The Slavery of the Mind
“...What I mean by the slavery of the mind is that state in
which men do not know of the alternative. It is something which clogs the
imagination, like a drug or a mesmeric sleep, so that a person cannot possibly
think of certain things at all. It is not the state in which he says, ‘I see
what you mean; but I cannot think that because I sincerely think this’ (which
is simply rational): it is one in which he has never thought of the other view;
and therefore does not even know that he has never thought of it. ... The thing I
mean is a man’s inability to state his opponent’s view; and often his inability
even to state his own.
Curiously enough, I find this sort of thing rather specially
widespread in our age, which claims to possess a popular culture or
enlightenment. There is everywhere the habit of assuming certain things, in the
sense of not even imagining the opposite things. For instance, as history is
taught, nearly everybody assumes that in all important past conflicts, it was
the right side that won. Everybody assumes it; and nobody knows that he assumes
it. The man has simply never seriously entertained the other notion. ...
...What I complain of is that those who accept the verdict of
fate in this way accept it without knowing why. By a quaint paradox, those who
thus assume that history always took the right turning are generally the very
people who do not believe there was any special providence to guide it. ...”
~G. K. Chesterton
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