“EQUALITY”
By Charles Dudley Warner
In accordance with the advice of Diogenes
of Apollonia in the beginning of his treatise on Natural
Philosophy “It appears to me to be
well for every one who commences any sort of philosophical
treatise to lay down some undeniable principle to
start with” we offer this:
All
men are created unequal.
It would be a most interesting study
to trace the growth in the world of the doctrine of
“equality.” That is not the purpose
of this essay, any further than is necessary for definition.
We use the term in its popular sense, in the meaning,
somewhat vague, it is true, which it has had since
the middle of the eighteenth century. In the popular
apprehension it is apt to be confounded with uniformity;
and this not without reason, since in many applications
of the theory the tendency is to produce likeness or
uniformity. Nature, with equal laws, tends always
to diversity; and doubtless the just notion of equality
in human affairs consists with unlikeness. Our
purpose is to note some of the tendencies of the dogma
as it is at present understood by a considerable portion
of mankind.
We regard the formulated doctrine
as modern. It would be too much to say that some
notion of the “equality of men” did not
underlie the socialistic and communistic ideas which
prevailed from time to time in the ancient world,
and broke out with volcanic violence in the Grecian
and Roman communities. But those popular movements
seem to us rather blind struggles against physical
evils, and to be distinguished from those more intelligent
actions based upon the theory which began to stir
Europe prior to the Reformation.
It is sufficient for our purpose to
take the well-defined theory of modern times.
Whether the ideal republic of Plato was merely a convenient
form for philosophical speculation, or whether, as
the greatest authority on political economy in Germany,
Dr. William Roscher, thinks, it “was no mere
fancy”; whether Plato’s notion of the identity
of man and the State is compatible with the theory
of equality, or whether it is, as many communists
say, indispensable to it, we need not here discuss.
It is true that in his Republic almost all the social
theories which have been deduced from the modern proclamation
of equality are elaborated. There was to be a
community of property, and also a community of wives
and children. The equality of the sexes was insisted
on to the extent of living in common, identical education
and pursuits, equal share in all labors, in occupations,
and in government. Between the sexes there was
allowed only one ultimate difference. The Greeks,
as Professor Jowett says, had noble conceptions of
womanhood; but Plato’s ideal for the sexes had
no counterpart in their actual life, nor could they
have understood the sort of equality upon which he
insisted. The same is true of the Romans throughout
their history.
More than any other Oriental peoples
the Egyptians of the Ancient Empire entertained the
idea of the equality of the sexes; but the equality
of man was not conceived by them. Still less
did any notion of it exist in the Jewish state.
It was the fashion with the socialists of 1793, as
it has been with the international assemblages at
Geneva in our own day, to trace the genesis of their
notions back to the first Christian age. The
far-reaching influence of the new gospel in the liberation
of the human mind and in promoting just and divinely-ordered
relations among men is admitted; its origination of
the social and political dogma we are considering
is denied. We do not find that Christ himself
anywhere expressed it or acted on it. He associated
with the lowly, the vile, the outcast; he taught that
all men, irrespective of rank or possessions, are
sinners, and in equal need of help. But he attempted
no change in the conditions of society. The “communism”
of the early Christians was the temporary relation
of a persecuted and isolated sect, drawn together by
common necessities and dangers, and by the new enthusiasm
of self-surrender. ["The community of goods of the
first Christians at Jerusalem, so frequently cited
and extolled, was only a community of use, not of
ownership (Acts i, and throughout a voluntary
act of love, not a duty ; least of all, a right
which the poorer might assert. Spite of all this,
that community of goods produced a chronic state of
poverty in the church of Jerusalem.” (Principles
of Political Economy. By William Roscher.
Note to Section LXXXI. English translation.
New York: Henry Holt & C.)] Paul
announced the universal brotherhood of man, but he
as clearly recognized the subordination of society,
in the duties of ruler and subject, master and slave,
and in all the domestic relations; and although his
gospel may be interpreted to contain the elements
of revolution, it is not probable that he undertook
to inculcate, by the proclamation of “universal
brotherhood,” anything more than the duty of
universal sympathy between all peoples and classes
as society then existed.
If Christianity has been and is the
force in promoting and shaping civilization that we
regard it, we may be sure that it is not as a political
agent, or an annuller of the inequalities of life,
that we are to expect aid from it. Its office,
or rather one of its chief offices on earth, is to
diffuse through the world, regardless of condition
or possessions or talent or opportunity, sympathy
and a recognition of the value of manhood underlying
every lot and every diversity a value not
measured by earthly accidents, but by heavenly standards.
This we understand to be “Christian equality.”
Of course it consists with inequalities of condition,
with subordination, discipline, obedience; to obey
and serve is as honorable as to command and to be served.
If the religion of Christ should ever
be acclimated on earth, the result would not be the
removal of hardships and suffering, or of the necessity
of self-sacrifice; but the bitterness and discontent
at unequal conditions would measurably disappear.
At the bar of Christianity the poor man is the equal
of the rich, and the learned of the unlearned, since
intellectual acquisition is no guarantee of moral worth.
The content that Christianity would bring to our perturbed
society would come from the practical recognition
of the truth that all conditions may be equally honorable.
The assertion of the dignity of man and of labor is,
we imagine, the sum and substance of the equality and
communism of the New Testament. But we are to
remember that this is not merely a “gospel for
the poor.”
Whatever the theories of the ancient
world were, the development of democratic ideas is
sufficiently marked in the fifteenth century, and
even in the fourteenth, to rob the eighteenth of the
credit of originating the doctrine of equality.
To mention only one of the early writers, [For
copious references to authorities on the spread of
communistic and socialistic ideas and libertine community
of goods and women in four periods of the world’s
history namely, at the time of the decline
of Greece, in the degeneration of the Roman republic,
among the moderns in the age of the Reformation, and
again in our own day see Roscher’s Political Economy, notes to Section
LXXIX., et seq.] Marsilio, a physician of Padua, in
1324, said that the laws ought to be made by all the
citizens; and he based this sovereignty of the people
upon the greater likelihood of laws being better obeyed,
and also being good laws, when they were made by the
whole body of the persons affected.
In 1750 and 1753, J. J. Rousseau published
his two discourses on questions proposed by the Academy
of Dijon: “Has the Restoration of Sciences
Contributed to Purify or to Corrupt Manners?”
and “What is the Origin of Inequality among
Men, and is it Authorized by Natural Law?” These
questions show the direction and the advance of thinking
on social topics in the middle of the eighteenth century.
Rousseau’s Contrat-Social and the novel
Emile were published in 1761.
But almost three-quarters of a century
before, in 1690, John Locke published his two treatises
on government. Rousseau was familiar with them.
Mr. John Morley, in his admirable study of Rousseau,
[Rousseau. By John Morley. London:
Chapman & Hal I have used it freely
in the glance at this period.] fully discusses
the latter’s obligation to Locke; and the exposition
leaves Rousseau little credit for originality, but
considerable for illogical misconception. He was,
in fact, the most illogical of great men, and the
most inconsistent even of geniuses. The Contrat-Social
is a reaction in many things from the discourses, and
Emile is almost an entire reaction, especially in the
theory of education, from both.
His central doctrine of popular sovereignty
was taken from Locke. The English philosopher
said, in his second treatise, “To understand
political power aright and derive it from its original,
we must consider what state all men are naturally
in; and that is a state of perfect freedom to order
their actions and dispose of their persons and possessions
as they think fit, within the bounds of the law of
nature, without asking leave or depending upon the
will of any other man a state also of equality,
wherein all the power and jurisdiction is reciprocal,
no one having more than another; there being nothing
more evident than that creatures of the same species
and rank, promiscuously born to all the advantages
of nature and the use of the same faculties, should
also be equal one amongst another, without subordination
or subjection, unless the Lord and Master of them
all should by any manifest declaration of His will
set one above another, and confer on him by an evident
and clear appointment an undoubted right to dominion
and sovereignty.” But a state of liberty
is not a state of license. We cannot exceed our
own rights without assailing the rights of others.
There is no such subordination as authorizes us to
destroy one another. As every one is bound to
preserve himself, so he is bound to preserve the rest
of mankind, and except to do justice upon an offender
we may not impair the life, liberty, health, or goods
of another. Here Locke deduces the power that
one man may have over another; community could not
exist if transgressors were not punished. Every
wrongdoer places himself in “a state of war.”
Here is the difference between the state of nature
and the state of war, which men, says Locke, have
confounded alluding probably to Hobbes’s
notion of the lawlessness of human society in the
original condition.
The portion of Locke’s treatise
which was not accepted by the French theorists was
that relating to property. Property in lands or
goods is due wholly and only to the labor man has
put into it. By labor he has removed it from
the common state in which nature has placed it, and
annexed something to it that excludes the common rights
of other men.
Rousseau borrowed from Hobbes as well
as from Locke in his conception of popular sovereignty;
but this was not his only lack of originality.
His discourse on primitive society, his unscientific
and unhistoric notions about the original condition
of man, were those common in the middle of the eighteenth
century. All the thinkers and philosophers and
fine ladies and gentlemen assumed a certain state
of nature, and built upon it, out of words and phrases,
an airy and easy reconstruction of society, without
a thought of investigating the past, or inquiring into
the development of mankind. Every one talked
of “the state of nature” as if he knew
all about it. “The conditions of primitive
man,” says Mr. Morley, “were discussed
by very incompetent ladies and gentlemen at convivial
supper-parties, and settled with complete assurance.”
That was the age when solitary Frenchmen plunged into
the wilderness of North America, confidently expecting
to recover the golden age under the shelter of a wigwam
and in the society of a squaw.
The state of nature of Rousseau was
a state in which inequality did not exist, and with
a fervid rhetoric he tried to persuade his readers
that it was the happier state. He recognized
inequality, it is true, as a word of two different
meanings: first, physical inequality, difference
of age, strength, health, and of intelligence and
character; second, moral and political inequality,
difference of privileges which some enjoy to the detriment
of others-such as riches, honor, power. The first
difference is established by nature, the second by
man. So long, however, as the state of nature
endures, no disadvantages flow from the natural inequalities.
In Rousseau’s account of the
means by which equality was lost, the incoming of
the ideas of property is prominent. From property
arose civil society. With property came in inequality.
His exposition of inequality is confused, and it is
not possible always to tell whether he means inequality
of possessions or of political rights. His contemporary,
Morelly, who published the Basileade in 1753, was troubled
by no such ambiguity. He accepts the doctrine
that men are formed by laws, but holds that they are
by nature good, and that laws, by establishing a division
of the products of nature, broke up the sociability
of men, and that all political and moral evils are
the result of private property. Political inequality
is an accident of inequality of possessions, and the
renovation of the latter lies in the abolition of the
former.
The opening sentence of the Contrat-Social
is, “Man is born free, and everywhere he is
a slave,” a statement which it is difficult to
reconcile with the fact that every human being is
born helpless, dependent, and into conditions of subjection,
conditions that we have no reason to suppose were
ever absent from the race. But Rousseau never
said, “All men are born equal.” He
recognized, as we have seen, natural inequality.
What he held was that the artificial differences springing
from the social union were disproportionate to the
capacities springing from the original constitution;
and that society, as now organized, tends to make the
gulf wider between those who have privileges and those
who have none.
The well-known theory upon which Rousseau’s
superstructure rests is that society is the result
of a compact, a partnership between men. They
have not made an agreement to submit their individual
sovereignty to some superior power, but they have
made a covenant of brotherhood. It is a contract
of association. Men were, and ought to be, equal
cooperators, not only in politics, but in industries
and all the affairs of life. All the citizens
are participants in the sovereign authority. Their
sovereignty is inalienable; power may be transmitted,
but not will; if the people promise to obey, it dissolves
itself by the very act if there is a master,
there is no longer a people. Sovereignty is also
indivisible; it cannot be split up into legislative,
judiciary, and executive power.
Society being the result of a compact
made by men, it followed that the partners could at
any time remake it, their sovereignty being inalienable.
And this the French socialists, misled by a priori
notions, attempted to do, on the theory of the Contrat-Social,
as if they had a tabula rasa, without regarding the
existing constituents of society, or traditions, or
historical growths.
Equality, as a phrase, having done
duty as a dissolvent, was pressed into service as
a constructor. As this is not so much an essay
on the nature of equality is an attempt to indicate
some of the modern tendencies to carry out what is
illusory in the dogma, perhaps enough has been said
of this period. Mr. Morley very well remarks
that the doctrine of equality as a demand for a fair
chance in the world is unanswerable; but that it is
false when it puts him who uses his chance well on
the same level with him who uses it ill. There
is no doubt that when Condorcet said, “Not only
equality of right, but equality of fact, is the goal
of the social art,” he uttered the sentiments
of the socialists of the Revolution.
The next authoritative announcement
of equality, to which it is necessary to refer, is
in the American Declaration of Independence, in these
words: “We hold these truths to be self-evident:
that all men are created equal; that they are endowed
by their Creator with certain unalienable rights;
that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit
of happiness; that to secure these rights governments
are instituted among men, deriving their just power
from the consent of the governed.” And the
Declaration goes on, in temperate and guarded language,
to assert the right of a people to change their form
of government when it becomes destructive of the ends
named.
Although the genesis of these sentiments
seems to be French rather than English, and equality
is not defined, and critics have differed as to whether
the equality clause is independent or qualified by
what follows, it is not necessary to suppose that
Thomas Jefferson meant anything inconsistent with
the admitted facts of nature and of history. It
is important to bear in mind that the statesmen of
our Revolution were inaugurating a political and not
a social revolution, and that the gravamen of their
protest was against the authority of a distant crown.
Nevertheless, these dogmas, independent of the circumstances
in which they were uttered, have exercised and do
exercise a very powerful influence upon the thinking
of mankind on social and political topics, and are
being applied without limitations, and without recognition
of the fact that if they are true, in the sense meant
by their originators, they are not the whole truth.
It is to be noticed that rights are mentioned, but
not duties, and that if political rights only are meant,
political duties are not inculcated as of equal moment.
It is not announced that political power is a function
to be discharged for the good of the whole body, and
not a mere right to be enjoyed for the advantage of
the possessor; and it is to be noted also that this
idea did not enter into the conception of Rousseau.
The dogma that “government derives
its just power from the consent of the governed”
is entirely consonant with the book theories of the
eighteenth century, and needs to be confronted, and
practically is confronted, with the equally good dogma
that “governments derive their just power from
conformity with the principles of justice.”
We are not to imagine, for instance, that the framers
of the Declaration really contemplated the exclusion
from political organization of all higher law than
that in the “consent of the governed,”
or the application of the theory, let us say, to a
colony composed for the most part of outcasts, murderers,
thieves, and prostitutes, or to such states as today
exist in the Orient. The Declaration was framed
for a highly intelligent and virtuous society.
Many writers, and some of them English,
have expressed curiosity, if not wonder, at the different
fortunes which attended the doctrine of equality in
America and in France. The explanation is on the
surface, and need not be sought in the fact of a difference
of social and political level in the two countries
at the start, nor even in the further fact that the
colonies were already accustomed to self-government.
The simple truth is that the dogmas
of the Declaration were not put into the fundamental
law. The Constitution is the most practical state
document ever made. It announces no dogmas, proclaims
no theories. It accepted society as it was, with
its habits and traditions; raising no abstract questions
whether men are born free or equal, or how society
ought to be organized. It is simply a working
compact, made by “the people,” to promote
union, establish justice, and secure the blessings
of liberty; and the equality is in the assumption
of the right of “the people of the United States”
to do this. And yet, in a recent number of Blackwood’s
Magazine, a writer makes the amusing statement, “I
have never met an American who could deny that, while
firmly maintaining that the theory was sound which,
in the beautiful language of the Constitution, proclaims
that all men were born equal, he was,” etc.
An enlightening commentary on the
meaning of the Declaration, in the minds of the American
statesmen of the period, is furnished by the opinions
which some of them expressed upon the French Revolution
while it was in progress. Gouverneur Morris,
minister to France in 1789, was a conservative republican;
Thomas Jefferson was a radical democrat. Both
of them had a warm sympathy with the French “people”
in the Revolution; both hoped for a republic; both
recognized, we may reasonably infer, the sufficient
cause of the Revolution in the long-continued corruption
of court and nobility, and the intolerable sufferings
of the lower orders; and both, we have equal reason
to believe, thought that a fair accommodation, short
of a dissolution of society, was defeated by the imbecility
of the king and the treachery and malignity of a considerable
portion of the nobility. The Revolution was not
caused by theories, however much it may have been
excited or guided by them. But both Morris and
Jefferson saw the futility of the application of the
abstract dogma of equality and the theories of the
Social Contract to the reconstruction of government
and the reorganization of society in France.
If the aristocracy were malignant though
numbers of them were far from being so there
was also a malignant prejudice aroused against them,
and M. Taine is not far wrong when he says of this
prejudice, “Its hard, dry kernel consists of
the abstract idea of equality.” [The
French Revolution. By H. A. Taine. Vol. i., bk. ii., chap. ii., sec. iii. Translation.
New York: Henry Holt & Co.] Taine’s
French Revolution is cynical, and, with all its accumulation
of material, omits some facts necessary to a philosophical
history; but a passage following that quoted is worth
reproducing in this connection: “The treatment
of the nobles of the Assembly is the same as the treatment
of the Protestants by Louis XIV. . . . One hundred
thousand Frenchmen driven out at the end of the seventeenth
century, and one hundred thousand driven out at the
end of the eighteenth! Mark how an intolerant
democracy completes the work of an intolerant monarchy!
The moral aristocracy was mowed down in the name of
uniformity; the social aristocracy is mowed down in
the name of equality. For the second time an
abstract principle, and with the same effect, buries
its blade in the heart of a living society.”
Notwithstanding the world-wide advertisement
of the French experiment, it has taken almost a century
for the dogma of equality, at least outside of France,
to filter down from the speculative thinkers into a
general popular acceptance, as an active principle
to be used in the shaping of affairs, and to become
more potent in the popular mind than tradition or
habit. The attempt is made to apply it to society
with a brutal logic; and we might despair as to the
result, if we did not know that the world is not ruled
by logic. Nothing is so fascinating in the hands
of the half-informed as a neat dogma; it seems the
perfect key to all difficulties. The formula
is applied in contempt and ignorance of the past,
as if building up were as easy as pulling down, and
as if society were a machine to be moved by mechanical
appliances, and not a living organism composed of
distinct and sensitive beings. Along with the
spread of a belief in the uniformity of natural law
has unfortunately gone a suggestion of parallelism
of the moral law to it, and a notion that if we can
discover the right formula, human society and government
can be organized with a mathematical justice to all
the parts. By many the dogma of equality is held
to be that formula, and relief from the greater evils
of the social state is expected from its logical extension.
Let us now consider some of the present
movements and tendencies that are related, more or
less, to this belief:
I. Absolute equality is seen to depend
upon absolute supremacy of the state. Professor
Henry Fawcett says, “Excessive dependence on
the state is the most prominent characteristic of
modern socialism.” “These proposals
to prohibit inheritance, to abolish private property,
and to make the state the owner of all the capital
and the administrator of the entire industry of the
country are put forward as representing socialism
in its ultimate and highest development.” ["Socialism
in Germany and the United States,” Fortnightly
Review, November, 1878.]
Society and government should be recast
till they conform to the theory, or, let us say, to
its exaggerations. Men can unmake what they have
made. There is no higher authority anywhere than
the will of the majority, no matter what the majority
is in intellect and morals. Fifty-one ignorant
men have a natural right to legislate for the one hundred,
as against forty-nine intelligent men.
All men being equal, one man is as
fit to legislate and execute as another. A recently
elected Congressman from Maine vehemently repudiated
in a public address, as a slander, the accusation that
he was educated. The theory was that, uneducated,
he was the proper representative of the average ignorance
of his district, and that ignorance ought to be represented
in the legislature in kind. The ignorant know
better what they want than the educated know for them.
“Their education [that of college men] destroys
natural perception and judgment; so that cultivated
people are one-sided, and their judgment is often inferior
to that of the working people.” “Cultured
people have made up their minds, and are hard to move.”
“No lawyer should be elected to a place in any
legislative body.” [Opinions of working-men,
reported in “The Nationals, their Origin and
their Aims,” The Atlantic Monthly, November,
1878.]
Experience is of no account, neither
is history, nor tradition, nor the accumulated wisdom
of ages. On all questions of political economy,
finance, morals, the ignorant man stands on a par with
the best informed as a legislator. We might cite
any number of the results of these illusions.
A member of a recent House of Representatives declared
that we “can repair the losses of the war by
the issue of a sufficient amount of paper money.”
An intelligent mechanic of our acquaintance, a leader
among the Nationals, urging the theory of his party,
that banks should be destroyed, and that the government
should issue to the people as much “paper money”
as they need, denied the right of banks or of any
individuals to charge interest on money. Yet he
would take rent for the house he owns.
Laws must be the direct expression
of the will of the majority, and be altered solely
on its will. It would be well, therefore, to have
a continuous election, so that, any day, the electors
can change their representative for a new man.
“If my caprice be the source of law, then my
enjoyment may be the source of the division of the
nation’s resources.” [Stahl’s Rechtsphilosophie, quoted by Roscher.]
Property is the creator of inequality,
and this factor in our artificial state can be eliminated
only by absorption. It is the duty of the government
to provide for all the people, and the sovereign people
will see to it that it does. The election franchise
is a natural right a man’s weapon
to protect himself. It may be asked, If it is
just this, and not a sacred trust accorded to be exercised
for the benefit of society, why may not a man sell
it, if it is for his interest to do so?
What is there illogical in these positions
from the premise given? “Communism,”
says Roscher, [Political Economy, bk. i., ch.
v., 78.] “is the logically not inconsistent
exaggeration of the principle of equality. Men
who hear themselves designated as the sovereign people,
and their welfare as the supreme law of the state,
are more apt than others to feel more keenly the distance
which separates their own misery from the superabundance
of others. And, indeed, to what an extent our
physical wants are determined by our intellectual
mold!”
The tendency of the exaggeration of
man’s will as the foundation of government is
distinctly materialistic; it is a self-sufficiency
that shuts out God and the higher law. ["And,
indeed, if the will of man is all-powerful, if states
are to be distinguished from one another only by their
boundaries, if everything may be changed like the scenery
in a play by a flourish of the magic wand of a system,
if man may arbitrarily make the right, if nations
can be put through evolutions like regiments of troops,
what a field would the world present for attempts at
the realizations of the wildest dreams, and what a
temptation would be offered to take possession, by
main force, of the government of human affairs, to
destroy the rights of property and the rights of capital,
to gratify ardent longings without trouble, and to
provide the much-coveted means of enjoyment!
The Titans have tried to scale the heavens, and have
fallen into the most degrading materialism. Purely
speculative dogmatism sinks into materialism.”
(M. Wolowski’s Essay on the Historical Method,
prefixed to his translation of Roscher’s Political
Economy.)] We need to remember that the
Creator of man, and not man himself, formed society
and instituted government; that God is always behind
human society and sustains it; that marriage and the
family and all social relations are divinely established;
that man’s duty, coinciding with his right, is,
by the light of history, by experience, by observation
of men, and by the aid of revelation, to find out
and make operative, as well as he can, the divine
law in human affairs. And it may be added that
the sovereignty of the people, as a divine trust,
may be as logically deduced from the divine institution
of government as the old divine right of kings.
Government, by whatever name it is called, is a matter
of experience and expediency. If we submit to
the will of the majority, it is because it is more
convenient to do so; and if the republic or the democracy
vindicate itself, it is because it works best, on
the whole, for a particular people. But it needs
no prophet to say that it will not work long if God
is shut out from it, and man, in a full-blown socialism,
is considered the ultimate authority.
II. Equality of education.
In our American system there is, not only theoretically
but practically, an equality of opportunity in the
public schools, which are free to all children, and
rise by gradations from the primaries to the high-schools,
in which the curriculum in most respects equals, and
in variety exceeds, that of many third-class “colleges.”
In these schools nearly the whole round of learning,
in languages, science, and art, is touched. The
system has seemed to be the best that could be devised
for a free society, where all take part in the government,
and where so much depends upon the intelligence of
the electors. Certain objections, however, have
been made to it. As this essay is intended only
to be tentative, we shall state some of them, without
indulging in lengthy comments.
( 1. ) The first charge is superficiality a
necessary consequence of attempting too much and
a want of adequate preparation for special pursuits
in life.
( 2. ) A uniformity in mediocrity
is alleged from the use of the same text-books and
methods in all schools, for all grades and capacities.
This is one of the most common criticisms on our social
state by a certain class of writers in England, who
take an unflagging interest in our development.
One answer to it is this: There is more reason
to expect variety of development and character in
a generally educated than in an ignorant community;
there is no such uniformity as the dull level of ignorance.
( 3. ) It is said that secular education and
the general schools open to all in a community of
mixed religions must be secular is training
the rising generation to be materialists and socialists.
( 4. ) Perhaps a better-founded charge
is that a system of equal education, with its superficiality,
creates discontent with the condition in which a majority
of men must be that of labor a
distaste for trades and for hand-work, an idea that
what is called intellectual labor (let us say, casting
up accounts in a shop, or writing trashy stories for
a sensational newspaper) is more honorable than physical
labor; and encourages the false notion that “the
elevation of the working classes” implies the
removal of men and women from those classes.
We should hesitate to draw adverse
conclusions in regard to a system yet so young that
its results cannot be fairly estimated. Only after
two or three generations can its effects upon the
character of a great people be measured: Observations
differ, and testimony is difficult to obtain.
We think it safe to say that those states are most
prosperous which have the best free schools.
But if the philosopher inquires as to the general
effect upon the national character in respect to the
objections named, he must wait for a reply.
III. The pursuit of the chimera
of social equality, from the belief that it should
logically follow political equality; resulting in extravagance,
misapplication of natural capacities, a notion that
physical labor is dishonorable, or that the state
should compel all to labor alike, and in efforts to
remove inequalities of condition by legislation.
IV. The equality of the sexes.
The stir in the middle of the eighteenth century gave
a great impetus to the emancipation of woman; though,
curiously enough, Rousseau, in unfolding his plan of
education for Sophie, in Emile, inculcates an almost
Oriental subjection of woman her education
simply that she may please man. The true enfranchisement
of woman that is, the recognition (by herself
as well as by man) of her real place in the economy
of the world, in the full development of her capacities is
the greatest gain to civilization since the Christian
era. The movement has its excesses, and the gain
has not been without loss. “When we turn
to modern literature,” writes Mr. Money, “from
the pages in which Fenelon speaks of the education
of girls, who does not feel that the world has lost
a sacred accent that some ineffable essence
has passed out from our hearts?”
How far the expectation has been realized
that women, in fiction, for instance, would be more
accurately described, better understood, and appear
as nobler and lovelier beings when women wrote the
novels, this is not the place to inquire. The
movement has results which are unavoidable in a period
of transition, and probably only temporary. The
education of woman and the development of her powers
hold the greatest promise for the regeneration of
society. But this development, yet in its infancy,
and pursued with much crudeness and misconception
of the end, is not enough. Woman would not only
be equal with man, but would be like him; that is,
perform in society the functions he now performs.
Here, again, the notion of equality is pushed towards
uniformity. The reformers admit structural differences
in the sexes, though these, they say, are greatly exaggerated
by subjection; but the functional differences are mainly
to be eliminated. Women ought to mingle in all
the occupations of men, as if the physical differences
did not exist. The movement goes to obliterate,
as far as possible, the distinction between sexes.
Nature is, no doubt, amused at this attempt.
A recent writer ["Biology and Woman’s
Rights,” Quarterly Journal of Science, November,
1878.] , says: “The ’femme
libre’ [free woman] of the new social order
may, indeed, escape the charge of neglecting her family
and her household by contending that it is not her
vocation to become a wife and a mother! Why, then,
we ask, is she constituted a woman at all? Merely
that she may become a sort of second-rate man?”
The truth is that this movement, based
always upon a misconception of equality, so far as
it would change the duties of the sexes, is a retrograde. ["It
has been frequently observed that among declining
nations the social differences between the two sexes
are first obliterated, and afterwards even the intellectual
differences. The more masculine the women become,
the more effeminate become the men. It is no
good symptom when there are almost as many female writers
and female rulers as there are male. Such was
the case, for instance, in the Hellenistic kingdoms,
and in the age of the Caesars. What today is called
by many the emancipation of woman would ultimately
end in the dissolution of the family, and, if carried
out, render poor service to the majority of women.
If man and woman were placed entirely on the same level,
and if in the competition between the two sexes nothing
but an actual superiority should decide, it is to
be feared that woman would soon be relegated to a
condition as hard as that in which she is found among
all barbarous nations. It is precisely family
life and higher civilization that have emancipated
woman. Those theorizers who, led astray by the
dark side of higher civilization, preach a community
of goods, generally contemplate in their simultaneous
recommendation of the emancipation of woman a more
or less developed form of a community of wives.
The grounds of the two institutions are very similar.”
(Roscher’s Political Economy, .) Note
also that difference in costumes of the sexes is least
apparent among lowly civilized peoples.] One
of the most striking features in our progress from
barbarism to civilization is the proper adjustment
of the work for men and women. One test of a civilization
is the difference of this work. This is a question
not merely of division of labor, but of differentiation
with regard to sex. It not only takes into account
structural differences and physiological disadvantages,
but it recognizes the finer and higher use of woman
in society.
The attainable, not to say the ideal,
society requires an increase rather than a decrease
of the differences between the sexes. The differences
may be due to physical organization, but the structural
divergence is but a faint type of deeper separation
in mental and spiritual constitution. That which
makes the charm and power of woman, that for which
she is created, is as distinctly feminine as that
which makes the charm and power of men is masculine.
Progress requires constant differentiation, and the
line of this is the development of each sex in its
special functions, each being true to the highest
ideal for itself, which is not that the woman should
be a man, or the man a woman. The enjoyment of
social life rests very largely upon the encounter and
play of the subtle peculiarities which mark the two
sexes; and society, in the limited sense of the word,
not less than the whole structure of our civilization,
requires the development of these peculiarities.
It is in diversity, and not in an equality tending
to uniformity, that we are to expect the best results
from the race.
V. Equality of races; or rather a
removal of the inequalities, social and political,
arising in the contact of different races by intermarriage.
Perhaps equality is hardly the word
to use here, since uniformity is the thing aimed at;
but the root of the proposal is in the dogma we are
considering. The tendency of the age is to uniformity.
The facilities of travel and communication, the new
inventions and the use of machinery in manufacturing,
bring men into close and uniform relations, and induce
the disappearance of national characteristics and
of race peculiarities. Men, the world over, are
getting to dress alike, eat alike, and disbelieve in
the same things: It is the sentimental complaint
of the traveler that his search for the picturesque
is ever more difficult, that race distinctions and
habits are in a way to be improved off the face of
the earth, and that a most uninteresting monotony
is supervening. The complaint is not wholly sentimental,
and has a deeper philosophical reason than the mere
pleasure in variety on this planet.
We find a striking illustration of
the equalizing, not to say leveling, tendency of the
age in an able paper by Canon George Rawlinson, of
the University of Oxford, contributed recently to
an American periodical of a high class and conservative
character. ["Duties of Higher towards Lower
Races.” By George Rawlinson. Princeton
Re-view. November, 1878. New York.] This
paper proposes, as a remedy for the social and political
evils caused by the negro element in our population,
the miscegenation of the white and black races, to
the end that the black race may be wholly absorbed
in the white an absorption of four millions
by thirty-six millions, which he thinks might reasonably
be expected in about a century, when the lower type
would disappear altogether.
Perhaps the pleasure of being absorbed
is not equal to the pleasure of absorbing, and we
cannot say how this proposal will commend itself to
the victims of the euthanasia. The results of
miscegenation on this continent black with
red, and white with black the results morally,
intellectually, and physically, are not such as to
make it attractive to the American people.
It is not, however, upon sentimental
grounds that we oppose this extension of the exaggerated
dogma of equality. Our objection is deeper.
Race distinctions ought to be maintained for the sake
of the best development of the race, and for the continuance
of that mutual reaction and play of peculiar forces
between races which promise the highest development
for the whole. It is not for nothing, we may suppose,
that differentiation has gone on in the world; and
we doubt that either benevolence or self-interest
requires this age to attempt to restore an assumed
lost uniformity, and fuse the race traits in a tiresome
homogeneity.
Life consists in an exchange of relations,
and the more varied the relations interchanged the
higher the life. We want not only different races,
but different civilizations in different parts of the
globe.
A much more philosophical view of
the African problem and the proper destiny of the
negro race than that of Canon Rawlinson is given by
a recent colored writer, ["Africa and the
Africans.” By Edmund W. Blyden. Eraser’s
Magazine, August, 1878.] an official in
the government of Liberia. We are mistaken, says
this excellent observer, in regarding Africa as a
land of a homogeneous population, and in confounding
the tribes in a promiscuous manner. There are
negroes and negroes. “The numerous tribes
inhabiting the vast continent of Africa can no more
be regarded as in every respect equal than the numerous
peoples of Asia or Europe can be so regarded;”
and we are not to expect the civilization of Africa
to be under one government, but in a great variety
of States, developed according to tribal and race
affinities. A still greater mistake is this:
“The mistake which Europeans
often make in considering questions of negro improvement
and the future of Africa is in supposing that the negro
is the European in embryo, in the undeveloped stage,
and that when, by-and-by, he shall enjoy the advantages
of civilization and culture, he will become like the
European; in other words, that the negro is on the
same line of progress, in the same groove, with the
European, but infinitely in the rear . . . .
This view proceeds upon the assumption that the two
races are called to the same work, and are alike in
potentiality and ultimate development, the negro only
needing the element of time, under certain circumstances,
to become European. But to our mind it is not
a question between the two races of inferiority or
superiority. There is no absolute or essential
superiority on the one side, or absolute or essential
inferiority on the other side. It is a question
of difference of endowment and difference of destiny.
No amount of training or culture will make the negro
a European. On the other hand, no lack of training
or deficiency of culture will make the European a negro.
The two races are not moving in the same groove, with
an immeasurable distance between them, but on parallel
lines. They will never meet in the plane of their
activities so as to coincide in capacity or performance.
They are not identical, as some think, but unequal;
they are distinct, but equal an idea that
is in no way incompatible with the Scripture truth
that God hath made of one blood all nations of men.”
The writer goes on, in a strain that
is not mere fancy, but that involves one of the truths
of inequality, to say that each race is endowed with
peculiar talents; that the negro has aptitudes and
capacities which the world needs, and will lack until
he is normally trained. In the grand symphony
of the universe, “there are several sounds not
yet brought out, and the feeblest of all is that hitherto
produced by the negro; but he alone can furnish it.” “When
the African shall come forward with his peculiar gifts,
they will fill a place never before occupied.”
In short, the African must be civilized in the line
of his capacities. “The present practice
of the friends of Africa is to frame laws according
to their own notions for the government and improvement
of this people, whereas God has already enacted the
laws for the government of their affairs, which laws
should be carefully ascertained, interpreted, and applied;
for until they are found out and conformed to, all
labor will be ineffective and resultless.”
We have thus passed in review some
of the tendencies of the age. We have only touched
the edges of a vast subject, and shall be quite satisfied
if we have suggested thought in the direction indicated.
But in this limited view of our complex human problem
it is time to ask if we have not pushed the dogma
of equality far enough. Is it not time to look
the facts squarely in the face, and conform to them
in our efforts for social and political amelioration?
Inequality appears to be the divine
order; it always has existed; undoubtedly it will
continue; all our theories and ‘a priori’
speculations will not change the nature of things.
Even inequality of condition is the basis of progress,
the incentive to exertion. Fortunately, if today
we could make every man white, every woman as like
man as nature permits, give to every human being the
same opportunity of education, and divide equally
among all the accumulated wealth of the world, tomorrow
differences, unequal possession, and differentiation
would begin again. We are attempting the regeneration
of society with a misleading phrase; we are wasting
our time with a theory that does not fit the facts.
There is an equality, but it is not
of outward show; it is independent of condition; it
does not destroy property, nor ignore the difference
of sex, nor obliterate race traits. It is the
equality of men before God, of men before the law;
it is the equal honor of all honorable labor.
No more pernicious notion ever obtained lodgment in
society than the common one that to “rise in
the world” is necessarily to change the “condition.”
Let there be content with condition; discontent with
individual ignorance and imperfection. “We
want,” says Emerson, “not a farmer, but
a man on a farm.” What a mischievous idea
is that which has grown, even in the United States,
that manual labor is discreditable! There is surely
some defect in the theory of equality in our society
which makes domestic service to be shunned as if it
were a disgrace.
It must be observed, further, that
the dogma of equality is not satisfied by the usual
admission that one is in favor of an equality of rights
and opportunities, but is against the sweeping application
of the theory made by the socialists and communists.
The obvious reply is that equal rights and a fair
chance are not possible without equality of condition,
and that property and the whole artificial constitution
of society necessitate inequality of condition.
The damage from the current exaggeration of equality
is that the attempt to realize the dogma in fact and
the attempt is everywhere on foot can lead
only to mischief and disappointment.
It would be considered a humorous
suggestion to advocate inequality as a theory or as
a working dogma. Let us recognize it, however,
as a fact, and shape the efforts for the improvement
of the race in accordance with it, encouraging it
in some directions, restraining it from injustice in
others. Working by this recognition, we shall
save the race from many failures and bitter disappointments,
and spare the world the spectacle of republics ending
in despotism and experiments in government ending in
anarchy.