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BOOKS BY WALTER LIPPMANN
A PREFACE TO POLITICS
DRIFT AND MASTERY
THE STAKES OF DIPLOMACY
THE POLITICAL SCENE
LIBERTY AND THE NEWS
PUBLIC OPINION THE PHANTOM PUBLIC
MEN OF DESTINY
AMERICAN INQUISITORS
A PREFACE TO MORALS
INTERPRETATIONS 1931-1932
INTERPRETATIONS I933-I935
THE METHOD OF FREEDOM
THE NEW IMPERATIVE
THE GOOD SOCIETY
U. S, FOREIGN POLICY: SHIELD OF THE REPUBLIC
U, S. WAR AIMS
THE COLD WAR, A STUDY IN U. S. FOREIGN POLICY
ISOLATION AND ALLIANCES: AN AMERICAN SPEAKS
TO THE BRITISH
ESSAYS IN THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
Wifh William O. Scroggs THE UNITED STATES IN WORLD AFFAIRS 1931 THE UNITED STATES IN WORLD AFFAIRS 1 932
THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
ESSAYS IN
THE PUBLIC
by WALTER LIPPMANN
An Atlantic Monthly Press Book Little, Brown and Company • Boston • Toronto
COPYRIGHT 1955, BY WALTER LIPPMANN
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. NO PART OF THIS BOOK IN EXCESS OF FIVE
HUNDRED WORDS MAY BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM WITHOUT
PERMISSION IN WRITING FROM THE PUBLISHER
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NO. 55-6533
Published Fehntary ig^^
Reprinted February 1955 (twice)
Reprinted March 1955 {tvuice)
Reprinted October 1955
ATLANTIC-LITTLE, BROWN BOOKS
ARE PUBLISHED BY
LITTLE, BROWN AND COMPANY
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS
Published simultaneously in Canada by Little, Brown &■ Company (Canada) Limited
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
To Helen
They are ill discoverers that think there is no land, when they see nothing but sea. BACON. Advancement of Learning, II: VII, 5
Acknowledgments
Once again I am deeply indebted to Edward Weeks, the editor of the Atlantic Monthly, for his editorial criticism and for his help in the editing and the revision of the ttyit. I can only acknowledge gratefully this debt which I could not repay.
I wish to thank Dean McGeorge Bundy of Harvard University for his very helpful criticism of the text; Mr. Stanley Salmen of Little, Brown for his reassurance and advice; Mr. Curtis W. Cate of the Atlantic Monthly Press for his constructive suggestions, and Dr. Mortimer J. Adler, Director of the Institute for Philosophical Research, who was consulted when the manuscript was finished, and who offered very prompt assistance with the footnotes and with certain of the logical problems.
W.L.
Washington, D.C.
1954
Contents
BOOK ONE: The Decline of the West
CHAPTER i: The Obscure Revolution 3
1. My Reason for Writing This Book
2. i^ij: The Revolutionary Year
3. Internal Revolution in the Democracies
4. The Paralysis of Governments
CHAPTER 11: The Malady of Democratic States 16
1. Public Opinion in War and Peace
2. The Compulsion to Make Mistakes
3. The Pattern of the Mistakes
4. Democratic Politicians
CHAPTER III: The Derangement of Powers 28
1. The Governors and the Governed
2. The People and the Voters
3. The Recently Enfranchised Voters
CHAPTER IV : The Public Interest 41
1. What Is the Public Interest?
2. The Equations of Reality
Xll CONTENTS
CHAPTER v: The Two Functions 47
1. The Elected Executive
2. The Protection of the Executive
3. The Voters and the Executive
4. The Enfeebled Executive
CHAPTER VI : The Totalitarian Counterrevolution 58
1. Certain of Its Lessons
2. A Prognosis
CHAPTER VII : The Adversaries of Liberal
Democracy 63
1. Liberalism and Jacobinism
2. The Paradigm of Revolution ■ 3. Democratic Education
4. Prom Jacobinism to Leninism
5. The Overpassing of the Bound
BOOK two: The Public Philosophy
CHAPTER VIII : The Eclipse of the Public
Philosophy 9 1
1. On the Efficacy of Ideas
2. The Great Vacuum
3. The Neglect of the Public Philosophy
4. The Universal Laius of the Rational Order
5. The Rupture in Modern Times
CONTENTS xiii
CHAPTER IX : The Renewal of the Public
Philosophy 113
1. The Capacity to Believe
2. Vor Example: The Theory of Property
3. For Example: Freedom of Speech
4. The Limits of Dissent
5. The Mirror of History
6. Man's Second Nature
CHAPTER x: The Two Realms 141
1. The Confusion of the Realms
2. The Good in This World
3. The Law and the Prophets
4. The Realm of the Spirit
5. The Balance of Poivers
6. The Mechanics of the Balance
CHAPTER XI : The Defense of Civility 160
1. The Thesis Restated
2. The Communication of the Public Philosophy
3. Constitutionalism Made Concrete
4. The Language of Accommodation
5. The Limits of Accommodation
6. The Death of God
7. The Mandate of Heaven
Index 183
BOOK ONE
The Decline of the West
CHAPTER I
The Obscure Revolution
I. My Reason for Writing This Book
During the fateful summer of 1938 I began writing a book in an effort to come to terms in my own mind and heart with the mounting disorder in our Western society. I was Hving in Paris at the time, and I had learned that the decision had been taken which was soon to lead Mr. Chamberlain and Monsieur Daladier to Munich. Little hope remained that another world war could be averted except by abject surrender, and yet there was no sure pros- pect that France and Great Britain would be able to with- stand the onslaught that was coming. They were unpre- pared, their people were divided and demoralized. The Americans were far away, were determined to be neutral, and were unarmed. I was filled with foreboding that the nations of the Atlantic Community would not prove equal to the challenge, and that, if they failed, we should lose our great traditions of civility,^ the liberties Western man had won for himself after centuries of struggle and which were now threatened by the rising tide of barbarity.
I began writing, impelled by the need to make more intelligible to myself the alarming failure of the Western
^ Sir Ernest Barker, Traditions of Civility (1948). The phrase is from Coventry Patmore.
4 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
liberal democracies to cope with the realities of this cen- tury. I had done a draft of the book when the fall of France made it evident that we, too, must soon be en- gaged and, moreover, engaged alone if the Battle of Brit- ain was lost.
But at this time the American people were as unpre- pared in their minds as in their military establishment. Could the democracies be rallied, could they be collected and nerved for the ordeal so that they would be equal to this mortal challenge? They had the superior assets. They had the numbers, the resources, the influence. But did they have the insight, the discipline to persevere, and the resolution to go through with it? Though they had the means, did they also have the will, and did they still know how? A second world war was making up out of the ruins and the failures of the first, and there was nothing to show that the Western democratic governments were in control of their affairs and capable of making the nec- essary decisions. They were reacting to events and they were not governing them. Could they avoid defeat and conquest without an exhaustion which would rend the fabric of Western society, without enormities of suffering which would alienate the masses of the people, and with- out resorting to measures of violence which might be- come inexpiable? They were so very late, and they were becoming engaged in they knew not what. They had re- fused to take in what they saw, they had refused to be- lieve what they heard, they had wished and they had waited, hoping against hope.
It did not come easily to one who, like myself, had known the soft air of the world before the wars to rec-
THE OBSCURE REVOLUTION 5
ognize and acknowledge the sickness of the Western Hberal democracies. Yet as we were being drawn unready and unarmed into the second of the great wars, there was no denying, it. seemed tojne, that there is ,a dgep^dis-- order in our society which comeg not from the machina- tions of our enemies and from the adversities of the hu-
,,.man_condition but from within ourselves,^ I was one of a large company who^^ felt that way. "Never doubting that the utmost resistance was imperative and that defeat would be irreparable and intolerable, they were a com- pany who knew in their hearts that by total war our world could not be made safe for democracy nor for the four f reedoms.i W^,.were, I had come to see, not_w;ounded
i5tiTsIc1t, and because_we_were failing to bring order- and peace tojiie_wDxId, we were beset by those who believed they have been chosen to succeed us. ■'
2. 1 9 If: The Revolutionary Year
In December 1941 I put the manuscript away, know- ing that so much was going to happen to the world and to me that if ever I went back to the book, it would be to start all over again. When I did come back to it after the war, the foreboding which had inspired it was in a terrible measure realized. Something had gone very wrong in the liberal demqaracies. They had, to be sure, defeated their enemies. They had avoided defeat and subjection. But they were unaW^_jta-inake_peace and to restore order. For the sernprl finn£_in a generRtinn they had failed to prevent a ruinous war, they had been unwilling to pre-
6 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
pare themselves to wage the war, and when at long last and at exorbitant cost they had managed to defeat their enemies, they had been unable to make peace out of their victories. They were entangled in a vicious circle of wars that led to ever bigger and wider wars. Could it be denied that they were sick with some kind of in- capacity to cope with reality, to govern their affairs, to defend their vital interests and, it might be, to insure their survival as free and democratic states?
There was no mistaking the decline of the West. _ Thirty years after Wilson had proclaimed a world at' peace under democratic governments, the North Atlantic democracies were preoccupied with the defense of western Europe and the fringes of the Eurasian continent. In less than half a century it had come to that. In 1900 men everywhere on earth had acknowledged, even when they resented, the primacy of the Western nations. They were the recognized leaders in the progress of mankind, and it was taken as axiomatic that the question was when, and not whether, the less advanced people would have learned how to use the Western technology, to hold free elections, to respect the Bill of Rights and to live by its political philosophy. Until 19 17 the mod£Lior__a_new govefnm£nt_anyj^fire in the world, even in Russia, -was liberaX-demiTcratT- in the British, the French, or the Amer- ican style.
But by the end of 1920 things had taken a sharp turn. Lord Bryce was then finishing his Modern Democ- racies, and though he still wrote in the prewar manner that democracy was spreading and that the number of democracies in the world had doubled within fifteen years,
THE OBSCURE REVOLUTION 7
he had seen the warning signs and he was troubled. It might not be "really helpful to the younger generation," he wrote in the preface, but he could not "repress the pes- simism of experience." He had to say that "although de- mocracy has spread, and although no country that has tried it shows any signs of forsaking it, we are not yet en- titled to hold with the men of 1789 that it is the natural and, therefore, in the long run, the inevitable form of government. Much has happened since the rising sun of liberty dazzled the eyes of the States-General at Versailles. Popular government has not yet been proved to guarantee, always and everywhere, good government. If it be im- probable, yet it is not unthinkable that, as in many coun- tries impatience with tangible evils substituted democracy for monarchy or oligarchy, a like impatience might some- day reverse the process." ^
Three years later Mussolini marched on Rome, and Italy became the first of the bigger democracies "to re-j, verse the process." In retrospect we can now see that what Lord Bryce, writing at the end of the First World War, thought was the pessimism of experience was in fact the intuition of a sensitive and knowing observer. He had felt in his bones, being too close to the event to perceive it, that a fundamental change in the prospects of democracy was in the making.
There had occurred, I now believe, an unrecognized revolution within the democratic states. By the third year of the First World War the cumulative losses had be- come so exorbitant that the institutional order of all the belligerents gave way under the stress and strain. The
^ James Bryce, Alodern Democracies (1921), Vol. I, p. 42.
8 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
war had become, in Ferrero's telling phrase, hyperbolic, and the prewar governments were incapable of imposing-^ such unlimited drafts upon the endurance and the loyal-> ties of the people. In the defeated countries the price ^of this was revolution against the established order. The Romanoff, the Hohenzollern, the Hapsburg and the Otto- man Empires collapsed. In the victorious countries insti- tutions were not overthrown, rulers were not exiled, im- prisoned or executed. But the constitutional order was altered subtly and yet radically, within itself.
3. Internal Revolution in the Democracies
A VIGOROUS critic of democracy. Sir Henry Maine, writ- ing in 1884 just as England was about to adopt general manhood suffrage, observed that "there could be no grosser mistake" than the impression that "Democracy differs from Monarchy in essence." For "the tests of suc- cess in the performance of the necessary and natural duties of a government are precisely the same in both cases." ^ These natural and necessary duties have to do with the defense and advancement abroad of the vital interests of the state and with its order, security, and solvency at home. Invariably these duties call for hard decisions. They are hard because the governors of the state must tax, conscript, command, prohibit; they must assert a public interest against private inclination and against what is easy and popular. If they are to do their 'Sir Henry Maine, Popular Government (1886), pp. 60-61.
THE OBSCURE REVOLUTION 9
duty, they must often swim against the tides of private feeHng.
The hardness of governing was little realized in the early 1900's. For more than half a century, while democ- racy was making its historic advance, there had been a remarkable interlude during which the governments rarely had to make hard decisions. Since Waterloo there had been no world war, and after the American Civil War only a few short and localized wars. It was a time of expansion, development, liberation; there were new con- tinents to be colonized and there was a new industrial system to be developed. It seemed as though mankind had outlived the tempests of history. The governments — which were increasingly democratic, liberal and hu- mane— were spared the necessity of dealing with the hard issues of war and peace, of security and solvency, of constitutional order and revolution. They could be con- cerned with improvements, with the more and more and the better and better. Life was secure, liberty was assured, and the way was open to the pursuit of private happiness.
In this long peace, the liberals became habituated to the notion that in a free and progressive society it is a good thing that the government should be weak. For several gen- erations the West had flourished under governments that did not have to prove their strength by making the hard decisions. It had been possible to dream, without being rudely awakened, that in the rivalry of the diverse in- terests all would somehow come out for the best. The government could normally be neutral and for the most part it could avoid making positive judgments of good and bad and of right and wrong. The public interest
lO THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
could be equated with that which was revealed in election returns, in sales reports, balance sheets, circulation figures, and statistics of expansion. As long as peace could be taken for granted, the public good could be thought of as being immanent in the aggregate of private trans- actions. There was no need for a governing power which transcended the particular interests and kept them in order by ruling over them.
All this was only, as we now know, a daydream during a brief spell of exceptionally fine weather. The dream ended with the outbreak of the First World War. Then we knew that the Age of Progress had not reformed the human condition of diversity and conflict; it had not miti- gated the violence of the struggle for survival and domination.
In fact, the violence was intensified and extended as never before. The expansion and development during the peaceful decades had wrought, as Graham Wallas pointed out on the eve of the war, "a general change of social scale," ^ and that change of scale had revolutionary con- sequences. The forty years which separated the Franco- Prussian War from the First World War were, says John U. Nef, "in terms of material welfare . . . the most successful years in history ... In little more than one generation the world's population grew by almost as much as it had grown during the untold generations which separate Adam, the first man, from Newton, the first man of science of the seventeenth century. According to the enterprising calculations of Golin Clark, the real income per person gainfully employed improved 75 per
* Graham Wallas, The Great Society, Ch. I.
THE OBSCURE REVOLUTION II
cent or more from 1870 to 19 14, while the hours of work were substantially reduced in the wealthier coun- tries of Western Europe . . . and in North America." ^
Because of the increase in the population, in the vol- ume of production, and in the destructiveness of v/eapons, the war which brought to an end the Age of Progress had, says Nef, "none of the limiting features of the warfare which had been characteristic of Newton's age. Europe could now afford enormous armies, could replenish and supply them again while the fighting proceeded. More money was needed to kill than ever before, but the money required turned out to be small in comparison with the money that could be raised (with the help of refined ad- vances in the use and manipulation of credit), and in relation to the quantity of munitions which money and credit could buy." All this meant that when war broke out again, the advanced nations had become, as Nickerson says, "capable of sacrifices so irrationally great that the bleeding victor would faint upon the corpse of his vic- tim." "^
The strain of the war worked up a menacing popular pressure upon the weak governments. We can, I think, point to 1 9 17 as the year when the pressure became so strong that the institutional framework of the established governments broke undds: it.
^ John U. Nef, War and Human Progress, Ch. i8.
* "In the military massacres of 1914-1915-1916 the French had lost permanently over 900,000 men, the British about half that number, and the Germans well over 800,000 . . . the Russians had mobilized 12,000,- 000 men and of them at least four million are presumed to have died, another 2,500,000 had become prisoners or were missing and an addi- tional million were seriously wounded." Hoffman Nickerson, The Armed Horde (1940), pp. 292-294.
12 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
The strain became unbearable. 1 9 1 7 was the year of the two Russian revolutions. It was the year of the American involvement which brought with it the declaration of the Wilsonian principles. For Italy it was the year of Caporetto. For Austria-Hungary it was the beginning of the end under the successor of Francis Joseph. For Germany it was the year of the July crisis and of the need of the Prussian mon- archy to listen to the Reichstag and its demand for a negotiated peace. For France it was the year of the mu- tinies, and for Britain the year of mortal peril from the submarine. In eastern and central Europe tortured and in- furiated masses brought down the historic states and the institutions of the old regime. In western Europe and in North America the breakthrough took the form — if I may use the term — of a deep and pervasive infiltration. Behind the fagade, which was little changed, the old structure of executive government with the consent of a representative assembly was dismantled — not every- where and not in all fields, but where it mattered the most — in the making of high policy for war and peace.
The existing governments had exhausted their impe- rium — their authority to bind and their power to com- mand. With their traditional means they were no longer able to carry on the hyperbolic war; yet they were unable to negotiate peace. They had, therefore, to turn to the people. They had to ask still greater exertions and sacri- fices. They obtained them by "democratizing" the conduct and the aims of the war: by pursuing total victory and by promising total peace.
In substance they ceded the executive power of decision
THE OBSCURE REVOLUTION I3
over the strategical and the poHtical conditions for con- cluding the war. In effect they lost control of the war. This revolution appeared to be a cession of power to the . representative assemblies, and when it happened it was j acclaimed as promising the end of the evils of secret diplomacy and the undemocratic conduct of unpopular wars. In fact, the powers which were ceded by the execu- tive passed through the assemblies, which could not ex- ercise them, to the mass of voters who, though unable! also to exercise them, passed them on to the party bosses,' the agents of pressure groups, and the magnates of the' new media of mass communications.
The consequences were disastrous and revolutionary. - The democracies became incapacitated to wage war for, rational ends and to make a peace which would be ob- ^ served or could be enforced.
4. The Paralysis of Governments
Perhaps, before going any further, I should say that I am a liberal democrat and have no wish to disenfranchise my fellow citizens. My hope is that both liberty and de- mocracy can be preserved before the one destroys the other. Whether this can be done is the question of our time, what with more than half the world denying and despairing of k. Of one thing we may be sure. If it is to be done at all, we must be uninhibited in our examination of our condition. And since our condition is manifestly connected with grave errors in war and peace that have
14 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
been committed by democratic governments, we must adopt the habit of thinking as plainly about the sovereign people as we do about the politicians they elect. It will not do to think poorly of the politicians and to talk with bated breath about the voters. No more than the kings before them should the people be hedged with divinity. Like all princes and rulers, like all sovereigns, they are ill-served by flattery and adulation. And they are betrayed by the servile hypocrisy which tells them that what is true and what is false, what is right and what is wrong, can be determined by their votes.
If I am right in what I have been saying, there has developed in this century, a^ functional derangement of the relationship between the mass of the people and the government. The people have acquired power which they
are incapable of_exercising, and the governments they elect have lost powers wJTJchjheyLmnst recover if they are to^^govern. What then are the true boundaries of the peo- ple's power? The answer cannot be simple, tint for a I rough beginning let us say that the people are able to givejind to_withhold their consent to being^overried —
\ their consent to what the government asks of^hem, pro- poses to them, and has done in the conduct of their
I ^affairs. They can elect the government. They can remove
1 k. They can approve or disapprove its_performance. Biit they cannot administer the governinent. They cannot
(■ themselves perform. They~carmot normally initiate and ' propose the necessary legislation. A niass cannot govern. The people, as Jefferson said, areTToT^'qualifiedrlio exer- cise themselves the Executive Department; but they are , qualified joname the person who shaLLexercise it ^-^..- 5^^
THE OBSCURE REVOLUTION 15
They are not qualified to legislate; with us therefore they only choose the legislators." '
^ Where mass opinion dpminate^s _tLe .government, there is a morbid derangement of the true functions of ^ower. The derangement brings abouLthe enfeeblement,. verging on paralysis, of the capacity to govern. This breakdown in the constitutional order is the cause of the precipitate ajid^catastrophic decline of Western society. It may, if it carmQLbfi..-ai:i"£Sted.-aniL tevexsecL^ing about the fall of the West.
The propensity to this derangement and the vulner- ability of our society to it have a long and complex his- tory. Yet the more I have brooded upon the events which I have lived through myself, the more astounding and significant does it seem that the decline of the power andv influence and self-confidence of the Western democracies has been so steep and so sudden. We have fallen far in a. short span of time. However long the underlying erosion had been going on, we were still a great and powerful and flourishing community when the First World War began. What we have seen is not only decay — though much of the old structure was dissolving — but some- thing which can be called an historic catastrophe.
'' Works (Ford ed. V, pp. 103-104, 1892-1898) cited in Yves IL Simon, Philosophy of Democratic Government (1951), p. 169.
CHAPTER II
The Malady of Democratic States
I. Public Opinion in War and Peace
Writing in 191 3, just before the outbreak of the war, and having in mind Queen Victoria and King Edward the VII, Sir Harry Johnston thus described how foreign affairs were conducted in the Nineteenth Century:
In those days, a country's relations with its neighbors or with distant lands were dealt with almost exclusively by the head of the State — Emperor, King, or President — acting with the more- or-less dependent Minister-of-State, who was no representative of the masses, but the employe of the Monarch. Events were prepared and sprung on a submissive, a confident, or a stupid people. The public Press criticized, more often applauded, but had at most to deal with a fait accompli and make the best of it. Occasionally, in our own land, a statesman, out of office and dis- contented, went round the great provincial towns agitating against the trend of British foreign policy — perhaps wisely, perhaps unfairly, we do not yet know — and scored a slight success. But once in office, his Cabinet fell in by degrees with the views of the Sovereign and the permanent officials (after the fifties of the last century these public servants were a factor of ever-grov/ing im- portance); and, as before, the foreign policy of the Empire was shaped by a small camarilla consisting of the Sovereign, two Cabinet Ministers, the permanent Under-Secretary of State for
THE DEMOCRATIC MALADY 17
Foreign Affairs, and perhaps one representative of la plus haute finance}
Without taking it too literally, this is a fair description of how foreign affairs were conducted before the First World War. There were exceptions. The Aberdeen gov- ernment, for example, was overthrown in 1855 because of its inefficient conduct of the Crimean War. But gen- erally speaking, the elected parliaments were little con- sulted in the deliberations which led up to war, or on the high strategy of the war, on the terms of the armistice, on the conditions of peace. Even their right to be in- formed was severely limited, and the principle of the system was, one might say, that war and peace were the business of the executive department. The power of deci-/ sion was not in, was not even shared with, the House of Commons, the Chamber of Deputies, the Reichstag.
The United States was, of course, a special case. The 1 Congress has always had constitutional rights to advise and to be consulted in the declaration of war and in the ratification of treaties. But at the time I am talking about, that is to say before the First World War broke out, it was American policy to abstain from the role of a great power, and to limit its sphere of vital interests to the Western Hemisphere and the North Pacific Ocean. Only iiLISiiiiidjhe American constitutional system for deal- ing with_foreign_affairs become involved_with the conduct of world affairs.
For the reasons which I outlined in the first chapter
^ Sir Harry Johnston, "Common Sense in Foreign Policy," pp. 1-2, cited in Howard Lee McBain & Lindsay Rogers, The New Constitutions of '?e (1922), p. 139.
l8 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
this system of executive responsibility broke down during the war, and from 19 17 on the conduct of the war and then the conditions of the armistice and the peace were subjected to the dominating impact of mass opinions.
Saying this does not mean that the great mass of the people have had strong opinions about the whole range of complex issues which were before the military staffs and the foreign offices. The action of mass opinion has not been, and in the nature of things could not be, con- tinuous through the successive phases in which affairs de- velop. Action has been discontinuous. Usually it has been a massive negative imposed at critical junctures when a new general course of policy needed to be set. There have, of course, been periods of apathy and of indiffer- ence. But democratic politicians have preferred to shun foresight about troublesome changes to come, knowing that the massive veto was latent, and that it would be expensive to them and to their party if they provoked it.
In the winter of 191 8— 191 9, for example, Lloyd George, Clemenceau, Wilson and Orlando were at a criti- cal juncture of modern history. The Germans were de- feated, their government was overthrown, their troops disarmed and disbanded. The Allies were called upon to decide whether they would dictate a punitive peace or would negotiate a peace of reconciliation.
In the Thirties the British and the French governments had to decide whether to rearm and to take concerted measures to contain Hitler and Mussolini or whether to remain unarmed and to appease them. The United States had to decide whether to arm in order to contain the
THE DEMOCRATIC MALADY 19
Japanese or to negotiate with them at the expense of China.
During the Second World War the British and the American governments had again to make the choice be- tween total victory with unconditional surrender and ne- gotiated settlements whose end was reconciliation.
These were momentous issues, like choosing at the fork of the road a way from which there is no turning back: whether to arm or not to arm — whether, as a conflict blows up, to intervene or to withdraw — whether in war to fight for the unconditional surrender of the adversary or for his reconciliation. The issues are so momentous that public feeling quickly becomes incandes- cent to them. But they can be answered with the only words that a great mass qua mass can speak — with a Yes or a No.
Experience since 1917 indicates that in matters of war and peace the popular answer in the democracies is likely to be No. For everything connected with war has become dangerous, painful, disagreeable and exhausting to very nearly everyone. The rule to which there are few excep- tions — the acceptance of the Marshall Plan is one of them — is that at the critical junctures, when the stakes are high, the prevailing mass opinion will impose what amounts to a veto upon changing the course on which the government is at the time proceeding. Prepare for war in time of peace? No. It is bad to raise taxes, to un- balance the budget, to take men away from their schools or their jobs, to provoke the enemy. Intervene in a developing conflict? No. Avoid the risk of war. Withdraw from the area of the conflict? No. The adversary must not
20 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
be appeased. Reduce your claims on the area? No. Right- eousness cannot be compromised. Negotiate a com- promise peace as soon as the opportunity presents itself? No. The aggressor must be punished. Remain armed to enforce the dictated settlement? No. The war is over.
The unhappy truth is that the prevailing public opinion has been destructively wrong at the critical junctures. The people have imposed a veto upon the judgments of in- formed and responsible officials. They have compelled the governments, which usually knew what would have been wiser, or was necessary, or was more expedient, to be too late with too little, or too long with too much, too pacifist in peace and too bellicose in war, too neutralist or appeasing in negotiation or too intransigent. Mass opin- ion has acquired mounting power in this century. It has shown itself to be a dangerous master of decisions when the stakes are life and death.
2. The Compulsion to Make Mistakes
The errors of public opinion in these matters have a common characteristic. The movement of opinion is slower than the movement of events. Because of that, the cycle of subjective sentiments on war and peace is usually out of gear with the cycle of objective develop- ments. Just because they are mass opinions there is an inertia in them. It takes much longer to change many minds than to change a few. It takes time to inform and to persuade and to arouse large scattered varied multi- tudes of persons. So before the multitude have caught up
THE DEMOCRATIC MALADY 21
with the old events there are hkely to be new ones com- ing up over the horizon with which the government should be preparing to deal. But the majority will be more aware of what they have just caught up with near at hand than with what is still distant and in the future. For these reasons the propensity to say No to a change of course sets up a compulsion to make mistakes. The opinion deals with a situation which no longer exists.
When the world wars came, the people of the liberal democracies could not be aroused to the exertions and the sacrifices of the struggle until they had been frightened by the opening disasters, had been incited to passionate hatred, and had become intoxicated with un- limited hope. To overcome this inertia the enemy had to be portrayed as evil incarnate, as absolute and congeni- tal wickedness. The people wanted to be told that when this particular enemy had been forced to unconditional surrender, they would re-enter the golden age. This unique war would end all wars. This last war would make the world safe for democracy. This crusade would make the whole world a democracy.
As a result of this impassioned nonsense public opin-. ion became so envenomed that the people would not countenance a workable peace; they were against any public man who showed "any tenderness for the Hun," or was inclined to listen to the "Hun food snivel." ^
^ Cf. Harold Nicolson, Peace>naking. Chap. III.
22 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
3. The Pattern of the Mistakes
In order to see in its true perspective what happened, we must remember that at the end of the First World War the only victorious powers were the liberal democ- racies of the West. Lenin, who had been a refugee in Switzerland until 19 17, was still at the very beginning of his struggle to become the master of the empire of the Romanoffs. Mussolini was an obscure journalist, and nobody had dreamed of Hitler. The men who took part in the Peace Conference were men of the same standards and tradition. They were the heads of duly elected gov- ernments in countries where respect for civil liberty was the rule. Europe from the Atlantic to the Pripet Mafshes lay within the military orbit of their forces. All the un- democratic empires, enemy and ally, had been destroyed by defeat and revolution. In 1918 — unlike 1945 — there had been no Yalta, there was no alien foreign min- ister at the peace conference who held a veto on the settle- ment.
Yet as soon as the terms of the settlement were known, it was evident that peace had not been made with Ger- many. It was not for want of power but for want of statesmanship that the liberal democracies failed. They failed to restore order in that great part of the world which — outside of revolutionary Russia — was still within the orbit of their influence, still amenable to their leadership, still subject to their decisions, still working within the same economy, still living in the same inter- national com,munity, still thinking in the same universe of discourse. In this failure to make peace there was gen-
THE DEMOCRATIC MALADY 23
erated the cycle of wars in which the West has suffered so sudden and so spectacular a decline.
Public opinion, having vetoed reconciliation, had made the settlement unworkable. And so when a new genera- tion of Germans grew up, they rebelled. But by that time the Western democracies, so recently too warlike to make peace with the unarmed German Republic, had become too pacifist to take the risks which could have prevented the war Hitler was announcing he would wage against Europe. Having refused the risk of trying to pre- vent war, they would not now prepare for the war. The European democracies chose to rely on the double nega- tive of unarmed appeasement, and the American democ- racy chose to rely on unarmed isolation.
When the unprevented war came, the fatal cycle was repeated. Western Europe was defeated and occupied be- fore the British people began seriously to wage the war. And after the catastrophe in Western Europe eighteen agonizing months of indecision elapsed before the sur- prise and shock of Pearl Harbor did for the American people what no amount of argument and evidence and reason had been able to do.
Once again it seemed impossible to wage the war energetically except by inciting the people to paroxysms of hatred and to Utopian dreams. So they were told that the Four Freedoms would be established everywhere, once the incurably bad Germans and the incurably bad Japanese had been forced to surrender unconditionally. The war could be popular only if the enemy was altogether evil and the Allies very nearly perfect. This mixture of envenomed hatred and furious righteousness
24 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
made a public opinion which would not tolerate the cal- culated compromises that durable settlements demand. Once again the people were drugged by the propaganda which had aroused them to fight the war and to endure its miseries. Once again they would not think, once again they would not allow their leaders to think, about an eventual peace with their enemies, or about the dif- ferences that must arise among the Allies in this coalition, as in all earlier ones. How well this popular diplomacy worked is attested by the fact that less than five years after the democracies had disarmed their enemies, they were imploring their former enemies, Germany and Japan, to rearm.
'' The record shows that the people of the democracies, having become sovereign in this century, have made it increasingly difficult for their governments to prepare I properly for war or to make peace. Their responsible officials have been like the ministers of an opinionated and willful despot. Between the critical junctures, when public opinion has been inattentive or not vehemently aroused, responsible officials have often been able to cir- cumvent extremist popular opinions and to wheedle their way towards moderation and good sense. In the crises, however, democratic ofi&cials — over and above their own human propensity to err — have been compelled to make the big mistakes that public opinion has insisted upon. Even the greatest men have not been able to turn back the massive tides of opinion and of sentiment.
There is no mystery about why there is such a tendency for popular opinion to be wrong in judging war and peace. Strategic and diplomatic decisions call for a kind
THE DEMOCRATIC MALADY 25
of knowledge — not to speak of an experience and a seasoned judgment — which cannot be had by glancing at newspapers, listening to snatches of radio comment, watching politicians perform on television, hearing oc- casional lectures, and reading a few books. It would not be enough to make a man competent to decide whether to amputate a leg, and it is not enough to qualify him to choose war or peace, to arm or not to arm, to intervene or to withdraw, to fight on or to negotiate.
Usually, moreover, when the decision is critical and urgent, the public will not be told the whole truth. What can be told to the great public it will not hear in the complicated and qualified concreteness that is needed for a practical decision. When distant and unfamiliar and complex things are communicated to great masses of people, the truth suffers a considerable and often a radical distortion. The complex is made over into the simple, the hypothetical into the dogmatic, and the relative into an absolute. Even when there is no deliberate distortion by censorship and propaganda, which is unlikely in time of war, the public opinion of masses cannot be counted upon to apprehend regularly and promptly the reality of things. There is an inherent tendency in opinion to feed upon rumors excited by our own wishes and fears.
4. Democratic Politicians
At THE critical moments in this sad history, there have been men, worth listening to, who warned the peonle against their mistakes. Always, too, there have been men
26 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
inside the governments who judged correctly, because they were permitted to know in time, the uncensored and unvarnished truth. But the chmate of modern de- mocracy does not usually inspire them to speak out. For what Churchill did in the Thirties before Munich was exceptional: the general rule is that a democratic politi- cian had better not be rigEFloo^joon. Very_often the penalty is political d^ath. It is much safer to keep in stepwith_the parade of opinion than to try_to,^ggpZHP with the swifter movement of events.
In government offices which are sensitive to the vehe- mence and passion of mass sentiment public men have no sure tenure. They are in effect perpetual office seekers, always on trial for their political lives, always required to court their restless constituents. They are deprived of their independence. Democratic politicians rarely feel they can afford the luxury of telling the whole truth to the people.^ And since not telling it, though^ prudent, ii-n.n'""'^fo''fable. they find iL_£asier if they themselves do not have to hear too often joo mjicti_o£j:he_SQur_truth. The men under them who X£part.^iKL collect the news CQme-,10 xgalize in their turn that it is safer to be wrong before it has become fashionable to be^jnght.
" "As we look over the list of the early leaders of the republic, Washing- ton, John Adams, Hamilton, and others, we discern that they were all men who insisted upon being themselves and who refused to truckle to the people. With each succeeding generation, the growing demand of the peo- ple that its elective officials shall not lead but merely register the popular will has steadily undermined the independence of those who derive their power from popular election. The persistent refusal of the Adamses to sacrifice the integrity of their own intellectual and moral standards and values for the sake of winning public office or popular favor is another of the measuring rods by which we may measure the divergence of American life from its starting point." James Truslow Adams, The Adams Family (1930), p. 95.
THE DEMOCRATIC MALADY 27
With exceptions so rare that they are regarded as miracles and freaks of nature, successful democratic poli- ticians are insecure and intimidated men. They advance politically only as they placate, appease, bribe, seduce, bamboozle, or otherwise manage to manipulate the de- manding and threatening elements in their constituen- cies. The decisive consideration is not whether the propo- sjtion^ is good Jrut whetjier k is popular — not whether it will work well and prove itself but whether the active talking constituents like it immediately. Politicians ration- > alize this servitude by saying that in a democracy public I men are the servants of the people.
This devitalization of the governing power is the t rnalady of democratic states. As the malady grows the executives become highly susceptible to encroachment and usurpation by elected assemblies; they are prgssed. and harassed by the higgling of parties, by the agents of organized interests, and by the spokesmenof sectarians anHfldeo rogues. The malady "l^n be fatal7~Tr~carr~be deadly to the very survival of the state as a free society if, when the great and hard issues of war and peace, of. security and solvency, of revolution and order are up for decision, the executive and judicial departments, with their civil servants and technicians, have lost their power to decide.
,^
CHAPTER III
The Derangement of Powers
I. The Governors and the Governed
When I describe the malady of democratic states as a (derangement in the relation between the mass of the people and the government, 1 am, of course, implying that there is a sound relationship arid that we should be able to know what it is. We must now examine this as- sumption. We are looking into the relation between, on the one hand, the governing or executive power, and, on the_ other hand, the elected assembly and the voters in the constituencies. The best place to begin is in the simple beginnings of our constitutional development — in the medieval English Parliament — before the essential func- tions and their relation had become complicated by their later development.
No relationship, sound or unsound, could exist until the functions of execution and representation had become,' differentiated. In primitive societies they are not differ-i entiated. Under the Norman and Angevin rulers the dif- ferentiation had not yet occurred. These rulers "judged and legislated as well as administered." ^ But by the thir- teenth century the differentiation is already visible, and
^ A. F. Pollard, The Evolution of Parliament (1926), p. 240.
^
DERANGEMENT OF POWERS 29
the essential relation in which we are interested can be recognized. There is a writ issued under Henry III in 1254, summoning Parliament. The sheriff of each county is ordered to "cause to come before the King's Council two good and discreet Knights of the Shire, whom the men of the county shall have chosen for this purpose in the stead of all and of each of them, to con- sider along with knights of other shires what aid they will grant the King." "
Let us note the dualism. There is the government, which means the King and his Council of prelates and peers. Then there are the Knights of the Shires, repre- senting the men of the counties. They are to meet, and the King will ask the Knights what aid they will grant to him. This is the basic relationship. The government can act. Because it can act, it decides what action should be taken, and it proposes the measures; it then asks the rep- resentatives of those who must supply the money and the men for the means to carry out its decisions. The gov- erned, through their representatives, the two Knights of the Shire from each county, give or withhold their con- sent.
From the tension and the balance of the two powers j,. — that of the ruler and that of the ruled — there evolved " the written and the unwritten contracts of the constitu- tion. The grant of aid by the ruled must be preceded by the ruler's redress of their grievances. The government will be refused the means of governing if it does not listen to the petitions, if it does not inform, if it does not
^Encyclopedia Britannica (1952), Vol. 19, p. 164, article "Representa- tion."
30 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
consult, if it cannot win the consent of, those who have been elected as the representatives of the governed. , ^ The executive isthe active power in the state, the asking and the proposing power. The representative as- sembly is the consenting power, the petitioning, the ap- proving and the criticizing, the accepting and the refusing power. The two powers are necessary if there is to be order and freedom. But each must be true to its own nature, each limiting and complementing the other. The government must be able to govern and the citizens must be represented in order that they shall not be oppressed. The health of the system depends upon the relation- ship of the two powers. If either absorbs or destroys the functions of the other power, the constitution is de- ranged.
There is here a relationship between governors and governed which is, I would contend, rooted in the nature of things. At the risk of reasoning by analogy, I would suggest that this duality of function within a political society has a certain resemblance to that of the two sexes. In the act of reproduction each sex has an unalterable physiological function. If this function is devitalized or is confused with the function of the other sex, the result is sterility and disorder.
In the final acts of the state the issues are war and peace, security and solvency, order and insurrection. In these final acts the executive power cannot be exercised by the representative assembly. Nor can it be exercised after the suppression of the assembly. For in the derange- ment of the two primary functions lie the seeds of dis- aster.
DERANGEMENT OF POWERS 3I
2. The People and the Voters
A RECENT historian of the Tudor Revolution, Mr. G. R. Elton, says that "our history is still much written by whigs, the champions of political freedom," and that "while the safeguards against despotism have long been understood and often described, — strong rule, prevent- ing anarchy and preserving order, requires still much exploration." There have been periods, he goes on to say, of which the Tudor Age was one — and our own, we may add, is another — when men were so ready to be governed, being so oppressed by disorder, that they have preferred strong government to free gov- ernment.
The Western liberal democracies are a declining power in human affairs. I argue that this is due to a, derangement of the functions of their governments which
disables them in coping with the mounting disorder. I do not say, indeed it is impossible to know surely, whether the malady can be cured or whether it must run its course. But I do say that if it cannot be cured, it will continue to erode the safeguards against despotism, and the failure of the West may be such that freedom will be lost and will not be restored again except by another revolution. But for either contingency, for cure now or for recovery after a catastrophe, our first necessity is to work towards an adequate knowledge of the two functions, their na- ture, and their derangement.
In order to do so it is necessary at the outset to reduce the ambiguity of the term "the people." For it has two different meanings, which it mav be convenient to dis-
32 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
tinguish typographically. When we speak of popular sovereignty, we must know whether we are talking about The People, as voters, or about The People, as a com- munity of the entire living population, with their prede- cessors and successors.
It is often assumed, but without warrant, that the opin- ions of The People as voters can be treated as the ex- ■■ pression of the interests of The People as an historic ' community. The crucial problem of modern democracy arises from the fact that this assumption is false. The voters cannot be relied upon to represent The People. The opinions of voters in elections are not to be accepted^ unquestioningly as true judgments of the vital interests ; of the community.
To whom, for example, did the Preamble of the Con- stitution refer when it said that "We, the People of the United States . . . ordain and establish this Constitu- tion"? On September 17, 1787, about forty members signed the draft on which they had been working since May 25, for one hundred and sixteen days. In Article VII of their text they stipulated that if and when con- ventions in nine states had ratified it, then for those nine states The People of the United States would have or- dained and established the Constitution. In this context a majority of the delegates elected to nine state con- ventions were deemed to be entitled to act as The People of the United States.
The inhabitants of the United States who were quali- fied to vote for these delegates were not a large number. They included no slaves, no women and, except in New York, only such adult males as could pass property and
DERANGEMENT OF POWERS 33
Other highly restrictive tests. We do not have accurate figures. But according to the census of 1790 the popula- tion was 3,929,782. Of these, 3,200,000 were free persons and the adult males among them who were entitled to vote are estimated to have been less than 500,000. Using the Massachusetts figures as a statistical sample, it may be assumed that less than 160,000 actually voted for delegates to all the ratifying conventions; and of those voting, per- haps 100,000 favored the adoption of the Constitution.^
The exact figures do not matter. The point is that the voters were not — and we may add that they have never been and can never be — more than a fraction of the total population. They were less than 5 per cent when the Constitution was ordained. They were not yet 40 per cent in 1952 when, except under the special conditions in the South, we had universal adult suffrage. Manifestly, the voters can never be equal to the whole population, even to the whole living adult population.
Because of the discrepancy between The People as' voters and The People as the corporate nation, the voters have no title to consider themselves the proprietors of the commonwealth and to claim that their interests are identi- cal with the public interest. A prevailing plurality of the voters are not The People. The claim that they are is a
^ These figures are from a memorandum prepared for me by my friend, Prof. Allan Nevins. In his covering letter, January 24, 1952, he says:
"Anyone who writes about election figures in our early national history treads upon very unsafe ground. Trustworthy data — the statistics and the general information — are too scanty for any explicit statement of detailed conclusions for the country as a whole. As you will see, I have found fig- ures for various states and localities, but we have no warrant for generaliz- ing them to apply to the country in its entirety. What we can say ivith absolute certainty, I think, is that in these early elections the vote was under 3 per cent of the whole population."
34 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
bogus title invoked to justify the usurpation of the execu- tive power by representative assembhes and the intimida- tion of public men by demagogic politicians. In fact demagoguery can be described as the sleight of hand by. which a faction of The People as voters are invested with the authority of The People. That is why so many crimes_j are committed in the people's name.
There are eminent political philosophers who reject this analytical distinction. Those who are strongly nominalist in their cast of mind, which modern men tend to be, look upon the abstract concept of a corporate people as mere words and rather like conjuring up spooks. Thus, according to that resolute nominalist, Jeremy Bentham, "the community is a fictitious body, composed of the in- dividual persons who are considered as constituting as it were its members. The interest of the community then is, what? — The sum of the interests of the several mem- bers who compose it." ^
There is an apparent toughness and empirical matter- of-factness in this statement. But the hard ice is thin. For Bentham has forgotten that "the several members who compose" the community are never identically the same members from one hour to another. If a community were what he says it is, then in theory it should be possible to make a directory of its members, each with his address. But no such list could ever be compiled. While it was being compiled, new members would be being born and old members would be dying. That is why it makes no sense to describe "The People of the United States" who
'' Jeremy Bentham, The Principles of Morals and Legislation, Ch. I, Sec. IV.
DERANGEMENT OF POWERS 35
ordained and established the Constitution as the inhabit- ants of the United States on that particular June 21, 1788, when the Constitution was established and or- dained. Between sunrise and sunset of that historic day ^ the persons composing The People had changed. In thirty years they had changed greatly; and in a hundred years, entirely.
The people, then, is not only, as Bentham assumed, the aggregate of living persons. The people is also the stream of individuals, the connected generations of changing per- sons, that Burke was talking about when he invoked the partnership "not only between those who are living" but also with "those who are dead, and those who are to be born." The People are a corporation, an entity, that is to? < say, which lives on while individuals come into it and go out of it.
For this reason Bentham cannot have been right when~^ ■ he said that the interests of the community are no more... than the sum of the interests of the several members who happen to compose it at any particular instant of time. He cannot have been right when he said that "the happiness of the individuals, of whom a community is composed, that is their pleasures and their security, is the end and the sole end which the legislator ought to have in view." ""
For besides the happiness and the security of the in- dividuals of whom a community is at any moment com- posed, there are also the happiness and the security of the individuals of whom generation after generation it will be composed. If we think of it in terms of individual persons, the corporate body of The People is for the most part in-
* Ibid., Ch. Ill, Sec. I.
36 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
visible and inaudible. Indeed as a whole it is nonexistent, in that so many are dead and so many are not yet born. Yet this corporate being, though so insubstantial to our senses, binds, in Burke's words, a man to his country with "ties which though light as air, are as strong as links of iron." That is why young men die in battle for their country's sake and why old men plant trees they will never sit under.
This invisible, inaudible, and so largely nonexistent community gives rational meaning to the necessary ob- jectives of government. If we deny it, identifying the peo- ple with the prevailing pluralities who vote in order to serve, as Bentham has it, "their pleasures and their secu- rity," where and what is the nation, and whose duty and business is it to defend the public interest? Bentham leaves us with the state as an arena in which factions con- tend for their immediate advantage in the struggle for survival and domination. Without the invisible and tran- . scendent community to bind them, why should they care for posterity? And why should posterity care about them, and about their treaties and their contracts, their commit- ments and their promises? Yet without these engagements to the future, they could not live and work; without these engagements the fabric of society is unraveled and shredded.
'Edmund Burke's speech on Conciliation with America (1775).
DERANGEMENT OF POWERS 37
3. The Recently Enfranchised Voters
The doctrine of popular sovereignty is ancient and^' venerable. But until about the second half of the Nine-' teenth Century, it did not imply the enfranchisement^-^ of the people. When, for example, Charlemagne vv^as crovv^ned in 800 A.D., the Pope professed to be declaring the will of the people. This has been called the principle of "virtual representation." ' Those who do not vote be- cause they lack the franchise, or cannot vote because they are infants or even unborn, are presumed to be repre- sented by someone like the Pope, the king, the parlia- ment, speaking in their name.
By the coronation of 800 A.D, the empire was being transferred from the Greeks to the Germans. A reason was needed to explain why a German prince, rather than the Emperor of Byzantium, was to be henceforth the law- ful successor of the Roman Caesars. The office of emperor was not hereditary, and in any event Charlemagne could have made no claim of kinship; the emperor was not ap- pointed by the Pope; he was chosen by the German princes who belonged to the College of Electors. A doc- trine was necessary which would justify and could compel everyone to believe that Charlemagne was the legitimate successor of Caesar.
The publicists of the new empire took for a foundation the accepted theory that "the Imperial power, as successoi to the Imperium of the Roman Caesars, was founded orig-
' The great exponent of "virtual representation" was Burke. Cf. his speech (1784) On the Reform of the Representation of the Commons in Parliament.
38 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
inally on an act of transference performed by the people in the Lex Regia." ^ They argued that what had happened once at the beginning of the imperial power would have to happen again whenever the throne was vacant. As the imperium "escheats or reverts to the people"; and the people had then to choose a new emperor, they might even "translate" the empire from one nation to another, in this instance from the Greeks to the Germans. Need- less to say, "the people," who were presumed to have this power, had neither votes nor any other means of making their will known. It was presumed that they wished to have their power exercised for them. In the coronation of Charlemagne, the Pope did this: he 'merely declared and exercised the people's will."
All this seems long ago and far away. But if we reject virtual representation, the question remains: if the Pope or the king, or the parliament of magnates, cannot repre- sent The People, how do a plurality of voters truly de- clare and exercise The People's will? It sounds incongru- ous to modern ears that the Pope should represent the people. But is it so congruous that the people should ben . represented by a count of the votes of some persons? The-^ conundrum springs from the fact that while The People as a corporate body are the true owners of the sovereign' power. The People, as an aggregate of voters, have di- verse, conflicting self-centered interests and opinions. K-^ plurality of them cannot be counted upon to represent the-^^ corporate nation.
The distinction upon which I am dwelling does not, as
^ Otto von Gierke, The Development of Political Theory, translated by Bernard Freyd (1939; original first published 1880), p. 92.
DERANGEMENT OF POWERS 39
one might suppose, cease to matter when the voters be- come enormously many. Cannot a multitude of voters be regarded as the practical equivalent of all the people? They cannot be. To multiply the voters makes it no more probable that a plurality of them will truly represent the public interest. Our experience with mass elections in the twentieth century compels us, I think, to the contrary con- clusion: that public opinion becomes less realistic as the mass to whom information must be conveyed, and argu- ment must be addressed, grows larger and more heteroge- neous.
All this will seem less odd if we remind ourselves that political democracy, as we know it in this century, is a very recent political phenomenon. The moral presump- tion in favor of universal suffrage may perhaps be said to have been laid down by the American and the French Revolutions at the end of the eighteenth century. But (until the end of the nineteenth century) the actual ad- vance towards universal suffrage was in fact spasmodic and slow. In 1900, voters in the United Kingdom were only 1 1 per cent of the population: they were 43 per cent in 1922. The Representation of The People Act in 1918 had very nearly tripled the electorate by simplifying the extremely complex regulations for voting and by extend- ing the suffrage to women thirty years of age and quali- fied as occupants. In France the voters were 27 per cent of the population in the election of 1881; in 195 1 they were 45 per cent. Until the last quarter of the nineteenth century, in most of Western and Northern Europe, the proportion of voters to population was not more than 5 per cent. In 1890 voters in the United States were
40 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
about 15 per cent of the population. It has been only since the First World War, owing to the enfranchisement of women and, in some measure, of southern Negroes, that the proportion has risen to over 30 per cent.
Large mass electorates are something quite new, much . newer than the ideals, the ideas, the institutions and the usages of the liberal state. Political orators often assume that the mass of the people voted their own liberties. But the fact is that they acquired the vote after they had/-^ acquired their liberties and, in fact, largely because not being able to vote was felt by free men to be incompatible with their equal dignity.^ The Bill of Rights (1689) is more than two centuries older than universal suffrage in Great Britain. The enfranchised people did not establish the rule that all powers are under the law, that laws must be made, amended and administered by due process, that a legitimate government must have the consent of the governed.
I dwell upon this point because it throws light upon the fact, so disconcerting an experience in this century, that> the enfranchised masses have not, surprisingly enough,-; , been those who have most stanchly defended the institu-..'' tions of freedom. —
" James Bryce, Modern Democracies, Vol. I, Ch. IV. Cf. also John Stuart Mill, Considerations on Representative Government. In On Liberty, Rep- resentative Government, The Subjection of Women (London, Oxford University Press, 1946), Ch. VIII, pp. 272-294.
CHAPTER IV
The Public Interest
I. What Is the Public Interest?
We are examining the question of how, and by whom, the interest of an invisible community over a long span of time is represented in the practical work of governing a modern state.
In ordinaxy_cirajinstaiicesjvo^ to j ,
transcend their particular, localized and_self-regarding , opinions. As well expect men laboring in the valley to see the land as from a mountain top. In their circumstances, which as private persons they cannot readily surmount, the voters are most likely to suppose that whatever seems ob- viously good to them must be good for the country, and good in the sight of God.
I am far from implying that the voters are not entitled to the representation of their particular opinions and in- terests. But their opinions and interests should be taken-^ for what they are and for no more. They are not — as such — propositions in the public interest. Beyond theic being, if they are genuine, a true report of what various groups of voters are thinking, they have no intrinsic au- thority. The Gallup polls are reports of what people are thinking. But that a plurality of the people sampled in the
42 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
poll think one way has no bearing upon whether it is sound public policy. For their opportunities of judging great issues are in the very nature of things limited, and the statistical sum of their opinions is not the final verdict/' on an issue. It is, rather, the beginning of the argument. In that argument their opinions need to be confronted by the views of the executive, defending and promoting the public interest. In the accommodation reached between/ the two views lies practical public policy.
Let us ask ourselves. How is the public interest dis- cerned and judged? From what we have been saying we know that we cannot answer the question by attempting to forecast what the invisible community, with all its un- born constituents, will, would, or might say if and when it ever had a chance to vote. There is no point in toying with any notion of an imaginary plebiscite to discover the public interest. We cannot know what we ourselves will be thinking five years hence, much less what infants now in the cradle will be thinking when they go into the poll- ing booth.
Yet their interests, as we observe them today, are within the public interest. Living adults share, we must believe, the same public interest. For them, however, the public interest is mixed with, and is often at odds with, their private and special interests. Put this way, we can say, I suggest, that the public interest may be presumed to , be__whaL,jl£il.,,^ouid_choose if they saw clearly, thought ' rationally, acted disinterestedly andjbenevglently. * '
THE PUBLIC INTEREST 43
2. The Equations of Reality
A RATiONALman^ acting in_the real world may be defined as one who decides where he will strike a balance be-
tween what he desires and what can be done. It is only in imaginary worlds that we can do whatever we wish. In the real world there are always equations which have to be adjusted between the possible and the desired. Within limits, a man can make a free choice as to where he will strike the balance. If he makes his living by doing piece- work, he can choose to work harder and to spend more. He can also choose to work less and to spend less. But he cannot spend more and work less.
Reality confronts us in practical affairs as a long and intricate series of equations. What we are likely to call "facts of life" are the accounts, the budgets, the orders of battle, the election returns. Sometimes, but not always, the two sides of the equations can be expressed quantitatively in terms of money, as supply and demand, as income and outgo, assets and liabilities, as exports and imports. Valid choices are limited to the question of where, not whether, the opposing terms of the equation are to be brought into equilibrium. For there is always a reckoning.
In public life, for example, the budget may be balanced by reducing expenditures to the revenue from taxes; by raising taxes to meet the expenditures, or by a combina- tion of the two, by borrowing, or by grants in aid from other governments, or by fiat credit, or by a combination of them. In one way or another the budget is in fact al-Ui 'ways balanced. The true nature of the reckoning would-^ be clearer if, instead of talking about "an unbalanced
44 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
budget," we spoke of a budget balanced not by taxes but by borrowing, of a budget balanced by inflation, or of a budget balanced by subsidy. A government which cannot raise enough money by taxes, loans, foreign grants, or by getting its fiat money accepted, will be unable to meet its bills and to pay the salaries of its employees. In bank- ruptcy an involuntary balance is struck for the bankrupt. He is forced to balance his accounts by reducing his ex- penditures to the level of his income.
Within limits, which public men have to bear in mind, the choices as to where to balance the budget are open. In making these choices, new equations confront them. Granted that it is possible to bring the budget into bal- ance by raising taxes, how far can taxes be raised? Some- what but not ad infinitum. There are no fixed criteria. But though we are unable to express all the equations quantitatively, this does not relieve us of the necessity of balancing the equations. There will be a reckoning. Prac- tical judgment requires an informed guess: what will the taxpayers accept readily, what will they accept with grum- bling but with no worse, what will arouse them to resist- ance and to evasion? How will the taxpayers react to the different levels of taxes if it is a time of peace, a time of war, a time of cold war, a time of social and economic disturbance, and so on? Although the various propositions cannot be reduced to precise figures, prudent men make estimates as to where the equations balance.
Their decisions as to where to balance the accounts must reflect other judgments — as to what, for example, are the military requirements in relation to foreign af- fairs; what is the phase of the business cycle in relation to
THE PUBLIC INTEREST 45
the needs for increased or decreased demand; what is the condition of the international monetary accounts; which are tlie necessary public works and welfare measures, and which are those that are desirable but not indispensable. Each of these judgments is itself the peak of a pyramid of equations: whether, for example, to enlarge or to reduce the national commitments at this or that point in the world — given the effect of the decision at other points in the world.
We may say, then, that public policy is made in a field of equations. The issues are the choices as to where the balance is to be struck. In the reality of things X will ex- act an equivalence of Y. Within the limits which the spe- cific nature of the case permits — limits which have to be estimated — a balance has to be reached by adding to or subtracting from the terms of the equation.
Oftener than not, the two sides of the equation differ in that the one is, as compared with the other, the pleas- anter, the more agreeable, the more popular. In general the softer and easier side reflects what we desire and the harder reflects what is needed in order to satisfy the de- sire. Now the momentous equations of war and peace, of solvency, of security and of order, always have a harder or a softer, a pleasanter or a more painful, a popular or an unpopular option. It is easier to obtain votes for appro- priations than it is for taxes, to facilitate consumption than to stimulate production, to protect a market than to open it, to inflate than to deflate, to borrow than to save, to de- mand than to compromise, to be intransigent than to ne- gotiate, to threaten war than to prepare for it.
Faced with these choices between the hard and the soft, '■ i.
46 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
the normal propensity of democratic governments is to. please the largest number of voters. The pressure of thej"^ electorate is normally for the soft side of the equations.' That is why governments are unable to cope with reality when elected assemblies and mass opinions become deci- sive in the state, when there are no statesmen to resist the inclination of the voters and there are only politicians to excite and to exploit them.
There is then a general tendency to be drawn down- ward, as by the force of gravity, towards insolvency, to- wards the insecurity of factionalism, towards the erosion of liberty, and towards hyperbolic wars.
CHAPTER V
The Tv^o Functions
I. The Elected Executive
Our inquiry has shown, I beheve, that we cannot take j popular government for granted, as if its principles were, settled and beyond discussion. We are compelled to agree with Sir Henry Maine who wrote, some seventy years ago, that "the actual history of popular government since it was introduced, in its modern shape, into the civilized world," does "little to support the assumption that popu- lar government has an indefinitely long future before it. Experience rather tends to show that it is characterized i ^ by great fragility, and that since its appearance, all forms'" of government have become more insecure than they were before." ^
We have been dwelling upon the devitalization of thex executive power as the cause of the fragility that Maine speaks of. It is, I have been saying, the disorder which re- sults froma functional_dera£gement_m the relationship between the executive power on the one hand, the repre-_ sentative assemblies and the mass electorates on the other
jiand.
Democratic states_arejusceptible to this derangement be-
' Sir Henry Maine, Popular Government (1886), p. 20.
48 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
-\ * ' cause congenitally the executive, when dependent on elec-
■'-' ^ tion, is weaker than the elected' representatives. The normal
^ -J " ■ -^ — • - — .
drainage of power in ajdenrnrratir^state is away^from the governing center and_down into the constituencies." And the normal tendency of elections is to reduce elected of- ficers to the role of agents of organized pluralities. Mod- ern democratic governments are, to be sure, big govern- ments, in their personnel, in the range and variety of their projects, the ubiquitousness of their interventions. But to be big is not necessarily to be strong. They are, in fact, swollen rather than strong, being too weak to resist the pressure of special interests and of the departmental bureaucracies.
As a rule competition in the electoral market works like Gresham's law: the soft money drives the hard money out of circulation. The competitive odds are heav- ily against the candidate who, like Burke with the electors of Bristol, promises to be true to his own best reason and judgment. The odds are all in favor of the candidate who- offers himself as the agent, the delegate, the spokesman, the errand boy, of blocs of voters. ^V* -^^^
"Yves R. Simon, Philosophy of Democratic Government, p. 136, quotes Jefferson, Notes on Virginia (Memorial ed.; Washington, 1903), Vol. II, ^ pp. 162-163 (the writer is surveying what he terms the "capital defects of the constitution") : "All the powers of government, legislative, executive, and judiciary, result to the legislative body. The concentrating these in the same hands is precisely the definition of despotic government. It will be no alleviation that these powers will be exercised by a plurality of hands, and not by a single one. One hundred and seventy-three despots would surely be as oppressive as one. Let those who doubt it turn their eyes on the republic of Venice. As little will it avail us that they are chosen by ourselves. An elective despotism was not the government we fought for, but one which should not only be founded on free principles, but in which the powers of government should be so divided and balanced among sev- eral bodies of magistracy, as that no one could transcend their legal limits, without being effectually checked and restrained by the others."
THE TWO FUNCTIONS 49
In a modern democratic state, the chief executive office must be elective. But as heredity, prescriptijonj^ . cojasecra- tion, rank and hierarchy are dissplyejd hy.. _the_acids of modernity, the executives become totally^de^endent on election. They have no status and no tenure which rein-
force their consciences, which invest them with power to withstand the tides of popular opinion and to defend the public interest.
They hold their offices for a short time, and to do this they must maneuver and manipulate combinations among the factions and the pressure groups. Their policies must be selected and shaped so as to attract and hold together these combinations. There are_ moments, the "finest hours," when communities are lifted above their habitual selves in unity and fellowship. But these moments are rare. They are not the stuff of daily life in a democracy, and they are remembered like a miracle in a dream. In the daily routine of dernocratic politics, elected executives can never for long take their eyes from the mirror of the constituencies. They must not look too much_out_of the window at the realities beyond.
2. The Protection of the Executive
During the nineteenth century good democrats were pri- marily concerned with insuring representation in the as- semblies and with extending the control of the assembliesjr over the executive power. It is true that the problem of the inadequate executive, overridden and dominated by the assembly, was very much in the minds of the Found-
50 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
ing Fathers at the Philadelphia convention, and it has been a continuing concern of the critics and opponents of democracy. But until the twentieth century the problem was not sharply and urgently posed. That there was such a problem was well known. But it was not the immediate problem.^
For some generations before 19 14, the West enjoyed fine political weather. Moreover, the full force of the coming enfranchisement, emancipation, and secularization of the whole population had not yet worked its conse- quences. Governments still had authority and power, which were independent of the assemblies and the elec- torates. They still drew upon the traditional sources of au- thority — upon prescription, hereditary prerogative, and consecration.
Yet the need to protect the executive and judicial pow- ers from the representative assemblies and from mass opinion has long been understood.^ Many expedients havei -^ been devised to soften, to neutralize, to check and to bal-| ance the pressure of parties, factions, lobbies, sects. The) expedients have taken, says Bryce. two generaH^orms, the one being^o pu^ constitutional restrictions upon the as-j, sembly and the other, "by a_diYisionjofj:he whole power.. of- the people," to weaken it. This has been done by elect-"^ in^the legislature and the executive separately, or by hav- ing the legislative bodies elected by the differing constitu- encjes andat different times.
The constitutional mechanisms have never themselves
'But cf. Woodrow Wilson, Congressional Governmeyit, Ch. 5. * Hamilton, Jay, Madison, The federalist, (Modern Library), No. 48, pp. 322-326; No. 49, pp. 330-332; No. 71, pp. 464-466.
^ James Bryce, Modern Democracies (1921), Vol. II, Ch. LXIII.
THE TWO FUNCTIONS 51
been sufficient to protect the executive. And much inven- tion and reforming energy have been appHed to finding ; other ways to insulate the judicial, the executive and the administrative functions from the heavy pressures of "pol- itics" and "politicians." The object has been to separate 1 4. them from the electoral process. The judiciary must be in- dependent of fear and favor. There must be no connection between the judgment of the courts and the election re- turns. The civil service, the military services, the foreign service, the scientific and technical services, the quasi- judicial administrative tribunals, the investigating com- missions, the public schools and institutions of learning, should be substantially independent of the elections. These reforms were inspired by the dire effects of the spoils system, and they were pushed as practical remedies for obvious evils.
Yet implicit in them there is a principle which, if it canbe^pplied deeply enough, gets at the root ofjhe^ dis- order of niodern democracy. It is that though public of-/^ ficials are elected by the voters, or are appoirued" bylneh ; wEo are elected, they owe their primary allegiance not to the opinions of the voters but to th^law, to the criteriaof their professions, to the integrity of the arts and sciences In which they work, to their ownconscientious and re- sponsible convictions oTlheir duty withiri,the rules and the frame of reference_thgy_have sworn to respect.
3. The Voters and the Executive
The implied principle may be defined in other terms by saying that--while jhe electors choose the ruler, they do
52 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
not own any shares in him and they have no right to com-] mand him. His duty^is to the oflEice and not to his electors. Their duty is to fill the office and not to direct the office-j.; holder. I realize that, as I have stated it, the principle runs counter to the popular view that in a democracy public men are the servants (that is, the agents) of the people (that is, of the voters). As the game of politics is played, what I am saying must seem at first like a counsel of per- fection.
There are, however, reasons for thinking that it is not an abstract and empty bit of theorizing. One is that until comparatively recent times, it has been the principle on which the election of rulers — lay and spiritual — has usually been carried out.
In the early church, says Acts VI, the twelve apostles called the multitude of the disciples to them and said, "Look ye out among you seven men of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom, whom we may appoint over this business." When these men had been chosen, and had prayed, "the apostles . . . laid their hands upon them." Having been ordained, they were not the servants of the multitude who had elected them, but of God.
This principle applied to the election of Popes. As Suarez says, "The Pope is elected by cardinals, yet he re- ceives his powers from God immediately." ^ The same principle applied to elected kings. After the electors had chosen the king, he was crowned and anointed. Then his duty was to his own vows and not to the electors. The act of election did not bind the ruler to the electors. Both par-
° Yves R. Simon, op. cit., p. 174.
THE TWO FUNCTIONS 53
ties to the transaction were bound only to the office; the electors to designate a king worthy of the office, the king to fill the office worthily.
If we look closely at the matter, we find, I believe, this must be the principle of election when the electors are choosing, not someone to represent them to the govern- ment, but the governors themselves. Though it is not too well recognized, there is a radical difference between the election of an executive and the election of a representa- tive. For while the executive is in honor bound not to^ considerTTTmseTF as the agent -ofJiis-_£lector5^xhe_j:epre- sentative is expected to be, withinjdie_limits_of reason and , the^general public interest,^ their agent.^ --'
This distinction has deep roots in the political experi- ence of Western society, and, though unrecognized in principle, it is implicit in our moral judgments. Everyone who has a case in court is entitled, we believe, to be rep- resented by a lawyer who, within the law and the code of professional practice, is expected to be the partisan and advocate of his client. But this presupposes not only that his opponent will be effectively represented too, but that the case will go to a court where the judge is not an advo- cate and has no clients. The judge is bound by his judicial vows. The same ethical standards are recognized, though they are applied less rigorously, in the executive branch of the government. No President or head of a department could afford to admit that he was using his office to fur- ther the interests of a client or of a pressure group, or even of his party. His acts must be presented as taken in obedience to his oath of office, which means taken disin-
''Hamilton, Jay, Madison, op. cit., No. 10, pp. 55-62.
54 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
terestedly and rationally. He must never in so many words admit that in order to gain votes he sacrificed the public good, that he played "politics." Often enough he does just that. But fealty to the public interest is his virtue. And he must, at the very least, pay it the homage of hypocrisy. ' When we move over to the representative assembly, the image is different, and the ethical rule is applied, if at all, loosely and lightly. The representative is in some very considerable degree an agent, and the image of his virtue is rather like that of the lawyer than of the judge. There are, of course, occasions when he is in fact the holder of one of the great offices of state — as when he must speak and vote on a declaration of war and the ratification of a treaty. But in the general run of the mundane business which comes before the assembly, he is entitled, indeed he is in duty bound, to keep close to the interests and sen- timents of his constitutents, and, within reasonable limits, to do what he can to support them. For it is indispensable-] to the freedom and the order of a civilized state that the voters should be effectively represented. But representation^' must not be confused with governing. '
4. The Enfeebled Executive
In the effort to understand the malady of democratic
government I have dwelt upon the underlying duality of
[functions: goyeri]mg^^Ci2it is^^^^^ of the
1 laws and the initiative in legislating, and representm^jhe
living persons who are governed, who must pay, who
■1 ..0 ■
THE TWO FUNCTIONS 55
f^ must work, who must fi,a:ht and, it may be, die for the acts of the ,governm_ent. I attribute the democratic disas- ter of the twentieth century to a derangement of these primary functions.
^^^ / The power of the executive has become enfeebled, V often to the verge of impotence, by the pressures of the representative assembly and of mass opinions. This de- rangement of the governing power has forced the demo- cratic states to commit disastrous and, it could be, fatal mistakes. It has also transformed the assemblies in most, perhaps not in all, democratic states from the defenders of local and personal rights into boss-ridden oligarchies, threatening the security, the solvency, and the liberties of the state.
In the traditions of Western society, civilized govern- ment is founded on the assumption that the two powers H exercising the two functions will be in balance — that they will check, restrain, compensate, complement, in- form and vitalize each one the other.
In this century, the balance of the two powers has beenL seriously upset. Two great streams of evolution have con- verged upon the modern_demQ'''''arip.'s m dpyifgliTP^jr^pn- feeble, and to eviscerate the executive^ower^ 'One is the -^ enormous expansion of public_expenditure, chiefly for war and reconstruction; this has augmented^ the power of_the assemblies which vote the appropriations on which the ex- ecutive depends. The_other_develQpment which has acted to enfeeble the executive powec^^g^he growing incapacity ,, of the large majority of the democratic peoples to believe t '^ in intangible realities. This has stripped the government ' of that imponderable authority which is derived from tra-
56 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
dition, immemorial usage, consecration, veneration, pre- scription, prestige, heredity, hierarchy.
At the beginning of our constitutional development the King, when he had mastered the great barons, was the proprietor of the greatest wealth in the realm. The crown was also the point from which radiated the imponderable powers to bind and to command. As the King needed money and men for his wars, he summoned representa- tives of the counties and the boroughs, who had the money and the men he needed. But the imponderable powers, together with very considerable power in land and in men, were still in the King's own hands. Gradu- ally, over the centuries, the power of the Parliament over the supplies of the government grew larger. They had to appropriate a larger proportion of a much greater total. At- the same time, in the white light of the enlightenment and the secularization of men's minds, the imponderable, powers of the crown diminished. "I
Under the stress and the strain of the great wars of the, twentieth century, the executive power has become elabo-L rarely dependent upon the assemblies for its enormous ex-' penditures of men and of money. The executive has, at the same time, been deprived of very nearly all of his im- ponderable power: fearing the action of the representa- tive assembly, he is under great temptation to outwit it or\ bypass it, as did Franklin D. Roosevelt in the period of^'^ the Second World War. It is significant, I think, certainly W^ it is at least suggestive, that while nearly all the Western "^ governments have been in deep trouble since the First World War, the constitutional monarchies of Scandina- via, the Low Countries, and the United Kingdom have
uV'^
THE TWO FUNCTIONS 57
shown greater capacity to endure, to preserve order with
freedom, than the repubhcs of France, Germany, Spain
and Italy. In some measure that may be because in a re-
pubhc the governing power, being wholly secularized,
loses much of its prestige; k is stripped, if one prefers, of , _,
all the illusiQns,..Q£inixiiisic majesty. -/^-T^^uj^m '.'^j.' ^ '^ ^^'"^ 'i'^ '^,^
The evaporatIon_ o£ jbe. imponderabJe_powers, a total -,\ Uw^^^^ dependence upon the assemblies and the mass electorates,"^^ ' ^^>- has upset the balance of powers between the two func- ^^■^,,^''~ tions of the state. The executive has lost both its material ^^""'C^^ mU and its ethereal powers. The assemblies and the mass elep* u
torates have acquired the monopoly of effective powers.] J\
This is the internal revolution which has deranged the, ' constitutional system of the liberal democratic states. ^ L
CHAPTER VI
The Totalitarian Counterrevolution
I . Certain of Its Lessons
We can learn something about the kind of incapacity which has brought on disaster for the modern democracies by the nature of the counterrevolutions that have under- mined and overthrown so many of them. There are various types of counterrevolutions. The most notable are the Soviet Communist, Italian Fascist, German National So- cialist, Spanish Falangist, Portuguese Corporatist, the Tito- ist, and Peronist. . . . Besides these organized counterrev- olutionary movements, professing doctrines of an anti- liberal and undemocratic character, there is, in large areas of the world, a very strong tendency to nullify the demo- cratic system behind the facade of democratic institutions. The countries where elections are free and genuine, where civil liberty is secure, are still powerful. But they embrace a shrinking minority of mankind.
Now in all these counterrevolutionary movements there are two conimQfl characteristid&t' One is the separa-i tion of thegoverning power from the large electorate.' In the totalitarian states this is done by not holding free elections; in the great number of nontotalitarian but also
THE COUNTERREVOLUTION 59
nondemocratic states, it is done by controlling and rigging the elections.
The other^x:ommon characteristic of the counterrevolu- tions is thai^political power, which is taken away from the electorate, the parties and the party bosses, is then passed to_an^elite corps niarked off from the mass of the( people by speciajjraining and by special vows. The totali- tarian revolutions generally liquidate the elite of the old regime, and then recruit their own elite of specially trained and specially dedicated and highly disciplined men. Elsewhere, when the liberal democratic system fails, the new rulers are drawn from the older established elites — from the army officers, from the clergy, the higher bureaucracy and the diplomatic corps, from uni- versity professors.
It is significant that in the reaction against the practical failure of the democratic states, we find always that the electoral process is shut down to a minimum or shut off entirely, and that the executive function is taken over — ■ more often than not with popular assent — by men with a special training and a special personal commitment to the business of ruling the state. In the enfeebled democ- racies the politicans have with rare exceptions been men without sure tenure of office. Many of the most important are novices, improvisers, and amateurs. After a counter- revolution has brought them down, their successors are almost certain to be either the elite of the new revolu- tionary party, or an elite drawn from predemocratic in- stitutions like the army, the church, and the bureauc- racy.
In their different ways — which ideologically may be
6o THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
at opposite ends of the world — the post-democratic rulers are men set apart from the masses of the people.' They are not set apart only because they have the power to arrest others and to shoot them. They would not long hold on to that kind of power. They have also an aura of i majesty, which causes them to be obeyed. That aura ema- nates from the popular belief that they have subjected themselves to a code and are under a discipline by which they are dedicated to ends that transcend their personal desires and their own private lives.
2. A Prognosis
The nature of the counterrevolution reflects a radical deficiency in the modern liberal democratic state. This deficiency is, as I have been saying, the enfeeblement and virtual paralysis of the executive governing func- tions. The strong medicine of the counterrevolution is needed, on the one hand, to stop the electoral process from encroaching upon and invading the government, and, on the other hand, to invest the government not only with all material power but also with the imponderable force of majesty.
It is possible to govern a state without giving the masses of the people full representation. But it is not possible to go on forjong without a government which can and does in fact govern. If, therefgrg^the p£ople_find ^^latjhey must choose whether they will bejgpresented in an assembly Y/hirh ;<; I'n^-p rape tent to govern, or whether
THE COUNTERREVOLUTION 6l
they will be governed -withaut-being_r£pt£sented, there IS no doubt at all as to how_the issue will be decided. They will choose authority, which promises to be pateti ^' '^' ^v- nal, in preference to freedom which threatens to bev hi c,.^,. I lie. fratricidal. For large communities cannot do without be- ing governed. No ideal of freedom and of democracy will long be allowed to stand in the way of their being governed.
The plight of the modern democracies is serious. They have suffered great disasters in this century and the con- sequences of these disasters are compounding themselves. The end is not yet clear. The world that is safe for de-. -, mocracy and is safely democratic is shrunken. It is still' shrinking. For the disorder which has been incapacitating the democracies- in this century is, if anything, becoming more virulent as time goes on.
A continuing practical failure to govern will lead — no one can say in what form and under what banners — to counterrevolutionary measures for the establishment of strong government. The alternative is to withstand and to reverse the descent towards counterrevolution. It is a much harder way. It demands popular assent to radical measures which will restore government strong enough to govern, strong enough to resist the encroachment of the assemblies and of mass opinions, and strong enough to guarantee private liberty against the pressure of the masses.
It would be foolish to attempt to predict whether the crisis of the democratic state will be resolved by such an internal restoration and revival or by counterrevolution. No doubt the danger of counterrevolution is greater in
62 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
countries where the margins of Hfe are thinner. No doubt the prospects of a restoration and revival are best in countries where the traditions of civiHty, as the public philosophy of Western society, have deep roots and a long history.
CHAPTER VII
The Adversaries of Liberal Democracy
I. Liheralism and ]acobinism
We are living in a time of massive popular counter- 1 revolution against liberal democracy. It is a reaction to the failure of the West to cope with the miseries and anx- ieties of the Twentieth Century. The liberal democracies have been tried and found wanting — found wanting not only in their capacity to govern successfully in this period of wars and upheavals, but also in their ability to defend and maintain the political philosophy that underlies the liberal way of life.
If we go back to the beginnings of the modern demo- cratic movements in the eighteenth century, we can dis-. tinguish two diverging lines of development. The one is a i way_of progress in liberal constitutional democracy. The other is a morbid course of development into totalitarian conditions.^
One of the first to realize what was happening was Alexis de Tocqueville. He foresaw that the "democratic nations are menaced" by a "species of oppression . . . unlike anything that ever before existed in the world."
^ Cf. J. C. Talmon, The Rise of Totalitarian Democracy.
64 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
But what is more, he discerned the original difference be- tween the healthy and the morbid development of democ- racy.
In 1833, after his voyage in America, where he had foreseen the threat of mass democracy, de Tocqueville visited England.' There he was impressed with the con- trast between the attitude of the English aristocracy, which was just in the way of accommodating itself to a newly enfranchised mass of voters, and the French no- blesse of the Ancien Regime,
He went on to reflect that
. . . from an early time a fundamental difference existed between the behavior of the governing classes in England and in France. The nobility, the cornerstone of medieval society, revealed in England a peculiar ability to merge and mix with other social groups, while in France it tended, on the contrary, to close its ranks and preserve its original purity of birth.
In the earlier Middle Ages all Western Europe had a similar social system. But some time in the Middle Ages, one cannot say exactly when, a change pregnant with tremendous consequences occurred in the British Isles and in the British Isles only — _the English nobility developed into an open aristocracy while the continental noblesse stubbornly remained within the rigid limits of a caste.
^ De Tocqueville did not write a book on England, as he had already written one on America and was later to write one on France. His views on England were not accessible until recently, when Miss Ada Zemach published her study, Alexis de Tocqueville on England, in the Revieiv of Politics for July 195 1, Vol. 13, No. 3. This valuable paper is collated from de TocqueviUe's correspondence and notes. Miss Zemach says that "unlike his views on America and France, which are carefully stated in special books written at great length and in elaborate form, his ideas about Eng- land are more impressionistic in nature, scattered as they are in no par- ticular order among volumes of correspondence, sometimes appearing in a bunch in the Journal de Voyage, sometimes as sudden asides in the big systematic works, emphasizing and defining a certain trend of thought by way of comparison and opposition."
THE ADVERSARIES 65
This, observes de Tocqueville, is the most revolutionary' fact in Enghsh history, and he claims to have been the" first to observe its importance and to grasp its full signifi- cance. It is, truly, a deep and illuminating observation on the conditions which are favorable to a healthy and pro- gressive evolution of democracy and on the conditions which make k morbid and degenerative. The crucial dif- ference is between what we might call enfranchisement by assimilation into the governing class, as exemplified in England, and, per contra, enfranchisement by the over- throw and displacing of the governing class as exempli- fied in Franj:e. In the one the government remains but becomes more responsible and more responsive; in the other, the government is overthrown with the liquidation of the governing class.
Although the two ways of evolution appear to have the same object — a society with free institutions under popu- lar government — they are radically different and they arrive at radically different ends.
The first way, that of assimilation, presumes the exist- ejice of a state which is already constitutional in principle/ which is under laws that are no longer arbitrary, though they may be unjust and unequal. Into this constitutional state more and more people are admitted to the govern- ing class and to the voting electoratei(The unequal and the unjust laws are revised until eventually all the people have equal opportunities to enter the government and to be represented! Broadly speaking, this has been the work- ing theory of the British movement towards a democratic society at home and also in the Commonwealth and Em- pire. This, too, was the working theory of the principal
GG THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
authors of the American Constitution, and this was how — though few of them welcomed it — they envisaged the enfranchisement of the whole adult population.
The other way is that of the Jacobin revolution. The people rise to power by overthrowing the ruling class and by liquidating its privileges and prerogatives. This is the doctrine of democratic revolution which was developed by French thinkers in the eighteenth century and was put into practice by the Jacobin party in the French Revolu- tion. In its English incarnation the doctrine became known as Radicalism. In America, tFough it had its early disciples, notably Tom Paine, not until the era of the Founding Fathers was over, not until the era of Andrew. Tackson, did the Jacobin doctrine become the popular po-' litical creed of the American democracy, y
The Jacobin philosophy rests on a view of human so- ciety which the encyclopedist, Holbach, stated in this way:
/ We see on the face of the globe only incapable, unjust sover- eigns, enervated by luxury, corrupted by flattery, depraved through unpunished Hcense, and without talent, morals, or good
\ qualities.^
What Holbach had, in fact, seen on the face of the globe was the French court — then the most powerful in Europe and the paragon of all the lesser courts. When he was writing, it would have been difficult for anyone on the continent of Europe to imagine a king and a ruling class who were not, like those he saw living at the Court of Versailles, exclusive and incompetent, corrupt, unteach- able and unconcerned.
*Cited in Hippolyte A. Taine. The Ancient Regime ( 1888) , p. 220.
THE ADVERSARIES 67
"Would you know the story in brief, of almost all our wretched- ness?" asked Diderot. "Here it is. There existed the natural man, and into this man was introduced an artificial man, whereupon a civil war arose within him lasting through life ... If you propose to become a tyrant over him, ... do your best to poison him with a theory of morals against nature; impose every kind of fetter on him; embarrass his movements with a thousand obstacles; place phantoms around him to frighten him. Would you see him happy and free? Do not meddle with his affairs. ... I appeal to every civil, religious and political institution; examine these closely, and, if I am not mistaken, you will find the human species, century after century, subject to a yoke which a mere handful of knaves chose to impose on it. . . . Be wary of him who seeks to establish order; to order is to obtain the mastery of others by giv- ing them trouble.^ X]
If we compare the mood of this passage with that of the Declaration of Independence, the work of the other brand of revolutionists, we must be struck by the nihilism of Diderot. Diderot had been exasperated to a blind destruc- tive despair by the rigidity of the French governing caste. He could not feel that there was anything to be done with any government, judging by the one he suffered un- der, except to abolish it.
Jeflferson and his colleagues, on the other hand, were interested in government. They were in rebellion because they were being denied the rights of representation and of participation which they, like other subjects of the same King, would have enjoyed had they lived in England. The Americans were in rebellion against the "usurpa- tions" of George III, not against authority as such but, against the abuse^of authority. The American revolution-
* Ibid., pp. 220-221.
68 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
ists had in fact participated in the colonial governments. They intended to play leading parts, as indeed they did, in the new government. Far from wishing to overthrow the authority of government, or to deny and subvert, as Diderot did, the moral foundations of authority, they went into rebellion first in order to .t;ain admittance into, and then to take possession of, the organs of government. When they declared that "a prince (George III) whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people," they were not saying that there was no one who was fit to be the ruler of a free people. They were imbued with the, English idea that the governing class must learn to share its special prerogatives by admitting new members. The American Revolutionists were themselves the new mem- bers who had been unjustly, in fact illegally, excluded from the government of the colonies. They themselves meant to govern the colonies after they had overthrown the government of the King. They were not nihilists to whom the revolutionary act of overthrowing the sover- eign is the climax and consummation of everything.
2. The Paradigm of Revolution
Of THE two rival philosophies, the Jacobin is almost everywhere in the ascendant. It is a ready philosophy for men who, previously excluded from the ruling class, and recently enfranchised, have no part in the business of gov- erning the state, and no personal expectation of being called upon to assume the responsibilities of office. The
THE ADVERSARIES 69
Jacobin doctrine is an obvious reaction, as de Tocque- ville's observation explains, to government by a caste. When there is no opening for the gradualness of reform and for enfranchisement by assimilation, a revolutionary collision is most likely.
The Jacobin doctrine is addressed to the revolutionary collision betv^^een the inviolable governing caste and the excluded^ men claiming the redress of their grievances and their place in the sun. Though it professes to be a po- litical philosophy, the doctrine is not, in fact, a philoso- phy of government. It is a gospel and also a strategy for revolution. At announces the promise that the crusade which is to overthrow the ruling caste will by the act of revolution create a good society. ^>
The peculiar essence of the dogma is that the revolu- tion itself is the creative act. Towards the revolution as such, because it is the culmination and the climax, all the -i^Uc labor and the sacrifice of the struggle are to be directed. ' '^'*'' The revolutionary act will remove the causes of evil in human society. Again and again k has been proved how effective is this formula for arousing, sustaining and or- ganizing men's energies for revolution: to declare that evil in society has been imposed upon the many by the few — by priests, nobles, capitalists, imperialists, liberals, aliens — and that evil will disappear when the many who are pure have removed these few who are evil, j ! .'
^The summons to revolution in the Communist Mani- festo of 1848 uses the same formula as the Jacobins had used a half century earlier./Marx and Engels were men steeped in the Western revolutionary tradition, and habit- uated, therefore, to the notion that the act of revolution
.,1.^
\
70 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
removes the source of evil and creates the perfect society. The French Revolution had not made this perfect society. For by 1848 there were the capitalist oppressors. Marx and Engels called for the next revolutionary act, announc- ing that now the Third Estate, the bourgeois capitalists, needed to go the way of the liquidated nobles and clergy,
/ This is the formula: that when the revolution of the \ masses is victorious over the few, there will exist the \ classless society without coercion and violence and withy^ freedom for all. This formula reappears whenever condi- tions are revolutionary — that is to say, when necessary reforms are being refused. The formula is the strategy of rebellion of those who are unable to obtain the redress of grievances. The rulers are to be attacked. So they are iso- lated. They are few. So they are not invincible. They bear the total guilt of all the sufferings and grievances of men. To remove them is then to cure all evil. Therefore, their overthrow, which is feasible, will be worth every sacrifice. Since the world will be good when the evil few have been overthrown, there is no need for the doubts and the dis- putes which would arise among the revolutionists if they had to make serious practical decisions on the problems of the post-revolutionary world.
"You are summoned," said Barrere to the National Assembly, "to give history a fresh start." ''' This was to be_ done by stripping off, as Taine puts it, the garments of the artificial man, all those fictitious qualities which make him "ecclesiastic or layman, noble or plebeian, sovereign or subject, proprietor or proletarian, ignorant or culti-
^ Ibid., p. 232.
THE ADVERSARIES 7I
vated." The established authorities who have made man wear these garments for their selfish and sinister ends must go. The authorities must go, the garments must be removed^nd then there will be left "man in himself, the same under all conditions, in all situations, in all coun- tries, in all ages." ^
These natural men would be very different from the fallen and deformed wretches who now inhabit the world. They would be Adam before he fell — Adam who fell by the machinations of the tyrants and the priests, and not by his own disobedience. Let this "infamous thing," with its upholders, be crushed, said Voltaire of the anclen regime. Then, added Condorcet exultingly, "tyrants and slaves, and priests with their senseless and hypocritical instru- ments," will disappear, and there will be only "free men recognizing no other master than reason." ^
To appreciate the compelling influence of these ideas, we must realize that Rousseau and his Jacobin disciples were not saying that "except for the clergy and the nobil- ity" all the Frenchmen of the eighteenth century were rational and good men. That may have been what the most simple-minded got from the Jacobin orations. But the doctrine could never have become, as in fact it has, the political religion of the democracies had it stood for anything so obviously contrary to common sense and ordi- nary experience.
Rousseau's dogma of the natural goodness of man did not move him to much love or admiration of his fellow- men. In his Inequalities Among Mankind, he described the inside of a civilized man in terms which John Adams, for
^ Ibid., p. 231.
72 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
all his tough-mindedness, found "too black and horrible to be transcribed." ^
To Rousseau, as to John Calvin who lived in Geneva before him, men were fallen and depraved, deformed with their lusts and their aggressions. The force of the new doctrine lay in its being a gospel of redemption and regeneration. Men who were evil were to be made good. >/ Jacobinism is, in fact, a Christian heresy — perhaps the y Y niost influential since the Arian. /
In that it preached the need of redemption, its recep- tion was prepared by the Christian education of the peo- ple of Western Europe and of North America. Like Saint Paul, the Jacobins promised a new creature who would "be led of the spirit" and would not be "under the law." But in the Jacobin gospel, this transformation was to be achieved by the revolutionary act of emancipation from authority. The religious end was to be reached, but with- out undergoing the religious experience. There was to be no dark night of the soul for each person in the labor of his own regeneration. Instead there were to be riots and strikes and votes and seizure of political power. Instead of the inner struggle of the individual soul, there was to be one great public massive, collective redemption.
'' John Adams, A Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America (1787), from the Life and Works of ]ohn Adams (edited with The life by Charles Francis Adams, 1851), Vol. IV., p. 409.
THE ADVERSARIES 73
3. Democratic Education
We live long enough after the new gospel was pro- claimed to have seen what came of it. The post- revolutionary man, enfranchised and emancipated, has not turned out to be the New Man. He is the old Adam. Yet the future of democratic society has been staked on the promises and the predictions of the Jacobin gospel.
For the Jacobin doctrine has pervaded the theory of mass education in the newly enfranchised mass democra- cies. In America and in most of the newer liberal democ- racies of the Western world, the Jacobin heresy is, though not unchallenged and not universal, the popular and dom- inant theory in the schools.
Its popularity is easily accounted for. It promises to solyethe problem which is otherwise so nearly insoluble — how to educate rapidly and sufficiently the ever-, expanding masses who are losing contact with the tradi- -tions of Western society. The explosive increase of the population in the past hundred and fifty years, its recent enfranchisement during the past fifty years, the dissolu- tion, or at least the radical weakening, of the bonds of the family, the churches, and of the local community have combined to make the demand upon the schools almost impossibly big.
Not only do the schools have to teach the arts and sciences to a multiplying mass of pupils. They have also to act in the place of the family, the household economy, the church, and the settled community, and to be the bearers of the traditions and the disciplines of a civilized jife. What the school system could do has never been
74 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
anywhere nearly equal to the demands upon it. The mod- ern democracies have never been willing to pay the price of recruiting and training enough teachers, of supporting enough schools and colleges, of offering enough scholar- ships to give all children equal opportunities. . The Jacobin doctrine does not solve this problem of mass education — as it does not solve or even throw light upon the problem of how to construct and govern the Utopian society which is to exist when the revolution has taken place. What it does is to provide an escape from f > these unsolved problems. It affirms that in politics the state will wither away and then there will be no prob-i k-^'" lems of how to govern it. For the democratic schools it affirms that there is no problem of supplying the demand: for almost nothing has to be taught in school and almost no effort is needed to learn it.
"The fundamental principle of all morality," said Rousseau in his reply to Archbishop de Beaumont's con- demnation of his book, £/?2/7g, "is that man is a being naturally good, loving justice and order: that there is not any original perversity in the human heart, and that the first movements of nature are always right." ^
And so, when Rousseau's disciple, Pestalozzi, the cele- brat_ed_educator, said that "in the newborn child are hid- den those faculties which are to unfold during life^" ^ he meant that the hidden faculties which would unfold were
*J. J. Rousseau, "Lettre a C. de Beaumont," in Oeuvres Completes de J. J. Rousseau, edited by P. R. Auguis (Paris, Dalibon, 1824-1825), Vol. 7, p. 44. Translation from Geoffrey O'Connell, Naturalism in Atnerican Education (1938), p. 23.
® J. H. Pestalo2zi, address on his birthday in 18 18, cited in the Encyclo- pedia of Religion and Ethics, Vol. V, p. 166.
THE ADVERSARIES 75
all of them good ones. Only good faculties, it transpired, were inherited. The evil faculties, on the contrary, were acquired. So Froebel, who was Pestalozzi's disciple, felt able to say that "the still young being, even though as yet unconsciously like a product of nature, precisely and surely wills that which is best for himself." ^°
Froebel, of course, had no way of proving that infants are precise and sure about anything. Nor did Rousseau know how to prove that there is no perversity in the hu- man heart, and that the first movements of nature are al- ways right. But if only all this could be taken as true, how miraculously it simplified the problems of the new democracies! If men do not have to acquire painfully by learning, if they are born with the necessary good facul- ties, if their first intentions are always right, if they un- consciously but precisely and surely will what is best for themselves from infancy on, then there is in the very na- • ture of things a guarantee that popular government must succeed.
The best government will be the one which governs the least and requires, therefore, the least training and ex- perience in the art of governing. The best education for deniocracy will be the one which trains, disciplines, and teaches the least. For the necessary faculties are inborn and they are more likely to be perverted by too much cul- ture than to wither for the lack of it. There is, moreover, no body of public knowledge and no public philosophy that the schools are called upon to transmit. There are, therefore, no inconvenient questions of faith and morals, questions on which there is no prospect of agreement by
'°F. W. A. Froebel, Education of Man, Sec. 8.
-jG THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
popular decision. The curriculum can be emptied of all the studies and the disciplines which relate to faith and to morals. And so while education can do something to en- able the individual to make a success of his own career, the instinctive rightness and righteousness of the people can be relied upon for everything else.
This is a convenient and agreeably plausible escape from reality. Pestalozzi described it by saying that . . .
Sound Education stands before me symbolized by a tree planted near fertilizing water. A little seed, which contains the design of the tree, its form and proportion, is placed in the soil. See how it germinates and expands into trunk, branches, leaves, flowers and fruit! The whole tree is an uninterrupted chain of organic parts, the plan of which existed in its seed and root. Man is similar to the tree. In the newborn child are hidden those faculties which are to unfold during life.^-^
The metaphor reveals very neatly how the Jacobin
\ theory inhibits education.^ In no way that is relevant to the problems of politics and eH^ucation is a man similar, as Pestalozzi says he is, to a tree which is planted near ferti- lizing water. For the tree will never, no matter how fer- tilizing the water near which it is planted, grow up and take to writing treatises, as Pestalozzi did, on the educa- tion of trees and how to raise the best trees from all the little saplings. The tree will never worry about whether its little saplings are going to be planted near the most fertilizing of the waters. The educator of a tree is, in short, not another tree. The educator of a tree, the man who plants it near the fertilizing water, is a being so radically different from a tree that the tree is incapable of being
^^Encyclopedia of Religion a)id Ethics, Vol. V, p. i66.
THE ADVERSARIES 77
aware of his existence. If, however, the tree were enough hke a man to notice such things, the teacher of the trees who cultivates them would be worshiped as the god of trees.
Pestalozzi's trees are, in fact, a caricature, but a telling one, of the educational vacuum created by the Jacobin theory. The tradidon of the trees is transmitted in their seed, and the older trees are unable to teach and the sap- lings are unable to learn. Each tree exists for itself, draw- ing what it can from the fertilizing waters if they happen to be there. Now if human education is founded upon this notion, it must fail to transmit the moral system, indeed the psychic structure, of a civilized society. Relying upon die inherent tightness of the natural impulses of man's first nature, the Jacobin theory does away with the second ^ civilized nature,_with the ruler of the impulses, who is identified with the grand necessities of the common- wealth. It overthrows the ruler within each man, — he who exercises "the royal and politic rule" over his "irasci- ble and concupiscible powers."
C^hen reason no longer represents society within the human psyche, then it becomes the instrument of appetite, desire and passion?\A.s William Godwin said in 1798: "Reason is wholly confined to adjusting the comparison between the different objects of desire and investigating the most successful mode of attaining those objects." ^^ More than a hundred years later (1911) Prof. William MacDougal put it this way: "The instinctive impulses de-
^^ From a memorandum setting forth his intended work. Reproduced in C. K. Paul, William Godwin: His Friends and Contemporaries. (Boston, 1876), Vol. I, p. 294.
>
yS THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
termine the end of all activities, and ... all the com- plex intellectual apparatus of the most highly developed mind is but . . . the instrument by which those impulses seek their satisfactions. . . ." ^^' Or, as Bernard Shaw has it, "Ability to reason accurately is as desirable as ever, since it is only by accurate reasoning that we can calculate our ac- tions so as to do what we intend to do — that is, to fulfill our will." ^*
If it is the role of reason merely to be an instrument of each man's career, then the mission of the schools is to turn out efficient careerists. They must teach the know- how of success, and this — seasoned with the social amenities and some civic and patriotic exhortation — is the subject matter of education. The student elects those subjects which will presumably equip him for success in his career. The rest are superfluous. There is no such thing as a general order of knowledge and a public philosophy, which he needs to possess.
4. From Jacobinism to Leninism
Towards the middle of the nineteenth century, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels produced an explanation of why the first revolution had not fulfilled the promises of the Jacobins. It was that "Modern bourgeois society, rising out of the ruins of feudal society,_did not make an end of class antagonisms. It merely set up new classes in place of the old."
^''William MacDougal, Social Psychology (London, Methuen & Co., 1950), p. 38.
"G. B. Shaw, Quintessence of Ibsenism (i 891), p. 15.
THE ADVERSARIES 79
As Marx and Engels were scholars and men of the world, they should not have been surprised to find that "the history of all human society past and present has been the history of class struggles," and, had they not be- come possessed by the Jacobin dogma, they would have thought it most probable that there would be class strug- gles in the future. But in the Jacobin philosophy the world as it is must be transformed; the day is soon to come when history, reaching its culmination, will end, and there will be no more struggles. So Marx and Engels decided that one more, though this time the con- clusive and the final, revolution was called for, in order to achieve the classless society: "The proletariat ... is compelled to organize itself as a class," and "by means of a revolution, it makes itself the ruling class and, as such, sweeps away by force the old conditions of production. . . . Then it will, along with these conditions, have swept away the conditions for the existence of class an- tagonisms and of classes generally, and will thereby have abolished its own supremacy as a class."
The revolution which is behind us has failed. But the revolution which is still to come will put "in place of the old bourgeois society, with its classes and class antagonisms ... an association, in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all."
By the beginning of the twentieth century it was be- coming more and more apparent that Marxism was go- ing to undergo the same disappointment as had the Jacobin movement. Since Marx and Engels wrote the
^"^ These quotations are from the Manifesto of the Communist Party (1848).
8o THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
Communist Manifesto a very considerable progress had been made in carrying out its specific planks. What that document had asked in 1848, "the most advanced na- i
tions" had gone a long way toward doing. They were '
taxing, inheritances, they had virtually nationalized cen- tral banking, transportation and communications, they were extending the industries owned by the state, they were abolishing child labor and providing free education in public schools.^^
Yet these reforms were not leading to the classless* society. Instead of one class or no class it was more prob- able that modern societies were heading towards a diver- sity of classes. Nor, as Engels had promised in his "Anti- Diihring," did it look as if "the state . . . withers away." As a matter of fact the progressive reforms were tequir- 1/3''' ing a rapid enlargement of the powers of the state and an ■ ^^jf'P"^'^ expansion of the bureaucracy. The Marxian predictions '^^^"^'^^ wei:e not being fulfilled. The rich were not becoming •"'^"'^ richer while the poor became poorer. The middle class "'■''V^'*'^" was not disappearing. It was growing larger. Society was not splitting into the two great hostile camps of the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. If it was splitting, it was ., into factions and into pressure groups. ^
Owing to the wide disparity between the dogma and the existential reality of things, a crisis developed within the revolutionary socialist movement. This crisis was re- solved by Lenin. He could not do again what Marx had done a half century earlier. He could not once more identify the next class, and this time the positively last class, that had to be overthrown. He could not point to
" Cf. the concrete proposals contained in the Communist Manifesto.
THE ADVERSARIES 8l
the last barricade that had to be stormed. It was then that
Lenin resolved the crisis within the revolutionary move-| ^ ment by committing it to the totalitarian solution. Aban- ' doning the naive but attractive promise that Utopia would follow simply and automatically from the revolutionary act, he replaced it with the terrible doctrine that Utopia must be brought about by an indefinitely prolonged pro- cess of unlimited revolution which would exterminate all opposition, actual and potential.
The totalitarian tendency has always been present and logically implied in the modern revolutionary move- ment.^' Yet Mr. Isaiah Berlin is no doubt right in saying that while Lenin's solution of the crisis within the revolu- tionary movement "marked the culmination of a process," this was "an event . . . which altered the history of our world." '^
In 1903, at the conference of the Russian Social Democratic Party, which began in Brussels and ended in London, Lenin was asked by a delegate named Posadov- sky "whether the emphasis laid by the 'hard' Socialists . . . upon the need for the exercise of absolute authority by the revolutionary nucleus of the Party might not prove incompatible with those fundamental liberties to whose realization Socialism, no less than liberalism, was officially dedicated." Posadovsky asked whether the basic, minimum civil liberties — "the sacrosanctity of the per- son" — could be infringed and even violated if the parry leader so decided.
" Cf. Eric Voegelin, The New Science of Politics, particularly Ch. IV, et seq.; also J. L. Talmon, The Rise of Totalitarian Democracy.
^® Isaiah Berlin, "Political Ideas in the Twentieth Century" {Foreign Affairs, April 1950, Vol. XXVIII, No. 3, pp. 364-366).
82 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
The answer was given by Plekhanov, one of the founders of Russian Marxism, and, says Mr. Berhn, "its most venerated figure, a cultivated, fastidious and mor- ally sensitive scholar of wide outlook," who had for twenty years lived in Western Europe and was much respected by the leaders of Western Socialism. Plekhanov was the very symbol of civilized "scientific" thinking among Russian revolutionaries. "Plekhanov, speaking solemnly, and with a splendid disregard for grammar, pronounced the words, salus revoluttae stiprema lex. Cer- tainly, if the revolution demanded it, everything — de- mocracy, liberty, the rights of the individual — must be sacrificed to it. If the democratic assembly elected by the Russian people after the revolution proved amenable to Marxist tactics, it would be kept in being as a Long Parliament; if not, k would be disbanded as quickly as possible. A Marxist revolution could not be carried through by men obsessed by scrupulous regard for the principles of bourgeois liberals. Doubtless whatever was valuable in these principles, like everything else good and desirable, would ultimately be realized by the victori- ous working class; but during the revolutionary period preoccupation with such ideals was evidence of a lack of seriousness."
Mr. Berlin goes on to say that "Plekhanov, who was brought up in a humane and liberal tradition, did, of course, later retreat from this position himself. The mix- ture of Utopian faith and brutal disregard for civilized morality proved too repulsive to a man who had spent the greater part of his civilized and productive life among Western workers and their leaders. Like the vast majority
THE ADVERSARIES 83
of Social Democrats, like Marx and Engels themselves, he was too European to try to realize a policy which, in the words of Shigalev in Dostoevski's The Possessed, 'starting from unlimited liberty ends in unlimited despot- ism.' But Lenin accepted the premises, and being logically driven to conclusions repulsive to most of his colleagues, accepted them easily and without apparent qualms. His assumptions were, perhaps, in some sense, still those of the optimistic rationalists of the eighteenth and nine- teenth centuries: the coercion, violence, execution, the total suppression of individual differences, the rule of a small, virtually self-appointed minority, were necessary only in the interim period, only so long as there was a powerful enemy to be destroyed."
But how was it that Lenin, and so many after him, have accepted easily and without apparent qualms the repulsive process of violence, executions, suppressions, de- ception, under the unlimited rule of self-appointed oligarchs? Why do the full-fledged totalitarians, Lenin, Hitler, Stalin, not shrink from the means they adopt to achieve their end? The answer ij that the inhuman means ..^uv^^-: ^--J are justijfied by the superhuman end J they are the agents o.-^. of history or of nature. They are the men appointed to fulfill the destiny of creation. They have been known as atheists. But in fact God was their enemy, not because they did not believe in the Deity, but because they them- selves were assuming His functions and claiming His prerogatives. \
Xk
84 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
5. The Overpassing of the Bound
This is the root of the matter, and it is here that the ulti- mate issue lies. Can men, acting like gods, be appointed to] '■^■^^" j establish heaven on earth? If we believe that they can be,f ,,,^ ,i.s then the rest follows. To fulfill their mission they must ^iln.-^-^'^ assume a godlike omnipotence. They must be jealous gods, ''''"" '^.jj, monopolizing power, destroying all rivals, compelling ex- " ^ • elusive loyalty. The family, the churches, the schools, the j
corporations, the labor unions and co-operative societies, I
the voluntary associations and all the arts and sciences, ;
must be their servants. Dissent and deviation are treason j
and quietism is sacrilege. .'
But the monopoly of all power will not be enough. -
There remains the old Adam. Unless they can remake the fallen nature of a man, the self-elected gods cannot make a heaven of the earth. In the Jacobin gospel of the eight- eenth century, and even in the Marxist gospel of the nine- teenth century, the new man would be there when the artificial garments were removed — when once he was emancipated by the revolutionary act from the deformation imposed upon him by the clergy, the nobility and the bour- geoisie. A hundred years later the new man was nowhere i^n sight. So the early and softer gospel gave way to a later and infinitely harder one. The new man and the new heaven on earth demanded the remaking of pre-Leninist and pre-Hitlerian man. The decrees of history as revealed to Marx, and the decrees of nature as revealed to Hitler, had to be carried out.
THE ADVERSARIES 85
But in order to do that, the human species had first to be transformed — or failing that, exterminated. Destiny called upon the mortal god to make surviving mankind "an active unfailing carrier," as Hannah Arendt says, "of a law to which human beings would otherwise only pas- sively and reluctantly be subject." ^^
In the eyes of its devotees, this is not an inhuman and Satanic doctrine. It is above and beyond humanity. It is for the superman that its gospel announces. The ruthlessness, the arbitrariness, the cruelty are not monstrous wicked- ness. They are natural and necessary, predestined like the fall of a sparrow, in the sublime construction of the earthly paradise.
The issue is carried outside the realm of rational dis- course. As Richard Hooker said of the Puritan revo- lutionaries three centuries ago, when men believe they are acting "under the absolute command of Almighty God," their discipline "must be received . . . although the world by receiving it should be clean turned upside down." ^^ There is no arguing with the pre-j tenders to a divine knowledge and to a divine mission. They are possessed with the sin of pride, they have yielded to the perennial temptation. This is the sover- eign evil against which the traditions of civility are arrayed.
Here is "the mortal sin original," the forbidden fruit, which Satan tempts Eve to eat:
" Hannah Arendt, Ideology and Terror; A Novel Form of Government. From the Review of Politics (published at the University of Notre Dame, July, 1953), Vol. XV, No. 3.
^ Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity. In Vol. I, The Works of Richard Hooker, edited by J. Keble (second edition, Oxford University, 1841), Preface, Ch. VIII, Sec. 5, p. 182.
86 THE DECLINE OF THE WEST
Taste this, and be henceforth among the Gods Thyself a God- dess.^^
This tasting of the tree, as Adam says to Dante, was "the overpassing of the bound." ^^ Zeus, says Aeschylus
... is a chastener of froward wills
And he correcteth with a heavy hand.
Wherefore be ye instructors of your Lord,
And with well-reasoned admonitions teach Him
To have a humbler heart and cast away
The sin of pride, for it offendeth God.^^
The delusion of men that they are gods — the preten- sion that they have a commission to act as if they were gods — is, says Aeschylus, "the blind arrogance of child- ish thought." It can become "the very madness of a mind diseased." Yet it is not a new and recent infection, but rather the disposition of our first natures, of our natural and uncivilized selves. Men have been barbarians much longer than they have been civilized. They are only pre- cariously civilized, and within us there is the propensity, persistent as the force of gravity, to revert under stress and strain, under neglect or temptation, to our first na- tures.
Rousseau and the Jacobins, Marx and the nineteenth- century socialists, did not introduce new impulses and pas- sions into men. They exploited and aggravated impulses
^ Paradise Lost. In the Poetical Works of John Milton, Bk. V, lines 77778. _
"'^Divine Comedy, translated by C. E. Norton (1941), Paradise, Canto XXVI, verse 117.
'^The Persians, lines S28-836.
THE ADVERSARIES 87
and passions that are always there. In the traditions of civiHty, man's second and more rational nature must master his first and more elemental.
The Jacobins and their successors made a political reli- gion founded upon the reversal of civility. Instead of rul- ing the elemental impulses, they stimulated and armed them. Instead of treating the pretension to being a god as the mortal sin original, they proclaimed it to be the glory and destiny of man. Upon this gospel they founded a popular religion of the rise of the masses to power. Lenin, Hitler and Stalin, the hard totalitarian Jacobins of the twentieth century, carried this movement and the logical implications of its gospel further and further towards the very bitter end.
And what is that bitter end? It is an everlasting war with the human condition: war with the finitude of man and with the moral ends of finite men, and, therefore, war against freedom, against justice, against the laws and against the order of the good society — as they are con- served in the traditions of civility, as they are articulated in the public philosophy.
BOOK TWO
The Public Philosophy
CHAPTER VIII
The Eclipse of the PubUc Philosophy
I. On the Efficacy of Ideas
There are those who would say, using the words of philosophers to prove it, that it is the characteristic illu- sion of the tender-minded that they believe in philosophy. Those who can, do; those who cannot, teach and theorize.] And being theorists by profession, they exaggerate the efficacy of ideas, which are mere airy nothings without mass or energy, the mere shadows of the existential world of substance and of force, of habits and desires, of machines and armies.
Yet the illusion, if it were one, is inordinately tenacious. It is impossible to remove it from the common sense in which we live and have our being. In the famil- iar daylight world we cannot act as if ideas had no conse- quences. The whole vast labor and passion of public life would be nonsense if we did not believe that it makes a difference what is done by parties, newspapers, books, broadcasts, schools and churches. All their effort would be irrelevant, indeed nonsense, like an argument about
92 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
what Nebuchadnezzar should be served for tomorrow morning's breakfast.
The most thoroughgoing skeptic is unable, in practice, to make a clean sweep — to say that since ideas have no consequences there is no such thing as a good idea or a bad one, a true idea or a false one. For there is no escap- ing the indubitable fact of experience that we are often mistaken, and that it makes a difference to have been wrong.
The chemistry of our bodies is never mistaken. The reaction of one chemical element to another chemical element is always correct, is never misled by misinforma- tion, by untruth, and by illusion. The doctor can be mis- taken about the chemistry of his patient, having failed to detect a substance which falsifies his diagnosis. But it is only the doctor who can be wrong; the chemical process cannot be.
Why do men make mistakes? Because an important part of human behavior is reaction to the pictures in their heads. Human behavior takes place in relation to a pseudo-environment — a representation, which is not quite the same for any t\v'0 individuals, of what they suppose to be — not what is — the reality of things.^ This man-made, this cultural environment, which has its being in the minds of men, is interposed between man as a biological organism and the external reality. It is in this realm that ideas are efficacious. They are efficacious be- cause men react to their ideas and images, to their pic- tures and notions of the world, treating these pictures as if they were the reality.
^ Cf. my Public Opinion, Chapters I to X.
THE ECLIPSE 93
The airy nothings in the realm of essence are effica- cious in the existential world when a man, believing it to be true or good, treats the idea as if it were the reality. In this way faith in an idea can quite literally remove a mountain. To be sure no man's idea can remove a mountain on the moon. But if the American people took it into their heads that life would not be worth living until Pike's Peak was in the suburbs of Chicago, they could move Pike's Peak. They could do it if they and their descendants were sufficiently devoted to the idea for a long enough time.
Nothing would happen to Pike's Peak if the idea of removing it were merely proclaimed and celebrated. The idea would have to become, like the idea of winning a war, the object and the focus of the nation's energies. Then the idea would operate in the minds of men who voted, who planned, who would engineer the undertak- ing, who would raise the money, would recruit the labor, would procure the equipment, and — shall we say — would suppress the mounting resistance of the objectors to the project.
Because ideas have the power to organize human be- havior, their efficacy can be radical. They are indeed radi- cal when, as the image of what a man should be, they govern the formation of his character and so imprint a lasting organization on his behavior.^ Because the images of man are the designs of the molds in which characters are formed, they are of critical concern. What is the
^ I am using the term "character" as Erich Fromm does, in his Man for Himself (1947), p. 49, meaning "the relatively permanent form in which human energy is canalized in the process of assimilation and socialization."
94 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
image of the good king, the good courtier, the good sub- ject — of the good master and of the good slave — of the good citizen, the good soldier, the good politician, the good boss, the good workingman? The images matter |V very much. The ones which prevail will govern educa- tion. The ideas of what men should be like become efiEica- cious in the existential world because, as they are imposed by the family, the school and the community, they cause men to "acquire the kind of_character which makes them want to actjn 'the way they have to^^acOiS members of the societ^r of a special class witITiirTf.""They learn "to ^Ijzf^what, objectively, it is necessary for them to do," md "outer force is . . . replaced by" thoT'^'mwer com-i pulsion^^^ theff^ow^SKSacters.''^ .-— — ,{
That there are limits to education in this sense, we cannot doubt. But we do not know where they are. There is, that is to say, no clear and certain boundary between character which is acquired and those more or less un- educable traits of human nature, evolved during the long ages and transmitted by inheritance. We are quite unable to predict with any certainty or precision how far the individual pupil is educable — or rather how far he is still educable by the time a particular educator gets hold of him, and after he has already acquired a character of sorts in his infancy.
Yet, however crude and clumsy our knowledge of the process, there is no doubt that a character is acquired by experience and education. Within limits that we have not
' Erich Fromm, "Individual and Social Origin of Neurosis," American Sociological Revietv, Vol. 9 (1944), pp. 380-384. Reprinted in Clyde Kluckhohn and Henry Alexander Murray, Personality in Nature, Society, and Culture, (1948), pp. 407, et seq.
THE ECLIPSE 95
measured, human nature is malleable. Can we doubt it when we remember that when Shakespeare was alive there were no Americans, that when Virgil was alive there were no Englishmen, and that when Homer was alive there were no Romans? Quite certainly, men have acquired the ways of thinking, feeling and acting which we recognize as their ethnic, national, class and occupa- tional characteristics. Comparatively speaking these characteristics are, moreover, recently acquired. Even within the brief span of historical time characters have been acquired and have been lost and have been re- placed by other characters. This is what gives to man's history, despite his common humanity, its infinite va- riety.
Because human nature is, as Hocking puts it, "the most plastic part of the living world, the most adaptable, the most educable," ^ it is also the most mal-adaptable and mis-educable. The cultural^ heritage which con- tains the whole structure and fabric of the good life is acquired. It may be rejected. It may be acquired/ badly. It may not be acquired at all. For we are not born with it. If it is not transmitted from one generation to the next, it may be lost, indeed forgotten through a dark age, until somewhere and somehow men re- discover it, and, exploring the world again, recreate it anew.
The acquired culture is not transmitted in our genes, and so the issue is always in doubt. The good life in the good society, though attainable, is never attained and pos-
* William Ernest Hocking, Human Nature and Its Remaking (1923), P 15-
96 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
sessed once and for all. So what has been attained will again be lost if the wisdom of the good life in a good society is not transmitted.
I That _ is the central and critical condition of the I Western society: that the democracies are ceasing to re- ceive the tra.ditions of civility in which the good society, the liberal, \^emocra.tic way of life at its best, originated and developed. They are cut off from the public philoso- phy and the poJiticalarts which are. needed to goyem the liberal democratic society. They have not been initiated into its secrets, and they do not greatly care for as much of it as they are prepared to understand.
In Toynbee's terrible phrase, they are proletarians who are "in" but are not "of" the society they dominate.
2. The Great Vacuum
To SPEAK of a public philosophy is, I am well aware, to raise dangerous questions, rather like opening Pandora's box.
Within the Western nations, as Father Murray has put it, there is "a plurality of incompatible faiths";^ there is also a multitude of secularized and agnostic people. Since there is so little prospect of agreement, and such certainty of dissension, on the content of the public philosophy, it seems expedient not to raise the issues by talking about them. It is easier to follow the rule that each person's
^ John Courtney Murray, S.J., "The Problem of Pluralism in America," in Thought (Fordham University, Summer, 1954).
%
THE ECLIPSE 97
beliefs are private and that only overt conduct is a public matter.
One might say that this prudent rule reflects and registers the terms of settlement of the religious wars and of the long struggle against exclusive authority in the realm of the spirit by "thrones or dominations, or principalities or powers."
Freedom of religion and of thought and of speech were achieved by denying both to the state and to the established church a sovereign monopoly in the field of religion, philosophy, morals, science, learning, opinion and conscience. The liberal constitutions, with their bills of rights, fixed the boundaries past which the sovereign — the King, the Parliament, the Congress, the voters — were forbidden to go.
Yet the men of the seventeenth and eighteenth cen- turies who established these great salutary rules would certainly have denied that a community could do without a general public philosophy. They were themselves the adherents of a public philosophy — of the doctrine of natural Jaw, which held that there was law "above the ruler and the sovereign people . , . above the whole community of mortals." ^
The traditions of civility spring from this principle, which was first worked out by the Stoics. As Ernest Barker says:
The rational faculty of man was conceived as producing a com- mon conception of law and order which possessed a universal
* Cf. Otto von Gierke, Political Theories of the Middle Age. translated with an introduction by Frederick William Maitland (London, Cambridge University Press, 1927), pp. 73-87; and more especially note #256. Also cf. Leo Strauss, Natural Right and History (1953).
98 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
validity. . . . This common conception included, as its three great notes, the three values of Liberty, Equality and the brother- hood or Fraternity of all mankind. This common conception, and its three great notes, have formed a European set of ideas for over two thousand years. It was a set of ideas which lived and moved in the Middle Ages; and St. Thomas Aquinas cherished the idea of a sovereign law of nature imprinted in the heart and nature of man, to which kings and legislators must everywhere bow. It was a set of ideas which lived and acted with an even greater anima- tion from the days of the Reformation to those of the French Revolution . . . Spoken through the mouth of Locke, [they had justified} the English Revolution of 1688, and had recently served to inspire the American Revolution of 1776 . . . They were ideas of the proper conduct of states and governments in the area of internal affairs. They were ideas of the natural rights of man — of liberty, political and civic, with sovereignty residing essentially in the nation, and with free communication of thoughts and opinions; of equality before the law, and the equal repartition of public expenses among all the members of the public; of a general fraternity which tended in practice to be sadly restricted within the nation, but which could, on occasion, be extended by decree to protect all nations struggling for freedom.''^
These traditions were expounded in the treatises of philosophers, were developed in the tracts of the publicists, were absorbed by the lawyers and applied in the courts. At times of great stress some of the endan- gered traditions were committed to writing, as in the Magna Carta and the Declaration of Independence. For the guidance of judges and lawyers, large portions were described — as in Lord Coke's examination of the common law. The public philosophy was in part expounded in the j Bill of Rights of 1689. It was re-enacted in the first ten
''Sir Ernest Barker, Traditions of Civility (1948), pp. 10-12.
THE ECLIPSE 99
amendments of the Constitution of the United States. The largest part of the pubHc philosophy was never explicitly stated. Being the wisdom of a great society over the gen- erations, it can never be stated in any single document. But the traditions of civility permeated the peoples of the West and provided a standard of public and private action which promoted, facilitated and protected the institutions of freedom and the growth of democracy.
The founders of our free institutions were themselves adherents of this public philosophy. When they insisted upon excluding the temporal power from the realm of the mind and the spirit, it was not that they had no public philosophy. It was because experience had taught them that as power corrupts, it corrupts the public phi- losophy. It was, therefore, a practical rule of politics that the government should not be given sovereignty and proprietorship over the public philosophy.
But as time went on, there fell out of fashion the public philosophy of the founders of Western institutions. The rule that th.e jemporal power should be excluded from the realm of the mind and of the spirit was then subtly transformed. It became the rule that ideas and principles are private — with only subjective relevance and significance. Only when there is "a clear and present danger" to public order are the acts of speaking and publishing in the public domain. All the jfirst and last things were removed from the public domain. All_that has to do with what man is and should be, or how he should hold himself in the scheme of things, what are his/ p: rightful ends and the legitimate means, became private' and subjective and publicly unaccountable. And so, the
■/ (J J
lOO THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
liberal democracies of the West became the first great society to treat as a private concern the formative beliefs that shape the character of its citizens.
This has brought about a radical change in the mean-|, ing of freedom. Originally it was founded on the postu- late that there vi^as a universal order on w^hich all rea- sonable men were agreed: within that public agreement on the fundamentals and on the ultimates, it was safe to permit and it would be desirable to encourage, dissent and dispute. But with the disappearance of the public phi- losophy — and of a consensus on the first and last things — there was opened up a great vacuum in the public mind, yawning to be filled.
As long as it worked, there was an obvious practical advantage in treating the struggle for the ultimate alle- giance of men as not within the sphere of the public interest. It was a way of not having to open the Pandora's box of theological, moral and ideological issues which divide the Western society. But in this century, when the hard decisions have had to be made, this rule of prudence has ceased to work. The expedient worked only as long as the general mass of the people were not seriously dissatisfied with things as they are. It was an expedient that looked towards reforms and improvement. But it as- sumed a society which was secure, progressive, expand- ing, and unchallenged. That is why it was only in the fine Victorian weather, before the storm clouds of the great wars began to gather, that the liberal democratic policy of public agnosticism and practical neutrality in ultimate issues was possible.
THE ECLIPSE lOI
3. The Neglect of the Public Philosophy .
We come, then, to a crucial question. If the discussion of public philosophy has been, so to speak, tabled in the liberal democracies, can we assume that, though it is not being discussed, there is a public philosophy? Is there a body of positive principles and precepts which a good citizen cannot deny or ignore? I am writing this book in the conviction that there is. It is a conviction which I have acquired gradually, not so much from a theoretical education, but rather from the practical experience of seeing how hard it is for our generation to make democ-" racy work. I believe there is a public philosophy. Indeed there is such a thing as the public philosophy of civility. It does not have to be discovered or invented. It is known. But it does have to be revived and renewed.
The public philosophy is known as natural law, a name which, alas, causes great semantic confusion.^ This phi- losophy is the premise of the institutions of the Western society, and they are, I believe, unworkable in communi- ties that do not adhere to it. Except on the premises of this philosophy, it is impossible to reach intelligible and workable conceptions of popular election, majority rule, representative assemblies, free speech, loyalty, property, corporations and voluntary associations. The founders of these institutions, which the recently enfranchised democ- racies have inherited, were all of them adherents of some one of the various schools of natural law.
® Cf. Mortimer Adler, "The Doctrine of Natural Law in Philosophy," University of Notre Dame Natural Law Institute Proceedings, Vol. I, pp. 65-84.
102 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
■In our time the institutions built upon the foundations '■of the public philosophy still stand. But they are used by .^ /a public- who are not being taught, and no longer adhere ■•^ !to, the philosophy. Increasingly, the people are alienated from the inner principles of their institutions. The ques- tion is whether and how this alienation can be overcome, and the rupture of the traditions of civility repaired.
Needless to say I am not about to argue that the rup- ture can be repaired by a neo-classical or neo-medieval restoration, or by some kind of romantic return to feudal- ism, folk-dancing and handicrafts. We cannot rub out the modern age, we cannot roll back the history that has made us what we are. We cannot start again as if there had been no advance of science, no spread of rationalism and secularism, no industrial revolution, no dissolution of the old habitual order of things, no sudden increase in the population. The poignant question is whether, and, if so, how modern men could make vital contact with the lost, traditions of civility.
The appearance of things is quite obviously unpromis- ing. There is radical novelty in our modern ways of life. The climate of feeling and the style of thought have changed radically. Modern men will first need to be con- vinced that the traditions of civility were not abandoned because they became antiquated. This is one of the roots of their unbelief and there is no denying its depth. Since the public philosophy preceded the advance of modern science and the industrial revolution, how can it be ex- pected to provide a positive doctrine which is directly and practically relevant to the age we live in?
It does, one must admit, look like that, and quite evi-
THE ECLIPSE IO3
dently the original principles and precepts do not now provide the specific rules and patterns of a way of life in the circumstances of this age. A rereading of the political classics from Aristotle to Burke will not give the answers to the immediate and concrete questions: to the burning issues of diplomacy, military defense, trade, taxes, prices, and wages. Nor have the classical books anything to say about repairing automobiles, treating poliomyelitis, or proceeding with nuclear fission. As handbooks for the busy man, wanting to know how to do this or that, they are now lamentably out of date. The language is archaic, the idiom is strange, the images are unfamiliar, the practi- cal precepts are addressed to forgotten issues.
But this irrelevance and remoteness might be the dust which has settled during the long time when philosophers and scholars and popular educators have relegated the public philosophy to the attic, when they have treated it as no longer usable by modern and progressive men. It is a neglected philosophy. For several generations it has been exceptional and indeed eccentric to use this philoso- phy in the practical discussion of public policies.
Neglect might well explain its dilapidated condition. If this were the explanation, it would encourage us to explore the question of a renascence. Could, modern men again make vital contact with the traditions of civility? At least once before something of the sort did happen. The traditions were articulated in the Graeco-Roman world, and submerged in the West by the decline and the fall of the Western empire. Later on they were re- vived and renovated and remade in a great flowering of discovery and enterprise and creativity. The revival of
I04 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
learning did not provide maps for Columbus to use in discovering America. But it did produce much human wisdom which helped Columbus and his contemporaries to discover themselves and their possibilities.
The ancient world, we may remind ourselves, was not destroyed because the traditions were false. They were submerged, neglected, lost. For the men adhering to them had become a dwindling minority who were overthrown and displaced by men who were alien to the traditions, having never been initiated and adopted into them. May it not be that while the historical circumstances are obvi- ously so different, something like that is happening again?
4. The Universal Laws of the National Order
FdR OVER two thousand years, says Barker, European thought has been acted upon by the idea that the ra- tional faculties of men can produce a common concep- tion of law and order which possesses a universal validity. This conception was first formulated as a theory by Zeno and the Stoics. It was absorbed by the Roman lawyers, was adopted by the Christian fathers, was re-established and reworked by Saint Thomas Aquinas, and in a new formulation, after the Renaissance and Reformation, it provided the philosophy of the English Revolution of 1688 and of the American Revolution of 1776. The long life of this idea and, above all, the recurring revival of the idea in all ages, would seem to indicate that it re- flects a wide and recurring human need — that it is in-
THE ECLIPSE IO5
volved with practical questions of policy in the face of recurring poHtical problems.
That the idea is not mere moonshine and cobwebs is attested by history. Barker tells us that in 330 B.C. Alexander was planning the empire in which he would be equally lord of the Greeks and the Persians, in which both Greeks and Persians would be equally bound to perform military service, and would be encouraged to intermarry. This was a revolutionary idea. Aristotle, who was then teaching at the Lyceum, advised Alexander against a policy which would bring the two worlds — the Greek and the barbarian — into the same political sys- tem. Aristotle advised Alexander to deal with the Greeks as a leader and with the Persians as a master.
But Alexander rejected the advice, certainly for practi- cal reasons, and perhaps also for idealistic reasons. He "acted in the spirit of the policy afterwards enunciated by Eratosthenes {an Alexandrian scholar of the next cen- tury} who, 'refusing to agree with men who divided mankind into Greeks and barbarians . . . declared that it was better to divide men simply into the good and bad.' '"
In adopting this policy, Alexander anticipated in ac- tion what Zeno and the Stoics were soon to be teaching — that, as Plutarch wrote long afterwards, "men should not live their lives in so many civic republics, separated from one another by different systems of justice; they should reckon all as their fellow citizens, and there should be one life and one order (cosmos), as it were of
* Ernest Barker, Introduction to his translation of Aristotle's Politics (1946), p. lix.
I06 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
one flock on a common pasture, feeding in common under one joint law." ^^
We must here dwell specially on the fact that Alexander anticipated in action what Zeno and the Stoics were soon to be teaching. This shows that the idea of a rational order is not only an attractive and a sublime conception but that it is a necessary assumption in the government of large and heterogeneous states. Alexander came to it in spite of Aristotle's teaching to the con- trary. His practical experience compelled him to see that in an empire which included the Persians as well as the Greeks there had to be a common law which was valid for both. To be valid for both the Greeks and the Per- sians, the law had in some significant degree to have their consent. The Persians could not be commanded^and coerced.
As in fact the laws were promulgated to the Persians by Alexander, who was a Greek, it was necessary to convince the Persians that Alexander's laws reflected something that was higher than the will and the inten- tions of the Greeks, something that was binding on both the Greeks and the Persians. That something was the faculty of distinguishing by reason the good and the bad. For this faculty was not peculiar to the Greeks but was common to both Persians and Greeks.
Alexander had discovered empirically what Zeno was to formulate theoretically — that a lar^e plural society cannot b^-gQxernedjwithoiiti^cQgnizing t^^^ trans^cend- ing its plural interests, there is a rational order with a
^°lbid., lix-lx. Cf. Saint Paul on the One Church, which was "neither Greek nor Jew . . . Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free."
THE ECLIPSE IO7
superior common law. This common law is "natural" in the sense that it can be discovered by any rational mind, that it is not the willful and arbitrary positive command of the sovereign^power/^ This is the necessary assump- tion, without which it is impossible for different peoples with their competing interests to live together in peace and freedom within one community.
The Roman lawyers worked out what Alexander had anticipated and what the Stoics taught. By the time of Cicero there were, says Barker, three different bodies and conceptions of law.^" The first, called ms civile, was applicable only to Roman citizens. The second was a body of commercial laws, known as the ius gentium, that were enforced by the Roman courts in all commercial cases: "a common law of contract throughout the em- pire." '''
The ins gentium was meant to contain what was com- mon and universal, separated from what was peculiar and local, in the laws of all states. And beyond this practical common law for commercial intercourse, the Roman jurists recognized that in theory there was also natural law, the ius nattirale, which is "the law imposed on mankind by common human nature, that is, by reason in response to human needs and instincts." " This is not, says Barker, "a body of actual law, which can be en- forced in actual courts" . . . but "a way of looking at things — a spirit of 'humane interpretation' in the mind
" Cf. Otto von Gierke, Natural Law and the Theory of Society, trans- lated with an Introduction by Ernest Barker ( 1934) , Vol. I, pp. 224-225.
^^ Ibid., p. xxxvi.
'^ F. de Zulueta, "The Science of Law," in The Legacy of Rome, edited by Cyril Bailey (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1928), p. 202.
" Ibid., p. 204.
I08 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
of the judge and the jurist — which may, and does, af- fect the law which is actually enforced, but does so with- out being actual law itself."
The idea of a universal rational order became sub-- stantial and effective in the Roman law. This was the law of a great society which did in fact bring peace and order to the Western world. The remembrance of the Roman peace is stamped indelibly on the consciousness of Western men. After the fall of the Roman Empire, the Roman law, which was practiced in some degree almost everywhere, and was taught everywhere, was recognized as "the law of an international civilization and relatively universal." ^^
With the beginning of the new age, after 1500, Roman law, as codified and digested in the Corpus Juris of Justinian, was regarded as the concrete expression of universal human reason. When the question came to be asked, says Barker, "What does this conception of Natural Law actually contain or include?" the answer tends to be, during the Middle Ages generally and down to the rise of a new school of Natural Law after 1500, "It contains or includes the whole of Roman law, which \ is, as a u'hole, both supremely reasonable and universally diffused, and is therefore natural." ^^
5. The Rupture in Modern Times
The new school of natural law, which flourished from about 1500 to 1800, was a response to the pluralism of
" Gierke, op. cit., p. xxxix.
THE ECLIPSE IO9
the modern age; to the rise of national states, to the schism of the Church, to the explorations and to the expansion of world commerce, to the advance of science and of secularism, to the progressive division and speciali- zation of labor. As the diversity of belief, opinion and interest became greater, the need for a common criterion and for common laws became more acute.
The new school of natural law was able to meet this need until the end of the eighteenth century. That was long enough to preside over the founding of the British and the American constitutional orders, and of those which derive from them. But the school of natural law has not been able to cope with the pluralism of the later modern age — with the pluralism which has resulted from the industrial revolution and from the enfranchise- ment and the emancipation of the masses of the people.
In the simple and relatively homogeneous society of the eighteenth century natural law provided the prin- ciples of a free state. But then the mode of such thinking went out of fashion. In the nineteenth century little was done to remint the old ideas. They were regarded as obsolete and false, as hostile to the rise of democracy, and they were abandoned to the reactionaries. The great frame of reference to the rational order was missing. No body of specific principles and precepts was worked out in order to regulate international relations, nor to cope with the problems raised by the industrial revolution and the advance of science and technology.
Yet, in^this_ pluralized and fragmenting society a public philosophy with common and binding principles was more necessary than it had ever been. The proof of the
'vVV-t
i
IIO THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
need is in the impulse to escape from freedom, which Erich Fromm has described so well. ^^ It has been growing strongerjas the emancipation of the masses of the people from authorityjias brought the dissolution of public, gen-| '-'f^'-^'-^ eral, objective criteria of the true and the false, th^ right t "^^^^'^ '"'' and die wrong. "I can assure you," wrote Andre Gide '" '.r"! in 1928, "that the feeling of freedom can plunge the ' V''" soul mto a sort or anguish. 1
"We know it from within, by a sort of immediate and personal experience," says Gilson, who was writing between the wars, that "Western culture was steadily following its process of dissolution." ^^ Similarly, Spengler's famous book on The Decline of the West was first pub- lished in 19 1 8 but it was written before the outbreak of the war.
But until the historic disasters of our own time, the \ loneliness and anxiety of modern men had been private, i without public and overt political effect. As long as the public order still provided external security, their inner insecurity was still a personal and private and inward af- fair. Since the breakdown of public order during thcs First World War, there has been no security for multi-f, tudes and no ease of mind for anyone.
Observing the public disorder in which he himself had always lived, and knowing how the inner disorder pro- voked ^he impulse to escape frorn it. Hitler conceived his doctrine. He had the insight of genius into human weak-
" Erich Fromm, Escape from Freedom.
"T^e Journals of Andre Gide. translated by Justin O'Brien (1947-51), Vol. Ill, 1928-1939, entry for Nov. 15, 1928, p. 26.
^"Etienne Gilson, The Unity of Philosophical Experience, (1937), p. 271.
THE ECLIPSE III
ness, and he wrote in Mein Kampf that the masses are "like a woman . . . who will submit to the strong man rather than dominate the weakling . . . the masses love the ruler rather than the suppliant, and inwardly they are far more satisfied by a doctrine which tolerates no rival than by the grant of liberal freedom; they often feel at a loss what to do with it, and even easily feel themselves deserted." ~^
The masses that Hitler was planning to dominate are the modern men who find in freedom from the con- straints of the ancestral order an intolerable loss of guid- ance and of support. With Gide they are finding that the burden of freedom is too great an anxiety. The older structures of society are dissolving and they must make their way through a time of troubles. They have been taught to expect a steady progress towards a higher stand- ard of life, and they have not been prepared to withstand the frustrations of a prolonged crisis in the outer world and the loneliness of their self-centered isolation.
They are the men who rise up against freedom, unable to cope with its insoluble difficulties and unable to en- dure the denial of communion in public and common truths. They have found no answer to their need and no remedy for their anguish in the principles and practice of freedom as they have known them in the liberal democra- cies of this century. There is a profound disorientation in their experience, a radical disconnection between the no- tions of their minds and the needs of their souls. They have become the "lonely crowd" "^ that Riesman has de-
,,.C^'^
Uiu'Jk f, y.^-'A'^ jfv^^i-i ^ y\*-'-^-~y
™ Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf (1939), p. 56.
^ David Riesman, The Lonely Crowd. X^xiA^ 0-i,-Vj-v-<^ j^xi-^'W,
112
THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
scribed. They are Durkheim's anomic mass. ^^ They_ are Toynbee's f>roletarians who are "of" but not "in" the com- munity they, |ive in; for they have "no 'stake' in that com- munity^beyond the fact of its physical existence." Their "true hallmark ... is neither poverty nor humble birth but is the consciousness — and the resentment that this consciousness inspires — of being disinherited." "^ They are, as Karl Jaspers says, men dissolved into "an anony- mous.mass" because they are "without an authentic world, without provenance or roots," "^ without, that is to say, belief and faith that they can live by.
"^ Emile Durkheim, Suicide.
'^Arnold Toynbee, A Study of History, (1951), Vol. I, p. 41; Vol. V, p.63.
"^ Karl Jaspers, The Origin and Goal of History, translated from the German edition of 1949 by Michael Bullock (London, Routledge and Kegan Paul, Ltd., 1953), pp. 127-128.
yJ-
CHAPTER IX
The Renewal of the PuMic Philosophy
I. The Capacity to Believe
The freedom which modern men are turned away from, not seldom with rehef and often with enthusiasm, is the hollow shell of freedom. The current theory of free- dom holds that what men believe may be important to them but that it has almost no public significance. The outer defenses of the free way of life stand upon the legal guarantees against the coercion of belief. But the citadel is vacant because the public philosophy is gone, and all that the defenders of freedom have to defend in common is a public neutrality and a public agnosticism.
Yet when we have demonstrated the need for the pub- lic philosophy, how do we prove that the need can be sat- isfied? ^ Not, we may be sure, by exhortation, however eloquent, to rise to the enormity of the present danger, still less by lamentations about the glory and the grandeur that are past. Modern men, to whom the argument is ad-| dressed, have a low capacity to believe in the invisible, the I intangible, and the imponderable.
Exhortation can capture the will to believe. But of the
* Cf. Leo Strauss, Natural Right and History ( 1953) , p. 6.
114 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
will to believe there is no lack. The modern trouble is in a low capacity to believe in precepts which restrict and restrain private interests and desire. Conviction of the need of these restraints is difficult to restore once it has been radically impaired. Public principles can, of course, be imposed by a despotic government. But the public phi- losophy of a free society cannot be restored by fiat and by force. To come to grips with the unbelief which underlies the condition of anomy, we must find a way to re-establish confidence in the validity of public standards. We must renew the convictions from which our political morality springs.
In the prevailing popular culture all philosophies are the instruments of some man's purpose, all truths are self- centered and self-regarding, and all principles are the ra- tionalizations of some special interest. There is no public criterion of the true and the false, of the right and the wrong, beyond that which the preponderant mass of vot- ers, consumers, readers, and listeners happen at the mo- ment to be supposed to want.
There is no reason to think that this condition of mind can be changed until it can be proved to the modern skeptic that there are certain principles which, when they have been demonstrated, only the willfully irrational can deny, that there are certain obligations binding on all men who are committed to a free society, and that only the willfully subversive can reject them.
When I say that the condition of anomy cannot be cor- rected unless these things are proved to the modern skep- tic, I mean that the skeptic must find the proof compel- ling. His skepticism cannot be cured by forcing him to
THE RENEWAL II5
conform. If he has no strong behefs, he will usually con- form if he is made to conform. But the very fact that he has been forced by the government or by the crowd will prove that the official doctrine lacked something in the way of evidence or of reason to carry full conviction. In the blood of the martyrs to intolerance are the seeds of unbelief.
In order to repair the capacity to believe in the public philosophy, it will be necessary to demonstrate the practi- cal relevance and the productivity of the public philoso- phy. It is almost impossible to deny its high and broad generalities. The difficulty is to see how they are to be ap- plied in the practical affairs of a modern state.
We are back, in a manner of speaking, before the Ro- man lawyers worked out the ius gentium and related it to the ius naturale, back with Alexander the Great, who un- derstood the pressing need for common laws in a plural society, and with Zeno who formulated the higher gen- eralities. Given the practical need which is acute, and the higher generalities, which are self-evident, can we de- velop a positive working doctrine of the good society un- der modern conditions? The answer which I am making to this question is that it can be done if the ideas of the public philosophy are recovered and are re-established in i the minds of men of light and leading./ - > - ^^^,/ '),,xj vv^'-'U-v'^)
2. VoY Example: The Theory of Property
Let us, then, put the matter to the test by applying the public philosophy to some of the great topics of our public life.
Il6 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
I shall begin with the theory of private property — before and after the loss of the public philosophy and the rupture of the traditions. We can do this conveniently by examining what Blackstone, working in the middle of the eighteenth century, does with the theory of private prop- erty. Blackstone's mind was formed in the classical tradi- tion. But Blackstone's world was in movement, and he was not equal to the creative effort of using the tradition to cope with the new circumstances.
He had declared that security of the person was the first, that liberty of the individual was the second, and that property was "the third absolute right inherent in every Englishman." " But, as a civilized man, he had to do more than to assert the absolute right. He had "to examine more deeply the rudiments and grounds" ^ on which it could be justified rationally.
Between the lines of his elegant and stately prose one can see, I think, that Blackstone was puzzled. According to his tradition, the rational justification of property is as a system of corresponding and reciprocal rights and duties. In the public philosophy an absolute right to property, or to anything else that affects other men, cannot be en- tertained. To claim it is to be outside the law and the bounds of civility. This conception of property is most easily intelligible in a society where the principal forms of private property are in agricultural land. The land is visi- ble and its products are known to all. This lends itself to a definition of the corresponding rights and duties: of the
" Sir William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book I, Ch. I.
' Ibid., II, 1.
THE RENEWAL II7
landlord with his tenants and hired workers below him in the hierarchy and above him with the sovereign power, claiming taxes and services.
When the main forms of property are intangible the difl&culty of defining rights and duties is much greater. When Blackstone was writing, England was a rising com- mercial power and the comparatively simple problems of a society based on landed property were already over- taken by the problems of an economy in which property was owned as money, as commercial paper, as stocks and bonds. It was easy enough to assert rights to intangible property, but difficult to define the duties of intangible property. Yet unless that was done, property would not be under general laws.
Blackstone is in a way a tragic figure in that, thanks to his education, he had the intimation that the right direc- tion was to work toward bringing intangible property un- der public standards. Yet for one reason or another he did not take it. He was, however, troubled. He knew that "nothing ... so generally . . . engages the affections of mankind" as that "sole and despotic dominion which one man claims and exercises over the external things of the world, in total exclusion of the right of any other in- dividual in the universe." But as a man steeped in the civilized traditions of the West, he knew, too that there must be rational limits put upon the acquisitive and pos- sessive instincts. As a man of the world, that is to say of his world and of the world that was to come, he Joiew also how little the rising men oLproperty wished jojiear about obligations that would limit their absolute rights.
So, with a certain regret, and perhaps with an intuitive
Il8 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
foreboding, he wrote that "Pleased as we are with the pos- session, we seem afraid to look back to the means by which it was acquired, as if fearful of some defect in our title . . . not caring to reflect that ( accurately and strictly speaking) there is no foundation in nature or in natural law, why a set of words upon parchment should convey the dominion of land: why the son should have a right to exclude his fellow-creatures from a determinate spot of ground, because his father had done so before him: or why the occupier of a particular field or of a jewel, when lying on his death-bed, and no longer able to maintain possession, should be entitled to tell the rest of the world which of them should enjoy it after him." ^
Blackstone thought that these questions which chal- lenge "the sole and despotic dominion" of the property holder, "would be useless and even troublesome in com- mon life." As a man of his world he felt bound to say that "it is well if the mass of mankind will obey the laws when made, without scrutinizing too nicely into the reason for making them." But as one formed in the traditions of civility, hejzould not ignore the question of whether there was "some defect in our title" to absolute property. And as an exponent of "rational science" he felt bound to ex- pound the classical conception of private property. He puts it this way: a man's property
. . . consists in the free use, enjoyment and disposal of all his acquisitions, without any control or diminution, save only by the laws of the land. The original of private property is probably founded in nature . . . but certainly the modifications under which we at present find it, the method of conserving it in the
*lbid., II, I.
THE RENEWAL II9
present owner, and of translating it from man to man, are entirely derived from society; and are some of those civil advantages in exchange for which every individual has resigned a part of his natural liberty.'^
.- 'The rights of property, that is to say, are a creation of ^|he laws of the state. And since the laws can be altered, there are no absolute rights of property. There are legal rights to use and to enjoy and to dispose of property. The laws define what are the rights to use and to enjoy and to dispose of property, which the courts will enforce. For, says Blackstone . . .
The earth and all things therein are the general property of all mankind, exclusive of other beings, from the immediate gift of the creator.
It is in order that, and only in order that, the earth may be enjoyed most fully that
. . . the legislature of England has universally promoted the grand ends of civil society, the peace and security of individuals, by steadily pursuing that wise and orderly maxim of assigning [Italics mine} to everything capable of ownership a legal and determinate owner.^
Conceived in this fashion, private property can never .^^,^^_..,.j ,^-i 4^' be regarded as giving to any man an absolute title to ex- ^.^rj. iWUiiW
ercise "the sole and despotic dominion" over the land and the resources of nature. The ultimate ti|le_jlQes_noLiie in the owner. The title is in "mankind," in The People as a corporate community. The rights of the individual in that patrimony are creations of the law, and have no other validity except as they are ordained by law. The purpose
^ Ibid., I, I, 3. (Italics mine). ' Ibid., II, I.
7
120 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
of laws which estabhsh private property is not to satisfy the acquisitive and possessive instincts of the primitive man, but to promote "the grand ends of civil society" — which comprehend "the peace and security of individuals."
Because the legal owner enjoys the use of a limited necessity belonging to all men, he cannot be the sovereign lord of his possessions. He is not entitled to exercise his absolute and therefore arbitrary will. He owes duties that correspond with his rights. His ownership is a grant made by the laws to achieve not his private purposes but the common social purpose. And, therefore, the laws of property may and should be judged, reviewed and, when necessary, amended, so as to define the specific system of rights_and duties that will promote the ends of society.
This is a doctrine of private property which denies the pretension to a "sole and despotic dominion." When Biackstone, though his conscience was troubled, accepted the sole and despotic dominion, he broke with the public philosophy and the traditions of civility. After his break the recognized theorists developed regressively the con- ception of private property as an absolute right. For a time they excluded from -political philosophy, from juris- prudence and from legislation, almost any notion that property had duties as well as rights. , Absolute private property inevitably produced intoler- able evils. Absolute owners did grave damage to their neighbors and to their descendants: they ruined the fertil- ity, of the land, they exploited destructively the minerals under the surface, they burned and cut forests, they de- stroyed the wild life, they polluted streams, they cornered
THE RENEWAL 121
supplies and formed monopolies, they held land and re- sources out of use, they exploited the feeble bargaining power of wage earners.
For such abuses of absolute property the political scien- tists_and the law makers had no remedy. They had lost •-» the tradition that property is the creation of the law for ;' social purposes. They had no principles by which the law couldTdieal wfth the abuses of property. The individualists of the nineteenth century could not, therefore, defend and preserve the system of private property by reforming it, and by adapting it to the circumstances of the modern age. They knew much about the rights of property and little about any corresponding duties. And so, because there was no legal remedy for the abuses of private property, because the duties which are the rational jus- tification of property were no longer defined and en- forced, the idea of private property lost its rational justification.
Between the property holders and the propertyless, who became the majority in many countries, there was, in consequence, no connecting bond, no consensus within the same realm of rational discourse. The proletariat had the duty to respect the rights of owners. But the own-' ;; ers owed no reciprocal duty to the proletariat. There were*' V.^./,
no obligations in which the proletarians found their '
righ^. Thus there arose the ominous phenomenon of "the i,J fii.iv-6^ two nations," the confrontation of those who owned the '"-''^'i -'^ ">'' earth by those who had nothing to lose. The latter were cs'-h'^ -^y ^^ more numerous than the former. As they acquired votes, r^t^.^'- the main issue in the domestic politics of the democracies ''''^V'k'/ became the struggle between the minority who had so ;• . - ^
122 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
much absolute property and the great mass of the elector- ate who had so little property.
To this conflict there have been and are_rwo possible outcomes: a gradual, cumulative, and perhaps at last a violent expropriation of the men of property — i>r re- forms of the laws of property which restore adequate- du- ties. But for several generations after Blackstone, the very idea of property as a system of duties was obscured. The public philosophy was discarded, and the most humane and enlightened men of the nineteenth century had little notion how rational reforms could be made. The alterna- tives, it appeared, were to defend absolute property against the growing discontent of the propertyless, or to abolish private property. It was a dangerous and a false dilemma. But in the nineteenth century this became the dilemma. The choice, it was said, was between individual- ism and collectivism, between Manchester and Marx, be- tween absolute property maintained by the force of the few and absolute property abolished by the dictatorship of the mass.
The case of Blackstone has shown that a different and better theory of property was possible. It was possible if he and his successors had adhered to the public philoso- phy — if they had used, instead of abandoning, the prin- ciples which he stated so well. The earth is the general property of all mankind. Private titles of ownership are assigned by law-making authorities to promote the grand ends of civil society. Private property is, thereforg, a sys- tem of legal rights and duties. Under changing conditions the systernmust be kept in accord with the_grand ends of civil society.
THE RENEWAL 123
Blackstone and his successors did not work out legal propositions from these principles.^ As I am contending that it would have been better if they had done so, I now ask myself what is the validity of these principles? Are they devices, like the rules of the road, for regulating the traffic? If they are only that, then another set of assump- tions could be just as valid, like the rule of the road in Britain that one must drive to the left. One could, and in fact men have, constructed systems of property on quite different assumptions — on the assumption, for example, that the earth is the general property of white men only, or of a master race of white men, or of those castes which have not sinned in a previous incarnation. But if the prin- ciples are more than that, if they have a validity which overrides such special claims, what is the virtue which gives them their validity?
They are the laws of a rational order of human society — in the sense that all men, when they are sincerely and lucidly rational, will regard them as self-evident. The ra- tional order consists of the terms which must be met in order to fulfill men's capacity for the good life in this world. They are-the terms of the widest consensus of ra^ tional men in a pluraLsQciety. They are the propositions to which all men concerned, if they are sincerely and lucidly rational, can be expected to converge. There could never be a consensus that Africa belongs to the descendants of the Dutch settlers; a property system founded on that pre- tension cannot be generally acceptable, and will generate disorder. The classical doctrine has a superior validity in that a system of property based upon it may obtain a con-
''Cf. my The Good Society, Ch. 12.
124 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
sensus of support in the community, and would have the prospect of being workable.
When we speak of these principles asjiatural laws, we must be careful. They are not scientific "iaws" like the laws of the motions of the heavenly bodies. They do not describe human behavior as it is. They prescribe jwhat it should be. They do not enable us to predjct what men will actually do. They are the principles of right behavior in the good society, governed by the Western traditions of civility.
It is possible to organize a state and to conduct a gov- ernment on quite different principles. But the outcome will not be freedom and the good life.' ,^\^ ,JC ivu-ii |^\ 'l-o'
3. For Example: Freedom of Speech
Only within a community which adheres to tK^' public _^^^,^ philosophy is there sure and sufficient ground for the free- ■ Ir' dom to think and to ask questions, to speak and to publish. ,.h.-.^ Nobody can justify in principle, much less in practice, a •••■•'-'^ claim that there exists an unrestricted right of anyone to '\ci^ utter anything he likes at any time he chooses. There can, for example, be no right, as Mr. Justice Holmes said, to cry "Fire" in a crowded theater. Nor is there a right to tell a customer that the glass beads are diamonds, or a voter that the opposition candidate for President is a So- viet agent.
Freedom of speech has become a central concern of the Western society because of the discovery among the Greeks that dialectic, as demonstrated in the Socratic dia- logues, is a principal method of attaining truth, and par-
THE RENEWAL 125
ticularly a method of attaining moral and political truth. "The ability to raise searching difficulties on both sides of a subject will," said Aristotle, "make us detect more easily the truth and error about the several points that arise." ^ The right to speak freely is one of the necessary means to the attainment of the truth. That, and not the subjective pleasure of utterance, is why freedom is a necessity in the good society.
This was the ground on which Milton in the Areopa- gitica opposed the order of Parliament (1643) that no book should be printed or put on sale unless it had first been licensed by the authorities:
As therefore the state of man now is; what wisdom can there be to choose, what continence to forbear without the knowledge of evil? . . . Since therefore the knowledge and survey of vice is in this world so necessary to the constituting of human virtue, and the scanning of error to the confirmation of truth, how can we more safely, and with less danger, scout into the regions of sin and falsity than by reading aU manner of tractates and hearing all manner of reason? ^
The method of dialectics is to confront ideas with op- posing ideas in order that the pro and the con of the dis- pute will lead to true ideas. But the dispute must not be I treated as^jtrial of strength. It must be a means of eluci- dation. In a Socratic dialogue the disputants are arguing co-operatively in order to acquire more wisdom than either of them had when he began. In a sophistical argu- ment the sophist is out to win a case, using rhetoric and not dialectic. "Both alike," says Aristotle, "are concerned
^Topics, Bk. I. Ch. i, 101335.
"Milton's Areopagitka (Oxford University Press, 1949), pp. 18-19.
126 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
with such things as come, more or less, within the general ken of all men and belong to no definite science." '" But while "dialectic is a process of criticism wherein lies the path to the principles of all inquiries," ^^ "rhetoric is con- cerned with the modes of persuasion." ^"
Divorced from its ori_ginal purpose and justification, as j> a process of__criticism, freedom to think and speak are not ! self-eviderit_jiecessides. It is only from the hope and the intention of discovering truth that freedom acquires such high public significance. The right of self-expression is, as such, a private amenity rather than a public necessity. The right to utter words, whether or not they have meaning, and regardless of their truth, could not be a vital interest of a great state but for the presumption that they are the chaff which goes with the utterance of true and significant words.
But when the chaff of silliness, baseness, and deception is so voluminous that it submerges the kernels of truth, freedom of speech may produce such frivolity, or such mischief, that it cannot be preserved against the demand for a restoration of order or of decency. If there, is. a divid-'| ing line between liberty and license, it j_s.^whei£j[reedom| of speech is no longer respected as a proc;g4ure- of thei truth and becomes the unrestricted right to exploit the ignorance, and to incite the passions, of the people. Then freedom is such a hullabaloo of sophistry, propaganda, special pleading, lobbying, and salesmanship that it is dif- ficult to remember why freedom of speech is worth the pain and trouble of defending it.
^"Rhetoric, Bk. I, Ch. i, 135431-3. ^^ Topics, Bk. I, Ch. 2, ioib3-4. ^^ Rhetoric, Bk. I, Ch. i, 135534.
THE RENEWAL 127
WhatJias been lost in the tumult is the meaning of the obligation which is involved in .the_righL.to speak freely. It is tlie 'obligation to subject_th£ utterance to criticism |-^ and debate. Because jhe dialectical debate is a procedure* for attaining motal and political truth, the righLIQ=-speak is protected by a willingness to debate.
In the public philosophy, freedom of speech is con- ceived as the means to a confrontation of opinion — as in a Socratic dialogue, in a schoolmen's disputation, in the critiques of scientists and savants, in a court of law, in a representative assembly, in an open forum.
Even at the canonisation of a saint, [says John Stuart Mill} the church admits and listens patiently to a "devil's advocate." The holiest of men, it appears, cannot be admitted to posthumous honors, until all that the devil could say against him is known and weighed. If even the Newtonian philosophy were not permitted to be questioned, mankind could not feel as complete assurance of its truth as they now [1859} do. The beliefs which we have most warrant for, have no safeguard to rest on, but a standing invitation to the whole world to prove them unfounded. If the challenge is not accepted, or is accepted and the attempt fails, we are far enough from certainty still; but we have done the best that the existing state of human reason admits of; we have neglected nothing that could give the truth the chance of reach- ing us: if the lists are kept open, we may hope that if there be a better truth, it will be found when the human mind is capable of receiving it; and in the meantime we may rely on having at- tained such approach to truth, as is possible in our day. This is the amount of certainty attainable by a fallible being, and this is the sole way of attaining it.^^
^^ J. S. Mill, On Liberty. In On Liberty, Representative Government, The Subjection of Women (London, Oxford University Press, 1946), Ch. II, pp. 28-29.
128 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
And because the purpose of the confrontation is to dis- cern truth, there are rules of evidence and of parHamen- tary procedure, there are codes of fair deaHng and fair comment, by which a loyal man will consider himself bound when he exercises the right to publish opinions. For the right to freedom of speech is no license to deceive, and willful misrepresentation is a violation of its princi- ples. It is sophistry to pretend that in a free country a man has some sort of inalienable or constitutional right to de- ceive his fellow men. There is no more right to deceive than there is a right to swindle, to cheat, or to pick pock- ets. It may be inexpedient to arraign every public liar, as we try to arraign other swindlers. It may be a poor policy to have too many laws which encourage litigation about matters of opinion. But, in principle, there can be no im- munity for lying in any of its protean forms. . In our time the application of these fundamental prin- ciples poses_.^many unsolved practical problems . For the modern media of ma.ss communication do not lend them- selves easily to a confrontation of opinions. The dialectical process for finding truth works best when the same audi- ence hears all the sides of the disputation. This is mani- festly impossible in the moving pictures: if a film advo- cates a thesis, the same audience cannot be shown another film designed to answer it. Radio and television broadcasts do permit some debate. But despite the effort of the com- panies to let opposing views be heard equally, and to or- ganize programs on which there are opposing speakers, the technical cgnditioas of broadcasting do not favor gen-l uine and productive debate. For the audience, tuning on- and tuning off here and there, cannot be counted upon to
THE RENEWAL 129
hear, even in summary form, the essential evidence and the main arguments on all the significant sides of a ques- tion. Rarely, and^on very few public issues, does the mass ^ ■^- audience have the benefit of the process by which truth isr'''^t ■,, Vi,. sifted from error — the dialectic of debate in which there ] ^'"^J^ ^ j,^,, is immediate ^ challenge, reply, cross-examination, and te-[ .," .^. i .^•u.tJbyk buttal. The men who resularly broadcast the news and ^"^^'"^ ' . comment upon the news cannot — like a speaker in the , . _ »- ;, Senate or in the House of Commons — be challenged by ''f . r ^^ one of their listeners and compelled then and there to '" '"* verify their statements of fact and to re-argue their infer- ences from the facts.
Yet when genuine debate is lacking, freedom of speech does not work as it is meant to work. It has lost the prin- ciple which regulates it and justifies it — that is to say, dialectic conducted according to logic and the rules of evidence. If there is no effective debate, the unrestricted right to speak will unloose so many propagandists, procur- ers, and panderers upon the public that sooner or later in self-defense the people will turn to the censors to protect them. An unrestricted and unregulated right to speak can- not be maintained. It will be curtailed for all manner of reasons and pretexts, and to serve all kinds of good, fool- ish, or sinister ends.
For in the absence_of debate unrestricted utterance ^^-.-u^^ leads to the degradation of opinion. By a kind of Gresh- am's law the more ratipnal_js^ overcome by the less ra- tional, and the opinions that will prevail will be those which are held most ardently by those with the most pas- sionate will. For that reason the freedom to speak can never be maintained merely by objecting to interference
M '
130 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
with the hberty of the press, of printing, of broadcasting, of the screen. It can be maintained only by promoting -i~- debate.
In the end what men will most ardently desire is to sup- press those who disagree with them and, therefore, stand in the way of the realization of their desires. Thus, once confrontation in debate is no longer necessary, the tolera- tion of all opinions leads to intolerance. Freedom of speech, separated from its essential principle, leads through a short transitional chaos to the destruction of freedom of speech.
It follows, I believe, that in the practice of freedom of speech, the degree of toleration that will be maintained is directly related to the effectiveness of the confrontation in debate which prevails or can be organized. In the Senate of the United States, for example, a Senator can promptly be challenged by another Senator and brought to an ac- counting. Here among the Senators themselves the condi- tions are most nearly ideal for the toleration of all opin- ions. ^* At the other extreme there is the secret circulation of anonymous allegations. Here there is no means of chal- lenging the author, and without any violation of the prin- ciples of freedom, he may properly be dealt with by detec- tives, by policemen, and the criminal courts. Between such extremes there are many problems of toleration which de- pend essentially upon how effective is the confrontation in debate. Where it is efficient, as in the standard news- paper press taken as a whole, freedom is largely unre- stricted by law. Where confrontation is difficult, as in broadcasting, there is also an acceptance of the principle
^* For non-Senators attacked by Senators the case is different.
THE RENEWAL I3I
that some legal regulation is necessary — for example, in order to insure fair play for political parties. When con- frontation is impossible, as in the moving picture, or in the so-called comic books, there will be censorship.
4. The Limits of Dissent
The counterrevolutionary movements have subjected the liberal democracies to severe stresses and strains : how to t insure their security and survival without abandoning their } liberties. They are faced with popular movements, aided and abetted by unfriendly foreign powers, and employing the machinery of democratic government to capture it and in order to abolish it. When they are working to attain power and before they do attain it, the fascist and commu- nist parties invoke all the guarantees of the bill of rights, all the prerogatives of popular parties, of elections, of rep- resentation of the assemblies, of tenure in the civil service. But when they attain power, they destroy the liberal demo- cratic institutions on which, as on a broad staircase, they climbed to power.
This exploitation of free institutions is, it seems to me, {^{i!^, yuu^ Ul^<
vs.
compelling proof^hat these institutions are inseparable from the public philosophy. If the connection is forgotten, as is so generally the case in the contemporary democra- ' '' " "^ cies, free institutions are poorly defended by the liberal democracies. They are the easy prey of their enemies. Either the fascists seize power in order to forestall the communists, or the communists seize power to forestall the fascists.
'«^A*<-
132 THE PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
There is no equivocation in the pubhc philosophy about the principle of the defense of free institutions. The rule is that the right to enjoy them and the duty to maintain them are inseparable. The right to these institutions is, that is to say, for those who adhere to them.
The criterion of loyalty is an indubitable commitment to defend and preserve the order of political and civil rights. The question of whether the liberal democratic states should outlaw, or in other ways contain, counter- revolutionary movements is not one of principle but of expediency and practical prudence. There is no doubt about the principle: that the counterrevolutionary move- ments are enemies of the state, and must be defeated.
In applying the principle the specific question of whether this party or that individual is or is not loyal is a matter to be determined by due process. For while there can be no right to destroy the liberal democratic state, there is an inalienable right to have the question ad- judicated justly in all particular cases as to whether this person or that is an enemy of the state. This right cannot be denied to those who have not been proved guilty without denying it to all who would be proved not guilty.
The limits of dissent are not too difficult to fix when we are dealing with avowedly revolutionary parties like the communists and the fascists. The borderline between sedition and radical reform is between the denial and the acceptance of the sovereign principle of the public phi- losophy: that we live in a rational order in which by sin- cere inquiry and rational debate we can distinguish the true and the false, the right and the wrong. The counter-
THE RENEWAL I33
revolutionists, who suppress freedom in order to propa- gate the official doctrine, reject the procedure by which in the free society official policy is determined.
Rational procedure is the ark of the covenant of the \ j. public philosophy. There js no set of elejction laws .^^ ^-^\ or constitutional guarantees which are unchangeable. jX^v^^*^^ What is unchangeable is the commitment to rational ^^(.t't r^,>-^- determination, the commitment to act in public life on the assumption which C. S. Peirce stated as fol-