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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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-Project Gutenberg's Common Sense Applied to Religion, by Catharine E. Beecher
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Common Sense Applied to Religion
- The Bible and the People
-
-Author: Catharine E. Beecher
-
-Release Date: September 12, 2017 [EBook #55531]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMMON SENSE APPLIED TO RELIGION ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry B. Harrison, Chris Pinfield and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note.
-
-Apparent typographical errors have been corrected; inconsistencies in
-the use of hyphens have been retained.
-
-One "oe" ligature has been removed.
-
-
-
-
- COMMON SENSE APPLIED TO RELIGION;
- OR,
- THE BIBLE AND THE PEOPLE.
-
- BY CATHARINE E. BEECHER.
-
- AUTHOR OF "LETTERS TO THE PEOPLE ON HEALTH AND HAPPINESS,"
- "PHYSIOLOGY AND CALISTHENICS," "DOMESTIC ECONOMY,"
- "DOMESTIC RECEIPT-BOOK," &c., &c.
-
-
- NEW YORK:
- HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,
- FRANKLIN SQUARE.
-
- MONTREAL: BENJAMIN DAWSON.
- 1857.
-
-
-Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year one thousand eight
-hundred and fifty-seven, by
-
-HARPER & BROTHERS,
-
-in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of
-New York.
-
-
- TO THE PEOPLE,
- AS THE SAFEST AND TRUEST INTERPRETERS OF
- THE BIBLE, AND
- TO WOMAN, AS
- THE HEAVEN-APPOINTED EDUCATOR OF MIND,
- THIS WORK
- Is respectfully Dedicated.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Page
-
- Introduction ix
-
- CHAP. I. The Grand Questions of Life 9
-
- CHAP. II. The Principles of Reason, or Intuitive Truths 14
-
- CHAP. III. Sources of Human Knowledge 29
-
- CHAP. IV. Of the Knowledge gained by Human Experience in regard
- to the Nature of Mind and of the System of which it is a Part 32
-
- CHAP. V. Knowledge gained by Reason and Experience alone as to a
- Future State 42
-
- CHAP. VI. Knowledge gained by Reason and Experience alone
- concerning the Existence, Character, and Designs of the Creator 47
-
- CHAP. VII. Diversities in Systems of Mental Philosophy 52
-
- CHAP. VIII. Classification and Description of the Mental Powers 59
-
- CHAP. IX. Sensation and Perception 64
-
- CHAP. X. Conception and Memory 79
-
- CHAP. XI. Attention and Abstraction 83
-
- CHAP. XII. Association 93
-
- CHAP. XIII. Imagination 102
-
- CHAP. XIV. Judgment 106
-
- CHAP. XV. The Susceptibilities 109
-
- CHAP. XVI. The Susceptibilities. Emotions of Taste 120
-
- CHAP. XVII. The Moral Susceptibilities 139
-
- CHAP. XVIII. The Will 149
-
- CHAP. XIX. Faith or Belief 165
-
- CHAP. XX. Constitutional Varieties of the Human Mind 175
-
- CHAP. XXI. Habit 178
-
- CHAP. XXII. Mind as Proof of its Creator's Designs 190
-
- CHAP. XXIII. Social and Material Proofs of the Creator's
- Designs 207
-
- CHAP. XXIV. Right Mode of securing the Object for which
- Mind was created 212
-
- CHAP. XXV. Wrong Action of Mind and its Causes 220
-
- CHAP. XXVI. Wrong Action of Mind and its Results in this
- Life 224
-
- CHAP. XXVII. Wrong Action of Mind and its Results in a Future
- State 233
-
- CHAP. XXVIII. Character of the Creator 245
-
- CHAP. XXIX. On Perfect and Imperfect Minds 250
-
- CHAP. XXX. On the probable Existence and Character of
- Disembodied Spirits 258
-
- CHAP. XXXI. Probabilities in regard to a Revelation from the
- Creator 261
-
- CHAP. XXXII. Interpretation of Language 265
-
- Addenda to Vol. I. 281
-
- Notes 337
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-This work is the result of thirty years of devotion to the training of
-the human mind for the great end for which it was created. Early in that
-period it was felt that at the very foundation of such efforts were
-opposing _theological theories_, that seemed at war with both the common
-sense and the moral sense of mankind.
-
-In the progress of such duties, a work was prepared on _Mental and Moral
-Science_, as a text-book for the institution under the care of the
-writer, which was printed, but never published. After submitting this
-work to the criticism of a number of the leading minds of various
-schools and sects, it was found to contain so much that might result in
-theological controversy, that it was deemed modest and wise to wait
-until age, experience, and farther examination had lent their maturing
-influence.
-
-After a delay of over a quarter of a century, the conviction above
-stated not only remains, but has been strengthened by the discussions
-and developments that have intervened in that period.
-
-While the great practical truths both of natural and revealed religion
-have seemed constantly to be gaining a more controlling influence over
-the intellect and feelings of mankind, the theological dogmas referred
-to have been more and more evaded or rejected, even by those who receive
-and respect the Bible as containing authentic and authoritative
-revelations from God.
-
-At the same time, there is apparent a manifest and strong tendency,
-especially among the young and most highly-educated of both sexes, to
-_infidelity_; not to that species of a former age which involved a
-hatred and contempt for the Bible, nor to the entire rejection of it as
-a very respectable and useful collection of most interesting writings,
-but to a rejection of it as a _sure and authoritative guide in faith and
-morals_.
-
-Though there may be other assignable causes for this, it is certain that
-not the least powerful is the repellency of dogmas claimed to be
-contained in the Bible, which are revolting both to the intellect and to
-the moral nature of man.
-
-Instead of being able to meet their religious teachers with the
-assumption that all which they have felt to be contrary to reason, to
-common sense, and to common honesty is not contained in the Sacred
-Writings, many have gradually drawn off to the religion of reason and
-nature, and left the Bible to theologians and the Church.
-
-At the same time, there has been a new development of philanthropy, in
-which those who either repudiate the Bible as of any binding authority,
-or disallow its commonly-accepted teachings, are as prominent and
-earnest in works of benevolence as the most orthodox of any sect. To
-these are added religious teachers, who set forth the morality and
-benevolence demanded in the Bible as obligatory, and as satisfactorily
-deducible from the light of nature, so that no revelation is needful to
-make them more so. Meantime, in popular forms and by popular writers,
-all the most plausible and startling difficulties that oppose the claims
-of the Bible are widely disseminated, while little is done to counteract
-these influences.
-
-Another class of religionists has also arisen, that numbers probably its
-hundreds of thousands, the _Spiritualists_, who rest their faith on a
-new species of so-called revelations, which ordinarily clash with the
-accepted teachings of the Bible, and by vast numbers are received as of
-superior authority.
-
-Meantime the press and public lectures are extensively supplanting the
-pulpit as organs of moral and religious influence over large portions of
-the community, while a large part of the most popular speakers and
-writers avowedly reject the Bible as of any binding authority in
-deciding moral and religious questions.
-
-At the same time, there has arisen a freedom of investigation, and an
-aversion to all traditional or conservative bonds, such as probably
-never before was so universal and dominant in this nation, especially
-among those religiously educated.
-
-All these influences have combined to place the Bible, and the systems
-of theology that claim to be educed from it, in entirely new relations.
-Nothing now is safe on the ground of tradition, or of authority, or of
-the reverence that belongs to age, learning, genius, or experience.
-Every thing in religion, as well as other matters, is to stand on its
-own claims, and not by any factitious supports.
-
-In this state of the public mind, the following considerations have had
-influence in leading to the presentation of the views contained in this
-volume.
-
-It is the distinctive maxim of Protestant Christianity that "every
-person is to be his own interpreter of the revelations of God contained
-in the Bible, responsible only to his Maker." This, of course, implies
-the practicability of a proper qualification for this duty in every
-individual, so that no person shall necessarily be dependent on other
-minds for a correct knowledge of all that relates to his own duty and
-dangers.
-
-It is manifest that the Creator designed that _woman_ should have the
-leading position as the _educator of mind_, especially at that period
-when the habits and principles of life are formed. This being so, it is
-clear that it was designed that _she_ should be qualified to gain by her
-own independent powers all that is revealed by God that will aid her in
-this great work.
-
-The theological theories referred to, as seemingly opposing the moral
-sense and common sense of mankind, are those that relate to the
-foundation principle on which the training of mind is to start. They
-involve the most practical questions of every-day life, both as to
-individual responsibility and to the education of the young.
-
-These theories, then, are to be examined and tested by _the laity_ as
-much as by theologians, and especially are they to be examined and
-decided on by _woman_, as the heaven-appointed educator of infancy and
-childhood.
-
-In this examination, these theories are to be tested, not by the
-decisions of ecclesiastical bodies, nor by the writings of theologians,
-but by those principles of _reason and common sense, and those laws of
-language_, which guide mankind in all other practical and personal
-duties. In order to this, these principles must be evolved and stated in
-simple and popular form, for particular application on these questions;
-for no man or woman can decide whether a thing agrees with, or is
-contrary to the moral sense, or to the principles of reason and common
-sense, till they clearly perceive what those principles are, and have
-learned to apply them appropriately.
-
-The leading object of this volume is, then, to present these principles
-in a popular form, and to make it apparent that they can be practically
-employed by the laity in deciding what is truth, both as to the claims
-of the Bible as containing authoritative revelations from the Creator,
-and also as to the true interpretation of it.
-
-In asking the attention of the laity, including her own sex, to the
-discussion of topics which have heretofore been deemed the most
-difficult, recondite, and profound, it is with the full conviction that
-most of the difficulties that heretofore have opposed such
-investigations have belonged, not to the topics themselves, but to the
-methods of discussion.
-
-It is believed that, though this small volume embraces most of those
-points in metaphysics which have been considered the most difficult,
-there is not a page that can not be perfectly comprehended by any man or
-woman of only an ordinarily good education, and with less intellectual
-effort than is demanded of little girls in acquiring an ability to parse
-the English language.
-
-It is true that _close thought and attention_ are requisite for a full
-appreciation of all in this volume; but not more of these are required
-than the dignity and importance of the great topics involved properly
-demand.
-
-In attempting what is here proposed, it can be seen that there are great
-difficulties to be met. As a general fact, these subjects have not been
-presented in popular forms, but have been confined to works of
-metaphysics and theology, and there enveloped in scientific techniques
-and formulas not interesting or intelligible to the common mind. For
-this reason, it has been suggested that, before presenting the abstract
-portion, a _practical illustration_ of the subject, embodied in the
-history of the opinions of the author, as they have been formed or
-modified by these principles, would have far more effect on the class of
-readers for whom the work is written than the bare statement of
-principles and argument, while it would certainly be more likely to be
-read.
-
-It has been still farther urged that, in attempting to controvert
-long-established theories, embodied as a part of religious truth in the
-popular mind, there will be an opposition of _feeling_ to be overcome,
-which needs a counterbalancing appeal to the feelings such as an
-individual history can best offer.
-
-As to the propriety of such a measure, it is now so common to offer
-autobiographies, and histories of life and opinions by living authors,
-that this will be no innovation on the customs of the literary world.
-
-To this, a more weighty consideration should be added, and that is, that
-all questions of propriety and of duty are regulated by circumstances of
-risk and danger. A woman, suddenly roused from sleep to save her
-children from the flames, has a very different rule of propriety in
-appearing before the public from that demanded on ordinary occasions. In
-this view, a believer in the risks of the _eternal loss of the soul_
-must withhold nothing, however sacred and cherished, if there is the
-shadow of a probability that it will avail aught in aiding, it may be,
-but one struggling, darkened mind in the death-agony of the soul.
-
-From these considerations, the writer has been led to prefix to the
-exhibition of principles and arguments of this work, a mental history
-that shall particularly illustrate the subjects discussed. The article
-was prepared for certain personal and family friends, and is inserted
-very nearly in its original form.
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIVE MENTAL HISTORY.
-
-I wish, before publishing my forthcoming work, to obtain the views of
-some of my theological friends as to certain phases of experience of my
-own mind, and, to a certain extent, of other minds known to me.
-
-My _intellectual_ character was a singular compound of the practical and
-the imaginative. In youth I had no love for study or for reading even,
-excepting works of imagination. Don Quixote, the novel to which I first
-had access, was nearly committed to memory, as were a few other novels
-found at my grandmother's. The poets, both ancient and modern, were
-always in reach, and with these materials I early formed a habit of
-reverie and castle-building as my chief internal source of enjoyment.
-With this was combined incessant activity in practical matters, such as,
-at first, doll-dressing and baby-house building; afterward drawing,
-painting, exploits of merriment, practical jokes, snow castles and
-forts, summer excursions, school and family drama-acting, and the like.
-Till eighteen, I never wrote any thing but a few letters and scraps of
-rhyme, and the transforming of some stories into dramas for acting. A
-kind teacher, who sympathized in my strong love of the comic, described
-me as "the busiest of all creatures in doing nothing."
-
-_Socially_, I was good-natured and sympathizing, so that my jokes and
-tricks were never such as to tease or annoy others.
-
-_Morally_, I had a strong sense of justice, but was not naturally so
-conscientious as some of the other children. Add to these, persevering
-energy, great self-reliance, and such cheerful hopefulness that the idea
-of danger or failure never entered my head. Even to this day, perfect
-success and no mischances are always anticipated till reason corrects
-the calculation.
-
-Thus constituted, my strict religious training made little impression,
-for I rarely heard any thing of that which seemed so dull and
-unintelligible. Up to the age of sixteen my conceptions on this subject
-were about these: that God made me and all things, and was very great,
-and wise, and good; that he knew all I thought and did; that because
-Adam and Eve disobeyed him _once_ only, he drove them out of Eden, and
-then so arranged it that all their descendants would be born with wicked
-hearts, and that, though this did not seem either just or good, it was
-so; that I had such a wicked heart that I could not feel or act right in
-any thing till I had a new one; that God only could give me a new heart;
-that, if I died without it, I should go to a lake of fire and brimstone,
-and be burned alive in it forever; that Jesus Christ was very good, and
-very sorry for us, and came to earth, and suffered and died to save us
-from this dreadful doom; that _revivals_ were times when God, the Holy
-Spirit, gave people new hearts; that, when revivals came, it was best to
-read the Bible, and pray, and go to meetings, but that at other times it
-was of little use. This last was not taught, but was my own inference.
-
-My mind turned from all this as very disagreeable. When led by my
-parents and Christian friends to it, I tried to do as they told me,
-because I saw they were anxious and troubled, and I wished to relieve
-them. Two or three times, when I saw my father so troubled, I took
-_Doddridge's Rise and Progress of Religion_, and tried to go through the
-process there laid down, but with utter failure. Meantime, I rarely
-heard any prayers or sermons, and at fifteen I doubt if the whole of my
-really serious thoughts and efforts would, except the above, have
-occupied a whole hour.
-
-In the earlier periods of my religious training, my parents, in their
-instructions, and also my little hymns and catechisms, made the
-impression that God loved little children, and, though he was angry when
-they did wrong, he was pleased when they did right; and, as parental
-government was tender and loving, my impression of the feelings of the
-heavenly Parent were conformed to this, my past experience.
-
-But when, in more mature years, I came under the influence of "revival
-preaching," all this impression seemed to be reversed. I was taught to
-look at God as a great "moral governor," whose chief interest was "to
-sustain his law." Then there seemed to be two kinds of right and wrong,
-the "common" and the "evangelical." According to this distinction, I
-could not feel or do any thing that was right or acceptable _to God_
-till my birth-gift of a depraved heart was renewed by a special divine
-interposition.
-
-Meantime, there did not seem to be any direct and practical way of
-securing this supernatural interference; for it was to be the result,
-not of any efforts of mine, nor were any divine promises or
-encouragements offered to secure my efforts. On the contrary, the
-selection of the recipients of this favor was regulated by a divine
-decree of "election," without reference to any acts of a being who did
-nothing but evil, and only evil, till this favor was bestowed. Moreover,
-all the exhortations to effort were based simply on the fact that,
-ordinarily, those who took a certain course were selected, though I
-perceived that sometimes those who did the least were chosen, while
-those who did the most were passed by.
-
-It was this view of the case that had the chief influence in leading to
-an entire neglect of all religious concerns. It was so nearly like a
-matter of mere chance, and there seemed so little adaptation of means to
-ends, that, to one so hopeful, and, at the same time, so practical,
-there was very little motive of any kind to lead to a religious life.
-
-The first real earnest feeling I ever had on this subject was when my
-tender mother died--such a mother as earth has seldom seen; as strong in
-intellect as she was modest and gentle in manners, and loving and
-sympathizing in heart. She left seven children younger than myself, one
-of them a babe, and I only sixteen. I really tried, for some time, to
-become a Christian, till the load of grief was alleviated by time, and
-then such efforts ceased; but these new responsibilities turned my
-practical habits into useful channels.
-
-Once after this, when "a revival" seemed closing, and my father
-expressed his distress for my indifference, I told him I was so happy I
-could not do any thing but enjoy life, and that _nothing but trials and
-sorrow_ would do me any good. Tears came into his eyes as he said, "Dear
-child, must I die too?" The responsive tears came to my eyes, but soon
-all was forgotten.
-
-At this time my theory of morals was, that to lie, steal, swear,
-quarrel, disobey parents, and break the Sabbath, were sins for which I
-should feel guilty; but for not becoming a Christian, when I could not
-understand how to do it, never rested on my conscience as a sin, but was
-felt to be simply a misfortune. And I wondered, if God desired that I
-should have a new heart, and he only could give it, why he did not do
-so. This was the amount of my "reasoning" so far. Till nearly twenty, I
-gained little knowledge except by intercourse with intelligent people,
-for still I had no love for solid reading or study. At about that age, I
-remember turning over Reid's work on Mental Science, in which my mother
-had been deeply interested, and wondering how people could read such
-stuff.
-
-At twenty that betrothal took place, so soon and so tragically ended! It
-was the realization of all my favorite dreams of earthly bliss.
-Affection, taste, ambition, every thing most desirable to me and to
-family friends, seemed secured. In a few months all was ended, and in
-the most terrible and heart-rending manner.
-
-After the first stunning effect was over, the next feeling was, "This is
-that indispensable sorrow! this is to save me from _eternal death_!" And
-so, as soon as I could do any thing, I began a course of religious
-reading, prayer, and mental conflict. I tried to remedy that pernicious
-mental habit of reverie and castle-building; I tried to do I knew not
-what in "becoming a Christian."
-
-Shut up in entire seclusion, all my dearest hopes forever crushed,
-without hope or object in life, overwhelmed with grief, horrified less
-at his dreadful death than at the awful apprehensions he himself had
-imparted that he was unprepared to die, I spent week after week in
-reading the stern and powerful writings of President Edwards, Dwight's
-System of Theology, and other similar works. I hoped for nothing, cared
-for nothing but to become a Christian. Yet no one could tell me
-intelligibly how to do it, while it was clear that all expected nothing
-from my efforts, and that all was dependent on a divine efflatus that
-was to change the birth-gift of a depraved heart.
-
-And yet I was told that the fault was all my own; that it was my
-obstinate _unwillingness_ to do what was required that alone made it
-needful for God to interfere. This was urged as a doctrine from God, and
-so, though it seemed as if I was not only willing, but that I longed for
-this change, I submitted my humble intellect to His, and owned that it
-must be so. So passed several dark and weary months.
-
-Next, I went to visit the parents of the friend I had lost. Here I read
-his private records of _years_ of almost superhuman effort to govern his
-mind, and to achieve the very thing I was laboring for, and yet, to his
-mind, all ended in entire failure; and this, too, without any murmuring,
-or any accusation of any one but himself. It was, as he maintained,
-because he was so ungrateful, so hardened, so obstinately "unwilling,"
-so averse from God and his service. And yet he was the model of every
-domestic, social, and official virtue; so reverent to God, so tender as
-a son and brother, so conscientious and faithful as an instructor! In
-not a single duty did he fail that the closest intimacy could discover;
-and yet, by his own showing, he had no love to God, and was entirely
-"unwilling" to love and serve him.
-
-At the same time, I found his intelligent, tender, heart-broken mother
-had for years been living just such a conscientious life, without any
-hope that she was a Christian, while now her pride and darling son was
-lost to her forever on earth, and oh! where was he? and where should she
-meet him at last? And thus she died. The only brother, too, so
-conscientious and exemplary, was and long continued in the same same
-position of mind.
-
-These revelations took away all hope of any good from any farther
-efforts of mine. At this period I almost lost my reason. For some days I
-thought I should go distracted. The first decided "change of mind" I now
-recall was an outburst of indignation and abhorrence. I remember once
-rising, as I was about to offer my usual, now hopeless prayer, with a
-feeling very like this: that such a God did not deserve to be loved;
-that I would not love him if I could, and I was glad I did not! It was
-but momentary, and the long training of years resumed its sway.
-
-It was at this period that I framed my first attempt at serious argument
-in a letter to my father. I took this position, that our own
-_experience_ and _consciousness_ were the highest kind of evidence of
-our mental power, and that I had this evidence of my mental inability to
-love God as required. My father's reply was published in the _Christian
-Spectator_, and was regarded as masterly and unanswerable. Its chief aim
-was to lessen confidence in my own consciousness, and to show that, as
-God was just and good, and certainly did require supreme love to him, we
-had the power to obey. I was unable to meet the argument, and so allowed
-that it must be so, and that all that was in my way was my own obstinate
-"unwillingness."
-
-But there was another point about which I attempted to reason that I did
-not give up so easily. According to the theory of "obstinate
-unwillingness," there was nothing in the Bible by way of promise, or
-even encouragement, for any like me. For how could God feel sympathy for
-obstinate rebels, or how make promises of hope and encouragement to
-those whose only difficulty was an unreasonable dislike to God and his
-service? Such texts as I quoted to the contrary (as Prov. 2:1-6; Matth.
-7:7; John 4:10) were not for such as I, but for those already converted;
-and no prayers, even, were acceptable till offered by a renewed heart.
-So it seemed impossible, in any case, to pray acceptably to God for the
-greatest of all boons, redemption from the awful doom of eternal death;
-for at regeneration the blessing was already given, and before that act
-no prayer was acceptable. So there was no place for such a prayer. This
-I never accepted, though I did not quite venture to oppose it.
-
-At one time my mind turned with longing and tender emotions toward Jesus
-Christ. All he said and did appeared so reasonable and so kind that it
-seemed to me he would hear my prayers. I brought, to sustain this idea,
-the case of the young man whom "Jesus loved" when he had no religion.
-Here I was met by a theory that, till now, had not attracted my notice,
-which was, that there was a human soul in Christ joined to the Divine
-mind, and that it was this human soul that felt this "human sympathy"
-for sinners, and _bore all the suffering_, while the Deity had nothing
-but calm, unmingled bliss. This made me feel that I could love the human
-soul, but could not love God. Indeed, the sufferings of this innocent
-Savior, _unshared by God_, was the most revolting of all.
-
-At the close of a long year of such darkness and suffering, I went to my
-friends in Boston, where "a _revival_" was in progress, and where I met
-my father. Here I received the most tender sympathy, was taken to
-prayer-meetings, and every thing was said and done that piety and love
-could devise for my relief, but all in vain.
-
-Finally, I came to this attitude of mind: "I will not try any more to
-understand any thing about these doctrines. I will not try any more to
-'be convinced of sin' in this inability to love God. Something is the
-matter: it does not seem like obstinate 'unwillingness;' but if God says
-so, I will take his word for it. I will assume that He is just, and
-wise, and good, in spite of all that seems to contrary. I will try to do
-all He commands the best I can. _There must be a dreadful mistake
-somewhere_, but I will trust and obey, and wait quietly for light." At
-this time my father gave me some little hope. I knew not why, for I did
-not "love God" according to any of the ordinary tests. But I was
-encouraged to hope that my heart was "renewed," and I shortly after made
-a public profession of religion in my father's church.
-
-During my residence with the friends referred to, I attempted the duties
-of a teacher to two young daughters of the family, and, to prepare
-myself, for the first time set my mind to real hard study. In five weeks
-I went through a large Arithmetic, of which I knew almost nothing; in
-seven weeks I completed Day's Algebra. Two schoolbooks on Chemistry and
-Natural Philosophy were also mastered that gloomy winter. I had no other
-resource within or without for so active a mind. Then my father urged
-me, for the sake of a sister, as my own pecuniary wants had been
-provided for, to commence a school in Hartford. As I taught only half a
-day, and "the higher branches" were but just entering female schools, I
-found no difficulty in keeping sufficiently ahead of my pupils. Thus
-commenced my career as a teacher.
-
-I went on several years with no other evidence of "love to God," which
-was the main test of "regeneration," but perseverance in the
-determination to assume that He was wise, just, and good, and to do all
-I could to obey him. My great aim in life was to find out what He
-required from the Bible, and then to try to do it as well as I could.
-Besides this, I imitated the methods of Christian worthies. I kept a
-religious diary--read religious books--went to religious meetings--prayed
-in my school, and taught religion to my pupils as it had been taught to
-me. Often, when I found suffering young minds embarrassed by my own
-difficulties, willing and anxious to do all in their power, and yet
-unable to feel as required, I almost lived over past anguish of spirit,
-and could scarcely nerve myself to instruct them that all the wrong was
-their own "obstinate unwillingness." There was a constant conflict
-between the theories to which I had bowed my intellect, and thought I
-really believed, and the impulses of my moral nature and common sense.
-
-Sometimes these questions were intolerably imperative. What evidence is
-there that what God says is _true_, when He claims to be wise, and just,
-and good, when He has done such contradictory things? For a single act,
-done six thousand years ago, the _first_ act of disobedience too, He has
-so constituted things that all the human minds that might be made right
-are formed so "_depraved_" as that not one of them will ever be
-"willing" to love and obey the Creator till He "_renews_" their minds.
-If I were to act thus, I should think it right for every one to believe
-I was cruel and unjust until I showed good reasons for it. And if I saw
-any one ruining the minds of young children, or permitting Adam or any
-one else to do it, when I had power to prevent it, I should say it was
-right to consider him an abominable and hateful being till he showed
-good reasons for such a course.
-
-Such thoughts were banished by the force of a strong will, and I
-continued to hold on to the Bible as a revelation from God, and to His
-claims as being wise, and just, and good. My renewed decision was,
-"There is some _dreadful mistake somewhere_; but I will take God's word
-and trust it, do the best I can, and wait till all is made clear."
-
-In the later periods of life, a mode of religious training has come
-repeatedly under my observation, to which a brief reference will here be
-made. I have known children, no more favorably endowed than myself, and
-some of them less so, whose parents were no more earnest and faithful
-than mine, though on a different theory.
-
-These children were first trained to prompt, unquestioning, and
-universal obedience to their parents' commands, almost such as is
-required by their Creator to his fixed and unalterable laws. At the same
-time they were treated with the greatest tenderness and sympathy, and as
-soon as they could understand the reasons for parental requirements,
-these reasons were given, but always with the understanding that
-implicit obedience must often be rendered without understanding the
-reasons. When these habits of confiding and affectionate obedience were
-formed, then they were taught that Jesus Christ was the Maker, Friend,
-and Father of all, who loved all his children as these parents loved
-their little ones, only more and better; that He created them to be
-happy, rejoiced to see them so, and was always sorry for them in every
-trouble.
-
-They were taught that there are _right_ ways and _wrong_ ways of seeking
-to be happy; that Jesus Christ came into this world to teach us what are
-these right and wrong ways, and that His instructions are written in the
-Bible; that it is very difficult to feel and act right in all things;
-that, when children _try_ to do so, the Savior is pleased with them,
-and, though they see him not, is present with them to help them; that,
-when they fail, and feel or act wrong, he is grieved, as their parents
-are, and as ready to forgive and help them, when they too are sorry, and
-continue to try to do right in all things; that _they are Christians
-just so far as they succeed in obeying Christ_, and that, the more they
-try, the more help they will have, and the better they will succeed.
-
-Thus these children grew up with the feeling that whenever they did any
-thing that was kind, honest, honorable, just, and self-denying, they
-were pleasing, not only their parents, but their best and ever-present
-Friend. Under such a course, the varied duties of religion and of social
-and domestic life were gradually not only explained, but _enforced_,
-both by parental authority and example, till a character and habits were
-formed that were far more consistent with the New Testament exhibitions
-of Christian life than is often seen among mature Christians.
-
-Without at present expressing any other opinion in regard to this
-method, I am strong in the belief that if this course had been pursued
-with me in childhood, very different mental habits would have been the
-result, and that the Christian life would have begun and progressed
-probably before the severe discipline of sorrow came, and certainly
-after it had been experienced.
-
-At the same time, there is a deep conviction that many of my young
-pupils, who turned away from religion as uninviting, severe, and
-unintelligible, would, by another method, have been easily led into the
-true paths of pleasantness and peace.
-
-I wish now to exhibit the influence of one doctrine (which I claim to be
-that of reason as truly as of revelation) on a mind like mine. I have
-stated something of that hopeful, elastic, and happy temperament that
-seemed to make sorrow so indispensable to the development of my noblest
-powers. But the earthly sorrow, time and new interests would have
-remedied ere youth had passed. But that awful doctrine of THE ETERNAL,
-IRREMEDIABLE LOSS OF THE SOUL, so ground into my spirit by years of
-effort, of which this was the mainspring, has been the grand motive
-power of my whole life ever since. If I could in any way have satisfied
-myself that a time would come, however distant, when all sufferers would
-be repaid by eternal ages of bliss, and all the guilty, however long
-their period of purgation, would at last be pure and happy _forever_, I
-should have returned to life and its enjoyments with fresh zest after
-such a period of privation. But I could not gain any such assurance
-without the Bible, but rather the reverse; while all the life and
-teachings of Christ and the Apostles seemed entirely based on the
-assumption that our whole race were in awful danger, that some were to
-be saved and some were to be _lost_ _forever_, and that the great end
-for which Christ lived, and for which his followers are to live, is to
-SAVE AS MANY AS POSSIBLE from this awful doom.
-
-Indeed, I could not see how any one could feel any respect for the
-teachings of Christ when such terrible things were uttered by him, if
-there was no just reason thus to terrify and alarm mankind. Times
-without number, I went over the New Testament to see if I could find any
-_honest_ way of escaping that doctrine, and always ending with a deeper
-and more awful conviction of its reality. The result was, that while,
-for the first year, I was driven to such mental effort and suffering to
-save myself, as soon as the least hope dawned that I was safe, all that
-was kindly and sympathizing in my nature led me to renewed efforts to
-save others.
-
-After such a lesson of inability, both in my own case and that of such
-dear friends, no words can express the ineffable pity, sympathy, and
-almost horror with which I looked on the world around me. And when young
-and happy minds, such as once was my own, came under my training, I
-never felt any need of being "waked up," as some Christian people seemed
-to do. It only seemed to me I could never sleep. There never has been an
-hour for thirty years when a moment's consideration of this awful
-doctrine would not drive away every temptation to earthly ambition, or
-any longings for earthly good of any sort for myself. Many times, when,
-by the presentation of such an awful theme, I have brought the young to
-me with tears and willing docility, and when, to the question "What can
-we do to be saved?" my shut-up heart was ready to exclaim "Nothing," I
-have been so burdened and worn as to be obliged to pray to forget, and
-to take every lawful mode to turn my thoughts to other less exciting
-themes. It was at such times I understood for what the love of the comic
-was implanted, and if all Christians should feel as I do, what might be
-the legitimate use of works of fiction, the drama, and the dance. In
-such a case, and properly regulated, they would be needful and only
-beneficial alteratives.
-
-I wish now to ask my theological friends to consider the character of my
-inner life. In all outward manifestations I took the theory of religion
-trained into me, and did my best to believe it, and talked, and wrote,
-and prayed, and acted before others on the assumption of its truth. But
-my inner life was after this fashion: as to prayer in private, I found
-great comfort in the preface to the Lord's prayer, "_After this manner_
-pray ye." It was a short, comprehensive prayer, which amounted to this,
-that God's will might be done on earth as in heaven; that our temporal
-wants might be supplied; that we might do right and escape evil. This I
-could sincerely feel and pray when all _details_ distressed me. But,
-still better, this prayer began, "Our _Father_." Now to me, through my
-whole life, this word "father" had been associated with unparalleled
-tenderness, sympathy, and love; with truth, justice, and all that was
-lovable. I could not apply it to God without such associations, and so
-it comforted me--and that was all. But the prayers, hymns, and sermons
-conformed to the _theory_ of religion were occasions when I had to
-struggle with feelings of disgust and abhorrence. Especially, at times,
-was this so in reference to the _atoning_ _sacrifice of Jesus Christ_,
-until I formed a curious mental habit of letting these things pass
-through my mind as something I did not understand, and then there seemed
-to flow in a vague impression of something better, I knew not what.
-
-In the progress of years I came to instruct some of the most vigorous
-and active minds I ever saw, both in mental science and in the
-interpretation of the Bible, and thus gradually evolved and applied "the
-principles of reason and rules of interpretation" in this work. The
-results will mainly appear in what follows.
-
-Up to this time, my feelings toward God (except sometimes when praying,
-as above described) were that, as He has said he was wise, and just, and
-good, I would take his word for it, in spite of all the evidence to the
-contrary, and feel and act as he required as far as I had power. My
-service, however, was much like that of a slave to a hard master. If
-"the _fear_ of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom," I certainly began
-aright.
-
-But the whole force of my being was turned, not toward Him, but toward
-my lost, and suffering, and darkened fellow-beings. And when all my
-darkness was removed, and by a simple intellectual process of
-argumentation I drew from His Holy Word all my soul had longed for, my
-chief joy was, not that I was safe, not that I could feel emotions of
-love to Him, but that _He felt as I did_ for this all-absorbing purpose
-and end of my existence--to save my fellow-men.
-
-Some minds seem to begin religious life with such emotions of love to
-the Creator as makes it easy to carry out the purpose to obey him. In my
-case, I began with the cool intellectual purpose to obey him, while it
-was _love_, not to Him, but to my fellow-men, that made it easy to carry
-out this purpose of obedience. But, in both cases, was it not the
-_spirit of obedience_ that was the grand requisite? The _all-controlling
-purpose of acting right_, by obeying all the laws of the Creator as
-discovered by the light of Nature, or by His revealed Word--is not
-_this_ the distinctive feature that marks the "_regenerated_" soul?
-
-It is theological _theories_, forced on mankind through popes, emperors,
-and church councils, by pains and penalties, which has mystified that
-grand question of life, "What must we do to be saved?" so that the
-answer to almost every other practical question is more clear than this.
-What do the great masses of men suppose that _they themselves_ are to do
-if ever they become "regenerated?" Multitudes imagine that, by going to
-camp-meetings, or conference meetings, or in "revivals," some Divine
-efflux will come over them, of which the chief evidence is that the mind
-is filled with joy, or other delightful emotions. Others deem it a
-mysterious change, that takes place sometimes in sleep, without any
-voluntary act of the individual. Others suppose it to consist in certain
-emotions or mental acts, in reference to Jesus Christ, that come by
-divine influence. Others consider it an act of the intellect and will,
-of which emotions may be the preceding state, or may follow as a result.
-Probably the vast majority regard it as a mysterious indescribable
-event, that no one can understand till it is experienced, and which can
-not be made intelligible to an "unrenewed mind."
-
-Thousands of excellent, conscientious persons are moving about with dark
-minds and heavy hearts, who would instantly become happy and consistent
-followers of Christ if these theories could be removed from their minds,
-and they were sure that an earnest spirit of obedience to Jesus Christ
-is what is required; to which the promises of hope and encouragement are
-made; which is the highest evidence of regeneration, and the chief
-feature of that "love to God" required; while all emotions, frames, and
-feelings are nothing without it. Thousands of children and young
-persons, religiously trained, are held back from a religious life
-because it is conceived of as so mysterious, uninviting, and painful
-that they can neither understand or desire it. At the same time, it is
-true that, _after children have been trained wrong_, so that bad habits
-of mind are dominant, the clear understanding of this subject will not,
-in many cases, make it easy for them to commence a religious life, or
-make it look desirable.
-
-The fearful sanctions of eternity can not very directly be brought to
-bear on the minds of young children without great risk of entirely false
-impressions. We see, in the Old Testament, that when God was training _a
-race_, in the infancy of its development He made visible appearances,
-used temporal motives, and made no appeals to the sanctions of the
-invisible world. Like the parents just referred to, his first aim seemed
-to be to teach _habits of obedience_ to God's temporal laws, while, at
-the same time, He displayed his sympathy, mercy, and love. And among his
-ancient people men became his obedient children by just such training as
-is now best fitted to young children.
-
-But when the race was farther advanced, so as to be able to act more by
-reason and on _general principles_, and when His religion, by new
-motives and forces, was to be extended from one nation to all the world,
-_then the Creator came himself_; and while disclosing those most
-terrific sanctions of the invisible world, at the same time exhibited
-such a manifestation of His pity, sympathy, and _self-sacrificing love_
-as renders these terrors safe and effective in such a conjuncture, as
-they would not be without.
-
-With these two classes of motives thus intensified, such a moral power
-has been generated, leading to self-denying efforts to educate and save
-mankind, as never existed before. In the case of the writer, the power
-of these terrible sanctions _alone_ has been illustrated. In other
-cases, the power of Christ's love and example have been the leading
-motives. It is the _union of both_, clearly appreciated, and especially
-brought to bear on those who form the character of childhood and youth,
-that eventually is to renew the whole race, and bring every human being
-to perfect obedience to _all_ the laws of the Creator.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the investigation which originated at the time the writer commenced
-teaching mental philosophy in connection with the Bible, this was the
-first point to which attention was led, "What is that '_reason_' or
-'_common sense_' which is so often appealed to as the umpire in
-religion, morals, and interpretation?" All the works of mental science
-within reach were examined, but it was long before any clear conceptions
-on this question were gained, and still longer before any _test_ was
-evolved that seemed a _practical_ one, as it is presented in this work.
-Not that these principles and the test are not indicated by
-metaphysicians in various forms of language, but that there is such a
-confusing variety of expression, and all is so presented as a
-_speculative_ instead of a _practical_ question, that years elapsed
-before that use of these principles which this work illustrates was
-attained.
-
-This is here referred to in explanation of future passages that
-otherwise might seem to imply that the author assumes to have discovered
-something not before known or recognized by metaphysicians. The very
-writings of Dr. Reid, which, in early life, were turned over with wonder
-that any one could be interested in them, probably contain the most
-complete and clear exhibition of these principles, and also recognize
-the _test_ by which they are to be established. The writings of Sir
-William Hamilton exhibit other, but less practical tests of these
-principles.
-
-Until the printing of this volume was nearly complete, it was the plan
-of the author to have the whole work issued at once; and, with reference
-to this whole, its title was THE BIBLE AND THE PEOPLE, OR COMMON SENSE
-APPLIED TO RELIGION. But, after submitting this portion of the work to
-criticism, it was concluded to issue only one volume, and to wait until
-it was seen what reception the _principles_ it offered would meet. In
-consequence of this, it seemed proper to transpose the title, as the
-latter portion of it best describes the contents of the first volume.
-This accounts for what is unusual in paging and in the running title on
-the left-hand pages.
-
-
-
-
-THE
-
-BIBLE AND THE PEOPLE.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE GRAND QUESTIONS OF LIFE.
-
-
-We are now living through the period of demolition. In morals, in social
-life, in politics, in medicine, and in religion, there is a universal
-upturning of foundations.
-
-But the day of reconstruction seems to be looming in the orient, and now
-the grand question is, Are there any sure and universal principles that
-will evolve a harmonious system in which all shall agree? Or, is the
-only unity to be anticipated that which results from the unsatisfactory
-conclusion that all must "agree to disagree?"
-
-The first alternative is believed to be in our future; and it is hoped
-that this volume will contribute something toward evolving such
-principles of reconstruction.
-
-In some happily constituted minds and singularly favorable
-circumstances, the passages of this life are almost uniformly happy, and
-no clouds ever shut out the sunshine of a cheerful existence.
-
-But, as a general rule, the farther we advance in life, the more solemn
-become our convictions that its experiences are stormy, sad,
-disappointing, and unsatisfactory. And the nobler the mind and the more
-exalted its aspirations, the more surely are these lessons read and
-understood.
-
-If we turn aside from the lower haunts of poverty, vice, and crime, and
-look only at the more favored classes, we find men toiling for years and
-years to build up schemes which, in some sudden shock, crumble and pass
-away; or, are their high hopes accomplished, some bitter ingredient
-mingles with the cup of success, that turns it to gall.
-
-And so, in heart-histories, the tenderest ties are formed, as it would
-seem, only to be wrenched and torn. The young heart gives its fresh
-impassioned love to its appropriate object, and, just at the happy
-consummation, death or desertion forever ends life's brightest
-experience.
-
-The young parents receive their first-born with untold rapture, and then
-some disease or accident turns it to a hopeless idiot or ceaseless
-sufferer.
-
-The young husband lays at once his first love and his first born in the
-same grave. The tender parents spend years and years of care and effort
-to rear a darling child, and at the culmination of their hopes the
-flower is cut down.
-
-Business or misfortune severs those whose chief happiness would be to
-live together. The long-tried friends of early life are thrown into
-painful antagonisms that end their friendship. The conflicts of interest
-and party develop conduct and character that shatter confidence in men
-and tempt to misanthropy.
-
-In short, there are seasons when a thoughtful and tender spirit is
-tempted to feel as if some malignant power were commissioned to seek out
-all that is most beautiful, harmonious, and delightful in the experience
-of our race, only to imbitter, confound, and destroy.
-
-And even where the experience of life has been the most favorable, as
-its closing years come on early friends pass away, the capacities and
-resources of enjoyment diminish, and the dim cloud that shrouds the
-closing vista awakens solemn and anxious meditations on the untried and
-silent future. Such experiences bring forth the heart-yearning questions
-that come, as it were, from the united voice of sad and suffering
-humanity:
-
-"Is there a God that controls the destinies of man? If so, what are his
-character and designs? Is this sad life our only portion, or shall we
-live beyond the grave? If there is another life before us, what
-influence has our conduct and character here on its solemn destinies?
-
-Are we left to our own unaided faculties to reason out from the nature
-of things around us the replies to these momentous questions, or has the
-Author of our being given some direct revelation to guide us?
-
-If such a revelation exists, is it made accessible to all, or must one
-portion of our race necessarily depend on fallible and interested
-interpreters?
-
-Does this revelation agree with reason and experience, and does it
-contain all that we need both for safe guidance and for peace of mind?"
-
-It is believed that, in the following pages, it will be seen that every
-mind, of even only ordinary capacity, is furnished with the means of
-answering all these questions, and with as much certainty as appertains
-to the ordinary practical questions of this life.
-
-At the same time, it will appear that most of the difficulties and
-diversities of opinions in religious matters have mainly resulted from
-neglecting these means of obtaining truth and peace, and that the "good
-times coming" are all depending on the proper use of these means.
-
-As introductory to the first main topic, it is important to refer to the
-fact that, in all languages, man is recognized as possessing what is
-called _reason_. He is called a _reasonable_ being and a _reasoning_
-being, and it is claimed that it is his reason that places him at the
-head of creation in this world.
-
-Again, in discussions on truth and duty, all men seem to agree that
-there is such a thing as _reason_, and that it is, more or less, to be
-made the umpire in settling all disputed points. It is true that very
-few seem to have a clear and definite idea of what this reason is, or
-how it is to be made an umpire. But all allow that there is such a
-thing, and that it has a very important office in deciding questions of
-truth and duty.
-
-Then, again, among more scientific men, we hear constant reference made
-to our "intuitions" and our "intuitive knowledge," as if there were some
-fixed truths which are superior to all others. It is true, that when we
-come to inquire specifically as to what are these intuitions, we often
-find them to be acquired notions, and sometimes such as are unsupported
-by any evidence, or even contrary to the best kind of evidence.
-Nevertheless, those who use these terms all agree in the fact that there
-are "intuitions" and "intuitive knowledge," which are superior to any
-other kinds of knowledge, and involve a certainty of conviction which no
-reasoning can overthrow.
-
-Then, as we advance still higher in the world of letters, we find
-metaphysicians and philosophers assuming that a belief in certain truths
-is implanted in all rational minds by the Creator as a necessary part of
-their constitution, and that these truths are the foundation of most of
-our acquired knowledge. The truths or principles of mind thus recognized
-are called by various names, such as _reason_, the _principles of
-reason_, the _primary truths_, the _intuitions_, the _intuitive truths_,
-the _fundamental truths_, the _principles of common sense_, the
-_categories_, etc.
-
-The grand difficulty on this subject has been, that while all agree in
-the existence of such implanted truths, there has never been any _test_
-for deciding which are these truths, in distinction from our acquired
-notions.
-
-It is the object of the succeeding chapter to present the most important
-of these truths, and also to set forth an infallible test by which they
-may be distinguished from every other kind of knowledge.
-
-And this attempt is made with a full conviction that success in such an
-effort is to be the foundation of that harmony of reconstruction which
-has been indicated as provided for the future.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-PRINCIPLES OF REASON, OR INTUITIVE TRUTHS.
-
-
-It is maintained that the Author of mind has implanted, as a part of its
-constitution, the belief in certain truths, so that it is impossible to
-disbelieve them without losing that which distinguishes man as a
-rational being.
-
-It is also assumed that there is an _infallible test_, by which we can
-distinguish these truths from all those acquired notions which men often
-falsely call intuitions, or principles of reason, etc.
-
-Before proceeding, it will be premised that the attempt will not be to
-set forth _all_ those truths that may properly be called intuitive, but
-it will be limited to those which are immediately connected with the
-subjects to be discussed.
-
-To proceed, then, the first principle of reason, or intuitive truth, is
-that by which we arrive at the idea of a great _First Cause, who was
-without a beginning_. In briefest form, this truth is usually thus
-expressed:
-
-EVERY CHANGE HAS A CAUSE.
-
-The position here maintained is that the human mind is so made that,
-whenever any kind of change (or effect) takes place, there inevitably
-follows a belief that there is some antecedent which is _the cause_ of
-this change, or, in other words, that there is _something that produced
-this change_.
-
-Now the question is not how this conviction first finds entrance to the
-mind, nor whether it is consequent on experience.
-
-It is simply a question of fact. Men always do, whenever they see any
-new form of existence, or any change take place, believe that there is
-some antecedent cause that produced this change.
-
-Moreover, if a man should be found who was destitute of this belief, so
-that in his daily pursuits he assumed that things would spring into
-existence without any cause, and that there were no causes of any kind
-that produced the changes around him, he would be pronounced insane--a
-man who had "lost his reason."
-
-Here, then, we have an example of an intuitive truth, and also an
-illustration of the _test_ by which we are to distinguish such truths
-from all others, viz.:
-
-_Any truth is a principle of reason, or an intuitive truth, when all men
-talk and act as if they believed it in the practical affairs of life,
-and when talking and acting as if it were not believed, would
-universally be regarded as evidence that a man had "lost his reason."_
-
-It will now be shown how a belief in this truth involves a belief in
-some great First Cause who himself had no beginning.
-
-The atheist says thus: Somewhere, far back in other ages, there were no
-existences at all, either of matter or mind; but at a given period,
-without any cause at all, the vast and wonderful contrivances of matter
-and mind began to exist.
-
-The first reply to this is, that it is an assertion without evidence,
-either intuitive or otherwise. No being ever was known to testify of
-such an event, and there is no proof of it of any kind.
-
-Next, it is replied that placing such an event at distant ages does not
-render it any more credible than the assertion that worlds and
-intelligent beings are coming into existence at the present time without
-any cause. God has so constituted our minds that we can not believe that
-any curious and wonderful contrivance springs into being without a
-cause, either now or at any past period of time.
-
-If the atheist, in the common affairs of life, should talk and act as if
-he believed there were no causes for all the existences and changes
-around him, he would be regarded as having "lost his reason." And thus
-Holy Writ sanctions the decision: "The fool hath said in his heart,
-There is no God."
-
-We find, then, that our minds are made so that we can not help believing
-that whatever begins to be has an antecedent cause that produces it, and
-every change in any kind of existence has a cause. We find, also, the
-universe around us to be a succession of changes, and these we trace
-back and back again to antecedent causes.
-
-But at last we come to the grand question, "Who first started this vast
-system of endless and wonderful contrivances?"
-
-Only two replies are possible. The first is that of the atheist, that
-the whole started into existence without a cause, which we have shown
-that no sane mind can really believe.
-
-The only remaining reply is, there is _some great_ _self-existent Cause,
-who never began to be, and who is the author of the universe of matter
-and mind_.[1]
-
-It must, however, be conceded that this intuitive truth does not aid us
-in deciding what is the nature and character of this First Cause. We are
-obliged to resort to other intuitive truths to settle this question.
-
-Neither does this principle aid us in deciding whether there may not be
-_more than one_ self-existent cause; for several minds can be supposed
-to have united in will and action to bring forth this "universal frame,"
-each one of which might have existed without beginning.
-
-The second intuitive truth is this:
-
-TWO CLASSES OF CAUSES EXIST, VIZ., MATERIAL THINGS, WHICH ACT ON MIND,
-AND IMMATERIAL OR SPIRITUAL THINGS, WHICH ACT ON MATTER.
-
-Some metaphysicians maintain that every thing is matter, and that mind
-or spirit is only one particular species of matter. Others teach that
-every thing is mind, and that all which we suppose to be material things
-are merely ideas in the mind of what really has no existence.
-
-Now we have no mode of proving that we have a soul or that we have a
-body, or that there are any real things existing around us. But God has
-so formed our minds that we can not help believing that our minds are
-distinct from matter, and that they are causes of changes in our body
-and in the things around us. Nor can we help believing that we have
-bodies, and that the things around us are realities. And no man could
-talk or act, in practical matters, with a contrary belief, without being
-regarded as having "lost his reason."
-
-The third intuitive truth is, that THE MIND OF MAN IS A FREE AGENT.
-
-By this is signified that mind is an independent cause of its own
-volitions, and capable, in appropriate circumstances, of choosing in
-_either_ of two or more ways, not being, like matter, forced to a fixed
-and necessary mode of action.
-
-Some changes in mind are necessary effects produced by causes out of the
-mind. And some mental action is the necessary result of its
-constitution, and can not be otherwise. But _choice_ or _volition_ is an
-act of the mind itself, when it has power to choose in either of two or
-more ways without any change of circumstances.
-
-The fatalist denies this, and maintains that choice is a necessary act,
-the same as the changes in matter, and that at each act of choice the
-mind had no power to choose otherwise than as it does choose.
-
-In reply to this, nothing is needed but to show that all men believe,
-and show it by their words and actions, that they always have power to
-choose more ways than one. And after they have chosen a particular way,
-they still believe that they had the power to have chosen another way.
-And though metaphysicians may deny this in words, if any one of them, in
-practical every-day life, should talk and act as if he believed that he
-had no power to choose otherwise than as he does, he would be regarded
-as having "lost his reason."
-
-This subject has often been so treated as to embarrass some of the most
-acute minds. Yet the ordinary mind is as perfectly qualified to settle
-this question as the most astute philosopher. Do men believe that they
-have no power to choose any other way than as they do choose? Do they
-talk and act in common life as if they believed it? Would not a man who
-talked and acted on the assumption that he had no power to choose
-otherwise than as he does choose be regarded as having "lost his
-reason?"
-
-All men of common sense must answer these questions alike, and thus
-decide that this is one of the intuitive truths.
-
-The fourth intuitive truth is, that DESIGN IS EVIDENCE OF AN INTELLIGENT
-CAUSE, AND THE NATURE OF A DESIGN PROVES THE INTENTION AND CHARACTER OF
-THE AUTHOR.
-
-It is by the aid of this principle of reason that we gain a knowledge of
-the character and designs of our Creator. All minds are so constituted
-that when they find a contrivance fitted to accomplish some end, they
-can not help believing that the author of it is an _intelligent_ cause,
-and that he _intended_ to secure that end.
-
-This position is finely illustrated by Paley. He describes a savage
-finding a watch in a desert, who is made to comprehend all its curious
-contrivances for marking time. This savage, he claims, would inevitably
-conclude that some intelligent person made the watch, and that it was
-his design to have it keep time.
-
-In like manner, should the residence of a person be inspected, and be
-found filled with contrivances for producing mischief and for torturing
-men and animals, the result would be a belief that the author of these
-things was cruel and malignant. On the other hand, were these
-contrivances calculated to produce only comfort and happiness, the
-inevitable belief would follow that the contriver was benevolent.
-
-Again, if these designs were found to involve powerful and magnificent
-results, the immediate belief would follow that the author was wise and
-powerful as well as benevolent.
-
-This illustrates the method by which this implanted principle of reason
-enables us to learn the design and character of the Author of the
-universe by the works of creation.
-
-The fifth intuitive truth is, that NO RATIONAL MIND WILL CHOOSE EVIL
-WITHOUT ANY HOPE OF COMPENSATING GOOD.
-
-The fact that any person was seeking pain and evil without hope of
-compensating good would prove to all that "reason was lost." No sane
-mind ever acts thus.
-
-It is by the aid of this intuitive truth that we rely on human
-testimony. The surest mode of establishing the reliability of a witness
-is to show that by false testimony he would knowingly incur evil and
-gain no good. In such circumstances no one would believe that a witness
-would be false.
-
-The sixth intuitive truth is, that THINGS WILL CONTINUE AS THEY ARE AND
-HAVE BEEN TILL THERE IS EVIDENCE OF A CHANGE OR OF A CAUSE FOR A CHANGE.
-
-All the business of this life rests on a belief in this implanted truth,
-and equally so do our inferences in regard to the immortality of the
-soul and a future state.
-
-The belief that the sun will continue to rise, or that the seasons will
-return, rests solely on the fact that these events have been uniform in
-past time, and that we know of no cause for a change from this
-uniformity. And were any person to talk and act as if destitute of this
-belief, he would be deemed insane.
-
-Bishop Butler's celebrated argument on the immortality of the soul is
-founded entirely on this principle. It is briefly this:
-
-Things will continue as they are and have been unless there is some
-evidence of some change or cause for a change. At death the soul exists.
-The dissolution of the body is no evidence of the destruction of the
-soul, and there is no kind of evidence that it is destroyed. Therefore
-we infer that the soul continues to exist after the dissolution of the
-body.
-
-The main point in this argument is to show that there is no evidence
-that the act of death involves the destruction of the soul. If this can
-be established, then the belief must follow that the soul exists after
-death. By the same method Butler establishes several other doctrines of
-the Bible.
-
-It is by the aid of this principle that what are called the laws of
-nature are established. By means of human testimony we learn what has
-been the uniform course of nature. And then men conclude that what has
-been will continue to be until some new cause intervenes to change this
-uniformity.
-
-The seventh intuitive truth is, that the NEEDLESS DESTRUCTION OF
-HAPPINESS OR INFLICTION OF PAIN IS WRONG, and THAT WHATEVER TENDS TO
-PRODUCE THE MOST HAPPINESS IS RIGHT.
-
-The terms right and wrong, as used by mankind, always have reference to
-some _plan_ or _design_. Any thing is called right when it fulfills the
-design for which it is made, and it is called wrong when it does not.
-Thus a watch is right when it fulfills its design in keeping time. A
-compass is right when it points to the north. And so of all
-contrivances.
-
-Of course, then, the question as to the right and wrong action of mind
-involves a reference to the _object_ or _design_ of the Author of mind.
-At this time it will be assumed (the proof being reserved for future
-pages) that the design or object for which God made mind was _to produce
-the greatest possible happiness with the least possible evil_.
-
-It is also assumed, without here exhibiting the proof, that the
-impression of this design is so inwrought into the mental constitution
-that whatever is perceived to be destructive to happiness is felt to be
-_wrong_--that is, _unfitted_ to the design of the Author of all things,
-which the mind _feels_ often when it can not logically set forth the
-reason. So, also, whatever is seen to promote the greatest amount of
-happiness is felt to be right.
-
-The mind is so constituted that, without any act of reasoning as to the
-tendencies of things, there are certain feelings and actions that the
-mind turns from as _unfit_ and to be abhorred.
-
-Thus, when plighted faith is violated, or a great benefactor treated
-with cruelty and indignity by those he has benefited, a feeling of
-unfitness and abhorrence is awakened, independent of all considerations
-of the tendency of such conduct to destroy happiness.
-
-In like manner, there are certain acts of gratitude and benevolence that
-always awaken approval and admiration as suitable and right, without any
-reference to future tendencies or results.
-
-At the same time, it is true that when, by a process of reasoning, it is
-seen that the _tendency_ of any course of conduct is to diminish
-happiness or inflict evil without compensating good, there arises the
-same feeling of disapproval of it as wrong, and unfitted to the end for
-which all things are made. This is often the case when there is no
-definite, distinct idea of what the great design of the Creator may be.
-
-This belief and feeling of unfitness and wrongfulness is common to all
-sane minds. It is true that there are different views of what actions
-are destructive to happiness, but when there is a clear perception that
-a given act will do great harm and no good, every mind will feel that it
-is wrong; and when it is seen that any act will do good without any
-evil, it is felt to be right. And this is so universal, that if any one
-should be found to talk and act with a contrary belief, he would be
-regarded as having lost a part of that which constitutes him a rational
-being.
-
-The eighth intuitive truth is, that THE EVIDENCE OF OUR SENSES IS
-RELIABLE.
-
-This statement needs some qualification. It often requires time to learn
-accurately what our senses do testify, and sometimes the apparent
-experience of the senses proves incorrect. For example, to one just
-restored to sight, every object seems to touch the eye, and distances
-are learned only by experience. So the sun and stars seem to move, when
-it is the earth that is turning. So, also, the senses are sometimes
-diseased or disordered, and make false reports.
-
-The true meaning, then, of the above intuitive truth is, that when men
-know that they have had all requisite experience, and understand
-properly all the circumstances of the case, they can not help believing
-the evidence of their senses, and when this belief is lost, a person is
-regarded as insane.
-
-The ninth intuitive truth is, that WHENEVER THERE IS A CHANGE IN THE
-ESTABLISHED ORDER OF NATURE SURPASSING HUMAN POWER, IT IS EVIDENCE OF A
-SUPERNATURAL AGENCY THAT IS SANCTIONED BY THE AUTHOR OF THE LAWS OF
-NATURE.
-
-The conviction of the wisdom and power of the Author of this vast and
-wonderful frame around us is such that whatever changes may occur in its
-established order must be felt to be by his permission.
-
-To illustrate this, suppose a man appeared claiming to be a teacher sent
-from God. In proof of this, he commands a mountain to be uptorn and
-thrown into the sea. Now, if this phenomenon should follow his command,
-it would be impossible for any who witnessed it to refrain from
-believing that the Author of Nature performed this miracle to attest the
-authority of his messenger.
-
-In order to insure this belief in the interference of Deity, there must
-be full evidence that there can be no deception, and that the miraculous
-performance is entirely beyond human power and skill. Men always talk
-and act on the assumption that _such_ miracles are from God, and that
-all rational minds so regard them.
-
-The tenth intuitive truth is, that IN ALL PRACTICAL CONCERNS WE ARE TO
-CONSIDER THAT COURSE RIGHT WHICH HAS THE BALANCE OF EVIDENCE IN ITS
-FAVOR.
-
-There are few practical questions where we can have perfect certainty as
-to the right course. In almost all the concerns of life men are guided
-by _probabilities_. It is not certain that seed will spring up, or that
-a ship will return, or that a given medicine will cure, or that any
-future project will succeed; but men go forward in their pursuits with
-exactly the same decision as if the probabilities that guide them were
-certainties. They find which course has _the most_ evidence in its
-favor, and then act as if it was certain that this was the right course
-to attain their designs.
-
-And if any person should habitually act as if he believed the reverse,
-he would be regarded as having lost his reason.
-
-The eleventh intuitive truth is, that NOTHING IS TO BE ASSUMED AS TRUE
-UNLESS THERE IS SOME EVIDENCE THAT IT IS SO.
-
-This principle is always assumed in all practical affairs. If a man were
-to send a cargo abroad without _any_ evidence that it was wanted, he
-would be called a fool; and so in all other concerns, every sane man
-takes this for his rule of conduct.
-
-The preceding include the principles which it is believed are the grand
-foundation on which rest most of the practical knowledge of life, as
-well as the doctrines and duties both of natural and revealed religion.
-
-There are some other intuitive truths which are not introduced here, and
-there are some principles that others have placed in this honorable
-position which could not stand the _test_ here introduced, and claimed
-to be the only true and reliable one.
-
-The intuitive truths have been called "fundamental truths," because they
-are the ultimate basis of all knowledge secured or established by the
-process of _reasoning_.
-
-This process consists in assuming a certain proposition to be true as
-the _basis_ of an argument. If this proposition is granted, or supposed
-to be granted, then the reasoner proceeds to show that the point in
-dispute is in reality _included_ in the truth already granted, so that
-believing the first proposition, or basis, necessarily involves a belief
-in the one to be proved.
-
-For example, if a man wishes to prove that a certain person is a
-benevolent man, he proceeds thus:
-
-Let it be granted that all persons who are habitually contriving and
-laboring to promote the happiness of all around them are benevolent
-persons. This basis proposition being conceded to be true, the reasoner
-proceeds to present evidence that the person in question habitually is
-laboring for the good of others. This being done, he draws the
-conclusion that this person is _included_ in the class which have been
-granted to be benevolent.
-
-_Reasoning_, then, is a process for exhibiting evidence that a point
-which is disputed is included in a proposition already believed and
-allowed.
-
-But suppose the disputant denies the truth of the basis or foundation
-proposition, then it becomes necessary to establish that proposition by
-another act of reasoning. In order to do this, still another proposition
-is assumed which is allowed to be true, and which the reasoner then
-attempts to show includes his former basis proposition.
-
-This process may thus be continued till, finally, it comes to pass that
-the basis proposition assumed is an intuitive truth. In this case the
-victory is secure; for whatever can be shown to be embraced in an
-intuitive truth must be conceded to be true, and whatever is
-contradictory to an intuitive truth must be allowed to be false.
-
-Now it can be shown that all the reliable practical knowledge of this
-life can be thus traced back till it is seen to rest on some intuitive
-truth as its basis.
-
-So, also, all the doctrines and duties, both of natural and revealed
-religion, can be shown to rest on these intuitive truths. This indicates
-the propriety of the name given to these first principles as _principles
-of reason_ and _fundamental truths_.
-
-Here, then, is presented the foundation of the hope so confidently
-expressed, that a time is coming when, in all the great questions which
-now agitate humanity with doubts, discussions, and conflict, there shall
-result universal harmony and unity of opinion. If such intuitive
-principles are implanted in all human minds; if there is a _certain
-test_ by which these principles can be eliminated and established; and
-if, by a sure process of reasoning, every correct practical and
-religious opinion can be shown to rest on these principles, and every
-false one to contradict them, then we can plainly perceive the true path
-to this golden age.
-
-It is to cultivate the powers of the human intellect, to train every
-mind, from early life, to detect the true laws of reason, and to
-practice accurately the process of reasoning. Not that this alone will
-suffice without the attending cultivation of the moral powers, and the
-promised blessing of heavenly aid. But the first would powerfully tend
-to secure the second, and then the third would inevitably be bestowed.
-
-Before proceeding farther, it is desirable to recognize the fact that
-the word _reason_ is used in several ways. Sometimes it signifies simply
-the intuitive truths. Sometimes it includes all those principles and
-powers of mind which are employed in the act of reasoning. Sometimes it
-refers to the intellect in distinction from the feelings. In all cases,
-however, the connection will determine in which of these uses it is
-employed.
-
-[1] Note A.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-SOURCES OF HUMAN KNOWLEDGE.
-
-
-We have seen that there are certain intuitive truths, the belief of
-which is implanted as a part of our mental constitution, and that there
-is a _test_ by which we can distinguish them from all other kinds of
-knowledge.
-
-We have seen, also, that we are dependent on these truths for a large
-portion of our acquired knowledge, inasmuch as they are the basis of
-_reasoning_, which is that process by which we gain new truths by the
-aid of those already believed.
-
-It has been intimated, also, that it is chiefly by the aid of these
-principles that a harmonious system of truth is to be anticipated, in
-which all minds will eventually agree, at least in all great questions
-involving the eternal interests of our race.
-
-We will now proceed in an inquiry as to what are _the sources of human
-knowledge_ in addition to these first implanted truths.
-
-In the first place, then, we have our own personal experience of the
-nature and action of our own minds, and of the qualities and powers of
-the persons and things around us. Next we have the experience of other
-minds as to their own mental history and the properties and powers of
-all that has surrounded them. This knowledge is communicated by them to
-us either directly by word of mouth, or indirectly by writings and
-books.
-
-The experience of a single mind is very limited both as to space and
-time, and it is only by the united experience of many persons, in
-different periods and places, that we arrive at what are called the laws
-of nature and experience. The laws of day and night, summer and winter,
-the tides, and all the other phenomena of nature, are simply a uniform
-succession and regularity of events, from which men infer a future
-regularity of the same experience. Much of this knowledge of past
-uniformity is transmitted from others to us, and rests on our confidence
-in human testimony, and it has been shown that this confidence is based
-on one of the intuitive truths.
-
-Next, we have the knowledge gained by the process of reasoning, and for
-this we are dependent on the intuitive truths which are the foundation
-of all reliable deductions.
-
-Lastly, we have the resource of _revelations_ from the Creator of all,
-who can communicate to us knowledge that we can not gain either by
-intuition, or experience, or reasoning.
-
-In regard to the kinds of knowledge to be gained from each of these
-sources, it is clear that the experience of ourselves and others
-furnishes us with nothing but facts, as it regards matter and mind, as
-they are developed in _this_ world only. As it respects the Creator, his
-character and designs, the immortality of the soul, and the future
-destiny of our race, we gain nothing by our own personal observation or
-experience. "No man hath seen God at any time." No one has gone to "the
-silent land" to learn by inspection the secrets of that dim shore, or
-the destiny of the soul when it passes from earth.
-
-Neither have we any resource in the experience of others who can go to
-the invisible world and transmit to us the knowledge there gained. There
-is not a man upon earth that can furnish any reliable information on
-these subjects from any personal knowledge.
-
-It becomes, then, a most interesting inquiry as to the amount and kind
-of knowledge to be gained by means of the intuitive truths, experience,
-and reasoning, independently of revelation. In what follows this inquiry
-will be pursued.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
- OF THE KNOWLEDGE GAINED BY HUMAN EXPERIENCE
- IN REGARD TO THE NATURE OF MIND AND THE LAWS
- OF THE SYSTEM OF WHICH IT IS A PART.
-
-
-We have seen that there are only these sources of human knowledge, viz.,
-the _intuitive truths_, _human experience_, _reasoning_, and
-_revelation_. We have alluded to the nature of intuitive knowledge; we
-will now inquire as to the nature of the knowledge gained by human
-experience, firstly, in regard to the _constitution of mind and the laws
-of that system in which it is placed_. We restrict our inquiries to
-those points which have the most direct bearing on the great questions
-to be discussed.
-
-As it respects the nature of mind, then, as exhibited by experience, we
-learn, in the first place, that it is constituted with desires and
-propensities for various kinds of enjoyment. These are the
-gratifications secured by the senses, the pleasures of taste, the
-happiness of giving and receiving affection, the various intellectual
-pleasures, and the still higher enjoyment resulting from our moral
-nature. All these are common to the race, though in varied degrees and
-combinations. The mind is also constituted with susceptibilities to pain
-and suffering from all the sources from which enjoyment may spring.
-
-With these susceptibilities are combined an all-pervading and constant
-_desire_ to gain enjoyment and to escape suffering. This desire is the
-grand _motive_ power to the mind, as the main-spring is to a watch. For
-this reason, awakened desires to gain any particular enjoyment or escape
-any pain are called _motives_. And so, also, all those things that cause
-these desires are called motives.
-
-Next, it is seen that the mind is endowed with intellect, or the
-intellectual powers, by which it can perceive the nature and relative
-value of various kinds of enjoyment, compare the present with the
-future, and judge both of what is most valuable and of the proper modes
-of securing it.
-
-To this add the power of choice or volition, by which, in view of any
-two or more kinds of enjoyment, the mind decides which shall be secured
-and which be denied.
-
-Thus constituted, the mind comes into action in a _system of law_.
-
-By this is signified that in every direction in which man can seek
-enjoyment there is a right course, or one that secures the good sought
-in such proper degrees and at such times as that the enjoyment designed
-is the result. At the same time there is a wrong course, or one in which
-the enjoyment sought is not secured, or, if gained, is combined with
-pain and disappointment.
-
-Thus there are right and wrong modes of seeking all the multiplied kinds
-of enjoyment, while to the right course is attached the reward of
-pleasure, and with the wrong course is connected the penalty of pain,
-either immediate or remote.
-
-Again, our minds come into existence in a _social_ _system_ so
-constituted that the rewards and penalties of law extend, not merely to
-the good and evil doer, but to those connected with him. Thus each mind
-is made dependent for happiness on the well-doing of those around almost
-as much as on its own obedience to law. The penalties for the sins of
-parents fall on their children, and the sins of children are visited on
-their parents, and thus in all the other relations of life. Equally so
-are the rewards of obedience shared by all who are connected with the
-well-doer.
-
-Thus it appears that in this life _happiness_ is the joint product of
-the obedience of each individual and the obedience of all connected with
-him to the laws of the vast system in which we are placed.
-
-Again, each mind comes into this system of law in perfect ignorance of
-the right and wrong courses to be pursued. At the commencement of being
-there has been no knowledge of good or of evil to call forth desire or
-fear, while the only conceivable way in which such a being can be taught
-law, and its penalties and rewards, is by _experience_. Good must be
-tasted before the desire for it can come, and evil must be felt before
-the fear of it can arise.
-
-After there has been some experience of pleasure and pain, and such
-advance in knowledge as that others around can teach the new-comer what
-are the right and wrong courses, then _faith_ or _belief_ becomes the
-leading mode of safety. From this time happiness or suffering will be
-proportioned to the _truth_ of the instructions given, to the _faith_
-accorded, and to the _obedience_ rendered.
-
-In this complicated system of law, it is found that the great Author of
-all is never moved to modify or suspend the penalties of wrong-doing by
-commiseration for the inevitable ignorance of inexperienced beings, nor
-by pity when wrong instructions are given, nor by sympathy for the pain
-inflicted. _Obedience_, exact, constant, persevering--this is the only
-mode of securing the enjoyment and escaping the pain that are the
-sanctions of law.
-
-And not only so, but it is often the case that disobedience to some law
-in only one instance will destroy the comfort and usefulness of a whole
-life. Nay, more, the neglect or the mistake of a parent sometimes will
-bring the penalty of violated law on some innocent child, whose whole
-life will thus be made miserable.
-
-Again, it is found that the sources of enjoyment are of different
-relative value.
-
-In the commencement of existence pleasure is secured mainly through the
-senses. Next come the higher social and domestic pleasures; then follow
-the intellectual enjoyments, the various gratifications of taste, and
-all the multitudinous resources open to a highly-cultivated, virtuous,
-and religious man.
-
-The greater the number of these sources, and the more elevated the
-nature of each, the greater the degree of happiness gained.
-
-Such, also, is the nature of things, that the lower kinds of happiness
-are placed first within our reach, and then, as the higher modes of
-enjoyment come, we often find them incompatible with the others, so that
-to obtain these we must, to some extent, relinquish the humbler classes.
-Thus, when a child begins to find the value of intellectual attainments,
-he sees they can not be gained without a sacrifice of many indulgences
-that are of an inferior value.
-
-We now come to the _grand law_ of the system in which we are placed, as
-it has been developed by the experience of our race, and that, in one
-word, is
-
-SACRIFICE!
-
-Each mind finds that it has conflicting desires, so that one class must
-constantly be sacrificed to another of superior value. And the rule in
-reference to individual enjoyment is "_always to sacrifice the lesser
-for the greater good, having reference to the future as much as to the
-present_."
-
-This is the lesson of self-denial and self-control first taught to
-infancy and childhood, and just as fast as the reasoning powers are
-developed, the extent of this far-reaching rule is impressed on the
-mind. At first this rule is applied to the young child himself, and he
-is trained chiefly to understand what will injure or benefit himself.
-
-But gradually a new and higher law begins to appear. As soon as the
-child can be made to understand that he is surrounded by other minds,
-who can suffer and enjoy by the same rules that regulate his happiness,
-he begins to learn the other and still higher law of _sacrifice_; and
-that is, that "_the lesser good of the individual is always to be
-sacrificed to the greater good of the many, having reference always to
-the future as much as to the present_."
-
-Thus life commences with desires that are to be _controlled_ and
-_denied_, first by parental power and influence, and next by the
-intellect and will of the child. And the farther life advances, the more
-numerous and complicated are the occasions where intellect must judge
-what is best for self, and what is best for the commonwealth, whose
-interests must have precedence.
-
-And as self-denial always involves more or less pain, it becomes a fact
-that happiness is to be gained only by more or less _suffering_.
-
-Moreover, the greater the good to be gained, the greater is the
-self-denial and suffering involved in its attainment. Though there are
-exceptions, this certainly is the general rule.
-
-The history of an individual is a history of self-conquest. It is a
-history of the self-denial and suffering involved in subjecting the
-physical to the intellectual, and both to the moral nature.
-
-In like manner, the history of the race, from infancy through its stages
-of barbarism, heathenism, civilization, and Christianity, is a process
-of _suffering_, as the lower principles of humanity are gradually
-subjected to the higher, while men learn to give up lower gratifications
-for the more elevated, and to sacrifice the lesser good of the minority
-to the well-being of the majority.
-
-But the cheering aspect of the case is that the effects of suffering are
-salutary and tonic. The child who is trained to bear cold bravely, to
-undergo toil, and to meet crosses, becomes strong in body, and
-enterprising and energetic in spirit; while a course of ease and
-indulgence debilitates both mind and body. This is true most decidedly
-when such a course is cheerfully and voluntarily assumed, and is not
-forced merely by fear of penalties.
-
-The same is true of communities. Those people who live in a cold climate
-and on a hard soil become vigorous, industrious, and enterprising; while
-a soft climate, and such abundance as requires no self-denial and toil,
-tend to national debility and decay.
-
-Another fact is still more cheering, and that is, that the more a habit
-of self-control and self-denial is formed, the easier they become, so
-that what at first was severe and painful may become a pleasure. Such
-may be the progress of a virtuous mind, that, ultimately, acting right,
-or conscious rectitude, may become more desirable and agreeable than any
-other mode of enjoyment.
-
-The history of mankind thus far shows that as a race we are progressing
-to higher and higher happiness. As we take the history of each nation
-from its origin, we find it a development of progress from lower to
-higher degrees of enjoyment. Then we find periods of retrocession and
-decay. Still, the experience of one age is transmitted more or less to
-another, so that, on the whole, the race has been gaining, both as to
-the number of sources of enjoyment received and as to the relative value
-of the enjoyments sought. The proportion of persons who secure the
-higher class of enjoyments is certainly greater now than at any former
-period of the world's history.
-
-Again, the history of the world teaches us that while the race gains in
-knowledge of the laws of the system and in obedience to them, there are
-vast multitudes to whom, as individuals, this life is a _total failure_.
-Their career has involved such frequent and fatal violations of the laws
-of the system, that their progress is constantly downward; and, so far
-as past experience gives any data, we must infer that continued
-existence would prove a continued downward progress. The glutton, the
-drunkard, the miser, the sluggard, the licentious, the selfish,
-malignant, and cruel--all these are binding their spirits with the
-_chains of habit_, rendering obedience to the laws they are violating
-more difficult and improbable.
-
-But then, as a counterbalancing result, it is seen that these losses to
-individuals are made available to the protection and improvement of the
-race, and seem indispensable to it; for it is the example of the evils
-suffered by wrong-doers that is constantly exercising a preservative
-influence to deter others from similar courses. Thus good is constantly
-educed from ill, even in the most melancholy cases.
-
-We have seen that it is the desire of good and fear of evil that is the
-motive power in causing all mental action, and we have the history of
-man to teach us also what kinds of motives prove the most effective in
-securing that obedience to law which is the only way to true and perfect
-happiness.
-
-Our only mode of learning the nature of a thing is to observe how it
-acts and is acted upon. This is as true of mind as it is of material
-things. What, then, has the experience of our race taught as to the
-nature of mind in reference to the kinds and relative influence of
-motive that secure obedience to law?
-
-In the first place, then, we learn that _fear of evil is indispensable_.
-As soon as children in the family, or adults in society, find that no
-harm comes from gratifying their desires, all restraint is removed. So
-strong is this necessity, that when natural penalties seem uncertain or
-far off, parents and civil rulers find it imperative to add those which
-are more immediate and discernible.
-
-But with this we learn that fear alone is not a healthful stimulus.
-Children and slaves who have no motives to action but fear of penalties
-are never so successfully led to obedience as when other more agreeable
-influences are combined. A mind that is constantly goaded to action by
-fear of evil becomes torpid, or irritable, or despairing, or all
-together. The hope of good, or rewards, then, are as indispensable to
-secure obedience to law as penalties. The proper balancing of the
-motives of fear of evil and hope of good is the grand art of controlling
-mind, both as it respects individuals and communities.
-
-In reference to those motives that are pleasurable, there are two
-classes which it is very important to recognize. The first class are
-those sources of enjoyment which are sought for the gratification of
-self without any reference to another. Of this class are the pleasures
-of the senses, the enjoyment of acquiring knowledge, the exercise of
-power, the pleasures of taste, and others that need not here be
-specified.
-
-The second class are those in which the enjoyment is secured by
-producing happiness for others, and is sought solely in reference to the
-enjoyment of another. The most decided illustration of this kind is that
-of a mother who is providing for her offspring. This and all true love
-has, as its distinctive feature, the pleasure found in conferring
-happiness on the beloved object. Gratitude, also, has for its main
-element the desire to make some returns of enjoyment to one who has
-conferred a favor.
-
-Experience has shown that the most powerful of all motives in securing
-obedience to law is that of _love_.
-
-When love is awakened toward a superior mind--when this superior mind
-knows what are the true rules of right and wrong, and is deeply
-interested to guide and aid the inferior mind--when this interest is
-expressed by all winning and attractive methods, nothing has ever yet
-been found so successful in securing obedience to the rules of right and
-wrong.
-
-The power of this principle is greatly enhanced when the superior mind
-is a benefactor. The bestowal of kindness excites a desire to make some
-returns of good, and when it is seen that such a benefactor is gratified
-by leading a dependent mind to right action, it proves a most powerful
-motive to obedience.
-
-Still more is the power of this principle increased when the favors
-bestowed are purchased by self-denial and suffering on the part of the
-benefactor. The more noble the benefactor, and the greater the good thus
-purchased or the evils thus averted, the stronger is the principle of
-gratitude leading to such returns of obedience.
-
-Again, experience has shown that the advance of the race has been by the
-agency of teachers and confessors who secured light and elevation to
-their fellows at the expense of labor, toil, and self-denial of the
-severest kind.
-
-These are the leading points in the results of human experience as to
-the nature of mind and the laws of the system of which it is a part.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-KNOWLEDGE GAINED BY REASON AND EXPERIENCE AS TO A FUTURE STATE.
-
-
-We have shown that, independently of a revelation, we have no sources of
-knowledge except the intuitions reasoning and experience. Hereafter we
-will, as is often done, include the two first in the term reason.
-
-We have seen what knowledge has been furnished by human experience as to
-the nature of mind and the laws of the present system in which it is
-placed. We will now inquire as to the teachings of reason and experience
-in regard to the future.
-
-As to the question of the existence of the soul after the dissolution of
-the body, we have only one of the intuitive truths for our guide, viz.,
-"things will continue as they are and have been till there is evidence
-of a cause for change," or, in other words, things will continue
-according to past experience till there is some evidence to the
-contrary.
-
-It has been the uniform experience of mankind that the human mind passes
-through various states of existence extremely different in nature and
-continuance. The first state is that in which the mind seems to have no
-susceptibilities but of sensation, and to be utterly destitute of all
-the properties of a rational intellect. By a slow and gradual process,
-new and successive powers seem to be called into existence, and what
-seemed among the lowest grades of animal existence becomes the glory and
-lord of this lower world. Yet, in the full exercise of all the faculties
-of a rational and moral nature, there is a perpetual recurrence of
-periods in which all evidences of the existence of such faculties cease.
-In a profound sleep, or in a deep swoon, no proof of rational existence
-remains either to the being thus affected or to the observers of this
-phenomenon. As the extreme of old age approaches, the glories of the
-mind begin to fade away, until man sometimes passes into a state of
-second childhood. There are times, also, when changes in the material
-system derange all the power of intellect, and sometimes reduce what was
-once a rational mind to a state of entire fatuity, and then, again, the
-mental powers are restored.
-
-The experience of mankind, then, on this subject is this: that the mind
-is an existence which passes through multiplied and very great changes
-without being destroyed. The soul continues to exist after changes as
-great as death, and in many respects similar to it, such, for example,
-as the event of birth, and of sleep, and we have never known a mind
-destroyed by such changes. The argument, then, is, that as things will
-be in agreement with past experience, the soul will continue to go
-through other changes without being destroyed, unless there is some
-reason to the contrary.
-
-There can be no reason found to the contrary, for there is no evidence
-that the event called death is any thing more than a separation of the
-spirit from its material envelope, nor is there any evidence against the
-supposition that it may be an event which introduces the mind into a
-more perfect state of existence.
-
-It appears that losing various parts of the body does not at all affect
-the operations of mind; that by the perpetual changes that are taking
-place in the body, every particle of it, after a course of years, is
-dissevered from its connection with the spirit, and is supplied by other
-matter. The soul is thus proved to be so connected with a material body
-that it may lose the whole of it by a slow process without being the
-least injured, and therefore we have the evidence of experience that it
-may be _separated_ from the body without any detriment to its powers and
-faculties.
-
-Analogy also leads to the supposition that death is only a change which
-introduces the intellectual being into a more perfect mode of existence;
-for, in past experience, those changes most resembling death, which are
-not accidental, but according to the ordinary course of nature, are
-means of renewing and invigorating mental powers. Thus sleep, the emblem
-of death, is succeeded by renewed powers of activity and consciousness.
-
-The changes of other animals which most resemble death furnish another
-analogy. The humble worm rolls itself up in its temporary tomb, and,
-after a short slumber, bursts forth to new life, clothed in more
-brilliant dyes, endued with more active capacities, and prepared to
-secure enjoyments before unknown. Reasoning from past experience, then,
-we should infer the continued existence of the mind after death.
-
-By the same method we arrive at the doctrine of the immortality of the
-soul. We know that the soul does now exist. We know of no cause that
-will destroy it. Therefore we infer that it will _forever_ continue to
-exist.
-
-Whether this argument is satisfactory or not, without a revelation this
-is _all_ the evidence we have of the soul's continued existence after
-death, and of the immortality of the soul.
-
-It is the same intuitive truth which (without a revelation) alone
-furnishes aid in regard to the future destiny of man.
-
-We assume that things are to be in agreement with past experience unless
-there is evidence to the contrary. No such evidence can be found. What,
-then, does the past history of our race teach us to expect from the
-future? These are the most important deductions:
-
-We are to continue under the same laws of the system already
-established. We are to have the same susceptibilities to pleasure and
-pain, the same intellect to guide us, the same power of volition to
-decide our own courses.
-
-We are to be parts of a social system in which every member suffers not
-only for his own violations of law, but for the sins of others.
-
-The great law of this system is to be forever sustained--the _law of_
-SACRIFICE. Every being is to sacrifice the lesser for the greater good
-in all his individual concerns, and, in regard to the commonwealth, the
-lesser good of the individual is to be sacrificed to the greater good of
-the many. In all this, also, reference is to be had to the interests of
-the future as much as to those of the present, and all violations of
-this great law are to involve the established penalties.
-
-This system of law is to be administered as it has been in the past. No
-pity for ignorance, no sympathy for the suffering, will ever suspend the
-natural penalties for wrong-doing. _Obedience_, exact, constant, and
-persevering, is to be the only mode of securing the rewards and escaping
-the penalties of this system.
-
-Again, mankind, as a race, are to continue to progress, until at some
-period a certain portion will arrive at the entire and perfect obedience
-to law which, at the present stage of being, no one has ever yet
-attained.
-
-But, on the other hand, this progress will be attended with the hopeless
-and perpetual ruin of multitudes who, as individuals, take a retrograde
-course, and grow more and more guilty and miserable, while continued
-existence will serve only to render obedience to law more improbable.
-
-But from this loss to individuals will result protective and purifying
-influences to the commonwealth, so that thus good will constantly be
-educed from evil.
-
-Again, the influences that are to secure the advance of the race to
-perfect obedience are to be, knowledge of laws, fear of penalties, hope
-of rewards, and love and gratitude toward those who may prove teachers,
-benefactors, and self-sacrificing friends. These have been the modes in
-past experience in this world, and therefore we infer them for the
-future.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
- KNOWLEDGE GAINED BY REASON AND EXPERIENCE
- ALONE CONCERNING THE EXISTENCE, CHARACTER,
- AND DESIGNS OF THE CREATOR.
-
-
-We have shown that, in regard to our Creator, his character and designs,
-without a revelation, we have nothing to guide us but the intuitive
-truths, and the deductions obtained by their aid from human experience.
-
-We will now inquire as to the amount of knowledge to be secured from
-these sources.
-
-By the aid of the first intuitive truth, we arrive at the knowledge of
-some great First Cause or causes, existing without beginning, who
-created the universe of matter and mind; yet, as has been shown, we are
-not, by this first principle, enabled to infer any thing as to the
-_unity_ or _plurality_ of such cause or causes. For aught that this
-intuitive truth indicates, there may have been a plurality of eternal
-and self-existent minds, who acted in unity at the creation of all
-things. Neither can we, by the aid of this truth, arrive at any
-conclusion as to the character and designs of the author or authors of
-all created things.
-
-It is by the aid of the fourth intuitive truth that we deduce whatever
-can be known of the character and designs of the Creator.
-
-This truth teaches us that "design is evidence of an intelligent cause,
-and that the nature of a design proves the intention and character of
-the author."
-
-The works of Nature, both of mind and matter, are full of evidence of
-design, and from this we infer that the Creator is an _intelligent_
-cause.
-
-The infinite variety and extent of creation are evidences of the
-wonderful _power_ of their Author. The fact that all the contrivances of
-matter and mind are clearly designed to produce enjoyment, while pain is
-merely the result of a violation of laws which, if obeyed, would secure
-only happiness--this is evidence of the _benevolence_ of the Creator.
-
-The skill with which all things are formed and combined to secure the
-ends designed are proofs of the _wisdom_ of the Creator.
-
-Thus, by aid of the fourth intuitive truth, and the world of mind and
-matter around us, we obtain the result that the Author of Nature is
-_powerful, benevolent, and wise_.
-
-But in regard to the use of the word _power_, as applied to the Creator,
-one distinction is important. There are things which are contradictory
-and impossible in the nature of things, so that no one can conceive of
-them as possible. Thus, to create and not to create at the same time, or
-to make a mind that is a free agent and at the same time not a free
-agent, but controlled in volitions by fixed causation as matter
-is--these and many other things are contradictions or impossibilities.
-
-Now when we say that the Creator can not do these things, we do not
-limit his power, for almighty power signifies simply and only a power to
-do all things that are not contradictions and thus absurdities.
-
-This being premised, we are obliged to infer from the history of our
-race that the Creator, in regard to the existence of evil, is limited
-either in power, or in benevolence, or in the nature of things.
-
-We arrive at this conclusion thus: We see that evils and suffering,
-multitudinous and terrific, do exist, and have existed in all ages. In
-reference to this, only these suppositions are conceivable: the first
-is, that the Creator is perfectly benevolent, and that a better system,
-with all the existing good and none of the evil, is conceivable and
-possible in the nature of things, yet that he _had not the power_ to
-produce and sustain it.
-
-The second supposition is, that the Creator has the power to produce and
-sustain a wiser and better system, in which there shall be all the good
-and none of the evil in the existing one, and yet that he _would not_ do
-it. This either involves the supposition of a purely malignant being,
-who enjoys witnessing needless and awful suffering, and prefers it to
-happiness, or of one who is, like human beings, of a mixed character,
-and allows evil to exist when self-denying efforts might prevent it.
-
-All the minds of whom we have had any knowledge, although, where their
-own ease and pleasure are not to be sacrificed, they prefer to make
-others around them happy, yet ever exhibit a selfish spirit. They all
-show that they think and plan more for their own private enjoyment than
-for the general happiness, and thus, to a greater or less extent, are
-selfish. Reasoning from experience, then, we should infer that the
-Creator might be of the same character.
-
-The third supposition is, that the Creator has instituted the _best
-system possible in the nature of things_, so that there is and will be
-the MOST POSSIBLE GOOD WITH THE LEAST POSSIBLE EVIL.
-
-We come, then, to the inquiry as to the _end_ or _design_ of the Creator
-in forming the universe of mind and matter.
-
-To answer this, we must again refer to the fourth intuitive truth, viz.,
-"the nature of a contrivance is proof of the intention or design of the
-author."
-
-This position is illustrated in many cases in common life. If we find a
-contrivance which moves the air toward a fire and thus increases the
-flame, we infer that the author intended to produce this result. If we
-find a contrivance to show the time of day, such as a sun-dial or clock,
-we can not help believing that the author intended to secure this end.
-
-Moreover, when we find a curious machine, where every part is arranged
-on a given design, we naturally inquire _how it must be worked_ to
-produce the intended result. It may have wheels that, if turned one way,
-produce the end designed, but, if turned another way, produce exactly
-the opposite effect.
-
-For example, if the wheels of a mill are arranged aright, or as the
-author designed, they will grind flour or weave cotton; but if arranged
-and worked contrary to the design of the author, they will break
-themselves to pieces and destroy all things around them.
-
-Two inquiries, then, are to be made in reference to the design of the
-Creator. The first is, What was the end or design for which he made all
-things? and the second is, What is the right and true method by which
-this design can be secured?
-
-We shall assume, and attempt to prove in what follows, that the design
-and ultimate end of the Creator in all his works is _to produce the
-greatest possible happiness with the least possible evil_.
-
-Afterward will be exhibited the _true and right method_ for securing
-this end, so far as we can learn it by reason and experience _without a
-revelation_.
-
-In pursuing this plan, the first step will be to exhibit the
-constitution and laws of mind, as the chief and most wonderful
-exhibition of the grand design of its Author.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-DIVERSITIES IN SYSTEMS OF MENTAL PHILOSOPHY.
-
-
-We are now to commence an examination of the various powers and
-operations of the human mind, for the purpose of illustrating the grand
-aim of the Author in the creation of all things.
-
-In pursuing this course, it is needful, first, to refer to the apparent
-diversities in systems of mental philosophy, for the purpose of
-justifying the classification and the terms to be employed hereafter.
-
-There is nothing more hackneyed than the complaints against metaphysics
-as abstruse, difficult of comprehension, and unpractical, while the
-various writers on this science seem more or less divided into opposing
-schools. Notwithstanding this, there are reasons for maintaining a real
-agreement in all systems of mental philosophy, at least in essentials,
-and the following considerations lead to such a conclusion:
-
-In the first place, the nature of the subject investigated would
-necessarily tend to such a result; for that subject is the human mind,
-not in its specific peculiarities, but in those generic phenomena which
-are common to all minds; just as the natural philosopher investigates
-those properties of matter which are common to a class, and not the
-specific peculiarities that distinguish individual masses or particles.
-Now, as those who direct their investigations to mental phenomena are
-all drawing a picture from the same pattern, it is properly inferred
-that in the main outlines there must be a general resemblance.
-
-Another reason for this conclusion is the mode of investigation pursued.
-It is simply observing, first, the phenomena of our own minds, and then
-comparing them with those of other minds as exhibited in looks, words,
-and actions, and thus educing generic resemblances and specific
-differences. It is the generic resemblances only that constitute the
-faculties and laws of mind which are to be described, classified, and
-named.
-
-Another reason for inferring such an agreement of systems is the fact,
-not only that all human minds have common phenomena, but that they have
-provided themselves with terms to express them, so that they succeed in
-so far understanding each other as to make comparisons of their mental
-experience.
-
-The same agreement may be inferred, also, when we consider that mental
-philosophy treats, not of new ideas, or new combinations of ideas, but
-of knowledge which is already in the mind. The process to be pursued,
-then, involves a reference to what we have ourselves experienced; it is
-an examination of our own feelings, thoughts, and volitions. These are
-subjects of which we are competent judges, and in regard to which we can
-be certain as to what is correct or incorrect, more than we can be in
-reference to any other kind of knowledge.
-
-From these considerations, it is inferred that all systems of mental
-philosophy will resemble each other just so far as they are true, and
-that the difference must be mainly in modes of presenting the subject.
-Inasmuch as writers on mental science are drawing a picture of those
-experiences of their own minds which are common to the whole race, they
-must in the main resemble each other, though some may be more imperfect,
-vague, and disconnected than others.
-
-It may be useful to indicate the causes which have combined to produce
-perplexity and apparent diversities among writers on mental science.
-
-The first cause is the want of an accurate medium of communication by
-which one mind can compare its experience with the experience of other
-minds. In natural science, when the philosopher instructs in reference
-to the properties of matter, all the terms employed can be made definite
-by appeals to the senses. For example, if it is not understood what is
-meant by a _pungent_ smell, such a smell can be produced, and then there
-is a perfectly clear idea of what is meant by the term. But in mental
-science, when the term _reason_ or the term _understanding_ is employed,
-no such perfect and definite mode is at command to illustrate the
-meaning.
-
-On the contrary, in this science, a single term is often used with
-various meanings, each use, however, including some common idea, while
-the extent or limitation in every case is to be determined by the
-connection. For example, the term _heart_ is used sometimes to signify
-the chief organ of physical life, sometimes it signifies the mind
-itself. In a more limited use it denotes the feelings, and in a still
-more restricted sense it expresses the leading interest of the mind.
-This involves a constant process of reasoning to decide the meaning of
-the term.
-
-Another perplexity in mental science has arisen from an unwarrantable
-use of terms by writers. In some instances new distinctions in mental
-analysis have been originated, and then terms have been used to express
-these distinctions which never before were employed in this limited
-sense. Of course, in reading their works, the mind is confused by
-meeting terms that in common use recall one signification, when the
-writer employs them in another.
-
-In other cases, such writers have formed new classifications of mental
-phenomena, and employed new terms to express them, and thus an
-impression is made that something new has been discovered, or a new
-system evolved. For example, Brown arranges the intellectual operations
-of mind in but two general classes, and calls them _simple suggestion_
-and _relative suggestion_. But his work, in this respect, presents only
-a new classification and new terms, but no new ideas.
-
-Another difficulty in mental science has arisen from the fact that many
-writers on this subject have failed in accurate analysis of the
-phenomena of mind, and, of course, have not succeeded in conveying clear
-and distinct ideas to their readers. For example, some metaphysicians
-have never discriminated between _desire_ and _choice_, but have written
-as if they were the same thing. Thus they have affirmed things which
-were true in reference to one of these mental acts, and false in regard
-to the other. This has produced mistiness of apprehension or false
-conceptions in their readers. Some understand the writer one way and
-dispute his positions, others understand him another way and defend
-them, because what he says is true of one act and false of the other,
-while both acts are spoken of as one and the same.
-
-Meantime the great mass of readers have never been accustomed to any
-accurate analysis, or even to any fixed observation of their own mental
-states. They are, therefore, unprepared to detect these defects in the
-writers on mental science, and are easily confused and perplexed.
-
-Another difficulty has arisen from false ideas as to the origin and
-proper use of words. In most minds an impression has been generated that
-there is an inherent meaning belonging to the words of a language. They
-do not consider that in the formation of language the ideas come first,
-and that the words are only conventional signs which men agree in using
-to express these ideas. Writers often speak of words which by long usage
-have been connected with certain ideas, as if they ought not to be so
-employed. They do not consider that the fact that men have used a word
-for a given idea, and understand each other, is the very thing which
-establishes its proper use and meaning.
-
-If, then, in all time and in all nations, mankind have classified and
-given names to their mental states, the classification and the names are
-true and proper, and no philosopher should claim that these are
-incorrect. The object of language is to enable men to communicate their
-ideas, and that language is best which enables them to do it the most
-extensively and the most accurately.
-
-It is maintained, then, that there is a _system_ of mental philosophy
-which is understood by all mankind; that there are words in common use
-by which it can be clearly and definitely described and expressed,
-either by single terms or by circumlocution; that it is recognized in
-the Bible; and that, substantially, it is the system taught by all
-writers on mental science, some teaching one portion and some another.
-It is maintained, also, that no such writer has taught any thing of any
-importance _that is true_ which can not be translated into the language
-of common life, so as to be readily comprehended even by persons of
-ordinary capacity and education.
-
-There is no difficulty in leading any mind of ordinary capacity to
-notice the several classes of mental operations introduced in this work,
-and in all nations and languages these facts are recognized and terms
-are provided to express them.
-
-Some persons object to speaking of any mental phenomena as _states_ of
-mind, because it is claimed that the mind is _active_ in all. Thus
-sensations are claimed to be acts of mind instead of passive states
-caused by material objects. In regard to this and various other
-objections urged against this mode of classification and nomenclature,
-it may be remarked that the thing aimed at is simply, by means of a
-description, to point out what is meant. When this is understood, it
-does not change our idea to give it a name. We know by our own
-experience what it is to have a sensation, and calling it a _state_ or
-an _act_ does not alter our idea of the fact.
-
-In using words, all we have to do is to _convey our meaning_, either by
-description or illustration, and when we have done this, to select a
-word to express it; and that word is best for this purpose which would
-recall this meaning to the greatest number of persons who have
-previously used it in this sense.
-
-For this reason, it is most proper to use terms employed in common life
-to express the phenomena treated of in mental science, instead of
-instituting new terms, which, to most persons, have never had the
-intended ideas connected with them.
-
-This method is adopted in the following pages; but it is important to
-remember that, while these words are used both in common life and by
-metaphysical writers with the meaning here indicated, they are often
-used with other significations. Thus the word _to perceive_ is used not
-only to signify the act of gaining ideas by the senses, but any act of
-mind in noticing truths of any kind, either mental or external. So _to
-conceive_ and _to perceive_ are often used interchangeably as meaning
-the same thing.
-
-But this does not render it necessary to seek any new terms to express
-these ideas. All that is needful is to indicate that in classing and
-describing mental phenomena we restrict ourselves to one exact and
-uniform use of these terms, and this use is indicated in the description
-or definition given.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-CLASSIFICATION AND DESCRIPTION OF THE MENTAL POWERS.
-
-
-We now proceed to the classification and description of the mental
-powers.
-
-Not only all writers on mental science, but the most common writers and
-speakers, recognize a general division of mental operations, which is
-expressed by the terms _intellect_, _feeling_, and _choice_. We _think_,
-we _feel_, and we _choose_. Even the young child learns to comprehend
-these three grand divisions of the mental phenomena.
-
-To this most general division, in this work, are applied the terms _the
-intellectual powers, the susceptibilities_, and _the will_. These terms
-are selected because they are the most common ones.
-
-
-THE INTELLECTUAL POWERS.
-
-Under the general class of intellectual powers are arranged the
-following specific powers of mind:
-
-Sensation, Perception, Conception, Memory, Imagination, Judgment,
-Abstraction, Attention, and Association.
-
-_Sensation_ is a state of mind produced by material objects acting on
-the senses.
-
-Thus, when light, which is considered as one kind of matter, affects the
-eye, the sensation of _sight_ is produced. When the perfume of a rose,
-which is another species of matter, affects the nostrils, the sensation
-of _smell_ is produced. When a bell or some musical instrument causes
-the air to vibrate on the drum of the ear, it causes the sensation of
-_sound_. When any sapid body is applied to the tongue, the sensation of
-_taste_ is caused. When the hand, or any part of the body, comes in
-contact with another body, the sensation of _touch_ is produced.
-
-Thus it appears that the five senses are the organs of sensation, and
-that through their instrumentality material things operate upon the
-mind.
-
-_Perception_ is a _sensation_ attended by the _belief of a cause_, and
-it is this additional circumstance alone which distinguishes perception
-from sensation.
-
-If a person were asleep, and should suffer from the prick of a pin, or
-be disturbed by an unpleasant sound, these would be mere sensations,
-because the mind would not ascribe them to any cause. But if the person
-should waken, these sensations would immediately become perceptions,
-because they would be attended by the belief of some cause.
-
-_Conception_ is a state of mind similar to perception, and differs from
-it in being less vivid, and in not being produced through the medium of
-the senses.
-
-When we look at a tree, we have a _perception_ of this object. But the
-mind can also have an idea of this tree when removed from the sight,
-though the idea is not so vivid and distinct, nor have the senses any
-agency in producing it. The perfume of a rose, also, occasions another
-sensation; but when the rose is removed, so as not to affect the senses,
-we can still have a _conception_ of its perfume. The conception differs
-from the perception only in being less vivid, and in not being caused by
-a material object acting on the senses.
-
-_Memory_ is either a conception or a perception, which is attended with
-a feeling of its resemblance to a past state of mind. It is this feeling
-of resemblance that is the only circumstance which distinguishes memory
-from conception.
-
-Thus we may conceive of a tree without recognizing it as the particular
-idea of any tree we may have seen before; but if this is accompanied by
-a feeling of the resemblance of this idea to the one we always have when
-we see the tree that shadows the paternal roof, this conception becomes
-_memory_. If we conceive the form of a man without recognizing the
-resemblance of this idea to the perceptions we have when we see any
-particular man, this is a simple act of conception; but if we recognize
-in this object of conception the features of a dear friend, this act
-then becomes memory. Again, if we conceive of certain events and
-circumstances attending them without recognizing this combination as
-ever having existed in past experience, they are mere conceptions; but
-if we recognize in them the events and circumstances of past experience,
-conception becomes memory.
-
-_Imagination_ is the power which the mind possesses of arranging our
-conceptions in new combinations. We can conceive objects as united
-together of which we never conceived before as thus united.
-
-Thus, when we read the description of some picturesque scene in nature,
-the mind immediately groups together mountains, trees, brooks, cottages,
-and glens, forming a new combination of conceptions different from any
-scene we ever witnessed or conceived before. All the objects thus
-combined are conceptions; the act of arranging them is an act of the
-imagination.
-
-_Judgment_ is the power which the mind possesses of _noticing
-relations_. A _relation_ is an idea obtained by observing one thing in
-connection with another. Thus, when we perceive one thing to be _longer_
-than another, one thing to be _on_ another, or one thing to _belong_ to
-another--in all these cases the mind _notices relations_, or exercises
-the faculty of judgment. Thus, also, when we compare any action with the
-rule of duty in order to decide whether it is right or wrong, we
-exercise the same faculty. This act always is necessarily preceded by
-the comparison of one thing with another, in order to notice the
-relations.
-
-_Abstraction_ is the power of noticing certain parts or qualities of any
-object, as distinct from other parts or qualities. Thus, when we notice
-the length of a bridge without attending to the breadth or color, or
-when we notice the height of a man without thinking of his character, we
-exercise the faculty of abstraction.
-
-_Attention_ is the direction of the mind to any particular object or
-quality, from the interest which is felt in it, or in something
-connected with it. The degree of attention is always proportioned to the
-degree of interest felt in the object.
-
-_Association_ is the power possessed by the mind of recalling ideas in
-the connections and relations in which they have existed in past
-experience. For example, when any two objects, such as a house and a
-tree, have often been observed together, the idea of one will ordinarily
-be attended by that of the other. If two events have often been united
-together in regard to the _time_ of their occurrence, such, for example,
-as thunder and lightning, the idea of one will usually be attended by
-the other.
-
-In this work, the aim is to introduce no more of mental analysis than is
-needed for its main object. What is here introduced is not claimed as a
-complete presentation of all the mental phenomena.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-SENSATION AND PERCEPTION.
-
-
-As there is no distinction between sensation and perception except in
-the fact that one is attended with the belief of a cause and the other
-is not, they will be treated of together.
-
-The mind of man is an immaterial existence, confined in its operations
-by the body it inhabits, and depending upon the construction and
-modifications of this envelope for much of its happiness or suffering.
-
-The exercise of the imagination, when the eyes are closed and the body
-at rest, will probably give us the best idea of what is the nature of
-spiritual existence when disconnected with matter. It is one of the
-offices of our bodily system to retain the spirit in its operations in
-one particular place, so that ordinarily it can have direct communion
-with no other mind which is not in the same place. Whether this is the
-case with mere spiritual existence is a question for conjecture, and not
-for any rational decision.
-
-While the spirit of man is resident in its material frame, it is
-furnished with facilities of communication with other minds, and with
-organs which fit it to receive suffering or enjoyment from the material
-objects by which it is surrounded. These organs of communication are the
-several senses. They consist of expansions of the substance of which the
-brain is formed, which, descending to the body through the spinal bone
-of the back, are thence sent out in thousands of ramifications over the
-whole system. Those branches which enter the eyes, and are spread over
-the interior back part of this organ, are called the _optic nerve_.
-Whenever the particles of light enter the eye, they strike the optic
-nerve, and produce the sensation which is called _sight_. Those branches
-which are spread over the tongue are the organ of _taste_. Those that
-are extended through the cavities of the nostrils are called the
-_olfactory_ nerves. When the small particles of matter that escape from
-odoriferous bodies come in contact with these nerves, they produce the
-sensation of _smell_.
-
-The nerves that constitute the organ of _hearing_ are extended over the
-cavity of the ear behind the _tympanum_, or _ear-drum_. This cavity is
-filled with a liquid, and when the drum of the ear is caused to vibrate
-by the air which is set in motion by sonorous bodies, it produces
-undulations of this liquid upon these nerves, and thus the sensation of
-_sound_ is produced. By the expansion of other nerves, the sense of
-_feeling_ is extended all over the body, excepting the nails and the
-hair. It is by the action of matter, in its different forms, on these
-several senses, that the mind obtains ideas, and that ideas are imparted
-from one mind to another.
-
-_Perception_ never takes place unless some material object makes an
-impression upon one of the senses. In the case of the eye, the ear, and
-the nostrils, the object which is regarded as the cause of the sensation
-does not come immediately in contact with the organs of sense. When we
-see a body, we consider it as the cause of that perception; but it is
-not the body that comes in contact with the organ of sight, but merely
-the particles of light reflected from that body. In the case of smell,
-the fragrant body is regarded as the cause of the sensation; but that
-which acts on the sense is the material particles of perfume which flow
-from that body.
-
-Thus, also, with hearing. We consider the sonorous body as the cause;
-but the sensation is produced through the medium of the air, which
-affects the drum of the ear. But in the case of taste and touch, the
-body which is regarded by the mind as the cause must come in contact
-with the nerves of the tongue or the body to produce the sensation.
-
-
-_Smell._
-
-The sense of smell is one which greatly conduces to the preservation,
-the comfort, and the happiness of man. It is a continual aid to him in
-detecting polluted atmosphere or unhealthy food. The direct enjoyment it
-affords is probably less in amount than that derived from any of the
-other senses; yet, were we deprived of all the enjoyment gained through
-this source, we should probably find the privation much greater than we
-at first might imagine. When we walk forth among the beauties of nature,
-the fresh perfumes that send forth their incense are sources both of
-immediate and succeeding gratification. The beautiful images of nature
-which rise to the mind in our imaginative hours, would lose many of
-their obscure but charming associations were the fields stripped of the
-fragrance of their greens and the flowers of their sweet perfumes.
-Nature would appear to have lost that moving spirit of life which now
-ever rides upon the evening zephyrs and the summer breeze. As it is, as
-we walk abroad, all nature seems to send forth its welcome, while to its
-Maker's praise
-
- "Each odorous leaf,
- Each opening blossom, freely breathes abroad
- Its gratitude, and thanks Him with its sweets."
-
-_Taste._
-
-When a sapid body is applied to the organ of taste, two sensations are
-produced, one of _touch_ and one of _taste_. We are conscious of the
-difference of these sensations when we apply a body to the tongue which
-has taste, and then immediately one which has not. It is probable,
-however, that the same set of nerves serve both purposes.
-
-It is one of the numberless evidences of the benevolence of our Creator
-that the process which is necessary for the preservation of life, and
-which depends upon the voluntary activity of every human being, should
-be connected with a sense which affords such gratification that the duty
-is sought as a pleasure. Were mankind led to seek food merely in the
-exercise of reason for the purpose of preserving life, multitudes,
-through carelessness and forgetfulness, would be perpetually neglecting
-that regular supply without which the animal system would become
-deranged and enfeebled. By the present constitution of the body, the
-gratification of this sense is an object of desire, and thus we are
-continually reminded of our duty, and led to it as a source of
-enjoyment.
-
-Nor is it the gratification of this sense which is the only source of
-enjoyment connected with it. The regular periods for repast bring around
-the social board those united to each other by the tenderest ties of
-kindred and affection. These become seasons of cheerful hilarity and
-relaxation, seasons of cessation from daily cares, seasons for the
-interchange of kind feelings and intellectual stores; and while the mere
-gratification of sense is one source of pleasure, to this is often added
-the "feast of reason and the flow of soul."
-
-The effect on the best feelings in thus assembling to participate in
-common blessings is scarcely ever appreciated. Did every individual of
-our race retire to secrecy and solitude to satisfy the cravings of
-nature, how much would the sum of human happiness be diminished! But
-thus has our benevolent Creator contrived that one source of enjoyment
-should serve as an occasion for introducing many more.
-
-
-_Hearing._
-
-The sense of hearing is one more connected with the intellectual and
-moral powers of man than either taste or smell, as it is through the
-medium of this organ that both music and speech operate on the human
-mind. We can form some imperfect estimate of the amount of happiness
-derived from this sense by imagining the condition of mankind were they
-at once and forever deprived of this source of improvement and
-enjoyment. The voice of sympathy, friendship, and love would be hushed.
-The eloquence of the forum, the debates of the Legislature, the
-instructions of the pulpit, would cease. The music of nature--its
-sighing winds and dashing waters--would be stilled, and the warbling of
-the groves would charm no more. The sound of pipe, and harp, and solemn
-harmonies of voice would never again waken the soul to thrilling and
-nameless emotions. Where now ten thousand sounds of active life, or
-cheerful hum of business, or music of language and song charm and
-animate the soul, man would walk forth in silence and solitude.
-
-The operation of mere sound, disconnected with the ideas which are often
-conveyed by it, is a subject of curious speculation. Sounds differ from
-each other in _quality_, _pitch_, _force_, and in _length_. The
-difference in _tone_ may be illustrated by the sounds of a clarionet
-compared with the sound of a bell or of the human voice. Every
-instrument and every human voice has each a peculiar tone by which it is
-distinguished from all others. The difference in _pitch_ is shown by
-sounding a low and a high note in succession on an instrument. The
-difference in _force_ is exhibited by singing or speaking loud or soft.
-
-There are certain sounds that in themselves are either agreeable or
-disagreeable from their tone alone. Thus the sound of a flute is
-agreeable, and that of the filing of a saw is disagreeable. Sounds also
-are agreeable according as they succeed each other.
-
-_Melody_ is a succession of agreeable tones arranged in some regular
-order as it respects their duration and succession. Some melodies are
-much more agreeable to the ear than others. Some melodies produce a
-plaintive state of mind, others exhilarate, and this without regard to
-any thing except the nature of the sounds and their succession. Thus a
-very young infant, by a certain succession of musical tones, can be made
-either to weep in sorrow or smile with joy.
-
-_Harmony_ is a certain _combination_ of sounds which are agreeable to
-the ear; and it is found that the mind can be much more powerfully
-affected by a combination of harmonious sounds than by any melody. The
-effect of music on certain minds is very powerful, often awakening
-strange and indescribable emotions. It has been, therefore, much
-employed both to heighten social, patriotic, and devotional feeling.
-
-There is probably nothing which produces stronger and more abiding
-associations in the mind than musical sounds. As an example of this may
-be mentioned the national air which is sung by the Swiss in their native
-valleys. It is said that when they become wanderers in foreign lands, so
-strongly will this wild music recall the scenes of their childhood and
-youth, their native skies, their towering mountains and romantic glens,
-with all the strong local attachments that gather around such objects,
-that their heart sickens with longing desires to return. And so much was
-this the case with the Swiss of the French armies, that Bonaparte
-forbade this air being played among his troops. The Marseilles Hymn,
-which was chanted in the scenes of the French Revolution, was said to
-have been perfectly electrifying, and to have produced more effect than
-all the eloquence of orators or machinations of statesmen.
-
-The mind seems to acquire by experience only the power of determining
-the place whence sounds originate. It is probable that, at first, sounds
-seem to originate within the ear of the person who hears; and, even
-after long experience, cases have been known, when a person suddenly
-waked from sleep imagined the throbbing of his own heart was a knocking
-at the door. But observation and experience soon teach us the direction
-and the distance of sounds. The art of the ventriloquist consists in
-nothing but the power which a nice and accurate ear gives him of
-distinguishing the difference between sounds when near or far off, and
-of imitating them.
-
-
-_Touch._
-
-The sense of touch is not confined to one particular organ, but is
-extended over the whole system, both externally and internally. It is in
-the hands, however, especially at the ends of the fingers, that this
-sense is most acute and most employed. We acquire many more ideas by the
-aid of this sense than by either hearing, smell, or taste. By these last
-we become acquainted with only one particular quality in a body, either
-of taste, smell, or sound; but by means of the touch we learn such
-qualities as heat and cold, roughness and smoothness, hardness and
-softness, figure, solidity, and extension.
-
-It is supposed that it is by this sense that we gain the idea of
-something _external_, or without ourselves. The sensation of smell would
-seem to be within, as an act or emotion of the soul itself. Thus also
-with hearing, which, being produced within the ear by the undulating
-air, would seem to originate within. Thus also with sensations within
-the eye. But when the limbs begin to move and to come in contact with
-outward objects, and also in contact with various parts of the body, the
-mind gains an idea of the existence of some outward object. This is
-probably the first sense by which any idea of existence is wakened in
-the mind. As one sense after another is called into action, the mind
-continually gains new ideas, and then begins its operations of
-comparing, abstracting, reasoning, and willing.
-
-It is by the sense of touch that we gain our ideas of _resistance_ and
-_extension_. In the class of ideas included under the head of ideas of
-resistance may be placed those of solidity, liquidity, hardness,
-softness, viscidity, roughness, and smoothness; these all being
-different names for different modes of resistance to the muscles of the
-hands, arms, or fingers, when applied to the bodies which have these
-qualities. These ideas are not gained by simple contact; their existence
-depends upon the contraction or expansion of the muscles, which are the
-organs of motion and resistance in the human body.
-
-We may suppose the infant to gain these ideas by a process somewhat
-similar to this: He first moves his arms by instinct, without any
-knowledge of the effects to follow. By this movement he gains certain
-ideas of the simple contractions and extension of his muscles, and
-learns also that by his own will he can exercise his muscles in this
-manner. At length he attempts to move his arm in a manner to which he
-has become familiar, and some object intervenes, and motion is
-prevented, while all his wonted muscular efforts are vain. Thus arises
-in his mind a new idea, of resistance, in addition to the sensations of
-touch and of motion, which had before been experienced.
-
-The ideas of _different degrees_ of this resistance are gained by
-repeated experience, and when age furnishes the ability to understand
-language, the names of hardness, softness, roughness, and the like, are
-given to these ideas. In the use of his muscles, also, the infant must
-first acquire its ideas of _extension_ and _figure_; for it must be
-where resistance to muscular effort ceases that he must feel that the
-cause ceases to exist. The little being extends his hand--an object
-intervenes which interrupts his muscular motions; he grasps this object,
-and wherever this feeling of resistance exists, there he feels that the
-cause of it exists, and that after he has passed certain limits it does
-not exist.
-
-_Figure_ is defined as the _limits of extension_, and, of course, it can
-be seen that ideas of figure can only be gained by thus finding the
-limits of extension. It has formerly been supposed that ideas of
-_extension_ and _figure_ were gained by the eye, but later experiments
-and discussions show that the sense of feeling, including muscular
-motion, is the medium by which these ideas are first gained, and that
-afterward the eye, by the principle of association, acquires the power
-of distinguishing figure and distance.
-
-There is much enjoyment resulting from the sense of touch in many ways,
-a large portion of which is almost unnoticed. Much also included under
-the term _comfort_ results from this sense. Much of that which is
-agreeable in clothing and in objects around us is of this nature.
-Besides this, there are many endearments of friendship and affection
-that gain expression only through this medium.
-
-
-_Vision._
-
-The organ of vision is the eye, which is one of the most curious and
-wonderful parts of the human frame, and displays in astonishing variety
-the wisdom and skill of its Designer.
-
-The eye consists of a round ball, formed externally of various
-coverings, and within of humors of different degrees of consistency. The
-front part of the eye, which is exposed to view, has a small opening in
-it, which admits the rays of light within this ball, while it is by the
-operation of light on the nerves, which are spread in fine net-work over
-the interior, that _sight_ is produced.
-
-In examining the mechanism of the eye, a great variety of contrivances
-appear, all aiding in accomplishing the object of vision. In the first
-place, we may observe its modes of protection and defense. The lid is a
-soft, moist wiper, which, with a motion quick as lightning, protects the
-eye from outward violence, cleanses it from dust, veils it from
-overpowering radiance, and in hours of repose entirely excludes the
-light. On its edge is the fringing lash, which intercepts floating
-matter that might otherwise intrude, while above is spread the eyebrow,
-which, like a thatch, obstructs the drops that heat or toil accumulate
-on the brow.
-
-We next observe the organs of motion with which the eye is furnished,
-and which, with complicated strings and pulleys, can turn it every way
-at the will of the intelligent agent. The _pupil_ or _opening_ of the
-eye, also, is so constructed, with its minute and multiplied circular
-and crossing muscles, that it can contract or expand in size just in
-proportion as the light varies in intensity.
-
-The ball of the eye is filled with three substances of different degrees
-of density. One is a watery humor, near the front of the eye; back of
-this, and suspended by two muscles, is the solid lens of the eye, or the
-_crystalline humor_; and the remainder of the eye, in which this lens is
-imbedded, consists of the _vitreous humor_, which is of the consistence
-of jelly. These all have different degrees of transparency, and are so
-nicely adjusted that the rays of light, which start from every point in
-all bodies in _diverging_ lines, are by these humors made to _converge_
-and meet in points on the _retina_, or the nerve of the eye, forming
-there a small picture, exactly of the same proportions, though not the
-same size, as the scene which is spread before the eye.
-
-When the outer covering of the back part of the eye is removed, the
-objects which are in front of the eye may be discerned, delicately
-portrayed in all their perfect colors and proportions, on the retina
-which lines the interior. It is this impression of light on the optic
-nerve which gives our ideas of light and colors.
-
-The eye is also formed in such a way that it can alter its shape and
-become somewhat oblong, while at the same time its lens is projected
-forward or drawn back. The object of this contrivance is to obtain an
-equally perfect picture of distant and of near objects.
-
-Our ideas of _shape_ and _size_ at first are not gained by the eye, but
-by the sense of touch. After considerable experience we learn to
-determine shape and size by the eye. Experiments made upon persons born
-blind and restored to sight furnish many curious facts to support this
-assertion.
-
-When the eye first admits the light, all objects appear to _touch_ the
-eye, and are all a confused mass of different colors. But by continual
-observation, and by the aid of the sense of touch, objects gradually are
-separated from each other, and are then regarded as separate and
-distinct existences.
-
-The eye is so formed that the picture of any object on the retina varies
-in size according to its _distance_. Two objects of equal size will make
-a different picture on the back of the eye, according to the distance at
-which they are held. The ideas of size at first are regulated by the
-proportions of this picture in the eye, until by experience it is found
-that this is an incorrect mode, and that it is necessary to judge of the
-_distance_ of a body before we can determine its _size_. This accounts
-for the fact that objects appear to us so different according as we
-conceive of their distance, and that we are often deceived in the size
-of bodies because we have no mode of determining their distance.
-
-But it appears also that our ideas of distance are gained, not by the
-eye alone, but by the eye and the sense of feeling united. A child by
-the sense of feeling learns the size of his cup or his playthings. He
-sees them removed, and that their apparent size diminishes. They are
-returned to him, and he finds them unaltered in size. When attempting to
-recover them, he finds that when they look very small he is obliged to
-pass over a much greater distance to gain them than when they appear
-large, and that the distance is always in exact proportion to their
-apparent size. In this way, by oft-repeated experiments, the infant
-reasoner learns to judge both of the size and distance of objects. From
-this it appears that, in determining the size of an object, we
-previously form some judgment of its distance, and likewise that, in
-finding the distance, we first determine the size.
-
-The _shape_ of objects is learned altogether by the sense of _feeling_.
-It has before been stated that at the first exercise of vision every
-thing is a confused mass of different colors, and all appearing to touch
-the eye. By the aid of the hands the separate existence of different
-bodies is detected, and the feeling of touch, which once was the sole
-mode of determining shape, is now associated with a certain form or
-picture on the eye, so that, in process of time, the eye becomes the
-principal judge of shape.
-
-But, in determining the shape of a thing, an act of judgment is
-necessary. This may be illustrated by the example of a hoop, which in
-one position will make a picture in the eye which is circular, in
-another position the picture of it will be oval, and in another only a
-straight line. If a person will observe a hoop in these different
-positions, and then attempt to draw a picture of it, he will be
-conscious of this varying picture in the eye. Of course, in order to
-decide the shape of a thing, we must decide its distance, its relative
-position, and various circumstances which would alter the form of the
-picture in the eye. It is only by long experience that the infant child
-gradually acquires the power of determining the shape, size, and
-distance of objects.
-
-The painter's art consists in laying on to canvas an enlarged picture of
-the scene which is painted in the interior of his own eye. In this
-minute picture of the eye, the more distant an object the smaller its
-size, the more indistinct its outline, and the fainter its colors. These
-same are transferred to canvas in an enlarged form; the distant objects
-are made small in size, faint in colors, and indistinct in outline, just
-in proportion to their distance.
-
-The organ of vision is the inlet of more enjoyment to the mind than any
-of the other senses. Through this small loop-hole the spirit looks forth
-on the rich landscape of nature, and the charms both of the natural and
-moral world. The fresh colors, the beauty of motion, the grace of
-figures, the fitness of proportion, and all the charms of taste, are
-discovered through this medium. By the eye, also, we learn to read the
-speaking face of man, we greet the smile of friendship and love, and all
-those varying charms that glance across the human face divine. By the
-aid of this little organ, too, we climb not only the summits of earth's
-domains, but wander forth to planets, stars, and suns, traverse the vast
-ethereal expanse, and gather faint images and flitting visions of the
-spirit's future home.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-CONCEPTION AND MEMORY.
-
-
-There has been much speculation on the question as to whether the mind
-possesses any ideas entirely independent of the senses, which were
-gained without any aid or influence from them. Many have maintained the
-existence of some ideas, which they denominate _innate ideas_, which
-they suppose were originally implanted in the mind, and not at all
-dependent on sensation.
-
-On this subject it may be sufficient to remark that there is no _proof_
-of the existence of any such ideas. All ideas, so far as we can trace
-them, seem to have been originally gained by the senses, though the mind
-has the power of making new arrangements and combinations of such
-materials as are thus furnished.
-
-The intuitive truths seem to exist as a part of the original
-constitution of the mind, but there is no evidence that they would ever
-have been called into exercise except through the instrumentality of the
-senses.
-
-There is nothing to prove that the positive exercise of thought,
-feeling, and volition is necessary to the existence of mind, and no
-proof that the mind might not have existed forever without thought or
-feeling of any kind, were it not for the aid of the senses. We know that
-there are periods of sleep and of swooning, when the mind is in
-existence, and yet when there is no evidence that either thoughts,
-feelings, or volitions are in exercise.
-
-Speculations on this subject seem to be profitless, because there are no
-data for determining them. The _facts_ in the case are not of a
-character to enable us to pronounce positively either that these
-operations are or are not essential to its existence. It may be that in
-sleep and in a swoon these phenomena exist, and no memory is retained of
-them, and it is equally probable that at such intervals all mental
-operations entirely cease.
-
-But, now that the mind has been furnished by the senses with its
-splendid acquisitions, upon which its reflective powers can act, it is
-easy to believe that it might continue to exist and to be in active
-exercise if all its bodily senses, and even its material envelope, were
-destroyed. Should we never again behold the light of heaven, nor be
-charmed with the profusion of varied color and form, still the mind
-could busy itself with pleasing visions of brilliant dyes, of graceful
-outline, and fair proportion, as bright and as beautiful as any objects
-of sense could awaken. Should we never again inhale the freshness of
-morning or the perfumes of spring, the mind itself could furnish from
-its stores some treasured incense, never to be entirely exhaled. Should
-the palate never again be cooled by the freshening water of spring, or
-be refreshed by the viands of the luxuriant year, yet fancy could spread
-forth her golden fruits and sparkling juices in banquets as varied and
-profuse as ever greeted the most fastidious taste. Should the melodies
-of speech and of music be heard no more, and the sweet harmonies of
-nature and of art forever be hushed, yet the exulting spirit could
-warble its own songs, and melt in ecstasies with imagined harmonies. And
-should the grasp of friendship rejoice us no more, nor the embrace of
-affection send joy to the heart, yet still the spirit would not be
-desolate, for it could gather around it the beings most loved, and still
-feel the embraces of affection.
-
-Conceptions are distinguished into two classes with reference to this
-one fact, that some of our conceptions are attended with a consciousness
-that they have existed before, and others are not. Those conceptions
-which are thus attended with the feeling of their resemblance to past
-perceptions or conceptions are called ideas of _memory_; those of our
-_perceptions_ also which are attended with this recognition are called
-memory.
-
-How important to our happiness and improvement is this recognition of
-past ideas, few are wont to imagine. If all our knowledge of external
-things were forever lost to us after sensation is past, our existence
-would be one of mere sensitive enjoyment, and all the honor and dignity
-of mind would be destroyed. No past experience could be of any avail,
-nor could any act of judgment or of reasoning be performed. Even the
-most common wants of animal nature could not be supplied; for, were the
-cooling water and sustaining food presented to the sight, no memory of
-the past comfort secured by them would lead the mind to seek it again.
-Or, had nature, by some implanted instinct, provided for these
-necessities, yet life in this case would have consisted of a mere
-succession of sensations, without even the amount of intellect of which
-the lower animals give proof.
-
-It is the capacity of retrospection, too, which gives us the power of
-foreseeing the future, and thus of looking both before and behind for
-sources of enjoyment in delightful reminiscences and joyful
-anticipations. It is this power of remembrance and foresight which
-raises man to be the image of his Creator, the miniature of Him who sees
-the end from the beginning, who looks back on never commencing ages, and
-forward through eternal years.
-
-It is true the mind of man can foresee only by the process of reasoning,
-by which it is inferred that the future will, in given circumstances,
-resemble the past. And how the Eternal Mind can foresee by intuition all
-the events which hang upon the volitions of the myriads of acting minds
-which he has formed is what no human intellect can grasp. The _foresight
-of intuition_ has not been bestowed upon man, but is reserved as one
-distinctive prerogative of Deity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-ATTENTION AND ABSTRACTION.
-
-
-To understand clearly the nature of the mental phenomena called
-_attention_ and _abstraction_, two facts in our mental history need
-definitely to be understood--facts which have a decided bearing on the
-nature and character of almost all the operations of mind.
-
-The first is, that the objects of our conceptions are seldom, if ever,
-isolated, disconnected objects. On the contrary, there is an extended
-and complex picture before the mind, including often a great variety of
-objects, with their several qualities, relations, and changes. In this
-mental picture some objects are clear and distinct, while others seem to
-float along in shadowy vagueness.
-
-This fact must be evident to any mind that will closely examine its own
-mental operations. It is also equally evident when we consider the mode
-in which our ideas are gained by perception. We never acquire our ideas
-in single disconnected lineaments. We are continually viewing complex
-objects with numerous qualities and surrounded by a great variety of
-circumstances, which unitedly form a _whole_ in one act of perception.
-
-Indeed, there are few objects, either of perception or conception,
-which, however close the process of abstraction, do not remain complex
-in their nature. The simplest forms of matter are _combined_ ideas of
-extension, figure, color, and relation. These different ideas we gain by
-the aid of the different senses. Of course, our conceptions are
-combinations of different qualities in an object which the mind
-considers as _one_, and as distinct from other objects.
-
-Each item, then, in any mental picture is itself a complex object, and
-each mental picture is formed by a combination of such complex objects.
-It will be found very difficult, if not impossible, to mention a name
-which recalls any object of sense in which the conception recalled by
-the word is a single disconnected thing, without any idea of place or
-any attendant circumstances, and, as before remarked, almost all objects
-of sense are complex objects, combining several ideas, which were gained
-through the instrumentality of different senses. The idea of color is
-gained by one sense, of position, shape, and consistency by another, and
-other qualities and powers which the mind associates with it by other
-senses.
-
-The other fact necessary to the correct understanding of the subject is
-the influence which the _desires_ and _emotions_ have upon the character
-both of the perceptions and conceptions with which they coexist.
-
-It will be found that our _sensations_ vary in vividness and
-distinctness according to the strength and permanency of certain
-feelings of desire which coexist with them. For example, we are
-continually hearing a multitude of sounds, but in respect to many of
-them, as we feel no desire to know the cause or nature of them, these
-sensations are so feeble and indistinct as scarcely ever to be recalled
-to the mind or recognized by any act of memory; but should we hear some
-strange wailing sound, immediately the desire would arise to ascertain
-its nature and cause. It would immediately become an object of distinct
-and vivid perception, and continue so as long as the desire lasted.
-
-While one sensation becomes thus clear and prominent, it will be found
-that other sensations which were coexisting with it will become feebler
-and seem to die away. The same impressions may still be made upon the
-eye as before, the same sounds that had previously been regarded may
-still strike upon the ear, but while the desire continues to learn the
-cause of that strange wailing sound, the other sensations would all be
-faint and indistinct. When this desire is gratified, then other
-sensations would resume their former distinctness and prominency.
-
-Our _conceptions_, in like manner, are affected by the coexistence of
-emotion or desire. If, for example, we are employing ourselves in study
-or mental speculations, the vividness of our conceptions will vary in
-exact proportion to the interest we feel in securing the object about
-which our conceptions are employed. If we feel but little interest in
-the subject of our speculations, every conception connected with them
-will be undefined and indistinct; but if the desire of approbation, or
-the admonitions of conscience, or the hope of securing some future good
-stimulate desire, immediately our conceptions grow more vivid and clear,
-and the object at which we aim is more readily and speedily secured. The
-great art, then, of quickening mental vigor and activity, and of gaining
-clear and quick conceptions, is to awaken interest and excite desire.
-When this is secured, conceptions will immediately become bright and
-clear, and all mental operations will be carried forward with facility
-and speed.
-
-The distinction between _attention_ and _abstraction_ is not great, but,
-as it is recognized in language, it needs to be definitely understood.
-_Attention_ has been defined as "the direction of the mind to some
-particular object, from the interest which is felt in that object." It
-consists simply in a feeling of desire coexisting with our sensations
-and conceptions, and thus rendering them vivid and distinct; while, in
-consequence of this fact, all other sensations and conceptions seem to
-fade and grow indistinct.
-
-Attention seems to be the generic exercise, and abstraction one species
-of the same thing. Attention is used to express the interest which
-attends our perceptions or conceptions as _whole objects_, thus
-rendering them clear and distinct from other surrounding objects.
-Abstraction is that particular act of attention which makes _one part_
-or _one quality_ of a complex object become vivid and distinct, while
-other parts and qualities grow faint and indistinct. Thus, in viewing a
-landscape, we should be said to exercise the power of attention if we
-noticed some object, such as a stream or a bridge, while other objects
-were more slightly regarded; and we should exercise the power of
-abstraction if we noticed the _color_ of the bridge or the _width_ of
-the stream, while their other qualities were not equally regarded.
-
-It is the power of abstraction which is the foundation of _language_ in
-its present use. Were it not for the power which the mind has of
-abstracting certain qualities and circumstances of things, and
-considering them as separate and distinct from all other parts and
-qualities, no words could be used except such as specify particular
-individuals. Every object that meets our eye would demand a separate and
-peculiar name, thus making the acquisition of language the labor of a
-life.
-
-But now the mind possesses the power of abstracting a greater or fewer
-number of qualities, and to these _qualities_ a name is given, and
-whenever these qualities are found combined in any object, this name can
-be applied. Thus the name _animal_ is given to any thing which has the
-qualities of existence and animal life, and the name _quadruped_ is
-given to any object which has the qualities of animal life and of four
-legs.
-
-Every thing which is regarded by the mind as a separate existence must
-have some peculiar quality, or action, or circumstance of time or place,
-to distinguish it from every other existence. Were there not something,
-either in the qualities or circumstances, which made each object in some
-respects peculiar, there would be no way to distinguish one thing from
-another.
-
-A _proper name_ is one which is used to recall the properties and
-circumstances which distinguish one individual existence from every
-other. Such is the word Mount Blanc, which recalls certain qualities and
-circumstances that distinguish one particular thing from all others, and
-the name Julius Cæsar, which recalls the character, qualities, and
-circumstances which distinguish one being from every other.
-
-Some words, then, are used to recall the peculiar qualities and
-circumstances of individual existences, and are called _proper names_;
-other words are used to recall a combination of certain qualities and
-circumstances, which unitedly are an object of conception, but are not
-considered by the mind as belonging to any real particular existence.
-These last words are called _general terms_ or _common names_.
-
-A great variety of names may be applied to the same object of conception
-or perception, according to the number of qualities and circumstances
-which are abstracted by the mind. Thus an object may be called a
-_thing_, and, in this case, the simple circumstance of existence is what
-is recalled by the word. The same object may be called an _animal_, and
-then the qualities of existence and animal life are made the objects of
-conception. It can also be called a _man_, and then, in addition to the
-qualities recalled by the word animal, are recalled those qualities
-which distinguish man from all other animals. It can also be called a
-_father_, and then to the qualities recalled by the term man is added
-the circumstance of his relation to some other being. The same object
-can be called _La Fayette_, and then, to all the preceding qualities,
-would be added in our conceptions all those peculiar qualities and
-circumstances which distinguish the hero of France from all other
-existences.
-
-The following will probably illustrate the mode by which the human mind
-first acquires the proper use of these general terms. The infant child
-learns to distinguish one existence from another probably long before he
-acquires the use of any names by which to designate them. We may suppose
-that a little dog is an inmate of his nursery, and that with the _sight_
-of this animal has often been associated the _sound_ of the word _dog_.
-This is so often repeated, that, by the principle of association, the
-sight of the object and the sound of the word invariably recur together.
-He observes that this sound is used by those around him in order to
-direct his attention to the animal, and he himself soon uses the word to
-direct the attention of others in the same way.
-
-But soon it happens that another animal is introduced into his
-apartment, which in many respects resembles the object he has learned to
-call a dog. To this new object he would apply the same term, but he
-finds that others use the sound _cat_ in connection with the sight of
-this new animal. He soon learns the difference between the two objects,
-the particulars in which they agree, and those in which they differ. He
-afterward notices other animals of these species, and observes that some
-have the qualities to which the term _dog_ is applied, and others those
-to which the term _cat_ is applied.
-
-He continues to notice animals of other kinds, and, after long
-experience in this way, he learns to apply names to designate a
-particular _combination of qualities_, and, whenever these qualities are
-found combined, he has a term ready to apply to them. He learns that
-some words are used to point out the peculiar qualities which
-distinguish one thing from all others, and, at the same time, other
-words are used which simply recall _qualities_, but do not designate any
-particular existence to which they belong. Thus the term _boy_ he uses
-for the purpose of designating qualities without conceiving of any
-particular existence in which they are found, while the term _Mary_ is
-used to designate the qualities and circumstances of the particular
-existence he finds as the companion of his sports.
-
-All objects of our perceptions are arranged into classes, according to
-the peculiar combination of qualities which are recalled by the names
-employed to designate them. For example, all objects that have the
-qualities of existence and of animal life are arranged in one class, and
-are called _animals_. All those which have the qualities recalled by the
-term animal, and the additional qualities of wings and feathers, are
-arranged in another class called _birds_. All those objects which have
-the qualities included in the term _bird_, together with several
-additional qualities, are arranged in another class, and called
-_eagles_.
-
-To these various classes the terms _genera_ and _species_ are applied.
-These terms imply a _relation_, or the comparison of one class with
-another, in reference to the _number of qualities_ to be recalled by the
-terms employed. Thus the class _bird_ is called a _species_ of the class
-_animal_, because it includes all the qualities that are combined in the
-conception recalled by the word animal, and others in addition; but the
-class _bird_ is called a _genus_ in relation to the class _eagle_,
-because it contains only a part of the qualities which are recalled by
-the term eagle.
-
-A _genus_ may be defined as a class of things the name of which recalls
-_fewer_ particulars than the name of another class or species with which
-it is compared. _Bird_ is a _genus_ when compared with the class
-_eagle_.
-
-A _species_ is a class of things the name of which recalls more
-particulars than the name of another class or genus with which it is
-compared. _Bird_ is a _species_ when compared with the class _animal_.
-
-In examining language, it will be found that the larger portion of words
-in common use are names of _genera_ and _species_--that is, they are
-words employed to recall ideas as they are arranged in genera and
-species. It is only those words that are _proper names_ which recall
-conceptions of the particular existences by which we are surrounded.
-Some of these surrounding existences are furnished with these particular
-names, and others can be designated and distinguished from each other
-only by a description. Thus we see some hills around our horizon, some
-of which have a peculiar name, and others can be designated only by
-describing the circumstances which distinguish them from all other
-hills.
-
-A _definition_ of a word is an enumeration of the several qualities or
-circumstances which distinguish certain things from all others, and
-which are recalled to the mind when the word is used. Thus, if the word
-animal is to be defined, we do it by mentioning the circumstances of its
-_existence_ and _animal life_, as the ideas recalled by the word.
-Generally, a word is defined by mentioning the name of some _genus_ of
-which the thing intended is a _species_, and then adding those
-particular qualities which the species has, in addition to those
-included under the genus. Thus, if we are to define the word _man_, we
-mention the genus _animal_, and then the qualities which man has in
-addition to those possessed by other animals. Thus: "_Man_ is an
-_animal_, having the human form, and a spirit endowed with intellect,
-susceptibility, and will."
-
-There are some words which recall only _one_ quality or circumstance,
-and which, therefore, can not be defined like the words which recall
-various qualities and circumstances, as joy, sorrow, color, and the
-like. Such words as these are defined by mentioning the times or
-circumstances when the mind is conscious of the existence of the idea to
-be recalled by the word. Thus _joy_ is "a state of mind which exists
-when any ardent desire is gratified." _Color_ is "a quality of objects
-which is perceived when light enters the eye."
-
-Those conceptions which can be defined by enumerating the several
-qualities and circumstances which compose them are called _complex
-ideas_, and the words used to designate them are called _complex terms_.
-Such words as landscape, wrestler, giant, and philosopher, are complex
-terms. The word landscape recalls a complex idea of various material
-things. The word wrestler recalls an idea of a material object and one
-of its actions. The word giant recalls an idea of a thing and its
-relation as to size. The word philosopher recalls the idea of a thing
-and one of its qualities.
-
-Those conceptions which are not composed of several qualities and
-circumstances, but are themselves a single quality or circumstance, are
-called _simple ideas_, and the words used to recall them are called
-_simple terms_. Such words as sweetness, loudness, depth, pain, and joy,
-are simple terms. Some terms which express emotions of the mind are
-entirely simple, such as sorrow, joy, and happiness. Others are words
-which recall an idea of a simple emotion and of its _cause_, such, for
-example, as _gratitude_, which expresses the idea of an emotion of mind
-and also that it was caused by some benefit conferred. Words that
-express simple ideas can be defined only by some description of the
-circumstances in which these ideas exist, or by a reference to their
-causes or effects.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-ASSOCIATION.
-
-
-The causes of the particular succession of our ideas, and the control
-which the mind has in regulating this succession, is a subject no less
-interesting than important; for if by any act of choice the mind has the
-power of regulating its own thoughts and feelings, then man is a free
-agent and an accountable being; but if the conceptions and the emotions
-depend entirely upon the constitution of things, and thus, either
-directly or indirectly, on the will of the Creator, then man can not be
-accountable for that over which he can have no control.
-
-In the preceding chapter has been illustrated the effect which the
-co-existence of desire has in regard both to our sensations and our
-conceptions, tending to make those which are fitted to accomplish the
-object desired very vivid and prominent, while others, to a greater or
-less extent, disappear.
-
-The mind is continually under the influence of some desire. It
-constantly has some plan to accomplish, some cause to search out, or
-some gratification to secure. The present wish or desire of the mind
-imparts an interest to whatever conception seems calculated to forward
-this object. Thus, if the mathematician has a problem to solve, and this
-is the leading desire of the mind, among the various conceptions that
-arise, those are the most interesting which are fitted to his object,
-and such immediately become vivid and distinct. If the painter or the
-poet is laboring to effect some new creation of his art, and has this as
-the leading object of desire, whatever conceptions seem best fitted to
-his purpose are immediately invested with interest, and become distinct
-and clear. If the merchant, or the capitalist, or the statesman has some
-project which he is toiling to accomplish, whatever conceptions appear
-adapted to his purpose soon are glowing and defined, in consequence of
-the interest with which desire thus invests them.
-
-From this it appears that the nature of the desire, or governing purpose
-of the mind, will in a great measure determine the nature and the
-succession of its conceptions. If a man has chosen to find his chief
-happiness in securing power and honor, then those conceptions will be
-the most interesting to his mind that best fall in with his object. If
-he has chosen to find happiness in securing the various gratifications
-of sense, then those conceptions that most coincide with this desire
-will become prominent. If a man has chosen to find his chief enjoyment
-in doing the will of God, then his conceptions will, to a great extent,
-be conformed to this object of desire. The current of a man's thoughts,
-therefore, becomes the surest mode of determining what is the governing
-purpose or leading desire of the mind.
-
-But there are seasons in our mental history when the mind does not seem
-to be under the influence of any governing desire; when it seems to
-relax, and its thoughts appear to flow on without any regulating
-principle. At such times the vividness of leading conceptions, which
-otherwise is determined by _desire_, seems to depend upon our past
-experience. Those objects which, in past experience, have been
-associated with emotion, are those which the mind selects, and which
-thus begin to glow in the distinct lineaments with which emotion at
-first invested them.
-
-In past experience, all conceptions which were attended with emotion
-were most distinct and clear, and therefore, when such conceptions
-return united with others, they are the ones which are most interesting,
-and thus most vivid and distinct. Thus, in our musing hours of idle
-reverie, as one picture after another glides before the mind, if some
-object occurs, such as the home of our youth, or the friend of our early
-days, the emotions which have so often been united with these objects in
-past experience cause them to appear in clear and glowing lineaments,
-and the stronger have been the past emotions connected with them, the
-more clearly will they be defined. It appears, then, that there are two
-circumstances that account for the apparent _selection_ which the mind
-makes in its objects of conception. The first is the feeling that
-_certain conceptions are fitted to accomplish the leading desire of the
-mind_; and the second is, that _certain objects in past experience have
-been attended with emotion_.
-
-But there is another phenomenon in our mental history which has a direct
-bearing on the nature and succession of our conceptions. When any
-conception, through the influence of desire or emotion, becomes the
-prominent object, immediately other objects with which this has been
-associated in past experience begin to return and gather around it in
-new combinations. Thus a new picture is presented before the mind, from
-which it again selects an object according as desire or emotion
-regulates, which, under this influence, grows vivid and distinct. Around
-this new object immediately begin to cluster its past associates, till
-still another scene is fresh arrayed before the mind.
-
-In these new combinations, those objects which are least interesting
-continually disappear, while those most interesting are retained to form
-a part of the succeeding picture. Thus, in every mental picture, desire
-or emotion seems to call forth objects which start out, as it were, in
-bold relief from all others, and call from the shade of obscurity the
-companions of their former existence, which gather around them in new
-and varied combinations.
-
-Almost every object of thought in past experience has been connected
-with a great number of other objects, and so great has been the variety
-of its former combinations, that it would be impossible to predict, with
-any degree of certainty, _which_ of its past associates will be summoned
-to aid in forming the new mental scenes which are destined to arise. Yet
-experience has enabled us to detect some _general laws_, which appear to
-regulate these combinations.
-
-The _first_ is, that those objects are most likely to attend each other
-which in past experience were united, while some strong emotion was
-existing with them. If, for example, a retired lake had been the scene
-of death to a beloved friend, the conception of this object would be
-almost invariably associated with the image of the friend that had
-perished beneath its waters, and also with the scene of his death. In
-like manner, if some friend had expired at a certain hour of the day, or
-on a particular day of the year, the return of these seasons would
-probably be associated with the sorrowful scenes connected with them in
-past experience.
-
-The _second_ law of association is, that _long continued_ or _frequently
-repeated_ attention to objects that are connected at the time of this
-attention will secure the connected return of these objects.
-_Attention_, it may be recollected, is desire united with our
-conceptions, thus rendering them more vivid.
-
-It seems to produce the same effect if this attention is long continued
-or if it is frequently repeated. Thus, if the mind has dwelt for a long
-time on a beautiful picture, has noticed all its proportions, its
-shading, its outline, and its colors with minute attention, one object
-in this picture can not recur to the mind without bringing with it the
-other objects that were associated at the time of this close attention.
-The frequent repetition of a sentence is a case where _oft repeated_
-though short attention to certain words has the effect of recalling them
-to the mind in the connection in which they were placed during this
-repeated attention.
-
-The _third_ law of association is, that objects which have _recently_
-been associated in experience are, on this account, more likely to
-recall each other than to recall those which were connected with them at
-a more remote period of time. The passage of time, as a general fact,
-seems to weaken the vividness of our conceptions, and to destroy the
-probability of their associate recurrence. Thus a line of poetry may be
-repeated, and the listener may be able, the moment after, to recall each
-word, but the next day the whole may be lost.
-
-The _fourth_ law of association is, that the recurrence of associated
-objects depends, in a great measure, upon the _number_ of objects with
-which it may have been connected in past experience. If it has existed
-in combination with only _one_ object, that object will return
-associated with it; but in proportion as the number of its associates
-increases, the power of determining which will be its next companion
-diminishes. As an example of this fact may be mentioned the first
-hearing of a beautiful air by some particular person. The next time it
-is heard, the idea of this performer will be associated with the sounds;
-but after it has been sung by a great variety of persons, other
-circumstances would determine what conceptions this air would recall. It
-is very probable, in this case, that its notes would recall from among
-the associated scenes the friend most beloved, or some interesting
-circumstance that awakened emotion at the time the air was performed.
-
-The principal circumstances which operate in recalling associated ideas
-have now been pointed out. The next inquiry is, What are those objects
-and events which ordinarily are most frequently united in our
-_perceptions_, and therefore are most likely to return together in our
-_conceptions_?
-
-The most common connection of our ideas of perception are made by
-contiguity in _place_. Objects are continually passing before the eye,
-and they are not in single distinct objects, but in connected groups. Of
-course, when we perceive any object, we must necessarily observe its
-several relations to the things by which it is surrounded. If it is a
-building which meets the eye, it is impossible to observe it without at
-the same time perceiving the trees around it, the sky above it, and any
-other objects which are parts of the picture of which this is the
-prominent object. Of course, objects that are united in one complex
-picture before the eye when we gain our knowledge of them by perception,
-will ordinarily return together in our conceptions.
-
-Our ideas, also, are very much connected by contiguity as it respects
-_time_. When any two events occur at the same moment of time, or in such
-near connection that the conception of one remains until the other
-occurs, they ordinarily will recur together in our after conceptions of
-them. As an example of this may be mentioned the associations of a
-family who have been accustomed to close each Sabbath with music. As the
-still hour of this sacred evening drew on, wherever any wanderer might
-roam, it is probable that the notes of praise, so often connected with
-this season, would perpetually steal over the mind, bringing many
-another image of friends, and kindred, and home.
-
-The mind of man is so constituted that no change can take place in any
-material object without awakening the idea of some _cause_. An _effect_
-is defined as "some change of state or mode of existence in matter or
-mind." A _cause_ is defined as "that without which no change would take
-place in matter or mind, and with which it will take place." As the
-ideas of cause and effect are so constantly conjoined in all our acts of
-perception, these ideas will return together in our conceptions. Thus,
-if we see an instrument which has been the cause of pain, the idea of
-this effect will be recalled by a conception of the cause; or if the
-mind is dwelling on the memory of some beautiful painting or poetry, the
-author of these works will probably recur to the mind in connection with
-these conceptions.
-
-We sometimes meet with persons of such peculiar habits and dispositions,
-that, whenever they are encountered, the feelings are wounded or the
-temper crossed by their ill-timed or ill-natured remarks. The
-conceptions of such persons will ordinarily be attended by the memory of
-some pains of which they have been the cause, and the mind will
-involuntarily shrink from contact with them, as from the points and
-thorns of a bramble-bush. Those events, therefore, or those objects
-which have the relation of _cause_ and _effect_ existing between them,
-will ordinarily be united as objects of conception.
-
-The mind of man is continually noticing the _relations_ which exist
-between the different objects of its conceptions. As no idea of relation
-can be gained without comparing two or more things together, those
-objects which are most frequently _compared_ will naturally be most
-frequently associated together in our conceptions. It has been shown
-that language is founded on that principle of the mind which enables us
-to notice certain qualities in things abstracted from other qualities,
-and to apply names to objects according as we find certain qualities
-united in them. Of course, in the use of language, the mind is
-continually led to notice the particulars in which objects resemble each
-other, and also the particulars in which they differ; consequently the
-mind, in learning and in applying names, is continually comparing
-objects, both to discover the particulars in which they are alike and
-those in which they differ, so that two objects are thus brought
-together before the mind.
-
-It is owing to this fact, therefore, that objects which resemble each
-other, or which are very much contrasted in their qualities, are very
-commonly united in our conceptions. If, for example, we see the
-countenance of a stranger, some feature will be recognized as familiar.
-Desire will be awakened to know where and in what other countenance we
-have seen such a feature or such an expression. This particular feature
-will thus become abstracted and vivid, and will soon recall that other
-combination of features for which we are seeking, and of which this has
-formed a part in our past experience. Thus two objects will be brought
-before the mind at once, the person who is the stranger, and a
-conception of another person whom this stranger resembles.
-
-All our ideas of contrast are relative. One thing can not be conceived
-of as very high or very low, as very large or very small, without a
-previous comparison with some object to determine this relation. Our
-ideas of poverty and riches, or of happiness and misery, are also
-_relative_. A person is always considered poor or rich, happy or
-miserable, by comparing his lot with that of others by whom he is
-surrounded. As, therefore, all ideas of resemblance or of contrast are
-gained by comparing two objects together, our conceptions often unite
-objects that _resemble_ each other or that are _contrasted_ with each
-other.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-IMAGINATION.
-
-
-All operations of mind which are not produced by material things acting
-upon the senses consist of a continual succession of conceptions. Some
-of these conceptions are exact pictures of past perceptions, and are
-attended by the consciousness that such things have existed before, and
-such are called ideas of memory. Others are conceptions which, by the
-process of association, are continually recurring, and arranging
-themselves in new combinations, according to certain laws or principles
-of association. Imagination has been defined as "that power which the
-mind possesses of arranging conceptions in new combinations," and it can
-readily be seen that this includes all the ordinary successions of
-thought except those of perception and memory. The term imagination has
-been used in rather a vague manner by writers on the subject. Sometimes
-it is used to signify all that succession of conceptions which recur
-according to the laws of association, and sometimes it is used in a more
-restricted sense. The more limited meaning is the one to which the term
-is most commonly applied, and it seems to be the one which precision and
-accuracy in the use of terms demand, and therefore it will now be
-pointed out.
-
-The mind is susceptible of certain emotions, which are called emotions
-of taste. These, more specifically, are called emotions of beauty,
-sublimity, and novelty. Such emotions are awakened by certain objects in
-nature, by certain works of art, and by the use of language which
-recalls conceptions of these objects. Those objects which awaken such
-emotions are called objects of taste, and those arts which enable us to
-produce combinations that will awaken such emotions are called the _fine
-arts_.
-
-Among the fine arts are ordinarily classed painting, music, sculpture,
-architecture, ornamental gardening, and poetry. The art of the painter
-consists in combining, according to certain rules of proportion and
-fitness of outline and color, certain objects, which, either from their
-peculiar character, or from the fitness of their combination in
-effecting a given design, awaken emotions of beauty or sublimity. The
-highest perfection of this art consists not so much in close imitation
-as in the nature of the combinations, and their unity and fitness in
-producing the effect designed by the artist.
-
-The art of the sculptor is similar in its nature, and differs chiefly in
-the materials employed, and in being limited to a much more restricted
-number of objects for combination.
-
-The art of the architect consists in planning and constructing edifices,
-intended either for use or ornament, and in so arranging the different
-parts as to awaken emotions of beauty or sublimity from the display of
-utility, fitness, grandeur of extent, or order of proportion.
-
-The art of the musician consists in combining sounds so as to produce
-such melodies or harmonies as will awaken varied emotions in the mind.
-The power of this art over the human mind is much superior to that of
-the others enumerated, because it can call forth both a greater variety
-and more powerful emotions.
-
-The art of the poet consists in such a use of language as will recall
-objects of beauty or sublimity in combinations that are pleasing to the
-mind, or as will, by the description and expression of varied emotion in
-other minds, awaken similar feelings in the breast of the reader.
-
-The art of ornamental gardening consists in such an arrangement of the
-varied objects which compose a landscape as will awaken emotions of
-beauty from a display of unity of design, order, fitness, and utility.
-
-The term imagination, then, in its most frequent use, signifies _those
-new combinations of conceptions which will awaken the emotions of
-taste_.
-
-The painter or the poet, when he attempts the exercise of his art, has
-some leading desire of an object to be secured. Under the influence of
-this desire, all those conceptions, recurring by the principle of
-association, which appear fitted to accomplish this object, immediately
-become vivid and distinct, and are clearly retained in the mind. As
-other conceptions succeed, other objects are found which will forward
-the general design, and these also are retained, and thus the process
-continues till the object aimed at is accomplished, and by the pen or
-pencil retained in durable characters.
-
-The action of mind to which the term _imagination_ is thus restricted
-differs in no respect from other acts of conception when the mind is
-under the influence of desire, except in the _nature of the objects of_
-_desire_. If it is the desire of the mind to establish a proposition by
-mathematical reasoning, the mind is engaged in the same process of
-conception as when it is engrossed with the desire to form some
-combination of taste. In both cases some object of desire stimulates the
-mind, and whatever conceptions appear fitted to accomplish this object
-immediately become vivid and distinct.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-JUDGMENT.
-
-
-The term _judgment_, as a mental faculty, signifies "that power of the
-mind by which it notices _relations_." It is often used to signify all
-the intellectual powers, among which it is the most important one. Thus
-we hear it said that, in certain cases, the _feelings_ and the
-_judgment_ are in opposition, or that the _heart_ and the _judgment_ are
-not in agreement.
-
-It is also used often to signify any act of the mind when a comparison
-is made between two things, or between the truths asserted in any
-proposition and a truth already believed. The act called _memory_ is a
-conception attended with one specific act of judgment, by which a
-present state of mind is compared with a past, and the relation of
-resemblance perceived.
-
-The nature of our ideas of relation are very different, according to the
-object or purpose for which the comparison is made. If objects are
-compared in reference to _time_, we learn some one of the relations of
-past, present, or future. No idea of time can be gained except by
-comparing one period of time with another, and thus noticing their
-relations. All _dates_ are gained by comparing one point of time with
-some specified event, such as the birth of the Savior, or some
-particular period in the revolution of the earth around the sun.
-
-If objects are compared in reference to the _succession_ of our
-conceptions or perceptions, we gain the ideas of such relations as are
-expressed by the terms _firstly_, _secondly_, and _thirdly_. If objects
-are compared in reference to the _degree_ of any quality, we gain an
-idea of such relations as are expressed by the terms _brighter_,
-_sweeter_, _harder_, _louder_. If objects are compared in reference to
-_proportion_, we gain ideas of such relations as are expressed by the
-terms _an eighth_, _a half_. If objects are compared in reference to the
-relation of parts to a whole, we gain such ideas as are expressed by the
-terms _part_, _whole_, _remainder_.
-
-The process of classifying objects and the use of language depend upon
-the power of judgment; for if we see an object possessing certain
-qualities, in order to apply the name we must compare and observe their
-resemblance to the qualities to which such a name has been applied in
-past experience, and this feeling of resemblance is an act of judgment.
-The application of a name, then, always implies the exercise of the
-power of judgment, by which a comparison is made between the present
-qualities observed in an object and the same qualities which affected
-the mind when the name has formerly been employed. It also implies the
-act of association, by which the perception of certain qualities recalls
-the idea of the sound or object with which they have been repeatedly
-conjoined.
-
-The mental process called _reasoning_ is nothing but a connected
-succession of acts of judgment. It is a comparison of what is asserted
-in a given proposition with some truth which is believed, or which has
-been established by evidence, and then observing the agreement or
-disagreement. Thus the truth that "things will be in agreement with past
-experience unless there is some reason for the contrary," is a truth
-which every mind believes. Whenever, therefore, any event has been
-repeatedly an object of past experience, it is compared with this truth
-already believed, and found to be included under it, and therefore
-entitled to the same credit.
-
-Thus, also, the truth that "things which equal the same thing equal one
-another," is one which every mind believes. When any object by
-examination is found to be included under that class of objects which
-are thus equal to the same thing, it is an act of reasoning when we
-infer that they are equal to one another.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE SUSCEPTIBILITIES.
-
-
-Having examined the intellectual powers, we will now attend to the next
-general class, denominated _the susceptibilities_.
-
-When the mind is in a state of emotion, this state is always either
-pleasurable or painful. _Desire_ relates to the attainment of some
-object which will be the cause of pleasurable emotions, or else to the
-avoidance of something which will cause painful emotions. This desire
-for pleasure and for the avoidance of pain is the mainspring of all
-mental activity; for when it is not in existence, neither the powers of
-the mind or of the body are called into exercise.
-
-There are various sources of enjoyment or causes of pleasurable emotion
-to the mind of man, the most important of which will now be pointed out.
-
-The _first_ cause of enjoyment at the commencement of existence is that
-of _sensation_.[2] This, at first, is small in amount compared with what
-it becomes when association lends its aid to heighten sensitive
-enjoyment. The light of day, the brilliancy of color, the sweetness of
-perfume, the gratification of taste and touch, the magic influence of
-sound, and the pleasure resulting from muscular activity, are probably
-the chief sources of enjoyment to the infant mind. As life advances, all
-these modes of sensitive gratification become connected with others of
-an intellectual and moral nature, so that at mature years it is
-difficult to determine how much of the enjoyment we derive from the
-senses is the result of association, and how much is simply that of
-sensation.
-
-Another source of happiness to the human mind is the simple exercise of
-its intellectual powers. This includes all the pleasures derived from
-the exercise of taste and the imagination; all the more profitless
-exercises of reverie and castle-building; all the activity of mind
-employed in contriving, inventing, and bringing to pass the various
-projects for securing good to ourselves and others; and all those
-charming illusions which so often give transient delight, but burst like
-bubbles in the grasp.
-
-Another source of enjoyment is the exercise of physical and moral power.
-This love of power is one of the earliest principles which is developed
-in the human mind. The exercise of the muscles in producing changes in
-its own material frame or in surrounding objects is a source of constant
-pleasure to the infant mind. There are few who have reared a child
-through the period of infancy but can recollect the times that this new
-species of delight was manifested, as, with his hand raised before his
-eyes, he watched its various motions, and learned his own power to
-control them.
-
-This love of power continually displays itself in the sports and
-pursuits of childhood. To project the pebble through the air; to drive
-the hoop; to turn the windmill; to conduct some light stream from its
-channel; to roll the rock from the mountain cliff--these and many others
-are the varied modes by which childhood exhibits its love of physical
-power.
-
-But when man begins to learn the influence which mind can exert over
-mind, a new desire is awakened of _moral power_. All the different modes
-are then sought by which one mind can bend the will of others to yield
-to its controlling influence. It is this desire which is gratified when
-the conqueror of nations beholds millions of minds yielding to the
-slightest word of his command. It is this which inspires the orator, as
-he pours forth that eloquence which charms the delighted throng, and
-bends them to his will. It is this desire, which often becomes the
-master passion, to which is sacrificed all that is just, lovely, and
-benevolent.
-
-Another cause of enjoyment is that of sympathy in the happiness of
-others. This susceptibility is a source of constant enjoyment when those
-around us are contented and happy. None can be ignorant of the change
-produced in passing from the society of a sprightly, cheerful, and happy
-group to a circle soured by discontent or overwhelmed with melancholy.
-In early childhood, the effect of this principle is clearly developed.
-Even the infant child is affected and disturbed with flowing tears, and
-steals away from the chamber of sorrow, while the sight of smiling faces
-and the sound of cheerful voices sends through his heart the glow of
-delight.
-
-Another source of enjoyment is a feeling of conscious rectitude. Man is
-so constituted that, when he knowingly violates the principles of
-rectitude, a painful feeling is the inevitable consequence, while a
-habit of constant conformity to them brings a peaceful and happy state
-of mind.
-
-Another source of happiness is the consciousness of being the cause of
-happiness to others. This is an enjoyment entirely distinct from that of
-sympathy in the happiness of others; for we may see happiness conferred
-by another and rejoice in it, but the pleasure of being ourselves the
-cause of this enjoyment is one altogether peculiar. It can readily be
-seen that the more benevolent a mind is, the more happiness it will
-derive from this source; while in exact proportion as the mind is
-selfishly engrossed by its own exclusive interests will this stream of
-enjoyment cease to flow.
-
-Another source of happiness is the consciousness of inspiring certain
-emotions in other minds, such as esteem, respect, confidence, love,
-gratitude, reverence, and the like. The desire for this is one of the
-strongest passions, and its gratification often secures the most
-exquisite enjoyment. This happiness, ordinarily, is proportioned to the
-nobleness of the person who renders this regard.
-
-Another source of enjoyment is the discovery of certain qualities in
-intelligent minds. The perception of the qualities of matter through the
-medium of the senses is a very inferior source of gratification compared
-with the discovery of certain qualities of mind. This is the source of
-the highest enjoyment of which the mind is capable. The emotions thus
-awakened are called esteem, veneration, love, gratitude, and the like.
-_Love_, in its most general sense, is used for the pleasurable emotion
-which is felt in the discovery of any quality that is agreeable, either
-in matter or mind. Thus we are said to love the beauties of nature, to
-love delicious fruit, and to love the society of friends. But in
-relation to intelligent beings, it signifies pleasurable emotion in view
-of certain qualities and actions, attended with the desire of good to
-the object loved, and also a desire for reciprocated affection. There
-are certain qualities and attributes of mind which may be pointed out as
-the _causes_ of affection.
-
-The first is _intellectual superiority_. Our estimate of intellect is
-altogether _relative_. What in a child seems an astonishing display of
-it, would be considered puerility in a man. What excites admiration in a
-savage or in the unlettered, is regarded with little emotion in the man
-of education. There are various qualities of intellect which awaken
-admiration. Quick perceptions and ready invention are the peculiar
-attribute of some minds; others are endowed with great sagacity and
-wisdom in adapting the best means to accomplish the best ends; others
-possess an energy and force of purpose which enables them to encounter
-difficulties, sustain bodily fatigue, and even to face death without
-shrinking; others possess a power of forming new and varied combinations
-that gratify the taste; others seem to possess a readiness and
-versatility of mind which enables them to succeed in almost any object
-they undertake. The exhibition of any of these operations of intellect
-are causes of emotions of pleasure to other minds.
-
-The next quality of mind which is a cause of affection is the power of
-_sympathy_. There is nothing which so powerfully draws the mind toward
-another being as the assurance that all our pleasures will be his, and
-that "in all our afflictions he will be afflicted." It is probable that
-a being entirely destitute of this susceptibility, however he might
-excite the mind by displays of intellectual power, never could be
-regarded with the warm and tender emotions of affection. If we
-encountered a mind that we felt looked upon our happiness without one
-glimmering of pleasure, and who could gaze upon our sufferings without
-one shade of sympathizing woe, it is probable the mind would turn away
-with feelings of dissatisfaction or disgust.
-
-Another quality of mind which becomes a cause of love is the power of
-_giving_ and _appreciating affection_. There is nothing which is an
-object of more constant and fervent desire than the admiration and
-affection of other minds. To be an object of attention and of admiration
-to others has been the aim that has stimulated the efforts and nerved
-the arm of all the heroes and conquerors of the world. To gain the
-esteem and affection of other minds is what regulates the actions, the
-plans, and the hopes of all mankind. If, therefore, a mind should be
-destitute of this susceptibility, that which gives the chief interest
-would be withdrawn. If we should find, also, that the gift of our
-affections was of no value to another mind, this would deprive it of
-much that awakens interest and pleasure. It is the excessive indulgence
-of this desire for admiration which leads to ambition and pride--those
-principles which have filled the world with contention and deluged it
-with blood.
-
-Another quality of mind which secures affection is _benevolence_. This
-consists in such a love for the happiness as induces a willingness to
-make sacrifices of personal ease or enjoyment to secure a greater amount
-of good to others. Every mind is so made that, if its own wishes are not
-interfered with, it is more agreeable to see others happy around than to
-see them miserable. There have been cases of such perversion of our
-nature that some have seemed to find pleasure in the simple act of
-inflicting pain upon others; but this seldom occurs until after a long
-course of self-indulgence and crime. All persons, if it cost no
-sacrifice, would prefer to make others happy.
-
-But there is a great difference in the character of minds in this
-particular. Some, when they find that certain modes of personal
-enjoyment interfere with the interests and happiness of others, can find
-a pleasure in sacrificing their own lesser enjoyment to secure greater
-good for others. But others are so engrossed by exclusive interest in
-their own happiness that they will not give up the smallest amount of
-their own good to secure any amount of benefit to others.
-
-All minds, whatever their own character may be, detest selfishness in
-others, and never can bestow any great affection where this is a
-prevailing trait.
-
-These are the leading characteristics of mind which are causes of
-admiration and affection. There are other more specific exercises, such
-as modesty, humility, meekness, and the like.
-
-But all these traits of character, which, in themselves considered, are
-causes of pleasure, in certain circumstances may, to a selfish mind,
-become causes of unmingled pain. If the displays of intellect or the
-exhibition of the amiable susceptibilities in another being are viewed
-by a selfish mind as the cause of disparagement and disadvantageous
-contrast to itself, they will be regarded only with painful emotions.
-They will awaken "envy, anger, wrath, malice, and all uncharitableness."
-This fact is fully illustrated in the history of the world and in the
-daily observation of life.
-
-The _causes of pain_ to the human mind are in most cases owing to these
-very susceptibilities of enjoyment. The organization of the material
-frame and of the external world, while it is a source of multiplied and
-constant enjoyment, is often also the cause of the most intense and
-exquisite suffering. The strongest conception of suffering of which mind
-can form any conception is sensitive suffering. There are many minds
-whose constitution and circumstances are such that they can form but
-faint conceptions of any pain which results from the exercise of
-malignant passions, or from other sources of suffering. But every mind
-soon acquires a knowledge of what sensitive suffering must be, and can
-form the most vivid conceptions of it. Though few ever suffered the
-dislocation of joints, the laceration of the flesh, or the fracture of
-bones, still descriptions of such sufferings are readily apprehended and
-conceived of, and there is nothing from which the mind so involuntarily
-shrinks.
-
-Another cause of suffering consists in the loss of present or expected
-enjoyment. There are many blessings which seem desirable to the mind
-that are never secured, and yet unhappiness is not caused by the want;
-but there is no happiness which is actually in possession of which the
-loss does not occasion pain. We may desire the esteem and affection of
-certain beings, and yet not become unhappy from the want of it; yet
-nothing sends such exquisite suffering through the mind as the
-conviction that some beloved object has ceased thus to respect and to
-love, or has been taken from us by death. Thus, also, if wealth, which
-is the means of purchasing a variety of blessings, be not secured, the
-heart can desire it without being made unhappy by the wish, yet the loss
-of wealth is attended with painful disappointment and regret. The
-possession of power, also, may be desired without uneasiness, but the
-loss of it seldom occurs without painful emotions.
-
-Another cause of suffering is inactivity of body and mind. It has been
-shown that desire is the spring both of mental and of physical activity,
-and that this activity is one source of enjoyment. The loss of this
-species of enjoyment is followed by consequent inquietude and
-uneasiness.
-
-Another cause of suffering is the existence of strong desire with the
-belief that it never can be gratified. Some desires exist in the mind
-without causing pain, but they may be excited to such a degree that the
-certainty that they never will be gratified may produce anguish almost
-intolerable.
-
-Another source of pain is sympathy in the sufferings of others. These
-may be so realized as to affect the mind of the observer with even more
-pain than the sufferer experiences. It is probable that the tender
-mother, in witnessing the distresses of her child, experiences much more
-pain than the object of her sympathies.
-
-Another cause of suffering is the violated sense of justice. In minds of
-high moral susceptibilities, suffering from this source may be most
-exquisite.
-
-Another cause of suffering is the consciousness of guilt. The emotions
-that follow the commission of crime are denominated repentance and
-remorse; and it is probable that the human mind has never suffered
-greater agonies than have attended the existence of these emotions.
-There are cases on record when intense bodily suffering has been
-resorted to as a relief from such anguish by withdrawing the attention
-of the mind from those subjects that call forth such emotions.
-
-Another cause of pain is the apprehension of future evil. This is often
-a source of long-continued and of distressing emotions, and the pain
-suffered in apprehension is often greater than would be experienced if
-the evils were realized.
-
-Another source of suffering is the exercise of malignant passions, such
-as hatred, envy, and jealousy. These emotions never can exist in the
-mind without pain. The exhibition of wicked passions and actions in
-other minds may also be mentioned in connection with this. It is painful
-to behold a mind tossed with the furies of ungoverned passion, or
-yielding to the chain of selfishness and pride.
-
-Another source of suffering is the consciousness of the existence of
-certain emotions in other minds toward ourselves. The belief that other
-intelligent beings look upon our character and conduct with displeasure,
-indignation, or contempt, inflicts the keenest suffering, and there is
-scarcely any thing mankind will not sacrifice to avoid these painful
-emotions.
-
-Another source of painful emotions is the view of certain characteristics
-in other minds. While the discovery of certain traits in other minds
-afford a high enjoyment, the want of them, or the existence of their
-opposite, awaken disagreeable emotions, expressed by the terms pity,
-contempt, indignation, disgust, abhorrence, and the like.
-
-There are other sources of pleasure and pain, which will be discussed
-more at large in succeeding chapters.
-
-[2] Hereafter the terms sensation and perception will often be used
-synonymously in cases where it is not needful to recognize the
-distinction heretofore indicated.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE SUSCEPTIBILITIES. EMOTIONS OF TASTE.
-
-
-Among the susceptibilities, the emotions of taste have always been
-distinguished, and treated of as a peculiarly distinct class. Why is it
-that certain objects of sight, and certain sounds or combinations of
-sound, awaken emotions more than other sights and sounds? Why do the
-perceptions of the eye and ear so much more powerfully affect the mind
-than those of the other senses? These certainly are objects for
-interesting inquiry. In attempting the discussion of this subject, the
-following particulars need to be considered.
-
-All pleasurable emotions are caused either by _perception_ or
-_conception_, for we have no other ideas but of these two kinds. That
-they are not occasioned by perception alone must be evident from the
-fact that infants and children, who have the same perceptions as matured
-persons, do not experience the emotions of taste in view of the most
-perfect specimens of the fine arts. A combination of gaudy colors or a
-string of glittering beads will delight a child more than the most
-finished productions of a Raphael or a Phidias. That it is not
-conception alone which awakens such emotions is manifest from the fact
-that it is the _perception_ of objects which are either sublime or
-beautiful that awakens the most vivid emotions of this kind. Of course,
-it is inevitable that emotions of taste are caused by perception and
-conception _through their connection with some past co-existing
-emotions_.
-
-Perceptions and conceptions can _recall the emotions_ which have been
-connected with them, and emotions can also recall a conception of the
-objects with which they have been united. For example, if some dark wood
-had been the scene of terror and affright, either the perception or the
-conception of this wood would recall the emotions of fear which had
-coexisted with it. If, on some other occasion, a strong emotion of fear
-should be awakened, this would probably recall a conception of the wood
-with which it had formerly been united. It is no uncommon fact in our
-experience to have circumstances about us that recall unusually sad and
-mournful feelings, for which we are wholly unable to account. No doubt,
-at such times, some particular objects, or some particular combination
-of circumstances which were formerly united with painful emotions, again
-recur, and recall the emotions with which they were once connected,
-while the mind is wholly unable to remember the fact of their past
-coexistence. In like manner, pleasurable emotions may be awakened by
-certain objects of perception when the mind is equally unable to trace
-the cause.
-
-Objects of _perception_ recall the emotions connected with them much
-more vividly than objects of conception can do. Thus, if we revisit the
-scenes of our childhood, the places of the sorrows and the joys of early
-days, how much more vividly are the emotions recalled which were
-formerly connected with these scenes than any _conception_ of these
-objects could awaken.
-
-Certain perceptions will be found to produce emotions similar to those
-awakened by the intellectual operations of mind. Thus the entrance of
-light produces an emotion similar to the discovery of some truth, and
-the emotion felt while in a state of doubt and uncertainty resembles
-that experienced when shrouded in darkness. Great care and anxiety
-produce a state of mind similar to what is felt when the body is pressed
-down by a heavy weight. The upward spring of an elastic body awakens
-feelings resembling those that attend the hearing of good news, and thus
-with many other perceptions. From this fact originates much of the
-figurative language in common use; such as when knowledge is called
-light, and ignorance darkness, and care is called a load, and joy is
-said to make the heart leap.
-
-It has previously been shown that the discovery of certain operations
-and emotions of mind affords much more pleasure than attends mere
-perceptions of material objects. Those who have experienced the exciting
-animation felt at developments of splendid genius, and the pure delight
-resulting from the interchange of affection, can well realize that no
-sensitive gratification could ever be exchanged for them. Whatever
-objects, therefore, most vividly recall those emotions which are
-awakened when such qualities are apprehended will be most interesting to
-the mind.
-
-Now it will appear that there are no modes by which one mind can learn
-the character and feelings of another but by means of the eye and ear. A
-person both deaf and blind could never, except to an exceedingly limited
-extent, learn either the intellectual operations or the emotions of
-another mind. Of course, it is by means of certain forms, colors,
-motions, and sounds that we gain those ideas which are most interesting
-and animating to the soul. It is by the blush of modesty, the paleness
-of fear, the flush of indignation, that _color_ aids in giving an idea
-of the emotions of the mind. The pallid hue of disease, the sallow
-complexion of age, the pure and bright colors of childhood, and the
-delicate blendings of the youthful complexion, have much influence in
-conveying ideas of the qualities of mind in certain particulars. The
-color and flashing expressions of the eye also have much to do with our
-apprehensions of the workings of mind.
-
-As it regards _motion_ as aiding in imparting such ideas, it is by the
-curl of the lip that contempt is expressed, by the arching brow that
-curiosity and surprise are exhibited, by the scowling front that anger
-and discontent are displayed, and by various muscular movements of the
-countenance that the passions and emotions of the mind are portrayed. It
-is by the motions of the body and limbs also that strong emotions are
-exhibited, as in the clasped hand of supplication, the extended arms of
-affection, and the violent contortions of anger.
-
-_Form_ and _outline_ also have their influence. The sunken eye of grief,
-the hollow cheek of care and want, the bending form of sorrow, the erect
-position of dignity, the curvature of haughtiness and pride, are various
-modes of expressing the qualities and emotions of mind.
-
-But it is by the varied _sounds_ of voice chiefly that intellect glances
-abroad, and the soul is poured forth at the lips. The quick and animated
-sounds of cheerfulness, joy, and hope; the softer tones of meekness,
-gentleness, and love; the plaintive notes of sympathy, sorrow, and pain;
-the firm tone of magnanimity, fortitude, patience, and self-denial, all
-exhibit the pleasing and interesting emotions of the soul. Nor less
-expressive, though more painful, are the harsh sounds of anger, malice,
-envy, and discontent.
-
-Not only are certain forms, colors, motions, and sounds the medium by
-which we gain a knowledge of the intellectual operations and emotions of
-other minds, but they are the means by which we discover and designate
-those material objects which are causes of comfort, utility, and
-enjoyment. Thus it is by the particular form and color that we
-distinguish the fruits and the food which minister to our support. By
-the same means we discriminate between noxious and useful plants and
-animals, and distinguish all those conveniences and contrivances which
-contribute to the comfort of man. Of course, certain forms and colors
-are connected in the mind with certain emotions of pleasure that have
-attended them as causes of comfort and enjoyment.
-
-In what precedes, it appears that it is those emotions which are
-awakened by the apprehension of certain intellectual operations and
-emotions of intelligent minds which are most delightful; that all our
-ideas of such operations and emotions are gained by means of certain
-forms, colors, motions, and sounds; that we designate objects of
-convenience and enjoyment to ourselves by the same mode; that
-perceptions can recall the emotions which have been connected with them,
-even after the mind has forgotten the connection, and that perceptions
-recall associated emotions much more vividly than conceptions.
-
-In consequence of these considerations, the inference seems justifiable
-that the emotions of beauty and sublimity are not owing either simply to
-the _perceptions_ produced, nor to the _conceptions_ recalled by the
-principle of association. But they are accounted for in a great degree
-by the fact that certain colors, forms, motions, and sounds have been so
-often connected with emotions awakened by the apprehension of qualities
-in other minds, or of emotions which arise in view of causes of
-enjoyment to ourselves, that the _perception_ of these colors, sounds,
-forms, and motions recall such agreeable emotions, even when the mind
-can not trace the connection in past experience.
-
-As an example of this, the emotion of pleasure has been so often
-connected with the clear blue of the sky and with the bright verdure of
-the foliage, that the sight of either of these colors recalls the
-emotions, though we may not be able to refer to any particular time when
-this previous connection existed. In like manner, the moaning sound of
-the wind in a storm, or the harsh growl which sometimes attends it, has
-so often been united with sorrowful or disagreeable emotions, that the
-sounds recall the emotions.
-
-But there is another important fact in regard to the causes of the
-emotions of taste. It is found that the character of the _combination_
-of sounds, forms, colors, and motions has as much to do with the
-existence of such feelings as the nature of these objects of perception.
-The very same colors and forms, in certain combination, are very
-displeasing, when in others they are beautiful. Thus, also, certain
-motions in certain circumstances are very beautiful or sublime, and in
-others very displeasing. The very same sounds, also, may be made either
-very disagreeable or very delightful, according to their combination.
-
-To account for this, it is necessary to understand that objects which
-tend to awaken emotions of a directly opposite nature can not both
-operate on the mind without causing disagreeable feelings. If we are
-surrounded by objects of awe and solemnity, it is painful to notice
-objects that are mean or ludicrous. If we are under the influence of
-sprightly and humorous feelings, it is painful to encounter solemn and
-pensive scenes, with which, perhaps, at other times, we should be
-pleased. In order, therefore, to awaken emotions of beauty and
-sublimity, there must exist a _congruity_ in the arrangement and
-composition of parts which will prevent the operation of causes that
-would awaken incongruous emotions.
-
-But there is another principle which has a still more powerful operation
-in regard to the effect of combination and composition. We are always
-accustomed to view objects with some reference to their _nature_ and
-_use_. We always feel that every effect must have a cause, and that
-every contrivance has some _design_ which it was made to accomplish.
-
-There is no intellectual attribute of mind which is regarded with more
-admiration than _wisdom_, which is always shown in selecting the best
-means for accomplishing a given end; and the more interesting or
-important is the object to be secured, the more is the mind pleased with
-discovering the wisdom exhibited in adapting means to secure this end.
-Almost every construction of nature or of art is regarded by the mind as
-having some use and design. No mind, except one bereft of its powers,
-would ever employ itself in designing any thing which has no possible
-use, either in benefiting or pleasing the designer or others; and should
-any such object be found, it would cause only disgust, as exhibiting the
-fatuity of a mind which spent its powers in contriving so useless a
-thing.
-
-There are many objects which meet the eye of man for which he in vain
-seeks the use and design; but such objects are never attended with the
-conviction that there is no possible use to which they can be applied;
-on the contrary, they more frequently provoke curiosity, and awaken
-desire to discover their nature and their use. There is a never-failing
-conviction attending all our discoveries of new objects in nature that
-there is some design or contrivance of which they form a link in the
-chain.
-
-Whenever the object of any design is ascertained, immediately there
-commences an examination of the modes by which this object is to be
-effected. If every thing is found to harmonize--if a relation of fitness
-and propriety is discovered in every part, the mind is satisfied with
-the exhibition of wisdom which is thus discovered. But if some parts are
-found tending to counteract the general design of the contrivance, the
-object is displeasing. Every work of art, then, depends, for the
-pleasure it affords, not alone on the various forms, colors, sounds, and
-motions which are combined to affect the senses, but on the nature of
-the design intended, and on the skill which is shown in so composing and
-arranging the several parts that each shall duly aid in effecting this
-design. This is the particular in which the genius of the painter, the
-sculptor, the architect, the musician, and the poet is especially
-exhibited.
-
-Another particular to be noticed in reference to this subject is the
-implanted principle of curiosity, or the desire which the mind feels to
-discover what is _new_. After we have discovered the object for which a
-thing is contrived, and the fit adjustment of every part to this object,
-one cause of interest in it ceases. And objects which have been the
-subjects of repeated observation and inspection never yield so much
-interest as those which afford to the mind some fresh opportunity to
-discover _new_ indications of design, and of fitness in the means for
-accomplishing the design. The love of novelty, then, is a powerful
-principle in securing gratification to the mind. Of course, the genius
-of the artist is to be displayed, not only in arranging the several
-parts so as to accomplish a given design, but in the very effort to
-secure a design which is new, so that the mind will have a fresh object
-for exercising its powers in detecting the fitness of means for
-accomplishing a given end.
-
-From the preceding, we recapitulate the following causes for the
-pleasurable emotions which are felt in view of certain objects of sight,
-and in certain combinations of sound: They recall emotions which, in
-past experience, have been connected with the conception of operations
-and emotions of other minds, or with material objects that were regarded
-as the causes of pleasurable emotions to ourselves; they recall emotions
-that are congruous in their nature; they cause emotions of pleasure from
-the discovery of fitness in design and composition; and, finally, they
-awaken emotions of novelty.
-
-Emotions of taste that are painful are caused by the presence of objects
-that recall painful emotions with which they have formerly been
-connected; by objects that recall incongruous emotions; by objects that
-exhibit a want of fitness and design; and by objects that are common,
-when the mind has been led to expect novelty.
-
-
-OBJECTS, MOTIONS, AND SOUNDS THAT CAUSE EMOTIONS OF TASTE.
-
-The _causes_ which produce emotions of taste have now been pointed out.
-An inquiry as to _which_ are the objects, motions, and sounds, and their
-various combinations, that, in our experience, have awakened such
-emotions, may lead to facts that will establish the position assumed.
-
-Emotions of taste generally are divided into two classes, called
-emotions of _sublimity_ and emotions of _beauty_. Emotions of sublimity
-resemble those which exist in the mind at the display of great
-intellectual power, and at exhibitions of strong passion and emotions in
-another mind. Emotions of beauty resemble those which are experienced at
-the exhibition of the more gentle emotions of mind, such as pity,
-humility, meekness, and affection.
-
-_Of Sounds._
-
-All sounds are sublime which in past experience have been associated
-with the strong emotions of fear and terror. Such sounds are heard in
-the roar of artillery, the howling of a storm, the roll of thunder, and
-the rumbling of an earthquake. Sounds are sublime, also, which convey an
-idea of great power and might. This is illustrated in the emotions felt
-at the uprooting of trees and the prostration of nature before a
-whirlwind; in the force of the rolling waves, as they dash against the
-cliffs; and in art, by the working of some ponderous and mighty engine,
-that astonishes with the immense resistance it can overcome.
-
-Other sounds, also, are sublime which have often been associated with
-emotions of awe, solemnity, or deep melancholy. Such are the tolling of
-a heavy bell and the solemn notes of the organ.
-
-There may be certain circumstances that render a sound, that otherwise
-would be very gentle and beautiful, more strongly sublime than even
-those sounds that are generally most terrific. Gray describes such a
-combination of circumstances in a letter to a friend. "Did you never
-observe," said he, "while rocking winds are piping loud, that _pause_,
-as the gust is recollecting itself, and rising upon the ear in a shrill
-and plaintive note, like the swell of the Æolian harp? I do assure you
-there is nothing in the world so like the _voice of a spirit_."
-
-We have another example in Scripture: "And behold, the Lord passed by,
-and a great and strong wind rent the mountains, and brake in pieces the
-rocks before the Lord; but the Lord was not in the wind; and after the
-wind an earthquake; but the Lord was not in the earthquake; and after
-the earthquake a fire; but the Lord was not in the fire; and after the
-fire a _still small voice_. And it was so, when Elijah heard it, he
-wrapped his face in a mantle." In both these cases, the sudden silence
-and the still small voice, so contrasted with the tumult around, would
-awaken the most thrilling emotions of the sublime. In some cases it is
-the sense which these sounds awaken of the presence of some awful and
-powerful Being that causes such emotions.
-
-There are a great variety of sounds that are called beautiful. Such are
-the sound of a distant waterfall, the murmur of a rivulet, the sighing
-of the wind, the tinkling of the sheepfold, the lowing of distant kine,
-and the note of the shepherd's pipe. But it must be remarked that it is
-always a combination of circumstances that make sounds either sublime or
-beautiful. If we know, by the source from which they originate, that
-they are caused by no display of power or danger, or if necessarily they
-have low and mean associations connected with them, the emotions of the
-sublime or beautiful, which would otherwise recur, are prevented. Thus
-the rumbling of a cart is sublime when it is believed to be thunder, and
-loses this character when its true cause is discovered. The sound of the
-lowing of kine in certain circumstances is very beautiful, and in others
-very vulgar and displeasing.
-
-Music seems to owe its chief power over the mind to the fact that it can
-combine all kinds of sounds that have ever been associated with any
-emotions, either of dignity, awe, and terror; or of joy, sprightliness,
-and mirth; or of tenderness, melancholy, and grief. Its power depends on
-the nature of the particular sounds, and also on the nature of their
-combination and succession in relation to time, and in relation to a
-certain sound which is called the fundamental or key note.
-
-The art of a musical composer consists in the ability with which he
-succeeds in producing a certain class of emotions which he aims to
-awaken. The more finished productions of this art are never relished
-till long observation and experience enable the listener to judge of the
-nature of the design, and with how much success the composer has
-succeeded in effecting it. Music, when adapted to certain words, has its
-nature and design more clearly portrayed, and in such productions it is
-easier to judge of the success of the composer.
-
-_Of Color._
-
-There are no colors which ordinarily excite so strong an emotion as to
-be called sublime. The deep black of mourning and the rich purple of
-royalty approach the nearest to this character. That colors acquire
-their power in awakening agreeable or disagreeable emotions simply from
-the emotions which have ordinarily existed in connection with them,
-appears from the fact that the associations of mankind are so
-exceedingly diverse on this subject. What is considered a dignified and
-solemn color in one nation is tawdry and vulgar in another. Thus, with
-us, _yellow_ is common and tawdry, but among the Chinese it is a
-favorite color. Black, with us, has solemn and mournful associations,
-but in Spain and Venice it is an agreeable color. White, in this
-country, is beautiful, as the emblem of purity and innocence, but in
-China it is the sorrowful garb of mourning.
-
-_Of Forms._
-
-Forms that awaken emotions of sublimity are such as have been associated
-with emotions of danger, terror, awe, or solemnity. Such are military
-ensigns, cannon, the hearse, the monument of death, and various objects
-of this kind. Those forms which distinguish bodies that have great
-strength, or which are enduring in their nature, awaken the same class
-of emotions. Thus the Gothic castle, the outline of rocks and mountains,
-and the form of the oak, are examples. Bodies often appear sublime from
-the mere circumstance of size, when compared with objects of the same
-kind. Thus the pyramids of Egypt are an example where relative size,
-together with their imperishable materials, awakens emotions of
-sublimity. The ideas of beauty of form depend almost entirely on their
-fitness to the object for which they are designed, and on many casual
-associations with which they are connected.
-
-_Of Motion._
-
-All motion that awakens sublime ideas is such as conveys the notion of
-great force and power. Motions of this kind are generally in straight or
-angular lines. Such motions are seen in the working of machinery, and in
-the efforts of animal nature. Quick motion is more sublime than slow.
-Motions that awaken ideas of beauty are generally slow and curving. Such
-are the windings of the quiet rivulet, the gliding motion of birds
-through the air, the waving of trees, and the curling of vapor.
-
-In regard to the beauty and sublimity of forms and color, it is equally
-true, as in reference to sound, that the alteration of circumstances
-will very materially alter the nature of the emotions connected with
-them. If they are so combined as to cause incongruous emotions, or if
-they do not harmonize with the general design of any composition,
-emotions of the sublime or beautiful are not awakened. For example, if
-the vivid green, which is agreeable in itself from the pleasing emotions
-which have been connected with it, is combined with a scene of
-melancholy and desolation, where the design of the artist is to awaken
-other than lively emotions, it appears incongruous and displeasing.
-
-The art of the poet consists in the use of such language as awakens
-emotions of beauty and sublimity, either by recalling conceptions of
-various forms, colors, and motions in nature, which are beautiful and
-sublime, or the strong and powerful, or the soft and gentle emotions of
-mind.
-
-Emotions of moral sublimity are such as are felt in witnessing
-exhibitions of the force of intellect or of strong feelings.
-
-Emotions of moral beauty are those that are felt in witnessing the
-exhibition of the gentler and tender emotions of mind. These emotions
-are much more powerful and delightful than when they are more faintly
-recalled by those objects of perception which are called sublime and
-beautiful.
-
-The taste is improved by cultivating a love for intellectual endowments
-and moral qualities. It is also cultivated by gaining an extensive
-knowledge of objects and scenes which, either in history, or in poetry,
-or in any compositions of the fine arts, have been associated with
-emotions. It is also cultivated by learning the rules of fitness and
-propriety, by studying works of taste, by general reading, by
-intercourse with persons of refinement and taste, and by a nice
-observation of the adaptation and fitness of things in the daily
-intercourse and pursuits of life.
-
-The highest efforts of taste are exhibited in the works of artists who
-make such pursuits the express object of their profession.
-
-But in ordinary life the cultivation of taste is chiefly exhibited in
-the style, furniture, and decoration of private dwellings, and in the
-dress and ornaments of the person. In reference to these, there is the
-same opportunity for gratifying the eye as there is in the compositions
-of the fine arts. On these subjects there are rules in regard to color,
-outline, and combination, and also rules of fitness and propriety, of
-which every person of taste sensibly feels the violation. In the
-construction of dwelling-houses, in the proportion of rooms, in the
-suitableness of colors, in the fitness of all circumstances to the spot
-of location, to the habits and circumstances of the proprietor, to ideas
-of convenience, and to various particulars which may be objects of
-regard, in all these respects the eye of taste ever is prepared to
-distinguish beauties or defects.
-
-As it regards dress, every individual will necessarily exhibit, to a
-greater or less extent, the degree in which taste has been cultivated. A
-person of real refinement of taste will always have the dress consistent
-with the circumstances of fortune, the relative rank in life, the
-station and character, the hour of the day, the particular pursuit or
-profession, and the period of life.
-
-If a person is dressed with a richness and elegance which fortune does
-not warrant, if the dress is either inferior or superior to that of
-others of the same rank and station, if it is unfitted to the hour or
-the pursuit, if youth puts on the grave dress of age, or age assumes the
-bright colors and ornaments of youth, in all these cases the eye of
-taste is offended.
-
-In the adaptation of colors to complexions, and the style of dress to
-the particular form of the person; in avoiding the extremes of fashion,
-the excesses of ornament, and all approaches to immodesty--in all these
-respects a good taste can be displayed in dress, and thus charm us in
-every-day life. A person of cultivated taste, in all that relates to the
-little arrangements of domestic life, the ornaments of the exterior and
-interior of a dwelling, the pursuits of hours of relaxation and
-amusement, the modes of social intercourse, the nice perception of
-proprieties in habits, manners, modes of address, and the thousand
-little every-day incidents of life, will throw an undefined and nameless
-charm around, like the soft light of heaven, that, without dazzling,
-perpetually cheers.
-
-_Emotions of the Ludicrous._
-
-There is a certain class of feelings called _emotions of the ludicrous_,
-which are the causes of laughter. These are generally pleasurable in
-their nature, though there are times when the emotions which produce
-laughter are painful. Emotions of this kind are usually caused by the
-sudden union of certain ideas in our conceptions when the laws of
-association appear to be violated. Such ideas are called incongruous,
-because, according to the ordinary experience of our minds, they would
-not naturally have appeared together.
-
-In order to awaken this emotion, it is not only necessary that the mind
-should discover ideas united which have not ordinarily been so in past
-experience, but those which are united in direct _opposition_ to the
-laws of association. Thus, if there has been a union of certain
-qualities in an object which have uniformly tended to produce emotions
-of a dignified and solemn kind, and some particular is pointed out which
-is mean, little, or low, the unexpected incongruity occasions mirth.
-
-In like manner, when an object in past experience has uniformly united
-ideas which awakened emotions of contempt, if some particular is pointed
-out in association with these which is grand or sublime, this
-incongruity occasions an emotion of the ludicrous. This is the
-foundation of the amusement produced by bombastic writings, where
-objects that are grand and sublime have low and mean conceptions
-connected with them, or where qualities that are insignificant or mean
-are connected with those which are grand and sublime.
-
-The following example of the union of such incongruous ideas will
-illustrate:
-
- "And now had Phoebus in the lap
- Of Thetis taken out his nap,
- And, like a lobster boiled, the morn
- From black to red began to turn."
-
-The sublime ideas connected with the sun, and the classical associations
-united with the name of Thetis, would not naturally have recalled the
-idea of so insignificant an animal, nor the changes produced in cooking
-it, and these connections violate the ordinary laws of association.
-
-Emotions of the ludicrous are also produced by the sudden conception of
-some association in ideas which has never before been discovered. Thus,
-if ideas have been united in the mind on some other principle of
-association than that of resemblance, the sudden discovery of some
-unexpected resemblance will produce mirth. This is the foundation of the
-merriment produced by _puns_, where the _ideas_ which the words
-represent would never have been united by the principles of association,
-but the union of these ideas is effected on the principle of resemblance
-between the _sounds_ of the words which recall these ideas. When the
-mind suddenly perceives this unexpected foundation for the union of
-ideas that in all other respects are incongruous, an emotion of the
-ludicrous is produced. This is also the foundation of the pleasure which
-is felt in the use of alliteration in poetry, where a resemblance is
-discovered in the initial sound of words that recall ideas which in all
-other respects are incongruous.
-
-All minds enjoy the excitement of this class of emotions, but some much
-more than others. _Laughter_, which is the effect of this class of
-emotions, is enjoyed more or less by all mankind, and is regarded as not
-only an agreeable, but as a healthful exercise.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE MORAL SUSCEPTIBILITIES.
-
-
-A brief reference has been made to those susceptibilities which are the
-subject of this chapter. These, from their importance, are entitled to a
-more enlarged consideration.
-
-Before proceeding, however, it is desirable to refer to the uses of the
-term _moral_, inasmuch as it often is employed with a vague
-comprehension of its signification. In its widest sense it signifies
-_whatever relates to the regulation of mind by motives_ in distinction
-from those influences that produce involuntary results.
-
-In a more limited sense, it signifies _whatever relates to the
-regulation of mind in reference to the rules of right and wrong_.
-
-In the preceding pages it has been assumed that the grand object for
-which the Creator formed mind and all things is to produce _the greatest
-possible happiness with the least possible evil_, and that this design
-is so impressed on the human mind that the needless destruction of
-happiness is felt to be _wrong_--that is, contrary or unfitted to the
-design of all things; while all that tends to promote happiness is felt
-to be right, or consistent with this plan.
-
-In order to a more clear view of this part of the subject, it is
-important to inquire as to the manner in which the ideas of _right_ and
-_wrong_ seem to originate.
-
-The young child first notices that certain actions of its own are
-regarded with smiles and tones of love and approval, while other acts
-occasion frowns and tones of displeasure.
-
-Next, it perceives that whatever gives pleasure to itself and to others
-is called _good_ and _right_, while whatever causes unpleasant feelings
-is called _bad_ and _wrong_. Moreover, it notices that there is a right
-and wrong way to hold its spoon, to use its playthings, to put on its
-clothes, and to do multitudes of other things. It thus perceives, more
-and more, that there is some _rule_ to regulate the use and action of
-all things, both animate and inanimate, and that such rules always have
-reference to some plan or design.
-
-As its faculties develop and its observation enlarges, the general
-impression is secured that _all_ plans and contrivances of men are
-designed to promote enjoyment or to prevent discomfort, and are called
-good and right just so far as this is done. At the same time, all that
-tend to discomfort or pain are called bad and wrong.
-
-In all the works of nature around, too, every thing that promotes
-enjoyment is called good and right, and the opposite is called evil and
-wrong.
-
-At last there is a resulting feeling that the great design of all things
-is to secure good and prevent evil, and that whatever is opposed to this
-is wrong, and unfitted to the object for which all things exist. The
-question whether this impression is owing solely to observation or
-partly to mental constitution is waived as of little practical
-consequence.
-
-But, in the experience of infancy and childhood, the _law of sacrifice_
-is speedily developed. It is perceived that much of the good to be
-gained, if sought to excess, occasions pain, so that there must be a
-certain amount of self-denial practiced, which, to the young novice,
-sometimes involves disappointment and discomfort. It is also seen that
-frequently two or more enjoyments are offered which are incompatible, so
-that one must be relinquished to gain the other. It is perceived, also,
-that there is a constant calculation going on as to which will be the
-_best_--that is, which will secure _the most good with the least evil_.
-And the child is constantly instructed that it must avoid excess, and
-must give up what is of less value to secure the greater good. All this
-training involves _sacrifices_ which are more or less painful, so that a
-young child will sometimes cry as it voluntarily gives up one kind of
-pleasure as the only mode of securing what is preferred.
-
-It is perceived, also, that there is a constant _balancing_ of good and
-evil, so that a given amount of enjoyment cancels or repays for a
-certain amount of evil. When a great amount of enjoyment is purchased by
-a small degree of labor or trouble, the _compound result_ is deemed a
-good, and called right; on the contrary, when the evil involved exceeds
-a given amount in comparison to the good, the compound result is called
-evil and wrong.
-
-Thus is generated the impression that there is a law of sacrifice
-instituted requiring the greatest possible good with the least possible
-evil, and that this is the great design of all things.
-
-The impression is, not merely that we are to seek enjoyment and avoid
-pain, but that we are to seek the _greatest possible_ good with the
-_least possible_ evil, and that in doing this we are to obey the law of
-sacrifice and suffering, by which the greatest possible good _is to be
-bought_ by a certain amount of evil _voluntarily_ assumed.
-
-In regard to this great law of sacrifice, the highest part of it is
-discerned in the earliest experiences of life. The young child very soon
-perceives that its mother and its other friends are constantly making
-sacrifices for its own good, and bearing inconveniences and trouble for
-the good of those around. And those who perform such acts of benevolent
-self-sacrifice are praised, and their conduct is called good and right.
-_Voluntary suffering to promote the welfare of others_ is discerned to
-be the highest kind of good and right conduct in the estimation of all.
-
-The first feature, then, in our moral nature is that _impression of the
-great design of our Creator_ which furnishes us the means of deciding on
-the rectitude of all voluntary action.
-
-The second feature of our moral constitution is what is ordinarily
-called the _sense of justice_. It is that susceptibility which is
-excited at the view of the conduct of others as _voluntary_ causes of
-good or evil.
-
-In all cases where free agents act to promote happiness, an emotion of
-approval arises, together with a desire of reward to the author of the
-good. On the contrary, when there is a voluntary destruction of
-happiness, there is an emotion of disapproval and a desire for
-retributive pain on the author of the wrong.
-
-These emotions are instinctive, and not at all regulated by reason in
-their inception. When an evil is done, an instant desire is felt _to
-discover the cause_; and when it is found, an instant desire is felt _to
-inflict some penalty_. So irrational is this impulse, that children will
-exhibit anger and deal blows on inanimate objects that cause pain. Even
-mature minds are sometimes conscious of this impulse.
-
-It is the office of the intellect to judge whether the deed was a
-voluntary one, whether the agent intended the mischief, and whether a
-penalty will be of any use. The impulse to punish is never preceded by
-any such calculations.
-
-That this impulse is an implanted part of our constitution, and not the
-result of reason and experience, is seen in the delight manifested by
-young children in the narration of the nursery tale where the cruel
-uncle who murdered the Babes in the Wood receives the retributions of
-Heaven.
-
-Another feature in this sense of justice is the _proportion_ demanded
-between the evil done and the penalty inflicted. That this also is
-instinctive, and not the result of reason, is seen in the nursery, where
-children will approve of slight penalties for slight offenses, and
-severe ones for great ones, but will revolt from any very great
-disproportion between the wrong act and its penalty. As a general rule,
-both in the nursery and in the great family of mature minds, the greater
-the wrong done, the stronger the desire for a penalty, and the more
-severe the punishment demanded.
-
-Another very important point of consideration is the universal feeling
-of mankind that the _natural penalties_ for wrong-doing are _not
-sufficient_, and that it is an act of love as well as of justice to add
-to these penalties. Thus the parent who forbids his child to eat green
-fruit will not trust to the results of the natural penalty, but restrain
-by the fear of the immediate and more easily conceived penalty of
-chastisement.
-
-So, in the great family of man, the natural penalties for theft are not
-deemed sufficient, but severe penalties for the protection of property
-are added.
-
-This particular is the foundation of certain distinctions that are of
-great importance, which will now be pointed out.
-
-We find the terms "_reward_ and _punishment_" used in two different
-relations. In the first and widest sense they signify not only the
-penalties of human law, but those _natural consequences_ which, by the
-constitution of nature, inevitably follow certain courses of conduct.
-
-Thus an indolent man is said to receive poverty as a punishment, and it
-is in this sense that his children are said to be punished for the
-faults of their father.
-
-The violations of natural law are punished without any reference to the
-question whether the evil-doer intended the wrong, or whether he sinned
-in ignorance, or whether this ignorance was involuntary and unavoidable.
-The question of the justice or injustice of such natural penalties
-involves the great question of the right and wrong of the system of the
-universe. Is it just and right for the Creator to make a system in which
-all free agents shall be thus led to obedience to its laws by penalties
-as well as rewards, by fear as well as by hope? This question will not
-be discussed here.
-
-Most discussions as to _just_ rewards and penalties ordinarily relate to
-the _added_ penalties by which parents, teachers, and magistrates
-enforce obedience to natural or to statute law.
-
-In these questions reference is always had to the _probable results_ of
-such rewards and penalties in securing obedience. If experience has
-shown that certain penalties do secure obedience to wise and good laws,
-either of nature or of human enactment, then they are considered just.
-If they do not, they are counted unwise and unjust.
-
-So, if certain penalties are needlessly severe--that is to say, if a
-less penalty will secure equal obedience, then this also decides so
-severe a penalty to be unjust.
-
-In deciding on the rectitude of the penalties of human enactments, it is
-always assumed to be unjust to punish for any lack of knowledge and
-obedience when the subject had _no power_ to know and to obey. If _a
-choice to obey_ will not secure the act required of a free agent, then a
-penalty inflicted for disobedience is always regarded as unjust. The
-only seeming exception to this is the case where a person, by voluntary
-means, has deprived himself of ability to obey. But in such cases the
-punishment is felt to be right, not because he does not obey when he has
-no power, but because he has voluntarily deprived himself of this power.
-And he is punished for destroying his ability to obey, and not for
-violating the law.
-
-These things in human laws, then, are always demanded to make a penalty
-appear _just_ to the moral sense of mankind, namely, that the subject
-have power to obey, and that he has opportunity to know the law, and is
-not ignorant by any voluntary and improper neglect.
-
-In all questions of justice, therefore, it is important to discriminate
-between those penalties that are inherent as a part of the great system
-of the universe, and for which the Creator alone is the responsible
-cause, and those which result from voluntary institutions of which men
-are the authors.
-
-In connection with this subject, it is important to recognize the
-distinction that exists in regard to two classes of right and wrong
-actions. The first class includes those which are wrong in their nature
-and in all supposable cases, such, for example, as the wanton infliction
-of needless pain, or the breach of plighted faith, or the returning of
-love and kindness with ungrateful treatment. In all possible
-suppositions, the mind revolts from such actions as wrong and deserving
-of penalties. It is this class of actions which, without any reasoning,
-the mind never fails to disapprove, and to desire should be visited with
-retributive penalties.
-
-The other class of right and wrong acts derive their estimate solely
-from the circumstances in which they occur. For example, a man is angry
-and beats a little child. Now the question whether his feelings and
-action are right or wrong depends entirely on circumstances. If the
-child has done no evil and the person knew it, his feelings and actions
-are wrong. But if the person is a father correcting his child for some
-heinous fault and with only a suitable degree of anger, then the feeling
-and action are right.
-
-There is another mode of estimating conduct by which the same act may
-have two opposite characters, according to the _relation_ in which it is
-regarded. For example, a good parent may give wrong medicine to his
-child, or punish an innocent one, believing him to be guilty.
-
-In such cases the act is right as it respects the motive or intention,
-and wrong as it respects the nature of the action. It is sometimes the
-case that a man may do a right action with a bad motive, and a wrong
-action with a good motive.
-
-Thus the same act is right in one relation, and wrong in another. It is
-important that this distinction should be borne in mind.
-
-The next feature in our moral constitution is the susceptibility which
-is excited by the intellectual judgment of our own feelings and conduct
-as either right or wrong.
-
-In case we decide them to be right, we experience an emotion of
-self-approval which is very delightful; but if we decide that they are
-wrong, we experience an immediate penalty in a painful emotion called
-_remorse_. This emotion is always proportioned to the amount of evil
-done, and the consciousness that it was done knowingly and
-intentionally. No suffering is more keen than the highest emotions of
-this kind, while their pangs are often enduring and unappeasable.
-Sometimes there is an attending desire to inflict retribution on one's
-self as a mode of alleviating this distress.
-
-This susceptibility is usually denominated _conscience_. Sometimes this
-word is used to include both the intellectual judgment of our conduct as
-right or wrong, and the consequent emotions of approval or remorse;
-sometimes it refers to the susceptibility alone. Either use is correct,
-as in the connection in which it is employed the distinction can
-ordinarily be easily made.
-
-This analysis of our moral constitution furnishes means for a clear
-definition of such terms as _obligated_, _ought_, _ought not_, and the
-like.
-
-A person is obligated or ought to do a thing when he has the intellect
-to perceive that it is right, and the moral susceptibilities just
-described. When he is destitute either of the intellect or of these
-susceptibilities, he ceases to be a moral and accountable being. He can
-no longer be made to feel any moral obligations.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE WILL.
-
-
-It is the _power of choice_ which raises man to the dignity of an
-intellectual and moral being. Without this principle, he would be a
-creature of mere impulses and instincts. He would possess
-susceptibilities of happiness to be excited, and intellect to devise and
-discover the modes of securing enjoyment; but without governing
-principle, the soul would be led captive with each successive desire, or
-be the sport of chances whenever conflicting desires were awakened.
-
-He who formed man in his own perfect image left not his work without
-this balance-power to regulate the complicated springs of so wonderful
-an existence. Man is now not only the image of his Creator as lord of
-this lower world, but is, like him, the lord and master of his own
-powers.
-
-It has been shown that the constitution, both of mind and of the world,
-is such that it is impossible in the nature of things to gain every
-object which is the cause of enjoyment. There is a constant succession
-of selections to be made between different modes of securing happiness.
-A lesser good is given up for a greater, or some good relinquished
-altogether to avoid some consequent pain. Often, also, some painful
-state of mind is sought as the means of securing some future good, or of
-avoiding some greater evil. Thus men endure want, fatigue, and famine to
-purchase wealth. Thus the nauseous draught will be swallowed to avoid
-the pains of sickness; and thus the pleasures of domestic affection will
-be sacrificed to obtain honor and fame. The whole course of life is a
-constant succession of such decisions between different modes of
-securing happiness and of avoiding pain.
-
-
-_Specific and Generic Volitions._
-
-In noticing the operation of mind, it will be seen that there is a
-foundation for two classes of volitions or acts of choice, which may be
-denominated _specific_ and _generic_.
-
-A _specific volition_ is one that secures some particular act, such as
-the moving of the arm or turning of the head. Such volitions are
-ordinarily consequent on some more general purpose of the mind, which
-they aid in accomplishing, and which is, therefore, denominated a
-_generic volition_. For example, a man chooses to make a certain
-journey: this is the generic volition, and, in order to carry it out, he
-performs a great variety of acts, each one of which aids in carrying out
-the generic decision. These specific acts of will, which tend to
-accomplish a more general purpose, may also be called _subordinate_,
-because they are controlled by a generic volition.
-
-It can be seen that the generic volitions may themselves become
-subordinate to a still more comprehensive purpose. Thus the man may
-decide to make a journey, which is a generic volition in reference to
-all acts subordinate to this end. But this journey may be a subordinate
-part of a more general purpose to make a fortune or to secure some other
-important end.
-
-It is frequently the case that a generic purpose, which relates to
-objects that require a long time and many complicated operations, exists
-when the mind seems almost unconscious of its power. For example, a man
-may form a generic purpose to enter a profession for which years will be
-required to prepare. And while his whole course of action is regulated
-by this decision, he engages in pursuits entirely foreign to it and
-which seem to engross his whole attention. These pursuits may sometimes
-be such as are antagonistic to his grand purpose, so as at least to
-imperil or retard its accomplishment. And yet this strong and quiet
-purpose remains, and is eventually carried out.
-
-It is the case, also, that a generic volition may be formed to be
-performed at some particular time and place, and then the mind becomes
-entirely unconscious of it till the appointed period and circumstances
-occur. Then the decision becomes dominant, and controls all other
-purposes.
-
-Thus a man may decide that, at a specified hour, he will stop his
-studies and perform certain gymnastic exercises. This volition is
-forgotten until the hour arrives, and then it recurs and is carried out.
-
-This phenomenon sometimes occurs in sleep. Some persons, in watching
-with the sick, will determine to wake at given hours to administer
-medicines; then they will sleep soundly till the appointed time comes,
-when they will waken and perform the predetermined actions.
-
-In regard to the _commencement_ of a generic purpose, we find that
-sometimes it is so distinct and definite as to be the subject of
-consciousness and memory. For example, a spendthrift, in some moment of
-suffering and despondency, may form a determination to commence a
-systematic course of thrift and economy, and may actually carry it out
-through all his future life. Such cases are often to be found on record
-or in everyday life.
-
-In other cases, this quiet, hidden, but controlling purpose seems to be
-formed by unconscious and imperceptible influences, so that the mind can
-not revert to the specific time or manner when it originated. For
-example, a child who is trained from early life to speak the truth, can
-never revert to any particular moment when this generic purpose
-originated.
-
-It is sometimes the case, also, that a person will contemplate some
-generic volition before it occurs, while the process of its final
-formation seems almost beyond the power of scrutiny. For example, a man
-may be urged to relinquish one employment and engage in another. He
-reflects, consults, and is entirely uncertain how he shall decide. As
-time passes, he gradually inclines toward the proposed change, until,
-finally, he finds his determination fixed, he scarcely knows when or
-how.
-
-Thus it appears that generic volitions commence sometimes so
-instantaneously and obviously that the time and influences connected
-with them can be recognized. In other cases, the decision seems to be a
-gradual one, while in some instances the process can be traced, and in
-others it is entirely unnoticed or forgotten.
-
-It is in reference to such generic purposes that the _moral character_
-of men is estimated. An honest man is one who has a fixed purpose to act
-honestly in all circumstances. A truthful man is one who has such a
-purpose to speak the truth at all times.
-
-In such cases, the degree in which such a purpose controls all others is
-the measure of a man's moral character in the estimate of society.
-
-The history of mankind shows a great diversity of moral character
-dependent on such generic volitions. Some men possess firm and reliable
-moral principles in certain directions, while they are very destitute of
-them in others.
-
-Thus it will be seen that some have formed a very decided purpose in
-regard to honesty in business affairs, who yet are miserable victims to
-intemperance. Others have cultivated a principle called _honor_, that
-restrains them from certain actions regarded as mean, and yet they may
-be frequenters of gambling saloons and other haunts of vice.
-
-In the religious world, too, it is the case that some who are very firm
-and decided on all points of religious observances and in the
-cultivation of devotional emotions, are guilty of very mean actions,
-such as some worldly men of honor would not practice at the sacrifice of
-a right hand.
-
-
-_On Causes of Volition._
-
-It becomes, then, a most interesting subject of inquiry as to the
-_causes_ which decide these diversities of moral purposes, and also the
-causes which operate to give them more or less control over other
-principles.
-
-But, preliminary to this, it is necessary to secure some discriminating
-accuracy in regard to the signification of the word _cause_ in its
-various uses.
-
-This term, in its widest sense, signifies "_that without which a change
-will not take place, and with which it will take place_." This is the
-leading idea which is included in every use of the word.
-
-But there is a foundation for three classes of causes which may be
-denominated _producing causes, occasional causes_, and _deciding
-causes_.
-
-A _producing cause_ is that which produces a change by the constitution
-of nature, so that in the given circumstances there is no power to do
-otherwise.
-
-_Occasional causes_ are those circumstances which are indispensable to
-the action of producing causes.
-
-Thus, when fire is applied to your powder, the fire is the producing
-cause of the explosion, while the act of contact between the fire and
-powder is the occasional cause.
-
-In regard to the action of mind in volition, the mind itself is the
-producing cause, while excited desires and objects to excite those
-desires are the occasional causes. Or, in other words, mind is the
-producing cause of its own volitions, and motives are the occasional
-causes.
-
-
-_On Deciding Causes of Volition._
-
-But inasmuch as mind always has the power to choose in _either_ of two
-or more directions, the question arises as to _the causes which decide
-the direction of volitions_, and which may be called _deciding causes_.
-Whenever it is asked, "_Why_ did a person choose to do thus?" the
-meaning is, What were the causes that influenced him to decide thus?
-
-Now these causes are ascertained, as all others are, by experience. Men
-are always stating to each other, as well as noticing in their own
-experience, the causes which decide their determinations.
-
-First, in certain cases, where two or more objects are presented, of
-which only one can be taken, the cause assigned for the direction of the
-choice may be that _one excited a stronger desire than the other_. A
-vast proportion of human volitions are decided simply by the fact that
-one object seems a greater good or excites a stronger desire than any
-other, and is thus the strongest motive.
-
-But there are other cases where, of the objects presented, one excites
-the strongest desire, while the judgment perceives that another will
-secure a _greater good on the whole_. For example, in case of a sick
-person, there may be placed a favorite drink that excites a very strong
-desire, and beside it may stand a nauseous medicine. In this case, the
-invalid may feel the strongest desire for the drink, and yet choose the
-medicine as the greater good in its final results.
-
-In such cases, what decides the direction of a volition is the judgment
-of the mind, that the object chosen, though it does not excite the
-strongest desire, is still the greater good.
-
-Another deciding cause of volition is the nature of the _constitutional
-susceptibilities_. For example, when it is asked why did a man forsake
-domestic life and become a soldier, the deciding cause may be that he
-had a strong constitutional love of the excitement and glory connected
-with that profession, and but little susceptibility for the quiet
-enjoyments of domestic life.
-
-It is sometimes the case that a child, from its birth, seems to possess
-a natural love for truth, so that instructions on that point are
-scarcely needed. In another case, in the same family, and under exactly
-the same training, will be found a child who has the contrary
-propensity, so that it costs years of careful training to form a
-principle of veracity. The same constitutional variety will be found in
-reference to other virtues.
-
-Another deciding cause of volition are _the habits_. The existence of a
-_habit of obedience_, for example, will induce the formation of virtuous
-purposes that would never have existed but for this. A child who began
-life with strong propensities to certain faults, by a wise and careful
-training may secure habits that are fully equal in power to the same
-constitutional traits in another child. Often, in the result, it can not
-be seen whether the generic purpose to be truthful, for example,
-resulted mainly from natural constitution or from the formation of
-habits.
-
-The will itself also is more or less regulated by this principle. When a
-child is trained constantly to submit to fixed rules, the will acquires
-increased ease and facility in doing it. On the contrary, a mind that is
-never controlled grows more and more averse to yielding to any
-regulating principle.
-
-Another deciding cause of volition is such _a combination of
-circumstances_ as excites one class of desires, while other
-sensibilities have no appropriate objects to stimulate them.
-
-For example, it may be asked, Why did a man choose to drink and gamble?
-The cause assigned may be the presence of liquor and of tempting
-companions, and the want of objects to excite higher susceptibilities.
-He had no wise friends, no business, and no higher sources of enjoyment
-immediately around him.
-
-Another deciding cause of volition is the existence of _principle or
-generic purpose_. For example, it may be asked, Why did a man choose to
-give up his liberty and property when he could have secured them by
-false testimony? The answer may be that he was a truthful man or a
-virtuous man--that is, he had formed a strong generic purpose to speak
-the truth or to act right on all occasions.
-
-Another deciding cause of volition is the existence of love and
-gratitude toward other minds, and the reflex influence of such minds in
-the bestowal of their love, sympathy, teachings, and example.
-
-This is the most powerful of all the influences which secure and sustain
-generic volitions, as will be illustrated more at large in future pages.
-
-
-_Causes that regulate the Power of Generic Volitions._
-
-The next inquiry relates to the causes which regulate the _power_ of
-generic volition.
-
-Among those causes, the most prominent is that natural force of will
-which is strictly constitutional. Some minds are formed by the Creator
-with great energy and great pertinacity of will, so that when a purpose
-is formed, all subordinate volitions needful to carry out this purpose
-seem easily controlled. Other minds, on the contrary, possess a
-naturally feeble will, so that no generic volition has a strong and
-steady control, but is constantly interrupted in its power over
-subordinate volitions, or is easily changed by conflicting desires.
-
-In one case the person is denominated a man of firm purpose or a man of
-a strong will. In the other case he is called a man of yielding
-temperament or a weak character.
-
-The remaining causes that give strength to a generic purpose are most of
-those that have been enumerated as causes of the _direction_ of
-volition, or _deciding causes_. These are the constitutional
-susceptibilities--the habits--the surrounding circumstances--the
-existence of love and gratitude toward other minds, and the reflex
-influence of such minds in the bestowal of their love, sympathy,
-teachings, and example.
-
-In all this variety of influences that decide those generic volitions
-which are the foundation of moral character, it must be remembered that
-in every case the mind has the power to choose that which the judgment
-decides to be the greatest good on the whole for itself and for the
-commonwealth.
-
-
-_How one Mind causes Volitions in another Mind._
-
-In this connection, it is important to secure exact ideas of what is
-meant when one mind is spoken of as _the cause_ of the volitions of
-another mind.
-
-Of course, in this relation, no mind can be the _producing_ cause of
-volition in any mind but itself. It must be, then, either as
-_occasional_ or as _deciding_ causes that we can influence other minds.
-
-The only mode by which we can regulate the volitions of other minds is
-by _the employment of motives to stimulate desire, or by changing the
-constitutional susceptibilities_.
-
-In the first case, men have power to so combine circumstances of
-temptation as to affect the most excitable and powerful sensibilities,
-or they can remove those objects and influences that sustain moral
-principle, or by a long course of training they can form habits and
-induce principles. The combinations of motive influences that one mind
-can bring to bear on another, as temptations to right or wrong action,
-are almost infinite.
-
-The other mode is by _changing the constitutional susceptibilities_.
-This can sometimes be effected to a certain degree by education and the
-formation of habits. It can be still more directly effected through the
-physical organization. For example, a child may be trained to use
-coffee, tea, alcohol, or tobacco, till the nervous system is shattered,
-and then a placid temper becomes excitable, a generous nature grows sour
-and selfish, an active nature becomes indolent, and multitudes of other
-disastrous changes are the result.
-
-These are the only two modes in which one mind is ever regarded as the
-cause of right or wrong volition in other minds.
-
-
-_On a Ruling Purpose._
-
-The most important of all the voluntary phenomena is the fact that,
-while there can be a multitude of these quiet and hidden generic
-purposes in the mind, it is also possible to form _one_ which shall be
-the dominant or controlling one, to which all the other volitions, both
-generic and specific, shall become subordinate. In common parlance, this
-would be called the _ruling passion_. It may also be called the _ruling
-purpose_ or _controlling principle_. This consists in the permanent
-choice of some one mode of securing happiness as the _chief end_ or
-grand object of life.
-
-We have set forth on preceding pages the chief sources of happiness and
-of suffering to the human mind. Now in the history of our race we find
-that each one of these modes of enjoyment have been selected by
-different individuals as the chief end of their existence--as the mode
-of seeking enjoyment, to which they sacrifice every other. Some persons
-have chosen the pleasures of eating, drinking, and the other grosser
-enjoyments of sense. Others have chosen those more elevated and refined
-pleasures that come indirectly from the senses in the emotions of taste.
-
-Others have devoted themselves to intellectual enjoyments as their chief
-resource for happiness. Others have selected the exercise of physical
-and moral power, as in the case of conquerors and physical heroes, or of
-those who have sought to control by moral power, as rulers and
-statesmen.
-
-Others have made the attainment of the esteem, admiration, and love of
-their fellow-creatures their chief end. Others, still, have devoted
-themselves to the promotion of happiness around them as their chief
-interest. Others have devoted themselves to the service of God, or what
-they conceived to be such, and sometimes by the most miserable life of
-asceticism and self-torture.
-
-Others have made it their main object in life to obey the laws of
-rectitude and virtue.
-
-In all these cases, the _moral character_ of the person, in the view of
-all observers, has been decided by this dominant volition, and exactly
-in proportion to the supremacy with which it has _actually controlled_
-all other purposes.
-
-Some minds seem to have no chief end of life. Their existence is a
-succession of small purposes, each of which has its turn in controlling
-the life. Others have a strong, defined, and all-controlling principle.
-
-Now experience shows that both of these classes are capable, the one of
-_forming_ and the other of _changing_ such a purpose. For example, in a
-time of peace and ease there is little to excite the mind strongly; but
-let a crisis come where fortune, reputation, and life are at stake, and
-men and women are obliged to form generic decisions involving all they
-hold dear, and many minds that have no controlling purpose immediately
-originate one, while those whose former ruling aims were in one
-direction change them entirely to another.
-
-This shows how it is that days of peril create heroes, statesmen, and
-strong men and women. The hour of danger calls all the energies of the
-soul into action. Great purposes are formed with the strongest desire
-and emotion. Instantly the whole current of thought, and all the
-co-existing desires and emotions, are conformed to these purposes.
-
-The experience of mankind proves that a dominant generic purpose may
-_extend to a whole life_, and actually control all other generic and
-specific volitions.
-
-
-_Mode of Controlling the Intellect, Desires, and Emotions._
-
-We will now consider some of the modes by which the will controls the
-intellect, desires, and emotions.
-
-We have seen, in previous pages, the influence which desire and emotion
-exert in making both our perceptions and conceptions more vivid.
-Whatever purpose or aim in life becomes an object of strong desire, is
-always distinctly and vividly conceived, while all less interesting
-objects are more faint and indistinct.
-
-We have also seen that whenever any conception arises it always brings
-connected objects, according to certain laws of association, forming a
-new and complex picture.
-
-Whenever the mind is under the influence of a controlling purpose, the
-object of pursuit is always _more interesting_ than any other. This
-interest always fastens on those particulars in any mental combination
-that are connected with the ruling purpose and seem fitted to promote
-it, making them more vivid. Around these selected objects their past
-associated ideas begin to cluster, forming other complex pictures. In
-all these combinations, those ideas most consonant with the leading
-interest of the mind become most vivid, and the others fade away.
-
-The grand method, then, for _regulating the thoughts_ is by the generic
-decisions of the mind as to the modes of seeking enjoyment.
-
-In regard to the power of the mind over its own desires and emotions, it
-is very clear that these sensibilities can not be regulated by direct
-specific volitions. Let any person try to produce love, fear, joy, hope,
-or gratitude by simply choosing to have them arise, and it is soon
-perceived that no such power exists.
-
-But there are _indirect_ modes by which the mind can control its
-susceptibilities. The first method is by directing attention to those
-objects of thought which are fitted to call forth such emotions. For
-example, if we wish to awaken the emotion of fear, we can place
-ourselves in circumstances of danger, or call up ideas of horror and
-distress. If we wish to call forth emotions of gratitude, we can direct
-attention to acts of kindness to ourselves calculated to awaken such
-feelings. If we wish to excite desire for any object, we can direct
-attention to those qualities in that object that are calculated to
-excite desire. In all these cases the mind can, by an act of will,
-_direct its attention_ to subjects calculated to excite emotion and
-desire.
-
-The other mode of regulating the desires and emotions is by _the
-direction of our generic volitions_. For example, let a man of business,
-who has never had any interest in commerce, decide to invest all his
-property in foreign trade. As soon as this is done, the name of the ship
-that bears his all can never be heard or seen but it excites some
-emotion. A storm, that before would go unnoticed, awakens fear; the
-prices in the commercial markets, before unheeded, now awaken fear or
-afford pleasure. And thus multitudes of varied desires and emotions are
-called into existence by this one generic volition.
-
-One result of a purpose to deny an importunate propensity is frequently
-seen in the immediate or gradual diminution of that desire. For example,
-if a person is satisfied that a certain article of food is injurious,
-and resolves on _total abstinence_, it will be found that the desire for
-it is very much reduced, far more so than when the effort is to diminish
-the indulgence.
-
-When a generic purpose is formed that involves great interests, it is
-impossible to prevent the desires and emotions from running consonant
-with this purpose. The only mode of changing this current is to give up
-this generic purpose and form another. Thus, if a man has devoted his
-whole time and energies to money-making, it is impossible for him to
-prevent his thoughts and feelings from running in that direction. He
-must give up this as his chief end, and take a nobler object, if he
-would elevate the whole course of his mental action.
-
-These are the principal phenomena of the grand mental faculty which is
-the controlling power of the mind, and on the regulation of which all
-its other powers are dependent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-FAITH OR BELIEF.
-
-
-We have shown that a belief in the reality of the existence, both of
-mind and of matter, as _causes_, is one of the implanted principles of
-mind. Some philosophers have claimed that there is nothing in existence
-but mind, and that all that is called matter is simply _ideas_ of things
-in the mind itself, for which there is no corresponding reality. Others
-have claimed just the opposite: that there is no such existence as an
-immaterial spirit, but that soul is the brain, or some other very fine
-organization of matter.
-
-In both cases, the assumptions not only have no evidence to sustain
-them, but are contrary to the common sense or reason of all mankind, and
-never can be really believed.
-
-When _perceptions_ are called into existence by the agency of the
-senses, we can not help believing that things _are as they appear to
-us_, unless we have some evidence of deception either from disordered
-sensation or some other cause.
-
-But in regard to our _conceptions_ we have two classes. One class is
-attended with the belief that they correspond with realities, or the
-things they represent. The other class is not attended with this belief.
-For example, we can conceive of a house of a color, form, and details
-such as we never saw, and this conception is not attended with any
-belief of the reality of such an existence; but when we conceive of the
-home of our childhood, this conception is attended with a belief of the
-reality of the thing conceived.
-
-This illustration furnishes the means of defining "_truth_" as "_the
-reality of things_." We _conceive_ the truth when our conceptions
-represent correctly the reality of things, and we _believe_ the truth
-when we feel this correspondence to exist. We believe falsehood when we
-have a conception attended by a feeling that it represents the reality
-of things when it does not.
-
-All our comfort, success, and happiness depend upon _believing the
-truth_; for just so far as our belief or faith varies from the reality
-of things, we shall meet with mistakes, disappointment, and sorrow.
-
-Our beneficent Creator has so formed our minds and our bodies that, in
-their natural, healthy state, our _perceptions_ correspond with the
-reality of things uniformly, while, as before stated, our belief or
-faith also thus corresponds.
-
-It is very rarely the case that disease or other causes prevent this
-uniform correct perception and belief in regard to all things that come
-within the reach of our own senses.
-
-It is only in regard to that knowledge that we gain from the _experience
-and testimony_ of others, or from the _process of reasoning_, that we
-become liable to a false belief.
-
-Men often impart their conceptions of things to us, and we find that
-they do not correspond with realities.
-
-We also, by a process of reasoning, often come to conceptions of things,
-and a belief in them, which we find to be false.
-
-_Evidence_ may be defined as all those causes which tend to produce
-_correct_ ideas of truth or the reality of things.
-
-Inasmuch as we find by experience that human testimony and the process
-of reasoning do not uniformly conduct us to right conceptions of
-realities, we find that there are different degrees of belief according
-to the nature of the evidence presented.
-
-The highest kind of evidence is intuitive knowledge, which is a uniform
-result of the constitution of mind and its inevitable circumstances.
-This is called _intuitive knowledge_ or _intuitive belief_.
-
-All other evidence is gained by _experience_ or by _reasoning_. The
-experience of other minds we gain by testimony. This is called the
-_evidence of testimony_.
-
-Belief differs in degrees according to the nature and amount of evidence
-perceived. The highest kind of evidence produces what is called
-_certainty_. It is the kind which is felt in reference to the intuitive
-truths. There are all degrees of faith, from the highest certainty to
-entire incredulity or unbelief.
-
-This fact lays the foundation for a distinction in practical matters
-which it is very important to recognize. It is often the case that there
-is an amount of evidence that produces a conviction which rests in the
-mind, but does not produce its appropriate _practical_ result. For
-example, a man in feeble health has read enough on the subject to be
-convinced that a daily bath in cool water would tend to restore
-strength, and yet the belief does not secure the practice. But on a
-review of the books which produced the conviction, or on hearing some
-lecturer on health, the conviction becomes more powerful, and leads to a
-corresponding practice.
-
-Now, in reference to the fact that there are multitudes of convictions
-which are inoperative, which, if vividly realized, would become
-principles of action, there is a distinction made, in common parlance,
-between a dead or ideal faith, and a living or practical faith. Still
-more is this distinction recognized in matters of religion, as will be
-hereafter shown.
-
-The question whether faith or belief is under the control of the will,
-or whether it is necessary and inevitable, is one of very great
-importance both in regard to our happiness and our obligations.
-
-If belief is not under the control of the will, it must be because
-either the mind has not the power of directing its attention to
-evidence, or because it is so made that, when it perceives the truth, it
-can not distinguish it from falsehood.
-
-In regard to the first alternative, the control which the mind has over
-its own train of thought has been definitely pointed out and described
-in the articles on attention and on the will. It appears that _the will_
-is the regulating principle, which governs all mental operations by
-selecting the modes of happiness which the intellect shall be employed
-in securing. Whatever mode of present or of general happiness is
-selected, immediately all conceptions which the judgment discerns as
-having a fitness for accomplishing this object become vivid and
-distinct, and recall their associate conceptions. Thus it is the choice
-of any mode of enjoyment by the will which determines the train of
-thought.
-
-When, therefore, any question is brought up which demands attention to
-evidence, if the mind has some desire to gratify, and the intellect
-discerns that the conviction of this truth will interfere with this
-chosen plan of happiness, the will refuses attention to what is not in
-consonance with the leading desire of the mind. Where conviction of any
-truth is foreseen to interfere with some plan of enjoyment already
-chosen, the only way by which attention can be secured is by exhibiting
-some evil that will follow inattention which will more than
-counterbalance the good to be gained. In this case, the mind may choose
-to attend, and run the hazard of losing the particular mode of enjoyment
-sought in order to avoid the threatened evil from inattention to
-evidence.
-
-This is the method men pursue in all their intercourse with each other.
-They find that their fellow-men are unwilling to believe what is
-contrary to their own wishes and plans. But when they determine that
-belief shall be secured, they contrive various modes to make it appear
-either for their pleasure or their interest to attend to evidence, or
-else they exhibit some evil as the consequence of neglecting attention.
-
-The only mode by which mankind are induced to give their thoughts to the
-concerns of an invisible world is by awakening their hopes of future
-good to be secured, or by stimulating their fears of future evils. It
-thus appears, from the laws and operations of the mind of which every
-person is conscious, and also from the conduct and recorded experience
-of mankind, that the mind _has_ the power of directing its attention to
-evidence.
-
-The other alternative which would establish the principle that belief is
-not under the control of the will is, that truth, when seen by the mind,
-can not be distinguished from falsehood. But this, it can be seen,
-involves a denial of the principles of reason and common sense. It is
-saying that the mind may have the evidence of the senses, memory, and
-all the other principles included in the laws of reason, and yet not
-believe it; for every process of reasoning is, in fact, exhibiting
-evidence either of the senses, memory, or experience, that a certain
-truth is included under a primary truth.
-
-The only position which can be assumed without denying the principles of
-reason and common sense is, that belief, according to the laws of mind,
-is exactly according to the _amount_ of evidence _to which the mind
-gives its attention_.
-
-In order to belief, then, two things are necessary, viz., _evidence_,
-and the _choice of the mind to attend_ to this evidence. When both of
-these are attained, the belief of truth and the rejection of falsehood
-are inevitable.
-
-The influence which the will and desires have upon our belief accounts
-for the great variety of opinions among mankind on almost every subject
-of duty and of happiness.
-
-There are two ways in which the desires and wishes regulate belief. In
-the first place, by preventing _attention_ to the subject which would
-lead to the belief of truths that are inconsistent with the leading
-desires of the mind. This, in a great measure, will account for the
-great variety of religious belief. Religion is a subject which is felt
-to be inconsistent with the leading desires of most persons who are
-interested in the pursuit of other enjoyments than those resulting from
-obedience to God in the discharge of the duties of benevolence and
-piety. It is a subject, therefore, which receives so little examination
-that opinions in regard to it are adopted with trifling attention.
-
-The second cause of variety of belief is the effect which _desire_ has
-in making vivid those conceptions which most agree with the leading
-purpose of the mind. When the mind decides to examine the evidence on
-any subject, if the decision involves questions which have a bearing on
-some favorite purpose, all those arguments which are most consonant with
-the desires appear vivid and clear, and those which are contrary to the
-wishes are fainter and less regarded. This is a fact which universal
-experience demonstrates. Men always fasten on evidence which favors
-their own wishes, and but faintly conceive the evidence which is
-opposed. This is a cause which operates most powerfully in regard to
-religious truths whenever they interfere with the leading desires.
-
-This view of the subject exhibits the importance of having the mind
-directed to proper objects; for if the mind is earnestly engaged in the
-pursuit of duty, it will be pleased with every development of truth, for
-truth and duty are never found to interfere. _Truth_ is another name for
-"things as they are," and it is always the duty and happiness of man to
-regulate his conduct by seeing things as they are, rather than by seeing
-them in false relations. That man is best prepared to discover truth who
-is most sincerely desirous to obtain it, and to regulate his feelings,
-words, and conduct by its dictates.
-
-There is nothing more obvious, from experience and observation, than
-that men _feel_ their ability to control their belief, and realize both
-their own obligations and those of their fellow-men on this subject.
-They know that every man must act according to his belief of right and
-wrong, and thus that the fulfillment of every duty depends upon the
-nature of our belief. And the more important are the interests involved
-in any question, the more men perceive their obligations to seek for
-evidence, and obtain the knowledge necessary to enable them to judge
-correctly.
-
-The estimation of guilt among mankind, in reference to wrong belief, is
-always proportioned to the interests involved and the opportunities for
-obtaining knowledge. In the minute affairs of life, where but little
-evil is done from false judgments, but little blame is attached to a man
-for believing wrong. Neither is a man severely judged if the necessary
-knowledge was inaccessible or very difficult to be obtained.
-
-But where a man has great interests committed to his keeping, and has
-sufficient opportunity for obtaining evidence of truth, the severest
-condemnation awaits him who, through inattention or prejudice, hazards
-vast interests by an incorrect belief. If an agent has the charge of
-great investments, and through negligence, or indolence, or prejudice
-ruins his employer, his sincere belief is no protection from severe
-condemnation. If the physician has the health and life of a valued
-member of the community and the object of many affections intrusted to
-his skill, and from negligence and inattention destroys the life he was
-appointed to save, his sincere belief is but a small palliation of his
-guilt. If a judge has the fortune and life of his fellow-citizens
-intrusted to his judicial knowledge and integrity, and, through want of
-care and attention, is guilty of flagrant injustice and evil, the plea
-of wrong belief will not protect him from the impeachment and just
-indignation which await such delinquencies.
-
-There is no point where men are more tenacious of the obligations of
-their fellow-creatures than on the subject of belief. If they find
-themselves calumniated, unjustly dealt with, and treated with contempt
-and scorn from prejudice or want of attention, the reality of belief is
-little palliation of the guilt of those who thus render them injustice.
-They feel the obligations of their fellow-men to _know the truth_ in all
-that relates to their interests, honor, and good name; and often there
-is scarcely any thing which it is so difficult to forgive as the simple
-crime of wrong belief.
-
-The only modes by which men attempt to justify themselves for guilt of
-this nature are to show either that the matter was of small consequence,
-or that the means of learning its importance and of obtaining the other
-necessary information was not within reach.
-
-It may be laid down, then, as a long-established axiom in regard to this
-subject, that men estimate the guilt of wrong belief in all matters
-relating to the welfare of mankind in exact proportion to the value of
-the interests involved, and to the opportunities enjoyed for obtaining
-information.
-
-Inasmuch as all our success and happiness depends upon our belief of the
-truth, we have two of the principles of reason and common sense to guide
-us. The first is, that we are to consider that to be right which has
-_the balance_ of evidence in its favor; and the second is, that nothing
-is to be assumed as true unless there is _some_ evidence that it is so.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-CONSTITUTIONAL VARIETIES OF THE HUMAN MIND.
-
-
-In the preceding chapters have been presented the most important mental
-faculties which are common to the race. There are none of the powers and
-attributes of the mind as yet set forth which do not belong to every
-mind which is regarded as rational and complete.
-
-But, though all the race have these in common, yet we can not but
-observe an almost endless variety of human character, resulting from the
-diverse _proportions_ and _combinations_ of these several faculties.
-
-These constitutional differences may be noticed, first, in regard to the
-intellectual powers. Some minds are naturally predisposed to exercise
-the reasoning powers. Others, with precisely the same kind of culture,
-have little relish for this, and little power of appreciating an
-argument.
-
-In other cases, the imagination seems to be the predominating faculty.
-In other minds there seems to be an equal balance of faculties, so that
-no particular power predominates.
-
-Next we see the same variety in reference to the susceptibilities. In
-some minds, the desire for love and admiration is the predominating
-principle. In others, the love of power takes the lead. Some are
-eminently sympathizing. Others have a strong love of rectitude, or
-natural conscience. In some, the principle of justice predominates. In
-others, benevolence is the leading impulse.
-
-Finally, in regard to the power of volition, as has been before
-indicated, there are some that possess a strong will that is decisive
-and effective in regulating all specific volitions, while others possess
-various and humbler measures of this power.
-
-According to the science of Phrenology, some of these peculiarities of
-mind are indicated by the size and shape of different portions of the
-brain, and externally indicated on the skull.
-
-That these differences are constitutional, and not the result of
-education, is clear from the many facts showing that no degree of care
-or training will serve to efface these distinctive traits of the mind.
-To a certain degree they may be modified by education, and the equal
-balance of the faculties be promoted, but never to such a degree as to
-efface very marked peculiarities.
-
-In addition to the endless diversities that result from these varied
-proportions and combinations, there is a manifest variety in the grades
-of mind. Some races are much lower in the scale of being every way than
-others, while the same disparity exists in individuals of the same race.
-
-The wisdom and benevolence of this arrangement is very manifest when
-viewed in reference to the interests of a commonwealth. Where some must
-lead and others follow, it is well that some have the love of power
-strong, and others have it less. Where some must be rulers, to inflict
-penalties as well as to apportion rewards, it is well that there be some
-who have the sense of justice a leading principle. And so in the
-developments of intellect. Some men are to follow callings where the
-reasoning powers are most needed. Others are to adopt pursuits in which
-taste and imagination are chiefly required; and thus the varied
-proportions of these faculties become serviceable.
-
-And if it be true that the exercise of the social and moral faculties
-secures the highest degrees of enjoyment, those disparities in mental
-powers which give exercise to the virtues of compassion, self-denial,
-fortitude, and benevolence in serving the weak, and the corresponding
-exercises of gratitude, reverence, humility, and devotion in those who
-are thus benefited, then we can see the wisdom and benevolence of this
-gradation of mental capacity.
-
-Moreover, in a commonwealth perfectly organized, where the happiness of
-the whole becomes that of each part, whatever tends to the highest
-general good tends to the best interest of each individual member. This
-being so, the lowest and humblest in the scale of being, in his
-appropriate place, is happier than he could be by any other arrangement,
-and happier than he could be if all were equally endowed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-HABIT.
-
-
-Habit is a facility in performing physical or mental operations, gained
-by the repetition of such acts. As examples of this in _physical_
-operations may be mentioned the power of walking, which is acquired only
-by a multitude of experiments; the power of speech, secured by a slow
-process of repeated acts of imitation; and the power of writing, gained
-in the same way. Success in every pursuit of life is attained by
-oft-repeated attempts, which finally induce a habit.
-
-As examples of the formation of _intellectual_ habits may be mentioned
-the facility gained in acquiring knowledge by means of repeated efforts,
-and the accuracy and speed with which the process of reasoning is
-performed after long practice in this art.
-
-As examples of _moral_ habits may be mentioned those which are formed by
-the oft-repeated exercise of self-government, justice, veracity,
-obedience, and industry. The will, as has been shown, gains a facility
-in controlling specific volitions and in yielding obedience to the laws
-of right action by constant use, as much as all the other mental powers.
-
-The happiness of man in the present state of existence depends not so
-much upon the circumstances in which he is placed, or the capacities
-with which he is endowed, as upon the _formation of his habits_. A man
-might have the organ of sight, and be surrounded with all the beauties
-of nature, and yet, if he did not form the habit of judging of the form,
-distance, and size of bodies, most of the pleasure and use from this
-sense would be wanting. The world and all its beauties would be a mere
-confused mass of colors.
-
-If the habits of walking and of speech were not acquired, these
-faculties and the circumstances for employing them would not furnish the
-enjoyment they were designed to secure.
-
-It is the formation of _intellectual_ habits by mental discipline and
-study, also, which opens vast resources for enjoyment that otherwise
-would be forever closed. And it is by practicing obedience to parents
-that _moral_ habits of subordination are formed, which are indispensable
-to our happiness as citizens, and as subjects of the divine government.
-There is no enjoyment which can be pointed out which is not, to a
-greater or less extent, dependent upon this principle.
-
-The influence of habit in regard to the _law of sacrifice_ is especially
-interesting. The experience of multitudes of our race shows that such
-tastes and habits may be formed in obeying this law, that what was once
-difficult and painful becomes easy and pleasant.
-
-But this ability to secure enjoyment through habits of self-control and
-self-denial, induced by long practice, so far as experience shows, could
-never be secured by any other method.
-
-That the highest kinds of happiness are to be purchased by more or less
-_voluntary sacrifice_ and _suffering_ to procure good for others seems
-to be a part of that nature of things which we at least may suppose has
-existed from eternity. We can conceive of the eternal First Cause only
-as we imagine a mind on the same pattern as our own in constitutional
-capacities, but indefinitely enlarged in extent and action. Knowledge,
-wisdom, power, justice, benevolence, and rectitude must be the same in
-the Creator as in ourselves, at least so far as we can conceive; and, as
-the practice of self-sacrifice and suffering for the good of others is
-our highest conception of virtue, it is impossible to regard the Eternal
-Mind as all-perfect without involving this idea.
-
-The formation of the habits depends chiefly upon the leading desire or
-governing purpose, because whatever the mind desires the most it will
-_act_ the most to secure, and thus by repeated acts will form its
-habits. The _character_ of every individual, therefore, as before
-indicated, depends upon the mode of seeking happiness selected by the
-will. Thus the ambitious man has selected the attainment of power and
-admiration as his leading purpose, and whatever modes of enjoyment
-interfere with this are sacrificed. The sensual man seeks his happiness
-from the various gratifications of sense, and sacrifices other modes of
-enjoyment that interfere with this. The man devoted to intellectual
-pursuits, and to seeking reputation and influence through this medium,
-sacrifices other modes of enjoyment to secure this gratification. The
-man who has devoted his affections and the service of his life to God
-and the good of his fellow-men sacrifices all other enjoyments to secure
-that which results from the fulfillment of such obligations. Thus a
-person is an ambitious man, a sensual man, a man of literary ambition,
-or a man of piety and benevolence, according to the governing purpose or
-leading desire of the mind.
-
-There is one fact in regard to the choice of the leading object of
-desire, or the governing purpose of life, which is very important.
-Certain modes of enjoyment, in consequence of repetition, increase the
-desire, but lessen the capacity of happiness from this source; while, in
-regard to others, gratification increases the desire, and at the same
-time increases the capacity for enjoyment.
-
-The enjoyments through the senses are of the first kind. It will be
-found, as a matter of universal experience, that where this has been
-chosen as the main purpose of life, though the desire for such pleasures
-is continually increased, yet, owing to the physical effects of
-excessive indulgence, the capacity for enjoyment is decreased. Thus the
-man who so degrades his nature as to make the pleasures of eating and
-drinking the great pursuit of life, while his desires never abate, finds
-his zest for such enjoyments continually decreasing, and a perpetual
-need for new devices to stimulate appetite and awaken the dormant
-capacities. The pleasures of sense always pall from repetition--grow
-"stale, flat, and unprofitable," though the deluded being who has
-slavishly yielded to such appetites feels himself bound by chains of
-habit, which, even when enjoyment ceases, seldom are broken.
-
-The pleasures derived from the exercise of power, when its attainment
-becomes the master passion, are also of this description. The statesman,
-the politician, the conqueror, are all seeking for this, and desire
-never abates while any thing of the kind remains to be attained. We do
-not find that enjoyment increases in proportion as power is secured. On
-the contrary, it seems to cloy in possession. Alexander, the conqueror
-of the world, when he had gained _all_, wept that objects of desire were
-extinct, and that possession could not satisfy.
-
-But there are other sources of happiness, which, while sought, the
-desire ever continues, and possession only increases the capacity for
-enjoyment. Of this class is the susceptibility of happiness from _giving
-and receiving affection_. Here, the more is given and received, the more
-is the power of giving and receiving increased. We find that this
-principle outlives every other, and even the decays of nature itself.
-When tottering age on the borders of the grave is just ready to resign
-its wasted tenement, often from its dissolving ashes the never-dying
-spark of affection has burst forth with new and undiminished lustre.
-This is that immortal fountain of happiness always increased by
-imparting, never surcharged by receiving.
-
-Another principle which increases both desire and capacity by exercise
-is the power of enjoyment from being the _cause of happiness to others_.
-Never was an instance known of regret for devotion to the happiness of
-others. On the contrary, the more this holy and delightful principle is
-in exercise, the more the desires are increased, and the more are the
-susceptibilities for enjoyment from this source enlarged. While the
-votaries of pleasure are wearing down with the exhaustion of abused
-nature, and the votaries of ambition are sighing over its thorny wreath,
-the benevolent spirit is exulting in the success of its plans of good,
-and reaching forth to still purer and more accomplished bliss.
-
-This principle is especially true in regard to the practice of
-rectitude. The more the leading aim of the mind is devoted to _right
-feeling and action_, or to obedience to all the laws of God, the more
-both the desire and the capacity of enjoyment from this source are
-increased.
-
-But there is another fact in regard to habit which has an immense
-bearing on the well-being of our race. When a habit of seeking happiness
-in some one particular mode is once formed, the change of this habit
-becomes difficult just in proportion to the degree of repetition which
-has been practiced. A habit once formed, it is no longer an easy matter
-to choose between the mode of securing happiness chosen and another
-which the mind may be led to regard as much superior. Thus, in
-gratifying the appetite, a man may feel that his happiness is
-continually diminishing, and that, by sacrificing this passion, he may
-secure much greater enjoyment from another source; yet the force of
-habit is such that decisions of the will perpetually yield to its power.
-
-Thus, also, if a man has found his chief enjoyment in that admiration
-and applause of men so ardently desired, even after it has ceased to
-charm, and seems like emptiness and vanity, still, when nobler objects
-of pursuit are offered, the chains of habit bind him to his wonted path.
-Though he looks and longs for the one that his conscience and his
-intellect assure him is brightest and best, the conflict with bad habit
-ends in fatal defeat and ruin. It is true that every habit can be
-corrected and changed, but nothing requires greater firmness of purpose
-and energy of will; for it is not _one_ resolution of mind that can
-conquer habit: it must be a constant series of long-continued efforts.
-
-The influence of habit in reference to _emotions_ deserves special
-attention as having a direct influence upon character and happiness. All
-pleasurable emotions of mind, being grateful, are indulged and
-cherished, and are not weakened by repetition unless they become
-excessive. If the pleasures of sense are indulged beyond a certain
-extent, the bodily system is exhausted, and satiety is the consequence.
-If the love of power and admiration is indulged to excess, so as to
-become the leading purpose of life, they are found to be cloying. But
-within certain limits all pleasurable emotions do not seem to lessen in
-power by repetition.
-
-But in regard to painful emotions the reverse is true. The mind
-instinctively resists or flies from them, so that after a habit of
-suppressing such emotions is formed, until the susceptibility
-diminishes, and sometimes appears almost entirely destroyed. Thus a
-person often exposed to danger ceases to be troubled by fear, because he
-forms a habit of suppressing it. A person frequently in scenes of
-distress and suffering learns to suppress the emotions of painful
-sympathy. The surgeon is an example of the last case, where, by repeated
-operations, he has learned to suppress emotions until they seldom recur.
-A person inured to guilt gradually deadens the pangs of remorse, until
-the conscience becomes "seared as with a hot iron." Thus, also, with the
-emotion of shame. After a person has been repeatedly exposed to
-contempt, and feels that he is universally despised, he grows callous to
-any such emotions.
-
-The mode by which the mind succeeds in forming such a habit seems to be
-by that implanted principle which makes ideas that are most in
-consonance with the leading desire of the mind become vivid and
-distinct, while those that are less interesting fade away. Now no person
-desires to witness pain except from the hope of relieving it, unless it
-be that, in anger, the mind is sometimes gratified with the infliction
-of suffering. But, in ordinary cases, the sight of suffering is avoided
-except where relief can be administered. In such cases, the desire of
-administering relief becomes the leading one, so that the mind is turned
-off from the view of the suffering to dwell on conceptions of modes of
-relief. Thus the surgeon and physician gradually form such habits that
-the sight of pain and suffering lead the mind to conception of modes of
-relief, whereas a mind not thus interested dwells on the more painful
-ideas.
-
-The mind, also, can form a habit of inattention to our own bodily
-sufferings by becoming interested in other things, and thus painful
-sensations go unnoticed. Some persons will go for years with a chronic
-headache, and yet appear to enjoy nearly as much as those who never
-suffer from such a cause. Again: those who violate conscience seem to
-relieve themselves from suffering by forming a habit of dwelling on
-other themes, and of turning the mind entirely from those obligations
-which, when contemplated, would upbraid and pain them. Thus, too, the
-sense of shame is lost. A habit is formed of leading the mind from
-whatever pains it to dwell on more pleasurable contemplations.
-
-The habits of life are all formed either from the desire to secure
-happiness or to avoid pain, and the _fear of suffering_ is found to be a
-much more powerful principle than the _desire of happiness_. The soul
-flies from pain with all its energies, even when it will be inert at the
-sight of promised joy. As an illustration of this, let a person be fully
-convinced that the gift of two new senses would confer as great an
-additional amount of enjoyment as is now secured by the eye and ear, and
-the promise of this future good would not stimulate with half the energy
-that would be caused by the threat of instant and entire blindness and
-deafness.
-
-If, then, the mind is stimulated to form good habits and to avoid the
-formation of evil ones most powerfully by painful emotions, when their
-legitimate object is not effected they continually decrease in
-vividness, and the designed benefit is lost. If a man is placed in
-circumstances of danger, and fear leads to habits of caution and
-carefulness, the object of exciting this emotion is accomplished, and
-the diminution of it is attended with no evil. But if fear is
-continually excited, and no such habits are formed, then the
-susceptibility is lessened, while the good to be secured by it is lost.
-So, also, with emotions of sympathy. If we witness pain and suffering,
-and it induces habits of active devotion to the good of those who
-suffer, the diminution of the susceptibility is a blessing and no evil.
-But if we simply indulge emotions, and do not form the habits they were
-intended to secure, the power of sympathy is weakened, and the designed
-benefit is lost. Thus, again, with shame: if this painful emotion does
-not lead us to form habits of honor and rectitude, it is continually
-weakened by repetition, and the object for which it was bestowed is not
-secured. And so with remorse: if this emotion is awakened without
-leading to habits of benevolence and virtue, it constantly decays in
-power, and the good it would have secured is forever lost.
-
-It does not appear, however, that the power of emotion in the soul is
-thus _destroyed_. Nothing is done but to form habits of inattention to
-painful emotions by allowing the mind to be engrossed in other and more
-pleasurable subjects. This appears from the fact that the most hardened
-culprits, when brought to the hour of death, where all plans of future
-good cease to charm the mental eye, are often overwhelmed with the most
-vivid emotions of sorrow, shame, remorse, and fear. And often, in the
-course of life, there are seasons when the soul returns from its pursuit
-of deluding visions to commune with itself in its own secret chambers.
-At such seasons, shame, remorse, and fear take up their abode in their
-long-deserted dwelling, and ply their scorpion whips till they are
-obeyed, and the course of honor and virtue is resumed, or till the
-distracted spirit again flies abroad for comfort and relief.
-
-There is a great diversity in human character, resulting from the
-diverse proportions and combinations of those powers of mind which the
-race have in common. At the same time, there is a variety in the scale
-of being, or relative grade of each mind. While all are alike in the
-common faculties of the human mind, some have every faculty on a much
-larger scale than others, while some are of a very humble grade.
-
-The principle of habit has very great influence in modifying and
-changing these varieties. Thus, by forming habits of intellectual
-exercise, a mind of naturally humble proportions can be elevated
-considerably above one more highly endowed by natural constitution. So
-the training of some particular intellectual faculty, which by nature is
-deficient, can bring it up nearer to the level of other powers less
-disciplined by exercise.
-
-In like manner, the natural susceptibilities can be increased,
-diminished, or modified by habit. Certain tastes, that had little power,
-can be so cultivated as to overtop all others.
-
-So of the moral nature: it can be so exercised that a habit will be
-formed which will generate a strength and prominency that nature did not
-impart.
-
-The will itself is also subject to this same principle. A strong will,
-that is trained to yield obedience to law in early life, acquires an
-ease and facility in doing it which belongs ordinarily to weak minds,
-and yet can retain all its vigor. And a mind that is trained to bring
-subordinate volitions into strict and ready obedience to a generic
-purpose, acquires an ease and facility in doing this which was not a
-natural endowment.
-
-Thus it appears that by the principle of _habit_ every mind is furnished
-with the power of elevating itself in the scale of being, and of
-modifying and perfecting the proportions and combinations of its
-constitutional powers.
-
-And sometimes the result is that there is no mode of distinguishing
-between the effects of habit and the natural organization.
-
-One of the most important results of habit is its influence on _faith_
-or _belief_. Those persons who practice methods of false reasoning, who
-turn away from evidence and follow their feelings in forming opinions,
-eventually lose the power of sure, confiding belief.
-
-On the contrary, an honest, conscientious steadiness in seeking the
-truth and in yielding to evidence secures the firmest and most reliable
-convictions, and that peace of mind which alone results from believing
-the truth.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-MIND AS PROOF OF ITS CREATOR'S DESIGNS.
-
-
-We have seen that the mind of man, by its very constitution, has certain
-implanted truths which it believes from the necessity of its nature, and
-that these are the foundation of all acquired knowledge, and the guide
-to all truth.
-
-We have seen that, independently of a revelation, we have no other
-sources of knowledge except these intuitions, the experience of
-ourselves and others, and the deductions of reasoning.
-
-We have examined as to the amount of knowledge to be gained from these
-sources in regard to the nature of mind, the laws of the system of which
-it is the essential part, the immortality of the soul, our prospects
-after death, and the character and designs of our Creator.
-
-In discussing the last topic, it has been assumed that the grand and
-ultimate design of the Creator is "to produce the greatest possible
-happiness with the least possible evil."
-
-We have examined, at some length, the chief faculties and laws of the
-human mind, for the purpose of exhibiting their adaptation to this
-design.
-
-We now proceed to a brief review of this portion as a _summing up_ of
-the evidence sustaining the proposition that the grand end of the
-Creator, in forming mind, is _to produce the greatest possible happiness
-with the least possible evil_.
-
-As preliminary, however, we need to refer to one principle.
-
-Whenever we find any contrivances all combining to secure a certain good
-result, which, at the same time, involves some degree of inevitable
-evil, and then discover that there are contrivances to diminish and
-avoid this evil, we properly infer that the author intended to secure
-_as much of the good with as little of the evil as possible_. For
-example, a traveler finds a deserted mine, and all around he discovers
-contrivances for obtaining gold, and, at the same time, other
-contrivances for getting rid of the earth mixed with it. The inevitable
-inference would be that the author of these contrivances designed to
-secure as much gold with as little earth as possible; and should any one
-say that he could have had more gold and less earth if he wished it, the
-answer would be that there is no evidence of this assertion, but direct
-evidence against it.
-
-Again: should we discover a piece of machinery in which every
-contrivance tended to secure _speed_ in movement, produced by the
-_friction_ of wheels against a rough surface, and at the same time other
-contrivances were found for diminishing all friction that was useless,
-we should infer that the author designed to secure the _greatest
-possible speed_ with the _least possible friction_.
-
-In like manner, if we can show that mind is a contrivance that acts by
-the influence of fear of evil, and that _pain_ seems as indispensable to
-the action of a free agent as friction is to motion; if we can show that
-there is no contrivance in mind or matter which is designed to secure
-suffering as its primary end; if we can, on the contrary, show that the
-direct end of all the organizations of mind and matter is to produce
-happiness; if we can show that it is only the _wrong action_ of mind
-that involves most of the pain yet known, so that right action, in its
-place, would secure only happiness; if we can show contrivances for
-diminishing pain, and also contrivances for increasing happiness by
-means of the inevitable pain involved in the system of things, then the
-just conclusion will be gained that the Author of the system of mind and
-matter designed "to produce the greatest possible happiness with the
-least possible evil."[3]
-
-In the review which follows, we shall present evidence exhibiting all
-these particulars.
-
-The only way in which we learn the nature of a thing is to observe its
-qualities and actions. This is true of mind as much as it is of matter.
-Experience and observation teach that the nature of mind is such that
-_the fear of suffering_ is indispensable to secure a large portion of
-the enjoyment within reach of its faculties, and that the highest modes
-of enjoyment can not be secured except by sacrifice, and thus by more or
-less suffering.
-
-This appears to be an inevitable combination, as much so as friction is
-inevitable in machinery.
-
-We have the evidence of our own consciousness that it is fear of evil to
-ourselves or to others that is the _strongest_ motive power to the mind.
-If we should find that no pain resulted from burning up our own bodies,
-or from drowning, or from any other cause; if every one perceived that
-no care, trouble, or pain resulted from losing all kinds of enjoyment,
-the effort to seek it would be greatly diminished.
-
-If we could desire good enough to exert ourselves to seek it, and yet
-should feel no discomfort in failing; if we could _lose every thing_,
-and feel no sense of pain or care, the stimulus to action which
-experience has shown to be most powerful and beneficent would be lost.
-
-We find that abundance of ease and prosperity enervates mental power,
-and that mind increases in all that is grand and noble, and also in the
-most elevating happiness, by means of danger, care, and pain. We may
-properly infer, then, that evil is a necessary part of the experience of
-a perfectly-acting mind.
-
-So strong is the conviction that _painful penalties_ are indispensable,
-that the kindest parents and the most benevolent rulers are the most
-sure to increase rather than diminish those that are already involved in
-the existing nature of things.
-
-Again: without a revelation we have no knowledge of any kind of mind but
-by inference from our experience in this state of being. All we know of
-the _Eternal First Cause_ is by a process of reasoning, inferring that
-his nature must be _like_ the only minds of which we have any knowledge.
-We assume, then, that he is a free agent, regulated by desire for
-happiness and fear of evil.
-
-We thus come to the conclusion that this organization of mind is a part
-of the _fixed and eternal nature of things_, and does not result from
-the will of the Creator. His own is the eternal pattern of an
-all-perfect mind, and our own are formed on this perfect model, with
-susceptibilities to pain as an indispensable motive power in gaining
-happiness.
-
-We will now recapitulate some of the particulars in the laws and
-constitution of mind which tend to establish the position that its
-Creator's grand design is "to produce the greatest possible happiness
-with the least possible evil."
-
-
-_Intellectual Powers._
-
-First, then, in reference to the earliest exercise of mind in
-_sensation_. The eye might have been so made that light would inflict
-pain, and the ear so that sound would cause only discomfort. And so of
-all the other senses.
-
-But the condition of a well-formed, healthy infant is a most striking
-illustration of the adaptation of the senses to receive enjoyment. Who
-could gaze on the countenance of such a little one, as its various
-senses are called into exercise, without such a conviction? The delight
-manifested as the light attracts the eye, or as pleasant sounds charm
-the ear, or as the limpid nourishment gratifies its taste, or as gentle
-motion and soft fondlings soothe the nerves of touch, all testify to the
-benevolent design of its Maker.
-
-Next come the pleasures of _perception_ as the infant gradually observes
-the qualities of the various objects around, and slowly learns to
-distinguish its mother and its playthings from the confused mass of
-forms and colors. Then comes the gentle curiosity as it watches the
-movement of its own limbs, and finally discovers that its own volitions
-move its tiny fingers, while the grand idea that _it is itself a cause_
-is gradually introduced.
-
-Next come the varied intellectual pleasures as the several powers are
-exercised in connection with the animate and material world around, in
-acquiring the meaning of words, and in imitating the sounds and use of
-language. The adult, in toiling over the dry lexicon, little realizes
-the pleasure with which the little one is daily acquiring the
-philosophy, grammar, and vocabulary of its mother tongue.
-
-A child who can not understand a single complete sentence, or speak an
-intelligible phrase, will sit and listen with long-continued delight to
-the simple enunciation of words, each one of which presents a picture to
-his mind of a dog, a cat, a cow, a horse, a whip, a ride, and many other
-objects and scenes that have given pleasure in the past; while the
-single words, without any sentences, bring back, not only vivid
-conceptions of these objects, but a part of the enjoyment with which
-they have been connected.
-
-Then, as years pass by, the intellect more and more administers
-pleasure, while the reasoning powers are developed, the taste
-cultivated, the imagination exercised, the judgment employed, and the
-memory stored with treasures for future enjoyment.
-
-In the proper and temperate use of the intellectual powers, there is a
-constant succession of placid satisfaction, or of agreeable and often of
-delightful emotions, while no one of these faculties is productive of
-pain except in violating the laws of the mental constitution.
-
-
-_The Susceptibilities._
-
-In regard to the second general class of mental powers--_the
-susceptibilities_--the first particular to be noticed is the ceaseless
-and all-pervading _desire to gain happiness and escape pain_. This is
-the mainspring of all voluntary activity; for no act of volition will
-take place till some good is presented to gain, or some evil to shun. At
-the same time, as has been shown, the desire to escape evil is more
-potent and effective than the desire for good. Thousands of minds that
-rest in passive listlessness, when there is nothing to stimulate but
-hope of enjoyment, will exert every physical and mental power to escape
-impending evil. The seasons of long-continued prosperity in nations
-always tend to a deterioration of intellect and manhood. It is in
-seasons of danger alone that fear wakes up the highest energies, and
-draws forth the heroes of the race.
-
-Mind, then, is an existence having the power of that self-originating
-action of _choice_ which constitutes free agency, while this power can
-only be exercised when desires are excited to gain happiness or to
-escape pain. This surely is the highest possible evidence that its
-Author _intended_ mind should thus act.
-
-But a mind may act to secure happiness and avoid pain to itself, and yet
-may gain only very low grades of enjoyment, while much higher are within
-reach of its faculties. So, also, it may act to gain happiness for
-itself as the chief end in such ways as to prevent or destroy the
-happiness of others around.
-
-In reference to this, we find those susceptibilities which raise man to
-the dignity of a moral being.
-
-In the first place, there is that _impression of the great design_ of
-the Creator existing in every mind, either as a result of constitution
-or of training, or of both united, which results in a feeling that
-whatever lessens or destroys happiness is unfit and contrary to the
-system of things.
-
-Next there is the power to balance pleasure and pain, and estimate the
-compound result, both in reference to self and to the commonwealth. With
-this is combined the feeling that whatever secures _the most_ good with
-_the least_ evil is right and fit, and that the opposite is wrong and
-unfitted to the nature of things.
-
-Next comes the _sense of justice_, which results in an impulse _to
-discover the cause_ of good and evil, and when this cause is found to be
-a voluntary agent, a consequent impulse to make returns of good for
-good, and of evil for evil, and also to _proportion_ retributive rewards
-or penalties to the amount of good or evil done.
-
-With this, also, is combined the feeling that those retributions should
-be applied only where there was _voluntary_ power to have done
-otherwise. When it is seen that there was no such power, the impulse to
-reward or punish is repressed.
-
-Such is the deep conviction that such retributions are indispensable,
-that where natural pains and penalties do not avail, others are
-demanded, both in the family and in the commonwealth.
-
-Lastly, we find the susceptibility of _conscience_, which, by the very
-framework of the mind itself, apportions the retributive pangs of
-remorse for wrong doing, and the pleasure of self-approval for well
-doing. These, too, are retributions never to be escaped, and the most
-exquisite, both in elevated happiness and exquisite pain. The mind
-carries about in itself its own certain and gracious remunerator--its
-own inexorable prosecutor, judge, and executioner.
-
-This same design of the Creator may be most delightfully traced in what
-may be called the _economy_ of happiness and pain.
-
-One particular of this is set forth at large in the chapter on the
-_emotions of taste_. Here we find the mind formed not only to secure
-multitudinous enjoyments through the nerves of sensation, but that, by
-the principle of association, there is a perpetual _reproduction_ of
-these emotions in connection with the colors, forms, sounds, and motions
-with which they were originally associated. Thus there are perpetually
-returning emotions of pleasure so recondite, so refined, so almost
-infinite in variety and extent, and yet how little noticed or
-understood!
-
-Another indication of the same kind is the peculiarity pointed out on
-former pages, where it is shown that securing certain enjoyments which
-tend to promote the _general_ happiness increases both desire and
-capacity for enjoyment, while those that terminate in the individual
-diminish by possession. Thus the enjoyment of power, which must, from
-its nature, be confined to a few, diminishes by possession. Thus, too,
-the pleasures of sense pall by indulgence. But the enjoyment resulting
-from the exercise and reciprocation of love, and that resulting from
-benevolent actions, and that which is included in a course of perfect
-obedience to all the rules of rectitude, increases the capacity for
-enjoyment.
-
-Another illustration of the same principle is exhibited in the chapter
-on Habit, where it is seen that the power of pleasurable emotions
-increases by repetition, while painful emotions decrease when the good
-to be secured by their agency is attained. Thus _fear_ seems to protect
-from danger till caution and habit render it needless, and then it
-decreases. And so of other painful emotions.
-
-It is interesting to trace the same design in the constitution of minds
-in _regard to each other_. We find that the purest and highest kind of
-happiness is dependent on the mutual relations of minds. Thus the
-enjoyment resulting from the discovery of intellectual and moral traits
-in other minds--that resulting from giving and receiving affection--that
-gained by sympathy, and by being the cause of happiness to others, and
-that resulting from conscious rectitude, all are dependent on the
-existence of other beings.
-
-Now we find that minds are relatively so constituted that _what one
-desires, it is a source of happiness in another to bestow_. Thus one can
-be pleased by the discovery of certain traits in other minds, while, in
-return, the exhibition of these traits, and the consciousness that they
-are appreciated, is an equal source of enjoyment. One mind seeks the
-love of others, while these, in return, are desiring objects of
-affection, and rejoice to confer the gift that is sought. The desire of
-knowledge or the gratification of curiosity is another source of
-pleasure, while satisfying this desire is a cause of enjoyment to those
-around. How readily do mankind seize upon every opportunity to convey
-interesting news to other minds!
-
-Again: we find that, both in sorrow and in joy, the mind seeks for the
-sympathy of others, while this grateful and soothing boon it is
-delightful to bestow. So, also, the consciousness of being the cause of
-good to another sends joy to the heart, while the recipient is filled
-with the pleasing glow of gratitude in receiving the benefit. The
-consciousness of virtue in acting for the general good, instead of for
-contracted, selfish purposes, is another source of happiness, while
-those who witness its delightful results rejoice to behold and
-acknowledge it. What bursts of rapturous applause have followed the
-exhibition of virtuous self-sacrifice for the good of others from bosoms
-who rejoiced in this display, and who could owe this pleasure to no
-other cause than the natural constitution of mind, which is formed to be
-made happy both in beholding and in exercising virtue.
-
-This same beneficial economy is manifested in a close analysis of all
-that is included in the affections of _love_ and _gratitude_.
-
-It has been shown that, in the commencement of existence, the young mind
-first learns the sources of good and evil to self, and its sole motives
-are desire for its own enjoyment.
-
-Soon, however, it begins to experience the happiness resulting from the
-relations of minds to each other, and then is developed the superior
-power of _love_, and its importance as a regulating principle.
-
-In the analysis of this affection, it is seen to consist, first, in the
-pleasurable emotions which arise in view of those traits of character in
-another mind pointed out on previous pages. When these qualities are
-discovered, the first result is emotions of pleasure in the
-contemplation. Immediately there follows _a desire of good_ to the cause
-of this pleasure. Next follows the desire of reciprocated
-affection--that is, a desire is awakened _to become the cause of the
-same pleasure_ to another; for the desire of _being loved_ is the desire
-to be the cause of pleasurable emotions in another mind, in view of our
-own good qualities. When we secure this desired appreciation, then
-follows an increased _desire of good_ to the one who bestows it.
-
-Thus the affection of love is a combination of the action and reaction
-of pleasurable emotions, all tending to awaken the desire of good to
-another. This passion may become so intensified that it will become more
-delightful to secure enjoyments to another than to procure them for
-self.
-
-Gratitude is the emotion of pleasure toward the author of _voluntary_
-good to self, attended by a desire of good to the benefactor. This
-principle can be added to augment the power of love.
-
-There is a foundation for a very important distinction in the analysis
-of the principle of love. In what is thus far presented, we find that
-the desire of good to another results solely from the fact that certain
-mental qualities are _causes of pleasure to self_. Of course, this
-desire ceases when those qualities cease to exist or cease to be
-appreciated. This kind of love is the natural result of the constitution
-of minds in their relations to each other, making it _easy and pleasant_
-to live for the good of another in return for the pleasure received from
-their agreeable qualities and manifestations.
-
-But the highest kind of love consists in the _desire of good to another
-without reference to any good received in return_. It is _good willing_.
-It consists in an abiding feeling of desire for the happiness of another
-mind.
-
-This principle exists as a natural impulse more or less powerful in
-differently constituted minds. It is the cause of that pleasure which is
-felt in the consciousness of being the cause of good to another. But
-this natural impulse can be so developed and increased by voluntary
-culture as to become the strongest impulse of the mind, and thus the
-source of the highest and most satisfying enjoyments. In many minds this
-becomes so strongly developed that securing happiness to others is
-sought with far more earnestness and pleasure than any modes of
-enjoyment that terminate solely in self. This analysis lays the
-foundation for the distinction expressed by the terms the _love of
-complacency_ and the _love of benevolence_. The first is the involuntary
-result of good conferred on _self_; the last is a voluntary act. It is
-good willing toward others without reference to self.
-
-The first can only exist where certain qualities are preserved and
-appreciated in another mind. The second can result from voluntary
-effort, and become the subject of law and penalties.
-
-We can never be justly required to love another mind with the love of
-complacency except when qualities are perceived that, by the
-constitution of mind, necessarily call forth such regard. But the love
-of benevolence can be justly demanded from every mind toward every being
-capable of happiness.
-
-Here it is important to discriminate more exactly in regard to the
-principle of _benevolence_ and the principle of _rectitude_.
-
-It is seen that the benevolence which is the subject of rewards and
-penalties as a voluntary act consists in _good willing_--that is, in
-choosing the happiness of _other_ minds as the object of interest and
-pursuit.
-
-But the principle of rectitude is more comprehensive in its nature. It
-relates to obedience to _all_ the laws of the system of the
-universe--those relating to ourselves as much as those relating to
-others. It is true that, as obedience to these laws includes the
-greatest possible amount of good with the least possible evil, both to
-the individual and the commonwealth, the tendency of the two principles
-is to the same result. But it may be the case that benevolence acts
-contrary to the true rules of rectitude, and thus may mar rather than
-promote happiness. A mind must not only choose to promote the greatest
-possible happiness, but must choose _the right way_ of doing it.
-
-A very important particular to be considered is, that, while in the
-physical and mental constitution there is not a single arrangement the
-direct object of which is to produce suffering, the susceptibilities to
-pain seem designed to protect and preserve, while the greater the need
-the more strong is this protection. For example, in regard to physical
-organization, fire is an element that is indispensable to the life,
-comfort, and activity of man, and it must be accessible at all times and
-places. But all its service arises from its power to dissolve and
-destroy the body itself, as well as all things around it. Therefore the
-pain connected with contact with fire is more acute than almost any
-other. Thus even the youngest child is taught that care and caution
-needful to protect its body from injury or destruction.
-
-Another fact in regard to the susceptibilities of pain is their frequent
-_co-existence_ with the highest degrees of enjoyment. The experiences of
-this life often present cases where the most elevated and ecstatic
-happiness is combined with the keenest suffering, while such is the
-nature of the case that the suffering is the chief cause of the
-happiness thus secured. The highest illustration of this is in the
-suffering of saints and martyrs, when they "rejoice to be counted worthy
-to suffer shame," or when, amid torturing flames, they sing songs of
-transport and praise.
-
-Even in common life it is constantly found that a certain relative
-amount of happiness is felt to be more than a recompense for a given
-amount of pain. This relative amount may be such that the evil involved,
-though great, may count as nothing. Where there is a passionate
-attachment, for example, the lover exults in the labor and suffering
-that will joyfully be received as a proof of affection and secure the
-compensating return.
-
-It is a very common fact that the existence of painful emotions _is
-sought_, not for themselves, but as ministers to a kind of mental
-excitement which is desired. This is the foundation of the pleasure
-which is felt in tragic representations, and in poetry and novels that
-present scenes of distress. The little child will again and again ask
-for the tale of the Babes in the Wood, though each rehearsal brings
-forth tears; and the mature matron or sage will spend hours over tales
-that harrow the feelings or call forth sighs. This also is the
-foundation of that kind of music called the _minor key_, in which
-certain sounds bring emotions of sadness or sorrow.
-
-Another striking fact in regard to the desire for pain is the emotions
-that are felt by the most noble and benevolent minds at the sight of
-cruelty and injustice. At such scenes, the desire for inflicting pain on
-the guilty offender amounts to a passion which nothing can allay but
-retributive justice. And the more benevolent the mind, the stronger this
-desire for retributive evil to another.
-
-Thus it appears that the mind is so made as to desire pain both for
-itself and for others; not in itself considered, but as the
-indispensable means to gain some consequent enjoyment.
-
-The highest kinds of happiness result from painful emergencies. The
-transports of love, gratitude, and delight, when some benefactor rescues
-suffering thousands from danger and evil, could exist in no other way.
-All the long train of virtues included in patient toil for the good of
-others, in heroic daring, in brave adventure, in fortitude, in patience,
-in resignation, in heavenly meekness, in noble magnanimity, in sublime
-self-sacrifice, all involve the idea of trial, danger, and suffering. It
-is only the highest and noblest class of minds that can fully understand
-that the most blissful of all enjoyments are those which are bought with
-pain.
-
-But the most cheering feature in the constitution of mind is all that is
-included in the principle of _habit_. We see in the commencement of
-existence that every action of mind and body is imperfect, and more or
-less difficult, while each effort to secure right action increases the
-facility of so doing. We see that, owing to this principle, every act of
-obedience to law makes such a course easier. The intellect, the
-susceptibilities, the will, all come under this benign influence. Habit
-may so diminish the difficulty of self-denial for our own good that the
-pain entirely ceases; and self-sacrifice for the good of others may so
-develop benevolence and generate a habit that it will become pleasure
-without pain. There are those, even in this world, who have so attained
-this capacity of living in the life of those around them that the
-happiness of others becomes their own, and then there is even less pain
-in self-denial for the good of others than for that of self. When this
-habit of mind is attained, the happiness of the commonwealth becomes the
-portion of the individual.
-
-[3] Note B.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-SOCIAL AND MATERIAL PROOFS OF THE CREATOR'S DESIGNS.
-
-
-We have now presented the organization of mind as the chief evidence of
-the grand design of its Creator in forming all things. We now will trace
-the evidences of the same beneficent object in the social and material
-organizations.
-
-First, then, in regard to the domestic relations. We have seen that
-while all happiness depends on obedience to laws, every mind comes into
-existence in perfect ignorance of them, and without any power to learn
-what is good or evil but by experience and instruction. The intention of
-the Creator that each new-born being should be taught these laws and
-trained to obey them, is clearly seen in the first and highest domestic
-relation. In this we see two mature minds, who have themselves been
-trained to understand these laws, drawn by sweet and gentle influences
-to each other. They go apart from all past ties of kindred; they have
-one home, one name, one common interest in every thing. The one who has
-most physical strength goes forth to provide supplies; the delicate one
-remains behind, by domestic ministries to render home the centre of all
-attractions.
-
-Then comes the beautiful, helpless infant, of no use to any one, and
-demanding constant care, labor, and attention. And yet, with its
-profound ignorance, its tender weakness, its delicate beauty, its utter
-helplessness, its entire dependence, how does it draw forth the
-strongest feelings of love and tenderness, making every toil and care a
-delight! And thus, month after month, both parents unite to cherish and
-support, while, with unceasing vigilance, they train the new-born mind
-to understand and obey the laws of the system into which it is thus
-ushered. Its first lessons are to learn to take care of its own body.
-And when the far-off penalty of pain can not be comprehended by the
-novice, the parent invents new penalties to secure habits of care and
-obedience. During all this period the great lesson of _sacrifice_
-constantly occurs. The child must eat what is _best_, not what it
-desires. It must go to bed when it wants to sit up. It must stay in the
-house when it wants to go out. It must not touch multitudes of things
-which it wishes thus to investigate. And so the habits of self-denial,
-obedience, and faith in the parents are gradually secured, while the
-knowledge of the laws of the system around are slowly learned.
-
-But the higher part of the law of sacrifice soon begins to make its
-demands. The child first learns of this law _by example_, in that of
-_the mother_, that most perfect illustration of self-sacrificing love.
-Then comes a second child, when the first-born must practice on this
-example. It must give up its place in the mother's bosom to another; it
-must share its sweets and toys with the new-comer; it must join in
-efforts to protect, amuse, and instruct the helpless one. And thus the
-family is the constant school for training ignorant, inexperienced mind
-in the laws of the system of which it is a part, especially in the great
-law of self-control and of self-sacrifice for the good of others.
-
-Next comes the discipline of the school and the neighborhood, when the
-child is placed among his peers to be taught new rules of justice,
-benevolence, and self-sacrifice for the general good.
-
-Next come the relations of the body politic, for which labors are
-demanded and pain is to be endured under the grand law of sacrifice,
-that the individual is to subordinate his own interests and wishes to
-the greater general good, and that the interests of the majority are to
-control those of the minority.
-
-Lastly, the whole world is to be taken into the estimate, and the
-nations are to be counted as members of one great family of man, for
-which every portion is to make sacrifices. Thus, as age, and experience,
-and habits of obedience to the laws of rectitude increase, the duties
-and obligations grow more numerous and complicated. But the same grand
-principle is more and more developed, that each individual is to seek
-the greatest possible happiness with the least possible evil, for the
-vast whole as well as each subordinate part, while _self_ is to receive
-only its just and proper share.
-
-The same great design of the Creator can be detected also in specific
-organizations, by which minds so differ from each other as to fit them
-for the diverse positions and relations that the common good demands. If
-all were exactly alike in the amount of constitutional powers and in the
-proportionate combinations, it can easily be seen that the general
-result would be far less favorable to the happiness of the whole. But as
-it is, some have the love of power very large, and love to lead and
-control; others have it small, and love to follow. Some have elevated
-intellect, and love to teach; others have humbler capacities, and better
-love humbler pursuits.
-
-These varied combinations also give scope to the virtues of pity,
-tenderness, patience, mercy, justice, self-denial, and many other graces
-that could not be called into being without all the disparities, social,
-domestic, intellectual, and moral, that we find existing. Meantime, the
-principle of habit and the power of the will give abundant opportunities
-for modifying these natural peculiarities to accommodate to varying
-circumstances.
-
-To these indications of benevolent design may be added the organization
-of the bodily system, and the constitution of the material world
-without. In examining the body we inhabit, so nicely adjusted, so
-perfectly adapted to our necessities, so beautifully and harmoniously
-arranged, so "fearfully and wonderfully made," it is almost beyond the
-power of numbers to express the multiplied contrivances for ease,
-comfort, and delight.
-
-We daily pursue our business and our pleasure, thoughtless of the
-thousand operations which are going on, and the busy mechanism employed
-in securing the objects we desire. The warm current that is flowing from
-the centre to the extremities, with its life-giving energies, and then
-returning to be purified and again sent forth; the myriads of branching
-nerves that are the sensitive discerners of good or ill; the unnumbered
-muscles and tendons that are contracting and expanding in all parts of
-our frame; the nicely-adjusted joints, and bands, and ligaments, that
-sustain, and direct, and support; the perpetual expansion and
-contraction of the vital organ; the thousand hidden contrivances and
-operations of the animal frame, all are quietly and constantly
-performing their generous functions, and administering comfort and
-enjoyment to the conscious spirit that dwells within.
-
-Nor is the outer world less busy in performing its part in promoting the
-great design of the Creator. The light of suns and stars is traversing
-the ethereal expanse in search of those for whom it was created; for
-them it gilds the scenes of earth, and is reflected in ten thousand
-forms of beauty and of skill. The trembling air is waiting to minister
-its aid, fanning with cool breezes, or yielding the warmth of spring,
-sustaining the functions of life, and bearing on its light wing the
-thoughts that go forth from mind to mind, and the breathings of
-affection that are given and returned. For this design earth is sending
-forth her exuberance, the waters are emptying their stores, and the
-clouds pouring forth their treasures. All nature is busy with its
-offerings of fruits and flowers, its wandering incense, its garnished
-beauty, and its varied songs. Within and without, above, beneath, and
-around, the same Almighty Beneficence is found still ministering to the
-wants and promoting the happiness of the minds He has formed forever to
-desire and pursue this boon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-RIGHT MODE OF SECURING THE OBJECT FOR WHICH MIND WAS CREATED.
-
-
-Having set forth the object for which the Creator formed mind, we are
-thus furnished with the means for deciding as to the _right mode of its
-action_ in obtaining this object. We may discover the design of a most
-curious machine, and perceive that, if it is _rightly regulated_, it
-will secure that end; while, if it is worked wrong, it will break itself
-to pieces, and destroy the very object which it was formed to secure.
-
-The same may be seen to be as true of mind as it is of material
-organization, and the question then is most pertinent, What is that mode
-of mental action which will most perfectly secure the end for which mind
-is made?
-
-We have seen that the self-determining power of choice is the
-distinctive attribute of mind, and that all the other powers are
-dependent on this, and regulated by it. We have seen that the current of
-the thoughts, and the nature and power of the desires and emotions, are
-also controlled by the generic ruling purpose, or chief interest of the
-mind.
-
-This being so, then the only way in which mind can act to secure the
-object for which it is made is _to choose that object for chief end or
-ruling purpose, and actually carry out this choice in all subordinate
-volitions_.
-
-We will now present the evidence gained from experience, as well as what
-we should infer from the known laws of mind, to show what the result
-would be in _a system of minds_ where each mind should thus act.
-
-Let us suppose, then, a commonwealth in which every mind is regulated by
-a ruling purpose to _act right_, which actually controls every specific
-volition. Each mind then would obey all those laws which will secure to
-the whole community and to each individual the greatest possible amount
-of happiness with the least possible evil.
-
-To do this of necessity involves the idea that each mind must _know what
-are all the laws of the system_; for no one can choose to obey laws
-until laws are known.
-
-Let the result on a single mind be first contemplated. In the first
-place, all the trains of thought would be regulated by the _chief
-desire_, which would be to make the most possible happiness with the
-least possible evil. Of course, all those ideas that were most consonant
-with this ruling passion would become vivid and distinct; and as these
-ideas also would be connected with the _strongest emotions_, the two
-chief causes that regulate association would combine to secure constant
-thought and intellectual activity to promote the common welfare as the
-chief object, while self would have only its true and proper estimation
-and attention. There would be no need of effort to regulate thought and
-emotion, for they would all flow naturally to the grand and right
-object.
-
-Next suppose a commonwealth in which every mind had its intellect,
-desires, and emotions, and all its specific volitions thus regulated by
-the grand aim of making the most possible happiness, guarded, too, by
-unerring judgment, so as to make no miscalculation; what would be the
-state of things, so far as we can ascertain by past experience and by
-reasoning from the known nature of things?
-
-First, then, in reference to the susceptibilities of sensation. If all
-should never touch any food but that which would expose to no danger or
-excess; if they never encountered any needless hazard; if they exactly
-balanced all the probabilities of good and evil, in every matter
-relating to the pleasures of sense, and invariably chose that which
-exposed to the _least_ danger; if every being around was anxiously
-watchful in affording the results of observation, and in protecting
-others from risk and exposure, it is probable that the amount of
-sensitive enjoyment would be a thousand fold increased, while most of
-the evils caused by improper food and drink, by needless exposure, by
-negligence of danger, and by many other causes which now operate, would
-cease. With the present constitution of body, which tends to decay, we
-could not positively maintain that no suffering would be experienced,
-but it is probable that the amount would be as a drop to the ocean
-compared with what is now experienced.
-
-Under such a constitution of things, we can perceive, also, that there
-would be no suffering from the painful emotions; for where each was
-striving to attain the _greatest_ amount of good to all, there could be
-no competition, no jealousy, no envy, no pride, no ambition, no anger,
-no hatred; for there would be no occasion for any of these discordant
-emotions. Nor could remorse harass, or shame overwhelm; for no
-wickedness would be perpetrated, and no occasion of reproach occur. Nor
-could fear intrude, where every mind was conscious that its own
-happiness was the constant care of every one around. Nor could painful
-sympathy exist, where so little pain was known. Nor could the weariness
-of inactivity be felt, where all were engaged in acting for one noble
-and common object, in which every faculty could be employed. Nor could
-the mind suffer the pangs of ungratified desire, while the gratification
-of its chief desire was the aim and object of all. So that, if all minds
-should act unitedly and habitually on this principle, there would be no
-exposure, except to sensitive pain, and this danger would be exceedingly
-trifling.
-
-In the mean time, every source of happiness would be full and
-overflowing. All sensitive enjoyments that would not cause suffering,
-nor interfere with the happiness of others, would be gained; admiration
-and affection would be given and reciprocated; the powers of body and
-mind would be actively employed in giving and acquiring happiness; the
-pleasure resulting from the exercise of physical and moral power would
-be enjoyed, and employed to promote the enjoyment of others; the peace
-of conscious rectitude would dwell in every bosom; the consciousness of
-being the cause of happiness to others would send joy to the heart,
-while sympathy in the general happiness would pour in its unmeasured
-tide. But this happiness could not be perfect except in a commonwealth
-where _every_ individual was perfectly conformed to the laws of
-rectitude. A single mind that violated a single law would send a jar
-through the whole sphere of benevolent and sympathizing beings.
-
-The next question is, How can mind be most successfully influenced to
-right action? To answer this we must refer again to _experience_, and
-inquire as to the methods which have been found most successful in
-influencing the mind to right action.
-
-The first thing which experience teaches is, that it is indispensable to
-right mental action that there should be _a knowledge and belief of the
-truth_. We must have _true conceptions_ of reality of things, and of the
-right mode of promoting the greatest possible happiness, before we have
-power to pursue this course.
-
-But each mind, as it comes into existence, is a perfect blank in regard
-to knowledge or experience of any kind. The only way to gain knowledge
-is by experience and instruction. The knowledge secured by experience as
-to the laws of a system so vast and complicated comes very slowly and
-imperfectly. The chief reliance in the beginning of existence is on the
-instructions of other minds. _Infallible teachers, and perfect faith or
-belief in such teachers_, then, is the grand necessity of mind as it
-begins existence.
-
-The next thing which experience shows to be effective in securing the
-right action of mind is the _formation of right habits_. For this, also,
-the new-made being is entirely dependent on those to whom is given its
-early training. It comes into life without any knowledge and without any
-habits, a creature of mere impulses and instincts. Its very first want
-is not only infallible teachers, but patient educators, who shall, by
-constant care and effort, form its physical, intellectual, social, and
-moral habits.
-
-The next indispensable requisite to the right action of mind is the
-existence of _a ruling generic purpose_ to obey all the laws of
-rectitude.
-
-It has already been shown how all the powers of the mind are regulated
-and controlled by the leading purpose, and that it is impossible to
-bring all the desires, emotions, and subordinate volitions into right
-action except by the power of such a principle.
-
-But experience has proved that such a generic purpose will not either be
-originated or sustained except by the social influences of surrounding
-minds through the principles of _love_, _gratitude_, _sympathy_, and
-_example_.
-
-The power of these principles may be illustrated by supposing the case
-of a mature mind already embarrassed with habits of self-indulgence and
-selfishness. Let such a person be placed in the most endeared and
-intimate communion with a being possessed of every possible attraction
-which is delightful to the human mind. Let him feel that he is the
-object of the most tender and devoted affection to such an exalted
-friend, and, spite of his own faults and deficiencies, realize that his
-own affection is desired and his communion sought. Let him, in all his
-daily pursuits, be attended by the desired presence of the one in whom
-his hopes centre and his affections repose; one in whom he sees every
-possible exhibition of disinterestedness, tenderness, and love, not only
-toward himself, but all other beings who come within the circle of such
-benevolence. Let him discover that the practice of all that is excellent
-and benevolent by himself is the object of unceasing desire to this
-devoted friend. Let him discover that, to save him from the consequences
-of some guilty act of selfishness, this friend had submitted to the most
-painful sacrifices, and only asked as a return those efforts which were
-necessary to overcome such pernicious habits. Let him feel that this
-friend, though pained by his deficiencies, could forbear and forgive,
-and continue his love in spite of them all. Let him know that his
-attainment of perfect virtue was the object of intense desire, and was
-watched with the most exulting joy by so good and so perfect a being,
-and is it possible to conceive a stronger pressure of motive which could
-be brought to act on a selfish mind? Would not every human being
-exclaim, "Give me such a friend, and I should be selfish no more. His
-presence and his love would be my strength in foiling every wrong desire
-and in conquering every baneful habit."
-
-This illustration enables us to realize more clearly the power of love
-and gratitude toward another mind, and the reflex influence of love of
-sympathy and of example. Could the young mind be placed under the
-training of such minds, and in circumstances where all the rules of
-right and wrong were perfectly understood, it can be seen that _the
-habits_ would early be formed aright, and that the difficulties against
-which the mature mind has to struggle would be escaped.
-
-Could we suppose a community of such elevated mature educators, with
-young minds of various degrees of advancement under their training, it
-can be seen that the social influences of all would produce a moral
-atmosphere that would add great power to the individual influences. What
-every body loves, honors, and admires, secures a moral force over young
-minds almost invincible, even when it sustains false and wicked customs.
-How much greater this power when it co-operates with the intellect, the
-moral sense, and the will in leading to right action!
-
-The result of all this is to show, as the result of reason and
-experience, that it is indispensable to the perfectly right action of
-mind to secure _infallible and perfect educators_.
-
-Meantime, the degree in which any individual mind, or any community, has
-or will approach to such perfection, depends entirely on the extent to
-which such a character can be secured in those who are to train young
-minds. The history of individual families and of large communities shows
-that their advance, both in intellectual and moral development, has
-exactly corresponded with the character of those who educated the young.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-WRONG ACTION OF MIND AND ITS CAUSES.
-
-
-We have exhibited the _object_ for which mind was created, and the _mode
-of action_ by which alone this object can be secured.
-
-We next inquire in regard to the wrong action of mind; its causes and
-its results as learned by reason and experience.
-
-According to the principles set forth, a mind acts wrong whenever it
-transgresses any law. The grand law is that of _sacrifice_, by which
-every mode of enjoyment is to be relinquished which does not tend to the
-greatest possible happiness with the least possible evil.
-
-Having set forth those influences or causes which tend to secure the
-right action of mind, we are enabled thus to indicate what are the
-_causes of its wrong action_.
-
-The first and leading cause is a want of knowledge of the truth and a
-belief of error. We begin existence without knowledge of any kind, and
-without any power to receive instruction from others. The newborn mind
-is a mere unit of impulses and instincts, with an intellect entirely
-undeveloped, and a will which never can act intelligently. It is
-entirely dependent for its experience, safety, enjoyment, and knowledge
-of all kinds on those around. As it gains by experience and training,
-much of its knowledge and belief is correct, and many of its mental acts
-are right; but a large portion of its actions are wrong, and many of
-them inevitably so.
-
-And here we must recognize again the distinction which our moral nature
-demands between wrong actions that result from unavoidable ignorance,
-and those which are committed intelligently and which violate
-conscience. In regard to the first class, the natural penalties are
-inevitable, and the justice of them involves the great question of the
-Creator's character and designs. In regard to those that violate
-conscience, our moral nature, as has been shown, leads us not only to
-approve additional penalties, but to demand them.
-
-The violations of law which are sins of ignorance commence with the
-earliest period of existence. Owing to its helpless ignorance, often the
-little child can no more help acting wrong than it can help thinking and
-feeling.
-
-A second cause of wrong action is false teachings. Although a large
-portion of the instruction given to the young, especially in regard to
-physical laws, are true, yet the infant commences life among imperfectly
-instructed beings, who often communicate error believing it to be truth.
-Meantime the little one has no power of correcting these errors, and
-thus again is inevitably led to wrong action.
-
-A third cause of wrong action is the want of good habits and the early
-formation of bad ones. As a habit is a facility of action _gained by
-repetition_, of course, at first, there can be no habits. And then what
-the habits shall be is entirely decided by the opinions and conduct of
-its educators. While some habits are formed aright, others are formed
-wrong, and thus the disability of nature is increased instead of
-diminished.
-
-The next cause of wrong action is those social influences of other minds
-that have most power both in securing and sustaining right action. In
-the previous chapter we have illustrated the power of the principles of
-_love_, _gratitude_, _sympathy_, and _example_ in securing right action.
-
-The same powerful influences exist in reference to wrong action. The
-child who loves its parents and playmates is not only taught to believe
-wrong action to be right, but has all the powerful influences which
-example, sympathy, love, and gratitude can combine to lead to the same
-wrong courses. Thus, to the natural ignorance of inexperienced mind, to
-false instructions, and to bad habits, are often added these most
-powerful of all influences.
-
-The next cause of wrong action is the want of a ruling purpose to do
-right. It has been shown that all the powers of the intellect and all
-the susceptibilities can be regulated by a generic ruling purpose, and
-that it is impossible, according to the nature of mind, to regulate it
-any other way.
-
-When such a purpose exists, and its object is _any_ other except the
-right and true one, it is as impossible for a mind to act right as it is
-for a machine to fulfill its design when the main wheel is turned the
-wrong way.
-
-That such a purpose does not exist in the new-born mind, and that it
-must be a considerable time before it is possible, in the nature of
-things, to be originated, needs no attempt to illustrate. Such a purpose
-is dependent on knowledge of truth, on habits, and these on the
-character of the educators of mind, and on other surrounding social
-influences.
-
-These are the chief causes of the wrong action of mind as they have been
-developed by experience.
-
-In the next chapters we shall consider the results of the wrong action
-of mind as they have been exhibited in the experience of mankind, and as
-they are to be anticipated in a future world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-WRONG ACTION OF MIND, AND ITS RESULTS IN THIS LIFE.
-
-
-We have examined into the causes of the wrong action of mind, and have
-found them to consist in the want of knowledge, want of habits, want of
-social influences from other minds, and want of a right governing
-purpose, all of which, so far as reason and experience teach, alone
-could be secured by perfect and infallible teachers and educators in a
-perfect commonwealth.
-
-We are now to inquire in regard to the wrong action of mind and its
-results in this life.
-
-The first point to be noticed is the fact that from the first there is
-in every intelligent mind _a sense of entire inability_ to obey the laws
-of the system in which it is placed.
-
-This is true not merely in reference to that breach of law which is the
-inevitable result of ignorance, but of that also which involves a
-violation of conscience. Where is the mother who has not heard the
-distressed confession, even from the weeping infant, that he was happier
-in doing right than in doing wrong, that he wished to do well, and yet
-that he was constantly doing evil? Where is the parent that has not
-witnessed, as one little being after another passed on from infancy to
-youth, and from youth to manhood, the perpetual warfare to sustain good
-purposes and oft-broken resolutions? And where is the conscious spirit
-that can not look back on its whole course of existence as one continued
-exhibition of a conflict that gives unvarying evidence of this truth?
-Men _feel_ that it is as impossible for them to be invariably _perfect_
-in thought, word, and deed, as it is to rule the winds and waves.
-
-The testimony of mankind through every period of the world, in regard to
-their own individual consciousness, attests a sense of the same fatal
-inability. If we go back even as far as to the heathen sages of
-antiquity, we gain the same acknowledgment. Thus we find Pythagoras
-calls it "the fatal companion, the noxious strife that lurks within us,
-and which was born along with us." Sopator terms it "the sin that is
-born with mankind." Plato denominates it "natural wickedness," and
-Aristotle "the natural repugnance of man's temper to reason." Cicero
-declares that "men are brought into life by Nature as a step-mother,
-with a naked, frail, and infirm body, and with a soul prone to divers
-lusts." Seneca observes, "We are born in such a condition that we are
-not subject to fewer disorders of the mind than of the body; all vices
-are in men, though they do not break out in every one." Propertius says
-that "every body has a vice to which he is inclined by nature." Juvenal
-asserts that "nature, unchangeably fixed, runs back to wickedness."
-Horace declares that "no man is free from vices, and he is the best man
-who is oppressed with the least." He adds that "mankind rush into
-wickedness, and always desire what is forbidden;" that "youth has the
-softness of wax to receive vicious impressions, and the hardness of rock
-to resist virtuous admonitions;" that "we are mad enough to attack
-Heaven itself, and our repeated crimes do not suffer the God of Heaven
-to lay aside his wrathful thunderbolts."
-
-This testimony of individual experience is verified by the general
-history of mankind. All the laws and institutions of society are founded
-on the principle that mankind are prone to wrong, infirm of purpose in
-all that is good, and that every possible restraint is needed to prevent
-the overbreaking tide of evil and crime. When we read the history of
-communities and of nations, it is one continued record of selfishness,
-avarice, injustice, revenge, and cruelty. Individuals seem equally
-plotting against the happiness of individuals, and rejoicing to work
-evils on society. Communities rise against communities, and nations dash
-against nations. Tyrants fill their dominions with sorrow, misery, and
-death; bloody heroes, followed by infuriate bands, spread havoc, ruin,
-and dismay through all their course, while superstition binds in chains,
-racks with tortures, and sacrifices its millions of victims.
-
-In tracing along the history of mankind, there is no period which we can
-select when mankind have not seemed as busy in destroying their own, and
-the happiness of others, as the lower animals are in seeking their
-appropriate enjoyments. At one time we behold Xerxes pouring forth all
-Asia upon Europe, where three million beings were brought to be
-slaughtered by the Greeks. At another time the Greeks, headed by
-Alexander, return upon Asia, and spread over most of the known world,
-pillaging, burning, and slaughtering. Then we behold Alaric, at the head
-of barbarous hordes, desolating all the Roman empire, and destroying the
-monuments of taste, science, and the arts. Then we see Tamerlane rushing
-forth, overrunning Persia, India, and other parts of Asia, carrying
-carnage and the most desolating cruelty in his course, so that it is
-recorded that he would cause thousands of his prisoners to be pounded in
-mortars with bricks to form into walls.
-
-From Europe we behold _six millions_ of Crusaders rush forth upon the
-plains of Asia, with rapine, and famine, and outrage attending their
-course. Then come forth from Eastern Asia the myrmidons of Genghis Khan,
-ravaging fifteen millions of square miles, beheading 100,000 prisoners
-at one time, shaking the whole earth with terror, and exterminating
-fourteen millions of their fellow-men. Then from the northern forests
-are seen swarming forth the Goths and Vandals, sweeping over Europe and
-Asia, and bearing away every vestige of arts, civilization, comfort, and
-peace. At another time we see the professed head of the Christian Church
-slaughtering the pious and inoffensive Albigenses, sending horror into
-their peaceful villages, and torturing thousands of inoffensive victims.
-
-At one period of history the whole known world seemed to be one vast
-field of carnage and commotion. The Huns, Vandals, and other Northern
-barbarians were ravaging France, Germany, and Spain; the Goths were
-plundering and murdering in Italy, and the Saxons and Angles were
-overrunning Great Britain. The Roman armies under Justinian, together
-with the Vandals and Huns, were desolating Africa; the barbarians of
-Scythia were pouring down upon the Roman empire; the Persian armies were
-pillaging and laying waste the countries of Asia; the Arabians, under
-Mohammed, were beginning to extend their conquests over Syria,
-Palestine, Egypt, Barbary, and Spain. Every nation and kingdom on earth
-was shaking to its centre. The smoke and the spirits of the bottomless
-pit seemed coming up to darken, and torment, and affright mankind. The
-most fertile countries were converted to deserts, and covered with ruins
-of once flourishing cities and villages; the most fiendish cruelty was
-practiced; famine raged to such a degree that the living fed upon the
-dead; prisoners were tortured by the most refined systems of cruelty;
-public edifices were destroyed; the monuments of science and the arts
-perished; cruelty, fraud, avarice, murder, and every crime that
-disgraces humanity, were let loose upon a wretched world. Historians
-seem to shudder in attempting to picture these horrid scenes, and would
-draw a veil over transactions that disgrace mankind.
-
-If from ancient times we look at the present state of the world, at its
-present most refined and enlightened period, the same mournful evidence
-is discovered. Cruelty and tyranny have changed some of the fairest
-provinces of Persia to deserts. The Turk long ago turned the land of the
-patriarchs and prophets to a wilderness, and drenched the shores of
-Greece with the blood of slaughtered victims, while Syria, Kurdistan,
-and Armenia for ages have been ravaged with injustice and rapine. China
-and Japan have been shut out from the world by a cold and jealous
-selfishness. In Tartary, Arabia, and Siberia, the barbarous tribes are
-prowling about for plunder, or engaged in murderous conflicts. In
-Africa, the Barbary States are in perpetual commotion; the petty tyrants
-of Benin, Ashantee, and other interior states are waging ceaseless wars,
-murdering their prisoners, and adorning their houses with their skulls;
-and on its ravaged coast the white man-stealer, for hundreds of years,
-has been prowling, and bearing off thousands of wretches as a yearly
-offering to the avarice of the most refined and Christian nations on
-earth. In North America, we have seen the native tribes employed in war,
-and practicing the most fiendish barbarities, while in South America,
-its more civilized inhabitants are engaged in constant political and
-bloody commotions. In the islands of the ocean thousands of human beings
-have been fighting each other, throwing darts and stones at strangers,
-offering human sacrifices, and feasting on the flesh of their enemies.
-
-If we select Europe for the exhibition of human nature as seen under the
-restraints of civilization, laws, refinement, and religion, the same
-evils burst forth from bonds and restraints. In Europe, for ages, the
-common people, in slavery and ignorance, have been bowing down to a
-grinding priesthood, or an oppressive nobility or monarchical tyranny.
-Incessant heaving of the troubled nations portends desolation and
-dismay, as man seems waking from the slavery of ages to shake off his
-fetters and call himself free.
-
-If we look to our own boasted land of liberty and religion, what toiling
-of selfish and discordant interests--what mean and low-lived arts to
-gain honor and power--what shameful attacks on fair reputation and
-unblemished honor--what collisions of party-strifes and local interests!
-Here also the curse of slavery brings the blush of shame to every honest
-man that, from year to year, on the anniversary of the national liberty,
-hears the declarations of rights this very nation is trampling under
-foot. Millions of slaves, deprived of the best blessing and the dearest
-rights of humanity, are held in the most degrading bondage by a nation
-who yearly and publicly acknowledge their perfect and unalienable
-rights.
-
-The same melancholy view is no less clearly witnessed in the opinions
-and moral sentiments of mankind. The mind of man is formed to love
-happiness, to be pleased with what promotes it, and to detest that which
-tends to destroy it, yet the long reign of selfishness has seemed to
-pervert and poison even the taste and moral sentiments of men. Who is
-the hero sung by the poet, eulogized by the statesman, and flattered by
-the orator? Who is it presented in classic language to the gaze of
-enthusiastic childhood, and pictured forth in tales of romance to
-kindling youth?
-
-It is the man who has given up his life to the gratification of pride,
-and the love of honor and fame; the man who, to gain this selfish good,
-can plunge the sword into the bosom of thousands, and stand the
-unpitying spectator of burning cities, widowed mothers, orphan children,
-desolated fields, and the long train of ills that he wantonly pours on
-mankind, that he may gain the miserable pittance of gaping admiration
-and dreadful renown which rises amid the tears and cries of mankind. It
-is the man who, when injured, knows not how to forgive--whose stinted
-soul never knew the dignity and pleasure of giving blessing for ill--who
-deems it the mark of honor and manhood to follow the example of the
-whining infant, that, when he is struck, with the same noble spirit will
-strike back again.
-
-Meantime, the calm forbearance and true dignity of virtue, that would be
-humbled at recrimination and can not condescend to retaliate, is put in
-the background as unworthy such honors and eulogy. Thus, also, we find
-intellect, which the Creator designed only as the instrument of securing
-happiness, though perverted to vice and folly, applauded and admired;
-and even some of those admired as among the wisest of mankind have often
-placed true virtue and goodness below the fancied splendors of genius
-and learning. All the maxims, and honors, and employments of mankind
-develop the perverted action of the noblest part of the creation of God
-in all its relations and in all its principles and pursuits.
-
-It is into such a world as this that every new-born mind is ushered
-without knowledge to guide, without habits to strengthen, without the
-power of forming a ruling purpose to do right which shall control all
-subordinate volitions.
-
-Instead of meeting perfect educators to instruct in the laws of the
-system, to form good habits, and to exert all the powerful social,
-domestic, and civil influences aright, every one of these powerful
-principles are fatally wrong. Parents, teachers, companions, and rulers,
-to a greater or less extent, teach wrong, train wrong, and set wrong
-examples, while the whole moral atmosphere is contaminated and
-paralyzing.
-
-In these circumstances, it is as _impossible_ for a young mind to
-commence existence here with perfect obedience to law, and to continue
-through life in a course of perfect rectitude, as it is for it, by its
-feeble will, to regulate the winds of heaven, or turn back the tides of
-the ocean.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-WRONG ACTION OF MIND, AND ITS RESULTS IN A FUTURE STATE.
-
-
-We are now to inquire as to the results of the wrong action of mind in a
-future state, so far as reason and experience can furnish data for any
-anticipations.
-
-The following are the principles of mind from which we reason on this
-subject. It appears that its constitution is such that the repetition of
-one particular mode of securing happiness induces a habit; and that the
-longer a habit continues, the more powerful is its force. An early habit
-of selfishness is always formed in the human mind, and the penalties
-following from self-indulgence and selfishness are not sufficient to
-prevent the continued increase of this habit. Though men, from the very
-beginning of existence, feel that they are happier in obeying the
-dictates of conscience, and that increase of guilt is increase of
-sorrow, yet this does not save them, in numberless cases, from
-increasing evil habits.
-
-It is also established by experience that, when a strong habit is
-formed, the mere decisions of the will are not sufficient for an
-immediate remedy. In this life, it requires a period of long and painful
-efforts of the will to rectify an established habit. Every human being
-is conscious how difficult it is to force the mental and bodily
-faculties to obey its decisions when contrary to the stream of a
-long-indulged habit. There are few who have not either experienced or
-witnessed the anguish of spirit that has followed the violations of
-solemn resolutions, those firmest decisions of the will, in the contest
-between habit and conscience.
-
-Another principle of mind is this, that when selfishness and crime have
-been long indulged, the natural constitution of mind seems changed, so
-that inflicting evil on others is sought as an enjoyment. In
-illustration of this, it is related of Antiochus Epiphanes that, in his
-wars with the Jews, after all opposition had ceased, and all danger and
-cause of fear was removed, he destroyed thousands for the mere pleasure
-of seeing them butchered. An anecdote is related of him, too horrible to
-record in all its particulars, where he sat and feasted his eyes on the
-sufferings of a mother and her seven sons, when the parent was doomed to
-witness the infliction of the most excruciating and protracted tortures
-on each of her seven children, and then was tortured to death herself.
-
-It is recorded of Mustapha, one of the Turkish sultans, that by
-honorable capitulations he gained the person of a brave Venetian
-commander called Bragadino, who was defending his country from the
-cruelty of invaders. After having promised him honorable protection, he
-ordered him, bound hand and foot, to behold the massacre of his
-soldiers, then caused his person to be cut and mutilated in the most
-horrible manner, and then taunted him as a worshiper of Christ, who
-could not save his servants. When recovered of his wounds, he obliged
-him to carry loaded buckets of earth before the army, and kiss the
-ground whenever he passed his barbarous tormentor. He then had him hung
-in a cage, to be tormented by his own soldiers, who were chained as
-galley-slaves, that they might be agonized by the indignities and
-sufferings of their venerated commander. After the most protracted
-sufferings and indignities in the public place, at the sound of music he
-was flayed alive.
-
-The history of some of the Roman emperors, even of some who, in early
-childhood and youth, were gentle, amiable, and kind, presents the same
-horrible picture. Nero set fire to Rome, and dressed the Christians in
-garments of flaming pitch, to run about his garden for his amusement.
-Tiberius tormented his subjects, and murdered them in cruel pangs, to
-gratify his love of suffering, while Caligula butchered his people for
-amusement with his own hand.
-
-The mind turns with horror from such revolting scenes, and asks if it is
-possible human nature _now_ can be so perverted and debased. But this is
-the humiliating record of some of the _amusements_, even of our own
-countrymen, that have occurred in some parts of this refined and
-Christian nation. "Many of the interludes are filled up with a _boxing
-match_, which becomes memorable by feats of _gouging_. When two boxers
-are wearied with fighting and bruising each other, they come to close
-quarters, each endeavoring to twist his forefinger into the earlocks of
-his antagonist. When they are thus fast clenched, the thumbs are
-extended, and _both the eyes_ are turned out of their sockets. The
-victor is hailed with shouts of applause from the sporting throng, while
-his poor antagonist, thus blinded for life, _is laughed at_ for his
-misfortune."
-
-One very striking fact bearing on this subject has been established by
-experience, and that is, that _extreme suffering_, either mental or
-bodily, tends to awaken the desire to inflict evil upon other minds.
-This is probably one mode of accounting for the increased cruelty of the
-Roman emperors. As the powers of enjoyment diminished by abuse, and the
-horrors of guilt harassed their spirits, this dreadful desire to torment
-others was awakened.
-
-There are many undisputed facts to establish the principle that extreme
-suffering is the cause of terrible malignity. The following is from a
-statement of Mr. Byron, who was shipwrecked on the coast of South
-America: "So terrible was the scene of foaming breakers, that one of the
-bravest men could not help expressing his dismay, saying it was too
-shocking to bear. In this dreadful situation malignant passions began to
-appear. The crew grew extremely riotous, and fell to beating every thing
-in their way, and broke open chests and cabins for plunder that could be
-of no use. So earnest were they in this wantonness of theft, that in the
-morning a strangled corpse was found of one who had contested the
-spoil."
-
-A still more terrible picture is given in an account of the loss of the
-Medusa frigate on the coast of Africa. In the midst of dreadful
-suffering from cold, danger, and famine, it is recorded that "a spirit
-of sedition arose and manifested itself by furious shouts. The soldiers
-and sailors began to cut the ropes, and declared their intention of
-murdering the officers. About midnight, they rushed on the officers like
-desperate men, each having a knife or sabre, and such was their fury
-that they tore their clothes and their flesh _with their teeth_. The
-next morning the raft was strewed with dead bodies. The succeeding night
-was passed in similar horrors, and the morning sun saw twelve more
-lifeless bodies. The next night of suffering was attended with a horrid
-massacre, and thus it continued till only fifteen remained of the whole
-one hundred and fifty!"
-
-Another principle of mind having a bearing on this subject is the fact
-that those qualities of mind which are the causes of enjoyment in others
-around may be viewed with only pain and dislike by a selfish person.
-Thus intellectual superiority, in itself considered, is a delightful
-object of contemplation; but if it becomes the means of degradation or
-of contemptuous comparison to a selfish mind, it is viewed with
-unmingled pain. Benevolence and truth are objects of delightful
-contemplation to all minds when disconnected with obligations or painful
-comparisons, but if they are viewed as causes of evil to a selfish mind,
-it will view them with unmingled dislike and hatred.
-
-Now we find that there are two classes of minds in this world: those who
-are more or less benevolent, and find their happiness in living to
-promote the general interests of their fellow-beings, and those who are
-selfish, and are living to promote their own enjoyment irrespective of
-the general happiness.
-
-If, then, we reason from the known laws of mind and from past
-experience, we must suppose that the habits of mind which are existing
-in this life will continue to increase, and if the mind is immortal, a
-time must come when one class will become perfectly benevolent and the
-other perfectly selfish. A community of perfectly benevolent beings, it
-has been shown, would, from the very nature and constitution of mind, be
-a perfectly happy community. Every source of enjoyment of which mind is
-capable would be secured by every individual.
-
-It can be seen, also, that there must, in the nature of the case, be an
-entire separation between two such opposite classes; for it is as
-painful for minds suffering from conscious guilt, shame, and malignity,
-to look upon purity, benevolence, and happiness, as it is for the
-virtuous to associate with the selfish, the debased, and the abandoned.
-This separation, therefore, would be a voluntary one on both sides, even
-did we suppose no interference of Deity. But if the Creator continues
-his present constitution of things, we may infer that his power would be
-exerted to prevent the intrusion of malignity into a perfect and
-well-ordered community; for he has so constituted things _here_, that
-those who are incorrigible pests to society are confined from
-interfering with its interests.
-
-From the laws of mind, then, and from past experience as to the
-tendencies of things, we can establish the position that, at some future
-period, if the mind of man is immortal, the human race will be
-permanently divided into two classes, the perfectly selfish and the
-perfectly benevolent.
-
-Should it be objected to this conclusion that when the mind passes into
-another world more effectual motives may be brought to operate, it may
-be replied that it is not the office of reason to meet _suppositions_ of
-_possibilities_, but to show what the _probabilities_ are by deductions
-from principles already known. A thousand possibilities may be asserted,
-such as the annihilation of mind or the alteration of its powers, but
-these are mere suppositions, and have nothing to do with the conclusions
-of reason.
-
-If mind is immortal and continues its present nature, habits will
-continue to strengthen; and in regard to motives, we know already that
-the _fear of evil consequences_ will not save from continuance in crime.
-How often has a man who has yielded to habits of guilt been seen
-writhing in the agonies of remorse, longing to free himself from the
-terrible evils he has drawn around him, acknowledging the misery of his
-course and his ability to return to virtue, and yet, with bitter
-anguish, yielding to the force of inveterate habits and despairing of
-any remedy.
-
-We know, also, that it is a principle established by long experience,
-that punishment does not tend to soften and reform. Where is the
-hardened culprit that was ever brought to repentance and reformation by
-lashes or the infliction of degradation? Such means serve only to harden
-and brutify. Experience forbids the hope that punishment will ever
-restore a selfish and guilty mind to virtue and peace.
-
-Reason and experience, then, both lead to the conclusion that the two
-classes of minds into which mankind are here divided will, on leaving
-this world, eventually become two permanently distinct communities--one
-perfectly selfish, and the other perfectly benevolent.
-
-What, then, would reason and experience teach us as to the probable
-situation of a community of minds constituted like those of the human
-race, who, in the progress of future ages, shall establish habits of
-_perfect selfishness and crime_?
-
-In regard to the Creator, what may we suppose will be the feelings of
-such minds? If he is a benevolent, pure, and perfectly happy being, and
-his power is exerted to confine them from inflicting evil on the good,
-he will be the object of unmingled and tormenting envy, hatred, and
-spite; for when a selfish mind beholds a being with characteristics
-which exhibit its own vileness in painful contrast, and using his power
-to oppose its desires, what might in other circumstances give pleasure
-will only be cause of pain. If they behold, also, the purity and
-happiness of that community of benevolent beings from which they will be
-withdrawn, the same baleful passions will be awakened in view of their
-excellence and enjoyment.
-
-There is no suffering of the mind more dreaded and avoided than that of
-_shame_. It is probable a guilty creature never writhes under keener
-burnings of spirit than when all his course of meanness, baseness,
-ingratitude, and guilt is unveiled in the presence of dignified virtue,
-honor, and purity, and the withering glance of pity, contempt, and
-abhorrence is encountered. This feeling must be experienced, to its full
-extent, by every member of such a wretched community. Each must feel
-himself an object of loathing and contempt to every pure and benevolent
-mind, as well as to all those who are equally debased.
-
-Another cause of suffering is ungratified desire. In this world, perfect
-misery and full happiness is seldom contrasted. But in such
-circumstances, if we suppose that the happiness of blessed minds will be
-known, the keenest pangs of ungratified desire must torment. Every mind
-will know what is the pure delight of yielded and reciprocated
-affection, of sympathy in the happiness of others, of the sweet peace of
-conscious rectitude, and of the delightful consciousness of conferring
-bliss on others, while the ceaseless cravings of hopeless desire will
-agonize the spirit.
-
-Another cause of suffering is found in the _loss of enjoyment_. In such
-a degraded and selfish community, all ties of country, kindred,
-friendship, and love must cease. Yet all will know what _were_ the
-endearments of home, the mild soothings of maternal love, the ties of
-fraternal sympathy, and all the trust and tenderness of friendship and
-love. What vanished blessing of earth would not rise up, with all the
-sweetness and freshness that agonizing memory can bring, to aggravate
-the _loss of all_!
-
-But the mind is so made that, however wicked itself, guilt and
-selfishness in others is hated and despised. Such a company, then, might
-be described as those who were "hateful and hating one another." It has
-been shown that both suffering and selfishness awaken the desire to
-torment others. This, then, will be the detested purpose of every
-malignant mind. Every action that could irritate, mortify, and enrage,
-would be deliberately practiced, while disappointed hopes, and blasted
-desires, and agonizing misery would alone awaken the smile of horrible
-delight. And if we suppose such minds in a future state reclothed in a
-body, with all the present susceptibilities of suffering, and surrounded
-by material elements that may be ministers of hate, what mind can
-conceive the terror and chaos of a world where every one is actuated by
-a desire to torment?
-
-Suppose these beings had arrived at only such a degree of selfishness as
-has been witnessed in this world; such, for example, as Genghis Khan,
-who caused unoffending prisoners to be pounded to death with bricks in a
-mortar; or Nero, who dressed the harmless Christians in flaming pitch
-for his amusement; or Antiochus Epiphanes and Mustapha, who spent their
-time in devising and executing the most excruciating tortures on those
-who could do them no injury. What malignity and baleful passions would
-actuate such minds, when themselves tormented by others around, bereft
-of all hope, and with nothing to interest them but plans of torment and
-revenge! What refined systems of cruelty would be devised in such a
-world! what terrific combinations of the elements to terrify and
-distress! If such objects as "the lake which burneth with fire and
-brimstone, and the worm that never dies," could be found, no Almighty
-hand would need to interfere, while the "smoke of their torment" would
-arise from flames of their own kindling.
-
-To fearful sufferings thus inflicted would be added the pangs of
-agitating _fear_; for where all around were plotting misery, what
-relief, by day or by night, from its withering terrors? Then surely
-"fear would come upon them like desolation, and destruction as a
-whirlwind."
-
-Another cause of suffering is inactivity of body and mind. It has been
-seen that the desire of good is what gives activity to the intellectual
-and moral powers. In such a world, no good could be hoped or sought, but
-the gratification of inflicting ill. And even a malignant mind must
-often weary in this pursuit, and sink under all the weight and misery of
-that awful _death of the soul_, when, in torpid inactivity, it has
-nothing to love, nothing to hope, nothing to desire!
-
-Another cause of misery is the consciousness of guilt; and such, even in
-this life, have been the agonies of remorse, that tearing the hair,
-bruising the body, and even gnawing the flesh have been resorted to as a
-temporary relief from its pangs. What, then, would be its agonizing
-throes in bosoms that live but to torment and to destroy all good to
-themselves and to other minds?
-
-In this life, where we can allow the mind to be engrossed by other
-pursuits, and where we can thus form a habit of suppressing and avoiding
-emotions of guilt, the conscience may be seared. But it could not be
-thus when all engaging and cheerful pursuits were ended forever. Then
-the mind would view its folly, and shame, and guilt in all their length
-and breadth, and find no escape from the soul-harrowing gaze.
-
-To these miseries must be added despair--the loss of all hope. Here hope
-comes to all; but, in such a community, that fearful susceptibility of
-the soul--that terrific power of _habit_--would bind in chains which
-would be felt to be stronger than brass and heavier than iron. If the
-spirit is conscious that its powers are immortal, with this
-consciousness would come the despairing certainty of increasing and
-never-ending woe!
-
-This terrifying and heart-rending picture, it must be remembered, is the
-_deduction of reason_, and who can point out its fallacy? Is not habit
-appalling in its power, and ofttimes, even in this life, inveterate in
-its hold? Are not habits increased by perpetual repetition? Is not the
-mind of man immortal? Do not the tendencies of this life indicate a
-period when a total separation of selfish and benevolent minds will be
-their own voluntary choice? If all the comforts, gentle endearments, and
-the enlivening hopes of this life; if all the restraints of
-self-interest, family, country, and laws; if in Christian lands the
-offers of heaven, and the fearful predictions of eternal woe; if the
-mercy and pardon, and all the love and pity of our Creator and Redeemer,
-neither by fear, nor by gratitude, nor by love, can turn a selfish mind,
-what hope of its recovery when it goes a _stranger_ into a world of
-spirits, to sojourn in that society which, according to its moral
-habits, it must voluntarily seek? And if there exists a community of
-such selfish beings, can language portray, with any adequacy, the
-appalling results that must necessarily ensue?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-CHARACTER OF THE CREATOR.
-
-
-The preceding pages have exhibited the nature of mind, the object of its
-formation, the right mode of action to secure this object, and the
-causes and results of its right and wrong action, as indicated by reason
-and experience.
-
-We are now furnished with farther data to guide us in regard to the
-character of our Creator, as we seek it by the light of reason alone.
-
-We have seen, in the chapter on intuitive truths, that by the first of
-these principles we arrive at the knowledge of some _eternal First Cause
-of all finite things_.
-
-By another of these principles we deduce certain particulars in regard
-to his character as exhibited through his works. This principle is thus
-expressed: "Design is evidence of an intelligent cause, and the nature
-of a design proves the character and intention of the author." We are
-now prepared to show how much must be included in this truth.
-
-Our only idea of "an intelligent cause" is that of _a mind like our
-own_. This being so, we assume that we are instructed, by the very
-constitution of our own minds, that our Creator is a being endowed with
-intellect, susceptibilities, and will, and a part of these
-susceptibilities are those included in our _moral constitution_.
-
-This moral nature, which we are thus led to ascribe to our Creator,
-includes, in the first place, the existence of a feeling that whatever
-lessens or destroys happiness is unfitted to the system of the universe,
-and that _voluntary sacrifice and suffering to purchase the highest
-possible happiness is fitted to or in accordance with the eternal nature
-of things_.
-
-Next, we are thus taught that in the Eternal Mind is existing that
-_sense of justice_ which involves the desire of good to the author of
-good, and of evil to the author of evil, which requires that such
-retributions be _proportioned_ to the good and evil done, and to the
-_voluntary_ power of the agent.
-
-Lastly, we are thus instructed that the Author of all created things
-possesses that susceptibility called _conscience_, which includes, in
-the very constitution of mind itself, retributions for right and wrong
-actions.
-
-But while we thus assume that the mind of the Creator is, so far as we
-can conceive, precisely like our own in constitutional organization, we
-are as necessarily led to perceive that the _extent_ of these powers is
-far beyond our own. A mind with the power, wisdom, and goodness
-exhibited in the very small portion of his works submitted to our
-inspection, who has inhabited eternity, and developed and matured
-through everlasting ages--our minds are lost in attempting any
-conception of the extent of such infinite faculties!
-
-But we have another intuitive truth to aid in our deductions. It is that
-by which we infer the continuance of a _uniformity in our experience_;
-that is, we necessarily believe that "things will continue as they are
-and have been, unless there is evidence to the contrary." Now all past
-experience as to the nature of mind has been uniform. Every mind known
-to us is endowed with intellect, susceptibility, and will, like our own.
-So much is this the case, that when any of these are wanting in a human
-being, we say he has "lost his mind."
-
-Again: all our experience of mind involves the idea of the _mutual
-relation of minds_. We perceive that minds are made to match to other
-minds, so that there can be no complete action of mind, according to its
-manifest design, except in relation to other beings. A mind can not love
-till there is another mind to call forth such emotion. A mind can not
-bring a tithe of its power into appropriate action except in a community
-of minds. The conception of a solitary being, with all the social powers
-and sympathies of the human mind infinitely enlarged, and yet without
-any sympathizing mind to match and meet them, involves the highest idea
-of unfitness and imperfection conceivable.
-
-Thus it is that past experience of the nature of mind leads to the
-inference that no mind has existed from all eternity _in solitude_, but
-that there is _more than one eternal, uncreated mind_, and that all
-their powers of enjoyment from giving and receiving happiness in social
-relations have been in exercise from eternal ages. This is the just and
-natural deduction of reason and experience, as truly as the deduction
-that there is at least one eternal First Cause.
-
-It has been argued that the _unity of design_ in the works of nature
-proves that there is but one creating mind. This is not so, for in all
-our experience of the creations of finite beings no _great design_ was
-ever formed without a combination of minds, both to plan and to execute.
-The majority of minds in all ages, both heathen and Christian, have
-always conceived of the Creator as _in some way_ existing so as to
-involve the ideas of plurality and of the love and communion of one mind
-with another.
-
-Without a revelation, also, we have the means of arriving at the
-conclusion that the Creator of all things is not only a mind organized
-just like our own, but that he always has and always will feel and act
-right. We infer this from both his social and his moral constitution;
-for he must, as our own minds do, desire the love, reverence, and
-confidence of his creatures. The fact that he has made them to love
-truth, justice, benevolence, and self-sacrificing virtue is evidence
-that he has and will exhibit these and all other excellences that call
-forth affection.
-
-But we have still stronger evidence. We have seen all the causes that
-experience has taught as the leading to the wrong action of mind. These
-are necessarily excluded from our conceptions of the Creator. The
-Eternal Mind can not err for want of knowledge, nor for want of habits
-of right action, nor for want of teachers and educators, nor for want of
-those social influences which generate and sustain a right governing
-purpose; for an infinite mind, that never had a beginning, can not have
-these modes of experience which appertain to new-born and finite
-creatures.
-
-Again: we have seen that it is one of the implanted principles of reason
-that "no rational mind will choose evil without hope of compensating
-good." Such is the eternal system of the universe, as we learn it by the
-light of reason, that the highest possible happiness to each individual
-mind and to the whole commonwealth is promoted by the right action of
-every mind in that system. This, of necessity, is seen and felt by the
-All-creating and Eternal Mind, and to suppose that, with this knowledge,
-he would ever choose wrong is to suppose that he would choose pure evil,
-and this is contrary to an intuitive truth. It is to suppose the Creator
-would do what he has formed our minds to believe to be impossible in
-_any_ rational mind. It is to suppose that the Creator would do that
-which, if done by human beings, marks them as insane.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-ON PERFECT AND IMPERFECT MINDS.
-
-
-We are now prepared to inquire in regard to what constitutes _a perfect
-mind_. This question relates, in the first place, to the perfect
-constitutional organization of mind, and, in the next place, to the
-perfect action of mind.
-
-In regard to a finite mind, when we inquire as to its perfection in
-organization, we are necessarily restricted to the question of the
-object or end for which it is made. Any contrivance in mind or matter is
-perfect when it is so formed that, _if worked according to its design_,
-it completely fulfills the end for which it is made, so that there is no
-way in which it could be improved.
-
-It is here claimed, then, that by the light of reason alone we first
-gain the object for which mind is made, and then arrive at the
-conclusion that the mind of man is perfect in construction, because, if
-worked according to its design, it would completely fulfill the end for
-which it is made, so that there is no conceivable way in which it could
-be improved. This position can not be controverted except by presenting
-evidence that some other organization of the mind would produce, in an
-eternal and infinite system, more good with less evil than the present
-one.
-
-In regard to the Eternal Mind, the only standard of perfection in
-organization that we can conceive of is revealed in our own mind. Every
-thing in our own minds--every thing around us--every thing we have known
-in past experience, is designed to produce the most possible happiness
-with the least possible evil. We can not conceive of any being as wise,
-or just, or good, but as he acts to promote that end.
-
-A mind organized like our own, with faculties infinitely enlarged, who
-always has and always will sustain a controlling purpose to act right,
-is the only idea we can have of an all-perfect Creator.
-
-But on the subject of the perfect action of finite minds it is perceived
-that reference must always be had to _voluntary power_ and its
-limitations. We have shown that the implanted susceptibility, called the
-_sense of justice_, demands that the rewards and penalties for good and
-evil have reference to _the knowledge and power_ of a voluntary agent;
-that is to say, it is contrary to our moral nature voluntarily to
-inflict penalties for wrong action on a being who either has no power to
-know what right is, or no power to do it. We revolt from such
-inflictions with instinctive abhorrence, as unfit and contrary to the
-design of all things.
-
-So, in forming our judgment of the Creator, when we regard him as
-perfectly just, the idea implies that he will never _voluntarily_
-inflict evil for wrong action on beings who have not the knowledge or
-power to act right.
-
-Here we are again forced to the assumption of some _eternal nature of
-things_ independent of the Creator's will, by which ignorant and
-helpless creatures are exposed to suffering from wrong action when they
-have no power of _any_ kind to act right.
-
-For we see such suffering actually does exist, and there are but two
-suppositions possible. The one is, that it results from the Creator's
-_voluntary_ acts, and the other, that it is inherent in that eternal
-nature of things which the Creator can no more alter than he can destroy
-his own necessary and eternal existence.
-
-In judging of the perfect action of finite minds, we are obliged to
-regard the question in two relations. In the primary relation we have
-reference to actions which, in all the infinite relations of a vast and
-eternal system of free agents, are fitted to secure the most possible
-good with the least possible evil. In this relation, so far as we can
-judge by experience and reason, no finite being ever did or ever can
-_act perfectly_ from the first to the last of its volitions. In this
-relation, every human being is certainly, necessarily, and inevitably
-imperfect in action.
-
-But when the question of perfection in action simply has reference to
-the knowledge and power of the voluntary agent, we come to another
-result. In this relation, any mind acts perfectly _when it forms a
-ruling purpose to feel and act right in all things, when it takes all
-possible means of learning what is right, and when it actually carries
-out this purpose, so far as it has knowledge and power_.
-
-If a human mind is, as has been shown, perfect in that organization of
-its powers for which the Creator is responsible, and then forms and
-carries out such a ruling purpose, it is, so far as we can learn without
-revelation, as perfect in action as is possible in the nature of things;
-that is to say, it voluntarily acts to promote the greatest possible
-good with the least possible evil as entirely as is possible, and as
-really as does the Creator, who himself is limited by the nature of
-things.
-
-It is as impossible for a finite mind to act right, when it does not
-know what right is, as it is for the Eternal Mind to make and sustain a
-system in which there has been and never will be any wrong action to
-cause pain to himself and to other minds.
-
-What, then, so far as we can learn without a revelation, is a perfect
-mind in such a system of things as we find in this world? It is a mind
-constituted like our own, which has formed a ruling purpose to feel and
-act right in all things, which takes all possible means in its reach to
-learn what is right, and which actually carries out this purpose to the
-extent of its power.
-
-In shorter terms, in this relation every human mind is perfect, both in
-constitution and in action, so long as it acts as near right as is in
-its present power. At the same time, in relation to the infinite and
-eternal standard of rectitude, its action may be very imperfect.
-
-We next inquire as to the _evidence_ of a perfect mind in this secondary
-relation; that is to say, how can we know when a mind does reach the
-full measure of its power in voluntary right action?
-
-In regard to this we have two sources of evidence: first, the mental
-consciousness of the acting mind itself, and, next, the results of its
-action. In regard to the first, every mind, in reference either to its
-mental states or external deeds, can have as much certainty as to the
-extent of its power as it can of any thing. If we _choose_ to feel in a
-given way, or to perform a given act, and what we choose does not
-follow, we are certain we have no power to do the thing. All the idea of
-_power_ we have is that volition is followed by the result chosen. All
-the idea we have of _want of power_ is that the result chosen does not
-follow the volition.
-
-Every mind, then, in regard to _every specific volition_, has the most
-perfect of all evidence as to the extent of its powers in its own
-experience.
-
-But the question is a more difficult one in reference to a _generic
-governing volition_. A perfectly acting mind, according to our
-definition, is one that has formed a generic governing volition to _feel
-and act right_ in all respects; that is, it decides that the chief end
-of existence shall be to promote the greatest possible happiness with
-the least possible evil, in obedience to all, physical, social, and
-moral laws of the Creator, so far as it is within the reach of its
-powers.
-
-Now, as to this simple act of choice, a mind can have the highest
-possible evidence in its own consciousness. The only question of
-difficulty would be as to _the extent_ of its powers to carry out this
-decision, and the correspondence of all its subordinate volitions with
-this generic purpose.
-
-To ascertain the truth on this point, let us suppose a mind that has the
-highest evidence (that of internal consciousness) that it has formed
-such a purpose. Then comes a case where a subordinate decision is to be
-made--say it relates to the existence of a certain _feeling_ or
-_emotion_, such as love, fear, gratitude, or sorrow. It has been shown
-that these emotions are not to be evoked into existence by a simple act
-of will. The mode by which the mind controls its own desires and
-emotions is set forth on page 162. If, then, the person chooses to do
-_all that is in its power at the given time_ to awaken these emotions,
-its action is _perfect_ in this respect: it has fulfilled the measure of
-its power. It reaches the limit of its power when it can find nothing
-more that an _act of choice_ will secure that it perceives will tend to
-accomplish the end chosen. That is to say, at each given moment, when a
-mind is aiming to know what is right, and to do it, if it has done all
-it perceives can be done by any act of will toward this end, then its
-decision or mental action is _perfect_; it is as good as is possible in
-the nature of things.
-
-We have the same method of testing our power in regard to the
-_prevention_ of desires and emotions. No matter how painful or
-inappropriate may be the desires and emotions of any mind, it is acting
-_perfectly_ when it goes to the full extent of its power to extinguish
-or to control them according to the rules of rectitude. If it wills to
-have them otherwise, and uses the appropriate modes to have them so,
-this is all it has power to do.
-
-In reference to _external actions_, there are an infinite variety of
-circumstances that must decide the character of actions as right or
-wrong. An action which is wise and benevolent in one set of
-circumstances becomes foolish and selfish in another combination. More
-than half the questions of right and wrong action are to be decided as
-to their character by the surrounding circumstances, while no mind but
-the one that is infinite and omniscient can pronounce with certainty on
-actions whose character is dependent on circumstances and probable
-future results.
-
-What, then, is the limitation of power in these cases? How can we know
-when we act as nearly right as it is in our power?
-
-In the first place, we can have the high evidence of consciousness that
-our chief end in life is _to act right_ in all things. In the next
-place, we can know certainly whether there is any thing more that we can
-do to find out what the right course is. When we have decided that we
-have done all we can in the given circumstances, and then are conscious
-that we choose _what we believe to be right_, or _that which has to our
-mind the balance of evidence in its favor as right, we act perfectly_;
-that is to say, we have reached the full measure of our power in
-voluntarily acting right.
-
-But, besides this evidence, that rests mainly on internal consciousness
-of the nature of our volitions, we have other evidence to guide us. It
-has been shown in the previous pages how our thoughts, and desires, and
-emotions are all dependent on the generic purposes of the mind. Whatever
-is the _chief end_ of life is the object which excites the strongest
-interest and calls forth the deepest emotions. Therefore, when a mind
-has chosen _to act right_ as the chief end, all its tastes, desires, and
-emotions become conformed to this purpose. Whatever is seen as tending
-to promote this end is more desired and valued than any thing else.
-Whatever is seen to interfere with this is regarded with dissatisfaction.
-
-This being so, a mind that is controlled by a ruling purpose to act
-right finds those persons and places the most congenial and agreeable
-who can lend the most aid in pointing out all that is wrong in thought,
-word, or deed, and in helping, by instruction, sympathy, and example, to
-do right. One great test, then, of the existence and strength of such a
-ruling purpose is the manner in which those are regarded who are most
-interested in finding out and doing what is right themselves, and in
-aiding others to do so.
-
-To be "meek and lowly in heart," so as to seek help in learning what is
-right from every source, however humble or however imperfectly offered,
-is the surest indication that a mind is under the entire control of a
-ruling purpose to do right, and is thus _a perfect mind_.
-
-Such a mind, it must be seen, has _tendencies_ that _fit_ it to that
-great system of things in which we find ourselves. Such a mind can not
-trace out these tendencies by the light of reason alone without a
-conviction that _somewhere_ in the progress of ages it will attain to a
-_perfect commonwealth_, where the great end and object of the Creator in
-forming mind will be carried to entire perfection in each individual
-mind and in the all-perfect whole!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-
-ON THE PROBABLE EXISTENCE AND CHARACTER OF DISEMBODIED SPIRITS.
-
-
-We have considered the mode by which, without revelation, we arrive at a
-knowledge of the existence and character of one eternal, self-existent
-Creator, and of other _eternal beings_ endowed with all the attributes
-of the human mind.
-
-We will next inquire as to the existence of other created minds in
-addition to those whose existence is manifested by a material body.
-There are several principles of reason to aid us in this inquiry. The
-first is that which establishes the existence of mind and matter as two
-distinct and diverse causes or existences. By this we decide that every
-human being has a body and a soul.
-
-The second principle of reason to guide us is that which teaches us to
-believe that things continue to exist as they are and have been, unless
-there is some known cause to destroy or change them.
-
-The other principles to guide us are, that nothing is to be assumed to
-be true unless there is some evidence that it is so, and, in case of
-conflicting evidence, the _balance_ of evidence is to decide what is
-right and true.
-
-These principles being assumed, we find that at the death of every human
-being we have evidence, first, that the body ceases to be connected with
-the spirit, and is dissolved.
-
-Next, we have evidence at the period of this dissolving of soul and body
-that the soul exists without a body, and no evidence that it is changed
-in any of its powers, or habits, or character.
-
-Thus we arrive at the conclusion that the spirits that have existed in
-this life connected with bodies are still existing with all the powers,
-habits, and character which they possessed in this life, except as they
-are modified by causes and tendencies that experience in this life has
-disclosed. We thus infer that all minds who have left this world have
-continued in the upward or downward tendencies of character which
-existed when they were disconnected with the body.
-
-This is all the knowledge we can gain by reason and experience alone in
-reference to other created beings, and their character and mode of
-existence.
-
-As to _the time when the soul commences existence_, we have no evidence
-of such existence except what is manifested in the body. We can only
-infer, then, that the soul begins to exist when the evidence of its
-existence commences in the body. To assert that it begins before that
-time is to violate the principle of reason which forbids us to assume
-any thing to be true unless there is evidence of it.
-
-Thus, without a revelation, we are led to a belief in the existence of
-two classes of disembodied spirits, the good and the bad. But we have no
-evidence of the existence of any other created minds except those that
-have formerly been connected with bodies in this world.
-
-So far as animals give evidence of possessing an independent spiritual
-existence, the same argument that proves the continued existence of the
-human mind after death, proves that the animal spirit, if there be one,
-continues after the dissolution of the body.
-
-But we can not reason in regard to animals as we can in regard to human
-minds, for we never had the _experience_ of animal existence to commence
-with, as we have our own experience in reasoning as to the nature and
-experience of mind in reference to other beings of the same race.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.
-
-PROBABILITIES IN REGARD TO A REVELATION FROM THE CREATOR.
-
-
-We have now completed our investigations as to the nature and amount of
-knowledge to be gained on the great questions of life by reason and
-experience independently of a revelation.
-
-We have assumed that the great cause of the disordered action of mind is
-that it commences action in perfect ignorance, while all those causes
-which experience shows to be indispensable to its right action, to a
-greater or less degree, are wanting.
-
-The great want of our race is _perfect educators_ to train new-born
-minds, who are _infallible teachers of what is right and true_.
-
-We have presented the evidence gained by reason and experience that the
-Creator is perfect in mental constitution, and that he always has acted
-right, and always will thus act. This being granted, we infer that he
-always has done _the best that is possible_ for the highest good of his
-creatures in this world, and that he always will continue to do so.
-
-We proceed to inquire in regard to what would be the best that it is
-possible to do for us in this state of being, _so far as we can
-conceive_.
-
-Inasmuch as the great cause of the wrong action of mind is the ignorance
-and imperfection of those who are its educators in the beginning of its
-existence, we should infer that the best possible thing to be done for
-our race would be to provide some _perfect and infallible teacher_ to
-instruct those who are to educate mind. This being granted, then all
-would concede that the Creator himself would be our best teacher, and
-that, if he would come to us himself in a visible form to instruct the
-educators of mind in all they need to know for themselves and for the
-new-born minds committed to their care, it would be the best thing we
-can conceive of for the highest good of our race.
-
-We next inquire as to the best conceivable mode by which the Creator can
-manifest himself so as to secure credence.
-
-To decide this, let each one suppose the case his own. Let a man make
-his appearance claiming to be the Creator. We can perceive that his mere
-word would never command the confidence of intelligent practical men.
-Thousands of impostors have appeared and made such claims, deceiving the
-weak and ignorant and disgusting the wise.
-
-In case the person with such claims proved to be ever so benevolent and
-intelligent, if we had no other evidence than his word, it would, by
-sensible persons, be regarded as the result of some mental
-hallucination.
-
-But suppose that a person making claims to be the Creator of all things,
-or to be a messenger from him, should attest his claim by shaking the
-earth, or tearing up a mountain, or turning back the floods of the
-ocean, it would be impossible for any man to witness these miracles
-without believing that the Author of all things thus attested his own
-presence or the authority of his messenger. We have shown that, in the
-very organization of mind, one of the intuitive truths would necessarily
-force such a belief on all sane minds.
-
-One other method would be as effective. Should this person predict
-events so improbable and so beyond all human intelligence as to be
-equivalent to an equal interruption of experience as to the laws of
-mind, as time developed the fulfillment of these predictions, the same
-belief would be induced in the authority of the person thus
-supernaturally endowed.
-
-In the first case, the evidence would be immediate and most powerful in
-its inception. In the latter case, the power of the evidence would
-increase with time.
-
-_Miracles and prophecy_, then, are the _only_ methods that we can
-conceive of that would, as our minds are now constituted, insure belief
-in revelations from the Creator.
-
-But if every human being, in order to believe, must have miracles, there
-would result such an incessant violation of the laws of nature as to
-destroy them, and thus to destroy all possibility of miracles.
-
-The only possible way, then, is to have miracles occur at certain
-periods of time, and then have them adequately recorded and preserved.
-
-This method involves the necessity of interpreting written documents.
-If, then, the Creator has provided such revelations, the question occurs
-as to how far they may be accessible to all men. Are there revelations
-from the Creator in such a form that all men can gain access to them and
-interpret them for themselves, or are they so recorded that only a few
-can gain the knowledge they impart, while the many are helplessly
-dependent on the few?
-
-It is with reference to this question that the interpretation of
-language becomes a subject of vital and infinite interest to every human
-being. This subject will therefore occupy the remaining portion of this
-volume.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-INTERPRETATION OF LANGUAGE.
-
-
-The mind of man is confined in its operations by the material system it
-inhabits, and has no modes of communicating with other minds except
-through the medium of the eye and ear. It is by signs addressed to the
-eye and by sounds affecting the ear that ideas are communicated and
-received.
-
-It is by the power of _association_, which enables us to recall certain
-ideas together which have been frequently united, that the use of
-language is gained. The infant finds certain states of mind produced by
-material objects invariably connected with certain sounds. This is done
-so often that whenever a certain perception occurs, the sound recurs
-which has been so often united with it.
-
-If language is correctly defined as "any sound or sign which conveys the
-ideas of one mind to another," it is probable that children learn
-language at a much earlier period than is generally imagined. It is
-impossible to know how soon the infant notices the soft tones of its own
-voice when happy, or the moaning or shrill sound that expresses its own
-pain, and by comparing them with those of its mother, learns, through
-its little process of reasoning, that another spirit has emotions of
-pleasure and pain corresponding with its own. Nor can we determine how
-soon these pleasant sounds of the mother's voice begin to be associated
-with the benignant smile, or the tones of grief with the sorrowful
-expression, or the tones of anger with the frowning brow.
-
-It seems very rational to suppose that _sound_, to the infant mind, is
-what first leads to the belief of the emotions of another mind, by means
-of a comparison of its own sounds with those originating from another.
-After this is done, the eye comes in for a share in these offices. The
-little reasoner, after thousands of experiments, finds the pleasant
-sound always united with the smiling face, until the object of vision
-becomes the sign for recalling the idea at first obtained by sound. In
-gaining the common use of language, we know this is the order of
-succession. We first learn the _sounds_ that recall ideas, and then, by
-means of a frequent union of these sounds with some _visible sign_, the
-power once possessed simply by the sound is conveyed to the sign. Thus
-we have words that are sounds and words that are visible signs.
-
-The communion of one spirit with that of others in every-day life is
-maintained ordinarily through the medium of _sounds_; but when distance
-intervenes, or when some record is to be preserved of the thoughts and
-feelings of other beings, then signs addressed to the eye are employed.
-In civilized nations, the signs used are a certain number of arbitrary
-marks, which are arranged in a great variety of combinations, and each
-combination is employed to recall some particular idea or combination of
-ideas. These arbitrary signs are called letters, and in the English
-language there are only twenty-six; yet, by the almost infinite variety
-of combination of which these are capable, every idea which one mind
-wishes to communicate to another can be expressed.
-
-A _written word_ is a single letter or a combination of letters used as
-a sign to recall one or more ideas. It is considered by the mind as a
-unit or whole thing, of which the letters are considered as parts, and
-is shown to be a unit by intervals or blank spaces that separate it from
-the other words of a sentence. The fact that it is considered by the
-mind as _a unit_, or a sign separate from all other combinations of
-letters, is the peculiarity which constitutes it a _word_. A _syllable_
-is a combination of letters which is not considered as a unit, but is
-considered as a _part_ of a word.
-
-Words are used to recall the ideas of _things_, _qualities_, _changes_,
-and _circumstances_. Some words recall the idea of a thing without any
-other idea connected with it; such are the words _mind_, _ivory_. Some
-words recall the idea of quality simply, such as _red_, _hard_, _sweet_.
-Some words recall the ideas of change merely, such as _motion_,
-_action_. Some words recall simply the idea of relation or circumstance,
-such as _on_, _under_, _about_. Sometimes ideas of things, and their
-actions and relations, are recalled by the same sign; thus _wrestler_
-recalls the idea of a thing and its action, and _giant_ of a thing and
-its _relation_. Some words recall a variety of ideas; thus the term
-_begone_ recalls the idea of two things, of the desire of a mind and of
-its mode of expression.
-
-In the process of learning language, mankind first acquire names for the
-several things, qualities, changes, and circumstances that they notice,
-and afterward learn the process of _combining_ these names, so as to
-convey the mental combination of one mind to another. A person might
-have names for all his ideas, and yet, if he had never learned the art
-of properly combining these signs, he never could communicate the varied
-conceptions of his own mind to another person. Suppose, for
-illustration, that a child had learned the meaning of the terms _cup_,
-_spoon_, _the_, _put_, _into_, _little_, _my_; it would be impossible
-for him to express his wish till he had learned the proper _arrangement_
-of each term, and then he could convey the conception and wishes of his
-own mind, viz., "Put the spoon into my little cup."
-
-We see, then, how the new combinations of ideas in one mind can be
-conveyed to another. The two persons must both have the _same ideas_
-attached to the _same sign_ of language, and must each understand the
-_mode of combination_ to be employed. When this is done, if one person
-sees a new object, he can send to his friend the signs which represent
-all its qualities, circumstances, and changes arranged in a proper
-manner. The absent person will then arrange the _conceptions_ recalled
-by these words, so as to correspond with those of his correspondent.
-
-In all languages, the same word often is used to recall different ideas,
-and the meaning of words depends often on their _mode of combination_.
-
-The _art of interpreting_ consists in ascertaining the particular ideas
-conveyed by words _in a given combination_.
-
-There are two modes of using language which need to be distinctly
-pointed out, viz., _literal_ and _figurative_.
-
-In order to understand these modes, it is necessary to refer to the
-principles of _association_. Neither our perceptions or conceptions are
-ever single, disconnected objects except when the power of abstraction
-is employed. Ordinarily, various objects are united together in the
-mind, and those objects which are most frequently united in our
-perceptions, as a matter of course, are those which are most frequently
-united in our conceptions.
-
-Now, by the power of _abstraction_, the mind can regard the same object
-sometimes as a unit or whole, and sometimes can disconnect it, and
-consider it as several distinct things. Thus it happens that ideas which
-are connected by the principles of association are sometimes regarded as
-a whole, and sometimes are disconnected, and considered as separate
-existences.
-
-Language will be found to be constructed in exact conformity to this
-phenomenon of mind. We shall find that objects ordinarily united
-together, as cause and effect, have the _same name_ given, sometimes to
-the _cause_, sometimes to the _effects_, and sometimes it embraces _the
-whole_; or the thing, its causes and its effects. As an example of this
-use of language may be mentioned the term _pride_. We sometimes hear
-those objects which are the _cause_ of pride receiving that name. Thus a
-child is called the pride of its parents. The same name is applied
-simply to the _state of mind_, as when a man is said to be under the
-influence of pride, while the _effects_ of pride receive the same
-appellation when we hear a haughty demeanor and consequential deportment
-called pride. The term is used in its most extended signification as
-including the thing, its causes, and its effects, when we hear of the
-"pride of this world," which is soon to pass away, signifying equally
-the causes of this feeling, the feeling itself, and the effects of it.
-
-_Literal language_ is that in which all words have the ordinary meaning
-as commonly used.
-
-_Figurative language_ is that in which the ordinary names, qualities,
-and actions of things are ascribed to _other things_ with which they
-have been associated.
-
-As an example of the use of language which is _figurative_, we find
-_tears_, that are the _effects_ of grief, called by the name of the
-_cause_; thus:
-
- "Streaming _grief_ his faded cheek bedewed."
-
-On the contrary, we find the cause called by the name of the effects in
-this sentence:
-
- "And _hoary hairs_ received the reverence due."
-
-Here age is called by the name of one of its effects.
-
-The indiscriminate application of names to things which have been
-connected by _time_, _place_, or _resemblance_, abounds in figurative
-language. The following is an example where one object is called by the
-name of another with which it has been connected by _place_:
-
- "The _groves_ give forth their songs."
-
-Here birds are called by the name of the groves with which they have
-been so often united as it respects _place_. The following is an example
-where an object is called by the name of another with which it is
-connected by _time_:
-
- "And _night_ weighed down his heavy eyes."
-
-Here _sleep_ is called by the name of _night_, with which it has been so
-often united. The following is an example where one object is called by
-the name of another with which it has been connected by the principle of
-_resemblance_:
-
- "You took her up, a little, tender bud,
- Just sprouted on a bank."
-
-Here a young female is called by the name of an object with which she is
-connected by the association of resemblance. When one object is thus
-called by the name of another which it resembles, the figure of speech
-is called a _metaphor_.
-
-When dominion is called a _sceptre_; the office of a bishop, the _lawn_;
-the profession of Christianity, the _cross_; a dwelling is called a
-_roof_; and various expressions of this kind, one thing is called by the
-name of another of which it is a _part_, or with which it has been
-connected as a circumstance, cause, or effect.
-
-Not only do objects which have been united in our perceptions receive
-each other's _names_, but the _qualities_ of one are often ascribed to
-the other. The following are examples in which the qualities of the
-cause are ascribed to the effect, and the qualities of the effect are
-ascribed to the cause:
-
- "An impious mortal gave a _daring_ wound."
-
-Here the quality of the _cause_ is ascribed to the _effect_.
-
- "The _merry_ pipe is heard."
-
-Here the quality of the _effect_ is ascribed to the _cause_. The
-following is an example where the quality of one thing is ascribed to
-another connected with it by _time_:
-
- "Now _musing_ midnight hallows all the scene."
-
-The following is an example of the quality of one thing ascribed to
-another, connected with it by _place_:
-
- "when sapless age
- Shall bring thy father to his _drooping_ chair."
-
-We have examples of the qualities of one thing ascribed to another which
-it _resembles_ in such expressions as these--"imperious ocean,"
-"tottering state," "raging tempest." The following is an example of a
-thing called by the name of one of its qualities or attending
-circumstances:
-
- "What art thou, that usurpest this time of night,
- Together with the fair and warlike form
- In which the _majesty_ of buried _Denmark_
- Did sometimes walk?"
-
-Here a king is called by the name of a quality and by the name of his
-kingdom.
-
-It is owing to the principle of association that another mode of
-figurative language is employed called _personification_. This consists
-in speaking of a quality which belongs to living beings as if it were
-the being in which such a quality was found. This is owing to the fact
-that the conceptions of qualities of mind are always united with some
-being, and therefore such ideas are connected ones. Thus it is said in
-the sacred writings,
-
- "Mercy and truth are met together."
-
- "Righteousness and peace have embraced each other."
-
- "Wisdom crieth aloud, she uttereth her voice."
-
-Another mode of personification is owing to the fact that the actions
-and relations of inanimate existences very often resemble those of
-living beings, so that such ideas are associated by the principle of
-resemblance. In such cases, the actions, properties, and relations of
-living beings are ascribed to inanimate objects. Thus, when the sea
-roars and lifts its waves toward the skies, the actions are similar to
-those of a man when he raises his arm in supplication. An example of
-this kind of figurative language is found in this sublime personification
-of Scripture: "The mountains saw thee, and trembled; the overflowing of
-the waters passed by; the deep uttereth his voice, and lifted up his
-hands on high; the sun and moon stood still in their habitations." Other
-examples of this kind are found when we hear it said that "the fields
-smile," "the woods clap their hands," "the skies frown," and the like.
-
-One cause of figurative language is found in the similarity of effects
-produced on the body by operations of mind and operations of matter.
-Whatever causes affect the mind in a similar manner are called by the
-same name. Thus, when a man endeavors to penetrate a hard substance, the
-muscles of his head and neck are affected in a particular manner. The
-same muscles are affected in a similar way when a person makes powerful
-and reiterated efforts to comprehend a difficult subject. Both these
-actions, therefore, are called by the same name, and a man is said to
-_penetrate_ the wood with an instrument, or to _penetrate_ into the
-subject of his investigations. Thus joy is said to _expand_ the breast,
-because it does, in fact, produce a sensation which resembles this
-action. There is a great variety of figurative language founded on this
-principle. Indeed, there is little said respecting the mind, and its
-qualities and operations, where we do not apply terms that describe the
-qualities, actions, and relations of matter.
-
-It is also the case that _actions_ and _relations_ that resemble each
-other are called by the same name, without regard to the objects in
-which they exist. Thus the skies are said _to weep_. Here there is, in
-fact, the same action as is weeping in mankind, and it receives the same
-name, though it is connected with a different subject. Thus, also, the
-sword is said to be "_drunk_ with the blood of the slain." Here the same
-relation exists between the blood and the sword as between a man and an
-immoderate quantity of liquor, and the relation receives the same name
-in each case.
-
-_An allegory_ is a succession of incidents and circumstances told of one
-thing which continually recall another thing, which it resembles in the
-particulars mentioned. Thus the aged Indian chief describes himself by
-an allegory: "I am an aged hemlock. The winds of a hundred years have
-swept over its branches; it is dead at the top; those that grew around
-have all mouldered away."
-
-_A parable_ is of the same character as an allegory.
-
-_A type_ is an object of conception in which many of its qualities and
-relations resemble another object that succeeds it in regard to _time_.
-
-_Hyperbole_ is a collection of actions, qualities, or circumstances
-ascribed to an object which are contrary to the laws of experience, and
-this language is employed to express excited feeling. Thus, by
-hyperbole, a person is said to be "_drowned_ in tears."
-
-_Irony_ is language used in such a manner as to contradict the known
-opinions of the speaker, and is intended to represent the absurdity or
-irrationality of some thing conceived by him.
-
-_Symbols_ are material things employed to convey the ideas of one mind
-to another. Thus, as the cultivation of the olive is connected with
-seasons of peace, an olive branch is used to express the idea of peace.
-
-_Symbolic language_ is the use of words that are names of symbols in
-place of the names of things represented by symbols. Thus the word olive
-might be used instead of the word peace.
-
-Figurative language, especially metaphors and symbolic words, abound in
-the writings of the earliest nations; and as what are claimed to be the
-earliest revelations of the Creator are recorded in these languages, the
-rules for interpreting figurative language are of the highest
-importance.
-
-The preceding illustrates the principles upon which both literal and
-figurative language are constructed. The question now arises, How are we
-to determine when expressions are to be interpreted literally and when
-they are figurative? One single rule will be found sufficient in all
-cases, viz.:
-
-All language is _literal_ when the common meaning of each word is
-consistent with our experience as to the nature of things, and
-consistent with the other sentiments of the writer.
-
-All language is _figurative_ when the names, qualities, and actions
-ascribed to things are inconsistent with our experience of the nature of
-things, or contradict the known opinions of the writer.
-
-In the preceding examples of figurative language, it can readily be seen
-that a literal interpretation would in all cases form combinations of
-ideas which are opposed to experience as to the nature of things. For
-example, "_grief_" can not be conceived of as "bedewing a face," because
-it is an emotion of mind; nor do "hoary hairs" literally ever receive
-honor; nor do "groves sing," nor "night weigh down the eyes."
-
-In like manner, where the qualities of one thing are ascribed to another
-with which it has been connected, there is no difficulty in determining
-that the language is figurative; for a "wound" can not have the quality
-of "daring," which belongs only to mind, nor can a "pipe" be literally
-considered as "merry," or "midnight" as "musing;" nor would it be
-consistent with experience to think of a "chair" as "drooping." Nor in
-the case of personification is there any more cause of difficulty. Mercy
-and truth, righteousness, peace, and wisdom, are qualities of mind, and
-can not be conceived of as "meeting," "embracing," and "crying aloud" in
-any other than a figurative sense. And when the ocean is said to "lift
-up his hands," and the sun and moon to "stand still in their
-habitations," the laws of experience forbid any but a figurative
-interpretation.
-
-In the case of an _allegory_ and all symbolic language, the same rule
-applies with equal clearness and certainty. In the example given, it
-would be a violation of the laws of experience to conceive of a man as a
-tree with branches and a withered top.
-
-_Hyperbole_ is readily distinguished by the same rule. _Irony_ is known
-by its being contradictory to the known opinions of the writer. Thus
-there is never any difficulty in deciding when language is literal and
-when it is figurative in cases where men have the laws of experience by
-which to determine.
-
-On the supposition of a revelation from the Creator, there must be
-subjects upon which mankind have had _no experience_, such as the nature
-of the Deity, the character and circumstances of the invisible world and
-of its inhabitants. On these subjects all language must be literal when
-the literal construction is not in contradiction to the known or implied
-opinion of the other declarations; for on these subjects, as the laws of
-experience can not regulate in deciding between figurative and literal
-language, it is impossible to show any reason why words should not be
-literal except by comparison with the other statements of the same
-author. If these show no reasons for supposing it figurative, it must of
-necessity be considered as literal; for if neither experience nor the
-writer's opinions oppose a literal meaning, there is _no_ cause why the
-ordinary and common signification of words should not be retained.
-
-The next inquiry is, How are we to ascertain the ideas which are to be
-attached to words that are used figuratively? If the common ideas which
-are recalled by words are not the proper ones, what are the data for
-knowing _which_ are the ideas to be recalled? The laws of association,
-upon which language is founded, furnish an adequate foundation for
-determining this question. If language is such that a literal
-construction is contrary to the nature of things, the words used
-figuratively must express something which has been connected with the
-object recalled by the literal signification, either as _cause_ or
-_effect_, or as something which it _resembles_, or as something it has
-been connected with as a _part_, or by circumstances of _time_ or
-_place_. Of course, a process of reasoning will soon decide which of
-these must be selected. Take, for example, the expression,
-
- "Streaming grief his faded cheek bedewed."
-
-Here, as "grief" can not bedew the cheek, it must be the name of
-something which has been connected with grief, either by the principle
-of resemblance, contiguity in time or place, or by the relation of cause
-and effect. It is easy to determine that it can not be either of these
-except the last. Tears are the effect of sorrow, and are therefore
-called by this name. The nature of the idea conveyed by the figurative
-term will show whether the cause or effect, or some object related to it
-as it respects time, place, or resemblance, is intended, and no
-difficulty can ever occur in deciding. In all cases this general rule
-avails: when words are used figuratively, such ideas as have been in any
-way connected with them are to be retained as will be consistent with
-the known nature of things, and consistent with other assertions of the
-writer.
-
-In regard to the _literal_ use of language, it has been shown that the
-same term is sometimes used for the name of the thing ordinarily
-expressed by it, sometimes for its cause, sometimes for its effect, and
-sometimes as including all these ideas. The rule for determining in
-which of these senses the term is used is the same as in regard to
-figurative language, viz., that signification must be attached to the
-term which is in agreement with experience as to the nature of things,
-and with the other sentiments of the writer. Thus, in relation to the
-example given of the term pride, suppose a child is called the "pride of
-its parents." We know it can not mean the _emotion of mind_; that it can
-not mean the _effects_ of this state of mind; and its only other meaning
-is found consistent with experience, viz., it is the _cause_ or occasion
-of pride to its parents. The same mode of reasoning can be applied to
-the other uses of the term. If a man is said to feel pride, there is but
-one meaning which can be attached to the term. If it is said that "the
-pride of the world passeth away," it includes the whole, and signifies
-that the causes of pride pass away, and with them the emotions and the
-effects.
-
-The following, then, are the clear and simple rules to employ in
-interpreting all language:
-
-LAWS OF INTERPRETATION.
-
-1. The literal, ordinary meaning is to be given to all words, unless it
-would express what is inconsistent with experience as to the nature of
-things, or inconsistent with the opinions of the writer.
-
-2. When the words in a sentence are capable of several literal meanings,
-that is to be chosen which makes the writer most consistent with himself
-and with all known circumstances.
-
-3. When the literal meaning expresses what is not consistent with the
-nature of things or with the writer's other declarations, then the
-language is _figurative_, and only such a part of the ideas as have been
-in any way connected with the words used are to be retained as will
-secure such consistency.
-
-4. In deciding the meaning of words, we are to be guided by the
-principles of common sense, viz.: No meaning is to be given unless there
-is _some_ evidence that it is true; and, when there is conflicting
-evidence, that meaning is the true one which has the _balance_ of
-evidence in its favor.
-
-
-
-
-ADDENDA TO VOL. I.
-
-
-The second volume will commence with a description of the _kind_ of
-evidence which sustains the Bible as a collection of authentic and
-authoritative records of revelations from the Creator. This kind of
-evidence, it will be shown, in one grand feature is entirely diverse
-from any that ever existed, or even that was ever _claimed_ to exist in
-reference to any pretended revelations.
-
-It will also be shown that this evidence is as strong and reliable as
-that which regulates men in their daily practical concerns.
-
-This attempt the writer supposes to be, in some respects, peculiar, and
-one that is particularly calculated to affect popular apprehension,
-especially that of well-balanced and practical minds. Instead of a great
-array of detail and argument, the whole will be contained in a very few
-pages, easily comprehended, and demanding but little time or effort.
-
-In the next place, the laws of interpretation, and the principles of
-common sense as set forth in this volume, will be _applied_ to discover
-the answers of the Sacred Oracles to the great questions of life, and
-their agreement with reason, experience, and the moral sense of mankind.
-
-This will involve a discussion of the _philosophical theories_ which it
-is believed have obscured and diminished the influence of the great
-Atoning Sacrifice of "the Great God our Savior Jesus Christ."
-
-The work will conclude with the practical application of the views set
-forth to the greatest of all human interests, the _right_ training of
-the human mind in infancy and childhood.
-
-Before offering to the public the topics to be embraced in the last
-volume, it is deemed expedient to present the _great principles_ on
-which all the discussions are to rest, and also a fair illustration of
-the mode in which these principles will be applied.
-
-The following is the illustrative example:
-
-
-_Theological Dogma of a Depraved Mental Constitution._
-
-In the preceding pages we have seen the evidence that the mind of man is
-_perfect_ in its _constitutional powers_, and is thus the chief and
-highest evidence of the wisdom, justice, and benevolence of its Creator.
-
-But the systems of theology in all the Christian sects, excepting a
-small fraction, teach that the mind of man comes into existence in this
-world with "_a depraved nature_;" meaning by this a mental constitution
-more or less depraved.
-
-That this is the ordinary dogma of theological teachings is clear from
-this statement of the case. A thing can be wrong in only two conceivable
-ways: one is by its nature or original construction, and the other is by
-its action. The mind of man, therefore, if it is not perfect every way,
-is either wrong in _construction_ or wrong in _action_. Now no person
-ever claimed that the mind of man was not depraved in action, and
-therefore all who teach that it is depraved any other way must teach
-that it is depraved in its constitution, or in that nature it received
-from its Maker, for there are only these two modes of depravity
-conceivable.
-
-It being granted, then, that the mind of our race is depraved in its
-nature, of course the Author of this nature is responsible for this
-inconceivable and wholesale wrong. This forces us to the inevitable
-conclusion that the Creator of mind is a being guilty of the highest
-conceivable folly, injustice, and malignity. For reason and common sense
-teach that "the nature of a contrivance is proof of the character and
-intention of its author." Therefore, if mind is depraved in
-construction, the Author of it is a depraved being, and totally unworthy
-of our trust, respect, or love.
-
-This is the argument which, in all ages, has been pressed on those
-theologians who maintain the dogma of the depraved nature of man, and
-there have been these various methods by which this difficulty has been
-evaded:
-
-One class openly avow that the Creator had power to make the mind of man
-perfect in all respects, and that he has proved that he has this power
-by making the minds of angels and of our first parents thus perfect.
-But, in consequence of our first parents eating the forbidden fruit,
-every mind created since that time has been ruined in the making, so as
-to be totally depraved. This, it is maintained, it was right for God to
-do. _How_ it was right we have no business to inquire. It is an awful
-mystery; but it was so done that God "is in no way the author of sin."
-
-This amounts simply to a denial of the principle of reason, "that the
-nature of a contrivance is proof of the intention and character of the
-contriver." It is saying that the author of sin is not the author of
-sin.
-
-This will be still farther apparent if we refer to page 158, where is
-exhibited the only conceivable modes in which one being can be the cause
-of sin or of wrong action in others. God is undisputably the author of
-all the _outward_ circumstances that surround us. If, then, he has made
-our susceptibilities wrong, or combined them wrong, he is the author of
-sin in every conceivable sense.
-
-Whoever, therefore, affirms that God is the author of a depraved mental
-organization of the human mind, affirms that he is "the author of sin"
-in every conceivable sense. To assert such a fact, and then deny that
-God is the author of sin, is simply a contradiction in terms.
-
-To avoid this dilemma, theologians have instituted the following
-theories:
-
-The first class teach that the first pair of the human race were made
-with perfect minds, and then stood as representatives of the race and
-sinned for the whole. The first part of the penalty came on the actual
-sinners in the ruin of their own mental constitution, and then, all men
-being _represented_ in Adam and Eve, the Creator "imputed" this sin to
-all their posterity, and, as a penalty, all receive a depraved mental
-constitution.
-
-That is to say, though each of the unborn millions descended from Adam
-was innocent of the crime, in order to be just, God "imputes" it to
-each, and, as a penalty, ruins each in its organization, when He has
-full power to make perfect minds.
-
-Another class assume that the Creator established such a constitution of
-things that the nature of one mind is transmitted to all its myriad
-descendants, by the same law as the nature of a plant is included in one
-seed and is transmitted to all of its future kind. The first parents of
-our race, receiving perfect minds from their Creator, ruined them by one
-act of disobedience. Then, by the above law, instituted by their Maker,
-they transmitted this depraved constitution of mind to all their
-descendants.
-
-This mode of evading responsibility is about as honorable as if a
-teacher should so construct springs and traps for his pupils that one
-little fellow, when forbidden to do it, should touch a spring that
-should cut off his own hand, and thus move other springs that would maim
-all the rest of the school, while the master lays all the blame on the
-child that disobeyed.
-
-Another class teach that the first man and woman of the race were made
-with perfect minds, and then such a constitution of things was
-instituted by God that every mind of the human race was so existing with
-or in them, that when Adam and Eve _voluntarily_ disobeyed the Creator's
-first law, every one of their descendants _voluntarily_ did the same
-thing; and then, as a penalty for the deed, the parent and every one of
-the embryo descendants became "totally depraved."
-
-This theory, which makes every human being guilty of a crime thousands
-of years before we were born, and for which we are suffering the most
-awful of all penalties, has nearly passed away to the puerilities of the
-old schoolmen, and yet there are some of the most popular professors in
-our largest and most respectable theological seminaries who are publicly
-advocating it at this very time.
-
-Another method promulgated is the assumption that all the race were
-originally created perfect, and then, while in the possession of every
-possible advantage for virtue and happiness, they ruined themselves in a
-previous state of existence. This is the only theory which really meets
-the difficulty, and relieves the character of the Creator from being the
-guilty author of depraved minds.
-
-But this theory, even if it could be established by revelation, does not
-remedy the strong argument of reason and experience against the wisdom
-and benevolence of the Creator, on the assumption of a depraved
-constitution of mind. The man denying a revelation, who is called upon
-to receive one, can say, Here is a race, every one of whom is ruined,
-and, so far as I can see, in the making of his mind by the Creator.
-Therefore this Creator, by his works, is shown to be a being of infinite
-folly and malignity, from whom no _reliable_ revelation is possible.
-
-Granting the mind to be depraved, the light of reason inevitably guides
-to a weak or malevolent Creator. To illustrate this, suppose a man is
-seen manufacturing beautiful porcelain vases, and out of the "clay of
-the same lump," as he makes them, he spoils every one, cracking,
-marring, and defacing them in the very process of manufacture. Now
-suppose this person should turn to a witness, and offer to instruct him
-in the _best way of doing things_, what would be the common-sense reply?
-Exactly that which would be due to a Creator who has ruined every mind
-he sent into this world, and then proposes to reveal the _right way for
-those ruined creatures to act_!
-
-Another illustration may be permitted. Suppose a colony, by some
-mischance, settles on an isolated island, which is found covered with
-the tobacco plant. They clear their plantations, but find that, by a
-remarkable and unintelligible arrangement, after every shower there is a
-fall of tobacco seeds, disseminated from an inaccessible height by a
-machine erected for the purpose and constantly supplied.
-
-After some years, they receive a missive from the king to whom the
-island belongs, in which he informs them that tobacco is the chief
-object of his detestation; that it is doing incalculable mischief to his
-subjects; that it is the chief end of his life, and he wishes it to be
-of theirs, to exterminate the plant, and thus its use.
-
-He, at the same time, states that he is the author of the contrivance
-for scattering the seed, and that he keeps it constantly supplied, and
-claims that he has a right "to do what he will with his own," without
-being questioned by his subjects.
-
-He then enacts that any person who is found to use tobacco, or even to
-have a single seed or plant on his premises, shall be burned alive in a
-caldron of fire and brimstone.
-
-If, in addition to this, that king were to command supreme love to him,
-and perfect confidence in his wisdom, justice, and goodness, all this
-would but faintly illustrate that awful system under consideration,
-whose penalties are _eternal_.
-
-The assumption that the constitution of mind is depraved not only
-destroys the evidence of the Creator's wisdom and benevolence by the
-light of reason, but _destroys the possibility of a credible and
-reliable revelation from him_.
-
-For the belief in the existence of a God is dependent on an intuitive
-truth, while his character is understood, without a revelation, only by
-the aid of that intuitive truth which teaches that the nature of his
-works proves his character and designs. Now if his greatest work, the
-immortal mind, that which alone gives any value to his other works, is
-malformed, and thus made the cause of all the misery, crime, and evil of
-this life, what is there to give any foundation for confidence that his
-revelations will not be false, pernicious, and malignant?
-
-No man can start with the assumption that there is a revelation from the
-Creator that needs no proof. The only basis for such a revelation is
-that intuitive truth by the aid of which miracles and prophecy become
-evidences of the interposition of the Creator. Thus we perceive that the
-proof that "the author of a depraved constitution of mind is a depraved
-being," is as strong as the evidence of a revelation by miracles and
-prophecy can be.
-
-In regard to these theories, and in regard to the dogma of theology
-which they are instituted to explain, it is claimed that both reason and
-the Bible equally forbid each and all of them.
-
-It has already been shown, in Chapters xxii. and xxiii., that all the
-evidence of reason and experience goes to prove that the mind of man is
-perfect in its organization. We have only to inquire, then, in regard to
-the evidence claimed to be found in revelations from the Creator.
-
-Before examining this evidence, it is important to notice the
-distinction between _revealed facts_ and the _theories_ invented to
-explain them.
-
-The _fact_, which both experience and revelation agree in teaching, is
-that man, as a race, is guilty and depraved in _action_, and that from
-the earliest periods of life this _depraved action_ is manifested.
-
-The _theories_ relate to _the cause_ of this wrong action, and there are
-only two. The first theory is, that the constitution of mind is perfect,
-and that the wrong action results from a want of experience, knowledge,
-right habits, right training, and right social influences.
-
-The second theory is, that the constitution of mind is depraved, and
-that its wrong action is the inevitable result of this wrong
-construction.
-
-Then come the theories in reference to _the cause_ of this assumed
-malformation of mind. There are only two ever assigned, viz., God and
-man: God by creation, and man by sinning _in_ Adam or _before_ Adam in a
-pre-existent state.
-
-By those who ascribe the deed to God, it is claimed that he perpetrated
-this wholesale wrong to our race in one of two ways, viz., either by the
-direct miscreation of each mind at or near the time of birth, or by
-creating such a constitution of things that by one wrong act the first
-pair transmitted, from parent to child, through the whole race, a
-vitiated and depraved mental constitution.
-
-We now resort to the Bible to ascertain what are its teachings on this
-subject.
-
-In the first place, then, we find a constant recognition of the fact of
-a depraved _action_ of mind, and that this commences at the earliest
-period of life. On this, as a revealed _fact_, there is no debate.
-
-Next, in regard to the _theories_ instituted to account for this fact.
-Here we shall only discuss the commonly accepted theory of the Christian
-world, and leave the other for the future volume.
-
-The main reliance for the support of the common theory of a miscreated
-mind is found in Genesis, chapters i. and v., which, it is claimed,
-teaches, in the first place, that God could and did create the first
-human pair with minds perfectly organized, and, next, that after they
-sinned, their descendants came into life with a depraved mental
-constitution. The passages read thus:
-
-Gen., i., 26, 27: "_And God said, 'Let us make man in our image, after
-our likeness.'_"
-
-"_So God created man in his own image; in the image of God created he
-him, male and female created he them._"
-
-Gen., v., 3: "_And Adam begat a son in his own likeness, after his
-image, and called his name Seth._"
-
-The whole question in these passages turns on the meaning of the words
-"image" and "likeness."
-
-Now the only conceptions possible of the "image or likeness" of a human
-mind to its spiritual Creator are, first, resemblance in its
-constitutional powers of intellect, susceptibility, and will, and, next,
-resemblance in the _action_ of these faculties.
-
-That man is the image and likeness of his Maker in constitutional powers
-is clear, because we can not have any conception of the Creator but as
-of a mind like our own, infinite in the extent of such capacities. This,
-then, is _one_ respect in which the first pair could be in the image or
-likeness to God.
-
-The other only conceivable respect in which they could resemble their
-Creator is by _their own voluntary action, and this can not be conceived
-of as created_.
-
-Man is the sole producing cause (see page 158) of his own _voluntary_
-acts, which alone decide moral character. Should God create these, man
-would cease to be their author and cease to be a free agent.
-
-It is thus manifest that a mind can be _created_ in the image of God, so
-far as we can conceive, only in its constitutional powers of intellect,
-susceptibility, and will.
-
-This being established as the meaning of the word when it is said that
-Adam begat Seth "in his own image," if it has reference to the mind
-alone, or chiefly, then it means that the mental organization of the
-child was like the parent's, and thus like the Creator's.
-
-In the New Testament, the chief passages which are supposed to bear on
-this subject are in Romans, chapter v. These are the main texts:
-
-Verse 12: "_Wherefore as by one man sin entered into the world, and
-death by sin, and so death passed upon all men for that all have
-sinned._"
-
-Verse 19: "_For as by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so
-by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous._"
-
-Here we again are to discriminate between _facts_ and _theories_. The
-_facts_ here stated are, that by one man sin entered into the world, and
-death by sin; that death comes on all men because all sin; and that by
-one man's disobedience many were made sinners.
-
-Then come the _theories_ as to _the mode_ by which many were made
-sinners by the sin of one man.
-
-Here the Bible is silent. But theologians have manufactured the _theory_
-that when Adam sinned the constitution of his mind was changed, and then
-that this nature was transmitted to his descendants. All this is without
-a word of proof.
-
-Others have assumed that all mankind were existing in Adam, and "sinned
-in him, and fell with him," which is both unintelligible, and equally
-without support from the Bible.
-
-These, it is believed, are all ever claimed as direct Scripture evidence
-of a depraved constitution of mind consequent on Adam's sin. Two other
-passages are quoted as having an _indirect_ bearing on this subject.
-They are as follows:
-
-2 Peter, ii., 4: "_For if God spared not the angels that sinned, but
-cast them down to hell, and delivered them into chains of darkness to be
-reserved unto judgment_"--
-
-Jude, 6 verse: "_And the angels which kept not their first estate, but
-left their own habitation, he hath reserved in everlasting chains under
-darkness unto the judgment of the great day._"
-
-In regard to these passages, we are to notice, as before, first, the
-_facts_ revealed, and, next, the _theories_ instituted in regard to
-them.
-
-The facts are, that there are two classes of angels, those that have
-sinned and those that have not; that those that sinned kept not their
-first estate, but left their habitations; that God cast them down to
-hell, and that they are reserved in chains of darkness unto the judgment
-of the great day.
-
-These are all the facts disclosed. Not a word is said as to the _cause_
-or _reason_ why some sinned and some did not, nor as to the mode or
-manner by which these events were brought about. Here the _theories_
-come in.
-
-Those who maintain the depravity of the human mental constitution frame
-their theory on these passages thus:
-
-It is here taught that there are a class of minds that have never
-sinned. There must be _a cause_ for this diversity from man's
-experience. _This cause is a perfect mental constitution._ This, it is
-seen, is _a mere assumption, without a word of proof from the passages
-quoted_! What is quite as remarkable is, that this theory is maintained
-in the face of the concession that both Adam and the fallen angels were
-as well endowed as the unsinning angels in regard to mental
-constitution, and yet that they all sinned just as the descendants of
-Adam have done.
-
-This dogma has been sustained by certain misconceptions that should be
-considered.
-
-The first is in the use of the term "nature." As this word is ordinarily
-used, it signifies that constitution, received from the Author of all
-things, which makes certain results or effects _invariable_. Thus, when
-a fountain invariably sends forth bitter waters, it is called its
-"nature" to do so; when a tree invariably produces bitter fruit, this is
-called its "nature." Now if it was a fact that the human mind never
-acted right, but invariably wrong, it would be proper to apply this
-term, and to say that in its "nature" it was totally depraved.
-
-But this is not the fact. "Sin is a transgression of law," and every
-child, from the first, sometimes obeys and sometimes disobeys the
-physical, social, and moral laws of God. No child ever _invariably_
-breaks them, but sometimes obeys and sometimes disobeys.
-
-But theologians have mystified the subject by assuming the very thing to
-be proved, and then "reasoning in a circle." Thus they assume, not only
-without, but contrary to evidence, that all human minds _invariably_ act
-wrong from the first; therefore there must be a cause, and this cause is
-the "nature" received, directly or indirectly, from the Creator. Then
-they assume that, as every mind is "totally depraved" in its "nature,"
-it can no more produce holy acts than a corrupt tree can produce good
-fruit, or a bitter fountain send forth sweet waters.
-
-Another misconception which has embarrassed this subject has arisen from
-the supposition that it is irreverent, and contrary to the Bible, to
-allow any limitation to _almighty power_, even in "the nature of
-things."
-
-But it can be clearly shown that every person who maintains that there
-is a Creator who is "perfect" in wisdom and benevolence, does, by this
-assertion, maintain that very limitation to which the objection is made.
-This is shown by means of accurate definitions.
-
-Thus "_perfect wisdom_ is that which adapts the _best possible_ means to
-the _best possible_ ends."
-
-"_Perfect benevolence_ is that which produces the _greatest possible
-good_ with the _least possible_ evil."
-
-That is to say, a Creator who is perfect in wisdom and goodness has done
-the best that possibly can be done for the great universe of mind in all
-its infinite and eternal relations. This being so, certainly "_He has no
-power to do better_."
-
-The only way this is evaded is by using different words that mean the
-same thing, and then refusing to define these words, or to accept exact
-definitions of them from others.
-
-The infidel, who allows a God of perfect goodness and wisdom, and the
-strict Calvinist, who is shocked at hearing that God "_has no power_" to
-make a better system, or one that has less of evil, say the very same
-thing themselves, only in more vague and misty modes of expression.
-They, therefore, are precluded from objecting to positions that involve
-such a limitation, when it is the very one which they themselves assume.
-
-To affirm that almighty power can make black white and yet black at the
-same time, or a straight line crooked and still straight, even the
-strictest upholders of the extent of almighty power would hesitate to
-affirm, because they are contradictions and absurdities. But they teach
-equal contradictions who claim that a mind can be _created_ with
-knowledge, habits, and experience, when it has had neither instruction,
-training, or experience.
-
-Instead of claiming these absurdities as included in our ideas of this
-attribute of Deity, we are rather to assume that by almighty power is
-signified "a power to do all things _except contradictions and
-absurdities_."
-
-Thus has been presented what is claimed as the evidence in the Bible in
-favor of a depraved mental constitution in the human race, and it is
-maintained that it amounts to _nothing at all_.
-
-This being so, then we appeal to the principle of reason and common
-sense (p. 25), "that _nothing is to be assumed as true unless there is
-some evidence that it is so_."
-
-Moreover, in Chapters xxii. and xxiii. is exhibited the evidence of
-reason and experience that the human mind is perfectly organized, and
-thus the highest evidence of its Maker's wisdom and benevolence.
-
-So we can again appeal to another principle of reason, that "_we are to
-consider that right which has the balance of evidence in its favor_." If
-there is no evidence to prove the mind of man depraved in organization,
-and all the evidence of reason and experience is in favor of its perfect
-organization, is it not to be assumed that it is thus perfect?
-
-To this might be added the teachings of the Bible in the same direction.
-But this is deferred to the future volume. In the present illustrative
-example, the aim is simply to exhibit the fallacy of _one_ of the
-theological theories that has been incorporated as a part of the
-teachings of the Bible, thus lessening the respect and confidence
-accorded to it, and impeding the true religious development of our race.
-
-How it has happened that a dogma, which is so contrary to the moral
-feelings and the common sense of man, and, at the same time, unsupported
-by revelation, should have become so incorporated with the teachings of
-the Christian Church, will be set forth in the next article.
-
-
-_History of the Dogma._
-
-The history of the dogma of the depraved constitution of the human mind
-imparted directly or indirectly by the creative agency of its Maker has
-become a matter of profound interest.
-
-So far as appears, _theories_ on the _philosophy_ of religion did not
-agitate the apostolic age. Christianity first spread among the humbler
-classes. They felt that they were sinful and miserable in the present
-life, and looked with dread and dismay to the dark passage of the grave
-and the destinies to follow. They were taught to "believe on the Lord
-Jesus Christ," and that thus they would become good and happy now and
-forever. This they understood to mean, not a mere intellectual
-conviction, but a _practical faith_, in which Christ was received as
-their supreme Lord and teacher _by conforming their feelings and conduct
-to his teachings_.
-
-But, after a while, the philosophers and rulers became Christians, and
-then commenced the two grand evils: first, the _theories of philosophy_,
-and, next, the _enforcing of these theories by pains and penalties_.
-About A.D. 400 commenced the discussion of the theory under
-consideration. _Pelagius_, a learned and devout man of Great Britain,
-aided by his friend Celcius, promulgated the common-sense views on the
-nature of mind derived from reason and experience, mainly as set forth
-in this volume, and claimed that these views were sustained by the
-teachings of the Old and New Testament. He and his friend traveled and
-disseminated these views in Great Britain, France, Africa, Italy, and
-Palestine, over which Christianity to a great extent prevailed. The
-celebrated Augustine, a man of great goodness, talents, and learning,
-became their leading antagonist. He set forth the philosophical theories
-afterward adopted and taught by Calvin in the form which is now
-denominated _the system of High Calvinism_.
-
-This system starts with the assumption (without proof) that the Creator
-_could_ form mind on a more perfect model than that of our race, and
-that he _proved_ it by forming the minds of angels and of our first
-parents on this pattern. But, as a penalty for one act of disobedience
-by them, first their own mental constitution was vitiated. Next, in the
-language of standard Calvinists, "Such as man was _after_ the fall, such
-children did he beget; corruption, by the righteous judgment of God,
-being derived from Adam to his posterity, not by imitation, but by the
-propagation of a vicious nature. Wherefore all men are conceived in sin,
-and are born children of wrath; unfit for every good connected with
-salvation; prone to evil, dead in sins, and, without the Holy Spirit
-regenerating them, they neither _will_ nor _can_ return to God, amend
-their depraved nature, nor _dispose themselves for its amendment_."
-
-Men being thus terribly incapacitated for right action, so that they
-have no power "to amend their depraved nature," nor even "to dispose
-themselves for its amendment," the whole race became liable not only to
-the pains and penalties of sin through this life, but to _eternal_ and
-hopeless misery beyond the grave. Nor could any one of the race do a
-single thing to escape this doom, or to induce the Author of their Being
-to pity or help them. Instead of this, a certain portion of the race
-were "elected" by God to be restored to the state from which their first
-parents fell by "the Holy Spirit regenerating them," while all the rest
-were left to eternal torments, "to illustrate God's justice and hatred
-of sin!" Moreover, whoever was thus elected was sure to "persevere."
-These tenets are usually called the "five points of Calvinism," viz.,
-_original sin_, _total depravity_, _election_, _regeneration_, and
-_saints' perseverance_.
-
-Pelagius denied that there was any difference between the mental
-constitution of Adam and his descendants, or any other connection
-between his and their sins than always exists between the sins of
-children and those of their parents. Of course, the vitiated nature
-imparted directly or indirectly by God, and the tenets based on it, were
-denied by him.
-
-At this period all matters of doctrine were settled by ecclesiastical
-councils. The first council on this matter was in Africa, and, led by
-Augustine, they condemned the views of Pelagius. The two next councils
-were in Palestine, and both sustained his teachings. Next, in Italy, the
-Pope, then at the early period of pontifical power, first sustained
-Pelagius, but finally, by the exertions of Augustine and his party, was
-led to condemn him with the greatest severity. Finally, the emperors
-were enlisted against him with their civil pains and penalties. The
-result was, Pelagius and his followers suffered the perils and miseries
-of civil and ecclesiastical persecution. "And thus," says the historian,
-"the Gauls, Britons, and Africans by their councils, and the emperors by
-their edicts, demolished this sect in its infancy, and suppressed it
-entirely."
-
-It is very probable that, if Pelagius had had the power and adroitness
-of Augustine, the edicts of emperors and decrees of councils would have
-maintained _his_ views, and those of Augustine would have gone into
-obscurity. But ever since that day the organized power of the Latin,
-Greek, and Protestant churches have been arrayed to sustain the theories
-thus inaugurated.
-
-But the common sense and the moral nature of man have maintained a
-feeble but ceaseless warfare against the tenets of the Augustinian and
-Calvinistic creed, while now this "conflict of ages" is invigorated by
-the intervention of a new power. The authority of councils, popes, and
-emperors is on the wane, while _the people_ are fast advancing to that
-position of umpires in the moral and religious world which they have
-gained in the political.
-
-In this long and unequal struggle, the principal actors since the days
-of Pelagius have been, in the first place, _Arminius_ at the time of the
-Reformation. While maintaining the foundation dogma of a depraved mental
-constitution consequent upon Adam's sin, he strove to give some slight
-feature of humanity and tenderness to the consequent system by
-maintaining that there was _some_ way in which man, in spite of his
-ruined nature, could attain some right feeling and action acceptable to
-his Creator, and tending in some degree to remedy the dreadful calamity
-inflicted on the race.
-
-The historian thus narrates:
-
-"After the appointment of Arminius to the theological chair at Leyden
-(University), he thought it his duty to avow and vindicate the
-principles which he had embraced, and the freedom with which he
-published and defended them exposed him to the resentment of those that
-adhered to the theological system of Geneva (Calvinistic), which
-prevailed in Holland. The Arminian doctrines gained ground under the
-mild and favorable treatment of the magistrates of Holland, and were
-adopted by several persons of merit and distinction. The Calvinists
-appealed to a _national synod_. Accordingly, the Synod of Dort was
-convened (by the States-General), and was composed of ecclesiastical
-deputies from the United Provinces, as well as from the Reformed
-churches of England, Hessia, Bremen, Switzerland, and the Palatinate.
-
-"It was first proposed to discuss the principal subjects in dispute, and
-that the Arminians should be allowed to state and vindicate the grounds
-on which their opinions were founded.
-
-"But some difference arising as to the proper course of conducting the
-debate, _the Arminians were excluded from the assembly, their case was
-tried in their absence, and they were pronounced guilty of pestilential
-errors, and condemned as corrupters of the true religion_!
-
-"In consequence of this decision, the Arminians were considered as
-enemies to their country and its established religion, and were much
-persecuted. They were treated with great severity, deprived of all their
-posts and employments, their ministers silenced, and their congregations
-suppressed. The great Barnevelt was beheaded, and the learned Grotius
-fled and took refuge in France."
-
-Thus it is seen that, while Pelagius and his followers were wasted by
-persecution in the commencement of the Calvinistic system under
-Augustine, the attempt to soften its hard features by Arminius was put
-down by the same method.
-
-But, in spite of all such opposition, Arminianism gained ground, and the
-Arminian and Calvinistic systems have existed side by side in most
-Protestant communions. In the Church of England, and formerly in the
-Methodist churches, these two parties have existed. So in the
-Presbyterian, Congregational, and Baptist churches, there has always
-been a division in reference to the tenets of Calvinism, some holding
-them strictly according to Augustine and Calvin, and others more or less
-modifying their sterner features by various theories and expositions.
-
-The main point of difference between these two classes is in reference
-to that most disheartening and deplorable tenet of men's entire
-inability to "amend their depraved nature," or even to "dispose
-themselves for its amendment." The strict Calvinist maintains that the
-mind of man is so entirely ruined in its nature that no one but the
-Author of mind can rectify it, while he can in no way be moved to this
-act of mercy (justice?) by any thing the _unrenewed_ creature can do.
-The Arminian sects hold that, though the "natural man" is utterly
-incapable of any acceptable moral action in himself, yet, through the
-atonement of Jesus Christ, he is endowed with "a gracious supernatural
-ability," by which he can accept the offers of salvation. This, it is
-supposed, is a statement that most Arminians would accept as expressing
-their views.
-
-In our own country, the earliest leader of an attempt to modify the
-Calvinistic system was the celebrated metaphysician, Jonathan Edwards.
-While maintaining, as did Arminius, the foundation theory of an utterly
-depraved mental constitution of the race as a penalty for the first act
-of disobedience, he first labored to prove this penalty to be _just_,
-inasmuch as in some mysterious way the whole race existed in Adam, and
-sinned just as he did, thus becoming the authors of their own mental
-ruin and incapacity.
-
-And inasmuch as our moral nature revolts from the infliction of
-penalties for not doing what there is _no power_ to do, he originated a
-metaphysical theory to this effect: that, in spite of the injury
-resulting from this first sin of the whole race, there is full power and
-obligation in every human being to obey all that the laws of God
-demanded, but that man is _unwilling_ instead of _unable_. This
-_unwillingness_ is the result of that first sin of the race; and so
-great is its pertinacity, that no man ever did or ever will feel or act
-right in a single case, from the beginning to the end of life, until
-"regenerated by the Holy Spirit." Neither will they do any thing "to
-amend their depraved nature," or to "dispose themselves to its
-amendment;" nor will any man, before "regeneration by the Holy Spirit,"
-do a single thing that has even any _tendency_ to gain this Divine aid,
-but it is all dependent on "sovereign, unconditional election." Still
-worse, the more efforts an unrenewed man makes to love and obey God, the
-more wicked he grows, because he is _voluntarily_ resisting increased
-light and obligation in refusing to regenerate himself, which, on this
-theory, he had full power to do.
-
-As it respects God, this theory, indeed, relieves his character very
-essentially; but as to affording any comfort to man, it only adds a new
-thorn to wound sensitive consciences. For no man could possibly help
-feeling that when, according to High Calvinism, he had _no power at all_
-to do right, he was relieved from some portion of obligation, even if,
-six thousand years ago, he did join Adam in that sinful repast. But
-President Edwards and his followers took away this small alleviation,
-and put the whole blame entirely on the depraved and guilty creature,
-both for the ruin of the fall and the refusal to remedy the evil.
-
-This attempt to prove that _God does not require men to perform what
-they have no power to do_, has been regarded as a most terrific heresy
-by the strict Calvinist, while for nearly a hundred years New England
-and the whole Presbyterian Church have been agitated by it. Again and
-again, some of the wisest and best of their clergy have been arraigned
-for this heresy, with the threatened or inflicted penalty of loss of
-character, profession, and daily bread for themselves and their
-families. Three times the author has seen a revered parent thus
-arraigned. And in these ecclesiastical trials, she has herself heard
-otherwise sensible persons maintaining that men were required by their
-Maker to do what they had no power of _any_ kind to do, under the
-penalty of eternal damnation, and that it was a dangerous heresy to
-maintain that God did not thus require it.
-
-Another attempt to modify the Augustinian dogma is found in the work
-entitled "The Conflict of Ages," by the Rev. Edward Beecher. The theory
-there presented was first started by the great and learned Origen in the
-third century, and has been advocated by individuals ever since. It
-assumes the entire and fatal depravity of the mental organization, but
-relieves the Creator of all blame by assuming that every human mind was
-created with a perfect mental organization, and placed in the most
-favorable circumstances possible in a _pre-existent state_; and yet the
-same sad results then occurred as our race are approaching, viz., the
-existence of two classes of minds, the holy and the sinful. Meantime
-this world was prepared as a merciful arrangement to afford a _second_
-probation to those who ruined themselves in the pre-existent state.
-
-This theory entirely relieves the Creator of all blame, but gives no
-other help or comfort to the miserable race of man. It certainly _is_ a
-comfort to feel that our Maker is not a being who ruins his creatures in
-the very process of creation, and then exposes them to eternal, hopeless
-misery as the consequence of it. But whoever believes this pre-existent
-theory takes the load of a guilty conscience for all he considers as
-wrong in his own mental constitution, and for all the dreadful
-consequences.
-
-These several theories all were originated to escape from the inevitable
-deduction of reason, that _God, as the author of a depraved constitution
-of mind, is himself depraved_.
-
-And yet neither of them avails but one of the two _pre-existent
-theories_, that makes man himself the author of this ruin of his own
-mind, either _in_ Adam or _before_ Adam, while neither of these is
-supported either by reason or revelation.
-
-Moreover, neither of these theories _could_ be established by revelation
-for want of means to prove a revelation to beings who find themselves
-endowed with _miscreated_ minds, as has been shown on pages 287 and 288
-of this volume.
-
-Another effort to change the hard features of Calvinism was by the New
-Haven school of theologians. These gentlemen maintained that _a holy
-nature_ and _a sinful nature_ were not what _could be_ created, inasmuch
-as all sin implies a knowledge of what a morally right choice is and
-power to make such a choice, while it consists not at all in a wrong
-_nature_ or _constitution_, but solely in _wrong voluntary action_.
-
-This is precisely what, as the author supposes, was the doctrine of
-Pelagius in opposition to that of Augustine, and for the propagation of
-which, popes, emperors, and councils drove Pelagius and his followers
-from their churches.
-
-A similar penalty seemed for a while to await the New Haven innovators;
-for, as professors in a theological seminary connected with the most
-influential university in the nation, their doctrine on this subject
-occasioned a controversy that agitated all the New England as well as
-the Presbyterian churches.
-
-At the same time, an earnest controversy was in progress with the
-Unitarian sect, which had adopted this tenet of Pelagius as a part of
-their creed. Of course, the charge, both of Pelagianism and
-Unitarianism, was rife all over the land against these innovators on the
-established creed of the churches.
-
-To meet this, these gentlemen maintained that they had not essentially
-departed from the system of New England divinity as exhibited in the
-writings of President Edwards. Thus they had two labors to perform--the
-one to maintain the doctrine that sin consisted solely in wrong _action_
-and not at all in _nature_, and the other to show that in this they did
-not differ from Edwards.
-
-In attempting the first, at one time and another, they have maintained
-that mankind _since the fall_ are as truly created in God's image as
-Adam was; that the nature of man is still like the nature of God; that a
-corrupt, depraved, or unholy nature can not be affirmed of the human
-mind in any proper use of these terms.
-
-The inquiry, then, must arise, in many minds that are familiar with the
-writings of President Edwards, how it is possible that men so
-intelligent and so honest should maintain that on this subject they had
-not departed from the system of New England divinity as exhibited by
-Edwards.
-
-To the author this enigma is solved by the character of Edwards's
-writings, which, like those of many other metaphysicians who hold
-theories contrary to common sense, are _contradictory and inconsistent_.
-Thus it is seen that one class of very acute minds find in Edwards's
-_Treatise on the Will_ the most complete exposition and defense of
-_fatalism_, and thus the author regards it. Another class, equally
-acute, claim this same essay as a full exposition and defense of the
-contrary doctrine of _free agency_.
-
-The Augustinian theory of a totally depraved mind, transmitted through
-the Catholic Church to its reformed offsets, was received by Edwards. He
-perceived that if God was the cause of this depravity, he is the author
-of sin, and so he labored to prove that all mankind "sinned in Adam and
-fell with him," and thus caused their own depravity.
-
-He perceived, too, that requiring men to originate holy acts with a
-totally depraved nature seemed to demand what they had no power to
-perform, and thus made God unjust. So he brought forth his _Treatise on
-the Will_ to prove that man had a _natural ability_ to obey God, and a
-_moral inability_; and so at once he established _fatalism_ to one class
-of minds, and _free agency_ to another.
-
-Thus it is that the New Haven divines find language in Edwards that
-sustains their views, while their antagonists find as much, or more,
-that condemns them.
-
-The ancient followers of Pelagius, the modern Unitarians, and the
-leaders of the New Haven school of divines, all hold exactly the
-position set forth in this work of the _perfect organization_ of the
-human mind, while the only depravity maintained by them is that of
-_voluntary action_. At the same time, it is believed that but a very
-small portion of the younger clergy of _any_ theological school in New
-England, or in a large portion of the Presbyterian churches, would
-openly avow a belief in the depraved mental constitution of man as
-created by God, either directly at or near birth, or indirectly by
-hereditary transmission.
-
-It is interesting, yet sad, to trace the dominant influence of the
-Augustinian theory of a depraved mental constitution in originating most
-of the leading sects of the present Christian world.
-
-Man being assumed to be thus miserably miscreated, and his sole hope
-being the gift of the Holy Ghost to recreate, the priesthood soon
-claimed to be the only medium through which this gift could pass; and
-having the eternal life and death of the soul in their hands, they
-speedily thus gained that domestic, civil, and religious power which
-made the papal hierarchy the most tremendous tyranny that earth ever
-witnessed.
-
-The question of the transmission of this power through properly ordained
-persons was the chief feature of the Episcopal organization.
-
-Most of the other large sects in this country are descended from the
-Puritans, who, as it appears, were the first to institute "a church" as
-consisting solely of persons who "profess" to be "regenerated" on the
-theory of the renewal of a misformed or depraved mind.
-
-The Greek, Roman, Episcopal, Scotch, and European Protestants recognize
-no such organization, all being born into the Church; and this seems to
-have been the case in the first churches of the New Testament, where
-parents and _their families_, and all who joined their communities, were
-considered as constituting the Christian Church, whether "regenerated"
-or not.[4] So, in the Jewish Church, all who submitted to the initiatory
-rite were members, without respect to religious attainments in
-character. This new principle of organization, originating with the
-Puritans, is retained among most sects in this nation, and is the
-foundation of their separate organizations.
-
-Thus the Baptists are separated on the question of the mode of
-administering the _rite of admission_ to this Church.
-
-The Presbyterians and Congregationalists separate on the question of
-_appointing the officers_ of this organization.
-
-The Methodists are an offset from the Episcopal Church, with reference
-chiefly to modes of bringing men into their Church.
-
-All agree that it is "regenerate persons" alone who are fully members of
-this organization.
-
-There are diversities of opinion as to the relation of baptized children
-to this body, but none allow them to be admitted to its distinctive
-ordinance except they profess to be "regenerated."
-
-It is a matter for interesting conjecture as to the probable results on
-Christendom had the theory of Pelagius been established by pope,
-emperor, and councils instead of that of Augustine.
-
-In that case we may suppose that the efforts and energies of the
-churches, instead of to these rites and forms, would have been mainly
-directed to the _right training_ of the human mind in obedience to all
-the physical, domestic, social, and moral laws of the Creator.
-
-Instead of instituting two standards of right and wrong, the "common"
-and the "evangelical," as is now so generally done, children would have
-been taught that all that was just, honorable, benevolent, and lovely in
-their feelings and conduct was as acceptable and right to God as it is
-to men. Their parents, instead of that sense of helpless inability
-resulting from the belief that their little ones could feel and do
-nothing but sin until new mental powers were given, and that the gift
-was bestowed by the rule of sovereign "election," would have felt that
-every successful effort to cultivate all lovely and right habits and
-feelings was advancing their offspring nearer to God and their heavenly
-home, and that, when their wisdom failed, the promise of "the Comforter"
-was given to encourage them in this great work.
-
-Thus they would expect their children to become "new creatures in Christ
-Jesus" by the combined influence of the heavenly and earthly parents
-gradually transforming their ignorance and selfishness to knowledge and
-benevolence.
-
-That the theory of Augustine, originally established in the Christian
-churches by pains and penalties, is still sustained there by such
-influences, is apparent from these facts.
-
-Although there is a large amount of real virtue and piety that is not
-within the pale of any sectarian organization, yet the vast majority of
-conscientious persons are either enrolled in _the Church_, or intimately
-connected with it in principle and feeling. All this intellectual and
-moral power is organized into various denominations, each controlled and
-led by a number of highly-educated, conscientious, and religious men.
-
-With these denominations are connected high positions in the pulpit,
-with great influence and liberal salaries; literary institutions, with
-posts of honor and competency; and theological seminaries that are the
-central ecclesiastical mainsprings of influence.
-
-Then there are connected with each denomination large voluntary
-associations for benevolent purposes, with officers who control large
-pecuniary means. Finally, each sect has its quarterlies, monthlies, and
-its religious newspapers, whose editors are speaking every day to the
-minds of thousands and hundreds of thousands.
-
-Now it is a fact that this vast array of wealth, position, influence,
-and ecclesiastical power is actually combined to sustain these
-theological theories. So much is this the case, that a minister,
-theological professor, president of a college, secretary of a benevolent
-society, or editor of a periodical or newspaper, could not openly deny
-this Augustinian tenet but under penalty of the loss of reputation,
-position, influence, and the income that sustains himself and family.
-Our largest and best theological seminaries demand an avowal of belief
-in this dogma as a condition of holding any professorship, and in some
-of them it must be renewed by all the professors every few years.
-
-At the same time, this dogma of a depraved mental constitution
-transmitted from Adam is inwrought into all the standard works of
-theology, the sermons, the prayers, the sacred poetry, the popular
-literature, and even the Sunday-school and family literature of
-childhood.
-
-The power of such influences is intensified by the present stringency of
-sectarian organization. By those who have marked the tendencies of the
-religious world, it will be remembered that, at the time the
-associations for religious benevolence began their great work, all sects
-seemed to be harmonizing and uniting in the efforts to send Bibles,
-tracts, and missionaries to the destitute. At this period, the questions
-that separated Christians in reference to modes of ordination, baptism,
-and church officers, seemed to disappear as matters of small moment
-among all whose great aim was to save the lost of every name and nation.
-
-But, while this served to liberalize the feelings and opinions of good
-men in all sects, it soon became apparent to the leaders that, if these
-tendencies were not counteracted, the sects would all come together.
-
-If this should happen, where would be all the great machinery that was
-supported by these several denominations for their distinctive aims?
-
-Soon the tide turned, and, though now there is less sectarian
-bitterness, and most sects can allow each other to be Christians with
-different names and badges, yet each is active for its own separate
-interests more decidedly than ever. And now the _leading_ concern of
-each denomination seems to be, to increase its own separate churches,
-schools, colleges, theological seminaries, religious periodicals, and
-benevolent associations, not because the salvation of the lost depends
-on these distinctive matters, but chiefly as modes of increasing the
-_extent_, _respectability_, and _influence_ of their sect. In order to
-do this, the importance of the points which divide each from the other
-must be magnified; for if there is but a trifling difference between an
-Old School and New School Church, or a Baptist, Congregational, or a
-Presbyterian, then, in small places, and especially in our new
-settlements, all these would unite in one large, harmonious church, that
-could properly support all its own ordinances, and send of its surplus
-to supply the destitute. On the contrary, if these differences are
-magnified, there will be two, three, or four small churches, all
-contending with each other, poorly supporting their own ordinances, and,
-instead of helping the destitute, sending to other churches of their own
-sect for help.
-
-Thus it is that we see vast sums raised every year to multiply these
-needless, weak, and militant churches all over the land. There are facts
-on this subject that should be deeply pondered.[5]
-
-So in regard to education; although intelligence has diminished the
-acerbity of sectarianism, it has led to a higher appreciation of
-educational institutions as an element of _sectarian influence_ and
-_respectability_. From this has come the struggle to multiply colleges
-and female seminaries in each of the several denominations. Each is now
-acting _as a sect_ in starting new institutions all over the land, that
-demand immense investments for buildings, apparatus, and endowments, and
-this without reference to the actual wants of the community. For
-example, in Indiana, where the low state of common school education
-makes such institutions least patronized, there are _eleven endowed_
-institutions, with an aggregate income from these endowments of $14,000
-_per annum_, besides tuition. In Ohio there are _twenty-six_ colleges
-and professional schools, with an annual income from endowments of
-$25,000; and yet, as appears in the public prints, $100,000 has been
-subscribed in one city in this same state to start another college for
-the Old School Presbyterians, who are expected to raise as much more
-among that sect. Besides endowments to support teachers, vast sums are
-expended in buildings, some of which are standing unused for the purpose
-for which the money to build them was given. This is a fair specimen of
-what is transpiring in most of the other states in raising new
-institutions or increasing the funds of those already started. In this
-way, two, three, and four colleges are often found as competitors in a
-section that could properly patronize scarcely one.
-
-After each sect has thus reared an institution, it must then struggle to
-find pupils, and thus multitudes of young boys, who are to go into
-future pursuits where such knowledge will be of little or no service,
-are pressed into a Latin and Greek course, which probably the larger
-portion of them forsake before it is completed, with little knowledge of
-ancient literature, and far less of their own mother tongue. The waste
-of educational benefactions in this way is little realized, while the
-effect of congregating the young in boarding-school life, away from home
-and parental influence, is most disastrous.
-
-How can it be otherwise? To take the unformed youth at the most
-excitable period of the nervous system, at the point where temptations
-are strongest, and habits of self-control the weakest, away from
-mothers, sisters, and home influences; herd them promiscuously with good
-and bad; stimulate the brain to excess; end all the healthful domestic
-exercise, and what could be expected but just such wrecks of health,
-morals, home habits, and all that is good and pure, as is constantly
-going on in such institutions?
-
-If parents could hear the details that have come from mothers and their
-young sons of the experiences of boarding-school and college life all
-over the land, especially in reference to that most contaminating and
-horrible literature and prints that no care can exclude, they would
-understand only a small part of the evils included in such institutions
-for the young.
-
-Not only colleges, but female seminaries, and even private schools, are
-becoming more and more sectarian, as especially patronized by some one
-denomination, and relying on this for success.
-
-All this sectarian influence in education is, in fact, operating to
-sustain the Augustinian theories _by the pains and penalties_ that first
-enforced them; for no teacher of a school, or college, or female
-seminary could avow a dissent from theories so powerfully sustained,
-without subjecting himself, his institution, and his sect to attacks
-from other sects and institutions, as one mode of supplanting a rival.
-
-It was this powerful array of antagonistic influences that for years
-withheld the author from any public expression of some of the views set
-forth in this work.
-
-It has been stated in the introduction that, while teaching mental
-science, in connection with the Bible, to highly gifted minds, an octavo
-volume was printed, but not published, which embraced the leading
-features of this work. In that, the principles of reason and
-interpretation were _not_ applied to the theories of a depraved mental
-constitution, which at that time were not, to her own mind,
-satisfactorily solved, but to theories on the character and atoning
-sacrifice of Jesus Christ, where relief was first experienced by the
-writer.
-
-On taking advice as to the publication of such a work, it became clear
-that it would probably result in such powerful theological influences as
-would end a connection with a public institution, and all labors as a
-teacher.
-
-In obedience to the counsel of friends, it was concluded to go quietly
-on as an educator, and work out practically all that could be done
-without innovating on accepted opinions, and wait till time and
-circumstances should afford more maturity and completeness to the
-writer's own views; for it was soon perceived that no one ever objected
-to having children trained exactly according to the author's present
-views, provided nothing was said against the accepted theological
-theories. So faithfully has this method been pursued, that it is
-probable that there is not an individual with whom the writer has been
-associated as an educator, who will not, for the first time, learn her
-views on the Augustinian and Calvinistic theories from this work; while,
-even in her own family circle, though opinions have been expressed
-freely, all discussions on this subject have been avoided.
-
-In pursuing the course of a practical educator, the first years were
-spent mainly in the intellectual department, at the period when the
-"higher branches" first began to enter as a part of female culture.
-Surrounded by some of the most gifted female minds in the country as
-both teachers and pupils, and all excited by the interest of pioneers in
-the effort to elevate the standard of female education, there resulted
-such an amount of intellectual activity and enthusiasm as has never been
-witnessed by the author before or since.
-
-Ignorant of the laws of health, and unaware of any danger from excess,
-the result was such entire and irretrievable prostration of the nervous
-system as forbade forever any farther labor as a practical teacher.
-
-Extensive journeyings to restore health among a widely-dispersed family
-connection led to frequent reunions with former pupils. Thence resulted
-a deep conviction of the necessity of _training the domestic habits and
-tastes_ of young girls as had never yet been attempted, and of the
-extreme suffering and _ill health_ consequent on the neglect of it as _a
-part of school education_. This led to two works on Domestic Economy,
-one of which was designed as a text-book for girls at school, and the
-other for their use after they became housekeepers.
-
-Continued ill health, inducing frequent resort to health establishments,
-where invalids from all classes were congregated, increased the
-conviction that modes of education and other causes were fatally
-undermining national health, especially that of women. Thus originated a
-work on Health, and another on Physiology and Physical Training.
-
-Incapacitated from labor as a teacher, the only field of effort to the
-author was in more general efforts to interest her own sex to enlarged
-and _organized_ efforts to secure the proper training of woman for her
-distinctive duties, and also to provide _employment_ for her in her
-appropriate profession.
-
-Two small works addressed to American women on this subject were issued
-by her, and two organizations were the result: one conducted by ladies
-in Boston, and one by Governor Slade as General Agent of the Board of
-National Popular Education.
-
-As both of these restricted their efforts mainly to providing employment
-for teachers already educated, the next attempt was to secure an
-organization to prepare woman for her _distinctive duties_ on a more
-complete and comprehensive scale.
-
-In this attempt, it was perceived that the other sex have always secured
-proper attention to any particular department of education by
-_endowments to support highly-educated teachers to give their whole time
-to that object_. Thus chemistry, agriculture, and the practical sciences
-are made honorable, and are insured as branches of liberal instruction.
-The question then arose, Why should not this method be taken to make
-woman's _distinctive_ profession honorable, and to secure a proper
-training for it?
-
-The business of a woman is divided into three as distinct departments as
-the liberal professions of law, medicine, and divinity for men, which
-are so honored and endowed. Nor are they less important or universal.
-For, in the first place, woman is to train the human mind at just that
-period when principles, tastes, and habits are most firmly fixed; next,
-she has the care of the human body all through its period of
-development, when the physical habits are formed, and also in periods of
-sickness for all ages. Lastly, she has charge of the whole circle of
-domestic economy, and of all the _home_ interests of the family state.
-Educator, nurse, and housekeeper, these three departments are not less
-in importance than law, medicine, and divinity.
-
-The leading feature, then, in this attempt was to secure an organization
-of American women, who should aim to establish model institutions for
-woman, that should prepare her _thoroughly and properly_ for the three
-distinctive employments of her profession, by means of endowments to
-support highly-educated teachers for this express object. In all other
-female institutions, the training of the _intellect_ has been the
-leading object; in these, the preparation of woman for her distinctive
-duties was to be the leading object.
-
-To the common remark that the mothers must do this _at home_, it is
-replied, in the first place, that the mothers, to a great extent--_as
-the general rule, having but few exceptions_--are not qualified to do
-this; and, next, if they were, they have not the _health_, or they have
-not the _time_, or they have not the _will_ to do so. When men wish to
-perfect and honor any profession, they provide _endowments_ to sustain
-teachers of the highest order. Thus, for example, though it may be said
-that farmers can best train their sons for their own profession, still
-agricultural professorships in our colleges, and teachers sustained by
-endowments, are found to be indispensable to honor and raise that
-pursuit to a _science_ and a _profession_.
-
-While the young women of the nation see every thing else more honored
-and provided for than the very profession and future business of their
-lives, they will grow up to neglect and despise such duties.
-
-The education of woman, to be what Heaven designed for the race, should
-unite the _home training_ of the parents with the _school training_ of
-the teacher. Instead of taking young girls from all domestic interests
-and pursuits, and turning all the energies of their nervous system into
-the intellectual department of the brain, there should be an equable and
-healthful training, at once, of the bodily powers, the social and
-domestic habits, the intellect, and the moral nature; and in effecting
-this, the parents and the teachers should _work together_ harmoniously.
-It is in reference to this that the tendency of this age and country to
-conduct the education of the higher and middling classes in
-_boarding-schools_ instead of _at home_ is most disastrous.
-Boarding-schools should be the exceptions to meet the wants of a sparse
-population. Instead of this, the country sends its daughters to city
-boarding-schools, and the city sends to country boarding-schools, and so
-_home_ education is becoming more and more neglected.
-
-The consequences to the health, happiness, and moral interests of woman
-are more and more disastrous.
-
-In reference to this, the efforts of the above association have been
-confined to establishing what it is hoped would become _model
-institutions_ in the _centres of influence_ of the states where they
-were located, in which the funds should _not_ be spent in providing
-great buildings to take children away from all home influences and
-domestic pursuits, but rather in providing such teachers and influences
-as would have a direct bearing on the homes of the pupils, and aid the
-parents in cultivating _home habits_, _home virtues_, and _home tastes_
-and _pursuits_.
-
-This brief history of the writer's efforts is given because its results
-will now be seen to form a part of the "history of the dogma" which is
-the subject of this section.
-
-For, during the whole period of these efforts to promote the _right
-training of the human mind by woman as the Heaven-appointed minister for
-this end_, the influence of this dogma has been constantly forced on
-attention as the real antagonistic force. That is to say, the whole
-energies of the Christian Church, in its distinctive character, are
-organized to remedy the evil _after the mind is educated wrong_, while
-little is attempted by the powerful agency of _organization_ to secure
-its _right education_. In proof of this, it will be seen that all the
-great benevolent organizations for which collections are enforced from
-the pulpit are for adults, with one only seeming exception. There is an
-organization to send Bibles, another to send tracts and colporteurs,
-another to send missionaries abroad, another to send home-missionaries,
-another for the sailor, another for the slaves, another to educate
-ministers, another to raise up colleges, another for temperance, and so
-on. All these have as their direct aim those who are educated wrong, and
-are to be redeemed from sinful habits. Not one has any direct reference
-to the _formation of right habits in the daily training of every-day
-life_.
-
-The Sunday-school is the only seeming exception. But this is only a
-weekly exercise of an hour or two, in which every sect secures the
-training of its children in its own religious system, while this system,
-in most cases, is based on the Augustinian doctrine of the inability of
-children to feel or do a single right thing till they are "regenerated,"
-while not only the teaching, but the Sunday libraries for children all
-enforce this dogma. The practical influence of this, though counteracted
-more or less by other influences, is fairly illustrated in the mental
-history of the author in the Introduction.
-
-Thus the Christian Church has all its organizations to _cure_ diseased
-and miseducated mind, and not a single one to _prevent_ this ruin by its
-right training.
-
-This being so, this effort to promote the neglected and yet great end of
-Christian effort has been looked on with indifference, or as a small
-concern to receive its mite, while all others are to receive their
-hundreds and thousands.
-
-Moreover, the enterprise has been looked upon with jealousy by many
-whose attention has been called to it as a _covert_ sectarian movement
-to promote the interests of that denomination with which some of its
-movers have been connected. Then, too, because it really has not favored
-any one sect, it has secured the special favor and sympathy of none.
-There has never been a time when its movers have not been made to
-understand that success in raising endowments would be certain if the
-anti-sectarian feature could be relinquished, and the enterprise could
-assume a sectarian banner.
-
-The most influential clergy of the large sects are engaged in
-denominational enterprises, to found colleges or theological seminaries,
-or to establish book or newspaper agencies _devoted to the interests of
-their sect_. The great body of laymen who have wealth to bestow in large
-sums are more or less influenced by their clergymen, either as personal
-friends or as spiritual advisers. Especially is this true of the few
-benevolent ladies who have such independent means as to be able to
-furnish endowments.
-
-And thus it has come to pass that this first attempt yet known to
-organize Christians _as Christians_, to train woman for her great work
-of forming the physical, social, domestic, and moral habits of childhood
-by methods deemed indispensable by man for his professions, is on the
-verge of failure, after four years of trial. And this is not owing to
-the fact that the motives, or the plan, or the conductors of it have
-been extensively distrusted, or in any particular disapproved. On the
-contrary, the leading clergymen of most of the Protestant sects have
-given their unqualified approval, while the Board of Managers embraces a
-large proportion of the most distinguished female educators and
-authoresses, with some of the most distinguished business men and
-financiers of our land. At the same time, the agents and educators who
-have performed for four years the details of the enterprise have secured
-the entire approval and confidence of the public as to their
-qualifications.
-
-The real difficulty at the root of all is the indifference to the
-training of the habits of childhood, resulting from the long-established
-dogma of a misformed mind, whose propagated incapacity is not within the
-reach of educational training. Meantime, the chief energies of the
-Christian Church are now tending to the extending of sectarian
-organizations, based on peculiarities as to baptism, ordination, and
-church officers, which no intelligent person believes are either
-indispensable to salvation, or even so important as to be subjects of
-direct Divine commands.
-
-It is this view of the subject that has at last brought the author to
-relinquish any farther practical educational efforts, and now to attempt
-whatever may be in her power in directing public attention to what seems
-to be one grand impediment in the Christian world to the right training
-and development of the human race.
-
-In presenting this work to the special attention of the laity, the
-author does not intend to imply that theologians are not to take the
-lead in all discussions and investigations that are to guide and
-enlighten mankind in their special department.
-
-The aim is rather to lessen the general impression that the whole matter
-is to be left exclusively to them; that it is a _professional_ concern,
-in which a layman is to resign his own judgment as he does to his
-physician or lawyer. Instead of this, there are some reasons why the
-laity have superior advantages to the clergy in cases where
-long-accepted theological errors are to be eradicated.
-
-In the first place, they are free from the strong influence of _a
-system_ into which the mind has been _educated_. The power of a system
-over men who are trained to reason, and who reason on that subject which
-involves all the greatest interests of existence both for time and
-eternity, is most insidious and incalculable. To this is added the
-reverence, love, and veneration felt by pious persons for those great
-and good men who, like Augustine, Calvin, and Jonathan Edwards, have
-been the revered masters of theological systems for ages. Under these
-two influences, every new opinion is compared with _a system_, and when
-it is seen to be inconsistent with it, all the veneration attached, both
-to that and to its authors and advocates, stands opposed to any
-innovation.
-
-The powerful influence of educational training, and of love and
-reverence to a revered parent, has taught the author to understand and
-sympathize with other minds similarly influenced.
-
-From all such biasing influences the laity are far more free than their
-clerical guides.
-
-Add to this the fact that the "pains and penalties" attached to all
-change in theological opinions have very little reach among the laity.
-Any layman, if he adopts new views, can quietly withdraw from one
-religious communion and join another more congenial, or remain
-unconnected with any, while no man can call him to an account. But men
-connected with parishes, colleges, and all educational institutions, are
-subject to the supervision of councils, presbyteries, synods, and many
-other organs of surveillance, making it indispensable that all changes
-should be known to the public. Thus profession, reputation, and daily
-bread become more or less involved.
-
-And here it is but justice to express the author's convictions, which an
-extensive acquaintance with the clergy of various sects has induced,
-that there is not another body of men, of equal number and education,
-who are so free from personal considerations of this kind in forming and
-maintaining opinions.
-
-The entrance on the clerical profession in this country involves the
-sacrifice of all hope of wealth and its advantages, and includes often
-poverty and a painful dependence on the vacillating favor of parishes;
-so that, to a man of talents and worldly ambition, the command to enter
-this profession is very nearly equivalent to that of the Great Master's,
-"Sell all that thou hast and give to the poor, and come and follow me."
-
-But while allowing that, as a class, this profession is, most of all,
-free from biasing influences of the kind indicated, it can not but be
-allowed that they are subject to like temptations as other men, and that
-these considerations must have more influence with them than with the
-laity, who are exposed to little or nothing of this kind.
-
-To this, add the fact that men in other professions are far more
-habituated to look at all questions in a _practical_ relation, and to
-use the principles of _common sense_ more than the principles of _a
-system_.
-
-The writer has had frequent occasion to notice how the well-trained
-reasoners of other professions throw aside the theories and systems of
-theology, and settle down on the great practical truths of Christianity.
-
-It has sometimes been a matter of wonder to perceive how little
-attention is often given by some of the most gifted and well-trained
-laity, even those that are devoutly religious, to questions deemed of
-paramount and absorbing interest by the clergy.
-
-In presenting this work to public attention, the author is not animated
-with the expectation of any immediate or very striking results.
-
-Long-established and time-honored opinions, especially when they are
-entwined with the sacred hopes and interests of religion, are changed
-only by slow and gradual transitions, and these, often, almost
-imperceptible.
-
-It is the hope of the author to do something to promote at least a
-_renewed discussion_ of these subjects, under more favorable auspices
-than have heretofore existed.
-
-The circumstances that favor and indicate such a renewal are, in the
-first place, a gradual change that has been going on the last thirty
-years in the theological world as the result of discussions on these
-very subjects. Some of the most candid and acute minds that have been
-interested in such discussions have, more and more, been led to feel the
-difficulties involved in the accepted theory of Augustine; and though
-few have come to such clear convictions on the subject as to feel
-warranted in taking any public stand as innovators or reformers, many
-are ready to examine and discuss in a very different attitude of mind
-from what has ever before been so extensively experienced.
-
-One striking indication of this change is the almost universal neglect
-of "indoctrinating preaching" among the younger clergy in those sects
-where, forty years ago, it was deemed indispensable to success to thus
-establish the "five points of Calvinism."
-
-A still more important change is an increase in that _practical_
-preaching that urges on the consciences of men all their domestic,
-social, and moral duties, _as constituting an essential part of
-religion, as truly as the affections toward God and the special duties
-owed to him_.
-
-An equal or greater change is apparent among the laity. The strong
-Calvinistic doctrines that used to be so reverently received are either
-simply tolerated or quietly rejected. This is particularly the case with
-mothers and teachers, both in the family and in the secular and Sunday
-schools. Thousands of practical, tender mothers utterly refuse to teach
-their little ones that a depraved nature has descended to them from
-Adam, and that they can never perform any thing that is right or
-pleasing to God till this nature is recreated; or, if they use such
-language, it is with explanations entirely un-Calvinistic.
-
-Instead of this, they teach their offspring that they can please and
-obey their Heavenly Parent as truly and acceptably as they do their
-earthly parents; that when they have so learned to love and please Him
-(or to feel and act right) that it is their _chief desire_ thus to do,
-they have a _new life_. This "new birth," they also teach, is the result
-of that aid from the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, which both parents and
-children so need that they can never succeed without it, and yet which
-is promised to all who earnestly desire it, and seek it by proper
-methods.
-
-Multitudes of parents and teachers are pursuing this method in churches
-whose ministers would entirely revolt from the idea of denying the
-Augustinian theory or the system of Calvin resting upon it. Many are
-doing this, unconscious that they are taking a course that is contrary
-to the standards of their Church.
-
-In conclusion, the author would ask attention to the chief points
-presented in this volume.
-
-The main question is, are these principles of reason or common sense,
-and the rules for interpreting language here set forth, accepted as
-guides in deciding the great questions of life?
-
-Next, are the deductions gained by their aid as to what can be learned
-without a direct revelation from the Creator accepted?
-
-Lastly, is the Augustinian theory of a depraved mental constitution
-consequent on the sin of the first parents of the race, as tried by
-these principles, supported either by reason or the Bible; and, if not,
-should not all men renounce it, both theoretically and practically?
-
-In answering this last, it is to be remembered that the question is not
-one of _fact_ as to the _depraved action_ of mind, but of the
-_philosophy_ of this fact, or _the cause_ of this wrong action. A man
-may not be able to form any satisfactory theory on this question, and be
-content, as the early Christians used to be, to remain without one. The
-repudiation of the Augustinian theory does not necessarily involve the
-adoption of any other, while it does remove insurmountable difficulties
-from just and generous minds in accepting the Bible as of Divine
-authority while encumbered with what seems so contrary both to the moral
-sense and the common sense of mankind.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It has been the privilege of the author all her life to be intimately
-associated, by family and other connections, with the ministers of
-religion in a variety of denominations--those intelligent, excellent,
-and pious men who, more than any other class, can understand that heavy
-burden of spirit connected with that awful subject, _the eternal loss of
-the human soul_.
-
-Before closing, they will permit a few inquiries in reference to this
-subject. The almost universal cessation of "revivals" of religion, the
-diminished attendance of the masses on Sabbath worship, the decrease in
-the relative proportion of the ministry, the diminution of spirituality
-and the consequent laxness in the Church, the increase of skepticism and
-infidelity of various grades, the terrific rush of worldliness on all
-classes, as wealth, and luxury, and temptations of all kinds abound, are
-not all these signs of the times of fearful import, foreshadowing either
-some dreadful judgments, or the advent of some moral forces that are
-appropriate to such a crisis?
-
-In this position of the moral world, is it to be supposed that theology
-alone, of all departments of science, has reached its culminating point,
-so that there is no possibility of improvement? Is there not manifestly
-needed far more powerful motives than any now wielded to stop the
-inrushing tide of worldliness? In former times, when revivals abounded,
-it was the principle of _fear_ that was first appealed to with such
-wonderful results. But where now are such appeals made as once shook
-men's consciences with fears of "_the wrath to come_?"
-
-If such preaching abounds in any quarter of our nation, where is it? In
-all her travels the writer finds it wanting, and the testimony of others
-is similar.
-
-Here, now, is the great question: Could the ministry _now_ preach the
-_distinctive_ theories of Calvinism, and at the same time those awful
-views of the _eternal loss of the soul_, warranted by Scripture
-language, with any prospect of being sustained by the moral sentiments
-of the great body of benevolent and intelligent hearers? Would not some
-be driven to reckless worldliness, others to infidelity, others to
-Universalism, others to another style of preaching, till the remainder
-could scarcely maintain any preaching at all? Is not this perceived and
-felt by many ministers, and is not this one great reason why that
-terrible doctrine, on which the whole Gospel is based, is now so hidden
-or so slightly recognized in the pulpit ministrations?
-
-And yet, to the writer, it seems that this very doctrine, so plain and
-awful in Holy Writ, could be so drawn forth by the light of reason alone
-as to furnish a power of motive now almost unwielded. It seems as if the
-terrible exhibitions of this volume in the chapters on _Habit_, and on
-the _Wrong Action of Mind in a Future State_, might be wrought out by a
-man of talent and eloquence so as to draw such audiences as once
-thronged around Whitfield, and with equal results. What, then, could be
-done with the added power of revelation, dissevered from obstructing
-theories?
-
-When the writer looks back on her own mental history for the last thirty
-years, and feels how every step of her life, during the whole of that
-period, has been regulated by the overmastering pressure of this
-tremendous subject, and when she is sure that a conviction that no such
-awful dangers beset our race would bring her life on to just that level
-where so many Christians complain that they find themselves, the query
-will often arise whether ministers who _say_ so little about the matter,
-and those professed Christians who _act_ so little in consistence with
-it, _really do believe it_? And yet, when her own difficulties in
-expressing all that has been thought and felt are recalled, it is
-understood how others too may have been equally embarrassed and
-restrained.
-
-In regard to the main topics of this work, is not every minister called
-to decide, _practically_, between these two theories?
-
-The first is, that the great and leading aim of all Christian
-organization should be _to train new-born minds aright_, and that it is
-the special office of the ministry to influence the _educators_ of the
-race to the right performance of this, their chief duty.
-
-In doing this, it is to be assumed that the end for which we are made is
-"to glorify God" by obedience to those laws by which "the most happiness
-with the least evil" is to be secured to His vast eternal empire.
-
-That, at the _first birth_ of a child, it is "impossible, in the nature
-of things," for it to feel and act for the happiness of others till it
-has learned to know what gives pleasure and pain to _self_, and to
-understand that there are other beings who can thus enjoy and suffer; so
-that a child, by its very nature, is at first obliged to be _selfish_ in
-the _exercise_ of faculties which, _in reference to the great whole_,
-are perfect.
-
-That the "second birth" is the sudden or the gradual entrance into a
-life in which the will of the Creator is to control the self-will of the
-creature; while, under the influence of love and gratitude to Him, and
-guided by "faith" in his teachings, _living chiefly for the great
-commonwealth_ takes the place of _living chiefly for self_. For this,
-the supernatural aid of the Holy Spirit is promised to all who seek it;
-and, without this aid, success is hopeless. But the grand instrumentality
-is the _right training_ of parents and teachers.
-
-Then, in reference to that great change of character which
-wrongly-educated mind must pass in order to gain eternal life, there are
-three modes of expression in the Bible in regard to that, viz., "love to
-God," "faith in Jesus Christ," and "repentance."
-
-According to all uses of these terms, in _practical_ matters, _love_ is
-nothing which does not include obedience or conformity of will and
-action to the being loved. _Faith_, or _belief_, is nothing unless it
-includes its fruits of obedience. _Repentance_ is nothing unless it
-includes ceasing to do evil.
-
-_Obedience_ to the laws of God, physical, social, moral, and religious,
-is the grand, indispensable requisite. Now, when any person is so
-engaged in striving to obey all these laws that it is the _first
-interest_ of the mind, then there is a "new heart;" and so great is the
-change from the life of self-indulgence and disobedience to one of such
-earnest desire and efforts to obey God, that it is properly expressed by
-the terms "born again" and "created anew."
-
-The contrasted theory is, that the chief end of man is "to glorify God,"
-without, perhaps, any very definite ideas of what this signifies; that
-our whole race comes into life with dwarfed and ruined moral powers, so
-that it is as impossible, before a "second birth," to feel and act
-right, as it is for a corrupt tree to bear good fruit, or a bitter
-fountain to send forth sweet waters; and that the great end of Christian
-organizations is to secure and administer certain appointed methods by
-which God re-creates these diseased minds. Thus all training, all
-instructions, all good habits, are nothing as having any fitness toward
-either preparing a child for eternal happiness, or inducing God to
-re-create its mind. For it is "unconditional election," and not any
-foreseen act, either of parent or child, that decides their eternal
-destiny.
-
-Can any minister preach without assuming one of these two theories as
-the very foundation-principle of his ministrations? And is this matter
-any the less a _practical_ one to all the laity?
-
-During the period in which the author has been engaged as a practical
-laborer in the field of education, her chief earthly reliance has been
-on the counsel, sympathy, and co-operation of _her own sex_; and in
-closing a work especially dedicated to them, a few parting words may be
-permitted.
-
-This work is offered, not as one of metaphysics and theology, to
-exercise the intellect alone. It presents the grand practical question
-of life to _woman_ as the mother, the educator, the nurse, and the
-fountain of home sympathies for the race. It is the question over which
-every Christian mother ponders with aching heart as every new immortal
-is brought to her arms. It is the question where every Christian teacher
-stands in awe, as, gazing into the dark futurity over the dim ocean of
-eternity, each young mind is felt to be a voyager whose frail and
-solitary bark is soon to be launched. The Protestant mother or teacher,
-with the Bible in her hands, can not, as in the Catholic Church, throw
-off this tremendous responsibility on to _her priest_. She may go to her
-minister for aid, but at the last _she must decide for herself_ what is
-that path which Jesus Christ decides to be right in guiding the lambs of
-His flock through such awful dangers.
-
-Here, then, is the great practical question on which depends the _life
-of the soul_, and for ETERNITY! and every parent and every teacher must
-decide on which theory the young minds committed to their care shall be
-trained.
-
-In contemplating the discussions that must ere long be renewed on these
-great topics, and in such forms as to involve, not theologians alone or
-chiefly, but _the_ _people_, and especially the most intelligent of her
-own sex, the writer recalls with deep interest her early efforts as a
-pioneer in elevating the course of female education. Then she supposed
-herself the first, as she was among the first, to introduce such works
-as Butler's Analogy, Mental Philosophy, and a Mathematical course as a
-regular part of female education. And as she recalls the hundreds of
-bright, vigorous, and independent minds under her care thus trained to
-reason accurately, and now scattered as mothers and influential members
-of society in almost every state in the Union, and then remembers, too,
-how many institutions all over the land have for years pursued the same
-course, she can not but thankfully believe that the Almighty Teacher and
-Ruler was thus preparing her sex for these very responsibilities.
-
-In relinquishing that educational enterprise which for years has
-absorbed her time and strength, while as yet it is so imperfectly
-understood and so little appreciated, she asks, with tender and grateful
-memories, the attention, not only of her dear former pupils, but of that
-multitude of noble and benevolent women who, at so many times and
-places, have afforded her their sympathy and aid, to what is still
-farther offered on this subject in the closing note.[6]
-
-[4] The word "church" in the New Testament, in the Greek, signifies
-"assembly" or "congregation," and not an organization of regenerate
-persons.
-
-[5] See Note C.
-
-[6] See Note D.
-
-
-
-
-NOTES.
-
-
-NOTE A, page 17.
-
-Some atheists imagine that they escape the difficulty by assuming that
-matter is eternal, and thus uncreated. But the question is, not in
-reference to the existence of matter, but as to the _organization_,
-_contrivances_, and _changes of matter_, all of which prove the
-existence of some Intelligent First Cause.
-
-The theory of an "infinite series of changes and causes without a
-beginning" is a contradiction in terms, as can be shown to any person
-who understands the use of definitions, and no other person is prepared
-to discuss such subjects intelligently.
-
-Let it be remembered that the author, in this work, has not attempted to
-present a complete exhibition of _all_ the intuitive truths, but only
-such a portion of them as are adapted to the design of this work. At the
-same time, by a close analysis, some here presented as distinct
-intuitions could be shown to be specifics, under a more general
-proposition. But in a popular work, and for the purposes aimed at, this
-close analysis is inappropriate.
-
-
-NOTE B, page 192.
-
-"Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy him forever," is an
-expression equivalent to what is here maintained, if we assume that the
-chief "glory" of God consists in the rectitude and happiness of his vast
-empire of intelligent minds.
-
-Various other terms used to express the ultimate end of the Creator in
-his works, _accurate definitions_ would show to be simply different
-words chosen to express the same idea as that here presented.
-
-
-NOTE C, page 314.
-
-In the _Home Missionary_ for February, 1856, is the following mournful
-exhibition of the results of these sectarian divisions:
-
-
-"_Subdivision a Source of Weakness and Destitution._
-
-"Now it is but too evident that our American Christendom is prosecuting
-its work, in some respects, at a disadvantage. True, funds have been
-furnished with a commendable liberality; but, worse than a dearth of
-money--which a few months of vigorous effort, or a prosperous turn in
-the market might remove--there is a dearth of men. Fields are explored,
-openings are found, communities are fast forming, and even make urgent
-requests for ministers, but often there are no ministers to send. The
-great exigency of the missionary work now is the want of capable and
-devoted _men_.
-
-"However we may charge this upon the lukewarmness of the churches, upon
-the absence of correct views respecting ministerial support--and its
-consequent meagreness--or on the prevalence among young men of a subtile
-skepticism, we may not shut our eyes to the fact that the want must
-continue as long as that unfortunate division of the field continues,
-which must ever come from divided counsels and sectarian rivalries.
-Destitutions are likely to last while alienations last.
-
-"Every denomination naturally feels that it must be strong in the
-centres of population; and so, without asking whether the Church of
-Christ needs so many congregations there, we crowd our six separate
-enterprises, of as many rival names, into a little place where two
-churches would do more good than the half dozen.
-
-"The evils that result from this course are many and various. One
-consequence of it is a weakening of the unity and the moral force of the
-Church as a whole. Another is the diminution of the numbers and the
-strength of the several local societies, so that an amount of assistance
-many times greater is needed, and this need is prolonged for years, when
-often its period should have been reckoned in months. But a third
-consequence of this overcrowding of one portion of the missionary field
-is the _destitution_ of other portions. While many villages are so well
-supplied as to leave pastors and churches leisure to quarrel, many rural
-districts and young communities are almost totally neglected. If all the
-preachers in the United States were evangelical men, well educated and
-devoted to their work, they would no more than supply the real wants of
-the country, upon a system of wise distribution. On a system, then, so
-unfortunate as this, its destitutions are not supplied; and we hear from
-all quarters the cry, Send more laborers into the harvest.
-
-
-"_A Cause of Unwillingness to enter the Ministry._
-
-"Again, a fourth consequence of our denominational divisions, and
-another cause of destitution, is seen in the difficulty of persuading
-young men of enterprise to enter the ministry. When we consider how the
-field of ministerial labor is cut up into small parishes, affording to
-men of superior capacity but a limited scope for some of their best
-qualities--with scarcely the possibility of much improvement--promising,
-also, only a meagre support and a moderate usefulness, we can not wonder
-that young men who are conscious of the ability to occupy a larger
-sphere, and whose nature thirsts after something stirring and an
-opportunity for a hopeful struggle and for achievement, should often
-shrink from the seeming narrowness and hopelessness of the work which is
-here offered them. We need not praise the truthfulness of their
-appreciation in all particulars, but have we, on the whole, a right to
-anticipate a different decision? No. The result is manifestly one that
-must be _expected_. There is not the least doubt that this diminution in
-the size of parishes is also a diminution in the attractiveness of the
-pastoral office. And so this very multitude of denominations, which has
-increased the want of ministers, operates, in more ways than one, to
-diminish the supply.
-
-
-"_A Discouragement and a Weariness._
-
-"But, what is yet worse, it tends to _injure_ the ministry. No preacher
-but has felt, at times, the depressing influence of a small audience. A
-large proportion of the missionaries at the West feel this at all times;
-and often the intellect is jaded, and the heart is wearied out, from the
-want of that natural stimulus which the presence of a multitude and the
-pressure of an important occasion alone can afford. If it is
-discouraging to find your people coming out in small numbers on rainy
-Sabbaths, what is it to have nothing but small numbers the year through,
-and year after year? How must this tend to check youthful enthusiasm,
-and to dull the fires of intellectual and moral energy. If our brethren
-of the West have not fallen behind themselves, it certainly is not due
-to the inspiration of large audiences or of populous and able parishes;
-for, with so many divisions in such sparse and unstable communities,
-these can not be otherwise than small. Good men will labor on, indeed,
-under all these discouragements; and the greatness of their faith will
-make their work and achievement great. They may triumph over these
-difficulties, but they contend at disadvantage; and the difficulties are
-_real_, notwithstanding the highest fidelity.
-
-
-"_Number and Policy of Denominations._
-
-"There are more than _forty_ religious denominations in the United
-States. Four of these--the N. S. Presbyterians, the O. S. Presbyterians,
-the Congregationalists and Baptists, together with the Methodists and
-Episcopalians--habitually esteem it a matter of obligation to be
-represented in every community where it is possible to gather a church
-of their name, and, in establishing these churches, deem it no part of
-their duty to consider, in the least, the welfare of any congregation of
-a different name that may have been previously gathered. We have six
-great evangelical churches, each one of whom feels bound to push forward
-its own growth, with a disregard of the interests of all other churches,
-which is equivalent to an ignoring of their existence, and, in practical
-effect, identifies the Kingdom of God with the denomination. It is very
-much as though each one had laid it down as the fundamental principle of
-its procedure--WE are the saints.
-
-
-"_Waste of Resources._
-
-"Now it is obvious that this system must bring about an unfortunate
-distribution of labor and a great waste of power; in some localities
-multiplying churches to excess, and leaving other regions destitute;
-making the town congregations weak, from their very multitude, and
-losing the happy moment in communities that are just forming from the
-want of the right men to occupy them at the right moment; while many
-laborers abuse as much time and strength in working against each other
-as they use in working for Christ. So churches are born weak, and are
-compelled to worry through a long and fretful infancy, are kept on a
-diet irritatingly low, and compelled to struggle, with slow and
-uncertain growth, toward a maturity which must come late, and may come
-never."
-
-
-_Statistics._
-
-Here follow statistics, the details of which we omit, and give these as
-the results, as seen in _three_ of the larger denominations, viz.: the
-O. S. Presbyterian, the N. S. Presbyterian, and the Congregational.
-
-In this table is shown the _number of churches_, with a given number of
-members to each church.
-
- -------------------+------+------+------+------+------+------------
- | Not | Not | | | |
- | more | more | More | More | More |
- | than | than | than | than | than | Total
- Number of Members. | 50. | 100. | 100. | 200. | 300. | reporting.
- -------------------+------+------+------+------+------+------------
- Presbyterian O.S. | 1239 | 1907 | 763 | 278 | 101 | 2670
- Presbyterian N.S. | 743 | 1180 | 432 | 163 | 70 | 1612
- Congregational | 696 | 1219 | 752 | 245 | 83 | 1971
- +------+------+------+------+------+------------
- Total of three | | | | | |
- denominations | 2678 | 4306 | 1947 | 686 | 254 | 6253
- -------------------+------+------+------+------+------+------------
-
-
-"_Proportion of strong and weak Churches._
-
-"More than _one fifth_, therefore, of all the churches connected with
-these denominations may be counted as _very weak_, none of them having
-more than twenty-five members, and the average falling considerably
-below that number. Nearly _one fourth_ may be counted as _weak_, their
-membership ranging between twenty-five and fifty; and these, taken
-together with those that are weaker yet, constitute nearly forty-three
-per cent. of the whole. More than two thirds of all the churches do not
-contain over one hundred members. Those that exceed one hundred are
-about thirty-one per cent., and those that exceed two hundred are not
-quite eleven per cent. of the entire number.
-
-
-"_Present Supply of Ministers inadequate._
-
-"The whole number of ministers in these three denominations is 6150. The
-number of pastors and stated supplies (errors excepted) is 4336, leaving
-1814 to be classed as without charge, as professors, teachers, editors,
-secretaries, etc.
-
-"The number of churches in the three denominations whose membership
-exceeds fifty is some five hundred less than the number of pastors and
-stated supplies. If, therefore, each of the five hundred men remaining
-after the largest churches were supplied were to take two of the smaller
-churches, more than sixteen hundred churches would still be left
-destitute; and if allowance be made for those not reporting, this number
-must be taken as exceeding two thousand. Probably none of these contain
-more than thirty-five members.
-
-
-"_Deficiency due to Divisions._
-
-"Now we need a thousand-fold _increase_ of our effective force in the
-great harvest-field of the world; but have we any reason to expect that
-the Lord of the harvest will hear our cry for laborers, and raise them
-up indefinitely, in order to meet wants unnecessarily, nay, wickedly
-created by our divisions? Would a spendthrift son expect to prevail with
-an indulgent father to administer to his necessities on the plea or the
-confession that he had squandered his former bounty, and, moreover, was
-intending to make a similar use of what he then solicited? The
-responsibility rests upon Christians of no one name, and it would seem
-that if the people of God every where could but have a full realization
-of the heart-rending inadequacy of all means yet employed for the
-conversion of the world, or of the utter hopelessness of ever meeting
-the vast want under such a waste of power, the work of economical
-adjustment would at once and earnestly commence, and also a new
-consecration--that the evangelization of the world may be carried
-forward upon a scale commensurate with the providential openings for
-missionary effort.
-
-"That would be, indeed, a glorious revolution which should bring the
-true disciples of Christ every where to this position--to a consecration
-that should keep nothing back from the Lord, to a heaven-appointed
-economy in the adjustment of forces, a _condensation_ of churches in the
-same neighborhood, till the combined body could support a pastor,
-furnish him with all needed facilities for the prosecution of his work,
-and, at the same time, open to him an _adequate_ field of labor. All
-supernumerary ministers in a given locality would thus be set loose for
-effort where men are perishing for lack of vision. Then Apollos would
-not interfere with Paul when he planted, nor Paul with Apollos when he
-watered, nor would both either plant or water at the same point or time,
-provided one could do the work.
-
-
-"_Divisions unnecessary._
-
-"But it is possible that some, calling to mind the large number of weak
-congregations at the East--where denominational rivalry is less active
-than at the West--may claim that this feebleness is but a part of the
-necessary imperfection of human arrangements; that we must always have
-the poor with us, and that it is not the sectarianism of the West which
-so reduces our churches. It were sufficient to suggest, in reply, that
-the weak churches in the older states are found where the communities
-are weak, in barren or uncultivated districts, or in regions depopulated
-by emigration, while a large proportion of the feeble churches of the
-West are in populous, vigorous, growing communities, where nothing but
-irreligion or division could keep the congregations from being numerous,
-and where nothing less than the combination of the two could keep them
-so small as they are. Yonder are three debilitated churches struggling
-for existence against each other. Is it necessary to ask whether, if
-they were joined in one, and were with one heart and voice contending
-for the kingdom of God, the Christian strength of that community would
-not be greater?
-
-
-"_Proportion of weak Churches at the West._
-
-"But facts are at hand which show that the relative number of feeble
-churches is much larger at the West than at the East. Of the churches in
-Illinois and Iowa connected with three leading denominations, the
-proportion that must be accounted very weak--having not more than
-twenty-five communicants--is almost twice as great as in the same
-denomination taken entire, and amounts to nearly _two fifths_ of the
-whole number reporting. These, again, taken with those whose membership
-ranges between twenty-five and fifty, make up nearly _seventy per cent._
-of the whole!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-The author would ask attention to a few questions in view of these
-statistics.
-
-The above table was formed from _reporting_ churches. There are 934
-churches _not reporting_. Giving to these last the average proportion of
-ministers and weak churches, and we find this result:
-
- Whole number of churches 7187
- Ministers acting as pastors and supplies 4336
- ----
- Churches without ministers 2851
-
-That is to say, in three of our largest and most wealthy and intelligent
-denominations, _nearly one third_ of their churches are without
-ministers, and _nearly one half_ of them have not over fifty members,
-and the majority of these members, no doubt, are women. Then the
-relative number of ministers is _constantly decreasing_.
-
-In this state of things, to what is the Church and ministry coming?
-
-When young men of talents and energy see not only independence, but
-wealth before them in other callings, where, in preparing, they will not
-need to spend _nine years_ in dead languages and literature never to be
-used; where they can have an abundant field of usefulness, and where
-their minds can be _free_ from creeds and the supervision of
-ecclesiastics and parishes, how long will any such seek the ministry?
-
-Will not the ministry thus soon become the resort, first, of poor,
-ambitious young men, who find in its official standing the surest mode,
-with moderate talents and means, to gain the _highest social position_;
-and next, of _ambitious young men of talents_, who, among such inferior
-competitors, are sure of the best pulpits and highest salaries?
-
-Again: How long will the _laity_ so freely pour out their earnings to
-endow colleges and theological seminaries when such results as these are
-seen?
-
-
-NOTE D, page 336.
-
-In resigning all farther agency in practical educational efforts, the
-writer hopes, after so many years of devotion to it, she may be allowed
-to speak with entire frankness her views as to the present modes of
-education.
-
-The last thirty years have witnessed great efforts all over the nation
-to improve and increase common schools, and to multiply higher
-educational institutions. Although much has been said and written in
-regard to physical and moral training in schools, unfortunately very
-little has been accomplished.
-
-It is the intellectual department of the brain that has absorbed
-attention, as if this were the chief, or even the whole of man. Parents
-stimulate, teachers stimulate, lecturers stimulate, superintendents
-stimulate, school committees stimulate--all turning their full energies
-on to only one function of the brain.
-
-In our colleges, this _intellectual_ stimulating is divided and
-subdivided, one professor for one department, another for a second, and
-another for a third, and so on, till from twelve to twenty are thus
-employed. Meantime the training of the body, or the development of the
-social, domestic, and moral powers, have not even one to minister the
-needful care.
-
-Then, in preparatory boarding-schools for boys, taken from mother,
-sisters, and home influences in the first blush of youth, all the school
-stimulus is turned on to the brain to develop Latin, Greek, and
-mathematics, while health of body and soul perish under abuse or
-neglect.
-
-Then the boarding-school is taking the young girls through a kind of
-college course at the most critical period of life, while their chief
-nervous energies are exhausted in completing _a given course of study in
-a given time_, and almost every law of health for body and mind are
-violated.
-
-Then, in our primary schools, especially in cities, where pure air,
-healthful exercise, and home employments are least at command, all the
-energies of school committees and superintendents of schools are
-directed to securing a given amount of intellectual labor.
-
-But what is the teaching of physiology on this matter? Through one of
-its greatest writers, thus it speaks:
-
-"If young children are compelled to sit quietly while their minds are
-urged to undue action, _we take from them the noblest part of their
-strength, and consume it in the function of thinking_. Thus growth is
-retarded, the limbs imperfectly developed, the digestion (and thus the
-blood) becomes bad, scrofula perhaps appears, and then ensues a great
-predominance of the nervous system. Any _unequal_ development of our
-faculties is injurious. It is certain that _mental exertions_ weaken the
-more they are unaccompanied by bodily movements. Those who, _between_
-mental occupations, take bodily exercise, can _do more_ than those who
-neglect this exercise."
-
-The grand evils of our present modes of education are, not that too much
-intellectual training is bestowed, but that physical, social, and
-domestic training are neglected. The result is a _universal decay of
-national vigor and health_. Other causes, such as the use of stoves and
-unventilated houses, improper diet and dress, with excess in other modes
-of stimulating, have had a large share in the evil, but there can be no
-doubt that mistaken modes of education are the chief causes of the
-acknowledged fact that our national health is perishing at a frightful
-rate.
-
-There are facts that prove the Anglo-Saxon race, as developed in America
-under the best circumstances, is the most perfect race on earth as it
-respects size, strength, and beauty. The mountain regions of Kentucky
-and Tennessee, where the climate allows all to live in pure air night
-and day, with the simple food and habit of forest life, send out sons
-that, appearing in foreign lands, are followed by admiring crowds as
-specimen giants. General Washington's staff, though not picked men, were
-most of them over six feet in height, with size and muscle to
-correspond. The vigorous mothers and stalwart sons that achieved our
-Revolution have given place to sickly mothers with a delicate and puny
-offspring.
-
-The Greeks, though they educated the mind, took even more pains to train
-the body, and thus they became the wisest, strongest, and most powerful
-people on earth. We might do the same, and with far greater facilities;
-but, should our present rate of deterioration proceed, two or more
-generations would bring us out a race of deformed and unhealthy pigmies.
-For facts to sustain such a prediction, the author begs leave to refer
-to her _Letters to the People on Health and Happiness_.
-
-The great point now urged is that woman should be _trained_, not, as
-some would urge, to enter the professions of men, but _for her own
-proper business_, in educating mind in developing the body of infancy
-and childhood, and in conducting the economy of an orderly, happy, and
-well-regulated _home_. These arduous and complicated duties demand able
-assistance, and here is the calling of the female educator; not to carry
-off children from their parents and home, but rather to aid these
-parents in education in _all_ departments.
-
-It is manifestly the Divine intention that parents should be the chief
-educators of the race, and all plans consistent with this will succeed,
-and all counter to it will fail. The boarding-school is not in
-consonance with this Heaven-appointed plan, and the evils multiply
-around it so fast that a nation of so much common sense as ours must
-soon forsake it for the true method.
-
-Again: in the grand object of educating humanity for an _eternal_
-existence, the questions as to how ordination or baptism shall be
-administered, or whether it shall be church elders or church committees
-that rule, are to be made secondary, and the followers of Christ are to
-unite for the education of the race, not as _sects_, but as
-_Christians_.
-
-These views present the principles on which is organized the _American
-Woman's Educational Association_.
-
-Its main features are, that it unites all sects in education; that it
-spends its funds, not for great buildings to deprive the young of
-parents and homes, but to provide well-trained educators to assist
-parents _in_ their homes; and, finally, its leading aim is to prepare
-woman for her _distinctive duties_ as educator, nurse, and fountain of
-home sympathies for the race.
-
-In attempting this, the methods the other sex have employed to honor and
-sustain _their_ professions have been claimed, viz.: institutions
-governed by _a faculty_ instead of an individual, and teachers supported
-by _endowments_ for this express object.
-
-The following extract from the _fourth_ Annual Report of this
-Association gives some of the results.
-
-"We are now prepared to indicate what has been accomplished. We have,
-then, in the first place, evolved and set forth a fundamental _idea_.
-This is no small part of the success of any great movement. Whatever
-were the difficulties of first learning to print, the triumph of
-Gutenberg was nearly achieved when he first mastered the _idea_ of the
-type. It was a secondary affair to work it out and set the world
-vibrating to its power. We have got the _idea_, and done something
-toward its execution.
-
-"We have secured the existence of two institutions on our plan, one at
-Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and the other at Dubuque, Iowa, whose united
-catalogues will show some five hundred pupils the past year. Both are in
-very successful operation, with efficient boards of teachers, silently
-doing the work for which they have been established.
-
-"We have united all the Protestant citizens in the noble work of
-founding and patronizing these institutions, which they cherish as among
-their most valued public establishments. We have shown that the _faculty
-principle_ is as good for female institutions as for those of the other
-sex, and that results may be expected from it for woman corresponding in
-utility and dignity with those it has secured to man.
-
-"We have shown that, by the _offer_ of the small endowment of twenty
-thousand dollars, we can secure the establishment of one of these
-invaluable institutions, and make it a permanent source of measureless
-good--a most economical and wise expenditure of educational
-benefactions.
-
-"We have, in short, carried out our plan successfully just as far as it
-can be done _before_ the endowments are actually furnished.
-
-"We have made a beginning toward raising the first endowment, and are
-able to report on hand and pledged nearly ten thousand dollars.
-
-"Our movement has the confidence and full endorsement of many leading
-clergymen, educators, and editors of our country. Our institutions have
-the hearty co-operation of the religious bodies where they are located.
-
-"At our last annual meeting, an urgent request was made to the
-Association to aid in the establishment of a third institution at
-Kalamazoo, Michigan. Without any pledge of immediate action, it was
-agreed that, if the citizens should comply with our conditions, we would
-aid them as soon as our means would allow. Those conditions have not yet
-been met, and we have not, therefore, been called to do any thing at
-that place.
-
-"It has seemed desirable, moreover, that the endowment of the two
-institutions already established should be completed before attempting
-to found others."
-
-The questions most frequently proposed to the conductors of this
-enterprise, and the answers to them, will now be introduced.
-
-How can the business of domestic economy be taught as a part of school
-training?
-
-Not in great boarding-schools, where it never was or can be done. The
-"Mount Holyoke" plan, now so popular, is widely supposed to embrace this
-in its design. But the _teaching_ of this science is not the aim of
-their domestic department. It is a measure for _reducing expenses_ by
-saving hired labor, while certain social advantages are supposed to be
-combined with it. But no pupil is to be _taught_ any thing in this
-department. Meantime, introducing cooking, washing, ironing, and
-house-cleaning as a regular part of school duty, makes a system of such
-detail and complication, demanding so many rules and such strict
-obedience as adds enormously to the already excessive pressure that is
-put on the female brain. This is probably an insuperable difficulty
-attendant on this system, that will forever forbid its introduction
-wherever the _healthful_ development of woman has its proper regard.
-
-How, then, is the object aimed at to be accomplished?
-
-In reply we say, that, with institutions established for the express
-purpose of training women to be healthy themselves, and to perform
-properly all their duties as educator, nurse, and regulator of the
-domestic state; with teachers supported by endowments for this express
-object; with a board of managers embracing some of the most influential
-ladies in the land, who are or have been both practical teachers and
-housekeepers; with committees of influential ladies in each place where
-such institutions are located to co-operate, the thing attempted can not
-fail to be done, and in the best manner. Whatever ought to be done, can
-be; and whatever can be done, will be, when energetic American women
-fairly undertake it.
-
-But will endowments for such institutions be furnished?
-
-In reply, we point to the multitudes of needless colleges for the other
-sex all over the land, for which the people are pouring forth such
-abundant endowments, while _women_ are even more liberal, according to
-their relative means, than men.
-
-Since this effort commenced, one lady has endowed a professorship in
-Brunswick College, Maine. Another lady has added $20,000 to the nearly
-_one million_ endowments of Cambridge. These two are the first cases of
-endowments for the _physical_, _social_, and _moral_ departments of
-education. Woman, then, has first done for man what is now sought for
-her sex.
-
-In this same short period, sufficient for the endowment of a theological
-professorship in Connecticut has been furnished by female benefactors.
-In New Jersey a lady has given some $30,000 for a college. In New York
-City another lady has endowed a theological professorship. In Albany,
-New York, a lady has given $50,000 for a scientific institution for man.
-In Massachusetts a lady has given more than enough to endow a
-professorship for a college in Wisconsin. Many more cases can be given
-of large benefactions, amounting in all to hundreds of thousands, given
-by woman within a few years for the richly-provided professional
-institutions of man, while as yet not one complete endowment for her sex
-has been raised.
-
-Why is this? Because it is so difficult to change long-established
-customs and habits of thought. The idea that every thing must be done
-for man's profession, and nothing for woman's, has so long been
-dominant, that even our own sex have fallen into that belief and
-practice.
-
-But the American people are eminent for practical wisdom and common
-sense. The time is certainly coming when the _true view_ is to possess
-the public mind, and then the right practice will follow. The question
-is simply one as to time, and as to _who_ are to be the first to provide
-means for this great movement to promote the right physical, domestic,
-and moral training of our race, whose names shall shine as benefactors
-of our sex, as Harvard and Yale have shone for the other.
-
-But it is asked, Why go to the West to establish such institutions?
-
-Because the evils of sectarian strife affect educational interest most
-severely there; because educational institutions are most needed there;
-and because the moral soil, like the natural, bears fruit so quickly and
-so abundantly.
-
-But why not endow large boarding institutions already established?
-
-Because it is contrary to the grand design of Providence to take
-children away from parents to educate them; because it is more
-economical to provide superior teachers and school-houses in cities and
-large towns, than to turn funds into brick and mortar to congregate
-great communities of the young away from parents, home, and all domestic
-pursuits; and because those who need to go to boarding-schools can find
-homes in private families in large towns.
-
-But why not have our public schools on this model?
-
-Because it can not be done until the public, by fair experiments, have
-tested the value of such institutions. So long, too, as foreign lands
-are emptying all classes into our country, and their children enter all
-public schools, it will be impossible to bring the children of the
-wealthy classes into them.
-
-In conclusion, the author asks every true woman who reads this to help
-in this effort for the _women and the children_ of our country. If she
-has money to give, it can be sent to our agent, Rev. William L. Parsons,
-No. 11 Cliff Street, New York.
-
-If she has _time_ to devote to the work, let her send $1 25 by mail to
-Harper & Brothers, New York, and she will receive, without farther
-expense, the author's two works, one on Domestic Economy, and the other
-on Physiology and Physical Training, designed as text-books for schools.
-She can then _use her influence_ to introduce them, while the author's
-profits, as they ever have been, will be devoted to this object.
-
-The following is the Constitution of the association and the names of
-the ladies and gentlemen who superintend the enterprise. Most of them
-have been practical teachers, most are practical housekeepers, while
-they represent seven different religious denominations:
-
-
-CONSTITUTION OF THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION.
-
-ART. 1. The name of this Society is the AMERICAN WOMAN'S EDUCATIONAL
-ASSOCIATION.
-
-ART. 2. The object of this Association is to aid in securing to American
-Women a liberal education, honorable position, and remunerative
-employment _in their appropriate profession_; the distinctive profession
-of woman being considered as embracing the training of the human mind,
-the care of the human body in infancy and in sickness, and the
-conservation of the family state.
-
-ART. 3. The leading measure to be pursued by this Association is the
-establishment of permanent endowed institutions for women, embracing the
-leading features of college and professional institutions for the other
-sex, _i. e._, they shall be conducted by a _Faculty_ of _Teachers_, each
-being the head of a given department, and no one having control over the
-others. An office corresponding to that of the President of a college
-shall be optional with those who control each institution.
-
-ART. 4. The mode of establishing such institutions shall be as follows:
-An agent of this Association shall make this offer to some city or large
-town in a section where teachers and schools are most needed.
-
-First: That the citizens shall organize a Board of Trustees, in which
-the various religious denominations of the place shall be fairly
-represented; that these Trustees shall provide temporary accommodations,
-and pupils enough to support four Teachers; that a Primary and a High
-School Department be organized, and that the college plan of a Faculty
-of Teachers be adopted.
-
-On these conditions, the Association shall furnish the Institution with
-a library and apparatus to the value of one thousand dollars. The first
-Board of Teachers shall be appointed by the Association, with the advice
-and consent of the Trustees, and thereafter the Faculty shall have the
-nominating and the Trustees the appointing power.
-
-Second: As soon as the Teachers have secured public confidence, and
-proved that they can work harmoniously together, the citizens shall
-erect a building at an expense of not less than ten thousand dollars,
-and engage to give gratuitous tuition to twenty Normal Pupils. In
-return, the Association shall provide an endowment of twenty thousand
-dollars, the interest of which shall furnish the salaries of the three
-superior teachers, each having charge of one of the three departments
-set forth above as constituting the profession of woman. They shall also
-aid in the literary instruction. These three teachers, with the
-beneficiary Normal Pupils, and any others who may wish and are qualified
-to enter, shall constitute the Normal Department. The Normal Pupils
-shall act as Assistants in the Primary and High School Departments,
-under the direction of the Principal Teachers.
-
-ART. 5. With each institution shall be connected an organization of
-ladies resident in the place of location, who, with the Teachers of the
-Normal Department, shall carry out a system for raising up schools in
-destitute places, and for securing employ and suitable compensation for
-all teachers trained in the institution. When the home supply is
-inadequate, the Teachers shall be sought from the Board of National
-Popular Education, and other similar associations. All teachers thus
-located shall be under the special care of this local Association, and
-the boarding establishment of the Normal Department shall serve as a
-temporary home to them in all emergencies demanding it.
-
-ART. 6. Funds contributed for endowments shall be held in trust for this
-Association by gentlemen Trustees incorporated for the purpose.
-
-ART. 7. The whole control of the business and funds shall be in a Board
-of Managers, who shall appoint their own officers, agents, and executive
-committee. This Board shall have power to perpetuate and increase
-itself, but the number from any one religious denomination shall never
-exceed one fifth of the whole. Not less than seven different
-denominations shall be represented in the Board, and a majority shall be
-ladies who are or have been practical teachers. Any number of members
-present, of the Board or of the Executive Committee, at any meeting of
-either, due notice having been given of such meeting, shall constitute a
-quorum. The Board shall meet annually at such time and place as it shall
-appoint, and the presiding officer shall be appointed at each meeting. A
-meeting may also be called at any time, at the request of any three
-members of the Board.
-
-ART. 8. Any person may become an honorary _life member_ of this
-Association by the payment of twenty-five dollars, and an _honorary
-patron_ of the enterprise by the payment of fifty dollars or upward.
-
-
-BOARD OF MANAGERS OF THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION.
-
- Mrs. Z. P. G. Banister, _Newburyport, Mass._
- Mrs. L. H. Sigourney, _Hartford, Conn._
- Mrs. S. J. Hale, _Philadelphia_.
- Miss P. Fobes, _Monticello, Ill._
- Mrs. Gen. J. Gould, _Rochester, N. Y._
- Mrs. E. Ricord, _Newark, N. J._
- Mrs. H. B. Stowe, _Andover, Mass._
- Mrs. Prof. H. C. Conant, _Rochester, N. Y._
- Miss C. E. Beecher, _Boston, Mass._
- Miss Mary Mortimer, _Milwaukee, Wis._
- Miss C. M. Sedgwick, _New York_.
- Mrs. Prof. D. C. Van Norman, "
- Mrs. Marcus Spring, "
- Mrs. C. M. Kirkland, "
- Mrs. Prof. H. Webster, "
- Mrs. A. H. Gibbons, "
- Mrs. C. W. Milbank, "
- Mrs. Rev. Dr. Cheever, "
- Mrs. Henry Dwight, Jr., "
- Mrs. James Harper, "
- Mrs. D. Codwise, "
- Mrs. Charles Abernethy, "
- Mrs. Prof. Henry B. Smith, "
- Mrs. Joseph F. Stone, "
- Miss Caroline L. Griffin, "
- Mrs. Rev. Abel Stevens, "
- Mrs. Rev. W. L. Parsons, "
-
-The following gentlemen are the Officers under the Act of Incorporation
-granted to the Association by the Legislature of New York in 1855.
-
- BENJ. W. BONNEY, President.
- WM. L. PARSONS, Cor. Secretary.
- HENRY A. HURLBUT, Treasurer.
-
-
-BOARD OF MANAGERS.
-
- CYRUS W. FIELD,
- JOSIAH W. BAKER,
- BENJ. W. BONNEY,
- HENRY A. HURLBUT,
- WM. L. PARSONS.
-
-
-FINANCE COMMITTEE.
-
- CYRUS W. FIELD,
- JOSIAH W. BAKER,
- BENJ. W. BONNEY.
-
-
-FORM OF BEQUEST.
-
-I give and bequeath to the "American Woman's Educational Association,"
-incorporated by or under an Act of the Legislature of the State of New
-York, the sum of [space] Dollars, which I direct to be paid by my
-executors to the Treasurer of said Association for the time being.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Common Sense Applied to Religion, by
-Catharine E. Beecher
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMMON SENSE APPLIED TO RELIGION ***
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Common Sense Applied to Religion, by Catharine E. Beecher
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Common Sense Applied to Religion
- The Bible and the People
-
-Author: Catharine E. Beecher
-
-Release Date: September 12, 2017 [EBook #55531]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMMON SENSE APPLIED TO RELIGION ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry B. Harrison, Chris Pinfield and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div id="tnote">
-
-<p>Transcriber's Note.</p>
-
-<p>Apparent typographical errors have been corrected; inconsistencies in
-the use of hyphens have been retained.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="front">
-
-<h1><span class="smaller">COMMON SENSE</span><br />
-<span class="x-small">APPLIED TO</span><br />
-RELIGION;<br />
-<span class="x-small">OR,</span><br />
-<span class="smaller">THE BIBLE AND THE PEOPLE.</span></h1>
-
-<p>BY CATHARINE E. BEECHER.</p>
-
-<p class="small">AUTHOR OF "LETTERS TO THE PEOPLE ON HEALTH AND HAPPINESS,"<br />
-"PHYSIOLOGY AND CALISTHENICS," "DOMESTIC ECONOMY,"<br />
-"DOMESTIC RECEIPT-BOOK," &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
- <p class="gap-above">NEW YORK:<br />
- <span class="small">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,<br />
- FRANKLIN SQUARE.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="small">MONTREAL: BENJAMIN DAWSON.</span><br />
-1857.</p>
-
-<p class="gap-above x-small">Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year<br />
-one thousand eight hundred and fifty-seven, by<br />
-
-<span class="smcap">Harper &amp; Brothers</span>,<br />
-
-in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District<br />
-of New York.</p>
-
- <p class="gap-above">
- <span class="x-small">TO</span><br />THE PEOPLE,<br />
- <span class="x-small">AS<br />THE SAFEST AND TRUEST INTERPRETERS OF</span><br />
- THE BIBLE,<br /><span class="x-small">AND</span><br />
- TO WOMAN,<br /><span class="x-small">AS<br />
- THE HEAVEN-APPOINTED EDUCATOR OF MIND,</span><br />
- <span class="small">THIS WORK<br />Is respectfully Dedicated.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h2>INDEX.</h2>
-
-<hr />
-
-<table class="toc" summary="ToC">
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="pag">Page</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap">Introduction</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_ix">ix</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span> The Grand Questions of Life</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. II.</span> The Principles of Reason, or Intuitive Truths</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_14">14</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. III.</span> Sources of Human Knowledge</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. IV.</span> Of the Knowledge gained by Human Experience in
-regard to the Nature of Mind and of the System of which it
-is a Part</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. V.</span> Knowledge gained by Reason and Experience alone
-as to a Future State</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. VI.</span> Knowledge gained by Reason and Experience alone
-concerning the Existence, Character, and Designs of the
-Creator</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. VII.</span> Diversities in Systems of Mental Philosophy</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. VIII.</span> Classification and Description of the Mental Powers</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. IX.</span> Sensation and Perception</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. X.</span> Conception and Memory</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XI.</span> Attention and Abstraction</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XII.</span> Association</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XIII.</span> Imagination</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XIV.</span> Judgment</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_106">106</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XV.</span> The Susceptibilities</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XVI.</span> The Susceptibilities. Emotions of Taste</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XVII.</span> The Moral Susceptibilities</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XVIII.</span> The Will</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XIX.</span> Faith or Belief</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_165">165</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XX.</span> Constitutional Varieties of the Human Mind</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_175">175</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXI.</span> Habit</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXII.</span> Mind as Proof of its Creator's Designs</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_190">190</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXIII.</span> Social and Material Proofs of the Creator's Designs</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXIV.</span> Right Mode of securing the Object for which
-Mind was created</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXV.</span> Wrong Action of Mind and its Causes</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXVI.</span> Wrong Action of Mind and its Results in this
-Life</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXVII.</span> Wrong Action of Mind and its Results in a Future
-State</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXVIII.</span> Character of the Creator</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_245">245</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXIX.</span> On Perfect and Imperfect Minds</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_250">250</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXX.</span> On the probable Existence and Character of Disembodied
-Spirits</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_258">258</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXXI.</span> Probabilities in regard to a Revelation from the
-Creator</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap"><span class="smcap">Chap. XXXII.</span> Interpretation of Language</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_265">265</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap">Addenda to Vol. I.</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_281">281</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chap">Notes</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_337">337</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">{ix}</a></div>
-
-<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> work is the result of thirty years of devotion to
-the training of the human mind for the great end for
-which it was created. Early in that period it was
-felt that at the very foundation of such efforts were
-opposing <i>theological theories</i>, that seemed at war with
-both the common sense and the moral sense of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>In the progress of such duties, a work was prepared
-on <i>Mental and Moral Science</i>, as a text-book for the
-institution under the care of the writer, which was
-printed, but never published. After submitting this
-work to the criticism of a number of the leading minds
-of various schools and sects, it was found to contain
-so much that might result in theological controversy,
-that it was deemed modest and wise to wait until age,
-experience, and farther examination had lent their maturing
-influence.</p>
-
-<p>After a delay of over a quarter of a century, the conviction
-above stated not only remains, but has been
-strengthened by the discussions and developments that
-have intervened in that period.</p>
-
-<p>While the great practical truths both of natural and
-revealed religion have seemed constantly to be gaining
-a more controlling influence over the intellect and feelings
-of mankind, the theological dogmas referred to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">{x}</a></span>
-have been more and more evaded or rejected, even by
-those who receive and respect the Bible as containing
-authentic and authoritative revelations from God.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, there is apparent a manifest and
-strong tendency, especially among the young and most
-highly-educated of both sexes, to <i>infidelity</i>; not to
-that species of a former age which involved a hatred
-and contempt for the Bible, nor to the entire rejection
-of it as a very respectable and useful collection of
-most interesting writings, but to a rejection of it as a
-<i>sure and authoritative guide in faith and morals</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Though there may be other assignable causes for
-this, it is certain that not the least powerful is the repellency
-of dogmas claimed to be contained in the
-Bible, which are revolting both to the intellect and to
-the moral nature of man.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of being able to meet their religious teachers
-with the assumption that all which they have felt
-to be contrary to reason, to common sense, and to common
-honesty is not contained in the Sacred Writings,
-many have gradually drawn off to the religion of reason
-and nature, and left the Bible to theologians and
-the Church.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, there has been a new development
-of philanthropy, in which those who either repudiate
-the Bible as of any binding authority, or disallow
-its commonly-accepted teachings, are as prominent
-and earnest in works of benevolence as the most
-orthodox of any sect. To these are added religious
-teachers, who set forth the morality and benevolence
-demanded in the Bible as obligatory, and as satisfactorily
-deducible from the light of nature, so that no
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">{xi}</a></span>
-revelation is needful to make them more so. Meantime,
-in popular forms and by popular writers, all the
-most plausible and startling difficulties that oppose the
-claims of the Bible are widely disseminated, while little
-is done to counteract these influences.</p>
-
-<p>Another class of religionists has also arisen, that
-numbers probably its hundreds of thousands, the <i>Spiritualists</i>,
-who rest their faith on a new species of so-called
-revelations, which ordinarily clash with the accepted
-teachings of the Bible, and by vast numbers
-are received as of superior authority.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime the press and public lectures are extensively
-supplanting the pulpit as organs of moral and
-religious influence over large portions of the community,
-while a large part of the most popular speakers
-and writers avowedly reject the Bible as of any binding
-authority in deciding moral and religious questions.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, there has arisen a freedom of investigation,
-and an aversion to all traditional or conservative
-bonds, such as probably never before was so
-universal and dominant in this nation, especially among
-those religiously educated.</p>
-
-<p>All these influences have combined to place the
-Bible, and the systems of theology that claim to be
-educed from it, in entirely new relations. Nothing
-now is safe on the ground of tradition, or of authority,
-or of the reverence that belongs to age, learning, genius,
-or experience. Every thing in religion, as well
-as other matters, is to stand on its own claims, and
-not by any factitious supports.</p>
-
-<p>In this state of the public mind, the following considerations
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">{xii}</a></span>
-have had influence in leading to the presentation
-of the views contained in this volume.</p>
-
-<p>It is the distinctive maxim of Protestant Christianity
-that "every person is to be his own interpreter
-of the revelations of God contained in the Bible, responsible
-only to his Maker." This, of course, implies
-the practicability of a proper qualification for
-this duty in every individual, so that no person shall
-necessarily be dependent on other minds for a correct
-knowledge of all that relates to his own duty and
-dangers.</p>
-
-<p>It is manifest that the Creator designed that <i>woman</i>
-should have the leading position as the <i>educator of
-mind</i>, especially at that period when the habits and
-principles of life are formed. This being so, it is clear
-that it was designed that <i>she</i> should be qualified to
-gain by her own independent powers all that is revealed
-by God that will aid her in this great work.</p>
-
-<p>The theological theories referred to, as seemingly opposing
-the moral sense and common sense of mankind,
-are those that relate to the foundation principle on
-which the training of mind is to start. They involve
-the most practical questions of every-day life, both as
-to individual responsibility and to the education of the
-young.</p>
-
-<p>These theories, then, are to be examined and tested
-by <i>the laity</i> as much as by theologians, and especially
-are they to be examined and decided on by <i>woman</i>, as
-the heaven-appointed educator of infancy and childhood.</p>
-
-<p>In this examination, these theories are to be tested,
-not by the decisions of ecclesiastical bodies, nor by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">{xiii}</a></span>
-writings of theologians, but by those principles of <i>reason
-and common sense, and those laws of language</i>,
-which guide mankind in all other practical and personal
-duties. In order to this, these principles must
-be evolved and stated in simple and popular form, for
-particular application on these questions; for no man
-or woman can decide whether a thing agrees with, or
-is contrary to the moral sense, or to the principles of
-reason and common sense, till they clearly perceive
-what those principles are, and have learned to apply
-them appropriately.</p>
-
-<p>The leading object of this volume is, then, to present
-these principles in a popular form, and to make it
-apparent that they can be practically employed by
-the laity in deciding what is truth, both as to the
-claims of the Bible as containing authoritative revelations
-from the Creator, and also as to the true interpretation
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>In asking the attention of the laity, including her
-own sex, to the discussion of topics which have heretofore
-been deemed the most difficult, recondite, and profound,
-it is with the full conviction that most of the
-difficulties that heretofore have opposed such investigations
-have belonged, not to the topics themselves,
-but to the methods of discussion.</p>
-
-<p>It is believed that, though this small volume embraces
-most of those points in metaphysics which have
-been considered the most difficult, there is not a page
-that can not be perfectly comprehended by any man or
-woman of only an ordinarily good education, and with
-less intellectual effort than is demanded of little girls
-in acquiring an ability to parse the English language.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">{xiv}</a></span>
-It is true that <i>close thought and attention</i> are requisite
-for a full appreciation of all in this volume; but
-not more of these are required than the dignity and
-importance of the great topics involved properly demand.</p>
-
-<p>In attempting what is here proposed, it can be seen
-that there are great difficulties to be met. As a general
-fact, these subjects have not been presented in
-popular forms, but have been confined to works of
-metaphysics and theology, and there enveloped in scientific
-techniques and formulas not interesting or intelligible
-to the common mind. For this reason, it has
-been suggested that, before presenting the abstract portion,
-a <i>practical illustration</i> of the subject, embodied in
-the history of the opinions of the author, as they have
-been formed or modified by these principles, would
-have far more effect on the class of readers for whom
-the work is written than the bare statement of principles
-and argument, while it would certainly be more
-likely to be read.</p>
-
-<p>It has been still farther urged that, in attempting to
-controvert long-established theories, embodied as a part
-of religious truth in the popular mind, there will be an
-opposition of <i>feeling</i> to be overcome, which needs a
-counterbalancing appeal to the feelings such as an individual
-history can best offer.</p>
-
-<p>As to the propriety of such a measure, it is now so
-common to offer autobiographies, and histories of life
-and opinions by living authors, that this will be no innovation
-on the customs of the literary world.</p>
-
-<p>To this, a more weighty consideration should be added,
-and that is, that all questions of propriety and of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">{xv}</a></span>
-duty are regulated by circumstances of risk and danger.
-A woman, suddenly roused from sleep to save
-her children from the flames, has a very different rule
-of propriety in appearing before the public from that
-demanded on ordinary occasions. In this view, a believer
-in the risks of the <i>eternal loss of the soul</i> must
-withhold nothing, however sacred and cherished, if
-there is the shadow of a probability that it will avail
-aught in aiding, it may be, but one struggling, darkened
-mind in the death-agony of the soul.</p>
-
-<p>From these considerations, the writer has been led
-to prefix to the exhibition of principles and arguments
-of this work, a mental history that shall particularly
-illustrate the subjects discussed. The article was prepared
-for certain personal and family friends, and is inserted
-very nearly in its original form.</p>
-
-<h3>ILLUSTRATIVE MENTAL HISTORY.</h3>
-
-<p>I wish, before publishing my forthcoming work, to
-obtain the views of some of my theological friends as
-to certain phases of experience of my own mind, and,
-to a certain extent, of other minds known to me.</p>
-
-<p>My <i>intellectual</i> character was a singular compound
-of the practical and the imaginative. In youth I had no
-love for study or for reading even, excepting works of
-imagination. Don Quixote, the novel to which I first
-had access, was nearly committed to memory, as were
-a few other novels found at my grandmother's. The
-poets, both ancient and modern, were always in reach,
-and with these materials I early formed a habit of reverie
-and castle-building as my chief internal source of
-enjoyment. With this was combined incessant activity
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">{xv1}</a></span>
-in practical matters, such as, at first, doll-dressing
-and baby-house building; afterward drawing,
-painting, exploits of merriment, practical jokes, snow
-castles and forts, summer excursions, school and family
-drama-acting, and the like. Till eighteen, I never
-wrote any thing but a few letters and scraps of rhyme,
-and the transforming of some stories into dramas for
-acting. A kind teacher, who sympathized in my
-strong love of the comic, described me as "the busiest
-of all creatures in doing nothing."</p>
-
-<p><i>Socially</i>, I was good-natured and sympathizing, so
-that my jokes and tricks were never such as to tease
-or annoy others.</p>
-
-<p><i>Morally</i>, I had a strong sense of justice, but was
-not naturally so conscientious as some of the other
-children. Add to these, persevering energy, great
-self-reliance, and such cheerful hopefulness that the
-idea of danger or failure never entered my head.
-Even to this day, perfect success and no mischances
-are always anticipated till reason corrects the calculation.</p>
-
-<p>Thus constituted, my strict religious training made
-little impression, for I rarely heard any thing of that
-which seemed so dull and unintelligible. Up to the
-age of sixteen my conceptions on this subject were
-about these: that God made me and all things, and
-was very great, and wise, and good; that he knew all
-I thought and did; that because Adam and Eve disobeyed
-him <i>once</i> only, he drove them out of Eden, and
-then so arranged it that all their descendants would
-be born with wicked hearts, and that, though this did
-not seem either just or good, it was so; that I had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">{xvii}</a></span>
-such a wicked heart that I could not feel or act right
-in any thing till I had a new one; that God only
-could give me a new heart; that, if I died without
-it, I should go to a lake of fire and brimstone, and be
-burned alive in it forever; that Jesus Christ was
-very good, and very sorry for us, and came to earth,
-and suffered and died to save us from this dreadful
-doom; that <i>revivals</i> were times when God, the Holy
-Spirit, gave people new hearts; that, when revivals
-came, it was best to read the Bible, and pray, and
-go to meetings, but that at other times it was of little
-use. This last was not taught, but was my own inference.</p>
-
-<p>My mind turned from all this as very disagreeable.
-When led by my parents and Christian friends to it, I
-tried to do as they told me, because I saw they were
-anxious and troubled, and I wished to relieve them.
-Two or three times, when I saw my father so troubled, I
-took <i>Doddridge's Rise and Progress of Religion</i>, and
-tried to go through the process there laid down, but
-with utter failure. Meantime, I rarely heard any prayers
-or sermons, and at fifteen I doubt if the whole of
-my really serious thoughts and efforts would, except
-the above, have occupied a whole hour.</p>
-
-<p>In the earlier periods of my religious training, my
-parents, in their instructions, and also my little hymns
-and catechisms, made the impression that God loved
-little children, and, though he was angry when they
-did wrong, he was pleased when they did right; and,
-as parental government was tender and loving, my impression
-of the feelings of the heavenly Parent were
-conformed to this, my past experience.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">{xviii}</a></span>
-But when, in more mature years, I came under the
-influence of "revival preaching," all this impression
-seemed to be reversed. I was taught to look at God
-as a great "moral governor," whose chief interest was
-"to sustain his law." Then there seemed to be two
-kinds of right and wrong, the "common" and the
-"evangelical." According to this distinction, I could
-not feel or do any thing that was right or acceptable
-<i>to God</i> till my birth-gift of a depraved heart was renewed
-by a special divine interposition.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, there did not seem to be any direct and
-practical way of securing this supernatural interference;
-for it was to be the result, not of any efforts of
-mine, nor were any divine promises or encouragements
-offered to secure my efforts. On the contrary, the selection
-of the recipients of this favor was regulated by
-a divine decree of "election," without reference to any
-acts of a being who did nothing but evil, and only evil,
-till this favor was bestowed. Moreover, all the exhortations
-to effort were based simply on the fact that,
-ordinarily, those who took a certain course were selected,
-though I perceived that sometimes those who
-did the least were chosen, while those who did the
-most were passed by.</p>
-
-<p>It was this view of the case that had the chief influence
-in leading to an entire neglect of all religious concerns.
-It was so nearly like a matter of mere chance,
-and there seemed so little adaptation of means to ends,
-that, to one so hopeful, and, at the same time, so practical,
-there was very little motive of any kind to lead
-to a religious life.</p>
-
-<p>The first real earnest feeling I ever had on this subject
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">{xix}</a></span>
-was when my tender mother died&mdash;such a mother
-as earth has seldom seen; as strong in intellect as
-she was modest and gentle in manners, and loving and
-sympathizing in heart. She left seven children younger
-than myself, one of them a babe, and I only sixteen.
-I really tried, for some time, to become a Christian, till
-the load of grief was alleviated by time, and then such
-efforts ceased; but these new responsibilities turned
-my practical habits into useful channels.</p>
-
-<p>Once after this, when "a revival" seemed closing,
-and my father expressed his distress for my indifference,
-I told him I was so happy I could not do any
-thing but enjoy life, and that <i>nothing but trials and
-sorrow</i> would do me any good. Tears came into his
-eyes as he said, "Dear child, must I die too?" The
-responsive tears came to my eyes, but soon all was
-forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>At this time my theory of morals was, that to lie,
-steal, swear, quarrel, disobey parents, and break the
-Sabbath, were sins for which I should feel guilty; but
-for not becoming a Christian, when I could not understand
-how to do it, never rested on my conscience as
-a sin, but was felt to be simply a misfortune. And I
-wondered, if God desired that I should have a new
-heart, and he only could give it, why he did not do so.
-This was the amount of my "reasoning" so far. Till
-nearly twenty, I gained little knowledge except by
-intercourse with intelligent people, for still I had no
-love for solid reading or study. At about that age, I
-remember turning over Reid's work on Mental Science,
-in which my mother had been deeply interested, and
-wondering how people could read such stuff.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">{xx}</a></span>
-At twenty that betrothal took place, so soon and
-so tragically ended! It was the realization of all my
-favorite dreams of earthly bliss. Affection, taste, ambition,
-every thing most desirable to me and to family
-friends, seemed secured. In a few months all was ended,
-and in the most terrible and heart-rending manner.</p>
-
-<p>After the first stunning effect was over, the next
-feeling was, "This is that indispensable sorrow! this
-is to save me from <i>eternal death</i>!" And so, as soon
-as I could do any thing, I began a course of religious
-reading, prayer, and mental conflict. I tried to remedy
-that pernicious mental habit of reverie and castle-building;
-I tried to do I knew not what in "becoming a
-Christian."</p>
-
-<p>Shut up in entire seclusion, all my dearest hopes
-forever crushed, without hope or object in life, overwhelmed
-with grief, horrified less at his dreadful death
-than at the awful apprehensions he himself had imparted
-that he was unprepared to die, I spent week after
-week in reading the stern and powerful writings of
-President Edwards, Dwight's System of Theology, and
-other similar works. I hoped for nothing, cared for
-nothing but to become a Christian. Yet no one could
-tell me intelligibly how to do it, while it was clear that
-all expected nothing from my efforts, and that all was
-dependent on a divine efflatus that was to change the
-birth-gift of a depraved heart.</p>
-
-<p>And yet I was told that the fault was all my own;
-that it was my obstinate <i>unwillingness</i> to do what was
-required that alone made it needful for God to interfere.
-This was urged as a doctrine from God, and so,
-though it seemed as if I was not only willing, but that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">{xxi}</a></span>
-I longed for this change, I submitted my humble intellect
-to His, and owned that it must be so. So passed
-several dark and weary months.</p>
-
-<p>Next, I went to visit the parents of the friend I had
-lost. Here I read his private records of <i>years</i> of almost
-superhuman effort to govern his mind, and to
-achieve the very thing I was laboring for, and yet, to
-his mind, all ended in entire failure; and this, too,
-without any murmuring, or any accusation of any one
-but himself. It was, as he maintained, because he was
-so ungrateful, so hardened, so obstinately "unwilling,"
-so averse from God and his service. And yet he was
-the model of every domestic, social, and official virtue;
-so reverent to God, so tender as a son and brother,
-so conscientious and faithful as an instructor! In
-not a single duty did he fail that the closest intimacy
-could discover; and yet, by his own showing, he had
-no love to God, and was entirely "unwilling" to love
-and serve him.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, I found his intelligent, tender,
-heart-broken mother had for years been living just
-such a conscientious life, without any hope that she
-was a Christian, while now her pride and darling son
-was lost to her forever on earth, and oh! where was
-he? and where should she meet him at last? And
-thus she died. The only brother, too, so conscientious
-and exemplary, was and long continued in the same
-same position of mind.</p>
-
-<p>These revelations took away all hope of any good
-from any farther efforts of mine. At this period I
-almost lost my reason. For some days I thought I
-should go distracted. The first decided "change of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxii" id="Page_xxii">{xxii}</a></span>
-mind" I now recall was an outburst of indignation
-and abhorrence. I remember once rising, as I was
-about to offer my usual, now hopeless prayer, with a
-feeling very like this: that such a God did not deserve
-to be loved; that I would not love him if I could, and
-I was glad I did not! It was but momentary, and
-the long training of years resumed its sway.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this period that I framed my first attempt
-at serious argument in a letter to my father. I took
-this position, that our own <i>experience</i> and <i>consciousness</i>
-were the highest kind of evidence of our mental
-power, and that I had this evidence of my mental inability
-to love God as required. My father's reply was
-published in the <i>Christian Spectator</i>, and was regarded
-as masterly and unanswerable. Its chief aim was
-to lessen confidence in my own consciousness, and to
-show that, as God was just and good, and certainly
-did require supreme love to him, we had the power to
-obey. I was unable to meet the argument, and so allowed
-that it must be so, and that all that was in my
-way was my own obstinate "unwillingness."</p>
-
-<p>But there was another point about which I attempted
-to reason that I did not give up so easily. According
-to the theory of "obstinate unwillingness," there
-was nothing in the Bible by way of promise, or even
-encouragement, for any like me. For how could God
-feel sympathy for obstinate rebels, or how make promises
-of hope and encouragement to those whose only
-difficulty was an unreasonable dislike to God and his
-service? Such texts as I quoted to the contrary (as
-Prov. 2:1-6; Matth. 7:7; John 4:10) were not for
-such as I, but for those already converted; and no
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiii" id="Page_xxiii">{xxiii}</a></span>
-prayers, even, were acceptable till offered by a renewed
-heart. So it seemed impossible, in any case, to pray
-acceptably to God for the greatest of all boons, redemption
-from the awful doom of eternal death; for at regeneration
-the blessing was already given, and before
-that act no prayer was acceptable. So there was no
-place for such a prayer. This I never accepted, though
-I did not quite venture to oppose it.</p>
-
-<p>At one time my mind turned with longing and tender
-emotions toward Jesus Christ. All he said and
-did appeared so reasonable and so kind that it seemed
-to me he would hear my prayers. I brought, to sustain
-this idea, the case of the young man whom "Jesus
-loved" when he had no religion. Here I was met by
-a theory that, till now, had not attracted my notice,
-which was, that there was a human soul in Christ joined
-to the Divine mind, and that it was this human soul
-that felt this "human sympathy" for sinners, and <i>bore
-all the suffering</i>, while the Deity had nothing but calm,
-unmingled bliss. This made me feel that I could love
-the human soul, but could not love God. Indeed, the
-sufferings of this innocent Savior, <i>unshared by God</i>,
-was the most revolting of all.</p>
-
-<p>At the close of a long year of such darkness and
-suffering, I went to my friends in Boston, where "a
-<i>revival</i>" was in progress, and where I met my father.
-Here I received the most tender sympathy, was taken
-to prayer-meetings, and every thing was said and done
-that piety and love could devise for my relief, but all
-in vain.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, I came to this attitude of mind: "I will not
-try any more to understand any thing about these doctrines.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiv" id="Page_xxiv">{xxiv}</a></span>
-I will not try any more to 'be convinced of
-sin' in this inability to love God. Something is the
-matter: it does not seem like obstinate 'unwillingness;'
-but if God says so, I will take his word for it.
-I will assume that He is just, and wise, and good, in
-spite of all that seems to contrary. I will try to do all
-He commands the best I can. <i>There must be a dreadful
-mistake somewhere</i>, but I will trust and obey,
-and wait quietly for light." At this time my father
-gave me some little hope. I knew not why, for I did
-not "love God" according to any of the ordinary tests.
-But I was encouraged to hope that my heart was "renewed,"
-and I shortly after made a public profession
-of religion in my father's church.</p>
-
-<p>During my residence with the friends referred to, I
-attempted the duties of a teacher to two young daughters
-of the family, and, to prepare myself, for the first
-time set my mind to real hard study. In five weeks
-I went through a large Arithmetic, of which I knew
-almost nothing; in seven weeks I completed Day's
-Algebra. Two schoolbooks on Chemistry and Natural
-Philosophy were also mastered that gloomy winter.
-I had no other resource within or without for so
-active a mind. Then my father urged me, for the sake
-of a sister, as my own pecuniary wants had been provided
-for, to commence a school in Hartford. As I
-taught only half a day, and "the higher branches"
-were but just entering female schools, I found no difficulty
-in keeping sufficiently ahead of my pupils.
-Thus commenced my career as a teacher.</p>
-
-<p>I went on several years with no other evidence of
-"love to God," which was the main test of "regeneration,"
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxv" id="Page_xxv">{xxv}</a></span>
-but perseverance in the determination to assume
-that He was wise, just, and good, and to do all I could
-to obey him. My great aim in life was to find out
-what He required from the Bible, and then to try to
-do it as well as I could. Besides this, I imitated the
-methods of Christian worthies. I kept a religious diary&mdash;read
-religious books&mdash;went to religious meetings&mdash;prayed
-in my school, and taught religion to my pupils
-as it had been taught to me. Often, when I found
-suffering young minds embarrassed by my own difficulties,
-willing and anxious to do all in their power,
-and yet unable to feel as required, I almost lived over
-past anguish of spirit, and could scarcely nerve myself
-to instruct them that all the wrong was their own "obstinate
-unwillingness." There was a constant conflict
-between the theories to which I had bowed my intellect,
-and thought I really believed, and the impulses
-of my moral nature and common sense.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes these questions were intolerably imperative.
-What evidence is there that what God says is
-<i>true</i>, when He claims to be wise, and just, and good,
-when He has done such contradictory things? For a
-single act, done six thousand years ago, the <i>first</i> act
-of disobedience too, He has so constituted things that
-all the human minds that might be made right are
-formed so "<i>depraved</i>" as that not one of them will ever
-be "willing" to love and obey the Creator till He "<i>renews</i>"
-their minds. If I were to act thus, I should
-think it right for every one to believe I was cruel and
-unjust until I showed good reasons for it. And if I
-saw any one ruining the minds of young children, or
-permitting Adam or any one else to do it, when I had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvi" id="Page_xxvi">{xxvi}</a></span>
-power to prevent it, I should say it was right to consider
-him an abominable and hateful being till he showed
-good reasons for such a course.</p>
-
-<p>Such thoughts were banished by the force of a strong
-will, and I continued to hold on to the Bible as a revelation
-from God, and to His claims as being wise,
-and just, and good. My renewed decision was, "There
-is some <i>dreadful mistake somewhere</i>; but I will take
-God's word and trust it, do the best I can, and wait
-till all is made clear."</p>
-
-<p>In the later periods of life, a mode of religious training
-has come repeatedly under my observation, to which
-a brief reference will here be made. I have known
-children, no more favorably endowed than myself, and
-some of them less so, whose parents were no more
-earnest and faithful than mine, though on a different
-theory.</p>
-
-<p>These children were first trained to prompt, unquestioning,
-and universal obedience to their parents'
-commands, almost such as is required by their Creator
-to his fixed and unalterable laws. At the same time
-they were treated with the greatest tenderness and
-sympathy, and as soon as they could understand the
-reasons for parental requirements, these reasons were
-given, but always with the understanding that implicit
-obedience must often be rendered without understanding
-the reasons. When these habits of confiding
-and affectionate obedience were formed, then they were
-taught that Jesus Christ was the Maker, Friend, and
-Father of all, who loved all his children as these parents
-loved their little ones, only more and better;
-that He created them to be happy, rejoiced to see
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvii" id="Page_xxvii">{xxvii}</a></span>
-them so, and was always sorry for them in every
-trouble.</p>
-
-<p>They were taught that there are <i>right</i> ways and
-<i>wrong</i> ways of seeking to be happy; that Jesus Christ
-came into this world to teach us what are these right
-and wrong ways, and that His instructions are written
-in the Bible; that it is very difficult to feel and
-act right in all things; that, when children <i>try</i> to do
-so, the Savior is pleased with them, and, though they
-see him not, is present with them to help them; that,
-when they fail, and feel or act wrong, he is grieved, as
-their parents are, and as ready to forgive and help
-them, when they too are sorry, and continue to try to
-do right in all things; that <i>they are Christians just
-so far as they succeed in obeying Christ</i>, and that, the
-more they try, the more help they will have, and the
-better they will succeed.</p>
-
-<p>Thus these children grew up with the feeling that
-whenever they did any thing that was kind, honest,
-honorable, just, and self-denying, they were pleasing,
-not only their parents, but their best and ever-present
-Friend. Under such a course, the varied duties of religion
-and of social and domestic life were gradually
-not only explained, but <i>enforced</i>, both by parental authority
-and example, till a character and habits were
-formed that were far more consistent with the New
-Testament exhibitions of Christian life than is often
-seen among mature Christians.</p>
-
-<p>Without at present expressing any other opinion in
-regard to this method, I am strong in the belief that
-if this course had been pursued with me in childhood,
-very different mental habits would have been
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxviii" id="Page_xxviii">{xxviii}</a></span>
-the result, and that the Christian life would have begun
-and progressed probably before the severe discipline
-of sorrow came, and certainly after it had been
-experienced.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, there is a deep conviction that
-many of my young pupils, who turned away from religion
-as uninviting, severe, and unintelligible, would,
-by another method, have been easily led into the true
-paths of pleasantness and peace.</p>
-
-<p>I wish now to exhibit the influence of one doctrine
-(which I claim to be that of reason as truly as of revelation)
-on a mind like mine. I have stated something
-of that hopeful, elastic, and happy temperament that
-seemed to make sorrow so indispensable to the development
-of my noblest powers. But the earthly sorrow,
-time and new interests would have remedied ere
-youth had passed. But that awful doctrine of <small>THE
-ETERNAL, IRREMEDIABLE LOSS OF THE SOUL</small>, so ground
-into my spirit by years of effort, of which this was
-the mainspring, has been the grand motive power of
-my whole life ever since. If I could in any way have
-satisfied myself that a time would come, however distant,
-when all sufferers would be repaid by eternal
-ages of bliss, and all the guilty, however long their period
-of purgation, would at last be pure and happy <i>forever</i>,
-I should have returned to life and its enjoyments
-with fresh zest after such a period of privation. But
-I could not gain any such assurance without the Bible,
-but rather the reverse; while all the life and teachings
-of Christ and the Apostles seemed entirely based on the
-assumption that our whole race were in awful danger,
-that some were to be saved and some were to be <i>lost</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxix" id="Page_xxix">{xxix}</a></span>
-<i>forever</i>, and that the great end for which Christ lived,
-and for which his followers are to live, is to <small>SAVE AS
-MANY AS POSSIBLE</small> from this awful doom.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, I could not see how any one could feel any
-respect for the teachings of Christ when such terrible
-things were uttered by him, if there was no just reason
-thus to terrify and alarm mankind. Times without
-number, I went over the New Testament to see if I
-could find any <i>honest</i> way of escaping that doctrine,
-and always ending with a deeper and more awful conviction
-of its reality. The result was, that while, for
-the first year, I was driven to such mental effort and
-suffering to save myself, as soon as the least hope
-dawned that I was safe, all that was kindly and sympathizing
-in my nature led me to renewed efforts to
-save others.</p>
-
-<p>After such a lesson of inability, both in my own
-case and that of such dear friends, no words can express
-the ineffable pity, sympathy, and almost horror
-with which I looked on the world around me. And
-when young and happy minds, such as once was my
-own, came under my training, I never felt any need of
-being "waked up," as some Christian people seemed
-to do. It only seemed to me I could never sleep.
-There never has been an hour for thirty years when a
-moment's consideration of this awful doctrine would
-not drive away every temptation to earthly ambition,
-or any longings for earthly good of any sort for myself.
-Many times, when, by the presentation of such
-an awful theme, I have brought the young to me with
-tears and willing docility, and when, to the question
-"What can we do to be saved?" my shut-up heart
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxx" id="Page_xxx">{xxx}</a></span>
-was ready to exclaim "Nothing," I have been so burdened
-and worn as to be obliged to pray to forget, and
-to take every lawful mode to turn my thoughts to other
-less exciting themes. It was at such times I understood
-for what the love of the comic was implanted,
-and if all Christians should feel as I do, what might
-be the legitimate use of works of fiction, the drama,
-and the dance. In such a case, and properly regulated,
-they would be needful and only beneficial alteratives.</p>
-
-<p>I wish now to ask my theological friends to consider
-the character of my inner life. In all outward manifestations
-I took the theory of religion trained into me,
-and did my best to believe it, and talked, and wrote, and
-prayed, and acted before others on the assumption of its
-truth. But my inner life was after this fashion: as to
-prayer in private, I found great comfort in the preface
-to the Lord's prayer, "<i>After this manner</i> pray ye." It
-was a short, comprehensive prayer, which amounted to
-this, that God's will might be done on earth as in heaven;
-that our temporal wants might be supplied; that
-we might do right and escape evil. This I could sincerely
-feel and pray when all <i>details</i> distressed me.
-But, still better, this prayer began, "Our <i>Father</i>."
-Now to me, through my whole life, this word "father"
-had been associated with unparalleled tenderness, sympathy,
-and love; with truth, justice, and all that was
-lovable. I could not apply it to God without such
-associations, and so it comforted me&mdash;and that was all.
-But the prayers, hymns, and sermons conformed to the
-<i>theory</i> of religion were occasions when I had to struggle
-with feelings of disgust and abhorrence. Especially,
-at times, was this so in reference to the <i>atoning</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxi" id="Page_xxxi">{xxxi}</a></span>
-<i>sacrifice of Jesus Christ</i>, until I formed a curious mental
-habit of letting these things pass through my mind
-as something I did not understand, and then there
-seemed to flow in a vague impression of something
-better, I knew not what.</p>
-
-<p>In the progress of years I came to instruct some of
-the most vigorous and active minds I ever saw, both in
-mental science and in the interpretation of the Bible,
-and thus gradually evolved and applied "the principles
-of reason and rules of interpretation" in this work.
-The results will mainly appear in what follows.</p>
-
-<p>Up to this time, my feelings toward God (except
-sometimes when praying, as above described) were
-that, as He has said he was wise, and just, and good, I
-would take his word for it, in spite of all the evidence
-to the contrary, and feel and act as he required as far
-as I had power. My service, however, was much like
-that of a slave to a hard master. If "the <i>fear</i> of the
-Lord is the beginning of wisdom," I certainly began
-aright.</p>
-
-<p>But the whole force of my being was turned, not toward
-Him, but toward my lost, and suffering, and
-darkened fellow-beings. And when all my darkness
-was removed, and by a simple intellectual process of
-argumentation I drew from His Holy Word all my
-soul had longed for, my chief joy was, not that I was
-safe, not that I could feel emotions of love to Him, but
-that <i>He felt as I did</i> for this all-absorbing purpose
-and end of my existence&mdash;to save my fellow-men.</p>
-
-<p>Some minds seem to begin religious life with such
-emotions of love to the Creator as makes it easy to
-carry out the purpose to obey him. In my case, I began
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxii" id="Page_xxxii">{xxxii}</a></span>
-with the cool intellectual purpose to obey him,
-while it was <i>love</i>, not to Him, but to my fellow-men,
-that made it easy to carry out this purpose of obedience.
-But, in both cases, was it not the <i>spirit of
-obedience</i> that was the grand requisite? The <i>all-controlling
-purpose of acting right</i>, by obeying all the
-laws of the Creator as discovered by the light of Nature,
-or by His revealed Word&mdash;is not <i>this</i> the distinctive
-feature that marks the "<i>regenerated</i>" soul?</p>
-
-<p>It is theological <i>theories</i>, forced on mankind through
-popes, emperors, and church councils, by pains and
-penalties, which has mystified that grand question of
-life, "What must we do to be saved?" so that the answer
-to almost every other practical question is more
-clear than this. What do the great masses of men
-suppose that <i>they themselves</i> are to do if ever they become
-"regenerated?" Multitudes imagine that, by
-going to camp-meetings, or conference meetings, or in
-"revivals," some Divine efflux will come over them,
-of which the chief evidence is that the mind is filled
-with joy, or other delightful emotions. Others deem
-it a mysterious change, that takes place sometimes in
-sleep, without any voluntary act of the individual.
-Others suppose it to consist in certain emotions or
-mental acts, in reference to Jesus Christ, that come by
-divine influence. Others consider it an act of the intellect
-and will, of which emotions may be the preceding
-state, or may follow as a result. Probably the vast
-majority regard it as a mysterious indescribable event,
-that no one can understand till it is experienced, and
-which can not be made intelligible to an "unrenewed
-mind."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxiii" id="Page_xxxiii">{xxxiii}</a></span>
-Thousands of excellent, conscientious persons are
-moving about with dark minds and heavy hearts, who
-would instantly become happy and consistent followers
-of Christ if these theories could be removed from their
-minds, and they were sure that an earnest spirit of obedience
-to Jesus Christ is what is required; to which
-the promises of hope and encouragement are made;
-which is the highest evidence of regeneration, and the
-chief feature of that "love to God" required; while all
-emotions, frames, and feelings are nothing without it.
-Thousands of children and young persons, religiously
-trained, are held back from a religious life because it
-is conceived of as so mysterious, uninviting, and painful
-that they can neither understand or desire it. At
-the same time, it is true that, <i>after children have been
-trained wrong</i>, so that bad habits of mind are dominant,
-the clear understanding of this subject will not,
-in many cases, make it easy for them to commence a
-religious life, or make it look desirable.</p>
-
-<p>The fearful sanctions of eternity can not very directly
-be brought to bear on the minds of young children
-without great risk of entirely false impressions.
-We see, in the Old Testament, that when God was
-training <i>a race</i>, in the infancy of its development He
-made visible appearances, used temporal motives, and
-made no appeals to the sanctions of the invisible world.
-Like the parents just referred to, his first aim seemed
-to be to teach <i>habits of obedience</i> to God's temporal
-laws, while, at the same time, He displayed his sympathy,
-mercy, and love. And among his ancient people
-men became his obedient children by just such training
-as is now best fitted to young children.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxiv" id="Page_xxxiv">{xxxiv}</a></span>
-But when the race was farther advanced, so as to be
-able to act more by reason and on <i>general principles</i>,
-and when His religion, by new motives and forces, was
-to be extended from one nation to all the world, <i>then
-the Creator came himself</i>; and while disclosing those
-most terrific sanctions of the invisible world, at the
-same time exhibited such a manifestation of His pity,
-sympathy, and <i>self-sacrificing love</i> as renders these
-terrors safe and effective in such a conjuncture, as they
-would not be without.</p>
-
-<p>With these two classes of motives thus intensified,
-such a moral power has been generated, leading to
-self-denying efforts to educate and save mankind, as
-never existed before. In the case of the writer, the
-power of these terrible sanctions <i>alone</i> has been illustrated.
-In other cases, the power of Christ's love and
-example have been the leading motives. It is the
-<i>union of both</i>, clearly appreciated, and especially
-brought to bear on those who form the character of
-childhood and youth, that eventually is to renew the
-whole race, and bring every human being to perfect
-obedience to <i>all</i> the laws of the Creator.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>In the investigation which originated at the time the
-writer commenced teaching mental philosophy in connection
-with the Bible, this was the first point to which
-attention was led, "What is that '<i>reason</i>' or '<i>common
-sense</i>' which is so often appealed to as the umpire in
-religion, morals, and interpretation?" All the works
-of mental science within reach were examined, but it
-was long before any clear conceptions on this question
-were gained, and still longer before any <i>test</i> was evolved
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxv" id="Page_xxxv">{xxxv}</a></span>
-that seemed a <i>practical</i> one, as it is presented in this
-work. Not that these principles and the test are not
-indicated by metaphysicians in various forms of language,
-but that there is such a confusing variety of
-expression, and all is so presented as a <i>speculative</i> instead
-of a <i>practical</i> question, that years elapsed before
-that use of these principles which this work illustrates
-was attained.</p>
-
-<p>This is here referred to in explanation of future
-passages that otherwise might seem to imply that the
-author assumes to have discovered something not before
-known or recognized by metaphysicians. The
-very writings of Dr. Reid, which, in early life, were
-turned over with wonder that any one could be interested
-in them, probably contain the most complete
-and clear exhibition of these principles, and also recognize
-the <i>test</i> by which they are to be established.
-The writings of Sir William Hamilton exhibit other,
-but less practical tests of these principles.</p>
-
-<p>Until the printing of this volume was nearly complete,
-it was the plan of the author to have the whole
-work issued at once; and, with reference to this whole,
-its title was <span class="smcap">The Bible and the People, or Common
-Sense Applied to Religion</span>. But, after submitting
-this portion of the work to criticism, it was concluded
-to issue only one volume, and to wait until it was seen
-what reception the <i>principles</i> it offered would meet.
-In consequence of this, it seemed proper to transpose
-the title, as the latter portion of it best describes the
-contents of the first volume. This accounts for what
-is unusual in paging and in the running title on the
-left-hand pages.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">{9}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above center">THE<br />
-<span class="x-large">BIBLE AND THE PEOPLE.</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br />
-<small>THE GRAND QUESTIONS OF LIFE.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are now living through the period of demolition.
-In morals, in social life, in politics, in medicine,
-and in religion, there is a universal upturning of foundations.</p>
-
-<p>But the day of reconstruction seems to be looming
-in the orient, and now the grand question is, Are there
-any sure and universal principles that will evolve a
-harmonious system in which all shall agree? Or, is
-the only unity to be anticipated that which results from
-the unsatisfactory conclusion that all must "agree to
-disagree?"</p>
-
-<p>The first alternative is believed to be in our future;
-and it is hoped that this volume will contribute something
-toward evolving such principles of reconstruction.</p>
-
-<p>In some happily constituted minds and singularly
-favorable circumstances, the passages of this life are
-almost uniformly happy, and no clouds ever shut out
-the sunshine of a cheerful existence.</p>
-
-<p>But, as a general rule, the farther we advance in life,
-the more solemn become our convictions that its experiences
-are stormy, sad, disappointing, and unsatisfactory.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">{10}</a></span>
-And the nobler the mind and the more exalted
-its aspirations, the more surely are these lessons
-read and understood.</p>
-
-<p>If we turn aside from the lower haunts of poverty,
-vice, and crime, and look only at the more favored
-classes, we find men toiling for years and years to
-build up schemes which, in some sudden shock, crumble
-and pass away; or, are their high hopes accomplished,
-some bitter ingredient mingles with the cup
-of success, that turns it to gall.</p>
-
-<p>And so, in heart-histories, the tenderest ties are formed,
-as it would seem, only to be wrenched and torn.
-The young heart gives its fresh impassioned love to
-its appropriate object, and, just at the happy consummation,
-death or desertion forever ends life's brightest
-experience.</p>
-
-<p>The young parents receive their first-born with untold
-rapture, and then some disease or accident turns
-it to a hopeless idiot or ceaseless sufferer.</p>
-
-<p>The young husband lays at once his first love and
-his first born in the same grave. The tender parents
-spend years and years of care and effort to rear a darling
-child, and at the culmination of their hopes the
-flower is cut down.</p>
-
-<p>Business or misfortune severs those whose chief happiness
-would be to live together. The long-tried
-friends of early life are thrown into painful antagonisms
-that end their friendship. The conflicts of interest
-and party develop conduct and character that
-shatter confidence in men and tempt to misanthropy.</p>
-
-<p>In short, there are seasons when a thoughtful and
-tender spirit is tempted to feel as if some malignant
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">{11}</a></span>
-power were commissioned to seek out all that is most
-beautiful, harmonious, and delightful in the experience
-of our race, only to imbitter, confound, and destroy.</p>
-
-<p>And even where the experience of life has been the
-most favorable, as its closing years come on early
-friends pass away, the capacities and resources of enjoyment
-diminish, and the dim cloud that shrouds the
-closing vista awakens solemn and anxious meditations
-on the untried and silent future. Such experiences
-bring forth the heart-yearning questions that come, as
-it were, from the united voice of sad and suffering humanity:</p>
-
-<p>"Is there a God that controls the destinies of man?
-If so, what are his character and designs? Is this
-sad life our only portion, or shall we live beyond the
-grave? If there is another life before us, what influence
-has our conduct and character here on its solemn
-destinies?</p>
-
-<p>Are we left to our own unaided faculties to reason
-out from the nature of things around us the replies to
-these momentous questions, or has the Author of our
-being given some direct revelation to guide us?</p>
-
-<p>If such a revelation exists, is it made accessible to
-all, or must one portion of our race necessarily depend
-on fallible and interested interpreters?</p>
-
-<p>Does this revelation agree with reason and experience,
-and does it contain all that we need both for safe
-guidance and for peace of mind?</p>
-
-<p>It is believed that, in the following pages, it will be
-seen that every mind, of even only ordinary capacity,
-is furnished with the means of answering all these
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">{12}</a></span>
-questions, and with as much certainty as appertains
-to the ordinary practical questions of this life.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, it will appear that most of the
-difficulties and diversities of opinions in religious matters
-have mainly resulted from neglecting these means
-of obtaining truth and peace, and that the "good times
-coming" are all depending on the proper use of these
-means.</p>
-
-<p>As introductory to the first main topic, it is important
-to refer to the fact that, in all languages, man is
-recognized as possessing what is called <i>reason</i>. He
-is called a <i>reasonable</i> being and a <i>reasoning</i> being, and
-it is claimed that it is his reason that places him at the
-head of creation in this world.</p>
-
-<p>Again, in discussions on truth and duty, all men
-seem to agree that there is such a thing as <i>reason</i>, and
-that it is, more or less, to be made the umpire in settling
-all disputed points. It is true that very few
-seem to have a clear and definite idea of what this
-reason is, or how it is to be made an umpire. But all
-allow that there is such a thing, and that it has a very
-important office in deciding questions of truth and duty.</p>
-
-<p>Then, again, among more scientific men, we hear
-constant reference made to our "intuitions" and our
-"intuitive knowledge," as if there were some fixed
-truths which are superior to all others. It is true,
-that when we come to inquire specifically as to what
-are these intuitions, we often find them to be acquired
-notions, and sometimes such as are unsupported by
-any evidence, or even contrary to the best kind of evidence.
-Nevertheless, those who use these terms all
-agree in the fact that there are "intuitions" and "intuitive
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">{13}</a></span>
-knowledge," which are superior to any other
-kinds of knowledge, and involve a certainty of conviction
-which no reasoning can overthrow.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as we advance still higher in the world of
-letters, we find metaphysicians and philosophers assuming
-that a belief in certain truths is implanted in
-all rational minds by the Creator as a necessary part
-of their constitution, and that these truths are the foundation
-of most of our acquired knowledge. The truths
-or principles of mind thus recognized are called by various
-names, such as <i>reason</i>, the <i>principles of reason</i>,
-the <i>primary truths</i>, the <i>intuitions</i>, the <i>intuitive truths</i>,
-the <i>fundamental truths</i>, the <i>principles of common
-sense</i>, the <i>categories</i>, etc.</p>
-
-<p>The grand difficulty on this subject has been, that
-while all agree in the existence of such implanted
-truths, there has never been any <i>test</i> for deciding which
-are these truths, in distinction from our acquired notions.</p>
-
-<p>It is the object of the succeeding chapter to present
-the most important of these truths, and also to set forth
-an infallible test by which they may be distinguished
-from every other kind of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>And this attempt is made with a full conviction that
-success in such an effort is to be the foundation of that
-harmony of reconstruction which has been indicated as
-provided for the future.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">{14}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br />
-<small>PRINCIPLES OF REASON, OR INTUITIVE TRUTHS.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is maintained that the Author of mind has implanted,
-as a part of its constitution, the belief in certain
-truths, so that it is impossible to disbelieve them
-without losing that which distinguishes man as a rational
-being.</p>
-
-<p>It is also assumed that there is an <i>infallible test</i>, by
-which we can distinguish these truths from all those
-acquired notions which men often falsely call intuitions,
-or principles of reason, etc.</p>
-
-<p>Before proceeding, it will be premised that the attempt
-will not be to set forth <i>all</i> those truths that may
-properly be called intuitive, but it will be limited to
-those which are immediately connected with the subjects
-to be discussed.</p>
-
-<p>To proceed, then, the first principle of reason, or intuitive
-truth, is that by which we arrive at the idea of
-a great <i>First Cause, who was without a beginning</i>.
-In briefest form, this truth is usually thus expressed:</p>
-
-<p class="center small">EVERY CHANGE HAS A CAUSE.</p>
-
-<p>The position here maintained is that the human mind
-is so made that, whenever any kind of change (or effect)
-takes place, there inevitably follows a belief that
-there is some antecedent which is <i>the cause</i> of this
-change, or, in other words, that there is <i>something that
-produced this change</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">{15}</a></span>
-Now the question is not how this conviction first
-finds entrance to the mind, nor whether it is consequent
-on experience.</p>
-
-<p>It is simply a question of fact. Men always do,
-whenever they see any new form of existence, or any
-change take place, believe that there is some antecedent
-cause that produced this change.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, if a man should be found who was destitute
-of this belief, so that in his daily pursuits he
-assumed that things would spring into existence without
-any cause, and that there were no causes of any
-kind that produced the changes around him, he would
-be pronounced insane&mdash;a man who had "lost his reason."</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, we have an example of an intuitive truth,
-and also an illustration of the <i>test</i> by which we are to
-distinguish such truths from all others, viz.:</p>
-
-<p><i>Any truth is a principle of reason, or an intuitive
-truth, when all men talk and act as if they believed it
-in the practical affairs of life, and when talking and
-acting as if it were not believed, would universally
-be regarded as evidence that a man had "lost his
-reason."</i></p>
-
-<p>It will now be shown how a belief in this truth involves
-a belief in some great First Cause who himself
-had no beginning.</p>
-
-<p>The atheist says thus: Somewhere, far back in other
-ages, there were no existences at all, either of matter
-or mind; but at a given period, without any cause at
-all, the vast and wonderful contrivances of matter and
-mind began to exist.</p>
-
-<p>The first reply to this is, that it is an assertion without
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">{16}</a></span>
-evidence, either intuitive or otherwise. No being
-ever was known to testify of such an event, and there
-is no proof of it of any kind.</p>
-
-<p>Next, it is replied that placing such an event at
-distant ages does not render it any more credible than
-the assertion that worlds and intelligent beings are
-coming into existence at the present time without any
-cause. God has so constituted our minds that we can
-not believe that any curious and wonderful contrivance
-springs into being without a cause, either now or
-at any past period of time.</p>
-
-<p>If the atheist, in the common affairs of life, should
-talk and act as if he believed there were no causes for
-all the existences and changes around him, he would
-be regarded as having "lost his reason." And thus
-Holy Writ sanctions the decision: "The fool hath
-said in his heart, There is no God."</p>
-
-<p>We find, then, that our minds are made so that we
-can not help believing that whatever begins to be has
-an antecedent cause that produces it, and every change
-in any kind of existence has a cause. We find, also,
-the universe around us to be a succession of changes,
-and these we trace back and back again to antecedent
-causes.</p>
-
-<p>But at last we come to the grand question, "Who
-first started this vast system of endless and wonderful
-contrivances?"</p>
-
-<p>Only two replies are possible. The first is that of
-the atheist, that the whole started into existence without
-a cause, which we have shown that no sane mind
-can really believe.</p>
-
-<p>The only remaining reply is, there is <i>some great</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">{17}</a></span>
-<i>self-existent Cause, who never began to be, and who is
-the author of the universe of matter and mind</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_1" id="Ref_1" href="#Foot_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It must, however, be conceded that this intuitive
-truth does not aid us in deciding what is the nature
-and character of this First Cause. We are obliged to
-resort to other intuitive truths to settle this question.</p>
-
-<p>Neither does this principle aid us in deciding whether
-there may not be <i>more than one</i> self-existent cause;
-for several minds can be supposed to have united in will
-and action to bring forth this "universal frame," each
-one of which might have existed without beginning.</p>
-
-<p>The second intuitive truth is this:</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Two classes of causes exist, viz., material
-things, which act on mind, and immaterial or
-spiritual things, which act on matter.</span></p>
-
-<p>Some metaphysicians maintain that every thing is
-matter, and that mind or spirit is only one particular
-species of matter. Others teach that every thing is
-mind, and that all which we suppose to be material
-things are merely ideas in the mind of what really has
-no existence.</p>
-
-<p>Now we have no mode of proving that we have a
-soul or that we have a body, or that there are any real
-things existing around us. But God has so formed
-our minds that we can not help believing that our
-minds are distinct from matter, and that they are causes
-of changes in our body and in the things around us.
-Nor can we help believing that we have bodies, and
-that the things around us are realities. And no man
-could talk or act, in practical matters, with a contrary
-belief, without being regarded as having "lost his
-reason."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">{18}</a></span>
-The third intuitive truth is, that <small>THE MIND OF MAN
-IS A FREE AGENT</small>.</p>
-
-<p>By this is signified that mind is an independent
-cause of its own volitions, and capable, in appropriate
-circumstances, of choosing in <i>either</i> of two or more
-ways, not being, like matter, forced to a fixed and necessary
-mode of action.</p>
-
-<p>Some changes in mind are necessary effects produced
-by causes out of the mind. And some mental
-action is the necessary result of its constitution, and
-can not be otherwise. But <i>choice</i> or <i>volition</i> is an act
-of the mind itself, when it has power to choose in either
-of two or more ways without any change of circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>The fatalist denies this, and maintains that choice is
-a necessary act, the same as the changes in matter, and
-that at each act of choice the mind had no power to
-choose otherwise than as it does choose.</p>
-
-<p>In reply to this, nothing is needed but to show that
-all men believe, and show it by their words and actions,
-that they always have power to choose more ways than
-one. And after they have chosen a particular way,
-they still believe that they had the power to have
-chosen another way. And though metaphysicians may
-deny this in words, if any one of them, in practical every-day
-life, should talk and act as if he believed that
-he had no power to choose otherwise than as he does,
-he would be regarded as having "lost his reason."</p>
-
-<p>This subject has often been so treated as to embarrass
-some of the most acute minds. Yet the ordinary
-mind is as perfectly qualified to settle this question
-as the most astute philosopher. Do men believe
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">{19}</a></span>
-that they have no power to choose any other way than
-as they do choose? Do they talk and act in common
-life as if they believed it? Would not a man
-who talked and acted on the assumption that he had
-no power to choose otherwise than as he does choose
-be regarded as having "lost his reason?"</p>
-
-<p>All men of common sense must answer these questions
-alike, and thus decide that this is one of the intuitive
-truths.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth intuitive truth is, that <small>DESIGN IS EVIDENCE
-OF AN INTELLIGENT CAUSE, AND THE NATURE
-OF A DESIGN PROVES THE INTENTION AND CHARACTER
-OF THE AUTHOR</small>.</p>
-
-<p>It is by the aid of this principle of reason that we
-gain a knowledge of the character and designs of our
-Creator. All minds are so constituted that when they
-find a contrivance fitted to accomplish some end, they
-can not help believing that the author of it is an <i>intelligent</i>
-cause, and that he <i>intended</i> to secure that end.</p>
-
-<p>This position is finely illustrated by Paley. He describes
-a savage finding a watch in a desert, who is
-made to comprehend all its curious contrivances for
-marking time. This savage, he claims, would inevitably
-conclude that some intelligent person made the
-watch, and that it was his design to have it keep
-time.</p>
-
-<p>In like manner, should the residence of a person be
-inspected, and be found filled with contrivances for
-producing mischief and for torturing men and animals,
-the result would be a belief that the author of these
-things was cruel and malignant. On the other hand,
-were these contrivances calculated to produce only comfort
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">{20}</a></span>
-and happiness, the inevitable belief would follow
-that the contriver was benevolent.</p>
-
-<p>Again, if these designs were found to involve powerful
-and magnificent results, the immediate belief
-would follow that the author was wise and powerful as
-well as benevolent.</p>
-
-<p>This illustrates the method by which this implanted
-principle of reason enables us to learn the design and
-character of the Author of the universe by the works
-of creation.</p>
-
-<p>The fifth intuitive truth is, that <small>NO RATIONAL MIND
-WILL CHOOSE EVIL WITHOUT ANY HOPE OF COMPENSATING
-GOOD</small>.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that any person was seeking pain and evil
-without hope of compensating good would prove to all
-that "reason was lost." No sane mind ever acts thus.</p>
-
-<p>It is by the aid of this intuitive truth that we rely
-on human testimony. The surest mode of establishing
-the reliability of a witness is to show that by false
-testimony he would knowingly incur evil and gain no
-good. In such circumstances no one would believe
-that a witness would be false.</p>
-
-<p>The sixth intuitive truth is, that <small>THINGS WILL CONTINUE
-AS THEY ARE AND HAVE BEEN TILL THERE IS
-EVIDENCE OF A CHANGE OR OF A CAUSE FOR A CHANGE</small>.</p>
-
-<p>All the business of this life rests on a belief in this
-implanted truth, and equally so do our inferences in
-regard to the immortality of the soul and a future state.</p>
-
-<p>The belief that the sun will continue to rise, or that
-the seasons will return, rests solely on the fact that
-these events have been uniform in past time, and that
-we know of no cause for a change from this uniformity.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">{21}</a></span>
-And were any person to talk and act as if destitute of
-this belief, he would be deemed insane.</p>
-
-<p>Bishop Butler's celebrated argument on the immortality
-of the soul is founded entirely on this principle.
-It is briefly this:</p>
-
-<p>Things will continue as they are and have been unless
-there is some evidence of some change or cause
-for a change. At death the soul exists. The dissolution
-of the body is no evidence of the destruction of
-the soul, and there is no kind of evidence that it is destroyed.
-Therefore we infer that the soul continues
-to exist after the dissolution of the body.</p>
-
-<p>The main point in this argument is to show that
-there is no evidence that the act of death involves the
-destruction of the soul. If this can be established,
-then the belief must follow that the soul exists after
-death. By the same method Butler establishes several
-other doctrines of the Bible.</p>
-
-<p>It is by the aid of this principle that what are called
-the laws of nature are established. By means of human
-testimony we learn what has been the uniform
-course of nature. And then men conclude that what
-has been will continue to be until some new cause intervenes
-to change this uniformity.</p>
-
-<p>The seventh intuitive truth is, that the <small>NEEDLESS
-DESTRUCTION OF HAPPINESS OR INFLICTION OF PAIN
-IS WRONG</small>, and <small>THAT WHATEVER TENDS TO PRODUCE
-THE MOST HAPPINESS IS RIGHT</small>.</p>
-
-<p>The terms right and wrong, as used by mankind,
-always have reference to some <i>plan</i> or <i>design</i>. Any
-thing is called right when it fulfills the design for which
-it is made, and it is called wrong when it does not.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">{22}</a></span>
-Thus a watch is right when it fulfills its design in
-keeping time. A compass is right when it points to
-the north. And so of all contrivances.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, then, the question as to the right and
-wrong action of mind involves a reference to the <i>object</i>
-or <i>design</i> of the Author of mind. At this time it
-will be assumed (the proof being reserved for future
-pages) that the design or object for which God made
-mind was <i>to produce the greatest possible happiness
-with the least possible evil</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It is also assumed, without here exhibiting the proof,
-that the impression of this design is so inwrought into
-the mental constitution that whatever is perceived to
-be destructive to happiness is felt to be <i>wrong</i>&mdash;that
-is, <i>unfitted</i> to the design of the Author of all things,
-which the mind <i>feels</i> often when it can not logically
-set forth the reason. So, also, whatever is seen to
-promote the greatest amount of happiness is felt to be
-right.</p>
-
-<p>The mind is so constituted that, without any act of
-reasoning as to the tendencies of things, there are certain
-feelings and actions that the mind turns from as
-<i>unfit</i> and to be abhorred.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, when plighted faith is violated, or a great benefactor
-treated with cruelty and indignity by those he
-has benefited, a feeling of unfitness and abhorrence is
-awakened, independent of all considerations of the tendency
-of such conduct to destroy happiness.</p>
-
-<p>In like manner, there are certain acts of gratitude
-and benevolence that always awaken approval and admiration
-as suitable and right, without any reference
-to future tendencies or results.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">{23}</a></span>
-At the same time, it is true that when, by a process
-of reasoning, it is seen that the <i>tendency</i> of any course
-of conduct is to diminish happiness or inflict evil without
-compensating good, there arises the same feeling
-of disapproval of it as wrong, and unfitted to the end
-for which all things are made. This is often the case
-when there is no definite, distinct idea of what the
-great design of the Creator may be.</p>
-
-<p>This belief and feeling of unfitness and wrongfulness
-is common to all sane minds. It is true that there are
-different views of what actions are destructive to happiness,
-but when there is a clear perception that a given
-act will do great harm and no good, every mind will
-feel that it is wrong; and when it is seen that any act
-will do good without any evil, it is felt to be right.
-And this is so universal, that if any one should be
-found to talk and act with a contrary belief, he would
-be regarded as having lost a part of that which constitutes
-him a rational being.</p>
-
-<p>The eighth intuitive truth is, that <small>THE EVIDENCE OF
-OUR SENSES IS RELIABLE</small>.</p>
-
-<p>This statement needs some qualification. It often
-requires time to learn accurately what our senses do
-testify, and sometimes the apparent experience of the
-senses proves incorrect. For example, to one just restored
-to sight, every object seems to touch the eye,
-and distances are learned only by experience. So the
-sun and stars seem to move, when it is the earth that
-is turning. So, also, the senses are sometimes diseased
-or disordered, and make false reports.</p>
-
-<p>The true meaning, then, of the above intuitive truth
-is, that when men know that they have had all requisite
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">{24}</a></span>
-experience, and understand properly all the circumstances
-of the case, they can not help believing the
-evidence of their senses, and when this belief is lost, a
-person is regarded as insane.</p>
-
-<p>The ninth intuitive truth is, that <span class="smcap">whenever there
-is a change in the established order of nature
-surpassing human power, it is evidence of a supernatural
-agency that is sanctioned by the
-Author of the laws of Nature</span>.</p>
-
-<p>The conviction of the wisdom and power of the Author
-of this vast and wonderful frame around us is
-such that whatever changes may occur in its established
-order must be felt to be by his permission.</p>
-
-<p>To illustrate this, suppose a man appeared claiming
-to be a teacher sent from God. In proof of this, he
-commands a mountain to be uptorn and thrown into
-the sea. Now, if this phenomenon should follow his
-command, it would be impossible for any who witnessed
-it to refrain from believing that the Author of
-Nature performed this miracle to attest the authority
-of his messenger.</p>
-
-<p>In order to insure this belief in the interference of
-Deity, there must be full evidence that there can be
-no deception, and that the miraculous performance is
-entirely beyond human power and skill. Men always
-talk and act on the assumption that <i>such</i> miracles are
-from God, and that all rational minds so regard them.</p>
-
-<p>The tenth intuitive truth is, that <small>IN ALL PRACTICAL
-CONCERNS WE ARE TO CONSIDER THAT COURSE
-RIGHT WHICH HAS THE BALANCE OF EVIDENCE IN ITS
-FAVOR</small>.</p>
-
-<p>There are few practical questions where we can
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">{25}</a></span>
-have perfect certainty as to the right course. In almost
-all the concerns of life men are guided by <i>probabilities</i>.
-It is not certain that seed will spring up,
-or that a ship will return, or that a given medicine will
-cure, or that any future project will succeed; but men
-go forward in their pursuits with exactly the same decision
-as if the probabilities that guide them were certainties.
-They find which course has <i>the most</i> evidence
-in its favor, and then act as if it was certain
-that this was the right course to attain their designs.</p>
-
-<p>And if any person should habitually act as if he believed
-the reverse, he would be regarded as having lost
-his reason.</p>
-
-<p>The eleventh intuitive truth is, that <small>NOTHING IS TO
-BE ASSUMED AS TRUE UNLESS THERE IS SOME EVIDENCE
-THAT IT IS SO</small>.</p>
-
-<p>This principle is always assumed in all practical affairs.
-If a man were to send a cargo abroad without
-<i>any</i> evidence that it was wanted, he would be called a
-fool; and so in all other concerns, every sane man
-takes this for his rule of conduct.</p>
-
-<p>The preceding include the principles which it is
-believed are the grand foundation on which rest most
-of the practical knowledge of life, as well as the doctrines
-and duties both of natural and revealed religion.</p>
-
-<p>There are some other intuitive truths which are not
-introduced here, and there are some principles that
-others have placed in this honorable position which
-could not stand the <i>test</i> here introduced, and claimed
-to be the only true and reliable one.</p>
-
-<p>The intuitive truths have been called "fundamental
-truths," because they are the ultimate basis of all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">{26}</a></span>
-knowledge secured or established by the process of
-<i>reasoning</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This process consists in assuming a certain proposition
-to be true as the <i>basis</i> of an argument. If this
-proposition is granted, or supposed to be granted, then
-the reasoner proceeds to show that the point in dispute
-is in reality <i>included</i> in the truth already granted, so
-that believing the first proposition, or basis, necessarily
-involves a belief in the one to be proved.</p>
-
-<p>For example, if a man wishes to prove that a certain
-person is a benevolent man, he proceeds thus:</p>
-
-<p>Let it be granted that all persons who are habitually
-contriving and laboring to promote the happiness of
-all around them are benevolent persons. This basis
-proposition being conceded to be true, the reasoner proceeds
-to present evidence that the person in question
-habitually is laboring for the good of others. This
-being done, he draws the conclusion that this person
-is <i>included</i> in the class which have been granted to be
-benevolent.</p>
-
-<p><i>Reasoning</i>, then, is a process for exhibiting evidence
-that a point which is disputed is included in a proposition
-already believed and allowed.</p>
-
-<p>But suppose the disputant denies the truth of the
-basis or foundation proposition, then it becomes necessary
-to establish that proposition by another act of
-reasoning. In order to do this, still another proposition
-is assumed which is allowed to be true, and
-which the reasoner then attempts to show includes
-his former basis proposition.</p>
-
-<p>This process may thus be continued till, finally, it
-comes to pass that the basis proposition assumed is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">{27}</a></span>
-an intuitive truth. In this case the victory is secure;
-for whatever can be shown to be embraced in an intuitive
-truth must be conceded to be true, and whatever
-is contradictory to an intuitive truth must be allowed
-to be false.</p>
-
-<p>Now it can be shown that all the reliable practical
-knowledge of this life can be thus traced back till it is
-seen to rest on some intuitive truth as its basis.</p>
-
-<p>So, also, all the doctrines and duties, both of natural
-and revealed religion, can be shown to rest on these intuitive
-truths. This indicates the propriety of the
-name given to these first principles as <i>principles of
-reason</i> and <i>fundamental truths</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, is presented the foundation of the hope
-so confidently expressed, that a time is coming when,
-in all the great questions which now agitate humanity
-with doubts, discussions, and conflict, there shall result
-universal harmony and unity of opinion. If such intuitive
-principles are implanted in all human minds;
-if there is a <i>certain test</i> by which these principles can
-be eliminated and established; and if, by a sure process
-of reasoning, every correct practical and religious
-opinion can be shown to rest on these principles, and
-every false one to contradict them, then we can plainly
-perceive the true path to this golden age.</p>
-
-<p>It is to cultivate the powers of the human intellect,
-to train every mind, from early life, to detect the true
-laws of reason, and to practice accurately the process
-of reasoning. Not that this alone will suffice without
-the attending cultivation of the moral powers, and the
-promised blessing of heavenly aid. But the first would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">{28}</a></span>
-powerfully tend to secure the second, and then the
-third would inevitably be bestowed.</p>
-
-<p>Before proceeding farther, it is desirable to recognize
-the fact that the word <i>reason</i> is used in several ways.
-Sometimes it signifies simply the intuitive truths.
-Sometimes it includes all those principles and powers
-of mind which are employed in the act of reasoning.
-Sometimes it refers to the intellect in distinction from
-the feelings. In all cases, however, the connection will
-determine in which of these uses it is employed.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_1" id="Foot_1" href="#Ref_1">[1]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Note A.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">{29}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br />
-<small>SOURCES OF HUMAN KNOWLEDGE.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have seen that there are certain intuitive truths,
-the belief of which is implanted as a part of our mental
-constitution, and that there is a <i>test</i> by which we
-can distinguish them from all other kinds of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen, also, that we are dependent on these
-truths for a large portion of our acquired knowledge,
-inasmuch as they are the basis of <i>reasoning</i>, which is
-that process by which we gain new truths by the aid
-of those already believed.</p>
-
-<p>It has been intimated, also, that it is chiefly by the
-aid of these principles that a harmonious system of
-truth is to be anticipated, in which all minds will eventually
-agree, at least in all great questions involving the
-eternal interests of our race.</p>
-
-<p>We will now proceed in an inquiry as to what are
-<i>the sources of human knowledge</i> in addition to these
-first implanted truths.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, then, we have our own personal
-experience of the nature and action of our own minds,
-and of the qualities and powers of the persons and
-things around us. Next we have the experience of
-other minds as to their own mental history and the
-properties and powers of all that has surrounded them.
-This knowledge is communicated by them to us either
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">{30}</a></span>
-directly by word of mouth, or indirectly by writings
-and books.</p>
-
-<p>The experience of a single mind is very limited
-both as to space and time, and it is only by the united
-experience of many persons, in different periods and
-places, that we arrive at what are called the laws of
-nature and experience. The laws of day and night,
-summer and winter, the tides, and all the other phenomena
-of nature, are simply a uniform succession and
-regularity of events, from which men infer a future
-regularity of the same experience. Much of this knowledge
-of past uniformity is transmitted from others to
-us, and rests on our confidence in human testimony,
-and it has been shown that this confidence is based on
-one of the intuitive truths.</p>
-
-<p>Next, we have the knowledge gained by the process
-of reasoning, and for this we are dependent on the intuitive
-truths which are the foundation of all reliable
-deductions.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, we have the resource of <i>revelations</i> from the
-Creator of all, who can communicate to us knowledge
-that we can not gain either by intuition, or experience,
-or reasoning.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the kinds of knowledge to be gained
-from each of these sources, it is clear that the experience
-of ourselves and others furnishes us with nothing
-but facts, as it regards matter and mind, as they are
-developed in <i>this</i> world only. As it respects the Creator,
-his character and designs, the immortality of the
-soul, and the future destiny of our race, we gain nothing
-by our own personal observation or experience.
-"No man hath seen God at any time." No one has
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">{31}</a></span>
-gone to "the silent land" to learn by inspection the
-secrets of that dim shore, or the destiny of the soul
-when it passes from earth.</p>
-
-<p>Neither have we any resource in the experience of
-others who can go to the invisible world and transmit
-to us the knowledge there gained. There is not a
-man upon earth that can furnish any reliable information
-on these subjects from any personal knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>It becomes, then, a most interesting inquiry as to
-the amount and kind of knowledge to be gained by
-means of the intuitive truths, experience, and reasoning,
-independently of revelation. In what follows this
-inquiry will be pursued.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">{32}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br/>
-<small>OF THE KNOWLEDGE GAINED BY HUMAN EXPERIENCE
-IN REGARD TO THE NATURE OF MIND AND THE LAWS
-OF THE SYSTEM OF WHICH IT IS A PART.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have seen that there are only these sources of
-human knowledge, viz., the <i>intuitive truths</i>, <i>human
-experience</i>, <i>reasoning</i>, and <i>revelation</i>. We have alluded
-to the nature of intuitive knowledge; we will
-now inquire as to the nature of the knowledge gained
-by human experience, firstly, in regard to the <i>constitution
-of mind and the laws of that system in which it
-is placed</i>. We restrict our inquiries to those points
-which have the most direct bearing on the great questions
-to be discussed.</p>
-
-<p>As it respects the nature of mind, then, as exhibited
-by experience, we learn, in the first place, that it is constituted
-with desires and propensities for various kinds
-of enjoyment. These are the gratifications secured by
-the senses, the pleasures of taste, the happiness of
-giving and receiving affection, the various intellectual
-pleasures, and the still higher enjoyment resulting
-from our moral nature. All these are common to the
-race, though in varied degrees and combinations. The
-mind is also constituted with susceptibilities to pain
-and suffering from all the sources from which enjoyment
-may spring.</p>
-
-<p>With these susceptibilities are combined an all-pervading
-and constant <i>desire</i> to gain enjoyment and to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">{33}</a></span>
-escape suffering. This desire is the grand <i>motive</i> power
-to the mind, as the main-spring is to a watch. For
-this reason, awakened desires to gain any particular enjoyment
-or escape any pain are called <i>motives</i>. And
-so, also, all those things that cause these desires are
-called motives.</p>
-
-<p>Next, it is seen that the mind is endowed with intellect,
-or the intellectual powers, by which it can perceive
-the nature and relative value of various kinds of
-enjoyment, compare the present with the future, and
-judge both of what is most valuable and of the proper
-modes of securing it.</p>
-
-<p>To this add the power of choice or volition, by which,
-in view of any two or more kinds of enjoyment, the
-mind decides which shall be secured and which be denied.</p>
-
-<p>Thus constituted, the mind comes into action in a
-<i>system of law</i>.</p>
-
-<p>By this is signified that in every direction in which
-man can seek enjoyment there is a right course, or one
-that secures the good sought in such proper degrees
-and at such times as that the enjoyment designed is
-the result. At the same time there is a wrong course,
-or one in which the enjoyment sought is not secured,
-or, if gained, is combined with pain and disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>Thus there are right and wrong modes of seeking
-all the multiplied kinds of enjoyment, while to the right
-course is attached the reward of pleasure, and with the
-wrong course is connected the penalty of pain, either
-immediate or remote.</p>
-
-<p>Again, our minds come into existence in a <i>social</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">{34}</a></span>
-<i>system</i> so constituted that the rewards and penalties
-of law extend, not merely to the good and evil doer,
-but to those connected with him. Thus each mind is
-made dependent for happiness on the well-doing of
-those around almost as much as on its own obedience to
-law. The penalties for the sins of parents fall on their
-children, and the sins of children are visited on their
-parents, and thus in all the other relations of life.
-Equally so are the rewards of obedience shared by all
-who are connected with the well-doer.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it appears that in this life <i>happiness</i> is the
-joint product of the obedience of each individual and
-the obedience of all connected with him to the laws of
-the vast system in which we are placed.</p>
-
-<p>Again, each mind comes into this system of law in
-perfect ignorance of the right and wrong courses to be
-pursued. At the commencement of being there has
-been no knowledge of good or of evil to call forth desire
-or fear, while the only conceivable way in which
-such a being can be taught law, and its penalties and
-rewards, is by <i>experience</i>. Good must be tasted before
-the desire for it can come, and evil must be felt
-before the fear of it can arise.</p>
-
-<p>After there has been some experience of pleasure
-and pain, and such advance in knowledge as that others
-around can teach the new-comer what are the right
-and wrong courses, then <i>faith</i> or <i>belief</i> becomes the
-leading mode of safety. From this time happiness or
-suffering will be proportioned to the <i>truth</i> of the instructions
-given, to the <i>faith</i> accorded, and to the <i>obedience</i>
-rendered.</p>
-
-<p>In this complicated system of law, it is found that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">{35}</a></span>
-the great Author of all is never moved to modify or suspend
-the penalties of wrong-doing by commiseration for
-the inevitable ignorance of inexperienced beings, nor by
-pity when wrong instructions are given, nor by sympathy
-for the pain inflicted. <i>Obedience</i>, exact, constant,
-persevering&mdash;this is the only mode of securing
-the enjoyment and escaping the pain that are the sanctions
-of law.</p>
-
-<p>And not only so, but it is often the case that disobedience
-to some law in only one instance will destroy
-the comfort and usefulness of a whole life. Nay,
-more, the neglect or the mistake of a parent sometimes
-will bring the penalty of violated law on some innocent
-child, whose whole life will thus be made miserable.</p>
-
-<p>Again, it is found that the sources of enjoyment are
-of different relative value.</p>
-
-<p>In the commencement of existence pleasure is secured
-mainly through the senses. Next come the
-higher social and domestic pleasures; then follow the
-intellectual enjoyments, the various gratifications of
-taste, and all the multitudinous resources open to a
-highly-cultivated, virtuous, and religious man.</p>
-
-<p>The greater the number of these sources, and the
-more elevated the nature of each, the greater the degree
-of happiness gained.</p>
-
-<p>Such, also, is the nature of things, that the lower
-kinds of happiness are placed first within our reach,
-and then, as the higher modes of enjoyment come, we
-often find them incompatible with the others, so that
-to obtain these we must, to some extent, relinquish the
-humbler classes. Thus, when a child begins to find
-the value of intellectual attainments, he sees they can
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">{36}</a></span>
-not be gained without a sacrifice of many indulgences
-that are of an inferior value.</p>
-
-<p>We now come to the <i>grand law</i> of the system in
-which we are placed, as it has been developed by the
-experience of our race, and that, in one word, is</p>
-
-<p class="center">SACRIFICE!</p>
-
-<p>Each mind finds that it has conflicting desires, so
-that one class must constantly be sacrificed to another
-of superior value. And the rule in reference to individual
-enjoyment is "<i>always to sacrifice the lesser for
-the greater good, having reference to the future as
-much as to the present</i>."</p>
-
-<p>This is the lesson of self-denial and self-control first
-taught to infancy and childhood, and just as fast as the
-reasoning powers are developed, the extent of this far-reaching
-rule is impressed on the mind. At first this
-rule is applied to the young child himself, and he is
-trained chiefly to understand what will injure or benefit
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>But gradually a new and higher law begins to appear.
-As soon as the child can be made to understand
-that he is surrounded by other minds, who can suffer
-and enjoy by the same rules that regulate his happiness,
-he begins to learn the other and still higher law
-of <i>sacrifice</i>; and that is, that "<i>the lesser good of the
-individual is always to be sacrificed to the greater good
-of the many, having reference always to the future as
-much as to the present</i>."</p>
-
-<p>Thus life commences with desires that are to be
-<i>controlled</i> and <i>denied</i>, first by parental power and influence,
-and next by the intellect and will of the child.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">{37}</a></span>
-And the farther life advances, the more numerous and
-complicated are the occasions where intellect must
-judge what is best for self, and what is best for the
-commonwealth, whose interests must have precedence.</p>
-
-<p>And as self-denial always involves more or less pain,
-it becomes a fact that happiness is to be gained only
-by more or less <i>suffering</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, the greater the good to be gained, the
-greater is the self-denial and suffering involved in its
-attainment. Though there are exceptions, this certainly
-is the general rule.</p>
-
-<p>The history of an individual is a history of self-conquest.
-It is a history of the self-denial and suffering
-involved in subjecting the physical to the intellectual,
-and both to the moral nature.</p>
-
-<p>In like manner, the history of the race, from infancy
-through its stages of barbarism, heathenism, civilization,
-and Christianity, is a process of <i>suffering</i>, as the
-lower principles of humanity are gradually subjected
-to the higher, while men learn to give up lower gratifications
-for the more elevated, and to sacrifice the lesser
-good of the minority to the well-being of the majority.</p>
-
-<p>But the cheering aspect of the case is that the effects
-of suffering are salutary and tonic. The child
-who is trained to bear cold bravely, to undergo toil,
-and to meet crosses, becomes strong in body, and enterprising
-and energetic in spirit; while a course of
-ease and indulgence debilitates both mind and body.
-This is true most decidedly when such a course is
-cheerfully and voluntarily assumed, and is not forced
-merely by fear of penalties.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">{38}</a></span>
-The same is true of communities. Those people
-who live in a cold climate and on a hard soil become
-vigorous, industrious, and enterprising; while a soft
-climate, and such abundance as requires no self-denial
-and toil, tend to national debility and decay.</p>
-
-<p>Another fact is still more cheering, and that is, that
-the more a habit of self-control and self-denial is formed,
-the easier they become, so that what at first was
-severe and painful may become a pleasure. Such may
-be the progress of a virtuous mind, that, ultimately,
-acting right, or conscious rectitude, may become more
-desirable and agreeable than any other mode of enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>The history of mankind thus far shows that as a
-race we are progressing to higher and higher happiness.
-As we take the history of each nation from its origin,
-we find it a development of progress from lower to
-higher degrees of enjoyment. Then we find periods
-of retrocession and decay. Still, the experience of one
-age is transmitted more or less to another, so that, on
-the whole, the race has been gaining, both as to the
-number of sources of enjoyment received and as to the
-relative value of the enjoyments sought. The proportion
-of persons who secure the higher class of enjoyments
-is certainly greater now than at any former period
-of the world's history.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the history of the world teaches us that while
-the race gains in knowledge of the laws of the system
-and in obedience to them, there are vast multitudes to
-whom, as individuals, this life is a <i>total failure</i>. Their
-career has involved such frequent and fatal violations
-of the laws of the system, that their progress is constantly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">{39}</a></span>
-downward; and, so far as past experience gives
-any data, we must infer that continued existence would
-prove a continued downward progress. The glutton,
-the drunkard, the miser, the sluggard, the licentious,
-the selfish, malignant, and cruel&mdash;all these are binding
-their spirits with the <i>chains of habit</i>, rendering
-obedience to the laws they are violating more difficult
-and improbable.</p>
-
-<p>But then, as a counterbalancing result, it is seen that
-these losses to individuals are made available to the
-protection and improvement of the race, and seem indispensable
-to it; for it is the example of the evils
-suffered by wrong-doers that is constantly exercising
-a preservative influence to deter others from similar
-courses. Thus good is constantly educed from ill, even
-in the most melancholy cases.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that it is the desire of good and fear
-of evil that is the motive power in causing all mental
-action, and we have the history of man to teach us also
-what kinds of motives prove the most effective in securing
-that obedience to law which is the only way to
-true and perfect happiness.</p>
-
-<p>Our only mode of learning the nature of a thing is
-to observe how it acts and is acted upon. This is as
-true of mind as it is of material things. What, then,
-has the experience of our race taught as to the nature
-of mind in reference to the kinds and relative influence
-of motive that secure obedience to law?</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, then, we learn that <i>fear of evil
-is indispensable</i>. As soon as children in the family,
-or adults in society, find that no harm comes from gratifying
-their desires, all restraint is removed. So strong
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">{40}</a></span>
-is this necessity, that when natural penalties seem uncertain
-or far off, parents and civil rulers find it imperative
-to add those which are more immediate and discernible.</p>
-
-<p>But with this we learn that fear alone is not a healthful
-stimulus. Children and slaves who have no motives
-to action but fear of penalties are never so successfully
-led to obedience as when other more agreeable
-influences are combined. A mind that is constantly
-goaded to action by fear of evil becomes torpid, or
-irritable, or despairing, or all together. The hope of
-good, or rewards, then, are as indispensable to secure
-obedience to law as penalties. The proper balancing
-of the motives of fear of evil and hope of good is the
-grand art of controlling mind, both as it respects individuals
-and communities.</p>
-
-<p>In reference to those motives that are pleasurable,
-there are two classes which it is very important to
-recognize. The first class are those sources of enjoyment
-which are sought for the gratification of self
-without any reference to another. Of this class are
-the pleasures of the senses, the enjoyment of acquiring
-knowledge, the exercise of power, the pleasures of taste,
-and others that need not here be specified.</p>
-
-<p>The second class are those in which the enjoyment
-is secured by producing happiness for others, and is
-sought solely in reference to the enjoyment of another.
-The most decided illustration of this kind is that of a
-mother who is providing for her offspring. This and
-all true love has, as its distinctive feature, the pleasure
-found in conferring happiness on the beloved object.
-Gratitude, also, has for its main element the desire to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">{41}</a></span>
-make some returns of enjoyment to one who has conferred
-a favor.</p>
-
-<p>Experience has shown that the most powerful of all
-motives in securing obedience to law is that of <i>love</i>.</p>
-
-<p>When love is awakened toward a superior mind&mdash;when
-this superior mind knows what are the true rules
-of right and wrong, and is deeply interested to guide
-and aid the inferior mind&mdash;when this interest is expressed
-by all winning and attractive methods, nothing
-has ever yet been found so successful in securing obedience
-to the rules of right and wrong.</p>
-
-<p>The power of this principle is greatly enhanced when
-the superior mind is a benefactor. The bestowal of
-kindness excites a desire to make some returns of good,
-and when it is seen that such a benefactor is gratified
-by leading a dependent mind to right action, it proves
-a most powerful motive to obedience.</p>
-
-<p>Still more is the power of this principle increased
-when the favors bestowed are purchased by self-denial
-and suffering on the part of the benefactor. The more
-noble the benefactor, and the greater the good thus purchased
-or the evils thus averted, the stronger is the principle
-of gratitude leading to such returns of obedience.</p>
-
-<p>Again, experience has shown that the advance of the
-race has been by the agency of teachers and confessors
-who secured light and elevation to their fellows at the
-expense of labor, toil, and self-denial of the severest kind.</p>
-
-<p>These are the leading points in the results of human
-experience as to the nature of mind and the laws of
-the system of which it is a part.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">{42}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br />
-<small>KNOWLEDGE GAINED BY REASON AND EXPERIENCE AS TO A FUTURE STATE.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have shown that, independently of a revelation,
-we have no sources of knowledge except the intuitions
-reasoning and experience. Hereafter we will, as is often
-done, include the two first in the term reason.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen what knowledge has been furnished
-by human experience as to the nature of mind and
-the laws of the present system in which it is placed.
-We will now inquire as to the teachings of reason and
-experience in regard to the future.</p>
-
-<p>As to the question of the existence of the soul after
-the dissolution of the body, we have only one of the
-intuitive truths for our guide, viz., "things will continue
-as they are and have been till there is evidence
-of a cause for change," or, in other words, things will
-continue according to past experience till there is some
-evidence to the contrary.</p>
-
-<p>It has been the uniform experience of mankind that
-the human mind passes through various states of existence
-extremely different in nature and continuance.
-The first state is that in which the mind seems to have
-no susceptibilities but of sensation, and to be utterly
-destitute of all the properties of a rational intellect. By
-a slow and gradual process, new and successive powers
-seem to be called into existence, and what seemed
-among the lowest grades of animal existence becomes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">{43}</a></span>
-the glory and lord of this lower world. Yet, in the
-full exercise of all the faculties of a rational and moral
-nature, there is a perpetual recurrence of periods in
-which all evidences of the existence of such faculties
-cease. In a profound sleep, or in a deep swoon, no
-proof of rational existence remains either to the being
-thus affected or to the observers of this phenomenon.
-As the extreme of old age approaches, the glories of
-the mind begin to fade away, until man sometimes
-passes into a state of second childhood. There are
-times, also, when changes in the material system derange
-all the power of intellect, and sometimes reduce
-what was once a rational mind to a state of entire fatuity,
-and then, again, the mental powers are restored.</p>
-
-<p>The experience of mankind, then, on this subject is
-this: that the mind is an existence which passes
-through multiplied and very great changes without
-being destroyed. The soul continues to exist after
-changes as great as death, and in many respects similar
-to it, such, for example, as the event of birth, and
-of sleep, and we have never known a mind destroyed
-by such changes. The argument, then, is, that as
-things will be in agreement with past experience, the
-soul will continue to go through other changes without
-being destroyed, unless there is some reason to the
-contrary.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no reason found to the contrary, for
-there is no evidence that the event called death is any
-thing more than a separation of the spirit from its material
-envelope, nor is there any evidence against the
-supposition that it may be an event which introduces
-the mind into a more perfect state of existence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">{44}</a></span>
-It appears that losing various parts of the body
-does not at all affect the operations of mind; that by
-the perpetual changes that are taking place in the
-body, every particle of it, after a course of years, is
-dissevered from its connection with the spirit, and is
-supplied by other matter. The soul is thus proved to
-be so connected with a material body that it may lose
-the whole of it by a slow process without being the
-least injured, and therefore we have the evidence of
-experience that it may be <i>separated</i> from the body
-without any detriment to its powers and faculties.</p>
-
-<p>Analogy also leads to the supposition that death is
-only a change which introduces the intellectual being
-into a more perfect mode of existence; for, in past experience,
-those changes most resembling death, which
-are not accidental, but according to the ordinary course
-of nature, are means of renewing and invigorating
-mental powers. Thus sleep, the emblem of death, is
-succeeded by renewed powers of activity and consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>The changes of other animals which most resemble
-death furnish another analogy. The humble worm
-rolls itself up in its temporary tomb, and, after a short
-slumber, bursts forth to new life, clothed in more brilliant
-dyes, endued with more active capacities, and prepared
-to secure enjoyments before unknown. Reasoning
-from past experience, then, we should infer the
-continued existence of the mind after death.</p>
-
-<p>By the same method we arrive at the doctrine of the
-immortality of the soul. We know that the soul does
-now exist. We know of no cause that will destroy it.
-Therefore we infer that it will <i>forever</i> continue to exist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">{45}</a></span>
-Whether this argument is satisfactory or not, without
-a revelation this is <i>all</i> the evidence we have of the
-soul's continued existence after death, and of the immortality
-of the soul.</p>
-
-<p>It is the same intuitive truth which (without a revelation)
-alone furnishes aid in regard to the future destiny
-of man.</p>
-
-<p>We assume that things are to be in agreement with
-past experience unless there is evidence to the contrary.
-No such evidence can be found. What, then,
-does the past history of our race teach us to expect
-from the future? These are the most important deductions:</p>
-
-<p>We are to continue under the same laws of the system
-already established. We are to have the same
-susceptibilities to pleasure and pain, the same intellect
-to guide us, the same power of volition to decide our
-own courses.</p>
-
-<p>We are to be parts of a social system in which every
-member suffers not only for his own violations of
-law, but for the sins of others.</p>
-
-<p>The great law of this system is to be forever sustained&mdash;the
-<i>law of</i> <small>SACRIFICE</small>. Every being is to sacrifice
-the lesser for the greater good in all his individual
-concerns, and, in regard to the commonwealth, the
-lesser good of the individual is to be sacrificed to the
-greater good of the many. In all this, also, reference
-is to be had to the interests of the future as much as
-to those of the present, and all violations of this great
-law are to involve the established penalties.</p>
-
-<p>This system of law is to be administered as it has
-been in the past. No pity for ignorance, no sympathy
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">{46}</a></span>
-for the suffering, will ever suspend the natural penalties
-for wrong-doing. <i>Obedience</i>, exact, constant, and
-persevering, is to be the only mode of securing the rewards
-and escaping the penalties of this system.</p>
-
-<p>Again, mankind, as a race, are to continue to progress,
-until at some period a certain portion will arrive
-at the entire and perfect obedience to law which, at the
-present stage of being, no one has ever yet attained.</p>
-
-<p>But, on the other hand, this progress will be attended
-with the hopeless and perpetual ruin of multitudes
-who, as individuals, take a retrograde course, and grow
-more and more guilty and miserable, while continued
-existence will serve only to render obedience to law
-more improbable.</p>
-
-<p>But from this loss to individuals will result protective
-and purifying influences to the commonwealth, so
-that thus good will constantly be educed from evil.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the influences that are to secure the advance
-of the race to perfect obedience are to be, knowledge
-of laws, fear of penalties, hope of rewards, and love and
-gratitude toward those who may prove teachers, benefactors,
-and self-sacrificing friends. These have been
-the modes in past experience in this world, and therefore
-we infer them for the future.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">{47}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br />
-<small>KNOWLEDGE GAINED BY REASON AND EXPERIENCE
-ALONE CONCERNING THE EXISTENCE, CHARACTER,
-AND DESIGNS OF THE CREATOR.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have shown that, in regard to our Creator, his
-character and designs, without a revelation, we have
-nothing to guide us but the intuitive truths, and the
-deductions obtained by their aid from human experience.</p>
-
-<p>We will now inquire as to the amount of knowledge
-to be secured from these sources.</p>
-
-<p>By the aid of the first intuitive truth, we arrive at
-the knowledge of some great First Cause or causes,
-existing without beginning, who created the universe
-of matter and mind; yet, as has been shown, we are
-not, by this first principle, enabled to infer any thing
-as to the <i>unity</i> or <i>plurality</i> of such cause or causes.
-For aught that this intuitive truth indicates, there may
-have been a plurality of eternal and self-existent minds,
-who acted in unity at the creation of all things. Neither
-can we, by the aid of this truth, arrive at any conclusion
-as to the character and designs of the author
-or authors of all created things.</p>
-
-<p>It is by the aid of the fourth intuitive truth that we
-deduce whatever can be known of the character and
-designs of the Creator.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">{48}</a></span>
-This truth teaches us that "design is evidence of
-an intelligent cause, and that the nature of a design
-proves the intention and character of the author."</p>
-
-<p>The works of Nature, both of mind and matter, are
-full of evidence of design, and from this we infer that
-the Creator is an <i>intelligent</i> cause.</p>
-
-<p>The infinite variety and extent of creation are evidences
-of the wonderful <i>power</i> of their Author. The
-fact that all the contrivances of matter and mind are
-clearly designed to produce enjoyment, while pain is
-merely the result of a violation of laws which, if obeyed,
-would secure only happiness&mdash;this is evidence of the
-<i>benevolence</i> of the Creator.</p>
-
-<p>The skill with which all things are formed and combined
-to secure the ends designed are proofs of the
-<i>wisdom</i> of the Creator.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, by aid of the fourth intuitive truth, and the
-world of mind and matter around us, we obtain the
-result that the Author of Nature is <i>powerful, benevolent,
-and wise</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But in regard to the use of the word <i>power</i>, as
-applied to the Creator, one distinction is important.
-There are things which are contradictory and impossible
-in the nature of things, so that no one can conceive
-of them as possible. Thus, to create and not to
-create at the same time, or to make a mind that is a
-free agent and at the same time not a free agent, but
-controlled in volitions by fixed causation as matter is&mdash;these
-and many other things are contradictions or impossibilities.</p>
-
-<p>Now when we say that the Creator can not do these
-things, we do not limit his power, for almighty power
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">{49}</a></span>
-signifies simply and only a power to do all things that
-are not contradictions and thus absurdities.</p>
-
-<p>This being premised, we are obliged to infer from
-the history of our race that the Creator, in regard to
-the existence of evil, is limited either in power, or in
-benevolence, or in the nature of things.</p>
-
-<p>We arrive at this conclusion thus: We see that
-evils and suffering, multitudinous and terrific, do exist,
-and have existed in all ages. In reference to this,
-only these suppositions are conceivable: the first is,
-that the Creator is perfectly benevolent, and that a
-better system, with all the existing good and none of
-the evil, is conceivable and possible in the nature of
-things, yet that he <i>had not the power</i> to produce and
-sustain it.</p>
-
-<p>The second supposition is, that the Creator has the
-power to produce and sustain a wiser and better system,
-in which there shall be all the good and none of
-the evil in the existing one, and yet that he <i>would not</i>
-do it. This either involves the supposition of a purely
-malignant being, who enjoys witnessing needless and
-awful suffering, and prefers it to happiness, or of one
-who is, like human beings, of a mixed character, and
-allows evil to exist when self-denying efforts might
-prevent it.</p>
-
-<p>All the minds of whom we have had any knowledge,
-although, where their own ease and pleasure are not to
-be sacrificed, they prefer to make others around them
-happy, yet ever exhibit a selfish spirit. They all show
-that they think and plan more for their own private enjoyment
-than for the general happiness, and thus, to a
-greater or less extent, are selfish. Reasoning from experience,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">{50}</a></span>
-then, we should infer that the Creator might
-be of the same character.</p>
-
-<p>The third supposition is, that the Creator has instituted
-the <i>best system possible in the nature of things</i>,
-so that there is and will be the <small>MOST POSSIBLE GOOD
-WITH THE LEAST POSSIBLE EVIL</small>.</p>
-
-<p>We come, then, to the inquiry as to the <i>end</i> or <i>design</i>
-of the Creator in forming the universe of mind and
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>To answer this, we must again refer to the fourth
-intuitive truth, viz., "the nature of a contrivance is
-proof of the intention or design of the author."</p>
-
-<p>This position is illustrated in many cases in common
-life. If we find a contrivance which moves the
-air toward a fire and thus increases the flame, we infer
-that the author intended to produce this result. If we
-find a contrivance to show the time of day, such as a
-sun-dial or clock, we can not help believing that the
-author intended to secure this end.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, when we find a curious machine, where
-every part is arranged on a given design, we naturally
-inquire <i>how it must be worked</i> to produce the intended
-result. It may have wheels that, if turned one way,
-produce the end designed, but, if turned another way,
-produce exactly the opposite effect.</p>
-
-<p>For example, if the wheels of a mill are arranged
-aright, or as the author designed, they will grind flour
-or weave cotton; but if arranged and worked contrary
-to the design of the author, they will break themselves
-to pieces and destroy all things around them.</p>
-
-<p>Two inquiries, then, are to be made in reference to
-the design of the Creator. The first is, What was the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">{51}</a></span>
-end or design for which he made all things? and the
-second is, What is the right and true method by which
-this design can be secured?</p>
-
-<p>We shall assume, and attempt to prove in what follows,
-that the design and ultimate end of the Creator
-in all his works is <i>to produce the greatest possible happiness
-with the least possible evil</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Afterward will be exhibited the <i>true and right method</i>
-for securing this end, so far as we can learn it by
-reason and experience <i>without a revelation</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In pursuing this plan, the first step will be to exhibit
-the constitution and laws of mind, as the chief
-and most wonderful exhibition of the grand design of
-its Author.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">{52}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br />
-<small>DIVERSITIES IN SYSTEMS OF MENTAL PHILOSOPHY.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are now to commence an examination of the various
-powers and operations of the human mind, for
-the purpose of illustrating the grand aim of the Author
-in the creation of all things.</p>
-
-<p>In pursuing this course, it is needful, first, to refer
-to the apparent diversities in systems of mental philosophy,
-for the purpose of justifying the classification
-and the terms to be employed hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing more hackneyed than the complaints
-against metaphysics as abstruse, difficult of
-comprehension, and unpractical, while the various writers
-on this science seem more or less divided into opposing
-schools. Notwithstanding this, there are reasons
-for maintaining a real agreement in all systems
-of mental philosophy, at least in essentials, and the following
-considerations lead to such a conclusion:</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, the nature of the subject investigated
-would necessarily tend to such a result; for that
-subject is the human mind, not in its specific peculiarities,
-but in those generic phenomena which are common
-to all minds; just as the natural philosopher investigates
-those properties of matter which are common
-to a class, and not the specific peculiarities that
-distinguish individual masses or particles. Now, as
-those who direct their investigations to mental phenomena
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">{53}</a></span>
-are all drawing a picture from the same pattern, it
-is properly inferred that in the main outlines there
-must be a general resemblance.</p>
-
-<p>Another reason for this conclusion is the mode of investigation
-pursued. It is simply observing, first, the
-phenomena of our own minds, and then comparing
-them with those of other minds as exhibited in looks,
-words, and actions, and thus educing generic resemblances
-and specific differences. It is the generic resemblances
-only that constitute the faculties and laws
-of mind which are to be described, classified, and
-named.</p>
-
-<p>Another reason for inferring such an agreement of
-systems is the fact, not only that all human minds have
-common phenomena, but that they have provided themselves
-with terms to express them, so that they succeed
-in so far understanding each other as to make comparisons
-of their mental experience.</p>
-
-<p>The same agreement may be inferred, also, when we
-consider that mental philosophy treats, not of new
-ideas, or new combinations of ideas, but of knowledge
-which is already in the mind. The process to be pursued,
-then, involves a reference to what we have ourselves
-experienced; it is an examination of our own
-feelings, thoughts, and volitions. These are subjects
-of which we are competent judges, and in regard to
-which we can be certain as to what is correct or incorrect,
-more than we can be in reference to any other
-kind of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>From these considerations, it is inferred that all systems
-of mental philosophy will resemble each other
-just so far as they are true, and that the difference
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">{54}</a></span>
-must be mainly in modes of presenting the subject.
-Inasmuch as writers on mental science are drawing a
-picture of those experiences of their own minds which
-are common to the whole race, they must in the main
-resemble each other, though some may be more imperfect,
-vague, and disconnected than others.</p>
-
-<p>It may be useful to indicate the causes which have
-combined to produce perplexity and apparent diversities
-among writers on mental science.</p>
-
-<p>The first cause is the want of an accurate medium
-of communication by which one mind can compare its
-experience with the experience of other minds. In
-natural science, when the philosopher instructs in reference
-to the properties of matter, all the terms employed
-can be made definite by appeals to the senses.
-For example, if it is not understood what is meant by
-a <i>pungent</i> smell, such a smell can be produced, and
-then there is a perfectly clear idea of what is meant by
-the term. But in mental science, when the term <i>reason</i>
-or the term <i>understanding</i> is employed, no such
-perfect and definite mode is at command to illustrate
-the meaning.</p>
-
-<p>On the contrary, in this science, a single term is
-often used with various meanings, each use, however,
-including some common idea, while the extent or limitation
-in every case is to be determined by the connection.
-For example, the term <i>heart</i> is used sometimes
-to signify the chief organ of physical life, sometimes
-it signifies the mind itself. In a more limited
-use it denotes the feelings, and in a still more restricted
-sense it expresses the leading interest of the mind.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">{55}</a></span>
-This involves a constant process of reasoning to decide
-the meaning of the term.</p>
-
-<p>Another perplexity in mental science has arisen from
-an unwarrantable use of terms by writers. In some
-instances new distinctions in mental analysis have been
-originated, and then terms have been used to express
-these distinctions which never before were employed in
-this limited sense. Of course, in reading their works,
-the mind is confused by meeting terms that in common
-use recall one signification, when the writer employs
-them in another.</p>
-
-<p>In other cases, such writers have formed new classifications
-of mental phenomena, and employed new terms
-to express them, and thus an impression is made that
-something new has been discovered, or a new system
-evolved. For example, Brown arranges the intellectual
-operations of mind in but two general classes, and calls
-them <i>simple suggestion</i> and <i>relative suggestion</i>. But
-his work, in this respect, presents only a new classification
-and new terms, but no new ideas.</p>
-
-<p>Another difficulty in mental science has arisen from
-the fact that many writers on this subject have failed
-in accurate analysis of the phenomena of mind, and, of
-course, have not succeeded in conveying clear and distinct
-ideas to their readers. For example, some metaphysicians
-have never discriminated between <i>desire</i> and
-<i>choice</i>, but have written as if they were the same thing.
-Thus they have affirmed things which were true in reference
-to one of these mental acts, and false in regard
-to the other. This has produced mistiness of apprehension
-or false conceptions in their readers. Some understand
-the writer one way and dispute his positions,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">{56}</a></span>
-others understand him another way and defend them,
-because what he says is true of one act and false of
-the other, while both acts are spoken of as one and
-the same.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime the great mass of readers have never been
-accustomed to any accurate analysis, or even to any
-fixed observation of their own mental states. They
-are, therefore, unprepared to detect these defects in the
-writers on mental science, and are easily confused and
-perplexed.</p>
-
-<p>Another difficulty has arisen from false ideas as to
-the origin and proper use of words. In most minds
-an impression has been generated that there is an inherent
-meaning belonging to the words of a language.
-They do not consider that in the formation of language
-the ideas come first, and that the words are only conventional
-signs which men agree in using to express
-these ideas. Writers often speak of words which by
-long usage have been connected with certain ideas, as
-if they ought not to be so employed. They do not
-consider that the fact that men have used a word for a
-given idea, and understand each other, is the very thing
-which establishes its proper use and meaning.</p>
-
-<p>If, then, in all time and in all nations, mankind have
-classified and given names to their mental states, the
-classification and the names are true and proper, and
-no philosopher should claim that these are incorrect.
-The object of language is to enable men to communicate
-their ideas, and that language is best which enables
-them to do it the most extensively and the most
-accurately.</p>
-
-<p>It is maintained, then, that there is a <i>system</i> of mental
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">{57}</a></span>
-philosophy which is understood by all mankind;
-that there are words in common use by which it can
-be clearly and definitely described and expressed, either
-by single terms or by circumlocution; that it is
-recognized in the Bible; and that, substantially, it is
-the system taught by all writers on mental science,
-some teaching one portion and some another. It is
-maintained, also, that no such writer has taught any
-thing of any importance <i>that is true</i> which can not be
-translated into the language of common life, so as to
-be readily comprehended even by persons of ordinary
-capacity and education.</p>
-
-<p>There is no difficulty in leading any mind of ordinary
-capacity to notice the several classes of mental
-operations introduced in this work, and in all nations
-and languages these facts are recognized and terms are
-provided to express them.</p>
-
-<p>Some persons object to speaking of any mental phenomena
-as <i>states</i> of mind, because it is claimed that
-the mind is <i>active</i> in all. Thus sensations are claimed
-to be acts of mind instead of passive states caused by
-material objects. In regard to this and various other
-objections urged against this mode of classification and
-nomenclature, it may be remarked that the thing aimed
-at is simply, by means of a description, to point out
-what is meant. When this is understood, it does not
-change our idea to give it a name. We know by our
-own experience what it is to have a sensation, and
-calling it a <i>state</i> or an <i>act</i> does not alter our idea of
-the fact.</p>
-
-<p>In using words, all we have to do is to <i>convey our
-meaning</i>, either by description or illustration, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">{58}</a></span>
-when we have done this, to select a word to express it;
-and that word is best for this purpose which would
-recall this meaning to the greatest number of persons
-who have previously used it in this sense.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason, it is most proper to use terms employed
-in common life to express the phenomena treated
-of in mental science, instead of instituting new
-terms, which, to most persons, have never had the intended
-ideas connected with them.</p>
-
-<p>This method is adopted in the following pages;
-but it is important to remember that, while these
-words are used both in common life and by metaphysical
-writers with the meaning here indicated, they are
-often used with other significations. Thus the word
-<i>to perceive</i> is used not only to signify the act of gaining
-ideas by the senses, but any act of mind in noticing
-truths of any kind, either mental or external.
-So <i>to conceive</i> and <i>to perceive</i> are often used interchangeably
-as meaning the same thing.</p>
-
-<p>But this does not render it necessary to seek any
-new terms to express these ideas. All that is needful
-is to indicate that in classing and describing mental
-phenomena we restrict ourselves to one exact and
-uniform use of these terms, and this use is indicated
-in the description or definition given.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">{59}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
-<small>CLASSIFICATION AND DESCRIPTION OF THE MENTAL POWERS.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> now proceed to the classification and description
-of the mental powers.</p>
-
-<p>Not only all writers on mental science, but the most
-common writers and speakers, recognize a general division
-of mental operations, which is expressed by the
-terms <i>intellect</i>, <i>feeling</i>, and <i>choice</i>. We <i>think</i>, we
-<i>feel</i>, and we <i>choose</i>. Even the young child learns to
-comprehend these three grand divisions of the mental
-phenomena.</p>
-
-<p>To this most general division, in this work, are applied
-the terms <i>the intellectual powers, the susceptibilities</i>,
-and <i>the will</i>. These terms are selected because
-they are the most common ones.</p>
-
-<h3><small>THE INTELLECTUAL POWERS.</small></h3>
-
-<p>Under the general class of intellectual powers are
-arranged the following specific powers of mind:</p>
-
-<p>Sensation, Perception, Conception, Memory, Imagination,
-Judgment, Abstraction, Attention, and Association.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sensation</i> is a state of mind produced by material
-objects acting on the senses.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, when light, which is considered as one kind
-of matter, affects the eye, the sensation of <i>sight</i> is produced.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">{60}</a></span>
-When the perfume of a rose, which is another
-species of matter, affects the nostrils, the sensation of
-<i>smell</i> is produced. When a bell or some musical instrument
-causes the air to vibrate on the drum of the
-ear, it causes the sensation of <i>sound</i>. When any sapid
-body is applied to the tongue, the sensation of <i>taste</i>
-is caused. When the hand, or any part of the body,
-comes in contact with another body, the sensation of
-<i>touch</i> is produced.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it appears that the five senses are the organs of
-sensation, and that through their instrumentality material
-things operate upon the mind.</p>
-
-<p><i>Perception</i> is a <i>sensation</i> attended by the <i>belief of
-a cause</i>, and it is this additional circumstance alone
-which distinguishes perception from sensation.</p>
-
-<p>If a person were asleep, and should suffer from the
-prick of a pin, or be disturbed by an unpleasant sound,
-these would be mere sensations, because the mind would
-not ascribe them to any cause. But if the person should
-waken, these sensations would immediately become
-perceptions, because they would be attended by the
-belief of some cause.</p>
-
-<p><i>Conception</i> is a state of mind similar to perception,
-and differs from it in being less vivid, and in not being
-produced through the medium of the senses.</p>
-
-<p>When we look at a tree, we have a <i>perception</i> of this
-object. But the mind can also have an idea of this
-tree when removed from the sight, though the idea is
-not so vivid and distinct, nor have the senses any agency
-in producing it. The perfume of a rose, also, occasions
-another sensation; but when the rose is removed,
-so as not to affect the senses, we can still have a <i>conception</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">{61}</a></span>
-of its perfume. The conception differs from
-the perception only in being less vivid, and in not being
-caused by a material object acting on the senses.</p>
-
-<p><i>Memory</i> is either a conception or a perception, which
-is attended with a feeling of its resemblance to a past
-state of mind. It is this feeling of resemblance that
-is the only circumstance which distinguishes memory
-from conception.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we may conceive of a tree without recognizing
-it as the particular idea of any tree we may have seen
-before; but if this is accompanied by a feeling of the
-resemblance of this idea to the one we always have
-when we see the tree that shadows the paternal roof,
-this conception becomes <i>memory</i>. If we conceive the
-form of a man without recognizing the resemblance of
-this idea to the perceptions we have when we see any
-particular man, this is a simple act of conception; but
-if we recognize in this object of conception the features
-of a dear friend, this act then becomes memory. Again,
-if we conceive of certain events and circumstances attending
-them without recognizing this combination as
-ever having existed in past experience, they are mere
-conceptions; but if we recognize in them the events
-and circumstances of past experience, conception becomes
-memory.</p>
-
-<p><i>Imagination</i> is the power which the mind possesses
-of arranging our conceptions in new combinations. We
-can conceive objects as united together of which we
-never conceived before as thus united.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, when we read the description of some picturesque
-scene in nature, the mind immediately groups
-together mountains, trees, brooks, cottages, and glens,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">{62}</a></span>
-forming a new combination of conceptions different from
-any scene we ever witnessed or conceived before. All
-the objects thus combined are conceptions; the act of
-arranging them is an act of the imagination.</p>
-
-<p><i>Judgment</i> is the power which the mind possesses
-of <i>noticing relations</i>. A <i>relation</i> is an idea obtained
-by observing one thing in connection with another.
-Thus, when we perceive one thing to be <i>longer</i> than
-another, one thing to be <i>on</i> another, or one thing to
-<i>belong</i> to another&mdash;in all these cases the mind <i>notices
-relations</i>, or exercises the faculty of judgment. Thus,
-also, when we compare any action with the rule of
-duty in order to decide whether it is right or wrong,
-we exercise the same faculty. This act always is necessarily
-preceded by the comparison of one thing with
-another, in order to notice the relations.</p>
-
-<p><i>Abstraction</i> is the power of noticing certain parts or
-qualities of any object, as distinct from other parts or
-qualities. Thus, when we notice the length of a bridge
-without attending to the breadth or color, or when we
-notice the height of a man without thinking of his
-character, we exercise the faculty of abstraction.</p>
-
-<p><i>Attention</i> is the direction of the mind to any particular
-object or quality, from the interest which is felt
-in it, or in something connected with it. The degree
-of attention is always proportioned to the degree of interest
-felt in the object.</p>
-
-<p><i>Association</i> is the power possessed by the mind of
-recalling ideas in the connections and relations in which
-they have existed in past experience. For example,
-when any two objects, such as a house and a tree, have
-often been observed together, the idea of one will ordinarily
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">{63}</a></span>
-be attended by that of the other. If two
-events have often been united together in regard to the
-<i>time</i> of their occurrence, such, for example, as thunder
-and lightning, the idea of one will usually be attended
-by the other.</p>
-
-<p>In this work, the aim is to introduce no more of
-mental analysis than is needed for its main object.
-What is here introduced is not claimed as a complete
-presentation of all the mental phenomena.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">{64}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br />
-<small>SENSATION AND PERCEPTION.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> there is no distinction between sensation and
-perception except in the fact that one is attended with
-the belief of a cause and the other is not, they will be
-treated of together.</p>
-
-<p>The mind of man is an immaterial existence, confined
-in its operations by the body it inhabits, and depending
-upon the construction and modifications of this
-envelope for much of its happiness or suffering.</p>
-
-<p>The exercise of the imagination, when the eyes are
-closed and the body at rest, will probably give us the
-best idea of what is the nature of spiritual existence
-when disconnected with matter. It is one of the offices
-of our bodily system to retain the spirit in its
-operations in one particular place, so that ordinarily it
-can have direct communion with no other mind which
-is not in the same place. Whether this is the case
-with mere spiritual existence is a question for conjecture,
-and not for any rational decision.</p>
-
-<p>While the spirit of man is resident in its material
-frame, it is furnished with facilities of communication
-with other minds, and with organs which fit it to receive
-suffering or enjoyment from the material objects
-by which it is surrounded. These organs of communication
-are the several senses. They consist of expansions
-of the substance of which the brain is formed,
-which, descending to the body through the spinal bone
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">{65}</a></span>
-of the back, are thence sent out in thousands of ramifications
-over the whole system. Those branches which
-enter the eyes, and are spread over the interior back
-part of this organ, are called the <i>optic nerve</i>. Whenever
-the particles of light enter the eye, they strike the
-optic nerve, and produce the sensation which is called
-<i>sight</i>. Those branches which are spread over the
-tongue are the organ of <i>taste</i>. Those that are extended
-through the cavities of the nostrils are called
-the <i>olfactory</i> nerves. When the small particles of
-matter that escape from odoriferous bodies come in
-contact with these nerves, they produce the sensation
-of <i>smell</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The nerves that constitute the organ of <i>hearing</i> are
-extended over the cavity of the ear behind the <i>tympanum</i>,
-or <i>ear-drum</i>. This cavity is filled with a liquid,
-and when the drum of the ear is caused to vibrate by
-the air which is set in motion by sonorous bodies, it
-produces undulations of this liquid upon these nerves,
-and thus the sensation of <i>sound</i> is produced. By the
-expansion of other nerves, the sense of <i>feeling</i> is extended
-all over the body, excepting the nails and the
-hair. It is by the action of matter, in its different
-forms, on these several senses, that the mind obtains
-ideas, and that ideas are imparted from one mind to
-another.</p>
-
-<p><i>Perception</i> never takes place unless some material
-object makes an impression upon one of the senses.
-In the case of the eye, the ear, and the nostrils, the object
-which is regarded as the cause of the sensation
-does not come immediately in contact with the organs
-of sense. When we see a body, we consider it as the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">{66}</a></span>
-cause of that perception; but it is not the body that
-comes in contact with the organ of sight, but merely
-the particles of light reflected from that body. In the
-case of smell, the fragrant body is regarded as the
-cause of the sensation; but that which acts on the
-sense is the material particles of perfume which flow
-from that body.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, also, with hearing. We consider the sonorous
-body as the cause; but the sensation is produced
-through the medium of the air, which affects the drum
-of the ear. But in the case of taste and touch, the
-body which is regarded by the mind as the cause
-must come in contact with the nerves of the tongue or
-the body to produce the sensation.</p>
-
-<h3><i>Smell.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The sense of smell is one which greatly conduces to
-the preservation, the comfort, and the happiness of
-man. It is a continual aid to him in detecting polluted
-atmosphere or unhealthy food. The direct enjoyment
-it affords is probably less in amount than
-that derived from any of the other senses; yet, were
-we deprived of all the enjoyment gained through this
-source, we should probably find the privation much
-greater than we at first might imagine. When we
-walk forth among the beauties of nature, the fresh perfumes
-that send forth their incense are sources both
-of immediate and succeeding gratification. The beautiful
-images of nature which rise to the mind in our
-imaginative hours, would lose many of their obscure
-but charming associations were the fields stripped of
-the fragrance of their greens and the flowers of their
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">{67}</a></span>
-sweet perfumes. Nature would appear to have lost
-that moving spirit of life which now ever rides upon
-the evening zephyrs and the summer breeze. As it
-is, as we walk abroad, all nature seems to send forth
-its welcome, while to its Maker's praise</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse indent">"Each odorous leaf,</div>
-<div class="verse">Each opening blossom, freely breathes abroad</div>
-<div class="verse">Its gratitude, and thanks Him with its sweets."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>Taste.</i></h3>
-
-<p>When a sapid body is applied to the organ of taste,
-two sensations are produced, one of <i>touch</i> and one of
-<i>taste</i>. We are conscious of the difference of these sensations
-when we apply a body to the tongue which has
-taste, and then immediately one which has not. It is
-probable, however, that the same set of nerves serve
-both purposes.</p>
-
-<p>It is one of the numberless evidences of the benevolence
-of our Creator that the process which is necessary
-for the preservation of life, and which depends
-upon the voluntary activity of every human being,
-should be connected with a sense which affords such
-gratification that the duty is sought as a pleasure.
-Were mankind led to seek food merely in the exercise
-of reason for the purpose of preserving life, multitudes,
-through carelessness and forgetfulness, would be perpetually
-neglecting that regular supply without which
-the animal system would become deranged and enfeebled.
-By the present constitution of the body, the
-gratification of this sense is an object of desire, and
-thus we are continually reminded of our duty, and led
-to it as a source of enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">{68}</a></span>
-Nor is it the gratification of this sense which is the
-only source of enjoyment connected with it. The regular
-periods for repast bring around the social board
-those united to each other by the tenderest ties of
-kindred and affection. These become seasons of cheerful
-hilarity and relaxation, seasons of cessation from
-daily cares, seasons for the interchange of kind feelings
-and intellectual stores; and while the mere gratification
-of sense is one source of pleasure, to this is
-often added the "feast of reason and the flow of soul."</p>
-
-<p>The effect on the best feelings in thus assembling
-to participate in common blessings is scarcely ever appreciated.
-Did every individual of our race retire to
-secrecy and solitude to satisfy the cravings of nature,
-how much would the sum of human happiness be diminished!
-But thus has our benevolent Creator contrived
-that one source of enjoyment should serve as
-an occasion for introducing many more.</p>
-
-<h3><i>Hearing.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The sense of hearing is one more connected with
-the intellectual and moral powers of man than either
-taste or smell, as it is through the medium of this organ
-that both music and speech operate on the human
-mind. We can form some imperfect estimate of the
-amount of happiness derived from this sense by imagining
-the condition of mankind were they at once and
-forever deprived of this source of improvement and enjoyment.
-The voice of sympathy, friendship, and
-love would be hushed. The eloquence of the forum,
-the debates of the Legislature, the instructions of the
-pulpit, would cease. The music of nature&mdash;its sighing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">{69}</a></span>
-winds and dashing waters&mdash;would be stilled, and
-the warbling of the groves would charm no more.
-The sound of pipe, and harp, and solemn harmonies of
-voice would never again waken the soul to thrilling
-and nameless emotions. Where now ten thousand
-sounds of active life, or cheerful hum of business, or
-music of language and song charm and animate the
-soul, man would walk forth in silence and solitude.</p>
-
-<p>The operation of mere sound, disconnected with the
-ideas which are often conveyed by it, is a subject of
-curious speculation. Sounds differ from each other
-in <i>quality</i>, <i>pitch</i>, <i>force</i>, and in <i>length</i>. The difference
-in <i>tone</i> may be illustrated by the sounds of a
-clarionet compared with the sound of a bell or of the
-human voice. Every instrument and every human
-voice has each a peculiar tone by which it is distinguished
-from all others. The difference in <i>pitch</i> is
-shown by sounding a low and a high note in succession
-on an instrument. The difference in <i>force</i> is exhibited
-by singing or speaking loud or soft.</p>
-
-<p>There are certain sounds that in themselves are either
-agreeable or disagreeable from their tone alone.
-Thus the sound of a flute is agreeable, and that of the
-filing of a saw is disagreeable. Sounds also are agreeable
-according as they succeed each other.</p>
-
-<p><i>Melody</i> is a succession of agreeable tones arranged
-in some regular order as it respects their duration and
-succession. Some melodies are much more agreeable
-to the ear than others. Some melodies produce a
-plaintive state of mind, others exhilarate, and this
-without regard to any thing except the nature of the
-sounds and their succession. Thus a very young infant,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">{70}</a></span>
-by a certain succession of musical tones, can be
-made either to weep in sorrow or smile with joy.</p>
-
-<p><i>Harmony</i> is a certain <i>combination</i> of sounds which
-are agreeable to the ear; and it is found that the mind
-can be much more powerfully affected by a combination
-of harmonious sounds than by any melody. The
-effect of music on certain minds is very powerful, often
-awakening strange and indescribable emotions. It
-has been, therefore, much employed both to heighten
-social, patriotic, and devotional feeling.</p>
-
-<p>There is probably nothing which produces stronger
-and more abiding associations in the mind than musical
-sounds. As an example of this may be mentioned
-the national air which is sung by the Swiss in their
-native valleys. It is said that when they become wanderers
-in foreign lands, so strongly will this wild music
-recall the scenes of their childhood and youth, their
-native skies, their towering mountains and romantic
-glens, with all the strong local attachments that gather
-around such objects, that their heart sickens with longing
-desires to return. And so much was this the case
-with the Swiss of the French armies, that Bonaparte
-forbade this air being played among his troops. The
-Marseilles Hymn, which was chanted in the scenes of
-the French Revolution, was said to have been perfectly
-electrifying, and to have produced more effect than
-all the eloquence of orators or machinations of statesmen.</p>
-
-<p>The mind seems to acquire by experience only the
-power of determining the place whence sounds originate.
-It is probable that, at first, sounds seem to originate
-within the ear of the person who hears; and, even
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">{71}</a></span>
-after long experience, cases have been known, when a
-person suddenly waked from sleep imagined the throbbing
-of his own heart was a knocking at the door.
-But observation and experience soon teach us the direction
-and the distance of sounds. The art of the
-ventriloquist consists in nothing but the power which
-a nice and accurate ear gives him of distinguishing the
-difference between sounds when near or far off, and of
-imitating them.</p>
-
-<h3><i>Touch.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The sense of touch is not confined to one particular
-organ, but is extended over the whole system, both externally
-and internally. It is in the hands, however,
-especially at the ends of the fingers, that this sense
-is most acute and most employed. We acquire many
-more ideas by the aid of this sense than by either hearing,
-smell, or taste. By these last we become acquainted
-with only one particular quality in a body, either of
-taste, smell, or sound; but by means of the touch we
-learn such qualities as heat and cold, roughness and
-smoothness, hardness and softness, figure, solidity, and
-extension.</p>
-
-<p>It is supposed that it is by this sense that we gain
-the idea of something <i>external</i>, or without ourselves.
-The sensation of smell would seem to be within, as
-an act or emotion of the soul itself. Thus also with
-hearing, which, being produced within the ear by the
-undulating air, would seem to originate within. Thus
-also with sensations within the eye. But when the
-limbs begin to move and to come in contact with outward
-objects, and also in contact with various parts of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">{72}</a></span>
-the body, the mind gains an idea of the existence of
-some outward object. This is probably the first sense
-by which any idea of existence is wakened in the mind.
-As one sense after another is called into action, the
-mind continually gains new ideas, and then begins its
-operations of comparing, abstracting, reasoning, and
-willing.</p>
-
-<p>It is by the sense of touch that we gain our ideas
-of <i>resistance</i> and <i>extension</i>. In the class of ideas included
-under the head of ideas of resistance may be
-placed those of solidity, liquidity, hardness, softness,
-viscidity, roughness, and smoothness; these all being
-different names for different modes of resistance
-to the muscles of the hands, arms, or fingers, when applied
-to the bodies which have these qualities. These
-ideas are not gained by simple contact; their existence
-depends upon the contraction or expansion of the
-muscles, which are the organs of motion and resistance
-in the human body.</p>
-
-<p>We may suppose the infant to gain these ideas by
-a process somewhat similar to this: He first moves
-his arms by instinct, without any knowledge of the
-effects to follow. By this movement he gains certain
-ideas of the simple contractions and extension of his
-muscles, and learns also that by his own will he can
-exercise his muscles in this manner. At length he attempts
-to move his arm in a manner to which he has
-become familiar, and some object intervenes, and motion
-is prevented, while all his wonted muscular efforts
-are vain. Thus arises in his mind a new idea, of resistance,
-in addition to the sensations of touch and of
-motion, which had before been experienced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">{73}</a></span>
-The ideas of <i>different degrees</i> of this resistance are
-gained by repeated experience, and when age furnishes
-the ability to understand language, the names of hardness,
-softness, roughness, and the like, are given to these
-ideas. In the use of his muscles, also, the infant must
-first acquire its ideas of <i>extension</i> and <i>figure</i>; for it
-must be where resistance to muscular effort ceases that
-he must feel that the cause ceases to exist. The little
-being extends his hand&mdash;an object intervenes which
-interrupts his muscular motions; he grasps this object,
-and wherever this feeling of resistance exists, there he
-feels that the cause of it exists, and that after he has
-passed certain limits it does not exist.</p>
-
-<p><i>Figure</i> is defined as the <i>limits of extension</i>, and, of
-course, it can be seen that ideas of figure can only be
-gained by thus finding the limits of extension. It has
-formerly been supposed that ideas of <i>extension</i> and <i>figure</i>
-were gained by the eye, but later experiments and
-discussions show that the sense of feeling, including
-muscular motion, is the medium by which these ideas
-are first gained, and that afterward the eye, by the principle
-of association, acquires the power of distinguishing
-figure and distance.</p>
-
-<p>There is much enjoyment resulting from the sense
-of touch in many ways, a large portion of which is almost
-unnoticed. Much also included under the term
-<i>comfort</i> results from this sense. Much of that which
-is agreeable in clothing and in objects around us is of
-this nature. Besides this, there are many endearments
-of friendship and affection that gain expression only
-through this medium.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">{74}</a></div>
-
-<h3><i>Vision.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The organ of vision is the eye, which is one of the
-most curious and wonderful parts of the human frame,
-and displays in astonishing variety the wisdom and
-skill of its Designer.</p>
-
-<p>The eye consists of a round ball, formed externally
-of various coverings, and within of humors of different
-degrees of consistency. The front part of the eye,
-which is exposed to view, has a small opening in it,
-which admits the rays of light within this ball, while
-it is by the operation of light on the nerves, which are
-spread in fine net-work over the interior, that <i>sight</i> is
-produced.</p>
-
-<p>In examining the mechanism of the eye, a great variety
-of contrivances appear, all aiding in accomplishing
-the object of vision. In the first place, we may
-observe its modes of protection and defense. The lid
-is a soft, moist wiper, which, with a motion quick
-as lightning, protects the eye from outward violence,
-cleanses it from dust, veils it from overpowering radiance,
-and in hours of repose entirely excludes the light.
-On its edge is the fringing lash, which intercepts floating
-matter that might otherwise intrude, while above
-is spread the eyebrow, which, like a thatch, obstructs
-the drops that heat or toil accumulate on the brow.</p>
-
-<p>We next observe the organs of motion with which
-the eye is furnished, and which, with complicated strings
-and pulleys, can turn it every way at the will of the intelligent
-agent. The <i>pupil</i> or <i>opening</i> of the eye, also,
-is so constructed, with its minute and multiplied circular
-and crossing muscles, that it can contract or expand
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">{75}</a></span>
-in size just in proportion as the light varies in
-intensity.</p>
-
-<p>The ball of the eye is filled with three substances
-of different degrees of density. One is a watery humor,
-near the front of the eye; back of this, and suspended
-by two muscles, is the solid lens of the eye, or
-the <i>crystalline humor</i>; and the remainder of the eye,
-in which this lens is imbedded, consists of the <i>vitreous
-humor</i>, which is of the consistence of jelly. These all
-have different degrees of transparency, and are so nicely
-adjusted that the rays of light, which start from every
-point in all bodies in <i>diverging</i> lines, are by these
-humors made to <i>converge</i> and meet in points on the
-<i>retina</i>, or the nerve of the eye, forming there a small
-picture, exactly of the same proportions, though not
-the same size, as the scene which is spread before the
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>When the outer covering of the back part of the eye
-is removed, the objects which are in front of the eye
-may be discerned, delicately portrayed in all their perfect
-colors and proportions, on the retina which lines
-the interior. It is this impression of light on the optic
-nerve which gives our ideas of light and colors.</p>
-
-<p>The eye is also formed in such a way that it can
-alter its shape and become somewhat oblong, while at
-the same time its lens is projected forward or drawn
-back. The object of this contrivance is to obtain an
-equally perfect picture of distant and of near objects.</p>
-
-<p>Our ideas of <i>shape</i> and <i>size</i> at first are not gained
-by the eye, but by the sense of touch. After considerable
-experience we learn to determine shape and size
-by the eye. Experiments made upon persons born
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">{76}</a></span>
-blind and restored to sight furnish many curious facts
-to support this assertion.</p>
-
-<p>When the eye first admits the light, all objects appear
-to <i>touch</i> the eye, and are all a confused mass of
-different colors. But by continual observation, and
-by the aid of the sense of touch, objects gradually are
-separated from each other, and are then regarded as
-separate and distinct existences.</p>
-
-<p>The eye is so formed that the picture of any object
-on the retina varies in size according to its <i>distance</i>.
-Two objects of equal size will make a different picture
-on the back of the eye, according to the distance at
-which they are held. The ideas of size at first are
-regulated by the proportions of this picture in the eye,
-until by experience it is found that this is an incorrect
-mode, and that it is necessary to judge of the <i>distance</i>
-of a body before we can determine its <i>size</i>. This accounts
-for the fact that objects appear to us so different
-according as we conceive of their distance, and that
-we are often deceived in the size of bodies because we
-have no mode of determining their distance.</p>
-
-<p>But it appears also that our ideas of distance are
-gained, not by the eye alone, but by the eye and the
-sense of feeling united. A child by the sense of feeling
-learns the size of his cup or his playthings. He
-sees them removed, and that their apparent size diminishes.
-They are returned to him, and he finds
-them unaltered in size. When attempting to recover
-them, he finds that when they look very small he is
-obliged to pass over a much greater distance to gain
-them than when they appear large, and that the distance
-is always in exact proportion to their apparent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">{77}</a></span>
-size. In this way, by oft-repeated experiments, the
-infant reasoner learns to judge both of the size and distance
-of objects. From this it appears that, in determining
-the size of an object, we previously form
-some judgment of its distance, and likewise that, in
-finding the distance, we first determine the size.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>shape</i> of objects is learned altogether by the
-sense of <i>feeling</i>. It has before been stated that at the
-first exercise of vision every thing is a confused mass
-of different colors, and all appearing to touch the eye.
-By the aid of the hands the separate existence of different
-bodies is detected, and the feeling of touch, which
-once was the sole mode of determining shape, is now
-associated with a certain form or picture on the eye,
-so that, in process of time, the eye becomes the principal
-judge of shape.</p>
-
-<p>But, in determining the shape of a thing, an act of
-judgment is necessary. This may be illustrated by
-the example of a hoop, which in one position will make
-a picture in the eye which is circular, in another position
-the picture of it will be oval, and in another only
-a straight line. If a person will observe a hoop in
-these different positions, and then attempt to draw a
-picture of it, he will be conscious of this varying picture
-in the eye. Of course, in order to decide the
-shape of a thing, we must decide its distance, its relative
-position, and various circumstances which would
-alter the form of the picture in the eye. It is only
-by long experience that the infant child gradually acquires
-the power of determining the shape, size, and
-distance of objects.</p>
-
-<p>The painter's art consists in laying on to canvas an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">{78}</a></span>
-enlarged picture of the scene which is painted in the
-interior of his own eye. In this minute picture of the
-eye, the more distant an object the smaller its size,
-the more indistinct its outline, and the fainter its colors.
-These same are transferred to canvas in an enlarged
-form; the distant objects are made small in
-size, faint in colors, and indistinct in outline, just in
-proportion to their distance.</p>
-
-<p>The organ of vision is the inlet of more enjoyment
-to the mind than any of the other senses. Through
-this small loop-hole the spirit looks forth on the rich
-landscape of nature, and the charms both of the natural
-and moral world. The fresh colors, the beauty of motion,
-the grace of figures, the fitness of proportion, and
-all the charms of taste, are discovered through this
-medium. By the eye, also, we learn to read the speaking
-face of man, we greet the smile of friendship and
-love, and all those varying charms that glance across
-the human face divine. By the aid of this little organ,
-too, we climb not only the summits of earth's domains,
-but wander forth to planets, stars, and suns,
-traverse the vast ethereal expanse, and gather faint
-images and flitting visions of the spirit's future home.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">{79}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br />
-<small>CONCEPTION AND MEMORY.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> has been much speculation on the question
-as to whether the mind possesses any ideas entirely
-independent of the senses, which were gained without
-any aid or influence from them. Many have maintained
-the existence of some ideas, which they denominate
-<i>innate ideas</i>, which they suppose were originally
-implanted in the mind, and not at all dependent on
-sensation.</p>
-
-<p>On this subject it may be sufficient to remark that
-there is no <i>proof</i> of the existence of any such ideas.
-All ideas, so far as we can trace them, seem to have
-been originally gained by the senses, though the mind
-has the power of making new arrangements and combinations
-of such materials as are thus furnished.</p>
-
-<p>The intuitive truths seem to exist as a part of the
-original constitution of the mind, but there is no evidence
-that they would ever have been called into exercise
-except through the instrumentality of the senses.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing to prove that the positive exercise
-of thought, feeling, and volition is necessary to the existence
-of mind, and no proof that the mind might not
-have existed forever without thought or feeling of any
-kind, were it not for the aid of the senses. We know
-that there are periods of sleep and of swooning, when
-the mind is in existence, and yet when there is no evidence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">{80}</a></span>
-that either thoughts, feelings, or volitions are in
-exercise.</p>
-
-<p>Speculations on this subject seem to be profitless,
-because there are no data for determining them. The
-<i>facts</i> in the case are not of a character to enable us to
-pronounce positively either that these operations are
-or are not essential to its existence. It may be that
-in sleep and in a swoon these phenomena exist, and no
-memory is retained of them, and it is equally probable
-that at such intervals all mental operations entirely
-cease.</p>
-
-<p>But, now that the mind has been furnished by the
-senses with its splendid acquisitions, upon which its
-reflective powers can act, it is easy to believe that it
-might continue to exist and to be in active exercise
-if all its bodily senses, and even its material envelope,
-were destroyed. Should we never again behold the
-light of heaven, nor be charmed with the profusion of
-varied color and form, still the mind could busy itself
-with pleasing visions of brilliant dyes, of graceful outline,
-and fair proportion, as bright and as beautiful as
-any objects of sense could awaken. Should we never
-again inhale the freshness of morning or the perfumes
-of spring, the mind itself could furnish from its stores
-some treasured incense, never to be entirely exhaled.
-Should the palate never again be cooled by the freshening
-water of spring, or be refreshed by the viands of
-the luxuriant year, yet fancy could spread forth her
-golden fruits and sparkling juices in banquets as varied
-and profuse as ever greeted the most fastidious
-taste. Should the melodies of speech and of music
-be heard no more, and the sweet harmonies of nature
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">{81}</a></span>
-and of art forever be hushed, yet the exulting spirit
-could warble its own songs, and melt in ecstasies with
-imagined harmonies. And should the grasp of friendship
-rejoice us no more, nor the embrace of affection
-send joy to the heart, yet still the spirit would not be
-desolate, for it could gather around it the beings most
-loved, and still feel the embraces of affection.</p>
-
-<p>Conceptions are distinguished into two classes with
-reference to this one fact, that some of our conceptions
-are attended with a consciousness that they have existed
-before, and others are not. Those conceptions
-which are thus attended with the feeling of their resemblance
-to past perceptions or conceptions are called
-ideas of <i>memory</i>; those of our <i>perceptions</i> also which
-are attended with this recognition are called memory.</p>
-
-<p>How important to our happiness and improvement
-is this recognition of past ideas, few are wont to imagine.
-If all our knowledge of external things were forever
-lost to us after sensation is past, our existence
-would be one of mere sensitive enjoyment, and all the
-honor and dignity of mind would be destroyed. No
-past experience could be of any avail, nor could any
-act of judgment or of reasoning be performed. Even
-the most common wants of animal nature could not be
-supplied; for, were the cooling water and sustaining
-food presented to the sight, no memory of the past
-comfort secured by them would lead the mind to seek
-it again. Or, had nature, by some implanted instinct,
-provided for these necessities, yet life in this case would
-have consisted of a mere succession of sensations, without
-even the amount of intellect of which the lower animals
-give proof.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">{82}</a></span>
-It is the capacity of retrospection, too, which gives
-us the power of foreseeing the future, and thus of looking
-both before and behind for sources of enjoyment in
-delightful reminiscences and joyful anticipations. It is
-this power of remembrance and foresight which raises
-man to be the image of his Creator, the miniature of
-Him who sees the end from the beginning, who looks
-back on never commencing ages, and forward through
-eternal years.</p>
-
-<p>It is true the mind of man can foresee only by the
-process of reasoning, by which it is inferred that the
-future will, in given circumstances, resemble the past.
-And how the Eternal Mind can foresee by intuition all
-the events which hang upon the volitions of the myriads
-of acting minds which he has formed is what no
-human intellect can grasp. The <i>foresight of intuition</i>
-has not been bestowed upon man, but is reserved
-as one distinctive prerogative of Deity.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">{83}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br />
-<small>ATTENTION AND ABSTRACTION.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">To</span> understand clearly the nature of the mental
-phenomena called <i>attention</i> and <i>abstraction</i>, two facts
-in our mental history need definitely to be understood&mdash;facts
-which have a decided bearing on the nature and
-character of almost all the operations of mind.</p>
-
-<p>The first is, that the objects of our conceptions are
-seldom, if ever, isolated, disconnected objects. On the
-contrary, there is an extended and complex picture before
-the mind, including often a great variety of objects,
-with their several qualities, relations, and changes.
-In this mental picture some objects are clear and
-distinct, while others seem to float along in shadowy
-vagueness.</p>
-
-<p>This fact must be evident to any mind that will
-closely examine its own mental operations. It is also
-equally evident when we consider the mode in which
-our ideas are gained by perception. We never acquire
-our ideas in single disconnected lineaments. We are
-continually viewing complex objects with numerous
-qualities and surrounded by a great variety of circumstances,
-which unitedly form a <i>whole</i> in one act of perception.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, there are few objects, either of perception or
-conception, which, however close the process of abstraction,
-do not remain complex in their nature. The simplest
-forms of matter are <i>combined</i> ideas of extension,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">{84}</a></span>
-figure, color, and relation. These different ideas we
-gain by the aid of the different senses. Of course, our
-conceptions are combinations of different qualities in
-an object which the mind considers as <i>one</i>, and as distinct
-from other objects.</p>
-
-<p>Each item, then, in any mental picture is itself a complex
-object, and each mental picture is formed by a
-combination of such complex objects. It will be found
-very difficult, if not impossible, to mention a name
-which recalls any object of sense in which the conception
-recalled by the word is a single disconnected thing,
-without any idea of place or any attendant circumstances,
-and, as before remarked, almost all objects of
-sense are complex objects, combining several ideas,
-which were gained through the instrumentality of different
-senses. The idea of color is gained by one
-sense, of position, shape, and consistency by another,
-and other qualities and powers which the mind associates
-with it by other senses.</p>
-
-<p>The other fact necessary to the correct understanding
-of the subject is the influence which the <i>desires</i>
-and <i>emotions</i> have upon the character both of the perceptions
-and conceptions with which they coexist.</p>
-
-<p>It will be found that our <i>sensations</i> vary in vividness
-and distinctness according to the strength and
-permanency of certain feelings of desire which coexist
-with them. For example, we are continually hearing
-a multitude of sounds, but in respect to many of them,
-as we feel no desire to know the cause or nature of
-them, these sensations are so feeble and indistinct as
-scarcely ever to be recalled to the mind or recognized
-by any act of memory; but should we hear some
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">{85}</a></span>
-strange wailing sound, immediately the desire would
-arise to ascertain its nature and cause. It would immediately
-become an object of distinct and vivid perception,
-and continue so as long as the desire lasted.</p>
-
-<p>While one sensation becomes thus clear and prominent,
-it will be found that other sensations which
-were coexisting with it will become feebler and seem
-to die away. The same impressions may still be
-made upon the eye as before, the same sounds that
-had previously been regarded may still strike upon the
-ear, but while the desire continues to learn the cause
-of that strange wailing sound, the other sensations
-would all be faint and indistinct. When this desire
-is gratified, then other sensations would resume their
-former distinctness and prominency.</p>
-
-<p>Our <i>conceptions</i>, in like manner, are affected by the
-coexistence of emotion or desire. If, for example, we
-are employing ourselves in study or mental speculations,
-the vividness of our conceptions will vary in exact
-proportion to the interest we feel in securing the
-object about which our conceptions are employed. If
-we feel but little interest in the subject of our speculations,
-every conception connected with them will be
-undefined and indistinct; but if the desire of approbation,
-or the admonitions of conscience, or the hope of
-securing some future good stimulate desire, immediately
-our conceptions grow more vivid and clear, and
-the object at which we aim is more readily and speedily
-secured. The great art, then, of quickening mental
-vigor and activity, and of gaining clear and quick
-conceptions, is to awaken interest and excite desire.
-When this is secured, conceptions will immediately become
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">{86}</a></span>
-bright and clear, and all mental operations will
-be carried forward with facility and speed.</p>
-
-<p>The distinction between <i>attention</i> and <i>abstraction</i>
-is not great, but, as it is recognized in language, it
-needs to be definitely understood. <i>Attention</i> has been
-defined as "the direction of the mind to some particular
-object, from the interest which is felt in that object."
-It consists simply in a feeling of desire coexisting
-with our sensations and conceptions, and thus
-rendering them vivid and distinct; while, in consequence
-of this fact, all other sensations and conceptions
-seem to fade and grow indistinct.</p>
-
-<p>Attention seems to be the generic exercise, and abstraction
-one species of the same thing. Attention is
-used to express the interest which attends our perceptions
-or conceptions as <i>whole objects</i>, thus rendering
-them clear and distinct from other surrounding objects.
-Abstraction is that particular act of attention which
-makes <i>one part</i> or <i>one quality</i> of a complex object become
-vivid and distinct, while other parts and qualities
-grow faint and indistinct. Thus, in viewing a
-landscape, we should be said to exercise the power of
-attention if we noticed some object, such as a stream
-or a bridge, while other objects were more slightly regarded;
-and we should exercise the power of abstraction
-if we noticed the <i>color</i> of the bridge or the <i>width</i>
-of the stream, while their other qualities were not
-equally regarded.</p>
-
-<p>It is the power of abstraction which is the foundation
-of <i>language</i> in its present use. Were it not for
-the power which the mind has of abstracting certain
-qualities and circumstances of things, and considering
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">{87}</a></span>
-them as separate and distinct from all other parts and
-qualities, no words could be used except such as specify
-particular individuals. Every object that meets
-our eye would demand a separate and peculiar name,
-thus making the acquisition of language the labor of
-a life.</p>
-
-<p>But now the mind possesses the power of abstracting
-a greater or fewer number of qualities, and to these
-<i>qualities</i> a name is given, and whenever these qualities
-are found combined in any object, this name can
-be applied. Thus the name <i>animal</i> is given to any
-thing which has the qualities of existence and animal
-life, and the name <i>quadruped</i> is given to any object
-which has the qualities of animal life and of four legs.</p>
-
-<p>Every thing which is regarded by the mind as a
-separate existence must have some peculiar quality, or
-action, or circumstance of time or place, to distinguish
-it from every other existence. Were there not something,
-either in the qualities or circumstances, which
-made each object in some respects peculiar, there would
-be no way to distinguish one thing from another.</p>
-
-<p>A <i>proper name</i> is one which is used to recall the
-properties and circumstances which distinguish one individual
-existence from every other. Such is the word
-Mount Blanc, which recalls certain qualities and circumstances
-that distinguish one particular thing from
-all others, and the name Julius Cæsar, which recalls
-the character, qualities, and circumstances which distinguish
-one being from every other.</p>
-
-<p>Some words, then, are used to recall the peculiar
-qualities and circumstances of individual existences,
-and are called <i>proper names</i>; other words are used to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">{88}</a></span>
-recall a combination of certain qualities and circumstances,
-which unitedly are an object of conception,
-but are not considered by the mind as belonging to
-any real particular existence. These last words are
-called <i>general terms</i> or <i>common names</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A great variety of names may be applied to the
-same object of conception or perception, according to
-the number of qualities and circumstances which are
-abstracted by the mind. Thus an object may be called
-a <i>thing</i>, and, in this case, the simple circumstance of
-existence is what is recalled by the word. The same
-object may be called an <i>animal</i>, and then the qualities
-of existence and animal life are made the objects of
-conception. It can also be called a <i>man</i>, and then, in
-addition to the qualities recalled by the word animal,
-are recalled those qualities which distinguish man from
-all other animals. It can also be called a <i>father</i>, and
-then to the qualities recalled by the term man is added
-the circumstance of his relation to some other being.
-The same object can be called <i>La Fayette</i>, and then,
-to all the preceding qualities, would be added in our
-conceptions all those peculiar qualities and circumstances
-which distinguish the hero of France from all other
-existences.</p>
-
-<p>The following will probably illustrate the mode by
-which the human mind first acquires the proper use of
-these general terms. The infant child learns to distinguish
-one existence from another probably long before
-he acquires the use of any names by which to designate
-them. We may suppose that a little dog is an
-inmate of his nursery, and that with the <i>sight</i> of this
-animal has often been associated the <i>sound</i> of the word
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">{89}</a></span>
-<i>dog</i>. This is so often repeated, that, by the principle
-of association, the sight of the object and the sound of
-the word invariably recur together. He observes that
-this sound is used by those around him in order to direct
-his attention to the animal, and he himself soon
-uses the word to direct the attention of others in the
-same way.</p>
-
-<p>But soon it happens that another animal is introduced
-into his apartment, which in many respects resembles
-the object he has learned to call a dog. To
-this new object he would apply the same term, but he
-finds that others use the sound <i>cat</i> in connection with
-the sight of this new animal. He soon learns the difference
-between the two objects, the particulars in
-which they agree, and those in which they differ. He
-afterward notices other animals of these species, and
-observes that some have the qualities to which the term
-<i>dog</i> is applied, and others those to which the term <i>cat</i>
-is applied.</p>
-
-<p>He continues to notice animals of other kinds, and,
-after long experience in this way, he learns to apply
-names to designate a particular <i>combination of qualities</i>,
-and, whenever these qualities are found combined,
-he has a term ready to apply to them. He learns that
-some words are used to point out the peculiar qualities
-which distinguish one thing from all others, and,
-at the same time, other words are used which simply
-recall <i>qualities</i>, but do not designate any particular existence
-to which they belong. Thus the term <i>boy</i> he
-uses for the purpose of designating qualities without
-conceiving of any particular existence in which they
-are found, while the term <i>Mary</i> is used to designate
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">{90}</a></span>
-the qualities and circumstances of the particular existence
-he finds as the companion of his sports.</p>
-
-<p>All objects of our perceptions are arranged into classes,
-according to the peculiar combination of qualities
-which are recalled by the names employed to designate
-them. For example, all objects that have the qualities
-of existence and of animal life are arranged in one
-class, and are called <i>animals</i>. All those which have
-the qualities recalled by the term animal, and the additional
-qualities of wings and feathers, are arranged in
-another class called <i>birds</i>. All those objects which
-have the qualities included in the term <i>bird</i>, together
-with several additional qualities, are arranged in another
-class, and called <i>eagles</i>.</p>
-
-<p>To these various classes the terms <i>genera</i> and <i>species</i>
-are applied. These terms imply a <i>relation</i>, or the
-comparison of one class with another, in reference to
-the <i>number of qualities</i> to be recalled by the terms
-employed. Thus the class <i>bird</i> is called a <i>species</i> of
-the class <i>animal</i>, because it includes all the qualities
-that are combined in the conception recalled by the
-word animal, and others in addition; but the class <i>bird</i>
-is called a <i>genus</i> in relation to the class <i>eagle</i>, because
-it contains only a part of the qualities which are recalled
-by the term eagle.</p>
-
-<p>A <i>genus</i> may be defined as a class of things the
-name of which recalls <i>fewer</i> particulars than the name
-of another class or species with which it is compared.
-<i>Bird</i> is a <i>genus</i> when compared with the class <i>eagle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A <i>species</i> is a class of things the name of which recalls
-more particulars than the name of another class
-or genus with which it is compared. <i>Bird</i> is a <i>species</i>
-when compared with the class <i>animal</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">{91}</a></span>
-In examining language, it will be found that the
-larger portion of words in common use are names of
-<i>genera</i> and <i>species</i>&mdash;that is, they are words employed
-to recall ideas as they are arranged in genera and species.
-It is only those words that are <i>proper names</i>
-which recall conceptions of the particular existences
-by which we are surrounded. Some of these surrounding
-existences are furnished with these particular
-names, and others can be designated and distinguished
-from each other only by a description. Thus we see
-some hills around our horizon, some of which have a
-peculiar name, and others can be designated only by
-describing the circumstances which distinguish them
-from all other hills.</p>
-
-<p>A <i>definition</i> of a word is an enumeration of the several
-qualities or circumstances which distinguish certain
-things from all others, and which are recalled to
-the mind when the word is used. Thus, if the word
-animal is to be defined, we do it by mentioning the
-circumstances of its <i>existence</i> and <i>animal life</i>, as the
-ideas recalled by the word. Generally, a word is defined
-by mentioning the name of some <i>genus</i> of which
-the thing intended is a <i>species</i>, and then adding those
-particular qualities which the species has, in addition
-to those included under the genus. Thus, if we are to
-define the word <i>man</i>, we mention the genus <i>animal</i>,
-and then the qualities which man has in addition to
-those possessed by other animals. Thus: "<i>Man</i> is
-an <i>animal</i>, having the human form, and a spirit endowed
-with intellect, susceptibility, and will."</p>
-
-<p>There are some words which recall only <i>one</i> quality
-or circumstance, and which, therefore, can not be defined
-like the words which recall various qualities and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">{92}</a></span>
-circumstances, as joy, sorrow, color, and the like. Such
-words as these are defined by mentioning the times or
-circumstances when the mind is conscious of the existence
-of the idea to be recalled by the word. Thus
-<i>joy</i> is "a state of mind which exists when any ardent
-desire is gratified." <i>Color</i> is "a quality of objects
-which is perceived when light enters the eye."</p>
-
-<p>Those conceptions which can be defined by enumerating
-the several qualities and circumstances which
-compose them are called <i>complex ideas</i>, and the words
-used to designate them are called <i>complex terms</i>.
-Such words as landscape, wrestler, giant, and philosopher,
-are complex terms. The word landscape recalls
-a complex idea of various material things. The word
-wrestler recalls an idea of a material object and one of
-its actions. The word giant recalls an idea of a thing
-and its relation as to size. The word philosopher recalls
-the idea of a thing and one of its qualities.</p>
-
-<p>Those conceptions which are not composed of several
-qualities and circumstances, but are themselves a
-single quality or circumstance, are called <i>simple ideas</i>,
-and the words used to recall them are called <i>simple
-terms</i>. Such words as sweetness, loudness, depth,
-pain, and joy, are simple terms. Some terms which
-express emotions of the mind are entirely simple, such
-as sorrow, joy, and happiness. Others are words
-which recall an idea of a simple emotion and of its
-<i>cause</i>, such, for example, as <i>gratitude</i>, which expresses
-the idea of an emotion of mind and also that it was
-caused by some benefit conferred. Words that express
-simple ideas can be defined only by some description
-of the circumstances in which these ideas exist,
-or by a reference to their causes or effects.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">{93}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br />
-<small>ASSOCIATION.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> causes of the particular succession of our ideas,
-and the control which the mind has in regulating this
-succession, is a subject no less interesting than important;
-for if by any act of choice the mind has the power
-of regulating its own thoughts and feelings, then
-man is a free agent and an accountable being; but if
-the conceptions and the emotions depend entirely upon
-the constitution of things, and thus, either directly or
-indirectly, on the will of the Creator, then man can not
-be accountable for that over which he can have no control.</p>
-
-<p>In the preceding chapter has been illustrated the
-effect which the co-existence of desire has in regard
-both to our sensations and our conceptions, tending to
-make those which are fitted to accomplish the object
-desired very vivid and prominent, while others, to a
-greater or less extent, disappear.</p>
-
-<p>The mind is continually under the influence of some
-desire. It constantly has some plan to accomplish,
-some cause to search out, or some gratification to secure.
-The present wish or desire of the mind imparts
-an interest to whatever conception seems calculated to
-forward this object. Thus, if the mathematician has
-a problem to solve, and this is the leading desire of
-the mind, among the various conceptions that arise,
-those are the most interesting which are fitted to his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">{94}</a></span>
-object, and such immediately become vivid and distinct.
-If the painter or the poet is laboring to effect
-some new creation of his art, and has this as the leading
-object of desire, whatever conceptions seem best
-fitted to his purpose are immediately invested with interest,
-and become distinct and clear. If the merchant,
-or the capitalist, or the statesman has some project
-which he is toiling to accomplish, whatever conceptions
-appear adapted to his purpose soon are glowing
-and defined, in consequence of the interest with which
-desire thus invests them.</p>
-
-<p>From this it appears that the nature of the desire,
-or governing purpose of the mind, will in a great measure
-determine the nature and the succession of its conceptions.
-If a man has chosen to find his chief happiness
-in securing power and honor, then those conceptions
-will be the most interesting to his mind that best
-fall in with his object. If he has chosen to find happiness
-in securing the various gratifications of sense,
-then those conceptions that most coincide with this
-desire will become prominent. If a man has chosen
-to find his chief enjoyment in doing the will of God,
-then his conceptions will, to a great extent, be conformed
-to this object of desire. The current of a man's
-thoughts, therefore, becomes the surest mode of determining
-what is the governing purpose or leading desire
-of the mind.</p>
-
-<p>But there are seasons in our mental history when
-the mind does not seem to be under the influence of
-any governing desire; when it seems to relax, and its
-thoughts appear to flow on without any regulating
-principle. At such times the vividness of leading
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">{95}</a></span>
-conceptions, which otherwise is determined by <i>desire</i>,
-seems to depend upon our past experience. Those
-objects which, in past experience, have been associated
-with emotion, are those which the mind selects, and
-which thus begin to glow in the distinct lineaments
-with which emotion at first invested them.</p>
-
-<p>In past experience, all conceptions which were attended
-with emotion were most distinct and clear, and
-therefore, when such conceptions return united with
-others, they are the ones which are most interesting,
-and thus most vivid and distinct. Thus, in our musing
-hours of idle reverie, as one picture after another
-glides before the mind, if some object occurs, such as
-the home of our youth, or the friend of our early days,
-the emotions which have so often been united with
-these objects in past experience cause them to appear
-in clear and glowing lineaments, and the stronger have
-been the past emotions connected with them, the more
-clearly will they be defined. It appears, then, that
-there are two circumstances that account for the apparent
-<i>selection</i> which the mind makes in its objects of
-conception. The first is the feeling that <i>certain conceptions
-are fitted to accomplish the leading desire of
-the mind</i>; and the second is, that <i>certain objects in
-past experience have been attended with emotion</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But there is another phenomenon in our mental history
-which has a direct bearing on the nature and succession
-of our conceptions. When any conception,
-through the influence of desire or emotion, becomes the
-prominent object, immediately other objects with which
-this has been associated in past experience begin to
-return and gather around it in new combinations.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">{96}</a></span>
-Thus a new picture is presented before the mind, from
-which it again selects an object according as desire or
-emotion regulates, which, under this influence, grows
-vivid and distinct. Around this new object immediately
-begin to cluster its past associates, till still another
-scene is fresh arrayed before the mind.</p>
-
-<p>In these new combinations, those objects which are
-least interesting continually disappear, while those
-most interesting are retained to form a part of the succeeding
-picture. Thus, in every mental picture, desire
-or emotion seems to call forth objects which start
-out, as it were, in bold relief from all others, and call
-from the shade of obscurity the companions of their
-former existence, which gather around them in new
-and varied combinations.</p>
-
-<p>Almost every object of thought in past experience
-has been connected with a great number of other objects,
-and so great has been the variety of its former
-combinations, that it would be impossible to predict,
-with any degree of certainty, <i>which</i> of its past associates
-will be summoned to aid in forming the new mental
-scenes which are destined to arise. Yet experience
-has enabled us to detect some <i>general laws</i>, which
-appear to regulate these combinations.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>first</i> is, that those objects are most likely to attend
-each other which in past experience were united,
-while some strong emotion was existing with them.
-If, for example, a retired lake had been the scene of
-death to a beloved friend, the conception of this object
-would be almost invariably associated with the image
-of the friend that had perished beneath its waters, and
-also with the scene of his death. In like manner, if
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">{97}</a></span>
-some friend had expired at a certain hour of the day,
-or on a particular day of the year, the return of these
-seasons would probably be associated with the sorrowful
-scenes connected with them in past experience.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>second</i> law of association is, that <i>long continued</i>
-or <i>frequently repeated</i> attention to objects that are
-connected at the time of this attention will secure the
-connected return of these objects. <i>Attention</i>, it may
-be recollected, is desire united with our conceptions,
-thus rendering them more vivid.</p>
-
-<p>It seems to produce the same effect if this attention
-is long continued or if it is frequently repeated.
-Thus, if the mind has dwelt for a long time on a
-beautiful picture, has noticed all its proportions, its
-shading, its outline, and its colors with minute attention,
-one object in this picture can not recur to the
-mind without bringing with it the other objects that
-were associated at the time of this close attention.
-The frequent repetition of a sentence is a case where
-<i>oft repeated</i> though short attention to certain words
-has the effect of recalling them to the mind in the connection
-in which they were placed during this repeated
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>third</i> law of association is, that objects which
-have <i>recently</i> been associated in experience are, on this
-account, more likely to recall each other than to recall
-those which were connected with them at a more remote
-period of time. The passage of time, as a general
-fact, seems to weaken the vividness of our conceptions,
-and to destroy the probability of their associate
-recurrence. Thus a line of poetry may be repeated,
-and the listener may be able, the moment after, to recall
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">{98}</a></span>
-each word, but the next day the whole may be
-lost.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>fourth</i> law of association is, that the recurrence
-of associated objects depends, in a great measure, upon
-the <i>number</i> of objects with which it may have been
-connected in past experience. If it has existed in
-combination with only <i>one</i> object, that object will return
-associated with it; but in proportion as the number
-of its associates increases, the power of determining
-which will be its next companion diminishes. As
-an example of this fact may be mentioned the first
-hearing of a beautiful air by some particular person.
-The next time it is heard, the idea of this performer
-will be associated with the sounds; but after it has
-been sung by a great variety of persons, other circumstances
-would determine what conceptions this air
-would recall. It is very probable, in this case, that
-its notes would recall from among the associated
-scenes the friend most beloved, or some interesting circumstance
-that awakened emotion at the time the air
-was performed.</p>
-
-<p>The principal circumstances which operate in recalling
-associated ideas have now been pointed out. The
-next inquiry is, What are those objects and events
-which ordinarily are most frequently united in our
-<i>perceptions</i>, and therefore are most likely to return together
-in our <i>conceptions</i>?</p>
-
-<p>The most common connection of our ideas of perception
-are made by contiguity in <i>place</i>. Objects are
-continually passing before the eye, and they are not
-in single distinct objects, but in connected groups.
-Of course, when we perceive any object, we must necessarily
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">{99}</a></span>
-observe its several relations to the things by
-which it is surrounded. If it is a building which
-meets the eye, it is impossible to observe it without
-at the same time perceiving the trees around it, the
-sky above it, and any other objects which are parts of
-the picture of which this is the prominent object. Of
-course, objects that are united in one complex picture
-before the eye when we gain our knowledge of them
-by perception, will ordinarily return together in our
-conceptions.</p>
-
-<p>Our ideas, also, are very much connected by contiguity
-as it respects <i>time</i>. When any two events occur
-at the same moment of time, or in such near connection
-that the conception of one remains until the
-other occurs, they ordinarily will recur together in our
-after conceptions of them. As an example of this
-may be mentioned the associations of a family who
-have been accustomed to close each Sabbath with music.
-As the still hour of this sacred evening drew on,
-wherever any wanderer might roam, it is probable that
-the notes of praise, so often connected with this season,
-would perpetually steal over the mind, bringing
-many another image of friends, and kindred, and home.</p>
-
-<p>The mind of man is so constituted that no change
-can take place in any material object without awakening
-the idea of some <i>cause</i>. An <i>effect</i> is defined as
-"some change of state or mode of existence in matter
-or mind." A <i>cause</i> is defined as "that without which
-no change would take place in matter or mind, and
-with which it will take place." As the ideas of cause
-and effect are so constantly conjoined in all our acts
-of perception, these ideas will return together in our
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">{100}</a></span>
-conceptions. Thus, if we see an instrument which
-has been the cause of pain, the idea of this effect will
-be recalled by a conception of the cause; or if the
-mind is dwelling on the memory of some beautiful
-painting or poetry, the author of these works will
-probably recur to the mind in connection with these
-conceptions.</p>
-
-<p>We sometimes meet with persons of such peculiar
-habits and dispositions, that, whenever they are encountered,
-the feelings are wounded or the temper
-crossed by their ill-timed or ill-natured remarks. The
-conceptions of such persons will ordinarily be attended
-by the memory of some pains of which they have been
-the cause, and the mind will involuntarily shrink from
-contact with them, as from the points and thorns of a
-bramble-bush. Those events, therefore, or those objects
-which have the relation of <i>cause</i> and <i>effect</i> existing
-between them, will ordinarily be united as objects
-of conception.</p>
-
-<p>The mind of man is continually noticing the <i>relations</i>
-which exist between the different objects of its
-conceptions. As no idea of relation can be gained without
-comparing two or more things together, those objects
-which are most frequently <i>compared</i> will naturally
-be most frequently associated together in our conceptions.
-It has been shown that language is founded on
-that principle of the mind which enables us to notice
-certain qualities in things abstracted from other qualities,
-and to apply names to objects according as we
-find certain qualities united in them. Of course, in the
-use of language, the mind is continually led to notice
-the particulars in which objects resemble each other,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">{101}</a></span>
-and also the particulars in which they differ; consequently
-the mind, in learning and in applying names,
-is continually comparing objects, both to discover the
-particulars in which they are alike and those in which
-they differ, so that two objects are thus brought together
-before the mind.</p>
-
-<p>It is owing to this fact, therefore, that objects which
-resemble each other, or which are very much contrasted
-in their qualities, are very commonly united in our
-conceptions. If, for example, we see the countenance
-of a stranger, some feature will be recognized as familiar.
-Desire will be awakened to know where and
-in what other countenance we have seen such a feature
-or such an expression. This particular feature
-will thus become abstracted and vivid, and will soon
-recall that other combination of features for which we
-are seeking, and of which this has formed a part in our
-past experience. Thus two objects will be brought
-before the mind at once, the person who is the stranger,
-and a conception of another person whom this
-stranger resembles.</p>
-
-<p>All our ideas of contrast are relative. One thing
-can not be conceived of as very high or very low, as
-very large or very small, without a previous comparison
-with some object to determine this relation. Our
-ideas of poverty and riches, or of happiness and misery,
-are also <i>relative</i>. A person is always considered
-poor or rich, happy or miserable, by comparing his lot
-with that of others by whom he is surrounded. As,
-therefore, all ideas of resemblance or of contrast are
-gained by comparing two objects together, our conceptions
-often unite objects that <i>resemble</i> each other or
-that are <i>contrasted</i> with each other.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">{102}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
-<small>IMAGINATION.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">All</span> operations of mind which are not produced by
-material things acting upon the senses consist of a
-continual succession of conceptions. Some of these
-conceptions are exact pictures of past perceptions, and
-are attended by the consciousness that such things
-have existed before, and such are called ideas of memory.
-Others are conceptions which, by the process of
-association, are continually recurring, and arranging
-themselves in new combinations, according to certain
-laws or principles of association. Imagination has
-been defined as "that power which the mind possesses
-of arranging conceptions in new combinations," and it
-can readily be seen that this includes all the ordinary
-successions of thought except those of perception and
-memory. The term imagination has been used in
-rather a vague manner by writers on the subject.
-Sometimes it is used to signify all that succession of
-conceptions which recur according to the laws of association,
-and sometimes it is used in a more restricted
-sense. The more limited meaning is the one to which
-the term is most commonly applied, and it seems to be
-the one which precision and accuracy in the use of
-terms demand, and therefore it will now be pointed
-out.</p>
-
-<p>The mind is susceptible of certain emotions, which
-are called emotions of taste. These, more specifically,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">{103}</a></span>
-are called emotions of beauty, sublimity, and novelty.
-Such emotions are awakened by certain objects in nature,
-by certain works of art, and by the use of language
-which recalls conceptions of these objects.
-Those objects which awaken such emotions are called
-objects of taste, and those arts which enable us to produce
-combinations that will awaken such emotions are
-called the <i>fine arts</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Among the fine arts are ordinarily classed painting,
-music, sculpture, architecture, ornamental gardening,
-and poetry. The art of the painter consists in combining,
-according to certain rules of proportion and fitness
-of outline and color, certain objects, which, either
-from their peculiar character, or from the fitness of their
-combination in effecting a given design, awaken emotions
-of beauty or sublimity. The highest perfection
-of this art consists not so much in close imitation as
-in the nature of the combinations, and their unity and
-fitness in producing the effect designed by the artist.</p>
-
-<p>The art of the sculptor is similar in its nature, and
-differs chiefly in the materials employed, and in being
-limited to a much more restricted number of objects
-for combination.</p>
-
-<p>The art of the architect consists in planning and
-constructing edifices, intended either for use or ornament,
-and in so arranging the different parts as to
-awaken emotions of beauty or sublimity from the display
-of utility, fitness, grandeur of extent, or order of
-proportion.</p>
-
-<p>The art of the musician consists in combining sounds
-so as to produce such melodies or harmonies as will
-awaken varied emotions in the mind. The power of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">{104}</a></span>
-this art over the human mind is much superior to that
-of the others enumerated, because it can call forth both
-a greater variety and more powerful emotions.</p>
-
-<p>The art of the poet consists in such a use of language
-as will recall objects of beauty or sublimity in
-combinations that are pleasing to the mind, or as will,
-by the description and expression of varied emotion in
-other minds, awaken similar feelings in the breast of
-the reader.</p>
-
-<p>The art of ornamental gardening consists in such an
-arrangement of the varied objects which compose a
-landscape as will awaken emotions of beauty from a
-display of unity of design, order, fitness, and utility.</p>
-
-<p>The term imagination, then, in its most frequent use,
-signifies <i>those new combinations of conceptions which
-will awaken the emotions of taste</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The painter or the poet, when he attempts the exercise
-of his art, has some leading desire of an object to
-be secured. Under the influence of this desire, all
-those conceptions, recurring by the principle of association,
-which appear fitted to accomplish this object,
-immediately become vivid and distinct, and are clearly
-retained in the mind. As other conceptions succeed,
-other objects are found which will forward the
-general design, and these also are retained, and thus
-the process continues till the object aimed at is accomplished,
-and by the pen or pencil retained in durable
-characters.</p>
-
-<p>The action of mind to which the term <i>imagination</i>
-is thus restricted differs in no respect from other
-acts of conception when the mind is under the influence
-of desire, except in the <i>nature of the objects of</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">{105}</a></span>
-<i>desire</i>. If it is the desire of the mind to establish a
-proposition by mathematical reasoning, the mind is engaged
-in the same process of conception as when it is
-engrossed with the desire to form some combination of
-taste. In both cases some object of desire stimulates
-the mind, and whatever conceptions appear fitted to
-accomplish this object immediately become vivid and
-distinct.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">{106}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
-<small>JUDGMENT.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> term <i>judgment</i>, as a mental faculty, signifies
-"that power of the mind by which it notices <i>relations</i>."
-It is often used to signify all the intellectual powers,
-among which it is the most important one. Thus we
-hear it said that, in certain cases, the <i>feelings</i> and the
-<i>judgment</i> are in opposition, or that the <i>heart</i> and the
-<i>judgment</i> are not in agreement.</p>
-
-<p>It is also used often to signify any act of the mind
-when a comparison is made between two things, or between
-the truths asserted in any proposition and a truth
-already believed. The act called <i>memory</i> is a conception
-attended with one specific act of judgment, by
-which a present state of mind is compared with a past,
-and the relation of resemblance perceived.</p>
-
-<p>The nature of our ideas of relation are very different,
-according to the object or purpose for which the comparison
-is made. If objects are compared in reference
-to <i>time</i>, we learn some one of the relations of past,
-present, or future. No idea of time can be gained except
-by comparing one period of time with another,
-and thus noticing their relations. All <i>dates</i> are gained
-by comparing one point of time with some specified
-event, such as the birth of the Savior, or some particular
-period in the revolution of the earth around the
-sun.</p>
-
-<p>If objects are compared in reference to the <i>succession</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">{107}</a></span>
-of our conceptions or perceptions, we gain the ideas of
-such relations as are expressed by the terms <i>firstly</i>,
-<i>secondly</i>, and <i>thirdly</i>. If objects are compared in
-reference to the <i>degree</i> of any quality, we gain an idea
-of such relations as are expressed by the terms <i>brighter</i>,
-<i>sweeter</i>, <i>harder</i>, <i>louder</i>. If objects are compared in
-reference to <i>proportion</i>, we gain ideas of such relations
-as are expressed by the terms <i>an eighth</i>, <i>a half</i>. If
-objects are compared in reference to the relation of
-parts to a whole, we gain such ideas as are expressed
-by the terms <i>part</i>, <i>whole</i>, <i>remainder</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The process of classifying objects and the use of
-language depend upon the power of judgment; for if
-we see an object possessing certain qualities, in order
-to apply the name we must compare and observe their
-resemblance to the qualities to which such a name has
-been applied in past experience, and this feeling of resemblance
-is an act of judgment. The application of
-a name, then, always implies the exercise of the power
-of judgment, by which a comparison is made between
-the present qualities observed in an object and the
-same qualities which affected the mind when the name
-has formerly been employed. It also implies the act
-of association, by which the perception of certain qualities
-recalls the idea of the sound or object with which
-they have been repeatedly conjoined.</p>
-
-<p>The mental process called <i>reasoning</i> is nothing but
-a connected succession of acts of judgment. It is a
-comparison of what is asserted in a given proposition
-with some truth which is believed, or which has been
-established by evidence, and then observing the agreement
-or disagreement. Thus the truth that "things
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">{108}</a></span>
-will be in agreement with past experience unless there
-is some reason for the contrary," is a truth which every
-mind believes. Whenever, therefore, any event
-has been repeatedly an object of past experience, it is
-compared with this truth already believed, and found
-to be included under it, and therefore entitled to the
-same credit.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, also, the truth that "things which equal the
-same thing equal one another," is one which every
-mind believes. When any object by examination is
-found to be included under that class of objects which
-are thus equal to the same thing, it is an act of reasoning
-when we infer that they are equal to one another.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">{109}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV.<br />
-<small>THE SUSCEPTIBILITIES.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> examined the intellectual powers, we will
-now attend to the next general class, denominated <i>the
-susceptibilities</i>.</p>
-
-<p>When the mind is in a state of emotion, this state is
-always either pleasurable or painful. <i>Desire</i> relates
-to the attainment of some object which will be the
-cause of pleasurable emotions, or else to the avoidance
-of something which will cause painful emotions. This
-desire for pleasure and for the avoidance of pain is
-the mainspring of all mental activity; for when it is
-not in existence, neither the powers of the mind or of
-the body are called into exercise.</p>
-
-<p>There are various sources of enjoyment or causes
-of pleasurable emotion to the mind of man, the most
-important of which will now be pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>first</i> cause of enjoyment at the commencement
-of existence is that of <i>sensation</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_2" id="Ref_2" href="#Foot_2">[2]</a></span>
-This, at first, is small in amount compared with what it becomes when
-association lends its aid to heighten sensitive enjoyment.
-The light of day, the brilliancy of color, the
-sweetness of perfume, the gratification of taste and
-touch, the magic influence of sound, and the pleasure
-resulting from muscular activity, are probably the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">{110}</a></span>
-chief sources of enjoyment to the infant mind. As
-life advances, all these modes of sensitive gratification
-become connected with others of an intellectual and
-moral nature, so that at mature years it is difficult to
-determine how much of the enjoyment we derive from
-the senses is the result of association, and how much
-is simply that of sensation.</p>
-
-<p>Another source of happiness to the human mind is
-the simple exercise of its intellectual powers. This
-includes all the pleasures derived from the exercise of
-taste and the imagination; all the more profitless exercises
-of reverie and castle-building; all the activity
-of mind employed in contriving, inventing, and
-bringing to pass the various projects for securing good
-to ourselves and others; and all those charming illusions
-which so often give transient delight, but burst
-like bubbles in the grasp.</p>
-
-<p>Another source of enjoyment is the exercise of physical
-and moral power. This love of power is one of
-the earliest principles which is developed in the human
-mind. The exercise of the muscles in producing
-changes in its own material frame or in surrounding
-objects is a source of constant pleasure to the infant
-mind. There are few who have reared a child through
-the period of infancy but can recollect the times that
-this new species of delight was manifested, as, with
-his hand raised before his eyes, he watched its various
-motions, and learned his own power to control them.</p>
-
-<p>This love of power continually displays itself in the
-sports and pursuits of childhood. To project the pebble
-through the air; to drive the hoop; to turn the
-windmill; to conduct some light stream from its channel;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">{111}</a></span>
-to roll the rock from the mountain cliff&mdash;these
-and many others are the varied modes by which childhood
-exhibits its love of physical power.</p>
-
-<p>But when man begins to learn the influence which
-mind can exert over mind, a new desire is awakened
-of <i>moral power</i>. All the different modes are then
-sought by which one mind can bend the will of others
-to yield to its controlling influence. It is this desire
-which is gratified when the conqueror of nations beholds
-millions of minds yielding to the slightest word
-of his command. It is this which inspires the orator,
-as he pours forth that eloquence which charms the delighted
-throng, and bends them to his will. It is this
-desire, which often becomes the master passion, to which
-is sacrificed all that is just, lovely, and benevolent.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of enjoyment is that of sympathy in
-the happiness of others. This susceptibility is a
-source of constant enjoyment when those around us
-are contented and happy. None can be ignorant of
-the change produced in passing from the society of a
-sprightly, cheerful, and happy group to a circle soured
-by discontent or overwhelmed with melancholy. In
-early childhood, the effect of this principle is clearly
-developed. Even the infant child is affected and disturbed
-with flowing tears, and steals away from the
-chamber of sorrow, while the sight of smiling faces
-and the sound of cheerful voices sends through his
-heart the glow of delight.</p>
-
-<p>Another source of enjoyment is a feeling of conscious
-rectitude. Man is so constituted that, when he knowingly
-violates the principles of rectitude, a painful feeling
-is the inevitable consequence, while a habit of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">{112}</a></span>
-constant conformity to them brings a peaceful and
-happy state of mind.</p>
-
-<p>Another source of happiness is the consciousness of
-being the cause of happiness to others. This is an
-enjoyment entirely distinct from that of sympathy in
-the happiness of others; for we may see happiness
-conferred by another and rejoice in it, but the pleasure
-of being ourselves the cause of this enjoyment is one
-altogether peculiar. It can readily be seen that the
-more benevolent a mind is, the more happiness it will
-derive from this source; while in exact proportion as
-the mind is selfishly engrossed by its own exclusive
-interests will this stream of enjoyment cease to flow.</p>
-
-<p>Another source of happiness is the consciousness of
-inspiring certain emotions in other minds, such as esteem,
-respect, confidence, love, gratitude, reverence,
-and the like. The desire for this is one of the strongest
-passions, and its gratification often secures the
-most exquisite enjoyment. This happiness, ordinarily,
-is proportioned to the nobleness of the person who renders
-this regard.</p>
-
-<p>Another source of enjoyment is the discovery of
-certain qualities in intelligent minds. The perception
-of the qualities of matter through the medium of the
-senses is a very inferior source of gratification compared
-with the discovery of certain qualities of mind.
-This is the source of the highest enjoyment of which
-the mind is capable. The emotions thus awakened
-are called esteem, veneration, love, gratitude, and the
-like. <i>Love</i>, in its most general sense, is used for the
-pleasurable emotion which is felt in the discovery of
-any quality that is agreeable, either in matter or mind.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">{113}</a></span>
-Thus we are said to love the beauties of nature, to love
-delicious fruit, and to love the society of friends. But
-in relation to intelligent beings, it signifies pleasurable
-emotion in view of certain qualities and actions, attended
-with the desire of good to the object loved, and
-also a desire for reciprocated affection. There are certain
-qualities and attributes of mind which may be
-pointed out as the <i>causes</i> of affection.</p>
-
-<p>The first is <i>intellectual superiority</i>. Our estimate
-of intellect is altogether <i>relative</i>. What in a child
-seems an astonishing display of it, would be considered
-puerility in a man. What excites admiration in
-a savage or in the unlettered, is regarded with little
-emotion in the man of education. There are various
-qualities of intellect which awaken admiration. Quick
-perceptions and ready invention are the peculiar attribute
-of some minds; others are endowed with great
-sagacity and wisdom in adapting the best means to accomplish
-the best ends; others possess an energy and
-force of purpose which enables them to encounter difficulties,
-sustain bodily fatigue, and even to face death
-without shrinking; others possess a power of forming
-new and varied combinations that gratify the taste;
-others seem to possess a readiness and versatility of
-mind which enables them to succeed in almost any object
-they undertake. The exhibition of any of these
-operations of intellect are causes of emotions of pleasure
-to other minds.</p>
-
-<p>The next quality of mind which is a cause of affection
-is the power of <i>sympathy</i>. There is nothing
-which so powerfully draws the mind toward another
-being as the assurance that all our pleasures will be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">{114}</a></span>
-his, and that "in all our afflictions he will be afflicted."
-It is probable that a being entirely destitute of
-this susceptibility, however he might excite the mind
-by displays of intellectual power, never could be regarded
-with the warm and tender emotions of affection.
-If we encountered a mind that we felt looked upon our
-happiness without one glimmering of pleasure, and
-who could gaze upon our sufferings without one shade
-of sympathizing woe, it is probable the mind would
-turn away with feelings of dissatisfaction or disgust.</p>
-
-<p>Another quality of mind which becomes a cause of
-love is the power of <i>giving</i> and <i>appreciating affection</i>.
-There is nothing which is an object of more constant
-and fervent desire than the admiration and affection of
-other minds. To be an object of attention and of admiration
-to others has been the aim that has stimulated
-the efforts and nerved the arm of all the heroes
-and conquerors of the world. To gain the esteem and
-affection of other minds is what regulates the actions,
-the plans, and the hopes of all mankind. If, therefore,
-a mind should be destitute of this susceptibility, that
-which gives the chief interest would be withdrawn.
-If we should find, also, that the gift of our affections
-was of no value to another mind, this would deprive it
-of much that awakens interest and pleasure. It is the
-excessive indulgence of this desire for admiration
-which leads to ambition and pride&mdash;those principles
-which have filled the world with contention and deluged
-it with blood.</p>
-
-<p>Another quality of mind which secures affection is
-<i>benevolence</i>. This consists in such a love for the happiness
-as induces a willingness to make sacrifices of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">{115}</a></span>
-personal ease or enjoyment to secure a greater amount
-of good to others. Every mind is so made that, if its
-own wishes are not interfered with, it is more agreeable
-to see others happy around than to see them miserable.
-There have been cases of such perversion of
-our nature that some have seemed to find pleasure in
-the simple act of inflicting pain upon others; but this
-seldom occurs until after a long course of self-indulgence
-and crime. All persons, if it cost no sacrifice,
-would prefer to make others happy.</p>
-
-<p>But there is a great difference in the character of
-minds in this particular. Some, when they find that
-certain modes of personal enjoyment interfere with the
-interests and happiness of others, can find a pleasure
-in sacrificing their own lesser enjoyment to secure
-greater good for others. But others are so engrossed
-by exclusive interest in their own happiness that they
-will not give up the smallest amount of their own good
-to secure any amount of benefit to others.</p>
-
-<p>All minds, whatever their own character may be, detest
-selfishness in others, and never can bestow any
-great affection where this is a prevailing trait.</p>
-
-<p>These are the leading characteristics of mind which
-are causes of admiration and affection. There are other
-more specific exercises, such as modesty, humility,
-meekness, and the like.</p>
-
-<p>But all these traits of character, which, in themselves
-considered, are causes of pleasure, in certain circumstances
-may, to a selfish mind, become causes of unmingled
-pain. If the displays of intellect or the exhibition
-of the amiable susceptibilities in another being
-are viewed by a selfish mind as the cause of disparagement
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">{116}</a></span>
-and disadvantageous contrast to itself, they
-will be regarded only with painful emotions. They
-will awaken "envy, anger, wrath, malice, and all uncharitableness."
-This fact is fully illustrated in the
-history of the world and in the daily observation of
-life.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>causes of pain</i> to the human mind are in most
-cases owing to these very susceptibilities of enjoyment.
-The organization of the material frame and of the external
-world, while it is a source of multiplied and constant
-enjoyment, is often also the cause of the most intense
-and exquisite suffering. The strongest conception
-of suffering of which mind can form any conception
-is sensitive suffering. There are many minds
-whose constitution and circumstances are such that
-they can form but faint conceptions of any pain which
-results from the exercise of malignant passions, or
-from other sources of suffering. But every mind soon
-acquires a knowledge of what sensitive suffering must
-be, and can form the most vivid conceptions of it.
-Though few ever suffered the dislocation of joints, the
-laceration of the flesh, or the fracture of bones, still
-descriptions of such sufferings are readily apprehended
-and conceived of, and there is nothing from which the
-mind so involuntarily shrinks.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of suffering consists in the loss of
-present or expected enjoyment. There are many blessings
-which seem desirable to the mind that are never
-secured, and yet unhappiness is not caused by the
-want; but there is no happiness which is actually in
-possession of which the loss does not occasion pain.
-We may desire the esteem and affection of certain beings,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">{117}</a></span>
-and yet not become unhappy from the want of it;
-yet nothing sends such exquisite suffering through
-the mind as the conviction that some beloved object
-has ceased thus to respect and to love, or has been
-taken from us by death. Thus, also, if wealth, which
-is the means of purchasing a variety of blessings, be
-not secured, the heart can desire it without being made
-unhappy by the wish, yet the loss of wealth is attended
-with painful disappointment and regret. The possession
-of power, also, may be desired without uneasiness,
-but the loss of it seldom occurs without painful
-emotions.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of suffering is inactivity of body and
-mind. It has been shown that desire is the spring
-both of mental and of physical activity, and that this
-activity is one source of enjoyment. The loss of this
-species of enjoyment is followed by consequent inquietude
-and uneasiness.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of suffering is the existence of strong
-desire with the belief that it never can be gratified.
-Some desires exist in the mind without causing pain,
-but they may be excited to such a degree that the certainty
-that they never will be gratified may produce
-anguish almost intolerable.</p>
-
-<p>Another source of pain is sympathy in the sufferings
-of others. These may be so realized as to affect the
-mind of the observer with even more pain than the
-sufferer experiences. It is probable that the tender
-mother, in witnessing the distresses of her child, experiences
-much more pain than the object of her sympathies.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of suffering is the violated sense of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">{118}</a></span>
-justice. In minds of high moral susceptibilities, suffering
-from this source may be most exquisite.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of suffering is the consciousness of
-guilt. The emotions that follow the commission of
-crime are denominated repentance and remorse; and it
-is probable that the human mind has never suffered
-greater agonies than have attended the existence of
-these emotions. There are cases on record when intense
-bodily suffering has been resorted to as a relief
-from such anguish by withdrawing the attention of
-the mind from those subjects that call forth such emotions.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of pain is the apprehension of future
-evil. This is often a source of long-continued and of
-distressing emotions, and the pain suffered in apprehension
-is often greater than would be experienced if
-the evils were realized.</p>
-
-<p>Another source of suffering is the exercise of malignant
-passions, such as hatred, envy, and jealousy.
-These emotions never can exist in the mind without
-pain. The exhibition of wicked passions and actions
-in other minds may also be mentioned in connection
-with this. It is painful to behold a mind tossed with
-the furies of ungoverned passion, or yielding to the
-chain of selfishness and pride.</p>
-
-<p>Another source of suffering is the consciousness of
-the existence of certain emotions in other minds toward
-ourselves. The belief that other intelligent beings
-look upon our character and conduct with displeasure,
-indignation, or contempt, inflicts the keenest
-suffering, and there is scarcely any thing mankind will
-not sacrifice to avoid these painful emotions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">{119}</a></span>
-Another source of painful emotions is the view of
-certain characteristics in other minds. While the discovery
-of certain traits in other minds afford a high
-enjoyment, the want of them, or the existence of their
-opposite, awaken disagreeable emotions, expressed by
-the terms pity, contempt, indignation, disgust, abhorrence,
-and the like.</p>
-
-<p>There are other sources of pleasure and pain, which
-will be discussed more at large in succeeding chapters.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_2" id="Foot_2" href="#Ref_2">[2]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Hereafter the terms sensation and perception will often be used
-synonymously in cases where it is not needful to recognize the distinction
-heretofore indicated.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">{120}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
-<small>THE SUSCEPTIBILITIES. EMOTIONS OF TASTE.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Among</span> the susceptibilities, the emotions of taste
-have always been distinguished, and treated of as a
-peculiarly distinct class. Why is it that certain objects
-of sight, and certain sounds or combinations of
-sound, awaken emotions more than other sights and
-sounds? Why do the perceptions of the eye and ear
-so much more powerfully affect the mind than those
-of the other senses? These certainly are objects for
-interesting inquiry. In attempting the discussion of
-this subject, the following particulars need to be considered.</p>
-
-<p>All pleasurable emotions are caused either by <i>perception</i>
-or <i>conception</i>, for we have no other ideas but
-of these two kinds. That they are not occasioned by
-perception alone must be evident from the fact that infants
-and children, who have the same perceptions as
-matured persons, do not experience the emotions of
-taste in view of the most perfect specimens of the fine
-arts. A combination of gaudy colors or a string of
-glittering beads will delight a child more than the most
-finished productions of a Raphael or a Phidias. That
-it is not conception alone which awakens such emotions
-is manifest from the fact that it is the <i>perception</i> of
-objects which are either sublime or beautiful that awakens
-the most vivid emotions of this kind. Of course,
-it is inevitable that emotions of taste are caused by perception
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">{121}</a></span>
-and conception <i>through their connection with
-some past co-existing emotions</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Perceptions and conceptions can <i>recall the emotions</i>
-which have been connected with them, and emotions
-can also recall a conception of the objects with which
-they have been united. For example, if some dark
-wood had been the scene of terror and affright, either
-the perception or the conception of this wood would
-recall the emotions of fear which had coexisted with
-it. If, on some other occasion, a strong emotion of
-fear should be awakened, this would probably recall a
-conception of the wood with which it had formerly been
-united. It is no uncommon fact in our experience to
-have circumstances about us that recall unusually sad
-and mournful feelings, for which we are wholly unable
-to account. No doubt, at such times, some particular
-objects, or some particular combination of circumstances
-which were formerly united with painful emotions,
-again recur, and recall the emotions with which they
-were once connected, while the mind is wholly unable
-to remember the fact of their past coexistence. In
-like manner, pleasurable emotions may be awakened
-by certain objects of perception when the mind is equally
-unable to trace the cause.</p>
-
-<p>Objects of <i>perception</i> recall the emotions connected
-with them much more vividly than objects of conception
-can do. Thus, if we revisit the scenes of our
-childhood, the places of the sorrows and the joys of
-early days, how much more vividly are the emotions
-recalled which were formerly connected with these
-scenes than any <i>conception</i> of these objects could
-awaken.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">{122}</a></span>
-Certain perceptions will be found to produce emotions
-similar to those awakened by the intellectual operations
-of mind. Thus the entrance of light produces
-an emotion similar to the discovery of some
-truth, and the emotion felt while in a state of doubt
-and uncertainty resembles that experienced when
-shrouded in darkness. Great care and anxiety produce
-a state of mind similar to what is felt when the
-body is pressed down by a heavy weight. The upward
-spring of an elastic body awakens feelings resembling
-those that attend the hearing of good news,
-and thus with many other perceptions. From this
-fact originates much of the figurative language in common
-use; such as when knowledge is called light, and
-ignorance darkness, and care is called a load, and joy
-is said to make the heart leap.</p>
-
-<p>It has previously been shown that the discovery of
-certain operations and emotions of mind affords much
-more pleasure than attends mere perceptions of material
-objects. Those who have experienced the exciting
-animation felt at developments of splendid genius,
-and the pure delight resulting from the interchange of
-affection, can well realize that no sensitive gratification
-could ever be exchanged for them. Whatever objects,
-therefore, most vividly recall those emotions which are
-awakened when such qualities are apprehended will be
-most interesting to the mind.</p>
-
-<p>Now it will appear that there are no modes by which
-one mind can learn the character and feelings of another
-but by means of the eye and ear. A person both
-deaf and blind could never, except to an exceedingly
-limited extent, learn either the intellectual operations
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">{123}</a></span>
-or the emotions of another mind. Of course, it is by
-means of certain forms, colors, motions, and sounds
-that we gain those ideas which are most interesting
-and animating to the soul. It is by the blush of modesty,
-the paleness of fear, the flush of indignation, that
-<i>color</i> aids in giving an idea of the emotions of the
-mind. The pallid hue of disease, the sallow complexion
-of age, the pure and bright colors of childhood,
-and the delicate blendings of the youthful complexion,
-have much influence in conveying ideas of the qualities
-of mind in certain particulars. The color and flashing
-expressions of the eye also have much to do with our
-apprehensions of the workings of mind.</p>
-
-<p>As it regards <i>motion</i> as aiding in imparting such
-ideas, it is by the curl of the lip that contempt is expressed,
-by the arching brow that curiosity and surprise
-are exhibited, by the scowling front that anger
-and discontent are displayed, and by various muscular
-movements of the countenance that the passions and
-emotions of the mind are portrayed. It is by the motions
-of the body and limbs also that strong emotions
-are exhibited, as in the clasped hand of supplication,
-the extended arms of affection, and the violent contortions
-of anger.</p>
-
-<p><i>Form</i> and <i>outline</i> also have their influence. The
-sunken eye of grief, the hollow cheek of care and want,
-the bending form of sorrow, the erect position of dignity,
-the curvature of haughtiness and pride, are various
-modes of expressing the qualities and emotions
-of mind.</p>
-
-<p>But it is by the varied <i>sounds</i> of voice chiefly that
-intellect glances abroad, and the soul is poured forth at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">{124}</a></span>
-the lips. The quick and animated sounds of cheerfulness,
-joy, and hope; the softer tones of meekness,
-gentleness, and love; the plaintive notes of sympathy,
-sorrow, and pain; the firm tone of magnanimity, fortitude,
-patience, and self-denial, all exhibit the pleasing
-and interesting emotions of the soul. Nor less
-expressive, though more painful, are the harsh sounds
-of anger, malice, envy, and discontent.</p>
-
-<p>Not only are certain forms, colors, motions, and
-sounds the medium by which we gain a knowledge of
-the intellectual operations and emotions of other minds,
-but they are the means by which we discover and designate
-those material objects which are causes of comfort,
-utility, and enjoyment. Thus it is by the particular
-form and color that we distinguish the fruits and
-the food which minister to our support. By the same
-means we discriminate between noxious and useful
-plants and animals, and distinguish all those conveniences
-and contrivances which contribute to the comfort
-of man. Of course, certain forms and colors are
-connected in the mind with certain emotions of pleasure
-that have attended them as causes of comfort and
-enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>In what precedes, it appears that it is those emotions
-which are awakened by the apprehension of certain
-intellectual operations and emotions of intelligent
-minds which are most delightful; that all our ideas
-of such operations and emotions are gained by means
-of certain forms, colors, motions, and sounds; that we
-designate objects of convenience and enjoyment to ourselves
-by the same mode; that perceptions can recall
-the emotions which have been connected with them,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">{125}</a></span>
-even after the mind has forgotten the connection, and
-that perceptions recall associated emotions much more
-vividly than conceptions.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of these considerations, the inference
-seems justifiable that the emotions of beauty and
-sublimity are not owing either simply to the <i>perceptions</i>
-produced, nor to the <i>conceptions</i> recalled by the
-principle of association. But they are accounted for in
-a great degree by the fact that certain colors, forms,
-motions, and sounds have been so often connected
-with emotions awakened by the apprehension of qualities
-in other minds, or of emotions which arise in view
-of causes of enjoyment to ourselves, that the <i>perception</i>
-of these colors, sounds, forms, and motions recall
-such agreeable emotions, even when the mind can not
-trace the connection in past experience.</p>
-
-<p>As an example of this, the emotion of pleasure has
-been so often connected with the clear blue of the sky
-and with the bright verdure of the foliage, that the
-sight of either of these colors recalls the emotions,
-though we may not be able to refer to any particular
-time when this previous connection existed. In like
-manner, the moaning sound of the wind in a storm, or
-the harsh growl which sometimes attends it, has so
-often been united with sorrowful or disagreeable emotions,
-that the sounds recall the emotions.</p>
-
-<p>But there is another important fact in regard to the
-causes of the emotions of taste. It is found that the
-character of the <i>combination</i> of sounds, forms, colors,
-and motions has as much to do with the existence
-of such feelings as the nature of these objects of perception.
-The very same colors and forms, in certain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">{126}</a></span>
-combination, are very displeasing, when in others they
-are beautiful. Thus, also, certain motions in certain
-circumstances are very beautiful or sublime, and in
-others very displeasing. The very same sounds, also,
-may be made either very disagreeable or very delightful,
-according to their combination.</p>
-
-<p>To account for this, it is necessary to understand
-that objects which tend to awaken emotions of a directly
-opposite nature can not both operate on the mind
-without causing disagreeable feelings. If we are surrounded
-by objects of awe and solemnity, it is painful
-to notice objects that are mean or ludicrous. If we are
-under the influence of sprightly and humorous feelings,
-it is painful to encounter solemn and pensive scenes,
-with which, perhaps, at other times, we should be
-pleased. In order, therefore, to awaken emotions of
-beauty and sublimity, there must exist a <i>congruity</i> in
-the arrangement and composition of parts which will
-prevent the operation of causes that would awaken incongruous
-emotions.</p>
-
-<p>But there is another principle which has a still more
-powerful operation in regard to the effect of combination
-and composition. We are always accustomed to
-view objects with some reference to their <i>nature</i> and
-<i>use</i>. We always feel that every effect must have a
-cause, and that every contrivance has some <i>design</i>
-which it was made to accomplish.</p>
-
-<p>There is no intellectual attribute of mind which is
-regarded with more admiration than <i>wisdom</i>, which is
-always shown in selecting the best means for accomplishing
-a given end; and the more interesting or important
-is the object to be secured, the more is the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">{127}</a></span>
-mind pleased with discovering the wisdom exhibited
-in adapting means to secure this end. Almost every
-construction of nature or of art is regarded by the
-mind as having some use and design. No mind, except
-one bereft of its powers, would ever employ itself
-in designing any thing which has no possible use,
-either in benefiting or pleasing the designer or others;
-and should any such object be found, it would cause
-only disgust, as exhibiting the fatuity of a mind which
-spent its powers in contriving so useless a thing.</p>
-
-<p>There are many objects which meet the eye of man
-for which he in vain seeks the use and design; but
-such objects are never attended with the conviction
-that there is no possible use to which they can be applied;
-on the contrary, they more frequently provoke
-curiosity, and awaken desire to discover their nature
-and their use. There is a never-failing conviction attending
-all our discoveries of new objects in nature
-that there is some design or contrivance of which they
-form a link in the chain.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever the object of any design is ascertained,
-immediately there commences an examination of the
-modes by which this object is to be effected. If every
-thing is found to harmonize&mdash;if a relation of fitness and
-propriety is discovered in every part, the mind is satisfied
-with the exhibition of wisdom which is thus
-discovered. But if some parts are found tending to
-counteract the general design of the contrivance, the
-object is displeasing. Every work of art, then, depends,
-for the pleasure it affords, not alone on the various
-forms, colors, sounds, and motions which are
-combined to affect the senses, but on the nature of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">{128}</a></span>
-design intended, and on the skill which is shown in so
-composing and arranging the several parts that each
-shall duly aid in effecting this design. This is the
-particular in which the genius of the painter, the sculptor,
-the architect, the musician, and the poet is especially
-exhibited.</p>
-
-<p>Another particular to be noticed in reference to this
-subject is the implanted principle of curiosity, or the
-desire which the mind feels to discover what is <i>new</i>.
-After we have discovered the object for which a thing
-is contrived, and the fit adjustment of every part to
-this object, one cause of interest in it ceases. And
-objects which have been the subjects of repeated observation
-and inspection never yield so much interest
-as those which afford to the mind some fresh opportunity
-to discover <i>new</i> indications of design, and of fitness
-in the means for accomplishing the design. The love
-of novelty, then, is a powerful principle in securing
-gratification to the mind. Of course, the genius of
-the artist is to be displayed, not only in arranging the
-several parts so as to accomplish a given design, but
-in the very effort to secure a design which is new, so
-that the mind will have a fresh object for exercising its
-powers in detecting the fitness of means for accomplishing
-a given end.</p>
-
-<p>From the preceding, we recapitulate the following
-causes for the pleasurable emotions which are felt in
-view of certain objects of sight, and in certain combinations
-of sound: They recall emotions which, in past
-experience, have been connected with the conception
-of operations and emotions of other minds, or with
-material objects that were regarded as the causes of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">{129}</a></span>
-pleasurable emotions to ourselves; they recall emotions
-that are congruous in their nature; they cause
-emotions of pleasure from the discovery of fitness in
-design and composition; and, finally, they awaken
-emotions of novelty.</p>
-
-<p>Emotions of taste that are painful are caused by the
-presence of objects that recall painful emotions with
-which they have formerly been connected; by objects
-that recall incongruous emotions; by objects that exhibit
-a want of fitness and design; and by objects
-that are common, when the mind has been led to expect
-novelty.</p>
-
-<h3>OBJECTS, MOTIONS, AND SOUNDS THAT CAUSE EMOTIONS
-OF TASTE.</h3>
-
-<p>The <i>causes</i> which produce emotions of taste have
-now been pointed out. An inquiry as to <i>which</i> are
-the objects, motions, and sounds, and their various
-combinations, that, in our experience, have awakened
-such emotions, may lead to facts that will establish
-the position assumed.</p>
-
-<p>Emotions of taste generally are divided into two
-classes, called emotions of <i>sublimity</i> and emotions of
-<i>beauty</i>. Emotions of sublimity resemble those which
-exist in the mind at the display of great intellectual
-power, and at exhibitions of strong passion and emotions
-in another mind. Emotions of beauty resemble
-those which are experienced at the exhibition of the
-more gentle emotions of mind, such as pity, humility,
-meekness, and affection.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">{130}</a></div>
-
-<h4><i>Of Sounds.</i></h4>
-
-<p>All sounds are sublime which in past experience
-have been associated with the strong emotions of fear
-and terror. Such sounds are heard in the roar of artillery,
-the howling of a storm, the roll of thunder, and
-the rumbling of an earthquake. Sounds are sublime,
-also, which convey an idea of great power and might.
-This is illustrated in the emotions felt at the uprooting
-of trees and the prostration of nature before a
-whirlwind; in the force of the rolling waves, as they
-dash against the cliffs; and in art, by the working of
-some ponderous and mighty engine, that astonishes
-with the immense resistance it can overcome.</p>
-
-<p>Other sounds, also, are sublime which have often
-been associated with emotions of awe, solemnity, or
-deep melancholy. Such are the tolling of a heavy
-bell and the solemn notes of the organ.</p>
-
-<p>There may be certain circumstances that render a
-sound, that otherwise would be very gentle and beautiful,
-more strongly sublime than even those sounds
-that are generally most terrific. Gray describes such
-a combination of circumstances in a letter to a friend.
-"Did you never observe," said he, "while rocking
-winds are piping loud, that <i>pause</i>, as the gust is recollecting
-itself, and rising upon the ear in a shrill and
-plaintive note, like the swell of the Æolian harp? I
-do assure you there is nothing in the world so like
-the <i>voice of a spirit</i>."</p>
-
-<p>We have another example in Scripture: "And behold,
-the Lord passed by, and a great and strong wind
-rent the mountains, and brake in pieces the rocks before
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">{131}</a></span>
-the Lord; but the Lord was not in the wind;
-and after the wind an earthquake; but the Lord was
-not in the earthquake; and after the earthquake a fire;
-but the Lord was not in the fire; and after the fire a
-<i>still small voice</i>. And it was so, when Elijah heard
-it, he wrapped his face in a mantle." In both these
-cases, the sudden silence and the still small voice, so
-contrasted with the tumult around, would awaken the
-most thrilling emotions of the sublime. In some cases
-it is the sense which these sounds awaken of the presence
-of some awful and powerful Being that causes
-such emotions.</p>
-
-<p>There are a great variety of sounds that are called
-beautiful. Such are the sound of a distant waterfall,
-the murmur of a rivulet, the sighing of the wind, the
-tinkling of the sheepfold, the lowing of distant kine,
-and the note of the shepherd's pipe. But it must be
-remarked that it is always a combination of circumstances
-that make sounds either sublime or beautiful.
-If we know, by the source from which they originate,
-that they are caused by no display of power or danger,
-or if necessarily they have low and mean associations
-connected with them, the emotions of the sublime
-or beautiful, which would otherwise recur, are prevented.
-Thus the rumbling of a cart is sublime when it
-is believed to be thunder, and loses this character when
-its true cause is discovered. The sound of the lowing
-of kine in certain circumstances is very beautiful, and
-in others very vulgar and displeasing.</p>
-
-<p>Music seems to owe its chief power over the mind
-to the fact that it can combine all kinds of sounds that
-have ever been associated with any emotions, either of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">{132}</a></span>
-dignity, awe, and terror; or of joy, sprightliness, and
-mirth; or of tenderness, melancholy, and grief. Its
-power depends on the nature of the particular sounds,
-and also on the nature of their combination and succession
-in relation to time, and in relation to a certain
-sound which is called the fundamental or key note.</p>
-
-<p>The art of a musical composer consists in the ability
-with which he succeeds in producing a certain
-class of emotions which he aims to awaken. The
-more finished productions of this art are never relished
-till long observation and experience enable the listener
-to judge of the nature of the design, and with how
-much success the composer has succeeded in effecting
-it. Music, when adapted to certain words, has its nature
-and design more clearly portrayed, and in such
-productions it is easier to judge of the success of the
-composer.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Of Color.</i></h4>
-
-<p>There are no colors which ordinarily excite so strong
-an emotion as to be called sublime. The deep black
-of mourning and the rich purple of royalty approach
-the nearest to this character. That colors acquire
-their power in awakening agreeable or disagreeable
-emotions simply from the emotions which have ordinarily
-existed in connection with them, appears from
-the fact that the associations of mankind are so exceedingly
-diverse on this subject. What is considered a
-dignified and solemn color in one nation is tawdry and
-vulgar in another. Thus, with us, <i>yellow</i> is common
-and tawdry, but among the Chinese it is a favorite
-color. Black, with us, has solemn and mournful associations,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">{133}</a></span>
-but in Spain and Venice it is an agreeable
-color. White, in this country, is beautiful, as the
-emblem of purity and innocence, but in China it is the
-sorrowful garb of mourning.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Of Forms.</i></h4>
-
-<p>Forms that awaken emotions of sublimity are such
-as have been associated with emotions of danger, terror,
-awe, or solemnity. Such are military ensigns,
-cannon, the hearse, the monument of death, and various
-objects of this kind. Those forms which distinguish
-bodies that have great strength, or which are
-enduring in their nature, awaken the same class of
-emotions. Thus the Gothic castle, the outline of rocks
-and mountains, and the form of the oak, are examples.
-Bodies often appear sublime from the mere circumstance
-of size, when compared with objects of the same
-kind. Thus the pyramids of Egypt are an example
-where relative size, together with their imperishable
-materials, awakens emotions of sublimity. The ideas
-of beauty of form depend almost entirely on their fitness
-to the object for which they are designed, and on
-many casual associations with which they are connected.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Of Motion.</i></h4>
-
-<p>All motion that awakens sublime ideas is such as
-conveys the notion of great force and power. Motions
-of this kind are generally in straight or angular lines.
-Such motions are seen in the working of machinery,
-and in the efforts of animal nature. Quick motion is
-more sublime than slow. Motions that awaken ideas
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">{134}</a></span>
-of beauty are generally slow and curving. Such are
-the windings of the quiet rivulet, the gliding motion
-of birds through the air, the waving of trees, and the
-curling of vapor.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the beauty and sublimity of forms and
-color, it is equally true, as in reference to sound, that
-the alteration of circumstances will very materially alter
-the nature of the emotions connected with them.
-If they are so combined as to cause incongruous emotions,
-or if they do not harmonize with the general design
-of any composition, emotions of the sublime or
-beautiful are not awakened. For example, if the vivid
-green, which is agreeable in itself from the pleasing
-emotions which have been connected with it, is combined
-with a scene of melancholy and desolation, where
-the design of the artist is to awaken other than lively
-emotions, it appears incongruous and displeasing.</p>
-
-<p>The art of the poet consists in the use of such language
-as awakens emotions of beauty and sublimity,
-either by recalling conceptions of various forms, colors,
-and motions in nature, which are beautiful and
-sublime, or the strong and powerful, or the soft and
-gentle emotions of mind.</p>
-
-<p>Emotions of moral sublimity are such as are felt in
-witnessing exhibitions of the force of intellect or of
-strong feelings.</p>
-
-<p>Emotions of moral beauty are those that are felt in
-witnessing the exhibition of the gentler and tender
-emotions of mind. These emotions are much more
-powerful and delightful than when they are more faintly
-recalled by those objects of perception which are
-called sublime and beautiful.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">{135}</a></span>
-The taste is improved by cultivating a love for intellectual
-endowments and moral qualities. It is also
-cultivated by gaining an extensive knowledge of objects
-and scenes which, either in history, or in poetry,
-or in any compositions of the fine arts, have been associated
-with emotions. It is also cultivated by learning
-the rules of fitness and propriety, by studying
-works of taste, by general reading, by intercourse with
-persons of refinement and taste, and by a nice observation
-of the adaptation and fitness of things in the
-daily intercourse and pursuits of life.</p>
-
-<p>The highest efforts of taste are exhibited in the
-works of artists who make such pursuits the express
-object of their profession.</p>
-
-<p>But in ordinary life the cultivation of taste is chiefly
-exhibited in the style, furniture, and decoration of
-private dwellings, and in the dress and ornaments of
-the person. In reference to these, there is the same
-opportunity for gratifying the eye as there is in the
-compositions of the fine arts. On these subjects there
-are rules in regard to color, outline, and combination,
-and also rules of fitness and propriety, of which every
-person of taste sensibly feels the violation. In the
-construction of dwelling-houses, in the proportion of
-rooms, in the suitableness of colors, in the fitness of all
-circumstances to the spot of location, to the habits and
-circumstances of the proprietor, to ideas of convenience,
-and to various particulars which may be objects of regard,
-in all these respects the eye of taste ever is prepared
-to distinguish beauties or defects.</p>
-
-<p>As it regards dress, every individual will necessarily
-exhibit, to a greater or less extent, the degree in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">{136}</a></span>
-which taste has been cultivated. A person of real refinement
-of taste will always have the dress consistent
-with the circumstances of fortune, the relative rank
-in life, the station and character, the hour of the day,
-the particular pursuit or profession, and the period of
-life.</p>
-
-<p>If a person is dressed with a richness and elegance
-which fortune does not warrant, if the dress is either
-inferior or superior to that of others of the same rank
-and station, if it is unfitted to the hour or the pursuit,
-if youth puts on the grave dress of age, or age assumes
-the bright colors and ornaments of youth, in all these
-cases the eye of taste is offended.</p>
-
-<p>In the adaptation of colors to complexions, and the
-style of dress to the particular form of the person; in
-avoiding the extremes of fashion, the excesses of ornament,
-and all approaches to immodesty&mdash;in all these
-respects a good taste can be displayed in dress, and
-thus charm us in every-day life. A person of cultivated
-taste, in all that relates to the little arrangements
-of domestic life, the ornaments of the exterior and interior
-of a dwelling, the pursuits of hours of relaxation
-and amusement, the modes of social intercourse, the
-nice perception of proprieties in habits, manners, modes
-of address, and the thousand little every-day incidents
-of life, will throw an undefined and nameless charm
-around, like the soft light of heaven, that, without dazzling,
-perpetually cheers.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Emotions of the Ludicrous.</i></h4>
-
-<p>There is a certain class of feelings called <i>emotions
-of the ludicrous</i>, which are the causes of laughter.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">{137}</a></span>
-These are generally pleasurable in their nature, though
-there are times when the emotions which produce
-laughter are painful. Emotions of this kind are usually
-caused by the sudden union of certain ideas in
-our conceptions when the laws of association appear to
-be violated. Such ideas are called incongruous, because,
-according to the ordinary experience of our
-minds, they would not naturally have appeared together.</p>
-
-<p>In order to awaken this emotion, it is not only necessary
-that the mind should discover ideas united which
-have not ordinarily been so in past experience, but those
-which are united in direct <i>opposition</i> to the laws of
-association. Thus, if there has been a union of certain
-qualities in an object which have uniformly tended
-to produce emotions of a dignified and solemn kind,
-and some particular is pointed out which is mean, little,
-or low, the unexpected incongruity occasions mirth.</p>
-
-<p>In like manner, when an object in past experience
-has uniformly united ideas which awakened emotions
-of contempt, if some particular is pointed out in association
-with these which is grand or sublime, this incongruity
-occasions an emotion of the ludicrous. This
-is the foundation of the amusement produced by bombastic
-writings, where objects that are grand and sublime
-have low and mean conceptions connected with
-them, or where qualities that are insignificant or mean
-are connected with those which are grand and sublime.</p>
-
-<p>The following example of the union of such incongruous
-ideas will illustrate:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"And now had Ph&oelig;bus in the lap</div>
-<div class="verse">Of Thetis taken out his nap,</div>
-<div class="verse">And, like a lobster boiled, the morn</div>
-<div class="verse">From black to red began to turn."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">{138}</a></span>
-The sublime ideas connected with the sun, and the
-classical associations united with the name of Thetis,
-would not naturally have recalled the idea of so insignificant
-an animal, nor the changes produced in cooking
-it, and these connections violate the ordinary laws
-of association.</p>
-
-<p>Emotions of the ludicrous are also produced by the
-sudden conception of some association in ideas which
-has never before been discovered. Thus, if ideas have
-been united in the mind on some other principle of
-association than that of resemblance, the sudden discovery
-of some unexpected resemblance will produce
-mirth. This is the foundation of the merriment produced
-by <i>puns</i>, where the <i>ideas</i> which the words represent
-would never have been united by the principles
-of association, but the union of these ideas is effected
-on the principle of resemblance between the <i>sounds</i> of
-the words which recall these ideas. When the mind
-suddenly perceives this unexpected foundation for the
-union of ideas that in all other respects are incongruous,
-an emotion of the ludicrous is produced. This is
-also the foundation of the pleasure which is felt in the
-use of alliteration in poetry, where a resemblance is
-discovered in the initial sound of words that recall
-ideas which in all other respects are incongruous.</p>
-
-<p>All minds enjoy the excitement of this class of emotions,
-but some much more than others. <i>Laughter</i>,
-which is the effect of this class of emotions, is enjoyed
-more or less by all mankind, and is regarded as not
-only an agreeable, but as a healthful exercise.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">{139}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII.<br />
-<small>THE MORAL SUSCEPTIBILITIES.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A brief</span> reference has been made to those susceptibilities
-which are the subject of this chapter. These,
-from their importance, are entitled to a more enlarged
-consideration.</p>
-
-<p>Before proceeding, however, it is desirable to refer to
-the uses of the term <i>moral</i>, inasmuch as it often is employed
-with a vague comprehension of its signification.
-In its widest sense it signifies <i>whatever relates to the
-regulation of mind by motives</i> in distinction from
-those influences that produce involuntary results.</p>
-
-<p>In a more limited sense, it signifies <i>whatever relates
-to the regulation of mind in reference to the rules of
-right and wrong</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the preceding pages it has been assumed that the
-grand object for which the Creator formed mind and
-all things is to produce <i>the greatest possible happiness
-with the least possible evil</i>, and that this design is so
-impressed on the human mind that the needless destruction
-of happiness is felt to be <i>wrong</i>&mdash;that is,
-contrary or unfitted to the design of all things; while
-all that tends to promote happiness is felt to be right,
-or consistent with this plan.</p>
-
-<p>In order to a more clear view of this part of the
-subject, it is important to inquire as to the manner in
-which the ideas of <i>right</i> and <i>wrong</i> seem to originate.</p>
-
-<p>The young child first notices that certain actions
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">{140}</a></span>
-of its own are regarded with smiles and tones of love
-and approval, while other acts occasion frowns and
-tones of displeasure.</p>
-
-<p>Next, it perceives that whatever gives pleasure to
-itself and to others is called <i>good</i> and <i>right</i>, while
-whatever causes unpleasant feelings is called <i>bad</i> and
-<i>wrong</i>. Moreover, it notices that there is a right and
-wrong way to hold its spoon, to use its playthings, to
-put on its clothes, and to do multitudes of other
-things. It thus perceives, more and more, that there
-is some <i>rule</i> to regulate the use and action of all
-things, both animate and inanimate, and that such
-rules always have reference to some plan or design.</p>
-
-<p>As its faculties develop and its observation enlarges,
-the general impression is secured that <i>all</i> plans
-and contrivances of men are designed to promote enjoyment
-or to prevent discomfort, and are called good
-and right just so far as this is done. At the same
-time, all that tend to discomfort or pain are called bad
-and wrong.</p>
-
-<p>In all the works of nature around, too, every thing
-that promotes enjoyment is called good and right, and
-the opposite is called evil and wrong.</p>
-
-<p>At last there is a resulting feeling that the great design
-of all things is to secure good and prevent evil,
-and that whatever is opposed to this is wrong, and unfitted
-to the object for which all things exist. The
-question whether this impression is owing solely to
-observation or partly to mental constitution is waived
-as of little practical consequence.</p>
-
-<p>But, in the experience of infancy and childhood, the
-<i>law of sacrifice</i> is speedily developed. It is perceived
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">{141}</a></span>
-that much of the good to be gained, if sought to excess,
-occasions pain, so that there must be a certain amount
-of self-denial practiced, which, to the young novice,
-sometimes involves disappointment and discomfort.
-It is also seen that frequently two or more enjoyments
-are offered which are incompatible, so that one must be
-relinquished to gain the other. It is perceived, also,
-that there is a constant calculation going on as to
-which will be the <i>best</i>&mdash;that is, which will secure <i>the
-most good with the least evil</i>. And the child is constantly
-instructed that it must avoid excess, and must
-give up what is of less value to secure the greater
-good. All this training involves <i>sacrifices</i> which are
-more or less painful, so that a young child will sometimes
-cry as it voluntarily gives up one kind of pleasure
-as the only mode of securing what is preferred.</p>
-
-<p>It is perceived, also, that there is a constant <i>balancing</i>
-of good and evil, so that a given amount of
-enjoyment cancels or repays for a certain amount of
-evil. When a great amount of enjoyment is purchased
-by a small degree of labor or trouble, the <i>compound
-result</i> is deemed a good, and called right; on
-the contrary, when the evil involved exceeds a given
-amount in comparison to the good, the compound result
-is called evil and wrong.</p>
-
-<p>Thus is generated the impression that there is a
-law of sacrifice instituted requiring the greatest possible
-good with the least possible evil, and that this is
-the great design of all things.</p>
-
-<p>The impression is, not merely that we are to seek
-enjoyment and avoid pain, but that we are to seek the
-<i>greatest possible</i> good with the <i>least possible</i> evil, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">{142}</a></span>
-that in doing this we are to obey the law of sacrifice
-and suffering, by which the greatest possible good <i>is
-to be bought</i> by a certain amount of evil <i>voluntarily</i>
-assumed.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to this great law of sacrifice, the highest
-part of it is discerned in the earliest experiences of
-life. The young child very soon perceives that its
-mother and its other friends are constantly making
-sacrifices for its own good, and bearing inconveniences
-and trouble for the good of those around. And those
-who perform such acts of benevolent self-sacrifice are
-praised, and their conduct is called good and right.
-<i>Voluntary suffering to promote the welfare of others</i>
-is discerned to be the highest kind of good and
-right conduct in the estimation of all.</p>
-
-<p>The first feature, then, in our moral nature is that
-<i>impression of the great design of our Creator</i> which
-furnishes us the means of deciding on the rectitude of
-all voluntary action.</p>
-
-<p>The second feature of our moral constitution is what
-is ordinarily called the <i>sense of justice</i>. It is that susceptibility
-which is excited at the view of the conduct
-of others as <i>voluntary</i> causes of good or evil.</p>
-
-<p>In all cases where free agents act to promote happiness,
-an emotion of approval arises, together with a
-desire of reward to the author of the good. On the
-contrary, when there is a voluntary destruction of happiness,
-there is an emotion of disapproval and a desire
-for retributive pain on the author of the wrong.</p>
-
-<p>These emotions are instinctive, and not at all regulated
-by reason in their inception. When an evil is
-done, an instant desire is felt <i>to discover the cause</i>;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">{143}</a></span>
-and when it is found, an instant desire is felt <i>to inflict
-some penalty</i>. So irrational is this impulse, that children
-will exhibit anger and deal blows on inanimate
-objects that cause pain. Even mature minds are sometimes
-conscious of this impulse.</p>
-
-<p>It is the office of the intellect to judge whether the
-deed was a voluntary one, whether the agent intended
-the mischief, and whether a penalty will be of any use.
-The impulse to punish is never preceded by any such
-calculations.</p>
-
-<p>That this impulse is an implanted part of our constitution,
-and not the result of reason and experience,
-is seen in the delight manifested by young children in
-the narration of the nursery tale where the cruel uncle
-who murdered the Babes in the Wood receives the retributions
-of Heaven.</p>
-
-<p>Another feature in this sense of justice is the <i>proportion</i>
-demanded between the evil done and the penalty
-inflicted. That this also is instinctive, and not
-the result of reason, is seen in the nursery, where children
-will approve of slight penalties for slight offenses,
-and severe ones for great ones, but will revolt from
-any very great disproportion between the wrong act
-and its penalty. As a general rule, both in the nursery
-and in the great family of mature minds, the greater
-the wrong done, the stronger the desire for a penalty,
-and the more severe the punishment demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Another very important point of consideration is the
-universal feeling of mankind that the <i>natural penalties</i>
-for wrong-doing are <i>not sufficient</i>, and that it is
-an act of love as well as of justice to add to these penalties.
-Thus the parent who forbids his child to eat
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">{144}</a></span>
-green fruit will not trust to the results of the natural
-penalty, but restrain by the fear of the immediate and
-more easily conceived penalty of chastisement.</p>
-
-<p>So, in the great family of man, the natural penalties
-for theft are not deemed sufficient, but severe penalties
-for the protection of property are added.</p>
-
-<p>This particular is the foundation of certain distinctions
-that are of great importance, which will now be
-pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>We find the terms "<i>reward</i> and <i>punishment</i>" used
-in two different relations. In the first and widest
-sense they signify not only the penalties of human
-law, but those <i>natural consequences</i> which, by the constitution
-of nature, inevitably follow certain courses of
-conduct.</p>
-
-<p>Thus an indolent man is said to receive poverty as
-a punishment, and it is in this sense that his children
-are said to be punished for the faults of their father.</p>
-
-<p>The violations of natural law are punished without
-any reference to the question whether the evil-doer intended
-the wrong, or whether he sinned in ignorance,
-or whether this ignorance was involuntary and unavoidable.
-The question of the justice or injustice of
-such natural penalties involves the great question of
-the right and wrong of the system of the universe. Is
-it just and right for the Creator to make a system in
-which all free agents shall be thus led to obedience to
-its laws by penalties as well as rewards, by fear as well
-as by hope? This question will not be discussed
-here.</p>
-
-<p>Most discussions as to <i>just</i> rewards and penalties
-ordinarily relate to the <i>added</i> penalties by which parents,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">{145}</a></span>
-teachers, and magistrates enforce obedience to
-natural or to statute law.</p>
-
-<p>In these questions reference is always had to the
-<i>probable results</i> of such rewards and penalties in securing
-obedience. If experience has shown that certain
-penalties do secure obedience to wise and good
-laws, either of nature or of human enactment, then
-they are considered just. If they do not, they are
-counted unwise and unjust.</p>
-
-<p>So, if certain penalties are needlessly severe&mdash;that
-is to say, if a less penalty will secure equal obedience,
-then this also decides so severe a penalty to be unjust.</p>
-
-<p>In deciding on the rectitude of the penalties of human
-enactments, it is always assumed to be unjust to
-punish for any lack of knowledge and obedience when
-the subject had <i>no power</i> to know and to obey. If <i>a
-choice to obey</i> will not secure the act required of a free
-agent, then a penalty inflicted for disobedience is always
-regarded as unjust. The only seeming exception
-to this is the case where a person, by voluntary
-means, has deprived himself of ability to obey. But in
-such cases the punishment is felt to be right, not because
-he does not obey when he has no power, but because
-he has voluntarily deprived himself of this power.
-And he is punished for destroying his ability to
-obey, and not for violating the law.</p>
-
-<p>These things in human laws, then, are always demanded
-to make a penalty appear <i>just</i> to the moral
-sense of mankind, namely, that the subject have power
-to obey, and that he has opportunity to know the law,
-and is not ignorant by any voluntary and improper
-neglect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">{146}</a></span>
-In all questions of justice, therefore, it is important
-to discriminate between those penalties that are inherent
-as a part of the great system of the universe, and
-for which the Creator alone is the responsible cause,
-and those which result from voluntary institutions of
-which men are the authors.</p>
-
-<p>In connection with this subject, it is important to
-recognize the distinction that exists in regard to two
-classes of right and wrong actions. The first class includes
-those which are wrong in their nature and in all
-supposable cases, such, for example, as the wanton infliction
-of needless pain, or the breach of plighted faith,
-or the returning of love and kindness with ungrateful
-treatment. In all possible suppositions, the mind revolts
-from such actions as wrong and deserving of penalties.
-It is this class of actions which, without any
-reasoning, the mind never fails to disapprove, and to
-desire should be visited with retributive penalties.</p>
-
-<p>The other class of right and wrong acts derive their
-estimate solely from the circumstances in which they
-occur. For example, a man is angry and beats a little
-child. Now the question whether his feelings and
-action are right or wrong depends entirely on circumstances.
-If the child has done no evil and the person
-knew it, his feelings and actions are wrong. But
-if the person is a father correcting his child for some
-heinous fault and with only a suitable degree of anger,
-then the feeling and action are right.</p>
-
-<p>There is another mode of estimating conduct by
-which the same act may have two opposite characters,
-according to the <i>relation</i> in which it is regarded. For
-example, a good parent may give wrong medicine to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">{147}</a></span>
-his child, or punish an innocent one, believing him to
-be guilty.</p>
-
-<p>In such cases the act is right as it respects the motive
-or intention, and wrong as it respects the nature
-of the action. It is sometimes the case that a man
-may do a right action with a bad motive, and a wrong
-action with a good motive.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the same act is right in one relation, and
-wrong in another. It is important that this distinction
-should be borne in mind.</p>
-
-<p>The next feature in our moral constitution is the
-susceptibility which is excited by the intellectual judgment
-of our own feelings and conduct as either right
-or wrong.</p>
-
-<p>In case we decide them to be right, we experience
-an emotion of self-approval which is very delightful;
-but if we decide that they are wrong, we experience an
-immediate penalty in a painful emotion called <i>remorse</i>.
-This emotion is always proportioned to the amount
-of evil done, and the consciousness that it was done
-knowingly and intentionally. No suffering is more
-keen than the highest emotions of this kind, while
-their pangs are often enduring and unappeasable.
-Sometimes there is an attending desire to inflict retribution
-on one's self as a mode of alleviating this distress.</p>
-
-<p>This susceptibility is usually denominated <i>conscience</i>.
-Sometimes this word is used to include both
-the intellectual judgment of our conduct as right or
-wrong, and the consequent emotions of approval or remorse;
-sometimes it refers to the susceptibility alone.
-Either use is correct, as in the connection in which it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">{148}</a></span>
-is employed the distinction can ordinarily be easily
-made.</p>
-
-<p>This analysis of our moral constitution furnishes
-means for a clear definition of such terms as <i>obligated</i>,
-<i>ought</i>, <i>ought not</i>, and the like.</p>
-
-<p>A person is obligated or ought to do a thing when
-he has the intellect to perceive that it is right, and the
-moral susceptibilities just described. When he is destitute
-either of the intellect or of these susceptibilities,
-he ceases to be a moral and accountable being. He
-can no longer be made to feel any moral obligations.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">{149}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
-<small>THE WILL.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is the <i>power of choice</i> which raises man to the
-dignity of an intellectual and moral being. Without
-this principle, he would be a creature of mere impulses
-and instincts. He would possess susceptibilities of
-happiness to be excited, and intellect to devise and
-discover the modes of securing enjoyment; but without
-governing principle, the soul would be led captive
-with each successive desire, or be the sport of chances
-whenever conflicting desires were awakened.</p>
-
-<p>He who formed man in his own perfect image left
-not his work without this balance-power to regulate
-the complicated springs of so wonderful an existence.
-Man is now not only the image of his Creator as lord
-of this lower world, but is, like him, the lord and master
-of his own powers.</p>
-
-<p>It has been shown that the constitution, both of
-mind and of the world, is such that it is impossible in
-the nature of things to gain every object which is the
-cause of enjoyment. There is a constant succession of
-selections to be made between different modes of securing
-happiness. A lesser good is given up for a greater,
-or some good relinquished altogether to avoid some
-consequent pain. Often, also, some painful state of
-mind is sought as the means of securing some future
-good, or of avoiding some greater evil. Thus men
-endure want, fatigue, and famine to purchase wealth.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">{150}</a></span>
-Thus the nauseous draught will be swallowed to avoid
-the pains of sickness; and thus the pleasures of domestic
-affection will be sacrificed to obtain honor and
-fame. The whole course of life is a constant succession
-of such decisions between different modes of securing
-happiness and of avoiding pain.</p>
-
-<h3><i>Specific and Generic Volitions.</i></h3>
-
-<p>In noticing the operation of mind, it will be seen
-that there is a foundation for two classes of volitions
-or acts of choice, which may be denominated <i>specific</i>
-and <i>generic</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A <i>specific volition</i> is one that secures some particular
-act, such as the moving of the arm or turning of
-the head. Such volitions are ordinarily consequent on
-some more general purpose of the mind, which they
-aid in accomplishing, and which is, therefore, denominated
-a <i>generic volition</i>. For example, a man chooses
-to make a certain journey: this is the generic volition,
-and, in order to carry it out, he performs a great variety
-of acts, each one of which aids in carrying out the generic
-decision. These specific acts of will, which tend
-to accomplish a more general purpose, may also be
-called <i>subordinate</i>, because they are controlled by a
-generic volition.</p>
-
-<p>It can be seen that the generic volitions may themselves
-become subordinate to a still more comprehensive
-purpose. Thus the man may decide to make a
-journey, which is a generic volition in reference to all
-acts subordinate to this end. But this journey may
-be a subordinate part of a more general purpose to make
-a fortune or to secure some other important end.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">{151}</a></span>
-It is frequently the case that a generic purpose,
-which relates to objects that require a long time and
-many complicated operations, exists when the mind
-seems almost unconscious of its power. For example,
-a man may form a generic purpose to enter a profession
-for which years will be required to prepare. And while
-his whole course of action is regulated by this decision,
-he engages in pursuits entirely foreign to it and
-which seem to engross his whole attention. These
-pursuits may sometimes be such as are antagonistic to
-his grand purpose, so as at least to imperil or retard its
-accomplishment. And yet this strong and quiet purpose
-remains, and is eventually carried out.</p>
-
-<p>It is the case, also, that a generic volition may be
-formed to be performed at some particular time and
-place, and then the mind becomes entirely unconscious
-of it till the appointed period and circumstances occur.
-Then the decision becomes dominant, and controls all
-other purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Thus a man may decide that, at a specified hour, he
-will stop his studies and perform certain gymnastic exercises.
-This volition is forgotten until the hour arrives,
-and then it recurs and is carried out.</p>
-
-<p>This phenomenon sometimes occurs in sleep. Some
-persons, in watching with the sick, will determine to
-wake at given hours to administer medicines; then
-they will sleep soundly till the appointed time comes,
-when they will waken and perform the predetermined
-actions.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the <i>commencement</i> of a generic purpose,
-we find that sometimes it is so distinct and definite as
-to be the subject of consciousness and memory. For
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">{152}</a></span>
-example, a spendthrift, in some moment of suffering
-and despondency, may form a determination to commence
-a systematic course of thrift and economy, and
-may actually carry it out through all his future life.
-Such cases are often to be found on record or in everyday
-life.</p>
-
-<p>In other cases, this quiet, hidden, but controlling purpose
-seems to be formed by unconscious and imperceptible
-influences, so that the mind can not revert to
-the specific time or manner when it originated. For
-example, a child who is trained from early life to speak
-the truth, can never revert to any particular moment
-when this generic purpose originated.</p>
-
-<p>It is sometimes the case, also, that a person will contemplate
-some generic volition before it occurs, while
-the process of its final formation seems almost beyond
-the power of scrutiny. For example, a man may be
-urged to relinquish one employment and engage in another.
-He reflects, consults, and is entirely uncertain
-how he shall decide. As time passes, he gradually
-inclines toward the proposed change, until, finally, he
-finds his determination fixed, he scarcely knows when
-or how.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it appears that generic volitions commence
-sometimes so instantaneously and obviously that the
-time and influences connected with them can be recognized.
-In other cases, the decision seems to be a
-gradual one, while in some instances the process can
-be traced, and in others it is entirely unnoticed or forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>It is in reference to such generic purposes that the
-<i>moral character</i> of men is estimated. An honest man
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">{153}</a></span>
-is one who has a fixed purpose to act honestly in all
-circumstances. A truthful man is one who has such
-a purpose to speak the truth at all times.</p>
-
-<p>In such cases, the degree in which such a purpose
-controls all others is the measure of a man's moral
-character in the estimate of society.</p>
-
-<p>The history of mankind shows a great diversity of
-moral character dependent on such generic volitions.
-Some men possess firm and reliable moral principles
-in certain directions, while they are very destitute of
-them in others.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it will be seen that some have formed a very
-decided purpose in regard to honesty in business affairs,
-who yet are miserable victims to intemperance.
-Others have cultivated a principle called <i>honor</i>, that
-restrains them from certain actions regarded as mean,
-and yet they may be frequenters of gambling saloons
-and other haunts of vice.</p>
-
-<p>In the religious world, too, it is the case that some
-who are very firm and decided on all points of religious
-observances and in the cultivation of devotional emotions,
-are guilty of very mean actions, such as some
-worldly men of honor would not practice at the sacrifice
-of a right hand.</p>
-
-<h3><i>On Causes of Volition.</i></h3>
-
-<p>It becomes, then, a most interesting subject of inquiry
-as to the <i>causes</i> which decide these diversities
-of moral purposes, and also the causes which operate
-to give them more or less control over other principles.</p>
-
-<p>But, preliminary to this, it is necessary to secure
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">{154}</a></span>
-some discriminating accuracy in regard to the signification
-of the word <i>cause</i> in its various uses.</p>
-
-<p>This term, in its widest sense, signifies "<i>that without
-which a change will not take place, and with
-which it will take place</i>." This is the leading idea
-which is included in every use of the word.</p>
-
-<p>But there is a foundation for three classes of causes
-which may be denominated <i>producing causes, occasional
-causes</i>, and <i>deciding causes</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A <i>producing cause</i> is that which produces a change
-by the constitution of nature, so that in the given circumstances
-there is no power to do otherwise.</p>
-
-<p><i>Occasional causes</i> are those circumstances which are
-indispensable to the action of producing causes.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, when fire is applied to your powder, the fire
-is the producing cause of the explosion, while the act
-of contact between the fire and powder is the occasional
-cause.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the action of mind in volition, the mind
-itself is the producing cause, while excited desires and
-objects to excite those desires are the occasional causes.
-Or, in other words, mind is the producing cause of its
-own volitions, and motives are the occasional causes.</p>
-
-<h3><i>On Deciding Causes of Volition.</i></h3>
-
-<p>But inasmuch as mind always has the power to
-choose in <i>either</i> of two or more directions, the question
-arises as to <i>the causes which decide the direction
-of volitions</i>, and which may be called <i>deciding causes</i>.
-Whenever it is asked, "<i>Why</i> did a person choose to
-do thus?" the meaning is, What were the causes that
-influenced him to decide thus?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">{155}</a></span>
-Now these causes are ascertained, as all others are,
-by experience. Men are always stating to each other,
-as well as noticing in their own experience, the causes
-which decide their determinations.</p>
-
-<p>First, in certain cases, where two or more objects
-are presented, of which only one can be taken, the cause
-assigned for the direction of the choice may be that <i>one
-excited a stronger desire than the other</i>. A vast proportion
-of human volitions are decided simply by the
-fact that one object seems a greater good or excites a
-stronger desire than any other, and is thus the strongest
-motive.</p>
-
-<p>But there are other cases where, of the objects presented,
-one excites the strongest desire, while the judgment
-perceives that another will secure a <i>greater good
-on the whole</i>. For example, in case of a sick person,
-there may be placed a favorite drink that excites a
-very strong desire, and beside it may stand a nauseous
-medicine. In this case, the invalid may feel the
-strongest desire for the drink, and yet choose the medicine
-as the greater good in its final results.</p>
-
-<p>In such cases, what decides the direction of a volition
-is the judgment of the mind, that the object
-chosen, though it does not excite the strongest desire,
-is still the greater good.</p>
-
-<p>Another deciding cause of volition is the nature of
-the <i>constitutional susceptibilities</i>. For example, when
-it is asked why did a man forsake domestic life and
-become a soldier, the deciding cause may be that he
-had a strong constitutional love of the excitement and
-glory connected with that profession, and but little
-susceptibility for the quiet enjoyments of domestic life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">{156}</a></span>
-It is sometimes the case that a child, from its birth,
-seems to possess a natural love for truth, so that instructions
-on that point are scarcely needed. In another
-case, in the same family, and under exactly the
-same training, will be found a child who has the contrary
-propensity, so that it costs years of careful training
-to form a principle of veracity. The same constitutional
-variety will be found in reference to other virtues.</p>
-
-<p>Another deciding cause of volition are <i>the habits</i>.
-The existence of a <i>habit of obedience</i>, for example, will
-induce the formation of virtuous purposes that would
-never have existed but for this. A child who began
-life with strong propensities to certain faults, by a wise
-and careful training may secure habits that are fully
-equal in power to the same constitutional traits in another
-child. Often, in the result, it can not be seen
-whether the generic purpose to be truthful, for example,
-resulted mainly from natural constitution or from
-the formation of habits.</p>
-
-<p>The will itself also is more or less regulated by this
-principle. When a child is trained constantly to submit
-to fixed rules, the will acquires increased ease and
-facility in doing it. On the contrary, a mind that is
-never controlled grows more and more averse to yielding
-to any regulating principle.</p>
-
-<p>Another deciding cause of volition is such <i>a combination
-of circumstances</i> as excites one class of desires,
-while other sensibilities have no appropriate objects to
-stimulate them.</p>
-
-<p>For example, it may be asked, Why did a man choose
-to drink and gamble? The cause assigned may be the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">{157}</a></span>
-presence of liquor and of tempting companions, and the
-want of objects to excite higher susceptibilities. He
-had no wise friends, no business, and no higher sources
-of enjoyment immediately around him.</p>
-
-<p>Another deciding cause of volition is the existence
-of <i>principle or generic purpose</i>. For example, it may
-be asked, Why did a man choose to give up his liberty
-and property when he could have secured them by false
-testimony? The answer may be that he was a truthful
-man or a virtuous man&mdash;that is, he had formed a
-strong generic purpose to speak the truth or to act
-right on all occasions.</p>
-
-<p>Another deciding cause of volition is the existence
-of love and gratitude toward other minds, and the reflex
-influence of such minds in the bestowal of their
-love, sympathy, teachings, and example.</p>
-
-<p>This is the most powerful of all the influences which
-secure and sustain generic volitions, as will be illustrated
-more at large in future pages.</p>
-
-<h3><i>Causes that regulate the Power of Generic Volitions.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The next inquiry relates to the causes which regulate
-the <i>power</i> of generic volition.</p>
-
-<p>Among those causes, the most prominent is that
-natural force of will which is strictly constitutional.
-Some minds are formed by the Creator with great energy
-and great pertinacity of will, so that when a purpose
-is formed, all subordinate volitions needful to carry
-out this purpose seem easily controlled. Other
-minds, on the contrary, possess a naturally feeble will,
-so that no generic volition has a strong and steady
-control, but is constantly interrupted in its power over
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">{158}</a></span>
-subordinate volitions, or is easily changed by conflicting
-desires.</p>
-
-<p>In one case the person is denominated a man of firm
-purpose or a man of a strong will. In the other case
-he is called a man of yielding temperament or a weak
-character.</p>
-
-<p>The remaining causes that give strength to a generic
-purpose are most of those that have been enumerated
-as causes of the <i>direction</i> of volition, or <i>deciding
-causes</i>. These are the constitutional susceptibilities&mdash;the
-habits&mdash;the surrounding circumstances&mdash;the existence
-of love and gratitude toward other minds, and
-the reflex influence of such minds in the bestowal of
-their love, sympathy, teachings, and example.</p>
-
-<p>In all this variety of influences that decide those
-generic volitions which are the foundation of moral
-character, it must be remembered that in every case
-the mind has the power to choose that which the judgment
-decides to be the greatest good on the whole for
-itself and for the commonwealth.</p>
-
-<h3><i>How one Mind causes Volitions in another Mind.</i></h3>
-
-<p>In this connection, it is important to secure exact
-ideas of what is meant when one mind is spoken of as
-<i>the cause</i> of the volitions of another mind.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, in this relation, no mind can be the <i>producing</i>
-cause of volition in any mind but itself. It
-must be, then, either as <i>occasional</i> or as <i>deciding</i>
-causes that we can influence other minds.</p>
-
-<p>The only mode by which we can regulate the volitions
-of other minds is by <i>the employment of motives
-to stimulate desire, or by changing the constitutional
-susceptibilities</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">{159}</a></span>
-In the first case, men have power to so combine circumstances
-of temptation as to affect the most excitable
-and powerful sensibilities, or they can remove those
-objects and influences that sustain moral principle, or
-by a long course of training they can form habits and
-induce principles. The combinations of motive influences
-that one mind can bring to bear on another, as
-temptations to right or wrong action, are almost infinite.</p>
-
-<p>The other mode is by <i>changing the constitutional
-susceptibilities</i>. This can sometimes be effected to a
-certain degree by education and the formation of habits.
-It can be still more directly effected through the
-physical organization. For example, a child may be
-trained to use coffee, tea, alcohol, or tobacco, till the
-nervous system is shattered, and then a placid temper
-becomes excitable, a generous nature grows sour and
-selfish, an active nature becomes indolent, and multitudes
-of other disastrous changes are the result.</p>
-
-<p>These are the only two modes in which one mind
-is ever regarded as the cause of right or wrong volition
-in other minds.</p>
-
-<h3><i>On a Ruling Purpose.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The most important of all the voluntary phenomena
-is the fact that, while there can be a multitude of these
-quiet and hidden generic purposes in the mind, it is
-also possible to form <i>one</i> which shall be the dominant
-or controlling one, to which all the other volitions,
-both generic and specific, shall become subordinate.
-In common parlance, this would be called the <i>ruling
-passion</i>. It may also be called the <i>ruling purpose</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">{160}</a></span>
-or <i>controlling principle</i>. This consists in the permanent
-choice of some one mode of securing happiness
-as the <i>chief end</i> or grand object of life.</p>
-
-<p>We have set forth on preceding pages the chief
-sources of happiness and of suffering to the human
-mind. Now in the history of our race we find that
-each one of these modes of enjoyment have been selected
-by different individuals as the chief end of
-their existence&mdash;as the mode of seeking enjoyment, to
-which they sacrifice every other. Some persons have
-chosen the pleasures of eating, drinking, and the other
-grosser enjoyments of sense. Others have chosen
-those more elevated and refined pleasures that come
-indirectly from the senses in the emotions of taste.</p>
-
-<p>Others have devoted themselves to intellectual enjoyments
-as their chief resource for happiness. Others
-have selected the exercise of physical and moral
-power, as in the case of conquerors and physical heroes,
-or of those who have sought to control by moral
-power, as rulers and statesmen.</p>
-
-<p>Others have made the attainment of the esteem, admiration,
-and love of their fellow-creatures their chief
-end. Others, still, have devoted themselves to the
-promotion of happiness around them as their chief interest.
-Others have devoted themselves to the service
-of God, or what they conceived to be such, and
-sometimes by the most miserable life of asceticism
-and self-torture.</p>
-
-<p>Others have made it their main object in life to obey
-the laws of rectitude and virtue.</p>
-
-<p>In all these cases, the <i>moral character</i> of the person,
-in the view of all observers, has been decided by this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">{161}</a></span>
-dominant volition, and exactly in proportion to the supremacy
-with which it has <i>actually controlled</i> all other
-purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Some minds seem to have no chief end of life. Their
-existence is a succession of small purposes, each of
-which has its turn in controlling the life. Others have
-a strong, defined, and all-controlling principle.</p>
-
-<p>Now experience shows that both of these classes
-are capable, the one of <i>forming</i> and the other of <i>changing</i>
-such a purpose. For example, in a time of peace
-and ease there is little to excite the mind strongly;
-but let a crisis come where fortune, reputation, and
-life are at stake, and men and women are obliged to
-form generic decisions involving all they hold dear,
-and many minds that have no controlling purpose immediately
-originate one, while those whose former ruling
-aims were in one direction change them entirely to
-another.</p>
-
-<p>This shows how it is that days of peril create heroes,
-statesmen, and strong men and women. The
-hour of danger calls all the energies of the soul into
-action. Great purposes are formed with the strongest
-desire and emotion. Instantly the whole current of
-thought, and all the co-existing desires and emotions,
-are conformed to these purposes.</p>
-
-<p>The experience of mankind proves that a dominant
-generic purpose may <i>extend to a whole life</i>, and actually
-control all other generic and specific volitions.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">{162}</a></div>
-
-<h3><i>Mode of Controlling the Intellect, Desires, and
-Emotions.</i></h3>
-
-<p>We will now consider some of the modes by which
-the will controls the intellect, desires, and emotions.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen, in previous pages, the influence which
-desire and emotion exert in making both our perceptions
-and conceptions more vivid. Whatever purpose
-or aim in life becomes an object of strong desire,
-is always distinctly and vividly conceived, while
-all less interesting objects are more faint and indistinct.</p>
-
-<p>We have also seen that whenever any conception
-arises it always brings connected objects, according to
-certain laws of association, forming a new and complex
-picture.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever the mind is under the influence of a controlling
-purpose, the object of pursuit is always <i>more
-interesting</i> than any other. This interest always fastens
-on those particulars in any mental combination
-that are connected with the ruling purpose and seem
-fitted to promote it, making them more vivid. Around
-these selected objects their past associated ideas begin
-to cluster, forming other complex pictures. In all these
-combinations, those ideas most consonant with the leading
-interest of the mind become most vivid, and the
-others fade away.</p>
-
-<p>The grand method, then, for <i>regulating the thoughts</i>
-is by the generic decisions of the mind as to the modes
-of seeking enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the power of the mind over its own
-desires and emotions, it is very clear that these sensibilities
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">{163}</a></span>
-can not be regulated by direct specific volitions.
-Let any person try to produce love, fear, joy, hope, or
-gratitude by simply choosing to have them arise, and
-it is soon perceived that no such power exists.</p>
-
-<p>But there are <i>indirect</i> modes by which the mind can
-control its susceptibilities. The first method is by
-directing attention to those objects of thought which
-are fitted to call forth such emotions. For example,
-if we wish to awaken the emotion of fear, we can place
-ourselves in circumstances of danger, or call up ideas
-of horror and distress. If we wish to call forth emotions
-of gratitude, we can direct attention to acts of
-kindness to ourselves calculated to awaken such feelings.
-If we wish to excite desire for any object, we
-can direct attention to those qualities in that object
-that are calculated to excite desire. In all these cases
-the mind can, by an act of will, <i>direct its attention</i> to
-subjects calculated to excite emotion and desire.</p>
-
-<p>The other mode of regulating the desires and emotions
-is by <i>the direction of our generic volitions</i>. For
-example, let a man of business, who has never had any
-interest in commerce, decide to invest all his property
-in foreign trade. As soon as this is done, the name
-of the ship that bears his all can never be heard or
-seen but it excites some emotion. A storm, that before
-would go unnoticed, awakens fear; the prices in the
-commercial markets, before unheeded, now awaken
-fear or afford pleasure. And thus multitudes of varied
-desires and emotions are called into existence by
-this one generic volition.</p>
-
-<p>One result of a purpose to deny an importunate propensity
-is frequently seen in the immediate or gradual
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">{164}</a></span>
-diminution of that desire. For example, if a person
-is satisfied that a certain article of food is injurious,
-and resolves on <i>total abstinence</i>, it will be found that
-the desire for it is very much reduced, far more so than
-when the effort is to diminish the indulgence.</p>
-
-<p>When a generic purpose is formed that involves
-great interests, it is impossible to prevent the desires
-and emotions from running consonant with this purpose.
-The only mode of changing this current is to
-give up this generic purpose and form another. Thus,
-if a man has devoted his whole time and energies to
-money-making, it is impossible for him to prevent his
-thoughts and feelings from running in that direction.
-He must give up this as his chief end, and take a nobler
-object, if he would elevate the whole course of his
-mental action.</p>
-
-<p>These are the principal phenomena of the grand
-mental faculty which is the controlling power of the
-mind, and on the regulation of which all its other powers
-are dependent.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">{165}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIX.<br />
-<small>FAITH OR BELIEF.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have shown that a belief in the reality of the
-existence, both of mind and of matter, as <i>causes</i>, is one
-of the implanted principles of mind. Some philosophers
-have claimed that there is nothing in existence
-but mind, and that all that is called matter is simply
-<i>ideas</i> of things in the mind itself, for which there is no
-corresponding reality. Others have claimed just the
-opposite: that there is no such existence as an immaterial
-spirit, but that soul is the brain, or some other
-very fine organization of matter.</p>
-
-<p>In both cases, the assumptions not only have no evidence
-to sustain them, but are contrary to the common
-sense or reason of all mankind, and never can be really
-believed.</p>
-
-<p>When <i>perceptions</i> are called into existence by the
-agency of the senses, we can not help believing that
-things <i>are as they appear to us</i>, unless we have some
-evidence of deception either from disordered sensation
-or some other cause.</p>
-
-<p>But in regard to our <i>conceptions</i> we have two classes.
-One class is attended with the belief that they correspond
-with realities, or the things they represent.
-The other class is not attended with this belief. For
-example, we can conceive of a house of a color, form,
-and details such as we never saw, and this conception
-is not attended with any belief of the reality of such
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">{166}</a></span>
-an existence; but when we conceive of the home of
-our childhood, this conception is attended with a belief
-of the reality of the thing conceived.</p>
-
-<p>This illustration furnishes the means of defining
-"<i>truth</i>" as "<i>the reality of things</i>." We <i>conceive</i> the
-truth when our conceptions represent correctly the reality
-of things, and we <i>believe</i> the truth when we feel
-this correspondence to exist. We believe falsehood
-when we have a conception attended by a feeling that
-it represents the reality of things when it does not.</p>
-
-<p>All our comfort, success, and happiness depend upon
-<i>believing the truth</i>; for just so far as our belief or
-faith varies from the reality of things, we shall meet
-with mistakes, disappointment, and sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>Our beneficent Creator has so formed our minds and
-our bodies that, in their natural, healthy state, our <i>perceptions</i>
-correspond with the reality of things uniformly,
-while, as before stated, our belief or faith also thus
-corresponds.</p>
-
-<p>It is very rarely the case that disease or other causes
-prevent this uniform correct perception and belief in
-regard to all things that come within the reach of our
-own senses.</p>
-
-<p>It is only in regard to that knowledge that we gain
-from the <i>experience and testimony</i> of others, or from
-the <i>process of reasoning</i>, that we become liable to a
-false belief.</p>
-
-<p>Men often impart their conceptions of things to us,
-and we find that they do not correspond with realities.</p>
-
-<p>We also, by a process of reasoning, often come to
-conceptions of things, and a belief in them, which we
-find to be false.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">{167}</a></span>
-<i>Evidence</i> may be defined as all those causes which
-tend to produce <i>correct</i> ideas of truth or the reality of
-things.</p>
-
-<p>Inasmuch as we find by experience that human testimony
-and the process of reasoning do not uniformly
-conduct us to right conceptions of realities, we find
-that there are different degrees of belief according to
-the nature of the evidence presented.</p>
-
-<p>The highest kind of evidence is intuitive knowledge,
-which is a uniform result of the constitution of
-mind and its inevitable circumstances. This is called
-<i>intuitive knowledge</i> or <i>intuitive belief</i>.</p>
-
-<p>All other evidence is gained by <i>experience</i> or by
-<i>reasoning</i>. The experience of other minds we gain by
-testimony. This is called the <i>evidence of testimony</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Belief differs in degrees according to the nature and
-amount of evidence perceived. The highest kind of
-evidence produces what is called <i>certainty</i>. It is the
-kind which is felt in reference to the intuitive truths.
-There are all degrees of faith, from the highest certainty
-to entire incredulity or unbelief.</p>
-
-<p>This fact lays the foundation for a distinction in
-practical matters which it is very important to recognize.
-It is often the case that there is an amount of
-evidence that produces a conviction which rests in the
-mind, but does not produce its appropriate <i>practical</i>
-result. For example, a man in feeble health has read
-enough on the subject to be convinced that a daily
-bath in cool water would tend to restore strength, and
-yet the belief does not secure the practice. But on a
-review of the books which produced the conviction, or
-on hearing some lecturer on health, the conviction becomes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">{168}</a></span>
-more powerful, and leads to a corresponding
-practice.</p>
-
-<p>Now, in reference to the fact that there are multitudes
-of convictions which are inoperative, which, if
-vividly realized, would become principles of action,
-there is a distinction made, in common parlance, between
-a dead or ideal faith, and a living or practical
-faith. Still more is this distinction recognized in
-matters of religion, as will be hereafter shown.</p>
-
-<p>The question whether faith or belief is under the
-control of the will, or whether it is necessary and inevitable,
-is one of very great importance both in regard
-to our happiness and our obligations.</p>
-
-<p>If belief is not under the control of the will, it must
-be because either the mind has not the power of directing
-its attention to evidence, or because it is so made
-that, when it perceives the truth, it can not distinguish
-it from falsehood.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the first alternative, the control which
-the mind has over its own train of thought has been
-definitely pointed out and described in the articles on
-attention and on the will. It appears that <i>the will</i> is
-the regulating principle, which governs all mental operations
-by selecting the modes of happiness which the
-intellect shall be employed in securing. Whatever
-mode of present or of general happiness is selected, immediately
-all conceptions which the judgment discerns
-as having a fitness for accomplishing this object become
-vivid and distinct, and recall their associate conceptions.
-Thus it is the choice of any mode of enjoyment
-by the will which determines the train of
-thought.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">{169}</a></span>
-When, therefore, any question is brought up which
-demands attention to evidence, if the mind has some
-desire to gratify, and the intellect discerns that the
-conviction of this truth will interfere with this chosen
-plan of happiness, the will refuses attention to what is
-not in consonance with the leading desire of the mind.
-Where conviction of any truth is foreseen to interfere
-with some plan of enjoyment already chosen, the only
-way by which attention can be secured is by exhibiting
-some evil that will follow inattention which will
-more than counterbalance the good to be gained. In
-this case, the mind may choose to attend, and run the
-hazard of losing the particular mode of enjoyment
-sought in order to avoid the threatened evil from inattention
-to evidence.</p>
-
-<p>This is the method men pursue in all their intercourse
-with each other. They find that their fellow-men
-are unwilling to believe what is contrary to their
-own wishes and plans. But when they determine that
-belief shall be secured, they contrive various modes to
-make it appear either for their pleasure or their interest
-to attend to evidence, or else they exhibit some
-evil as the consequence of neglecting attention.</p>
-
-<p>The only mode by which mankind are induced to
-give their thoughts to the concerns of an invisible
-world is by awakening their hopes of future good to be
-secured, or by stimulating their fears of future evils.
-It thus appears, from the laws and operations of the
-mind of which every person is conscious, and also from
-the conduct and recorded experience of mankind, that
-the mind <i>has</i> the power of directing its attention to
-evidence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">{170}</a></span>
-The other alternative which would establish the
-principle that belief is not under the control of the
-will is, that truth, when seen by the mind, can not be
-distinguished from falsehood. But this, it can be seen,
-involves a denial of the principles of reason and common
-sense. It is saying that the mind may have the
-evidence of the senses, memory, and all the other
-principles included in the laws of reason, and yet not
-believe it; for every process of reasoning is, in fact,
-exhibiting evidence either of the senses, memory, or
-experience, that a certain truth is included under a primary
-truth.</p>
-
-<p>The only position which can be assumed without
-denying the principles of reason and common sense is,
-that belief, according to the laws of mind, is exactly
-according to the <i>amount</i> of evidence <i>to which the mind
-gives its attention</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In order to belief, then, two things are necessary,
-viz., <i>evidence</i>, and the <i>choice of the mind to attend</i> to
-this evidence. When both of these are attained, the
-belief of truth and the rejection of falsehood are inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>The influence which the will and desires have upon
-our belief accounts for the great variety of opinions
-among mankind on almost every subject of duty and
-of happiness.</p>
-
-<p>There are two ways in which the desires and wishes
-regulate belief. In the first place, by preventing <i>attention</i>
-to the subject which would lead to the belief
-of truths that are inconsistent with the leading desires
-of the mind. This, in a great measure, will account
-for the great variety of religious belief. Religion is a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">{171}</a></span>
-subject which is felt to be inconsistent with the leading
-desires of most persons who are interested in the
-pursuit of other enjoyments than those resulting from
-obedience to God in the discharge of the duties of benevolence
-and piety. It is a subject, therefore, which
-receives so little examination that opinions in regard
-to it are adopted with trifling attention.</p>
-
-<p>The second cause of variety of belief is the effect
-which <i>desire</i> has in making vivid those conceptions
-which most agree with the leading purpose of the
-mind. When the mind decides to examine the evidence
-on any subject, if the decision involves questions
-which have a bearing on some favorite purpose, all those
-arguments which are most consonant with the desires
-appear vivid and clear, and those which are contrary to
-the wishes are fainter and less regarded. This is a
-fact which universal experience demonstrates. Men
-always fasten on evidence which favors their own
-wishes, and but faintly conceive the evidence which is
-opposed. This is a cause which operates most powerfully
-in regard to religious truths whenever they interfere
-with the leading desires.</p>
-
-<p>This view of the subject exhibits the importance of
-having the mind directed to proper objects; for if the
-mind is earnestly engaged in the pursuit of duty, it
-will be pleased with every development of truth, for
-truth and duty are never found to interfere. <i>Truth</i>
-is another name for "things as they are," and it is always
-the duty and happiness of man to regulate his
-conduct by seeing things as they are, rather than by
-seeing them in false relations. That man is best prepared
-to discover truth who is most sincerely desirous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">{172}</a></span>
-to obtain it, and to regulate his feelings, words, and
-conduct by its dictates.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing more obvious, from experience and
-observation, than that men <i>feel</i> their ability to control
-their belief, and realize both their own obligations and
-those of their fellow-men on this subject. They know
-that every man must act according to his belief of right
-and wrong, and thus that the fulfillment of every duty
-depends upon the nature of our belief. And the more
-important are the interests involved in any question,
-the more men perceive their obligations to seek for evidence,
-and obtain the knowledge necessary to enable
-them to judge correctly.</p>
-
-<p>The estimation of guilt among mankind, in reference
-to wrong belief, is always proportioned to the interests
-involved and the opportunities for obtaining
-knowledge. In the minute affairs of life, where but
-little evil is done from false judgments, but little blame
-is attached to a man for believing wrong. Neither is
-a man severely judged if the necessary knowledge was
-inaccessible or very difficult to be obtained.</p>
-
-<p>But where a man has great interests committed to
-his keeping, and has sufficient opportunity for obtaining
-evidence of truth, the severest condemnation awaits
-him who, through inattention or prejudice, hazards
-vast interests by an incorrect belief. If an agent has
-the charge of great investments, and through negligence,
-or indolence, or prejudice ruins his employer,
-his sincere belief is no protection from severe condemnation.
-If the physician has the health and life of a
-valued member of the community and the object of
-many affections intrusted to his skill, and from negligence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">{173}</a></span>
-and inattention destroys the life he was appointed
-to save, his sincere belief is but a small palliation
-of his guilt. If a judge has the fortune and life of his
-fellow-citizens intrusted to his judicial knowledge and
-integrity, and, through want of care and attention, is
-guilty of flagrant injustice and evil, the plea of wrong
-belief will not protect him from the impeachment and
-just indignation which await such delinquencies.</p>
-
-<p>There is no point where men are more tenacious of
-the obligations of their fellow-creatures than on the
-subject of belief. If they find themselves calumniated,
-unjustly dealt with, and treated with contempt
-and scorn from prejudice or want of attention, the reality
-of belief is little palliation of the guilt of those who
-thus render them injustice. They feel the obligations
-of their fellow-men to <i>know the truth</i> in all that relates
-to their interests, honor, and good name; and
-often there is scarcely any thing which it is so difficult
-to forgive as the simple crime of wrong belief.</p>
-
-<p>The only modes by which men attempt to justify
-themselves for guilt of this nature are to show either
-that the matter was of small consequence, or that the
-means of learning its importance and of obtaining the
-other necessary information was not within reach.</p>
-
-<p>It may be laid down, then, as a long-established axiom
-in regard to this subject, that men estimate the
-guilt of wrong belief in all matters relating to the welfare
-of mankind in exact proportion to the value of the
-interests involved, and to the opportunities enjoyed for
-obtaining information.</p>
-
-<p>Inasmuch as all our success and happiness depends
-upon our belief of the truth, we have two of the principles
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">{174}</a></span>
-of reason and common sense to guide us. The
-first is, that we are to consider that to be right which
-has <i>the balance</i> of evidence in its favor; and the second
-is, that nothing is to be assumed as true unless
-there is <i>some</i> evidence that it is so.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">{175}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XX.<br />
-<small>CONSTITUTIONAL VARIETIES OF THE HUMAN MIND.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the preceding chapters have been presented the
-most important mental faculties which are common to
-the race. There are none of the powers and attributes
-of the mind as yet set forth which do not belong to every
-mind which is regarded as rational and complete.</p>
-
-<p>But, though all the race have these in common, yet
-we can not but observe an almost endless variety of
-human character, resulting from the diverse <i>proportions</i>
-and <i>combinations</i> of these several faculties.</p>
-
-<p>These constitutional differences may be noticed, first,
-in regard to the intellectual powers. Some minds are
-naturally predisposed to exercise the reasoning powers.
-Others, with precisely the same kind of culture,
-have little relish for this, and little power of appreciating
-an argument.</p>
-
-<p>In other cases, the imagination seems to be the predominating
-faculty. In other minds there seems to
-be an equal balance of faculties, so that no particular
-power predominates.</p>
-
-<p>Next we see the same variety in reference to the
-susceptibilities. In some minds, the desire for love
-and admiration is the predominating principle. In
-others, the love of power takes the lead. Some are
-eminently sympathizing. Others have a strong love
-of rectitude, or natural conscience. In some, the principle
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">{176}</a></span>
-of justice predominates. In others, benevolence
-is the leading impulse.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, in regard to the power of volition, as has
-been before indicated, there are some that possess a
-strong will that is decisive and effective in regulating
-all specific volitions, while others possess various and
-humbler measures of this power.</p>
-
-<p>According to the science of Phrenology, some of these
-peculiarities of mind are indicated by the size and
-shape of different portions of the brain, and externally
-indicated on the skull.</p>
-
-<p>That these differences are constitutional, and not
-the result of education, is clear from the many facts
-showing that no degree of care or training will serve to
-efface these distinctive traits of the mind. To a certain
-degree they may be modified by education, and
-the equal balance of the faculties be promoted, but
-never to such a degree as to efface very marked peculiarities.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the endless diversities that result
-from these varied proportions and combinations, there
-is a manifest variety in the grades of mind. Some
-races are much lower in the scale of being every way
-than others, while the same disparity exists in individuals
-of the same race.</p>
-
-<p>The wisdom and benevolence of this arrangement is
-very manifest when viewed in reference to the interests
-of a commonwealth. Where some must lead and others
-follow, it is well that some have the love of power
-strong, and others have it less. Where some must be
-rulers, to inflict penalties as well as to apportion rewards,
-it is well that there be some who have the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">{177}</a></span>
-sense of justice a leading principle. And so in the
-developments of intellect. Some men are to follow
-callings where the reasoning powers are most needed.
-Others are to adopt pursuits in which taste and imagination
-are chiefly required; and thus the varied proportions
-of these faculties become serviceable.</p>
-
-<p>And if it be true that the exercise of the social and
-moral faculties secures the highest degrees of enjoyment,
-those disparities in mental powers which give
-exercise to the virtues of compassion, self-denial, fortitude,
-and benevolence in serving the weak, and the
-corresponding exercises of gratitude, reverence, humility,
-and devotion in those who are thus benefited, then
-we can see the wisdom and benevolence of this gradation
-of mental capacity.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, in a commonwealth perfectly organized,
-where the happiness of the whole becomes that of each
-part, whatever tends to the highest general good tends
-to the best interest of each individual member. This
-being so, the lowest and humblest in the scale of being,
-in his appropriate place, is happier than he could
-be by any other arrangement, and happier than he
-could be if all were equally endowed.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">{178}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXI.<br />
-<small>HABIT.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Habit</span> is a facility in performing physical or mental
-operations, gained by the repetition of such acts. As
-examples of this in <i>physical</i> operations may be mentioned
-the power of walking, which is acquired only
-by a multitude of experiments; the power of speech,
-secured by a slow process of repeated acts of imitation;
-and the power of writing, gained in the same
-way. Success in every pursuit of life is attained by
-oft-repeated attempts, which finally induce a habit.</p>
-
-<p>As examples of the formation of <i>intellectual</i> habits
-may be mentioned the facility gained in acquiring
-knowledge by means of repeated efforts, and the accuracy
-and speed with which the process of reasoning is
-performed after long practice in this art.</p>
-
-<p>As examples of <i>moral</i> habits may be mentioned
-those which are formed by the oft-repeated exercise of
-self-government, justice, veracity, obedience, and industry.
-The will, as has been shown, gains a facility
-in controlling specific volitions and in yielding obedience
-to the laws of right action by constant use, as
-much as all the other mental powers.</p>
-
-<p>The happiness of man in the present state of existence
-depends not so much upon the circumstances in
-which he is placed, or the capacities with which he is
-endowed, as upon the <i>formation of his habits</i>. A
-man might have the organ of sight, and be surrounded
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">{179}</a></span>
-with all the beauties of nature, and yet, if he did not
-form the habit of judging of the form, distance, and
-size of bodies, most of the pleasure and use from this
-sense would be wanting. The world and all its beauties
-would be a mere confused mass of colors.</p>
-
-<p>If the habits of walking and of speech were not acquired,
-these faculties and the circumstances for employing
-them would not furnish the enjoyment they
-were designed to secure.</p>
-
-<p>It is the formation of <i>intellectual</i> habits by mental
-discipline and study, also, which opens vast resources
-for enjoyment that otherwise would be forever closed.
-And it is by practicing obedience to parents that <i>moral</i>
-habits of subordination are formed, which are indispensable
-to our happiness as citizens, and as subjects
-of the divine government. There is no enjoyment
-which can be pointed out which is not, to a greater or
-less extent, dependent upon this principle.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of habit in regard to the <i>law of sacrifice</i>
-is especially interesting. The experience of multitudes
-of our race shows that such tastes and habits
-may be formed in obeying this law, that what was once
-difficult and painful becomes easy and pleasant.</p>
-
-<p>But this ability to secure enjoyment through habits
-of self-control and self-denial, induced by long practice,
-so far as experience shows, could never be secured by
-any other method.</p>
-
-<p>That the highest kinds of happiness are to be purchased
-by more or less <i>voluntary sacrifice</i> and <i>suffering</i>
-to procure good for others seems to be a part of
-that nature of things which we at least may suppose
-has existed from eternity. We can conceive of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">{180}</a></span>
-eternal First Cause only as we imagine a mind on the
-same pattern as our own in constitutional capacities,
-but indefinitely enlarged in extent and action. Knowledge,
-wisdom, power, justice, benevolence, and rectitude
-must be the same in the Creator as in ourselves,
-at least so far as we can conceive; and, as the practice
-of self-sacrifice and suffering for the good of others is
-our highest conception of virtue, it is impossible to regard
-the Eternal Mind as all-perfect without involving
-this idea.</p>
-
-<p>The formation of the habits depends chiefly upon
-the leading desire or governing purpose, because whatever
-the mind desires the most it will <i>act</i> the most to
-secure, and thus by repeated acts will form its habits.
-The <i>character</i> of every individual, therefore, as before
-indicated, depends upon the mode of seeking happiness
-selected by the will. Thus the ambitious man has selected
-the attainment of power and admiration as his
-leading purpose, and whatever modes of enjoyment interfere
-with this are sacrificed. The sensual man
-seeks his happiness from the various gratifications of
-sense, and sacrifices other modes of enjoyment that interfere
-with this. The man devoted to intellectual
-pursuits, and to seeking reputation and influence
-through this medium, sacrifices other modes of enjoyment
-to secure this gratification. The man who has
-devoted his affections and the service of his life to
-God and the good of his fellow-men sacrifices all other
-enjoyments to secure that which results from the
-fulfillment of such obligations. Thus a person is an
-ambitious man, a sensual man, a man of literary ambition,
-or a man of piety and benevolence, according
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">{181}</a></span>
-to the governing purpose or leading desire of the
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>There is one fact in regard to the choice of the leading
-object of desire, or the governing purpose of life,
-which is very important. Certain modes of enjoyment,
-in consequence of repetition, increase the desire,
-but lessen the capacity of happiness from this source;
-while, in regard to others, gratification increases the
-desire, and at the same time increases the capacity for
-enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>The enjoyments through the senses are of the first
-kind. It will be found, as a matter of universal experience,
-that where this has been chosen as the main
-purpose of life, though the desire for such pleasures is
-continually increased, yet, owing to the physical effects
-of excessive indulgence, the capacity for enjoyment is
-decreased. Thus the man who so degrades his nature
-as to make the pleasures of eating and drinking the
-great pursuit of life, while his desires never abate,
-finds his zest for such enjoyments continually decreasing,
-and a perpetual need for new devices to stimulate
-appetite and awaken the dormant capacities.
-The pleasures of sense always pall from repetition&mdash;grow
-"stale, flat, and unprofitable," though the deluded
-being who has slavishly yielded to such appetites
-feels himself bound by chains of habit, which,
-even when enjoyment ceases, seldom are broken.</p>
-
-<p>The pleasures derived from the exercise of power,
-when its attainment becomes the master passion, are
-also of this description. The statesman, the politician,
-the conqueror, are all seeking for this, and desire never
-abates while any thing of the kind remains to be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">{182}</a></span>
-attained. We do not find that enjoyment increases
-in proportion as power is secured. On the contrary,
-it seems to cloy in possession. Alexander, the conqueror
-of the world, when he had gained <i>all</i>, wept that
-objects of desire were extinct, and that possession
-could not satisfy.</p>
-
-<p>But there are other sources of happiness, which,
-while sought, the desire ever continues, and possession
-only increases the capacity for enjoyment. Of this
-class is the susceptibility of happiness from <i>giving and
-receiving affection</i>. Here, the more is given and received,
-the more is the power of giving and receiving
-increased. We find that this principle outlives every
-other, and even the decays of nature itself. When
-tottering age on the borders of the grave is just ready
-to resign its wasted tenement, often from its dissolving
-ashes the never-dying spark of affection has burst
-forth with new and undiminished lustre. This is that
-immortal fountain of happiness always increased by
-imparting, never surcharged by receiving.</p>
-
-<p>Another principle which increases both desire and
-capacity by exercise is the power of enjoyment from
-being the <i>cause of happiness to others</i>. Never was
-an instance known of regret for devotion to the happiness
-of others. On the contrary, the more this holy
-and delightful principle is in exercise, the more the desires
-are increased, and the more are the susceptibilities
-for enjoyment from this source enlarged. While
-the votaries of pleasure are wearing down with the exhaustion
-of abused nature, and the votaries of ambition
-are sighing over its thorny wreath, the benevolent
-spirit is exulting in the success of its plans of good,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">{183}</a></span>
-and reaching forth to still purer and more accomplished
-bliss.</p>
-
-<p>This principle is especially true in regard to the
-practice of rectitude. The more the leading aim of the
-mind is devoted to <i>right feeling and action</i>, or to obedience
-to all the laws of God, the more both the desire
-and the capacity of enjoyment from this source are increased.</p>
-
-<p>But there is another fact in regard to habit which
-has an immense bearing on the well-being of our race.
-When a habit of seeking happiness in some one particular
-mode is once formed, the change of this habit becomes
-difficult just in proportion to the degree of repetition
-which has been practiced. A habit once formed,
-it is no longer an easy matter to choose between
-the mode of securing happiness chosen and another
-which the mind may be led to regard as much superior.
-Thus, in gratifying the appetite, a man may feel
-that his happiness is continually diminishing, and that,
-by sacrificing this passion, he may secure much greater
-enjoyment from another source; yet the force of
-habit is such that decisions of the will perpetually
-yield to its power.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, also, if a man has found his chief enjoyment in
-that admiration and applause of men so ardently desired,
-even after it has ceased to charm, and seems
-like emptiness and vanity, still, when nobler objects
-of pursuit are offered, the chains of habit bind him to
-his wonted path. Though he looks and longs for the
-one that his conscience and his intellect assure him is
-brightest and best, the conflict with bad habit ends in
-fatal defeat and ruin. It is true that every habit can
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">{184}</a></span>
-be corrected and changed, but nothing requires greater
-firmness of purpose and energy of will; for it is not
-<i>one</i> resolution of mind that can conquer habit: it must
-be a constant series of long-continued efforts.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of habit in reference to <i>emotions</i> deserves
-special attention as having a direct influence
-upon character and happiness. All pleasurable emotions
-of mind, being grateful, are indulged and cherished,
-and are not weakened by repetition unless they
-become excessive. If the pleasures of sense are indulged
-beyond a certain extent, the bodily system is
-exhausted, and satiety is the consequence. If the love
-of power and admiration is indulged to excess, so as to
-become the leading purpose of life, they are found to be
-cloying. But within certain limits all pleasurable emotions
-do not seem to lessen in power by repetition.</p>
-
-<p>But in regard to painful emotions the reverse is true.
-The mind instinctively resists or flies from them, so
-that after a habit of suppressing such emotions is
-formed, until the susceptibility diminishes, and sometimes
-appears almost entirely destroyed. Thus a person
-often exposed to danger ceases to be troubled by
-fear, because he forms a habit of suppressing it. A
-person frequently in scenes of distress and suffering
-learns to suppress the emotions of painful sympathy.
-The surgeon is an example of the last case, where, by
-repeated operations, he has learned to suppress emotions
-until they seldom recur. A person inured to
-guilt gradually deadens the pangs of remorse, until
-the conscience becomes "seared as with a hot iron."
-Thus, also, with the emotion of shame. After a person
-has been repeatedly exposed to contempt, and feels
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">{185}</a></span>
-that he is universally despised, he grows callous to
-any such emotions.</p>
-
-<p>The mode by which the mind succeeds in forming
-such a habit seems to be by that implanted principle
-which makes ideas that are most in consonance with
-the leading desire of the mind become vivid and distinct,
-while those that are less interesting fade away.
-Now no person desires to witness pain except from
-the hope of relieving it, unless it be that, in anger, the
-mind is sometimes gratified with the infliction of suffering.
-But, in ordinary cases, the sight of suffering
-is avoided except where relief can be administered. In
-such cases, the desire of administering relief becomes
-the leading one, so that the mind is turned off from
-the view of the suffering to dwell on conceptions of
-modes of relief. Thus the surgeon and physician
-gradually form such habits that the sight of pain and
-suffering lead the mind to conception of modes of relief,
-whereas a mind not thus interested dwells on the
-more painful ideas.</p>
-
-<p>The mind, also, can form a habit of inattention to
-our own bodily sufferings by becoming interested in
-other things, and thus painful sensations go unnoticed.
-Some persons will go for years with a chronic headache,
-and yet appear to enjoy nearly as much as those
-who never suffer from such a cause. Again: those
-who violate conscience seem to relieve themselves
-from suffering by forming a habit of dwelling on other
-themes, and of turning the mind entirely from those
-obligations which, when contemplated, would upbraid
-and pain them. Thus, too, the sense of shame is
-lost. A habit is formed of leading the mind from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">{186}</a></span>
-whatever pains it to dwell on more pleasurable contemplations.</p>
-
-<p>The habits of life are all formed either from the desire
-to secure happiness or to avoid pain, and the <i>fear
-of suffering</i> is found to be a much more powerful principle
-than the <i>desire of happiness</i>. The soul flies
-from pain with all its energies, even when it will be
-inert at the sight of promised joy. As an illustration
-of this, let a person be fully convinced that the gift of
-two new senses would confer as great an additional
-amount of enjoyment as is now secured by the eye
-and ear, and the promise of this future good would
-not stimulate with half the energy that would be
-caused by the threat of instant and entire blindness
-and deafness.</p>
-
-<p>If, then, the mind is stimulated to form good habits
-and to avoid the formation of evil ones most powerfully
-by painful emotions, when their legitimate object
-is not effected they continually decrease in vividness,
-and the designed benefit is lost. If a man is placed
-in circumstances of danger, and fear leads to habits of
-caution and carefulness, the object of exciting this
-emotion is accomplished, and the diminution of it is attended
-with no evil. But if fear is continually excited,
-and no such habits are formed, then the susceptibility
-is lessened, while the good to be secured by
-it is lost. So, also, with emotions of sympathy. If
-we witness pain and suffering, and it induces habits
-of active devotion to the good of those who suffer, the
-diminution of the susceptibility is a blessing and no
-evil. But if we simply indulge emotions, and do not
-form the habits they were intended to secure, the power
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">{187}</a></span>
-of sympathy is weakened, and the designed benefit
-is lost. Thus, again, with shame: if this painful emotion
-does not lead us to form habits of honor and rectitude,
-it is continually weakened by repetition, and
-the object for which it was bestowed is not secured.
-And so with remorse: if this emotion is awakened
-without leading to habits of benevolence and virtue, it
-constantly decays in power, and the good it would have
-secured is forever lost.</p>
-
-<p>It does not appear, however, that the power of emotion
-in the soul is thus <i>destroyed</i>. Nothing is done
-but to form habits of inattention to painful emotions
-by allowing the mind to be engrossed in other and
-more pleasurable subjects. This appears from the
-fact that the most hardened culprits, when brought to
-the hour of death, where all plans of future good cease
-to charm the mental eye, are often overwhelmed with
-the most vivid emotions of sorrow, shame, remorse,
-and fear. And often, in the course of life, there are
-seasons when the soul returns from its pursuit of deluding
-visions to commune with itself in its own secret
-chambers. At such seasons, shame, remorse, and fear
-take up their abode in their long-deserted dwelling,
-and ply their scorpion whips till they are obeyed,
-and the course of honor and virtue is resumed, or till
-the distracted spirit again flies abroad for comfort and
-relief.</p>
-
-<p>There is a great diversity in human character, resulting
-from the diverse proportions and combinations of
-those powers of mind which the race have in common.
-At the same time, there is a variety in the scale of being,
-or relative grade of each mind. While all are
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">{188}</a></span>
-alike in the common faculties of the human mind, some
-have every faculty on a much larger scale than others,
-while some are of a very humble grade.</p>
-
-<p>The principle of habit has very great influence in
-modifying and changing these varieties. Thus, by
-forming habits of intellectual exercise, a mind of naturally
-humble proportions can be elevated considerably
-above one more highly endowed by natural constitution.
-So the training of some particular intellectual
-faculty, which by nature is deficient, can bring it up
-nearer to the level of other powers less disciplined by
-exercise.</p>
-
-<p>In like manner, the natural susceptibilities can be
-increased, diminished, or modified by habit. Certain
-tastes, that had little power, can be so cultivated as to
-overtop all others.</p>
-
-<p>So of the moral nature: it can be so exercised that
-a habit will be formed which will generate a strength
-and prominency that nature did not impart.</p>
-
-<p>The will itself is also subject to this same principle.
-A strong will, that is trained to yield obedience
-to law in early life, acquires an ease and facility in doing
-it which belongs ordinarily to weak minds, and yet
-can retain all its vigor. And a mind that is trained to
-bring subordinate volitions into strict and ready obedience
-to a generic purpose, acquires an ease and facility
-in doing this which was not a natural endowment.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it appears that by the principle of <i>habit</i> every
-mind is furnished with the power of elevating itself in
-the scale of being, and of modifying and perfecting
-the proportions and combinations of its constitutional
-powers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">{189}</a></span>
-And sometimes the result is that there is no mode
-of distinguishing between the effects of habit and the
-natural organization.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most important results of habit is its influence
-on <i>faith</i> or <i>belief</i>. Those persons who practice
-methods of false reasoning, who turn away from
-evidence and follow their feelings in forming opinions,
-eventually lose the power of sure, confiding belief.</p>
-
-<p>On the contrary, an honest, conscientious steadiness
-in seeking the truth and in yielding to evidence secures
-the firmest and most reliable convictions, and
-that peace of mind which alone results from believing
-the truth.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">{190}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXII.<br />
-<small>MIND AS PROOF OF ITS CREATOR'S DESIGNS.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have seen that the mind of man, by its very
-constitution, has certain implanted truths which it believes
-from the necessity of its nature, and that these
-are the foundation of all acquired knowledge, and the
-guide to all truth.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that, independently of a revelation, we
-have no other sources of knowledge except these intuitions,
-the experience of ourselves and others, and the
-deductions of reasoning.</p>
-
-<p>We have examined as to the amount of knowledge
-to be gained from these sources in regard to the nature
-of mind, the laws of the system of which it is the
-essential part, the immortality of the soul, our prospects
-after death, and the character and designs of our
-Creator.</p>
-
-<p>In discussing the last topic, it has been assumed
-that the grand and ultimate design of the Creator is
-"to produce the greatest possible happiness with the
-least possible evil."</p>
-
-<p>We have examined, at some length, the chief faculties
-and laws of the human mind, for the purpose of
-exhibiting their adaptation to this design.</p>
-
-<p>We now proceed to a brief review of this portion
-as a <i>summing up</i> of the evidence sustaining the proposition
-that the grand end of the Creator, in forming
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">{191}</a></span>
-mind, is <i>to produce the greatest possible happiness
-with the least possible evil</i>.</p>
-
-<p>As preliminary, however, we need to refer to one
-principle.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever we find any contrivances all combining to
-secure a certain good result, which, at the same time,
-involves some degree of inevitable evil, and then discover
-that there are contrivances to diminish and avoid this
-evil, we properly infer that the author intended to secure
-<i>as much of the good with as little of the evil as possible</i>.
-For example, a traveler finds a deserted mine, and
-all around he discovers contrivances for obtaining gold,
-and, at the same time, other contrivances for getting
-rid of the earth mixed with it. The inevitable inference
-would be that the author of these contrivances
-designed to secure as much gold with as little earth as
-possible; and should any one say that he could have
-had more gold and less earth if he wished it, the answer
-would be that there is no evidence of this assertion,
-but direct evidence against it.</p>
-
-<p>Again: should we discover a piece of machinery in
-which every contrivance tended to secure <i>speed</i> in
-movement, produced by the <i>friction</i> of wheels against
-a rough surface, and at the same time other contrivances
-were found for diminishing all friction that was
-useless, we should infer that the author designed to
-secure the <i>greatest possible speed</i> with the <i>least possible
-friction</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In like manner, if we can show that mind is a contrivance
-that acts by the influence of fear of evil, and
-that <i>pain</i> seems as indispensable to the action of a
-free agent as friction is to motion; if we can show that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">{192}</a></span>
-there is no contrivance in mind or matter which is designed
-to secure suffering as its primary end; if we
-can, on the contrary, show that the direct end of all the
-organizations of mind and matter is to produce happiness;
-if we can show that it is only the <i>wrong action</i>
-of mind that involves most of the pain yet known, so
-that right action, in its place, would secure only happiness;
-if we can show contrivances for diminishing
-pain, and also contrivances for increasing happiness by
-means of the inevitable pain involved in the system
-of things, then the just conclusion will be gained that
-the Author of the system of mind and matter designed
-"to produce the greatest possible happiness with the
-least possible evil."<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_3" id="Ref_3" href="#Foot_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the review which follows, we shall present evidence
-exhibiting all these particulars.</p>
-
-<p>The only way in which we learn the nature of a
-thing is to observe its qualities and actions. This is
-true of mind as much as it is of matter. Experience
-and observation teach that the nature of mind is such
-that <i>the fear of suffering</i> is indispensable to secure a
-large portion of the enjoyment within reach of its faculties,
-and that the highest modes of enjoyment can
-not be secured except by sacrifice, and thus by more
-or less suffering.</p>
-
-<p>This appears to be an inevitable combination, as
-much so as friction is inevitable in machinery.</p>
-
-<p>We have the evidence of our own consciousness
-that it is fear of evil to ourselves or to others that is
-the <i>strongest</i> motive power to the mind. If we should
-find that no pain resulted from burning up our own
-bodies, or from drowning, or from any other cause; if
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">{193}</a></span>
-every one perceived that no care, trouble, or pain resulted
-from losing all kinds of enjoyment, the effort to
-seek it would be greatly diminished.</p>
-
-<p>If we could desire good enough to exert ourselves to
-seek it, and yet should feel no discomfort in failing;
-if we could <i>lose every thing</i>, and feel no sense of pain
-or care, the stimulus to action which experience has
-shown to be most powerful and beneficent would be
-lost.</p>
-
-<p>We find that abundance of ease and prosperity enervates
-mental power, and that mind increases in all
-that is grand and noble, and also in the most elevating
-happiness, by means of danger, care, and pain. We
-may properly infer, then, that evil is a necessary part
-of the experience of a perfectly-acting mind.</p>
-
-<p>So strong is the conviction that <i>painful penalties</i>
-are indispensable, that the kindest parents and the
-most benevolent rulers are the most sure to increase
-rather than diminish those that are already involved
-in the existing nature of things.</p>
-
-<p>Again: without a revelation we have no knowledge
-of any kind of mind but by inference from our experience
-in this state of being. All we know of the
-<i>Eternal First Cause</i> is by a process of reasoning, inferring
-that his nature must be <i>like</i> the only minds of
-which we have any knowledge. We assume, then, that
-he is a free agent, regulated by desire for happiness
-and fear of evil.</p>
-
-<p>We thus come to the conclusion that this organization
-of mind is a part of the <i>fixed and eternal nature
-of things</i>, and does not result from the will of the Creator.
-His own is the eternal pattern of an all-perfect
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">{194}</a></span>
-mind, and our own are formed on this perfect model,
-with susceptibilities to pain as an indispensable motive
-power in gaining happiness.</p>
-
-<p>We will now recapitulate some of the particulars in
-the laws and constitution of mind which tend to establish
-the position that its Creator's grand design is "to
-produce the greatest possible happiness with the least
-possible evil."</p>
-
-<h3><i>Intellectual Powers.</i></h3>
-
-<p>First, then, in reference to the earliest exercise of
-mind in <i>sensation</i>. The eye might have been so made
-that light would inflict pain, and the ear so that sound
-would cause only discomfort. And so of all the other
-senses.</p>
-
-<p>But the condition of a well-formed, healthy infant
-is a most striking illustration of the adaptation of the
-senses to receive enjoyment. Who could gaze on the
-countenance of such a little one, as its various senses
-are called into exercise, without such a conviction?
-The delight manifested as the light attracts the eye,
-or as pleasant sounds charm the ear, or as the limpid
-nourishment gratifies its taste, or as gentle motion and
-soft fondlings soothe the nerves of touch, all testify to
-the benevolent design of its Maker.</p>
-
-<p>Next come the pleasures of <i>perception</i> as the infant
-gradually observes the qualities of the various
-objects around, and slowly learns to distinguish its
-mother and its playthings from the confused mass of
-forms and colors. Then comes the gentle curiosity
-as it watches the movement of its own limbs, and
-finally discovers that its own volitions move its tiny
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">{195}</a></span>
-fingers, while the grand idea that <i>it is itself a cause</i> is
-gradually introduced.</p>
-
-<p>Next come the varied intellectual pleasures as the
-several powers are exercised in connection with the
-animate and material world around, in acquiring the
-meaning of words, and in imitating the sounds and
-use of language. The adult, in toiling over the dry
-lexicon, little realizes the pleasure with which the little
-one is daily acquiring the philosophy, grammar, and
-vocabulary of its mother tongue.</p>
-
-<p>A child who can not understand a single complete
-sentence, or speak an intelligible phrase, will sit and
-listen with long-continued delight to the simple enunciation
-of words, each one of which presents a picture
-to his mind of a dog, a cat, a cow, a horse, a whip, a
-ride, and many other objects and scenes that have
-given pleasure in the past; while the single words,
-without any sentences, bring back, not only vivid conceptions
-of these objects, but a part of the enjoyment
-with which they have been connected.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as years pass by, the intellect more and more
-administers pleasure, while the reasoning powers are
-developed, the taste cultivated, the imagination exercised,
-the judgment employed, and the memory stored
-with treasures for future enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>In the proper and temperate use of the intellectual
-powers, there is a constant succession of placid satisfaction,
-or of agreeable and often of delightful emotions,
-while no one of these faculties is productive of
-pain except in violating the laws of the mental constitution.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">{196}</a></div>
-
-<h3><i>The Susceptibilities.</i></h3>
-
-<p>In regard to the second general class of mental powers&mdash;<i>the
-susceptibilities</i>&mdash;the first particular to be noticed
-is the ceaseless and all-pervading <i>desire to gain
-happiness and escape pain</i>. This is the mainspring
-of all voluntary activity; for no act of volition will
-take place till some good is presented to gain, or some
-evil to shun. At the same time, as has been shown,
-the desire to escape evil is more potent and effective
-than the desire for good. Thousands of minds that
-rest in passive listlessness, when there is nothing to
-stimulate but hope of enjoyment, will exert every physical
-and mental power to escape impending evil. The
-seasons of long-continued prosperity in nations always
-tend to a deterioration of intellect and manhood. It is
-in seasons of danger alone that fear wakes up the highest
-energies, and draws forth the heroes of the race.</p>
-
-<p>Mind, then, is an existence having the power of that
-self-originating action of <i>choice</i> which constitutes free
-agency, while this power can only be exercised when
-desires are excited to gain happiness or to escape pain.
-This surely is the highest possible evidence that its
-Author <i>intended</i> mind should thus act.</p>
-
-<p>But a mind may act to secure happiness and avoid
-pain to itself, and yet may gain only very low grades
-of enjoyment, while much higher are within reach of
-its faculties. So, also, it may act to gain happiness
-for itself as the chief end in such ways as to prevent
-or destroy the happiness of others around.</p>
-
-<p>In reference to this, we find those susceptibilities
-which raise man to the dignity of a moral being.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">{197}</a></span>
-In the first place, there is that <i>impression of the
-great design</i> of the Creator existing in every mind,
-either as a result of constitution or of training, or of
-both united, which results in a feeling that whatever
-lessens or destroys happiness is unfit and contrary to
-the system of things.</p>
-
-<p>Next there is the power to balance pleasure and
-pain, and estimate the compound result, both in reference
-to self and to the commonwealth. With this is
-combined the feeling that whatever secures <i>the most</i>
-good with <i>the least</i> evil is right and fit, and that the
-opposite is wrong and unfitted to the nature of things.</p>
-
-<p>Next comes the <i>sense of justice</i>, which results in an
-impulse <i>to discover the cause</i> of good and evil, and
-when this cause is found to be a voluntary agent, a
-consequent impulse to make returns of good for good,
-and of evil for evil, and also to <i>proportion</i> retributive rewards
-or penalties to the amount of good or evil done.</p>
-
-<p>With this, also, is combined the feeling that those
-retributions should be applied only where there was
-<i>voluntary</i> power to have done otherwise. When it is
-seen that there was no such power, the impulse to reward
-or punish is repressed.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the deep conviction that such retributions
-are indispensable, that where natural pains and penalties
-do not avail, others are demanded, both in the
-family and in the commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, we find the susceptibility of <i>conscience</i>,
-which, by the very framework of the mind itself, apportions
-the retributive pangs of remorse for wrong doing,
-and the pleasure of self-approval for well doing.
-These, too, are retributions never to be escaped, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">{198}</a></span>
-the most exquisite, both in elevated happiness and exquisite
-pain. The mind carries about in itself its own
-certain and gracious remunerator&mdash;its own inexorable
-prosecutor, judge, and executioner.</p>
-
-<p>This same design of the Creator may be most delightfully
-traced in what may be called the <i>economy</i>
-of happiness and pain.</p>
-
-<p>One particular of this is set forth at large in the
-chapter on the <i>emotions of taste</i>. Here we find the
-mind formed not only to secure multitudinous enjoyments
-through the nerves of sensation, but that, by the
-principle of association, there is a perpetual <i>reproduction</i>
-of these emotions in connection with the colors,
-forms, sounds, and motions with which they were originally
-associated. Thus there are perpetually returning
-emotions of pleasure so recondite, so refined, so almost
-infinite in variety and extent, and yet how little
-noticed or understood!</p>
-
-<p>Another indication of the same kind is the peculiarity
-pointed out on former pages, where it is shown
-that securing certain enjoyments which tend to promote
-the <i>general</i> happiness increases both desire and
-capacity for enjoyment, while those that terminate in
-the individual diminish by possession. Thus the enjoyment
-of power, which must, from its nature, be
-confined to a few, diminishes by possession. Thus,
-too, the pleasures of sense pall by indulgence. But
-the enjoyment resulting from the exercise and reciprocation
-of love, and that resulting from benevolent actions,
-and that which is included in a course of perfect
-obedience to all the rules of rectitude, increases
-the capacity for enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">{199}</a></span>
-Another illustration of the same principle is exhibited
-in the chapter on Habit, where it is seen that the
-power of pleasurable emotions increases by repetition,
-while painful emotions decrease when the good to be
-secured by their agency is attained. Thus <i>fear</i> seems
-to protect from danger till caution and habit render it
-needless, and then it decreases. And so of other painful
-emotions.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting to trace the same design in the constitution
-of minds in <i>regard to each other</i>. We find
-that the purest and highest kind of happiness is dependent
-on the mutual relations of minds. Thus the
-enjoyment resulting from the discovery of intellectual
-and moral traits in other minds&mdash;that resulting from
-giving and receiving affection&mdash;that gained by sympathy,
-and by being the cause of happiness to others, and
-that resulting from conscious rectitude, all are dependent
-on the existence of other beings.</p>
-
-<p>Now we find that minds are relatively so constituted
-that <i>what one desires, it is a source of happiness in
-another to bestow</i>. Thus one can be pleased by the
-discovery of certain traits in other minds, while, in return,
-the exhibition of these traits, and the consciousness
-that they are appreciated, is an equal source of
-enjoyment. One mind seeks the love of others, while
-these, in return, are desiring objects of affection, and
-rejoice to confer the gift that is sought. The desire
-of knowledge or the gratification of curiosity is another
-source of pleasure, while satisfying this desire is a
-cause of enjoyment to those around. How readily do
-mankind seize upon every opportunity to convey interesting
-news to other minds!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">{200}</a></span>
-Again: we find that, both in sorrow and in joy, the
-mind seeks for the sympathy of others, while this
-grateful and soothing boon it is delightful to bestow.
-So, also, the consciousness of being the cause of good
-to another sends joy to the heart, while the recipient
-is filled with the pleasing glow of gratitude in receiving
-the benefit. The consciousness of virtue in acting for
-the general good, instead of for contracted, selfish purposes,
-is another source of happiness, while those who
-witness its delightful results rejoice to behold and acknowledge
-it. What bursts of rapturous applause
-have followed the exhibition of virtuous self-sacrifice
-for the good of others from bosoms who rejoiced in this
-display, and who could owe this pleasure to no other
-cause than the natural constitution of mind, which is
-formed to be made happy both in beholding and in
-exercising virtue.</p>
-
-<p>This same beneficial economy is manifested in a
-close analysis of all that is included in the affections
-of <i>love</i> and <i>gratitude</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It has been shown that, in the commencement of
-existence, the young mind first learns the sources of
-good and evil to self, and its sole motives are desire for
-its own enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>Soon, however, it begins to experience the happiness
-resulting from the relations of minds to each other,
-and then is developed the superior power of <i>love</i>, and
-its importance as a regulating principle.</p>
-
-<p>In the analysis of this affection, it is seen to consist,
-first, in the pleasurable emotions which arise in view of
-those traits of character in another mind pointed out on
-previous pages. When these qualities are discovered,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">{201}</a></span>
-the first result is emotions of pleasure in the contemplation.
-Immediately there follows <i>a desire of good</i>
-to the cause of this pleasure. Next follows the desire
-of reciprocated affection&mdash;that is, a desire is awakened
-<i>to become the cause of the same pleasure</i> to another;
-for the desire of <i>being loved</i> is the desire to be the
-cause of pleasurable emotions in another mind, in view
-of our own good qualities. When we secure this desired
-appreciation, then follows an increased <i>desire of
-good</i> to the one who bestows it.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the affection of love is a combination of the
-action and reaction of pleasurable emotions, all tending
-to awaken the desire of good to another. This passion
-may become so intensified that it will become
-more delightful to secure enjoyments to another than
-to procure them for self.</p>
-
-<p>Gratitude is the emotion of pleasure toward the author
-of <i>voluntary</i> good to self, attended by a desire of
-good to the benefactor. This principle can be added
-to augment the power of love.</p>
-
-<p>There is a foundation for a very important distinction
-in the analysis of the principle of love. In
-what is thus far presented, we find that the desire of
-good to another results solely from the fact that certain
-mental qualities are <i>causes of pleasure to self</i>.
-Of course, this desire ceases when those qualities cease
-to exist or cease to be appreciated. This kind of love
-is the natural result of the constitution of minds in
-their relations to each other, making it <i>easy and pleasant</i>
-to live for the good of another in return for the
-pleasure received from their agreeable qualities and
-manifestations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">{202}</a></span>
-But the highest kind of love consists in the <i>desire
-of good to another without reference to any good received
-in return</i>. It is <i>good willing</i>. It consists in
-an abiding feeling of desire for the happiness of another
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>This principle exists as a natural impulse more or
-less powerful in differently constituted minds. It is
-the cause of that pleasure which is felt in the consciousness
-of being the cause of good to another. But
-this natural impulse can be so developed and increased
-by voluntary culture as to become the strongest impulse
-of the mind, and thus the source of the highest
-and most satisfying enjoyments. In many minds
-this becomes so strongly developed that securing happiness
-to others is sought with far more earnestness
-and pleasure than any modes of enjoyment that terminate
-solely in self. This analysis lays the foundation
-for the distinction expressed by the terms the <i>love of
-complacency</i> and the <i>love of benevolence</i>. The first is
-the involuntary result of good conferred on <i>self</i>; the
-last is a voluntary act. It is good willing toward
-others without reference to self.</p>
-
-<p>The first can only exist where certain qualities are
-preserved and appreciated in another mind. The second
-can result from voluntary effort, and become the
-subject of law and penalties.</p>
-
-<p>We can never be justly required to love another mind
-with the love of complacency except when qualities
-are perceived that, by the constitution of mind, necessarily
-call forth such regard. But the love of benevolence
-can be justly demanded from every mind toward
-every being capable of happiness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">{203}</a></span>
-Here it is important to discriminate more exactly
-in regard to the principle of <i>benevolence</i> and the principle
-of <i>rectitude</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It is seen that the benevolence which is the subject
-of rewards and penalties as a voluntary act consists
-in <i>good willing</i>&mdash;that is, in choosing the happiness
-of <i>other</i> minds as the object of interest and pursuit.</p>
-
-<p>But the principle of rectitude is more comprehensive
-in its nature. It relates to obedience to <i>all</i> the laws
-of the system of the universe&mdash;those relating to ourselves
-as much as those relating to others. It is true
-that, as obedience to these laws includes the greatest
-possible amount of good with the least possible evil,
-both to the individual and the commonwealth, the tendency
-of the two principles is to the same result. But
-it may be the case that benevolence acts contrary to
-the true rules of rectitude, and thus may mar rather
-than promote happiness. A mind must not only
-choose to promote the greatest possible happiness, but
-must choose <i>the right way</i> of doing it.</p>
-
-<p>A very important particular to be considered is, that,
-while in the physical and mental constitution there is
-not a single arrangement the direct object of which is
-to produce suffering, the susceptibilities to pain seem
-designed to protect and preserve, while the greater the
-need the more strong is this protection. For example,
-in regard to physical organization, fire is an element
-that is indispensable to the life, comfort, and activity
-of man, and it must be accessible at all times and
-places. But all its service arises from its power to
-dissolve and destroy the body itself, as well as all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">{204}</a></span>
-things around it. Therefore the pain connected with
-contact with fire is more acute than almost any other.
-Thus even the youngest child is taught that care and
-caution needful to protect its body from injury or destruction.</p>
-
-<p>Another fact in regard to the susceptibilities of pain
-is their frequent <i>co-existence</i> with the highest degrees
-of enjoyment. The experiences of this life often present
-cases where the most elevated and ecstatic happiness
-is combined with the keenest suffering, while such
-is the nature of the case that the suffering is the chief
-cause of the happiness thus secured. The highest
-illustration of this is in the suffering of saints and martyrs,
-when they "rejoice to be counted worthy to suffer
-shame," or when, amid torturing flames, they sing
-songs of transport and praise.</p>
-
-<p>Even in common life it is constantly found that a
-certain relative amount of happiness is felt to be more
-than a recompense for a given amount of pain. This
-relative amount may be such that the evil involved,
-though great, may count as nothing. Where there is
-a passionate attachment, for example, the lover exults
-in the labor and suffering that will joyfully be received
-as a proof of affection and secure the compensating return.</p>
-
-<p>It is a very common fact that the existence of painful
-emotions <i>is sought</i>, not for themselves, but as ministers
-to a kind of mental excitement which is desired.
-This is the foundation of the pleasure which is felt in
-tragic representations, and in poetry and novels that
-present scenes of distress. The little child will again
-and again ask for the tale of the Babes in the Wood,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">{205}</a></span>
-though each rehearsal brings forth tears; and the
-mature matron or sage will spend hours over tales that
-harrow the feelings or call forth sighs. This also
-is the foundation of that kind of music called the
-<i>minor key</i>, in which certain sounds bring emotions
-of sadness or sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>Another striking fact in regard to the desire for pain
-is the emotions that are felt by the most noble and
-benevolent minds at the sight of cruelty and injustice.
-At such scenes, the desire for inflicting pain on the
-guilty offender amounts to a passion which nothing
-can allay but retributive justice. And the more benevolent
-the mind, the stronger this desire for retributive
-evil to another.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it appears that the mind is so made as to desire
-pain both for itself and for others; not in itself
-considered, but as the indispensable means to gain
-some consequent enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>The highest kinds of happiness result from painful
-emergencies. The transports of love, gratitude, and
-delight, when some benefactor rescues suffering thousands
-from danger and evil, could exist in no other
-way. All the long train of virtues included in patient
-toil for the good of others, in heroic daring, in brave
-adventure, in fortitude, in patience, in resignation, in
-heavenly meekness, in noble magnanimity, in sublime
-self-sacrifice, all involve the idea of trial, danger, and
-suffering. It is only the highest and noblest class of
-minds that can fully understand that the most blissful
-of all enjoyments are those which are bought with pain.</p>
-
-<p>But the most cheering feature in the constitution of
-mind is all that is included in the principle of <i>habit</i>.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">{206}</a></span>
-We see in the commencement of existence that every
-action of mind and body is imperfect, and more or less
-difficult, while each effort to secure right action increases
-the facility of so doing. We see that, owing
-to this principle, every act of obedience to law makes
-such a course easier. The intellect, the susceptibilities,
-the will, all come under this benign influence.
-Habit may so diminish the difficulty of self-denial for
-our own good that the pain entirely ceases; and self-sacrifice
-for the good of others may so develop benevolence
-and generate a habit that it will become pleasure
-without pain. There are those, even in this world,
-who have so attained this capacity of living in the life
-of those around them that the happiness of others becomes
-their own, and then there is even less pain in
-self-denial for the good of others than for that of self.
-When this habit of mind is attained, the happiness of
-the commonwealth becomes the portion of the individual.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_3" id="Foot_3" href="#Ref_3">[3]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Note B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">{207}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
-<small>SOCIAL AND MATERIAL PROOFS OF THE CREATOR'S DESIGNS.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have now presented the organization of mind as
-the chief evidence of the grand design of its Creator in
-forming all things. We now will trace the evidences
-of the same beneficent object in the social and material
-organizations.</p>
-
-<p>First, then, in regard to the domestic relations. We
-have seen that while all happiness depends on obedience
-to laws, every mind comes into existence in perfect
-ignorance of them, and without any power to learn
-what is good or evil but by experience and instruction.
-The intention of the Creator that each new-born being
-should be taught these laws and trained to obey them,
-is clearly seen in the first and highest domestic relation.
-In this we see two mature minds, who have
-themselves been trained to understand these laws,
-drawn by sweet and gentle influences to each other.
-They go apart from all past ties of kindred; they have
-one home, one name, one common interest in every
-thing. The one who has most physical strength goes
-forth to provide supplies; the delicate one remains
-behind, by domestic ministries to render home the centre
-of all attractions.</p>
-
-<p>Then comes the beautiful, helpless infant, of no use
-to any one, and demanding constant care, labor, and attention.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">{208}</a></span>
-And yet, with its profound ignorance, its tender
-weakness, its delicate beauty, its utter helplessness,
-its entire dependence, how does it draw forth the strongest
-feelings of love and tenderness, making every toil
-and care a delight! And thus, month after month,
-both parents unite to cherish and support, while, with
-unceasing vigilance, they train the new-born mind to
-understand and obey the laws of the system into which
-it is thus ushered. Its first lessons are to learn to
-take care of its own body. And when the far-off penalty
-of pain can not be comprehended by the novice,
-the parent invents new penalties to secure habits of
-care and obedience. During all this period the great
-lesson of <i>sacrifice</i> constantly occurs. The child must
-eat what is <i>best</i>, not what it desires. It must go to
-bed when it wants to sit up. It must stay in the
-house when it wants to go out. It must not touch
-multitudes of things which it wishes thus to investigate.
-And so the habits of self-denial, obedience, and
-faith in the parents are gradually secured, while the
-knowledge of the laws of the system around are slowly
-learned.</p>
-
-<p>But the higher part of the law of sacrifice soon begins
-to make its demands. The child first learns of
-this law <i>by example</i>, in that of <i>the mother</i>, that most
-perfect illustration of self-sacrificing love. Then comes
-a second child, when the first-born must practice on
-this example. It must give up its place in the mother's
-bosom to another; it must share its sweets and
-toys with the new-comer; it must join in efforts to
-protect, amuse, and instruct the helpless one. And
-thus the family is the constant school for training ignorant,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">{209}</a></span>
-inexperienced mind in the laws of the system
-of which it is a part, especially in the great law of self-control
-and of self-sacrifice for the good of others.</p>
-
-<p>Next comes the discipline of the school and the
-neighborhood, when the child is placed among his peers
-to be taught new rules of justice, benevolence, and self-sacrifice
-for the general good.</p>
-
-<p>Next come the relations of the body politic, for
-which labors are demanded and pain is to be endured
-under the grand law of sacrifice, that the individual is
-to subordinate his own interests and wishes to the
-greater general good, and that the interests of the majority
-are to control those of the minority.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, the whole world is to be taken into the estimate,
-and the nations are to be counted as members
-of one great family of man, for which every portion is
-to make sacrifices. Thus, as age, and experience, and
-habits of obedience to the laws of rectitude increase,
-the duties and obligations grow more numerous and
-complicated. But the same grand principle is more
-and more developed, that each individual is to seek the
-greatest possible happiness with the least possible evil,
-for the vast whole as well as each subordinate part,
-while <i>self</i> is to receive only its just and proper share.</p>
-
-<p>The same great design of the Creator can be detected
-also in specific organizations, by which minds so
-differ from each other as to fit them for the diverse positions
-and relations that the common good demands.
-If all were exactly alike in the amount of constitutional
-powers and in the proportionate combinations, it can
-easily be seen that the general result would be far less
-favorable to the happiness of the whole. But as it is,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">{210}</a></span>
-some have the love of power very large, and love to
-lead and control; others have it small, and love to follow.
-Some have elevated intellect, and love to teach;
-others have humbler capacities, and better love humbler
-pursuits.</p>
-
-<p>These varied combinations also give scope to the
-virtues of pity, tenderness, patience, mercy, justice,
-self-denial, and many other graces that could not be
-called into being without all the disparities, social, domestic,
-intellectual, and moral, that we find existing.
-Meantime, the principle of habit and the power of the
-will give abundant opportunities for modifying these
-natural peculiarities to accommodate to varying circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>To these indications of benevolent design may be
-added the organization of the bodily system, and the
-constitution of the material world without. In examining
-the body we inhabit, so nicely adjusted, so perfectly
-adapted to our necessities, so beautifully and
-harmoniously arranged, so "fearfully and wonderfully
-made," it is almost beyond the power of numbers to
-express the multiplied contrivances for ease, comfort,
-and delight.</p>
-
-<p>We daily pursue our business and our pleasure,
-thoughtless of the thousand operations which are going
-on, and the busy mechanism employed in securing
-the objects we desire. The warm current that is flowing
-from the centre to the extremities, with its life-giving
-energies, and then returning to be purified and
-again sent forth; the myriads of branching nerves that
-are the sensitive discerners of good or ill; the unnumbered
-muscles and tendons that are contracting and expanding
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">{211}</a></span>
-in all parts of our frame; the nicely-adjusted
-joints, and bands, and ligaments, that sustain, and direct,
-and support; the perpetual expansion and contraction
-of the vital organ; the thousand hidden contrivances
-and operations of the animal frame, all are
-quietly and constantly performing their generous functions,
-and administering comfort and enjoyment to the
-conscious spirit that dwells within.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is the outer world less busy in performing its
-part in promoting the great design of the Creator.
-The light of suns and stars is traversing the ethereal
-expanse in search of those for whom it was created;
-for them it gilds the scenes of earth, and is reflected
-in ten thousand forms of beauty and of skill. The
-trembling air is waiting to minister its aid, fanning
-with cool breezes, or yielding the warmth of spring,
-sustaining the functions of life, and bearing on its light
-wing the thoughts that go forth from mind to mind,
-and the breathings of affection that are given and returned.
-For this design earth is sending forth her
-exuberance, the waters are emptying their stores, and
-the clouds pouring forth their treasures. All nature
-is busy with its offerings of fruits and flowers, its
-wandering incense, its garnished beauty, and its varied
-songs. Within and without, above, beneath, and
-around, the same Almighty Beneficence is found still
-ministering to the wants and promoting the happiness
-of the minds He has formed forever to desire and pursue
-this boon.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">{212}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
-<small>RIGHT MODE OF SECURING THE OBJECT FOR WHICH MIND WAS CREATED.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> set forth the object for which the Creator
-formed mind, we are thus furnished with the means
-for deciding as to the <i>right mode of its action</i> in obtaining
-this object. We may discover the design of
-a most curious machine, and perceive that, if it is <i>rightly
-regulated</i>, it will secure that end; while, if it is
-worked wrong, it will break itself to pieces, and destroy
-the very object which it was formed to secure.</p>
-
-<p>The same may be seen to be as true of mind as it
-is of material organization, and the question then is
-most pertinent, What is that mode of mental action
-which will most perfectly secure the end for which
-mind is made?</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that the self-determining power of
-choice is the distinctive attribute of mind, and that
-all the other powers are dependent on this, and regulated
-by it. We have seen that the current of the
-thoughts, and the nature and power of the desires and
-emotions, are also controlled by the generic ruling purpose,
-or chief interest of the mind.</p>
-
-<p>This being so, then the only way in which mind
-can act to secure the object for which it is made is <i>to
-choose that object for chief end or ruling purpose,
-and actually carry out this choice in all subordinate
-volitions</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">{213}</a></span>
-We will now present the evidence gained from experience,
-as well as what we should infer from the
-known laws of mind, to show what the result would
-be in <i>a system of minds</i> where each mind should thus
-act.</p>
-
-<p>Let us suppose, then, a commonwealth in which every
-mind is regulated by a ruling purpose to <i>act
-right</i>, which actually controls every specific volition.
-Each mind then would obey all those laws which will
-secure to the whole community and to each individual
-the greatest possible amount of happiness with the
-least possible evil.</p>
-
-<p>To do this of necessity involves the idea that each
-mind must <i>know what are all the laws of the system</i>;
-for no one can choose to obey laws until laws are
-known.</p>
-
-<p>Let the result on a single mind be first contemplated.
-In the first place, all the trains of thought
-would be regulated by the <i>chief desire</i>, which would
-be to make the most possible happiness with the least
-possible evil. Of course, all those ideas that were
-most consonant with this ruling passion would become
-vivid and distinct; and as these ideas also would
-be connected with the <i>strongest emotions</i>, the two chief
-causes that regulate association would combine to secure
-constant thought and intellectual activity to promote
-the common welfare as the chief object, while
-self would have only its true and proper estimation
-and attention. There would be no need of effort to
-regulate thought and emotion, for they would all flow
-naturally to the grand and right object.</p>
-
-<p>Next suppose a commonwealth in which every mind
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">{214}</a></span>
-had its intellect, desires, and emotions, and all its
-specific volitions thus regulated by the grand aim of
-making the most possible happiness, guarded, too, by
-unerring judgment, so as to make no miscalculation;
-what would be the state of things, so far as we can
-ascertain by past experience and by reasoning from
-the known nature of things?</p>
-
-<p>First, then, in reference to the susceptibilities of
-sensation. If all should never touch any food but
-that which would expose to no danger or excess; if
-they never encountered any needless hazard; if they
-exactly balanced all the probabilities of good and evil,
-in every matter relating to the pleasures of sense, and
-invariably chose that which exposed to the <i>least</i> danger;
-if every being around was anxiously watchful in
-affording the results of observation, and in protecting
-others from risk and exposure, it is probable that the
-amount of sensitive enjoyment would be a thousand
-fold increased, while most of the evils caused by improper
-food and drink, by needless exposure, by negligence
-of danger, and by many other causes which
-now operate, would cease. With the present constitution
-of body, which tends to decay, we could not
-positively maintain that no suffering would be experienced,
-but it is probable that the amount would be as
-a drop to the ocean compared with what is now experienced.</p>
-
-<p>Under such a constitution of things, we can perceive,
-also, that there would be no suffering from the
-painful emotions; for where each was striving to attain
-the <i>greatest</i> amount of good to all, there could
-be no competition, no jealousy, no envy, no pride,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">{215}</a></span>
-no ambition, no anger, no hatred; for there would
-be no occasion for any of these discordant emotions.
-Nor could remorse harass, or shame overwhelm; for
-no wickedness would be perpetrated, and no occasion
-of reproach occur. Nor could fear intrude, where every
-mind was conscious that its own happiness was
-the constant care of every one around. Nor could
-painful sympathy exist, where so little pain was known.
-Nor could the weariness of inactivity be felt, where all
-were engaged in acting for one noble and common object,
-in which every faculty could be employed. Nor
-could the mind suffer the pangs of ungratified desire,
-while the gratification of its chief desire was the aim
-and object of all. So that, if all minds should act
-unitedly and habitually on this principle, there would
-be no exposure, except to sensitive pain, and this
-danger would be exceedingly trifling.</p>
-
-<p>In the mean time, every source of happiness would
-be full and overflowing. All sensitive enjoyments
-that would not cause suffering, nor interfere with the
-happiness of others, would be gained; admiration and
-affection would be given and reciprocated; the powers
-of body and mind would be actively employed in giving
-and acquiring happiness; the pleasure resulting
-from the exercise of physical and moral power would
-be enjoyed, and employed to promote the enjoyment
-of others; the peace of conscious rectitude would
-dwell in every bosom; the consciousness of being the
-cause of happiness to others would send joy to the
-heart, while sympathy in the general happiness would
-pour in its unmeasured tide. But this happiness could
-not be perfect except in a commonwealth where <i>every</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">{216}</a></span>
-individual was perfectly conformed to the laws of rectitude.
-A single mind that violated a single law would
-send a jar through the whole sphere of benevolent and
-sympathizing beings.</p>
-
-<p>The next question is, How can mind be most successfully
-influenced to right action? To answer this
-we must refer again to <i>experience</i>, and inquire as to
-the methods which have been found most successful in
-influencing the mind to right action.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing which experience teaches is, that it is
-indispensable to right mental action that there should
-be <i>a knowledge and belief of the truth</i>. We must
-have <i>true conceptions</i> of reality of things, and of the
-right mode of promoting the greatest possible happiness,
-before we have power to pursue this course.</p>
-
-<p>But each mind, as it comes into existence, is a perfect
-blank in regard to knowledge or experience of any
-kind. The only way to gain knowledge is by experience
-and instruction. The knowledge secured by experience
-as to the laws of a system so vast and complicated
-comes very slowly and imperfectly. The
-chief reliance in the beginning of existence is on the
-instructions of other minds. <i>Infallible teachers, and
-perfect faith or belief in such teachers</i>, then, is the
-grand necessity of mind as it begins existence.</p>
-
-<p>The next thing which experience shows to be effective
-in securing the right action of mind is the <i>formation
-of right habits</i>. For this, also, the new-made being
-is entirely dependent on those to whom is given its
-early training. It comes into life without any knowledge
-and without any habits, a creature of mere impulses
-and instincts. Its very first want is not only
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">{217}</a></span>
-infallible teachers, but patient educators, who shall, by
-constant care and effort, form its physical, intellectual,
-social, and moral habits.</p>
-
-<p>The next indispensable requisite to the right action
-of mind is the existence of <i>a ruling generic purpose</i> to
-obey all the laws of rectitude.</p>
-
-<p>It has already been shown how all the powers of
-the mind are regulated and controlled by the leading
-purpose, and that it is impossible to bring all the desires,
-emotions, and subordinate volitions into right action
-except by the power of such a principle.</p>
-
-<p>But experience has proved that such a generic purpose
-will not either be originated or sustained except
-by the social influences of surrounding minds through
-the principles of <i>love</i>, <i>gratitude</i>, <i>sympathy</i>, and <i>example</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The power of these principles may be illustrated by
-supposing the case of a mature mind already embarrassed
-with habits of self-indulgence and selfishness.
-Let such a person be placed in the most endeared and
-intimate communion with a being possessed of every
-possible attraction which is delightful to the human
-mind. Let him feel that he is the object of the most
-tender and devoted affection to such an exalted friend,
-and, spite of his own faults and deficiencies, realize
-that his own affection is desired and his communion
-sought. Let him, in all his daily pursuits, be attended
-by the desired presence of the one in whom his
-hopes centre and his affections repose; one in whom
-he sees every possible exhibition of disinterestedness,
-tenderness, and love, not only toward himself, but all
-other beings who come within the circle of such benevolence.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">{218}</a></span>
-Let him discover that the practice of all
-that is excellent and benevolent by himself is the object
-of unceasing desire to this devoted friend. Let
-him discover that, to save him from the consequences
-of some guilty act of selfishness, this friend had submitted
-to the most painful sacrifices, and only asked as
-a return those efforts which were necessary to overcome
-such pernicious habits. Let him feel that this friend,
-though pained by his deficiencies, could forbear and
-forgive, and continue his love in spite of them all. Let
-him know that his attainment of perfect virtue was the
-object of intense desire, and was watched with the most
-exulting joy by so good and so perfect a being, and is
-it possible to conceive a stronger pressure of motive
-which could be brought to act on a selfish mind?
-Would not every human being exclaim, "Give me
-such a friend, and I should be selfish no more. His
-presence and his love would be my strength in foiling
-every wrong desire and in conquering every baneful
-habit."</p>
-
-<p>This illustration enables us to realize more clearly
-the power of love and gratitude toward another mind,
-and the reflex influence of love of sympathy and of
-example. Could the young mind be placed under the
-training of such minds, and in circumstances where
-all the rules of right and wrong were perfectly understood,
-it can be seen that <i>the habits</i> would early be
-formed aright, and that the difficulties against which
-the mature mind has to struggle would be escaped.</p>
-
-<p>Could we suppose a community of such elevated mature
-educators, with young minds of various degrees of
-advancement under their training, it can be seen that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">{219}</a></span>
-the social influences of all would produce a moral atmosphere
-that would add great power to the individual
-influences. What every body loves, honors, and
-admires, secures a moral force over young minds almost
-invincible, even when it sustains false and wicked
-customs. How much greater this power when it
-co-operates with the intellect, the moral sense, and the
-will in leading to right action!</p>
-
-<p>The result of all this is to show, as the result of reason
-and experience, that it is indispensable to the perfectly
-right action of mind to secure <i>infallible and perfect
-educators</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, the degree in which any individual mind,
-or any community, has or will approach to such perfection,
-depends entirely on the extent to which such
-a character can be secured in those who are to train
-young minds. The history of individual families and
-of large communities shows that their advance, both
-in intellectual and moral development, has exactly
-corresponded with the character of those who educated
-the young.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">{220}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXV.<br />
-<small>WRONG ACTION OF MIND AND ITS CAUSES.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have exhibited the <i>object</i> for which mind was
-created, and the <i>mode of action</i> by which alone this
-object can be secured.</p>
-
-<p>We next inquire in regard to the wrong action of
-mind; its causes and its results as learned by reason
-and experience.</p>
-
-<p>According to the principles set forth, a mind acts
-wrong whenever it transgresses any law. The grand
-law is that of <i>sacrifice</i>, by which every mode of enjoyment
-is to be relinquished which does not tend to the
-greatest possible happiness with the least possible evil.</p>
-
-<p>Having set forth those influences or causes which
-tend to secure the right action of mind, we are enabled
-thus to indicate what are the <i>causes of its wrong
-action</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The first and leading cause is a want of knowledge
-of the truth and a belief of error. We begin existence
-without knowledge of any kind, and without any
-power to receive instruction from others. The newborn
-mind is a mere unit of impulses and instincts, with
-an intellect entirely undeveloped, and a will which never
-can act intelligently. It is entirely dependent for
-its experience, safety, enjoyment, and knowledge of all
-kinds on those around. As it gains by experience
-and training, much of its knowledge and belief is correct,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">{221}</a></span>
-and many of its mental acts are right; but a
-large portion of its actions are wrong, and many of
-them inevitably so.</p>
-
-<p>And here we must recognize again the distinction
-which our moral nature demands between wrong actions
-that result from unavoidable ignorance, and those
-which are committed intelligently and which violate
-conscience. In regard to the first class, the natural
-penalties are inevitable, and the justice of them involves
-the great question of the Creator's character
-and designs. In regard to those that violate conscience,
-our moral nature, as has been shown, leads
-us not only to approve additional penalties, but to demand
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The violations of law which are sins of ignorance
-commence with the earliest period of existence. Owing
-to its helpless ignorance, often the little child can
-no more help acting wrong than it can help thinking
-and feeling.</p>
-
-<p>A second cause of wrong action is false teachings.
-Although a large portion of the instruction given to the
-young, especially in regard to physical laws, are true,
-yet the infant commences life among imperfectly instructed
-beings, who often communicate error believing
-it to be truth. Meantime the little one has no power
-of correcting these errors, and thus again is inevitably
-led to wrong action.</p>
-
-<p>A third cause of wrong action is the want of good
-habits and the early formation of bad ones. As a habit
-is a facility of action <i>gained by repetition</i>, of course,
-at first, there can be no habits. And then what the
-habits shall be is entirely decided by the opinions and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">{222}</a></span>
-conduct of its educators. While some habits are
-formed aright, others are formed wrong, and thus the
-disability of nature is increased instead of diminished.</p>
-
-<p>The next cause of wrong action is those social influences
-of other minds that have most power both in
-securing and sustaining right action. In the previous
-chapter we have illustrated the power of the principles
-of <i>love</i>, <i>gratitude</i>, <i>sympathy</i>, and <i>example</i> in securing
-right action.</p>
-
-<p>The same powerful influences exist in reference to
-wrong action. The child who loves its parents and
-playmates is not only taught to believe wrong action
-to be right, but has all the powerful influences which
-example, sympathy, love, and gratitude can combine to
-lead to the same wrong courses. Thus, to the natural
-ignorance of inexperienced mind, to false instructions,
-and to bad habits, are often added these most powerful
-of all influences.</p>
-
-<p>The next cause of wrong action is the want of a
-ruling purpose to do right. It has been shown that
-all the powers of the intellect and all the susceptibilities
-can be regulated by a generic ruling purpose, and
-that it is impossible, according to the nature of mind,
-to regulate it any other way.</p>
-
-<p>When such a purpose exists, and its object is <i>any</i>
-other except the right and true one, it is as impossible
-for a mind to act right as it is for a machine to fulfill
-its design when the main wheel is turned the wrong
-way.</p>
-
-<p>That such a purpose does not exist in the new-born
-mind, and that it must be a considerable time before it
-is possible, in the nature of things, to be originated,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">{223}</a></span>
-needs no attempt to illustrate. Such a purpose is dependent
-on knowledge of truth, on habits, and these
-on the character of the educators of mind, and on other
-surrounding social influences.</p>
-
-<p>These are the chief causes of the wrong action of
-mind as they have been developed by experience.</p>
-
-<p>In the next chapters we shall consider the results of
-the wrong action of mind as they have been exhibited
-in the experience of mankind, and as they are to be
-anticipated in a future world.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">{224}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.<br />
-<small>WRONG ACTION OF MIND, AND ITS RESULTS IN THIS LIFE.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have examined into the causes of the wrong action
-of mind, and have found them to consist in the
-want of knowledge, want of habits, want of social influences
-from other minds, and want of a right governing
-purpose, all of which, so far as reason and experience
-teach, alone could be secured by perfect and infallible
-teachers and educators in a perfect commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p>We are now to inquire in regard to the wrong action
-of mind and its results in this life.</p>
-
-<p>The first point to be noticed is the fact that from
-the first there is in every intelligent mind <i>a sense of
-entire inability</i> to obey the laws of the system in
-which it is placed.</p>
-
-<p>This is true not merely in reference to that breach
-of law which is the inevitable result of ignorance,
-but of that also which involves a violation of conscience.
-Where is the mother who has not heard
-the distressed confession, even from the weeping infant,
-that he was happier in doing right than in doing
-wrong, that he wished to do well, and yet that he was
-constantly doing evil? Where is the parent that has
-not witnessed, as one little being after another passed
-on from infancy to youth, and from youth to manhood,
-the perpetual warfare to sustain good purposes and oft-broken
-resolutions? And where is the conscious spirit
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">{225}</a></span>
-that can not look back on its whole course of existence
-as one continued exhibition of a conflict that gives
-unvarying evidence of this truth? Men <i>feel</i> that it
-is as impossible for them to be invariably <i>perfect</i> in
-thought, word, and deed, as it is to rule the winds and
-waves.</p>
-
-<p>The testimony of mankind through every period of
-the world, in regard to their own individual consciousness,
-attests a sense of the same fatal inability. If we
-go back even as far as to the heathen sages of antiquity,
-we gain the same acknowledgment. Thus we
-find Pythagoras calls it "the fatal companion, the noxious
-strife that lurks within us, and which was born
-along with us." Sopator terms it "the sin that is
-born with mankind." Plato denominates it "natural
-wickedness," and Aristotle "the natural repugnance of
-man's temper to reason." Cicero declares that "men
-are brought into life by Nature as a step-mother, with
-a naked, frail, and infirm body, and with a soul prone
-to divers lusts." Seneca observes, "We are born in
-such a condition that we are not subject to fewer disorders
-of the mind than of the body; all vices are in
-men, though they do not break out in every one."
-Propertius says that "every body has a vice to which
-he is inclined by nature." Juvenal asserts that "nature,
-unchangeably fixed, runs back to wickedness."
-Horace declares that "no man is free from vices, and
-he is the best man who is oppressed with the least."
-He adds that "mankind rush into wickedness, and always
-desire what is forbidden;" that "youth has the
-softness of wax to receive vicious impressions, and the
-hardness of rock to resist virtuous admonitions;" that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">{226}</a></span>
-"we are mad enough to attack Heaven itself, and our
-repeated crimes do not suffer the God of Heaven to lay
-aside his wrathful thunderbolts."</p>
-
-<p>This testimony of individual experience is verified
-by the general history of mankind. All the laws and
-institutions of society are founded on the principle that
-mankind are prone to wrong, infirm of purpose in all
-that is good, and that every possible restraint is needed
-to prevent the overbreaking tide of evil and crime.
-When we read the history of communities and of nations,
-it is one continued record of selfishness, avarice,
-injustice, revenge, and cruelty. Individuals seem equally
-plotting against the happiness of individuals, and
-rejoicing to work evils on society. Communities rise
-against communities, and nations dash against nations.
-Tyrants fill their dominions with sorrow, misery, and
-death; bloody heroes, followed by infuriate bands,
-spread havoc, ruin, and dismay through all their course,
-while superstition binds in chains, racks with tortures,
-and sacrifices its millions of victims.</p>
-
-<p>In tracing along the history of mankind, there is no
-period which we can select when mankind have not
-seemed as busy in destroying their own, and the happiness
-of others, as the lower animals are in seeking
-their appropriate enjoyments. At one time we behold
-Xerxes pouring forth all Asia upon Europe, where
-three million beings were brought to be slaughtered by
-the Greeks. At another time the Greeks, headed by
-Alexander, return upon Asia, and spread over most of
-the known world, pillaging, burning, and slaughtering.
-Then we behold Alaric, at the head of barbarous
-hordes, desolating all the Roman empire, and destroying
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">{227}</a></span>
-the monuments of taste, science, and the arts.
-Then we see Tamerlane rushing forth, overrunning
-Persia, India, and other parts of Asia, carrying carnage
-and the most desolating cruelty in his course, so that
-it is recorded that he would cause thousands of his
-prisoners to be pounded in mortars with bricks to form
-into walls.</p>
-
-<p>From Europe we behold <i>six millions</i> of Crusaders
-rush forth upon the plains of Asia, with rapine, and
-famine, and outrage attending their course. Then
-come forth from Eastern Asia the myrmidons of Genghis
-Khan, ravaging fifteen millions of square miles,
-beheading 100,000 prisoners at one time, shaking the
-whole earth with terror, and exterminating fourteen
-millions of their fellow-men. Then from the northern
-forests are seen swarming forth the Goths and Vandals,
-sweeping over Europe and Asia, and bearing
-away every vestige of arts, civilization, comfort, and
-peace. At another time we see the professed head of
-the Christian Church slaughtering the pious and inoffensive
-Albigenses, sending horror into their peaceful
-villages, and torturing thousands of inoffensive victims.</p>
-
-<p>At one period of history the whole known world
-seemed to be one vast field of carnage and commotion.
-The Huns, Vandals, and other Northern barbarians
-were ravaging France, Germany, and Spain; the Goths
-were plundering and murdering in Italy, and the Saxons
-and Angles were overrunning Great Britain. The
-Roman armies under Justinian, together with the Vandals
-and Huns, were desolating Africa; the barbarians
-of Scythia were pouring down upon the Roman empire;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">{228}</a></span>
-the Persian armies were pillaging and laying
-waste the countries of Asia; the Arabians, under Mohammed,
-were beginning to extend their conquests over
-Syria, Palestine, Egypt, Barbary, and Spain. Every
-nation and kingdom on earth was shaking to its centre.
-The smoke and the spirits of the bottomless pit
-seemed coming up to darken, and torment, and affright
-mankind. The most fertile countries were converted
-to deserts, and covered with ruins of once flourishing
-cities and villages; the most fiendish cruelty was practiced;
-famine raged to such a degree that the living
-fed upon the dead; prisoners were tortured by the
-most refined systems of cruelty; public edifices were
-destroyed; the monuments of science and the arts perished;
-cruelty, fraud, avarice, murder, and every crime
-that disgraces humanity, were let loose upon a wretched
-world. Historians seem to shudder in attempting
-to picture these horrid scenes, and would draw a veil
-over transactions that disgrace mankind.</p>
-
-<p>If from ancient times we look at the present state of
-the world, at its present most refined and enlightened
-period, the same mournful evidence is discovered. Cruelty
-and tyranny have changed some of the fairest
-provinces of Persia to deserts. The Turk long ago
-turned the land of the patriarchs and prophets to a
-wilderness, and drenched the shores of Greece with the
-blood of slaughtered victims, while Syria, Kurdistan,
-and Armenia for ages have been ravaged with injustice
-and rapine. China and Japan have been shut out
-from the world by a cold and jealous selfishness. In
-Tartary, Arabia, and Siberia, the barbarous tribes are
-prowling about for plunder, or engaged in murderous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">{229}</a></span>
-conflicts. In Africa, the Barbary States are in perpetual
-commotion; the petty tyrants of Benin, Ashantee,
-and other interior states are waging ceaseless wars, murdering
-their prisoners, and adorning their houses with
-their skulls; and on its ravaged coast the white man-stealer,
-for hundreds of years, has been prowling, and
-bearing off thousands of wretches as a yearly offering
-to the avarice of the most refined and Christian nations
-on earth. In North America, we have seen the native
-tribes employed in war, and practicing the most fiendish
-barbarities, while in South America, its more civilized
-inhabitants are engaged in constant political and
-bloody commotions. In the islands of the ocean thousands
-of human beings have been fighting each other,
-throwing darts and stones at strangers, offering human
-sacrifices, and feasting on the flesh of their enemies.</p>
-
-<p>If we select Europe for the exhibition of human nature
-as seen under the restraints of civilization, laws,
-refinement, and religion, the same evils burst forth
-from bonds and restraints. In Europe, for ages, the
-common people, in slavery and ignorance, have been
-bowing down to a grinding priesthood, or an oppressive
-nobility or monarchical tyranny. Incessant heaving
-of the troubled nations portends desolation and
-dismay, as man seems waking from the slavery of ages
-to shake off his fetters and call himself free.</p>
-
-<p>If we look to our own boasted land of liberty and
-religion, what toiling of selfish and discordant interests&mdash;what
-mean and low-lived arts to gain honor and
-power&mdash;what shameful attacks on fair reputation and
-unblemished honor&mdash;what collisions of party-strifes
-and local interests! Here also the curse of slavery
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">{230}</a></span>
-brings the blush of shame to every honest man that,
-from year to year, on the anniversary of the national
-liberty, hears the declarations of rights this very nation
-is trampling under foot. Millions of slaves, deprived
-of the best blessing and the dearest rights of humanity,
-are held in the most degrading bondage by a nation
-who yearly and publicly acknowledge their perfect
-and unalienable rights.</p>
-
-<p>The same melancholy view is no less clearly witnessed
-in the opinions and moral sentiments of mankind.
-The mind of man is formed to love happiness,
-to be pleased with what promotes it, and to detest
-that which tends to destroy it, yet the long reign of
-selfishness has seemed to pervert and poison even
-the taste and moral sentiments of men. Who is the
-hero sung by the poet, eulogized by the statesman,
-and flattered by the orator? Who is it presented in
-classic language to the gaze of enthusiastic childhood,
-and pictured forth in tales of romance to kindling
-youth?</p>
-
-<p>It is the man who has given up his life to the gratification
-of pride, and the love of honor and fame; the
-man who, to gain this selfish good, can plunge the
-sword into the bosom of thousands, and stand the unpitying
-spectator of burning cities, widowed mothers,
-orphan children, desolated fields, and the long train of
-ills that he wantonly pours on mankind, that he may
-gain the miserable pittance of gaping admiration and
-dreadful renown which rises amid the tears and cries
-of mankind. It is the man who, when injured, knows
-not how to forgive&mdash;whose stinted soul never knew
-the dignity and pleasure of giving blessing for ill&mdash;who
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">{231}</a></span>
-deems it the mark of honor and manhood to follow
-the example of the whining infant, that, when he
-is struck, with the same noble spirit will strike back
-again.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, the calm forbearance and true dignity of
-virtue, that would be humbled at recrimination and
-can not condescend to retaliate, is put in the background
-as unworthy such honors and eulogy. Thus,
-also, we find intellect, which the Creator designed only
-as the instrument of securing happiness, though perverted
-to vice and folly, applauded and admired; and
-even some of those admired as among the wisest of
-mankind have often placed true virtue and goodness
-below the fancied splendors of genius and learning.
-All the maxims, and honors, and employments of
-mankind develop the perverted action of the noblest
-part of the creation of God in all its relations and in
-all its principles and pursuits.</p>
-
-<p>It is into such a world as this that every new-born
-mind is ushered without knowledge to guide, without
-habits to strengthen, without the power of forming a
-ruling purpose to do right which shall control all subordinate
-volitions.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of meeting perfect educators to instruct in
-the laws of the system, to form good habits, and to
-exert all the powerful social, domestic, and civil influences
-aright, every one of these powerful principles are
-fatally wrong. Parents, teachers, companions, and
-rulers, to a greater or less extent, teach wrong, train
-wrong, and set wrong examples, while the whole moral
-atmosphere is contaminated and paralyzing.</p>
-
-<p>In these circumstances, it is as <i>impossible</i> for a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">{232}</a></span>
-young mind to commence existence here with perfect
-obedience to law, and to continue through life in a
-course of perfect rectitude, as it is for it, by its feeble
-will, to regulate the winds of heaven, or turn back the
-tides of the ocean.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">{233}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVII.<br />
-<small>WRONG ACTION OF MIND, AND ITS RESULTS IN A FUTURE STATE.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are now to inquire as to the results of the
-wrong action of mind in a future state, so far as reason
-and experience can furnish data for any anticipations.</p>
-
-<p>The following are the principles of mind from which
-we reason on this subject. It appears that its constitution
-is such that the repetition of one particular
-mode of securing happiness induces a habit; and that
-the longer a habit continues, the more powerful is its
-force. An early habit of selfishness is always formed
-in the human mind, and the penalties following from
-self-indulgence and selfishness are not sufficient to prevent
-the continued increase of this habit. Though
-men, from the very beginning of existence, feel that
-they are happier in obeying the dictates of conscience,
-and that increase of guilt is increase of sorrow, yet
-this does not save them, in numberless cases, from increasing
-evil habits.</p>
-
-<p>It is also established by experience that, when a
-strong habit is formed, the mere decisions of the will
-are not sufficient for an immediate remedy. In this
-life, it requires a period of long and painful efforts of
-the will to rectify an established habit. Every human
-being is conscious how difficult it is to force the mental
-and bodily faculties to obey its decisions when contrary
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">{234}</a></span>
-to the stream of a long-indulged habit. There
-are few who have not either experienced or witnessed
-the anguish of spirit that has followed the violations
-of solemn resolutions, those firmest decisions of the
-will, in the contest between habit and conscience.</p>
-
-<p>Another principle of mind is this, that when selfishness
-and crime have been long indulged, the natural
-constitution of mind seems changed, so that inflicting
-evil on others is sought as an enjoyment. In illustration
-of this, it is related of Antiochus Epiphanes
-that, in his wars with the Jews, after all opposition had
-ceased, and all danger and cause of fear was removed,
-he destroyed thousands for the mere pleasure of seeing
-them butchered. An anecdote is related of him, too
-horrible to record in all its particulars, where he sat
-and feasted his eyes on the sufferings of a mother and
-her seven sons, when the parent was doomed to witness
-the infliction of the most excruciating and protracted
-tortures on each of her seven children, and then
-was tortured to death herself.</p>
-
-<p>It is recorded of Mustapha, one of the Turkish
-sultans, that by honorable capitulations he gained the
-person of a brave Venetian commander called Bragadino,
-who was defending his country from the cruelty
-of invaders. After having promised him honorable
-protection, he ordered him, bound hand and foot,
-to behold the massacre of his soldiers, then caused his
-person to be cut and mutilated in the most horrible
-manner, and then taunted him as a worshiper of Christ,
-who could not save his servants. When recovered of
-his wounds, he obliged him to carry loaded buckets of
-earth before the army, and kiss the ground whenever
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">{235}</a></span>
-he passed his barbarous tormentor. He then had him
-hung in a cage, to be tormented by his own soldiers,
-who were chained as galley-slaves, that they might be
-agonized by the indignities and sufferings of their venerated
-commander. After the most protracted sufferings
-and indignities in the public place, at the sound
-of music he was flayed alive.</p>
-
-<p>The history of some of the Roman emperors, even
-of some who, in early childhood and youth, were gentle,
-amiable, and kind, presents the same horrible picture.
-Nero set fire to Rome, and dressed the Christians
-in garments of flaming pitch, to run about his garden
-for his amusement. Tiberius tormented his subjects,
-and murdered them in cruel pangs, to gratify his love
-of suffering, while Caligula butchered his people for
-amusement with his own hand.</p>
-
-<p>The mind turns with horror from such revolting
-scenes, and asks if it is possible human nature <i>now</i>
-can be so perverted and debased. But this is the humiliating
-record of some of the <i>amusements</i>, even of
-our own countrymen, that have occurred in some parts
-of this refined and Christian nation. "Many of the
-interludes are filled up with a <i>boxing match</i>, which becomes
-memorable by feats of <i>gouging</i>. When two
-boxers are wearied with fighting and bruising each
-other, they come to close quarters, each endeavoring
-to twist his forefinger into the earlocks of his antagonist.
-When they are thus fast clenched, the thumbs
-are extended, and <i>both the eyes</i> are turned out of their
-sockets. The victor is hailed with shouts of applause
-from the sporting throng, while his poor antagonist,
-thus blinded for life, <i>is laughed at</i> for his misfortune."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">{236}</a></span>
-One very striking fact bearing on this subject has
-been established by experience, and that is, that <i>extreme
-suffering</i>, either mental or bodily, tends to awaken the
-desire to inflict evil upon other minds. This is probably
-one mode of accounting for the increased cruelty
-of the Roman emperors. As the powers of enjoyment
-diminished by abuse, and the horrors of guilt harassed
-their spirits, this dreadful desire to torment others was
-awakened.</p>
-
-<p>There are many undisputed facts to establish the
-principle that extreme suffering is the cause of terrible
-malignity. The following is from a statement of Mr.
-Byron, who was shipwrecked on the coast of South
-America: "So terrible was the scene of foaming breakers,
-that one of the bravest men could not help expressing
-his dismay, saying it was too shocking to
-bear. In this dreadful situation malignant passions began
-to appear. The crew grew extremely riotous, and
-fell to beating every thing in their way, and broke open
-chests and cabins for plunder that could be of no use.
-So earnest were they in this wantonness of theft, that
-in the morning a strangled corpse was found of one
-who had contested the spoil."</p>
-
-<p>A still more terrible picture is given in an account
-of the loss of the Medusa frigate on the coast of Africa.
-In the midst of dreadful suffering from cold, danger,
-and famine, it is recorded that "a spirit of sedition
-arose and manifested itself by furious shouts. The
-soldiers and sailors began to cut the ropes, and declared
-their intention of murdering the officers. About
-midnight, they rushed on the officers like desperate
-men, each having a knife or sabre, and such was their
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">{237}</a></span>
-fury that they tore their clothes and their flesh <i>with
-their teeth</i>. The next morning the raft was strewed with
-dead bodies. The succeeding night was passed in similar
-horrors, and the morning sun saw twelve more lifeless
-bodies. The next night of suffering was attended
-with a horrid massacre, and thus it continued till only
-fifteen remained of the whole one hundred and fifty!"</p>
-
-<p>Another principle of mind having a bearing on this
-subject is the fact that those qualities of mind which
-are the causes of enjoyment in others around may be
-viewed with only pain and dislike by a selfish person.
-Thus intellectual superiority, in itself considered,
-is a delightful object of contemplation; but if it
-becomes the means of degradation or of contemptuous
-comparison to a selfish mind, it is viewed with unmingled
-pain. Benevolence and truth are objects of delightful
-contemplation to all minds when disconnected
-with obligations or painful comparisons, but if they
-are viewed as causes of evil to a selfish mind, it will
-view them with unmingled dislike and hatred.</p>
-
-<p>Now we find that there are two classes of minds in
-this world: those who are more or less benevolent, and
-find their happiness in living to promote the general
-interests of their fellow-beings, and those who are selfish,
-and are living to promote their own enjoyment irrespective
-of the general happiness.</p>
-
-<p>If, then, we reason from the known laws of mind
-and from past experience, we must suppose that the
-habits of mind which are existing in this life will continue
-to increase, and if the mind is immortal, a time
-must come when one class will become perfectly benevolent
-and the other perfectly selfish. A community
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">{238}</a></span>
-of perfectly benevolent beings, it has been shown,
-would, from the very nature and constitution of mind,
-be a perfectly happy community. Every source of
-enjoyment of which mind is capable would be secured
-by every individual.</p>
-
-<p>It can be seen, also, that there must, in the nature
-of the case, be an entire separation between two such
-opposite classes; for it is as painful for minds suffering
-from conscious guilt, shame, and malignity, to look
-upon purity, benevolence, and happiness, as it is for the
-virtuous to associate with the selfish, the debased, and
-the abandoned. This separation, therefore, would be
-a voluntary one on both sides, even did we suppose
-no interference of Deity. But if the Creator continues
-his present constitution of things, we may infer
-that his power would be exerted to prevent the intrusion
-of malignity into a perfect and well-ordered community;
-for he has so constituted things <i>here</i>, that
-those who are incorrigible pests to society are confined
-from interfering with its interests.</p>
-
-<p>From the laws of mind, then, and from past experience
-as to the tendencies of things, we can establish
-the position that, at some future period, if the mind of
-man is immortal, the human race will be permanently
-divided into two classes, the perfectly selfish and the
-perfectly benevolent.</p>
-
-<p>Should it be objected to this conclusion that when
-the mind passes into another world more effectual motives
-may be brought to operate, it may be replied that
-it is not the office of reason to meet <i>suppositions</i> of
-<i>possibilities</i>, but to show what the <i>probabilities</i> are
-by deductions from principles already known. A thousand
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">{239}</a></span>
-possibilities may be asserted, such as the annihilation
-of mind or the alteration of its powers, but these
-are mere suppositions, and have nothing to do with
-the conclusions of reason.</p>
-
-<p>If mind is immortal and continues its present nature,
-habits will continue to strengthen; and in regard
-to motives, we know already that the <i>fear of evil consequences</i>
-will not save from continuance in crime.
-How often has a man who has yielded to habits of
-guilt been seen writhing in the agonies of remorse,
-longing to free himself from the terrible evils he has
-drawn around him, acknowledging the misery of his
-course and his ability to return to virtue, and yet, with
-bitter anguish, yielding to the force of inveterate habits
-and despairing of any remedy.</p>
-
-<p>We know, also, that it is a principle established by
-long experience, that punishment does not tend to soften
-and reform. Where is the hardened culprit that
-was ever brought to repentance and reformation by
-lashes or the infliction of degradation? Such means
-serve only to harden and brutify. Experience forbids
-the hope that punishment will ever restore a selfish
-and guilty mind to virtue and peace.</p>
-
-<p>Reason and experience, then, both lead to the conclusion
-that the two classes of minds into which mankind
-are here divided will, on leaving this world, eventually
-become two permanently distinct communities&mdash;one
-perfectly selfish, and the other perfectly benevolent.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, would reason and experience teach us
-as to the probable situation of a community of minds
-constituted like those of the human race, who, in the
-progress of future ages, shall establish habits of <i>perfect
-selfishness and crime</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">{240}</a></span>
-In regard to the Creator, what may we suppose will
-be the feelings of such minds? If he is a benevolent,
-pure, and perfectly happy being, and his power is exerted
-to confine them from inflicting evil on the good,
-he will be the object of unmingled and tormenting
-envy, hatred, and spite; for when a selfish mind beholds
-a being with characteristics which exhibit its
-own vileness in painful contrast, and using his power
-to oppose its desires, what might in other circumstances
-give pleasure will only be cause of pain. If they behold,
-also, the purity and happiness of that community
-of benevolent beings from which they will be withdrawn,
-the same baleful passions will be awakened in
-view of their excellence and enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>There is no suffering of the mind more dreaded and
-avoided than that of <i>shame</i>. It is probable a guilty
-creature never writhes under keener burnings of spirit
-than when all his course of meanness, baseness, ingratitude,
-and guilt is unveiled in the presence of dignified
-virtue, honor, and purity, and the withering
-glance of pity, contempt, and abhorrence is encountered.
-This feeling must be experienced, to its full
-extent, by every member of such a wretched community.
-Each must feel himself an object of loathing
-and contempt to every pure and benevolent mind, as
-well as to all those who are equally debased.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of suffering is ungratified desire. In
-this world, perfect misery and full happiness is seldom
-contrasted. But in such circumstances, if we suppose
-that the happiness of blessed minds will be known, the
-keenest pangs of ungratified desire must torment.
-Every mind will know what is the pure delight of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">{241}</a></span>
-yielded and reciprocated affection, of sympathy in the
-happiness of others, of the sweet peace of conscious
-rectitude, and of the delightful consciousness of conferring
-bliss on others, while the ceaseless cravings of
-hopeless desire will agonize the spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of suffering is found in the <i>loss of
-enjoyment</i>. In such a degraded and selfish community,
-all ties of country, kindred, friendship, and love
-must cease. Yet all will know what <i>were</i> the endearments
-of home, the mild soothings of maternal love,
-the ties of fraternal sympathy, and all the trust and
-tenderness of friendship and love. What vanished
-blessing of earth would not rise up, with all the sweetness
-and freshness that agonizing memory can bring,
-to aggravate the <i>loss of all</i>!</p>
-
-<p>But the mind is so made that, however wicked itself,
-guilt and selfishness in others is hated and despised.
-Such a company, then, might be described as
-those who were "hateful and hating one another."
-It has been shown that both suffering and selfishness
-awaken the desire to torment others. This, then, will
-be the detested purpose of every malignant mind.
-Every action that could irritate, mortify, and enrage,
-would be deliberately practiced, while disappointed
-hopes, and blasted desires, and agonizing misery would
-alone awaken the smile of horrible delight. And if
-we suppose such minds in a future state reclothed in
-a body, with all the present susceptibilities of suffering,
-and surrounded by material elements that may be
-ministers of hate, what mind can conceive the terror
-and chaos of a world where every one is actuated by a
-desire to torment?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">{242}</a></span>
-Suppose these beings had arrived at only such a degree
-of selfishness as has been witnessed in this world;
-such, for example, as Genghis Khan, who caused unoffending
-prisoners to be pounded to death with bricks
-in a mortar; or Nero, who dressed the harmless Christians
-in flaming pitch for his amusement; or Antiochus
-Epiphanes and Mustapha, who spent their time in devising
-and executing the most excruciating tortures on
-those who could do them no injury. What malignity
-and baleful passions would actuate such minds, when
-themselves tormented by others around, bereft of all
-hope, and with nothing to interest them but plans of
-torment and revenge! What refined systems of cruelty
-would be devised in such a world! what terrific
-combinations of the elements to terrify and distress!
-If such objects as "the lake which burneth with fire
-and brimstone, and the worm that never dies," could be
-found, no Almighty hand would need to interfere, while
-the "smoke of their torment" would arise from flames
-of their own kindling.</p>
-
-<p>To fearful sufferings thus inflicted would be added
-the pangs of agitating <i>fear</i>; for where all around were
-plotting misery, what relief, by day or by night, from
-its withering terrors? Then surely "fear would come
-upon them like desolation, and destruction as a whirlwind."</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of suffering is inactivity of body and
-mind. It has been seen that the desire of good is
-what gives activity to the intellectual and moral powers.
-In such a world, no good could be hoped or
-sought, but the gratification of inflicting ill. And even
-a malignant mind must often weary in this pursuit, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">{243}</a></span>
-sink under all the weight and misery of that awful
-<i>death of the soul</i>, when, in torpid inactivity, it has
-nothing to love, nothing to hope, nothing to desire!</p>
-
-<p>Another cause of misery is the consciousness of
-guilt; and such, even in this life, have been the agonies
-of remorse, that tearing the hair, bruising the
-body, and even gnawing the flesh have been resorted
-to as a temporary relief from its pangs. What, then,
-would be its agonizing throes in bosoms that live but
-to torment and to destroy all good to themselves and
-to other minds?</p>
-
-<p>In this life, where we can allow the mind to be engrossed
-by other pursuits, and where we can thus form
-a habit of suppressing and avoiding emotions of guilt,
-the conscience may be seared. But it could not be
-thus when all engaging and cheerful pursuits were
-ended forever. Then the mind would view its folly,
-and shame, and guilt in all their length and breadth,
-and find no escape from the soul-harrowing gaze.</p>
-
-<p>To these miseries must be added despair&mdash;the loss
-of all hope. Here hope comes to all; but, in such a
-community, that fearful susceptibility of the soul&mdash;that
-terrific power of <i>habit</i>&mdash;would bind in chains
-which would be felt to be stronger than brass and
-heavier than iron. If the spirit is conscious that its
-powers are immortal, with this consciousness would
-come the despairing certainty of increasing and never-ending
-woe!</p>
-
-<p>This terrifying and heart-rending picture, it must be
-remembered, is the <i>deduction of reason</i>, and who can
-point out its fallacy? Is not habit appalling in its
-power, and ofttimes, even in this life, inveterate in its
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">{244}</a></span>
-hold? Are not habits increased by perpetual repetition?
-Is not the mind of man immortal? Do not
-the tendencies of this life indicate a period when a total
-separation of selfish and benevolent minds will be
-their own voluntary choice? If all the comforts, gentle
-endearments, and the enlivening hopes of this life;
-if all the restraints of self-interest, family, country, and
-laws; if in Christian lands the offers of heaven, and the
-fearful predictions of eternal woe; if the mercy and pardon,
-and all the love and pity of our Creator and Redeemer,
-neither by fear, nor by gratitude, nor by love,
-can turn a selfish mind, what hope of its recovery when
-it goes a <i>stranger</i> into a world of spirits, to sojourn in
-that society which, according to its moral habits, it
-must voluntarily seek? And if there exists a community
-of such selfish beings, can language portray,
-with any adequacy, the appalling results that must
-necessarily ensue?</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">{245}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII.<br />
-<small>CHARACTER OF THE CREATOR.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> preceding pages have exhibited the nature of
-mind, the object of its formation, the right mode of
-action to secure this object, and the causes and results
-of its right and wrong action, as indicated by reason
-and experience.</p>
-
-<p>We are now furnished with farther data to guide us
-in regard to the character of our Creator, as we seek it
-by the light of reason alone.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen, in the chapter on intuitive truths,
-that by the first of these principles we arrive at the
-knowledge of some <i>eternal First Cause of all finite
-things</i>.</p>
-
-<p>By another of these principles we deduce certain
-particulars in regard to his character as exhibited
-through his works. This principle is thus expressed:
-"Design is evidence of an intelligent cause, and the
-nature of a design proves the character and intention
-of the author." We are now prepared to show how
-much must be included in this truth.</p>
-
-<p>Our only idea of "an intelligent cause" is that of <i>a
-mind like our own</i>. This being so, we assume that
-we are instructed, by the very constitution of our own
-minds, that our Creator is a being endowed with intellect,
-susceptibilities, and will, and a part of these susceptibilities
-are those included in our <i>moral constitution</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">{246}</a></span>
-This moral nature, which we are thus led to ascribe
-to our Creator, includes, in the first place, the existence
-of a feeling that whatever lessens or destroys happiness
-is unfitted to the system of the universe, and that
-<i>voluntary sacrifice and suffering to purchase the highest
-possible happiness is fitted to or in accordance
-with the eternal nature of things</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Next, we are thus taught that in the Eternal Mind
-is existing that <i>sense of justice</i> which involves the desire
-of good to the author of good, and of evil to the
-author of evil, which requires that such retributions be
-<i>proportioned</i> to the good and evil done, and to the
-<i>voluntary</i> power of the agent.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, we are thus instructed that the Author of
-all created things possesses that susceptibility called
-<i>conscience</i>, which includes, in the very constitution of
-mind itself, retributions for right and wrong actions.</p>
-
-<p>But while we thus assume that the mind of the
-Creator is, so far as we can conceive, precisely like our
-own in constitutional organization, we are as necessarily
-led to perceive that the <i>extent</i> of these powers is
-far beyond our own. A mind with the power, wisdom,
-and goodness exhibited in the very small portion
-of his works submitted to our inspection, who has inhabited
-eternity, and developed and matured through
-everlasting ages&mdash;our minds are lost in attempting any
-conception of the extent of such infinite faculties!</p>
-
-<p>But we have another intuitive truth to aid in our deductions.
-It is that by which we infer the continuance
-of a <i>uniformity in our experience</i>; that is, we necessarily
-believe that "things will continue as they are and
-have been, unless there is evidence to the contrary."
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">{247}</a></span>
-Now all past experience as to the nature of mind has
-been uniform. Every mind known to us is endowed
-with intellect, susceptibility, and will, like our own.
-So much is this the case, that when any of these are
-wanting in a human being, we say he has "lost his
-mind."</p>
-
-<p>Again: all our experience of mind involves the idea
-of the <i>mutual relation of minds</i>. We perceive that
-minds are made to match to other minds, so that there
-can be no complete action of mind, according to its
-manifest design, except in relation to other beings. A
-mind can not love till there is another mind to call
-forth such emotion. A mind can not bring a tithe of
-its power into appropriate action except in a community
-of minds. The conception of a solitary being,
-with all the social powers and sympathies of the human
-mind infinitely enlarged, and yet without any
-sympathizing mind to match and meet them, involves
-the highest idea of unfitness and imperfection conceivable.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it is that past experience of the nature of
-mind leads to the inference that no mind has existed
-from all eternity <i>in solitude</i>, but that there is <i>more
-than one eternal, uncreated mind</i>, and that all their
-powers of enjoyment from giving and receiving happiness
-in social relations have been in exercise from
-eternal ages. This is the just and natural deduction
-of reason and experience, as truly as the deduction
-that there is at least one eternal First Cause.</p>
-
-<p>It has been argued that the <i>unity of design</i> in the
-works of nature proves that there is but one creating
-mind. This is not so, for in all our experience of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">{248}</a></span>
-creations of finite beings no <i>great design</i> was ever
-formed without a combination of minds, both to plan
-and to execute. The majority of minds in all ages,
-both heathen and Christian, have always conceived of
-the Creator as <i>in some way</i> existing so as to involve
-the ideas of plurality and of the love and communion
-of one mind with another.</p>
-
-<p>Without a revelation, also, we have the means of
-arriving at the conclusion that the Creator of all
-things is not only a mind organized just like our own,
-but that he always has and always will feel and act
-right. We infer this from both his social and his
-moral constitution; for he must, as our own minds
-do, desire the love, reverence, and confidence of his
-creatures. The fact that he has made them to love
-truth, justice, benevolence, and self-sacrificing virtue
-is evidence that he has and will exhibit these and all
-other excellences that call forth affection.</p>
-
-<p>But we have still stronger evidence. We have
-seen all the causes that experience has taught as the
-leading to the wrong action of mind. These are necessarily
-excluded from our conceptions of the Creator.
-The Eternal Mind can not err for want of knowledge,
-nor for want of habits of right action, nor for want of
-teachers and educators, nor for want of those social influences
-which generate and sustain a right governing
-purpose; for an infinite mind, that never had a beginning,
-can not have these modes of experience which
-appertain to new-born and finite creatures.</p>
-
-<p>Again: we have seen that it is one of the implanted
-principles of reason that "no rational mind will choose
-evil without hope of compensating good." Such is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">{249}</a></span>
-the eternal system of the universe, as we learn it by
-the light of reason, that the highest possible happiness
-to each individual mind and to the whole commonwealth
-is promoted by the right action of every mind
-in that system. This, of necessity, is seen and felt
-by the All-creating and Eternal Mind, and to suppose
-that, with this knowledge, he would ever choose wrong
-is to suppose that he would choose pure evil, and this
-is contrary to an intuitive truth. It is to suppose the
-Creator would do what he has formed our minds to
-believe to be impossible in <i>any</i> rational mind. It is
-to suppose that the Creator would do that which, if
-done by human beings, marks them as insane.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">{250}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIX.<br />
-<small>ON PERFECT AND IMPERFECT MINDS.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are now prepared to inquire in regard to what
-constitutes <i>a perfect mind</i>. This question relates, in
-the first place, to the perfect constitutional organization
-of mind, and, in the next place, to the perfect action
-of mind.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to a finite mind, when we inquire as to
-its perfection in organization, we are necessarily restricted
-to the question of the object or end for which
-it is made. Any contrivance in mind or matter is
-perfect when it is so formed that, <i>if worked according
-to its design</i>, it completely fulfills the end for which it
-is made, so that there is no way in which it could be
-improved.</p>
-
-<p>It is here claimed, then, that by the light of reason
-alone we first gain the object for which mind is made,
-and then arrive at the conclusion that the mind of man
-is perfect in construction, because, if worked according
-to its design, it would completely fulfill the end for
-which it is made, so that there is no conceivable way
-in which it could be improved. This position can not
-be controverted except by presenting evidence that
-some other organization of the mind would produce, in
-an eternal and infinite system, more good with less evil
-than the present one.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the Eternal Mind, the only standard of
-perfection in organization that we can conceive of is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">{251}</a></span>
-revealed in our own mind. Every thing in our own
-minds&mdash;every thing around us&mdash;every thing we have
-known in past experience, is designed to produce the
-most possible happiness with the least possible evil.
-We can not conceive of any being as wise, or just, or
-good, but as he acts to promote that end.</p>
-
-<p>A mind organized like our own, with faculties infinitely
-enlarged, who always has and always will sustain
-a controlling purpose to act right, is the only idea
-we can have of an all-perfect Creator.</p>
-
-<p>But on the subject of the perfect action of finite
-minds it is perceived that reference must always be
-had to <i>voluntary power</i> and its limitations. We have
-shown that the implanted susceptibility, called the
-<i>sense of justice</i>, demands that the rewards and penalties
-for good and evil have reference to <i>the knowledge
-and power</i> of a voluntary agent; that is to say, it is
-contrary to our moral nature voluntarily to inflict penalties
-for wrong action on a being who either has no
-power to know what right is, or no power to do it. We
-revolt from such inflictions with instinctive abhorrence,
-as unfit and contrary to the design of all things.</p>
-
-<p>So, in forming our judgment of the Creator, when
-we regard him as perfectly just, the idea implies that
-he will never <i>voluntarily</i> inflict evil for wrong action
-on beings who have not the knowledge or power to act
-right.</p>
-
-<p>Here we are again forced to the assumption of some
-<i>eternal nature of things</i> independent of the Creator's
-will, by which ignorant and helpless creatures are exposed
-to suffering from wrong action when they have
-no power of <i>any</i> kind to act right.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">{252}</a></span>
-For we see such suffering actually does exist, and
-there are but two suppositions possible. The one is,
-that it results from the Creator's <i>voluntary</i> acts, and
-the other, that it is inherent in that eternal nature of
-things which the Creator can no more alter than he can
-destroy his own necessary and eternal existence.</p>
-
-<p>In judging of the perfect action of finite minds,
-we are obliged to regard the question in two relations.
-In the primary relation we have reference to
-actions which, in all the infinite relations of a vast and
-eternal system of free agents, are fitted to secure the
-most possible good with the least possible evil. In
-this relation, so far as we can judge by experience and
-reason, no finite being ever did or ever can <i>act perfectly</i>
-from the first to the last of its volitions. In this
-relation, every human being is certainly, necessarily,
-and inevitably imperfect in action.</p>
-
-<p>But when the question of perfection in action simply
-has reference to the knowledge and power of the voluntary
-agent, we come to another result. In this relation,
-any mind acts perfectly <i>when it forms a ruling
-purpose to feel and act right in all things, when it
-takes all possible means of learning what is right,
-and when it actually carries out this purpose, so far
-as it has knowledge and power</i>.</p>
-
-<p>If a human mind is, as has been shown, perfect in
-that organization of its powers for which the Creator
-is responsible, and then forms and carries out such a
-ruling purpose, it is, so far as we can learn without
-revelation, as perfect in action as is possible in the nature
-of things; that is to say, it voluntarily acts to
-promote the greatest possible good with the least possible
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">{253}</a></span>
-evil as entirely as is possible, and as really as
-does the Creator, who himself is limited by the nature
-of things.</p>
-
-<p>It is as impossible for a finite mind to act right,
-when it does not know what right is, as it is for the
-Eternal Mind to make and sustain a system in which
-there has been and never will be any wrong action to
-cause pain to himself and to other minds.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, so far as we can learn without a revelation,
-is a perfect mind in such a system of things as
-we find in this world? It is a mind constituted like
-our own, which has formed a ruling purpose to feel and
-act right in all things, which takes all possible means
-in its reach to learn what is right, and which actually
-carries out this purpose to the extent of its power.</p>
-
-<p>In shorter terms, in this relation every human mind
-is perfect, both in constitution and in action, so long
-as it acts as near right as is in its present power. At
-the same time, in relation to the infinite and eternal
-standard of rectitude, its action may be very imperfect.</p>
-
-<p>We next inquire as to the <i>evidence</i> of a perfect
-mind in this secondary relation; that is to say, how
-can we know when a mind does reach the full measure
-of its power in voluntary right action?</p>
-
-<p>In regard to this we have two sources of evidence:
-first, the mental consciousness of the acting mind itself,
-and, next, the results of its action. In regard to
-the first, every mind, in reference either to its mental
-states or external deeds, can have as much certainty
-as to the extent of its power as it can of any thing.
-If we <i>choose</i> to feel in a given way, or to perform a
-given act, and what we choose does not follow, we
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">{254}</a></span>
-are certain we have no power to do the thing. All
-the idea of <i>power</i> we have is that volition is followed
-by the result chosen. All the idea we have of <i>want
-of power</i> is that the result chosen does not follow the
-volition.</p>
-
-<p>Every mind, then, in regard to <i>every specific volition</i>,
-has the most perfect of all evidence as to the extent of
-its powers in its own experience.</p>
-
-<p>But the question is a more difficult one in reference
-to a <i>generic governing volition</i>. A perfectly acting
-mind, according to our definition, is one that has
-formed a generic governing volition to <i>feel and act
-right</i> in all respects; that is, it decides that the
-chief end of existence shall be to promote the greatest
-possible happiness with the least possible evil, in obedience
-to all, physical, social, and moral laws of the
-Creator, so far as it is within the reach of its powers.</p>
-
-<p>Now, as to this simple act of choice, a mind can have
-the highest possible evidence in its own consciousness.
-The only question of difficulty would be as to <i>the extent</i>
-of its powers to carry out this decision, and the
-correspondence of all its subordinate volitions with
-this generic purpose.</p>
-
-<p>To ascertain the truth on this point, let us suppose
-a mind that has the highest evidence (that of internal
-consciousness) that it has formed such a purpose.
-Then comes a case where a subordinate decision is to be
-made&mdash;say it relates to the existence of a certain <i>feeling</i>
-or <i>emotion</i>, such as love, fear, gratitude, or sorrow.
-It has been shown that these emotions are not to be
-evoked into existence by a simple act of will. The
-mode by which the mind controls its own desires and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">{255}</a></span>
-emotions is set forth on page 162. If, then, the person
-chooses to do <i>all that is in its power at the given
-time</i> to awaken these emotions, its action is <i>perfect</i> in
-this respect: it has fulfilled the measure of its power.
-It reaches the limit of its power when it can find
-nothing more that an <i>act of choice</i> will secure that it
-perceives will tend to accomplish the end chosen.
-That is to say, at each given moment, when a mind is
-aiming to know what is right, and to do it, if it has
-done all it perceives can be done by any act of will toward
-this end, then its decision or mental action is
-<i>perfect</i>; it is as good as is possible in the nature of
-things.</p>
-
-<p>We have the same method of testing our power in
-regard to the <i>prevention</i> of desires and emotions. No
-matter how painful or inappropriate may be the desires
-and emotions of any mind, it is acting <i>perfectly</i> when
-it goes to the full extent of its power to extinguish or to
-control them according to the rules of rectitude. If it
-wills to have them otherwise, and uses the appropriate
-modes to have them so, this is all it has power to do.</p>
-
-<p>In reference to <i>external actions</i>, there are an infinite
-variety of circumstances that must decide the character
-of actions as right or wrong. An action which is
-wise and benevolent in one set of circumstances becomes
-foolish and selfish in another combination.
-More than half the questions of right and wrong action
-are to be decided as to their character by the surrounding
-circumstances, while no mind but the one that is
-infinite and omniscient can pronounce with certainty
-on actions whose character is dependent on circumstances
-and probable future results.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">{256}</a></span>
-What, then, is the limitation of power in these cases?
-How can we know when we act as nearly right as it
-is in our power?</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, we can have the high evidence of
-consciousness that our chief end in life is <i>to act right</i>
-in all things. In the next place, we can know certainly
-whether there is any thing more that we can do
-to find out what the right course is. When we have
-decided that we have done all we can in the given
-circumstances, and then are conscious that we choose
-<i>what we believe to be right</i>, or <i>that which has to our
-mind the balance of evidence in its favor as right, we
-act perfectly</i>; that is to say, we have reached the full
-measure of our power in voluntarily acting right.</p>
-
-<p>But, besides this evidence, that rests mainly on internal
-consciousness of the nature of our volitions, we
-have other evidence to guide us. It has been shown
-in the previous pages how our thoughts, and desires,
-and emotions are all dependent on the generic purposes
-of the mind. Whatever is the <i>chief end</i> of life is the
-object which excites the strongest interest and calls
-forth the deepest emotions. Therefore, when a mind
-has chosen <i>to act right</i> as the chief end, all its tastes,
-desires, and emotions become conformed to this purpose.
-Whatever is seen as tending to promote this
-end is more desired and valued than any thing else.
-Whatever is seen to interfere with this is regarded
-with dissatisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>This being so, a mind that is controlled by a ruling
-purpose to act right finds those persons and places the
-most congenial and agreeable who can lend the most
-aid in pointing out all that is wrong in thought, word,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">{257}</a></span>
-or deed, and in helping, by instruction, sympathy, and
-example, to do right. One great test, then, of the existence
-and strength of such a ruling purpose is the
-manner in which those are regarded who are most interested
-in finding out and doing what is right themselves,
-and in aiding others to do so.</p>
-
-<p>To be "meek and lowly in heart," so as to seek help
-in learning what is right from every source, however
-humble or however imperfectly offered, is the surest
-indication that a mind is under the entire control of a
-ruling purpose to do right, and is thus <i>a perfect mind</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Such a mind, it must be seen, has <i>tendencies</i> that
-<i>fit</i> it to that great system of things in which we find
-ourselves. Such a mind can not trace out these tendencies
-by the light of reason alone without a conviction
-that <i>somewhere</i> in the progress of ages it will attain
-to a <i>perfect commonwealth</i>, where the great end
-and object of the Creator in forming mind will be carried
-to entire perfection in each individual mind and in
-the all-perfect whole!</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">{258}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXX.<br />
-<small>ON THE PROBABLE EXISTENCE AND CHARACTER OF DISEMBODIED SPIRITS.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have considered the mode by which, without
-revelation, we arrive at a knowledge of the existence
-and character of one eternal, self-existent Creator, and
-of other <i>eternal beings</i> endowed with all the attributes
-of the human mind.</p>
-
-<p>We will next inquire as to the existence of other
-created minds in addition to those whose existence is
-manifested by a material body. There are several
-principles of reason to aid us in this inquiry. The
-first is that which establishes the existence of mind
-and matter as two distinct and diverse causes or existences.
-By this we decide that every human being has
-a body and a soul.</p>
-
-<p>The second principle of reason to guide us is that
-which teaches us to believe that things continue to
-exist as they are and have been, unless there is some
-known cause to destroy or change them.</p>
-
-<p>The other principles to guide us are, that nothing is
-to be assumed to be true unless there is some evidence
-that it is so, and, in case of conflicting evidence, the
-<i>balance</i> of evidence is to decide what is right and true.</p>
-
-<p>These principles being assumed, we find that at the
-death of every human being we have evidence, first,
-that the body ceases to be connected with the spirit,
-and is dissolved.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">{259}</a></span>
-Next, we have evidence at the period of this dissolving
-of soul and body that the soul exists without
-a body, and no evidence that it is changed in any of
-its powers, or habits, or character.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we arrive at the conclusion that the spirits
-that have existed in this life connected with bodies are
-still existing with all the powers, habits, and character
-which they possessed in this life, except as they are
-modified by causes and tendencies that experience in
-this life has disclosed. We thus infer that all minds
-who have left this world have continued in the upward
-or downward tendencies of character which existed
-when they were disconnected with the body.</p>
-
-<p>This is all the knowledge we can gain by reason and
-experience alone in reference to other created beings,
-and their character and mode of existence.</p>
-
-<p>As to <i>the time when the soul commences existence</i>,
-we have no evidence of such existence except what is
-manifested in the body. We can only infer, then, that
-the soul begins to exist when the evidence of its existence
-commences in the body. To assert that it begins
-before that time is to violate the principle of reason
-which forbids us to assume any thing to be true unless
-there is evidence of it.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, without a revelation, we are led to a belief in
-the existence of two classes of disembodied spirits, the
-good and the bad. But we have no evidence of the
-existence of any other created minds except those that
-have formerly been connected with bodies in this world.</p>
-
-<p>So far as animals give evidence of possessing an independent
-spiritual existence, the same argument that
-proves the continued existence of the human mind after
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">{260}</a></span>
-death, proves that the animal spirit, if there be one,
-continues after the dissolution of the body.</p>
-
-<p>But we can not reason in regard to animals as we
-can in regard to human minds, for we never had the
-<i>experience</i> of animal existence to commence with, as
-we have our own experience in reasoning as to the
-nature and experience of mind in reference to other
-beings of the same race.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">{261}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXXI.<br />
-<small>PROBABILITIES IN REGARD TO A REVELATION FROM THE CREATOR.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have now completed our investigations as to
-the nature and amount of knowledge to be gained on
-the great questions of life by reason and experience
-independently of a revelation.</p>
-
-<p>We have assumed that the great cause of the disordered
-action of mind is that it commences action in
-perfect ignorance, while all those causes which experience
-shows to be indispensable to its right action, to a
-greater or less degree, are wanting.</p>
-
-<p>The great want of our race is <i>perfect educators</i> to
-train new-born minds, who are <i>infallible teachers of
-what is right and true</i>.</p>
-
-<p>We have presented the evidence gained by reason
-and experience that the Creator is perfect in mental
-constitution, and that he always has acted right, and
-always will thus act. This being granted, we infer
-that he always has done <i>the best that is possible</i> for
-the highest good of his creatures in this world, and
-that he always will continue to do so.</p>
-
-<p>We proceed to inquire in regard to what would be
-the best that it is possible to do for us in this state of
-being, <i>so far as we can conceive</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Inasmuch as the great cause of the wrong action of
-mind is the ignorance and imperfection of those who
-are its educators in the beginning of its existence, we
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">{262}</a></span>
-should infer that the best possible thing to be done
-for our race would be to provide some <i>perfect and infallible
-teacher</i> to instruct those who are to educate
-mind. This being granted, then all would concede
-that the Creator himself would be our best teacher,
-and that, if he would come to us himself in a visible
-form to instruct the educators of mind in all they need
-to know for themselves and for the new-born minds
-committed to their care, it would be the best thing we
-can conceive of for the highest good of our race.</p>
-
-<p>We next inquire as to the best conceivable mode
-by which the Creator can manifest himself so as to secure
-credence.</p>
-
-<p>To decide this, let each one suppose the case his
-own. Let a man make his appearance claiming to be
-the Creator. We can perceive that his mere word
-would never command the confidence of intelligent
-practical men. Thousands of impostors have appeared
-and made such claims, deceiving the weak and ignorant
-and disgusting the wise.</p>
-
-<p>In case the person with such claims proved to be
-ever so benevolent and intelligent, if we had no other
-evidence than his word, it would, by sensible persons,
-be regarded as the result of some mental hallucination.</p>
-
-<p>But suppose that a person making claims to be the
-Creator of all things, or to be a messenger from him,
-should attest his claim by shaking the earth, or tearing
-up a mountain, or turning back the floods of the
-ocean, it would be impossible for any man to witness
-these miracles without believing that the Author
-of all things thus attested his own presence or the
-authority of his messenger. We have shown that, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">{263}</a></span>
-the very organization of mind, one of the intuitive
-truths would necessarily force such a belief on all sane
-minds.</p>
-
-<p>One other method would be as effective. Should
-this person predict events so improbable and so beyond
-all human intelligence as to be equivalent to an
-equal interruption of experience as to the laws of mind,
-as time developed the fulfillment of these predictions,
-the same belief would be induced in the authority of
-the person thus supernaturally endowed.</p>
-
-<p>In the first case, the evidence would be immediate
-and most powerful in its inception. In the latter
-case, the power of the evidence would increase with
-time.</p>
-
-<p><i>Miracles and prophecy</i>, then, are the <i>only</i> methods
-that we can conceive of that would, as our minds are
-now constituted, insure belief in revelations from the
-Creator.</p>
-
-<p>But if every human being, in order to believe, must
-have miracles, there would result such an incessant
-violation of the laws of nature as to destroy them, and
-thus to destroy all possibility of miracles.</p>
-
-<p>The only possible way, then, is to have miracles occur
-at certain periods of time, and then have them adequately
-recorded and preserved.</p>
-
-<p>This method involves the necessity of interpreting
-written documents. If, then, the Creator has provided
-such revelations, the question occurs as to how far
-they may be accessible to all men. Are there revelations
-from the Creator in such a form that all men can
-gain access to them and interpret them for themselves,
-or are they so recorded that only a few can gain the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">{264}</a></span>
-knowledge they impart, while the many are helplessly
-dependent on the few?</p>
-
-<p>It is with reference to this question that the interpretation
-of language becomes a subject of vital and
-infinite interest to every human being. This subject
-will therefore occupy the remaining portion of this
-volume.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">{265}</a></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXXII.<br />
-<small>INTERPRETATION OF LANGUAGE.</small></h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> mind of man is confined in its operations by
-the material system it inhabits, and has no modes of
-communicating with other minds except through the
-medium of the eye and ear. It is by signs addressed
-to the eye and by sounds affecting the ear that ideas
-are communicated and received.</p>
-
-<p>It is by the power of <i>association</i>, which enables us
-to recall certain ideas together which have been frequently
-united, that the use of language is gained.
-The infant finds certain states of mind produced by
-material objects invariably connected with certain
-sounds. This is done so often that whenever a certain
-perception occurs, the sound recurs which has
-been so often united with it.</p>
-
-<p>If language is correctly defined as "any sound or
-sign which conveys the ideas of one mind to another,"
-it is probable that children learn language at a much
-earlier period than is generally imagined. It is impossible
-to know how soon the infant notices the soft
-tones of its own voice when happy, or the moaning or
-shrill sound that expresses its own pain, and by comparing
-them with those of its mother, learns, through
-its little process of reasoning, that another spirit has
-emotions of pleasure and pain corresponding with its
-own. Nor can we determine how soon these pleasant
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">{266}</a></span>
-sounds of the mother's voice begin to be associated
-with the benignant smile, or the tones of grief with the
-sorrowful expression, or the tones of anger with the
-frowning brow.</p>
-
-<p>It seems very rational to suppose that <i>sound</i>, to the
-infant mind, is what first leads to the belief of the
-emotions of another mind, by means of a comparison
-of its own sounds with those originating from another.
-After this is done, the eye comes in for a share in these
-offices. The little reasoner, after thousands of experiments,
-finds the pleasant sound always united with
-the smiling face, until the object of vision becomes the
-sign for recalling the idea at first obtained by sound.
-In gaining the common use of language, we know this
-is the order of succession. We first learn the <i>sounds</i>
-that recall ideas, and then, by means of a frequent union
-of these sounds with some <i>visible sign</i>, the power
-once possessed simply by the sound is conveyed to
-the sign. Thus we have words that are sounds and
-words that are visible signs.</p>
-
-<p>The communion of one spirit with that of others in
-every-day life is maintained ordinarily through the
-medium of <i>sounds</i>; but when distance intervenes, or
-when some record is to be preserved of the thoughts
-and feelings of other beings, then signs addressed to
-the eye are employed. In civilized nations, the signs
-used are a certain number of arbitrary marks, which
-are arranged in a great variety of combinations, and
-each combination is employed to recall some particular
-idea or combination of ideas. These arbitrary
-signs are called letters, and in the English language
-there are only twenty-six; yet, by the almost infinite
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">{267}</a></span>
-variety of combination of which these are capable, every
-idea which one mind wishes to communicate to
-another can be expressed.</p>
-
-<p>A <i>written word</i> is a single letter or a combination
-of letters used as a sign to recall one or more ideas.
-It is considered by the mind as a unit or whole thing,
-of which the letters are considered as parts, and is
-shown to be a unit by intervals or blank spaces that
-separate it from the other words of a sentence. The
-fact that it is considered by the mind as <i>a unit</i>, or a
-sign separate from all other combinations of letters, is
-the peculiarity which constitutes it a <i>word</i>. A <i>syllable</i>
-is a combination of letters which is not considered
-as a unit, but is considered as a <i>part</i> of a word.</p>
-
-<p>Words are used to recall the ideas of <i>things</i>, <i>qualities</i>,
-<i>changes</i>, and <i>circumstances</i>. Some words recall
-the idea of a thing without any other idea connected
-with it; such are the words <i>mind</i>, <i>ivory</i>. Some
-words recall the idea of quality simply, such as <i>red</i>,
-<i>hard</i>, <i>sweet</i>. Some words recall the ideas of change
-merely, such as <i>motion</i>, <i>action</i>. Some words recall
-simply the idea of relation or circumstance, such as
-<i>on</i>, <i>under</i>, <i>about</i>. Sometimes ideas of things, and
-their actions and relations, are recalled by the same
-sign; thus <i>wrestler</i> recalls the idea of a thing and its
-action, and <i>giant</i> of a thing and its <i>relation</i>. Some
-words recall a variety of ideas; thus the term <i>begone</i>
-recalls the idea of two things, of the desire of a mind
-and of its mode of expression.</p>
-
-<p>In the process of learning language, mankind first
-acquire names for the several things, qualities, changes,
-and circumstances that they notice, and afterward learn
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">{268}</a></span>
-the process of <i>combining</i> these names, so as to convey
-the mental combination of one mind to another. A
-person might have names for all his ideas, and yet, if
-he had never learned the art of properly combining
-these signs, he never could communicate the varied
-conceptions of his own mind to another person. Suppose,
-for illustration, that a child had learned the meaning
-of the terms <i>cup</i>, <i>spoon</i>, <i>the</i>, <i>put</i>, <i>into</i>, <i>little</i>, <i>my</i>;
-it would be impossible for him to express his wish till
-he had learned the proper <i>arrangement</i> of each term,
-and then he could convey the conception and wishes of
-his own mind, viz., "Put the spoon into my little cup."</p>
-
-<p>We see, then, how the new combinations of ideas in
-one mind can be conveyed to another. The two persons
-must both have the <i>same ideas</i> attached to the
-<i>same sign</i> of language, and must each understand the
-<i>mode of combination</i> to be employed. When this is
-done, if one person sees a new object, he can send to
-his friend the signs which represent all its qualities,
-circumstances, and changes arranged in a proper manner.
-The absent person will then arrange the <i>conceptions</i>
-recalled by these words, so as to correspond with
-those of his correspondent.</p>
-
-<p>In all languages, the same word often is used to recall
-different ideas, and the meaning of words depends
-often on their <i>mode of combination</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>art of interpreting</i> consists in ascertaining the
-particular ideas conveyed by words <i>in a given combination</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There are two modes of using language which need
-to be distinctly pointed out, viz., <i>literal</i> and <i>figurative</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In order to understand these modes, it is necessary
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">{269}</a></span>
-to refer to the principles of <i>association</i>. Neither our
-perceptions or conceptions are ever single, disconnected
-objects except when the power of abstraction is employed.
-Ordinarily, various objects are united together
-in the mind, and those objects which are most frequently
-united in our perceptions, as a matter of course,
-are those which are most frequently united in our conceptions.</p>
-
-<p>Now, by the power of <i>abstraction</i>, the mind can regard
-the same object sometimes as a unit or whole,
-and sometimes can disconnect it, and consider it as
-several distinct things. Thus it happens that ideas
-which are connected by the principles of association
-are sometimes regarded as a whole, and sometimes are
-disconnected, and considered as separate existences.</p>
-
-<p>Language will be found to be constructed in exact
-conformity to this phenomenon of mind. We shall
-find that objects ordinarily united together, as cause
-and effect, have the <i>same name</i> given, sometimes to the
-<i>cause</i>, sometimes to the <i>effects</i>, and sometimes it embraces
-<i>the whole</i>; or the thing, its causes and its effects.
-As an example of this use of language may
-be mentioned the term <i>pride</i>. We sometimes hear
-those objects which are the <i>cause</i> of pride receiving
-that name. Thus a child is called the pride of its
-parents. The same name is applied simply to the
-<i>state of mind</i>, as when a man is said to be under the
-influence of pride, while the <i>effects</i> of pride receive
-the same appellation when we hear a haughty demeanor
-and consequential deportment called pride.
-The term is used in its most extended signification as
-including the thing, its causes, and its effects, when we
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">{270}</a></span>
-hear of the "pride of this world," which is soon to pass
-away, signifying equally the causes of this feeling, the
-feeling itself, and the effects of it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Literal language</i> is that in which all words have
-the ordinary meaning as commonly used.</p>
-
-<p><i>Figurative language</i> is that in which the ordinary
-names, qualities, and actions of things are ascribed to
-<i>other things</i> with which they have been associated.</p>
-
-<p>As an example of the use of language which is <i>figurative</i>,
-we find <i>tears</i>, that are the <i>effects</i> of grief, called
-by the name of the <i>cause</i>; thus:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"Streaming <i>grief</i> his faded cheek bedewed."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the contrary, we find the cause called by the name
-of the effects in this sentence:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"And <i>hoary hairs</i> received the reverence due."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here age is called by the name of one of its effects.</p>
-
-<p>The indiscriminate application of names to things
-which have been connected by <i>time</i>, <i>place</i>, or <i>resemblance</i>,
-abounds in figurative language. The following
-is an example where one object is called by the
-name of another with which it has been connected by
-<i>place</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"The <i>groves</i> give forth their songs."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here birds are called by the name of the groves with
-which they have been so often united as it respects
-<i>place</i>. The following is an example where an object
-is called by the name of another with which it is connected
-by <i>time</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"And <i>night</i> weighed down his heavy eyes."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">{271}</a></span>
-Here <i>sleep</i> is called by the name of <i>night</i>, with which
-it has been so often united. The following is an example
-where one object is called by the name of another
-with which it has been connected by the principle
-of <i>resemblance</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"You took her up, a little, tender bud,</div>
-<div class="verse">Just sprouted on a bank."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here a young female is called by the name of an object
-with which she is connected by the association of
-resemblance. When one object is thus called by the
-name of another which it resembles, the figure of speech
-is called a <i>metaphor</i>.</p>
-
-<p>When dominion is called a <i>sceptre</i>; the office of a
-bishop, the <i>lawn</i>; the profession of Christianity, the
-<i>cross</i>; a dwelling is called a <i>roof</i>; and various expressions
-of this kind, one thing is called by the name
-of another of which it is a <i>part</i>, or with which it has
-been connected as a circumstance, cause, or effect.</p>
-
-<p>Not only do objects which have been united in our
-perceptions receive each other's <i>names</i>, but the <i>qualities</i>
-of one are often ascribed to the other. The following
-are examples in which the qualities of the cause
-are ascribed to the effect, and the qualities of the effect
-are ascribed to the cause:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"An impious mortal gave a <i>daring</i> wound."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here the quality of the <i>cause</i> is ascribed to the <i>effect</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"The <i>merry</i> pipe is heard."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here the quality of the <i>effect</i> is ascribed to the <i>cause</i>.
-The following is an example where the quality of one
-thing is ascribed to another connected with it by <i>time</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">{272}</a></div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"Now <i>musing</i> midnight hallows all the scene."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The following is an example of the quality of one thing
-ascribed to another, connected with it by <i>place</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse indent">"when sapless age</div>
-<div class="verse">Shall bring thy father to his <i>drooping</i> chair."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We have examples of the qualities of one thing ascribed
-to another which it <i>resembles</i> in such expressions
-as these&mdash;"imperious ocean," "tottering state,"
-"raging tempest." The following is an example of a
-thing called by the name of one of its qualities or attending
-circumstances:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"What art thou, that usurpest this time of night,</div>
-<div class="verse">Together with the fair and warlike form</div>
-<div class="verse">In which the <i>majesty</i> of buried <i>Denmark</i></div>
-<div class="verse">Did sometimes walk?"</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here a king is called by the name of a quality and by
-the name of his kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>It is owing to the principle of association that another
-mode of figurative language is employed called
-<i>personification</i>. This consists in speaking of a quality
-which belongs to living beings as if it were the
-being in which such a quality was found. This is
-owing to the fact that the conceptions of qualities of
-mind are always united with some being, and therefore
-such ideas are connected ones. Thus it is said in
-the sacred writings,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"Mercy and truth are met together."</div>
-<div class="verse quote">"Righteousness and peace have embraced each other."</div>
-<div class="verse quote">"Wisdom crieth aloud, she uttereth her voice."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Another mode of personification is owing to the fact
-that the actions and relations of inanimate existences
-very often resemble those of living beings, so that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">{273}</a></span>
-such ideas are associated by the principle of resemblance.
-In such cases, the actions, properties, and relations
-of living beings are ascribed to inanimate objects.
-Thus, when the sea roars and lifts its waves
-toward the skies, the actions are similar to those of a
-man when he raises his arm in supplication. An example
-of this kind of figurative language is found in
-this sublime personification of Scripture: "The mountains
-saw thee, and trembled; the overflowing of the
-waters passed by; the deep uttereth his voice, and
-lifted up his hands on high; the sun and moon stood
-still in their habitations." Other examples of this
-kind are found when we hear it said that "the fields
-smile," "the woods clap their hands," "the skies
-frown," and the like.</p>
-
-<p>One cause of figurative language is found in the
-similarity of effects produced on the body by operations
-of mind and operations of matter. Whatever
-causes affect the mind in a similar manner are called
-by the same name. Thus, when a man endeavors to
-penetrate a hard substance, the muscles of his head
-and neck are affected in a particular manner. The
-same muscles are affected in a similar way when a person
-makes powerful and reiterated efforts to comprehend
-a difficult subject. Both these actions, therefore,
-are called by the same name, and a man is said to <i>penetrate</i>
-the wood with an instrument, or to <i>penetrate</i>
-into the subject of his investigations. Thus joy is
-said to <i>expand</i> the breast, because it does, in fact, produce
-a sensation which resembles this action. There
-is a great variety of figurative language founded on this
-principle. Indeed, there is little said respecting the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">{274}</a></span>
-mind, and its qualities and operations, where we do not
-apply terms that describe the qualities, actions, and relations
-of matter.</p>
-
-<p>It is also the case that <i>actions</i> and <i>relations</i> that resemble
-each other are called by the same name, without
-regard to the objects in which they exist. Thus
-the skies are said <i>to weep</i>. Here there is, in fact, the
-same action as is weeping in mankind, and it receives
-the same name, though it is connected with a different
-subject. Thus, also, the sword is said to be "<i>drunk</i>
-with the blood of the slain." Here the same relation
-exists between the blood and the sword as between a
-man and an immoderate quantity of liquor, and the relation
-receives the same name in each case.</p>
-
-<p><i>An allegory</i> is a succession of incidents and circumstances
-told of one thing which continually recall another
-thing, which it resembles in the particulars mentioned.
-Thus the aged Indian chief describes himself
-by an allegory: "I am an aged hemlock. The
-winds of a hundred years have swept over its branches;
-it is dead at the top; those that grew around have
-all mouldered away."</p>
-
-<p><i>A parable</i> is of the same character as an allegory.</p>
-
-<p><i>A type</i> is an object of conception in which many
-of its qualities and relations resemble another object
-that succeeds it in regard to <i>time</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hyperbole</i> is a collection of actions, qualities, or circumstances
-ascribed to an object which are contrary to
-the laws of experience, and this language is employed
-to express excited feeling. Thus, by hyperbole,
-a person is said to be "<i>drowned</i> in tears."</p>
-
-<p><i>Irony</i> is language used in such a manner as to contradict
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">{275}</a></span>
-the known opinions of the speaker, and is intended
-to represent the absurdity or irrationality of
-some thing conceived by him.</p>
-
-<p><i>Symbols</i> are material things employed to convey
-the ideas of one mind to another. Thus, as the cultivation
-of the olive is connected with seasons of peace,
-an olive branch is used to express the idea of peace.</p>
-
-<p><i>Symbolic language</i> is the use of words that are
-names of symbols in place of the names of things represented
-by symbols. Thus the word olive might be
-used instead of the word peace.</p>
-
-<p>Figurative language, especially metaphors and symbolic
-words, abound in the writings of the earliest nations;
-and as what are claimed to be the earliest revelations
-of the Creator are recorded in these languages,
-the rules for interpreting figurative language are of the
-highest importance.</p>
-
-<p>The preceding illustrates the principles upon which
-both literal and figurative language are constructed.
-The question now arises, How are we to determine
-when expressions are to be interpreted literally and
-when they are figurative? One single rule will be
-found sufficient in all cases, viz.:</p>
-
-<p>All language is <i>literal</i> when the common meaning
-of each word is consistent with our experience as to
-the nature of things, and consistent with the other sentiments
-of the writer.</p>
-
-<p>All language is <i>figurative</i> when the names, qualities,
-and actions ascribed to things are inconsistent
-with our experience of the nature of things, or contradict
-the known opinions of the writer.</p>
-
-<p>In the preceding examples of figurative language, it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">{276}</a></span>
-can readily be seen that a literal interpretation would
-in all cases form combinations of ideas which are opposed
-to experience as to the nature of things. For
-example, "<i>grief</i>" can not be conceived of as "bedewing
-a face," because it is an emotion of mind; nor do
-"hoary hairs" literally ever receive honor; nor do
-"groves sing," nor "night weigh down the eyes."</p>
-
-<p>In like manner, where the qualities of one thing are
-ascribed to another with which it has been connected,
-there is no difficulty in determining that the language
-is figurative; for a "wound" can not have the quality
-of "daring," which belongs only to mind, nor can a
-"pipe" be literally considered as "merry," or "midnight"
-as "musing;" nor would it be consistent with
-experience to think of a "chair" as "drooping." Nor
-in the case of personification is there any more cause
-of difficulty. Mercy and truth, righteousness, peace,
-and wisdom, are qualities of mind, and can not be conceived
-of as "meeting," "embracing," and "crying
-aloud" in any other than a figurative sense. And
-when the ocean is said to "lift up his hands," and the
-sun and moon to "stand still in their habitations,"
-the laws of experience forbid any but a figurative interpretation.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of an <i>allegory</i> and all symbolic language,
-the same rule applies with equal clearness and
-certainty. In the example given, it would be a violation
-of the laws of experience to conceive of a man as
-a tree with branches and a withered top.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hyperbole</i> is readily distinguished by the same rule.
-<i>Irony</i> is known by its being contradictory to the
-known opinions of the writer. Thus there is never
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">{277}</a></span>
-any difficulty in deciding when language is literal and
-when it is figurative in cases where men have the laws
-of experience by which to determine.</p>
-
-<p>On the supposition of a revelation from the Creator,
-there must be subjects upon which mankind have had
-<i>no experience</i>, such as the nature of the Deity, the
-character and circumstances of the invisible world and
-of its inhabitants. On these subjects all language
-must be literal when the literal construction is not in
-contradiction to the known or implied opinion of the
-other declarations; for on these subjects, as the laws
-of experience can not regulate in deciding between figurative
-and literal language, it is impossible to show
-any reason why words should not be literal except by
-comparison with the other statements of the same author.
-If these show no reasons for supposing it figurative,
-it must of necessity be considered as literal; for
-if neither experience nor the writer's opinions oppose
-a literal meaning, there is <i>no</i> cause why the ordinary
-and common signification of words should not be retained.</p>
-
-<p>The next inquiry is, How are we to ascertain the
-ideas which are to be attached to words that are used
-figuratively? If the common ideas which are recalled
-by words are not the proper ones, what are the data for
-knowing <i>which</i> are the ideas to be recalled? The
-laws of association, upon which language is founded,
-furnish an adequate foundation for determining this
-question. If language is such that a literal construction
-is contrary to the nature of things, the words used
-figuratively must express something which has been
-connected with the object recalled by the literal signification,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">{278}</a></span>
-either as <i>cause</i> or <i>effect</i>, or as something which
-it <i>resembles</i>, or as something it has been connected
-with as a <i>part</i>, or by circumstances of <i>time</i> or <i>place</i>.
-Of course, a process of reasoning will soon decide
-which of these must be selected. Take, for example,
-the expression,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote">"Streaming grief his faded cheek bedewed."</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here, as "grief" can not bedew the cheek, it must be
-the name of something which has been connected with
-grief, either by the principle of resemblance, contiguity
-in time or place, or by the relation of cause and effect.
-It is easy to determine that it can not be either of
-these except the last. Tears are the effect of sorrow,
-and are therefore called by this name. The nature of
-the idea conveyed by the figurative term will show
-whether the cause or effect, or some object related to it
-as it respects time, place, or resemblance, is intended,
-and no difficulty can ever occur in deciding. In all
-cases this general rule avails: when words are used
-figuratively, such ideas as have been in any way connected
-with them are to be retained as will be consistent
-with the known nature of things, and consistent
-with other assertions of the writer.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the <i>literal</i> use of language, it has been
-shown that the same term is sometimes used for the
-name of the thing ordinarily expressed by it, sometimes
-for its cause, sometimes for its effect, and sometimes
-as including all these ideas. The rule for determining
-in which of these senses the term is used is
-the same as in regard to figurative language, viz., that
-signification must be attached to the term which is in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">{279}</a></span>
-agreement with experience as to the nature of things,
-and with the other sentiments of the writer. Thus,
-in relation to the example given of the term pride,
-suppose a child is called the "pride of its parents."
-We know it can not mean the <i>emotion of mind</i>; that
-it can not mean the <i>effects</i> of this state of mind; and
-its only other meaning is found consistent with experience,
-viz., it is the <i>cause</i> or occasion of pride to its
-parents. The same mode of reasoning can be applied
-to the other uses of the term. If a man is said to feel
-pride, there is but one meaning which can be attached
-to the term. If it is said that "the pride of the world
-passeth away," it includes the whole, and signifies that
-the causes of pride pass away, and with them the emotions
-and the effects.</p>
-
-<p>The following, then, are the clear and simple rules
-to employ in interpreting all language:</p>
-
-<h3><small>LAWS OF INTERPRETATION.</small></h3>
-
-<p>1. The literal, ordinary meaning is to be given to
-all words, unless it would express what is inconsistent
-with experience as to the nature of things, or inconsistent
-with the opinions of the writer.</p>
-
-<p>2. When the words in a sentence are capable of
-several literal meanings, that is to be chosen which
-makes the writer most consistent with himself and
-with all known circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>3. When the literal meaning expresses what is not
-consistent with the nature of things or with the writer's
-other declarations, then the language is <i>figurative</i>,
-and only such a part of the ideas as have been in any
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">{280}</a></span>
-way connected with the words used are to be retained
-as will secure such consistency.</p>
-
-<p>4. In deciding the meaning of words, we are to be
-guided by the principles of common sense, viz.: No
-meaning is to be given unless there is <i>some</i> evidence
-that it is true; and, when there is conflicting evidence,
-that meaning is the true one which has the <i>balance</i> of
-evidence in its favor.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">{281}</a></div>
-
-<h2>ADDENDA TO VOL. I.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> second volume will commence with a description
-of the <i>kind</i> of evidence which sustains the Bible
-as a collection of authentic and authoritative records
-of revelations from the Creator. This kind of evidence,
-it will be shown, in one grand feature is entirely
-diverse from any that ever existed, or even that was
-ever <i>claimed</i> to exist in reference to any pretended
-revelations.</p>
-
-<p>It will also be shown that this evidence is as strong
-and reliable as that which regulates men in their daily
-practical concerns.</p>
-
-<p>This attempt the writer supposes to be, in some respects,
-peculiar, and one that is particularly calculated
-to affect popular apprehension, especially that of well-balanced
-and practical minds. Instead of a great array
-of detail and argument, the whole will be contained
-in a very few pages, easily comprehended, and demanding
-but little time or effort.</p>
-
-<p>In the next place, the laws of interpretation, and the
-principles of common sense as set forth in this volume,
-will be <i>applied</i> to discover the answers of the Sacred
-Oracles to the great questions of life, and their agreement
-with reason, experience, and the moral sense of
-mankind.</p>
-
-<p>This will involve a discussion of the <i>philosophical
-theories</i> which it is believed have obscured and diminished
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">{282}</a></span>
-the influence of the great Atoning Sacrifice of
-"the Great God our Savior Jesus Christ."</p>
-
-<p>The work will conclude with the practical application
-of the views set forth to the greatest of all human
-interests, the <i>right</i> training of the human mind in infancy
-and childhood.</p>
-
-<p>Before offering to the public the topics to be embraced
-in the last volume, it is deemed expedient to
-present the <i>great principles</i> on which all the discussions
-are to rest, and also a fair illustration of the
-mode in which these principles will be applied.</p>
-
-<p>The following is the illustrative example:</p>
-
-<h3><i>Theological Dogma of a Depraved Mental Constitution.</i></h3>
-
-<p>In the preceding pages we have seen the evidence
-that the mind of man is <i>perfect</i> in its <i>constitutional
-powers</i>, and is thus the chief and highest evidence of
-the wisdom, justice, and benevolence of its Creator.</p>
-
-<p>But the systems of theology in all the Christian
-sects, excepting a small fraction, teach that the mind
-of man comes into existence in this world with "<i>a depraved
-nature</i>;" meaning by this a mental constitution
-more or less depraved.</p>
-
-<p>That this is the ordinary dogma of theological teachings
-is clear from this statement of the case. A thing
-can be wrong in only two conceivable ways: one is
-by its nature or original construction, and the other is
-by its action. The mind of man, therefore, if it is not
-perfect every way, is either wrong in <i>construction</i> or
-wrong in <i>action</i>. Now no person ever claimed that
-the mind of man was not depraved in action, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">{283}</a></span>
-therefore all who teach that it is depraved any other
-way must teach that it is depraved in its constitution,
-or in that nature it received from its Maker, for there
-are only these two modes of depravity conceivable.</p>
-
-<p>It being granted, then, that the mind of our race is
-depraved in its nature, of course the Author of this nature
-is responsible for this inconceivable and wholesale
-wrong. This forces us to the inevitable conclusion
-that the Creator of mind is a being guilty of the
-highest conceivable folly, injustice, and malignity.
-For reason and common sense teach that "the nature
-of a contrivance is proof of the character and intention
-of its author." Therefore, if mind is depraved in construction,
-the Author of it is a depraved being, and totally
-unworthy of our trust, respect, or love.</p>
-
-<p>This is the argument which, in all ages, has been
-pressed on those theologians who maintain the dogma
-of the depraved nature of man, and there have been
-these various methods by which this difficulty has
-been evaded:</p>
-
-<p>One class openly avow that the Creator had power
-to make the mind of man perfect in all respects, and
-that he has proved that he has this power by making
-the minds of angels and of our first parents thus perfect.
-But, in consequence of our first parents eating
-the forbidden fruit, every mind created since that time
-has been ruined in the making, so as to be totally depraved.
-This, it is maintained, it was right for God
-to do. <i>How</i> it was right we have no business to inquire.
-It is an awful mystery; but it was so done
-that God "is in no way the author of sin."</p>
-
-<p>This amounts simply to a denial of the principle of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">{284}</a></span>
-reason, "that the nature of a contrivance is proof of the
-intention and character of the contriver." It is saying
-that the author of sin is not the author of sin.</p>
-
-<p>This will be still farther apparent if we refer to
-page 158, where is exhibited the only conceivable
-modes in which one being can be the cause of sin or
-of wrong action in others. God is undisputably the
-author of all the <i>outward</i> circumstances that surround
-us. If, then, he has made our susceptibilities wrong,
-or combined them wrong, he is the author of sin in every
-conceivable sense.</p>
-
-<p>Whoever, therefore, affirms that God is the author
-of a depraved mental organization of the human mind,
-affirms that he is "the author of sin" in every conceivable
-sense. To assert such a fact, and then deny
-that God is the author of sin, is simply a contradiction
-in terms.</p>
-
-<p>To avoid this dilemma, theologians have instituted
-the following theories:</p>
-
-<p>The first class teach that the first pair of the human
-race were made with perfect minds, and then stood
-as representatives of the race and sinned for the whole.
-The first part of the penalty came on the actual sinners
-in the ruin of their own mental constitution, and
-then, all men being <i>represented</i> in Adam and Eve, the
-Creator "imputed" this sin to all their posterity, and,
-as a penalty, all receive a depraved mental constitution.</p>
-
-<p>That is to say, though each of the unborn millions
-descended from Adam was innocent of the crime, in
-order to be just, God "imputes" it to each, and, as a
-penalty, ruins each in its organization, when He has
-full power to make perfect minds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">{285}</a></span>
-Another class assume that the Creator established
-such a constitution of things that the nature of one
-mind is transmitted to all its myriad descendants, by
-the same law as the nature of a plant is included in
-one seed and is transmitted to all of its future kind.
-The first parents of our race, receiving perfect minds
-from their Creator, ruined them by one act of disobedience.
-Then, by the above law, instituted by their
-Maker, they transmitted this depraved constitution of
-mind to all their descendants.</p>
-
-<p>This mode of evading responsibility is about as
-honorable as if a teacher should so construct springs
-and traps for his pupils that one little fellow, when
-forbidden to do it, should touch a spring that should
-cut off his own hand, and thus move other springs
-that would maim all the rest of the school, while
-the master lays all the blame on the child that disobeyed.</p>
-
-<p>Another class teach that the first man and woman
-of the race were made with perfect minds, and then
-such a constitution of things was instituted by God
-that every mind of the human race was so existing
-with or in them, that when Adam and Eve <i>voluntarily</i>
-disobeyed the Creator's first law, every one of their
-descendants <i>voluntarily</i> did the same thing; and then,
-as a penalty for the deed, the parent and every one of
-the embryo descendants became "totally depraved."</p>
-
-<p>This theory, which makes every human being guilty
-of a crime thousands of years before we were born, and
-for which we are suffering the most awful of all penalties,
-has nearly passed away to the puerilities of the
-old schoolmen, and yet there are some of the most
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">{286}</a></span>
-popular professors in our largest and most respectable
-theological seminaries who are publicly advocating it
-at this very time.</p>
-
-<p>Another method promulgated is the assumption that
-all the race were originally created perfect, and then,
-while in the possession of every possible advantage for
-virtue and happiness, they ruined themselves in a previous
-state of existence. This is the only theory which
-really meets the difficulty, and relieves the character of
-the Creator from being the guilty author of depraved
-minds.</p>
-
-<p>But this theory, even if it could be established by revelation,
-does not remedy the strong argument of reason
-and experience against the wisdom and benevolence of
-the Creator, on the assumption of a depraved constitution
-of mind. The man denying a revelation, who
-is called upon to receive one, can say, Here is a race,
-every one of whom is ruined, and, so far as I can see,
-in the making of his mind by the Creator. Therefore
-this Creator, by his works, is shown to be a being of
-infinite folly and malignity, from whom no <i>reliable</i>
-revelation is possible.</p>
-
-<p>Granting the mind to be depraved, the light of reason
-inevitably guides to a weak or malevolent Creator.
-To illustrate this, suppose a man is seen manufacturing
-beautiful porcelain vases, and out of the "clay of the
-same lump," as he makes them, he spoils every one,
-cracking, marring, and defacing them in the very process
-of manufacture. Now suppose this person should
-turn to a witness, and offer to instruct him in the <i>best
-way of doing things</i>, what would be the common-sense
-reply? Exactly that which would be due to a Creator
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">{287}</a></span>
-who has ruined every mind he sent into this world, and
-then proposes to reveal the <i>right way for those ruined
-creatures to act</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Another illustration may be permitted. Suppose a
-colony, by some mischance, settles on an isolated island,
-which is found covered with the tobacco plant.
-They clear their plantations, but find that, by a remarkable
-and unintelligible arrangement, after every
-shower there is a fall of tobacco seeds, disseminated
-from an inaccessible height by a machine erected for
-the purpose and constantly supplied.</p>
-
-<p>After some years, they receive a missive from the
-king to whom the island belongs, in which he informs
-them that tobacco is the chief object of his detestation;
-that it is doing incalculable mischief to his subjects;
-that it is the chief end of his life, and he wishes it to
-be of theirs, to exterminate the plant, and thus its use.</p>
-
-<p>He, at the same time, states that he is the author
-of the contrivance for scattering the seed, and that he
-keeps it constantly supplied, and claims that he has a
-right "to do what he will with his own," without being
-questioned by his subjects.</p>
-
-<p>He then enacts that any person who is found to use
-tobacco, or even to have a single seed or plant on his
-premises, shall be burned alive in a caldron of fire and
-brimstone.</p>
-
-<p>If, in addition to this, that king were to command
-supreme love to him, and perfect confidence in his wisdom,
-justice, and goodness, all this would but faintly
-illustrate that awful system under consideration, whose
-penalties are <i>eternal</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The assumption that the constitution of mind is depraved
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">{288}</a></span>
-not only destroys the evidence of the Creator's
-wisdom and benevolence by the light of reason, but
-<i>destroys the possibility of a credible and reliable revelation
-from him</i>.</p>
-
-<p>For the belief in the existence of a God is dependent
-on an intuitive truth, while his character is understood,
-without a revelation, only by the aid of that intuitive
-truth which teaches that the nature of his
-works proves his character and designs. Now if his
-greatest work, the immortal mind, that which alone
-gives any value to his other works, is malformed, and
-thus made the cause of all the misery, crime, and evil
-of this life, what is there to give any foundation for
-confidence that his revelations will not be false, pernicious,
-and malignant?</p>
-
-<p>No man can start with the assumption that there is
-a revelation from the Creator that needs no proof. The
-only basis for such a revelation is that intuitive truth
-by the aid of which miracles and prophecy become evidences
-of the interposition of the Creator. Thus we
-perceive that the proof that "the author of a depraved
-constitution of mind is a depraved being," is as strong
-as the evidence of a revelation by miracles and prophecy
-can be.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to these theories, and in regard to the dogma
-of theology which they are instituted to explain, it
-is claimed that both reason and the Bible equally forbid
-each and all of them.</p>
-
-<p>It has already been shown, in Chapters xxii. and
-xxiii., that all the evidence of reason and experience
-goes to prove that the mind of man is perfect in its organization.
-We have only to inquire, then, in regard
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">{289}</a></span>
-to the evidence claimed to be found in revelations from
-the Creator.</p>
-
-<p>Before examining this evidence, it is important to
-notice the distinction between <i>revealed facts</i> and the
-<i>theories</i> invented to explain them.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>fact</i>, which both experience and revelation agree
-in teaching, is that man, as a race, is guilty and depraved
-in <i>action</i>, and that from the earliest periods of
-life this <i>depraved action</i> is manifested.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>theories</i> relate to <i>the cause</i> of this wrong action,
-and there are only two. The first theory is, that the
-constitution of mind is perfect, and that the wrong action
-results from a want of experience, knowledge,
-right habits, right training, and right social influences.</p>
-
-<p>The second theory is, that the constitution of mind
-is depraved, and that its wrong action is the inevitable
-result of this wrong construction.</p>
-
-<p>Then come the theories in reference to <i>the cause</i> of
-this assumed malformation of mind. There are only
-two ever assigned, viz., God and man: God by creation,
-and man by sinning <i>in</i> Adam or <i>before</i> Adam in
-a pre-existent state.</p>
-
-<p>By those who ascribe the deed to God, it is claimed
-that he perpetrated this wholesale wrong to our race
-in one of two ways, viz., either by the direct miscreation
-of each mind at or near the time of birth, or by
-creating such a constitution of things that by one wrong
-act the first pair transmitted, from parent to child,
-through the whole race, a vitiated and depraved mental
-constitution.</p>
-
-<p>We now resort to the Bible to ascertain what are its
-teachings on this subject.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">{290}</a></span>
-In the first place, then, we find a constant recognition
-of the fact of a depraved <i>action</i> of mind, and that
-this commences at the earliest period of life. On this,
-as a revealed <i>fact</i>, there is no debate.</p>
-
-<p>Next, in regard to the <i>theories</i> instituted to account
-for this fact. Here we shall only discuss the commonly
-accepted theory of the Christian world, and leave
-the other for the future volume.</p>
-
-<p>The main reliance for the support of the common
-theory of a miscreated mind is found in Genesis, chapters
-i. and v., which, it is claimed, teaches, in the first
-place, that God could and did create the first human
-pair with minds perfectly organized, and, next, that
-after they sinned, their descendants came into life with
-a depraved mental constitution. The passages read
-thus:</p>
-
-<p>Gen., i., 26, 27: "<i>And God said, 'Let us make man
-in our image, after our likeness.'</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"<i>So God created man in his own image; in the
-image of God created he him, male and female created
-he them.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Gen., v., 3: "<i>And Adam begat a son in his own
-likeness, after his image, and called his name Seth.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>The whole question in these passages turns on the
-meaning of the words "image" and "likeness."</p>
-
-<p>Now the only conceptions possible of the "image
-or likeness" of a human mind to its spiritual Creator
-are, first, resemblance in its constitutional powers of
-intellect, susceptibility, and will, and, next, resemblance
-in the <i>action</i> of these faculties.</p>
-
-<p>That man is the image and likeness of his Maker in
-constitutional powers is clear, because we can not have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">{291}</a></span>
-any conception of the Creator but as of a mind like
-our own, infinite in the extent of such capacities. This,
-then, is <i>one</i> respect in which the first pair could be in
-the image or likeness to God.</p>
-
-<p>The other only conceivable respect in which they
-could resemble their Creator is by <i>their own voluntary
-action, and this can not be conceived of as created</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Man is the sole producing cause (see page 158) of his
-own <i>voluntary</i> acts, which alone decide moral character.
-Should God create these, man would cease to be
-their author and cease to be a free agent.</p>
-
-<p>It is thus manifest that a mind can be <i>created</i> in
-the image of God, so far as we can conceive, only in
-its constitutional powers of intellect, susceptibility, and
-will.</p>
-
-<p>This being established as the meaning of the word
-when it is said that Adam begat Seth "in his own image,"
-if it has reference to the mind alone, or chiefly,
-then it means that the mental organization of the child
-was like the parent's, and thus like the Creator's.</p>
-
-<p>In the New Testament, the chief passages which are
-supposed to bear on this subject are in Romans, chapter v.
-These are the main texts:</p>
-
-<p>Verse 12: "<i>Wherefore as by one man sin entered
-into the world, and death by sin, and so death passed
-upon all men for that all have sinned.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Verse 19: "<i>For as by one man's disobedience many
-were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall
-many be made righteous.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Here we again are to discriminate between <i>facts</i>
-and <i>theories</i>. The <i>facts</i> here stated are, that by one
-man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">{292}</a></span>
-death comes on all men because all sin; and that by
-one man's disobedience many were made sinners.</p>
-
-<p>Then come the <i>theories</i> as to <i>the mode</i> by which
-many were made sinners by the sin of one man.</p>
-
-<p>Here the Bible is silent. But theologians have
-manufactured the <i>theory</i> that when Adam sinned the
-constitution of his mind was changed, and then that
-this nature was transmitted to his descendants. All
-this is without a word of proof.</p>
-
-<p>Others have assumed that all mankind were existing
-in Adam, and "sinned in him, and fell with him,"
-which is both unintelligible, and equally without support
-from the Bible.</p>
-
-<p>These, it is believed, are all ever claimed as direct
-Scripture evidence of a depraved constitution of mind
-consequent on Adam's sin. Two other passages are
-quoted as having an <i>indirect</i> bearing on this subject.
-They are as follows:</p>
-
-<p>2 Peter, ii., 4: "<i>For if God spared not the angels
-that sinned, but cast them down to hell, and delivered
-them into chains of darkness to be reserved unto judgment</i>"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Jude, 6 verse: "<i>And the angels which kept not
-their first estate, but left their own habitation, he hath
-reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the
-judgment of the great day.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>In regard to these passages, we are to notice, as before,
-first, the <i>facts</i> revealed, and, next, the <i>theories</i> instituted
-in regard to them.</p>
-
-<p>The facts are, that there are two classes of angels,
-those that have sinned and those that have not; that
-those that sinned kept not their first estate, but left
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">{293}</a></span>
-their habitations; that God cast them down to hell,
-and that they are reserved in chains of darkness unto
-the judgment of the great day.</p>
-
-<p>These are all the facts disclosed. Not a word is
-said as to the <i>cause</i> or <i>reason</i> why some sinned and
-some did not, nor as to the mode or manner by which
-these events were brought about. Here the <i>theories</i>
-come in.</p>
-
-<p>Those who maintain the depravity of the human
-mental constitution frame their theory on these passages
-thus:</p>
-
-<p>It is here taught that there are a class of minds that
-have never sinned. There must be <i>a cause</i> for this
-diversity from man's experience. <i>This cause is a
-perfect mental constitution.</i> This, it is seen, is <i>a
-mere assumption, without a word of proof from the
-passages quoted</i>! What is quite as remarkable is,
-that this theory is maintained in the face of the concession
-that both Adam and the fallen angels were as
-well endowed as the unsinning angels in regard to
-mental constitution, and yet that they all sinned just as
-the descendants of Adam have done.</p>
-
-<p>This dogma has been sustained by certain misconceptions
-that should be considered.</p>
-
-<p>The first is in the use of the term "nature." As
-this word is ordinarily used, it signifies that constitution,
-received from the Author of all things, which
-makes certain results or effects <i>invariable</i>. Thus,
-when a fountain invariably sends forth bitter waters,
-it is called its "nature" to do so; when a tree invariably
-produces bitter fruit, this is called its "nature."
-Now if it was a fact that the human mind never acted
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">{294}</a></span>
-right, but invariably wrong, it would be proper to apply
-this term, and to say that in its "nature" it was
-totally depraved.</p>
-
-<p>But this is not the fact. "Sin is a transgression of
-law," and every child, from the first, sometimes obeys
-and sometimes disobeys the physical, social, and moral
-laws of God. No child ever <i>invariably</i> breaks them,
-but sometimes obeys and sometimes disobeys.</p>
-
-<p>But theologians have mystified the subject by assuming
-the very thing to be proved, and then "reasoning
-in a circle." Thus they assume, not only without,
-but contrary to evidence, that all human minds <i>invariably</i>
-act wrong from the first; therefore there must
-be a cause, and this cause is the "nature" received,
-directly or indirectly, from the Creator. Then they
-assume that, as every mind is "totally depraved" in its
-"nature," it can no more produce holy acts than a
-corrupt tree can produce good fruit, or a bitter fountain
-send forth sweet waters.</p>
-
-<p>Another misconception which has embarrassed this
-subject has arisen from the supposition that it is irreverent,
-and contrary to the Bible, to allow any limitation
-to <i>almighty power</i>, even in "the nature of things."</p>
-
-<p>But it can be clearly shown that every person who
-maintains that there is a Creator who is "perfect" in
-wisdom and benevolence, does, by this assertion, maintain
-that very limitation to which the objection is made.
-This is shown by means of accurate definitions.</p>
-
-<p>Thus "<i>perfect wisdom</i> is that which adapts the
-<i>best possible</i> means to the <i>best possible</i> ends."</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Perfect benevolence</i> is that which produces the
-<i>greatest possible good</i> with the <i>least possible</i> evil."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">{295}</a></span>
-That is to say, a Creator who is perfect in wisdom
-and goodness has done the best that possibly can be
-done for the great universe of mind in all its infinite
-and eternal relations. This being so, certainly "<i>He has
-no power to do better</i>."</p>
-
-<p>The only way this is evaded is by using different
-words that mean the same thing, and then refusing to
-define these words, or to accept exact definitions of
-them from others.</p>
-
-<p>The infidel, who allows a God of perfect goodness
-and wisdom, and the strict Calvinist, who is shocked
-at hearing that God "<i>has no power</i>" to make a better
-system, or one that has less of evil, say the very
-same thing themselves, only in more vague and misty
-modes of expression. They, therefore, are precluded
-from objecting to positions that involve such a limitation,
-when it is the very one which they themselves
-assume.</p>
-
-<p>To affirm that almighty power can make black white
-and yet black at the same time, or a straight line crooked
-and still straight, even the strictest upholders of the
-extent of almighty power would hesitate to affirm, because
-they are contradictions and absurdities. But
-they teach equal contradictions who claim that a mind
-can be <i>created</i> with knowledge, habits, and experience,
-when it has had neither instruction, training, or experience.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of claiming these absurdities as included in
-our ideas of this attribute of Deity, we are rather to
-assume that by almighty power is signified "a power
-to do all things <i>except contradictions and absurdities</i>."</p>
-
-<p>Thus has been presented what is claimed as the evidence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">{296}</a></span>
-in the Bible in favor of a depraved mental constitution
-in the human race, and it is maintained that
-it amounts to <i>nothing at all</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This being so, then we appeal to the principle of
-reason and common sense (p. 25), "that <i>nothing is to
-be assumed as true unless there is some evidence that
-it is so</i>."</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, in Chapters xxii. and xxiii. is exhibited
-the evidence of reason and experience that the human
-mind is perfectly organized, and thus the highest
-evidence of its Maker's wisdom and benevolence.</p>
-
-<p>So we can again appeal to another principle of reason,
-that "<i>we are to consider that right which has the
-balance of evidence in its favor</i>." If there is no evidence
-to prove the mind of man depraved in organization,
-and all the evidence of reason and experience is in
-favor of its perfect organization, is it not to be assumed
-that it is thus perfect?</p>
-
-<p>To this might be added the teachings of the Bible
-in the same direction. But this is deferred to the future
-volume. In the present illustrative example, the
-aim is simply to exhibit the fallacy of <i>one</i> of the theological
-theories that has been incorporated as a part of
-the teachings of the Bible, thus lessening the respect
-and confidence accorded to it, and impeding the true
-religious development of our race.</p>
-
-<p>How it has happened that a dogma, which is so contrary
-to the moral feelings and the common sense of
-man, and, at the same time, unsupported by revelation,
-should have become so incorporated with the teachings
-of the Christian Church, will be set forth in the next
-article.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">{297}</a></div>
-
-<h3><i>History of the Dogma.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The history of the dogma of the depraved constitution
-of the human mind imparted directly or indirectly
-by the creative agency of its Maker has become a matter
-of profound interest.</p>
-
-<p>So far as appears, <i>theories</i> on the <i>philosophy</i> of religion
-did not agitate the apostolic age. Christianity first
-spread among the humbler classes. They felt that they
-were sinful and miserable in the present life, and looked
-with dread and dismay to the dark passage of the
-grave and the destinies to follow. They were taught
-to "believe on the Lord Jesus Christ," and that thus
-they would become good and happy now and forever.
-This they understood to mean, not a mere intellectual
-conviction, but a <i>practical faith</i>, in which Christ was
-received as their supreme Lord and teacher <i>by conforming
-their feelings and conduct to his teachings</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But, after a while, the philosophers and rulers became
-Christians, and then commenced the two grand
-evils: first, the <i>theories of philosophy</i>, and, next, the
-<i>enforcing of these theories by pains and penalties</i>.
-About A.D. 400 commenced the discussion of the theory
-under consideration. <i>Pelagius</i>, a learned and devout
-man of Great Britain, aided by his friend Celcius,
-promulgated the common-sense views on the nature of
-mind derived from reason and experience, mainly as set
-forth in this volume, and claimed that these views were
-sustained by the teachings of the Old and New Testament.
-He and his friend traveled and disseminated
-these views in Great Britain, France, Africa, Italy, and
-Palestine, over which Christianity to a great extent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">{298}</a></span>
-prevailed. The celebrated Augustine, a man of great
-goodness, talents, and learning, became their leading
-antagonist. He set forth the philosophical theories
-afterward adopted and taught by Calvin in the form
-which is now denominated <i>the system of High Calvinism</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This system starts with the assumption (without
-proof) that the Creator <i>could</i> form mind on a more
-perfect model than that of our race, and that he <i>proved</i>
-it by forming the minds of angels and of our first parents
-on this pattern. But, as a penalty for one act
-of disobedience by them, first their own mental constitution
-was vitiated. Next, in the language of standard
-Calvinists, "Such as man was <i>after</i> the fall, such
-children did he beget; corruption, by the righteous judgment
-of God, being derived from Adam to his posterity,
-not by imitation, but by the propagation of a vicious
-nature. Wherefore all men are conceived in
-sin, and are born children of wrath; unfit for every
-good connected with salvation; prone to evil, dead in
-sins, and, without the Holy Spirit regenerating them,
-they neither <i>will</i> nor <i>can</i> return to God, amend their
-depraved nature, nor <i>dispose themselves for its amendment</i>."</p>
-
-<p>Men being thus terribly incapacitated for right action,
-so that they have no power "to amend their depraved
-nature," nor even "to dispose themselves for
-its amendment," the whole race became liable not only
-to the pains and penalties of sin through this life, but
-to <i>eternal</i> and hopeless misery beyond the grave. Nor
-could any one of the race do a single thing to escape
-this doom, or to induce the Author of their Being to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">{299}</a></span>
-pity or help them. Instead of this, a certain portion
-of the race were "elected" by God to be restored to
-the state from which their first parents fell by "the
-Holy Spirit regenerating them," while all the rest were
-left to eternal torments, "to illustrate God's justice
-and hatred of sin!" Moreover, whoever was thus elected
-was sure to "persevere." These tenets are usually
-called the "five points of Calvinism," viz., <i>original
-sin</i>, <i>total depravity</i>, <i>election</i>, <i>regeneration</i>, and <i>saints'
-perseverance</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Pelagius denied that there was any difference between
-the mental constitution of Adam and his descendants,
-or any other connection between his and
-their sins than always exists between the sins of children
-and those of their parents. Of course, the vitiated
-nature imparted directly or indirectly by God, and
-the tenets based on it, were denied by him.</p>
-
-<p>At this period all matters of doctrine were settled
-by ecclesiastical councils. The first council on this
-matter was in Africa, and, led by Augustine, they condemned
-the views of Pelagius. The two next councils
-were in Palestine, and both sustained his teachings.
-Next, in Italy, the Pope, then at the early period
-of pontifical power, first sustained Pelagius, but
-finally, by the exertions of Augustine and his party,
-was led to condemn him with the greatest severity.
-Finally, the emperors were enlisted against him with
-their civil pains and penalties. The result was, Pelagius
-and his followers suffered the perils and miseries of
-civil and ecclesiastical persecution. "And thus," says
-the historian, "the Gauls, Britons, and Africans by
-their councils, and the emperors by their edicts, demolished
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">{300}</a></span>
-this sect in its infancy, and suppressed it entirely."</p>
-
-<p>It is very probable that, if Pelagius had had the
-power and adroitness of Augustine, the edicts of emperors
-and decrees of councils would have maintained
-<i>his</i> views, and those of Augustine would have gone
-into obscurity. But ever since that day the organized
-power of the Latin, Greek, and Protestant churches
-have been arrayed to sustain the theories thus inaugurated.</p>
-
-<p>But the common sense and the moral nature of man
-have maintained a feeble but ceaseless warfare against
-the tenets of the Augustinian and Calvinistic creed,
-while now this "conflict of ages" is invigorated by the
-intervention of a new power. The authority of councils,
-popes, and emperors is on the wane, while <i>the
-people</i> are fast advancing to that position of umpires
-in the moral and religious world which they have gained
-in the political.</p>
-
-<p>In this long and unequal struggle, the principal actors
-since the days of Pelagius have been, in the first
-place, <i>Arminius</i> at the time of the Reformation. While
-maintaining the foundation dogma of a depraved mental
-constitution consequent upon Adam's sin, he strove
-to give some slight feature of humanity and tenderness
-to the consequent system by maintaining that there
-was <i>some</i> way in which man, in spite of his ruined
-nature, could attain some right feeling and action acceptable
-to his Creator, and tending in some degree to
-remedy the dreadful calamity inflicted on the race.</p>
-
-<p>The historian thus narrates:</p>
-
-<p>"After the appointment of Arminius to the theological
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">{301}</a></span>
-chair at Leyden (University), he thought it his duty
-to avow and vindicate the principles which he had embraced,
-and the freedom with which he published and
-defended them exposed him to the resentment of those
-that adhered to the theological system of Geneva (Calvinistic),
-which prevailed in Holland. The Arminian
-doctrines gained ground under the mild and favorable
-treatment of the magistrates of Holland, and were
-adopted by several persons of merit and distinction.
-The Calvinists appealed to a <i>national synod</i>. Accordingly,
-the Synod of Dort was convened (by the
-States-General), and was composed of ecclesiastical
-deputies from the United Provinces, as well as from
-the Reformed churches of England, Hessia, Bremen,
-Switzerland, and the Palatinate.</p>
-
-<p>"It was first proposed to discuss the principal subjects
-in dispute, and that the Arminians should be allowed
-to state and vindicate the grounds on which
-their opinions were founded.</p>
-
-<p>"But some difference arising as to the proper course
-of conducting the debate, <i>the Arminians were excluded
-from the assembly, their case was tried in their
-absence, and they were pronounced guilty of pestilential
-errors, and condemned as corrupters of the true
-religion</i>!</p>
-
-<p>"In consequence of this decision, the Arminians
-were considered as enemies to their country and its
-established religion, and were much persecuted. They
-were treated with great severity, deprived of all their
-posts and employments, their ministers silenced, and
-their congregations suppressed. The great Barnevelt
-was beheaded, and the learned Grotius fled and took
-refuge in France."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">{302}</a></span>
-Thus it is seen that, while Pelagius and his followers
-were wasted by persecution in the commencement
-of the Calvinistic system under Augustine, the attempt
-to soften its hard features by Arminius was put down
-by the same method.</p>
-
-<p>But, in spite of all such opposition, Arminianism
-gained ground, and the Arminian and Calvinistic systems
-have existed side by side in most Protestant
-communions. In the Church of England, and formerly
-in the Methodist churches, these two parties have
-existed. So in the Presbyterian, Congregational, and
-Baptist churches, there has always been a division in
-reference to the tenets of Calvinism, some holding
-them strictly according to Augustine and Calvin, and
-others more or less modifying their sterner features by
-various theories and expositions.</p>
-
-<p>The main point of difference between these two
-classes is in reference to that most disheartening and
-deplorable tenet of men's entire inability to "amend
-their depraved nature," or even to "dispose themselves
-for its amendment." The strict Calvinist maintains
-that the mind of man is so entirely ruined in its nature
-that no one but the Author of mind can rectify
-it, while he can in no way be moved to this act of
-mercy (justice?) by any thing the <i>unrenewed</i> creature
-can do. The Arminian sects hold that, though the
-"natural man" is utterly incapable of any acceptable
-moral action in himself, yet, through the atonement of
-Jesus Christ, he is endowed with "a gracious supernatural
-ability," by which he can accept the offers of
-salvation. This, it is supposed, is a statement that
-most Arminians would accept as expressing their views.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">{303}</a></span>
-In our own country, the earliest leader of an attempt
-to modify the Calvinistic system was the celebrated
-metaphysician, Jonathan Edwards. While maintaining,
-as did Arminius, the foundation theory of an utterly
-depraved mental constitution of the race as a penalty
-for the first act of disobedience, he first labored to
-prove this penalty to be <i>just</i>, inasmuch as in some
-mysterious way the whole race existed in Adam, and
-sinned just as he did, thus becoming the authors of
-their own mental ruin and incapacity.</p>
-
-<p>And inasmuch as our moral nature revolts from the
-infliction of penalties for not doing what there is <i>no
-power</i> to do, he originated a metaphysical theory to
-this effect: that, in spite of the injury resulting from
-this first sin of the whole race, there is full power and
-obligation in every human being to obey all that the
-laws of God demanded, but that man is <i>unwilling</i> instead
-of <i>unable</i>. This <i>unwillingness</i> is the result of
-that first sin of the race; and so great is its pertinacity,
-that no man ever did or ever will feel or act right in a
-single case, from the beginning to the end of life, until
-"regenerated by the Holy Spirit." Neither will they
-do any thing "to amend their depraved nature," or to
-"dispose themselves to its amendment;" nor will any
-man, before "regeneration by the Holy Spirit," do a
-single thing that has even any <i>tendency</i> to gain this
-Divine aid, but it is all dependent on "sovereign, unconditional
-election." Still worse, the more efforts an
-unrenewed man makes to love and obey God, the more
-wicked he grows, because he is <i>voluntarily</i> resisting
-increased light and obligation in refusing to regenerate
-himself, which, on this theory, he had full power to do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">{304}</a></span>
-As it respects God, this theory, indeed, relieves his
-character very essentially; but as to affording any
-comfort to man, it only adds a new thorn to wound
-sensitive consciences. For no man could possibly help
-feeling that when, according to High Calvinism, he had
-<i>no power at all</i> to do right, he was relieved from some
-portion of obligation, even if, six thousand years ago,
-he did join Adam in that sinful repast. But President
-Edwards and his followers took away this small
-alleviation, and put the whole blame entirely on the
-depraved and guilty creature, both for the ruin of the
-fall and the refusal to remedy the evil.</p>
-
-<p>This attempt to prove that <i>God does not require
-men to perform what they have no power to do</i>, has
-been regarded as a most terrific heresy by the strict
-Calvinist, while for nearly a hundred years New England
-and the whole Presbyterian Church have been
-agitated by it. Again and again, some of the wisest
-and best of their clergy have been arraigned for this
-heresy, with the threatened or inflicted penalty of loss
-of character, profession, and daily bread for themselves
-and their families. Three times the author has seen
-a revered parent thus arraigned. And in these ecclesiastical
-trials, she has herself heard otherwise sensible
-persons maintaining that men were required by their
-Maker to do what they had no power of <i>any</i> kind to
-do, under the penalty of eternal damnation, and that it
-was a dangerous heresy to maintain that God did not
-thus require it.</p>
-
-<p>Another attempt to modify the Augustinian dogma
-is found in the work entitled "The Conflict of Ages,"
-by the Rev. Edward Beecher. The theory there presented
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">{305}</a></span>
-was first started by the great and learned Origen
-in the third century, and has been advocated by individuals
-ever since. It assumes the entire and fatal depravity
-of the mental organization, but relieves the Creator
-of all blame by assuming that every human mind
-was created with a perfect mental organization, and
-placed in the most favorable circumstances possible in
-a <i>pre-existent state</i>; and yet the same sad results then
-occurred as our race are approaching, viz., the existence
-of two classes of minds, the holy and the sinful. Meantime
-this world was prepared as a merciful arrangement
-to afford a <i>second</i> probation to those who ruined themselves
-in the pre-existent state.</p>
-
-<p>This theory entirely relieves the Creator of all blame,
-but gives no other help or comfort to the miserable race
-of man. It certainly <i>is</i> a comfort to feel that our Maker
-is not a being who ruins his creatures in the very process
-of creation, and then exposes them to eternal, hopeless
-misery as the consequence of it. But whoever
-believes this pre-existent theory takes the load of a
-guilty conscience for all he considers as wrong in his
-own mental constitution, and for all the dreadful consequences.</p>
-
-<p>These several theories all were originated to escape
-from the inevitable deduction of reason, that <i>God, as
-the author of a depraved constitution of mind, is himself
-depraved</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And yet neither of them avails but one of the two
-<i>pre-existent theories</i>, that makes man himself the author
-of this ruin of his own mind, either <i>in</i> Adam or
-<i>before</i> Adam, while neither of these is supported either
-by reason or revelation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">{306}</a></span>
-Moreover, neither of these theories <i>could</i> be established
-by revelation for want of means to prove a revelation
-to beings who find themselves endowed with
-<i>miscreated</i> minds, as has been shown on pages 287
-and 288 of this volume.</p>
-
-<p>Another effort to change the hard features of Calvinism
-was by the New Haven school of theologians. These
-gentlemen maintained that <i>a holy nature</i> and <i>a sinful
-nature</i> were not what <i>could be</i> created, inasmuch as
-all sin implies a knowledge of what a morally right
-choice is and power to make such a choice, while it
-consists not at all in a wrong <i>nature</i> or <i>constitution</i>,
-but solely in <i>wrong voluntary action</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This is precisely what, as the author supposes, was
-the doctrine of Pelagius in opposition to that of Augustine,
-and for the propagation of which, popes, emperors,
-and councils drove Pelagius and his followers
-from their churches.</p>
-
-<p>A similar penalty seemed for a while to await the
-New Haven innovators; for, as professors in a theological
-seminary connected with the most influential
-university in the nation, their doctrine on this subject
-occasioned a controversy that agitated all the New England
-as well as the Presbyterian churches.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, an earnest controversy was in progress
-with the Unitarian sect, which had adopted this
-tenet of Pelagius as a part of their creed. Of course,
-the charge, both of Pelagianism and Unitarianism, was
-rife all over the land against these innovators on the
-established creed of the churches.</p>
-
-<p>To meet this, these gentlemen maintained that they
-had not essentially departed from the system of New
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">{307}</a></span>
-England divinity as exhibited in the writings of President
-Edwards. Thus they had two labors to perform&mdash;the
-one to maintain the doctrine that sin consisted
-solely in wrong <i>action</i> and not at all in <i>nature</i>,
-and the other to show that in this they did not differ
-from Edwards.</p>
-
-<p>In attempting the first, at one time and another, they
-have maintained that mankind <i>since the fall</i> are as
-truly created in God's image as Adam was; that the
-nature of man is still like the nature of God; that a
-corrupt, depraved, or unholy nature can not be affirmed
-of the human mind in any proper use of these
-terms.</p>
-
-<p>The inquiry, then, must arise, in many minds that
-are familiar with the writings of President Edwards,
-how it is possible that men so intelligent and so honest
-should maintain that on this subject they had not
-departed from the system of New England divinity as
-exhibited by Edwards.</p>
-
-<p>To the author this enigma is solved by the character
-of Edwards's writings, which, like those of many
-other metaphysicians who hold theories contrary to
-common sense, are <i>contradictory and inconsistent</i>.
-Thus it is seen that one class of very acute minds find
-in Edwards's <i>Treatise on the Will</i> the most complete
-exposition and defense of <i>fatalism</i>, and thus the author
-regards it. Another class, equally acute, claim this
-same essay as a full exposition and defense of the contrary
-doctrine of <i>free agency</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Augustinian theory of a totally depraved mind,
-transmitted through the Catholic Church to its reformed
-offsets, was received by Edwards. He perceived
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">{308}</a></span>
-that if God was the cause of this depravity, he
-is the author of sin, and so he labored to prove that all
-mankind "sinned in Adam and fell with him," and
-thus caused their own depravity.</p>
-
-<p>He perceived, too, that requiring men to originate
-holy acts with a totally depraved nature seemed to demand
-what they had no power to perform, and thus
-made God unjust. So he brought forth his <i>Treatise
-on the Will</i> to prove that man had a <i>natural ability</i>
-to obey God, and a <i>moral inability</i>; and so at once
-he established <i>fatalism</i> to one class of minds, and <i>free
-agency</i> to another.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it is that the New Haven divines find language
-in Edwards that sustains their views, while their
-antagonists find as much, or more, that condemns them.</p>
-
-<p>The ancient followers of Pelagius, the modern Unitarians,
-and the leaders of the New Haven school of
-divines, all hold exactly the position set forth in this
-work of the <i>perfect organization</i> of the human mind,
-while the only depravity maintained by them is that
-of <i>voluntary action</i>. At the same time, it is believed
-that but a very small portion of the younger clergy of
-<i>any</i> theological school in New England, or in a large
-portion of the Presbyterian churches, would openly
-avow a belief in the depraved mental constitution of
-man as created by God, either directly at or near birth,
-or indirectly by hereditary transmission.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting, yet sad, to trace the dominant influence
-of the Augustinian theory of a depraved mental
-constitution in originating most of the leading sects of
-the present Christian world.</p>
-
-<p>Man being assumed to be thus miserably miscreated,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">{309}</a></span>
-and his sole hope being the gift of the Holy Ghost
-to recreate, the priesthood soon claimed to be the only
-medium through which this gift could pass; and having
-the eternal life and death of the soul in their hands,
-they speedily thus gained that domestic, civil, and religious
-power which made the papal hierarchy the
-most tremendous tyranny that earth ever witnessed.</p>
-
-<p>The question of the transmission of this power
-through properly ordained persons was the chief feature
-of the Episcopal organization.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the other large sects in this country are descended
-from the Puritans, who, as it appears, were
-the first to institute "a church" as consisting solely
-of persons who "profess" to be "regenerated" on the
-theory of the renewal of a misformed or depraved mind.</p>
-
-<p>The Greek, Roman, Episcopal, Scotch, and European
-Protestants recognize no such organization, all being
-born into the Church; and this seems to have
-been the case in the first churches of the New Testament,
-where parents and <i>their families</i>, and all who
-joined their communities, were considered as constituting
-the Christian Church, whether "regenerated" or not.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_4" id="Ref_4" href="#Foot_4">[4]</a></span>
-So, in the Jewish Church, all who submitted to
-the initiatory rite were members, without respect to
-religious attainments in character. This new principle
-of organization, originating with the Puritans, is retained
-among most sects in this nation, and is the foundation
-of their separate organizations.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Baptists are separated on the question of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">{310}</a></span>
-the mode of administering the <i>rite of admission</i> to
-this Church.</p>
-
-<p>The Presbyterians and Congregationalists separate
-on the question of <i>appointing the officers</i> of this organization.</p>
-
-<p>The Methodists are an offset from the Episcopal
-Church, with reference chiefly to modes of bringing
-men into their Church.</p>
-
-<p>All agree that it is "regenerate persons" alone who
-are fully members of this organization.</p>
-
-<p>There are diversities of opinion as to the relation of
-baptized children to this body, but none allow them to
-be admitted to its distinctive ordinance except they
-profess to be "regenerated."</p>
-
-<p>It is a matter for interesting conjecture as to the
-probable results on Christendom had the theory of
-Pelagius been established by pope, emperor, and councils
-instead of that of Augustine.</p>
-
-<p>In that case we may suppose that the efforts and energies
-of the churches, instead of to these rites and forms,
-would have been mainly directed to the <i>right training</i>
-of the human mind in obedience to all the physical,
-domestic, social, and moral laws of the Creator.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of instituting two standards of right and
-wrong, the "common" and the "evangelical," as is
-now so generally done, children would have been taught
-that all that was just, honorable, benevolent, and lovely
-in their feelings and conduct was as acceptable and
-right to God as it is to men. Their parents, instead
-of that sense of helpless inability resulting from the
-belief that their little ones could feel and do nothing
-but sin until new mental powers were given, and that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">{311}</a></span>
-the gift was bestowed by the rule of sovereign "election,"
-would have felt that every successful effort to
-cultivate all lovely and right habits and feelings was
-advancing their offspring nearer to God and their heavenly
-home, and that, when their wisdom failed, the
-promise of "the Comforter" was given to encourage
-them in this great work.</p>
-
-<p>Thus they would expect their children to become
-"new creatures in Christ Jesus" by the combined influence
-of the heavenly and earthly parents gradually
-transforming their ignorance and selfishness to knowledge
-and benevolence.</p>
-
-<p>That the theory of Augustine, originally established
-in the Christian churches by pains and penalties, is
-still sustained there by such influences, is apparent
-from these facts.</p>
-
-<p>Although there is a large amount of real virtue and
-piety that is not within the pale of any sectarian organization,
-yet the vast majority of conscientious persons
-are either enrolled in <i>the Church</i>, or intimately
-connected with it in principle and feeling. All this intellectual
-and moral power is organized into various
-denominations, each controlled and led by a number of
-highly-educated, conscientious, and religious men.</p>
-
-<p>With these denominations are connected high positions
-in the pulpit, with great influence and liberal salaries;
-literary institutions, with posts of honor and competency;
-and theological seminaries that are the central
-ecclesiastical mainsprings of influence.</p>
-
-<p>Then there are connected with each denomination
-large voluntary associations for benevolent purposes,
-with officers who control large pecuniary means. Finally,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">{312}</a></span>
-each sect has its quarterlies, monthlies, and its
-religious newspapers, whose editors are speaking every
-day to the minds of thousands and hundreds of thousands.</p>
-
-<p>Now it is a fact that this vast array of wealth, position,
-influence, and ecclesiastical power is actually combined
-to sustain these theological theories. So much
-is this the case, that a minister, theological professor,
-president of a college, secretary of a benevolent society,
-or editor of a periodical or newspaper, could not openly
-deny this Augustinian tenet but under penalty of
-the loss of reputation, position, influence, and the income
-that sustains himself and family. Our largest
-and best theological seminaries demand an avowal of
-belief in this dogma as a condition of holding any professorship,
-and in some of them it must be renewed by
-all the professors every few years.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, this dogma of a depraved mental
-constitution transmitted from Adam is inwrought into
-all the standard works of theology, the sermons, the
-prayers, the sacred poetry, the popular literature, and
-even the Sunday-school and family literature of childhood.</p>
-
-<p>The power of such influences is intensified by the
-present stringency of sectarian organization. By those
-who have marked the tendencies of the religious
-world, it will be remembered that, at the time the associations
-for religious benevolence began their great
-work, all sects seemed to be harmonizing and uniting
-in the efforts to send Bibles, tracts, and missionaries to
-the destitute. At this period, the questions that separated
-Christians in reference to modes of ordination,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">{313}</a></span>
-baptism, and church officers, seemed to disappear as
-matters of small moment among all whose great aim
-was to save the lost of every name and nation.</p>
-
-<p>But, while this served to liberalize the feelings and
-opinions of good men in all sects, it soon became apparent
-to the leaders that, if these tendencies were not
-counteracted, the sects would all come together.</p>
-
-<p>If this should happen, where would be all the great
-machinery that was supported by these several denominations
-for their distinctive aims?</p>
-
-<p>Soon the tide turned, and, though now there is less
-sectarian bitterness, and most sects can allow each other
-to be Christians with different names and badges,
-yet each is active for its own separate interests more
-decidedly than ever. And now the <i>leading</i> concern
-of each denomination seems to be, to increase its own
-separate churches, schools, colleges, theological seminaries,
-religious periodicals, and benevolent associations,
-not because the salvation of the lost depends on
-these distinctive matters, but chiefly as modes of increasing
-the <i>extent</i>, <i>respectability</i>, and <i>influence</i> of their
-sect. In order to do this, the importance of the points
-which divide each from the other must be magnified;
-for if there is but a trifling difference between an Old
-School and New School Church, or a Baptist, Congregational,
-or a Presbyterian, then, in small places, and
-especially in our new settlements, all these would unite
-in one large, harmonious church, that could properly
-support all its own ordinances, and send of its surplus
-to supply the destitute. On the contrary, if these differences
-are magnified, there will be two, three, or four
-small churches, all contending with each other, poorly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">{314}</a></span>
-supporting their own ordinances, and, instead of helping
-the destitute, sending to other churches of their
-own sect for help.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it is that we see vast sums raised every year
-to multiply these needless, weak, and militant churches
-all over the land. There are facts on this subject that
-should be deeply pondered.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_5" id="Ref_5" href="#Foot_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So in regard to education; although intelligence has
-diminished the acerbity of sectarianism, it has led to
-a higher appreciation of educational institutions as an
-element of <i>sectarian influence</i> and <i>respectability</i>.
-From this has come the struggle to multiply colleges
-and female seminaries in each of the several denominations.
-Each is now acting <i>as a sect</i> in starting new
-institutions all over the land, that demand immense investments
-for buildings, apparatus, and endowments,
-and this without reference to the actual wants of the
-community. For example, in Indiana, where the low
-state of common school education makes such institutions
-least patronized, there are <i>eleven endowed</i> institutions,
-with an aggregate income from these endowments
-of $14,000 <i>per annum</i>, besides tuition. In Ohio there
-are <i>twenty-six</i> colleges and professional schools, with
-an annual income from endowments of $25,000; and
-yet, as appears in the public prints, $100,000 has been
-subscribed in one city in this same state to start another
-college for the Old School Presbyterians, who
-are expected to raise as much more among that sect.
-Besides endowments to support teachers, vast sums are
-expended in buildings, some of which are standing
-unused for the purpose for which the money to build
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">{315}</a></span>
-them was given. This is a fair specimen of what is
-transpiring in most of the other states in raising new
-institutions or increasing the funds of those already
-started. In this way, two, three, and four colleges are
-often found as competitors in a section that could
-properly patronize scarcely one.</p>
-
-<p>After each sect has thus reared an institution, it
-must then struggle to find pupils, and thus multitudes
-of young boys, who are to go into future pursuits where
-such knowledge will be of little or no service, are
-pressed into a Latin and Greek course, which probably
-the larger portion of them forsake before it is completed,
-with little knowledge of ancient literature, and
-far less of their own mother tongue. The waste of
-educational benefactions in this way is little realized,
-while the effect of congregating the young in boarding-school
-life, away from home and parental influence, is
-most disastrous.</p>
-
-<p>How can it be otherwise? To take the unformed
-youth at the most excitable period of the nervous system,
-at the point where temptations are strongest, and
-habits of self-control the weakest, away from mothers,
-sisters, and home influences; herd them promiscuously
-with good and bad; stimulate the brain to excess;
-end all the healthful domestic exercise, and what could
-be expected but just such wrecks of health, morals,
-home habits, and all that is good and pure, as is constantly
-going on in such institutions?</p>
-
-<p>If parents could hear the details that have come
-from mothers and their young sons of the experiences
-of boarding-school and college life all over the land,
-especially in reference to that most contaminating and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">{316}</a></span>
-horrible literature and prints that no care can exclude,
-they would understand only a small part of the evils
-included in such institutions for the young.</p>
-
-<p>Not only colleges, but female seminaries, and even
-private schools, are becoming more and more sectarian,
-as especially patronized by some one denomination,
-and relying on this for success.</p>
-
-<p>All this sectarian influence in education is, in fact,
-operating to sustain the Augustinian theories <i>by the
-pains and penalties</i> that first enforced them; for no
-teacher of a school, or college, or female seminary
-could avow a dissent from theories so powerfully sustained,
-without subjecting himself, his institution, and
-his sect to attacks from other sects and institutions, as
-one mode of supplanting a rival.</p>
-
-<p>It was this powerful array of antagonistic influences
-that for years withheld the author from any public expression
-of some of the views set forth in this work.</p>
-
-<p>It has been stated in the introduction that, while
-teaching mental science, in connection with the Bible,
-to highly gifted minds, an octavo volume was printed,
-but not published, which embraced the leading features
-of this work. In that, the principles of reason and interpretation
-were <i>not</i> applied to the theories of a depraved
-mental constitution, which at that time were
-not, to her own mind, satisfactorily solved, but to
-theories on the character and atoning sacrifice of Jesus
-Christ, where relief was first experienced by the
-writer.</p>
-
-<p>On taking advice as to the publication of such a
-work, it became clear that it would probably result in
-such powerful theological influences as would end a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">{317}</a></span>
-connection with a public institution, and all labors as
-a teacher.</p>
-
-<p>In obedience to the counsel of friends, it was concluded
-to go quietly on as an educator, and work out
-practically all that could be done without innovating
-on accepted opinions, and wait till time and circumstances
-should afford more maturity and completeness
-to the writer's own views; for it was soon perceived
-that no one ever objected to having children trained
-exactly according to the author's present views, provided
-nothing was said against the accepted theological
-theories. So faithfully has this method been pursued,
-that it is probable that there is not an individual
-with whom the writer has been associated as an
-educator, who will not, for the first time, learn her
-views on the Augustinian and Calvinistic theories from
-this work; while, even in her own family circle, though
-opinions have been expressed freely, all discussions on
-this subject have been avoided.</p>
-
-<p>In pursuing the course of a practical educator, the
-first years were spent mainly in the intellectual department,
-at the period when the "higher branches" first
-began to enter as a part of female culture. Surrounded
-by some of the most gifted female minds in the
-country as both teachers and pupils, and all excited by
-the interest of pioneers in the effort to elevate the
-standard of female education, there resulted such an
-amount of intellectual activity and enthusiasm as has
-never been witnessed by the author before or since.</p>
-
-<p>Ignorant of the laws of health, and unaware of
-any danger from excess, the result was such entire
-and irretrievable prostration of the nervous system
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">{318}</a></span>
-as forbade forever any farther labor as a practical
-teacher.</p>
-
-<p>Extensive journeyings to restore health among a
-widely-dispersed family connection led to frequent reunions
-with former pupils. Thence resulted a deep
-conviction of the necessity of <i>training the domestic
-habits and tastes</i> of young girls as had never yet been
-attempted, and of the extreme suffering and <i>ill health</i>
-consequent on the neglect of it as <i>a part of school education</i>.
-This led to two works on Domestic Economy,
-one of which was designed as a text-book for girls at
-school, and the other for their use after they became
-housekeepers.</p>
-
-<p>Continued ill health, inducing frequent resort to
-health establishments, where invalids from all classes
-were congregated, increased the conviction that modes
-of education and other causes were fatally undermining
-national health, especially that of women. Thus
-originated a work on Health, and another on Physiology
-and Physical Training.</p>
-
-<p>Incapacitated from labor as a teacher, the only field
-of effort to the author was in more general efforts to
-interest her own sex to enlarged and <i>organized</i> efforts
-to secure the proper training of woman for her distinctive
-duties, and also to provide <i>employment</i> for her in
-her appropriate profession.</p>
-
-<p>Two small works addressed to American women on
-this subject were issued by her, and two organizations
-were the result: one conducted by ladies in Boston,
-and one by Governor Slade as General Agent of the
-Board of National Popular Education.</p>
-
-<p>As both of these restricted their efforts mainly to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">{319}</a></span>
-providing employment for teachers already educated,
-the next attempt was to secure an organization to prepare
-woman for her <i>distinctive duties</i> on a more complete
-and comprehensive scale.</p>
-
-<p>In this attempt, it was perceived that the other sex
-have always secured proper attention to any particular
-department of education by <i>endowments to support
-highly-educated teachers to give their whole time to
-that object</i>. Thus chemistry, agriculture, and the practical
-sciences are made honorable, and are insured as
-branches of liberal instruction. The question then
-arose, Why should not this method be taken to make
-woman's <i>distinctive</i> profession honorable, and to secure
-a proper training for it?</p>
-
-<p>The business of a woman is divided into three as distinct
-departments as the liberal professions of law, medicine,
-and divinity for men, which are so honored and
-endowed. Nor are they less important or universal.
-For, in the first place, woman is to train the human
-mind at just that period when principles, tastes, and
-habits are most firmly fixed; next, she has the care of
-the human body all through its period of development,
-when the physical habits are formed, and also in periods
-of sickness for all ages. Lastly, she has charge
-of the whole circle of domestic economy, and of all the
-<i>home</i> interests of the family state. Educator, nurse,
-and housekeeper, these three departments are not less
-in importance than law, medicine, and divinity.</p>
-
-<p>The leading feature, then, in this attempt was to secure
-an organization of American women, who should
-aim to establish model institutions for woman, that
-should prepare her <i>thoroughly and properly</i> for the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">{320}</a></span>
-three distinctive employments of her profession, by
-means of endowments to support highly-educated teachers
-for this express object. In all other female institutions,
-the training of the <i>intellect</i> has been the leading
-object; in these, the preparation of woman for her
-distinctive duties was to be the leading object.</p>
-
-<p>To the common remark that the mothers must do
-this <i>at home</i>, it is replied, in the first place, that the
-mothers, to a great extent&mdash;<i>as the general rule, having
-but few exceptions</i>&mdash;are not qualified to do this; and,
-next, if they were, they have not the <i>health</i>, or they have
-not the <i>time</i>, or they have not the <i>will</i> to do so. When
-men wish to perfect and honor any profession, they provide
-<i>endowments</i> to sustain teachers of the highest order.
-Thus, for example, though it may be said that
-farmers can best train their sons for their own profession,
-still agricultural professorships in our colleges,
-and teachers sustained by endowments, are found to
-be indispensable to honor and raise that pursuit to a
-<i>science</i> and a <i>profession</i>.</p>
-
-<p>While the young women of the nation see every
-thing else more honored and provided for than the
-very profession and future business of their lives, they
-will grow up to neglect and despise such duties.</p>
-
-<p>The education of woman, to be what Heaven designed
-for the race, should unite the <i>home training</i> of the
-parents with the <i>school training</i> of the teacher. Instead
-of taking young girls from all domestic interests
-and pursuits, and turning all the energies of their nervous
-system into the intellectual department of the
-brain, there should be an equable and healthful training,
-at once, of the bodily powers, the social and domestic habits,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">{321}</a></span>
-the intellect, and the moral nature; and
-in effecting this, the parents and the teachers should
-<i>work together</i> harmoniously. It is in reference to this
-that the tendency of this age and country to conduct
-the education of the higher and middling classes in
-<i>boarding-schools</i> instead of <i>at home</i> is most disastrous.
-Boarding-schools should be the exceptions to meet the
-wants of a sparse population. Instead of this, the
-country sends its daughters to city boarding-schools,
-and the city sends to country boarding-schools, and so
-<i>home</i> education is becoming more and more neglected.</p>
-
-<p>The consequences to the health, happiness, and moral
-interests of woman are more and more disastrous.</p>
-
-<p>In reference to this, the efforts of the above association
-have been confined to establishing what it is
-hoped would become <i>model institutions</i> in the <i>centres
-of influence</i> of the states where they were located, in
-which the funds should <i>not</i> be spent in providing great
-buildings to take children away from all home influences
-and domestic pursuits, but rather in providing
-such teachers and influences as would have a direct
-bearing on the homes of the pupils, and aid the parents
-in cultivating <i>home habits</i>, <i>home virtues</i>, and
-<i>home tastes</i> and <i>pursuits</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This brief history of the writer's efforts is given because
-its results will now be seen to form a part of the
-"history of the dogma" which is the subject of this
-section.</p>
-
-<p>For, during the whole period of these efforts to promote
-the <i>right training of the human mind by woman
-as the Heaven-appointed minister for this end</i>,
-the influence of this dogma has been constantly forced
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">{322}</a></span>
-on attention as the real antagonistic force. That is
-to say, the whole energies of the Christian Church, in
-its distinctive character, are organized to remedy the
-evil <i>after the mind is educated wrong</i>, while little is
-attempted by the powerful agency of <i>organization</i> to
-secure its <i>right education</i>. In proof of this, it will be
-seen that all the great benevolent organizations for
-which collections are enforced from the pulpit are for
-adults, with one only seeming exception. There is an
-organization to send Bibles, another to send tracts and
-colporteurs, another to send missionaries abroad, another
-to send home-missionaries, another for the sailor,
-another for the slaves, another to educate ministers,
-another to raise up colleges, another for temperance,
-and so on. All these have as their direct aim those
-who are educated wrong, and are to be redeemed from
-sinful habits. Not one has any direct reference to the
-<i>formation of right habits in the daily training of every-day
-life</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Sunday-school is the only seeming exception.
-But this is only a weekly exercise of an hour or two,
-in which every sect secures the training of its children
-in its own religious system, while this system,
-in most cases, is based on the Augustinian doctrine of
-the inability of children to feel or do a single right
-thing till they are "regenerated," while not only the
-teaching, but the Sunday libraries for children all enforce
-this dogma. The practical influence of this,
-though counteracted more or less by other influences,
-is fairly illustrated in the mental history of the author
-in the Introduction.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Christian Church has all its organizations
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">{323}</a></span>
-to <i>cure</i> diseased and miseducated mind, and not a single
-one to <i>prevent</i> this ruin by its right training.</p>
-
-<p>This being so, this effort to promote the neglected
-and yet great end of Christian effort has been looked
-on with indifference, or as a small concern to receive
-its mite, while all others are to receive their hundreds
-and thousands.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, the enterprise has been looked upon with
-jealousy by many whose attention has been called to
-it as a <i>covert</i> sectarian movement to promote the interests
-of that denomination with which some of its
-movers have been connected. Then, too, because it
-really has not favored any one sect, it has secured the
-special favor and sympathy of none. There has never
-been a time when its movers have not been made to understand
-that success in raising endowments would be
-certain if the anti-sectarian feature could be relinquished,
-and the enterprise could assume a sectarian banner.</p>
-
-<p>The most influential clergy of the large sects are
-engaged in denominational enterprises, to found colleges
-or theological seminaries, or to establish book
-or newspaper agencies <i>devoted to the interests of their
-sect</i>. The great body of laymen who have wealth to
-bestow in large sums are more or less influenced by
-their clergymen, either as personal friends or as spiritual
-advisers. Especially is this true of the few benevolent
-ladies who have such independent means as
-to be able to furnish endowments.</p>
-
-<p>And thus it has come to pass that this first attempt
-yet known to organize Christians <i>as Christians</i>, to
-train woman for her great work of forming the physical,
-social, domestic, and moral habits of childhood by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">{324}</a></span>
-methods deemed indispensable by man for his professions,
-is on the verge of failure, after four years of trial.
-And this is not owing to the fact that the motives, or
-the plan, or the conductors of it have been extensively
-distrusted, or in any particular disapproved. On the
-contrary, the leading clergymen of most of the Protestant
-sects have given their unqualified approval,
-while the Board of Managers embraces a large proportion
-of the most distinguished female educators and
-authoresses, with some of the most distinguished business
-men and financiers of our land. At the same
-time, the agents and educators who have performed
-for four years the details of the enterprise have secured
-the entire approval and confidence of the public as to
-their qualifications.</p>
-
-<p>The real difficulty at the root of all is the indifference
-to the training of the habits of childhood, resulting
-from the long-established dogma of a misformed
-mind, whose propagated incapacity is not within the
-reach of educational training. Meantime, the chief energies
-of the Christian Church are now tending to the
-extending of sectarian organizations, based on peculiarities
-as to baptism, ordination, and church officers,
-which no intelligent person believes are either indispensable
-to salvation, or even so important as to be
-subjects of direct Divine commands.</p>
-
-<p>It is this view of the subject that has at last brought
-the author to relinquish any farther practical educational
-efforts, and now to attempt whatever may be in her
-power in directing public attention to what seems to
-be one grand impediment in the Christian world to the
-right training and development of the human race.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">{325}</a></span>
-In presenting this work to the special attention of
-the laity, the author does not intend to imply that theologians
-are not to take the lead in all discussions and
-investigations that are to guide and enlighten mankind
-in their special department.</p>
-
-<p>The aim is rather to lessen the general impression
-that the whole matter is to be left exclusively to them;
-that it is a <i>professional</i> concern, in which a layman is
-to resign his own judgment as he does to his physician
-or lawyer. Instead of this, there are some reasons
-why the laity have superior advantages to the clergy
-in cases where long-accepted theological errors are to
-be eradicated.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, they are free from the strong influence
-of <i>a system</i> into which the mind has been <i>educated</i>.
-The power of a system over men who are
-trained to reason, and who reason on that subject
-which involves all the greatest interests of existence
-both for time and eternity, is most insidious and incalculable.
-To this is added the reverence, love, and
-veneration felt by pious persons for those great and
-good men who, like Augustine, Calvin, and Jonathan
-Edwards, have been the revered masters of theological
-systems for ages. Under these two influences, every
-new opinion is compared with <i>a system</i>, and when it is
-seen to be inconsistent with it, all the veneration attached,
-both to that and to its authors and advocates,
-stands opposed to any innovation.</p>
-
-<p>The powerful influence of educational training, and
-of love and reverence to a revered parent, has taught
-the author to understand and sympathize with other
-minds similarly influenced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">{326}</a></span>
-From all such biasing influences the laity are far
-more free than their clerical guides.</p>
-
-<p>Add to this the fact that the "pains and penalties"
-attached to all change in theological opinions have
-very little reach among the laity. Any layman, if he
-adopts new views, can quietly withdraw from one religious
-communion and join another more congenial, or
-remain unconnected with any, while no man can call
-him to an account. But men connected with parishes,
-colleges, and all educational institutions, are subject
-to the supervision of councils, presbyteries, synods,
-and many other organs of surveillance, making it
-indispensable that all changes should be known to the
-public. Thus profession, reputation, and daily bread
-become more or less involved.</p>
-
-<p>And here it is but justice to express the author's
-convictions, which an extensive acquaintance with the
-clergy of various sects has induced, that there is not
-another body of men, of equal number and education,
-who are so free from personal considerations of this
-kind in forming and maintaining opinions.</p>
-
-<p>The entrance on the clerical profession in this country
-involves the sacrifice of all hope of wealth and its
-advantages, and includes often poverty and a painful
-dependence on the vacillating favor of parishes; so
-that, to a man of talents and worldly ambition, the
-command to enter this profession is very nearly equivalent
-to that of the Great Master's, "Sell all that
-thou hast and give to the poor, and come and follow
-me."</p>
-
-<p>But while allowing that, as a class, this profession is,
-most of all, free from biasing influences of the kind indicated,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">{327}</a></span>
-it can not but be allowed that they are subject
-to like temptations as other men, and that these
-considerations must have more influence with them
-than with the laity, who are exposed to little or nothing
-of this kind.</p>
-
-<p>To this, add the fact that men in other professions
-are far more habituated to look at all questions in a
-<i>practical</i> relation, and to use the principles of <i>common
-sense</i> more than the principles of <i>a system</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The writer has had frequent occasion to notice how
-the well-trained reasoners of other professions throw
-aside the theories and systems of theology, and settle
-down on the great practical truths of Christianity.</p>
-
-<p>It has sometimes been a matter of wonder to perceive
-how little attention is often given by some of the
-most gifted and well-trained laity, even those that are
-devoutly religious, to questions deemed of paramount
-and absorbing interest by the clergy.</p>
-
-<p>In presenting this work to public attention, the author
-is not animated with the expectation of any immediate
-or very striking results.</p>
-
-<p>Long-established and time-honored opinions, especially
-when they are entwined with the sacred hopes and
-interests of religion, are changed only by slow and gradual
-transitions, and these, often, almost imperceptible.</p>
-
-<p>It is the hope of the author to do something to promote
-at least a <i>renewed discussion</i> of these subjects,
-under more favorable auspices than have heretofore
-existed.</p>
-
-<p>The circumstances that favor and indicate such a
-renewal are, in the first place, a gradual change that
-has been going on the last thirty years in the theological
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">{328}</a></span>
-world as the result of discussions on these very
-subjects. Some of the most candid and acute minds
-that have been interested in such discussions have,
-more and more, been led to feel the difficulties involved
-in the accepted theory of Augustine; and though few
-have come to such clear convictions on the subject as
-to feel warranted in taking any public stand as innovators
-or reformers, many are ready to examine and
-discuss in a very different attitude of mind from what
-has ever before been so extensively experienced.</p>
-
-<p>One striking indication of this change is the almost
-universal neglect of "indoctrinating preaching" among
-the younger clergy in those sects where, forty years
-ago, it was deemed indispensable to success to thus
-establish the "five points of Calvinism."</p>
-
-<p>A still more important change is an increase in that
-<i>practical</i> preaching that urges on the consciences of
-men all their domestic, social, and moral duties, <i>as constituting
-an essential part of religion, as truly as the affections
-toward God and the special duties owed to him</i>.</p>
-
-<p>An equal or greater change is apparent among the
-laity. The strong Calvinistic doctrines that used to
-be so reverently received are either simply tolerated
-or quietly rejected. This is particularly the case with
-mothers and teachers, both in the family and in the
-secular and Sunday schools. Thousands of practical,
-tender mothers utterly refuse to teach their little ones
-that a depraved nature has descended to them from
-Adam, and that they can never perform any thing that
-is right or pleasing to God till this nature is recreated;
-or, if they use such language, it is with explanations
-entirely un-Calvinistic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">{329}</a></span>
-Instead of this, they teach their offspring that they
-can please and obey their Heavenly Parent as truly
-and acceptably as they do their earthly parents; that
-when they have so learned to love and please Him
-(or to feel and act right) that it is their <i>chief desire</i>
-thus to do, they have a <i>new life</i>. This "new birth,"
-they also teach, is the result of that aid from the Holy
-Spirit, the Comforter, which both parents and children
-so need that they can never succeed without it, and
-yet which is promised to all who earnestly desire it,
-and seek it by proper methods.</p>
-
-<p>Multitudes of parents and teachers are pursuing this
-method in churches whose ministers would entirely revolt
-from the idea of denying the Augustinian theory
-or the system of Calvin resting upon it. Many are
-doing this, unconscious that they are taking a course
-that is contrary to the standards of their Church.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, the author would ask attention to the
-chief points presented in this volume.</p>
-
-<p>The main question is, are these principles of reason
-or common sense, and the rules for interpreting
-language here set forth, accepted as guides in deciding
-the great questions of life?</p>
-
-<p>Next, are the deductions gained by their aid as to
-what can be learned without a direct revelation from
-the Creator accepted?</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, is the Augustinian theory of a depraved
-mental constitution consequent on the sin of the first
-parents of the race, as tried by these principles, supported
-either by reason or the Bible; and, if not,
-should not all men renounce it, both theoretically and
-practically?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">{330}</a></span>
-In answering this last, it is to be remembered that
-the question is not one of <i>fact</i> as to the <i>depraved
-action</i> of mind, but of the <i>philosophy</i> of this fact, or
-<i>the cause</i> of this wrong action. A man may not be
-able to form any satisfactory theory on this question,
-and be content, as the early Christians used to be, to
-remain without one. The repudiation of the Augustinian
-theory does not necessarily involve the adoption
-of any other, while it does remove insurmountable
-difficulties from just and generous minds in accepting
-the Bible as of Divine authority while encumbered
-with what seems so contrary both to the moral sense
-and the common sense of mankind.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>It has been the privilege of the author all her life to
-be intimately associated, by family and other connections,
-with the ministers of religion in a variety of denominations&mdash;those
-intelligent, excellent, and pious
-men who, more than any other class, can understand
-that heavy burden of spirit connected with that awful
-subject, <i>the eternal loss of the human soul</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Before closing, they will permit a few inquiries in
-reference to this subject. The almost universal cessation
-of "revivals" of religion, the diminished attendance
-of the masses on Sabbath worship, the decrease
-in the relative proportion of the ministry, the diminution
-of spirituality and the consequent laxness in the
-Church, the increase of skepticism and infidelity of
-various grades, the terrific rush of worldliness on all
-classes, as wealth, and luxury, and temptations of all
-kinds abound, are not all these signs of the times of
-fearful import, foreshadowing either some dreadful
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">{331}</a></span>
-judgments, or the advent of some moral forces that
-are appropriate to such a crisis?</p>
-
-<p>In this position of the moral world, is it to be supposed
-that theology alone, of all departments of science,
-has reached its culminating point, so that there is no
-possibility of improvement? Is there not manifestly
-needed far more powerful motives than any now wielded
-to stop the inrushing tide of worldliness? In former
-times, when revivals abounded, it was the principle
-of <i>fear</i> that was first appealed to with such wonderful
-results. But where now are such appeals made
-as once shook men's consciences with fears of "<i>the
-wrath to come</i>?"</p>
-
-<p>If such preaching abounds in any quarter of our nation,
-where is it? In all her travels the writer finds
-it wanting, and the testimony of others is similar.</p>
-
-<p>Here, now, is the great question: Could the ministry
-<i>now</i> preach the <i>distinctive</i> theories of Calvinism,
-and at the same time those awful views of the <i>eternal
-loss of the soul</i>, warranted by Scripture language,
-with any prospect of being sustained by the moral sentiments
-of the great body of benevolent and intelligent
-hearers? Would not some be driven to reckless
-worldliness, others to infidelity, others to Universalism,
-others to another style of preaching, till the remainder
-could scarcely maintain any preaching at all?
-Is not this perceived and felt by many ministers, and
-is not this one great reason why that terrible doctrine,
-on which the whole Gospel is based, is now so hidden
-or so slightly recognized in the pulpit ministrations?</p>
-
-<p>And yet, to the writer, it seems that this very doctrine,
-so plain and awful in Holy Writ, could be so
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">{332}</a></span>
-drawn forth by the light of reason alone as to furnish
-a power of motive now almost unwielded. It seems
-as if the terrible exhibitions of this volume in the chapters
-on <i>Habit</i>, and on the <i>Wrong Action of Mind in a
-Future State</i>, might be wrought out by a man of talent
-and eloquence so as to draw such audiences as once
-thronged around Whitfield, and with equal results.
-What, then, could be done with the added power of
-revelation, dissevered from obstructing theories?</p>
-
-<p>When the writer looks back on her own mental history
-for the last thirty years, and feels how every step
-of her life, during the whole of that period, has been
-regulated by the overmastering pressure of this tremendous
-subject, and when she is sure that a conviction
-that no such awful dangers beset our race would
-bring her life on to just that level where so many
-Christians complain that they find themselves, the query
-will often arise whether ministers who <i>say</i> so little
-about the matter, and those professed Christians who
-<i>act</i> so little in consistence with it, <i>really do believe it</i>?
-And yet, when her own difficulties in expressing all
-that has been thought and felt are recalled, it is understood
-how others too may have been equally embarrassed
-and restrained.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to the main topics of this work, is not
-every minister called to decide, <i>practically</i>, between
-these two theories?</p>
-
-<p>The first is, that the great and leading aim of all
-Christian organization should be <i>to train new-born
-minds aright</i>, and that it is the special office of the
-ministry to influence the <i>educators</i> of the race to the
-right performance of this, their chief duty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">{333}</a></span>
-In doing this, it is to be assumed that the end for
-which we are made is "to glorify God" by obedience
-to those laws by which "the most happiness with
-the least evil" is to be secured to His vast eternal empire.</p>
-
-<p>That, at the <i>first birth</i> of a child, it is "impossible,
-in the nature of things," for it to feel and act for the
-happiness of others till it has learned to know what
-gives pleasure and pain to <i>self</i>, and to understand that
-there are other beings who can thus enjoy and suffer;
-so that a child, by its very nature, is at first obliged
-to be <i>selfish</i> in the <i>exercise</i> of faculties which, <i>in reference
-to the great whole</i>, are perfect.</p>
-
-<p>That the "second birth" is the sudden or the gradual
-entrance into a life in which the will of the Creator
-is to control the self-will of the creature; while,
-under the influence of love and gratitude to Him, and
-guided by "faith" in his teachings, <i>living chiefly for
-the great commonwealth</i> takes the place of <i>living
-chiefly for self</i>. For this, the supernatural aid of the
-Holy Spirit is promised to all who seek it; and, without
-this aid, success is hopeless. But the grand instrumentality
-is the <i>right training</i> of parents and
-teachers.</p>
-
-<p>Then, in reference to that great change of character
-which wrongly-educated mind must pass in order to
-gain eternal life, there are three modes of expression in
-the Bible in regard to that, viz., "love to God," "faith
-in Jesus Christ," and "repentance."</p>
-
-<p>According to all uses of these terms, in <i>practical</i>
-matters, <i>love</i> is nothing which does not include obedience
-or conformity of will and action to the being
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">{334}</a></span>
-loved. <i>Faith</i>, or <i>belief</i>, is nothing unless it includes
-its fruits of obedience. <i>Repentance</i> is nothing unless
-it includes ceasing to do evil.</p>
-
-<p><i>Obedience</i> to the laws of God, physical, social, moral,
-and religious, is the grand, indispensable requisite.
-Now, when any person is so engaged in striving to
-obey all these laws that it is the <i>first interest</i> of the
-mind, then there is a "new heart;" and so great is
-the change from the life of self-indulgence and disobedience
-to one of such earnest desire and efforts to obey
-God, that it is properly expressed by the terms "born
-again" and "created anew."</p>
-
-<p>The contrasted theory is, that the chief end of man
-is "to glorify God," without, perhaps, any very definite
-ideas of what this signifies; that our whole race comes
-into life with dwarfed and ruined moral powers, so
-that it is as impossible, before a "second birth," to feel
-and act right, as it is for a corrupt tree to bear good
-fruit, or a bitter fountain to send forth sweet waters;
-and that the great end of Christian organizations is to
-secure and administer certain appointed methods by
-which God re-creates these diseased minds. Thus all
-training, all instructions, all good habits, are nothing
-as having any fitness toward either preparing a child
-for eternal happiness, or inducing God to re-create its
-mind. For it is "unconditional election," and not any
-foreseen act, either of parent or child, that decides their
-eternal destiny.</p>
-
-<p>Can any minister preach without assuming one of
-these two theories as the very foundation-principle of
-his ministrations? And is this matter any the less a
-<i>practical</i> one to all the laity?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">{335}</a></span>
-During the period in which the author has been engaged
-as a practical laborer in the field of education,
-her chief earthly reliance has been on the counsel,
-sympathy, and co-operation of <i>her own sex</i>; and in
-closing a work especially dedicated to them, a few
-parting words may be permitted.</p>
-
-<p>This work is offered, not as one of metaphysics and
-theology, to exercise the intellect alone. It presents
-the grand practical question of life to <i>woman</i> as the
-mother, the educator, the nurse, and the fountain of
-home sympathies for the race. It is the question over
-which every Christian mother ponders with aching
-heart as every new immortal is brought to her arms.
-It is the question where every Christian teacher stands
-in awe, as, gazing into the dark futurity over the
-dim ocean of eternity, each young mind is felt to be a
-voyager whose frail and solitary bark is soon to be
-launched. The Protestant mother or teacher, with
-the Bible in her hands, can not, as in the Catholic
-Church, throw off this tremendous responsibility on to
-<i>her priest</i>. She may go to her minister for aid, but at
-the last <i>she must decide for herself</i> what is that path
-which Jesus Christ decides to be right in guiding the
-lambs of His flock through such awful dangers.</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, is the great practical question on which
-depends the <i>life of the soul</i>, and for <small>ETERNITY</small>! and
-every parent and every teacher must decide on which
-theory the young minds committed to their care shall
-be trained.</p>
-
-<p>In contemplating the discussions that must ere long
-be renewed on these great topics, and in such forms as
-to involve, not theologians alone or chiefly, but <i>the</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">{336}</a></span>
-<i>people</i>, and especially the most intelligent of her own
-sex, the writer recalls with deep interest her early
-efforts as a pioneer in elevating the course of female
-education. Then she supposed herself the first, as
-she was among the first, to introduce such works as
-Butler's Analogy, Mental Philosophy, and a Mathematical
-course as a regular part of female education.
-And as she recalls the hundreds of bright, vigorous,
-and independent minds under her care thus trained to
-reason accurately, and now scattered as mothers and
-influential members of society in almost every state
-in the Union, and then remembers, too, how many institutions
-all over the land have for years pursued the
-same course, she can not but thankfully believe that
-the Almighty Teacher and Ruler was thus preparing
-her sex for these very responsibilities.</p>
-
-<p>In relinquishing that educational enterprise which
-for years has absorbed her time and strength, while
-as yet it is so imperfectly understood and so little appreciated,
-she asks, with tender and grateful memories,
-the attention, not only of her dear former pupils, but
-of that multitude of noble and benevolent women who,
-at so many times and places, have afforded her their
-sympathy and aid, to what is still farther offered on
-this subject in the closing note.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_6" id="Ref_6" href="#Foot_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_4" id="Foot_4" href="#Ref_4">[4]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The word "church" in the New Testament, in the Greek, signifies
-"assembly" or "congregation," and not an organization of regenerate
-persons.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_5" id="Foot_5" href="#Ref_5">[5]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See Note C.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_6" id="Foot_6" href="#Ref_6">[6]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See Note D.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">{337}</a></div>
-
-<h2>NOTES.</h2>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Note A</span>, page <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Some</span> atheists imagine that they escape the difficulty by
-assuming that matter is eternal, and thus uncreated. But
-the question is, not in reference to the existence of matter,
-but as to the <i>organization</i>, <i>contrivances</i>, and <i>changes of matter</i>,
-all of which prove the existence of some Intelligent
-First Cause.</p>
-
-<p>The theory of an "infinite series of changes and causes
-without a beginning" is a contradiction in terms, as can be
-shown to any person who understands the use of definitions,
-and no other person is prepared to discuss such subjects
-intelligently.</p>
-
-<p>Let it be remembered that the author, in this work, has
-not attempted to present a complete exhibition of <i>all</i> the
-intuitive truths, but only such a portion of them as are
-adapted to the design of this work. At the same time, by
-a close analysis, some here presented as distinct intuitions
-could be shown to be specifics, under a more general proposition.
-But in a popular work, and for the purposes aimed
-at, this close analysis is inappropriate.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Note B</span>, page <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</h3>
-
-<p>"Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy him forever,"
-is an expression equivalent to what is here maintained,
-if we assume that the chief "glory" of God consists
-in the rectitude and happiness of his vast empire of intelligent
-minds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">{338}</a></span>
-Various other terms used to express the ultimate end of
-the Creator in his works, <i>accurate definitions</i> would show
-to be simply different words chosen to express the same idea
-as that here presented.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Note C</span>, page <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</h3>
-
-<p>In the <i>Home Missionary</i> for February, 1856, is the following
-mournful exhibition of the results of these sectarian
-divisions:</p>
-
-<h4>"<i>Subdivision a Source of Weakness and Destitution.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"Now it is but too evident that our American Christendom
-is prosecuting its work, in some respects, at a disadvantage.
-True, funds have been furnished with a commendable
-liberality; but, worse than a dearth of money&mdash;which
-a few months of vigorous effort, or a prosperous turn in the
-market might remove&mdash;there is a dearth of men. Fields
-are explored, openings are found, communities are fast forming,
-and even make urgent requests for ministers, but often
-there are no ministers to send. The great exigency of the
-missionary work now is the want of capable and devoted
-<i>men</i>.</p>
-
-<p>"However we may charge this upon the lukewarmness
-of the churches, upon the absence of correct views respecting
-ministerial support&mdash;and its consequent meagreness&mdash;or
-on the prevalence among young men of a subtile skepticism,
-we may not shut our eyes to the fact that the want
-must continue as long as that unfortunate division of the
-field continues, which must ever come from divided counsels
-and sectarian rivalries. Destitutions are likely to last
-while alienations last.</p>
-
-<p>"Every denomination naturally feels that it must be
-strong in the centres of population; and so, without asking
-whether the Church of Christ needs so many congregations
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">{339}</a></span>
-there, we crowd our six separate enterprises, of as many
-rival names, into a little place where two churches would do
-more good than the half dozen.</p>
-
-<p>"The evils that result from this course are many and various.
-One consequence of it is a weakening of the unity
-and the moral force of the Church as a whole. Another
-is the diminution of the numbers and the strength of the
-several local societies, so that an amount of assistance many
-times greater is needed, and this need is prolonged for years,
-when often its period should have been reckoned in months.
-But a third consequence of this overcrowding of one portion
-of the missionary field is the <i>destitution</i> of other portions.
-While many villages are so well supplied as to leave pastors
-and churches leisure to quarrel, many rural districts
-and young communities are almost totally neglected. If all
-the preachers in the United States were evangelical men,
-well educated and devoted to their work, they would no
-more than supply the real wants of the country, upon a
-system of wise distribution. On a system, then, so unfortunate
-as this, its destitutions are not supplied; and we
-hear from all quarters the cry, Send more laborers into the
-harvest.</p>
-
-<h4>"<i>A Cause of Unwillingness to enter the Ministry.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"Again, a fourth consequence of our denominational divisions,
-and another cause of destitution, is seen in the difficulty
-of persuading young men of enterprise to enter the
-ministry. When we consider how the field of ministerial
-labor is cut up into small parishes, affording to men of superior
-capacity but a limited scope for some of their best
-qualities&mdash;with scarcely the possibility of much improvement&mdash;promising,
-also, only a meagre support and a moderate
-usefulness, we can not wonder that young men who are
-conscious of the ability to occupy a larger sphere, and whose
-nature thirsts after something stirring and an opportunity
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">{340}</a></span>
-for a hopeful struggle and for achievement, should often
-shrink from the seeming narrowness and hopelessness of the
-work which is here offered them. We need not praise the
-truthfulness of their appreciation in all particulars, but have
-we, on the whole, a right to anticipate a different decision?
-No. The result is manifestly one that must be <i>expected</i>.
-There is not the least doubt that this diminution in the size
-of parishes is also a diminution in the attractiveness of the
-pastoral office. And so this very multitude of denominations,
-which has increased the want of ministers, operates,
-in more ways than one, to diminish the supply.</p>
-
-<h4>"<i>A Discouragement and a Weariness.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"But, what is yet worse, it tends to <i>injure</i> the ministry.
-No preacher but has felt, at times, the depressing influence
-of a small audience. A large proportion of the missionaries
-at the West feel this at all times; and often the intellect
-is jaded, and the heart is wearied out, from the want
-of that natural stimulus which the presence of a multitude
-and the pressure of an important occasion alone can afford.
-If it is discouraging to find your people coming out in small
-numbers on rainy Sabbaths, what is it to have nothing but
-small numbers the year through, and year after year? How
-must this tend to check youthful enthusiasm, and to dull
-the fires of intellectual and moral energy. If our brethren
-of the West have not fallen behind themselves, it certainly
-is not due to the inspiration of large audiences or of populous
-and able parishes; for, with so many divisions in such
-sparse and unstable communities, these can not be otherwise
-than small. Good men will labor on, indeed, under
-all these discouragements; and the greatness of their faith
-will make their work and achievement great. They may
-triumph over these difficulties, but they contend at disadvantage;
-and the difficulties are <i>real</i>, notwithstanding the
-highest fidelity.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">{341}</a></div>
-
-<h4>"<i>Number and Policy of Denominations.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"There are more than <i>forty</i> religious denominations in
-the United States. Four of these&mdash;the N. S. Presbyterians,
-the O. S. Presbyterians, the Congregationalists and
-Baptists, together with the Methodists and Episcopalians&mdash;habitually
-esteem it a matter of obligation to be represented
-in every community where it is possible to gather a
-church of their name, and, in establishing these churches,
-deem it no part of their duty to consider, in the least, the
-welfare of any congregation of a different name that may
-have been previously gathered. We have six great evangelical
-churches, each one of whom feels bound to push forward
-its own growth, with a disregard of the interests of
-all other churches, which is equivalent to an ignoring of
-their existence, and, in practical effect, identifies the Kingdom
-of God with the denomination. It is very much as
-though each one had laid it down as the fundamental principle
-of its procedure&mdash;<span class="smcap">We</span> are the saints.</p>
-
-<h4>"<i>Waste of Resources.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"Now it is obvious that this system must bring about
-an unfortunate distribution of labor and a great waste of
-power; in some localities multiplying churches to excess,
-and leaving other regions destitute; making the town congregations
-weak, from their very multitude, and losing the
-happy moment in communities that are just forming from
-the want of the right men to occupy them at the right moment;
-while many laborers abuse as much time and strength
-in working against each other as they use in working for
-Christ. So churches are born weak, and are compelled to
-worry through a long and fretful infancy, are kept on a diet
-irritatingly low, and compelled to struggle, with slow and
-uncertain growth, toward a maturity which must come late,
-and may come never."</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">{342}</a></div>
-
-<h4><i>Statistics.</i></h4>
-
-<p>Here follow statistics, the details of which we omit, and
-give these as the results, as seen in <i>three</i> of the larger denominations,
-viz.: the O. S. Presbyterian, the N. S. Presbyterian,
-and the Congregational.</p>
-
-<p>In this table is shown the <i>number of churches</i>, with a given
-number of members to each church.</p>
-
-<table class="c1" summary="NoteC-1">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="left">Number of Members.</td>
- <td class="numb">Not more than 50.</td>
- <td class="numb">Not more than 100.</td>
- <td class="numb">More than 100.</td>
- <td class="numb">More than 200.</td>
- <td class="numb">More than 300.</td>
- <td class="leftline numb">Total reporting.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="left topline">Presbyterian O.S.</td>
- <td class="numb topline">1239</td>
- <td class="numb topline">1907</td>
- <td class="numb topline">763</td>
- <td class="numb topline">278</td>
- <td class="numb topline">101</td>
- <td class="leftline topline numb">2670</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="left">Presbyterian N.S.</td>
- <td class="numb">743</td>
- <td class="numb">1180</td>
- <td class="numb">432</td>
- <td class="numb">163</td>
- <td class="numb">70</td>
- <td class="leftline numb">1612</td>
- </tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="left">Congregational</td>
- <td class="numb">696</td>
- <td class="numb">1219</td>
- <td class="numb">752</td>
- <td class="numb">245</td>
- <td class="numb">83</td>
- <td class="leftline numb">1971</td>
- </tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="topline left">Total of three denominations</td>
- <td class="topline numb">2678</td>
- <td class="topline numb">4306</td>
- <td class="topline numb">1947</td>
- <td class="topline numb">686</td>
- <td class="topline numb">254</td>
- <td class="leftline topline numb">6253</td>
- </tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<h4>"<i>Proportion of strong and weak Churches.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"More than <i>one fifth</i>, therefore, of all the churches connected
-with these denominations may be counted as <i>very
-weak</i>, none of them having more than twenty-five members,
-and the average falling considerably below that number.
-Nearly <i>one fourth</i> may be counted as <i>weak</i>, their membership
-ranging between twenty-five and fifty; and these, taken
-together with those that are weaker yet, constitute nearly
-forty-three per cent. of the whole. More than two thirds
-of all the churches do not contain over one hundred members.
-Those that exceed one hundred are about thirty-one
-per cent., and those that exceed two hundred are not quite
-eleven per cent. of the entire number.</p>
-
-<h4>"<i>Present Supply of Ministers inadequate.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"The whole number of ministers in these three denominations
-is 6150. The number of pastors and stated supplies
-(errors excepted) is 4336, leaving 1814 to be classed
-as without charge, as professors, teachers, editors, secretaries,
-etc.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">{343}</a></span>
-"The number of churches in the three denominations
-whose membership exceeds fifty is some five hundred less
-than the number of pastors and stated supplies. If, therefore,
-each of the five hundred men remaining after the
-largest churches were supplied were to take two of the
-smaller churches, more than sixteen hundred churches
-would still be left destitute; and if allowance be made for
-those not reporting, this number must be taken as exceeding
-two thousand. Probably none of these contain more
-than thirty-five members.</p>
-
-<h4>"<i>Deficiency due to Divisions.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"Now we need a thousand-fold <i>increase</i> of our effective
-force in the great harvest-field of the world; but have we
-any reason to expect that the Lord of the harvest will hear
-our cry for laborers, and raise them up indefinitely, in order
-to meet wants unnecessarily, nay, wickedly created by our
-divisions? Would a spendthrift son expect to prevail with
-an indulgent father to administer to his necessities on the
-plea or the confession that he had squandered his former
-bounty, and, moreover, was intending to make a similar
-use of what he then solicited? The responsibility rests
-upon Christians of no one name, and it would seem that if
-the people of God every where could but have a full realization
-of the heart-rending inadequacy of all means yet
-employed for the conversion of the world, or of the utter
-hopelessness of ever meeting the vast want under such a
-waste of power, the work of economical adjustment would
-at once and earnestly commence, and also a new consecration&mdash;that
-the evangelization of the world may be carried
-forward upon a scale commensurate with the providential
-openings for missionary effort.</p>
-
-<p>"That would be, indeed, a glorious revolution which
-should bring the true disciples of Christ every where to
-this position&mdash;to a consecration that should keep nothing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">{344}</a></span>
-back from the Lord, to a heaven-appointed economy in the
-adjustment of forces, a <i>condensation</i> of churches in the same
-neighborhood, till the combined body could support a pastor,
-furnish him with all needed facilities for the prosecution
-of his work, and, at the same time, open to him an <i>adequate</i>
-field of labor. All supernumerary ministers in a given locality
-would thus be set loose for effort where men are perishing
-for lack of vision. Then Apollos would not interfere
-with Paul when he planted, nor Paul with Apollos
-when he watered, nor would both either plant or water at
-the same point or time, provided one could do the work.</p>
-
-<h4>"<i>Divisions unnecessary.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"But it is possible that some, calling to mind the large
-number of weak congregations at the East&mdash;where denominational
-rivalry is less active than at the West&mdash;may claim
-that this feebleness is but a part of the necessary imperfection
-of human arrangements; that we must always have the
-poor with us, and that it is not the sectarianism of the West
-which so reduces our churches. It were sufficient to suggest,
-in reply, that the weak churches in the older states
-are found where the communities are weak, in barren or
-uncultivated districts, or in regions depopulated by emigration,
-while a large proportion of the feeble churches of the
-West are in populous, vigorous, growing communities,
-where nothing but irreligion or division could keep the congregations
-from being numerous, and where nothing less
-than the combination of the two could keep them so small
-as they are. Yonder are three debilitated churches struggling
-for existence against each other. Is it necessary to
-ask whether, if they were joined in one, and were with one
-heart and voice contending for the kingdom of God, the
-Christian strength of that community would not be greater?</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">{345}</a></div>
-
-<h4>"<i>Proportion of weak Churches at the West.</i></h4>
-
-<p>"But facts are at hand which show that the relative
-number of feeble churches is much larger at the West than
-at the East. Of the churches in Illinois and Iowa connected
-with three leading denominations, the proportion that
-must be accounted very weak&mdash;having not more than twenty-five
-communicants&mdash;is almost twice as great as in the
-same denomination taken entire, and amounts to nearly <i>two
-fifths</i> of the whole number reporting. These, again, taken
-with those whose membership ranges between twenty-five
-and fifty, make up nearly <i>seventy per cent.</i> of the whole!"</p>
-
-<p class="gap-above">The author would ask attention to a few questions in
-view of these statistics.</p>
-
-<p>The above table was formed from <i>reporting</i> churches.
-There are 934 churches <i>not reporting</i>. Giving to these last
-the average proportion of ministers and weak churches, and
-we find this result:</p>
-
-<table class="c2" summary="NoteC-2">
-
-<tr>
- <td>Whole number of churches</td>
- <td class="right">7187</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ministers acting as pastors and supplies</td>
- <td class="right">4336</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Churches without ministers</td>
- <td class="right line">2851</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="nodent">That is to say, in three of our largest and most wealthy and
-intelligent denominations, <i>nearly one third</i> of their churches
-are without ministers, and <i>nearly one half</i> of them have
-not over fifty members, and the majority of these members,
-no doubt, are women. Then the relative number of ministers
-is <i>constantly decreasing</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In this state of things, to what is the Church and ministry
-coming?</p>
-
-<p>When young men of talents and energy see not only independence,
-but wealth before them in other callings, where,
-in preparing, they will not need to spend <i>nine years</i> in dead
-languages and literature never to be used; where they can
-have an abundant field of usefulness, and where their minds
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">{346}</a></span>
-can be <i>free</i> from creeds and the supervision of ecclesiastics
-and parishes, how long will any such seek the ministry?</p>
-
-<p>Will not the ministry thus soon become the resort, first,
-of poor, ambitious young men, who find in its official standing
-the surest mode, with moderate talents and means, to
-gain the <i>highest social position</i>; and next, of <i>ambitious young
-men of talents</i>, who, among such inferior competitors, are
-sure of the best pulpits and highest salaries?</p>
-
-<p>Again: How long will the <i>laity</i> so freely pour out their
-earnings to endow colleges and theological seminaries when
-such results as these are seen?</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Note D</span>, page <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</h3>
-
-<p>In resigning all farther agency in practical educational
-efforts, the writer hopes, after so many years of devotion to
-it, she may be allowed to speak with entire frankness her
-views as to the present modes of education.</p>
-
-<p>The last thirty years have witnessed great efforts all over
-the nation to improve and increase common schools, and to
-multiply higher educational institutions. Although much
-has been said and written in regard to physical and moral
-training in schools, unfortunately very little has been accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>It is the intellectual department of the brain that has absorbed
-attention, as if this were the chief, or even the whole
-of man. Parents stimulate, teachers stimulate, lecturers
-stimulate, superintendents stimulate, school committees
-stimulate&mdash;all turning their full energies on to only one
-function of the brain.</p>
-
-<p>In our colleges, this <i>intellectual</i> stimulating is divided and
-subdivided, one professor for one department, another for a
-second, and another for a third, and so on, till from twelve
-to twenty are thus employed. Meantime the training of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">{347}</a></span>
-body, or the development of the social, domestic, and moral
-powers, have not even one to minister the needful care.</p>
-
-<p>Then, in preparatory boarding-schools for boys, taken
-from mother, sisters, and home influences in the first blush of
-youth, all the school stimulus is turned on to the brain to
-develop Latin, Greek, and mathematics, while health of
-body and soul perish under abuse or neglect.</p>
-
-<p>Then the boarding-school is taking the young girls through
-a kind of college course at the most critical period of life,
-while their chief nervous energies are exhausted in completing
-<i>a given course of study in a given time</i>, and almost
-every law of health for body and mind are violated.</p>
-
-<p>Then, in our primary schools, especially in cities, where
-pure air, healthful exercise, and home employments are least
-at command, all the energies of school committees and superintendents
-of schools are directed to securing a given
-amount of intellectual labor.</p>
-
-<p>But what is the teaching of physiology on this matter?
-Through one of its greatest writers, thus it speaks:</p>
-
-<p>"If young children are compelled to sit quietly while
-their minds are urged to undue action, <i>we take from them
-the noblest part of their strength, and consume it in the function
-of thinking</i>. Thus growth is retarded, the limbs imperfectly
-developed, the digestion (and thus the blood) becomes bad,
-scrofula perhaps appears, and then ensues a great predominance
-of the nervous system. Any <i>unequal</i> development
-of our faculties is injurious. It is certain that <i>mental exertions</i>
-weaken the more they are unaccompanied by bodily
-movements. Those who, <i>between</i> mental occupations, take
-bodily exercise, can <i>do more</i> than those who neglect this
-exercise."</p>
-
-<p>The grand evils of our present modes of education are,
-not that too much intellectual training is bestowed, but that
-physical, social, and domestic training are neglected. The
-result is a <i>universal decay of national vigor and health</i>. Other
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">{348}</a></span>
-causes, such as the use of stoves and unventilated houses,
-improper diet and dress, with excess in other modes of stimulating,
-have had a large share in the evil, but there can be
-no doubt that mistaken modes of education are the chief
-causes of the acknowledged fact that our national health is
-perishing at a frightful rate.</p>
-
-<p>There are facts that prove the Anglo-Saxon race, as developed
-in America under the best circumstances, is the
-most perfect race on earth as it respects size, strength, and
-beauty. The mountain regions of Kentucky and Tennessee,
-where the climate allows all to live in pure air night
-and day, with the simple food and habit of forest life, send
-out sons that, appearing in foreign lands, are followed by
-admiring crowds as specimen giants. General Washington's
-staff, though not picked men, were most of them over
-six feet in height, with size and muscle to correspond. The
-vigorous mothers and stalwart sons that achieved our Revolution
-have given place to sickly mothers with a delicate
-and puny offspring.</p>
-
-<p>The Greeks, though they educated the mind, took even
-more pains to train the body, and thus they became the
-wisest, strongest, and most powerful people on earth. We
-might do the same, and with far greater facilities; but,
-should our present rate of deterioration proceed, two or
-more generations would bring us out a race of deformed and
-unhealthy pigmies. For facts to sustain such a prediction,
-the author begs leave to refer to her <i>Letters to the People on
-Health and Happiness</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The great point now urged is that woman should be
-<i>trained</i>, not, as some would urge, to enter the professions of
-men, but <i>for her own proper business</i>, in educating mind in
-developing the body of infancy and childhood, and in conducting
-the economy of an orderly, happy, and well-regulated
-<i>home</i>. These arduous and complicated duties demand
-able assistance, and here is the calling of the female educator;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">{349}</a></span>
-not to carry off children from their parents and home,
-but rather to aid these parents in education in <i>all</i> departments.</p>
-
-<p>It is manifestly the Divine intention that parents should
-be the chief educators of the race, and all plans consistent
-with this will succeed, and all counter to it will fail. The
-boarding-school is not in consonance with this Heaven-appointed
-plan, and the evils multiply around it so fast that
-a nation of so much common sense as ours must soon forsake
-it for the true method.</p>
-
-<p>Again: in the grand object of educating humanity for an
-<i>eternal</i> existence, the questions as to how ordination or baptism
-shall be administered, or whether it shall be church
-elders or church committees that rule, are to be made secondary,
-and the followers of Christ are to unite for the education
-of the race, not as <i>sects</i>, but as <i>Christians</i>.</p>
-
-<p>These views present the principles on which is organized
-the <i>American Woman's Educational Association</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Its main features are, that it unites all sects in education;
-that it spends its funds, not for great buildings to deprive
-the young of parents and homes, but to provide well-trained
-educators to assist parents <i>in</i> their homes; and,
-finally, its leading aim is to prepare woman for her <i>distinctive
-duties</i> as educator, nurse, and fountain of home sympathies
-for the race.</p>
-
-<p>In attempting this, the methods the other sex have employed
-to honor and sustain <i>their</i> professions have been
-claimed, viz.: institutions governed by <i>a faculty</i> instead of
-an individual, and teachers supported by <i>endowments</i> for this
-express object.</p>
-
-<p>The following extract from the <i>fourth</i> Annual Report of
-this Association gives some of the results.</p>
-
-<p>"We are now prepared to indicate what has been accomplished.
-We have, then, in the first place, evolved and set
-forth a fundamental <i>idea</i>. This is no small part of the success
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">{350}</a></span>
-of any great movement. Whatever were the difficulties
-of first learning to print, the triumph of Gutenberg was
-nearly achieved when he first mastered the <i>idea</i> of the type.
-It was a secondary affair to work it out and set the world
-vibrating to its power. We have got the <i>idea</i>, and done
-something toward its execution.</p>
-
-<p>"We have secured the existence of two institutions on
-our plan, one at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and the other at
-Dubuque, Iowa, whose united catalogues will show some
-five hundred pupils the past year. Both are in very successful
-operation, with efficient boards of teachers, silently
-doing the work for which they have been established.</p>
-
-<p>"We have united all the Protestant citizens in the noble
-work of founding and patronizing these institutions, which
-they cherish as among their most valued public establishments.
-We have shown that the <i>faculty principle</i> is as good
-for female institutions as for those of the other sex, and that
-results may be expected from it for woman corresponding
-in utility and dignity with those it has secured to man.</p>
-
-<p>"We have shown that, by the <i>offer</i> of the small endowment
-of twenty thousand dollars, we can secure the establishment
-of one of these invaluable institutions, and make
-it a permanent source of measureless good&mdash;a most economical
-and wise expenditure of educational benefactions.</p>
-
-<p>"We have, in short, carried out our plan successfully
-just as far as it can be done <i>before</i> the endowments are actually
-furnished.</p>
-
-<p>"We have made a beginning toward raising the first endowment,
-and are able to report on hand and pledged nearly
-ten thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p>"Our movement has the confidence and full endorsement
-of many leading clergymen, educators, and editors of our
-country. Our institutions have the hearty co-operation of
-the religious bodies where they are located.</p>
-
-<p>"At our last annual meeting, an urgent request was made
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">{351}</a></span>
-to the Association to aid in the establishment of a third institution
-at Kalamazoo, Michigan. Without any pledge of
-immediate action, it was agreed that, if the citizens should
-comply with our conditions, we would aid them as soon as
-our means would allow. Those conditions have not yet
-been met, and we have not, therefore, been called to do any
-thing at that place.</p>
-
-<p>"It has seemed desirable, moreover, that the endowment
-of the two institutions already established should be completed
-before attempting to found others."</p>
-
-<p>The questions most frequently proposed to the conductors
-of this enterprise, and the answers to them, will now
-be introduced.</p>
-
-<p>How can the business of domestic economy be taught as
-a part of school training?</p>
-
-<p>Not in great boarding-schools, where it never was or can
-be done. The "Mount Holyoke" plan, now so popular,
-is widely supposed to embrace this in its design. But the
-<i>teaching</i> of this science is not the aim of their domestic department.
-It is a measure for <i>reducing expenses</i> by saving
-hired labor, while certain social advantages are supposed to
-be combined with it. But no pupil is to be <i>taught</i> any thing
-in this department. Meantime, introducing cooking, washing,
-ironing, and house-cleaning as a regular part of school
-duty, makes a system of such detail and complication, demanding
-so many rules and such strict obedience as adds
-enormously to the already excessive pressure that is put on
-the female brain. This is probably an insuperable difficulty
-attendant on this system, that will forever forbid its
-introduction wherever the <i>healthful</i> development of woman
-has its proper regard.</p>
-
-<p>How, then, is the object aimed at to be accomplished?</p>
-
-<p>In reply we say, that, with institutions established for the
-express purpose of training women to be healthy themselves,
-and to perform properly all their duties as educator, nurse,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">{352}</a></span>
-and regulator of the domestic state; with teachers supported
-by endowments for this express object; with a board of
-managers embracing some of the most influential ladies in
-the land, who are or have been both practical teachers and
-housekeepers; with committees of influential ladies in each
-place where such institutions are located to co-operate, the
-thing attempted can not fail to be done, and in the best
-manner. Whatever ought to be done, can be; and whatever
-can be done, will be, when energetic American women
-fairly undertake it.</p>
-
-<p>But will endowments for such institutions be furnished?</p>
-
-<p>In reply, we point to the multitudes of needless colleges for
-the other sex all over the land, for which the people are pouring
-forth such abundant endowments, while <i>women</i> are even
-more liberal, according to their relative means, than men.</p>
-
-<p>Since this effort commenced, one lady has endowed a
-professorship in Brunswick College, Maine. Another lady
-has added $20,000 to the nearly <i>one million</i> endowments of
-Cambridge. These two are the first cases of endowments
-for the <i>physical</i>, <i>social</i>, and <i>moral</i> departments of education.
-Woman, then, has first done for man what is now sought
-for her sex.</p>
-
-<p>In this same short period, sufficient for the endowment of
-a theological professorship in Connecticut has been furnished
-by female benefactors. In New Jersey a lady has given
-some $30,000 for a college. In New York City another
-lady has endowed a theological professorship. In Albany,
-New York, a lady has given $50,000 for a scientific institution
-for man. In Massachusetts a lady has given more
-than enough to endow a professorship for a college in Wisconsin.
-Many more cases can be given of large benefactions,
-amounting in all to hundreds of thousands, given by woman
-within a few years for the richly-provided professional institutions
-of man, while as yet not one complete endowment
-for her sex has been raised.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">{353}</a></span>
-Why is this? Because it is so difficult to change long-established
-customs and habits of thought. The idea that
-every thing must be done for man's profession, and nothing
-for woman's, has so long been dominant, that even our own
-sex have fallen into that belief and practice.</p>
-
-<p>But the American people are eminent for practical wisdom
-and common sense. The time is certainly coming
-when the <i>true view</i> is to possess the public mind, and then
-the right practice will follow. The question is simply one
-as to time, and as to <i>who</i> are to be the first to provide means
-for this great movement to promote the right physical, domestic,
-and moral training of our race, whose names shall
-shine as benefactors of our sex, as Harvard and Yale have
-shone for the other.</p>
-
-<p>But it is asked, Why go to the West to establish such institutions?</p>
-
-<p>Because the evils of sectarian strife affect educational interest
-most severely there; because educational institutions
-are most needed there; and because the moral soil, like the
-natural, bears fruit so quickly and so abundantly.</p>
-
-<p>But why not endow large boarding institutions already established?</p>
-
-<p>Because it is contrary to the grand design of Providence
-to take children away from parents to educate them; because
-it is more economical to provide superior teachers and
-school-houses in cities and large towns, than to turn funds
-into brick and mortar to congregate great communities of
-the young away from parents, home, and all domestic pursuits;
-and because those who need to go to boarding-schools
-can find homes in private families in large towns.</p>
-
-<p>But why not have our public schools on this model?</p>
-
-<p>Because it can not be done until the public, by fair experiments,
-have tested the value of such institutions. So
-long, too, as foreign lands are emptying all classes into our
-country, and their children enter all public schools, it will
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">{354}</a></span>
-be impossible to bring the children of the wealthy classes
-into them.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, the author asks every true woman who
-reads this to help in this effort for the <i>women and the children</i>
-of our country. If she has money to give, it can be
-sent to our agent, Rev. William L. Parsons, No. 11 Cliff
-Street, New York.</p>
-
-<p>If she has <i>time</i> to devote to the work, let her send $1 25
-by mail to Harper &amp; Brothers, New York, and she will receive,
-without farther expense, the author's two works, one
-on Domestic Economy, and the other on Physiology and
-Physical Training, designed as text-books for schools. She
-can then <i>use her influence</i> to introduce them, while the
-author's profits, as they ever have been, will be devoted to
-this object.</p>
-
-<p>The following is the Constitution of the association and
-the names of the ladies and gentlemen who superintend the
-enterprise. Most of them have been practical teachers,
-most are practical housekeepers, while they represent seven
-different religious denominations:</p>
-
-<h4>CONSTITUTION OF THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S EDUCATIONAL
-ASSOCIATION.</h4>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Art. 1.</span> The name of this Society is the <span class="smcap">American Woman's
-Educational Association</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Art. 2.</span> The object of this Association is to aid in securing
-to American Women a liberal education, honorable position,
-and remunerative employment <i>in their appropriate
-profession</i>; the distinctive profession of woman being considered
-as embracing the training of the human mind, the
-care of the human body in infancy and in sickness, and the
-conservation of the family state.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Art. 3.</span> The leading measure to be pursued by this Association
-is the establishment of permanent endowed institutions
-for women, embracing the leading features of college
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">{355}</a></span>
-and professional institutions for the other sex, <i>i. e.</i>, they
-shall be conducted by a <i>Faculty</i> of <i>Teachers</i>, each being the
-head of a given department, and no one having control over
-the others. An office corresponding to that of the President
-of a college shall be optional with those who control
-each institution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Art. 4.</span> The mode of establishing such institutions shall
-be as follows: An agent of this Association shall make this
-offer to some city or large town in a section where teachers
-and schools are most needed.</p>
-
-<p>First: That the citizens shall organize a Board of Trustees,
-in which the various religious denominations of the
-place shall be fairly represented; that these Trustees shall
-provide temporary accommodations, and pupils enough to
-support four Teachers; that a Primary and a High School
-Department be organized, and that the college plan of a
-Faculty of Teachers be adopted.</p>
-
-<p>On these conditions, the Association shall furnish the Institution
-with a library and apparatus to the value of one
-thousand dollars. The first Board of Teachers shall be appointed
-by the Association, with the advice and consent of
-the Trustees, and thereafter the Faculty shall have the
-nominating and the Trustees the appointing power.</p>
-
-<p>Second: As soon as the Teachers have secured public
-confidence, and proved that they can work harmoniously
-together, the citizens shall erect a building at an expense of
-not less than ten thousand dollars, and engage to give gratuitous
-tuition to twenty Normal Pupils. In return, the
-Association shall provide an endowment of twenty thousand
-dollars, the interest of which shall furnish the salaries of
-the three superior teachers, each having charge of one of
-the three departments set forth above as constituting the
-profession of woman. They shall also aid in the literary
-instruction. These three teachers, with the beneficiary
-Normal Pupils, and any others who may wish and are
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">{356}</a></span>
-qualified to enter, shall constitute the Normal Department.
-The Normal Pupils shall act as Assistants in the Primary
-and High School Departments, under the direction of the
-Principal Teachers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Art. 5.</span> With each institution shall be connected an organization
-of ladies resident in the place of location, who,
-with the Teachers of the Normal Department, shall carry
-out a system for raising up schools in destitute places, and
-for securing employ and suitable compensation for all teachers
-trained in the institution. When the home supply is inadequate,
-the Teachers shall be sought from the Board of
-National Popular Education, and other similar associations.
-All teachers thus located shall be under the special care of
-this local Association, and the boarding establishment of
-the Normal Department shall serve as a temporary home to
-them in all emergencies demanding it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Art. 6.</span> Funds contributed for endowments shall be held
-in trust for this Association by gentlemen Trustees incorporated
-for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Art. 7.</span> The whole control of the business and funds shall
-be in a Board of Managers, who shall appoint their own
-officers, agents, and executive committee. This Board shall
-have power to perpetuate and increase itself, but the number
-from any one religious denomination shall never exceed
-one fifth of the whole. Not less than seven different denominations
-shall be represented in the Board, and a majority
-shall be ladies who are or have been practical teachers.
-Any number of members present, of the Board or of
-the Executive Committee, at any meeting of either, due notice
-having been given of such meeting, shall constitute a
-quorum. The Board shall meet annually at such time and
-place as it shall appoint, and the presiding officer shall be
-appointed at each meeting. A meeting may also be called
-at any time, at the request of any three members of the
-Board.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">{357}</a></span>
-<span class="smcap">Art. 8.</span> Any person may become an honorary <i>life member</i>
-of this Association by the payment of twenty-five dollars,
-and an <i>honorary patron</i> of the enterprise by the payment of
-fifty dollars or upward.</p>
-
-<h4><small>BOARD OF MANAGERS OF THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S EDUCATIONAL
-ASSOCIATION.</small></h4>
-
-<table class="d1" summary="NoteD-1">
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Z. P. G. Banister,</td>
- <td><i>Newburyport, Mass.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. L. H. Sigourney,</td>
- <td><i>Hartford, Conn.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. S. J. Hale,</td>
- <td><i>Philadelphia</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Miss P. Fobes,</td>
- <td><i>Monticello, Ill.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Gen. J. Gould,</td>
- <td><i>Rochester, N. Y.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. E. Ricord,</td>
- <td><i>Newark, N. J.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. H. B. Stowe,</td>
- <td><i>Andover, Mass.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Prof. H. C. Conant,</td>
- <td><i>Rochester, N. Y.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Miss C. E. Beecher,</td>
- <td><i>Boston, Mass.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Miss Mary Mortimer,</td>
- <td><i>Milwaukee, Wis.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Miss C. M. Sedgwick,</td>
- <td><i>New York</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Prof. D. C. Van Norman,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Marcus Spring,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. C. M. Kirkland,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Prof. H. Webster,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. A. H. Gibbons,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. C. W. Milbank,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Rev. Dr. Cheever,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Henry Dwight, Jr.,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. James Harper,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. D. Codwise,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Charles Abernethy,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Prof. Henry B. Smith,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Joseph F. Stone,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Miss Caroline L. Griffin,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Rev. Abel Stevens,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mrs. Rev. W. L. Parsons,</td>
- <td class="ditto">"</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">{358}</a></span>
-The following gentlemen are the Officers under the Act
-of Incorporation granted to the Association by the Legislature
-of New York in 1855.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Benj. W. Bonney</span>, President.</div>
- <div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Wm. L. Parsons</span>, Cor. Secretary.</div>
- <div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Henry A. Hurlbut</span>, Treasurer.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="center small">BOARD OF MANAGERS.</p>
- <div class="verse smcap">Cyrus W. Field,</div>
- <div class="verse smcap">Josiah W. Baker,</div>
- <div class="verse smcap">Benj. W. Bonney,</div>
- <div class="verse smcap">Henry A. Hurlbut,</div>
- <div class="verse smcap">Wm. L. Parsons,</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="center small">FINANCE COMMITTEE.</p>
- <div class="verse smcap">Cyrus W. Field,</div>
- <div class="verse smcap">Josiah W. Baker,</div>
- <div class="verse smcap">Benj. W. Bonney,</div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h4>FORM OF BEQUEST.</h4>
-
-<p>I give and bequeath to the "American Woman's Educational
-Association," incorporated by or under an Act of
-the Legislature of the State of New York, the sum of
-<span class="space">&nbsp;</span> Dollars, which I direct to be paid by my
-executors to the Treasurer of said Association for the time
-being.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Common Sense Applied to Religion, by
-Catharine E. Beecher
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