Progress and Poverty
[01] What, then, is
the law of human progress -- the law under which civilization advances?
[02] It must explain
clearly and definitely, and not by vague generalities or superficial
analogies, why, though mankind started presumably with the same capacities
and at the same time, there now exist such wide differences in social
development. It must account for the arrested civilizations and for
the decayed and destroyed civilizations; for the general facts as
to the rise of civilization, and for the petrifying or enervating
force which the progress of civilization has heretofore always evolved.
It must account for retrogression as well as for progression; for
the differences in general character between Asiatic and European
civilizations; for the difference between classical and modern civilizations;
for the different rates at which progress goes on; and for those bursts,
and starts, and halts of progress which are so marked as minor phenomena.
And, thus, it must show us what are the essential conditions of progress,
and what social adjustments advance and what retard it.
[03] It is not difficult
to discover such a law. We have but to look and we may see it. I do
not pretend to give it scientific precision, but merely to point it
out.
[04] The incentives
to progress are the desires inherent in human nature -- the desire
to gratify the wants of the animal nature, the wants of the intellectual
nature, and the wants of the sympathetic nature; the desire to be,
to know, and to do -- desires that short of infinity can never be
satisfied, as they grow by what they feed on.
[05] Mind is the instrument
by which man advances, and by which each advance is secured and made
the vantage ground for new advances. Though he may not by taking thought
add a cubit to his stature, man may by taking thought extend his knowledge
of the universe and his power over it, in what, so far as we can see,
is an infinite degree. The narrow span of human life allows the individual
to go but a short distance, but though each generation may do but
little, yet generations, succeeding to the gain of their predecessors,
may gradually elevate the status of mankind, as coral polyps, building
one generation upon the work of the other, gradually elevate themselves
from the bottom of the sea.
[06] Mental power is,
therefore, the motor of progress, and men tend to advance in proportion
to the mental power expended in progression -- the mental power which
is devoted to the extension of knowledge, the improvement of methods,
and the betterment of social conditions.
[07] Now mental power
is a fixed quantity -- that is to say, there is a limit to the work
a man can do with his mind, as there is to the work he can do with
his body; therefore, the mental power which can be devoted to progress
is only what is left after what is required for nonprogressive purposes.
[08] These nonprogressive
purposes in which mental power is consumed may be classified as maintenance
and conflict. By maintenance I mean, not only the support of existence,
but the keeping up of the social condition and the holding of advances
already gained. By conflict I mean not merely warfare and preparation
for warfare, but all expenditure of mental power in seeking the gratification
of desire at the expense of others, and in resistance to such aggression.
[09] To compare society
to a boat. Her progress through the water will not depend upon the
exertion of her crew, but upon the exertion devoted to propelling
her. This will be lessened by any expenditure of force required for
bailing, or any expenditure of force in fighting among themselves,
or in pulling in different directions.
[10] Now, as in a separated
state the whole powers of man are required to maintain existence,
and mental power is set free for higher uses only by the association
of men in communities, which permits the division of labor and all
the economies which come with the co-operation of increased numbers,
association is the first essential of progress. Improvement becomes
possible as men come together in peaceful association, and the wider
and closer the association, the greater the possibilities of improvement.
And as the wasteful expenditure of mental power in conflict becomes
greater or less as the moral law which accords to each an equality
of rights is ignored or is recognized, equality (or justice) is the
second essential of progress.
[11] Thus association
in equality is the law of progress. Association frees mental power
for expenditure in improvement, and equality, or justice, or freedom
-- for the terms here signify the same thing, the recognition of the
moral law -- prevents the dissipation of this power in fruitless struggles.
[12] Here is the law
of progress, which will explain all diversities, all advances, all
halts, and retrogressions. Men tend to progress just as they come
closer together, and by co-operation with each other increase the
mental power that may be devoted to improvement, but just as conflict
is provoked, or association develops inequality of condition and power,
this tendency to progression is lessened, checked, and finally reversed.
[13] Given the same
innate capacity, and it is evident that social development will go
on faster or slower, will stop or turn back, according to the resistances
it meets. In a general way these obstacles to improvement may, in
relation to the society itself, be classed as external and internal
-- the first operating with greater force in the earlier stages of
civilization, the latter becoming more important in the later stages.
[14] Man is social in
his nature. He does not require to be caught and tamed in order to
induce him to live with his fellows. The utter helplessness with which
he enters the world, and the long period required for the maturity
of his powers, necessitate the family relation; which, as we may observe,
is wider, and in its extensions stronger, among the ruder than among
the more cultivated peoples. The first societies are families, expanding
into tribes, still holding a mutual blood relationship, and even when
they have become great nations claiming a common descent.
[15] Given beings of
this kind, placed on a globe of such diversified surface and climate
as this, and it is evident that, even with equal capacity, and an
equal start, social development must be very different. The first
limit or resistance to association will come from the conditions of
physical nature, and as these greatly vary with locality, corresponding
differences in social progress must show themselves. The net rapidity
of increase, and the closeness with which men, as they increase, can
keep together, will, in the rude state of knowledge in which reliance
for subsistence must be principally upon the spontaneous offerings
of nature, very largely depend upon climate, soil, and physical conformation.
Where much animal food and warm clothing are required; where the earth
seems poor and niggard; where the exuberant life of tropical forests
mocks barbarous man's puny efforts to control; where mountains, deserts,
or arms of the sea separate and isolate men; association, and the
power of improvement which it evolves, can at first go but a little
way. But on the rich plains of warm climates, where human existence
can be maintained with a smaller expenditure of force, and from a
much smaller area, men can keep closer together, and the mental power
which can at first be devoted to improvement is much greater. Hence
civilization naturally first arises in the great valleys and table
lands where we find its earliest monuments.
[16] But these diversities
in natural conditions, not merely thus directly produce diversities
in social development but, by producing diversities in social development,
bring out in man himself an obstacle, or rather an active counterforce,
to improvement. As families and tribes are separated from each other,
the social feeling ceases to operate between them, and differences
arise in language, custom, tradition, religion -- in short, in the
whole social web which each community, however small or large, constantly
spins. With these differences, prejudices grow, animosities spring
up, contact easily produces quarrels, aggression begets aggression,
and wrong kindles revenge.1
And so between these separate social aggregates arises the feeling
of Ishmael and the spirit of Cain, warfare becomes the chronic and
seemingly natural relation of societies to each other, and the powers
of men are expended in attack or defense, in mutual slaughter and
mutual destruction of wealth, or in warlike preparations. How long
this hostility persists, the protective tariffs and the standing armies
of the civilized world today bear witness; how difficult it is to
get over the idea that it is not theft to steal from a foreigner,
the difficulty in procuring an international copyright act will show.
Can we wonder at the perpetual hostilities of tribes and clans? Can
we wonder that when each community was isolated from the others --
when each, uninfluenced by the others, was spinning its separate web
of social environment, which no individual can escape, that war should
have been the rule and peace the exception? "They were even as we
are."
[17] Now, warfare is
the negation of association. The separation of men into diverse tribes,
by increasing warfare, thus checks improvement; while in the localities
where a large increase in numbers is possible without much separation,
civilization gains the advantage of exemption from tribal war, even
when the community as a whole is carrying on warfare beyond its borders.
Thus, where the resistance of nature to the close association of men
is slightest, the counterforce of warfare is likely at first to be
least felt; and in the rich plains where civilization first begins,
it may rise to a great height while scattered tribes are yet barbarous.
And thus, when small, separated communities exist in a state of chronic
warfare which forbids advance, the first step to their civilization
is the advent of some conquering tribe or nation that unites these
smaller communities into a larger one, in which internal peace is
preserved. Where this power of peaceable association is broken up,
either by external assaults or internal dissensions, the advance ceases
and retrogression begins.
[18] But it is not conquest
alone that has operated to promote association, and, by liberating
mental power from the necessities of warfare, to promote civilization.
If the diversities of climate, soil, and configuration of the earth's
surface operate at first to separate mankind, they also operate to
encourage exchange. And commerce, which is in itself a form of association
or co-operation, operates to promote civilization, not only directly,
but by building up interests which are opposed to warfare, and dispelling
the ignorance which is the fertile mother of prejudices and animosities.
[19] And so of religion.
Though the forms it has assumed -- and the animosities it has aroused
have often sundered men and produced warfare, yet it has at other
times been the means of promoting association. A common worship has
often, as among the Greeks, mitigated war and furnished the basis
of union, while it is from the triumph of Christianity over the barbarians
of Europe that modern civilization springs. Had not the Christian
Church existed when the Roman Empire went to pieces, Europe, destitute
of any bond of association, might have fallen to a condition not much
above that of the North American Indians or only received civilization
with an Asiatic impress from the conquering scimiters of the invading
hordes which had been welded into a mighty power by a religion which,
springing up in the deserts of Arabia, had united tribes separated
from time immemorial, and, thence issuing, brought into the association
of a common faith a great part of the human race.
[20] Looking over what
we know of the history of the world, we thus see civilization everywhere
springing up where men are brought into association, and everywhere
disappearing as this association is broken up. Thus the Roman civilization,
spread over Europe by the conquests which insured internal peace,
was overwhelmed by the incursions of the northern nations that broke
society again into disconnected fragments; and the progress that now
goes on in our modern civilization began as the feudal system again
began to associate men in larger communities, and the spiritual supremacy
of Rome to bring these communities into a common relation, as her
legions had done before. As the feudal bonds grew into national autonomies,
and Christianity worked the amelioration of manners, brought forth
the knowledge that during the dark days she had hidden, bound the
threads of peaceful union in her all-pervading organization, and taught
association in her religious orders, a greater progress became possible,
which, as men have been brought into closer and closer association
and co-operation, has gone on with greater and greater force.
[21] But we shall never
understand the course of civilization, and the varied phenomena which
its history presents, without a consideration of what I may term the
internal resistances, or counter forces, which arise in the heart
of advancing society, and which can alone explain how a civilization
once fairly started should either come of itself to a halt or be destroyed
by barbarians.
[22] The mental power,
which is the motor of social progress, is set free by association,
which is, what, perhaps, it may be more properly called, an integration.
Society in this process becomes more complex; its individuals more
dependent upon each other. Occupations and functions are specialized.
Instead of wandering, population becomes fixed. Instead of each man
attempting to supply all of his wants, the various trades and industries
are separated -- one man acquires skill in one thing, and another
in another thing. So, too, of knowledge, the body of which constantly
tends to become vaster than one man can grasp, and is separated into
different parts, which different individuals acquire and pursue. So,
too, the performance of religious ceremonies tends to pass into the
hands of a body of men specially devoted to that purpose, and the
preservation of order, the administration of justice, the assignment
of public duties and the distribution of awards, the conduct of war,
etc., to be made the special functions of an organized government.
In short, to use the language in which Herbert Spencer has defined
evolution, the development of society is, in relation to its component
individuals, the passing from an indefinite, incoherent homogeneity
to a definite, coherent heterogeneity. The lower the stage of social
development, the more society resembles one of those lowest of animal
organisms which are without organs or limbs, and from which a part
may be cut and yet live. The higher the stage of social development,
the more society resembles those higher organisms in which functions
and powers are specialized, and each member is vitally dependent on
the others.
[23] Now, this process
of integration, of the specialization of functions and powers, as
it goes on in society, is, by virtue of what is probably one of the
deepest laws of human nature, accompanied by a constant liability
to inequality. I do not mean that inequality is the necessary result
of social growth, but that it is the constant tendency of social growth
if unaccompanied by changes in social adjustments which, in the new
conditions that growth produces, will secure equality. I mean, so
to speak, that the garment of laws, customs, and political institutions,
which each society weaves for itself, is constantly tending to become
too tight as the society develops. I mean, so to speak, that man,
as he advances, threads a labyrinth, in which, if he keeps straight
ahead, he will infallibly lose his way, and through which reason and
justice can alone keep him continuously in an ascending path.
[24] For, while the
integration which accompanies growth tends in itself to set free mental
power to work improvement, there is, both with increase of numbers
and with increase in complexity of the social organization, a counter
tendency set up to the production of a state of inequality, which
wastes mental power, and, as it increases, brings improvement to a
halt.
[25] To trace to its
highest expression the law which thus operates to evolve with progress
the force which stops progress, would be, it seems to me, to go far
to the solution of a problem deeper than that of the genesis of the
material universe -- the problem of the genesis of evil. Let me content
myself with pointing out the manner in which, as society develops,
there arise tendencies which check development.
[26] There are two qualities
of human nature which it will be well, however, first to call to mind.
The one is the power of habit -- the tendency to continue to do things
in the same way; the other is the possibility of mental and moral
deterioration. The effect of the first in social development is to
continue habits, customs, laws, and methods, long after they have
lost their original usefulness, and the effect of the other is to
permit the growth of institutions and modes of thought from which
the normal perceptions of men instinctively revolt.
[27] Now the growth
and development of society not merely tend to make each more and more
dependent upon all, and to lessen the influence of individuals, even
over their own conditions, as compared with the influence of society;
but the effect of association or integration is to give rise to a
collective power which is distinguishable from the sum of individual
powers. Analogies, or, perhaps, rather illustrations of the same law,
may be found in all directions. As animal organisms increase in complexity,
there arise, above the life and power of the parts, a life and power
of the integrated whole; above the capability of involuntary movements,
the capability of voluntary movements. The actions and impulses of
bodies of men are, as has often been observed, different from those
which, under the same circumstances, would be called forth in individuals.
The fighting qualities of a regiment may be very different from those
of the individual soldiers. But there is no need of illustrations.
In our inquiries into the nature and rise of rent, we traced the very
thing to which I allude. Where population is sparse, land has no value;
just as men congregate together, the value of land appears and rises
-- a clearly distinguishable thing from the values produced by individual
effort; a value which springs from association, which increases as
association grows greater, and disappears as association is broken
up. And the same thing is true of power in other forms than those
generally expressed in terms of wealth.
[28] Now, as society
grows, the disposition to continue previous social adjustments tends
to lodge this collective power, as it arises, in the hands of a portion
of the community; and this unequal distribution of the wealth and
power gained as society advances tends to produce greater inequality,
since aggression grows by what it feeds on, and the idea of justice
is blurred by the habitual toleration of injustice.
[29] In this way the
patriarchal organization of society can easily grow into hereditary
monarchy, in which the king is as a god on earth, and the masses of
the people mere slaves of his caprice. It is natural that the father
should be the directing head of the family, and that at his death
the eldest son, as the oldest and most experienced member of the little
community, should succeed to the headship. But to continue this arrangement
as the family expands, is to lodge power in a particular line, and
the power thus lodged necessarily continues to increase, as the common
stock becomes larger and larger, and the power of the community grows.
The head of the family passes into the hereditary king, who comes
to look upon himself and to be looked upon by others as a being of
superior rights. With the growth of the collective power as compared
with the power of the individual, his power to reward and to punish
increases, and so increase the inducements to flatter and to fear
him; until finally, if the process be not disturbed, a nation grovels
at the foot of a throne, and a hundred thousand men toil for fifty
years to prepare a tomb for one of their own mortal kind.
[30] So the war chief
of a little band of savages is but one of their number, whom they
follow as their bravest and most wary. But when large bodies come
to act together, personal selection becomes more difficult, a blinder
obedience becomes necessary and can be enforced, and from the very
necessities of warfare when conducted on a large scale absolute power
arises.
[31] And so of the specialization
of function. There is a manifest gain in productive power when social
growth has gone so far that instead of every producer being summoned
from his work for fighting purposes, a regular military force can
be specialized; but this inevitably tends to the concentration of
power in the hands of the military class or their chiefs. The preservation
of internal order, the administration of justice, the construction
and care of public works, and, notably, the observances of religion,
all tend in similar manner to pass into the hands of special classes,
whose disposition it is to magnify their function and extend their
power.
[32] But the great cause
of inequality is in the natural monopoly which is given by the possession
of land. The first perceptions of men seem always to be that land
is common property; but the rude devices by which this is at first
recognized -- such as annual partitions or cultivation in common --
are consistent with only a low stage of development. The idea of property,
which naturally arises with reference to things of human production,
is easily transferred to land, and an institution which when population
is sparse merely secures to the improver and user the due reward of
his labor, finally, as population becomes dense and rent arises, operates
to strip the producer of his wages. Not merely this, but the appropriation
of rent for public purposes, which is the only way in which, with
anything like a high development, land can be readily retained as
common property, becomes, when political and religious power passes
into the hands of a class, the ownership of the land by that class,
and the rest of the community become merely tenants. And wars and
conquests, which tend to the concentration of political power and
to the institution of slavery, naturally result, where social growth
has given land a value, in the appropriation of the soil. A dominant
class, who concentrate power in their hands, will likewise soon concentrate
ownership of the land. To them will fall large partitions of conquered
land, which the former inhabitants will till as tenants or serfs,
and the public domain, or common lands, which in the natural course
of social growth are left for awhile in every country, and in which
state the primitive system of village culture leaves pasture and woodland,
are readily acquired, as we see by modern instances. And inequality
once established, the ownership of land tends to concentrate as development
goes on.
[33] I am merely attempting
to set forth the general fact that as a social development goes on,
inequality tends to establish itself, and not to point out the particular
sequence, which must necessarily vary with different conditions. But
this main fact makes intelligible all the phenomena of petrifaction
and retrogression. The unequal distribution of the power and wealth
gained by the integration of men in society tends to check, and finally
to counterbalance, the force by which improvements are made and society
advances. On the one side, the masses of the community are compelled
to expend their mental powers in merely maintaining existence. On
the other side, mental power is expended in keeping up and intensifying
the system of inequality, in ostentation, luxury, and warfare. A community
divided into a class that rules and a class that is ruled -- into
the very rich and the very poor, may "build like giants and finish
like jewelers"; but it will be monuments of ruthless pride and barren
vanity, or of a religion turned from its office of elevating man into
an instrument for keeping him down. Invention may for awhile to some
degree go on; but it will be the invention of refinements in luxury,
not the inventions that relieve toil and increase power. In the arcana
of temples or in the chambers of court physicians knowledge may still
be sought; but it will be hidden as a secret thing, or if it dares
come out to elevate common thought or brighten common life, it will
be trodden down as a dangerous innovator. For as it tends to lessen
the mental power devoted to improvement, so does inequality tend to
render men adverse to improvement. How strong is the disposition to
adhere to old methods among the classes who are kept in ignorance
by being compelled to toil for a mere existence, is too well known
to require illustration; and on the other hand the conservatism of
the classes to whom the existing social adjustment gives special advantages
is equally apparent. This tendency to resist innovation, even though
it be improvement, is observable in every special organization --
in religion, in law, in medicine, in science, in trade guilds; and
it becomes intense just as the organization is close. A close corporation
has always an instinctive dislike of innovation and innovators, which
is but the expression of an instinctive fear that change may tend
to throw down the barriers which hedge it in from the common herd,
and so rob it of importance and power; and it is always disposed to
guard carefully its special knowledge or skill.
[34] It is in this way
that petrifaction succeeds progress. The advance of inequality necessarily
brings improvement to a halt, and as it still persists or provokes
unavailing reactions, draws even upon the mental power necessary for
maintenance, and retrogression begins.
[35] These principles
make intelligible the history of civilization.
[36] In the localities
where climate, soil, and physical conformation tended least to separate
men as they increased, and where, accordingly, the first civilizations
grew up, the internal resistances to progress would naturally develop
in a more regular and thorough manner than where smaller communities,
which in their separation had developed diversities, were afterward
brought together into a closer association. It is this, it seems to
me, which accounts for the general characteristics of the earlier
civilizations as compared with the later civilizations of Europe.
Such homogeneous communities, developing from the first without the
jar of conflict between different customs, laws, religions, etc.,
would show a much greater uniformity. The concentrating and conservative
forces would all, so to speak, pull together. Rival chieftains would
not counterbalance each other, nor diversities of belief hold the
growth of priestly influence in check. Political and religious power,
wealth and knowledge, would thus tend to concentrate in the same centers.
The same causes which tended to produce the hereditary king and hereditary
priest would tend to produce the hereditary artisan and laborer, and
to separate society into castes. The power which association sets
free for progress would thus be wasted, and barriers to further progress
be gradually raised. The surplus energies of the masses would be devoted
to the construction of temples, palaces, and pyramids; to ministering
to the pride and pampering the luxury of their rulers; and should
any disposition to improvement arise among the classes of leisure
it would at once be checked by the dread of innovation. Society developing
in this way must at length stop in a conservatism which permits no
further progress.
[37] How long such a
state of complete petrifaction, when once reached, will continue,
seems to depend upon external causes, for the iron bonds of the social
environment which grows up repress disintegrating forces as well as
improvement. Such a community can be most easily conquered, for the
masses of the people are trained to a passive acquiescence in a life
of hopeless labor. If the conquerors merely take the place of the
ruling class, as the Hyksos did in Egypt and the Tartars in China,
everything will go on as before. If they ravage and destroy, the glory
of palace and temple remains but in ruins, population becomes sparse,
and knowledge and art are lost.
[38] European civilization
differs in character from civilizations of the Egyptian type because
it springs not from the association of a homogeneous people developing
from the beginning, or at least for a long time, under the same conditions,
but from the association of peoples who in separation had acquired
distinctive social characteristics, and whose smaller organizations
longer prevented the concentration of power and wealth in one center.
The physical conformation of the Grecian peninsula is such as to separate
the people at first into a number of small communities. As those petty
republics and nominal kingdoms ceased to waste their energies in warfare,
and the peaceable co-operation of commerce extended, the light of
civilization blazed up. But the principle of association was never
strong enough to save Greece from intertribal war, and when this was
put an end to by conquest, the tendency to inequality, which had been
combated with various devices by Grecian sages and statesmen, worked
its result, and Grecian valor, art, and literature became things of
the past. And so in the rise and extension, the decline and fall,
of Roman civilization, may be seen the working of these two principles
of association and equality, from the combination of which springs
progress.
[39] Springing from
the association of the independent husbandmen and free citizens of
Italy, and gaining fresh strength from conquests which brought hostile
nations into common relations, the Roman power hushed the world in
peace. But the tendency to inequality, checking real progress from
the first, increased as the Roman civilization extended. The Roman
civilization did not petrify as did the homogeneous civilizations
where the strong bonds of custom and superstition that held the people
in subjection probably also protected them, or at any rate kept the
peace between rulers and ruled; it rotted, declined and fell. Long
before Goth or Vandal had broken through the cordon of the legions,
even while her frontiers were advancing, Rome was dead at the heart.
Great estates had ruined Italy. Inequality had dried up the strength
and destroyed the vigor of the Roman world. Government became despotism,
which even assassination could not temper; patriotism became servility;
vices the most foul flouted themselves in public; literature sank
to puerilities; learning was forgotten; fertile districts became waste
without the ravages of war -- everywhere inequality produced decay,
political, mental, moral, and material. The barbarism which overwhelmed
Rome came not from without, but from within. It was the necessary
product of the system which had substituted slaves and coloni for
the independent husbandmen of Italy, and carved the provinces into
estates of senatorial families.
[40] Modern civilization
owes its superiority to the growth of equality with the growth of
association. Two great causes contributed to this -- the splitting
up of concentrated power into innumerable little centers by the influx
of the Northern nations, and the influence of Christianity. Without
the first there would have been the petrifaction and slow decay of
the Eastern Empire, where church and state were closely married and
loss of external power brought no relief of internal tyranny. And
but for the other there would have been barbarism, without principle
of association or amelioration. The petty chiefs and allodial lords
who everywhere grasped local sovereignty held each other in check.
Italian cities recovered their ancient liberty, free towns were founded,
village communities took root, and serfs acquired rights in the soil
they tilled. The leaven of Teutonic ideas of equality worked through
the disorganized and disjointed fabric of society. And although society
was split up into an innumerable number of separated fragments, yet
the idea of closer association was always present -- it existed in
the recollections of a universal empire; it existed in the claims
of a universal church.
[41] Though Christianity
became distorted and alloyed in percolating through a rotting civilization;
though pagan gods were taken into her pantheon, and pagan forms into
her ritual, and pagan ideas into her creed; yet her essential idea
of the equality of men was never wholly destroyed. And two things
happened of the utmost moment to incipient civilization -- the establishment
of the papacy and the celibacy of the clergy. The first prevented
the spiritual power from concentrating in the same lines as the temporal
power; and the latter prevented the establishment of a priestly caste,
during a time when all power tended to hereditary form.
[42] In her efforts
for the abolition of slavery; in her Truce of God; in her monastic
orders; in her councils which united nations, and her edicts which
ran without regard to political boundaries; in the lowborn hands in
which she placed a sign before which the proudest knelt; in her bishops
who by consecration became the peers of the greatest nobles; in her
"Servant of Servants," for so his official title ran, who, by virtue
of the ring of a simple fisherman, claimed the right to arbitrate
between nations, and whose stirrup was held by kings; the Church,
in spite of everything, was yet a promoter of association, a witness
for the natural equality of men; and by the Church herself was nurtured
a spirit that, when her early work of association and emancipation
was well-nigh done -- when the ties she had knit had become strong,
and the learning she had preserved had been given to the world --
broke the chains with which she would have fettered the human mind,
and in a great part of Europe rent her organization.
[43] The rise and growth
of European civilization is too vast and complex a subject to be thrown
into proper perspective and relation in a few paragraphs; but in all
its details, as in its main features, it illustrates the truth that
progress goes on just as society tends toward closer association and
greater equality. Civilization is co-operation. Union and liberty
are its factors. The great extension of association -- not alone in
the growth of larger and denser communities, but in the increase of
commerce and the manifold exchanges which knit each community together
and link them with other though widely separated communities; the
growth of international and municipal law; the advances in security
of property and of person, in individual liberty, and towards democratic
government -- advances, in short, towards the recognition of the equal
rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness -- it is these
that make our modern civilization so much greater, so much higher,
than any that has gone before. It is these that have set free the
mental power which has rolled back the veil of ignorance which hid
all but a small portion of the globe from men's knowledge; which has
measured the orbits of the circling spheres and bids us see moving,
pulsing life in a drop of water; which has opened to us the antechamber
of nature's mysteries and read the secrets of a long-buried past;
which has harnessed in our service physical forces beside which man's
efforts are puny; and increased productive power by a thousand great
inventions.
[44] In that spirit
of fatalism to which I have alluded as pervading current literature,
it is the fashion to speak even of war and slavery as means of human
progress. But war, which is the opposite of association, can aid progress
only when it prevents further war or breaks down antisocial barriers
which are themselves passive war.
[45] As for slavery,
I cannot see how it could ever have aided in establishing freedom,
and freedom, the synonym of equality, is, from the very rudest state
in which man can he imagined, the stimulus and condition of progress.
Auguste Comte's idea that the institution of slavery destroyed cannibalism
is as fanciful as Elia's humorous notion of the way mankind acquired
a taste for roast pig. It assumes that a propensity that has never
been found developed in man save as the result of the most unnatural
conditions -- the direst want or the most brutalizing superstitions2
-- is an original impulse, and that he, even in his lowest state the
highest of all animals, has natural appetites which the nobler brutes
do not show. And so of the idea that slavery began civilization by
giving slaveowners leisure for improvement.
[46] Slavery never did
and never could aid improvement. Whether the community consist of
a single master and a single slave, or of thousands of masters and
millions of slaves, slavery necessarily involves a waste of human
power; for not only is slave labor less productive than free labor,
but the power of masters is likewise wasted in holding and watching
their slaves, and is called away from directions in which real improvement
lies. From first to last, slavery, like every other denial of the
natural equality of men, has hampered and prevented progress. Just
in proportion as slavery plays an important part in the social organization
does improvement cease. That in the classical world slavery was so
universal, is undoubtedly the reason why the mental activity which
so polished literature and refined art never hit on any of the great
discoveries and inventions which distinguish modem civilization. No
slaveholding people ever were an inventive people. In a slaveholding
community the upper classes may become luxurious and polished; but
never inventive. Whatever degrades the laborer and robs him of the
fruits of his toil stifles the spirit of invention and forbids the
utilization of inventions and discoveries even when made. To freedom
alone is given the spell of power which summons the genii in whose
keeping are the treasures of earth and the viewless forces of the
air.
[47] The law of human
progress, what is it but the moral law? Just as social adjustments
promote justice, just as they acknowledge the equality of right between
man and man, just as they insure to each the perfect liberty which
is bounded only by the equal liberty of every other, must civilization
advance. just as they fail in this, must advancing civilization come
to a halt and recede. Political economy and social science cannot
teach any lessons that are not embraced in the simple truths that
were taught to poor fishermen and Jewish peasants by One who eighteen
hundred years ago was crucified -- the simple truths which, beneath
the warpings of selfishness and the distortions of superstition, seem
to underlie every religion that has ever striven to formulate the
spiritual yearnings of man.
Footnotes:
1 How easy
it is for ignorance to pass into contempt and dislike; how natural
it is for us to consider any difference in manners, customs, religion,
etc., as proof of the inferiority of those who differ from us, any
one who has emancipated himself in any degree from prejudice, and
who mixes with different classes, may see in civilized society.
In religion, for instance, the spirit of the hymn
"I'd rather be a Baptist, and wear a shining face,
Than for to be a Methodist and always fall from grace," is observable
in all denominations. As the English Bishop said, "Orthodoxy is
my doxy, and heterodoxy is any other doxy," while the universal
tendency is to classify all outside of the orthodoxies and heterodoxies
of the prevailing religion as heathens or atheists. And the like
tendency is observable as to all other differences.
2 The Sandwich
Islanders did honor to their good chiefs by eating their bodies.
Their bad and tyrannical chiefs they would not touch. The New Zealanders
had a notion that by eating their enemies they acquired their strength
and valor. And this seems to be the general origin of eating prisoners
of war.
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