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Mark Twain What Is Man

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The essay written by Mark Twain called “What is Man?” is a dialogue between the old man and the young man. The old man believes that “no man ever originates anything,” a man will take an action for himself, and a man do not have such thing as free will (Twain 7). The old man’s beliefs are very similar to Baron D’ Holbach’s philosophy of determinism. On the other hand, the young man’s beliefs are the opposite of both the old man and D’Holbach’s beliefs. The young man tries to deny the old man’s beliefs by questioning. However, the more agreeable beliefs are the beliefs of the old man and D’Holbach. In the first chapter, the old man believes that a human being is like a machine, which cannot originates anything. He uses a metal machine and a …show more content…

First, the old man states that humans do not originate anything, which is true. Humans are always influenced by external factors. For example, when writers write essays, musicians compose music, and artists drew arts, their products are always influenced by their environment, their surrounding people, and their many other factors. If those people were born in different environment then they did, they probably produced something different. Secondly, it is true that people always think about themselves first. Even if a person chooses to give up his life for someone else, the decision is made for himself; because, he would feel like “if I do not help this person, I will probably regret about it for my entire life.” By loosing his life and helping a person, he is free from the life long regret. Lastly, there is no such thing as free will. Humans live in the earth where there is a something called gravity. Humans are forced to stay on the ground and cannot fly without any kind of flying machine. The existence of the gravity already explains that humans do not have free will. Also, humans will always die. They cannot choose to live forever, the limit of life also proves humans do not have free will. In fact, the old man says the almost an exact same thing, but with a different example. The man who gives a quarter to the woman decides to give a quarter, but he does not make his decision, it is made for him by forces, which he could not control (Twain 90). Humans have uncontrollable forces such as gravity and death. Overall, the old man explains his thoughts very well and answers to the young man’s arguments completely. At the end, the young man does not talk back at the old man. Toward the end of the conversation, it seems like the young man decides to agree with the old man. As a result, the old man’s belief is more

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