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History is the life of nations and of humanity. To seize and put into
words, to describe directly the life of humanity or even of a single nation,
appears impossible. |
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The ancient historians all employed one and the same method to describe
and seize the apparently elusive- the life of a people. They described the
activity of individuals who ruled the people, and regarded the activity of those
men as representing the activity of the whole nation. |
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The question: how did individuals make nations act as they wished and by
what was the will of these individuals themselves guided? the ancients met by
recognizing a divinity which subjected the nations to the will of a chosen man,
and guided the will of that chosen man so as to accomplish ends that were
predestined. |
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For the ancients these questions were solved by a belief in the direct
participation of the Deity in human affairs. |
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Modern history, in theory, rejects both these principles. |
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It would seem that having rejected the belief of the ancients in man's
subjection to the Deity and in a predetermined aim toward which nations are led,
modern history should study not the manifestations of power but the causes that
produce it. But modern history has not done this. Having in theory rejected the
view held by the ancients, it still follows them in practice. |
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Instead of men endowed with divine authority and directly guided by the
will of God, modern history has given us either heroes endowed with
extraordinary, superhuman capacities, or simply men of very various kinds, from
monarchs to journalists, who lead the masses. Instead of the former divinely
appointed aims of the Jewish, Greek, or Roman nations, which ancient historians
regarded as representing the progress of humanity, modern history has postulated
its own aims- the welfare of the French, German, or English people, or, in its
highest abstraction, the welfare and civilization of humanity in general, by
which is usually meant that of the peoples occupying a small northwesterly
portion of a large continent. |
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Modern history has rejected the beliefs of the ancients without replacing
them by a new conception, and the logic of the situation has obliged the
historians, after they had apparently rejected the divine authority of the kings
and the "fate" of the ancients, to reach the same conclusion by
another road, that is, to recognize (1) nations guided by individual men, and
(2) the existence of a known aim to which these nations and humanity at large
are tending. |
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At the basis of the works of all the modern historians from Gibbon to
Buckle, despite their seeming disagreements and the apparent novelty of their
outlooks, lie those two old, unavoidable assumptions. |
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In the first place the historian describes the activity of individuals
who in his opinion have directed humanity (one historian considers only
monarchs, generals, and ministers as being such men, while another includes also
orators, learned men, reformers, philosophers, and poets). Secondly, it is
assumed that the goal toward which humanity is being led is known to the
historians: to one of them this goal is the greatness of the Roman, Spanish, or
French realm; to another it is liberty, equality, and a certain kind of
civilization of a small corner of the world called Europe. |
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In 1789 a ferment arises in Paris; it grows, spreads, and is expressed by
a movement of peoples from west to east. Several times it moves eastward and
collides with a countermovement from the east westward. In 1812 it reaches its
extreme limit, Moscow, and then, with remarkable symmetry, a countermovement
occurs from east to west, attracting to it, as the first movement had done, the
nations of middle Europe. The counter movement reaches the starting point of the
first movement in the west- Paris- and subsides. |
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During that twenty-year period an immense number of fields were left
untilled, houses were burned, trade changed its direction, millions of men
migrated, were impoverished, or were enriched, and millions of Christian men
professing the law of love of their fellows slew one another. |
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What does all this mean? Why did it happen? What made those people burn
houses and slay their fellow men? What were the causes of these events? What
force made men act so? These are the instinctive, plain, and most legitimate
questions humanity asks itself when it encounters the monuments and tradition of
that period. |
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For a reply to these questions the common sense of mankind turns to the
science of history, whose aim is to enable nations and humanity to know
themselves. |
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If history had retained the conception of the ancients it would have said
that God, to reward or punish his people, gave Napoleon power and directed his
will to the fulfillment of the divine ends, and that reply, would have been
clear and complete. One might believe or disbelieve in the divine significance
of Napoleon, but for anyone believing in it there would have been nothing
unintelligible in the history of that period, nor would there have been any
contradictions. |
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But modern history cannot give that reply. Science does not admit the
conception of the ancients as to the direct participation of the Deity in human
affairs, and therefore history ought to give other answers. |
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Modern history replying to these questions says: you want to know what
this movement means, what caused it, and what force produced these events? Then
listen: |
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"Louis XIV was a very proud and self-confident man; he had such and
such mistresses and such and such ministers and he ruled France badly. His
descendants were weak men and they too ruled France badly. And they had such and
such favorites and such and such mistresses. Moreover, certain men wrote some
books at that time. At the end of the eighteenth century there were a couple of
dozen men in Paris who began to talk about all men being free and equal. This
caused people all over France to begin to slash at and drown one another. They
killed the king and many other people. At that time there was in France a man of
genius- Napoleon. He conquered everybody everywhere- that is, he killed many
people because he was a great genius. And for some reason he went to kill
Africans, and killed them so well and was so cunning and wise that when he
returned to France he ordered everybody to obey him, and they all obeyed him.
Having become an Emperor he again went out to kill people in Italy, Austria, and
Prussia. And there too he killed a great many. In Russia there was an Emperor,
Alexander, who decided to restore order in Europe and therefore fought against
Napoleon. In 1807 he suddenly made friends with him, but in 1811 they again
quarreled and again began killing many people. Napoleon led six hundred thousand
men into Russia and captured Moscow; then he suddenly ran away from Moscow, and
the Emperor Alexander, helped by the advice of Stein and others, united Europe
to arm against the disturber of its peace. All Napoleon's allies suddenly became
his enemies and their forces advanced against the fresh forces he raised. The
Allies defeated Napoleon, entered Paris, forced Napoleon to abdicate, and sent
him to the island of Elba, not depriving him of the title of Emperor and showing
him every respect, though five years before and one year later they all regarded
him as an outlaw and a brigand. Then Louis XVIII, who till then had been the
laughingstock both of the French and the Allies, began to reign. And Napoleon,
shedding tears before his Old Guards, renounced the throne and went into exile.
Then the skillful statesmen and diplomatists (especially Talleyrand, who managed
to sit down in a particular chair before anyone else and thereby extended the
frontiers of France) talked in Vienna and by these conversations made the
nations happy or unhappy. Suddenly the diplomatists and monarchs nearly
quarreled and were on the point of again ordering their armies to kill one
another, but just then Napoleon arrived in France with a battalion, and the
French, who had been hating him, immediately all submitted to him. But the
Allied monarchs were angry at this and went to fight the French once more. And
they defeated the genius Napoleon and, suddenly recognizing him as a brigand,
sent him to the island of St. Helena. And the exile, separated from the beloved
France so dear to his heart, died a lingering death on that rock and bequeathed
his great deeds to posterity. But in Europe a reaction occurred and the
sovereigns once again all began to oppress their subjects." |
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It would be a mistake to think that this is ironic- a caricature of the
historical accounts. On the contrary it is a very mild expression of the
contradictory replies, not meeting the questions, which all the historians give,
from the compilers of memoirs and the histories of separate states to the
writers of general histories and the new histories of the culture of that
period. |
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The strangeness and absurdity of these replies arise from the fact that
modern history, like a deaf man, answers questions no one has asked. |
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If the purpose of history be to give a description of the movement of
humanity and of the peoples, the first question- in the absence of a reply to
which all the rest will be incomprehensible- is: what is the power that moves
peoples? To this, modern history laboriously replies either that Napoleon was a
great genius, or that Louis XIV was very proud, or that certain writers wrote
certain books. |
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All that may be so and mankind is ready to agree with it, but it is not
what was asked. All that would be interesting if we recognized a divine power
based on itself and always consistently directing its nations through Napoleons,
Louis-es, and writers; but we do not acknowledge such a power, and therefore
before speaking about Napoleons, Louis-es, and authors, we ought to be shown the
connection existing between these men and the movement of the nations. |
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If instead of a divine power some other force has appeared, it should be
explained in what this new force consists, for the whole interest of history
lies precisely in that force. |
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History seems to assume that this force is self-evident and known to
everyone. But in spite of every desire to regard it as known, anyone reading
many historical works cannot help doubting whether this new force, so variously
understood by the historians themselves, is really quite well known to
everybody. |
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What force moves the nations? |
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Biographical historians and historians of separate nations understand
this force as a power inherent in heroes and rulers. In their narration events
occur solely by the will of a Napoleon, and Alexander, or in general of the
persons they describe. The answers given by this kind of historian to the
question of what force causes events to happen are satisfactory only as long as
there is but one historian to each event. As soon as historians of different
nationalities and tendencies begin to describe the same event, the replies they
give immediately lose all meaning, for this force is understood by them all not
only differently but often in quite contradictory ways. One historian says that
an event was produced by Napoleon's power, another that it was produced by
Alexander's, a third that it was due to the power of some other person. Besides
this, historians of that kind contradict each other even in their statement as
to the force on which the authority of some particular person was based. Thiers,
a Bonapartist, says that Napoleon's power was based on his virtue and genius.
Lanfrey, a Republican, says it was based on his trickery and deception of the
people. So the historians of this class, by mutually destroying one another's
positions, destroy the understanding of the force which produces events, and
furnish no reply to history's essential question. |
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Writers of universal history who deal with all the nations seem to
recognize how erroneous is the specialist historians' view of the force which
produces events. They do not recognize it as a power inherent in heroes and
rulers, but as the resultant of a multiplicity of variously directed forces. In
describing a war or the subjugation of a people, a general historian looks for
the cause of the event not in the power of one man, but in the interaction of
many persons connected with the event. |
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According to this view the power of historical personages, represented as
the product of many forces, can no longer, it would seem, be regarded as a force
that itself produces events. Yet in most cases universal historians still employ
the conception of power as a force that itself produces events, and treat it as
their cause. In their exposition, an historic character is first the product of
his time, and his power only the resultant of various forces, and then his power
is itself a force producing events. Gervinus, Schlosser, and others, for
instance, at one time prove Napoleon to be a product of the Revolution, of the
ideas of 1789 and so forth, and at another plainly say that the campaign of 1812
and other things they do not like were simply the product of Napoleon's
misdirected will, and that the very ideas of 1789 were arrested in their
development by Napoleon's caprice. The ideas of the Revolution and the general
temper of the age produced Napoleon's power. But Napoleon's power suppressed the
ideas of the Revolution and the general temper of the age. |
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This curious contradiction is not accidental. Not only does it occur at
every step, but the universal historians' accounts are all made up of a chain of
such contradictions. This contradiction occurs because after entering the field
of analysis the universal historians stop halfway. |
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To find component forces equal to the composite or resultant force, the
sum of the components must equal the resultant. This condition is never observed
by the universal historians, and so to explain the resultant forces they are
obliged to admit, in addition to the insufficient components, another
unexplained force affecting the resultant action. |
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Specialist historians describing the campaign of 1813 or the restoration
of the Bourbons plainly assert that these events were produced by the will of
Alexander. But the universal historian Gervinus, refuting this opinion of the
specialist historian, tries to prove that the campaign of 1813 and the
restoration of the Bourbons were due to other things beside Alexander's will-
such as the activity of Stein, Metternich, Madame de Stael, Talleyrand, Fichte
Chateaubriand, and others. The historian evidently decomposes Alexander's power
into the components: Talleyrand, Chateaubriand, and the rest- but the sum of the
components, that is, the interactions of Chateaubriand, Talleyrand, Madame de
Stael, and the others, evidently does not equal the resultant, namely the
phenomenon of millions of Frenchmen submitting to the Bourbons. That
Chateaubriand, Madame de Stael, and others spoke certain words to one another
only affected their mutual relations but does not account for the submission of
millions. And therefore to explain how from these relations of theirs the
submission of millions of people resulted- that is, how component forces equal
to one A gave a resultant equal to a thousand times A- the historian is again
obliged to fall back on power- the force he had denied- and to recognize it as
the resultant of the forces, that is, he has to admit an unexplained force
acting on the resultant. And that is just what the universal historians do, and
consequently they not only contradict the specialist historians but contradict
themselves. |
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Peasants having no clear idea of the cause of rain, say, according to
whether they want rain or fine weather: "The wind has blown the clouds
away," or, "The wind has brought up the clouds." And in the same
way the universal historians sometimes, when it pleases them and fits in with
their theory, say that power is the result of events, and sometimes, when they
want to prove something else, say that power produces events. |
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A third class of historians- the so-called historians of culture-
following the path laid down by the universal historians who sometimes accept
writers and ladies as forces producing events- again take that force to be
something quite different. They see it in what is called culture- in mental
activity. |
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The historians of culture are quite consistent in regard to their
progenitors, the writers of universal histories, for if historical events may be
explained by the fact that certain persons treated one another in such and such
ways, why not explain them by the fact that such and such people wrote such and
such books? Of the immense number of indications accompanying every vital
phenomenon, these historians select the indication of intellectual activity and
say that this indication is the cause. But despite their endeavors to prove that
the cause of events lies in intellectual activity, only by a great stretch can
one admit that there is any connection between intellectual activity and the
movement of peoples, and in no case can one admit that intellectual activity
controls people's actions, for that view is not confirmed by such facts as the
very cruel murders of the French Revolution resulting from the doctrine of the
equality of man, or the very cruel wars and executions resulting from the
preaching of love. |
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But even admitting as correct all the cunningly devised arguments with
which these histories are filled- admitting that nations are governed by some
undefined force called an idea- history's essential question still remains
unanswered, and to the former power of monarchs and to the influence of advisers
and other people introduced by the universal historians, another, newer force-
the idea- is added, the connection of which with the masses needs explanation.
It is possible to understand that Napoleon had power and so events occurred;
with some effort one may even conceive that Napoleon together with other
influences was the cause of an event; but how a book, Le Contrat social, had the
effect of making Frenchmen begin to drown one another cannot be understood
without an explanation of the causal nexus of this new force with the event. |
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Undoubtedly some relation exists between all who live contemporaneously,
and so it is possible to find some connection between the intellectual activity
of men and their historical movements, just as such a connection may be found
between the movements of humanity and commerce, handicraft, gardening, or
anything else you please. But why intellectual activity is considered by the
historians of culture to be the cause or expression of the whole historical
movement is hard to understand. Only the following considerations can have led
the historians to such a conclusion: (1) that history is written by learned men,
and so it is natural and agreeable for them to think that the activity of their
class supplies the basis of the movement of all humanity, just as a similar
belief is natural and agreeable to traders, agriculturists, and soldiers (if
they do not express it, that is merely because traders and soldiers do not write
history), and (2) that spiritual activity, enlightenment, civilization, culture,
ideas, are all indistinct, indefinite conceptions under whose banner it is very
easy to use words having a still less definite meaning, and which can therefore
be readily introduced into any theory. |
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But not to speak of the intrinsic quality of histories of this kind
(which may possibly even be of use to someone for something) the histories of
culture, to which all general histories tend more and more to approximate, are
significant from the fact that after seriously and minutely examining various
religious, philosophic, and political doctrines as causes of events, as soon as
they have to describe an actual historic event such as the campaign of 1812 for
instance, they involuntarily describe it as resulting from an exercise of power-
and say plainly that that was the result of Napoleon's will. Speaking so, the
historians of culture involuntarily contradict themselves, and show that the new
force they have devised does not account for what happens in history, and that
history can only be explained by introducing a power which they apparently do
not recognize. |
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A locomotive is moving. Someone asks: "What moves it?" A
peasant says the devil moves it. Another man says the locomotive moves because
its wheels go round. A third asserts that the cause of its movement lies in the
smoke which the wind carries away. |
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The peasant is irrefutable. He has devised a complete explanation. To
refute him someone would have to prove to him that there is no devil, or another
peasant would have to explain to him that it is not the devil but a German, who
moves the locomotive. Only then, as a result of the contradiction, will they see
that they are both wrong. But the man who says that the movement of the wheels
is the cause refutes himself, for having once begun to analyze he ought to go on
and explain further why the wheels go round; and till he has reached the
ultimate cause of the movement of the locomotive in the pressure of steam in the
boiler, he has no right to stop in his search for the cause. The man who
explains the movement of the locomotive by the smoke that is carried back has
noticed that the wheels do not supply an explanation and has taken the first
sign that occurs to him and in his turn has offered that as an explanation. |
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The only conception that can explain the movement of the locomotive is
that of a force commensurate with the movement observed. |
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The only conception that can explain the movement of the peoples is that
of some force commensurate with the whole movement of the peoples. |
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Yet to supply this conception various historians take forces of different
kinds, all of which are incommensurate with the movement observed. Some see it
as a force directly inherent in heroes, as the peasant sees the devil in the
locomotive; others as a force resulting from several other forces, like the
movement of the wheels; others again as an intellectual influence, like the
smoke that is blown away. |
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So long as histories are written of separate individuals, whether
Caesars, Alexanders, Luthers, or Voltaires, and not the histories of all,
absolutely all those who take part in an event, it is quite impossible to
describe the movement of humanity without the conception of a force compelling
men to direct their activity toward a certain end. And the only such conception
known to historians is that of power. |
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This conception is the one handle by means of which the material of
history, as at present expounded, can be dealt with, and anyone who breaks that
handle off, as Buckle did, without finding some other method of treating
historical material, merely deprives himself of the one possible way of dealing
with it. The necessity of the conception of power as an explanation of
historical events is best demonstrated by the universal historians and
historians of culture themselves, for they professedly reject that conception
but inevitably have recourse to it at every step. |
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In dealing with humanity's inquiry, the science of history up to now is
like money in circulation- paper money and coin. The biographies and special
national histories are like paper money. They can be used and can circulate and
fulfill their purpose without harm to anyone and even advantageously, as long as
no one asks what is the security behind them. You need only forget to ask how
the will of heroes produces events, and such histories as Thiers' will be
interesting and instructive and may perhaps even possess a tinge of poetry. But
just as doubts of the real value of paper money arise either because, being easy
to make, too much of it gets made or because people try to exchange it for gold,
so also doubts concerning the real value of such histories arise either because
too many of them are written or because in his simplicity of heart someone
inquires: by what force did Napoleon do this?- that is, wants to exchange the
current paper money for the real gold of actual comprehension. |
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The writers of universal histories and of the history of culture are like
people who, recognizing the defects of paper money, decide to substitute for it
money made of metal that has not the specific gravity of gold. It may indeed
make jingling coin, but will do no more than that. Paper money may deceive the
ignorant, but nobody is deceived by tokens of base metal that have no value but
merely jingle. As gold is gold only if it is serviceable not merely for exchange
but also for use, so universal historians will be valuable only when they can
reply to history's essential question: what is power? The universal historians
give contradictory replies to that question, while the historians of culture
evade it and answer something quite different. And as counters of imitation gold
can be used only among a group of people who agree to accept them as gold, or
among those who do not know the nature of gold, so universal historians and
historians of culture, not answering humanity's essential question, serve as
currency for some purposes of their own, only in universities and among the mass
of readers who have a taste for what they call "serious reading." |
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Having abandoned the conception of the ancients as to the divine
subjection of the will of a nation to some chosen man and the subjection of that
man's will to the Deity, history cannot without contradictions take a single
step till it has chosen one of two things: either a return to the former belief
in the direct intervention of the Deity in human affairs or a definite
explanation of the meaning of the force producing historical events and termed
"power." |
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A return to the first is impossible, the belief has been destroyed; and
so it is essential to explain what is meant by power. |
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Napoleon ordered an army to be raised and go to war. We are so accustomed
to that idea and have become so used to it that the question: why did six
hundred thousand men go to fight when Napoleon uttered certain words, seems to
us senseless. He had the power and so what he ordered was done. |
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This reply is quite satisfactory if we believe that the power was given
him by God. But as soon as we do not admit that, it becomes essential to
determine what is this power of one man over others. |
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It cannot be the direct physical power of a strong man over a weak one- a
domination based on the application or threat of physical force, like the power
of Hercules; nor can it be based on the effect of moral force, as in their
simplicity some historians think who say that the leading figures in history are
heroes, that is, men gifted with a special strength of soul and mind called
genius. This power cannot be based on the predominance of moral strength, for,
not to mention heroes such as Napoleon about whose moral qualities opinions
differ widely, history shows us that neither a Louis XI nor a Metternich, who
ruled over millions of people, had any particular moral qualities, but on the
contrary were generally morally weaker than any of the millions they ruled over. |
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If the source of power lies neither in the physical nor in the moral
qualities of him who possesses it, it must evidently be looked for elsewhere- in
the relation to the people of the man who wields the power. |
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And that is how power is understood by the science of jurisprudence, that
exchange bank of history which offers to exchange history's understanding of
power for true gold. |
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Power is the collective will of the people transferred, by expressed or
tacit consent, to their chosen rulers. |
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In the domain of jurisprudence, which consists of discussions of how a
state and power might be arranged were it possible for all that to be arranged,
it is all very clear; but when applied to history that definition of power needs
explanation. |
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The science of jurisprudence regards the state and power as the ancients
regarded fire- namely, as something existing absolutely. But for history, the
state and power are merely phenomena, just as for modern physics fire is not an
element but a phenomenon. |
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From this fundamental difference between the view held by history and
that held by jurisprudence, it follows that jurisprudence can tell minutely how
in its opinion power should be constituted and what power- existing immutably
outside time- is, but to history's questions about the meaning of the mutations
of power in time it can answer nothing. |
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If power be the collective will of the people transferred to their ruler,
was Pugachev a representative of the will of the people? If not, then why was
Napoleon I? Why was Napoleon III a criminal when he was taken prisoner at
Boulogne, and why, later on, were those criminals whom he arrested? |
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Do palace revolutions- in which sometimes only two or three people take
part- transfer the will of the people to a new ruler? In international
relations, is the will of the people also transferred to their conqueror? Was
the will of the Confederation of the Rhine transferred to Napoleon in 1806? Was
the will of the Russian people transferred to Napoleon in 1809, when our army in
alliance with the French went to fight the Austrians? |
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To these questions three answers are possible: |
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Either to assume (1) that the will of the people is always
unconditionally transferred to the ruler or rulers they have chosen, and that
therefore every emergence of a new power, every struggle against the power once
appointed, should be absolutely regarded as an infringement of the real power;
or (2) that the will of the people is transferred to the rulers conditionally,
under definite and known conditions, and to show that all limitations,
conflicts, and even destructions of power result from a nonobservance by the
rulers of the conditions under which their power was entrusted to them; or (3)
that the will of the people is delegated to the rulers conditionally, but that
the conditions are unknown and indefinite, and that the appearance of several
authorities, their struggles and their falls, result solely from the greater or
lesser fulfillment by the rulers of these unknown conditions on which the will
of the people is transferred from some people to others. |
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And these are the three ways in which the historians do explain the
relation of the people to their rulers. |
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Some historians- those biographical and specialist historians already
referred to- in their simplicity failing to understand the question of the
meaning of power, seem to consider that the collective will of the people is
unconditionally transferred to historical persons, and therefore when describing
some single state they assume that particular power to be the one absolute and
real power, and that any other force opposing this is not a power but a
violation of power- mere violence. |
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Their theory, suitable for primitive and peaceful periods of history, has
the inconvenience- in application to complex and stormy periods in the life of
nations during which various powers arise simultaneously and struggle with one
another- that a Legitimist historian will prove that the National Convention,
the Directory, and Bonaparte were mere infringers of the true power, while a
Republican and a Bonapartist will prove: the one that the Convention and the
other that the Empire was the real power, and that all the others were
violations of power. Evidently the explanations furnished by these historians
being mutually contradictory can only satisfy young children. |
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Recognizing the falsity of this view of history, another set of
historians say that power rests on a conditional delegation of the will of the
people to their rulers, and that historical leaders have power only
conditionally on carrying out the program that the will of the people has by
tacit agreement prescribed to them. But what this program consists in these
historians do not say, or if they do they continually contradict one another. |
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Each historian, according to his view of what constitutes a nation's
progress, looks for these conditions in the greatness, wealth, freedom, or
enlightenment of citizens of France or some other country. But not to mention
the historians' contradictions as to the nature of this program- or even
admitting that some one general program of these conditions exists- the facts of
history almost always contradict that theory. If the conditions under which
power is entrusted consist in the wealth, freedom, and enlightenment of the
people, how is it that Louis XIV and Ivan the Terrible end their reigns
tranquilly, while Louis XVI and Charles I are executed by their people? To this
question historians reply that Louis XIV's activity, contrary to the program,
reacted on Louis XVI. But why did it not react on Louis XIV or on Louis XV- why
should it react just on Louis XVI? And what is the time limit for such
reactions? To these questions there are and can be no answers. Equally little
does this view explain why for several centuries the collective will is not
withdrawn from certain rulers and their heirs, and then suddenly during a period
of fifty years is transferred to the Convention, to the Directory, to Napoleon,
to Alexander, to Louis XVIII, to Napoleon again, to Charles X, to Louis
Philippe, to a Republican government, and to Napoleon III. When explaining these
rapid transfers of the people's will from from one individual to another,
especially in view of international relations, conquests, and alliances, the
historians are obliged to admit that some of these transfers are not normal
delegations of the people's will but are accidents dependent on cunning, on
mistakes, on craft, or on the weakness of a diplomatist, a ruler, or a party
leader. So that the greater part of the events of history- civil wars,
revolutions, and conquests- are presented by these historians not as the results
of free transferences of the people's will, but as results of the ill-directed
will of one or more individuals, that is, once again, as usurpations of power.
And so these historians also see and admit historical events which are
exceptions to the theory. |
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These historians resemble a botanist who, having noticed that some plants
grow from seeds producing two cotyledons, should insist that all that grows does
so by sprouting into two leaves, and that the palm, the mushroom, and even the
oak, which blossom into full growth and no longer resemble two leaves, are
deviations from the theory. |
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Historians of the third class assume that the will of the people is
transferred to historic personages conditionally, but that the conditions are
unknown to us. They say that historical personages have power only because they
fulfill the will of the people which has been delegated to them. |
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But in that case, if the force that moves nations lies not in the
historic leaders but in the nations themselves, what significance have those
leaders? |
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The leaders, these historians tell us, express the will of the people:
the activity of the leaders represents the activity of the people. |
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But in that case the question arises whether all the activity of the
leaders serves as an expression of the people's will or only some part of it. If
the whole activity of the leaders serves as the expression of the people's will,
as some historians suppose, then all the details of the court scandals contained
in the biographies of a Napoleon or a Catherine serve to express the life of the
nation, which is evident nonsense; but if it is only some particular side of the
activity of an historical leader which serves to express the people's life, as
other so-called "philosophical" historians believe, then to determine
which side of the activity of a leader expresses the nation's life, we have
first of all to know in what the nation's life consists. |
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Met by this difficulty historians of that class devise some most obscure,
impalpable, and general abstraction which can cover all conceivable occurrences,
and declare this abstraction to be the aim of humanity's movement. The most
usual generalizations adopted by almost all the historians are: freedom,
equality, enlightenment, progress, civilization, and culture. Postulating some
generalization as the goal of the movement of humanity, the historians study the
men of whom the greatest number of monuments have remained: kings, ministers,
generals, authors, reformers, popes, and journalists, to the extent to which in
their opinion these persons have promoted or hindered that abstraction. But as
it is in no way proved that the aim of humanity does consist in freedom,
equality, enlightenment, or civilization, and as the connection of the people
with the rulers and enlighteners of humanity is only based on the arbitrary
assumption that the collective will of the people is always transferred to the
men whom we have noticed, it happens that the activity of the millions who
migrate, burn houses, abandon agriculture, and destroy one another never is
expressed in the account of the activity of some dozen people who did not burn
houses, practice agriculture, or slay their fellow creatures. |
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History proves this at every turn. Is the ferment of the peoples of the
west at the end of the eighteenth century and their drive eastward explained by
the activity of Louis XIV, XV, and XVI, their mistresses and ministers, and by
the lives of Napoleon, Rousseau, Diderot, Beaumarchais, and others? |
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Is the movement of the Russian people eastward to Kazan and Siberia
expressed by details of the morbid character of Ivan the Terrible and by his
correspondence with Kurbski? |
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Is the movement of the peoples at the time of the Crusades explained by
the life and activity of the Godfreys and the Louis-es and their ladies? For us
that movement of the peoples from west to east, without leaders, with a crowd of
vagrants, and with Peter the Hermit, remains incomprehensible. And yet more
incomprehensible is the cessation of that movement when a rational and sacred
aim for the Crusade- the deliverance of Jerusalem- had been clearly defined by
historic leaders. Popes, kings, and knights incited the peoples to free the Holy
Land; but the people did not go, for the unknown cause which had previously
impelled them to go no longer existed. The history of the Godfreys and the
Minnesingers can evidently not cover the life of the peoples. And the history of
the Godfreys and the Minnesingers has remained the history of Godfreys and
Minnesingers, but the history of the life of the peoples and their impulses has
remained unknown. |
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Still less does the history of authors and reformers explain to us the
life of the peoples. |
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The history of culture explains to us the impulses and conditions of life
and thought of a writer or a reformer. We learn that Luther had a hot temper and
said such and such things; we learn that Rousseau was suspicious and wrote such
and such books; but we do not learn why after the Reformation the peoples
massacred one another, nor why during the French Revolution they guillotined one
another. |
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If we unite both these kinds of history, as is done by the newest
historians, we shall have the history of monarchs and writers, but not the
history of the life of the peoples. |
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The life of the nations is not contained in the lives of a few men, for
the connection between those men and the nations has not been found. The theory
that this connection is based on the transference of the collective will of a
people to certain historical personages is an hypothesis unconfirmed by the
experience of history. |
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The theory of the transference of the collective will of the people to
historic persons may perhaps explain much in the domain of jurisprudence and be
essential for its purposes, but in its application to history, as soon as
revolutions, conquests, or civil wars occur- that is, as soon as history begins-
that theory explains nothing. |
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The theory seems irrefutable just because the act of transference of the
people's will cannot be verified, for it never occurred. |
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Whatever happens and whoever may stand at the head of affairs, the theory
can always say that such and such a person took the lead because the collective
will was transferred to him. |
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The replies this theory gives to historical questions are like the
replies of a man who, watching the movements of a herd of cattle and paying no
attention to the varying quality of the pasturage in different parts of the
field, or to the driving of the herdsman, should attribute the direction the
herd takes to what animal happens to be at its head. |
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"The herd goes in that direction because the animal in front leads
it and the collective will of all the other animals is vested in that
leader." This is what historians of the first class say- those who assume
the unconditional transference of the people's will. |
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"If the animals leading the herd change, this happens because the
collective will of all the animals is transferred from one leader to another,
according to whether the animal is or is not leading them in the direction
selected by the whole herd." Such is the reply historians who assume that
the collective will of the people is delegated to rulers under conditions which
they regard as known. (With this method of observation it often happens that the
observer, influenced by the direction he himself prefers, regards those as
leaders who, owing to the people's change of direction, are no longer in front,
but on one side, or even in the rear.) |
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"If the animals in front are continually changing and the direction
of the whole herd is constantly altered, this is because in order to follow a
given direction the animals transfer their will to the animals that have
attracted our attention, and to study the movements of the herd we must watch
the movements of all the prominent animals moving on all sides of the
herd." So say the third class of historians who regard all historical
persons, from monarchs to journalists, as the expression of their age. |
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The theory of the transference of the will of the people to historic
persons is merely a paraphrase- a restatement of the question in other words. |
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What causes historical events? Power. What is power? Power is the
collective will of the people transferred to one person. Under what condition is
the will of the people delegated to one person? On condition that that person
expresses the will of the whole people. That is, power is power: in other words,
power is a word the meaning of which we do not understand. |
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If the realm of human knowledge were confined to abstract reasoning, then
having subjected to criticism the explanation of "power" that
juridical science gives us, humanity would conclude that power is merely a word
and has no real existence. But to understand phenomena man has, besides abstract
reasoning, experience by which he verifies his reflections. And experience tells
us that power is not merely a word but an actually existing phenomenon. |
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Not to speak of the fact that no description of the collective activity
of men can do without the conception of power, the existence of power is proved
both by history and by observing contemporary events. |
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Whenever an event occurs a man appears or men appear, by whose will the
event seems to have taken place. Napoleon III issues a decree and the French go
to Mexico. The King of Prussia and Bismarck issue decrees and an army enters
Bohemia. Napoleon I issues a decree and an army enters Russia. Alexander I gives
a command and the French submit to the Bourbons. Experience shows us that
whatever event occurs it is always related to the will of one or of several men
who have decreed it. |
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The historians, in accord with the old habit of acknowledging divine
intervention in human affairs, want to see the cause of events in the expression
of the will of someone endowed with power, but that supposition is not confirmed
either by reason or by experience. |
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On the one side reflection shows that the expression of a man's will- his
words- are only part of the general activity expressed in an event, as for
instance in a war or a revolution, and so without assuming an incomprehensible,
supernatural force- a miracle- one cannot admit that words can be the immediate
cause of the movements of millions of men. On the other hand, even if we
admitted that words could be the cause of events, history shows that the
expression of the will of historical personages does not in most cases produce
any effect, that is to say, their commands are often not executed, and sometimes
the very opposite of what they order occurs. |
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Without admitting divine intervention in the affairs of humanity we
cannot regard "power" as the cause of events. |
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|
Power, from the standpoint of experience, is merely the relation that
exists between the expression of someone's will and the execution of that will
by others. |
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To explain the conditions of that relationship we must first establish a
conception of the expression of will, referring it to man and not to the Deity. |
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If the Deity issues a command, expresses His will, as ancient history
tells us, the expression of that will is independent of time and is not caused
by anything, for the Divinity is not controlled by an event. But speaking of
commands that are the expression of the will of men acting in time and in
relation to one another, to explain the connection of commands with events we
must restore: (1) the condition of all that takes place: the continuity of
movement in time both of the events and of the person who commands, and (2) the
inevitability of the connection between the person commanding and those who
execute his command. |
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Only the expression of the will of the Deity, not dependent on time, can
relate to a whole series of events occurring over a period of years or
centuries, and only the Deity, independent of everything, can by His sole will
determine the direction of humanity's movement; but man acts in time and himself
takes part in what occurs. |
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Reinstating the first condition omitted, that of time, we see that no
command can be executed without some preceding order having been given rendering
the execution of the last command possible. |
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No command ever appears spontaneously, or itself covers a whole series of
occurrences; but each command follows from another, and never refers to a whole
series of events but always to one moment only of an event. |
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|
When, for instance, we say that Napoleon ordered armies to go to war, we
combine in one simultaneous expression a whole series of consecutive commands
dependent one on another. Napoleon could not have commanded an invasion of
Russia and never did so. Today he ordered such and such papers to be written to
Vienna, to Berlin, and to Petersburg; tomorrow such and such decrees and orders
to the army, the fleet, the commissariat, and so on and so on- millions of
commands, which formed a whole series corresponding to a series of events which
brought the French armies into Russia. |
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If throughout his reign Napoleon gave commands concerning an invasion of
England and expended on no other undertaking so much time and effort, and yet
during his whole reign never once attempted to execute that design but undertook
an expedition into Russia, with which country he considered it desirable to be
in alliance (a conviction he repeatedly expressed)- this came about because his
commands did not correspond to the course of events in the first case, but did
so correspond in the latter. |
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For an order to be certainly executed, it is necessary that a man should
order what can be executed. But to know what can and what cannot be executed is
impossible, not only in the case of Napoleon's invasion of Russia in which
millions participated, but even in the simplest event, for in either case
millions of obstacles may arise to prevent its execution. Every order executed
is always one of an immense number unexecuted. All the impossible orders
inconsistent with the course of events remain unexecuted. Only the possible ones
get linked up with a consecutive series of commands corresponding to a series of
events, and are executed. |
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Our false conception that an event is caused by a command which precedes
it is due to the fact that when the event has taken place and out of thousands
of others those few commands which were consistent with that event have been
executed, we forget about the others that were not executed because they could
not be. Apart from that, the chief source of our error in this matter is due to
the fact that in the historical accounts a whole series of innumerable, diverse,
and petty events, such for instance as all those which led the French armies to
Russia, is generalized into one event in accord with the result produced by that
series of events, and corresponding with this generalization the whole series of
commands is also generalized into a single expression of will. |
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We say that Napoleon wished to invade Russia and invaded it. In reality
in all Napoleon's activity we never find anything resembling an expression of
that wish, but find a series of orders, or expressions of his will, very
variously and indefinitely directed. Amid a long series of unexecuted orders of
Napoleon's one series, for the campaign of 1812, was carried out- not because
those orders differed in any way from the other, unexecuted orders but because
they coincided with the course of events that led the French army into Russia;
just as in stencil work this or that figure comes out not because the color was
laid on from this side or in that way, but because it was laid on from all sides
over the figure cut in the stencil. |
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So that examining the relation in time of the commands to the events, we
find that a command can never be the cause of the event, but that a certain
definite dependence exists between the two. |
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To understand in what this dependence consists it is necessary to
reinstate another omitted condition of every command proceeding not from the
Deity but from a man, which is, that the man who gives the command himself takes
part in |
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This relation of the commander to those he commands is just what is
called power. This relation consists in the following: |
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For common action people always unite in certain combinations, in which
regardless of the difference of the aims set for the common action, the relation
between those taking part in it is always the same. |
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|
Men uniting in these combinations always assume such relations toward one
another that the larger number take a more direct share, and the smaller number
a less direct share, in the collective action for which they have combined. |
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Of all the combinations in which men unite for collective action one of
the most striking and definite examples is an army. |
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|
Every army is composed of lower grades of the service- the rank and file-
of whom there are always the greatest number; of the next higher military rank-
corporals and noncommissioned officers of whom there are fewer, and of
still-higher officers of whom there are still fewer, and so on to the highest
military command which is concentrated in one person. |
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|
A military organization may be quite correctly compared to a cone, of
which the base with the largest diameter consists of the rank and file; the next
higher and smaller section of the cone consists of the next higher grades of the
army, and so on to the apex, the point of which will represent the commander in
chief. |
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|
The soldiers, of whom there are the most, form the lower section of the
cone and its base. The soldier himself does the stabbing, hacking, burning, and
pillaging, and always receives orders for these actions from men above him; he
himself never gives an order. The noncommissioned officers (of whom there are
fewer) perform the action itself less frequently than the soldiers, but they
already give commands. An officer still less often acts directly himself, but
commands still more frequently. A general does nothing but command the troops,
indicates the objective, and hardly ever uses a weapon himself. The commander in
chief never takes direct part in the action itself, but only gives general
orders concerning the movement of the mass of the troops. A similar relation of
people to one another is seen in every combination of men for common activity-
in agriculture, trade, and every administration. |
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And so without particularly analyzing all the contiguous sections of a
cone and of the ranks of an army, or the ranks and positions in any
administrative or public business whatever from the lowest to the highest, we
see a law by which men, to take associated action, combine in such relations
that the more directly they participate in performing the action the less they
can command and the more numerous they are, while the less their direct
participation in the action itself, the more they command and the fewer of them
there are; rising in this way from the lowest ranks to the man at the top, who
takes the least direct share in the action and directs his activity chiefly to
commanding. |
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This relation of the men who command to those they command is what
constitutes the essence of the conception called power. |
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Having restored the condition of time under which all events occur, find
that a command is executed only when it is related to a corresponding series of
events. Restoring the essential condition of relation between those who command
and those who execute, we find that by the very nature of the case those who
command take the smallest part in the action itself and that their activity is
exclusively directed to commanding. |
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When an event is taking place people express their opinions and wishes
about it, and as the event results from the collective activity of many people,
some one of the opinions or wishes expressed is sure to be fulfilled if but
approximately. When one of the opinions expressed is fulfilled, that opinion
gets connected with the event as a command preceding it. |
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Men are hauling a log. Each of them expresses his opinion as to how and
where to haul it. They haul the log away, and it happens that this is done as
one of them said. He ordered it. There we have command and power in their
primary form. The man who worked most with his hands could not think so much
about what he was doing, or reflect on or command what would result from the
common activity; while the man who commanded more would evidently work less with
his hands on account of his greater verbal activity. |
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When some larger concourse of men direct their activity to a common aim
there is a yet sharper division of those who, because their activity is given to
directing and commanding, take less less part in the direct work. |
|
|
When a man works alone he always has a certain set of reflections which
as it seems to him directed his past activity, justify his present activity, and
guide him in planning his future actions. Just the same is done by a concourse
of people, allowing those who do not take a direct part in the activity to
devise considerations, justifications, and surmises concerning their collective
activity. |
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|
For reasons known or unknown to us the French began to drown and kill one
another. And corresponding to the event its justification appears in people's
belief that this was necessary for the welfare of France, for liberty, and for
equality. People ceased to kill one another, and this event was accompanied by
its justification in the necessity for a centralization of power, resistance to
Europe, and so on. Men went from the west to the east killing their fellow men,
and the event was accompanied by phrases about the glory of France, the baseness
of England, and so on. History shows us that these justifications of the events
have no common sense and are all contradictory, as in the case of killing a man
as the result of recognizing his rights, and the killing of millions in Russia
for the humiliation of England. But these justifications have a very necessary
significance in their own day. |
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These justifications release those who produce the events from moral
responsibility. These temporary aims are like the broom fixed in front of a
locomotive to clear the snow from the rails in front: they clear men's moral
responsibilities from their path. |
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|
Without such justification there would be no reply to the simplest
question that presents itself when examining each historical event. How is it
that millions of men commit collective crimes- make war, commit murder, and so
on? |
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|
With the present complex forms of political and social life in Europe can
any event that is not prescribed, decreed, or ordered by monarchs, ministers,
parliaments, or newspapers be imagined? Is there any collective action which
cannot find its justification in political unity, in patriotism, in the balance
of power, or in civilization? So that every event that occurs inevitably
coincides with some expressed wish and, receiving a justification, presents
itself as the result of the will of one man or of several men. |
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In whatever direction a ship moves, the flow of the waves it cuts will
always be noticeable ahead of it. To those on board the ship the movement of
those waves will be the only perceptible motion. |
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|
Only by watching closely moment by moment the movement of that flow and
comparing it with the movement of the ship do we convince ourselves that every
bit of it is occasioned by the forward movement of the ship, and that we were
led into error by the fact that we ourselves were imperceptibly moving. |
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|
We see the same if we watch moment by moment the movement of historical
characters (that is, re-establish the inevitable condition of all that occurs-
the continuity of movement in time) and do not lose sight of the essential
connection of historical persons with the masses. |
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|
When the ship moves in one direction there is one and the same wave ahead
of it, when it turns frequently the wave ahead of it also turns frequently. But
wherever it may turn there always will be the wave anticipating its movement. |
|
|
Whatever happens it always appears that just that event was foreseen and
decreed. Wherever the ship may go, the rush of water which neither directs nor
increases its movement foams ahead of it, and at a distance seems to us not
merely to move of itself but to govern the ship's movement also. |
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Examining only those expressions of the will of historical persons which,
as commands, were related to events, historians have assumed that the events
depended on those commands. But examining the events themselves and the
connection in which the historical persons stood to the people, we have found
that they and their orders were dependent on events. The incontestable proof of
this deduction is that, however many commands were issued, the event does not
take place unless there are other causes for it, but as soon as an event occurs-
be it what it may- then out of all the continually expressed wishes of different
people some will always be found which by their meaning and their time of
utterance are related as commands to the events. |
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|
Arriving at this conclusion we can reply directly and positively to these
two essential questions of history: |
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|
(1) What is power? |
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|
(2) What force produces the movement of the nations? |
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|
(1) Power is the relation of a given person to other individuals, in
which the more this person expresses opinions, predictions, and justifications
of the collective action that is performed, the less is his participation in
that action. |
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|
(2) The movement of nations is caused not by power, nor by intellectual
activity, nor even by a combination of the two as historians have supposed, but
by the activity of all the people who participate in the events, and who always
combine in such a way that those taking the largest direct share in the event
take on themselves the least responsibility and vice versa. |
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|
Morally the wielder of power appears to cause the event; physically it is
those who submit to the power. But as the moral activity is inconceivable
without the physical, the cause of the event is neither in the one nor in the
other but in the union of the two. |
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|
Or in other words, the conception of a cause is inapplicable to the
phenomena we are examining. |
|
|
In the last analysis we reach the circle of infinity- that final limit to
which in every domain of thought man's reason arrives if it is not playing with
the subject. Electricity produces heat, heat produces electricity. Atoms attract
each other and atoms repel one another. |
|
|
Speaking of the interaction of heat and electricity and of atoms, we
cannot say why this occurs, and we say that it is so because it is inconceivable
otherwise, because it must be so and that it is a law. The same applies to
historical events. Why war and revolution occur we do not know. We only know
that to produce the one or the other action, people combine in a certain
formation in which they all take part, and we say that this is so because it is
unthinkable otherwise, or in other words that it is a law. |
|
|
If history dealt only with external phenomena, the establishment of this
simple and obvious law would suffice and we should have finished our argument.
But the law of history relates to man. A particle of matter cannot tell us that
it does not feel the law of attraction or repulsion and that that law is untrue,
but man, who is the subject of history, says plainly: I am free and am therefore
not subject to the law. |
|
|
The presence of the problem of man's free will, though unexpressed, is
felt at every step of history. |
|
|
All seriously thinking historians have involuntarily encountered this
question. All the contradictions and obscurities of history and the false path
historical science has followed are due solely to the lack of a solution of that
question. |
|
|
If the will of every man were free, that is, if each man could act as he
pleased, all history would be a series of disconnected incidents. |
|
|
If in a thousand years even one man in a million could act freely, that
is, as he chose, it is evident that one single free act of that man's in
violation of the laws governing human action would destroy the possibility of
the existence of any laws for the whole of humanity. |
|
|
If there be a single law governing the actions of men, free will cannot
exist, for then man's will is subject to that law. |
|
|
In this contradiction lies the problem of free will, which from most
ancient times has occupied the best human minds and from most ancient times has
been presented in its whole tremendous significance. |
|
|
The problem is that regarding man as a subject of observation from
whatever point of view- theological, historical, ethical, or philosophic- we
find a general law of necessity to which he (like all that exists) is subject.
But regarding him from within ourselves as what we are conscious of, we feel
ourselves to be free. |
|
|
This consciousness is a source of self-cognition quite apart from and
independent of reason. Through his reason man observes himself, but only through
consciousness does he know himself. |
|
|
Apart from consciousness of self no observation or application of reason
is conceivable. |
|
|
To understand, observe, and draw conclusions, man must first of all be
conscious of himself as living. A man is only conscious of himself as a living
being by the fact that he wills, that is, is conscious of his volition. But his
will- which forms the essence of his life- man recognizes (and can but
recognize) as free. |
|
|
If, observing himself, man sees that his will is always directed by one
and the same law (whether he observes the necessity of taking food, using his
brain, or anything else) he cannot recognize this never-varying direction of his
will otherwise than as a limitation of it. Were it not free it could not be
limited. A man's will seems to him to be limited just because he is not
conscious of it except as free. |
|
|
You say: I am not and am not free. But I have lifted my hand and let it
fall. Everyone understands that this illogical reply is an irrefutable
demonstration of freedom. |
|
|
That reply is the expression of a consciousness that is not subject to
reason. |
|
|
If the consciousness of freedom were not a separate and independent
source of self-consciousness it would be subject to reasoning and to experience,
but in fact such subjection does not exist and is inconceivable. |
|
|
A series of experiments and arguments proves to every man that he, as an
object of observation, is subject to certain laws, and man submits to them and
never resists the laws of gravity or impermeability once he has become
acquainted with them. But the same series of experiments and arguments proves to
him that the complete freedom of which he is conscious in himself is impossible,
and that his every action depends on his organization, his character, and the
motives acting upon him; yet man never submits to the deductions of these
experiments and arguments. Having learned from experiment and argument that a
stone falls downwards, a man indubitably believes this and always expects the
law that he has learned to be fulfilled. |
|
|
But learning just as certainly that his will is subject to laws, he does
not and cannot believe this. |
|
|
However often experiment and reasoning may show a man that under the same
conditions and with the same character he will do the same thing as before, yet
when under the same conditions and with the same character he approaches for the
thousandth time the action that always ends in the same way, he feels as
certainly convinced as before the experiment that he can act as he pleases.
Every man, savage or sage, however incontestably reason and experiment may prove
to him that it is impossible to imagine two different courses of action in
precisely the same conditions, feels that without this irrational conception
(which constitutes the essence of freedom) he cannot imagine life. He feels that
however impossible it may be, it is so, for without this conception of freedom
not only would he be unable to understand life, but he would be unable to live
for a single moment. |
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He could not live, because all man's efforts, all his impulses to life,
are only efforts to increase freedom. Wealth and poverty, fame and obscurity,
power and subordination, strength and weakness, health and disease, culture and
ignorance, work and leisure, repletion and hunger, virtue and vice, are only
greater or lesser degrees of freedom. |
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A man having no freedom cannot be conceived of except as deprived of
life. |
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If the conception of freedom appears to reason to be a senseless
contradiction like the possibility of performing two actions at one and the same
instant of time, or of an effect without a cause, that only proves that
consciousness is not subject to reason. |
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This unshakable, irrefutable consciousness of freedom, uncontrolled by
experiment or argument, recognized by all thinkers and felt by everyone without
exception, this consciousness without which no conception of man is possible
constitutes the other side of the question. |
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Man is the creation of an all-powerful, all-good, and all-seeing God.
What is sin, the conception of which arises from the consciousness of man's
freedom? That is a question for theology. |
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The actions of men are subject to general immutable laws expressed in
statistics. What is man's responsibility to society, the conception of which
results from the conception of freedom? That is a question for jurisprudence. |
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Man's actions proceed from his innate character and the motives acting
upon him. What is conscience and the perception of right and wrong in actions
that follows from the consciousness of freedom? That is a question for ethics. |
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Man in connection with the general life of humanity appears subject to
laws which determine that life. But the same man apart from that connection
appears to free. How should the past life of nations and of humanity be
regarded- as the result of the free, or as the result of the constrained,
activity of man? That is a question for history. |
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Only in our self-confident day of the popularization of knowledge- thanks
to that most powerful engine of ignorance, the diffusion of printed matter- has
the question of the freedom of will been put on a level on which the question
itself cannot exist. In our time the majority of so-called advanced people- that
is, the crowd of ignoramuses- have taken the work of the naturalists who deal
with one side of the question for a solution of the whole problem. |
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They say and write and print that the soul and freedom do not exist, for
the life of man is expressed by muscular movements and muscular movements are
conditioned by the activity of the nerves; the soul and free will do not exist
because at an unknown period of time we sprang from the apes. They say this, not
at all suspecting that thousands of years ago that same law of necessity which
with such ardor they are now trying to prove by physiology and comparative
zoology was not merely acknowledged by all the religions and all the thinkers,
but has never been denied. They do not see that the role of the natural sciences
in this matter is merely to serve as an instrument for the illumination of one
side of it. For the fact that, from the point of view of observation, reason and
the will are merely secretions of the brain, and that man following the general
law may have developed from lower animals at some unknown period of time, only
explains from a fresh side the truth admitted thousands of years ago by all the
religious and philosophic theories- that from the point of view of reason man is
subject to the law of necessity; but it does not advance by a hair's breadth the
solution of the question, which has another, opposite, side, based on the
consciousness of freedom. |
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If men descended from the apes at an unknown period of time, that is as
comprehensible as that they were made from a handful of earth at a certain
period of time (in the first case the unknown quantity is the time, in the
second case it is the origin); and the question of how man's consciousness of
freedom is to be reconciled with the law of necessity to which he is subject
cannot be solved by comparative physiology and zoology, for in a frog, a rabbit,
or an ape, we can observe only the muscular nervous activity, but in man we
observe consciousness as well as the muscular and nervous activity. |
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The naturalists and their followers, thinking they can solve this
question, are like plasterers set to plaster one side of the walls of a church
who, availing themselves of the absence of the chief superintendent of the work,
should in an access of zeal plaster over the windows, icons, woodwork, and still
unbuttressed walls, and should be delighted that from their point of view as
plasterers, everything is now so smooth and regular. |
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For the solution of the question of free will or inevitability, history
has this advantage over other branches of knowledge in which the question is
dealt with, that for history this question does not refer to the essence of
man's free will but its manifestation in the past and under certain conditions. |
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In regard to this question, history stands to the other sciences as
experimental science stands to abstract science. |
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The subject for history is not man's will itself but our presentation of
it. |
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And so for history, the insoluble mystery presented by the
incompatibility of free will and inevitability does not exist as it does for
theology, ethics, and philosophy. History surveys a presentation of man's life
in which the union of these two contradictions has already taken place. |
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In actual life each historic event, each human action, is very clearly
and definitely understood without any sense of contradiction, although each
event presents itself as partly free and partly compulsory. |
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To solve the question of how freedom and necessity are combined and what
constitutes the essence of these two conceptions, the philosophy of history can
and should follow a path contrary to that taken by other sciences. Instead of
first defining the conceptions of freedom and inevitability in themselves, and
then ranging the phenomena of life under those definitions, history should
deduce a definition of the conception of freedom and inevitability themselves
from the immense quantity of phenomena of which it is cognizant and that always
appear dependent on these two elements. |
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Whatever presentation of the activity of many men or of an individual we
may consider, we always regard it as the result partly of man's free will and
partly of the law of inevitability. |
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Whether we speak of the migration of the peoples and the incursions of
the barbarians, or of the decrees of Napoleon III, or of someone's action an
hour ago in choosing one direction out of several for his walk, we are
unconscious of any contradiction. The degree of freedom and inevitability
governing the actions of these people is clearly defined for us. |
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Our conception of the degree of freedom often varies according to
differences in the point of view from which we regard the event, but every human
action appears to us as a certain combination of freedom and inevitability. In
every action we examine we see a certain measure of freedom and a certain
measure of inevitability. And always the more freedom we see in any action the
less inevitability do we perceive, and the more inevitability the less freedom. |
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The proportion of freedom to inevitability decreases and increases
according to the point of view from which the action is regarded, but their
relation is always one of inverse proportion. |
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A sinking man who clutches at another and drowns him; or a hungry mother
exhausted by feeding her baby, who steals some food; or a man trained to
discipline who on duty at the word of command kills a defenseless man- seem less
guilty, that is, less free and more subject to the law of necessity, to one who
knows the circumstances in which these people were placed, and more free to one
who does not know that the man was himself drowning, that the mother was hungry,
that the soldier was in the ranks, and so on. Similarly a man who committed a
murder twenty years ago and has since lived peaceably and harmlessly in society
seems less guilty and his action more due to the law of inevitability, to
someone who considers his action after twenty years have elapsed than to one who
examined it the day after it was committed. And in the same way every action of
an insane, intoxicated, or highly excited man appears less free and more
inevitable to one who knows the mental condition of him who committed the
action, and seems more free and less inevitable to one who does not know it. In
all these cases the conception of freedom is increased or diminished and the
conception of compulsion is correspondingly decreased or increased, according to
the point of view from which the action is regarded. So that the greater the
conception of necessity the smaller the conception of freedom and vice versa. |
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Religion, the common sense of mankind, the science of jurisprudence, and
history itself understand alike this relation between necessity and freedom. |
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All cases without exception in which our conception of freedom and
necessity is increased and diminished depend on three considerations: |
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(1) The relation to the external world of the man who commits the deeds. |
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(2) His relation to time. |
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(3) His relation to the causes leading to the action. |
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The first consideration is the clearness of our perception of the man's
relation to the external world and the greater or lesser clearness of our
understanding of the definite position occupied by the man in relation to
everything coexisting with him. This is what makes it evident that a drowning
man is less free and more subject to necessity than one standing on dry ground,
and that makes the actions of a man closely connected with others in a thickly
populated district, or of one bound by family, official, or business duties,
seem certainly less free and more subject to necessity than those of a man
living in solitude and seclusion. |
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If we consider a man alone, apart from his relation to everything around
him, each action of his seems to us free. But if we see his relation to anything
around him, if we see his connection with anything whatever- with a man who
speaks to him, a book he reads, the work on which he is engaged, even with the
air he breathes or the light that falls on the things about him- we see that
each of these circumstances has an influence on him and controls at least some
side of his activity. And the more we perceive of these influences the more our
conception of his freedom diminishes and the more our conception of the
necessity that weighs on him increases. |
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The second consideration is the more or less evident time relation of the
man to the world and the clearness of our perception of the place the man's
action occupies in time. That is the ground which makes the fall of the first
man, resulting in the production of the human race, appear evidently less free
than a man's entry into marriage today. It is the reason why the life and
activity of people who lived centuries ago and are connected with me in time
cannot seem to me as free as the life of a contemporary, the consequences of
which are still unknown to me. |
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The degree of our conception of freedom or inevitability depends in this
respect on the greater or lesser lapse of time between the performance of the
action and our judgment of it. |
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If I examine an act I performed a moment ago in approximately the same
circumstances as those I am in now, my action appears to me undoubtedly free.
But if I examine an act performed a month ago, then being in different
circumstances, I cannot help recognizing that if that act had not been committed
much that resulted from it- good, agreeable, and even essential- would not have
taken place. If I reflect on an action still more remote, ten years ago or more,
then the consequences of my action are still plainer to me and I find it hard to
imagine what would have happened had that action not been performed. The farther
I go back in memory, or what is the same thing the farther I go forward in my
judgment, the more doubtful becomes my belief in the freedom of my action. |
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In history we find a very similar progress of conviction concerning the
part played by free will in the general affairs of humanity. A contemporary
event seems to us to be indubitably the doing of all the known participants, but
with a more remote event we already see its inevitable results which prevent our
considering anything else possible. And the farther we go back in examining
events the less arbitrary do they appear. |
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The Austro-Prussian war appears to us undoubtedly the result of the
crafty conduct of Bismarck, and so on. The Napoleonic wars still seem to us,
though already questionably, to be the outcome of their heroes' will. But in the
Crusades we already see an event occupying its definite place in history and
without which we cannot imagine the modern history of Europe, though to the
chroniclers of the Crusades that event appeared as merely due to the will of
certain people. In regard to the migration of the peoples it does not enter
anyone's head today to suppose that the renovation of the European world
depended on Attila's caprice. The farther back in history the object of our
observation lies, the more doubtful does the free will of those concerned in the
event become and the more manifest the law of inevitability. |
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The third consideration is the degree to which we apprehend that endless
chain of causation inevitably demanded by reason, in which each phenomenon
comprehended, and therefore man's every action, must have its definite place as
a result of what has gone before and as a cause of what will follow. |
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The better we are acquainted with the physiological, psychological, and
historical laws deduced by observation and by which man is controlled, and the
more correctly we perceive the physiological, psychological, and historical
causes of the action, and the simpler the action we are observing and the less
complex the character and mind of the man in question, the more subject to
inevitability and the less free do our actions and those of others appear. |
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When we do not at all understand the cause of an action, whether a crime,
a good action, or even one that is simply nonmoral, we ascribe a greater amount
of freedom to it. In the case of a crime we most urgently demand the punishment
for such an act; in the case of a virtuous act we rate its merit most highly. In
an indifferent case we recognize in it more individuality, originality, and
independence. But if even one of the innumerable causes of the act is known to
us we recognize a certain element of necessity and are less insistent on
punishment for the crime, or the acknowledgment of the merit of the virtuous
act, or the freedom of the apparently original action. That a criminal was
reared among male factors mitigates his fault in our eyes. The self-sacrifice of
a father or mother, or self-sacrifice with the possibility of a reward, is more
comprehensible than gratuitous self-sacrifice, and therefore seems less
deserving of sympathy and less the result of free will. The founder of a sect or
party, or an inventor, impresses us less when we know how or by what the way was
prepared for his activity. If we have a large range of examples, if our
observation is constantly directed to seeking the correlation of cause and
effect in people's actions, their actions appear to us more under compulsion and
less free the more correctly we connect the effects with the causes. If we
examined simple actions and had a vast number of such actions under observation,
our conception of their inevitability would be still greater. The dishonest
conduct of the son of a dishonest father, the misconduct of a woman who had
fallen into bad company, a drunkard's relapse into drunkenness, and so on are
actions that seem to us less free the better we understand their cause. If the
man whose actions we are considering is on a very low stage of mental
development, like a child, a madman, or a simpleton- then, knowing the causes of
the act and the simplicity of the character and intelligence in question, we see
so large an element of necessity and so little free will that as soon as we know
the cause prompting the action we can foretell the result. |
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On these three considerations alone is based the conception of
irresponsibility for crimes and the extenuating circumstances admitted by all
legislative codes. The responsibility appears greater or less according to our
greater or lesser knowledge of the circumstances in which the man was placed
whose action is being judged, and according to the greater or lesser interval of
time between the commission of the action and its investigation, and according
to the greater or lesser understanding of the causes that led to the action. |
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Thus our conception of free will and inevitability gradually diminishes
or increases according to the greater or lesser connection with the external
world, the greater or lesser remoteness of time, and the greater or lesser
dependence on the causes in relation to which we contemplate a man's life. |
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So that if we examine the case of a man whose connection with the
external world is well known, where the time between the action and its
examination is great, and where the causes of the action are most accessible, we
get the conception of a maximum of inevitability and a minimum of free will. If
we examine a man little dependent on external conditions, whose action was
performed very recently, and the causes of whose action are beyond our ken, we
get the conception of a minimum of inevitability and a maximum of freedom. |
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In neither case- however we may change our point of view, however plain
we may make to ourselves the connection between the man and the external world,
however inaccessible it may be to us, however long or short the period of time,
however intelligible or incomprehensible the causes of the action may be- can we
ever conceive either complete freedom or complete necessity. |
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(1) To whatever degree we may imagine a man to be exempt from the
influence of the external world, we never get a conception of freedom in space.
Every human action is inevitably conditioned by what surrounds him and by his
own body. I lift my arm and let it fall. My action seems to me free; but asking
myself whether I could raise my arm in every direction, I see that I raised it
in the direction in which there was least obstruction to that action either from
things around me or from the construction of my own body. I chose one out of all
the possible directions because in it there were fewest obstacles. For my action
to be free it was necessary that it should encounter no obstacles. To conceive
of a man being free we must imagine him outside space, which is evidently
impossible. |
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(2) However much we approximate the time of judgment to the time of the
deed, we never get a conception of freedom in time. For if I examine an action
committed a second ago I must still recognize it as not being free, for it is
irrevocably linked to the moment at which it was committed. Can I lift my arm? I
lift it, but ask myself: could I have abstained from lifting my arm at the
moment that has already passed? To convince myself of this I do not lift it the
next moment. But I am not now abstaining from doing so at the first moment when
I asked the question. Time has gone by which I could not detain, the arm I then
lifted is no longer the same as the arm I now refrain from lifting, nor is the
air in which I lifted it the same that now surrounds me. The moment in which the
first movement was made is irrevocable, and at that moment I could make only one
movement, and whatever movement I made would be the only one. That I did not
lift my arm a moment later does not prove that I could have abstained from
lifting it then. And since I could make only one movement at that single moment
of time, it could not have been any other. To imagine it as free, it is
necessary to imagine it in the present, on the boundary between the past and the
future- that is, outside time, which is impossible. |
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(3) However much the difficulty of understanding the causes may be
increased, we never reach a conception of complete freedom, that is, an absence
of cause. However inaccessible to us may be the cause of the expression of will
in any action, our own or another's, the first demand of reason is the
assumption of and search for a cause, for without a cause no phenomenon is
conceivable. I raise my arm to perform an action independently of any cause, but
my wish to perform an action without a cause is the cause of my action. |
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But even if- imagining a man quite exempt from all influences, examining
only his momentary action in the present, unevoked by any cause- we were to
admit so infinitely small a remainder of inevitability as equaled zero, we
should even then not have arrived at the conception of complete freedom in man,
for a being uninfluenced by the external world, standing outside of time and
independent of cause, is no longer a man. |
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In the same way we can never imagine the action of a man quite devoid of
freedom and entirely subject to the law of inevitability. |
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(1) However we may increase our knowledge of the conditions of space in
which man is situated, that knowledge can never be complete, for the number of
those conditions is as infinite as the infinity of space. And therefore so long
as not all the conditions influencing men are defined, there is no complete
inevitability but a certain measure of freedom remains. |
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(2) However we may prolong the period of time between the action we are
examining and the judgment upon it, that period will be finite, while time is
infinite, and so in this respect too there can never be absolute inevitability. |
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(3) However accessible may be the chain of causation of any action, we
shall never know the whole chain since it is endless, and so again we never
reach absolute inevitability. |
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But besides this, even if, admitting the remaining minimum of freedom to
equal zero, we assumed in some given case- as for instance in that of a dying
man, an unborn babe, or an idiot- complete absence of freedom, by so doing we
should destroy the very conception of man in the case we are examining, for as
soon as there is no freedom there is also no man. And so the conception of the
action of a man subject solely to the law of inevitability without any element
of freedom is just as impossible as the conception of a man's completely free
action. |
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And so to imagine the action of a man entirely subject to the law of
inevitability without any freedom, we must assume the knowledge of an infinite
number of space relations, an infinitely long period of time, and an infinite
series of causes. |
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To imagine a man perfectly free and not subject to the law of
inevitability, we must imagine him all alone, beyond space, beyond time, and
free from dependence on cause. |
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In the first case, if inevitability were possible without freedom we
should have reached a definition of inevitability by the laws of inevitability
itself, that is, a mere form without content. |
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In the second case, if freedom were possible without inevitability we
should have arrived at unconditioned freedom beyond space, time, and cause,
which by the fact of its being unconditioned and unlimited would be nothing, or
mere content without form. |
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We should in fact have reached those two fundamentals of which man's
whole outlook on the universe is constructed- the incomprehensible essence of
life, and the laws defining that essence. |
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Reason says: (1) space with all the forms of matter that give it
visibility is infinite, and cannot be imagined otherwise. (2) Time is infinite
motion without a moment of rest and is unthinkable otherwise. (3) The connection
between cause and effect has no beginning and can have no end. |
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Consciousness says: (1) I alone am, and all that exists is but me,
consequently I include space. (2) I measure flowing time by the fixed moment of
the present in which alone I am conscious of myself as living, consequently I am
outside time. (3) I am beyond cause, for I feel myself to be the cause of every
manifestation of my life. |
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Reason gives expression to the laws of inevitability. Consciousness gives
expression to the essence of freedom. |
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Freedom not limited by anything is the essence of life, in man's
consciousness. Inevitability without content is man's reason in its three forms. |
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Freedom is the thing examined. Inevitability is what examines. Freedom is
the content. Inevitability is the form. |
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Only by separating the two sources of cognition, related to one another
as form to content, do we get the mutually exclusive and separately
incomprehensible conceptions of freedom and inevitability. |
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Only by uniting them do we get a clear conception of man's life. |
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Apart from these two concepts which in their union mutually define one
another as form and content, no conception of life is possible. |
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All that we know of the life of man is merely a certain relation of free
will to inevitability, that is, of consciousness to the laws of reason. |
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All that we know of the external world of nature is only a certain
relation of the forces of nature to inevitability, or of the essence of life to
the laws of reason. |
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The great natural forces lie outside us and we are not conscious of them;
we call those forces gravitation, inertia, electricity, animal force, and so on,
but we are conscious of the force of life in man and we call that freedom. |
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But just as the force of gravitation, incomprehensible in itself but felt
by every man, is understood by us only to the extent to which we know the laws
of inevitability to which it is subject (from the first knowledge that all
bodies have weight, up to Newton's law), so too the force of free will,
incomprehensible in itself but of which everyone is conscious, is intelligible
to us only in as far as we know the laws of inevitability to which it is subject
(from the fact that every man dies, up to the knowledge of the most complex
economic and historic laws). |
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