The Fixation of Belief
Charles S. Peirce
Popular Science Monthly 12 (November 1877), 1-15.

IFew persons care to study
logic, because everybody conceives himself to be proficient enough in the
art of reasoning already. But I observe that this satisfaction is limited
to one's own ratiocination, and does not extend to that of other men.
We come to the full possession of our power of
drawing inferences, the last of all our faculties; for it is not so much a
natural gift as a long and difficult art. The history of its practice
would make a grand subject for a book. The medieval schoolman, following
the Romans, made logic the earliest of a boy's studies after grammar, as
being very easy. So it was as they understood it. Its fundamental
principle, according to them, was, that all knowledge rests either on
authority or reason; but that whatever is deduced by reason depends
ultimately on a premiss derived from authority. Accordingly, as soon as a
boy was perfect in the syllogistic procedure, his intellectual kit of
tools was held to be complete.
To Roger Bacon, that remarkable mind who in the
middle of the thirteenth century was almost a scientific man, the
schoolmen's conception of reasoning appeared only an obstacle to truth. He
saw that experience alone teaches anything -- a proposition which to us
seems easy to understand, because a distinct conception of experience has
been handed down to us from former generations; which to him likewise
seemed perfectly clear, because its difficulties had not yet unfolded
themselves. Of all kinds of experience, the best, he thought, was interior
illumination, which teaches many things about Nature which the external
senses could never discover, such as the transubstantiation of bread.
Four centuries later, the more celebrated Bacon,
in the first book of his Novum Organum, gave his clear
account of experience as something which must be open to verification and
reexamination. But, superior as Lord Bacon's conception is to earlier
notions, a modern reader who is not in awe of his grandiloquence is
chiefly struck by the inadequacy of his view of scientific procedure. That
we have only to make some crude experiments, to draw up briefs of the
results in certain blank forms, to go through these by rule, checking off
everything disproved and setting down the alternatives, and that thus in a
few years physical science would be finished up -- what an idea! "He
wrote on science like a Lord Chancellor," indeed, as Harvey, a
genuine man of science said.
The early scientists, Copernicus, Tycho Brahe,
Kepler, Galileo, Harvey, and Gilbert, had methods more like those of their
modern brethren. Kepler undertook to draw a curve through
the places of Mars; and to state the times
occupied by the planet in describing the different parts of that curve;
but perhaps his greatest service to science was in impressing on men's
minds that this was the thing to be done if they wished to improve
astronomy; that they were not to content themselves with inquiring whether
one system of epicycles was better than another but that they were to sit
down to the figures and find out what the curve, in truth, was. He
accomplished this by his incomparable energy and courage, blundering along
in the most inconceivable way (to us), from one irrational hypothesis to
another, until, after trying twenty-two of these, he fell, by the mere
exhaustion of his invention, upon the orbit which a mind well furnished
with the weapons of modern logic would have tried almost at the outset.
In the same way, every work of science great
enough to be well remembered for a few generations affords some
exemplification of the defective state of the art of reasoning of the time
when it was written; and each chief step in science has been a lesson in
logic. It was so when Lavoisier and his contemporaries took up the study
of Chemistry. The old chemist's maxim had been, "Lege, lege, lege,
labora, ora, et relege." Lavoisier's method was not to read and
pray, but to dream that some long and complicated chemical process would
have a certain effect, to put it into practice with dull patience, after
its inevitable failure, to dream that with some modification it would have
another result, and to end by publishing the last dream as a fact: his way
was to carry his mind into his laboratory, and literally to make of his
alembics and cucurbits instruments of thought, giving a new conception of
reasoning as something which was to be done with one's eyes open, in
manipulating real things instead of words and fancies.
The Darwinian controversy is, in large part, a
question of logic. Mr. Darwin proposed to apply the statistical method to
biology. The same thing has been done in a widely different branch of
science, the theory of gases. Though unable to say what the movements of
any particular molecule of gas would be on a certain hypothesis regarding
the constitution of this class of bodies, Clausius and Maxwell were yet
able, eight years before the publication of Darwin's immortal work, by the
application of the doctrine of probabilities, to predict that in the long
run such and such a proportion of the molecules would, under given
circumstances, acquire such and such velocities; that there would take
place, every second, such and such a relative number of collisions, etc.;
and from these propositions were able to deduce certain properties of
gases, especially in regard to their heat-relations. In like manner,
Darwin, while unable to say what the operation of variation and natural
selection in any individual case will be, demonstrates that in the long
run they will, or would, adapt animals to their circumstances. Whether or
not existing animal forms are due to such action, or what position the
theory ought to take, forms the subject of a discussion in which questions
of fact and questions of logic are curiously interlaced.
II
The object of reasoning is to find out, from the
consideration of what we already know, something else which we do not
know. Consequently, reasoning is good if it be such as to give a true
conclusion from true premisses, and not otherwise. Thus, the question of
validity is purely one of fact and not of thinking. A being the facts
stated in the premisses and B being that concluded, the question is,
whether these facts are really so related that if A were B would generally
be. If so, the inference is valid; if not, not. It is not in the least the
question whether, when the premisses are accepted by the mind, we feel an
impulse to accept the conclusion also. It is true that we do generally
reason correctly by nature. But that is an accident; the true conclusion
would remain true if we had no impulse to accept it; and the false one
would remain false, though we could not resist the tendency to believe in
it.
We are, doubtless, in the main logical animals,
but we are not perfectly so. Most of us, for example, are naturally more
sanguine and hopeful than logic would justify. We seem to be so
constituted that in the absence of any facts to go upon we are happy and
self-satisfied; so that the effect of experience is continually to
contract our hopes and aspirations. Yet a lifetime of the application of
this corrective does not usually eradicate our sanguine disposition. Where
hope is unchecked by any experience, it is likely that our optimism is
extravagant. Logicality in regard to practical matters (if this be
understood, not in the old sense, but as consisting in a wise union of
security with fruitfulness of reasoning) is the most useful quality an
animal can possess, and might, therefore, result from the action of
natural selection; but outside of these it is probably of more advantage
to the animal to have his mind filled with pleasing and encouraging
visions, independently of their truth; and thus, upon unpractical
subjects, natural selection might occasion a fallacious tendency of
thought.
That which determines us, from given premisses,
to draw one inference rather than another, is some habit of mind, whether
it be constitutional or acquired. The habit is good or otherwise,
according as it produces true conclusions from true premisses or not; and
an inference is regarded as valid or not, without reference to the truth
or falsity of its conclusion specially, but according as the habit which
determines it is such as to produce true conclusions in general or not.
The particular habit of mind which governs this or that inference may be
formulated in a proposition whose truth depends on the validity of the
inferences which the habit determines; and such a formula is called a guiding
principle of inference. Suppose, for example, that we observe that a
rotating disk of copper quickly comes to rest when placed between the
poles of a magnet, and we infer that this will happen with every disk of
copper. The guiding principle is, that what is true of one piece of copper
is true of another. Such a guiding principle with regard to copper would
be much safer than with regard to many other substances -- brass, for
example.
A book might be written to signalize all the most
important of these guiding principles of reasoning. It would probably be,
we must confess, of no service to a person whose thought is directed
wholly to practical subjects, and whose activity moves along
thoroughly-beaten paths. The problems that present themselves to such a
mind are matters of routine which he has learned once for all to handle in
learning his business. But let a man venture into an unfamiliar field, or
where his results are not continually checked by experience, and all
history shows that the most masculine intellect will ofttimes lose his
orientation and waste his efforts in directions which bring him no nearer
to his goal, or even carry him entirely astray. He is like a ship in the
open sea, with no one on board who understands the rules of navigation.
And in such a case some general study of the guiding principles of
reasoning would be sure to be found useful.
The subject could hardly be treated, however,
without being first limited; since almost any fact may serve as a guiding
principle. But it so happens that there exists a division among facts,
such that in one class are all those which are absolutely essential as
guiding principles, while in the others are all which have any other
interest as objects of research. This division is between those which are
necessarily taken for granted in asking why a certain conclusion is
thought to follow from certain premisses, and those which are not implied
in such a question. A moment's thought will show that a variety of facts
are already assumed when the logical question is first asked. It is
implied, for instance, that there are such states of mind as doubt and
belief -- that a passage from one to the other is possible, the object of
thought remaining the same, and that this transition is subject to some
rules by which all minds are alike bound. As these are facts which we must
already know before we can have any clear conception of reasoning at all,
it cannot be supposed to be any longer of much interest to inquire into
their truth or falsity. On the other hand, it is easy to believe that
those rules of reasoning which are deduced from the very idea of the
process are the ones which are the most essential; and, indeed, that so
long as it conforms to these it will, at least, not lead to false
conclusions from true premisses. In point of fact, the importance of what
may be deduced from the assumptions involved in the logical question turns
out to be greater than might be supposed, and this for reasons which it is
difficult to exhibit at the outset. The only one which I shall here
mention is, that conceptions which are really products of logical
reflection, without being readily seen to be so, mingle with our ordinary
thoughts, and are frequently the causes of great confusion. This is the
case, for example, with the conception of quality. A quality, as such, is
never an object of observation. We can see that a thing is blue or green,
but the quality of being blue and the quality of being green are not
things which we see; they are products of logical reflections. The truth
is, that common-sense, or thought as it first emerges above the level of
the narrowly practical, is deeply imbued with that bad logical quality to
which the epithet metaphysical is commonly applied; and nothing can
clear it up but a severe course of logic.
III
We generally know when we wish to ask a question
and when we wish to pronounce a judgment, for there is a dissimilarity
between the sensation of doubting and that of believing.
But this is not all which distinguishes doubt
from belief. There is a practical difference. Our beliefs guide our
desires and shape our actions. The Assassins, or followers of the Old Man
of the Mountain, used to rush into death at his least command, because
they believed that obedience to him would insure everlasting felicity. Had
they doubted this, they would not have acted as they did. So it is with
every belief, according to its degree. The feeling of believing is a more
or less sure indication of there being established in our nature some
habit which will determine our actions. Doubt never has such an effect.
Nor must we overlook a third point of difference.
Doubt is an uneasy and dissatisfied state from which we
struggle to free ourselves and pass into the state of belief; while the
latter is a calm and satisfactory state which we do not wish to avoid, or
to change to a belief in anything else. On the
contrary, we cling tenaciously, not merely to believing, but to believing
just what we do believe.
Thus, both doubt and belief have positive effects
upon us, though very different ones. Belief does not make us act at once,
but puts us into such a condition that we shall behave in some certain
way, when the occasion arises. Doubt has not the least such active effect,
but stimulates us to inquiry until it is destroyed. This reminds us of the
irritation of a nerve and the reflex action produced thereby; while for
the analogue of belief, in the nervous system, we must look to what are
called nervous associations -- for example, to that habit of the nerves in
consequence of which the smell of a peach will make the mouth water.
IV
The irritation of doubt causes a struggle to
attain a state of belief. I shall term this struggle inquiry,
though it must be admitted that this is sometimes not a very apt
designation.
The irritation of doubt is the only immediate
motive for the struggle to attain belief. It is certainly best for us that
our beliefs should be such as may truly guide our actions so as to satisfy
our desires; and this reflection will make us reject every belief which
does not seem to have been so formed as to insure this result. But it will
only do so by creating a doubt in the place of that belief. With the
doubt, therefore, the struggle begins, and with the cessation of doubt it
ends. Hence, the sole object of inquiry is the settlement of opinion. We
may fancy that this is not enough for us, and that we seek, not merely an
opinion, but a true opinion. But put this fancy to the test, and it proves
groundless; for as soon as a firm belief is reached we are entirely
satisfied, whether the belief be true or false. And it is clear that
nothing out of the sphere of our knowledge can be our object, for nothing
which does not affect the mind can be the motive for mental effort. The
most that can be maintained is, that we seek for a belief that we shall think
to be true. But we think each one of our beliefs to be true, and, indeed,
it is mere tautology to say so.
That the settlement of opinion is the sole end of inquiry is a very
important proposition. It sweeps away, at once, various vague and
erroneous conceptions of proof. A few of these may be noticed here.
1. Some philosophers have imagined that to start
an inquiry it was only necessary to utter a question whether orally or by
setting it down upon paper, and have even recommended us to begin our
studies with questioning everything! But the mere putting of a proposition
into the interrogative form does not stimulate the mind to any struggle
after belief. There must be a real and living doubt, and without this all
discussion is idle.
2. It is a very common idea that a demonstration must rest on some
ultimate and absolutely indubitable propositions. These, according to one
school, are first principles of a general nature; according to another,
are first sensations. But, in point of fact, an inquiry, to have that
completely satisfactory result called demonstration, has only to start
with propositions perfectly free from all actual doubt. If the premisses
are not in fact doubted at all, they cannot be more satisfactory than they
are.
3. Some people seem to love to argue a point after all the world is
fully convinced of it. But no further advance can be made. When doubt
ceases, mental action on the subject comes to an end; and, if it did go
on, it would be without a purpose.
V
If the settlement of opinion is the sole object
of inquiry, and if belief is of the nature of a habit, why should we not
attain the desired end, by taking as answer to a question any we may
fancy, and constantly reiterating it to ourselves, dwelling on all which
may conduce to that belief, and learning to turn with contempt and hatred
from anything that might disturb it? This simple and direct method is
really pursued by many men. I remember once being entreated not to read a
certain newspaper lest it might change my opinion upon free-trade.
"Lest I might be entrapped by its fallacies and misstatements,"
was the form of expression. "You are not," my friend said,
"a special student of political economy. You might, therefore, easily
be deceived by fallacious arguments upon the subject. You might, then, if
you read this paper, be led to believe in protection. But you admit that
free-trade is the true doctrine; and you do not wish to believe what is
not true." I have often known this system to be deliberately adopted.
Still oftener, the instinctive dislike of an undecided state of mind,
exaggerated into a vague dread of doubt, makes men cling spasmodically to
the views they already take. The man feels that, if he only holds to his
belief without wavering, it will be entirely satisfactory. Nor can it be
denied that a steady and immovable faith yields great peace of mind. It
may, indeed, give rise to inconveniences, as if a man should resolutely
continue to believe that fire would not burn him, or that he would be
eternally damned if he received his ingesta otherwise than through
a stomach-pump. But then the man who adopts this method will not allow
that its inconveniences are greater than its advantages. He will say,
"I hold steadfastly to the truth, and the truth is always
wholesome." And in many cases it may very well be that the pleasure
he derives from his calm faith overbalances any inconveniences resulting
from its deceptive character. Thus, if it be true that death is
annihilation, then the man who believes that he will certainly go straight
to heaven when he dies, provided he have fulfilled certain simple
observances in this life, has a cheap pleasure which will not be followed
by the least disappointment. A similar consideration seems to have weight
with many persons in religious topics, for we frequently hear it said,
"Oh, I could not believe so-and-so, because I should be wretched if I
did." When an ostrich buries its head in the sand as danger
approaches, it very likely takes the happiest course. It hides the danger,
and then calmly says there is no danger; and, if it feels perfectly sure
there is none, why should it raise its head to see? A man may go through
life, systematically keeping out of view all that might cause a change in
his opinions, and if he only succeeds -- basing his method, as he does, on
two fundamental psychological laws -- I do not see what can be said
against his doing so. It would be an egotistical impertinence to object
that his procedure is irrational, for that only amounts to saying that his
method of settling belief is not ours. He does not propose to himself to
be rational, and, indeed, will often talk with scorn of man's weak and
illusive reason. So let him think as he pleases.
But this method of fixing belief, which may be
called the method of tenacity, will be unable to hold its ground in
practice. The social impulse is against it. The man who adopts it will
find that other men think differently from him, and it will be apt to
occur to him, in some saner moment, that their opinions are quite as good
as his own, and this will shake his confidence in his belief. This
conception, that another man's thought or sentiment may be equivalent to
one's own, is a distinctly new step, and a highly important one. It arises
from an impulse too strong in man to be suppressed, without danger of
destroying the human species. Unless we make ourselves hermits, we shall
necessarily influence each other's opinions; so that the problem becomes
how to fix belief, not in the individual merely, but in the community.
Let the will of the state act, then, instead of
that of the individual. Let an institution be created which shall have for
its object to keep correct doctrines before the attention of the people,
to reiterate them perpetually, and to teach them to the young; having at
the same time power to prevent contrary doctrines from being taught,
advocated, or expressed. Let all possible causes of a change of mind be
removed from men's apprehensions. Let them be kept ignorant, lest they
should learn of some reason to think otherwise than they do. Let their
passions be enlisted, so that they may regard private and unusual opinions
with hatred and horror. Then, let all men who reject the established
belief be terrified into silence. Let the people turn out and
tar-and-feather such men, or let inquisitions be made into the manner of
thinking of suspected persons, and when they are found guilty of forbidden
beliefs, let them be subjected to some signal punishment. When complete
agreement could not otherwise be reached, a general massacre of all who
have not thought in a certain way has proved a very effective means of
settling opinion in a country. If the power to do this be wanting, let a
list of opinions be drawn up, to which no man of the least independence of
thought can assent, and let the faithful be required to accept all these
propositions, in order to segregate them as radically as possible from the
influence of the rest of the world.
This method has, from the earliest times, been one of the chief means
of upholding correct theological and political doctrines, and of
preserving their universal or catholic character. In Rome, especially, it
has been practised from the days of Numa Pompilius to those of Pius Nonus.
This is the most perfect example in history; but wherever there is a
priesthood -- and no religion has been without one -- this method has been
more or less made use of. Wherever there is an aristocracy, or a guild, or
any association of a class of men whose interests depend, or are supposed
to depend, on certain propositions, there will be inevitably found some
traces of this natural product of social feeling. Cruelties always
accompany this system; and when it is consistently carried out, they
become atrocities of the most horrible kind in the eyes of any rational
man. Nor should this occasion surprise, for the officer of a society does
not feel justified in surrendering the interests of that society for the
sake of mercy, as he might his own private interests. It is natural,
therefore, that sympathy and fellowship should thus produce a most
ruthless power.
In judging this method of fixing belief, which
may be called the method of authority, we must, in the first place, allow
its immeasurable mental and moral superiority to the method of tenacity.
Its success is proportionately greater; and, in fact, it has over and over
again worked the most majestic results. The mere structures of stone which
it has caused to be put together -- in Siam, for example, in Egypt, and in
Europe -- have many of them a sublimity hardly more than rivaled by the
greatest works of Nature. And, except the geological epochs, there are no
periods of time so vast as those which are measured by some of these
organized faiths. If we scrutinize the matter closely, we shall find that
there has not been one of their creeds which has remained always the same;
yet the change is so slow as to be imperceptible during one person's life,
so that individual belief remains sensibly fixed. For the mass of mankind,
then, there is perhaps no better method than this. If it is their highest
impulse to be intellectual slaves, then slaves they ought to remain.
But no institution can undertake to regulate
opinions upon every subject. Only the most important ones can be attended
to, and on the rest men's minds must be left to the action of natural
causes. This imperfection will be no source of weakness so long as men are
in such a state of culture that one opinion does not influence another --
that is, so long as they cannot put two and two together. But in the most
priest-ridden states some individuals will be found who are raised above
that condition. These men possess a wider sort of social feeling; they see
that men in other countries and in other ages have held to very different
doctrines from those which they themselves have been brought up to
believe; and they cannot help seeing that it is the mere accident of their
having been taught as they have, and of their having been surrounded with
the manners and associations they have, that has caused them to believe as
they do and not far differently. Nor can their candour resist the
reflection that there is no reason to rate their own views at a higher
value than those of other nations and other centuries; thus giving rise to
doubts in their minds.
They will further perceive that such doubts as
these must exist in their minds with reference to every belief which seems
to be determined by the caprice either of themselves or of those who
originated the popular opinions. The willful adherence to a belief, and
the arbitrary forcing of it upon others, must, therefore, both be given
up. A different new method of settling opinions must be adopted, that
shall not only produce an impulse to believe, but shall also decide what
proposition it is which is to be believed. Let the action of natural
preferences be unimpeded, then, and under their influence let men,
conversing together and regarding matters in different lights, gradually
develop beliefs in harmony with natural causes. This method resembles that
by which conceptions of art have been brought to maturity. The most
perfect example of it is to be found in the history of metaphysical
philosophy. Systems of this sort have not usually rested upon any observed
facts, at least not in any great degree. They have been chiefly adopted
because their fundamental propositions seemed "agreeable to
reason." This is an apt expression; it does not mean that which
agrees with experience, but that which we find ourselves inclined to
believe. Plato, for example, finds it agreeable to reason that the
distances of the celestial spheres from one another should be proportional
to the different lengths of strings which produce harmonious chords. Many
philosophers have been led to their main conclusions by considerations
like this; but this is the lowest and least developed form which the
method takes, for it is clear that another man might find Kepler's theory,
that the celestial spheres are proportional to the inscribed and
circumscribed spheres of the different regular solids, more agreeable to his
reason. But the shock of opinions will soon lead men to rest on
preferences of a far more universal nature. Take, for example, the
doctrine that man only acts selfishly -- that is, from the consideration
that acting in one way will afford him more pleasure than acting in
another. This rests on no fact in the world, but it has had a wide
acceptance as being the only reasonable theory.
This method is far more intellectual and
respectable from the point of view of reason than either of the others
which we have noticed. But its failure has been the most manifest. It
makes of inquiry something similar to the development of taste; but taste,
unfortunately, is always more or less a matter of fashion, and accordingly
metaphysicians have never come to any fixed agreement, but the pendulum
has swung backward and forward between a more material and a more
spiritual philosophy, from the earliest times to the latest. And so from
this, which has been called the a priori method, we are driven, in
Lord Bacon's phrase, to a true induction. We have examined into this a
priori method as something which promised to deliver our opinions from
their accidental and capricious element. But development, while it is a
process which eliminates the effect of some casual circumstances, only
magnifies that of others. This method, therefore, does not differ in a
very essential way from that of authority. The government may not have
lifted its finger to influence my convictions; I may have been left
outwardly quite free to choose, we will say, between monogamy and
polygamy, and, appealing to my conscience only, I may have concluded that
the latter practice is in itself licentious. But when I come to see that
the chief obstacle to the spread of Christianity among a people of as high
culture as the Hindoos has been a conviction of the immorality of our way
of treating women, I cannot help seeing that, though governments do not
interfere, sentiments in their development will be very greatly determined
by accidental causes. Now, there are some people, among whom I must
suppose that my reader is to be found, who, when they see that any belief
of theirs is determined by any circumstance extraneous to the facts, will
from that moment not merely admit in words that that belief is doubtful,
but will experience a real doubt of it, so that it ceases to be a belief.
To satisfy our doubts, therefore, it is necessary
that a method should be found by which our beliefs may be determined by
nothing human, but by some external permanency -- by something upon which
our thinking has no effect. Some mystics imagine that they have such a
method in a private inspiration from on high. But that is only a form of
the method of tenacity, in which the conception of truth as something
public is not yet developed. Our external permanency would not be
external, in our sense, if it was restricted in its influence to one
individual. It must be something which affects, or might affect, every
man. And, though these affections are necessarily as various as are
individual conditions, yet the method must be such that the ultimate
conclusion of every man shall be the same. Such is the method of science.
Its fundamental hypothesis, restated in more familiar language, is this:
There are Real things, whose characters are entirely independent of our
opinions about them; those Reals affect our senses according to regular
laws, and, though our sensations are as different as are our relations to
the objects, yet, by taking advantage of the laws of perception, we can
ascertain by reasoning how things really and truly are; and any man, if he
have sufficient experience and he reason enough about it, will be led to
the one True conclusion. The new conception here involved is that of
Reality. It may be asked how I know that there are any Reals. If this
hypothesis is the sole support of my method of inquiry, my method of
inquiry must not be used to support my hypothesis. The reply is this: 1.
If investigation cannot be regarded as proving that there are Real things,
it at least does not lead to a contrary conclusion; but the method and the
conception on which it is based remain ever in harmony. No doubts of the
method, therefore, necessarily arise from its practice, as is the case
with all the others. 2. The feeling which gives rise to any method of
fixing belief is a dissatisfaction at two repugnant propositions. But here
already is a vague concession that there is some one thing which a
proposition should represent. Nobody, therefore, can really doubt that
there are Reals, for, if he did, doubt would not be a source of
dissatisfaction. The hypothesis, therefore, is one which every mind
admits. So that the social impulse does not cause men to doubt it. 3.
Everybody uses the scientific method about a great many things, and only
ceases to use it when he does not know how to apply it. 4. Experience of
the method has not led us to doubt it, but, on the contrary, scientific
investigation has had the most wonderful triumphs in the way of settling
opinion. These afford the explanation of my not doubting the method or the
hypothesis which it supposes; and not having any doubt, nor believing that
anybody else whom I could influence has, it would be the merest babble for
me to say more about it. If there be anybody with a living doubt upon the
subject, let him consider it.
To describe the method of scientific
investigation is the object of this series of papers. At present I have
only room to notice some points of contrast between it and other methods
of fixing belief.
This is the only one of the four methods which presents any distinction
of a right and a wrong way. If I adopt the method of tenacity, and shut
myself out from all influences, whatever I think necessary to doing this,
is necessary according to that method. So with the method of authority:
the state may try to put down heresy by means which, from a scientific
point of view, seem very ill-calculated to accomplish its purposes; but
the only test on that method is what the state thinks; so that it
cannot pursue the method wrongly. So with the a priori method. The
very essence of it is to think as one is inclined to think. All
metaphysicians will be sure to do that, however they may be inclined to
judge each other to be perversely wrong. The Hegelian system recognizes
every natural tendency of thought as logical, although it be certain to be
abolished by counter-tendencies. Hegel thinks there is a regular system in
the succession of these tendencies, in consequence of which, after
drifting one way and the other for a long time, opinion will at last go
right. And it is true that metaphysicians do get the right ideas at last;
Hegel's system of Nature represents tolerably the science of his day; and
one may be sure that whatever scientific investigation shall have put out
of doubt will presently receive a priori demonstration on the part
of the metaphysicians. But with the scientific method the case is
different. I may start with known and observed facts to proceed to the
unknown; and yet the rules which I follow in doing so may not be such as
investigation would approve. The test of whether I am truly following the
method is not an immediate appeal to my feelings and purposes, but, on the
contrary, itself involves the application of the method. Hence it is that
bad reasoning as well as good reasoning is possible; and this fact is the
foundation of the practical side of logic.
It is not to be supposed that the first three
methods of settling opinion present no advantage whatever over the
scientific method. On the contrary, each has some peculiar convenience of
its own. The a priori method is distinguished for its comfortable
conclusions. It is the nature of the process to adopt whatever belief we
are inclined to, and there are certain flatteries to the vanity of man
which we all believe by nature, until we are awakened from our pleasing
dream by rough facts. The method of authority will always govern the mass
of mankind; and those who wield the various forms of organized force in
the state will never be convinced that dangerous reasoning ought not to be
suppressed in some way. If liberty of speech is to be untrammeled from the
grosser forms of constraint, then uniformity of opinion will be secured by
a moral terrorism to which the respectability of society will give its
thorough approval. Following the method of authority is the path of peace.
Certain non-conformities are permitted; certain others (considered unsafe)
are forbidden. These are different in different countries and in different
ages; but, wherever you are, let it be known that you seriously hold a
tabooed belief, and you may be perfectly sure of being treated with a
cruelty less brutal but more refined than hunting you like a wolf. Thus,
the greatest intellectual benefactors of mankind have never dared, and
dare not now, to utter the whole of their thought; and thus a shade of prima
facie doubt is cast upon every proposition which is considered
essential to the security of society. Singularly enough, the persecution
does not all come from without; but a man torments himself and is
oftentimes most distressed at finding himself believing propositions which
he has been brought up to regard with aversion. The peaceful and
sympathetic man will, therefore, find it hard to resist the temptation to
submit his opinions to authority. But most of all I admire the method of
tenacity for its strength, simplicity, and directness. Men who pursue it
are distinguished for their decision of character, which becomes very easy
with such a mental rule. They do not waste time in trying to make up their
minds what they want, but, fastening like lightning upon whatever
alternative comes first, they hold to it to the end, whatever happens,
without an instant's irresolution. This is one of the splendid qualities
which generally accompany brilliant, unlasting success. It is impossible
not to envy the man who can dismiss reason, although we know how it must
turn out at last.
Such are the advantages which the other methods
of settling opinion have over scientific investigation. A man should
consider well of them; and then he should consider that, after all, he
wishes his opinions to coincide with the fact, and that there is no reason
why the results of those three first methods should do so. To bring about
this effect is the prerogative of the method of science. Upon such
considerations he has to make his choice -- a choice which is far more
than the adoption of any intellectual opinion, which is one of the ruling
decisions of his life, to which, when once made, he is bound to adhere.
The force of habit will sometimes cause a man to hold on to old beliefs,
after he is in a condition to see that they have no sound basis. But
reflection upon the state of the case will overcome these habits, and he
ought to allow reflection its full weight. People sometimes shrink from
doing this, having an idea that beliefs are wholesome which they cannot
help feeling rest on nothing. But let such persons suppose an analogous
though different case from their own. Let them ask themselves what they
would say to a reformed Mussulman who should hesitate to give up his old
notions in regard to the relations of the sexes; or to a reformed Catholic
who should still shrink from reading the Bible. Would they not say that
these persons ought to consider the matter fully, and clearly understand
the new doctrine, and then ought to embrace it, in its entirety? But,
above all, let it be considered that what is more wholesome than any
particular belief is integrity of belief, and that to avoid looking into
the support of any belief from a fear that it may turn out rotten is quite
as immoral as it is disadvantageous. The person who confesses that there
is such a thing as truth, which is distinguished from falsehood simply by
this, that if acted on it should, on full consideration, carry us to the
point we aim at and not astray, and then, though convinced of this, dares
not know the truth and seeks to avoid it, is in a sorry state of mind
indeed.

Notes
1.Not quite so, but as nearly so as can be
told in a few words.
2.I am not speaking of secondary effects
occasionally produced by the interference of other impulses. |