Abstract
There appears to be no limit to the number and kind of things which someone, somewhere, might feel to be in need of justification: the existence of snakes and spiders, one’s own existence, some or all of the things one does, some or all of the things one thinks and feels. The need for justification is a need to feel, or to be able to show, that a thing is somehow as it should be, right, proper, appropriate, or at least that it is all right, not blameworthy, unsuitable, or discreditable. The forms taken by the attempt to justify vary greatly, as the preceding list of adjectives begins to show; and the need to justify appears variously, at times as a dull sense of unease or discomfort, at times as a conscious sense of obligation to produce good reasons for what one does, thinks, or feels. Perhaps the need for justification, like a need for yachts or applause, is something one would be better off without; might not one be a stoic or cynic philosopher on the topic of justification, and advocate a life free from the burdens of the need to justify, as more becoming to a free man?