THE MOVEMENT OF THEORY
Great changes are not caused by ideas
alone; but they are not effected without ideas.
The passions of men must be aroused if the frost of
custom is to be broken or the chains of authority burst;
but passion of itself is blind and its world is chaotic.
To be effective men must act together, and to act
together they must have a common understanding and
a common object. When it comes to be a question
of any far-reaching change, they must not merely conceive
their own immediate end with clearness. They
must convert others, they must communicate sympathy
and win over the unconvinced. Upon the whole,
they must show that their object is possible, that
it is compatible with existing institutions, or at
any rate with some workable form of social life.
They are, in fact, driven on by the requirements of
their position to the elaboration of ideas, and in
the end to some sort of social philosophy; and the
philosophies that have driving force behind them are
those which arise after this fashion out of the practical
demands of human feeling. The philosophies that
remain ineffectual and academic are those that are
formed by abstract reflection without relation to the
thirsty souls of human kind.
In England, it is true, where men
are apt to be shy and unhandy in the region of theory,
the Liberal movement has often sought to dispense with
general principles. In its early days and in its
more moderate forms, it sought its ends under the
guise of constitutionalism. As against the claims
of the Stuart monarchy, there was a historic case as
well as a philosophic argument, and the earlier leaders
of the Parliament relied more on precedent than on
principle. This method was embodied in the Whig
tradition, and runs on to our own time, as one of the
elements that go to make up the working constitution
of the Liberal mind. It is, so to say, the Conservative
element in Liberalism, valuable in resistance to encroachments,
valuable in securing continuity of development, for
purposes of re-construction insufficient. To maintain
the old order under changed circumstances may be,
in fact, to initiate a revolution. It was so
in the seventeenth century. Pym and his followers
could find justification for their contentions in
our constitutional history, but to do so they had
to go behind both the Stuarts and the Tudors; and to
apply the principles of the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries in 1640 was, in effect, to institute a revolution.
In our own time, to maintain the right of the Commons
against the Lords is, on the face of it, to adhere
to old constitutional right, but to do so under the
new circumstances which have made the Commons representative
of the nation as a whole is, in reality, to establish
democracy for the first time on a firm footing, and
this, again, is to accomplish a revolution.
Now, those who effect a revolution
ought to know whither they are leading the world.
They have need of a social theory and in
point of fact the more thorough-going apostles of
movement always have such a theory; and though, as
we have remarked, the theory emerges from the practical
needs which they feel, and is therefore apt to invest
ideas of merely temporary value with the character
of eternal truths, it is not on this account to be
dismissed as of secondary importance. Once formed,
it reacts upon the minds of its adherents, and gives
direction and unity to their efforts. It becomes,
in its turn, a real historic force, and the degree
of its coherence and adequacy is matter, not merely
of academic interest, but of practical moment.
Moreover, the onward course of a movement is more
clearly understood by appreciating the successive
points of view which its thinkers and statesmen have
occupied than by following the devious turnings of
political events and the tangle of party controversy.
The point of view naturally affects the whole method
of handling problems, whether speculative or practical,
and to the historian it serves as a centre around
which ideas and policies that perhaps differ, and
even conflict with one another, may be so grouped
as to show their underlying affinities. Let us
then seek to determine the principal points of view
which the Liberal movement has occupied, and distinguish
the main types of theory in which the passion for
freedom has sought to express itself.
The first of these types I will call
the theory of the Natural Order.
The earlier Liberalism had to deal
with authoritarian government in church and state.
It had to vindicate the elements of personal, civil,
and economic freedom; and in so doing it took its stand
on the rights of man, and, in proportion as it was
forced to be constructive, on the supposed harmony
of the natural order. Government claimed supernatural
sanction and divine ordinance. Liberal theory
replied in effect that the rights of man rested on
the law of Nature, and those of government on human
institution. The oldest “institution”
in this view was the individual, and the primordial
society the natural grouping of human beings under
the influence of family affection, and for the sake
of mutual aid. Political society was a more artificial
arrangement, a convention arrived at for the specific
purpose of securing a better order and maintaining
the common safety. It was, perhaps, as Locke held,
founded on a contract between king and people, a contract
which was brought to an end if either party violated
its terms. Or, as in Rousseau’s view, it
was essentially a contract of the people with one
another, an arrangement by means of which, out of many
conflicting individual wills, a common or general
will could be formed. A government might be instituted
as the organ of this will, but it would, from the
nature of the case, be subordinate to the people from
whom it derived authority. The people were sovereign.
The government was their delegate.
Whatever the differences of outlook
that divide these theories, those who from Locke to
Rousseau and Paine worked with this order of ideas
agreed in conceiving political society as a restraint
to which men voluntarily submitted themselves for
specific purposes. Political institutions were
the source of subjection and inequality. Before
and behind them stood the assemblage of free and equal
individuals. But the isolated individual was
powerless. He had rights which were limited only
by the corresponding rights of others, but he could
not, unless chance gave him the upper hand, enforce
them. Accordingly, he found it best to enter
into an arrangement with others for the mutual respect
of rights; and for this purpose he instituted a government
to maintain his rights within the community and to
guard the community from assault from without.
It followed that the function of government was limited
and definable. It was to maintain the natural
rights of man as accurately as the conditions of society
allowed, and to do naught beside. Any further
action employing the compulsory power of the State
was of the nature of an infringement of the understanding
on which government rested. In entering into
the compact, the individual gave up so much of his
rights as was necessitated by the condition of submitting
to a common rule so much, and no more.
He gave up his natural rights and received in return
civil rights, something less complete, perhaps, but
more effective as resting on the guarantee of the
collective power. If you would discover, then,
what the civil rights of man in society should be,
you must inquire what are the natural rights of man,
and how far they are unavoidably modified in accommodating
the conflicting claims of men with one another.
Any interference that goes beyond this necessary accommodation
is oppression. Civil rights should agree as nearly
as possible with natural rights, or, as Paine says,
a civil right is a natural right exchanged.
This conception of the relations of
the State and the individual long outlived the theory
on which it rested. It underlies the entire teaching
of the Manchester school. Its spirit was absorbed,
as we shall see, by many of the Utilitarians.
It operated, though in diminishing force, throughout
the nineteenth century; and it is strongly held by
contemporary Liberals like M. Faguet, who frankly abrogate
its speculative foundations and rest their case on
social utility. Its strength is, in effect, not
in its logical principles, but in the compactness
and consistency which it gives to a view of the functions
of the State which responds to certain needs of modern
society. As long as those needs were uppermost,
the theory was of living value. In proportion
as they have been satisfied and other needs have emerged,
the requirement has arisen for a fuller and sounder
principle.
But there was another side to the
theory of nature which we must not ignore. If
in this theory government is the marplot and authority
the source of oppression and stagnation, where are
the springs of progress and civilization? Clearly,
in the action of individuals. The more the individual
receives free scope for the play of his faculties,
the more rapidly will society as a whole advance.
There are here the elements of an important truth,
but what is the implication? If the individual
is free, any two individuals, each pursuing his own
ends, may find themselves in conflict. It was,
in fact, the possibility of such conflict which was
recognized by our theory as the origin and foundation
of society. Men had to agree to some measure of
mutual restraint in order that their liberty might
be effective. But in the course of the eighteenth
century, and particularly in the economic sphere, there
arose a view that the conflict of wills is based on
misunderstanding and ignorance, and that its mischiefs
are accentuated by governmental repression. At
bottom there is a natural harmony of interests.
Maintain external order, suppress violence, assure
men in the possession of their property, and enforce
the fulfilment of contracts, and the rest will go
of itself. Each man will be guided by self-interest,
but interest will lead him along the lines of greatest
productivity. If all artificial barriers are
removed, he will find the occupation which best suits
his capacities, and this will be the occupation in
which he will be most productive, and therefore, socially,
most valuable. He will have to sell his goods
to a willing purchaser, therefore he must devote himself
to the production of things which others need, things,
therefore, of social value. He will, by preference,
make that for which he can obtain the highest price,
and this will be that for which, at the particular
time and place and in relation to his particular capacities,
there is the greatest need. He will, again, find
the employer who will pay him best, and that will
be the employer to whom he can do the best service.
Self-interest, if enlightened and unfettered, will,
in short, lead him to conduct coincident with public
interest. There is, in this sense, a natural
harmony between the individual and society. True,
this harmony might require a certain amount of education
and enlightenment to make it effective. What
it did not require was governmental “interference,”
which would always hamper the causes making for its
smooth and effectual operation. Government must
keep the ring, and leave it for individuals to play
out the game. The theory of the natural rights
of the individual is thus supplemented by a theory
of the mutual harmony of individual and social needs,
and, so completed, forms a conception of human society
which is prima facie workable, which, in fact,
contains important elements of truth, and which was
responsive to the needs of a great class, and to many
of the requirements of society as a whole, during
a considerable period.
On both sides, however, the theory
exhibits, under criticism, fundamental weaknesses
which have both a historical and a speculative significance.
Let us first consider the conception of natural rights.
What were these rights, and on what did they rest?
On the first point men sought to be explicit.
By way of illustration we cannot do better than quote
the leading clauses of the Declaration of 1789.
Article I. Men are
born and remain free and equal in rights. Social
distinctions can only be founded on common utility.
Article II. The
end of every political association is the conservation
of the natural and imprescriptible rights of man.
These rights are liberty, property, security (la
sûreté), and resistance to oppression.
Article III. The
principle of all sovereignty resides essentially in
the nation....
Article IV. Liberty
consists in the power to do anything that does not
injure others; thus, the exercise of the natural rights
of every man has only such limits as assure to other
members of society the enjoyment of the same rights.
These limits can only be determined by law.
Article VI. The
law is the expression of the general will. All
citizens have a right to take part (concourir),
personally or by their representatives, in its formation.
The remainder of this article insists
on the impartiality of law and the equal admission
of all citizens to office. The Declaration of
1793 is more emphatic about equality, and more rhetorical.
Article III reads, “All men are equal by nature
and before the law.”
It is easy to subject these articles
to a niggling form of criticism in which their spirit
is altogether missed. I would ask attention only
to one or two points of principle.
(a) What are the rights actually
claimed? “Security” and “resistance
to oppression” are not in principle distinct,
and, moreover, may be taken as covered by the definition
of liberty. The meaning at bottom is “Security
for liberty in respect of his person and property is
the right of every man.” So expressed,
it will be seen that this right postulates the existence
of an ordered society, and lays down that it is the
duty of such a society to secure the liberty of its
members. The right of the individual, then, is
not something independent of society, but one of the
principles which a good social order must recognize.
(b) Observe that equality is
limited by the “common utility,” and that
the sphere of liberty is ultimately to be defined by
“law.” In both cases we are referred
back from the individual either to the needs or to
the decision of society as a whole. There are,
moreover, two definitions of liberty. (1) It is the
power to do what does not injure others. (2) It is
a right limited by the consideration that others must
enjoy the same rights. It is important to bear
in mind that these two definitions are highly discrepant.
If my right to knock a man down is only limited by
his equal right to knock me down, the law has no business
to interfere when we take to our fists. If, on
the other hand, I have no right to injure another,
the law should interfere. Very little reflection
suffices to show that this is the sounder principle,
and that respect for the equal liberty of another
is not an adequate definition of liberty. My
right to keep my neighbour awake by playing the piano
all night is not satisfactorily counterbalanced by
his right to keep a dog which howls all the time the
piano is being played. The right of a “sweater”
to pay starvation wages is not satisfactorily limited
by the corresponding right which his employee would
enjoy if he were in a position to impose the same
terms on some one else. Generally, the right
to injure or take advantage of another is not sufficiently
limited by the right of that other if he should have
the power to retaliate in kind. There is no right
to injure another; and if we ask what is injury we
are again thrown back on some general principle which
will override the individual claim to do what one
will.
(c) The doctrine of popular
sovereignty rests on two principles. (1) It is said
to reside in the nation. Law is the expression
of the general will. Here the “nation”
is conceived as a collective whole, as a unit. (2)
Every citizen has the right to take part in making
the law. Here the question is one of individual
right. Which is the real ground of democratic
representation the unity of the national
life, or the inherent right of the individual to be
consulted about that which concerns himself?
Further, and this is a very serious
question, which is the ultimate authority the
will of the nation, or the rights of the individual?
Suppose the nation deliberately decides on laws which
deny the rights of the individual, ought such laws
to be obeyed in the name of popular sovereignty, or
to be disobeyed in the name of natural rights?
It is a real issue, and on these lines it is unfortunately
quite insoluble.
These difficulties were among the
considerations which led to the formation of the second
type of Liberal theory, and what has to be said about
the harmony of the natural order may be taken in conjunction
with this second theory to which we may now pass,
and which is famous as The Greatest Happiness Principle.
Bentham, who spent the greater part
of his life in elaborating the greatest happiness
principle as a basis of social reconstruction, was
fully alive to the difficulties which we have found
in the theory of natural rights. The alleged
rights of man were for him so many anarchical fallacies.
They were founded on no clearly assignable principle,
and admitted of no demonstration. “I say
I have a right.” “I say you have
no such right.” Between the disputants who
or what is to decide? What was the supposed law
of nature? When was it written, and by whose
authority? On what ground do we maintain that
men are free or equal? On what principle and
within what limits do we or can we maintain the right
of property? There were points on which, by universal
admission, all these rights have to give way.
What is the right of property worth in times of war
or of any overwhelming general need? The Declaration
itself recognized the need of appeal to common utility
or to the law to define the limits of individual right.
Bentham would frankly make all rights dependent on
common utility, and therewith he would make it possible
to examine all conflicting claims in the light of a
general principle. He would measure them all
by a common standard. Has a man the right to
express his opinion freely? To determine the question
on Bentham’s lines we must ask whether it is,
on the whole, useful to society that the free expression
of opinion should be allowed, and this, he would say,
is a question which may be decided by general reasoning
and by experience of results. Of course, we must
take the rough with the smooth. If the free expression
of opinion is allowed, false opinion will find utterance
and will mislead many. The question would be,
does the loss involved in the promulgation of error
counterbalance the gain to be derived from unfettered
discussion? and Bentham would hold himself free to
judge by results. Should the State maintain the
rights of private property? Yes, if the admission
of those rights is useful to the community as a whole.
No, if it is not useful. Some rights of property,
again, may be advantageous, others disadvantageous.
The community is free to make a selection. If
it finds that certain forms of property are working
to the exclusive benefit of individuals and the prejudice
of the common weal, it has good ground for the suppression
of those forms of property, while it may, with equal
justice, maintain other forms of property which it
holds sound as judged by the effect on the common
welfare. It is limited by no “imprescriptible”
right of the individual. It may do with the individual
what it pleases provided that it has the good of the
whole in view. So far as the question of right
is concerned the Benthamite principle might be regarded
as decidedly socialistic or even authoritarian.
It contemplates, at least as a possibility, the complete
subordination of individual to social claims.
There is, however, another side to
the Benthamite principle, to understand which we must
state the heads of the theory itself as a positive
doctrine. What is this social utility of which
we have spoken? In what does it consist?
What is useful to society, and what harmful?
The answer has the merit of great clearness and simplicity.
An action is good which tends to promote the greatest
possible happiness of the greatest possible number
of those affected by it. As with an action, so,
of course, with an institution or a social system.
That is useful which conforms to this principle.
That is harmful which conflicts with it. That
is right which conforms to it, that is wrong which
conflicts with it. The greatest happiness principle
is the one and supreme principle of conduct.
Observe that it imposes on us two considerations.
One is the greatest happiness. Now happiness
is defined as consisting positively in the presence
of pleasure, negatively in the absence of pain.
A greater pleasure is then preferable to a lesser,
a pleasure unaccompanied by pain to one involving
pain. Conceiving pain as a minus quantity of
pleasure, we may say that the principle requires us
always to take quantity and pleasure into account,
and nothing else. But, secondly, the number
of individuals affected is material. An act might
cause pleasure to one and pain to two. Then it
is wrong, unless, indeed, the pleasure were very great
and the pain in each case small. We must balance
the consequences, taking all individuals affected into
account, and “everybody must count for one and
nobody for more than one.” This comment
is an integral part of the original formula. As
between the happiness of his father, his child, or
himself, and the happiness of a stranger, a man must
be impartial. He must only consider the quantity
of pleasure secured or pain inflicted.
Now, in this conception of measurable
quantities of pleasure and pain there is, as many
critics have insisted, something unreal and academic.
We shall have to return to the point, but let us first
endeavour to understand the bearing of Bentham’s
teaching on the problems of his own time and on the
subsequent development of Liberal thought. For
this purpose we will keep to what is real in his doctrine,
even if it is not always defined with academic precision.
The salient points that we note, then, are (1) the
subordination of all considerations of right to the
considerations of happiness, (2) the importance of
number, and (3) as the other side of the same doctrine,
the insistence on equality or impartiality between
man and man. The common utility which Bentham
considers is the happiness experienced by a number
of individuals, all of whom are reckoned for this
purpose as of equal value. This is the radical
individualism of the Benthamite creed, to be set against
that socialistic tendency which struck us in our preliminary
account.
In this individualism, equality is
fundamental. Everybody is to count for one, nobody
for more than one, for every one can feel pain and
pleasure. Liberty, on the other hand, is not fundamental,
it is a means to an end. Popular sovereignty
is not fundamental, for all government is a means
to an end. Nevertheless, the school of Bentham,
upon the whole, stood by both liberty and democracy.
Let us consider their attitude.
As to popular government, Bentham
and James Mill reasoned after this fashion. Men,
if left to themselves, that is to say, if neither trained
by an educational discipline nor checked by responsibility,
do not consider the good of the greatest number.
They consider their own good. A king, if his
power is unchecked, will rule in his own interest.
A class, if its power is unchecked, will rule in its
own interest. The only way to secure fair consideration
for the happiness of all is to allow to all an equal
share of power. True, if there is a conflict the
majority will prevail, but they will be moved each
by consideration of his own happiness, and the majority
as a whole, therefore, by the happiness of the greater
number. There is no inherent right in the individual
to take a part in government. There is a claim
to be considered in the distribution of the means
of happiness, and to share in the work of government
as a means to this end. It would follow, among
other things, that if one man or one class could be
shown to be so much wiser and better than others that
his or their rule would, in fact, conduce more to
the happiness of the greater number than a popular
system, then the business of government ought to be
entrusted to that man or that class and no one else
ought to interfere with it.
The whole argument, however, implies
a crude view of the problem of government. It
is, of course, theoretically possible that a question
should present itself, detached from other questions,
in which a definite measurable interest of each of
the seven millions or more of voters is at stake.
For example, the great majority of English people
drink tea. Comparatively few drink wine.
Should a particular sum be raised by a duty on tea
or on wine? Here the majority of tea-drinkers
have a measurable interest, the same in kind and roughly
the same in degree for each; and the vote of the majority,
if it could be taken on this question alone and based
on self-interest alone, might be conceived without
absurdity as representing a sum of individual interests.
Even here, however, observe that, though the greatest
number is considered, the greatest happiness does
not fare so well. For to raise the same sum the
tax on wine will, as less is drunk, have to be much
larger than the tax on tea, so that a little gain
to many tea-drinkers might inflict a heavy loss on
the few wine-drinkers, and on the Benthamite principle
it is not clear that this would be just. In point
of fact it is possible for a majority to act tyrannically,
by insisting on a slight convenience to itself at
the expense, perhaps, of real suffering to a minority.
Now the Utilitarian principle by no means justifies
such tyranny, but it does seem to contemplate the
weighing of one man’s loss against another’s
gain, and such a method of balancing does not at bottom
commend itself to our sense of justice. We may
lay down that if there is a rational social order
at all it must be one which never rests the essential
indispensable condition of the happiness of one man
on the unavoidable misery of another, nor the happiness
of forty millions of men on the misery of one.
It may be temporarily expedient, but it is eternally
unjust, that one man should die for the people.
We may go further. The case of
the contemplated tax is, as applied to the politics
of a modern State, an unreal one. Political questions
cannot be thus isolated. Even if we could vote
by referendum on a special tax, the question which
voters would have to consider would never be the revenue
from and the incidence of that tax alone. All
the indirect social and economic bearings of the tax
would come up for consideration, and in the illustration
chosen people would be swayed, and rightly swayed,
by their opinion, for example, of the comparative
effects of tea-drinking and wine-drinking. No
one element of the social life stands separate from
the rest, any more than any one element of the animal
body stands separate from the rest. In this sense
the life of society is rightly held to be organic,
and all considered public policy must be conceived
in its bearing on the life of society as a whole.
But the moment that we apply this view to politics,
the Benthamite mode of stating the case for democracy
is seen to be insufficient. The interests of
every man are no doubt in the end bound up with the
welfare of the whole community, but the relation is
infinitely subtle and indirect. Moreover, it
takes time to work itself out, and the evil that is
done in the present day may only bear fruit when the
generation that has done it has passed away.
Thus, the direct and calculable benefit of the majority
may by no means coincide with the ultimate good of
society as a whole; and to suppose that the majority
must, on grounds of self-interest, govern in the interests
of the community as a whole is in reality to attribute
to the mass of men full insight into problems which
tax the highest efforts of science and of statesmanship.
Lastly, to suppose that men are governed entirely
by a sense of their interests is a many-sided fallacy.
Men are neither so intelligent nor so selfish.
They are swayed by emotion and by impulse, and both
for good and for evil they will lend enthusiastic
support to courses of public policy from which, as
individuals, they have nothing to gain. To understand
the real value of democratic government, we shall
have to probe far deeper into the relations of the
individual and society.
I turn lastly to the question of liberty.
On Benthamite principles there could be no question
here of indefeasible individual right. There were
even, as we saw, possibilities of a thorough-going
Socialism or of an authoritarian paternalism in the
Benthamite principle. But two great considerations
told in the opposite direction. One arose from
the circumstances of the day. Bentham, originally
a man of somewhat conservative temper, was driven
into Radicalism comparatively late in life by the
indifference or hostility of the governing classes
to his schemes of reform. Government, as he saw
it, was of the nature of a close corporation with
a vested interest hostile to the public weal, and
his work is penetrated by distrust of power as such.
There was much in the history of the time to justify
his attitude. It was difficult at that time to
believe in an honest officialdom putting the commonwealth
above every personal or corporate interest, and reformers
naturally looked to individual initiative as the source
of progress. Secondly, and this was a more philosophic
argument, the individual was supposed to understand
his own interest best, and as the common good was the
sum of individual interests, it followed that so far
as every man was free to seek his own good, the good
of the greatest number would be most effectually realized
by general freedom of choice. That there were
difficulties in reconciling self-interest with the
general good was not denied. But men like James
Mill, who especially worked at this side of the problem,
held that they could be overcome by moral education.
Trained from childhood to associate the good of others
with his own, a man would come, he thought, to care
for the happiness of others as for the happiness of
self. For, in the long run, the two things were
coincident. Particularly in a free economic system,
as remarked above, each individual, moving along the
line of greatest personal profit, would be found to
fulfil the function of greatest profit to society.
Let this be understood, and we should have true social
harmony based on the spontaneous operation of personal
interest enlightened by intelligence and chastened
by the discipline of unruly instinct.
Thus, though their starting-point
was different, the Benthamites arrived at practical
results not notably divergent from those of the doctrine
of natural liberty; and, on the whole, the two influences
worked together in the formation of that school who
in the reform period exercised so notable an influence
on English Liberalism, and to whose work we must now
turn.