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<h2> CHAPTER XI </h2>
<p>History examines the manifestations of man's free will in connection with
the external world in time and in dependence on cause, that is, it defines
this freedom by the laws of reason, and so history is a science only in so
far as this free will is defined by those laws.</p>
<p>The recognition of man's free will as something capable of influencing
historical events, that is, as not subject to laws, is the same for
history as the recognition of a free force moving the heavenly bodies
would be for astronomy.</p>
<p>That assumption would destroy the possibility of the existence of laws,
that is, of any science whatever. If there is even a single body moving
freely, then the laws of Kepler and Newton are negatived and no conception
of the movement of the heavenly bodies any longer exists. If any single
action is due to free will, then not a single historical law can exist,
nor any conception of historical events.</p>
<p>For history, lines exist of the movement of human wills, one end of which
is hidden in the unknown but at the other end of which a consciousness of
man's will in the present moves in space, time, and dependence on cause.</p>
<p>The more this field of motion spreads out before our eyes, the more
evident are the laws of that movement. To discover and define those laws
is the problem of history.</p>
<p>From the standpoint from which the science of history now regards its
subject on the path it now follows, seeking the causes of events in man's
freewill, a scientific enunciation of those laws is impossible, for
however man's free will may be restricted, as soon as we recognize it as a
force not subject to law, the existence of law becomes impossible.</p>
<p>Only by reducing this element of free will to the infinitesimal, that is,
by regarding it as an infinitely small quantity, can we convince ourselves
of the absolute inaccessibility of the causes, and then instead of seeking
causes, history will take the discovery of laws as its problem.</p>
<p>The search for these laws has long been begun and the new methods of
thought which history must adopt are being worked out simultaneously with
the self-destruction toward which—ever dissecting and dissecting the
causes of phenomena—the old method of history is moving.</p>
<p>All human sciences have traveled along that path. Arriving at
infinitesimals, mathematics, the most exact of sciences, abandons the
process of analysis and enters on the new process of the integration of
unknown, infinitely small, quantities. Abandoning the conception of cause,
mathematics seeks law, that is, the property common to all unknown,
infinitely small, elements.</p>
<p>In another form but along the same path of reflection the other sciences
have proceeded. When Newton enunciated the law of gravity he did not say
that the sun or the earth had a property of attraction; he said that all
bodies from the largest to the smallest have the property of attracting
one another, that is, leaving aside the question of the cause of the
movement of the bodies, he expressed the property common to all bodies
from the infinitely large to the infinitely small. The same is done by the
natural sciences: leaving aside the question of cause, they seek for laws.
History stands on the same path. And if history has for its object the
study of the movement of the nations and of humanity and not the narration
of episodes in the lives of individuals, it too, setting aside the
conception of cause, should seek the laws common to all the inseparably
interconnected infinitesimal elements of free will.</p>
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