The leisure class lives by the industrial
community rather than in it. Its relations to
industry are of a pecuniary rather than an industrial
kind. Admission to the class is gained by exercise
of the pecuniary aptitudes aptitudes for
acquisition rather than for serviceability. There
is, therefore, a continued selective sifting of the
human material that makes up the leisure class, and
this selection proceeds on the ground of fitness for
pecuniary pursuits. But the scheme of life of
the class is in large part a heritage from the past,
and embodies much of the habits and ideals of the
earlier barbarian period. This archaic, barbarian
scheme of life imposes itself also on the lower orders,
with more or less mitigation. In its turn the
scheme of life, of conventions, acts selectively and
by education to shape the human material, and its
action runs chiefly in the direction of conserving
traits, habits, and ideals that belong to the early
barbarian age the age of prowess and predatory
life.
The most immediate and unequivocal
expression of that archaic human nature which characterizes
man in the predatory stage is the fighting propensity
proper. In cases where the predatory activity
is a collective one, this propensity is frequently
called the martial spirit, or, latterly, patriotism.
It needs no insistence to find assent to the proposition
that in the countries of civilized Europe the hereditary
leisure class is endowed with this martial spirit in
a higher degree than the middle classes. Indeed,
the leisure class claims the distinction as a matter
of pride, and no doubt with some grounds. War
is honorable, and warlike prowess is eminently honorific
in the eyes of the generality of men; and this admiration
of warlike prowess is itself the best voucher of a
predatory temperament in the admirer of war. The
enthusiasm for war, and the predatory temper of which
it is the index, prevail in the largest measure among
the upper classes, especially among the hereditary
leisure class. Moreover, the ostensible serious
occupation of the upper class is that of government,
which, in point of origin and developmental content,
is also a predatory occupation.
The only class which could at all
dispute with the hereditary leisure class the honor
of an habitual bellicose frame of mind is that of
the lower-class delinquents. In ordinary times,
the large body of the industrial classes is relatively
apathetic touching warlike interests. When unexcited,
this body of the common people, which makes up the
effective force of the industrial community, is rather
averse to any other than a defensive fight; indeed,
it responds a little tardily even to a provocation
which makes for an attitude of defense. In the
more civilized communities, or rather in the communities
which have reached an advanced industrial development,
the spirit of warlike aggression may be said to be
obsolescent among the common people. This does
not say that there is not an appreciable number of
individuals among the industrial classes in whom the
martial spirit asserts itself obtrusively. Nor
does it say that the body of the people may not be
fired with martial ardor for a time under the stimulus
of some special provocation, such as is seen in operation
today in more than one of the countries of Europe,
and for the time in America. But except for such
seasons of temporary exaltation, and except for those
individuals who are endowed with an archaic temperament
of the predatory type, together with the similarly
endowed body of individuals among the higher and the
lowest classes, the inertness of the mass of any modern
civilized community in this respect is probably so
great as would make war impracticable, except against
actual invasion. The habits and aptitudes of
the common run of men make for an unfolding of activity
in other, less picturesque directions than that of
war.
This class difference in temperament
may be due in part to a difference in the inheritance
of acquired traits in the several classes, but it
seems also, in some measure, to correspond with a difference
in ethnic derivation. The class difference is
in this respect visibly less in those countries whose
population is relatively homogeneous, ethnically,
than in the countries where there is a broader divergence
between the ethnic elements that make up the several
classes of the community. In the same connection
it may be noted that the later accessions to the leisure
class in the latter countries, in a general way, show
less of the martial spirit than contemporary representatives
of the aristocracy of the ancient line. These
nouveaux arrives have recently emerged from the commonplace
body of the population and owe their emergence into
the leisure class to the exercise of traits and propensities
which are not to be classed as prowess in the ancient
sense.
Apart from warlike activity proper,
the institution of the duel is also an expression
of the same superior readiness for combat; and the
duel is a leisure-class institution. The duel
is in substance a more or less deliberate resort to
a fight as a final settlement of a difference of opinion.
In civilized communities it prevails as a normal phenomenon
only where there is an hereditary leisure class, and
almost exclusively among that class. The exceptions
are (1) military and naval officers who are ordinarily
members of the leisure class, and who are at the same
time specially trained to predatory habits of mind
and (2) the lower-class delinquents who
are by inheritance, or training, or both, of a similarly
predatory disposition and habit. It is only the
high-bred gentleman and the rowdy that normally resort
to blows as the universal solvent of differences of
opinion. The plain man will ordinarily fight
only when excessive momentary irritation or alcoholic
exaltation act to inhibit the more complex habits
of response to the stimuli that make for provocation.
He is then thrown back upon the simpler, less differentiated
forms of the instinct of self-assertion; that is to
say, he reverts temporarily and without reflection
to an archaic habit of mind.
This institution of the duel as a
mode of finally settling disputes and serious questions
of precedence shades off into the obligatory, unprovoked
private fight, as a social obligation due to one’s
good repute. As a leisure-class usage of this
kind we have, particularly, that bizarre survival
of bellicose chivalry, the German student duel.
In the lower or spurious leisure class of the delinquents
there is in all countries a similar, though less formal,
social obligation incumbent on the rowdy to assert
his manhood in unprovoked combat with his fellows.
And spreading through all grades of society, a similar
usage prevails among the boys of the community.
The boy usually knows to nicety, from day to day,
how he and his associates grade in respect of relative
fighting capacity; and in the community of boys there
is ordinarily no secure basis of reputability for
any one who, by exception, will not or can not fight
on invitation.
All this applies especially to boys
above a certain somewhat vague limit of maturity.
The child’s temperament does not commonly answer
to this description during infancy and the years of
close tutelage, when the child still habitually seeks
contact with its mother at every turn of its daily
life. During this earlier period there is little
aggression and little propensity for antagonism.
The transition from this peaceable temper to the predaceous,
and in extreme cases malignant, mischievousness of
the boy is a gradual one, and it is accomplished with
more completeness, covering a larger range of the individual’s
aptitudes, in some cases than in others. In the
earlier stage of his growth, the child, whether boy
or girl, shows less of initiative and aggressive self-assertion
and less of an inclination to isolate himself and
his interests from the domestic group in which he lives,
and he shows more of sensitiveness to rebuke, bashfulness,
timidity, and the need of friendly human contact.
In the common run of cases this early temperament
passes, by a gradual but somewhat rapid obsolescence
of the infantile features, into the temperament of
the boy proper; though there are also cases where
the predaceous futures of boy life do not emerge at
all, or at the most emerge in but a slight and obscure
degree.
In girls the transition to the predaceous
stage is seldom accomplished with the same degree
of completeness as in boys; and in a relatively large
proportion of cases it is scarcely undergone at all.
In such cases the transition from infancy to adolescence
and maturity is a gradual and unbroken process of
the shifting of interest from infantile purposes and
aptitudes to the purposes, functions, and relations
of adult life. In the girls there is a less general
prevalence of a predaceous interval in the development;
and in the cases where it occurs, the predaceous and
isolating attitude during the interval is commonly
less accentuated.
In the male child the predaceous interval
is ordinarily fairly well marked and lasts for some
time, but it is commonly terminated (if at all) with
the attainment of maturity. This last statement
may need very material qualification. The cases
are by no means rare in which the transition from
the boyish to the adult temperament is not made, or
is made only partially understanding by
the “adult” temperament the average temperament
of those adult individuals in modern industrial life
who have some serviceability for the purposes of the
collective life process, and who may therefore be
said to make up the effective average of the industrial
community.
The ethnic composition of the European
populations varies. In some cases even the lower
classes are in large measure made up of the peace-disturbing
dolicho-blond; while in others this ethnic element
is found chiefly among the hereditary leisure class.
The fighting habit seems to prevail to a less extent
among the working-class boys in the latter class of
populations than among the boys of the upper classes
or among those of the populations first named.
If this generalization as to the temperament
of the boy among the working classes should be found
true on a fuller and closer scrutiny of the field,
it would add force to the view that the bellicose temperament
is in some appreciable degree a race characteristic;
it appears to enter more largely into the make-up
of the dominant, upper-class ethnic type the
dolicho-blond of the European countries
than into the subservient, lower-class types of man
which are conceived to constitute the body of the
population of the same communities.
The case of the boy may seem not to
bear seriously on the question of the relative endowment
of prowess with which the several classes of society
are gifted; but it is at least of some value as going
to show that this fighting impulse belongs to a more
archaic temperament than that possessed by the average
adult man of the industrious classes. In this,
as in many other features of child life, the child
reproduces, temporarily and in miniature, some of
the earlier phases of the development of adult man.
Under this interpretation, the boy’s predilection
for exploit and for isolation of his own interest is
to be taken as a transient reversion to the human
nature that is normal to the early barbarian culture the
predatory culture proper. In this respect, as
in much else, the leisure-class and the delinquent-class
character shows a persistence into adult life of traits
that are normal to childhood and youth, and that are
likewise normal or habitual to the earlier stages
of culture. Unless the difference is traceable
entirely to a fundamental difference between persistent
ethnic types, the traits that distinguish the swaggering
delinquent and the punctilious gentleman of leisure
from the common crowd are, in some measure, marks of
an arrested spiritual development. They mark
an immature phase, as compared with the stage of development
attained by the average of the adults in the modern
industrial community. And it will appear presently
that the puerile spiritual make-up of these representatives
of the upper and the lowest social strata shows itself
also in the presence of other archaic traits than
this proclivity to ferocious exploit and isolation.
As if to leave no doubt about the
essential immaturity of the fighting temperament,
we have, bridging the interval between legitimate boyhood
and adult manhood, the aimless and playful, but more
or less systematic and elaborate, disturbances of
the peace in vogue among schoolboys of a slightly
higher age. In the common run of cases, these
disturbances are confined to the period of adolescence.
They recur with decreasing frequency and acuteness
as youth merges into adult life, and so they reproduce,
in a general way, in the life of the individual, the
sequence by which the group has passed from the predatory
to a more settled habit of life. In an appreciable
number of cases the spiritual growth of the individual
comes to a close before he emerges from this puerile
phase; in these cases the fighting temper persists
through life. Those individuals who in spiritual
development eventually reach man’s estate, therefore,
ordinarily pass through a temporary archaic phase
corresponding to the permanent spiritual level of the
fighting and sporting men. Different individuals
will, of course, achieve spiritual maturity and sobriety
in this respect in different degrees; and those who
fail of the average remain as an undissolved residue
of crude humanity in the modern industrial community
and as a foil for that selective process of adaptation
which makes for a heightened industrial efficiency
and the fullness of life of the collectivity.
This arrested spiritual development may express itself
not only in a direct participation by adults in youthful
exploits of ferocity, but also indirectly in aiding
and abetting disturbances of this kind on the part
of younger persons. It thereby furthers the formation
of habits of ferocity which may persist in the later
life of the growing generation, and so retard any
movement in the direction of a more peaceable effective
temperament on the part of the community. If a
person so endowed with a proclivity for exploits is
in a position to guide the development of habits in
the adolescent members of the community, the influence
which he exerts in the direction of conservation and
reversion to prowess may be very considerable.
This is the significance, for instance, of the fostering
care latterly bestowed by many clergymen and other
pillars of society upon “boys’ brigades”
and similar pseudo-military organizations. The
same is true of the encouragement given to the growth
of “college spirit,” college athletics,
and the like, in the higher institutions of learning.
These manifestations of the predatory
temperament are all to be classed under the head of
exploit. They are partly simple and unreflected
expressions of an attitude of emulative ferocity, partly
activities deliberately entered upon with a view to
gaining repute for prowess. Sports of all kinds
are of the same general character, including prize-fights,
bull-fights, athletics, shooting, angling, yachting,
and games of skill, even where the element of destructive
physical efficiency is not an obtrusive feature.
Sports shade off from the basis of hostile combat,
through skill, to cunning and chicanery, without its
being possible to draw a line at any point. The
ground of an addiction to sports is an archaic spiritual
constitution the possession of the predatory
emulative propensity in a relatively high potency,
a strong proclivity to adventuresome exploit and to
the infliction of damage is especially pronounced
in those employments which are in colloquial usage
specifically called sportsmanship.
It is perhaps truer, or at least more
evident, as regards sports than as regards the other
expressions of predatory emulation already spoken of,
that the temperament which inclines men to them is
essentially a boyish temperament. The addiction
to sports, therefore, in a peculiar degree marks an
arrested development of the man’s moral nature.
This peculiar boyishness of temperament in sporting
men immediately becomes apparent when attention is
directed to the large element of make-believe that
is present in all sporting activity. Sports share
this character of make-believe with the games and
exploits to which children, especially boys, are habitually
inclined. Make-believe does not enter in the same
proportion into all sports, but it is present in a
very appreciable degree in all. It is apparently
present in a larger measure in sportsmanship proper
and in athletic contests than in set games of skill
of a more sedentary character; although this rule may
not be found to apply with any great uniformity.
It is noticeable, for instance, that even very mild-mannered
and matter-of-fact men who go out shooting are apt
to carry an excess of arms and accoutrements in order
to impress upon their own imagination the seriousness
of their undertaking. These huntsmen are also
prone to a histrionic, prancing gait and to an elaborate
exaggeration of the motions, whether of stealth or
of onslaught, involved in their deeds of exploit.
Similarly in athletic sports there is almost invariably
present a good share of rant and swagger and ostensible
mystification features which mark the histrionic
nature of these employments. In all this, of course,
the reminder of boyish make-believe is plain enough.
The slang of athletics, by the way, is in great part
made up of extremely sanguinary locutions borrowed
from the terminology of warfare. Except where
it is adopted as a necessary means of secret communication,
the use of a special slang in any employment is probably
to be accepted as evidence that the occupation in
question is substantially make-believe.
A further feature in which sports
differ from the duel and similar disturbances of the
peace is the peculiarity that they admit of other
motives being assigned for them besides the impulses
of exploit and ferocity. There is probably little
if any other motive present in any given case, but
the fact that other reasons for indulging in sports
are frequently assigned goes to say that other grounds
are sometimes present in a subsidiary way. Sportsmen hunters
and anglers are more or less in the habit
of assigning a love of nature, the need of recreation,
and the like, as the incentives to their favorite
pastime. These motives are no doubt frequently
present and make up a part of the attractiveness of
the sportsman’s life; but these can not be the
chief incentives. These ostensible needs could
be more readily and fully satisfied without the accompaniment
of a systematic effort to take the life of those creatures
that make up an essential feature of that “nature”
that is beloved by the sportsman. It is, indeed,
the most noticeable effect of the sportsman’s
activity to keep nature in a state of chronic desolation
by killing off all living thing whose destruction
he can compass.
Still, there is ground for the sportsman’s
claim that under the existing conventionalities his
need of recreation and of contact with nature can
best be satisfied by the course which he takes.
Certain canons of good breeding have been imposed
by the prescriptive example of a predatory leisure
class in the past and have been somewhat painstakingly
conserved by the usage of the latter-day representatives
of that class; and these canons will not permit him,
without blame, to seek contact with nature on other
terms. From being an honorable employment handed
down from the predatory culture as the highest form
of everyday leisure, sports have come to be the only
form of outdoor activity that has the full sanction
of decorum. Among the proximate incentives to
shooting and angling, then, may be the need of recreation
and outdoor life. The remoter cause which imposes
the necessity of seeking these objects under the cover
of systematic slaughter is a prescription that can
not be violated except at the risk of disrepute and
consequent lesion to one’s self-respect.
The case of other kinds of sport is
somewhat similar. Of these, athletic games are
the best example. Prescriptive usage with respect
to what forms of activity, exercise, and recreation
are permissible under the code of reputable living
is of course present here also. Those who are
addicted to athletic sports, or who admire them, set
up the claim that these afford the best available
means of recreation and of “physical culture.”
And prescriptive usage gives countenance to the claim.
The canons of reputable living exclude from the scheme
of life of the leisure class all activity that can
not be classed as conspicuous leisure. And consequently
they tend by prescription to exclude it also from
the scheme of life of the community generally.
At the same time purposeless physical exertion is
tedious and distasteful beyond tolerance. As
has been noticed in another connection, recourse is
in such a case had to some form of activity which
shall at least afford a colorable pretense of purpose,
even if the object assigned be only a make-believe.
Sports satisfy these requirements of substantial futility
together with a colorable make-believe of purpose.
In addition to this they afford scope for emulation,
and are attractive also on that account. In order
to be decorous, an employment must conform to the
leisure-class canon of reputable waste; at the same
time all activity, in order to be persisted in as
an habitual, even if only partial, expression of life,
must conform to the generically human canon of efficiency
for some serviceable objective end. The leisure-class
canon demands strict and comprehensive futility, the
instinct of workmanship demands purposeful action.
The leisure-class canon of decorum acts slowly and
pervasively, by a selective elimination of all substantially
useful or purposeful modes of action from the accredited
scheme of life; the instinct of workmanship acts impulsively
and may be satisfied, provisionally, with a proximate
purpose. It is only as the apprehended ulterior
futility of a given line of action enters the reflective
complex of consciousness as an element essentially
alien to the normally purposeful trend of the life
process that its disquieting and deterrent effect
on the consciousness of the agent is wrought.
The individual’s habits of thought
make an organic complex, the trend of which is necessarily
in the direction of serviceability to the life process.
When it is attempted to assimilate systematic waste
or futility, as an end in life, into this organic
complex, there presently supervenes a revulsion.
But this revulsion of the organism may be avoided
if the attention can be confined to the proximate,
unreflected purpose of dexterous or emulative exertion.
Sports hunting, angling, athletic games,
and the like afford an exercise for dexterity
and for the emulative ferocity and astuteness characteristic
of predatory life. So long as the individual
is but slightly gifted with reflection or with a sense
of the ulterior trend of his actions so long as his
life is substantially a life of naïve impulsive action so
long the immediate and unreflected purposefulness
of sports, in the way of an expression of dominance,
will measurably satisfy his instinct of workmanship.
This is especially true if his dominant impulses are
the unreflecting emulative propensities of the predaceous
temperament. At the same time the canons of decorum
will commend sports to him as expressions of a pecuniarily
blameless life. It is by meeting these two requirements,
of ulterior wastefulness and proximate purposefulness,
that any given employment holds its place as a traditional
and habitual mode of decorous recreation. In
the sense that other forms of recreation and exercise
are morally impossible to persons of good breeding
and delicate sensibilities, then, sports are the best
available means of recreation under existing circumstances.
But those members of respectable society
who advocate athletic games commonly justify their
attitude on this head to themselves and to their neighbors
on the ground that these games serve as an invaluable
means of development. They not only improve the
contestant’s physique, but it is commonly added
that they also foster a manly spirit, both in the
participants and in the spectators. Football is
the particular game which will probably first occur
to any one in this community when the question of
the serviceability of athletic games is raised, as
this form of athletic contest is at present uppermost
in the mind of those who plead for or against games
as a means of physical or moral salvation. This
typical athletic sport may, therefore, serve to illustrate
the bearing of athletics upon the development of the
contestant’s character and physique. It
has been said, not inaptly, that the relation of football
to physical culture is much the same as that of the
bull-fight to agriculture. Serviceability for
these lusory institutions requires sedulous training
or breeding. The material used, whether brute
or human, is subjected to careful selection and discipline,
in order to secure and accentuate certain aptitudes
and propensities which are characteristic of the ferine
state, and which tend to obsolescence under domestication.
This does not mean that the result in either case is
an all around and consistent rehabilitation of the
ferine or barbarian habit of mind and body. The
result is rather a one-sided return to barbarism or
to the feroe natura a rehabilitation
and accentuation of those ferine traits which make
for damage and desolation, without a corresponding
development of the traits which would serve the individual’s
self-preservation and fullness of life in a ferine
environment. The culture bestowed in football
gives a product of exotic ferocity and cunning.
It is a rehabilitation of the early barbarian temperament,
together with a suppression of those details of temperament,
which, as seen from the standpoint of the social and
economic exigencies, are the redeeming features of
the savage character.
The physical vigor acquired in the
training for athletic games so far as the
training may be said to have this effect is
of advantage both to the individual and to the collectivity,
in that, other things being equal, it conduces to
economic serviceability. The spiritual traits
which go with athletic sports are likewise economically
advantageous to the individual, as contradistinguished
from the interests of the collectivity. This
holds true in any community where these traits are
present in some degree in the population. Modern
competition is in large part a process of self-assertion
on the basis of these traits of predatory human nature.
In the sophisticated form in which they enter into
the modern, peaceable emulation, the possession of
these traits in some measure is almost a necessary
of life to the civilized man. But while they
are indispensable to the competitive individual, they
are not directly serviceable to the community.
So far as regards the serviceability of the individual
for the purposes of the collective life, emulative
efficiency is of use only indirectly if at all.
Ferocity and cunning are of no use to the community
except in its hostile dealings with other communities;
and they are useful to the individual only because
there is so large a proportion of the same traits actively
present in the human environment to which he is exposed.
Any individual who enters the competitive struggle
without the due endowment of these traits is at a
disadvantage, somewhat as a hornless steer would find
himself at a disadvantage in a drove of horned cattle.
The possession and the cultivation
of the predatory traits of character may, of course,
be desirable on other than economic grounds. There
is a prevalent aesthetic or ethical predilection for
the barbarian aptitudes, and the traits in question
minister so effectively to this predilection that
their serviceability in the aesthetic or ethical respect
probably offsets any economic unserviceability which
they may give. But for the present purpose that
is beside the point. Therefore nothing is said
here as to the desirability or advisability of sports
on the whole, or as to their value on other than economic
grounds.
In popular apprehension there is much
that is admirable in the type of manhood which the
life of sport fosters. There is self-reliance
and good-fellowship, so termed in the somewhat loose
colloquial use of the words. From a different
point of view the qualities currently so characterized
might be described as truculence and clannishness.
The reason for the current approval and admiration
of these manly qualities, as well as for their being
called manly, is the same as the reason for their
usefulness to the individual. The members of the
community, and especially that class of the community
which sets the pace in canons of taste, are endowed
with this range of propensities in sufficient measure
to make their absence in others felt as a shortcoming,
and to make their possession in an exceptional degree
appreciated as an attribute of superior merit.
The traits of predatory man are by no means obsolete
in the common run of modern populations. They
are present and can be called out in bold relief at
any time by any appeal to the sentiments in which
they express themselves unless this appeal
should clash with the specific activities that make
up our habitual occupations and comprise the general
range of our everyday interests. The common run
of the population of any industrial community is emancipated
from these, economically considered, untoward propensities
only in the sense that, through partial and temporary
disuse, they have lapsed into the background of sub-conscious
motives. With varying degrees of potency in different
individuals, they remain available for the aggressive
shaping of men’s actions and sentiments whenever
a stimulus of more than everyday intensity comes in
to call them forth. And they assert themselves
forcibly in any case where no occupation alien to the
predatory culture has usurped the individual’s
everyday range of interest and sentiment. This
is the case among the leisure class and among certain
portions of the population which are ancillary to that
class. Hence the facility with which any new accessions
to the leisure class take to sports; and hence the
rapid growth of sports and of the sporting sentient
in any industrial community where wealth has accumulated
sufficiently to exempt a considerable part of the population
from work.
A homely and familiar fact may serve
to show that the predaceous impulse does not prevail
in the same degree in all classes. Taken simply
as a feature of modern life, the habit of carrying
a walking-stick may seem at best a trivial detail;
but the usage has a significance for the point in
question. The classes among whom the habit most
prevails the classes with whom the walking-stick
is associated in popular apprehension are
the men of the leisure class proper, sporting men,
and the lower-class delinquents. To these might
perhaps be added the men engaged in the pecuniary
employments. The same is not true of the common
run of men engaged in industry and it may be noted
by the way that women do not carry a stick except
in case of infirmity, where it has a use of a different
kind. The practice is of course in great measure
a matter of polite usage; but the basis of polite
usage is, in turn, the proclivities of the class which
sets the pace in polite usage. The walking-stick
serves the purpose of an advertisement that the bearer’s
hands are employed otherwise than in useful effort,
and it therefore has utility as an evidence of leisure.
But it is also a weapon, and it meets a felt need
of barbarian man on that ground. The handling
of so tangible and primitive a means of offense is
very comforting to any one who is gifted with even
a moderate share of ferocity. The exigencies of
the language make it impossible to avoid an apparent
implication of disapproval of the aptitudes, propensities,
and expressions of life here under discussion.
It is, however, not intended to imply anything in the
way of deprecation or commendation of any one of these
phases of human character or of the life process.
The various elements of the prevalent human nature
are taken up from the point of view of economic theory,
and the traits discussed are gauged and graded with
regard to their immediate economic bearing on the
facility of the collective life process. That
is to say, these phenomena are here apprehended from
the economic point of view and are valued with respect
to their direct action in furtherance or hindrance
of a more perfect adjustment of the human collectivity
to the environment and to the institutional structure
required by the economic situation of the collectivity
for the present and for the immediate future.
For these purposes the traits handed down from the
predatory culture are less serviceable than might be.
Although even in this connection it is not to be overlooked
that the energetic aggressiveness and pertinacity
of predatory man is a heritage of no mean value.
The economic value with some regard also
to the social value in the narrower sense of
these aptitudes and propensities is attempted to be
passed upon without reflecting on their value as seen
from another point of view. When contrasted with
the prosy mediocrity of the latter-day industrial
scheme of life, and judged by the accredited standards
of morality, and more especially by the standards of
aesthetics and of poetry, these survivals from a more
primitive type of manhood may have a very different
value from that here assigned them. But all this
being foreign to the purpose in hand, no expression
of opinion on this latter head would be in place here.
All that is admissible is to enter the caution that
these standards of excellence, which are alien to
the present purpose, must not be allowed to influence
our economic appreciation of these traits of human
character or of the activities which foster their
growth. This applies both as regards those persons
who actively participate in sports and those whose
sporting experience consists in contemplation only.
What is here said of the sporting propensity is likewise
pertinent to sundry reflections presently to be made
in this connection on what would colloquially be known
as the religious life.
The last paragraph incidentally touches
upon the fact that everyday speech can scarcely be
employed in discussing this class of aptitudes and
activities without implying deprecation or apology.
The fact is significant as showing the habitual attitude
of the dispassionate common man toward the propensities
which express themselves in sports and in exploit
generally. And this is perhaps as convenient a
place as any to discuss that undertone of deprecation
which runs through all the voluminous discourse in
defense or in laudation of athletic sports, as well
as of other activities of a predominantly predatory
character. The same apologetic frame of mind
is at least beginning to be observable in the spokesmen
of most other institutions handed down from the barbarian
phase of life. Among these archaic institutions
which are felt to need apology are comprised, with
others, the entire existing system of the distribution
of wealth, together with the resulting class distinction
of status; all or nearly all forms of consumption
that come under the head of conspicuous waste; the
status of women under the patriarchal system; and
many features of the traditional creeds and devout
observances, especially the exoteric expressions of
the creed and the naïve apprehension of received observances.
What is to be said in this connection of the apologetic
attitude taken in commending sports and the sporting
character will therefore apply, with a suitable change
in phraseology, to the apologies offered in behalf
of these other, related elements of our social heritage.
There is a feeling usually
vague and not commonly avowed in so many words by
the apologist himself, but ordinarily perceptible in
the manner of his discourse that these
sports, as well as the general range of predaceous
impulses and habits of thought which underlie the sporting
character, do not altogether commend themselves to
common sense. “As to the majority of murderers,
they are very incorrect characters.” This
aphorism offers a valuation of the predaceous temperament,
and of the disciplinary effects of its overt expression
and exercise, as seen from the moralist’s point
of view. As such it affords an indication of what
is the deliverance of the sober sense of mature men
as to the degree of availability of the predatory
habit of mind for the purposes of the collective life.
It is felt that the presumption is against any activity
which involves habituation to the predatory attitude,
and that the burden of proof lies with those who speak
for the rehabilitation of the predaceous temper and
for the practices which strengthen it. There is
a strong body of popular sentiment in favor of diversions
and enterprises of the kind in question; but there
is at the same time present in the community a pervading
sense that this ground of sentiment wants legitimation.
The required legitimation is ordinarily sought by
showing that although sports are substantially of a
predatory, socially disintegrating effect; although
their proximate effect runs in the direction of reversion
to propensities that are industrially disserviceable;
yet indirectly and remotely by some not
readily comprehensible process of polar induction,
or counter-irritation perhaps sports are
conceived to foster a habit of mind that is serviceable
for the social or industrial purpose. That is
to say, although sports are essentially of the nature
of invidious exploit, it is presumed that by some
remote and obscure effect they result in the growth
of a temperament conducive to non-invidious work.
It is commonly attempted to show all this empirically
or it is rather assumed that this is the empirical
generalization which must be obvious to any one who
cares to see it. In conducting the proof of this
thesis the treacherous ground of inference from cause
to effect is somewhat shrewdly avoided, except so
far as to show that the “manly virtues”
spoken of above are fostered by sports. But since
it is these manly virtues that are (economically)
in need of legitimation, the chain of proof breaks
off where it should begin. In the most general
economic terms, these apologies are an effort to show
that, in spite of the logic of the thing, sports do
in fact further what may broadly be called workmanship.
So long as he has not succeeded in persuading himself
or others that this is their effect the thoughtful
apologist for sports will not rest content, and commonly,
it is to be admitted, he does not rest content.
His discontent with his own vindication of the practice
in question is ordinarily shown by his truculent tone
and by the eagerness with which he heaps up asseverations
in support of his position. But why are apologies
needed? If there prevails a body of popular sentient
in favor of sports, why is not that fact a sufficient
legitimation? The protracted discipline of prowess
to which the race has been subjected under the predatory
and quasi-peaceable culture has transmitted to the
men of today a temperament that finds gratification
in these expressions of ferocity and cunning.
So, why not accept these sports as legitimate expressions
of a normal and wholesome human nature? What other
norm is there that is to be lived up to than that
given in the aggregate range of propensities that
express themselves in the sentiments of this generation,
including the hereditary strain of prowess? The
ulterior norm to which appeal is taken is the instinct
of workmanship, which is an instinct more fundamental,
of more ancient prescription, than the propensity
to predatory emulation. The latter is but a special
development of the instinct of workmanship, a variant,
relatively late and ephemeral in spite of its great
absolute antiquity. The emulative predatory impulse or
the instinct of sportsmanship, as it might well be
called is essentially unstable in comparison
with the primordial instinct of workmanship out of
which it has been developed and differentiated.
Tested by this ulterior norm of life, predatory emulation,
and therefore the life of sports, falls short.
The manner and the measure in which
the institution of a leisure class conduces to the
conservation of sports and invidious exploit can of
course not be succinctly stated. From the evidence
already recited it appears that, in sentient and inclinations,
the leisure class is more favorable to a warlike attitude
and animus than the industrial classes. Something
similar seems to be true as regards sports. But
it is chiefly in its indirect effects, though the
canons of decorous living, that the institution has
its influence on the prevalent sentiment with respect
to the sporting life. This indirect effect goes
almost unequivocally in the direction of furthering
a survival of the predatory temperament and habits;
and this is true even with respect to those variants
of the sporting life which the higher leisure-class
code of proprieties proscribes; as, e.g., prize-fighting,
cock-fighting, and other like vulgar expressions of
the sporting temper. Whatever the latest authenticated
schedule of detail proprieties may say, the accredited
canons of decency sanctioned by the institution say
without equivocation that emulation and waste are
good and their opposites are disreputable. In
the crepuscular light of the social nether spaces the
details of the code are not apprehended with all the
facility that might be desired, and these broad underlying
canons of decency are therefore applied somewhat unreflectingly,
with little question as to the scope of their competence
or the exceptions that have been sanctioned in detail.
Addiction to athletic sports, not
only in the way of direct participation, but also
in the way of sentiment and moral support, is, in
a more or less pronounced degree, a characteristic
of the leisure class; and it is a trait which that
class shares with the lower-class delinquents, and
with such atavistic elements throughout the body of
the community as are endowed with a dominant predaceous
trend. Few individuals among the populations
of Western civilized countries are so far devoid of
the predaceous instinct as to find no diversion in
contemplating athletic sports and games, but with the
common run of individuals among the industrial classes
the inclination to sports does not assert itself to
the extent of constituting what may fairly be called
a sporting habit. With these classes sports are
an occasional diversion rather than a serious feature
of life. This common body of the people can therefore
not be said to cultivate the sporting propensity.
Although it is not obsolete in the average of them,
or even in any appreciable number of individuals,
yet the predilection for sports in the commonplace
industrial classes is of the nature of a reminiscence,
more or less diverting as an occasional interest, rather
than a vital and permanent interest that counts as
a dominant factor in shaping the organic complex of
habits of thought into which it enters. As it
manifests itself in the sporting life of today, this
propensity may not appear to be an economic factor
of grave consequence. Taken simply by itself
it does not count for a great deal in its direct effects
on the industrial efficiency or the consumption of
any given individual; but the prevalence and the growth
of the type of human nature of which this propensity
is a characteristic feature is a matter of some consequence.
It affects the economic life of the collectivity both
as regards the rate of economic development and as
regards the character of the results attained by the
development. For better or worse, the fact that
the popular habits of thought are in any degree dominated
by this type of character can not but greatly affect
the scope, direction, standards, and ideals of the
collective economic life, as well as the degree of
adjustment of the collective life to the environment.
Something to a like effect is to be
said of other traits that go to make up the barbarian
character. For the purposes of economic theory,
these further barbarian traits may be taken as concomitant
variations of that predaceous temper of which prowess
is an expression. In great measure they are not
primarily of an economic character, nor do they have
much direct economic bearing. They serve to indicate
the stage of economic evolution to which the individual
possessed of them is adapted. They are of importance,
therefore, as extraneous tests of the degree of adaptation
of the character in which they are comprised to the
economic exigencies of today, but they are also to
some extent important as being aptitudes which themselves
go to increase or diminish the economic serviceability
of the individual.
As it finds expression in the life
of the barbarian, prowess manifests itself in two
main directions force and fraud. In
varying degrees these two forms of expression are
similarly present in modern warfare, in the pecuniary
occupations, and in sports and games. Both lines
of aptitudes are cultivated and strengthened by the
life of sport as well as by the more serious forms
of emulative life. Strategy or cunning is an element
invariably present in games, as also in warlike pursuits
and in the chase. In all of these employments
strategy tends to develop into finesse and chicanery.
Chicanery, falsehood, browbeating, hold a well-secured
place in the method of procedure of any athletic contest
and in games generally. The habitual employment
of an umpire, and the minute technical regulations
governing the limits and details of permissible fraud
and strategic advantage, sufficiently attest the fact
that fraudulent practices and attempts to overreach
one’s opponents are not adventitious features
of the game. In the nature of the case habituation
to sports should conduce to a fuller development of
the aptitude for fraud; and the prevalence in the community
of that predatory temperament which inclines men to
sports connotes a prevalence of sharp practice and
callous disregard of the interests of others, individually
and collectively. Resort to fraud, in any guise
and under any legitimation of law or custom, is an
expression of a narrowly self-regarding habit of mind.
It is needless to dwell at any length on the economic
value of this feature of the sporting character.
In this connection it is to be noted
that the most obvious characteristic of the physiognomy
affected by athletic and other sporting men is that
of an extreme astuteness. The gifts and exploits
of Ulysses are scarcely second to those of Achilles,
either in their substantial furtherance of the game
or in the eclat which they give the astute sporting
man among his associates. The pantomime of astuteness
is commonly the first step in that assimilation to
the professional sporting man which a youth undergoes
after matriculation in any reputable school, of the
secondary or the higher education, as the case may
be. And the physiognomy of astuteness, as a decorative
feature, never ceases to receive the thoughtful attention
of men whose serious interest lies in athletic games,
races, or other contests of a similar emulative nature.
As a further indication of their spiritual kinship,
it may be pointed out that the members of the lower
delinquent class usually show this physiognomy of
astuteness in a marked degree, and that they very
commonly show the same histrionic exaggeration of it
that is often seen in the young candidate for athletic
honors. This, by the way, is the most legible
mark of what is vulgarly called “toughness”
in youthful aspirants for a bad name.
The astute man, it may be remarked,
is of no economic value to the community unless
it be for the purpose of sharp practice in dealings
with other communities. His functioning is not
a furtherance of the generic life process. At
its best, in its direct economic bearing, it is a
conversion of the economic substance of the collectivity
to a growth alien to the collective life process very
much after the analogy of what in medicine would be
called a benign tumor, with some tendency to transgress
the uncertain line that divides the benign from the
malign growths. The two barbarian traits, ferocity
and astuteness, go to make up the predaceous temper
or spiritual attitude. They are the expressions
of a narrowly self-regarding habit of mind. Both
are highly serviceable for individual expediency in
a life looking to invidious success. Both also
have a high aesthetic value. Both are fostered
by the pecuniary culture. But both alike are
of no use for the purposes of the collective life.