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a new view of society-第17章

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s in which the inhabitants of the world are now instructed; combined with the external circumstances by which they are surrounded; form the characters which at present pervade society。     The doctrines which have been and now are taught throughout the world; must necessarily create and perpetuate; and they do create and perpetuate; a total want of mental charity among men。 They also generate superstitions; bigotry; hypocrisy; hatred; revenge; wars; and all their evil consequences。 For it has been and is a fundamental principle in every system hitherto taught; with exceptions more nominal than real; 'That man will possess merit; and receive eternal reward; by believing the doctrines of that peculiar system; that he will be eternally punished if he disbelieves them; that all those innumerable individuals also; who; through time; have been taught to believe other than the tenets of this system; must be doomed to eternal misery。' Yet nature itself; in all its works; is perpetually operating to convince man of such gross absurdities。     Yes; my deluded fellow men; believe me; for your future happiness; that the facts around us; when you shall observe them aright; will make it evident; even to demonstration; that all such doctrines must he erroneous; because THE WILL OF MAN HAS NO POWER WHATEVER OVER HIS OPINIONS; HE MUST; AND EVER DID; AND EVER WILL BELIEVE WHAT HAS BEEN; IS; OR MAY BE IMPRESSED ON HIS MIND BY HIS PREDECESSORS AND THE CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH SURROUND HIM; It becomes therefore the essence of irrationality to suppose that any human being; from the creation to this day; could deserve praise or blame; reward or punishment; for the prepossessions of early education。     It is from these fundamental errors; in all systems which have been hitherto taught to the mass of mankind; that the misery of the human race has to so great an extent proceeded; for; in consequence of them; man has been always instructed from infancy to believe impossibilities he is still taught to pursue the same insane course; and the result still is misery。 Let this source of wretchedness; this most lamentable of all errors; this scourge of the human race; be publicly exposed; and let those just principles be introduced; which prove themselves true by their uniform consistency and the evidence of our senses; hence insincerity; hatred; revenge; and even a wish to injure a fellow creature; will ere long be unknown; and mental charity; heartfelt benevolence; and acts of kindness to one another; will be the distinguished characters of human nature。     Shall then misery most complicated and extensive be experienced; from the prince to the peasant; in all nations throughout the world; and shall its cause and prevention be known; and yet withheld? The knowledge of this cause; however; cannot be communicated to mankind without offending against the deep…rooted prejudices of all。 The work is therefore replete with difficulties; which can alone be overcome by those who; foreseeing all its important practical advantages; may be induced to contend against them。     Yet; difficult as it may be to establish this grand truth generally throughout society; on account of the dark and gross errors in which the world to this period has been instructed; it will be found; whenever the subject shall undergo a full investigation; that the principles now brought forward cannot; by possibility; injure any class of men; or even a single individual。 On the contrary; there is not one member of the great family of the world; from the highest to the lowest; that will not derive the most important benefits from its public promulgation。 And when such incalculable; substantial; and permanent advantages are clearly seen and strongly felt; shall individual considerations be for a moment put in competition with its attainment? No! Ease; comfort; the good opinion of part of society; and even life itself。 may be sacrificed to those prejudices; and yet the principles on which this knowledge is founded must ultimately and universally prevail。     This high event; of unequalled magnitude in the history of humanity; is thus confidently predicted; because the knowledge whence that confidence proceeds is not derived from any of the uncertain legends of the days of dark and gross ignorance; but from the plain and obvious facts which now exist throughout the world。 Due attention to these facts; to these truly revealed works of nature; will soon instruct; or rather compel mankind to discover the universal errors in which they have been trained。     The principle; then; on which the doctrines taught in the New Institution are proposed to be founded; is; that they shall be in unison with universally revealed facts; which cannot but be true。     The following are some of the facts; which; with a view to this part of the undertaking; may be deemed fundamental:     That man is born with a desire to obtain happiness; which desire is the primary cause of all his actions; continues through life; and; in popular language; is called self…interest。     That he is also born with the germs of animal propensities; or the desire to sustain; enjoy; and propagate life; and which desires; as they grow and develop themselves; are termed his natural inclinations。     That he is born likewise with faculties which; in their growth; receive; convey; compare; and become conscious of receiving and comparing ideas。     That the ideas so received; conveyed; compared; and understood; constitute human knowledge; or mind; which acquires strength and maturity with the growth of the individual。     That the desire of happiness in man; the germs of his natural inclinations; and the faculties by which he acquires knowledge; are formed unknown to himself in the womb; and whether perfect or imperfect; they are alone the immediate work of the Creator; and over which the infant and future man have no control。     That these inclinations and faculties are not formed exactly alike in any two individuals; hence the diversity of talents; and the varied impressions called liking and disliking which the same external objects make on different persons; and the lesser varieties which exist among men whose characters have been formed apparently under similar circumstances。     That the knowledge which man receives is derived from the objects around him; and chiefly from the example and instruction of his immediate predecessors。     That this knowledge may be limited or extended; erroneous or true; limited; when the individual receives few; and extended when he receives many ideas; erroneous; when those ideas are inconsistent with the facts which exist around him; and true when they are uniformly consistent with them。     That the misery which he experiences; and the happiness which he enjoys; depend on the kind and degree of knowledge which he receives; and on that which is possessed by those around him。     That when the knowledge which he receives is true and unmixed with error; although it be limited; if the community in which he lives possesses the same kind and degree of knowledge; he will enjoy happiness in proportion to the extent of that knowledge。 On the contrary; when the opinions which he receives are erroneous; and the opinions possesse
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