<h2> <SPAN name="article30"></SPAN> The Future </h2>
<p>The recent decision that, if a fortune-teller honestly
believes what she is saying, she is not defrauding her
client, may be good law, but it does not sound like good
sense. To a layman like myself it would seem more sensible to
say that, if the client honestly believes what the
fortune-teller is saying, then the client is not being
defrauded.</p>
<p>For instance, a fortune-teller may inform you, having
pocketed your two guineas, that a rich uncle in Australia is
going to leave you a million pounds next year. She
doesn’t promise you the million pounds herself;
obviously that is coming to you anyhow, fortune-teller or no
fortune-teller. There is no suggestion on her part that she
is arranging your future for you. All that she promises to do
for two guineas is to give you a little advance information.
She tells you that you are coming into a million pounds next
year, and if you believe it, I should say that it was well
worth the money. You have a year’s happiness (if that
sort of thing makes you happy), a year in which to tell
yourself in every trouble, “Never mind, there’s a
good time coming”; a year in which to make glorious
plans for the future, to build castles in the air, or (if
your taste is not for castles) country cottages and Mayfair
flats. And all this for two guineas; it is amazingly cheap.</p>
<p>And now consider what happens when the year is over. The
fortune-teller has done her part; she has given you a
year’s happiness for two guineas. It is now your
uncle’s turn to step forward. He is going to give you
twenty years’ happiness by leaving you a million
pounds. Probably he doesn’t; he hasn’t got a
million pounds to leave; he has, in fact, just written to you
to ask you to lend him a fiver. Well, surely it is the uncle
who has let you down, not the fortune-teller. Curse him by
all means, cut him out of your will, but don’t blame
the fortune-teller, who fulfilled her part of the contract.
The only reason why you went to her was to get your happiness
in advance. Well, you got it in advance; and seeing that it
was the only happiness you got, her claim on your gratitude
shines out the more clearly. You might decently send her
another guinea.</p>
<p>This is the case if you honestly believe your fortune-teller.
Now let us suppose that you don’t believe. It seems to
me that in this case you are entitled to the return of your
money.</p>
<p>Of course, I am not supposing that you are a complete sceptic
about these things. It is plainly impossible for a
fortune-teller to defraud a sceptic, otherwise than by
telling him the truth. For if a sceptic went to consult the
crystal, and was told that he would marry again before the
month was out, when in fact he was a bachelor, then he has
not been defrauded, for he is now in a position to tell all
his friends that fortune-telling is absolute nonsense--on
evidence for which he deliberately paid two guineas. Indeed,
it is just on this ground that police prosecutions seem to me
to fail. For a policeman (suitably disguised) pays his money
simply for the purpose of getting evidence against the
crystal-gazer. Having got his evidence, it is ridiculous of
him to pretend that he has been cheated. But if he wasted two
guineas of the public money, and was told nothing but the
truth about himself and his family, then he could indeed
complain that the money had been taken from him under false
pretences.</p>
<p>However, to get back to your own case. You, we assume, are
not a sceptic. You believe that certain inspired people can
tell your future, and that the fee which they ask for doing
this is a reasonable one. But on this particular occasion the
spirits are not working properly, and all that emerges is
that your uncle in Australia----</p>
<p>But with the best will in the world you cannot believe this.
The spirits must have got mixed; they are slightly
under-proof this morning; you have no uncle. The
fortune-teller gives you her word of honour that she firmly
believes you to have at least three uncles in Australia, one
of whom will shortly leave you a mill---- It is no good. You
cannot believe it. And it seems to me that on the
morning’s transaction you have certainly been
defrauded. You must insist on “a tall dark man from
India” at the next sitting.</p>
<p>It is “the tall dark man” which the amateur
crystal-gazer really wants. He doesn’t want the future.
There is so little to foretell in most of our lives. Nobody
is going to pay two guineas to be told that he will be off
his drive next Saturday and have a stomach-ache on the
following Monday. He wants something a little more romantic
than that. Even if he is never going to be influenced by a
tall dark man from India, it makes life a little more
interesting to be told that he is going to be.</p>
<p>For the average man finds life very uninteresting as it is.
And I think that the reason why he finds it uninteresting is
that he is always waiting for something to happen to him
instead of setting to work to make things happen. For one
person who dreams of earning fifty thousand pounds, a hundred
people dream of being left fifty thousand pounds. I imagine
that if a young man went to a crystal-gazer and was told that
he would work desperately hard for the next twenty years, and
would by that time have earned (and saved) a fortune, he
would be very disappointed. Probably he would ask for his
money back.</p>
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