GraciousCall.org - Freedom of the Will Part I. Section IV.
On the Freedom of the Will
by Jonathan Edwards
PART I. - SECTION IV.
OF THE DISTINCTION OF NATURAL AND MORAL NECESSITY, AND INABILITY.
That Necessity which has been explained, consisting in an infallible connexion of the things signified by the subject and predicate of a proposition, as intelligent beings are the subjects of it, is distinguished into moral and natural Necessity.
I shall not now stand to inquire whether this distinction
be a proper and perfect distinction; but shall only explain
how these two sorts of Necessity are understood, as the
terms are sometimes used, and as they are used in the
following discourse.
The phrase, moral Necessity, is used variously: some-
times it is used for a Necessity of moral obligation. So
we say, a man is under Necessity, when he is under bonds
of duty and conscience, from which he cannot be discharged. Again, the word
Necessity is often used for great
obligation in point of interest. Sometimes by moral Necessity
is meant that apparent connexion of things, which
is the ground of moral evidence; and so is distinguished
from absolute Necessity, or that sure connexion of things,
that is a foundation for infallible certainty. In this sense,
moral Necessity signifies much the same as that high degree
of probability, which is ordinarily sufficient to satisfy
mankind, in their conduct and behavior in the world, as
they would consult their own safety and interest, and treat
others properly as members of society. And sometimes
by moral Necessity is meant that Necessity of connexion
and consequence, which arises from such moral causes, as
the strength of inclination, or motives, and the connexion
which there is in many cases between these and such
certain volitions and actions. And it is in this sense, that
I use the phrase, moral necessity, in the following discourse.
By natural necessity, as applied to men, I mean such
Necessity as men are under through the force of natural
causes; as distinguished from what are called moral
causes, such as habits and dispositions of the heart, and
moral motives and inducements. Thus men, placed in
certain circumstances, are the subjects of particular sensations
by Necessity: they feel pain
when their bodies are
wounded; they see the objects presented before them in
a clear light, when their eyes are opened: so they assent
to the truth of certain propositions, as soon as the terms
are understood; as that two and two make four, that
black is not white, that two parallel lines can never cross
one another; so by a natural Necessity men's bodies move
downwards, when there is nothing to support them.
But here several things may be noted concerning these
two kinds of Necessity.
1. Moral Necessity may be as absolute as natural Necessity. That is, the effect may be as
perfectly connected
with its moral cause, as a natural, necessary effect is with
its natural cause. Whether the Will in every case is necessarily determined by the strongest
motive, or whether
the Will ever makes any resistance to such a motive, or
can ever oppose the strongest present inclination, or not;
if that matter should be controverted, yet I suppose none
will deny, but that, in some cases, a previous bias and
inclination, or the motive presented, may be so powerful,
that the act of the will may be certainly and indissolubly
connected therewith. When motives or previous bias are
very strong, all will allow that there is some difficulty in
going against them. And if they were yet stronger, the
difficulty would be still greater. And therefore, if more
were still added to their strength, to a certain degree, it
would make the difficulty so great, that it would be wholly
impossible to surmount it; for this plain reason, because
whatever power men may be supposed to have to surmount difficulties, yet that power
is not infinite; and so
goes not beyond certain limits. If a man can surmount
ten degrees of difficulty of this kind with twenty degrees
of strength, because the degrees of strength are beyond the
degrees of difficulty; yet if the difficulty be increased to
thirty, or an hundred, or a thousand degrees, and his
strength not also increased, his strength will be wholly
insufficient to surmount the difficulty. As therefore it
must be allowed, that there may be such a thing as a sure
and perfect connexion between moral causes and effects;
so this only is what I call by the name of moral Necessity.
2. When I use this distinction of moral and natured
Necessity, I would not he understood to suppose, that if
any thing come to pass by the former kind of Necessity,
the nature of things is not concerned in it, as well as in the
latter. I do not mean to determine, that when a moral
habit or motive is so strong, that the act of the Will infallibly follows, this is not owing to the
nature of things.
But natural and moral are the terms by which thee two
kinds of Necessity have usually been called; and they
must be distinguished by some names, for there is a difference between them, that is very
important in its consequences. This difference, however, does not lie so much
in the nature of the connexion, as in the two terms connected. The cause with which the
effect is connected, is
of a particular kind; viz. that which is of a moral nature;
either some previous habitual disposition, or some motive
exhibited to the understanding. And the effect is also of
a particular kind; being likewise of a moral nature; consisting in some inclination or
volition of the soul, or
voluntary action.
I suppose, that Necessity which is called natural in distinction from moral Necessity, is so
called, because mere
nature, as the word is vulgarly used, is concerned, without
any thing of choice. The word nature is often used in
opposition to choice; not because nature has indeed never
any hand in our choice; but, probably, because we first
get our notion of nature from that obvious course of events,
which we observe in many things where our choice has no
concern; and especially in the material world; which, in
very many parts of it, we easily perceive to be in a settled
course; the stated order, and manner of succession, being
very apparent. But where we do not readily discern the
rule and connexion, (though there be a connexion, according to an established law, truly
taking place,) we signify the
manner of event by some other name. Even in many
things which are seen in the material and inanimate world,
which do not obviously come to pass according to any
settled course, men do not call the manner of the event by
the name of nature, but by such names as accident, chance,
contingence, &c. So men make a distinction between
nature and choice; as if they were completely and universally distinct. Whereas, I
suppose none will deny but
that choice, in many cases, arises from nature, as truly as
other events. But the connexion between acts of choice,
and their causes, according to established laws, is not so
obvious. And we observe that choice is, as it were, a
new principle of motion and action, different from that
established order of things which is most obvious, and
seen especially in corporeal things. The choice also often
interposes, interrupts, and alters the chain of events in these
external objects, and causes them to proceed otherwise
than they would do, if let alone. Hence it is spoken of as
if it were a principle of motion entirely distinct from
nature, and properly set in opposition to it. Names being
commonly given to things, according to what is most obvious, and is suggested by what
appears to the senses
without reflection and research.
3. It must be observed, that in what has been explained, as signified by the name of moral
Necessity, the word
Necessity is not used according to the original design and
meaning of the word: for, as was observed before, such
terms, necessary, impossible, irresistible, &c. in common
speech, and their most proper sense, are always relative;
having reference to some supposable voluntary opposition
or endeavour, that is insufficient. But no such opposition,
or contrary will and endeavour, is supposable in the case
of moral Necessity; which is a certainty of the inclination
and will itself; which does not admit of the supposition of
a will to oppose and resist it. For it is absurd, to suppose
the same individual will to oppose itself, in its present
act; or the present choice to be opposite to and resisting
present choice: as absurd as it is to talk of two contrary
motions, in the same moving body, at the same time.---
And therefore the very case supposed never admits of any
trial, whether an opposing or resisting will can overcome
this Necessity.
What has been said of natural and mora! Necessity,
may serve to explain what is intended by natural arid
moral Inability. We are said to be naturally unable to do
a thing, when we cannot do it if we will, because what is
most commonly called nature does not allow of it, or because of some impeding defect or
obstacle that is extrinsic
to the Will; either in the Faculty of understanding, constitution of body, or external objects.
Moral Inability consists not in any of these things; but
either in the want of
inclination; or the strength of a contrary inclination; or
the want of sufficient motives in view, to induce and excite the act of the Will, or the strength
of apparent motives
to the contrary. Or both these may be resolved into one;
and it may be said in one word, that moral Inability consists in the opposition or want of
inclination. For when a
person is unable to will or choose such a thing, through a
defect of motives, or prevalence of contrary motives, it is
the same thing as his being unable through the want of an
inclination, or the prevalence of a contrary inclination, in
such circumstances, and under the influence of such views.
To give some instances of this moral Inability.-- A
woman of great honour and chastity may have a moral
Inability to prostitute herself to her slave. A child of
great love and duty to his parents, may be thus unable to
kill his father. A very lascivious man, in case of certain
opportunities and temptations, and in the absence of such
and such restraints, may be unable to forbear gratifying his
lust. A drunkard, under such and such circumstances,
may be unable to forbear taking strong drink. A very
malicious man may be unable to exert benevolent acts to
an enemy, or to desire his prosperity; yea, some may be
so under the power of a vile disposition, that they may be
unable to love those who are most worthy of their esteem
and affection. A strong habit of virtue, and a great degree
of holiness, may cause a moral Inability to love wickedness in general, and may render a
man unable to take complacence in wicked persons or things; or to choose a wicked in
preference to a virtuous life. And on the other hand,
a great degree of habitual wickedness may lay a man under
an Inability to love and choose holiness; and render him
utterly unable to love an infinitely holy Being, or to choose
and cleave to him as his chief good.
Here it may be of use to observe this distinction of
moral Inability, viz. of that which is general and habitual,
and that which is particular and occasional. By a general
and habitual moral Inability, I mean an Inability in the
heart to all exercises or acts of will of that kind, through a
fixed and habitual inclination, or an habitual and stated
defect, or want of a certain kind of inclination. Thus a
very ill-natured man may be unable to exert such acts of
benevolence, as another, who is full of good nature, commonly exerts; and a man whose
heart is habitually void
of gratitude, may be unable to exert grateful acts. through
that stated defect of a grateful inclination. By particular
and occasional moral Inability, I mean an Inability of the
will or heart to a particular act, through the strength or
defect of present motives, or of inducements presented to
the view of the understanding, on this occasion.-- If it be
so, that the Will is always determined by the strongest
motive, then it must always have an Inability, in this latter sense, to act otherwise than it does;
it not being possible, in any case, that the Will should, at present, go
against the motive which has now, all things considered,
the greatest advantage to induce it.-- The former of these
kinds of moral inability is most commonly called by the
name of Inability; because the word, in its most proper
and original signification, has respect to some stated defect. And this especially obtains the
name of Inability
also upon another account: -- because, as before observed,
the word Inability, in its original and most common use, is
a relative term; and has respect to will and endeavor, as
supposable in the case, and as insufficient to bring to pass
the thing desired and endeavored. Now there may be
more of an appearance and shadow of this, with respect to
the acts which arise from a fixed and strong habit, than
others that arise only from transient occasions and causes.
Indeed will and endeavour against, or diverse from present
acts of the Will are in no case supposable, whether those
acts be occasional or habitual; for that would be to suppose the Will, at present, to be
otherwise than, at present,
it is. But yet their may be will and endeavour against
future acts of the Will, or volitions that are likely to take
place, as viewed at a distance. It is no contradiction, to
suppose that the acts of the Will at one time, may be against
the acts of the Will at another time; and there may be desires and endeavors to prevent or
excite future acts of the
will; but such desires and endeavors are, in many cases,
rendered insufficient and vain, through fixedness of habit:
when the occasion returns, the strength of habit overcomes
and baffles all such opposition. In this respect, a man
may be in miserable slavery and bondage to a strong habit.
But it may be comparatively easy to make an alteration,
with respect to such future acts, as are only occasional and
transient; because the occasion or transient cause, if foreseen, may often easily be prevented
or avoided. On this
account, the moral Inability that attends fixed habits,
especially obtains the name of Inability. And then, as the
will may remotely and indirectly resist itself, and do it in
vain, in the case of strong habits; so reason may resist
present acts of the Will, and its resistance be insufficient;
and this is more commonly the case also, when the acts
arise from strong habit.
But it must be observed concerning moral Inability, in
each kind of it, that the word Inability is used in a sense
very diverse from its original import. The word signifies
only a natural Inability, in the proper use of it; and is applied to such cases only wherein a
present will or inclination to the thing, with respect to which
a person is said to
be unable, is supposable. It cannot be truly said, according to the ordinary use of language,
that a malicious man,
let him be never so malicious, cannot hold his hand from
striking, or that he is not able to show his neighbor kindness; or that a drunkard, let his appetite
be never so strong,
cannot keep the cup from his mouth. In the strictest propriety of speech, a man has a thing in
his power, if he has
it in his choice, or at his election: and a man cannot be
truly said to be unable to do a thing, when he can do it if
he will. It is improperly said, that a person cannot perform those external actions, which are
dependent on the act
of the Will, and which would be easily performed, if the
act of the Will were present. And if it be improperly said,
that he cannot perform those external voluntary actions,
which depend on the Will, it is in some respect more improperly said, that he is unable to
exert the acts of the Will
themselves; because it is more evidently false, with respect to these, that he cannot if he will:
for to say so, is a
downright contradiction; it is to say, he cannot will, if he
dries will. And in this case, not only is it true, that it is
easy for a man to do the thing if he will, but the very willing is the doing; when once he has
willed, the thing is
performed; and nothing else remains to be done. Therefore, in these things, to ascribe a
non-performance to the
want of power or ability, is not just; because the thing
wanting, is not a being able, but a being willing. There are
faculties of mind, and a capacity of nature, and every thing
else, sufficient, but a disposition: nothing is wanting but
a will.
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