GraciousCall.org - Freedom of the Will Part II. Section VI.
On the Freedom of the Will
by Jonathan Edwards
PART II. - SECTION VI.
Concerning the Will determining in things which are perfectly indifferent in the view of the mind.
A Great argument for self-determining power, is the
supposed experience we universally have of an ability to
determine our Wills, in cases wherein no prevailing motive is presented: the Will, as is
supposed, has its choice
to make between two or more things, that are perfectly
equal in the view of the mind; and the Will is apparently, altogether indifferent; and
yet we find no difficulty
in coming to a choice; the Will can instantly determine
itself to one, by a sovereign power which it has over itself,
without being moved by any preponderating inducement.
Thus the fore-mentioned author of an Essay on the
Freedom of the will, &c. (p. 25, 26, 27.) supposes, "That
there are many instances, wherein the will is determined
neither by present uneasiness, nor by the greatest apparent
good, nor by the last dictate of the understanding, nor by
any thing else, but merely by itself, as a sovereign self-
determining power of the soul; and that the soul does
not will this or that action, in some cases, by any other
influence but because it will. Thus, says he, I can turn
my face to the south, or the north; I can point with my
finger upward, or downward.-- And thus, in some cases,
the will determines itself in a very sovereign manner, because it will, without a reason borrowed
from the understanding: and hereby it discovers its own perfect power
of choice, rising from within itself, and free from all influence or restraint of any kind." And (p.
66, 70, 73,
74.) this author very expressly supposes the will in many
cases to be determined by no motive at all, and acts altogether without motive, or ground of
preference.-- Here I
would observe,
1. The very supposition which is here made, directly
contradicts and overthrows itself. For the thing supposed,
wherein this grand argument consists, is, that among
several things the Will actually chooses one before another, at the same time that it is perfectly
indifferent; which
is the very same thing as to say, the mind has a preference,
at the same time that it has no preference. What is meant
cannot be, that the mind is indifferent before it comes to
have a choice, or until it has a preference; for certainly this
author did not imagine he had a controversy with any
person in supposing this. Besides, it appears in fact, that
the thing which he supposes, is -- not that the Will chooses
one thing before another, concerning which it is indifferent
before it chooses, but that the Will is indifferent when it
chooses; and that it being otherwise than indifferent is not
until afterwards, in consequence of its choice; that the
chosen thing appearing preferable, and more agreeable than
another, arises from its choice already made. His words
are, (p. 30.)"Where the objects which are proposed appear equally fit or good, the will is left
without a guide
or director; and therefore must take its own choice, by its
own determination; it being properly a self-determining
power. And in such cases the Will does as it were make
a good to itself by its own choice, i. e. creates its own
pleasure or delight in this self-chosen good. Even as a
man by seizing upon a spot of unoccupied land, in an uninhabited country, makes it his own
possession and property, and as such rejoices in it. Where things were indifferent before, the Will
finds nothing to make them more
agreeable, considered merely in themselves, but the pleasure it feels arising from its own choice,
and its perseverance
therein. We love many things which we have chosen, and
purely because we chose them."
This is as much as to say, that we first begin to prefer
many things, purely because we have preferred and chosen
them before.-- These things must needs be spoken inconsiderately by this author. Choice or
preference cannot be
before itself in the same instance, either in the order of
time or nature: It cannot be the foundation of itself, or
the consequence of itself. The very act of choosing one
thing rather than another, is preferring that thing, and that
is setting a higher value on that thing. But that the mind
sets a higher value on one thing than another, is not, in
the first place, the fruit of its setting a higher value on that
thing.
This author says, (p. 36.) "The Will may be perfectly
indifferent, and yet the Will may determine itself to choose
one or the other." And again, in the same page, "I am
entirely indifferent to either; and yet my Will may determine itself to choose." And again,
"Which I shall
choose must be determined by the mere act of my will."
If the choice is determined by a mere act of Will, then
the choice is determined by a mere act of choice. And
concerning this matter, vis. That the act of the Will itself
is determined by act of choice, this writer is express. (p.
72.) Speaking of the case, where there is no superior fitness in objects presented, he has these
words: "There it
must act by its own choice, and determine itself as it
PLEASES." Where it is supposed that the very determination, which is the ground and spring
of the will's act, is
an act of choice and pleasure, wherein one act is more
agreeable than another: and this preference and superior
pleasure is the ground of all it does in the case. And if
so, the mind is not indifferent when it determines itself, but
had rather determine itself one way than another. And
therefore the Will does not act at all in indifference; not
so much as in the first step it takes. If it be possible for
the understanding to act in indifference, yet surely the
will never does; because the will beginning to act is the
very same thing as it beginning to choose or prefer. And
if in the very first act of the Will, the mind prefers something, then the idea of that thing
preferred, does at that
time preponderate, or prevail in the mind: or, which is the
same thing, the idea of it has a prevailing influence on the
Will. So that this wholly destroys the thing supposed,
viz. That the mind can by a sovereign power choose one
of two or more things, which in the view of the mind are,
in every respect, perfectly equal, one of which does not at
all preponderate, nor has any prevailing influence on the
mind above another.
So that this author, in his grand argument for the ability
of the Will to choose one of two or more things, concerning which it is perfectly
indifferent, does at the same time,
in effect, deny the thing he supposes, even that the Will,
in choosing, is subject to no prevailing influence of the
view of the thing chosen. And indeed it is impossible to
offer this argument without overthrowing it; the thing supposed in it being that which
denies itself. To suppose the
Will to act at all in a state of perfect indifference, is to
assert that the mind chooses without choosing. To say
that when it is indifferent, it can do as it pleases, is to say
that it can follow its pleasure, when it has no pleasure to
follow. And therefore if there be any difficulty in the instances of two cakes, or two eggs,
&c. which are exactly
alike, one as good as another; concerning which this
author supposes the mind in fact has a choice, and so in
effect supposes that it has a preference; it as much concerned himself to solve the
difficulty, as it does those
whom he opposes. For if these instances prove any thing
to his purpose, they prove that a man chooses without
choice. And yet this is not to his purpose; because if
this is what he asserts, his own words are as much against
him, and does as much contradict him, as the words of
those he disputes against can do.
2. There is no great difficulty in showing, in such instances as are alleged, not only that it
must needs be so,
that the mind must be influenced in its choice by something that has a preponderating
influence upon it, but also
how it is so. A little attention to our own experience, and
a distinct consideration of the acts of our own minds, in
such cases, will be sufficient to clear up the matter.
Thus, supposing I have a chess-board before me; and
because I am required by a superior, or desired by a
friend, or on some other consideration, I am determined to
touch some one of the spots or squares on the board with
my finger. Not being limited or directed, in the first proposal, to any one in particular; and
there being nothing in
the squares, in themselves considered, that recommends
any one of all the sixty-four, more than another; in this
case, my mind determines to give itself up to what is vulgularly called accident, by
determining to touch that
square which happens to be most in view, which my eye
is especially upon at that moment, or which happens to
be then most in my mind, or which I shall be directed to
by some other such like accident. Here are several steps
of the mind proceeding (though all may be done, as it
were, in a moment). The first step is its general determination that it will touch one of the
squares. The next step
is another general determination to give itself up to accident, in some certain way; as to
touch that which shall
be most in the eye or mind at that time, or to some other
such like accident. The third and last step is a particular
determination to touch a certain individual spot, even that
square, which, by that sort of accident the mind has pitched upon, has actually offered itself
beyond others. Now
it is apparent that in none of these several steps does the
mind proceed in absolute indifference, but in each of them
is influenced by a preponderating inducement. So it is in
the first step, the mind's general determination to touch
one of the sixty-four spots: the mind is not absolutely indifferent whether it does so or no; it is
induced to it, for
the sake of making some experiment, or by the desire of a
friend, or some other motive that prevails. So it is in the
second step, the mind determining to give itself up to accident, by touching that which shall be
most in the eve, or
the idea of which shall be most prevalent in the mind, &c.
The mind is not absolutely indifferent whether it proceeds
by this rule or no; but chooses it, because it appears at
that time a convenient and requisite expedient in order to
fulfil the general purpose. And so it is in the third and
last step, which is determining to touch that individual spot
which actually does prevail in the mind's view. The mind
is not indifferent concerning this; but is influenced by a
prevailing inducement and reason; which is, that this is a
prosecution of the preceding determination, which appeared requisite, and was fixed before in
the second step.
Accident will ever serve a man, without hindering him
a moment, in such a case. Among a number of objects
in view, one will prevail in the eye, or in idea, beyond
others. When we have our eyes open in the clear sunshine, many objects strike the eye
at once, and innumerable images may be at once painted in it by the rays of
light; but the attention of the mind is not equal to several
of them at once; or if it be, it does not continue so for any
time. And so it is with respect to the ideas of the mind
in general: several ideas are not in equal strength in the
mind's view and notice at once; or at least, does not remain so for any sensible continuance.
There is nothing in
the world more constantly varying, than the ideas of the
mind; they do not remain precisely in the same state for
the least perceivable space of time; as is evident by this:
-- That all time is perceived by the mind, only by the successive changes of its own ideas.
Therefore while the perceptions of the mind remain precisely in the same state,
there is no perceivable length of time, because no sensible
succession at all.
As the acts of the Will, in each step of the forementioned procedure, do not come to pass
without a particular
cause, but every act is owing to a prevailing inducement;
so the accident, as I have called it, or that which happens in
the unsearchable course of things, to which the mind yields
itself, and by which it is guided, is not any thing that
comes to pass without a cause. The mind in determining
to be guided by it, is not determined by something that
has no cause; any more than if it be determined to be
guided by a lot, or the casting of a die. For though the
die falling in such a manner be accidental to him that casts
it, yet none will suppose that there is no cause why it
falls as it does. The involuntary changes in the succession of our ideas, though the cause
may not be observed,
have as much a cause, as the changeable motions of the
motes that float in the air, or the continual, infinitely
various, successive changes of the unevennesses on the
surface of the water.
There are two things especially, which are probably the
occasions of confusion in the minds of them who insist
upon it, that the Will acts in a proper indifference, and
without being moved by any inducement, in its determinations in such cases as have been
mentioned.
1. They seem to mistake the point in question, or at
least not to keep it distinctly in view. The question they
dispute about, is, Whether the mind be indifferent about
the objects presented, one of which is to be taken, touched,
pointed to, &c. as two eggs, two cakes, which appear
equally good. Whereas the question to be considered, is,
Whether the person be indifferent with respect to his own
actions; whether he does not, on some consideration or
other, prefer one act with respect to these objects before
another. The mind in its determination and choice, in
these cases, is not most immediately and directly conversant about the objects presented;
but the acts to be done
concerning these objects. The objects may appear equal,
and the mind may never properly make any choice between
them; but the next act of the Will being about the external actions to be performed, taking,
touching, &c. these
may not appear equal, and one action may properly be
chosen before another. In each step of the mind's progress, the determination is not
about the objects, unless
indirectly and improperly, but about the actions, which it
chooses for other reasons than any preference of the objects,
and for reasons not taken at all from the objects.
There is no necessity of supposing, that the mind does
ever at all properly choose one of the objects before another: either before it has taken, or
afterwards. Indeed
the man chooses to take or touch one rather than another;
but not because it chooses the thing taken, or touched, but
from foreign considerations. The case may be so, that of
two things offered, a man may, for certain reasons, prefer
taking that which he undervalues, and choose to neglect
that which his mind prefers. In such a case, choosing the
thing taken, and choosing to take, are diverse: and so they
are in a case where the things presented are equal in the
mind's esteem, and neither of them preferred. All that
fact and experience makes evident, is, that the mind
chooses one action rather than another. And therefore the
arguments which they bring, in order to be to their purpose, should be to prove that the
mind chooses the action
in perfect indifference, with respect to that action; and not
to prove that the mind chooses the action in perfect indifference with respect to the object;
which is very possible,
and yet the Will not act at all without prevalent inducement, and proper preponderation.
2. Another reason of confusion and difficulty in this
matter, seems to be, not distinguishing between a general
indifference, or an indifference with respect to what is to
be done in a more distant and general view of it, and a
particular indifference, or an indifference with respect to
the next immediate act, viewed with its particular and
present circumstances. A man may be perfectly indifferent with respect to his own actions,
in the former respect;
and yet not in the latter. Thus in the foregoing instance
of touching one of the squares of a chess-board; when it is
first proposed that I should touch one of them, I may be
perfectly indifferent which I touch; because as yet I view
the matter remotely and generally, being but in the first
step of the mind's progress in the affair. But yet, when I
am actually come to the last step, and the very next thing
to be determined is which, is to be touched, having already
determined that I will touch that which happens to be most
in my eye or mind, and my mind being now fixed on a
particular one, the act of touching that, considered thus
immediately, and in these particular present circumstances,
is not what my mind is absolutely indifferent about.
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