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<h2> CHAPTER VI—THE ABSOLUTE GOODNESS OF PRAYER </h2>
<p>With regard to the modes of prayer, all are good, provided that they are
sincere. Turn your book upside down and be in the infinite.</p>
<p>There is, as we know, a philosophy which denies the infinite. There is
also a philosophy, pathologically classified, which denies the sun; this
philosophy is called blindness.</p>
<p>To erect a sense which we lack into a source of truth, is a fine blind
man's self-sufficiency.</p>
<p>The curious thing is the haughty, superior, and compassionate airs which
this groping philosophy assumes towards the philosophy which beholds God.
One fancies he hears a mole crying, "I pity them with their sun!"</p>
<p>There are, as we know, powerful and illustrious atheists. At bottom, led
back to the truth by their very force, they are not absolutely sure that
they are atheists; it is with them only a question of definition, and in
any case, if they do not believe in God, being great minds, they prove
God.</p>
<p>We salute them as philosophers, while inexorably denouncing their
philosophy.</p>
<p>Let us go on.</p>
<p>The remarkable thing about it is, also, their facility in paying
themselves off with words. A metaphysical school of the North, impregnated
to some extent with fog, has fancied that it has worked a revolution in
human understanding by replacing the word Force with the word Will.</p>
<p>To say: "the plant wills," instead of: "the plant grows": this would be
fecund in results, indeed, if we were to add: "the universe wills." Why?
Because it would come to this: the plant wills, therefore it has an <i>I</i>;
the universe wills, therefore it has a God.</p>
<p>As for us, who, however, in contradistinction to this school, reject
nothing a priori, a will in the plant, accepted by this school, appears to
us more difficult to admit than a will in the universe denied by it.</p>
<p>To deny the will of the infinite, that is to say, God, is impossible on
any other conditions than a denial of the infinite. We have demonstrated
this.</p>
<p>The negation of the infinite leads straight to nihilism. Everything
becomes "a mental conception."</p>
<p>With nihilism, no discussion is possible; for the nihilist logic doubts
the existence of its interlocutor, and is not quite sure that it exists
itself.</p>
<p>From its point of view, it is possible that it may be for itself, only "a
mental conception."</p>
<p>Only, it does not perceive that all which it has denied it admits in the
lump, simply by the utterance of the word, mind.</p>
<p>In short, no way is open to the thought by a philosophy which makes all
end in the monosyllable, No.</p>
<p>To No there is only one reply, Yes.</p>
<p>Nihilism has no point.</p>
<p>There is no such thing as nothingness. Zero does not exist. Everything is
something. Nothing is nothing.</p>
<p>Man lives by affirmation even more than by bread.</p>
<p>Even to see and to show does not suffice. Philosophy should be an<br/>
energy; it should have for effort and effect to ameliorate the condition<br/>
of man. Socrates should enter into Adam and produce Marcus Aurelius; in<br/>
other words, the man of wisdom should be made to emerge from the man<br/>
of felicity. Eden should be changed into a Lyceum. Science should be<br/>
a cordial. To enjoy,—what a sad aim, and what a paltry ambition! The<br/>
brute enjoys. To offer thought to the thirst of men, to give them all as<br/>
an elixir the notion of God, to make conscience and science fraternize<br/>
in them, to render them just by this mysterious confrontation; such is<br/>
the function of real philosophy. Morality is a blossoming out of truths.<br/>
Contemplation leads to action. The absolute should be practicable. It is<br/>
necessary that the ideal should be breathable, drinkable, and eatable to<br/>
the human mind. It is the ideal which has the right to say: Take, this<br/>
It is on this condition that it ceases to be a sterile love of science<br/>
and becomes the one and sovereign mode of human rallying, and that<br/>
philosophy herself is promoted to religion.<br/></p>
<p>Philosophy should not be a corbel erected on mystery to gaze upon it at
its ease, without any other result than that of being convenient to
curiosity.</p>
<p>For our part, adjourning the development of our thought to another
occasion, we will confine ourselves to saying that we neither understand
man as a point of departure nor progress as an end, without those two
forces which are their two motors: faith and love.</p>
<p>Progress is the goal, the ideal is the type.</p>
<p>What is this ideal? It is God.</p>
<p>Ideal, absolute, perfection, infinity: identical words.</p>
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