The life of man in society, just like
the life of other species, is a struggle for existence,
and therefore it is a process of selective adaptation.
The evolution of social structure has been a process
of natural selection of institutions. The progress
which has been and is being made in human institutions
and in human character may be set down, broadly, to
a natural selection of the fittest habits of thought
and to a process of enforced adaptation of individuals
to an environment which has progressively changed
with the growth of the community and with the changing
institutions under which men have lived. Institutions
are not only themselves the result of a selective
and adaptive process which shapes the prevailing or
dominant types of spiritual attitude and aptitudes;
they are at the same time special methods of life and
of human relations, and are therefore in their turn
efficient factors of selection. So that the changing
institutions in their turn make for a further selection
of individuals endowed with the fittest temperament,
and a further adaptation of individual temperament
and habits to the changing environment through the
formation of new institutions.
The forces which have shaped the development
of human life and of social structure are no doubt
ultimately reducible to terms of living tissue and
material environment; but proximately for the purpose
in hand, these forces may best be stated in terms
of an environment, partly human, partly non-human,
and a human subject with a more or less definite physical
and intellectual constitution. Taken in the aggregate
or average, this human subject is more or less variable;
chiefly, no doubt, under a rule of selective conservation
of favorable variations. The selection of favorable
variations is perhaps in great measure a selective
conservation of ethnic types. In the life history
of any community whose population is made up of a
mixture of divers ethnic elements, one or another
of several persistent and relatively stable types
of body and of temperament rises into dominance at
any given point. The situation, including the
institutions in force at any given time, will favor
the survival and dominance of one type of character
in preference to another; and the type of man so selected
to continue and to further elaborate the institutions
handed down from the past will in some considerable
measure shape these institutions in his own likeness.
But apart from selection as between relatively stable
types of character and habits of mind, there is no
doubt simultaneously going on a process of selective
adaptation of habits of thought within the general
range of aptitudes which is characteristic of the
dominant ethnic type or types. There may be a
variation in the fundamental character of any population
by selection between relatively stable types; but there
is also a variation due to adaptation in detail within
the range of the type, and to selection between specific
habitual views regarding any given social relation
or group of relations.
For the present purpose, however,
the question as to the nature of the adaptive process whether
it is chiefly a selection between stable types of
temperament and character, or chiefly an adaptation
of men’s habits of thought to changing circumstances is
of less importance than the fact that, by one method
or another, institutions change and develop.
Institutions must change with changing circumstances,
since they are of the nature of an habitual method
of responding to the stimuli which these changing
circumstances afford. The development of these
institutions is the development of society. The
institutions are, in substance, prevalent habits of
thought with respect to particular relations and particular
functions of the individual and of the community;
and the scheme of life, which is made up of the aggregate
of institutions in force at a given time or at a given
point in the development of any society, may, on the
psychological side, be broadly characterized as a
prevalent spiritual attitude or a prevalent theory
of life. As regards its generic features, this
spiritual attitude or theory of life is in the last
analysis reducible to terms of a prevalent type of
character.
The situation of today shapes the
institutions of tomorrow through a selective, coercive
process, by acting upon men’s habitual view
of things, and so altering or fortifying a point of
view or a mental attitude banded down from the past.
The institutions that is to say the habits
of thought under the guidance of which men
live are in this way received from an earlier time;
more or less remotely earlier, but in any event they
have been elaborated in and received from the past.
Institutions are products of the past process, are
adapted to past circumstances, and are therefore never
in full accord with the requirements of the present.
In the nature of the case, this process of selective
adaptation can never catch up with the progressively
changing situation in which the community finds itself
at any given time; for the environment, the situation,
the exigencies of life which enforce the adaptation
and exercise the selection, change from day to day;
and each successive situation of the community in
its turn tends to obsolescence as soon as it has been
established. When a step in the development has
been taken, this step itself constitutes a change of
situation which requires a new adaptation; it becomes
the point of departure for a new step in the adjustment,
and so on interminably.
It is to be noted then, although it
may be a tedious truism, that the institutions of
today the present accepted scheme of life do
not entirely fit the situation of today. At the
same time, men’s present habits of thought tend
to persist indefinitely, except as circumstances enforce
a change. These institutions which have thus been
handed down, these habits of thought, points of view,
mental attitudes and aptitudes, or what not, are therefore
themselves a conservative factor. This is the
factor of social inertia, psychological inertia, conservatism.
Social structure changes, develops, adapts itself
to an altered situation, only through a change in
the habits of thought of the several classes of the
community, or in the last analysis, through a change
in the habits of thought of the individuals which
make up the community. The evolution of society
is substantially a process of mental adaptation on
the part of individuals under the stress of circumstances
which will no longer tolerate habits of thought formed
under and conforming to a different set of circumstances
in the past. For the immediate purpose it need
not be a question of serious importance whether this
adaptive process is a process of selection and survival
of persistent ethnic types or a process of individual
adaptation and an inheritance of acquired traits.
Social advance, especially as seen
from the point of view of economic theory, consists
in a continued progressive approach to an approximately
exact “adjustment of inner relations to outer
relations”, but this adjustment is never definitively
established, since the “outer relations”
are subject to constant change as a consequence of
the progressive change going on in the “inner
relations.” But the degree of approximation
may be greater or less, depending on the facility with
which an adjustment is made. A readjustment of
men’s habits of thought to conform with the
exigencies of an altered situation is in any case
made only tardily and reluctantly, and only under the
coercion exercised by a stipulation which has made
the accredited views untenable. The readjustment
of institutions and habitual views to an altered environment
is made in response to pressure from without; it is
of the nature of a response to stimulus. Freedom
and facility of readjustment, that is to say capacity
for growth in social structure, therefore depends
in great measure on the degree of freedom with which
the situation at any given time acts on the individual
members of the community-the degree of exposure of
the individual members to the constraining forces
of the environment. If any portion or class of
society is sheltered from the action of the environment
in any essential respect, that portion of the community,
or that class, will adapt its views and its scheme
of life more tardily to the altered general situation;
it will in so far tend to retard the process of social
transformation. The wealthy leisure class is in
such a sheltered position with respect to the economic
forces that make for change and readjustment.
And it may be said that the forces which make for
a readjustment of institutions, especially in the case
of a modern industrial community, are, in the last
analysis, almost entirely of an economic nature.
Any community may be viewed as an
industrial or economic mechanism, the structure of
which is made up of what is called its economic institutions.
These institutions are habitual methods of carrying
on the life process of the community in contact with
the material environment in which it lives. When
given methods of unfolding human activity in this
given environment have been elaborated in this way,
the life of the community will express itself with
some facility in these habitual directions. The
community will make use of the forces of the environment
for the purposes of its life according to methods learned
in the past and embodied in these institutions.
But as population increases, and as men’s knowledge
and skill in directing the forces of nature widen,
the habitual methods of relation between the members
of the group, and the habitual method of carrying
on the life process of the group as a whole, no longer
give the same result as before; nor are the resulting
conditions of life distributed and apportioned in the
same manner or with the same effect among the various
members as before. If the scheme according to
which the life process of the group was carried on
under the earlier conditions gave approximately the
highest attainable result under the circumstances in
the way of efficiency or facility of the life process
of the group; then the same scheme of life unaltered
will not yield the highest result attainable in this
respect under the altered conditions. Under the
altered conditions of population, skill, and knowledge,
the facility of life as carried on according to the
traditional scheme may not be lower than under the
earlier conditions; but the chances are always that
it is less than might be if the scheme were altered
to suit the altered conditions.
The group is made up of individuals,
and the group’s life is the life of individuals
carried on in at least ostensible severalty. The
group’s accepted scheme of life is the consensus
of views held by the body of these individuals as
to what is right, good, expedient, and beautiful in
the way of human life. In the redistribution of
the conditions of life that comes of the altered method
of dealing with the environment, the outcome is not
an equable change in the facility of life throughout
the group. The altered conditions may increase
the facility of life for the group as a whole, but
the redistribution will usually result in a decrease
of facility or fullness of life for some members of
the group. An advance in technical methods, in
population, or in industrial organization will require
at least some of the members of the community to change
their habits of life, if they are to enter with facility
and effect into the altered industrial methods; and
in doing so they will be unable to live up to the
received notions as to what are the right and beautiful
habits of life.
Any one who is required to change
his habits of life and his habitual relations to his
fellow men will feel the discrepancy between the method
of life required of him by the newly arisen exigencies,
and the traditional scheme of life to which he is
accustomed. It is the individuals placed in this
position who have the liveliest incentive to reconstruct
the received scheme of life and are most readily persuaded
to accept new standards; and it is through the need
of the means of livelihood that men are placed in
such a position. The pressure exerted by the
environment upon the group, and making for a readjustment
of the group’s scheme of life, impinges upon
the members of the group in the form of pecuniary
exigencies; and it is owing to this fact that
external forces are in great part translated into the
form of pecuniary or economic exigencies it
is owing to this fact that we can say that the forces
which count toward a readjustment of institutions in
any modern industrial community are chiefly economic
forces; or more specifically, these forces take the
form of pecuniary pressure. Such a readjustment
as is here contemplated is substantially a change in
men’s views as to what is good and right, and
the means through which a change is wrought in men’s
apprehension of what is good and right is in large
part the pressure of pecuniary exigencies.
Any change in men’s views as
to what is good and right in human life make its way
but tardily at the best. Especially is this true
of any change in the direction of what is called progress;
that is to say, in the direction of divergence from
the archaic position from the position
which may be accounted the point of departure at any
step in the social evolution of the community.
Retrogression, reapproach to a standpoint to which
the race has been long habituated in the past, is easier.
This is especially true in case the development away
from this past standpoint has not been due chiefly
to a substitution of an ethnic type whose temperament
is alien to the earlier standpoint. The cultural
stage which lies immediately back of the present in
the life history of Western civilization is what has
here been called the quasi-peaceable stage. At
this quasi-peaceable stage the law of status is the
dominant feature in the scheme of life. There
is no need of pointing out how prone the men of today
are to revert to the spiritual attitude of mastery
and of personal subservience which characterizes that
stage. It may rather be said to be held in an
uncertain abeyance by the economic exigencies of today,
than to have been definitely supplanted by a habit
of mind that is in full accord with these later-developed
exigencies. The predatory and quasi-peaceable
stages of economic evolution seem to have been of
long duration in life history of all the chief ethnic
elements which go to make up the populations of the
Western culture. The temperament and the propensities
proper to those cultural stages have, therefore, attained
such a persistence as to make a speedy reversion to
the broad features of the corresponding psychological
constitution inevitable in the case of any class or
community which is removed from the action of those
forces that make for a maintenance of the later-developed
habits of thought.
It is a matter of common notoriety
that when individuals, or even considerable groups
of men, are segregated from a higher industrial culture
and exposed to a lower cultural environment, or to
an economic situation of a more primitive character,
they quickly show evidence of reversion toward the
spiritual features which characterize the predatory
type; and it seems probable that the dolicho-blond
type of European man is possessed of a greater facility
for such reversion to barbarism than the other ethnic
elements with which that type is associated in the
Western culture. Examples of such a reversion
on a small scale abound in the later history of migration
and colonization. Except for the fear of offending
that chauvinistic patriotism which is so characteristic
a feature of the predatory culture, and the presence
of which is frequently the most striking mark of reversion
in modern communities, the case of the American colonies
might be cited as an example of such a reversion on
an unusually large scale, though it was not a reversion
of very large scope.
The leisure class is in great measure
sheltered from the stress of those economic exigencies
which prevail in any modern, highly organized industrial
community. The exigencies of the struggle for
the means of life are less exacting for this class
than for any other; and as a consequence of this privileged
position we should expect to find it one of the least
responsive of the classes of society to the demands
which the situation makes for a further growth of institutions
and a readjustment to an altered industrial situation.
The leisure class is the conservative class.
The exigencies of the general economic situation of
the community do not freely or directly impinge upon
the members of this class. They are not required
under penalty of forfeiture to change their habits
of life and their theoretical views of the external
world to suit the demands of an altered industrial
technique, since they are not in the full sense an
organic part of the industrial community. Therefore
these exigencies do not readily produce, in the members
of this class, that degree of uneasiness with the
existing order which alone can lead any body of men
to give up views and methods of life that have become
habitual to them. The office of the leisure class
in social evolution is to retard the movement and
to conserve what is obsolescent. This proposition
is by no means novel; it has long been one of the
commonplaces of popular opinion.
The prevalent conviction that the
wealthy class is by nature conservative has been popularly
accepted without much aid from any theoretical view
as to the place and relation of that class in the
cultural development. When an explanation of this
class conservatism is offered, it is commonly the
invidious one that the wealthy class opposes innovation
because it has a vested interest, of an unworthy sort,
in maintaining the present conditions. The explanation
here put forward imputes no unworthy motive.
The opposition of the class to changes in the cultural
scheme is instinctive, and does not rest primarily
on an interested calculation of material advantages;
it is an instinctive revulsion at any departure from
the accepted way of doing and of looking at things a
revulsion common to all men and only to be overcome
by stress of circumstances. All change in habits
of life and of thought is irksome. The difference
in this respect between the wealthy and the common
run of mankind lies not so much in the motive which
prompts to conservatism as in the degree of exposure
to the economic forces that urge a change. The
members of the wealthy class do not yield to the demand
for innovation as readily as other men because they
are not constrained to do so.
This conservatism of the wealthy class
is so obvious a feature that it has even come to be
recognized as a mark of respectability. Since
conservatism is a characteristic of the wealthier and
therefore more reputable portion of the community,
it has acquired a certain honorific or decorative
value. It has become prescriptive to such an extent
that an adherence to conservative views is comprised
as a matter of course in our notions of respectability;
and it is imperatively incumbent on all who would
lead a blameless life in point of social repute.
Conservatism, being an upper-class characteristic,
is decorous; and conversely, innovation, being a lower-class
phenomenon, is vulgar. The first and most unreflected
element in that instinctive revulsion and reprobation
with which we turn from all social innovators is this
sense of the essential vulgarity of the thing.
So that even in cases where one recognizes the substantial
merits of the case for which the innovator is spokesman as
may easily happen if the evils which he seeks to remedy
are sufficiently remote in point of time or space or
personal contact still one cannot but be
sensible of the fact that the innovator is a person
with whom it is at least distasteful to be associated,
and from whose social contact one must shrink.
Innovation is bad form.
The fact that the usages, actions,
and views of the well-to-do leisure class acquire
the character of a prescriptive canon of conduct for
the rest of society, gives added weight and reach to
the conservative influence of that class. It
makes it incumbent upon all reputable people to follow
their lead. So that, by virtue of its high position
as the avatar of good form, the wealthier class comes
to exert a retarding influence upon social development
far in excess of that which the simple numerical strength
of the class would assign it. Its prescriptive
example acts to greatly stiffen the resistance of all
other classes against any innovation, and to fix men’s
affections upon the good institutions handed down
from an earlier generation. There is a second
way in which the influence of the leisure class acts
in the same direction, so far as concerns hindrance
to the adoption of a conventional scheme of life more
in accord with the exigencies of the time. This
second method of upper-class guidance is not in strict
consistency to be brought under the same category as
the instinctive conservatism and aversion to new modes
of thought just spoken of; but it may as well be dealt
with here, since it has at least this much in common
with the conservative habit of mind that it acts to
retard innovation and the growth of social structure.
The code of proprieties, conventionalities, and usages
in vogue at any given time and among any given people
has more or less of the character of an organic whole;
so that any appreciable change in one point of the
scheme involves something of a change or readjustment
at other points also, if not a reorganization all
along the line. When a change is made which immediately
touches only a minor point in the scheme, the consequent
derangement of the structure of conventionalities may
be inconspicuous; but even in such a case it is safe
to say that some derangement of the general scheme,
more or less far-reaching, will follow. On the
other hand, when an attempted reform involves the suppression
or thorough-going remodelling of an institution of
first-rate importance in the conventional scheme,
it is immediately felt that a serious derangement
of the entire scheme would result; it is felt that
a readjustment of the structure to the new form taken
on by one of its chief elements would be a painful
and tedious, if not a doubtful process.
In order to realize the difficulty
which such a radical change in any one feature of
the conventional scheme of life would involve, it is
only necessary to suggest the suppression of the monogamic
family, or of the agnatic system of consanguinity,
or of private property, or of the theistic faith,
in any country of the Western civilization; or suppose
the suppression of ancestor worship in China, or of
the caste system in india, or of slavery in Africa,
or the establishment of equality of the sexes in Mohammedan
countries. It needs no argument to show that the
derangement of the general structure of conventionalities
in any of these cases would be very considerable.
In order to effect such an innovation a very far-reaching
alteration of men’s habits of thought would
be involved also at other points of the scheme than
the one immediately in question. The aversion
to any such innovation amounts to a shrinking from
an essentially alien scheme of life.
The revulsion felt by good people
at any proposed departure from the accepted methods
of life is a familiar fact of everyday experience.
It is not unusual to hear those persons who dispense
salutary advice and admonition to the community express
themselves forcibly upon the far-reaching pernicious
effects which the community would suffer from such
relatively slight changes as the disestablishment of
the Anglican Church, an increased facility of divorce,
adoption of female suffrage, prohibition of the manufacture
and sale of intoxicating beverages, abolition or restriction
of inheritances, etc. Any one of these innovations
would, we are told, “shake the social structure
to its base,” “reduce society to chaos,”
“subvert the foundations of morality,”
“make life intolerable,” “confound
the order of nature,” etc. These various
locutions are, no doubt, of the nature of hyperbole;
but, at the same time, like all overstatement, they
are evidence of a lively sense of the gravity of the
consequences which they are intended to describe.
The effect of these and like innovations in deranging
the accepted scheme of life is felt to be of much
graver consequence than the simple alteration of an
isolated item in a series of contrivances for the
convenience of men in society. What is true in
so obvious a degree of innovations of first-rate importance
is true in a less degree of changes of a smaller immediate
importance. The aversion to change is in large
part an aversion to the bother of making the readjustment
which any given change will necessitate; and this
solidarity of the system of institutions of any given
culture or of any given people strengthens the instinctive
resistance offered to any change in men’s habits
of thought, even in matters which, taken by themselves,
are of minor importance. A consequence of this
increased reluctance, due to the solidarity of human
institutions, is that any innovation calls for a greater
expenditure of nervous energy in making the necessary
readjustment than would otherwise be the case.
It is not only that a change in established habits
of thought is distasteful. The process of readjustment
of the accepted theory of life involves a degree of
mental effort a more or less protracted
and laborious effort to find and to keep one’s
bearings under the altered circumstances. This
process requires a certain expenditure of energy,
and so presumes, for its successful accomplishment,
some surplus of energy beyond that absorbed in the
daily struggle for subsistence. Consequently
it follows that progress is hindered by underfeeding
and excessive physical hardship, no less effectually
than by such a luxurious life as will shut out discontent
by cutting off the occasion for it. The abjectly
poor, and all those persons whose energies are entirely
absorbed by the struggle for daily sustenance, are
conservative because they cannot afford the effort
of taking thought for the day after tomorrow; just
as the highly prosperous are conservative because
they have small occasion to be discontented with the
situation as it stands today.
From this proposition it follows that
the institution of a leisure class acts to make the
lower classes conservative by withdrawing from them
as much as it may of the means of sustenance, and so
reducing their consumption, and consequently their
available energy, to such a point as to make them
incapable of the effort required for the learning and
adoption of new habits of thought. The accumulation
of wealth at the upper end of the pecuniary scale
implies privation at the lower end of the scale.
It is a commonplace that, wherever it occurs, a considerable
degree of privation among the body of the people is
a serious obstacle to any innovation.
This direct inhibitory effect of the
unequal distribution of wealth is seconded by an indirect
effect tending to the same result. As has already
been seen, the imperative example set by the upper
class in fixing the canons of reputability fosters
the practice of conspicuous consumption. The
prevalence of conspicuous consumption as one of the
main elements in the standard of decency among all
classes is of course not traceable wholly to the example
of the wealthy leisure class, but the practice and
the insistence on it are no doubt strengthened by the
example of the leisure class. The requirements
of decency in this matter are very considerable and
very imperative; so that even among classes whose
pecuniary position is sufficiently strong to admit
a consumption of goods considerably in excess of the
subsistence minimum, the disposable surplus left over
after the more imperative physical needs are satisfied
is not infrequently diverted to the purpose of a conspicuous
decency, rather than to added physical comfort and
fullness of life. Moreover, such surplus energy
as is available is also likely to be expended in the
acquisition of goods for conspicuous consumption or
conspicuous boarding. The result is that the requirements
of pecuniary reputability tend (1) to leave but a
scanty subsistence minimum available for other than
conspicuous consumption, and (2) to absorb any surplus
energy which may be available after the bare physical
necessities of life have been provided for. The
outcome of the whole is a strengthening of the general
conservative attitude of the community. The institution
of a leisure class hinders cultural development immediately
(1) by the inertia proper to the class itself, (2)
through its prescriptive example of conspicuous waste
and of conservatism, and (3) indirectly through that
system of unequal distribution of wealth and sustenance
on which the institution itself rests. To this
is to be added that the leisure class has also a material
interest in leaving things as they are. Under
the circumstances prevailing at any given time this
class is in a privileged position, and any departure
from the existing order may be expected to work to
the detriment of the class rather than the reverse.
The attitude of the class, simply as influenced by
its class interest, should therefore be to let well-enough
alone. This interested motive comes in to supplement
the strong instinctive bias of the class, and so to
render it even more consistently conservative than
it otherwise would be.
All this, of course, has nothing to
say in the way of eulogy or deprecation of the office
of the leisure class as an exponent and vehicle of
conservatism or reversion in social structure.
The inhibition which it exercises may be salutary
or the reverse. Wether it is the one or the other
in any given case is a question of casuistry rather
than of general theory. There may be truth in
the view (as a question of policy) so often expressed
by the spokesmen of the conservative element, that
without some such substantial and consistent resistance
to innovation as is offered by the conservative well-to-do
classes, social innovation and experiment would hurry
the community into untenable and intolerable situations;
the only possible result of which would be discontent
and disastrous reaction. All this, however, is
beside the present argument.
But apart from all deprecation, and
aside from all question as to the indispensability
of some such check on headlong innovation, the leisure
class, in the nature of things, consistently acts to
retard that adjustment to the environment which is
called social advance or development. The characteristic
attitude of the class may be summed up in the maxim:
“Whatever is, is right” whereas the law
of natural selection, as applied to human institutions,
gives the axiom: “Whatever is, is wrong.”
Not that the institutions of today are wholly wrong
for the purposes of the life of today, but they are,
always and in the nature of things, wrong to some
extent. They are the result of a more or less
inadequate adjustment of the methods of living to a
situation which prevailed at some point in the past
development; and they are therefore wrong by something
more than the interval which separates the present
situation from that of the past. “Right”
and “wrong” are of course here used without
conveying any rejection as to what ought or ought not
to be. They are applied simply from the (morally
colorless) evolutionary standpoint, and are intended
to designate compatibility or incompatibility with
the effective evolutionary process. The institution
of a leisure class, by force or class interest and
instinct, and by precept and prescriptive example,
makes for the perpetuation of the existing maladjustment
of institutions, and even favors a reversion to a
somewhat more archaic scheme of life; a scheme which
would be still farther out of adjustment with the
exigencies of life under the existing situation even
than the accredited, obsolescent scheme that has come
down from the immediate past.
But after all has been said on the
head of conservation of the good old ways, it remains
true that institutions change and develop. There
is a cumulative growth of customs and habits of thought;
a selective adaptation of conventions and methods
of life. Something is to be said of the office
of the leisure class in guiding this growth as well
as in retarding it; but little can be said here of
its relation to institutional growth except as it
touches the institutions that are primarily and immediately
of an economic character. These institutions the
economic structure may be roughly distinguished
into two classes or categories, according as they
serve one or the other of two divergent purposes of
economic life.
To adapt the classical terminology,
they are institutions of acquisition or of production;
or to revert to terms already employed in a different
connection in earlier chapters, they are pecuniary
or industrial institutions; or in still other terms,
they are institutions serving either the invidious
or the non-invidious economic interest. The former
category have to do with “business,” the
latter with industry, taking the latter word in the
mechanical sense. The latter class are not often
recognized as institutions, in great part because they
do not immediately concern the ruling class, and are,
therefore, seldom the subject of legislation or of
deliberate convention. When they do receive attention
they are commonly approached from the pecuniary or
business side; that being the side or phase of economic
life that chiefly occupies men’s deliberations
in our time, especially the deliberations of the upper
classes. These classes have little else than a
business interest in things economic, and on them
at the same time it is chiefly incumbent to deliberate
upon the community’s affairs.
The relation of the leisure (that
is, propertied non-industrial) class to the economic
process is a pecuniary relation a relation
of acquisition, not of production; of exploitation,
not of serviceability. Indirectly their economic
office may, of course, be of the utmost importance
to the economic life process; and it is by no means
here intended to depreciate the economic function
of the propertied class or of the captains of industry.
The purpose is simply to point out what is the nature
of the relation of these classes to the industrial
process and to economic institutions. Their office
is of a parasitic character, and their interest is
to divert what substance they may to their own use,
and to retain whatever is under their hand. The
conventions of the business world have grown up under
the selective surveillance of this principle of predation
or parasitism. They are conventions of ownership;
derivatives, more or less remote, of the ancient predatory
culture. But these pecuniary institutions do
not entirely fit the situation of today, for they
have grown up under a past situation differing somewhat
from the present. Even for effectiveness in the
pecuniary way, therefore, they are not as apt as might
be. The changed industrial life requires changed
methods of acquisition; and the pecuniary classes have
some interest in so adapting the pecuniary institutions
as to give them the best effect for acquisition of
private gain that is compatible with the continuance
of the industrial process out of which this gain arises.
Hence there is a more or less consistent trend in the
leisure-class guidance of institutional growth, answering
to the pecuniary ends which shape leisure-class economic
life.
The effect of the pecuniary interest
and the pecuniary habit of mind upon the growth of
institutions is seen in those enactments and conventions
that make for security of property, enforcement of
contracts, facility of pecuniary transactions, vested
interests. Of such bearing are changes affecting
bankruptcy and receiverships, limited liability, banking
and currency, coalitions of laborers or employers,
trusts and pools. The community’s institutional
furniture of this kind is of immediate consequence
only to the propertied classes, and in proportion
as they are propertied; that is to say, in proportion
as they are to be ranked with the leisure class.
But indirectly these conventions of business life
are of the gravest consequence for the industrial
process and for the life of the community. And
in guiding the institutional growth in this respect,
the pecuniary classes, therefore, serve a purpose
of the most serious importance to the community, not
only in the conservation of the accepted social scheme,
but also in shaping the industrial process proper.
The immediate end of this pecuniary institutional
structure and of its amelioration is the greater facility
of peaceable and orderly exploitation; but its remoter
effects far outrun this immediate object. Not
only does the more facile conduct of business permit
industry and extra-industrial life to go on with less
perturbation; but the resulting elimination of disturbances
and complications calling for an exercise of astute
discrimination in everyday affairs acts to make the
pecuniary class itself superfluous. As fast as
pecuniary transactions are reduced to routine, the
captain of industry can be dispensed with. This
consummation, it is needless to say, lies yet in the
indefinite future. The améliorations wrought
in favor of the pecuniary interest in modern institutions
tend, in another field, to substitute the “soulless”
joint-stock corporation for the captain, and so they
make also for the dispensability, of the great leisure-class
function of ownership. Indirectly, therefore,
the bent given to the growth of economic institutions
by the leisure-class influence is of very considerable
industrial consequence.