i PROLEGOMENA 31 



make any human society jnore efficient in 

 thr st niggle for existence with the state of 

 nature, or with other societies, it works in har- 

 monious contrast with the cosmic process. But 

 it is none tin- less true that, since law and 

 morals an- restraints upon the struggle for ex- 

 istence between men in society, the ethical 

 process is in opposition to the principle of the 

 cosmic process, and tends to the suppression of the 

 qualities best fitted for success in that struggle. 1 



It is further to be observed that, just as the self- 

 assertion, necessary to the maintenance of society 

 against the state of nature, will destroy that society 

 if it is allowed free operation within ; so the sclf-j 

 restraint, the essence; of the ethical process, which 

 is no less an essential condition of the existence of 

 every polity, may, by excess, become ruinous to it. 



Moralists of all ages and of all faiths, attending 

 only to the relations of men towards one another 

 in an ideal society, have agreed upon the i 

 " golden rule," " Do as you_ would be done_j>y." 

 In other words, let sympathy be your guide ; 

 put yourself in the place of the man towards 

 whom your action is directed ; and do to him 

 what you would like to have done to yourself 

 under the circumstances. However much one 

 may admire the generosity of such a rule of con- 



1 S-e the essay "On the Struggle for Existence in Human 

 Society " below : and Collected Essays, vol. i. p. 276, for Kant's 

 recognition of these facts. 



