PREFACE.
_____
THOUGH it is
scarce possible to avoid judging, in some way or other, of almost every thing
which offers itself to one’s thoughts, yet it is certain that many persons,
from different causes, never exercise their judgment upon what comes before
them, in the way of determining whether it be conclusive and holds. They are perhaps entertained with some
things, not so with others; they like and they dislike: but whether that which
is proposed to be made out, be really made out or not; whether a matter be
stated according to the real truth of the case, seems to the generality of
people merely a circumstance of no consideration at all. Arguments are often wanted for some accidental
purpose: but proof, as such, is what they never want for themselves; for their
own satisfaction of mind, or conduct in life.
Not to mention the multitudes who read merely for the sake of talking,
or to qualify themselves for the world, or some such kind of reasons; there
are, even of the few who read for their own entertainment, and have a real
curiosity to see what is said, several, which is prodigious, who have no sort
of curiosity to see what is true: I say, curiosity; because it is too obvious
to be mentioned, how much that religious and sacred attention, which is due to
truth, and to the important question, What is the rule of life? is lost out of
the world.
12
For the sake
of this whole class of readers, for they are of different capacities, different
kinds, and get into this way from different occasions, I have often wished that
it had been the custom to lay before people nothing in matters of argument but
premises, and leave them to draw conclusions themselves; which, though it could
not be done in all cases, might in many.
The great number
of books and papers of amusement, which, of one kind or another, daily come in
one’s way, have in part occasioned, and most perfectly fall in with and humor,
this idle way of reading and considering things. By this means, time, even in solitude, is happily
got rid of, without the pain of attention: neither is any part of it more put
to the account of idleness, one can scarce forbear saying, is spent with less
thought, than great part of that which is spent in reading.
Thus people
habituate themselves to let things pass through their minds, as one may speak,
rather than to think of them. Thus, by
use, they become satisfied merely with seeing what is said, without going any
further. Review and attention, and even forming a judgment, become fatigue; and
to lay any thing before them that requires it, is putting them quite out of
their way.
There are
also persons, and there are at least more of them than have a right to claim
such superiority, who take for granted, that they are acquainted with every
thing; and that no subject, if treated in the manner it should be, can be
treated in any manner but what is familiar and easy to them.
It is true,
indeed, that few persons have a right to demand attention; but it is also true,
that nothing can be understood without that degree of it, which the very nature
of the thing requires. Now morals,
considered as a science, concerning which speculative difficulties are daily
raised, and treated with regard to those difficulties, plainly require a very
peculiar attention. For here ideas never
are in themselves determinate, but become so by
13
the train of
reasoning and the place they stand in; since it is impossible that words can
always stand for the same ideas, even in the same author, much less in
different ones. Hence an argument may
not readily be apprehended, which is different from its being mistaken; and
even caution to avoid being mistaken, may, in some cases, render it less
readily apprehended. It is very unallowable for a work of imagination or
entertainment not to be of easy comprehension, but may be unavoidable in a work
of another kind, where a man is not to form or accommodate, but to state things
as he finds them.
It must be
acknowledged, that some of the following discourses are very abstruse and
difficult; or, if you please, obscure.
But I must take leave to add, that those alone are judges, whether or
no, and how far this is a fault, who are judges whether or no and how far it
might have been avoided—those only who will be at the trouble to understand what
is here said, and to see how far the things here insisted upon, and not other
things, might have been put in a plainer manner; which yet I am very far from
asserting that they could not.
Thus much
however will be allowed, that general criticisms concerning obscurity,
considered as a distinct thing from confusion and perplexity of thought, as in
some cases there may be ground for them, so, in others, they may be nothing
more at the bottom than complaints, that every thing is not to be understood
with the same ease that some things are.
Confusion and perplexity in writing is indeed without excuse, because
anyone may, if he pleases, know whether he understands and sees through what he
is about; and it is unpardonable for a man to lay his thoughts before others,
when he is conscious that he himself does not know whereabouts he is, or how
the matter before him stands. It is
coming abroad in a disorder which he ought to be dissatisfied to find himself
in at home.
But even
obscurities, arising from other causes than the abstruseness of the argument,
may not be always
14
inexcusable. Thus, a subject may be treated in a manner,
which all along supposes the reader acquainted with what has been said upon it,
both by ancient and modern writers; and with what is the present state of
opinion in the world concerning such subject.
This will create a difficulty of a very peculiar kind, and even throw an
obscurity over the whole, before those who are not thus informed; but those who
are, will be disposed to excuse such a manner, and other things of the like
kind, as a saving of their patience.
However,
upon the whole, as the title of Sermons gives some right to expect what
is plain and of easy comprehension, and as the best auditories are mixed, I
shall not set about to justify the propriety of preaching, or under that title
publishing, discourses so abstruse as some of these are. Neither is it worth while to trouble the
reader with the account of my doing either.
He must not, however; impute to me, as a repetition of the impropriety,
this second edition,* but to the demand for it.
Whether he
will think he has any amends made him, by the following illustrations of what
seemed most to require them, I myself am by no means a proper judge.
There are
two ways in which the subject of morals may be treated. One begins from inquiring into the abstract
relations of things; the other, from a matter of fact, namely, what the
particular nature of man is, its several parts, their economy or constitution;
from whence it proceeds to determine what course of life it is, which is
correspondent to this whole nature. In the former method the conclusion is
expressed thus, that vice is contrary to the nature and reasons of things; in
the latter, that it is a violation or breaking in upon our own nature. Thus they both lead us to the same thing, our
obligations to the practice of virtue; and thus they exceedingly strengthen and
enforce each other. The first seems the
*The Preface stands exactly as it
did before the second edition of the Sermons.
15
most direct
formal proof, and in some respects the least liable to cavil and dispute: the
latter is in a peculiar manner adapted to satisfy a fair mind, and is more
easily applicable to the several particular relations and circumstances in
life.
The
following discourses proceed chiefly in this latter method. The three first
wholly. They were intended to explain what is meant by the nature of man, when
it is said that virtue consists in following, and vice in deviating from it;
and, by explaining, to show that the assertion is true. That the ancient moralists had some inward
feeling or other, which they chose to express in this manner, that man is born
to virtue, that it consists in following nature, and that vice is more contrary
to this nature than tortures or death, their works in our hands are instances. Now, a person who found no mystery in this
way of speaking of the ancients: who, without being very explicit with himself,
kept to his natural feeling, went along with them, and found within himself a
full conviction that what they laid down was just and true; such a one would
probably wonder to see a point, in which he never perceived any difficulty, so
labored as this is, in the second and third sermons: insomuch, perhaps, as to
be at a loss for the occasion, scope, and drift of them. But it need not to be thought strange, that
this manner of expression, though familiar with them, and, if not usually
carried so far, yet not uncommon amongst ourselves, should want explaining;
since there are several perceptions daily felt and spoke of, which yet it may
not be very easy at first view to explicate, to distinguish from all others,
and ascertain exactly what the idea or perception is. The many treatises upon the passions are a
proof of this; since so many would never have undertaken to unfold their
several complications, and trace and resolve them into their principles, if
they had thought, what they were endeavoring to show was obvious to everyone
who felt and talked of those passions.
Thus, though there seems no ground to doubt, but that
16
the
generality of mankind have the inward perception expressed so commonly in that
manner by the ancient moralists, more than to doubt whether they have those
passions, yet I appeared of use to unfold that inward conviction, and lay it
open in a more explicit manner than I had seen done; especially when there were
not wanting persons, who manifestly mistook the whole thing, and had so great
reason to express themselves dissatisfied with it. A late author, of great and deserved
reputation, says, that to place virtue in following nature, is, at best, a
loose way of talk. And he has reason to
say this, if what I think he intends to express, though with great decency, be
true, that scarce any other sense can be put upon those words, but acting as
any of the several parts, without distinction, of a man’s nature, happened most
to incline him.*
Whoever
thinks it worth while to consider this matter thoroughly, should begin with
stating to himself exactly the idea of a system, economy, or constitution, of
any particular nature, or particular any thing: and he will, I suppose, find, that it is a one or a whole,
made up of several parts; but yet that the several parts, even considered as a
whole, do not complete the idea, unless, in the notion of a whole, you include
the relations and respects which those parts have to each other. Every work both of nature and of art is a
system: and as every particular thing, both natural and artificial, is for some
use or purpose out of and beyond itself, one may add, to what has been already
brought into the idea of a system, its conduciveness to this one or more
ends. Let us instance in a watch:
Suppose the several parts of it taken to pieces, and placed apart from each
other: let a man have ever so exact a notion of these several parts, unless he
considers the respects and relations which they have to each other, he will not
have any thing like the idea of a watch.
Suppose these several parts brought
*Religion of Nature Delineated. Ed. 1724.
Pages 22, 23.
17
together and
any how united: neither will he yet, be the union ever so close, have an idea
which will bear any resemblance to that of a watch. But let him view those several parts put
together, or consider them as to be put together, in the manner of a
watch; let him form a notion of the relations which those several parts have to
each other—all conducive, in their respective ways, to this purpose, showing
the hour of the day; and then he has the idea of a watch. Thus it is with regard to the inward frame of
man. Appetites, passions, affections,
and the principle of reflection, considered merely as the several parts of our
inward nature, do not at, all give us an idea of the system or constitution of
this nature: because the constitution is formed by somewhat not yet taken into
consideration, namely, by the relations which these several parts have to each
other; the chief of which is the authority of reflection or conscience. It is from considering the relations which
the several appetites and passions in the inward frame have to each other, and,
above all, the supremacy of reflection or conscience, that we get the idea of
the system or constitution of human nature.
And from the idea itself it will as fully appear, that this our nature, i.e.
constitution, is adapted to virtue, as from the idea of a watch it appears,
that its nature, i.e. constitution or system is adapted to measure
time. What in fact or event commonly
happens, is nothing to this question.
Every work of art is apt to be out of order: but this is so far from
being according to its system, that let the disorder increase, and it will
totally destroy it. This is merely by
way of explanation, what an economy, system, or constitution is. And thus far the cases are perfectly
parallel. If we go further, there is indeed a difference, nothing to the
present purpose, but too important a one ever to be omitted. A machine is inanimate and passive: but we
are agents. Our constitution is put in
our power: we are charged with it: and therefore are accountable for any
disorder or violation of it.
18
Thus nothing
can possibly be more contrary to nature than vice; meaning by nature not only
the several parts of our internal frame, but also the constitution of it. Poverty and disgrace, tortures and death, are
not so contrary to it. Misery and
injustice are indeed equally contrary to some different parts of our nature
taken singly: but injustice is moreover contrary to the whole constitution of
the nature.
If it be
asked, whether this constitution be really what those philosophers meant, and
whether they would have explained themselves in this manner: the answer is the
same as if it should be asked, whether a person, who had often used the word
resentment, and felt the thing, would have explained this passion exactly in
the same manner in which it is done in one of these discourses. As I have no doubt but that this is a true
account of that passion, which he referred to and intended to express by the
word resentment; so I have no doubt, but that this is the true account of the
ground of that conviction which they referred to, when they said, vice was
contrary to nature. And though it should
be thought that they meant no more than that vice was contrary to the higher
and better part of our nature; even this implies such a constitution as I have
endeavored to explain. For the very
terms, higher and better, imply a relation or respect of parts to
each other; and these relative parts, being in one and the same nature, form a
constitution, and are the very idea of it.
They had a perception that injustice was contrary to their nature, and
that pain was so also. They observed
these two perceptions totally different, not in degree, but in kind: and the
reflecting upon each of them, as they thus stood in their nature, wrought a
full intuitive conviction, that more was due, and of right belonging to one of
these inward perceptions, than to the other; that it demanded in all cases to
govern such a creature as man. So that, upon the whole, this is a fair and true
account of what was the ground of their conviction; of what they 'intended to
refer to when they said, virtue consisted in following nature: a manner of
speaking
19
not loose
and undeterminate, but clear and distinct, strictly just and true.
Though I am
persuaded the force of this conviction is felt by almost everyone, yet since,
considered as an argument, and put in words, it appears somewhat abstruse, and
since the connexion of it is broken in the three first sermons, it may not be
amiss to give the reader the whole argument here in one view.
Mankind has
various instincts and principles of action, as brute creatures have; some
leading most directly and immediately to the good of the community, and some
most directly to private good.
Man has
several which brutes have not; particularly reflection or conscience, an
approbation of some principles or actions, and disapprobation of others.
Brutes obey
their instincts or principles of action, according to certain rules; suppose
the constitution of their body, and the objects around them.
The
generality of mankind also obey their instincts and principles, all of them;
those propensions we call good, as well as the bad, according to the same
rules, namely, the constitution of their body, and the external circumstances
which they are in. [Therefore it is not
a true representation of mankind, to affirm that they are wholly governed by
self-love, the love of power and sensual appetites: since, as on the one hand,
they are often actuated by these, without any regard to right or wrong; so on
the other, it is manifest fact, that the same persons, the generality, are
frequently Influenced by friendship, compassion, gratitude, and even general
abhorrence of what is base, and linking of what is fair and just, takes its
turn amongst the other motives of action.
This is the partial inadequate notion of human nature treated of in the
first discourse: and it is by this nature, if one may speak so, that the world
is in fact influenced, and kept in that tolerable order in which it is.]
Brutes, in
acting according to the rules before mentioned, their bodily constitution and
circumstances, act
20
suitably to
their whole nature. [It is however to be distinctly noted, that the reason why
we affirm this, is not merely that brutes in fact act so; for this alone,
however universal, does not at all determine, whether such course of action be
correspondent to their whole nature: but the reason of the assertion is,
that as, in acting thus, they plainly act conformably to somewhat in their
nature, so, from all observations we are able to make upon them, there does not
appear the least ground to imagine them to have any thing else in their nature,
which requires a different rule or course of action.]
Mankind
also, in acting thus, would act suitably to their whole nature, if no more were
to be said of man’s nature than what has been now said; if that, as it is a
true, were also a complete, adequate account of our nature.
But that is
not a complete account of man’s nature.
Somewhat further must be brought in to give us an adequate notion of it;
namely, that one of those principles of action, conscience, or reflection,
compared with the rest, as they all stand together in the nature of man,
plainly bears upon it marks of authority over all the rest, and claims
the absolute direction of them all, to allow or forbid their
gratification: A disapprobation of reflection being in itself a principle
manifestly superior to a mere propension.
And the conclusion is, that to allow no more to this superior principle
or part of our nature, than to other parts; to let it govern and guide
only occasionally in common with the rest, as its turn happens to come, from
the temper and circumstances one happens to be in; this is not to act
conformably to the constitution of man. Neither can any human creature be said
to act conformably to his constitution of nature, unless he allows to that
superior principle the absolute authority which is due to it. And this
conclusion is abundantly confirmed from hence, that one may determine what
course of action the economy of man’s nature requires, without so
much as knowing in what degrees of strength
21
the several
principles prevail, or which of them have actually the greatest influence.
The
practical reason of insisting so much upon this natural authority of the
principle of reflection or conscience is, that it seems in a great measure
overlooked by many, who are by no means the worst sort of men. It is thought
sufficient to abstain from gross wickedness, and to be humane and kind to such
as happen to come in their way. Whereas,
in reality, the very constitution of our nature requires, that we bring our
whole conduct before this superior faculty; wait its determination; enforce
upon ourselves its authority; and make it the business of our lives, as it is
absolutely the whole business of a moral agent, to conform ourselves to
it. This is the true meaning of that
ancient precept, reverence thyself.
The not
taking into consideration this authority, which is implied in the idea of
reflex approbation or disapprobation, seems a material deficiency or omission
in Lord Shaftesbury’s Inquiry concerning Virtue. He has shown, beyond all contradiction, that virtue is
naturally the interest of happiness, and vice the misery of such a creature as
man, placed in the circumstances which we are in this world. But suppose there
are particular exceptions; a case which this author was unwilling to put, and
yet surely it is to be put. Or suppose a
case which he has put and determined, that of a sceptic not convinced of, this
happy tendency of virtue, or being of a contrary opinion: his determination is,
that it would be without remedy.* One may say more explicitly, that, leaving
out the authority of reflex approbation or disapprobation, such a one would be
under an obligation to act viciously; since interest, one’s own happiness, is a
manifest obligation, and there is not supposed to be any other obligation in
the case. “But does it much mend the matter, to take in that natural authority
of reflection? There indeed would be an
obligation to virtue; but would not the obligation
*Characteristics, vol. ii. p. 69.
22
from
supposed interest on the side of vice remain?" If it should, yet to be under two contrary
obligations, i.e. under none at all, would not be exactly the same as to
be under a formal obligation to be vicious, or to be in circumstances in which
the constitution of man's nature plainly required, that vice should be
preferred. But the obligation on the side of interest
really does not remain. For the natural
authority of the principle of reflection, is an obligation the most near and
intimate, the most certain and known: whereas the contrary obligation can at
the utmost appear no more than probable; since no man can be certain,
in any circumstances,
that vice is his interest in the present world, much less can he be certain
against another: and thus the certain obligation would entirely supersede and
destroy the uncertain one; which yet would have been of real force without the
former.
In truth,
the taking in this consideration totally changes the whole state of the case;
and shows, what this author does not seem to have been aware of, that the
greatest degree of scepticism which he thought possible, will still
leave men under the
strictest moral obligations, whatever their
opinion be, concerning the happiness of virtue.
For, that
mankind, upon reflection, felt an approbation of what was good, and
disapprobatlon of the contrary, he thought a plain matter of fact, as it
undoubtedly is, which none could deny, but from mere affectation. Take in, then,
that authority and obligation, which is a constituent part of this reflex
approbation, and it will undeniably follow, though a man should doubt of every
thing else, yet, that he would still remain under the nearest and most certain
obligation to the
practice of virtue; an obligation implied in the very idea of virtue, in the
very idea of reflex approbation.
And how
little influence soever this obligation alone can be expected to have, in fact,
upon mankind, yet one may appeal even to interest and self-love, and ask, since
from man's nature, condition, and the shortness of life, so little, so very
little, indeed, can possibly in any case
23
be gained by
vice, whether it be so prodigious a thing to sacrifice that little, to the most
intimate of all obligations; and which a man cannot transgress without being self-condemned, and, unless he
has corrupted his nature, without real self-dislike? This question, I say, may be asked, even upon
suspicious that the prospect of a future life were ever so uncertain.
The
observation that man is thus, by his very nature, a law to himself, pursued to
its just consequences, is of the utmost importance; because from it will
follow, that though men should, through stupidity, or speculative skepticism,
be ignorant of, or disbelieve, any authority in the universe to punish the
violation of this law; yet, if there should be such authority, they would be as
really liable to punishment, as though they had been beforehand convinced, that
such punishment would follow. For, in
whatever sense we understand justice, even supposing, what I think would be
very presumptuous to assert, that the end of divine punishment is no other than
that of civil punishment, namely, to prevent future mischief; upon this bold
supposition, ignorance, or disbelief of the sanction would by no means exempt
even from this justice; because it is not foreknowledge of the punishment which
renders the obnoxious to it, but merely violating a known obligation.
And here it
comes in one’s way to take notice of a manifest error, or mistake, in the
author now cited, unless, perhaps he has incautiously expressed himself so as
to be misunderstood; namely, that “it is malice only, and not goodness, which
can make us afraid.” * Whereas, in reality,
goodness is the natural and just object of the greatest fear to an ill
man. Malice may be appeased or
satisfied; humor may change; but goodness is a fixed, steady, immoveable
principle of action. If either of the
former holds the sword of justice, there is plainly ground for the greatest of
crimes to hope for impunity:
*Characteristics, vol. i. p. 39.
24
But if it be
goodness, there can be no possible hope, whilst the reason of things, or the
ends of government, call for punishment. Thus, everyone sees how much greater
chance of impunity an ill man has, in a partial administration, than in a just
and upright one. It is said, that "the interest, or good of the whole,
must be the interest of the universal Being, and that He can have no
other." Be it so. This author has proved, that vice is naturally the
misery of mankind in this world. Consequently, it was for the good of the
whole, that it should be so. What shadow of reason, then, is there to assert,
that this may not be the case hereafter? Danger of future punishment, (and if
there be danger, there is ground of fear) no more supposes malice than the
present feeling of punishment does.
The sermon upon
the character of Balaam, and that upon self-deceit, both relate to
one subject. I am persuaded, that a very great part of the wickedness of the
world, is, one way or other, owing to the self-partiality, self-flattery, and
self-deceit endeavored there to be laid open and explained. It is to be
observed amongst persons of the lower rank, in proportion to their compass of
thought, as much as amongst men of education and improvement. It seems, that people are capable of being
thus artful with themselves, ill proportion as they are capable of being so
with others. Those who have taken notice
that there is really such a thing, namely, plain falseness and insincerity in
men, with regard to themselves, will readily see the drift and design of these
discourses: and nothing that I can add will explain the design of them to him,
who has not beforehand remarked at least somewhat of the character. And yet the
admonitions they contain, may be as much wanted by such a person as by others;
for it is to be noted, that a man may be entirely possessed by this unfairness
of mind, without having the least speculative notion what the thing is.
The account
given of resentment, in the eighth sermon
25
is
introductory to the following one, upon forgiveness of injuries. It may
possibly have appeared to some, at first
sight, a strange assertion, that injury is the only naturaI object of settled
resentment; or that men do not, in fact, resent deliberately any thing but
under this appearance of injury. But I must desire the reader not to take any
assertion alone by itself, but to consider the whole of what is said upon it.
Because this is necessary, not only in
order to judge of the truth of it, but often, such is the nature of language,
to see the very meaning of the assertion.
Particularly, as to this, injury and injustice is, in the sermon itself,
explained to mean, not only the more gross and shocking instances of
wickedness, but also contempt, scorn, neglect, any sort of disagreeable
behaviour towards a person, which he thinks other than what is due to him. And
the general notion of injury, or wrong, plainly comprehends this, though the
words are mostly confined to the higher degrees of it.
Forgiveness
of injuries is one of the very few moral obligations which has been disputed.
But the proof that it is really an obligation, what our nature and condition l
require, seems very obvious, were it only from the consideration, that revenge
is doing harm merely for harm’s sake.
And as to the love of our enemies: Resentment cannot supersede the
obligations to universal benevolence, unless they are in the nature of the
thing inconsistent, which they plainly are not.
This divine
precept, to forgive injuries and love our enemies, though to be met with in Gentile moralists, yet ,is in a
peculiar sense a precept of Christianity; as our Saviour has insisted more upon
it than upon any other single virtue. One reason of this doubtless is, that it
so peculiarly becomes an imperfect, faulty creature. But it may be observed
also, that a virtuous temper of mind, consciousness of innocence, and good
meaning towards everybody, and a strong feeling of injustice and injury, may
itself, such is the
imperfection of our virtue, lead a person to
violate this obligation, if he be not upon his
26
guard. And it may well be supposed, that this is
another reason why it is so much insisted upon by him, who knew what was in
man.
The chief
design of the eleventh discourse, is to state the notion of self-love and
disinterestedness, in order to show that benevolence is not more unfriendly to
self-love, than any other particular affection whatever. There is a strange affectation in many people
of explaining away all particular affections, and representing the whole of
life as nothing but one continued exercise of self-love. Hence arises that
surprising confusion and perplexity in the Epicureans* of old, Hobbs, the
author of Reflections, Sentences, et Maximes Morales, and this whole set
of writers; the confusion of calling actions interested, which are done in
contradiction to the most manifest known interest, merely for the gratification
of a present passion. Now, all this confusion might easily be avoided, by
stating to ourselves wherein the idea of self-love in general consists, as distinguished
from all particular movements, towards particular external objects; the
appetites of sense, resentment, compassion, curiosity, ambition, and the rest.
When this is done, if the words selfish and interested cannot be parted with, but must be
applied to every thing; yet, to avoid such total confusion of all language, let
the distinction be made by epithets; and the first may be called cool, or
settled selfishness, and the other passionate, or sensual selfishness. But the
most natural way of speaking plainly is, to call the first only, self-love, and
the actions proceeding from it, interested;
*One need only look into Torquatus’s
account of the Epicurean system, in Cicero’s first book, De Finibus, to
see in what a surprising manner this was done by them. Thus, the desire of
praise, and of being beloved, he explains to no other than desire of safety:
Regard to our country, even in the most virtuous character, to be nothing but
regard to ourselves. The author of Reflections, &c. Morales, says,
“curiosity proceeds from interest, or pride; which pride also would doubtless
have been explained to be self-love;” (Page 85. Ed. 1725)—as if there
were no passions in mankind, as desire of esteem, or of being beloved, or of
knowledge. Hobbs’ account of the
affections of good-will and pity, are instances of the same kind.
27
and to say
of the latter, that they are not love to ourselves, but movements towards somewhat
external, --honor, power, the harm, or good, of another. And that the pursuit
of these external objects, so far as it proceeds from these movements (for
it may proceed from self-love,) is no otherwise interested, than as every
action of every creature must, from the nature of the thing, be; for no
one can act but from a desire, or choice, or preference of his own.
Self-love
and any particular passion may be joined together; and from this complication,
it becomes impossible, in numberless instances, to determine precisely how far
an action, perhaps even of one's own, has for its principle general self-love,
or some particular passion. But this need create no confusion in the ideas
themselves of self-love and particular passions. We distinctly discern what one
is, and what the other are; though we may be un- certain how far one or the
other influences us. And though, from this uncertainty, it cannot, but be, that
there will be different opinions concerning mankind, as more or less governed
by interest; and some will ascribe actions to self-love, which others
wiII ascribe to particular passions; yet it is absurd to say, that mankind are
wholly actuated by either; since it is manifest that both have their
influence. For as, on the one hand, men form a general notion of interest, some
placing it in one thing, and some in another, and have a considerable regard to
it throughout the course of their life, which is owing to self-love; so, on the
other hand, they are often set on work by the particular passions themselves,
and a considerable part of life is spent in the actual gratification of them; i.e.
is employed, not by self-love, but by the passions.
Besides, the
very idea of an interested pursuit, necessarily presupposes particular passions
or appetites; since the very idea of interest, or happiness, consists in this,
that an appetite; or affection, enjoys its object. It is not because we love
ourselves that we find delight in such and such objects, but because we have
particular affections
28
towards him.
Take away these affections, and you leave self-love nothing at all to employ
itself about; no end, or object, for it to purpose, excepting that of avoiding
pain. Indeed, the Epicureans, who
maintained that absence of pain was the highest happiness, might, consistently
with themselves, deny all affection, and, if they had so pleased, every sensual
appetite too. But the very idea of interest, or happiness, other than absence
of pain, implies particular appetites or passions; these being necessary to
constitute that interest or happiness.
The
observation, that benevolence is no more disinterested than any of the common
particular passions, seems of itself worth being taken notice of; but is
insisted upon to obviate that scorn, which one sees rising upon the faces of
people, who are said to know the world, when mention is made of a
disinterested, generous, or public spirited action. The truth of that
observation might be made to appear in a more formal manner of proof: for,
whoever will consider all the possible respects and relations which any
particular affection can have to self-love and private interest, will, I think,
see demonstrably, that benevolence is not ill any respect more at variance with
self-love, than any other particular affection whatever, but that it is, in
every respect, at least as friendly to it.
If the
observation be true, it follows, that self-love and benevolence, virtue and
interest, are not to be opposed, but only to be distinguished from each other;
in the same way as virtue and any other particular affection, love of arts,
suppose, are to be distinguished. Every
thing is what it is, and not another thing. The goodness, or badness of
actions, does not arise from hence, that the epithet, interested, or
disinterested, may be applied to them, any more than that any other indifferent
epithet, suppose inquisitive or jealous may, or may not, be applied to them;
not from their being attended with present or future pleasure or pain, but from
their being what they are; namely, what becomes such creatures as we are, what
the state of the case requires, or the contrary. Or, in other words, we may judge and
determine that an action
29
is morally
good or evil, before we so much as consider, whether it be interested or
disinterested. This consideration no
more comes in to determine, whether an action be virtuous, than to determine
whether it be resentful. Self-love, in
its due degree, is as just and morally good as any affection whatever. Benevolence towards particular persons may be
to a degree of weakness, and so be blameable. And disinterestedness is so far
from being in itself commendable, that the utmost possible depravity, which we
can in imagination conceive, is that of disinterested cruelty.
Neither does
there appear any reason to wish self-love were weaker in the generality of the
world, than it is. -- The influence which it has, seems plainly owing to its
being constant and habitual, which it cannot but be, and not to the degree or
strength of it. Every caprice of
the imagination, every curiosity of the understanding, every affection of the
heart, is perpetually showing its weakness, by prevailing over it. Men daily, hourly, sacrifice the greatest
known interest to fancy, inquisitiveness, love, or hatred, any vagrant
inclination. The thing to be lamented is, not that men have so great regard to
their own good or interest ,in the present world, for they have not enough; but
that they have so little to the good of others. And this seems plainly owing to
their being so much engaged in it the gratification of particular passions
unfriendly to benevolence, and which happen to be most prevalent in them, much
more than to self-love. As a proof of this may be observed, that there is
character more void of friendship, gratitude, natural affection, love to their
country, common justice, or more equally and uniformly hard-hearted, than the abandoned
in, what is called, the way
of pleasure -- hard-hearted and totally without feeling in behalf of others;
except when they cannot escape the sight of distress, and so are interrupted by
it in their pleasures. And yet it is ridiculous to call such an abandoned
course of pleasure interested, when the person engaged in it knows beforehand,
and goes on under the feeling and
30
apprehension,
that it will be as ruinous to himself, as to those who depend upon him.
Upon the
whole, if the generality of mankind were to cultivate within themselves the
principle of self-love; if they were to accustom themselves often to sit down
and consider, what was the greatest happiness they were capable of attaining
for themselves in this life; and if self-love were so strong and prevalent, as
that they would uniformly pursue this their supposed chief temporal good
without being diverted from it by any particular passion, it would manifestly prevent
numberless follies and vices. This was
in a great measure the Epicurean system of philosophy. It is indeed by no means the religious, or
even moral institution of life. Yet,
with all the mistakes men would fall into about interest; it would be less
mischievous than the extravagancies of mere appetite, will, and pleasure. For certainly self-love, though confined to
the interest of this life, is, of the two, a much better guide than passion,
which has absolutely no bound nor measure, but what is set to it by this
self-love, or moral considerations.
From the
distinction above made, between self-love and the several particular principles
or affections ill our nature, we may see how good ground there was for that
assertion, maintained by the several ancient schools of philosophy
against the Epicureans, namely that virtue is to be pursued as an end,
eligible in and for itself. For, if
there be any principles or affections in the mind of man distinct from
self-love, that the things those principles tend towards, or that the objects
of those affections are, each of them, in themselves eligible, to be pursued
upon its own account, and to be rested in as all end, is implied in the very
idea of such principle or affection.
They indeed asserted much higher things of virtue, and with very good
reason; but to say thus much of it, that it is to be pursued for itself, is to
say no more of it than may truly: be said of the object of every natural
affection whatever.
The question
which was a few years ago disputed in France, concerning the love of God, which
was there
31
called
enthusiasm, as it will every where by the generality of the world; this
question, I say, answers, in religion, to that old one in morals now
mentioned. And both of them are, I
think, fully determined by the same observation, namely, that the very nature
of affection, the idea, itself, necessarily implies resting in its object as an
end. I shall not here add any thing
further to what I have said in the two discourses upon that most important
subject, but only this, that if we are constituted such sort of creatures, as,
from our very nature, to feel certain affections or movements of mind, upon the
sight or contemplation of the meanest inanimate part of the creation, for the
flowers of the field have their beauty; certainly there must be somewhat due to
him himself, who is the Author and Cause of all things; who is more intimately
present to us than any thing else can be; and with whom we have a nearer and
more constant intercourse, than we can have with any creature. There must be some movements of mind and
heart which correspond to his perfections, or of which those perfections are
the natural object. And that when we are
commanded to love the Lord our God, with all our heart, and with all our
mind, and with all our soul, somewhat more must be meant than merely that
we live in hope of rewards, or fear of punishments, from him; somewhat more
than this must be intended; though these regards themselves are most just and
reasonable, and absolutely necessary to be often recollected, in such a world
as this.
It may be
proper just to advertise the reader, that he is not to look for any particular
reason for the choice of the greatest part of these discourses; their being
taken from amongst many others, preached in the same place, through a course of
eight years, being in a great measure accidental. Neither is he to expect to find any other
connexion between them, than that uniformity of thought and design, which will
always be found in the writings of the same person, when he writes with
simplicity and in earnest.
STANHOPE,
Sept. 16, 1729.