FIRST EPILOGUE: 1813 - 20
2. CHAPTER II
 
If we assume as the historians do that great men lead humanity to
 the attainment of certain ends- the greatness of Russia or of
 France, the balance of power in Europe, the diffusion of the ideas
 of the Revolution general progress or anything else- then it is
 impossible to explain the facts of history without introducing the
 conceptions of chance and genius. 
If the aim of the European wars at the beginning of the nineteenth
 century had been the aggrandizement of Russia, that aim might have
 been accomplished without all the preceding wars and without the
 invasion. If the aim wag the aggrandizement of France, that might have
 been attained without the Revolution and without the Empire. If the
 aim was the dissemination of ideas, the printing press could have
 accomplished that much better than warfare. If the aim was the
 progress of civilization, it is easy to see that there are other
 ways of diffusing civilization more expedient than by the
 destruction of wealth and of human lives. 
Why did it happen in this and not in some other way? 
Because it happened so! "Chance created the situation; genius
 utilized it," says history. 
But what is chance? What is genius? 
The words chance and genius do not denote any really existing
 thing and therefore cannot be defined. Those words only denote a
 certain stage of understanding of phenomena. I do not know why a
 certain event occurs; I think that I cannot know it; so I do not try
 to know it and I talk about chance. I see a force producing effects
 beyond the scope of ordinary human agencies; I do not understand why
 this occurs and I talk of genius. 
To a herd of rams, the ram the herdsman drives each evening into a
 special enclosure to feed and that becomes twice as fat as the
 others must seem to be a genius. And it must appear an astonishing
 conjunction of genius with a whole series of extraordinary chances
 that this ram, who instead of getting into the general fold every
 evening goes into a special enclosure where there are oats- that
 this very ram, swelling with fat, is killed for meat. 
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