"FATED TO BE FREE" 



are so important that they could not be left to the 

 hazards of the forgetful and sleep-indulging mind. 

 In health the body does not forget to breathe, or the 

 heart to beat, or the stomach to digest. 



in 



In aU our human relations and enterprises we are 

 no doubt imder the influence of general, impersonal 

 laws to a much larger extent than we ever suspect. 

 Our destinies are shaped more or less by the geogra- 

 phy of the country, by its geology, by its climate. 

 A great river, a great lake, the coastline, a moun- 

 tain-range — all set their stamp upon our hves. We 

 are independent of our environment only within 

 very narrow limits. The mountains beget one type 

 of character, the plains another, the sea another. 

 These influences work over and beyond our power 

 of choice. Men in masses and tribes are subject to 

 influences and courses of action that the individ- 

 ual members composing them are exempt from. 

 There is a rule of the multitude, and a rule of the in- 

 dividual. Men collectively will be guilty of deeds and 

 crimes that the separate units would not stoop to. 

 In a crowd we escape the feeling of individual re- 

 sponsibility. In mobs man reverts to more primitive 

 and savage conditions; he becomes more like the 

 irrational forces of nature. Is there any ground 

 of hope that international morahty wiU ever reach 

 the standard of individual morality? — that the 

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