Appendix To The Abolition of Man
Appendix To The Abolition of Man
Appendix To The Abolition of Man
CONTENTS
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I. The Law of General Beneficence/Law of General Goodwill towards
Humanity.
(a) NEGATIVE
(Ancient Egyptian. From the Confession of the Righteous Soul, 'Book of the Dead', v. Encyclopedia of
Religion and Ethics [= ERE], vol. V, p. 478)
(Ancient Egyptian. Precepts of Ptahhetep. H. R. Hall, Ancient History of the Near East, p. i33n)
'I have not brought misery upon my fellows. I have not made the beginning of every day laborious
in the sight of him who worked for me.'
'Slander not.'
(Hindu. Janet, p. 7)
'Has he... driven an honest man from his family? Broken up a well cemented clan?'
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(Babylonian. List of Sins from incantation tablets. ERE v. 446)
(Ancient Chinese. Analects of Confucius, trans. A. Waley, xv. 23j cf. xii. 2)
'He whose heart is in the smallest degree set upon goodness will dislike no one.'
(b) POSITIVE
'Nature urges that a man should wish human society to exist and should wish to enter it.'
'By the fundamental Law of Nature, Man [is] to be preserved as much as possible.'
Jan Ch'iu said. 'When the people have multiplied, what next should be done for them?
Jan Ch'iu said. When one has enriched them, what next should be done for them?
'Men were brought into existence for the sake of men that they might do one another good.'
(Roman. Cicero. De Off. i. vii)
(Hindu. Janet, i. 7)
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(Roman. Juvenal xv. 140)
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2. The Law of Special Beneficence/The Law of Goodwill to Specific Persons.
'It is upon the trunk that a gentleman works. When that is firmly set up, the Way grows. And
surely proper behaviour to parents and elder brothers is the trunk of goodness.'
(Old Norse. Account of the Evil Age before the World's end, Volospa 45)
'You will see them take care of their kindred [and] the children of their friends ... never
reproaching them in the least.'
'Love thy wife studiously. Gladden her heart all thy life long.'
'Nothing can ever change the claims of kinship for a right thinking man.'
'Did not Socrates love his own children, though he did so as a free man and as one not forgetting
that the gods have the first claim on our friendship?'
'I ought not to be unfeeling like a statue but should fulfil both my natural and artificial relations, as
a worshipper, a son, a brother, a father, and a citizen.'
'This first I rede [advise] thee: be blameless to thy kindred. Take no vengeance even though they
do thee wrong.'
'Is it only the sons of Atreus who love their wives? For every good man, who is right-minded, loves
and cherishes his own.'
'The union and fellowship of men will be best preserved if each receives from us the more
kindness in proportion as he is more closely connected with us.'
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(Roman. Cicero. De Off. i. xvi)
'Part of us is claimed by our country, part by our parents, part by our friends.'
'If a ruler ...compassed the salvation of the whole state, surely you would call him Good? The
Master said. It would no longer be a matter of "Good". He would without doubt be a Divine Sage.'
(Ancient Chinese. Analects, vi. 28)
'Has it escaped you that, in the eyes of gods and good men, your native land deserves from you
more honour, worship, and reverence than your mother and father and all your ancestors? That
you should give a softer answer to its anger than to a father's anger? That if you cannot persuade
it to alter its mind you must obey it in all quietness, whether it binds you or beats you or sends
you to a war where you may get wounds or death?'
'If any provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith.'
(Christian. I Timothy 5:8)
'Put them in mind to obey magistrates.'... 'I exhort that prayers be made for kings and all that are
in authority.'
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3. Duties to Parents, Elders, Ancestors
'Your father is an image of the Lord of Creation, your mother an image of the Earth. For him who
fails to honour them, every work of piety is in vain. This is the first duty.'
(Hindu. Janet, i. 9)
'I was a staff by my Father's side...I went in and out at his command.'
'Children, old men, the poor, and the sick, should be considered as the lords of the atmosphere.'
(Hindu. Janet, i. 8)
'Rise up before the hoary head and honour the old man.'
'I have not taken away the oblations of the blessed dead.'
'When proper respect towards the dead is shown at the end and continued after they are far
away, the moral force (te) of a people has reached its highest point.'
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4. Duties to Children and Posterity
'Children, the old, the poor, etc. should be considered as lords of the atmosphere.'
(Hindu. Janet, i. 8)
'Can you conceive an Epicurean [pleasure seeking] commonwealth? . . . What will happen?
Whence is the population to be kept up? Who will educate them? Who will be Director of
Adolescents? Who will be Director of Physical Training? What will be taught?'
(Greek. Ibid.)
'Nature produces a special love of offspring' and 'To live according to Nature is the supreme good.'
(Roman. Cicero, De Off. i. iv, and De Legibus, i. xxi)
'The second of these achievements is no less glorious than the first; for while the first did good on
one occasion, the second will continue to benefit the state for ever.'
'The killing of the women and more especially of the young boys and girls who are to go to make
up the future strength of the people, is the saddest part... and we feel it very sorely.'
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5. The Law of Justice
(a) SEXUAL JUSTICE
(b) HONESTY
(Babylonian. Ibid.)
'Justice is the settled and permanent intention of rendering to each man his rights.'
'If the native made a "find" of any kind (e.g., a honey tree) and marked it, it was thereafter safe
for him, as far as his own tribesmen were concerned, no matter how long he left it.'
'The first point of justice is that none should do any mischief to another unless he has first been
attacked by the other's wrongdoing. The second is that a man should treat common property as
common property, and private property as his own. There is no such thing as private property by
nature, but things have become private either through prior occupation (as when men of old came
into empty territory) or by conquest, or law, or agreement, or stipulation, or casting lots.'
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(c) JUSTICE IN COURT, &C.
'I have not traduced the slave to him who is set over him.'
'Regard him whom thou knowest like him whom thou knowest not.'
'Do no unrighteousness in judgement. You must not consider the fact that one party is poor nor
the fact that the other is a great man.'
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6. The Law of Good Faith and Veracity
'A sacrifice is obliterated by a lie and the merit of alms by an act of fraud.'
(Hindu. Janet, i. 6)
'Whose mouth, full of lying, avails not before thee: thou burnest their utterance.'
'With his mouth was he full of Yea, in his heart full of Nay?
'Hateful to me as are the gates of Hades is that man who says one thing, and hides another in his
heart.'
'[The gentleman] must learn to be faithful to his superiors and to keep promises.'
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7. The Law of Mercy
'The poor and the sick should be regarded as lords of the atmosphere.'
(Hindu. Janet, i. 8)
'Whoso makes intercession for the weak, well pleasing is this to Samas.'
'I have given bread to the hungry, water to the thirsty, clothes to the naked, a ferry boat to the
boatless.'
(Hindu. Janet, i. 8)
'In the Dalebura tribe a woman, a cripple from birth, was carried about by the tribes-people in
turn until her death at the age of sixty-six.'... 'They never desert the sick.'
'You will see them take care of… widows, orphans, and old men, never reproaching them.'
'Nature confesses that she has given to the human race the tenderest hearts, by giving us the
power to weep. This is the best part of us.'
'They said that he had been the mildest and gentlest of the kings of the world.'
'When thou cuttest down thine harvest... and hast forgot a sheaf., thou shalt not go again to fetch
it: it shall be for the stranger, for the fatherless, and for the widow.'
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8. The Law of Magnanimity/Courage
'Men always knew that when force and injury was offered they might be defenders of themselves;
they knew that howsoever men may seek their own commodity, yet if this were done with injury
unto others it was not to be suffered, but by all men and by all good means to be withstood.'
(English. Hooker, Laws ofEccl. Polity, I. ix. 4)
'To take no notice of a violent attack is to strengthen the heart of the enemy. Vigour is valiant, but
cowardice is vile.'
(Ancient Egyptian. The Pharaoh Senusert III, cit. H. R. Hall, Ancient History of the Near East, p.
161)
'They came to the fields of joy, the fresh turf of the Fortunate Woods and the dwellings of the
Blessed . . . here was the company of those who had suffered wounds fighting for their
fatherland.' (Roman. Virgil, Aeneid, vi. 638-9, 660)
'Courage has got to be harder, heart the stouter, spirit the sterner, as our strength weakens. Here
lies our lord, cut to pieces, out best man in the dust. If anyone thinks of leaving this battle, he can
howl forever.'
'Praise and imitate that man to whom, while life is pleasing, death is not grievous.'
'The Master said. Love learning and if attacked be ready to die for the Good Way.'
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'Nature and Reason command that nothing uncomely, nothing effeminate, nothing lascivious be
done or thought.'
'We must not listen to those who advise us "being men to think human thoughts, and being
mortal to think mortal thoughts," but must put on immortality as much as is possible and strain
every nerve to live according to that best part of us, which, being small in bulk, yet much more in
its power and honour surpasses all else.'
'The soul then ought to conduct the body, and the spirit of our minds the soul. This is therefore the
first Law, whereby the highest power of the mind requireth obedience at the hands of all the rest.'
(Hooker, op. cit. i. viii. 6)
'Let him not desire to die, let him not desire to live, let him wait for his time...let him patiently
bear hard words, entirely abstaining from bodily pleasures.'
'He who is unmoved, who has restrained his senses ... is said to be devoted. As a flame in a
windless place that flickers not, so is the devoted.'
'I know that I hung on the gallows for nine nights, wounded with the spear as a sacrifice to Odin,
myself offered to Myself.'
(Old Norse. Hdvamdl, I. 10 in Corpus Poeticum Boreale; stanza 139 in Hildebrand's Lieder der Alteren
Edda. 1922)
'Verily, verily I say to you unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone, but
if it dies it bears much fruit. He who loves his life loses it.'
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