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The Altruist in Politics
Synopsis
When people feel that their ordered societies are in decay, they are attracted
too readily to principles and attitudes found in socialism and communism.
Delivered at Columbia University in an address during commencement ceremonies.
Benjamin Nathan Cardozo
American jurist. Cardozo was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court (1932-1938)
by President Hoover to fill Oliver Wendell Holmes' seat upon his resignation.
He was a forerunner of jurists who believe that the courts have a role in
shaping public policy, and made liberal interpretations of the constitution
in his bid to "modernize" jurisprudence.
Essay - 9/15/1889
There comes not seldom a crisis in the life of men, of nations, and of worlds,
when the old forms seem ready to decay, and the old rules of action have lost
their binding force. The evils of existing systems obscure the blessings that
attend them; and, where reform is needed, the cry is raised for subversion.
The cause of such phenomena is not far to seek. "It used to appear to
me," writes Count Tolstoi, in a significant passage, "it used to
appear to me that the small number of cultivated, rich and idle men, of whom
I was one, composed the whole of humanity, and that the millions and millions
of other men who had lived and are still living were not in reality men at
all." It is this spirit- the spirit that sees the whole of humanity in
the few, and throws into the background the millions and millions of other
men-it is this spirit that has aroused the antagonism of reformers, and made
the decay of the old forms, the rupture of the old restrictions, the ideal
of them and of their followers. When wealth and poverty meet each other face
to face, the one the master and the other the dependent, the one exalted and
the other debased, it is perhaps hardly matter for surprise that the dependent
and debased and powerless faction, in envy of their opponents' supremacy,
should demand, not simple reform, but absolute community and equality of wealth.
That cry for communism is no new one in the history of mankind. Thousands
of years ago it was heard and acted on; and, in the lapse of centuries, its
reverberations have but swelled in volume. Again and again, the altruist has
arisen in politics, has bidden us share with others the product of our toil,
and has proclaimed the communistic dogma as the panacea for our social ills.
So today, amid the buried hopes and buried projects of the past, the doctrine
of communism still lives in the minds of men. Under stress of misfortune,
or in dread of tyranny, it is still preached in modern times as Plato preached
it in the world of the Greeks.
Yet it is indeed doubtful whether, in the history of mankind, a doctrine was
ever taught more impracticable or more false to the principles it professes
than this very doctrine of communism. In a world where self-interest is avowedly
the ruling motive, it seeks to establish at once an all-reaching and all-controlling
altruism. In a world where every man is pushing and fighting to outstrip his
fellows, it would make him toil with like vigor for their common welfare.
In a world where a man's activity is measured by the nearness of reward, it
would hold up a prospective recompense as an equal stimulant to labor. "The
more bitterly we feel," writes George Eliot, "the more bitterly
we feel the folly, ignorance, neglect, or self-seeking of those who at different
times have wielded power, the stronger is the obligation we lay on ourselves
to beware lest we also, by a too hasty wresting of measures which seem to
promise immediate relief, make a worse time of it for our own generation,
and leave a bad inheritance for our children." In the future, when the
remoteness of his reward shall have weakened the laborer's zeal, we shall
be able to judge more fairly of the blessings that the communist offers. Instead
of the present world, where some at least are well-to-do and happy, the communist
holds before us a world where all alike are poor. For the activity, the push,
the vigor of our modern life, his substitute is a life aimless and unbroken.
And so we have to say to communists what George Eliot might have said: Be
not blinded by the passions of the moment, but when you prate about your own
wrongs and the sufferings of your offspring, take heed lest in the long run
you make a worse time of it for your own generation, and leave a bad inheritance
for your children.
Little thought has been taken by these altruistic reformers for the application
of the doctrines they uphold. To the question how one kind of labor can be
measured against another, how the labor of the artisan can be measured against
the labor of the artist, how the labor of the strong can be measured against
the labor of the weak, the communists can give no answer. Absorbed, as they
are, in the principle of equality, they have still forgotten the equality
of work in the equality of pay; they have forgotten that reward, to be really
equal, must be proportionate to effort; and they and all socialists have forgotten
that we cannot make an arithmetic of human thought and feeling; and that for
all our crude attempts to balance recompense against toil, for all our crude
attempts to determine the relative severity of different kinds of toil, for
all our crude attempts to determine the relative strain on different persons
of the same kind of toil, yet not only will the ratio, dealing, as it does,
with our subjective feelings, be a blundering one, but a system based upon
it will involve inequalities greater, because more insidious, than those of
the present system it would discard.
Instances, indeed, are not wanting to substantiate the claim that communism,
by unduly exalting our altruistic impulses, proceeds upon a false psychological
basis. Yet if an instance is to be chosen, it would be hard to find one more
suggestive than that afforded by the efforts of Robert Owen. The year 1824
saw the rise of Owen's little community of New Harmony, and the year of 1828
saw the community's final disruption. Individuals had appropriated to themselves
the property designed for all; and even Owen, who had given to the enterprise
his money and his life, was obliged to admit that men were not yet fitted
for the communistic stage, and that the moment of transition from individualism
to communism had not yet arrived. Men trained under the old system, with its
eager rivalry, its selfish interests, could not quite yet enter into the spirit
of self- renunciation that communism demands. And Owen, therefore, was led
to put his trust in education as the great moulder of the minds of men. Through
this agency, he hoped, the eager rivalry, the selfish interests, the sordid
love of gain, might be lost in higher, purer, more disinterested ends; and,
animated by that hope-the hope that in the fullness of time another New Harmony,
free from contention and the disappointments of the old one, might serve to
immortalize his name-animated by that hope, Owen passed the last thirty years
of his life; and with that hope still before his eyes he died.
But years now have passed since Owen lived; the second New Harmony has not
yet been seen; the so-called rational system of education has not yet transformed
the impulses or the aims of men; and the communist of today, with a history
of two thousand years of failure behind him, in the same pathetic confidence
still looks for the realization of his dreams to the communism of the future.
And yet, granting that communism were practicable, granting that Owen's hopes
had some prospect of fulfillment, the doctrine still embodies evils that must
make it forever inexpedient. The readers of Mr. Matthew Arnold's works must
have noticed the emphasis with which he dwells on the instinct of expansion
as a factor in human progress. It is the refutation alike of communism and
socialism that they thwart the instinct of expansion; that they substitute
for individual energy the energy of the government; that they substitute for
human personality the blind, mechanical power of the State. The one system,
as the other, marks the end of individualism. The one system, as the other,
would make each man the image of his neighbor. The one system, as the other,
would hold back the progressive, and, by uniformity of reward, gain uniformity
of type.
I can look forward to no blissful prospect for a race of men that, under the
dominion of the State, at the cost of all freedom of action, at the cost,
indeed, of their own true selves, shall enjoy, if one will, a fair abundance
of the material blessings of life. Some Matthew Arnold of the future would
inevitably say of them in phase like that applied to the Puritans of old:
"They entered the prison of socialism and had the key turned upon their
spirit there for hundreds of years." Into that prison of socialism, with
broken enterprise and broken energy, as serfs under the mastery of the State,
while human personality is preferred to unreasoning mechanism, mankind must
hesitate to step. When they shall once have entered within it, when the key
shall have been turned upon their spirit and have confined them in narrower
straits than even Puritanism could have done, it will be left for them to
find, in their blind obedience and passive submission, the recompense for
the singleness of character, the foresight, and the energy, that they have
left behind them.
In almost every phase of life, this doctrine of political altruists is equally
impracticable and pernicious. In its social results, it involves the substitution
of the community in the family's present position. In its political aspects,
it involves the absolute dominion of the State over the actions and property
of its subjects. Thus, though claiming to be an exaltation of the so-called
natural rights of liberty and equality, it is in reality their emphatic debasement.
It teaches that thoughtless docility is a recompense for stunted enterprise.
It magnifies material good at the cost of every rational endowment. It inculcates
a self-denial that must result in dwarfing the individual to a mere instrument
in the hands of the State for the benefit of his fellows. No such organization
of society-no organization that fails to take note of the fact that man must
have scope for the exercise and development of his faculties-no such organization
of society can ever reach a permanent success. However beneficent its motives,
the hypothesis with which it starts can never be realized. The aphorism of
Emerson, "Churches have been built, not upon principles, but upon tropes,"
is as true in the field of politics as it is in the field of religion. In
a like figurative spirit, the followers of communism have reared their edifice;
and, looking back upon the finished structure, seeking to discern the base
on which it rests, the critic finds, not principles, but tropes. The builders
have appealed to a future that has no warrant in the past; and fixing their
gaze upon the distant dreamland, captivated by the vision there beheld, entranced
by its ideal effulgence, their eyes were blinded to the real conditions of
the human problem they had set before them. Their enemies have not been slow
to note such weakness and mistake; and perhaps it may serve to clear up misconceptions,
perhaps it may serve to lessen cant and open the way for fresh and vigorous
thought, if we shall once convince ourselves that altruism cannot be the rule
of life; that its logical result is the dwarfing of the individual man; and
that not by the death of human personality can we hope to banish the evils
of our day, and to realize the ideal of all existence, a nobler or purer life.
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