GraciousCall.org - Freedom of the Will Part II. Section VIII.
On the Freedom of the Will
by Jonathan Edwards
PART II. - SECTION VIII.
Concerning the supposed Liberty of the will, as opposite to all Necessity.
IT is chiefly insisted on by Arminians, in this controversy,
as a thing most important and essential in human
Liberty, that volitions, or the acts of the will, are contingent
events; understanding contingence as opposite,
not only to constraint, but to all Necessity. Therefore I
would particularly consider this matter.
And, first, I would inquire, whether there is or can be
any such thing, as a volition which is contingent in such a
sense, as not only to come to pass without any Necessity
of constraint or co-action, but also without a Necessity of
consequence, or an infallible connexion with any thing foregoing.-- Secondly, Whether, if it were
so, this would at all
help the cause of Liberty.
I. I would consider whether volition is a thing that ever
does or can come to pass, in this manner, contingently.
And here it must be remembered, that it has been already
shown, that nothing can ever come to pass without a cause,
or a reason, why it exists in this manner rather than another; and the evidence of this has been
particularly applied to the acts of the will. Now if this be so, it will
demonstrably follow, that the acts of the will are never
contingent, or without necessity, in the sense spoken of;
inasmuch as those things which have a cause, or a reason of their existence, must be connected
with their cause.
This appears by the following considerations.
1. For an event to have a cause and ground of its existence, and yet not to be connected with its
cause, is an
inconsistence. For if the event be not connected with the
cause, it is not dependent on the cause; its existence is as
it were loose from its influence, and may attend it, or may
not; it being a mere contingence, whether it follows or
attends the influence of the cause, or not: And that is the
same thing as not to he dependent on it. And to say, the
event is not dependent on its cause, is absurd; it is
the same thing as to say, it is not its cause, nor the event
the effect of it; for dependence on the influence of a cause
is the very notion of an effect. If there be no such relation between one thing and another,
consisting in the connexion and dependence of one thing an the influence of
another, then it is certain there is no such relation between them as is signified by the terms
cause and effect.
So far as an event is dependent on a cause, and connected
with it, so much causality is there in the case, and no
more. The cause does, or brings to pass, no more in any
event, than is dependent on it. If we say, the connexion
and dependence is not total, but partial, and that the effect,
though it has some connexion and dependence, yet is not
entirely dependent on it; that is the same thing as to say,
that not all that is in the event is an effect of that cause,
but that only part of it arises from thence, and part some
other way.
2. If there are some events which are not necessarily
connected with their causes, then it will follow, that there
are some things which come to pass without any cause,
contrary to the supposition. For if there be any event
which was not necessarily connected with the influence of
the cause under such circumstances, then it was contingent
whether it would attend or follow the influence of the
cause, or no; it might have followed, and it might not,
when the cause was the same, its influence the same, and
under the same circumstances. And if so, why did it
follow, rather than not follow? Of this there is no cause
or reason. Therefore here is something without any cause
or reason why it is, viz. the following of the effect on the
influence of the cause, with which it was not necessarily
connected. If there be no necessary connexion of the
effect on any thing antecedent, then we may suppose that
sometimes the event will follow the cause, and sometimes
not, when the cause is the same, and in every respect in
the same state and circumstances. And what can be the
cause and reason of this strange phenomenon, even this
diversity, that in one instance, the effect should follow, in
another not? It is evident by the supposition, that this is
wholly without any cause or ground. Here is something
in the present manner of the existence of things, and state
of the world, that is absolutely without a cause. Which
is contrary to the supposition, and contrary to what has
been before demonstrated.
3. To suppose there are some events which have a
cause and ground of their existence, that yet are not necessarily connected with their cause, is
to suppose that
they have a cause which is not their cause. Thus; if the
effect be not necessarily connected with the cause, with its
influence, and influential circumstances; then, as I observed before, it is a thing possible and
supposable, that
the cause may sometimes exert the same influence, under
the same circumstances, and yet the effect not follow.
And if this actually happens in any instance, this instance
is a proof, in fact, that the influence of the cause is not
sufficient to produce the effect. For if it had been sufficient, it would have done it. And yet, by
the supposition,
in another instance, the same cause, with perfectly the
same influence, and when all circumstances which have
any influence are the same, it was followed with the effect.
By which it is manifest, that the effect in this last instance
was not owing to the influence of the cause, but must
come to pass some other way. For it was proved before,
that the influence of the cause was not sufficient to produce the effect. And if it was not
sufficient to produce
it, then the production of it could not be owing to that
influence, but must be owing to something else, or owing
to nothing. And if the effect be not owing to the influence of the cause, then it is not the cause.
Which brings
us to the contradiction of a cause, and no cause, that
which is the ground and reason of the existence of a
thing, and at the same time is
NOT
the ground and reason
of its existence.
If the matter be not already so plain as to render any
further reasoning upon it impertinent, I would say, that
which seems to be the cause in the supposed case, can be
no cause; its power and influence having, on a full trial,
proved insufficient to produce such an effect: and if it be
not sufficient to produce it, then it does not produce it. To
say otherwise, is to say, there is power to do that which
there is not power to do. If there be in a cause sufficient
power exerted, and in circumstances sufficient to produce
an effect, and so the effect be actually produced at one
time; all these things concurring, will produce the effect
at all times. And so we may turn it the other way; that
which proves not sufficient at one time, cannot he sufficient
at another, with precisely the same influential circumstances. And therefore if the effect
follows, it is not
owing to that cause; unless the different time be a circumstance which has influence: but that is
contrary to the
supposition; for it is supposed that all circumstances that
have influence, are the same. And besides, this would be to
suppose the time to be the cause; which is contrary to the
supposition of the other thing being the cause. But if
merely diversity of time has no influence, then it is evident
that it is as much of an absurdity to say, the cause was
sufficient to produce the effect at one time, and not at
another; as to say, that it is sufficient to produce the
effect at a certain time, and yet not sufficient to produce
the same effect at the same time.
On the whole, it is clearly manifest, that every effect has
a necessary connexion with its cause, or with that which
is the true ground and reason of its existence. And therefore, if there be no event without a
cause, as was proved
before, then no event whatsoever is contingent, in the
manner that Arminians suppose the free acts of the will
to be contingent.
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