hese
Essays in their original form. But there was so much to add, to
omit, to rearrange, and to join together, that I have found it
necessary to rewrite nearly the whole; and thus you will find the
present volume virtually new.
Torquay, _May, 1879_.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
THE NEW IMPORT OF THE QUESTION.
PAGE
The question may seem vague and useless; but if we consider its
real meaning we shall see that it is not so 1
In the present day it has acquired a new importance 2
Its exact meaning. It does not question the fact of human happiness 3
But the nature of happiness, and the permanence of its basis 4
For what we call the higher happiness is essentially a complex
thing 5
We cannot be sure that all its elements are permanent 7
Without certain of its elements it has been declared by the wisest
men to be valueless 8
And it is precisely the elements in question that modern thought
is eliminating 11
It is contended that they have often been eliminated before; and
that yet the worth of life has not suffered 13
But this contention is entirely false. They were never before
eliminated as modern thought is eliminating them now 17
The present age can find no genuine parallels in the past 19
Its position is made peculiar by three facts 19
Firstly, by the existence of Christianity 19
Secondly, the insignificance to which science has reduced the
earth 23
Thirdly, the intense self-consciousness that has been developed
in the modern world 25
It is often said that a parallel to our present case is to be found
in Buddhism 27
But this is absolutely false. Buddhist positivism is the exact
reverse of Western positivism 29
In short, the life-problem of our day is distinctly a new and an as
yet unanswered one
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