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Edgar Allan Poe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 February 2018
Extract
“Given a force acted upon by certain other forces, and the result is as good as mathematically sure. Men, like trees, grow according to their nature and their circumstances …. Freewill is only force, and all force is determined, first automatically, that is by its own law or nature, and action of other forces.”—Infanti Perduti, Edinburgh Essays.
“All force in action is what we call free, but all force must be determined to action which is what we call necessity-A man does not stand distinct from nature but in it: the forcewhich his will represents comes not entirely from without, nor is it generated Solelywithin; it is the result of the action of a certain organization upon outer forces, a development of force into a higher manifestation according to fundamental laws of the universe.”
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- Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1860
References
∗ “We have heard of an Englishmnn,” says Goëthe, “who hanged himself to be no more troubled with putting on and off his clothes. I knew an honest gardener, the overseer of some extensive pleasure grounds, who once splenetically exclaimed, ‘Shall I sec these clouds for ever passing from east to west.’ It is told of one of our most distinguished men that he viewed with dissatisfaction the spring again growing green, and wished that, by way of change, it would for once be red. These are specially the symptoms of life weariness, which not seldom issue in suicide.” Google Scholar
∗ Esquirol, des Maladies Mentales. Google Scholar
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