which all languages have adopted — a usage which is not fortuitous, but the work of universal, and therefore uniform, human judgment. “Reasonable” and “vicious” are terms that go very well together; indeed great, far-reaching crimes are only possible from their union. Similarly, “unreasonable” and “noble-minded” are often found associated; e.g., if I give to-day to the needy man what I shall myself require to-morrow more urgently than he; or, if I am so far affected as to hand over to one in distress the sum which my creditor is waiting for; and such cases could be multiplied indefinitely.
We have seen that this exaltation of Reason to be the source of all virtue rests on two assertions. First, as Practical Reason, it is said to issue, like an oracle, peremptory