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evolution and ethics and other essays-第6部分
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while he seems to be impelled thus to imitate for the pure pleasure of
it。 And there is no such another emotional chameleon。 By a purely
reflex operation of the mind; we take the hue of passion of those who
are about us; or; it may be; the complementary colour。 It is not by
any conscious 〃putting one's self in the place〃 of a joyful or a
suffering person that the state of mind we call sympathy usually
arises; * indeed; it is often contrary to one's sense of '29' right;
and in spite of one's will; that 〃fellow…feeling makes us wondrous
kind;〃 or the reverse。 However complete may be the indifference to
public opinion; in a cool; intellectual view; of the traditional sage;
it has not yet been my fortune to meet with any actual sage who took
its hostile manifestations with entire equanimity。 Indeed; I doubt if
the philosopher lives; or ever has lived who could know himself to be
heartily despised by; a street boy without some irritation。 And;
though one cannot justify Haman for wishing to hang Mordecai on such a
very high gibbet; yet; really; the consciousness of the Vizier of
Ahasuerus; as he went in and out of the gate; that this obscure Jew
had no respect for him; must have been very annoying。**
* Adam Smith makes the pithy observation that the man who
sympathises with a woman in childbed; cannot be said to put
himself in her place。 (〃The Theory of the Moral Sentiments;〃
Part vii。 sec。 iii。 chap。 i。) Perhaps there is more humour than
force in the example; and; in spite of this and other
observations of the same tenor; I think that the one defect of
the remarkable work in which it occurs is that it lays too much
stress on conscious substitution; too little on purely reflex
sympathy。
** Esther v。 9…13。 〃。 。 。 but when Haman saw Mordecai in the
king's gate; that he stood not up; nor moved for him; he was
full of indignation against Mordecai。 。 。 。 And Haman told them
of the glory of his riches 。 。 。 and all the things wherein the
king had promoted him 。 。 。 Yet all this availeth me nothing;
so long as I see Mordecai the Jew sitting at the king's gate。〃
What a shrewd exposure of human weakness it is!
It is needful only to look around us; to see that the greatest
restrainer of the anti…social tendencies of men is fear; not of the
law; but of the opinion of their fellows。 The conventions of honour
bind men who break legal; moral; and religious bonds; and; while
people endure the extremity of physical pain rather than part with
life; shame drives the weakest to suicide。
Every forward step of social progress brings '30' men into closer
relations with their fellows; and increases the importance of the
pleasures and pains derived from sympathy。 We judge the acts of others
by our own sympathies; and we judge our own acts by the sympathies of
others; every day and all day long; from childhood upwards; until
associations; as indissoluble as those of language; are formed between
certain acts and the feelings of approbation or disapprobation。 It
becomes impossible to imagine some acts without disapprobation; or
others without approbation of the actor; whether he be one's self; or
any one else。 We come to think in the acquired dialect of morals。 An
artificial personality; the 〃man within;〃 as Adam Smith* calls
conscience; is built up beside the natural personality。 He is the
watchman of society; charged to restrain the anti…social tendencies of
the natural man within the limits required by social welfare。
* 〃Theory of the Moral Sentiments;〃 Part iii。 chap。 3。 On the
Influence and Authority of Conscience。
XI。
I have termed this evolution of the feelings out of which the
primitive bonds of human society are so largely forged; into the
organized and personified sympathy we call conscience; the ethical
process。* So far as it tends to
* Worked out; in its essential features; chiefly by Hartley and
Adam Smith; long before the modern doctrine of evolution was
thought of。 See Note below; p。 45。
'31' make any human society more efficient in the struggle for
existence with the state of nature; or with other societies; it works
in harmonious contrast with the cosmic process。 But it is none the
less true that; since law and morals are restraints upon the struggle
for existence between men in society; the ethical process is in
opposition to the principle of the cosmic process; and tends to the
suppression of the qualities best fitted for success in that
struggle。*
* See the essay 〃On the Struggle for Existence in Human Society〃
below; and Collected Essays; vol。 i。 p。 276; for Kant's
recognition of these facts。
It is further to be observed that; just as the self…assertion;
necessary to the maintenance of society against the state of nature;
will destroy that society if it is allowed free operation within; so
the self…restraint; the essence of the ethical process; which is no
less an essential condition of the existence of every polity; may; by
excess; become ruinous to it。
Moralists of all ages and of all faiths; attending only to the
relations of men towards one another in an ideal society; have agreed
upon the 〃golden rule;〃 〃Do as you would be done by。〃 In other words;
let sympathy be your guide; put yourself in the place of the man
towards whom your action is directed; and do to him what you would
like to have done to yourself under the circumstances。 However much
one may admire the generosity of such a rule of '32' conduct; however
confident one may be that average men may be thoroughly depended upon
not to carry it out to its full logical consequences; it is
nevertheless desirable to recognise the fact that these consequences
are incompatible with the existence of a civil state; under any
circumstances of this world which have obtained; or; so far as one can
see; are; likely to come to pass。
For I imagine there can be no doubt that the great desire of every
wrongdoer is to escape from the painful consequences of his actions。
If I put myself in the place of the man who has robbed me; I find that
I am possessed by an exceeding desire not to be fined or imprisoned;
if in that of the man who has smitten me on one cheek; I contemplate
with satisfaction the absence of any worse result than the turning of
the other cheek for like treatment。 Strictly observed; the 〃golden
rule〃 involves the negation of law by the refusal to put it in motion
against law…breakers; and; as regards the external relations of a
polity; it is the refusal to continue the struggle for existence。 It
can be obeyed; even partially; only under the protection of a society
which repudiates it。 Without such shelter; the followers of the
〃golden rule〃 may indulge in hopes of heaven; but they must reckon with
the certainty that other people will be masters of the earth。
What would become of the garden if the '33' gardener treated all the
weeds and slugs; and birds and trespassers as he would like to be
treated; if he were in their place?
XII。
Under the preceding heads; I have endeavoured to represent in broad;
but I hope faithful; outlines the essential features of the state of
nature and of that cosmic process of which it is the outcome; so far
as was needful for my argument; I have contrasted with the state of
nature the state of art; produced by human intelligence and energy; as
it is exemplified by a garden; and I have shown that the state of art;
here and elsewhere; can be maintained only by the constant
counteraction of the hostile influences of the state of nature。
Further; I have pointed out that the 〃horticultural process;〃 which
thus sets itself against the 〃cosmic process〃 is opposed to the latter
in principle; in so far as it tends to arrest the struggle for
existence; by restraining the multiplication which is one of the chief
causes of that struggle; and by creating artificial conditions of
life; better adapted to the cultivated plants than are the conditions
of the state of nature。 And I have dwelt upon the fact that; though
the progressive modification; which is the consequence of the struggle
for existence in the state of nature; is at an end; such modification
may still be effected '34' by that selection; in view of an ideal of
usefulness; or of pleasantness; to man; of which the state of nature
knows nothing。
I have proceeded to show that a colony; set down in a country in the
state of nature; presents close analogies with a garden; and I have
indicated the course of action which an administrator; able and
willing to carry out horticultural principles; would adopt; in order
to secure the success of such a newly formed polity; supposing it to
be capable of indefinite expansion。 In the contrary case; I have shown
that difficulties must arise; that the unlimited increase of the
population over a limited area must; sooner or later; reintroduce into
the colony that struggle for the means of existence between the
colonists; which it was the primary object of the administrator to
exclude; insomuch as it is fatal to the mutual peace which is the
prime condition of the union of men in society。
I have briefly described the nature of the only radical cure; known to
me; for the disease which would thus threaten the existence of the
colony; and; however regretfully; I have been obliged to admit that
this rigorously scientific method of applying the principles of
evolution to human society hardly comes within the region of practical
politics; not for want of will on the part of a great many people; but
because; for one reason; there is no hope that mere human beings will
ever possess enough intelligence to select the fittest。 And I '35'
have adduced other grounds for arriving at the same conclusion。
I have pointed out that human society took its rise in the organic
necessities expressed by imitation and by the sympathetic emotions;
and that; in the struggle for existence with the state of nature and
with other societies; as part of it; those in which men were thus led
to close co…operation bad a great advantage。* But; since each man
retained more or less of the faculties commo
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