[Dr. Heidenhoff’s Process by Edward Bellamy]@TWC D-Link book
Dr. Heidenhoff’s Process

CHAPTER XI
12/23

That is a favourable element in an operation of this sort." Henry said nothing, and there was a considerable silence.

Finally the doctor observed, with the air of a man who thinks it just as well to spend the time talking-- "I am fond of speculating what sort of a world, morally speaking, we should have if there were no memory.

One thing is clear, we should have no such very wicked people as we have now.

There would, of course, be congenitally good and bad dispositions, but a bad disposition would not grow worse and worse as it does now, and without this progressive badness the depths of depravity are never attained." "Why do you think that ?" "Because it is the memory of our past sins which demoralizes as, by imparting a sense of weakness and causing loss of self-respect.

Take the memory away, and a bad act would leave us no worse in character than we were before its commission, and not a whit more likely to repeat it than we were to commit it the first time." "But surely our good or bad acts impress our own characters for good or evil, and give an increased tendency one way or the other." "Excuse me, my dear sir.


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