The Soul of Democracy 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Soul of Democracy, by Edward 
Howard Griggs This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no 
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Title: The Soul of Democracy The Philosophy Of The World War In 
Relation To Human Liberty 
Author: Edward Howard Griggs 
Release Date: January 26, 2004 [EBook #10837] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SOUL 
OF DEMOCRACY *** 
 
Produced by Al Haines 
 
THE SOUL OF DEMOCRACY 
THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE WORLD WAR IN RELATION TO 
HUMAN LIBERTY 
BY 
EDWARD HOWARD GRIGGS 
 
Man for the State means autocracy and imperialism; MAN FOR 
MANKIND is the soul of democracy. 
 
1918
CONTENTS 
I THE WORLD TRAGEDY II THE CONFLICT OF IDEAS IN THE 
WAR III THE IDEAS FOR WHICH THE ALLIED NATIONS FIGHT 
IV MORAL STANDARDS AND THE MORAL ORDER V THE 
PRESENT STATE OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS VI THE 
ETHICS OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSHIP VII AMERICA'S 
DUTY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS VIII THE GOSPEL 
AND THE SUPERSTITION OF NON-RESISTANCE IX 
PREPAREDNESS FOR SELF-DEFENSE X RECONSTRUCTION 
FROM THE WAR XI THE WAR AND EDUCATION XII 
SOCIALISM AND THE WAR XIII THE WAR AND FEMINISM 
XIV THE TRANSFORMATION OF DEMOCRACY XV 
DEMOCRACY AND EDUCATION XVI MENACES OF 
DEMOCRACY XVII THE DILEMMA OF DEMOCRACY XVIII 
PATERNALISM VERSUS DEMOCRACY XIX THE SOLUTION 
FOR DEMOCRACY XX TRAINING FOR MORAL LEADERSHIP 
XXI DEMOCRACY AND SACRIFICE XXII THE HOUR OF 
SACRIFICE 
 
THE SOUL OF DEMOCRACY 
I 
THE WORLD TRAGEDY 
We are living under the shadow of the greatest world tragedy in the 
history of mankind. Not even the overthrow of the old Roman empire 
was so colossal a disaster as this. Inevitably we are bewildered by it. 
Utterly unanticipated, at least in its world extent, for we had believed 
mankind too far advanced for such a chaos of brute force to recur, it 
overwhelms our vision. Man had been going forward steadily, 
inventing and discovering, until in the last hundred years his whole 
world had been transformed. Suddenly the entire range of invention is 
turned against Man. The machinery of comfort and progress becomes 
the enginery of devastation. Under such a shock, we ask, "Has 
civilization over-reached itself? Has the machine run away with its 
maker?" The imagination is staggered. We are too much in the storm to 
see across the storm. 
When the War began, it was over our minds as a dark cloud. It was the
last conscious thought as we went to sleep at night, and the first to 
which we awakened in the morning: wakening with a dumb sense of 
something wrong, as if we had suffered a personal tragedy, and then as 
we came to clear consciousness we said, "O yes, the War!" The days 
have passed into weeks, the weeks into months and years: inevitably 
we become benumbed to the long continued disaster. It is impossible to 
think deaths and mutilations in terms of millions. Even those who stand 
in the immediate presence of it and suffer most terribly become 
calloused to it: much more must we who stood so long apart and have 
not yet felt the brunt of it. Even our entrance into the whirling vortex, 
drawing ever nearer our shores, has failed to waken us to a realizing 
sense of it. Nevertheless, these years through which we are now living 
are the most important in the entire history of the world. It is probable 
that the future will look back upon them as the years determining the 
destiny of mankind for ages to come. 
How this terrible fact of War falls across all philosophies! Complacent 
optimisms, so widely current recently, are put out of court by it. The 
pleasant interpretations mediocrity formulates of the universe are torn 
to tatters. There is at least the refreshment of standing face to face with 
brute actuality, though it crash all our "little systems" to the ground. 
Philosophy must wait. The interpretations cannot be hastened, while 
the facts are multiplying with such bewildering rapidity. The one 
certainty is that an entirely new world is being born--what it will be, no 
one knows. 
Nevertheless, we have gone far enough to recognize that all our 
thinking will be transformed under the influence of the struggle. It will 
be impossible for us, after the War, to do what we have done so widely 
hitherto: proclaim one range of ethical ideals and standards, and live to 
something widely different in practice. Either we shall have to abandon 
the standards, or bring our conduct measurably into harmony with them. 
We shall be unable longer to hold unconsciously in solution 
Christianity    
    
		
	
	
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