r THE LAW OF NATURE, O R, PRINCIPLES OF MOR4LITT, DEDUCED FROM THE PHYSICAL CONSTITUTION O F MANKIND AND THE UNIVERSE. BvC F. VOLLEY. ' For modes of faith, let gracelefs zealots fight ; ' His can't be wrong, whofe life is in the right.*' POPE. PHILADELPHIA : PRINTED FOR. T. STEPHENS BV F. 3* R. BAILEY, .179$. ADVERTISEMENT OF THE EDITOR. IF looks are to be eflimated by their . bulk, this 'will have but a very Jlendcr claim upon the public ; but if they are to be appreciated by their intrinftc con- tents, this will probably rank among feme of the mojl important. As nothing, in general, is of more real utility than a good elementary treatife, fo nothing is attended 'with greater dif- ficulty In the compnfition, and even in IV ADVERTISEMENT* the perufal of it ; becaufe, in fuch a one, there is nothing but analyfis and definition, and an exhibition of truth with all the Jimplicity of precifion. If the work be deficient in truth and pre- cifion, its object is totally defeated , and if it has to boafl of both, it is liable to become abflrufe, even by dint of its All the treatifes on ethics that have hitherto appeared, evidently labour un- der the former of thefe defects, being only a confufed mafs. of detached and unconnected maxims, of precepts with- out ofienfible caufes, and of actions with- out pre-exlftent motives. The pedantic race of morall-zers, that have addref- fed themfelves to mankind on this topic ADVERTISEMENT. V lave treated them like fo many babies > And have kept them in awe by terrifying them with invrfible ghojls and hobgob- lins ; but now when thejlature of man's mind is more advanced in growth, if is time that itjhould hear the language of reafon. The period is arrived, when, men Jhould be taught by the conviftion of their own fenfes, that the radical fource of their melioration and moral improvement is to be looked for, in their organization, in the direction and in- terejl of their paj/ions, and in the very cotiftituetit elements of their exigence. Such is the advantage of the fyjlem ex~ Ixlitedin the prefent work, that mora- lity, by deriving its fundamental prin- ciples from the very nature of things a 1 VI ADVERTISEMENT. becomes Me them fixed and immutable : ivhilft, on the contrary, in all the theo- logical fyjlems, ly being built upon ar- bitrary opinions, indemonjlrable in them- felves, and frequently abfurd, it fluc- tuates, declines, andperifhes with them 9 having, mankind in a flate of abfolute depravity. It is high time to prove, that morality is a phyjical and geometri- al fcience, and, as fuch, fufceptible, like the reft, of calculation and mathe- matical demonflration. But, fince a feal fyjlem of ethics mufl be founded on totlual fatls, and not on the romantic dreams of a fanciful imagination, it may, it is true, have more obflacles, on that account, to combat with, before its principles canbecome general and popular ADVERTISEMENT. Vll Tet it has one confolation to fupport it* that it will gain Jrrength even by the op" pofition that is made againft it ; and the sternal religion of nature will eventually learfway and overturn all the tranfi- tory religions of human fabrication. 'The French treatife, of which the prefent is a tranflation, was publi/hed in I 793> an d appears from its title of " Catechifm of a French Citizen," to be intended as a national manual of ethics ; but, as it may equally be entit- led, The Catechifm of good fenfe and good people, we judge, that it may be naturalized and adopted, in that view, in the United States of America. * Thejimple and pointed Jllle in which it is written, can hardly fail to be agree" Till ADVERTISEMENT. able to thofe who are fond of that kind ef eowpojition which characierifes the works of FRANKLIN. And? if it does not become a clafficai author in the plan of education already projefted, it may at any rate afford fome materials for the conjtruclion of a letter ont* CONTENTS. CHAP. I. OF the -Law of Nature. I H. Characters of the Law of Nature. - * * in. Ttf Principles of the Law of Nature, as they relate to Man. - 29 IV. Of the Bafts of Mo- ralityOf Good Of Evil Of Sin Of Crimes Of Vice and - - 48 Page, CONTENTS, V. Of Individual Virtues Of Knowledge. 57 VI. Of Temperance. - 66 VII. Of Continence. - 77 VIII. Of Courage and Activity. 88 IX. Of Cleanlinefs. - loo X. Of Domejlic Virtues. 107 XI. Of /< ***/ Virtues, and of Juftice. - 1 23 XII. Developement of tie So- cial Virtues. - 12 THE LAW OF NATURE. CHAPTER I. Of the Law of Nature. CV WHAT is tie law of nature? A. It is the regular and con- ftant order of events according to which God rules the univerfe ; the order which his wifdom pre- fents to the fenfes and reafon of mankind, to ferve them as an A THE LAW OF NATURE. equal and general rule of adHon, and to conduct them, without diftinction of country or fet, towards happinefs and perfection. Q^ Give me a clear definition of the ivor d LAW? A. The word law, taken in its literal fenfe, fignifies reading ; becaufe, in early times ordinances and regulations principally corn- pofed the readings delivered to the people ; which were mad~ in order that they might obferve them, and not incur the penal- ties attached to their infraction : whence it follows, that the ori~ THE LAW OF NATURE. 3 ginal ufage explaining the true idea, a law may be defined to be> " A command or a prohibi- " tion of an action, with the " exprefled claufe of a penalty " attached to the infraction $ or " a reward annexed to the ob- " fervation of the order." Q.^ Are there fuch orders in na- ture ? A. Yes. Q^ What means the word NA- TURE ? A. The word nature compre- hends three different fignifica- tions. A *M& 44*469* pwuj&t 9 4 THE LAW OF NATURE. 1. It means the univerfe, or material world : we fay, accord- ing to this fignification, the beau- ties of nature , the riches of nature : that is, of the objects in heaven and on earth prefented to our contemplation. 2. It means the power which animates and moves the univerfe, confidering this power as a dif- tint being, fuch as^ the foul is fuppofed to be with refpecl: to the body. In this fecond fenfe we fay, the intentions of nature^ the incomprehenfible fecrets of nature* t X,/**^ -^ *~z * >f THE LAW OF NATURE. 5 3. It means the partial opera- tion of this power, as exerted in each individual being, or in any clafs of beings : and we fay, in this third fenfe, the nature of man is an enigma ; every being afts according to its nature. Now, fmce the aUons of each individual, or of each clafs of beings, are fubjefted to conftant and general rules 4 which cannot be departed from without chang- ing and difturbing feme general or particular order of things, to thefe rules of adion and motion, A 2 6 THE LAW OF NATURE. is given the name of natural laws, or taius of nature. Q^ Give me examples of thefe laws ? A. It is a law of nature that the fun -enlightens in fucceflion every part of the furface of the terreilrial globe : that his pre- fence excites light and heat : that heat acting on the waters pro- duces vapours : that thefe va- pours raifed in clouds into the higher regions of the atmofphere, form themfelves into rain or mow, andfupply, without ceafmg, the water of fprings and rivers. THE LAW OF NATURE. 7 It is a law of nature that wa- ter flows from an upper to a lower Iituation ; that it feeks its level ; that it is heavier than air ; that all bodies tend towards the earth ; that flame rifes towards the fky ; that it deflroys the organization of vegetables and animals ; that air is effential to the life of cer- tain animals ; that in certain cafes water fuffocates and kills them ; that certain juices of plants, and certain minerals attack their or- gans, and deftroy their life ; and the fame of a variety of facts. 8 THE LAW OF NATURE. Now, fince thefe fafts, and many fimilar ones are conftant, regular, and immutable, they be- come fo many real and poiitive commands to which man is bound to conform, under the exprefs penalty of punifhment attached to their infraction, or well-being connected with their obfervance. So that if a man were to pretend to fee clearly in the dark, or is regardlefs of the progrefs of the feafons, or the action of the ele- ments : if he pretends to exift under water without drowning ; to handle fire without burning THE LAW OF NATURE. p himfelf ; to deprive himfelf of air without fuffocating ; or to drink poifon without deftroying himfelf, he receives from each infraction of the law of nature, a corporal punimment propor- tioned to his tranfgreffion. If, on the contrary, he obferves thefe laws, and founds his practice on the precife and regular relation which they bear to him, he pre- ferves his exiilence and renders it as happy as it is capable of be- ing rendered ; and (ince all thefe laws, coniidered in relation to the human fpecies, have in view 10 THE LAW OF NATURE. only one common end, that of their prefervaticn and their hap- pinefs 3 whence it has been agreed ta afiemble together the differ- ent ideas, and exprefs them by a lingle word, and call them col- Jetively by the name of the law of nature, THE LAW OF NATURE. CHAPTER II. Characters of the Law of Nature* Q^WHATarethe characters of the laiv of nature ? A. We may reckon ten prin- cipal ones. Q^ What is thefirft ? A. To be inherent in, and v ef- fential to the exiltence of things ; confequently to be primitive and anterior to every other law, fo that all thofe which men have adopted from time to time, are 12 THE LAW OF NATURE. only imitations of this ; the per- fection of which laws is to be meafured by their refemblance with this primordial model. Q^ What is thefecond ? A. It is to emanate immedi- ately from God, and to be by him offered to the contemplation of every man, while others are prefented to us by men only, who may happen to be either deceivers or deceived. Q^ What is the third ? A. It is to be common to every time and country ; that is, to be one and univerfal. *THfc LAW OF NATURE, 13 Q^ Is there no other law which is univerfal ? A. No 5 for no other is fuit- ed, and applicable to every people upon earth ; all are local and ac- cidental, fprung from the differ- ing circumftances of places and perfons ; fo that if a given man, or a given event had not exifted, a given law would not have taken place. Q^ What is the fourth charac- ter ? A. That of being uniform and invariable, B 14 THE LAW OF NATURE* Q^ Is there no other law which is uniform and invariable ? A. No ; for that which ac- cording to one is good and vir- tuous, is evil and vicious accord- ing to another ; aiad what is at one time approved, is often con- demned at another by the fame law. Q^ What is the fifth character? A. To be evident and palpable, fince it confifts wholly of fa6ts ever prefent to our fenfes, and capable of demonftration. Q^ Are not other laws evident ? A. No , for they are founded THE LAW OF NATURE. 15 on paft and doubtful facts j on equivocal and fufpicious teilimo- ny ; and on proofs which can- not be prefented to the fenfes. Q^ What is thefatb character? A. To be reafonable 5 becaufe its precepts, and its whole doc- trine, are conformable to reafon, and agreeable to the human un- derflanding. Q^ Is no other law reafonable ? A. No ; for they all contradict the reafon and underflanding of man, and impofe upon him, ty- rannically, a blind and imprac- ticable belkf. 1 6 THE LAW OF NATURE, Q^ What is the feventh charac* ter? A. To be juft, becaufe in this law the puniihment is proportion- ed to the tranfgreffion. Q.^ Are not other laws jiift ? A. No; for they frequently attach to merit or to criminality, difproportionate pumfhment or re- ward, and impute merit and cri- minality to actions which are null or indifferent. Q.^ What is the eighth charac- ter ? A. To be pacific and tolerant \ becaufe according to the law of nature, all men being brethren, and equal in rights, it advifes all to peace and toleration, even for their errors. Q^ Are not other laius pacific ? A. No ; for they all breath diflenfion, difcord, and war, and divide men among each other by means of exclufive pretenfions to truth and power. Q^ What Is the ninth character of this law ? A. To be equally beneficent to all men, and to teach them all the true method of being better and happier. B 2 I 8 THE LAW OF NATURE. Q^ Are not the re/1 likeivife be* neficent ? A. No , for none teach the true road to happinefs ; they all really amount to nothing but per- nicious or futile performances : and this is proved by facts, fince after fo many laws, religions, le- giflators, and prophets, Men re- main ftill as unhappy and as ig- norant as they were five thou- fand years ago. Q.^ What is the loft character of the law of nature ? A. It is its being of itfelf fuffi- dent to render Men happier and THE LAW OF NATURE. 10 better, becaufe it includes what- ever is good and ufeful in every other law, civil or religious : that is, it is in its eflence the moral part of them all ; fo that were they diverted of it, they would be reduced to the ftate of chime- rical and imaginary opinions, and be of no practical utility. Q.^ Recapitulate all thefc cha~ rafters ? A. I have faid that the law of nature is, Primitive ; Immediate s or of original ema* nation j '20 'THE LAW OF NATURE. Univerfal ; Invariable ; Evident; Reafonable ; Juft; Pacific ; ^Beneficent ; And_of itfelf jfufficient ^ And it is becaufe it unites in itfelf all thefe attributes of per- feftion and of truth, that there has always exiiled in the human heart, an involuntary and fecret inclination to regard it, as in a pe- culiar fenfe, the true religion , the only one adapted to the nature of THE LAW OF NATURE. 21 man, and the only one worthy of God, from whom it emanates. Q^ If, as you afferty it ema- nates immediately from God, does it teach us his exiftence ? A. Yes ; very poiitively ; for every man, who obferves with attention, the aftonifhing fcene of the univerfe, the more he me- ditates on the properties and at- tributes of ' each exiftence, and on the admirable order and har- mony of their motions, the more will he be convinced that there is a fupreme agent, a univerfal identical mover, defigned'by 22 THE LAW OF NATURE. 'the name God : and it is fo true that the law of nature is fuffici- ent to raife us to the knowledge of God, that whatever men have pretended to know of him by other means, has been conftant- ly found to be ridiculous and abfurd ; and they have been ob- liged to return to the unchange- able notions of natural reafon. Q^ Is it not true then that the followers of the law of nature are atheifts. ? A. No : it is not true. On the contrary, they have ftronger and more noble ideas of the THE LAW OF NATURE. 23 nity than the greater part of man- kind ; for they do not defile it by the addition of the weaknefles and paffions of human nature. Q^ What is the ivorjhip 'which they render him ? A. A worfhip which confiils entirely in aftion ; in the obferva- tion and practice of all the rules which the fupreme wifdom has impofed upon the motions of each being ; eternal and inalter- able rules which maintain the or- der and harmony of the univerfe, and which, confidered in relar 24 THE LAW OF NATURE. tion to man, compofe the law of nature. Q^ Was the law of tiature ever known before the prefent day? A. It has been fpoken of in eve- ry age. The greater part of law- givers have pretended to make it the bafis of their laws ^ but they have brought forward only a few of its precepts, and have had but vague ideas of it as a whole. Q^ Why has this happened ? A. Becaufe, though it is fimplc in its bafis, it forks in its deve- lopement and its confequences, a complicated aggregate which THE LAW OF NATURE. 2 requires the knowledge of a num- ber of fafts, and the whole fa- gacity of reafon, in order to be underftood. Q.^ Does not inJllnEl alone in- Jlruffi us in the law of nature ? No : for inftinft fignifies only that blind fentiment which leads us, without difcrimmation, to- wards whatever pleafes our fen- fes. Q^ Why then is it faid that the law of nature is engraven on the hearts of all men ? A. It is laid, for two reafons, T/?, Becaufe it has been remarked C ** + 26 THE LAW OF NATURE. that there are actions and fenti- ments common to all mankind, arifing from their fimilar organi- zation. 2<9j Becaufe it was an opinion of the ancient philofo- phers, that men were born into the world with innate or ready formed ideas ; an opinion which is now demonftrated to be an er- ror. Q^ Do philofophers then deceive themfelves ? A. Yes ; they do. Q.^ How happens this ? A. i/?, From their nature as men. 2^/, Becaufe ignorant per- THE LAW OF NATURE. 27 fons call every man who reafons a philofopher, whether he rea- fon well or ill. 3^, Eecaufe thofe who reafon on a variety of fub- jects, and are the firft to reafon on them, are liable to deceive themfelves. Q^ Since the law of nature is not written^ may it not be conjlder- ed as arbitrary and ideal ? A. No ; becaufe it confifts al- together in facts, whofe demon- ilration may be at any time re- called before the fenfes, and form a fcience as precife and exact as thofe of geometry and mathe- 28 THE LAW OF NATURE* inatics : and this very circum- ftance, that the law of nature forms an exaft fcience, is the reafon why men, who are born in ignorance, and live in carelefs- nefs, have, till this day, known it only fuperficially. THE LAW OF NATURE. 29 CHAPTER III. Tie Principles of the Law of Na- ture as they relate to Man. <^JjNFOLD the principles of the laiv of nature as they relate to man ? A. They are (imple^ and re- ducible to fingie fundamental pre- cept. Q.^ What is this precept f A. Se'f-prefervation. 30 THE LAW OF NATURE* Q.^ Is not happmefs likewjfe a precept of the laiu of nature ? A. Yes ; but as happinefs is an accidental circumftance which taikes place, only in confequence of the unfolding of the facul- ties of man, and the develope- ment of the focial fyftem, it is not the primary and direft end propofed by nature. It is an ob- jeft of luxury fuperaddcd to the neceflary and fundamental objecl; of felf-prefervation. Q.^ In what manner does nature ecmmand felf-prefervation. ? A. By two powerful and in- voluntary fenfations \vhich ftie has THE LAW OF NATURE. 3! attached as two guides or guar- dian genii to all our adtions : one, the fenfation of pain, by which (lie informs us of, and turns us from whatever tends to our definition. The other, the fenfation of pleafure, by which me attracts and leads us towards every thing that tends to our prefervation, and the unfolding of our faculties. Q^ Pleafure then is not an evil or n fifty as the cafuifts have pretended ? A. No ; it is of that clafs only when it tends to the deftruc- tion of life and health, which, 32 THE LAW OF NATURE. as the cafuifts themfelves confefs, are derived to us from God. Q^ Is pleafure the principal ob~ jeEl of our ex'iftence as feme philo- fophers have ajjerted ? A. No ; no more than pain is : by pleafure nature encourages us to live , by pain, it makes us fhrink from death. Q^ How do you prove this offer- tion ? A. By two palpable fadls ; the one, the pleafure carried too far, condufts into deftrudlion , for inftance, a man who abufes the pleafure of eating and drinking, THE LAW OF NATURE. 33 attacks his health, and injures his exiflence. The other, that pain fometimes tends to our pre- fervation ; for inftance, a man who orders his mortified limb to be amputated, fuffers pain, but it is in order that he may not perifh altogether* Q.^ But does not this prove that our fenfes may deceive us 'with re- fpeEl to this end of f elf -prefer vation ? A. Yes ; they may for a time. Q^ How do our fenfations de- ceive us ? A. In two ways; through our ignorance and our paflions, 34 THE LAW OF NATURE. Q^ When do they deceive us through our ignorance ? A: When we adt without knowing the ation and effel of objels on our fenfes ; for in- ftance, when a man handles net- tles without knowing their qua- lity of flinging , or when he chews opium in ignorance of its foporific properties. Q.^ When do they deceive us through our pajpons. ? A. When, though we are ac- quainted with the hurtful afcion of objels 3 we, notwithflanding, give way to the violence of our THE LAW OF NATURE. 35 defires and our appetites \ for inftance, when a man who knows that wine inebriates, drinks, not- withilandmg, to excefs. Q^What refultsfrom thefefaEls ? A. The refult is, that the ig- norance in which we enter the world, and the inordinate appe- tites to which we give ourfelves up, are oppofed to our felf-pre- fervation \ that in confequence, the inftruciiion of our minds, and the moderation of our paflions, are two obligations, or two laws, immediately derived from the firft law of prefervation. 36 THE LAW OF NATURE. Q.^ But if we are born ignorant^ Is not ignorance a part of the law of nature ? A. No more than it is for us to remain in the naked and feeble ftate of infancy : far from its be- ing a law of nature, ignorance is an obflacle in the way of all her laws. It is the true original fin. Q^ Whence then has it happened that moralifts have exifted ivho con- j j , ftdered it as a virtue and y perfec- tion ? A. Becaufe, through caprice, or mifanthropy, they have con- founded the abufe of our know- THE LAW OF NATURE. 37 ledge itfelf ; as though becaufc men mifemploy the faculty of fpeaking, it were neceflary to cut out their tongue ; as though perfection and virtue confided in the annihilation, and not in the unfolding and proper em- ployment of our faculties. Q^ Is injlrucllon then neceffarily indifperifiUe for marl's exiftcnce ? A. Yes ; fo indifpenfible, that without it, he mufl be every in- * ftant ftruck and wounded by all the beings which furround him ; for if he did not know the ef~ fefts of fire, he would burn him- D 38 THE LAW OF NATURE* felf; of water, he would be drowned , of opium, he would be poifoned. If in the favage {late he is unacquainted with the cunning and fubterfuges of ani- mals, and the art of procuring game, he perifhes with hunger : if in a (late of fociety, he does not know the progrefs of the feafons, he can neither cultivate the earth, nor provide himfelf with food : and the like may be faid of all his aftions arifmg from all his wants. Q^ But can man y *in a Jlate of folltude^ acquire all thefe ideas n&~ THE LAW OF NATURE. 39 eeffary to his exiftence and the un- folding of his faculties. A. No ; he cannot do it but by the afliftance of his fellows ^ living with hirrL a ftate of fociety. L 1 Q^ But is not a Jlate of fociety a Jlate unnatural to man ? A. No j it is, en the contrary, a neceffity, a law impofed upon him by his very organization ; for, i/?, Nature has fo conftituted the human being, that he^ctoes not behold his likenefs of another fex without experiencing emo- tions, and' an atfcraftion inducing him to live in a domefiic .{late, , 40 THE LAW OF NATURE. which is already a ftate of fo- ciety : id. In rendering him fen- fible, fhe has fo organized him, that the fenfations of others are refiefted into himfelf, and excite in him co-fentiments of plea- fure or pain, which become the attractive force and indiiToluble bond of focial life : 3^, In fine, the ftate of fociety eftab- lifhed on the wants of man, is nothing more than an addition- al means of fulfilling the law of prefervation : and to fay, that fuch a ftate is unnatural, becaufe it is more advanced towards THE LAW OF NATURE. 4! perfection, is to fay that a fruitj which in the woods is bitter and wild, is no longer a production of nature, after having become fweet and delicious in the garden in which it has been cultivated. Q^ Why then have philofophers denominated the favage Jlate of life, a Jlate of perfection ? A. Becaufe, as I have before obferved, the vulgar have often- given the appellation of philofo- phers, to capricious perfons, who, through morofenefs, wounded va- nity, or difguft with the vices of D 2 42 THE LAW OF NATURE. focial life, have formed a chimeri- cal idea of the favage ftate, con- tradictory to their own fyflem of the perfe&ability of man. Q^ What is the true meaning of the ivord philofopher ? A. The word philofopher Cg- nifies lover of wifdom : now, fmce wifdom confifls in the prac- tice of the laws of nature, that man is a true philofopher who underftands thefe laws in their full extent, and, with precifion, renders his conduit conformable to them. THE LAW OF NATURE, 43 Q^Wkat is man in afavagejlate ? A. A Brute and ignorant animal j a mifchievous and ferocious bead, like a bear or an ourang-outang. Q^ Is he happy in fuck a ft ate ? A. No; for he has but the fen- fations of the moment ; and thefe fenfations are habitually fenti- ments of violent and preffing wants which he cannot gratify ; feeing that he is ignorant by na- ture, and feeble by his ftate of infulation from fociety. Q^ Is he free ? A. No : he is the moft flavifh of beings ; his life depends on 44 THE LAW OF NATURE. all that furrounds him , he has not the power to eat when he is hungry , to reft himfelf when he is weary, or to warm himfelf when he is cold : he is in danger of periihing every inftant. Na- ture, it is true, has exhibited fuch beings only, as it were, by chance : and, it is evident, that the efforts of the human race have, from the beginning, been employed to extricate it from this ftate of violence ; fo ftrong is the defire of preferva- ticn. THE LAW OF NATURE. 45 Q^ But does not this defire cf f elf -prefers at ion produce in indivi- duals egoifm, that is, the love of t* fe/fy and is not egoifm abhorrent to the facial ft ate. A. No , for, if by egoifm is un- t derflood an inclination to injure others, it is no longer the love of felf but the hatred of our neigh- bour. The love of felf, taken in its true fenfe, is not only con- fiilent with a (late of fociety, but is likewife its firmeft fupport ; fince we are under a neceffity of not doing injury to others, left 46 THE LAW OF NATURE.' they fhould, in return, do inju- ry to ourfelves. Thus the prefervation of man, and the unfolding of his facul- ties, which have in view the fame end, are the true law which na- ture has followed in the produc- tion of the human fpecies : and from this fimple and fruitful prin- ciple, are derived, muft be re- ferred, and ultimately meafured all our ideas of good and evil, vice and virtue, juftice and in- juftice, truth and error, of what is permitted and v/hat .is forbid- THE LAW OF NATURE* 47 den 5 the foundation of all moral conduft, whether in the indivi- dual man, or the man of focial life. 48 THE LAW OF NATURE. CHAPTER IV. Of the Bafts of Morality Of Good Of Evil Of Sin Of Crimes Of Vice and Virtue. Q^ WHAT is good) according to the law of nature? A. Whatever tends to preferve and ameliorate mankind, O. What is evil ? ^>*^ A. Whatever tends to the de- finition and deterioration of the human race. LAW OF NATURE. 49 Q c What Is underftood by PHT- SICAL good or evil, and MORAL good or evil ? . A. By the word plyfical> is meant whatever afts immediately upon the body ; health is a phyfi- cal good ; ficknefs is a phyfical evil. By moral) is underftood what- ever is effected by confequences more or lefs remote : calumny is a moral evil ; a fair reputation is a moral good, becaufe .both of them are the occafion of certain difpofitions and habits in other men, with refpecl: to ourfdves, which are ufeful or prejudicial to E 50 THE LAW OF NATURE. our well-being, and which at- tack or contribute to the means of exigence. Q^ IFljatever then tends to pre~ fervatlon or production is good ? A. Yes ; and this is the reafon why fome legiflators have ranked in the clafs of things pleafmg to God, the cultivation of a field> and the fruitfulnefs of a woman* Q. Every thing which tends to bring on death is of tonfcquencc evil? A. Yes ; and for this reafon, fome legiflators have extended THE LAW OF NATURE. 51 the idea of evil and fin to the killing of any animals. Q^ The murder of a man, is it then a crime according to the law of nature ? A. Yes ; and the greateil that can be committed ; for all other evils may be repaired ; but mur- der can never be done away. Q^What Is a fin according to the la e w of nature ? A. Whatever tends to difturb the order eftabliihed by nature, for the prefervation and perfefta- bility of man and of fociety. $2 THE LAW OF NATURE. Q^ Can intention be a merit or a crime ? A. No ; for it is only an idea without reality ; but it is a be- ginning of fin and evil, by the inclination to aft, of which it is the caufe. Q^ What is virtue according to the law of nature ? A. The practice of actions which are ufeful to the individual and to fociety. Q.^ What ftgnifies the 'word in- dividual ? , A. It fignifies a perfon confider- cd as infulated from every other. THE LAW OF NATURE. 53 Q^ What is via according to the law of nature ? A. It is the praftice of aftions prejudicial to the individual and to fociety. Q^ Have not virtue and vice an object purely fpiritual and abflr act- ed from fenfe ? A. No -, they are always ulti- mately referable to a phyficalendj and this end is invariably the de- ftru6tion or prefervation of the body. Q^Have vice and virtue de~ grees of Jlrength and intenfity ? 2 54 THE LAW OF NATURE.' A. Yes ; according to the im- portance of the faculties which they attack or favour ; and ac- cording to the number of indi- viduals in whom thefe faculties are thus aflifted or injured. ' Q^ Give me an example ? A. The adlion of faving a man's life is more virtuous than that of faving his wealth : the aft of faving the lives of ten men, is more fo than that of fav- ing the life of a fmgle perfon : and an aftion which is ufeful to the whole human race, is more virtuous than an aHon ufefut only to a fingle nation. THE LAW OF NATURE. 55- Q^ /// what manner does the law of nature prefcribe the prafticc of good and virtue, and forbid that of evil and of vice ? A. By the advantages refult- ing from the practice of good and virtue in the prefervatioii of our bodies, and the injuries which our very exiilence receives from the practice of evil and vice. Q^ Its precepts then are found in and founded upon action ? Q^Yes ; they are action itfelf, confidered in its prefent eiFecl:, and its future confequences. Q^ What divifion do you make of the virtues ? 56 THE LAW OF NATURE. -A. We divide them into three clafles ; ifi, Private virtues, or thofe which refer to fmgle and infulated perfons ; id y Domeilic virtues, of thofe which relate to families ; 3^, Social virtues, or thofe which refpecT; fociety at large. THE LAW OF NATURE. CHAPTER V. Of Individual or Private Virtues* Of Knowledge. are tie private vir- tues ? A. There are five principal ones : namely, knowledge ; which comprehends prudence and wif- dom. zd. Temperance j which in* eludes fobriety and chaltity. 5 3 THE LAW OF NATURE. %d. Courage ; or ftrength of body and mind. 4**. Adivity ; that is, the love of labour, and a proper em- ployment of our time. $th. Laftly ; cleanlinefs, or purity of body, as well in our cloathing, as in our dwellings. Q.^ Ho other pieces : our language has no word calculated to exprefs at the THE LAW OF NATURE. fame time famenefs of nature, and diversity of form and employment, It is a relative equality, and for this reafon I faid, equal before God, and in the order of nature. Q^ Why is Liberty called a phy- Jical attribute of man ? A. Becaufe all men pofleffing fenfes fitted and fufficient for their prefervation ; no one having need of the eye of another man in or- der to fee, of his ear to hear, of his rriouth to eat, or of his foot to walk, they are all made by this means, naturally independent and free. No one is of neceffity fub- THE LAW OF NATtTRE. I2x> jecled to another's rule, nor has right of dominion over him. Q^ But if a man is bornjlrong has he not a natural right to majter and rule over him which THE LAW OF NATURE. 139 turn to the advantage of rogues and cheats. Q^ Does the law of nature pre- fcribe probity ? A. Yes ; for probity is nothing more than a refpecl: paid to our own rights through the medium of the rights of others; a re- fpecl: derived from a prudent and well-made calculation of our own interefts, compared with thofe of others. ut does not this calculation^ includes the complicated in- ter efts and rights of the focial jiatiy demand fuch light y and fuch know* 140 THE LAW OF NATURE. [edge of things, as to render it a Jclence of difficult acquifttion ? A. Yes \ and a fcience fo much the more delicate, as the man of probity pronounces fen- tence in his own caufe. Q^ Is probity then a mark of an enlarged and correct mind ? A. Yes \ for the man of probi- ty almoft always neglects fome prefent intereft for the fake of one which is future ; while on the other hand, the knave is wil- ling to lofe a great intereft to come for the fake of fome trifl- ing one which is prefent. THE LAW OF NATURE. 14'! Q^ Knavery tken is a fign of falfe judgment an narroivnefs of mind ? A. Yes ; and rogues may be defined to be ignorant or foolifh fpecuiators, for they know not their own interefls *, and though they affect warinefs and cunning, their artifices feldom fail to ex- pofe them, and make them known for what they are , to deprive them of the confidence and efteem of others, and of all the advan- tages which might thence refult to their focial and phyfical exifl> ence. They neither live in peace with themfelves, nor with others, 142 THE LAW OF NATURE, and inceffantly alarmed by their conference and their enemies, they enjoy no other real happi- nefs than that of efcaping from the executioner. Q^ Does the /aw of nature for- bid theft ? A. Yes ; for the man who fteals from another, grants him the liberty to fteal in his turn : hence no fecurity in property, nor even in the means of felf-prefer- vation. Thus the man who does injury to another, by a fpecies of re-ation, is hurt himfelf. THE LAW OF NATURE. 143 Q^ Does it forbid the inclination to theft ? A. Yes ; for this inclination naturally leads to aftion : hence the reafon of confidering envy as a fin. Q^ How does it forbid murder ? A. By the moft powerful mo- tives addrefled to the defire of felf-prefervation ; for iy?, The man who attacks another, expofes himfelf to the riik of being killed, according to the law of felf-de* fence : 2d y If he kills his oppo ttent, he gives an equal right, founded on the fame law, to the 144 THE LAW OF NATURE. relations and friends of the de- ceafed, and even to the whole community, of killing him, and Iiis life is no longer in fecurity. Q. How cq?i a man y according to the law of nature, repair any injury which he has committed ? . A. By conferring a proportion- able benefit upon thofe whom he has injured. Q.^ Docs tins law allow him to repair it by prayers, vows, offer- ings ta God, faftingS) or mortifica* tions ? A; No \ for none of thcfc things have any relation to the ac- LAW <*F AW*fe. 1 41 tion which is meant to be atoned for - ? they neither reftore to him who has been robbed, what he has loft, v/hether it be proper- ty or reputation ; nor life to him who has been deprived of it : con- fequently they fail with regard to juftice : they conftitute an illegi- timate contract, by which one man fells to another, a good of which he himfelf is not pofleffed : they tend to a depravation of morals, as they embolden men to commit every fpecies of crime, in the hope of expiation : and they have been the real fources of E LAW OF NATURE,, all thofe. evils which have con- llantly tormented every nation, \vhofe inflitutions permitted thefe expiatory pralices. Q.^ Is fincerity enjoined by the laiu of nature ? A. Yes ; for lying, perfidy, and perjury, excite amongft men, tliftruft, difTenfion, hatred, re- venge, and a multitude of evils, which tend t6 the deftruftion of Ibciety ; whilft fineerity and good faith eflablifh confidence, con- cord, peace, and the other in- finite advantages, which are the neceffary refult of fuch a happy ftate of things* . r . THE LAW OF NATURE. 147 Q^ Does it prefcribe mildnefs and modefly ? A. Yes ; for an afluming and rude deportment while it alienates from us the hearts of other men, infufes into them a difpofition to do us difTervice : Oftentation and vanity, by wounding their felf-love and exciting their jealoufy, pre- vent us from attaining the .point of real utility. Q^ Does it prefcribe humility as a virtue ? A. No ; for there is a natural propenfity in the human heart, to feel a fecret contempt for every 148 THE LAW OF NATURE. tiling which conveys to it the idea of weaknefs ; and by abafmg our- felves^ we encourage in others, pride and oppreflion : we mould hold the balance with an even hand. Q^ Ton have doffed amongst the facial virtues, fimplicity of man- ners 5 what do you mean by that ex- preffion ? A. I mean the confining our wants and defires, to what is really ufeful for the exiftence of the in* dividual and his family : that is to fay, the man ofjimf/e manners THE LAW OF NATURE. 149 has few wants, and is content with little. Q.^ How is this virtue recom- mended to us ? A. By the numerous advan- tages, which it bellows both upon the individual, and upon fociety at large , for the man who ha? few wants, liberates himfelf at once from a crowd of cares, trotu bles and toils, avoids a number of difputes and quarrels, w^ich- arife from the eager defire of gain ; is free from the cares of ambition, the inquietudes of pofleffion, and the fears of lofs ; meeting every Nz 150 THE LAW OF NATURE. where with more than fufficient for his wants, he is the truly rich man ; always content with what he has, he is happy at a fmall ex- pence j and the world at large fearing no rivalfhip from him, fuf- fer him to enjoy tranquility, and are difpofed to do him fervice. Again, if this virtue of fimpli- ciry, were extended to a whole people, it fecures abundance to them ; every thing which they do not immediately confume, becomes to them a fource of trade and commerce to a very great extent ; they labour, they manufacture, THE LAW OP NATURE. and fell their productions to greater advantage than others ; and attain the fummit both of external and internal profperity. Q^ What vice is the direEt oppo* Jlte of this virtue ? A. Cupidity and luxury. Q^ Is luxury a vice both in the individual and in fociety at large ? A. Yes; and to fuch an ex- tent, that, it may be faid to in- clude in it the feeds of all others ; for the man who makes many things necefiary to his happinefs, impofes at the fame time upon himfelf all the cares, and fubmits lt;2 THE L^W OF NATURE. to all the means of acquiring them, whether they be juft or unjirft. Has he already one enjoyment, he wifhes for another, and in the mtdft of fuperfluities, he is never rich ; a commodious habitation will not fatisfy him $ he inuft have a fuperb hotel ; he is not content with a plentiful table; he muft have rare and coftly meats ; he muft have fplendid furniture, ex- penfive apparel, and a long, ufe- lefs train of footmen, horfes, car- riages and women , he muft be conftantly at the gaming table, or at places of public entertainment. THE LAW OF NATURE. 153 Now to fupport their expences, a great deal of money is requisite, and every mode of procuring this, is conlidered at firft as lawful, and afterwards, neceflary ; he be- gins by borrowing, he then fwin- dles, robs, plunders, becomes bankrupt, is at war with mankind, ruins others, and is himfelf ruined. Again, if we confider the ef- fects of luxury upon a nation, it produces the fame ravages upon a large fcale ; in confequencc of its confuming within itfelf all its pro- ductions, . it is poor in the midft of abundance ; it has nothing to j 54 THE LAW OF NATURE. fell to the foreigner ; it manufac- tures at a heavy expence ; it fells its produce at a dear rate, and be- comes a tributary for every thing which it imports : it lofes its ref- peftability, its ftrength, and its means of defence and prefervation abroad ; whilfl at home it is un- dermined, and the bond of union between its members is diflblved. All its citizens being greedy after enjoyments, are perpetually ftrug- gling with each other for the at- tainment of them 5 all are either inflicting injuries, or have the difpofition to do fo : and hence THE LAW OF NATURE, t l6o THE LAW OF NATURE. and prohibits as a crime whatever counteracts the operation of this principle : That we have within us the germ of all virtue, and of all per- feftion : that we have only to attend to the means of exciting it into ation : That we are happy, in exal proportion to the obedience we yield to thofe laws which nature has eftablifhed with a view to our prefervation : That all wifdom, all perfec- tion, all law, all virtue, all phi- lofophy, confift in the practice of THE LA'W OF NATURE. l6l the following axioms, which are founded upon our natural orga* nization : Preferve thyfelf. Inftruft thyfelf. Moderate thyfelf. Live for thy fellow creatures in order that they may live for thee. FINIS<