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If when tormented with violent thirst, he figures PAUL HaLBACH 419

to himself in idea, or really perceives a fountain,


whose limpid streams might cool his feverish want, will be insisted, the debauchee may be prevailed on
is he sufficient master of himself to desire or not to to change his conduct: this does not imply that he is
desire the object competent to satisfy so lively a a free agent; but that motives may be found suffi-
want? It will no doubt be conceded, that it is impos- ciently powerful to annihilate the effect of those that
sible he should not be desirous to satisfy it; but it previously acted upon him; then these new motives
Hard Determinism: The Casefor Determinism and Its Incompatibility with Any will be said-if at this moment it is announced to I,
determine his will to the new mode of conduct he II:
Important Sense of Free Will him that the water he so ardently desires is poi- may adopt as necessarily as the former did to the old I!
mode.. . . I:
soned, he will, notwithstanding his vehement thirst,
!ii
abstain from drinking it: and it has, therefore, been The errors of philosophers on the free agency of
falsely concluded that he is a free agent. The fact, man, have arisen from their regarding his will as the
however, is, that the motive in either case is exactly primum mobile, the original motive of his actions;
PAUL HaLBACH the same: his own conservation. The same necessity
for want of recurring back, they have not perceived I
that determined him to drink before he knew the
water was deleterious upon this new discovery equally
the II1_ultip~~E_.Jh~com~~ causes which, inde- i
pendently of him, give motion to the will itself; or I
The Illusion of Free Will* determined him not to drink; the desire of conserv-
which dispose and modify his brain, while he himself I
ing himself either annihilates or suspends the former is purely passive in the motion he receives. Is he the;
impulse; the second motive becomes stronger than master of desiring or not desiring an object that ap-
the preceding, that is, the fear of death, or the desire pears desirable to him? Without doubt it will be an-
of the causes by which he is moved, he determines of preserving himself, necessarily prevails over the swered, no: but he is the master of resisting his
Paul Henri Thiry, baron d'Holbach (1723-1789), a painful sensation caused by his eagerness to drink:
his own will, and regulates his own condition. . . . desire, if he reflects on the consequences. But, I ask,
French philosopher, was one of the Encyclopedists. but, it will be said, if the thirst is very parching, an
The will, as we have elsewhere said, is a modifi- is he capable of reflecting on these consequences,
His book, System of Nature, was called by his ene- inconsiderate man without regarding the danger will
cation of the brain, by which it is disposed to action, when his soul is hurried along by a very lively pas-
mies "the Bible of Atheists." risk swallowing the water. Nothing is gained by this
or prepared to give play to the organs. This will is sion, which entirely depends upon his natural orga-
necessarily determined by the qualities, good ot remark: in this case, the anterior impulse only re- nization, and the causes by which he is modified? Is
Motives and the Determinism of the Will. In what-
bad, agreeable or painful, of the object or the mo- gains the ascendency; he is persuaded that life may it in his power to add to these consequences all the
ever manner man is considered, he is connected to
tive that acts upon his senses, or of which the idea possibly be longer preserved, or that he shall derive weight necessary to counterbalance his desire? Is he
universal nature, and submitted to the necessary and
remains with him, and is resuscitated by his mem- a greater good by drinking the poisoned water than the master of preventing the qualities which render
immutable laws that she imposes on all the beings
ory. In consequence, he acts necessarily, his action by enduring the torment, which, to his mind, threat- an object desirable from residing in it? I shall be
she contains, according to their peculiar essences or
is the result of the impulse he receives either from ens instant dissolution; thus the first becomes the told: he ought to have learned to resist his passions;
to the respective properties with which, without con-
the motive, from the object, or from the idea which strongest and necessarily urges him on to action. to contract a habit of putting a curb on his desires. I
sulting them, she endows each particular species.
Man's life is a line that nature commands him to has modified his .brain, or disposed his will. When Nevertheless, in either case, whether he partakes of agree to it without any difficulty. But in reply, I
he does not act according to this impulse, it is be- the water, or whether he does not, the two actions again ask, is his nature susceptible of this modifica-
describe upon the surface of the earth, without his
cause there comes some new cause, some new mo- will be equally necessary; they will be the effect of tion? Does his boiling blood, his unruly imagination,
ever being able to swerve from it, even for an in-
stant. He is born without his own consent; his orga- tive, some new idea, which modifies his brain in a that motive which finds itself most puissant; which the igneous fluid that circulates in his veins, permit
nization does in nowise depend upon himself; his different manner, gives him a new impulse, deter- consequently acts in the most coercive manner upon him to make, enable him to apply true.experience in
mines his will in another way, by which the action of his will. the moment when it is wanted? And even when his
ideas come to him involuntarily; his habits are in the
the former impulse is suspended: thus, the sight of This example will serve to explain the whole phe- temperament has capacitated him, has his educa-
power of those who cause him to contract them; he nomena of the human will. This will, or rather the
an agreeable object, or its idea, determines his will tion, the examples set before him, the ideas with
ris unceasingly modified by causes, whether visible or brain, finds itself in the same situation as a bowl,
to set him in action to procure it; but if a new object which he has been inspired in early life, been suit-
\ concealed, over which he has no control, which nec-
or a new idea more powerfully attracts him, it gives which, although it has received an impulse that able to make him contract this habit of repressing his
I, to his way of thinking,
essarily regulate his mode of existence, give the hue
and determine his manner of a new direction to his will, annihilates the effect of drives it forward in a straight line, is deranged in its desires? Have not all these things rather contributed
the former, and prevents the action by which it was course whenever a force superior to the first obliges to induce him to seek with avidity, to make him
L:cting. He is good or bad, happy or miserable, wise it to change its direction. The man who drinks the actually desire those objects which you say he ought
::or foolish, reasonable or irrational, without his will to be procured. This is the mode in which reflection,
experience, reason, necessarily arrests or suspends poisoned water appears a madman; but the actions to resist? . . .
being for anything in these various states. Neverthe-
the action of man's will: without this he would ~f of fools are as necessary as those of the most prudent In short, the actions of man are never free; they
less, in spite of the shackles by which he is bound, it
necessity have followed the anterior impulse which individuals. The motives that determine the volup- are always the necessary consequence of his temper-
Es pretended he is a free agent, or that independent carried him towards a then desirable object. In all tuary and the debauchee to risk their health, are as ament, of the received ideas, and of the notions,
this he always acts according to necessary laws from powerful, and their actions are as necessary, as those either true or false, which he has formed to himself
'From System of Nature by Baron Paul d'Holbach, pub- which he has no means of emancipating himself. which decide the wise man to manage his. But, it
lished in 1770. Translated by H. D. Robinson. of happiness; of his opinions, strengthened by ex-

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420 DETERMINISM AND FREE WILL him he is a free agent at this moment, is, that he he is not master of the thought presented to his PAUL HaLBACH 421
does no~gLsc"ern t,he true£1o.tive which sets him in mind, which determines his will; this thought is ex-
ample, by education, and by daily experience. So 'aCti6ii,-namely, the"des"ire of convincing his oppo- cited by some cause independent of himself.
nent: if in the heat of the dispute he insists and asks, To be undeceived on the system of his free whatever: take away this obstacle, it will gravitate or
many crimes are witnessed on the earth only because
every thing conspires to render man vicious and
criminal; the religion he has adopted, his govern-
ment, his education, the examples set before him,
"Am I not the master of throwing myself out of the
window?" I shall answer him, no; that whilst he pre-
serves his reason there is no probability that the de-
agency, man has simply to recur to the motive by
which his will is determined; he will always find this.
motive is out of his own control. It is said: that in)
\ continue to fall; but who shall say this dense body is
free to fall or not? Is not its descent the necessary
effect of its own specific gravity? The virtuous Soc-
irresistibly drive him on to evil: under these circum- sire of proving his free ageucy, will become a motive rates submitted to the laws of his country, although
consequence of an idea to which the mind gives
stances, morality preaches virtue to him in vain. In sufficiently powerful to make him sacrifice his life to birth, man acts freely if he encounters no obstacle. they were unjust; and though the doors of his jail
those societies where vice is esteemed, where crime the attempt: if, notwithstanding this, to prove he is But the question is, what gives birth to this idea in were left open to him, he would not save himself;
is crowned, where venality is constantly recom- a free agent, he should actually precipitate himself but in this he did not act as a free agent: the invisible
his brain? Was he the master either to prevent it from
from the window, it would not be a sufficient war- chains of opinion, the secret love of decorum, the
pensed, where the most dreadful disorders are pun- presenting itself, or from renewing itself in his
ranty to conclude he acted freely, but rather that it inward respect for the laws, even when they were
ished only in those who are too weak to enjoy the brain? Does not this idea depend either upon ob-
was the violence of his temperament which spurred iniquitous, the fear of tarnishing his glory, kept him
privilege of committing them with impunity, the jects that strike him exteriorly and in despite of him-
him on to this folly. Madness is a state, that depends in his prison; they were motives sufficiently powerful
practice of virtue is considered nothing more than a self, or upon causes, that without his knowledge, act
with this enthusiast for virtue, to induce him to wait
painful sacrifice of happiness. Such societies chas- upon the heat of the blood, not upon the will. A within himself and modify his brain? Can he prevent
fanatic or a hero, braves death as necessarily as a death with tranquility; it was not in his power to save
tise, in the lower orders, those excesses which they his eyes, cast without design upon any object what-
more phlegmatic man or coward flies from it. himself, because he could find no potential motive
respect in the higher ranks; and frequently have the ever, from giving him an idea of this object, and
There is, in point of fact, no difference between from moving his brain? He is not more master of the to bring him to depart, even for an instant, from
injustice to condemn those in the penalty of death,
the man that is cast out of the window by another, those principles to which his mind was accustomed.
whom public prejudices, maintained by constant ex- obstacles; they are the necessary effects of either
and the man who throws himself out of it, except Man, it is said, frequently acts against his incli-
ample, have rendered criminal. interior or exterior causes, which always act accord-
that the impulse in the first instance comes immedi- nation, from wh<;:nce it is falsely concluded he is a
Man, then, is not a free agent in anyone instant ing to their given properties. A man insults a cow-
of his life; he is necessarily guided in each step by ately from without whilst that which determines the free agent; but when he appears to act contrary to
ard; this necessarily irritates him against his insulter;
those advantages, whether real or fictitious, that he fall in the second case, springs from within his own but his will cannot vanquish the obstacle that cow- his iuclination, he is always determined to it by some
peculiar machine, having its more remote cause also ardice places to the object of his desire, because his motive sufficiently efficacious to vanquish this incli-
attaches to the objects" by which his passions are
exterior. When Mutius Scaevola held his hand in the nation. A sick man, with a view to his cure, arrives
roused: these passions themselves are necessary in a natural conformation, which does not depend upou
fire, he was as much acting under the influence of at couquering his repugnance to the most disgusting
being who unceasingly teuds towards his own hap- himself, prevents his having courage. In this case,
necessity (caused by interior motives) that urged remedies: the fear of pain, or the dread of death,
piness; their energy is necessary, since that depends the coward is insulted in spite of himself; and against
him to this strange action, as if his arm had been his will is obliged patiently to brook the insult he has then become necessary motives; consequently this
on his temperament; his temperament is necessary,
"
held by strong men: pride, despair, the desire of received. sick man cannot be said to act freely.
because it depends on the physical elements which
braving his enemy, a wish to astonish him, and anx- When it is said, that man is not a free agent, it is
enter into his composition; the modification of this I
Absence of Restraint Is Not Absence of Necessity.
iety to intimidate him, etc., were the invisible chains not pretended to compare him to a body moved by
temperament is necessary, as it is the infallible and The partisans of the system of free agency appear
that held his hand bound to the fire~Th~ a simple impulsive cause: he contains withiu himself
inevitable consequence of the impulse he receives ever to have confounded constraint with necessity.
from the incessant action of moral and physical glory, enthusiasm for their country, in like manner causes inherent to his existence; he is moved by an
Man believes he acts as a free agent, every time he
caused Codrus and Decius to devote themselves for interior organ, which has its own peculiar laws, and
beings. does not see any thing that places obstacles to his
Choice Does Not Prove Freedom. In spite of their fellow-citizens. The Indian Colanus and the actions; he does not perceive that the motive which is itself necessarily determined in cousequence of
ideas formed from perception resulting from sensa-
these proofs of the want of free agency in man, so philosopher Peregrinus were equally obliged to burn causes him to will, is always necessary and indepen-
themselves, by desire of exciting the astonishment dent of himself..A prisoner loaded with chains is tion which it receives from exterior ebjects. As the
clear to unprejudiced minds, it will, perhaps be in-
of the Grecian assembly. compelled to remain in prison; but he is not a free mechanism of these sensations, of these perceptions,
sisted upon with no small feeling of triull}ph, that if and the manner they engrave ideas on the brain of
it be proposed to anyone, to move or not to move It is said that free agency is the absence of those agent in the desire to emancipate himself; his chains
man, are not known to him; because he is unable to
his hand, an action in the number of those called obstacles competent to oppose themselves to the 2 prevent him from acting, but they do not prevent
tions of man, or to the exercise of his faculties: it unravel all these motions; because he cannot per-
indifferent, he evidently appears to be the master of him from willing; he would save himself if they
would loose his fetters; but he would not save him. ceive the chain of operations in his soul, or the mo-
choosing; from which it is concluded that evidence pretended that he is a free agent whenever, making
use of these faculties, he produces the effect he has tive principle that acts within him, he supposes
has been offered of free agency. The reply is, this self as a free agent; fear or the idea of punishment
proposed to himself. In reply to this reasoning, it is would be sufficient motives for his action. himself a free agent; which literally translated, sig-
example is perfectly simple; man in performing
nifies, that he moves himself by himself; that he de-
some action which he is resolved on doing, does not sufficient to consider that it in nowise depends upon Man may, therefore, cease to be restrained,
termines himself without cause: when he rather
by any means prove his free agency; the very desire himself to place or remove the obstacles that either without, for that reason, becoming a free agent: in
determine or resist him; the motive that causes his ought to say, that he is ignorant how or why he acts
of displaying this quality, excited by the dispute, be- whatever manner he acts, he will act necessarily,
action is no more in his own power than the obstacle according to motives by which he shall be deter- in the manner he does. It is true the soul enjoys an
comes a necessary motive, which decides his will
either for the one or the other of these actions: What activity peculiar tojtself: but it is equally certain that
that impedes him, whether this obstacle or motive"' mined. He may be compared to a heavy body that this activity would never be displayed, if some mo-
deludes him in this instance, or that which persuades be within his own machine or exterior of his person" . finds itself arrested in its descent by any obstacle tive or some cause did not put it in a condition to

"',"'"".,,",,-~.4_'
422 DETERMINISM AND FREE WILL causes so fugitive, so remote from their effects, and
which, superficially examined, appear to have so lit-
exercise itself: at least it will not be pretended that tle analogy, so slender a relation with them, that it
the soul is able either to love or to hate without requires singular sagacity to bring them into light..
being moved, without knowing the objects, without This is what renders the study of the moral man a
having some idea of their qualities. Gunpowder has task of such difficulty; this is the reason why' his
unquestionably a particular activity, but this activity heart is an abyss, of which it is frequently impossible B. F. SKINNER
will never display itself, unless fire be applied to it; for him to fathom the depth.
this, however, immediately sets it in motion. If he understood the play of his organs, if he were'
The Complexity of Human Conduct and the Illu- able to recall to himself all the impulsions they have
sion of Free Agency. It is the great complication of received, all the modifications they have undergone:
Beyond Freedom and Dignity*
motion in man, it is the variety of his action, it is the all the effects they have produced, he would per-
multiplicity of causes that move him, whether simul- ceive that all his actions are submitted to the fatality,
taneouslyor in continual succession, that persuades which regulates his own particular system, as it does
him he is a free agent: if all his motions were simple, the entire system of the universe: no one effect in B. F. Skinner (1904-1990), the leading behavioral psy- ing to them. (Punitive contingencies are not to be
if the causes that move him did not confound them- him, any more than in nature, produces itself by chologist of his time, taught at Harvard University.
confused with aversive control, through which people
selves with each other, if they were distinct, if his chance; this, as has been before proved, is word vc I ----- are induced to behave in given ways. Punishment is
machine were less complicated, he would perceive of sense. All that passes in him; all that is done used to induce people not to behave in given ways.)
that all his actions were necessary, because he would him; as well as all that happens in nature, or that is Freedom is sometimes defined as a lack of resistance
A person resorts to punishment when he criticizes,
be enabled to recur instantly to the cause that made attributed to her, is derived from necessary causes, or restraint. A wheel turns freely if there is very little ridicules, blames, or physically attacks another in
him act. A man who should be always obliged to go which act according to necessary laws, and which friction in the bearing, a horse breaks free from the order to suppress unwanted behavior. Government
towards the west, would always go on that side; but produce necessary effects from whence necessarily post to which it has been tethered, a man frees him- is often defined -in terms of the power to punish, and
he would feel that, in so going, he was not a free flow others. self from the branch on which he has been caught some religions teach that sinful behavior will be fol-
agent: if he had another sense, as his actions or his Fatality, is the eternal, the immutable, the nec! while climbing a tree. Physical restraint is an obvious lowed by eternal punishments of the most horrible
motion, augmented by a sixth, would be still more essary order, established in nature; or the indispens- condition, which seems particularly useful in defin- sort.
varied and much more complicated, he would be- able connexion of causes that act, with the effects ing freedom, but with respect to important issues, it We should expect the literatures of freedom and
lieve himself still more a free agent than he does they operate. Conforming to this order, heavy bod- is a metaphor and not a very good one. People are dignity to oppose measures of this sort and to work
with his five senses. ies fall: light bodies rise; that which is analogous in indeed controlled by fetters, handcuffs, strait jack- toward a world in which punishment is less common
It is, then, for want of recurring to the causes that matter reciprocally attracts; that which is heteroge- ets, and the walls of jails and concentration camps, or even absent, and up to a point they have done so.
move him; for want of being able to analyze, from neous mutually repels; man congregates himself in but what may be called behavioral control-the re-
But punitive sanctions are still common. People still
not being competent to decompose the complicated society, modifies each his fellow; becomes either vir- straint imposed by contingencies of reinforcement- control each other more often through censure or
motion of his machine, that man believes himself a tuous or wicked; either contributes to his mutual is a very different thing.
blame than commendation or praise, the military
free agent: it is only upon his own ignorance that he happiness, or reciprocates his misery; either loves Except when physically restrained, a person is and the police remain the most powerful arms of
founds the profound yet deceitful notion he has of his neighbour, or hates his companion necessarily,' least free or dignified when he is under threat of
government, communicants are still occasionally re-
his free agency; that he builds those opinions which according to the manner in which the one acts upori punishment, and unfortunately most people often minded of hellfire, and teachers have abandoned the
he brings forward as a striking proof of his pre- the other. From whence it may be seen, that the are. Punishment is very common in nature, and we birch rod only to replace it with more subtle forms
tended freedom of action. If, for a short time, each same necessity which regulates the physical, also learn a great deal from it. A child runs awkwardly, of punishment. And the curious fact is that those
man was willing to examine his own peculiar actions, regulates the moral world, in which every thing is iri falls, and is hurt; he touches a bee and is stung; he who defend freedom and dignity are not only not
search out their true motives to discover their con- takes a bone from a dog and is bitten; and as a result opposed to these measures but largely responsible
consequynce submitted to fatality. Man, in running
catenation, he would remain convinced that the sen- over, frequently without his own knowledge, often y...- he learns not to do these things again. It is mainly to for the fact that they are still withps. This strange
timent he has of his natural free agency, is a chimera in spite of himself, the route which nature has>\w avoid various forms of natural punishment that peo- state of affairs can be understood only by looking
that must speedily be destroyed by experience. marked out for him, resembles a swimmer who is' ple have built a more comfortable and less danger- at the way in which organisms respond to punitive
ous world.
Nevertheless it must be acknowledged that the obliged to follow the current that carries him along: contingencies.
multiplicity and diversity of the causes which contin- The word punishment is usually confined to con- Punishment is designed to remove awkward, dan-
he believes himself a free agent, because he some-,
ually act upon man, frequently without even his times consents, sometimes does not consent, to glide' tingencies intentionally arranged by other people, gerous, or otherwise unwanted behavior from a rep-
knowledge, render it impossible, or at least ex- who arrange them because the results are reinforc- ertoire on the assumption that a person who has
with the stream, which notwithstanding, always hur-
tremely difficult for him to recur to the true princi- ries him forward; he believes himself the master of been punished is less likely to behave in the same
ples of his own peculiar actions, much less the his condition, because he is obliged to use his way again. Unfortunately, the matter is not that sim-
'From B. F. Skinner, Beyond Freedom and Dignity (New
actions of others: they frequently depend upon under the fear of sinking. . . . York: BantamlVintage Books, 1971), pp. 56-77. Skinner's own ple. Reward and punishment do not cliffer merely in
title for this chapter of his book was "Punishment." Reprinted the direction of the changes they induce. A child
by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. @ 1971 by B. F. Skinner.
who has been severely punished for sex play is not

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