OCR Text |
Show INTRODUCTION. THE first question to be proposed by a rational being is, not what is profitable, but what is Right. Duty must be primary, prominent, most conspicuous, among the objects of human thought and pursuit. If we cast it down from its supremacy, if we inquire first for our interests and then for our duties, we shall certainly err. We can never see the Right clearly and fully, but by making it our first concern. No judgment can be just or wise, but that which is built on the conviction of the paramount worth and importance of Duty. This is the fundamental truth, the supreme law of reason: and the mind, which does not start from this in its inquiries into human affa irs, is doon1ed to great. perhaps fatal error. The Right is the supreme good, and includes all other goods. In ~eek ing and adhering to it, wt secure our tme and only happiness. All prosperity, not founded on it, is built on sand. If human affai t·s are controlled, as we believe, by Almighty Rectitude and Impartial Goodness, then to hope 1 |