Copyright notice: (c) 1995, James Fieser. This text
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with this copyright notice attached. When quoting from this text,
please use the following citation: Essays on Suicide and the
Immortality of the Soul: The Complete Unauthorized 1783 Edition,
David Hume, Version 1.0, ed. James Fieser (Internet Release, 1995).
Spelling and punctuation have not been modernized.
Paragraphs are numbered here to facilitate class
discussion. They were not numbered in the original edition.
#1. One considerable advantage that arises from Philosophy, consists
in the sovereign antidote which it affords to superstition and
false religion. All other remedies against that pestilent distemper
are vain, or at least uncertain. Plain good sense and the practice
of the world, which alone serve most purposes of life, are here
found ineffectual: History as well as daily experience furnish
instances of men endowed with the strongest capacity for business
and affairs, who have all their lives crouched under slavery to
the grossest superstition. Even gaiety and sweetness of temper,
which infuse a balm into every ther wound, afford no remedy to
so virulent a poison; as we may particularly observe of the fair
sex, who tho' commonly possest of their rich presents of nature,
feel many of their joys blasted by this importunate intruder.
But when found Philosophy has once gained possession of the mind,
superstition is effectually excluded, and one may fairly affirm
that her triumph over this enemy is more complete than over most
of the vices and imperfections incident to human nature. Love
or anger, ambition or avarice, have their root in the temper and
affection, which the soundest reason is scarce ever able fully
to correct, but superstition being founded on false opinion, must
immediately vanish when true philosophy has inspired juster sentiments
of superior powers. The contest is here more equal between the
distemper and the medicine, and nothing can hinder the latter
from proving effectual but its being false and sophisticated.
#2. It will here be superfluous to magnify the merits of Philosophy
by displaying the pernicious tendency of that vice of which it
cures the human mind. The superstitious man says Tully is miserable
in every scene, in every incident in life; even sleep itself,
which banishes all other cares of unhappy mortals, affords to
him matter of new terror; while he examines his dreams, and finds
in those visions of the night prognostications of future calamities.
I may add that tho' death alone can put a full period to his misery,
he dares not fly to this refuge, but still prolongs a miserable
existence from a vain fear left he offend his Maker, by using
the power, with which that beneficent being has endowed him. The
presents of God and nature are ravished from us by this cruel
enemy, and notwithstanding that one step would remove us from
the regions of pain and sorrow, her menaces still chain us down
to a hated being which she herself chiefly contributes to render
miserable.
#3. 'Tis observed by such as have been reduced by the calamities
of life to the necessity of employing this fatal remedy, that
if the unseasonable care of their friends deprive them of that
species of Death which they proposed to themselves, they seldom
venture upon any other, or can summon up so much resolution a
second time as to execute their purpose. So great is our horror
of death, that when it presents itself under any form, besides
that to which a man has endeavoured to reconcile his imagination,
it acquires new terrors and overcomes his feeble courage: But
when the menaces of superstition are joined to this natural timidity,
no wonder it quite deprives men of all power over their lives,
since even many pleasures and enjoyments, to which we are carried
by a strong propensity, are torn from us by this inhuman tyrant.
Let us here endeavour to restore men to their native liberty,
by examining all the common arguments against Suicide, and shewing
that that action may be free from every imputation of guilt or
blame, according to the sentiments of all the antient philosophers.
#4. If Suicide be criminal, it must be a transgression of our
duty either to God, our neighbour, or ourselves.
To prove that suicide is no transgression of our duty to God,
the following considerations may perhaps suffice. In order to
govern the material world, the almighty Creator has established
general and immutable laws, by which all bodies, from the greatest
planet to the smallest particle of matter, are maintained in their
proper sphere and function. To govern the animal world, he has
endowed all living creatures with bodily and mental powers; with
senses, passions, appetites, memory, and judgement, by which they
are impelled or regulated in that course of life to which they
are destined. These two distinct principles of the material and
animal world, continually encroach upon each other, and mutually
retard or forward each others operation. The powers of men and
of all other animals are restrained and directed by the nature
and qualities of the surrounding bodies, and the modifications
and actions of these bodies are incessantly altered by the operation
of all animals. Man is stopt by rivers in his passage over the
surface of the earth; and rivers, when properly directed, lend
their force to the motion of machines, which serve to the use
of man. But tho' the provinces of the material and animal powers
are not kept entirely separate, there results from thence no discord
or disorder in the creation; on the contrary, from the mixture,
union, and contrast of all the various powers of inanimate bodies
and living creatures, arises that sympathy, harmony, and proportion,
which affords the surest argument of supreme wisdom. The providence
of the Deity appears not immediately in any operation, but governs
every thing by those general and immutable laws, which have been
established from the beginning of time. All events, in one sense,
may be pronounced the action of the Almighty, they all proceed
from those powers with which he has endowed his creatures. A house
which falls by its own weight, is not brought to ruin by his providence,
more than one destroyed by the hands of men; nor are the human
faculties less his workmanship, than the laws of motion and gravitation.
When the passions play, when the judgment dictates, when the limbs
obey; this is all the operation of God, and upon these animate
principles, as well as upon the inanimate, has he established
the government of the universe. Every event is alike important
in the eyes of that infinite being, who takes in at one glance
the most distant regions of space, and remotest periods of time.
There is no event, however important to us, which he has exempted
from the general laws that govern the universe, or which he has
peculiarly reserved for his own immediate action and operation.
The revolution of states and empires depends upon the smallest
caprice or passion of single men; and the lives of men are shortened
or extended by the smallest accident of air or dies, sunshine
or tempest. Nature still continues her progress and operation;
and if general laws be ever broke by particular volitions of the
Deity, 'tis after a manner which entirely escapes human observation.
As on the one hand, the elements and other inanimate parts of
the creation carry on their action without regard to the particular
interest and situation of men; so men are entrusted to their own
judgment and discretion in the various shocks of matter, and may
employ every faculty with which they are endowed, in order to
provide for their ease, happiness, or preservation. What is the
meaning then of that principle, that a man who tired of life,
and hunted by pain and misery, bravely overcomes all the natural
terrors of death, and makes his escape from this cruel scene:
that such a man I say, has incurred the indignation of his Creator
by encroaching on the office of divine providence, and disturbing
the order of the universe? Shall we assert that the Almighty has
reserved to himself in any peculiar manner the disposal of the
lives of men, and has not submitted that event, in common with
others, to the general laws by which the universe is governed?
This is plainly false; the lives of men depend upon the same laws
as the lives of all other animals; and these are subjected to
the general laws of matter and motion. The fall of a tower, or
the infusion of a poison, will destroy a man equally with the
meanest creature; an inundation sweeps away every thing without
distinction that comes within the reach of its fury. Since therefore
the lives of men are for ever dependant on the general laws of
matter and motion, is a man's disposing of his life criminal,
because in every case it is criminal to encroach upon these laws,
or disturb their operation? But this seems absurd; all animals
are entrusted to their own prudence and skill for their conduct
in the world, and have full authority as far as their power extends,
to alter all the operations of nature. Without the excercise of
this authority they could not subsist a moment; every action,
every motion of a man, innovates on the order of some parts of
matter, and diverts from their ordinary course the general laws
of motion. Putting together, therefore, these conclusion, we find
that human life depends upon the general laws of matter and motion,
and that it is no encroachment on the office of providence to
disturb or alter these general laws: Has not every one, of consequence,
the free disposal of his own life? And may he not lawfully employ
that power with which nature has endowed him? In order to destroy
the evidence of this conclusion, we must shew a reason why this
particular cafe is excepted; is it because human life is of such
great importance, that 'tis a presumption for human prudence to
dispose of it? But the life of a man is of no greater importance
to the universe than that of an oyster. And were it of ever so
great importance, the order of human nature has actually submitted
it to human prudence, and reduced us to a necessity, in every
incident, of determining concerning it. -- Were the disposal of
human life so much reserved as the peculiar province of the Almighty,
that it were an encroachment on his right, for men to dispose
of their own lives; it would be equally criminal to act for the
preservation of life as for its destruction. If I turn aside a
stone which is falling upon my head, I disturb the course of nature,
and I invade the peculiar province of the Almighty, by lengthening
out my life beyond the period which by the general laws of matter
and motion he had assigned it.
#5. A hair, a fly, an insect is able to destroy this mighty being whose life is of such importance. Is it an absurdity to suppose that human prudence may lawfully dispose of what depends on such insignificant causes? It would be no crime in me to divert the Nile or Danube from its course, were I able to effect such purposes. Where then is the crime of turning a few ounces of blood from their natural channel? -- Do you imagine that I repine at Providence or curse my creation, because I go out of life, and put a period to a being, which, were it to continue, would render me miserable? Far be such sentiments from me; I am only convinced of a matter of fact, which you yourself acknowledge possible, that human life may be unhappy, and that my existence, if further prolonged, would become ineligible; but I thank Providence, both for the good which I have already enjoyed, and for the power with which I am endowed of escaping the ill that threatens me. To you it belongs to repine at providence, who foolishly imagine that you have no such power, and who must still prolong a hated life, tho' loaded with pain and sickness, with shame and poverty -- Do not you teach, that when any ill befals me, tho' by the malice of my enemies, I ought to be resigned to providence, and that the actions of men are the operations of the Almighty as much as the actions of inanimate beings? When I fall upon my own sword, therefore, I receive my death equally from the hands of the Deity as if it had proceeded from a lion, a precipice, or a fever. The submission which you require to providence, in every calamity that befals me, excludes not human skill and industry, if possible by their means I can avoid or escape the calamity: And why may I not employ one remedy as well as another? -- If my life be not my own, it were criminal for me to put it in danger, as well as to dispose of it; nor could one man deserve the appellation of hero, whom glory or friendship transports into the greatest dangers, and another merit the reproach of wretch or misereant who puts a period to his life, from the same or like motives. -- There is no being, which possesses any power or faculty, that it receives not from its Creator, nor is there any one, which by ever so irregular an action can encroach upon the plan of his providence, or disorder the universe. Its operations are his works equally with that chain of events which it invades, and which ever principle prevails, we may for that very reason conclude it to be most favoured by him. Be it animate, or inanimate, rational, or irrational, 'tis all a cafe: its power is still derived from the supreme Creator, and is alike comprehended in the order of his providence. When the horror of pain prevails over the love of life; when a voluntary action anticipates the effects of blind causes, 'tis only in consequence of those powers and principles which he has implanted in his creatures. Divine providence is still inviolate, and placed far beyond the reach of human injuries. 'Tis impious says the old Roman superstition to divert rivers from their course, or invade the prerogatives of nature. 'Tis impious says the French superstition to inoculate for the small - pox, or usurp the business of providence by voluntarily producing distempers and maladies. 'Tis impious says the modern European superstition, to put a period to our own life, and thereby rebel against our Creator; and why not impious, say I, to build houses, cultivate the ground, or fail upon the ocean? In all these actions we employ our powers of mind and body, to produce some innovation in the course of nature; and in none of them do we any more. They are all of them therefore equally innocent, or equally criminal. But you are placed by providence, like a centinal, in a particular station, and when you desert it without being recalled, you are equally guilty of rebellion against your almighty sovereign, and have incurred his displeasure. -- I ask, why do you conclude that providence has placed me in this station? For my part I find that I owe my birth to a long chain of causes, of which many depended upon voluntary actions of men. But providence guided all these causes, and nothing happens in the universe without its consent and co-operation. If so, then neither does my death, however voluntary, happen without its consent; and whenever pain or sorrow so far overcome my patience, as to make me tired of life, I may conclude that I am recalled from my station in the clearest and most express terms. 'Tis providence surely that has placed me at this present in this chamber: But may I not leave it when I think proper, without being liable to the imputation of having deserted my post or station? When I shall be dead, the principles of which I am composed will still perform their part in the universe, and will be equally useful in the grand fabrick, as when they composed this individual creature. The difference to the whole will be no greater than betwixt my being in a chamber and in the open air. The one change is of more importance to me than the other; but not more so to the universe. 'Tis a kind of blasphemy to imagine that any created being can disturb the order of the world, or invade the business of Providence! It supposes, that that being possesses powers and faculties, which it received not from its creator, and which are not subordinate to his government and authority. A man may disturb society no doubt, and thereby incur the displeasure of the Almighty: But the government of the world is placed far beyond his reach and violence. And how does it appear that the Almighty is displeased with those actions that disturb society? By the principles which he has implanted in human nature, and which inspire us with a sentiment of remorse if we ourselves have been guilty of such actions, and with that of blame and disapprobation, if we ever observe them in others: -- Let us now examine, according to the method proposed, whether Suicide be of this kind of actions, and be a breach of our duty to our neighbour and to society.
#6. A man who retires from life does no harm to society: He only
ceases to do good; which, if it is an injury, is of the lowest
kind. -- All our obligations to do good to society seem to imply
something reciprocal. I receive the benefits of society, and therefore
ought to promote its interests; but when I withdraw myself altogether
from society, can I be bound any longer? But allowing that our
obligations to do good were perpetual, they have certainly some
bounds; I am not obliged to do a small good to society at the
expence of a great harm to myself; why then should I prolong a
miserable existence, because of some frivolous advantage which
the public may perhaps receive from me? If upon account of age
and infirmities, I may lawfully resign any office, and employ
my time altogether in fencing against these calamities, and alleviating,
as much as possible, the miseries of my future life: why may I
not cut short these miseries at once by an action which is no
more prejudicial to society? But suppose that it is no longer
in my power to promote the interest of society, suppose that I
am a burden to it, suppose that my life hinders some person from
being much more useful to society. In such cases, my resignation
of life must not only be innocent, but laudable. And most people
who lie under any temptation to abandon existence, are in some
such situation; those who have health, or power, or authority,
have commonly better reason to be in humour with the world.
#7. A man who is engaged in a conspiracy for the public interest;
is seized upon suspicion; is threatened with the rack; and knows
from his own weakness that the secret will be extorted from him:
Could such a one consult the public interest better than by putting
a quick period to a miserable life? This was the case of the famous
and brave Strozi of Florence. -- Again, suppose
a malefactor is justly condemned to a shameful death, can any
reason be imagined, why he may not anticipate his punishment,
and save himself all the anguish of thinking on its dreadful approaches?
He invades the business of providence no more than the magistrate
did, who ordered his execution; and his voluntary death is equally
advantageous to society, by ridding it of a pernicious member.
#8. That Suicide may often be consistent with interest and with
our duty to ourselves, no one can question, who allows that age,
sickness, or misfortune, may render life a burthen, and make it
worse even than annihilation. I believe that no man ever threw
away life, while it was worth keeping. For such is our natural
horror of death, that small motives will never be able to reconcile
us to it; and though perhaps the situation of a man's health or
fortune did not seem to require this remedy, we may at least be
assured that any one who, without apparent reason, has had recourse
to it, was curst with such an incurable depravity or gloominess
of temper as must poison all enjoyment, and render him equally
miserable as if he had been loaded with the most grievous misfortunes.
-- If suicide be supposed a crime, 'tis only cowardice can impel
us to it. If it be no crime, both prudence and courage should
engage us to rid ourselves at once of existence, when it becomes
a burthen. 'Tis the only way that we can then be useful to society,
by setting an example, which if imitated, would preserve to every
one his chance for happiness in life, and would effectually free
him from all danger of misery.
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