THE HEART OF LIBERALISM
The teaching of Mill brings us close
to the heart of Liberalism. We learn from him,
in the first place, that liberty is no mere formula
of law, or of the restriction of law. There may
be a tyranny of custom, a tyranny of opinion, even
a tyranny of circumstance, as real as any tyranny
of government and more pervasive. Nor does liberty
rest on the self-assertion of the individual.
There is scope abundant for Liberalism and illiberalism
in personal conduct. Nor is liberty opposed to
discipline, to organization, to strenuous conviction
as to what is true and just. Nor is it to be
identified with tolerance of opposed opinions.
The Liberal does not meet opinions which he conceives
to be false with toleration, as though they did not
matter. He meets them with justice, and exacts
for them a fair hearing as though they mattered just
as much as his own. He is always ready to put
his own convictions to the proof, not because he doubts
them, but because he believes in them. For, both
as to that which he holds for true and as to that which
he holds for false, he believes that one final test
applies. Let error have free play, and one of
two things will happen. Either as it develops,
as its implications and consequences become clear,
some elements of truth will appear within it.
They will separate themselves out; they will go to
enrich the stock of human ideas; they will add something
to the truth which he himself mistakenly took as final;
they will serve to explain the root of the error;
for error itself is generally a truth misconceived,
and it is only when it is explained that it is finally
and satisfactorily confuted. Or, in the alternative,
no element of truth will appear. In that case
the more fully the error is understood, the more patiently
it is followed up in all the windings of its implications
and consequences, the more thoroughly will it refute
itself. The cancerous growth cannot be extirpated
by the knife. The root is always left, and it
is only the evolution of the self-protecting anti-toxin
that works the final cure. Exactly parallel is
the logic of truth. The more the truth is developed
in all its implications, the greater is the opportunity
of detecting any element of error that it may contain;
and, conversely, if no error appears, the more completely
does it establish itself as the whole truth and nothing
but the truth. Liberalism applies the wisdom
of Gamaliel in no spirit of indifference, but in the
full conviction of the potency of truth. If this
thing be of man, i. e. if it is not rooted
in actual verity, it will come to nought. If it
be of God, let us take care that we be not found fighting
against God.
Divergences of opinion, of character,
of conduct are not unimportant matters. They
may be most serious matters, and no one is called on
in the name of Liberalism to overlook their seriousness.
There are, for example, certain disqualifications
inherent in the profession of certain opinions.
It is not illiberal to recognize such disqualifications.
It is not illiberal for a Protestant in choosing a
tutor for his son to reject a conscientious Roman
Catholic who avows that all his teaching is centred
on the doctrine of his Church. It would be illiberal
to reject the same man for the specific purpose of
teaching arithmetic, if he avowed that he had no intention
of using his position for the purpose of religious
propagandism. For the former purpose the divergence
of religious opinion is an inherent disqualification.
It negates the object propounded, which is the general
education of the boy on lines in which the father
believes. For the latter purpose the opinion is
no disqualification. The devout Catholic accepts
the multiplication table, and can impart his knowledge
without reference to the infallibility of the Pope.
To refuse to employ him is to impose an extraneous
penalty on his convictions. It is not illiberal
for an editor to decline the services of a member
of the opposite party as a leader writer, or even
as a political reviewer or in any capacity in which
his opinions would affect his work. It is illiberal
to reject him as a compositor or as a clerk, or in
any capacity in which his opinions would not affect
his work for the paper. It is not illiberal to
refuse a position of trust to the man whose record
shows that he is likely to abuse such a trust.
It is illiberal and this the “moralist”
has yet to learn to punish a man who has
done a wrong in one relation by excluding him from
the performance of useful social functions for which
he is perfectly fitted, by which he could at once
serve society and re-establish his own self-respect.
There may, however, yet come a time when Liberalism,
already recognized as a duty in religion and in politics,
will take its true place at the centre of our ethical
conceptions, and will be seen to have its application
not only to him whom we conceive to be the teacher
of false opinions, but to the man whom we hold a sinner.
The ground of Liberalism so understood
is certainly not the view that a man’s personal
opinions are socially indifferent, nor that his personal
morality matters nothing to others. So far as
Mill rested his case on the distinction between self-regarding
actions and actions that affect others, he was still
dominated by the older individualism. We should
frankly recognize that there is no side of a man’s
life which is unimportant to society, for whatever
he is, does, or thinks may affect his own well-being,
which is and ought to be matter of common concern,
and may also directly or indirectly affect the thought,
action, and character of those with whom he comes
in contact. The underlying principle may be put
in two ways. In the first place, the man is much
more than his opinions and his actions. Carlyle
and Sterling did not differ “except in opinion.”
To most of us that is just what difference means.
Carlyle was aware that there was something much deeper,
something that opinion just crassly formulates, and
for the most part formulates inadequately, that is
the real man. The real man is something more than
is ever adequately expressed in terms which his fellows
can understand; and just as his essential humanity
lies deeper than all distinctions of rank, and class,
and colour, and even, though in a different sense,
of sex, so also it goes far below those comparatively
external events which make one man figure as a saint
and another as a criminal. This sense of ultimate
oneness is the real meaning of equality, as it is the
foundation of social solidarity and the bond which,
if genuinely experienced, resists the disruptive force
of all conflict, intellectual, religious, and ethical.
But, further, while personal opinions
and social institutions are like crystallized results,
achievements that have been won by certain definite
processes of individual or collective effort, human
personality is that within which lives and grows,
which can be destroyed but cannot be made, which cannot
be taken to pieces and repaired, but can be placed
under conditions in which it will flourish and expand,
or, if it is diseased, under conditions in which it
will heal itself by its own recuperative powers.
The foundation of liberty is the idea of growth.
Life is learning, but whether in theory or practice
what a man genuinely learns is what he absorbs, and
what he absorbs depends on the energy which he himself
puts forth in response to his surroundings. Thus,
to come at once to the real crux, the question of
moral discipline, it is of course possible to reduce
a man to order and prevent him from being a nuisance
to his neighbours by arbitrary control and harsh punishment.
This may be to the comfort of the neighbours, as is
admitted, but regarded as a moral discipline it is
a contradiction in terms. It is doing less than
nothing for the character of the man himself.
It is merely crushing him, and unless his will is
killed the effect will be seen if ever the superincumbent
pressure is by chance removed. It is also possible,
though it takes a much higher skill, to teach the same
man to discipline himself, and this is to foster the
development of will, of personality, of self control,
or whatever we please to call that central harmonizing
power which makes us capable of directing our own
lives. Liberalism is the belief that society can
safely be founded on this self-directing power of
personality, that it is only on this foundation that
a true community can be built, and that so established
its foundations are so deep and so wide that there
is no limit that we can place to the extent of the
building. Liberty then becomes not so much a
right of the individual as a necessity of society.
It rests not on the claim of A to be let alone by
B, but on the duty of B to treat A as a rational being.
It is not right to let crime alone or to let error
alone, but it is imperative to treat the criminal or
the mistaken or the ignorant as beings capable of
right and truth, and to lead them on instead of merely
beating them down. The rule of liberty is just
the application of rational method. It is the
opening of the door to the appeal of reason, of imagination,
of social feeling; and except through the response
to this appeal there is no assured progress of society.
Now, I am not contending that these
principles are free from difficulty in application.
At many points they suggest difficulties both in theory
and in practice, with some of which I shall try to
deal later on. Nor, again, am I contending that
freedom is the universal solvent, or the idea of liberty
the sole foundation on which a true social philosophy
can be based. On the contrary, freedom is only
one side of social life. Mutual aid is not less
important than mutual forbearance, the theory of collective
action no less fundamental than the theory of personal
freedom. But, in an inquiry where all the elements
are so closely interwoven as they are in the field
of social life, the point of departure becomes almost
indifferent. Wherever we start we shall, if we
are quite frank and consistent, be led on to look at
the whole from some central point, and this, I think,
has happened to us in working with the conception
of ‘liberty.’ For, beginning with
the right of the individual, and the antithesis between
personal freedom and social control, we have been
led on to a point at which we regard liberty as primarily
a matter of social interest, as something flowing from
the necessities of continuous advance in those regions
of truth and of ethics which constitute the matters
of highest social concern. At the same time,
we have come to look for the effect of liberty in the
firmer establishment of social solidarity, as the
only foundation on which such solidarity can securely
rest. We have, in fact, arrived by a path of our
own at that which is ordinarily described as the organic
conception of the relation between the individual
and society a conception towards which
Mill worked through his career, and which forms the
starting-point of T. H. Green’s philosophy alike
in ethics and in politics.
The term organic is so much used and
abused that it is best to state simply what it means.
A thing is called organic when it is made up of parts
which are quite distinct from one another, but which
are destroyed or vitally altered when they are removed
from the whole. Thus, the human body is organic
because its life depends on the functions performed
by many organs, while each of these organs depends
in turn on the life of the body, perishing and decomposing
if removed therefrom. Now, the organic view of
society is equally simple. It means that, while
the life of society is nothing but the life of individuals
as they act one upon another, the life of the individual
in turn would be something utterly different if he
could be separated from society. A great deal
of him would not exist at all. Even if he himself
could maintain physical existence by the luck and
skill of a Robinson Crusoe, his mental and moral being
would, if it existed at all, be something quite different
from anything that we know. By language, by training,
by simply living with others, each of us absorbs into
his system the social atmosphere that surrounds us.
In particular, in the matter of rights and duties
which is cardinal for Liberal theory, the relation
of the individual to the community is everything.
His rights and his duties are alike defined by the
common good. What, for example, is my right?
On the face of it, it is something that I claim.
But a mere claim is nothing. I might claim anything
and everything. If my claim is of right it is
because it is sound, well grounded, in the judgment
of an impartial observer. But an impartial observer
will not consider me alone. He will equally weigh
the opposed claims of others. He will take us
in relation to one another, that is to say, as individuals
involved in a social relationship. Further, if
his decision is in any sense a rational one, it must
rest on a principle of some kind; and again, as a
rational man, any principle which he asserts he must
found on some good result which it serves or embodies,
and as an impartial man he must take the good of every
one affected into account. That is to say, he
must found his judgment on the common good. An
individual right, then, cannot conflict with the common
good, nor could any right exist apart from the common
good.
The argument might seem to make the
individual too subservient to society. But this
is to forget the other side of the original supposition.
Society consists wholly of persons. It has no
distinct personality separate from and superior to
those of its members. It has, indeed, a certain
collective life and character. The British nation
is a unity with a life of its own. But the unity
is constituted by certain ties that bind together
all British subjects, which ties are in the last resort
feelings and ideas, sentiments of patriotism, of kinship,
a common pride, and a thousand more subtle sentiments
that bind together men who speak a common language,
have behind them a common history, and understand
one another as they can understand no one else.
The British nation is not a mysterious entity over
and above the forty odd millions of living souls who
dwell together under a common law. Its life is
their life, its well-being or ill-fortune their well-being
or ill-fortune. Thus, the common good to which
each man’s rights are subordinate is a good
in which each man has a share. This share consists
in realizing his capacities of feeling, of loving,
of mental and physical energy, and in realizing these
he plays his part in the social life, or, in Green’s
phrase, he finds his own good in the common good.
Now, this phrase, it must be admitted,
involves a certain assumption, which may be regarded
as the fundamental postulate of the organic view of
society. It implies that such a fulfilment or
full development of personality is practically possible
not for one man only but for all members of a community.
There must be a line of development open along which
each can move in harmony with others. Harmony
in the full sense would involve not merely absence
of conflict but actual support. There must be
for each, then, possibilities of development such as
not merely to permit but actively to further the development
of others. Now, the older economists conceived
a natural harmony, such that the interests of each
would, if properly understood and unchecked by outside
interference, inevitably lead him in courses profitable
to others and to society at large. We saw that
this assumption was too optimistic. The conception
which we have now reached does not assume so much.
It postulates, not that there is an actually existing
harmony requiring nothing but prudence and coolness
of judgment for its effective operation, but only
that there is a possible ethical harmony, to which,
partly by discipline, partly by the improvement of
the conditions of life, men might attain, and that
in such attainment lies the social ideal. To
attempt the systematic proof of this postulate would
take us into the field of philosophical first principles.
It is the point at which the philosophy of politics
comes into contact with that of ethics. It must
suffice to say here that, just as the endeavour to
establish coherent system in the world of thought
is the characteristic of the rational impulse which
lies at the root of science and philosophy, so the
impulse to establish harmony in the world of feeling
and action a harmony which must include
all those who think and feel is of the
essence of the rational impulse in the world of practice.
To move towards harmony is the persistent impulse
of the rational being, even if the goal lies always
beyond the reach of accomplished effort.
These principles may appear very abstract,
remote from practical life, and valueless for concrete
teaching. But this remoteness is of the nature
of first principles when taken without the connecting
links that bind them to the details of experience.
To find some of these links let us take up again our
old Liberal principles, and see how they look in the
light of the organic, or, as we may now call it, the
harmonic conception. We shall readily see, to
begin with, that the old idea of equality has its
place. For the common good includes every individual.
It is founded on personality, and postulates free scope
for the development of personality in each member
of the community. This is the foundation not
only of equal rights before the law, but also of what
is called equality of opportunity. It does not
necessarily imply actual equality of treatment for
all persons any more than it implies original equality
of powers. It does, I think, imply that whatever
inequality of actual treatment, of income, rank, office,
consideration, there be in a good social system, it
would rest, not on the interest of the favoured individual
as such, but on the common good. If the existence
of millionaires on the one hand and of paupers on
the other is just, it must be because such contrasts
are the result of an economic system which upon the
whole works out for the common good, the good of the
pauper being included therein as well as the good of
the millionaire; that is to say, that when we have
well weighed the good and the evil of all parties
concerned we can find no alternative open to us which
could do better for the good of all. I am not
for the moment either attacking or defending any economic
system. I point out only that this is the position
which according to the organic or harmonic view of
society must be made good by any rational defence
of grave inequality in the distribution of wealth.
In relation to equality, indeed, it appears, oddly
enough, that the harmonic principle can adopt wholesale,
and even expand, one of the “Rights of Man”
as formulated in 1789 “Social distinctions
can only be founded upon common utility.”
If it is really just that A should be superior to
B in wealth or power or position, it is only because
when the good of all concerned is considered, among
whom B is one, it turns out that there is a net gain
in the arrangement as compared with any alternative
that we can devise.
If we turn from equality to liberty,
the general lines of argument have already been indicated,
and the discussion of difficulties in detail must
be left for the next chapter. It need only be
repeated here that on the harmonic principle the fundamental
importance of liberty rests on the nature of the “good”
itself, and that whether we are thinking of the good
of society or the good of the individual. The
good is something attained by the development of the
basal factors of personality; a development proceeding
by the widening of ideas, the awakening of the imagination,
the play of affection and passion, the strengthening
and extension of rational control. As it is the
development of these factors in each human being that
makes his life worth having, so it is their harmonious
interaction, the response of each to each, that makes
of society a living whole. Liberty so interpreted
cannot, as we have seen, dispense with restraint;
restraint, however, is not an end but a means to an
end, and one of the principal elements in that end
is the enlargement of liberty.
But the collective activity of the
community does not necessarily proceed by coercion
or restraint. The more securely it is founded
on freedom and general willing assent, the more it
is free to work out all the achievements in which
the individual is feeble or powerless while combined
action is strong. Human progress, on whatever
side we consider it, is found to be in the main social
progress, the work of conscious or unconscious co-operation.
In this work voluntary association plays a large and
increasing part. But the State is one form of
association among others, distinguished by its use
of coercive power, by its supremacy, and by its claim
to control all who dwell within its geographical limits.
What the functions of such a form of association are
to be we shall have to consider a little further in
connection with the other questions which we have
already raised. But that, in general, we are
justified in regarding the State as one among many
forms of human association for the maintenance and
improvement of life is the general principle that
we have to point out here, and this is the point at
which we stand furthest from the older Liberalism.
We have, however, already seen some reason for thinking
that the older doctrines led, when carefully examined,
to a more enlarged conception of State action than
appeared on the surface; and we shall see more fully
before we have done that the “positive”
conception of the State which we have now reached
not only involves no conflict with the true principle
of personal liberty, but is necessary to its effective
realization.
There is, in addition, one principle
of historic Liberalism with which our present conception
of the State is in full sympathy. The conception
of the common good as it has been explained can be
realized in its fullness only through the common will.
There are, of course, elements of value in the good
government of a benevolent despot or of a fatherly
aristocracy. Within any peaceful order there is
room for many good things to flourish. But the
full fruit of social progress is only to be reaped
by a society in which the generality of men and women
are not only passive recipients but practical contributors.
To make the rights and responsibilities of citizens
real and living, and to extend them as widely as the
conditions of society allow, is thus an integral part
of the organic conception of society, and the justification
of the democratic principle. It is, at the same
time, the justification of nationalism so far as nationalism
is founded on a true interpretation of history.
For, inasmuch as the true social harmony rests on feeling
and makes use of all the natural ties of kinship,
of neighbourliness, of congruity of character and
belief, and of language and mode of life, the best,
healthiest, and most vigorous political unit is that
to which men are by their own feelings strongly drawn.
Any breach of such unity, whether by forcible disruption
or by compulsory inclusion in a larger society of
alien sentiments and laws, tends to mutilate or,
at lowest, to cramp the spontaneous development
of social life. National and personal freedom
are growths of the same root, and their historic connection
rests on no accident, but on ultimate identity of idea.
Thus in the organic conception of
society each of the leading ideas of historic Liberalism
has its part to play. The ideal society is conceived
as a whole which lives and flourishes by the harmonious
growth of its parts, each of which in developing on
its own lines and in accordance with its own nature
tends on the whole to further the development of others.
There is some elementary trace of such harmony in every
form of social life that can maintain itself, for
if the conflicting impulses predominated society would
break up, and when they do predominate society does
break up. At the other extreme, true harmony is
an ideal which it is perhaps beyond the power of man
to realize, but which serves to indicate the line
of advance. But to admit this is to admit that
the lines of possible development for each individual
or, to use a more general phrase, for each constituent
of the social order are not limited and fixed.
There are many possibilities, and the course that will
in the end make for social harmony is only one among
them, while the possibilities of disharmony and conflict
are many. The progress of society like that of
the individual depends, then, ultimately on choice.
It is not “natural,” in the sense in which
a physical law is natural, that is, in the sense of
going forward automatically from stage to stage without
backward turnings, deflections to the left, or fallings
away on the right. It is natural only in this
sense, that it is the expression of deep-seated forces
of human nature which come to their own only by an
infinitely slow and cumbersome process of mutual adjustment.
Every constructive social doctrine rests on the conception
of human progress. The heart of Liberalism is
the understanding that progress is not a matter of
mechanical contrivance, but of the liberation of living
spiritual energy. Good mechanism is that which
provides the channels wherein such energy can flow
unimpeded, unobstructed by its own exuberance of output,
vivifying the social structure, expanding and ennobling
the life of mind.