It is all too easy, in the atmosphere of intellectual fog that pervades Humanist circles today, to allow sympathy for an unfortunate person to pass over into receptivity to his ideas. The Nihilist, to be sure, is in some sense "sick," and his sickness is a testimony to the sickness of an age whose best, as well as worst, elements turn to Nihilism, but sickness is not cured, nor even properly diagnosed by "sympathy." In any case, there is no such thing as an entirely "innocent victim."