Montaigne on Intention: How Our Motives Define Our Actions
Imagine helping a friend move house, only for something valuable to break halfway through. Does that make your help worthless? Or does it matter that you showed up with the best of intentions? Michel de Montaigne wrestled with exactly these kinds of questions back in the sixteenth century. In his seventh essay from the first book, he explores how our inner motivation shapes the way our actions should be judged. Short but powerful, this essay offers surprisingly practical insights for anyone who reflects on the true value of what they do — and it resonates deeply with the symbolic traditions of Freemasonry. The Core Idea: Intention Over Outcome Montaigne argues that it is not the result of an action that determines its worth, but the intention behind it. An endeavor can fail due to circumstances entirely beyond our control, yet that does not make the underlying motive any less pure or praiseworthy. Conversely, someone might stumble into a good outcome without any noble intention whatsoever. In such cases, Montaigne insists, we must look at what the person truly intended to accomplish. This may sound obvious at first glance, but Montaigne demonstrates how often we do the opposite in practice. We […]