Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Part 3, Chapter 5
"Everything with them is 'the influence of environment,' and nothing else. Their favourite phrase! From which it follows that, if society is normally organised, all crime will cease at once, since there will be nothing to protest against and all men will become righteous in one instant. Human nature is not taken into account, it is excluded, it's not supposed to exist! They don't recognise that humanity, developing by a historical living process, will become at last a normal society, but they believe that a social system that has come out of some mathematical brain is going to organise all humanity at once and make it just and sinless in an instant, quicker than any living process! That's why they instinctively dislike history, 'nothing but ugliness and stupidity in it,' and they explain it all as stupidity! That's why they so dislike the living process of life; they don't want a living soul! The living soul demands life, the soul won't obey the rules of mechanics, the soul is an object of suspicion, the soul is retrograde! But what they want though it smells of death and can be made of India-rubber, at least is not alive, has no will, is servile and won't revolt! And it comes in the end to their reducing everything to the building of walls and the planning of rooms and passages in a phalanstery [utopian commune building]! The phalanstery is ready, indeed, but your human nature is not ready for the phalanstery—it wants life, it hasn't completed its vital process, it's too soon for the graveyard! You can't skip over nature by logic. Logic presupposes three possibilities, but there are millions! Cut away a million, and reduce it all to the question of comfort! That's the easiest solution of the problem! It's seductively clear and you mustn't think about it. That's the great thing, you mustn't think! The whole secret of life in two pages of print!" [About the presupposition that people, given a perfect environment, will not resort to crime or sin. Nature vs nurture. They forget that people have souls with desires and potential to great evil as well as good and that people will always err]
I maintain
that if the discoveries of Kepler and Newton could not have been made
known except by sacrificing the lives of one, a dozen, a hundred, or more
men, Newton would have had the right, would indeed have been in duty
bound... to eliminate the dozen or the hundred men for the sake of
making his discoveries known to the whole of humanity. But it does not
follow from that that Newton had a right to murder people right and left
and to steal every day in the market. Then, I remember, I maintain in my
article that all... well, legislators and leaders of men, such as
Lycurgus, Solon, Mahomet, Napoleon, and so on, were all without exception
criminals, from the very fact that, making a new law, they transgressed
the ancient one, handed down from their ancestors and held sacred by the
people, and they did not stop short at bloodshed either, if that bloodshed—often
of innocent persons fighting bravely in defence of ancient law—were
of use to their cause. It's remarkable, in fact, that the majority,
indeed, of these benefactors and leaders of humanity were guilty of
terrible carnage. In short, I maintain that all great men or even men a
little out of the common, that is to say capable of giving some new word,
must from their very nature be criminals—more or less, of course.
Otherwise it's hard for them to get out of the common rut; and to remain
in the common rut is what they can't submit to, from their very nature
again, and to my mind they ought not, indeed, to submit to it. [A justification of crime and bloodshed if it means the replacement of the old regime and results with the new legislators being forgiven for their past transgressions]
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