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Honorary Board
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ArticleDostoevsky Didn't Say It [Editor's note: Cortesi's position on this issue has been challenged by several Secular Web visitors. One of those has written a comprehensive rebuttal article on the subject: Dostoevsky Did Say It: A Response to David E. Cortesi (2011) by Andrei I. Volkov.] Possibly the best-known quote from the works of Dostoevsky is this: "If God does not exist, everything is permitted." You can see it, for example, on the title page of the self-designated "Dostoevsky Resource on the Net" by Christiaan Stange; and again in the Quotes section of Lu's Greco's Dostoevsky page; and yet again (possibly lifted intact from Stange's page) on Luba Petersen's Dostoevsky site. Dostoevsky never wrote it!I say this with confidence because I have searched the online text of the Constance Garnett translation of The Brothers Karamazov, examining every use of "God" and "exist" and "lawful" ("lawful" is how Garnett translates the word that others translate as "permitted"). Correct CitationIt is true that "If God does not exist, everything is permitted" is an accurate capsule description of the belief espoused by Ivan Karamazov in the early chapters of The Brothers Karamazov. Ivan has concluded, or pretends to conclude, that there is no God, no immortality. As what he claims is a logical consequence, "everything is lawful." However, Ivan never speaks the sentence in question, and neither does any other character in the novel! The phrase, "everything is lawful," is used frequently by other characters as an idea that they got from Ivan. And once, Ivan says "If there is no immortality, there is no virtue." But the magic soundbite sentence is not to be found. Jean Paul Sartre has said that all of French Existentialism is to be found in Ivan Karamazov's contention that if there is no God, everything is permitted. This is correct scholarship in two respects:
These two points are essential to prevent misunderstanding. It is wrong to use double quotes around text that is not an exact quote, because to do so tells an untruth about the cited author, saying he wrote certain words when he didn't. What Did Dostoevsky Think?While it is undeniable that Ivan advances this view, that does not mean it is Dostoevsky's view, and it is wrong to imply that it is—at least, without more support. In this respect, note that the sentence is a logical implication, if A then B. Ivan advances the truth of the implication as a whole, apparently as an intellectual proposition.In common talk, people assume that a claim if A then B automatically implies the contrary claim ...and if not-A then not-B. However, logic is not commonsensical. When the antecedent A is not true, an implication is not automatically false; it becomes null—the truth of B is simply unknown.
Sloppy WorkHere's an interesting exercise for you. Go to the Alta Vista Advanced Search window and enter this in the boolean expression box: (Dostoevsky OR Dostoyevsky) NEAR "If God" The returned pages will give you an idea of how far Dostoevsky's soundbite has propagated. The search hits you find will vary day by day. When I ran it, I found such items as, in a book review by Richard T. Oakes: ... he felt with Dostoevsky that if God does not exist then all things are permitted. This attributes the character's view to the author. Fyodor Dostoevsky—"If God does not exist then everything is permitted" In online lecture notes on Dostoevsky, Prof. Jay Gallagher makes a surprising slip, Russian Orthodox Christianity was for Dostoevsky the answer to the problem of nihilism he saw growing around him. This problem was succinctly summarized by him through the famous words of Ivan Karamazov: "If God is dead, all is permitted." While this properly attributes the idea to the character, I don't believe the phrase "If God is dead" appears in the book. Dostoyevsky said, "Anything is permissible if there is no God." In an essay by Vladimir Moss we find a rather bizarre distortion, It was in reflecting on the French Revolution that Dostoevsky uttered his famous saying: "If God does not exist, then everything [that is, everything that is evil] is permitted." Besides the dubious association with the French Revolution (not a featured element of The Brothers Karamazov), this asserts that Dostoevsky "uttered" the sentence that everyone else at least assumes was written. And the insertion of the bracketed gloss "that is, everything that is evil" is entirely unjustified. Dostoevsky said, "If God didn't exist, everything would be possible." In the Agnostic Bible is found the same conditional verb, but "permissible" in place of "possible." 12. The moral argument from the consequences of atheism (If God did not exist, everything would be permissible The shotgun approach to citations is shown in the Psychedelic Library: ... as Dostoevsky, Nietzsche, and others realized very clearly, "If God is dead, then anything is permitted, anything is possible." Other pages turn up in the search; explore a few. Some of the misquotes are amusing, as in this, from a site that might as well remain nameless: ... like Ivan Dostoevsky stated, "If God ... Did Sartre Start It?On a page of the Humanism.org site I found this: Referring to one of the inspirations of Existentialism, Dostoyevsky, Sartre says: "Dostoyevsky wrote: If God does not exist, everything is permitted and for Existentialism this is the starting-point." Aha! Could it have been Sartre who started all this trouble? On a page of quotes (the number of web pages that are just collections of quotes is truly staggering) we find: Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980) As with most such collections of quotes, the compiler omits to give the source for the text, which greatly reduces the value of the site. However, if this correctly reflects Sartre's understanding, it would explain a great deal. To begin with, consider the difficulty, pre-Internet, of verifying a one-sentence quotation in a book of a quarter-million words like The Brothers Karamazov. You come across this very appealing soundbite in the in the work of a well-known writer like Sartre, and you'd like to use it. The Web Makes Honest Scholars of Us AllWith the internet, it is no longer necessary to propagate such errors, and writers of honesty should no longer do so. Most "great books" are online in full-text versions (see for example the English Server at CMU; there are also multiple searchable versions of the Bible, Quran, and the Buddhist canon). A search through a book the size of The Brothers Karamazov takes minutes. A search for prior work using Alta Vista or any of the similar engines also takes less than an hour to carry out. Interested in publishing on the Secular Web? See the Submission Guidelines & Instructions.
Published: 11/1/2000 |
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