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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
EIGHT
CHAPTER
IX
21. How can there be such a strange anomaly? And why is it? Let thy mercy shine
on me, that I may inquire and find an answer, amid the dark labyrinth of human
punishment and in the darkest contritions of the sons of Adam. Whence such an
anomaly? And why should it be? The mind commands the body, and the body obeys.
The mind commands itself and is resisted. The mind commands the hand to be moved
and there is such readiness that the command is scarcely distinguished from
the obedience in act. Yet the mind is mind, and the hand is body. The mind commands
the mind to will, and yet though it be itself it does not obey itself. Whence
this strange anomaly and why should it be? I repeat: The will commands itself
to will, and could not give the command unless it wills; yet what is commanded
is not done. But actually the will does not will entirely; therefore it does
not command entirely. For as far as it wills, it commands. And as far as it
does not will, the thing commanded is not done. For the will commands that there
be an act of will--not another, but itself. But it does not command entirely.
Therefore, what is commanded does not happen; for if the will were whole and
entire, it would not even command it to be, because it would already be. It
is, therefore, no strange anomaly partly to will and partly to be unwilling.
This is actually an infirmity of mind, which cannot wholly rise, while pressed
down by habit, even though it is supported by the truth. And so there are two
wills, because one of them is not whole, and what is present in this one is
lacking in the other.
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