[An Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Malthus]@TWC D-Link bookAn Essay on the Principle of Population CHAPTER 13 1/12
CHAPTER 13. Error of Mr Godwin is considering man too much in the light of a being merely rational--In the compound being, man, the passions will always act as disturbing forces in the decisions of the understanding--Reasonings of Mr Godwin on the subject of coercion--Some truths of a nature not to be communicated from one man to another. In the chapter which I have been examining, Mr Godwin professes to consider the objection to his system of equality from the principle of population.
It has appeared, I think clearly, that he is greatly erroneous in his statement of the distance of this difficulty, and that instead of myriads of centuries, it is really not thirty years, or even thirty days, distant from us.
The supposition of the approach of man to immortality on earth is certainly not of a kind to soften the difficulty.
The only argument, therefore, in the chapter which has any tendency to remove the objection is the conjecture concerning the extinction of the passion between the sexes, but as this is a mere conjecture, unsupported by the smallest shadow of proof, the force of the objection may be fairly said to remain unimpaired, and it is undoubtedly of sufficient weight of itself completely to overturn Mr Godwin's whole system of equality.
I will, however, make one or two observations on a few of the prominent parts of Mr Godwin's reasonings which will contribute to place in a still clearer point of view the little hope that we can reasonably entertain of those vast improvements in the nature of man and of society which he holds up to our admiring gaze in his Political Justice. Mr Godwin considers man too much in the light of a being merely intellectual.
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