"In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences"
About this Quote
The subtext is aimed at a 19th-century culture still saturated with providential thinking, where misfortune could be interpreted as divine discipline and success as moral credit. As a prominent freethinker as well as a lawyer, Ingersoll knew how institutions convert consequences into verdicts. Blaming the poor for poverty, the sick for illness, the “fallen” for being harmed: these are social habits that dress up complexity as justice. His formulation is an antidote. It doesn’t deny that actions matter; it denies that outcomes are evidence of virtue.
Why it works is the pivot on a single word: “consequences.” It’s stark, unsentimental, and quietly radical. It asks readers to trade metaphysical scorekeeping for responsibility without cosmic reassurance. If there’s no celestial rewards program, the urgency shifts to human agency: build fair systems, reduce preventable harm, stop calling suffering a sentence.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Christian Religion: An Enquiry (Robert G. Ingersoll, 1881)
Evidence: There are in nature neither rewards nor punishments, there are consequences. (Section II (exact page depends on the August 1881 issue pagination)). Primary-source match found in Robert G. Ingersoll’s text "The Christian Religion" (published in The North American Review, August 1881). The wording most commonly quoted today as "In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences" appears in the original as "There are in nature neither rewards nor punishments, there are consequences." In the Project Gutenberg transcription of "The Christian Religion: An Enquiry" the sentence appears in Section II immediately after "You must, after all, reap what you sow." and before "The life of Christ is worth its example..." (see the Gutenberg HTML text around lines 160–164). The Gutenberg edition is a later digital reprint/transcription; it is reliable for the wording, but it is not the first publication, so the confidence is set to medium. To pin down an exact page number, you would need the scanned August 1881 issue (or a facsimile) of The North American Review and cite the page in that issue’s pagination. Other candidates (1) The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll: Lectures (Robert Green Ingersoll, 1900)95.0% Robert Green Ingersoll. you committed a sin , you had to bring a sacrifice- dove , sheep , or bullock , now , when ..... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Ingersoll, Robert G. (2026, February 14). In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-nature-there-are-neither-rewards-nor-85469/
Chicago Style
Ingersoll, Robert G. "In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences." FixQuotes. February 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-nature-there-are-neither-rewards-nor-85469/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences." FixQuotes, 14 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-nature-there-are-neither-rewards-nor-85469/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.










