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- THE EVOLUTION OF CAPITALISM
- SYSTEM OF ECONOMICAL CONTRADICTIONS OR, THE PHILOSOPHY OF MISERY.
- BY
- P. J. PROUDHON
- Destruam et aedificabo.
- Deuteronomy: c. 32.
- VOLUME FIRST.
- CONTENTS.
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER I.
- OF THE ECONOMIC SCIENCE
- % 1. Opposition between FACT and RIGHT in Social Economy
- % 2. Inadequacy of Theories and Criticisms
- CHAPTER II.
- OF VALUE
- % 1. Opposition of Value in USE and Value in EXCHANGE
- % 2. Constitution of Value; Definition of Wealth
- % 3. Application of the Law of Proportionality of Values
- CHAPTER III.
- ECONOMIC EVOLUTIONS.--FIRST PERIOD.--THE DIVISION OF LABOR
- % 1. Antagonistic Effects of the Principle of Division
- % 2. Impotence of Palliatives.--MM. Blanqui, Chevalier,
- Dunoyer, Rossi, and Passy
- CHAPTER IV.
- SECOND PERIOD.--MACHINERY
- % 1. Of the Function of Machinery in its Relations to Liberty
- % 2. Machinery's Contradiction.--Origin of Capital and Wages
- % 3. Of Preservatives against the Disastrous Influence of Machinery
- CHAPTER V.
- THIRD PERIOD.--COMPETITION
- % 1. Necessity of Competition
- % 2. Subversive Effects of Competition, and the Destruction of
- Liberty thereby
- % 3. Remedies against Competition
- CHAPTER VI.
- FOURTH PERIOD.--MONOPOLY
- % 1. Necessity of Monopoly
- % 2. The Disasters in Labor and the Perversion of Ideas caused
- by Monopoly
- CHAPTER VII.
- FIFTH PERIOD.--POLICE, OR TAXATION
- % 1. Synthetic Idea of the Tax. Point of Departure and
- Development of this Idea
- % 2. Antinomy of the Tax
- % 3. Disastrous and Inevitable Consequences of the Tax.
- (Provisions, Sumptuary Laws, Rural and Industrial Police,
- Patents,Trade-Marks, etc.)
- CHAPTER VIII.
- OF THE RESPONSIBILITY OF MAN AND OF GOD, UNDER THE LAW OF
- CONTRADICTION, OR A SOLUTION OF THE PROBLEM OF PROVIDENCE
- % 1. The Culpability of Man.--Exposition of the Myth of the Fall
- % 2. Exposition of the Myth of Providence.--Retrogression of God
- INTRODUCTION.
- Before entering upon the subject-matter of these new memoirs, I
- must explain an hypothesis which will undoubtedly seem strange,
- but in the absence of which it is impossible for me to proceed
- intelligibly: I mean the hypothesis of a God.
- To suppose God, it will be said, is to deny him. Why do you not
- affirm him?
- Is it my fault if belief in Divinity has become a suspected
- opinion; if the bare suspicion of a Supreme Being is already
- noted as evidence of a weak mind; and if, of all philosophical
- Utopias, this is the only one which the world no longer
- tolerates? Is it my fault if hypocrisy and imbecility everywhere
- hide behind this holy formula?
- Let a public teacher suppose the existence, in the universe, of
- an unknown force governing suns and atoms, and keeping the whole
- machine in motion. With him this supposition, wholly gratuitous,
- is perfectly natural; it is received, encouraged: witness
- attraction--an hypothesis which will never be verified, and
- which, nevertheless, is the glory of its originator. But when,
- to explain the course of human events, I suppose, with all
- imaginable caution, the intervention of a God, I am sure to shock
- scientific gravity and offend critical ears: to so wonderful an
- extent has our piety discredited Providence, so many tricks
- have been played by means of this dogma or fiction by charlatans
- of every stamp! I have seen the theists of my time, and
- blasphemy has played over my lips; I have studied the belief of
- the people,--this people that Brydaine called the best friend of
- God,--and have shuddered at the negation which was about to
- escape me. Tormented by conflicting feelings, I appealed to
- reason; and it is reason which, amid so many dogmatic
- contradictions, now forces the hypothesis upon me. A priori
- dogmatism, applying itself to God, has proved fruitless: who
- knows whither the hypothesis, in its turn, will lead us?
- I will explain therefore how, studying in the silence of my
- heart, and far from every human consideration, the mystery of
- social revolutions, God, the great unknown, has become for me an
- hypothesis,--I mean a necessary dialectical tool.
- I.
- If I follow the God-idea through its successive transformations,
- I find that this idea is preeminently social: I mean by this that
- it is much more a collective act of faith than an individual
- conception. Now, how and under what circumstances is this act of
- faith produced? This point it is important to determine.
- From the moral and intellectual point of view, society, or the
- collective man, is especially distinguished from the individual
- by spontaneity of action,--in other words, instinct. While the
- individual obeys, or imagines he obeys, only those motives of
- which he is fully conscious, and upon which he can at will
- decline or consent to act; while, in a word, he thinks himself
- free, and all the freer when he knows that he is possessed of
- keener reasoning faculties and larger information,--society is
- governed by impulses which, at first blush, exhibit no
- deliberation and design, but which gradually seem to be directed
- by a superior power, existing outside of society, and pushing it
- with irresistible might toward an unknown goal. The
- establishment of monarchies and republics, caste-distinctions,
- judicial institutions, etc., are so many manifestations of this
- social spontaneity, to note the effects of which is much easier
- than to point out its principle and show its cause. The whole
- effort, even of those who, following Bossuet, Vico, Herder,
- Hegel, have applied themselves to the philosophy of history, has
- been hitherto to establish the presence of a providential destiny
- presiding over all the movements of man. And I observe, in this
- connection, that society never fails to evoke its genius previous
- to action: as if it wished the powers above to ordain what its
- own spontaneity has already resolved on. Lots, oracles,
- sacrifices, popular acclamation, public prayers, are the
- commonest forms of these tardy deliberations of society.
- This mysterious faculty, wholly intuitive, and, so to speak,
- super-social, scarcely or not at all perceptible in persons, but
- which hovers over humanity like an inspiring genius, is the
- primordial fact of all psychology.
- Now, unlike other species of animals, which, like him, are
- governed at the same time by individual desires and collective
- impulses, man has the privilege of perceiving and designating to
- his own mind the instinct or fatum which leads him; we shall see
- later that he has also the power of foreseeing and even
- influencing its decrees. And the first act of man, filled and
- carried away with enthusiasm (of the divine breath), is to adore
- the invisible Providence on which he feels that he depends, and
- which he calls GOD,--that is, Life, Being, Spirit, or, simpler
- still, Me; for all these words, in the ancient tongues, are
- synonyms and homophones. "I am ME," God said to Abraham,
- "and I covenant with THEE.".... And to Moses: "I am the Being.
- Thou shalt say unto the children of Israel, `The Being hath sent
- me unto you.'" These two words, the Being and Me, have in the
- original language--the most religious that men have ever
- spoken--the same characteristic.[1] Elsewhere, when Ie-hovah,
- acting as law-giver through the instrumentality of Moses, attests
- his eternity and swears by his own essence, he uses, as a form of
- oath, _I_; or else, with redoubled force, _I_, THE BEING. Thus
- the God of the Hebrews is the most personal and wilful of all the
- gods, and none express better than he the intuition of humanity.
- [1] Ie-hovah, and in composition Iah, the Being; Iao, ioupitur,
- same meaning; ha-iah, Heb., he was; ei, Gr., he is, ei-nai, to
- be; an-i, Heb., and in conjugation th-i, me; e-go, io, ich, i,
- m-i, me, t-ibi, te, and all the personal pronouns in which the
- vowels i, e, ei, oi, denote personality in general, and the
- consonants, m or n, s or t, serve to indicate the number of the
- person. For the rest, let who will dispute over these analogies;
- I have no objections: at this depth, the science of the
- philologist is but cloud and mystery. The important point to
- which I wish to call attention is that the phonetic relation of
- names seems to correspond to the metaphysical relation of ideas.
- God appeared to man, then, as a me, as a pure and permanent
- essence, placing himself before him as a monarch before his
- servant, and expressing himself now through the mouth of poets,
- legislators, and soothsayers, musa, nomos, numen; now through the
- popular voice, vox populi vox Dei. This may serve, among other
- things, to explain the existence of true and false oracles; why
- individuals secluded from birth do not attain of themselves to
- the idea of God, while they eagerly grasp it as soon as it is
- presented to them by the collective mind; why, finally,
- stationary races, like the Chinese, end by losing it.[2] In the
- first place, as to oracles, it is clear that all their
- accuracy depends upon the universal conscience which inspires
- them; and, as to the idea of God, it is easily seen why isolation
- and statu quo are alike fatal to it. On the one hand, absence of
- communication keeps the mind absorbed in animal
- self-contemplation; on the other, absence of motion, gradually
- changing social life into mechanical routine, finally eliminates
- the idea of will and providence. Strange fact! religion, which
- perishes through progress, perishes also through quiescence.
- [2] The Chinese have preserved in their traditions the
- remembrance of a religion which had ceased to exist among them
- five or six centuries before our era.
- (See Pauthier, "China," Paris, Didot.) More surprising still is
- it that this singular people, in losing its primitive faith,
- seems to have understood that divinity is simply the collective
- me of humanity: so that, more than two thousand years ago, China
- had reached, in its commonly-accepted belief, the latest results
- of the philosophy of the Occident. "What Heaven sees and
- understands," it is written in the Shu-king, "is only that which
- the people see and understand. What the people deem worthy of
- reward and punishment is that which Heaven wishes to punish and
- reward. There is an intimate communication between Heaven and
- the people: let those who govern the people, therefore, be
- watchful and cautious." Confucius expressed the same idea in
- another manner: "Gain the affection of the people, and you gain
- empire. Lose the affection of the people, and you lose empire."
- There, then, general reason was regarded as queen of the world, a
- distinction which elsewhere has been bestowed upon revelations.
- The Tao-te-king is still more explicit. In this work, which is
- but an outline criticism of pure reason, the philosopher Lao-tse
- continually identifies, under the name of TAO, universal reason
- and the infinite being; and all the obscurity of the book of Lao
- tse consists, in my opinion, of this constant identification of
- principles which our religious and metaphysical habits have so
- widely separated.
- Notice further that, in attributing to the vague and (so to
- speak) objectified consciousness of a universal reason the first
- revelation of Divinity, we assume absolutely nothing concerning
- even the reality or non-reality of God. In fact, admitting that
- God is nothing more than collective instinct or universal reason,
- we have still to learn what this universal reason is in itself.
- For, as we shall show directly, universal reason is not given in
- individual reason, in other words, the knowledge of social
- laws, or the theory of collective ideas, though deduced from the
- fundamental concepts of pure reason, is nevertheless wholly
- empirical, and never would have been discovered a priori by means
- of deduction, induction, or synthesis. Whence it follows that
- universal reason, which we regard as the origin of these laws;
- universal reason, which exists, reasons, labors, in a separate
- sphere and as a reality distinct from pure reason, just as the
- planetary system, though created according to the laws of
- mathematics, is a reality distinct from mathematics, whose
- existence could not have been deduced from mathematics alone: it
- follows, I say, that universal reason is, in modern languages,
- exactly what the ancients called God. The name is changed: what
- do we know of the thing?
- Let us now trace the evolution of the Divine idea.
- The Supreme Being once posited by a primary mystical judgment,
- man immediately generalizes the subject by another
- mysticism,--analogy. God, so to speak, is as yet but a point:
- directly he shall fill the world.
- As, in sensing his social me, man saluted his AUTHOR, so, in
- finding evidence of design and intention in animals, plants,
- springs, meteors, and the whole universe, he attributes to each
- special object, and then to the whole, a soul, spirit, or genius
- presiding over it; pursuing this inductive process of apotheosis
- from the highest summit of Nature, which is society, down to the
- humblest forms of life, to inanimate and inorganic matter. From
- his collective me, taken as the superior pole of creation, to the
- last atom of matter, man EXTENDS, then, the idea of God,--that
- is, the idea of personality and intelligence,--just as God
- himself EXTENDED HEAVEN, as the book of Genesis tells us; that
- is, created space and time, the conditions of all things.
- Thus, without a God or master-builder, the universe and man
- would not exist: such is the social profession of faith. But
- also without man God would not be thought, or--to clear the
- interval--God would be nothing. If humanity needs an author, God
- and the gods equally need a revealer; theogony, the history of
- heaven, hell, and their inhabitants,--those dreams of the human
- mind,--is the counterpart of the universe, which certain
- philosophers have called in return the dream of God. And how
- magnificent this theological creation, the work of society! The
- creation of the demiourgos was obliterated; what we call the
- Omnipotent was conquered; and for centuries the enchanted
- imagination of mortals was turned away from the spectacle of
- Nature by the contemplation of Olympian marvels.
- Let us descend from this fanciful region: pitiless reason knocks
- at the door; her terrible questions demand a reply.
- "What is God?" she asks; "where is he? what is his extent? what
- are his wishes? what his powers? what his promises?"--and here,
- in the light of analysis, all the divinities of heaven, earth,
- and hell are reduced to an incorporeal, insensible, immovable,
- incomprehensible, undefinable I-know-not-what; in short, to a
- negation of all the attributes of existence. In fact, whether
- man attributes to each object a special spirit or genius, or
- conceives the universe as governed by a single power, he in
- either case but SUPPOSES an unconditioned, that is, an
- impossible, entity, that he may deduce therefrom an explanation
- of such phenomena as he deems inconceivable on any other
- hypothesis. The mystery of God and reason! In order to render
- the object of his idolatry more and more RATIONAL, the believer
- despoils him successively of all the qualities which would make
- him REAL; and, after marvellous displays of logic and genius,
- the attributes of the Being par excellence are found to be the
- same as those of nihility. This evolution is inevitable and
- fatal: atheism is at the bottom of all theodicy.
- Let us try to understand this progress.
- God, creator of all things, is himself no sooner created by the
- conscience,--in other words, no sooner have we lifted God from
- the idea of the social me to the idea of the cosmic me,--than
- immediately our reflection begins to demolish him under the
- pretext of perfecting him. To perfect the idea of God, to purify
- the theological dogma, was the second hallucination of the human
- race.
- The spirit of analysis, that untiring Satan who continually
- questions and denies, must sooner or later look for proof of
- religious dogmas. Now, whether the philosopher determine the
- idea of God, or declare it indeterminable; whether he approach it
- with his reason, or retreat from it,--I say that this idea
- receives a blow; and, as it is impossible for speculation to
- halt, the idea of God must at last disappear. Then the atheistic
- movement is the second act of the theologic drama; and this
- second act follows from the first, as effect from cause. "The
- heavens declare the glory of God," says the Psalmist. Let us
- add, And their testimony dethrones him.
- Indeed, in proportion as man observes phenomena, he thinks that
- he perceives, between Nature and God, intermediaries; such as
- relations of number, form, and succession; organic laws,
- evolutions, analogies,-- forming an unmistakable series of
- manifestations which invariably produce or give rise to each
- other. He even observes that, in the development of this society
- of which he is a part, private wills and associative
- deliberations have some influence; and he says to himself that
- the Great Spirit does not act upon the world directly and by
- himself, or arbitrarily and at the dictation of a capricious
- will, but mediately, by perceptible means or organs, and by
- virtue of laws. And, retracing in his mind the chain of effects
- and causes, he places clear at the extremity, as a balance, God.
- A poet has said,--
- Par dela tous les cieux, le Dieu des cieux reside.
- Thus, at the first step in the theory, the Supreme Being is
- reduced to the function of a motive power, a mainspring, a
- corner-stone, or, if a still more trivial comparison may be
- allowed me, a constitutional sovereign, reigning but not
- governing, swearing to obey the law and appointing ministers to
- execute it. But, under the influence of the mirage which
- fascinates him, the theist sees, in this ridiculous system, only
- a new proof of the sublimity of his idol; who, in his opinion,
- uses his creatures as instruments of his power, and causes the
- wisdom of human beings to redound to his glory.
- Soon, not content with limiting the power of the Eternal, man,
- increasingly deicidal in his tendencies, insists on sharing it.
- If I am a spirit, a sentient me giving voice to ideas, continues
- the theist, I consequently am a part of absolute existence; I am
- free, creative, immortal, equal with God. Cogito, ergo sum,--I
- think, therefore I am immortal, that is the corollary, the
- translation of Ego sum qui sum: philosophy is in accord with the
- Bible. The existence of God and the immortality of the soul are
- posited by the conscience in the same judgment: there, man speaks
- in the name of the universe, to whose bosom he transports his me;
- here, he speaks in his own name, without perceiving that, in this
- going and coming, he only repeats himself.
- The immortality of the soul, a true division of divinity,
- which, at the time of its first promulgation, arriving after a
- long interval, seemed a heresy to those faithful to the old
- dogma, has been none the less considered the complement of divine
- majesty, necessarily postulated by eternal goodness and justice.
- Unless the soul is immortal, God is incomprehensible, say the
- theists; resembling in this the political theorists who regard
- sovereign representation and perpetual tenure of office as
- essential conditions of monarchy. But the inconsistency of the
- ideas is as glaring as the parity of the doctrines is exact:
- consequently the dogma of immortality soon became the
- stumbling-block of philosophical theologians, who, ever since the
- days of Pythagoras and Orpheus, have been making futile attempts
- to harmonize divine attributes with human liberty, and reason
- with faith. A subject of triumph for the impious! . . . . But
- the illusion could not yield so soon: the dogma of immortality,
- for the very reason that it was a limitation of the uncreated
- Being, was a step in advance. Now, though the human mind
- deceives itself by a partial acquisition of the truth, it never
- retreats, and this perseverance in progress is proof of its
- infallibility. Of this we shall soon see fresh evidence.
- In making himself like God, man made God like himself: this
- correlation, which for many centuries had been execrated, was the
- secret spring which determined the new myth. In the days of the
- patriarchs God made an alliance with man; now, to strengthen the
- compact, God is to become a man. He will take on our flesh, our
- form, our passions, our joys, and our sorrows; will be born of
- woman, and die as we do. Then, after this humiliation of the
- infinite, man will still pretend that he has elevated the ideal
- of his God in making, by a logical conversion, him whom he
- had always called creator, a saviour, a redeemer. Humanity does
- not yet say, I am God: such a usurpation would shock its piety;
- it says, God is in me, IMMANUEL, nobiscum Deus. And, at the
- moment when philosophy with pride, and universal conscience with
- fright, shouted with unanimous voice, The gods are departing!
- excedere deos! a period of eighteen centuries of fervent
- adoration and superhuman faith was inaugurated.
- But the fatal end approaches. The royalty which suffers itself
- to be limited will end by the rule of demagogues; the divinity
- which is defined dissolves in a pandemonium. Christolatry is the
- last term of this long evolution of human thought. The angels,
- saints, and virgins reign in heaven with God, says the catechism;
- and demons and reprobates live in the hells of eternal
- punishment. Ultramundane society has its left and its right: it
- is time for the equation to be completed; for this mystical
- hierarchy to descend upon earth and appear in its real character.
- When Milton represents the first woman admiring herself in a
- fountain, and lovingly extending her arms toward her own image as
- if to embrace it, he paints, feature for feature, the human
- race.--This God whom you worship, O man! this God whom you have
- made good, just, omnipotent, omniscient, immortal, and holy, is
- yourself: this ideal of perfection is your image, purified in the
- shining mirror of your conscience. God, Nature, and man are
- three aspects of one and the same being; man is God himself
- arriving at self-consciousness through a thousand evolutions. In
- Jesus Christ man recognized himself as God; and Christianity is
- in reality the religion of God-man. There is no other God than
- he who in the beginning said, ME; there is no other God than
- THEE.
- Such are the last conclusions of philosophy, which dies in
- unveiling religion's mystery and its own.
- II.
- It seems, then, that all is ended; it seems that, with the
- cessation of the worship and mystification of humanity by itself,
- the theological problem is for ever put aside. The gods have
- gone: there is nothing left for man but to grow weary and die in
- his egoism. What frightful solitude extends around me, and
- forces its way to the bottom of my soul! My exaltation resembles
- annihilation; and, since I made myself a God, I seem but a
- shadow. It is possible that I am still a ME, but it is very
- difficult to regard myself as the absolute; and, if I am not the
- absolute, I am only half of an idea.
- Some ironical thinker, I know not who, has said: "A little
- philosophy leads away from religion, and much philosophy leads
- back to it." This proposition is humiliatingly true.
- Every science develops in three successive periods, which may be
- called--comparing them with the grand periods of
- civilization--the religious period, the sophistical period, the
- scientific period.[3] Thus, alchemy represents the religious
- period of the science afterwards called chemistry, whose
- definitive plan is not yet discovered; likewise astrology was the
- religious period of another science, since
- established,--astronomy.
- [3] See, among others, Auguste Comte, "Course of Positive
- Philosophy," and P. J. Proudhon, "Creation of Order in Humanity."
- Now, after being laughed at for sixty years about the
- philosopher's stone, chemists, governed by experience, no longer
- dare to deny the transmutability of bodies; while astronomers
- are led by the structure of the world to suspect also an organism
- of the world; that is, something precisely like astrology. Are
- we not justified in saying, in imitation of the philosopher just
- quoted, that, if a little chemistry leads away from the
- philosopher's stone, much chemistry leads back to it; and
- similarly, that, if a little astronomy makes us laugh at
- astrologers, much astronomy will make us believe in them?[4]
- [4] I do not mean to affirm here in a positive manner the
- transmutability of bodies, or to point it out as a subject for
- investigation; still less do I pretend to say what ought to be
- the opinion of savants upon this point. I wish only to call
- attention to the species of scepticism generated in every
- uninformed mind by the most general conclusions of chemical
- philosophy, or, better, by the irreconcilable hypotheses which
- serve as the basis of its theories. Chemistry is truly the
- despair of reason: on all sides it mingles with the fanciful; and
- the more knowledge of it we gain by experience, the more it
- envelops itself in impenetrable mysteries. This thought was
- recently suggested to me by reading M. Liebig's "Letters on
- Chemistry" (Paris, Masgana, 1845, translation of Bertet-Dupiney
- and Dubreuil Helion).
- Thus M. Liebig, after having banished from science hypothetical
- causes and all the entities admitted by the ancients,--such as
- the creative power of matter, the horror of a vacuum, the esprit
- recteur, etc. (p. 22),--admits immediately, as necessary to the
- comprehension of chemical phenomena, a series of entities no less
- obscure,--vital force, chemical force, electric force, the force
- of attraction, etc. (pp. 146, 149). One might call it a
- realization of the properties of bodies, in imitation of the
- psychologists' realization of the faculties of the soul under the
- names liberty, imagination, memory, etc. Why not keep to the
- elements? Why, if the atoms have weight of their own, as M.
- Liebig appears to believe, may they not also have electricity and
- life of their own? Curious thing! the phenomena of matter, like
- those of mind, become intelligible only by supposing them to be
- produced by unintelligible forces and governed by contradictory
- laws: such is the inference to be drawn from every page of M.
- Liebig's book.
- Matter, according to M. Liebig, is essentially inert and entirely
- destitute of spontaneous activity (p. 148): why, then, do the
- atoms have weight? Is not the weight inherent in atoms the real,
- eternal, and spontaneous motion of matter? And that which we
- chance to regard as rest,--may it not be equilibrium rather?
- Why, then, suppose now an inertia which definitions contradict,
- now an external potentiality which nothing proves?
- Atoms having WEIGHT, M. Liebig infers that they are INDIVISIBLE
- (p. 58). What logic! Weight is only force, that is, a thing
- hidden from the senses, whose phenomena alone are perceptible,--a
- thing, consequently, to which the idea of division and indivision
- is inapplicable; and from the presence of this force, from the
- hypothesis of an indeterminate and immaterial entity, is inferred
- an indivisible material existence!
- For the rest, M. Liebig confesses that it is IMPOSSIBLE FOR THE
- MIND to conceive of particles absolutely indivisible; he
- recognizes, further, that the FACT of this indivisibility is not
- proved; but he adds that science cannot dispense with this
- hypothesis: so that, by the confession of its teachers, chemistry
- has for its point of departure a fiction as repugnant to the mind
- as it is foreign to experience. What irony!
- Atoms are unequal in weight, says M. Liebig, because unequal in
- volume: nevertheless, it is impossible to demonstrate that
- chemical equivalents express the relative weight of atoms, or, in
- other words, that what the calculation of atomic equivalents
- leads us to regard as an atom is not composed of several atoms.
- This is tantamount to saying that MORE MATTER weighs more than
- LESS MATTER; and, since weight is the essence of materiality, we
- may logically conclude that, weight being universally identical
- with itself, there is also an identity in matter; that the
- differences of simple bodies are due solely, either to different
- methods of atomic association, or to different degrees of
- molecular condensation, and that, in reality, atoms are
- transmutable: which M. Liebig does not admit.
- "We have," he says, "no reason for believing that one element is
- convertible into another element" (p. 135). What do you know
- about it? The reasons for believing in such a conversion can
- very well exist and at the same time escape your attention; and
- it is not certain that your intelligence in this respect has
- risen to the level of your experience. But, admitting the
- negative argument of M. Liebig, what follows? That, with about
- fifty-six exceptions, irreducible as yet, all matter is in a
- condition of perpetual metamorphosis. Now, it is a law of our
- reason to suppose in Nature unity of substance as well as unity
- of force and system; moreover, the series of chemical compounds
- and simple substances themselves leads us irresistibly to this
- conclusion. Why, then, refuse to follow to the end the road
- opened by science, and to admit an hypothesis which is the
- inevitable result of experience itself?
- M. Liebig not only denies the transmutability of elements, but
- rejects the spontaneous formation of germs. Now, if we reject
- the spontaneous formation of germs, we are forced to admit their
- eternity; and as, on the other hand, geology proves that the
- globe has not been inhabited always, we must admit also that, at
- a given moment, the eternal germs of animals and plants were
- born, without father or mother, over the whole face of the earth.
- Thus, the denial of spontaneous generation leads back to the
- hypothesis of spontaneity: what is there in much-derided
- metaphysics more contradictory?
- Let it not be thought, however, that I deny the value and
- certainty of chemical theories, or that the atomic theory seems
- to me absurd, or that I share the Epicurean opinion as to
- spontaneous generation. Once more, all that I wish to point out
- is that, from the point of view of principles, chemistry needs to
- exercise extreme tolerance, since its own existence depends on a
- certain number of fictions, contrary to reason and experience,
- and destructive of each other.
- I certainly have less inclination to the marvellous than
- many atheists, but I cannot help thinking that the stories of
- miracles, prophecies, charms, etc., are but distorted accounts of
- the extraordinary effects produced by certain latent forces, or,
- as was formerly said, by occult powers. Our science is still so
- brutal and unfair; our professors exhibit so much impertinence
- with so little knowledge; they deny so impudently facts which
- embarrass them, in order to protect the opinions which they
- champion,--that I distrust strong minds equally with
- superstitious ones. Yes, I am convinced of it; our gross
- rationalism is the inauguration of a period which, thanks to
- science, will become truly PRODIGIOUS; the universe, to my eyes,
- is only a laboratory of magic, from which anything may be
- expected. . . . This said, I return to my subject.
- They would be deceived, then, who should imagine, after my rapid
- survey of religious progress, that metaphysics has uttered its
- last word upon the double enigma expressed in these four
- words,--the existence of God, the immortality of the soul. Here,
- as elsewhere, the most advanced and best established conclusions,
- those which seem to have settled for ever the theological
- question, lead us back to primeval mysticism, and involve the new
- data of an inevitable philosophy. The criticism of religious
- opinions makes us smile today both at ourselves and at religions;
- and yet the resume of this criticism is but a reproduction of the
- problem. The human race, at the present moment, is on the eve of
- recognizing and affirming something equivalent to the old notion
- of Divinity; and this, not by a spontaneous movement as before,
- but through reflection and by means of irresistible logic. I
- will try, in a few words, to make myself understood.
- If there is a point on which philosophers, in spite of
- themselves, have finally succeeded in agreeing, it is without
- doubt the distinction between intelligence and necessity, the
- subject of thought and its object, the me and the not-me; in
- ordinary terms, spirit and matter. I know well that all these
- terms express nothing that is real and true; that each of them
- designates only a section of the absolute, which alone is true
- and real; and that, taken separately, they involve, all alike, a
- contradiction. But it is no less certain also that the absolute
- is completely inaccessible to us; that we know it only by its
- opposite extremes, which alone fall within the limits of our
- experience; and that, if unity only can win our faith, duality is
- the first condition of science.
- Thus, who thinks, and what is thought? What is a soul? what is a
- body? I defy any one to escape this dualism. It is with
- essences as with ideas: the former are seen separated in Nature,
- as the latter in the understanding; and just as the ideas of God
- and immortality, in spite of their identity, are posited
- successively and contradictorily in philosophy, so, in spite of
- their fusion in the absolute, the me and the not-me posit
- themselves separately and contradictorily in Nature, and we have
- beings who think, at the same time with others which do not
- think.
- Now, whoever has taken pains to reflect knows today that such a
- distinction, wholly realized though it be, is the most
- unintelligible, most contradictory, most absurd thing which
- reason can possibly meet. Being is no more conceivable without
- the properties of spirit than without the properties of
- matter: so that if you deny spirit, because, included in none of
- the categories of time, space, motion, solidity, etc., it seems
- deprived of all the attributes which constitute reality, I in my
- turn will deny matter, which, presenting nothing appreciable but
- its inertia, nothing intelligible but its forms, manifests itself
- nowhere as cause (voluntary and free), and disappears from view
- entirely as substance; and we arrive at pure idealism, that is,
- nihility. But nihility is inconsistent with the existence of
- living, reasoning--I know not what to call them--uniting in
- themselves, in a state of commenced synthesis or imminent
- dissolution, all the antagonistic attributes of being. We are
- compelled, then, to end in a dualism whose terms we know
- perfectly well to be false, but which, being for us the condition
- of the truth, forces itself irresistibly upon us; we are
- compelled, in short, to commence, like Descartes and the human
- race, with the me; that is, with spirit.
- But, since religions and philosophies, dissolved by analysis,
- have disappeared in the theory of the absolute, we know no better
- than before what spirit is, and in this differ from the ancients
- only in the wealth of language with which we adorn the darkness
- that envelops us. With this exception, however; that while, to
- the ancients, order revealed intelligence OUTSIDE of the world,
- to the people of today it seems to reveal it rather WITHIN the
- world. Now, whether we place it within or without, from the
- moment we affirm it on the ground of order, we must admit it
- wherever order is manifested, or deny it altogether. There is no
- more reason for attributing intelligence to the head which
- produced the "Iliad" than to a mass of matter which crystallizes
- in octahedrons; and, reciprocally, it is as absurd to refer the
- system of the world to physical laws, leaving out an ordaining
- ME, as to attribute the victory of Marengo to strategic
- combinations, leaving out the first consul. The only distinction
- that can be made is that, in the latter case, the thinking ME is
- located in the brain of a Bonaparte, while, in the case of the
- universe, the ME has no special location, but extends everywhere.
- The materialists think that they have easily disposed of their
- opponents by saying that man, having likened the universe to his
- body, finishes the comparison by presuming the existence in the
- universe of a soul similar to that which he supposes to be the
- principle of his own life and thought; that thus all the
- arguments in support of the existence of God are reducible to an
- analogy all the more false because the term of comparison is
- itself hypothetical.
- It is certainly not my intention to defend the old syllogism:
- Every arrangement implies an ordaining intelligence; there is
- wonderful order in the world; then the world is the work of an
- intelligence. This syllogism, discussed so widely since the days
- of Job and Moses, very far from being a solution, is but the
- statement of the problem which it assumes to solve. We know
- perfectly well what order is, but we are absolutely ignorant of
- the meaning of the words Soul, Spirit, Intelligence: how, then,
- can we logically reason from the presence of the one to the
- existence of the other? I reject, then, even when advanced by
- the most thoroughly informed, the pretended proof of the
- existence of God drawn from the presence of order in the world; I
- see in it at most only an equation offered to philosophy.
- Between the conception of order and the affirmation of spirit
- there is a deep gulf of metaphysics to be filled up; I am
- unwilling, I repeat, to take the problem for the demonstration.
- But this is not the point which we are now considering. I have
- tried to show that the human mind was inevitably and irresistibly
- led to the distinction of being into me and not-me, spirit and
- matter, soul and body. Now, who does not see that the objection
- of the materialists proves the very thing it is intended to deny?
- Man distinguishing within himself a spiritual principle and a
- material principle,--what is this but Nature herself, proclaiming
- by turns her double essence, and bearing testimony to her own
- laws? And notice the inconsistency of materialism: it denies,
- and has to deny, that man is free; now, the less liberty man has,
- the more weight is to be attached to his words, and the greater
- their claim to be regarded as the expression of truth. When I
- hear this machine say to me, "I am soul and I am body," though
- such a revelation astonishes and confounds me, it is invested in
- my eyes with an authority incomparably greater than that of the
- materialist who, correcting conscience and Nature, undertakes to
- make them say, "I am matter and only matter, and intelligence is
- but the material faculty of knowing."
- What would become of this assertion, if, assuming in my turn the
- offensive, I should demonstrate that belief in the existence of
- bodies, or, in other words, in the reality of a purely corporeal
- nature, is untenable? Matter, they say, is
- impenetrable.--Impenetrable by what? I ask. Itself, undoubtedly;
- for they would not dare to say spirit, since they would therein
- admit what they wish to set aside. Whereupon I raise this double
- question: What do you know about it, and what does it signify?
- 1. Impenetrability, which is pretended to be the definition of
- matter, is only an hypothesis of careless naturalists, a gross
- conclusion deduced from a superficial judgment. Experience shows
- that matter possesses infinite divisibility, infinite
- expansibility, porosity without assignable limits, and
- permeability by heat, electricity, and magnetism, together
- with a power of retaining them indefinitely; affinities,
- reciprocal influences, and transformations without number:
- qualities, all of them, hardly compatible with the assumption of
- an impenetrable aliquid. Elasticity, which, better than any
- other property of matter, could lead, through the idea of spring
- or resistance, to that of impenetrability, is subject to the
- control of a thousand circumstances, and depends entirely on
- molecular attraction: now, what is more irreconcilable with
- impenetrability than this attraction? Finally, there is a
- science which might be defined with exactness as the SCIENCE OF
- PENETRABILITY OF MATTER: I mean chemistry. In fact, how does
- what is called chemical composition differ from penetration?[5].
- . . . In short, we know matter only through its forms; of its
- substance we know nothing. How, then, is it possible to affirm
- the reality of an invisible, impalpable, incoercible being, ever
- changing, ever vanishing, impenetrable to thought alone, to which
- it exhibits only its disguises? Materialist! I permit you to
- testify to the reality of your sensations; as to what occasions
- them, all that you can say involves this reciprocity: something
- (which you call matter) is the occasion of sensations which are
- felt by another something (which I call spirit).
- [5] Chemists distinguish between MIXTURE and COMPOSITION, just
- as logicians distinguish between the association of ideas and
- their synthesis. It is true, nevertheless, that, according to
- the chemists, composition may be after all but a mixture, or
- rather an aggregation of atoms, no longer fortuitous, but
- systematic, the atoms forming different compounds by varying
- their arrangement. But still this is only an hypothesis, wholly
- gratuitous; an hypothesis which explains nothing, and has not
- even the merit of being logical. Why does a purely NUMERICAL or
- GEOMETRICAL difference in the composition and form of atoms give
- rise to PHYSIOLOGICAL properties so different? If atoms are
- indivisible and impenetrable, why does not their association,
- confined to mechanical effects, leave them unchanged in essence?
- Where is the relation between the cause supposed and the effect
- obtained?
- We must distrust our intellectual vision: it is with chemical
- theories as with psychological systems. The mind, in order to
- account for phenomena, works with atoms, which it does not and
- can never see, as with the ME, which it does not perceive: it
- applies its categories to everything; that is, it distinguishes,
- individualizes, concretes, numbers, compares, things which,
- material or immaterial, are thoroughly identical and
- indistinguishable. Matter, as well as spirit, plays, as we view
- it, all sorts of parts; and, as there is nothing arbitrary in its
- metamorphoses, we build upon them these psychologic and atomic
- theories, true in so far as they faithfully represent, in terms
- agreed upon, the series of phenomena, but radically false as soon
- as they pretend to realize their abstractions and are accepted
- literally.
- 2. But what, then, is the source of this supposition that matter
- is impenetrable, which external observation does not justify and
- which is not true; and what is its meaning?
- Here appears the triumph of dualism. Matter is pronounced
- impenetrable, not, as the materialists and the vulgar fancy, by
- the testimony of the senses, but by the conscience. The ME, an
- incomprehensible nature, feeling itself free, distinct, and
- permanent, and meeting outside of itself another nature equally
- incomprehensible, but also distinct and permanent in spite of its
- metamorphoses, declares, on the strength of the sensations and
- ideas which this essence suggests to it, that the NOT-ME is
- extended and impenetrable. Impenetrability is a figurative term,
- an image by which thought, a division of the absolute, pictures
- to itself material reality, another division of the absolute; but
- this impenetrability, without which matter disappears, is, in the
- last analysis, only a spontaneous judgment of inward sensation, a
- metaphysical a priori, an unverified hypothesis of spirit.
- Thus, whether philosophy, after having overthrown theological
- dogmatism, spiritualizes matter or materializes thought,
- idealizes being or realizes ideas; or whether, identifying
- SUBSTANCE and CAUSE, it everywhere substitutes FORCE, phrases,
- all, which explain and signify nothing,--it always leads us
- back to this everlasting dualism, and, in summoning us to believe
- in ourselves, compels us to believe in God, if not in spirits.
- It is true that, making spirit a part of Nature, in distinction
- from the ancients, who separated it, philosophy has been led to
- this famous conclusion, which sums up nearly all the fruit of its
- researches: In man spirit KNOWS ITSELF, while everywhere else
- it seems NOT TO KNOW ITSELf--"That which is awake in man, which
- dreams in the animal, and sleeps in the stone," said a
- philosopher.
- Philosophy, then, in its last hour, knows no more than at its
- birth: as if it had appeared in the world only to verify the
- words of Socrates, it says to us, wrapping itself solemnly around
- with its funeral pall, "I know only that I know nothing." What
- do I say? Philosophy knows today that all its judgments rest on
- two equally false, equally impossible, and yet equally necessary
- and inevitable hypotheses,--matter and spirit. So that, while in
- former times religious intolerance and philosophic disputes,
- spreading darkness everywhere, excused doubt and tempted to
- libidinous indifference, the triumph of negation on all points no
- longer permits even this doubt; thought, freed from every
- barrier, but conquered by its own successes, is forced to affirm
- what seems to it clearly contradictory and absurd. The savages
- say that the world is a great fetich watched over by a great
- manitou. For thirty centuries the poets, legislators, and sages
- of civilization, handing down from age to age the philosophic
- lamp, have written nothing more sublime than this profession of
- faith. And here, at the end of this long conspiracy against God,
- which has called itself philosophy, emancipated reason concludes
- with savage reason, The universe is a NOT-ME, objectified by a
- ME.
- Humanity, then, inevitably supposes the existence of God: and if,
- during the long period which closes with our time, it has
- believed in the reality of its hypothesis; if it has worshipped
- the inconceivable object; if, after being apprehended in this act
- of faith, it persists knowingly, but no longer voluntarily, in
- this opinion of a sovereign being which it knows to be only a
- personification of its own thought; if it is on the point of
- again beginning its magic invocations,--we must believe that so
- astonishing an hallucination conceals some mystery, which
- deserves to be fathomed.
- I say hallucination and mystery, but without intending to deny
- thereby the superhuman content of the God-idea, and without
- admitting the necessity of a new symbolism,--I mean a new
- religion. For if it is indisputable that humanity, in affirming
- God,--or all that is included in the word me or spirit,--only
- affirms itself, it is equally undeniable that it affirms itself
- as something other than its own conception of itself, as all
- mythologies and theologies show. And since, moreover, this
- affirmation is incontestable, it depends, without doubt, upon
- hidden relations, which ought, if possible, to be determined
- scientifically.
- In other words, atheism, sometimes called humanism, true in its
- critical and negative features, would be, if it stopped at man in
- his natural condition, if it discarded as an erroneous judgment
- the first affirmation of humanity, that it is the daughter,
- emanation, image, reflection, or voice of God,--humanism, I say,
- if it thus denied its past, would be but one contradiction more.
- We are forced, then, to undertake the criticism of humanism; that
- is, to ascertain whether humanity, considered as a whole and
- throughout all its periods of development, satisfies the Divine
- idea, after eliminating from the latter the exaggerated and
- fanciful attributes of God; whether it satisfies the perfection
- of being; whether it satisfies itself. We are forced, in short,
- to inquire whether humanity TENDS TOWARD God, according to the
- ancient dogma, or is itself BECOMING God, as modern philosophers
- claim. Perhaps we shall find in the end that the two systems,
- despite their seeming opposition, are both true and essentially
- identical: in that case, the infallibility of human reason, in
- its collective manifestations as well as its studied
- speculations, would be decisively confirmed.--In a word, until we
- have verified to man the hypothesis of God, there is nothing
- definitive in the atheistic negation.
- It is, then, a scientific, that is, an empirical demonstration of
- the idea of God, that we need: now, such a demonstration has
- never been attempted. Theology dogmatizing on the authority of
- its myths, philosophy speculating by the aid of categories, God
- has existed as a TRANSCENDENTAL conception, incognizable by the
- reason, and the hypothesis always subsists.
- It subsists, I say, this hypothesis, more tenacious, more
- pitiless than ever. We have reached one of those prophetic
- epochs when society, scornful of the past and doubtful of the
- future, now distractedly clings to the present, leaving a few
- solitary thinkers to establish the new faith; now cries to God
- from the depths of its enjoyments and asks for a sign of
- salvation, or seeks in the spectacle of its revolutions, as in
- the entrails of a victim, the secret of its destiny.
- Why need I insist further? The hypothesis of God is allowable,
- for it forces itself upon every man in spite of himself: no one,
- then, can take exception to it. He who believes can do no less
- than grant me the supposition that God exists; he who denies is
- forced to grant it to me also, since he entertained it before
- me, every negation implying a previous affirmation; as for him
- who is in doubt, he needs but to reflect a moment to understand
- that his doubt necessarily supposes an unknown something, which,
- sooner or later, he will call God.
- But if I possess, through the fact of my thought, the right to
- SUPPOSE God, I must abandon the right to AFFIRM him. In other
- words, if my hypothesis is irresistible, that, for the present,
- is all that I can pretend. For to affirm is to determine; now,
- every determination, to be true, must be reached empirically. In
- fact, whoever says determination, says relation, conditionality,
- experience. Since, then, the determination of the idea of God
- must result from an empirical demonstration, we must abstain from
- everything which, in the search for this great unknown, not being
- established by experience, goes beyond the hypothesis, under
- penalty of relapsing into the contradictions of theology, and
- consequently arousing anew atheistic dissent.
- III.
- It remains for me to tell why, in a work on political economy, I
- have felt it necessary to start with the fundamental hypothesis
- of all philosophy.
- And first, I need the hypothesis of God to establish the
- authority of social science.--When the astronomer, to explain the
- system of the world, judging solely from appearance, supposes,
- with the vulgar, the sky arched, the earth flat, the sun much
- like a football, describing a curve in the air from east to west,
- he supposes the infallibility of the senses, reserving the right
- to rectify subsequently, after further observation, the data with
- which he is obliged to start. Astronomic philosophy, in fact,
- could not admit a priori that the senses deceive us, and that
- we do not see what we do see: admitting such a principle, what
- would become of the certainty of astronomy? But the evidence of
- the senses being able, in certain cases, to rectify and complete
- itself, the authority of the senses remains unshaken, and
- astronomy is possible.
- So social philosophy does not admit a priori that humanity can
- err or be deceived in its actions: if it should, what would
- become of the authority of the human race, that is, the authority
- of reason, synonymous at bottom with the sovereignty of the
- people? But it thinks that human judgments, always true at the
- time they are pronounced, can successively complete and throw
- light on each other, in proportion to the acquisition of ideas,
- in such a way as to maintain continual harmony between universal
- reason and individual speculation, and indefinitely extend the
- sphere of certainty: which is always an affirmation of the
- authority of human judgments.
- Now, the first judgment of the reason, the preamble of every
- political constitution seeking a sanction and a principle, is
- necessarily this: THERE IS A GOD; which means that society is
- governed with design, premeditation, intelligence. This
- judgment, which excludes chance, is, then, the foundation of the
- possibility of a social science; and every historical and
- positive study of social facts, undertaken with a view to
- amelioration and progress, must suppose, with the people, the
- existence of God, reserving the right to account for this
- judgment at a later period.
- Thus the history of society is to us but a long determination of
- the idea of God, a progressive revelation of the destiny of man.
- And while ancient wisdom made all depend on the arbitrary and
- fanciful notion of Divinity, oppressing reason and conscience,
- and arresting progress through fear of an invisible master,
- the new philosophy, reversing the method, trampling on the
- authority of God as well as that of man, and accepting no other
- yoke than that of fact and evidence, makes all converge toward
- the theological hypothesis, as toward the last of its problems.
- Humanitarian atheism is, therefore, the last step in the moral
- and intellectual enfranchisement of man, consequently the last
- phase of philosophy, serving as a pathway to the scientific
- reconstruction and verification of all the demolished dogmas.
- I need the hypothesis of God, not only, as I have just said, to
- give a meaning to history, but also to legitimate the reforms to
- be effected, in the name of science, in the State.
- Whether we consider Divinity as outside of society, whose
- movements it governs from on high (a wholly gratuitous and
- probably illusory opinion); or whether we deem it immanent in
- society and identical with that impersonal and unconscious reason
- which, acting instinctively, makes civilization advance (although
- impersonality and ignorance of self are contrary to the idea of
- intelligence); or whether, finally, all that is accomplished in
- society results from the relation of its elements (a system whose
- whole merit consists in changing an active into a passive, in
- making intelligence necessity, or, which amounts to the same
- thing, in taking law for cause),--it always follows that the
- manifestations of social activity, necessarily appearing to us
- either as indications of the will of the Supreme Being, or as a
- sort of language typical of general and impersonal reason, or,
- finally, as landmarks of necessity, are absolute authority for
- us. Being connected in time as well as in spirit, the facts
- accomplished determine and legitimate the facts to be
- accomplished; science and destiny are in accord; everything which
- happens resulting from reason, and, reciprocally, reason
- judging only from experience of that which happens, science has a
- right to participate in government, and that which establishes
- its competency as a counsellor justifies its intervention as a
- sovereign.
- Science, expressed, recognized, and accepted by the voice of all
- as divine, is queen of the world. Thus, thanks to the hypothesis
- of God, all conservative or retrogressive opposition, every
- dilatory plea offered by theology, tradition, or selfishness,
- finds itself peremptorily and irrevocably set aside.
- I need the hypothesis of God to show the tie which unites
- civilization with Nature.
- In fact, this astonishing hypothesis, by which man is assimilated
- to the absolute, implying identity of the laws of Nature and the
- laws of reason, enables us to see in human industry the
- complement of creative action, unites man with the globe which he
- inhabits, and, in the cultivation of the domain in which
- Providence has placed us, which thus becomes in part our work,
- gives us a conception of the principle and end of all things.
- If, then, humanity is not God, it is a continuation of God; or,
- if a different phraseology be preferred, that which humanity does
- today by design is the same thing that it began by instinct, and
- which Nature seems to accomplish by necessity. In all these
- cases, and whichever opinion we may choose, one thing remains
- certain: the unity of action and law. Intelligent beings, actors
- in an intelligently-devised fable, we may fearlessly reason from
- ourselves to the universe and the eternal; and, when we shall
- have completed the organization of labor, may say with pride, The
- creation is explained.
- Thus philosophy's field of exploration is fixed; tradition is the
- starting-point of all speculation as to the future; utopia is
- forever exploded; the study of the ME, transferred from the
- individual conscience to the manifestations of the social will,
- acquires the character of objectivity of which it has been
- hitherto deprived; and, history becoming psychology, theology
- anthropology, the natural sciences metaphysics, the theory of the
- reason is deduced no longer from the vacuum of the intellect, but
- from the innumerable forms of a Nature abundantly and directly
- observable.
- I need the hypothesis of God to prove my good-will towards a
- multitude of sects, whose opinions I do not share, but whose
- malice I fear:-- theists; I know one who, in the cause of God,
- would be ready to draw sword, and, like Robespierre, use the
- guillotine until the last atheist should be destroyed, not
- dreaming that that atheist would be himself;-- mystics, whose
- party, largely made up of students and women marching under the
- banner of MM. Lamennais, Quinet, Leroux, and others, has taken
- for a motto, "Like master, like man;" like God, like people; and,
- to regulate the wages of the workingman, begins by restoring
- religion;-- spiritualists, who, should I overlook the rights of
- spirit, would accuse me of establishing the worship of matter,
- against which I protest with all the strength of my
- soul;--sensualists and materialists, to whom the divine dogma is
- the symbol of constraint and the principle of enslavement of the
- passions, outside of which, they say, there is for man neither
- pleasure, nor virtue, nor genius;--eclectics and sceptics,
- sellers and publishers of all the old philosophies, but not
- philosophers themselves, united in one vast brotherhood, with
- approbation and privilege, against whoever thinks, believes, or
- affirms without their permission;--conservatives finally,
- retrogressives, egotists, and hypocrites, preaching the love of
- God by hatred of their neighbor, attributing to liberty the
- world's misfortunes since the deluge, and scandalizing reason by
- their foolishness.
- Is it possible, however, that they will attack an hypothesis
- which, far from blaspheming the revered phantoms of faith,
- aspires only to exhibit them in broad daylight; which, instead of
- rejecting traditional dogmas and the prejudices of conscience,
- asks only to verify them; which, while defending itself against
- exclusive opinions, takes for an axiom the infallibility of
- reason, and, thanks to this fruitful principle, will doubtless
- never decide against any of the antagonistic sects? Is it
- possible that the religious and political conservatives will
- charge me with disturbing the order of society, when I start with
- the hypothesis of a sovereign intelligence, the source of every
- thought of order; that the semi-Christian democrats will curse me
- as an enemy of God, and consequently a traitor to the republic,
- when I am seeking for the meaning and content of the idea of God;
- and that the tradesmen of the university will impute to me the
- impiety of demonstrating the non-value of their philosophical
- products, when I am especially maintaining that philosophy should
- be studied in its object,--that is, in the manifestations of
- society and Nature? . . . .
- I need the hypothesis of God to justify my style.
- In my ignorance of everything regarding God, the world, the soul,
- and destiny; forced to proceed like the materialist,--that is, by
- observation and experience,--and to conclude in the language of
- the believer, because there is no other; not knowing whether my
- formulas, theological in spite of me, would be taken literally or
- figuratively; in this perpetual contemplation of God, man, and
- things, obliged to submit to the synonymy of all the terms
- included in the three categories of thought, speech, and
- action, but wishing to affirm nothing on either one side or the
- other,--rigorous logic demanded that I should suppose, no more,
- no less, this unknown that is called God. We are full of
- Divinity, Jovis omnia plena; our monuments, our traditions, our
- laws, our ideas, our languages, and our sciences, all are
- infected by this indelible superstition outside of which we can
- neither speak nor act, and without which we do not even think.
- Finally, I need the hypothesis of God to explain the publication
- of these new memoirs.
- Our society feels itself big with events, and is anxious about
- the future: how account for these vague presentiments by the sole
- aid of a universal reason, immanent if you will, and permanent,
- but impersonal, and therefore dumb, or by the idea of necessity,
- if it implies that necessity is self-conscious, and consequently
- has presentiments? There remains then, once more, an agent or
- nightmare which weighs upon society, and gives it visions.
- Now, when society prophesies, it puts questions in the mouths of
- some, and answers in the mouths of others. And wise, then, he
- who can listen and understand; for God himself has spoken, quia
- locutus est Deus.
- The Academy of Moral and Political Sciences has proposed the
- following question:--
- "To determine the general facts which govern the relations of
- profits to wages, and to explain their respective oscillations."
- A few years ago the same Academy asked, "What are the causes of
- misery?" The nineteenth century has, in fact, but one
- idea,--equality and reform. But the wind bloweth where it
- listeth: many began to reflect upon the question, no one answered
- it. The college of aruspices has, therefore, renewed its
- question, but in more significant terms. It wishes to know
- whether order prevails in the workshop; whether wages are
- equitable; whether liberty and privilege compensate each other
- justly; whether the idea of value, which controls all the facts
- of exchange, is, in the forms in which the economists have
- represented it, sufficiently exact; whether credit protects
- labor; whether circulation is regular; whether the burdens of
- society weigh equally on all, etc.
- And, indeed, insufficiency of income being the immediate cause of
- misery, it is fitting that we should know why, misfortune and
- malevolence aside, the workingman's income is insufficient. It
- is still the same question of inequality of fortunes, which has
- made such a stir for a century past, and which, by a strange
- fatality, continually reappears in academic programmes, as if
- there lay the real difficulty of modern times.
- Equality, then,--its principle, its means, its obstacles, its
- theory, the motives of its postponement, the cause of social and
- providential iniquities,--these the world has got to learn, in
- spite of the sneers of incredulity.
- I know well that the views of the Academy are not thus profound,
- and that it equals a council of the Church in its horror of
- novelties; but the more it turns towards the past, the more it
- reflects the future, and the more, consequently, must we believe
- in its inspiration: for the true prophets are those who do not
- understand their utterances. Listen further.
- "What," the Academy has asked, "are the most useful applications
- of the principle of voluntary and private association that we can
- make for the alleviation of misery?"
- And again:--
- "To expound the theory and principles of the contract of
- insurance, to give its history, and to deduce from its rationale
- and the facts the developments of which this contract is capable,
- and the various useful applications possible in the present state
- of commercial and industrial progress."
- Publicists admit that insurance, a rudimentary form of commercial
- solidarity, is an association in things, societas in re; that is,
- a society whose conditions, founded on purely economical
- relations, escape man's arbitrary dictation. So that a
- philosophy of insurance or mutual guarantee of security, which
- shall be deduced from the general theory of real (in re)
- societies, will contain the formula of universal association, in
- which no member of the Academy believes. And when, uniting
- subject and object in the same point of view, the Academy
- demands, by the side of a theory of association of interests, a
- theory of voluntary association, it reveals to us the most
- perfect form of society, and thereby affirms all that is most at
- variance with its convictions. Liberty, equality, solidarity,
- association! By what inconceivable blunder has so eminently
- conservative a body offered to the citizens this new programme of
- the rights of man? It was in this way that Caiaphas prophesied
- redemption by disowning Jesus Christ.
- Upon the first of these questions, forty-five memoirs were
- addressed to the Academy within two years,--a proof that the
- subject was marvellously well suited to the state of the public
- mind. But among so many competitors no one having been deemed
- worthy of the prize, the Academy has withdrawn the question;
- alleging as a reason the incapacity of the competitors, but in
- reality because, the failure of the contest being the sole object
- that the Academy had in view, it behooved it to declare, without
- further delay, that the hopes of the friends of association were
- groundless.
- Thus, then, the gentlemen of the Academy disavow, in their
- session-chamber, their announcements from the tripod! There is
- nothing in such a contradiction astonishing to me; and may God
- preserve me from calling it a crime! The ancients believed that
- revolutions announced their advent by dreadful signs, and that
- among other prodigies animals spoke. This was a figure,
- descriptive of those unexpected ideas and strange words which
- circulate suddenly among the masses at critical moments, and
- which seem to be entirely without human antecedent, so far
- removed are they from the sphere of ordinary judgment. At the
- time in which we live, such a thing could not fail to occur.
- After having, by a prophetic instinct and a mechanical
- spontaneity, pecudesque locut{ae}, proclaimed association, the
- gentlemen of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences have
- returned to their ordinary prudence; and with them custom has
- conquered inspiration. Let us learn, then, how to distinguish
- heavenly counsel from the interested judgments of men, and hold
- it for certain that, in the discourse of sages, that is the most
- trustworthy to which they have given the least reflection.
- Nevertheless the Academy, in breaking so rudely with its
- intuitions, seems to have felt some remorse. In place of a
- theory of association in which, after reflection, it no longer
- believes, it asks for a "Critical examination of Pestalozzi's
- system of instruction and education, considered mainly in its
- relation to the well-being and morality of the poor classes."
- Who knows? perchance the relation between profits and wages,
- association, the organization of labor indeed, are to be found at
- the bottom of a system of instruction. Is not man's life a
- perpetual apprenticeship? Are not philosophy and religion
- humanity's education? To organize instruction, then, would be to
- organize industry and fix the theory of society: the Academy,
- in its lucid moments, always returns to that.
- "What influence," the Academy again asks, "do progress and a
- desire for material comfort have upon a nation's morality?"
- Taken in its most obvious sense, this new question of the Academy
- is commonplace, and fit at best to exercise a rhetorisian's
- skill. But the Academy, which must continue till the end in its
- ignorance of the revolutionary significance of its oracles, has
- drawn aside the curtain in its commentary. What, then, so
- profound has it discovered in this Epicurean thesis?
- "The desire for luxury and its enjoyments," it tells us; "the
- singular love of it felt by the majority; the tendency of hearts
- and minds to occupy themselves with it exclusively; the agreement
- of individuals AND THE STATE in making it the motive and the end
- of all their projects, all their efforts, and all their
- sacrifices,--engender general or individual feelings which,
- beneficent or injurious, become principles of action more potent,
- perhaps, than any which have heretofore governed men."
- Never had moralists a more favorable opportunity to assail the
- sensualism of the century, the venality of consciences, and the
- corruption instituted by the government: instead of that, what
- does the Academy of Moral Sciences do? With the most automatic
- calmness, it establishes a series in which luxury, so long
- proscribed by the stoics and ascetics,--those masters of
- holiness,--must appear in its turn as a principle of conduct as
- legitimate, as pure, and as grand as all those formerly invoked
- by religion and philosophy. Determine, it tells us, the motives
- of action (undoubtedly now old and worn-out) of which LUXURY is
- historically the providential successor, and, from the
- results of the former, calculate the effects of the latter.
- Prove, in short, that Aristippus was only in advance of his
- century, and that his system of morality must have its day, as
- well as that of Zeno and A Kempis.
- We are dealing, then, with a society which no longer wishes to be
- poor; which mocks at everything that was once dear and sacred to
- it,--liberty, religion, and glory,--so long as it has not wealth;
- which, to obtain it, submits to all outrages, and becomes an
- accomplice in all sorts of cowardly actions: and this burning
- thirst for pleasure, this irresistible desire to arrive at
- luxury,--a symptom of a new period in civilization,--is the
- supreme commandment by virtue of which we are to labor for the
- abolition of poverty: thus saith the Academy. What becomes,
- then, of the doctrine of expiation and abstinence, the morality
- of sacrifice, resignation, and happy moderation? What distrust
- of the compensation promised in the other life, and what a
- contradiction of the Gospel! But, above all, what a
- justification of a government which has adopted as its system the
- golden key! Why have religious men, Christians, Senecas, given
- utterance in concert to so many immoral maxims?
- The Academy, completing its thought, will reply to us:--
- "Show how the progress of criminal justice, in the prosecution
- and punishment of attacks upon persons and property, follows and
- marks the ages of civilization from the savage condition up to
- that of the best- governed nations."
- Is it possible that the criminal lawyers in the Academy of Moral
- Sciences foresaw the conclusion of their premises? The fact
- whose history is now to be studied, and which the Academy
- describes by the words "progress of criminal justice," is simply
- the gradual mitigation which manifests itself, both in the
- forms of criminal examinations and in the penalties inflicted, in
- proportion as civilization increases in liberty, light, and
- wealth. So that, the principle of repressive institutions being
- the direct opposite of all those on which the welfare of society
- depends, there is a constant elimination of all parts of the
- penal system as well as all judicial paraphernalia, and the final
- inference from this movement is that the guarantee of order lies
- neither in fear nor punishment; consequently, neither in hell nor
- religion.
- What a subversion of received ideas! What a denial of all that
- it is the business of the Academy of Moral Sciences to defend!
- But, if the guarantee of order no longer lies in the fear of a
- punishment to be suffered, either in this life or in another,
- where then are to be found the guarantees protective of persons
- and property? Or rather, without repressive institutions, what
- becomes of property? And without property, what becomes of the
- family?
- The Academy, which knows nothing of all these things, replies
- without agitation:--
- "Review the various phases of the organization of the family upon
- the soil of France from ancient times down to our day."
- Which means: Determine, by the previous progress of family
- organization, the conditions of the existence of the family in a
- state of equality of fortunes, voluntary and free association,
- universal solidarity, material comfort and luxury, and public
- order without prisons, courts, police, or hangmen.
- There will be astonishment, perhaps, at finding that the Academy
- of Moral and Political Sciences, after having, like the boldest
- innovators, called in question all the principles of social
- order,--religion, family, property, justice,--has not also
- proposed this problem: WHAT IS THE BEST FORM OF GOVERNMENT?
- In fact, government is for society the source of all initiative,
- every guarantee, every reform. It would be, then, interesting to
- know whether the government, as constituted by the Charter, is
- adequate to the practical solution of the Academy's questions.
- But it would be a misconception of the oracles to imagine that
- they proceed by induction and analysis; and precisely because the
- political problem was a condition or corollary of the
- demonstrations asked for, the Academy could not offer it for
- competition. Such a conclusion would have opened its eyes, and,
- without waiting for the memoirs of the competitors, it would have
- hastened to suppress its entire programme. The Academy has
- approached the question from above. It has said:--
- The works of God are beautiful in their own essence, justificata
- in semet ipsa; they are true, in a word, because they are his.
- The thoughts of man resemble dense vapors pierced by long and
- narrow flashes. WHAT, THEN, IS THE TRUTH IN RELATION TO US, AND
- WHAT IS THE CHARACTER OF CERTAINTY?
- As if the Academy had said to us: You shall verify the
- hypothesis of your existence, the hypothesis of the Academy which
- interrogates you, the hypotheses of time, space, motion, thought,
- and the laws of thought. Then you may verify the hypothesis of
- pauperism, the hypothesis of inequality of conditions, the
- hypothesis of universal association, the hypothesis of happiness,
- the hypotheses of monarchy and republicanism, the hypothesis of
- Providence! . . . .
- A complete criticism of God and humanity.
- I point to the programme of the honorable society: it is not I
- who have fixed the conditions of my task, it is the Academy of
- Moral and Political Sciences. Now, how can I satisfy these
- conditions, if I am not myself endowed with infallibility; in
- a word, if I am not God or divine? The Academy admits, then,
- that divinity and humanity are identical, or at least
- correlative; but the question now is in what consists this
- correlation: such is the meaning of the problem of certainty,
- such is the object of social philosophy.
- Thus, then, in the name of the society that God inspires, an
- Academy questions.
- In the name of the same society, I am one of the prophets who
- attempt to answer. The task is an immense one, and I do not
- promise to accomplish it: I will go as far as God shall give me
- strength. But, whatever I may say, it does not come from me: the
- thought which inspires my pen is not personal, and nothing that I
- write can be attributed to me. I shall give the facts as I have
- seen them; I shall judge them by what I shall have said; I shall
- call everything by its strongest name, and no one will take
- offence. I shall inquire freely, and by the rules of divination
- which I have learned, into the meaning of the divine purpose
- which is now expressing itself through the eloquent lips of sages
- and the inarticulate wailings of the people: and, though I should
- deny all the prerogatives guaranteed by our Constitution, I shall
- not be factious. I shall point my finger whither an invisible
- influence is pushing us; and neither my action nor my words shall
- be irritating. I shall stir up the cloud, and, though I should
- cause it to launch the thunderbolt, I should be innocent. In
- this solemn investigation to which the Academy invites me, I have
- more than the right to tell the truth,--I have the right to say
- what I think: may my thought, my words, and the truth be but one
- and the same thing!
- And you, reader,--for without a reader there is no writer,--you
- are half of my work. Without you, I am only sounding brass;
- with the aid of your attention, I will speak marvels. Do you see
- this passing whirlwind called SOCIETY, from which burst forth,
- with startling brilliancy, lightnings, thunders, and voices? I
- wish to cause you to place your finger on the hidden springs
- which move it; but to that end you must reduce yourself at my
- command to a state of pure intelligence. The eyes of love and
- pleasure are powerless to recognize beauty in a skeleton, harmony
- in naked viscera, life in dark and coagulated blood: consequently
- the secrets of the social organism are a sealed letter to the man
- whose brain is beclouded by passion and prejudice. Such
- sublimities are unattainable except by cold and silent
- contemplation. Suffer me, then, before revealing to your eyes
- the leaves of the book of life, to prepare your soul by this
- sceptical purification which the great teachers of the
- people--Socrates, Jesus Christ, St. Paul, St. Remi, Bacon,
- Descartes, Galileo, Kant, etc.--have always claimed of their
- disciples.
- Whoever you may be, clad in the rags of misery or decked in the
- sumptuous vestments of luxury, I restore you to that state of
- luminous nudity which neither the fumes of wealth nor the poisons
- of envious poverty dim. How persuade the rich that the
- difference of conditions arises from an error in the accounts;
- and how can the poor, in their beggary, conceive that the
- proprietor possesses in good faith? To investigate the
- sufferings of the laborer is to the idler the most intolerable of
- amusements; just as to do justice to the fortunate is to the
- miserable the bitterest of draughts.
- You occupy a high position: I strip you of it; there you are,
- free. There is too much optimism beneath this official costume,
- too much subordination, too much idleness. Science demands an
- insurrection of thought: now, the thought of an official is his
- salary.
- Your mistress, beautiful, passionate, artistic, is, I like to
- believe, possessed only by you. That is, your soul, your spirit,
- your conscience, have passed into the most charming object of
- luxury that nature and art have produced for the eternal torment
- of fascinated mortals. I separate you from this divine half of
- yourself: at the present day it is too much to wish for justice
- and at the same time to love a woman. To think with grandeur and
- clearness, man must remove the lining of his nature and hold to
- his masculine hypostasis. Besides, in the state in which I have
- put you, your lover would no longer know you: remember the wife
- of Job.
- What is your religion? . . . . Forget your faith, and, through
- wisdom, become an atheist.--What! you say; an atheist in spite of
- our hypothesis!--No, but because of our hypothesis. One's
- thought must have been raised above divine things for a long time
- to be entitled to suppose a personality beyond man, a life beyond
- this life. For the rest, have no fears for your salvation. God
- is not angry with those who are led by reason to deny him, any
- more than he is anxious for those who are led by faith to worship
- him; and, in the state of your conscience, the surest course for
- you is to think nothing about him. Do you not see that it is
- with religion as with governments, the most perfect of which
- would be the denial of all? Then let no political or religious
- fancy hold your soul captive; in this way only can you now keep
- from being either a dupe or a renegade. Ah! said I in the days
- of my enthusiastic youth, shall I not hear the tolling for the
- second vespers of the republic, and our priests, dressed in white
- tunics, singing after the Doric fashion the returning hymn:
- Change o Dieu, notre servitude, comme le vent du desert en un
- souffle rafraichissan! . . . . . But I have despaired of
- republicans, and no longer know either religion or priests.
- I should like also, in order to thoroughly secure your judgment,
- dear reader, to render your soul insensible to pity, superior to
- virtue, indifferent to happiness. But that would be too much to
- expect of a neophyte. Remember only, and never forget, that
- pity, happiness, and virtue, like country, religion, and love,
- are masks. . . .
- SYSTEM OF ECONOMICAL CONTRADICTIONS: OR, THE PHILOSOPHY OF
- MISERY.
- CHAPTER I. OF THE ECONOMIC SCIENCE.
- % 1.--Opposition between FACT and RIGHT in social economy.
- I affirm the REALITY of an economic science.
- This proposition, which few economists now dare to question, is
- the boldest, perhaps, that a philosopher ever maintained; and the
- inquiries to follow will prove, I hope, that its demonstration
- will one day be deemed the greatest effort of the human mind.
- I affirm, on the other hand, the ABSOLUTE CERTAINTY as well as
- the PROGRESSIVE nature of economic science, of all the sciences
- in my opinion the most comprehensive, the purest, the best
- supported by facts: a new proposition, which alters this science
- into logic or metaphysics in concreto, and radically changes the
- basis of ancient philosophy. In other words, economic science is
- to me the objective form and realization of metaphysics; it is
- metaphysics in action, metaphysics projected on the vanishing
- plane of time; and whoever studies the laws of labor and exchange
- is truly and specially a metaphysician.
- After what I have said in the introduction, there is nothing in
- this which should surprise any one. The labor of man continues
- the work of God, who, in creating all beings, did but externally
- realize the eternal laws of reason. Economic science is, then,
- necessarily and at once a theory of ideas, a natural theology,
- and a psychology. This general outline alone would have sufficed
- to explain why, having to treat of economic matters, I was
- obliged previously to suppose the existence of God, and by what
- title I, a simple economist, aspire to solve the problem of
- certainty.
- But I hasten to say that I do not regard as a science the
- incoherent ensemble of theories to which the name POLITICAL
- ECONOMY has been officially given for almost a hundred years, and
- which, in spite of the etymology of the name, is after ail but
- the code, or immemorial routine, of property. These theories
- offer us only the rudiments, or first section, of economic
- science; and that is why, like property, they are all
- contradictory of each other, and half the time inapplicable. The
- proof of this assertion, which is, in one sense, a denial of
- political economy as handed down to us by Adam Smith, Ricardo,
- Malthus, and J. B. Say, and as we have known it for half a
- century, will be especially developed in this treatise.
- The inadequacy of political economy has at all times impressed
- thoughtful minds, who, too fond of their dreams for practical
- investigation, and confining themselves to the estimation of
- apparent results, have constituted from the beginning a party of
- opposition to the statu quo, and have devoted themselves to
- persevering, and systematic ridicule of civilization and its
- customs. Property, on the other hand, the basis of all social
- institutions, has never lacked zealous defenders, who, proud to
- be called PRACTICAL, have exchanged blow for blow with the
- traducers of political economy, and have labored with a
- courageous and often skilful hand to strengthen the edifice which
- general prejudice and individual liberty have erected in concert.
- The controversy between conservatives and reformers, still
- pending, finds its counterpart, in the history of philosophy, in
- the quarrel between realists and nominalists; it is almost
- useless to add that, on both sides, right and wrong are equal,
- and that the rivalry, narrowness, and intolerance of opinions
- have been the sole cause of the misunderstanding.
- Thus two powers are contending for the government of the world,
- and cursing each other with the fervor of two hostile religions:
- political economy, or tradition; and socialism, or utopia.
- What is, then, in more explicit terms, political economy? What
- is socialism?
- Political economy is a collection of the observations thus far
- made in regard to the phenomena of the production and
- distribution of wealth; that is, in regard to the most common,
- most spontaneous, and therefore most genuine, forms of labor and
- exchange.
- The economists have classified these observations as far as they
- were able; they have described the phenomena, and ascertained
- their contingencies and relations; they have observed in them, in
- many cases, a quality of necessity which has given them the name
- of LAWS; and this ensemble of information, gathered from the
- simplest manifestations of society, constitutes political
- economy.
- Political economy is, therefore, the natural history of the most
- apparent and most universally accredited customs, traditions,
- practices, and methods of humanity in all that concerns the
- production and distribution of wealth. By this title,
- political economy considers itself legitimate in FACT and in
- RIGHT: in fact, because the phenomena which it studies are
- constant, spontaneous, and universal; in right, because these
- phenomena rest on the authority of the human race, the strongest
- authority possible. Consequently, political economy calls itself
- a SCIENCE; that is, a rational and systematic knowledge of
- regular and necessary facts.
- Socialism, which, like the god Vishnu, ever dying and ever
- returning to life, has experienced within a score of years its
- ten-thousandth incarnation in the persons of five or six
- revelators,--socialism affirms the irregularity of the present
- constitution of society, and, consequently, of all its previous
- forms. It asserts, and proves, that the order of civilization is
- artificial, contradictory, inadequate; that it engenders
- oppression, misery, and crime; it denounces, not to say
- calumniates, the whole past of social life, and pushes on with
- all its might to a reformation of morals and institutions.
- Socialism concludes by declaring political economy a false and
- sophistical hypothesis, devised to enable the few to exploit the
- many; and applying the maxim A fructibus cognoscetis, it ends
- with a demonstration of the impotence and emptiness of political
- economy by the list of human calamities for which it makes it
- responsible.
- But if political economy is false, jurisprudence, which in all
- countries is the science of law and custom, is false also; since,
- founded on the distinction of thine and mine, it supposes the
- legitimacy of the facts described and classified by political
- economy. The theories of public and international law, with all
- the varieties of representative government, are also false, since
- they rest on the principle of individual appropriation and the
- absolute sovereignty of wills.
- All these consequences socialism accepts. To it, political
- economy, regarded by many as the physiology of wealth, is but the
- organization of robbery and poverty; just as jurisprudence,
- honored by legists with the name of written reason, is, in its
- eyes, but a compilation of the rubrics of legal and official
- spoliation,--in a word, of property. Considered in their
- relations, these two pretended sciences, political economy and
- law, form, in the opinion of socialism, the complete theory of
- iniquity and discord. Passing then from negation to affirmation,
- socialism opposes the principle of property with that of
- association, and makes vigorous efforts to reconstruct social
- economy from top to bottom; that is, to establish a new code, a
- new political system, with institutions and morals diametrically
- opposed to the ancient forms.
- Thus the line of demarcation between socialism and political
- economy is fixed, and the hostility flagrant.
- Political economy tends toward the glorification of selfishness;
- socialism favors the exaltation of communism.
- The economists, saving a few violations of their principles, for
- which they deem it their duty to blame governments, are optimists
- with regard to accomplished facts; the socialists, with regard to
- facts to be accomplished.
- The first affirm that that which ought to be IS; the second,
- that that which ought to be IS NOT. Consequently, while the
- first are defenders of religion, authority, and the other
- principles contemporary with, and conservative of,
- property,--although their criticism, based solely on reason,
- deals frequent blows at their own prejudices,--the second reject
- authority and faith, and appeal exclusively to science,--
- although a certain religiosity, utterly illiberal, and an
- unscientific disdain for facts, are always the most obvious
- characteristics of their doctrines.
- For the rest, neither party ever ceases to accuse the other of
- incapacity and sterility.
- The socialists ask their opponents to account for the inequality
- of conditions, for those commercial debaucheries in which
- monopoly and competition, in monstrous union, perpetually give
- birth to luxury and misery; they reproach economic theories,
- always modeled after the past, with leaving the future hopeless;
- in short, they point to the regime of property as a horrible
- hallucination, against which humanity has protested and struggled
- for four thousand years.
- The economists, on their side, defy socialists to produce a
- system in which property, competition, and political organization
- can be dispensed with; they prove, with documents in hand, that
- all reformatory projects have ever been nothing but rhapsodies of
- fragments borrowed from the very system that socialism sneers
- at,--plagiarisms, in a word, of political economy, outside of
- which socialism is incapable of conceiving and formulating an
- idea.
- Every day sees the proofs in this grave suit accumulating, and
- the question becoming confused.
- While society has traveled and stumbled, suffered and thrived, in
- pursuing the economic routine, the socialists, since Pythagoras,
- Orpheus, and the unfathomable Hermes, have labored to establish
- their dogma in opposition to political economy. A few attempts
- at association in accordance with their views have even been made
- here and there: but as yet these exceptional undertakings, lost
- in the ocean of property, have been without result; and, as if
- destiny had resolved to exhaust the economic hypothesis before
- attacking the socialistic utopia, the reformatory party is
- obliged to content itself with pocketing the sarcasms of its
- adversaries while waiting for its own turn to come.
- This, then, is the state of the cause: socialism incessantly
- denounces the crimes of civilization, verifies daily the
- powerlessness of political economy to satisfy the harmonic
- attractions of man, and presents petition after petition;
- political economy fills its brief with socialistic systems, all
- of which, one after another, pass away and die, despised by
- common sense. The persistence of evil nourishes the complaint of
- the one, while the constant succession of reformatory checks
- feeds the malicious irony of the other. When will judgment be
- given? The tribunal is deserted; meanwhile, political economy
- improves its opportunities, and, without furnishing bail,
- continues to lord it over the world; possideo quia possideo.
- If we descend from the sphere of ideas to the realities of the
- world, the antagonism will appear still more grave and
- threatening.
- When, in these recent years, socialism, instigated by prolonged
- convulsions, made its fantastic appearance in our midst, men whom
- all controversy had found until then indifferent and lukewarm
- went back in fright to monarchical and religious ideas;
- democracy, which was charged with being developed at last to its
- ultimate, was cursed and driven back. This accusation of the
- conservatives against the democrats was a libel. Democracy is by
- nature as hostile to the socialistic idea as incapable of filling
- the place of royalty, against which it is its destiny endlessly
- to conspire. This soon became evident, and we are witnesses of
- it daily in the professions of Christian and proprietary faith by
- democratic publicists, whose abandonment by the people began at
- that moment.
- On the other hand, philosophy proves no less distinct from
- socialism, no less hostile to it, than politics and religion.
- For just as in politics the principle of democracy is the
- sovereignty of numbers, and that of monarchy the sovereignty of
- the prince; just as likewise in affairs of conscience religion is
- nothing but submission to a mystical being, called God, and to
- the priests who represent him; just as finally in the economic
- world property--that is, exclusive control by the individual of
- the instruments of labor--is the point of departure of every
- theory,--so philosophy, in basing itself upon the a priori
- assumptions of reason, is inevitably led to attribute to the ME
- alone the generation and autocracy of ideas, and to deny the
- metaphysical value of experience; that is, universally to
- substitute, for the objective law, absolutism, despotism.
- Now, a doctrine which, springing up suddenly in the heart of
- society, without antecedents and without ancestors, rejected from
- every department of conscience and society the arbitrary
- principle, in order to substitute as sole truth the relation of
- facts; which broke with tradition, and consented to make use of
- the past only as a point from which to launch forth into the
- future,--such a doctrine could not fail to stir up against it the
- established AUTHORITIES; and we can see today how, in spite of
- their internal discords, the said AUTHORITIES, which are but one,
- combine to fight the monster that is ready to swallow them.
- To the workingmen who complain of the insufficiency of wages and
- the uncertainty of labor, political economy opposes the liberty
- of commerce; to the citizens who are seeking for the conditions
- of liberty and order, the ideologists respond with representative
- systems; to the tender souls who, having lost their ancient
- faith, ask the reason and end of their existence, religion
- proposes the unfathomable secrets of Providence, and philosophy
- holds doubt in reserve. Subterfuges always; complete ideas,
- in which heart and mind find rest, never! Socialism cries that
- it is time to set sail for the mainland, and to enter port: but,
- say the antisocialists, there is no port; humanity sails onward
- in God's care, under the command of priests, philosophers,
- orators, economists, and our circumnavigation is eternal.
- Thus society finds itself, at its origin, divided into two great
- parties: the one traditional and essentially hierarchical, which,
- according to the object it is considering, calls itself by turns
- royalty or democracy, philosophy or religion, in short, property;
- the other socialism, which, coming to life at every crisis of
- civilization, proclaims itself preeminently ANARCHICAL and
- ATHEISTIC; that is, rebellious against all authority, human and
- divine.
- Now, modern civilization has demonstrated that in a conflict of
- this nature the truth is found, not in the exclusion of one of
- the opposites, but wholly and solely in the reconciliation of the
- two; it is, I say, a fact of science that every antagonism,
- whether in Nature or in ideas, is resolvable in a more general
- fact or in a complex formula, which harmonizes the opposing
- factors by absorbing them, so to speak, in each other. Can we
- not, then, men of common sense, while awaiting the solution which
- the future will undoubtedly bring forth, prepare ourselves for
- this great transition by an analysis of the struggling powers, as
- well as their positive and negative qualities? Such a work,
- performed with accuracy and conscientiousness, even though it
- should not lead us directly to the solution, would have at least
- the inestimable advantage of revealing to us the conditions of
- the problem, and thereby putting us on our guard against every
- form of utopia.
- What is there, then, in political economy that is necessary
- and true; whither does it tend; what are its powers; what are
- its wishes? It is this which I propose to determine in this
- work. What is the value of socialism? The same investigation
- will answer this question also.
- For since, after all, socialism and political economy pursue the
- same end,--namely, liberty, order, and well-being among men,--it
- is evident that the conditions to be fulfilled--in other words,
- the difficulties to be overcome--to attain this end, are also the
- same for both, and that it remains only to examine the methods
- attempted or proposed by either party. But since, moreover, it
- has been given thus far to political economy alone to translate
- its ideas into acts, while socialism has scarcely done more than
- indulge in perpetual satire, it is no less clear that, in judging
- the works of economy according to their merit, we at the same
- time shall reduce to its just value the invective of the
- socialists: so that our criticism, though apparently special,
- will lead to absolute and definitive conclusions.
- This it is necessary to make clearer by a few examples, before
- entering fully upon the examination of political economy.
- % 2.--Inadequacy of theories and criticisms.
- We will record first an important observation: the contending
- parties agree in acknowledging a common authority, whose support
- each claims,--SCIENCE.
- Plato, a utopian, organized his ideal republic in the name of
- science, which, through modesty and euphemism, he called
- philosophy. Aristotle, a practical man, refuted the Platonic
- utopia in the name of the same philosophy. Thus the social war
- has continued since Plato and Aristotle. The modern socialists
- refer all things to science one and indivisible, but without
- power to agree either as to its content, its limits, or its
- method; the economists, on their side, affirm that social science
- in no wise differs from political economy.
- It is our first business, then, to ascertain what a science of
- society must be.
- Science, in general, is the logically arranged and systematic
- knowledge of that which IS.
- Applying this idea to society, we will say: Social science is
- the logically arranged and systematic knowledge, not of that
- which society HAS BEEN, nor of that which it WILL BE, but of
- that which it IS in its whole life; that is, in the sum total of
- its successive manifestations: for there alone can it have reason
- and system. Social science must include human order, not alone
- in such or such a period of duration, nor in a few of its
- elements; but in all its principles and in the totality of its
- existence: as if social evolution, spread throughout time and
- space, should find itself suddenly gathered and fixed in a
- picture which, exhibiting the series of the ages and the sequence
- of phenomena, revealed their connection and unity. Such must be
- the science of every living and progressive reality; such social
- science indisputably is.
- It may be, then, that political economy, in spite of its
- individualistic tendency and its exclusive affirmations, is a
- constituent part of social science, in which the phenomena that
- it describes are like the starting-points of a vast
- triangulation and the elements of an organic and complex whole.
- From this point of view, the progress of humanity, proceeding
- from the simple to the complex, would be entirely in harmony with
- the progress of science; and the conflicting and so often
- desolating facts, which are today the basis and object of
- political economy, would have to be considered by us as so
- many special hypotheses, successively realized by humanity in
- view of a superior hypothesis, whose realization would solve all
- difficulties, and satisfy socialism without destroying political
- economy. For, as I said in my introduction, in no case can we
- admit that humanity, however it expresses itself, is mistaken.
- Let us now make this clearer by facts.
- The question now most disputed is unquestionably that of the
- ORGANIZATION OF LABOR.
- As John the Baptist preached in the desert, REPENT YE, so the
- socialists go about proclaiming everywhere this novelty old as
- the world, ORGANIZE LABOR, though never able to tell what, in
- their opinion, this organization should be. However that may be,
- the economists have seen that this socialistic clamor was
- damaging their theories: it was, indeed, a rebuke to them for
- ignoring that which they ought first to recognize,--labor. They
- have replied, therefore, to the attack of their adversaries,
- first by maintaining that labor is organized, that there is no
- other organization of labor than liberty to produce and exchange,
- either on one's own personal account, or in association with
- others,--in which case the course to be pursued has been
- prescribed by the civil and commercial codes. Then, as this
- argument served only to make them the laughing-stock of their
- antagonists, they assumed the offensive; and, showing that the
- socialists understood nothing at all themselves of this
- organization that they held up as a scarecrow, they ended by
- saying that it was but a new socialistic chimera, a word without
- sense,--an absurdity. The latest writings of the economists are
- full of these pitiless conclusions.
- Nevertheless, it is certain that the phrase organization of labor
- contains as clear and rational a meaning as these that
- follow: organization of the workshop, organization of the
- army, organization of police, organization of charity,
- organization of war. In this respect, the argument of the
- economists is deplorably irrational. No less certain is it that
- the organization of labor cannot be a utopia and chimera; for at
- the moment that labor, the supreme condition of civilization,
- begins to exist, it follows that it is already submitted to an
- organization, such as it is, which satisfies the economists, but
- which the socialists think detestable.
- There remains, then, relatively to the proposal to organize labor
- formulated by socialism, this objection,--that labor is
- organized. Now, this is utterly untenable, since it is notorious
- that in labor, supply, demand, division, quantity, proportion,
- price, and security, nothing, absolutely nothing is regulated; on
- the contrary, everything is given up to the caprices of
- free-will; that is, to chance.
- As for us, guided by the idea that we have formed of social
- science, we shall affirm, against the socialists and against the
- economists, not that labor MUST BE ORGANIZED, nor that it is
- ORGANIZED but that it IS BEING ORGANIZED.
- Labor, we say, is being organized: that is, the process of
- organization has been going on from the beginning of the world,
- and will continue till the end. Political economy teaches us the
- primary elements of this organization; but socialism is right in
- asserting that, in its present form, the organization is
- inadequate and transitory; and the whole mission of science is
- continually to ascertain, in view of the results obtained and the
- phenomena in course of development, what innovations can be
- immediately effected.
- Socialism and political economy, then, while waging a burlesque
- war, pursue in reality the same idea,--the organization of labor.
- But both are guilty of disloyalty to science and of mutual
- calumny, when on the one hand political economy, mistaking for
- science its scraps of theory, denies the possibility of further
- progress; and when socialism, abandoning tradition, aims at
- reestablishing society on undiscoverable bases.
- Thus socialism is nothing but a profound criticism and continual
- development of political economy; and, to apply here the
- celebrated aphorism of the school, Nihil est in intellectu, quod
- non prius fuerit in sensu, there is nothing in the socialistic
- hypotheses which is not duplicated in economic practice. On the
- other hand, political economy is but an impertinent rhapsody, so
- long as it affirms as absolutely valid the facts collected by
- Adam Smith and J. B. Say.
- Another question, no less disputed than the preceding one, is
- that of usury, or lending at interest.
- Usury, or in other words the price of use, is the emolument, of
- whatever nature, which the proprietor derives from the loan of
- his property. Quidquid sorti accrescit usura est, say the
- theologians. Usury, the foundation of credit, was one of the
- first of the means which social spontaneity employed in its work
- of organization, and whose analysis discloses the profound laws
- of civilization. The ancient philosophers and the Fathers of the
- Church, who must be regarded here as the representatives of
- socialism in the early centuries of the Christian era, by a
- singular fallacy,--which arose however from the paucity of
- economic knowledge in their day,--allowed farm-rent and condemned
- interest on money, because, as they believed, money was
- unproductive. They distinguished consequently between the loan
- of things which are consumed by use--among which they included
- money--and the loan of things which, without being consumed,
- yield a product to the user.
- The economists had no difficulty in showing, by generalizing the
- idea of rent, that in the economy of society the action of
- capital, or its productivity, was the same whether it was
- consumed in wages or retained the character of an instrument;
- that, consequently, it was necessary either to prohibit the rent
- of land or to allow interest on money, since both were by the
- same title payment for privilege, indemnity for loan. It
- required more than fifteen centuries to get this idea accepted,
- and to reassure the consciences that had been terrified by the
- anathemas pronounced by Catholicism against usury. But finally
- the weight of evidence and the general desire favored the
- usurers: they won the battle against socialism; and from this
- legitimation of usury society gained some immense and
- unquestionable advantages. Under these circumstances socialism,
- which had tried to generalize the law enacted by Moses for the
- Israelites alone, Non foeneraberis proximo tuo, sed alieno, was
- beaten by an idea which it had accepted from the economic
- routine,-- namely, farm-rent,--elevated into the theory of the
- productivity of capital.
- But the economists in their turn were less fortunate, when they
- were afterwards called upon to justify farm-rent in itself, and
- to establish this theory of the product of capital. It may be
- said that, on this point, they have lost all the advantage they
- had at first gained against socialism.
- Undoubtedly--and I am the first to recognize it--the rent of
- land, like that of money and all personal and real property, is a
- spontaneous and universal fact, which has its source in the
- depths of our nature, and which soon becomes, by its natural
- development, one of the most potent means of organization. I
- shall prove even that interest on capital is but the
- materialization of the aphorism, ALL LABOR SHOULD LEAVE AN
- EXCESS. But in the face of this theory, or rather this fiction,
- of the productivity of capital, arises another thesis no less
- certain, which in these latter days has struck the ablest
- economists: it is that all value is born of labor, and is
- composed essentially of wages; in other words, that no wealth has
- its origin in privilege, or acquires any value except through
- work; and that, consequently, labor alone is the source of
- revenue among men. How, then, reconcile the theory of farm-rent
- or productivity of capital--a theory confirmed by universal
- custom, which conservative political economy is forced to accept
- but cannot justify--with this other theory which shows that value
- is normally composed of wages, and which inevitably ends, as we
- shall demonstrate, in an equality in society between net product
- and raw product?
- The socialists have not wasted the opportunity. Starting with
- the principle that labor is the source of all income, they began
- to call the holders of capital to account for their farm-rents
- and emoluments; and, as the economists won the first victory by
- generalizing under a common expression farm-rent and usury, so
- the socialists have taken their revenge by causing the seignorial
- rights of capital to vanish before the still more general
- principle of labor. Property has been demolished from top to
- bottom: the economists could only keep silent; but, powerless to
- arrest itself in this new descent, socialism has slipped clear to
- the farthest boundaries of communistic utopia, and, for want of a
- practical solution, society is reduced to a position where it can
- neither justify its tradition, nor commit itself to experiments
- in which the least mistake would drive it backward several
- thousand years.
- In such a situation what is the mandate of science?
- Certainly not to halt in an arbitrary, inconceivable, and
- impossible juste milieu; it is to generalize further, and
- discover a third principle, a fact, a superior law, which shall
- explain the fiction of capital and the myth of property, and
- reconcile them with the theory which makes labor the origin of
- all wealth. This is what socialism, if it wishes to proceed
- logically, must undertake. In fact, the theory of the real
- productivity of labor, and that of the fictitious productivity of
- capital, are both essentially economical: socialism has
- endeavored only to show the contradiction between them, without
- regard to experience or logic; for it appears to be as destitute
- of the one as of the other. Now, in law, the litigant who
- accepts the authority of a title in one particular must accept it
- in all; it is not allowable to divide the documents and proofs.
- Had socialism the right to decline the authority of political
- economy in relation to usury, when it appealed for support to
- this same authority in relation to the analysis of value? By no
- means. All that socialism could demand in such a case was,
- either that political economy should be directed to reconcile its
- theories, or that it might be itself intrusted with this
- difficult task.
- The more closely we examine these solemn discussions, the more
- clearly we see that the whole trouble is due to the fact that one
- of the parties does not wish to see, while the other refuses to
- advance.
- It is a principle of our law that no one can be deprived of his
- property except for the sake of general utility, and in
- consideration of a fair indemnity payable in advance.
- This principle is eminently an economic one; for, on the one
- hand, it assumes the right of eminent domain of the citizen
- expropriated, whose consent, according to the democratic spirit
- of the social compact, is necessarily presupposed. On the other
- hand, the indemnity, or the price of the article taken, is
- fixed, not by the intrinsic value of the article, but by the
- general law of commerce,--supply and demand; in a word, by
- opinion. Expropriation in the name of society may be likened to
- a contract of convenience, agreed to by each with all; not only
- then must the price be paid, but the convenience also must be
- paid for: and it is thus, in reality, that the indemnity is
- estimated. If the Roman legists had seen this analogy, they
- undoubtedly would have hesitated less over the question of
- expropriation for the sake of public utility.
- Such, then, is the sanction of the social right of expropriation:
- indemnity.
- Now, practically, not only is the principle of indemnity not
- applied in all cases where it ought to be, but it is impossible
- that it should be so applied. Thus, the law which established
- railways provided indemnity for the lands to be occupied by the
- rails; it did nothing for the multitude of industries dependent
- upon the previous method of conveyance, whose losses far exceeded
- the value of the lands whose owners received compensation.
- Similarly, when the question of indemnifying the manufacturers of
- beet-root sugar was under consideration, it occurred to no one
- that the State ought to indemnify also the large number of
- laborers and employees who earned their livelihood in the
- beet-root industry, and who were, perhaps, to be reduced to want.
- Nevertheless, it is certain, according to the idea of capital and
- the theory of production, that as the possessor of land, whose
- means of labor is taken from him by the railroad, has a right to
- be indemnified, so also the manufacturer, whose capital is
- rendered unproductive by the same railroad, is entitled to
- indemnification. Why, then, is he not indemnified? Alas!
- because to indemnify him is impossible. With such a system of
- justice and impartiality society would be, as a general thing,
- unable to act, and would return to the fixedness of Roman
- justice. There must be victims. The principle of indemnity is
- consequently abandoned; to one or more classes of citizens the
- State is inevitably bankrupt.
- At this point the socialists appear. They charge that the sole
- object of political economy is to sacrifice the interests of the
- masses and create privileges; then, finding in the law of
- expropriation the rudiment of an agrarian law, they suddenly
- advocate universal expropriation; that is, production and
- consumption in common.
- But here socialism relapses from criticism into utopia, and its
- incapacity becomes freshly apparent in its contradictions. If
- the principle of expropriation for the sake of public utility,
- carried to its logical conclusion, leads to a complete
- reorganization of society, before commencing the work the
- character of this new organization must be understood; now,
- socialism, I repeat, has no science save a few bits of physiology
- and political economy. Further, it is necessary in accordance
- with the principle of indemnity, if not to compensate citizens,
- at least to guarantee to them the values which they part with; it
- is necessary, in short, to insure them against loss. Now,
- outside of the public fortune, the management of which it
- demands, where will socialism find security for this same
- fortune?
- It is impossible, in sound and honest logic, to escape this
- circle. Consequently the communists, more open in their dealings
- than certain other sectarians of flowing and pacific ideas,
- decide the difficulty; and promise, the power once in their
- hands, to expropriate all and indemnify and guarantee none. At
- bottom, that would be neither unjust nor disloyal.
- Unfortunately, to burn is not to reply, as the interesting
- Desmoulins said to Robespierre; and such a discussion ends
- always in fire and the guillotine. Here, as everywhere, two
- rights, equally sacred, stand in the presence of each other, the
- right of the citizen and the right of the State; it is enough to
- say that there is a superior formula which reconciles the
- socialistic utopias and the mutilated theories of political
- economy, and that the problem is to discover it. In this
- emergency what are the contending parties doing? Nothing. We
- might say rather that they raise questions only to get an
- opportunity to redress injuries. What do I say? The questions
- are not even understood by them; and, while the public is
- considering the sublime problems of society and human destiny,
- the professors of social science, orthodox and heretics, do not
- agree on principles. Witness the question which occasioned these
- inquiries, and which its authors certainly understand no better
- than its disparagers,--THE RELATION OF PROFITS AND WAGES.
- What! an Academy of economists has offered for competition a
- question the terms of which it does not understand! How, then,
- could it have conceived the idea?
- Well! I know that my statement is astonishing and incredible; but
- it is true. Like the theologians, who answer metaphysical
- problems only by myths and allegories, which always reproduce the
- problems but never solve them, the economists reply to the
- questions which they ask only by relating how they were led to
- ask them: should they conceive that it was possible to go
- further, they would cease to be economists.
- For example, what is profit? That which remains for the manager
- after he has paid all the expenses. Now, the expenses consist of
- the labor performed and the materials consumed; or, in fine,
- wages. What, then, is the wages of a workingman? The least
- that can be given him; that is, we do not know. What should be
- the price of the merchandise put upon the market by the manager?
- The highest that he can obtain; that is, again, we do not know.
- Political economy prohibits the supposition that the prices of
- merchandise and labor can be FIXED, although it admits that they
- can be ESTIMATED; and that for the reason, say the economists,
- that estimation is essentially an arbitrary operation, which
- never can lead to sure and certain conclusions. How, then, shall
- we find the relation between two unknowns which, according to
- political economy, cannot be determined? Thus political economy
- proposes insolvable problems; and yet we shall soon see that it
- must propose them, and that our century must solve them. That is
- why I said that the Academy of Moral Sciences, in offering for
- competition the question of the relation of profits and wages,
- spoke unconsciously, spoke prophetically.
- But it will be said, Is it not true that, if labor is in great
- demand and laborers are scarce, wages will rise, while profits on
- the other hand will decrease; that if, in the press of
- competition, there is an excess of production, there will be a
- stoppage and forced sales, consequently no profit for the manager
- and a danger of idleness for the laborer; that then the latter
- will offer his labor at a reduced price; that, if a machine is
- invented, it will first extinguish the fires of its rivals; then,
- a monopoly established, and the laborer made dependent on the
- employer, profits and wages will be inversely proportional?
- Cannot all these causes, and others besides, be studied,
- ascertained, counterbalanced, etc.?
- Oh, monographs, histories!--we have been saturated with them
- since the days of Adam Smith and J. B. Say, and they are scarcely
- more than variations of these authors' words. But it is not thus
- that the question should be understood, although the Academy has
- given it no other meaning. The RELATION OF PROFITS AND WAGES
- should be considered in an absolute sense, and not from the
- inconclusive point of view of the accidents of commerce and the
- division of interests: two things which must ultimately receive
- their interpretation. Let me explain myself.
- Considering producer and consumer as a single individual, whose
- recompense is naturally equal to his product; then dividing this
- product into two parts, one which rewards the producer for his
- outlay, another which represents his profit, according to the
- axiom that all labor should leave an excess,--we have to
- determine the relation of one of these parts to the other. This
- done, it will be easy to deduce the ratio of the fortunes of
- these two classes of men, employers and wage-laborers, as well
- as account for all commercial oscillations. This will be a
- series of corollaries to add to the demonstration.
- Now, that such a relation may exist and be estimated, there must
- necessarily be a law, internal or external, which governs wages
- and prices; and since, in the present state of things, wages and
- prices vary and oscillate continually, we must ask what are the
- general facts, the causes, which make value vary and oscillate,
- and within what limits this oscillation takes place.
- But this very question is contrary to the accepted principles;
- for whoever says OSCILLATION necessarily supposes a mean
- direction toward which value's centre of gravity continually
- tends; and when the Academy asks that we DETERMINE THE
- OSCILLATIONS OF PROFIT AND WAGES, it asks thereby that we
- DETERMINE VALUE. Now that is precisely what the gentlemen of
- the Academy deny: they are unwilling to admit that, if value is
- variable, it is for that very reason determinable; that
- variability is the sign and condition of determinability. They
- pretend that value, ever varying, can never be determined. This
- is like maintaining that, given the number of oscillations of a
- pendulum per second, their amplitude, and the latitude and
- elevation of the spot where the experiment is performed, the
- length of the pendulum cannot be determined because the pendulum
- is in motion. Such is political economy's first article of
- faith.
- As for socialism, it does not appear to have understood the
- question, or to be concerned about it. Among its many organs,
- some simply and merely put aside the problem by substituting
- division for distribution,--that is, by banishing number and
- measure from the social organism: others relieve themselves of
- the embarrassment by applying universal suffrage to the wages
- question. It is needless to say that these platitudes find dupes
- by thousands and hundreds of thousands.
- The condemnation of political economy has been formulated by
- Malthus in this famous passage:--
- A man who is born into a world already occupied, his family
- unable to support him, and society not requiring his labor,--such
- a man, I say, has not the least right to claim any nourishment
- whatever: he is really one too many on the earth. At the great
- banquet of Nature there is no plate laid for him. Nature
- commands him to take himself away, and she will not be slow to
- put her order into execution.[6]
- [6 The passage quoted may not be given in the exact words used by
- Malthus, it having reached its present shape through the medium
- of a French rendering--Translator.
- This then is the necessary, the fatal, conclusion of political
- economy,--a conclusion which I shall demonstrate by evidence
- hitherto unknown in this field of inquiry,--Death to him who does
- not possess!
- In order better to grasp the thought of Malthus, let us translate
- it into philosophical propositions by stripping it of its
- rhetorical gloss:--
- "Individual liberty, and property, which is its expression, are
- economical data; equality and solidarity are not.
- "Under this system, each one by himself, each one for himself:
- labor, like all merchandise, is subject to fluctuation: hence the
- risks of the proletariat.
- "Whoever has neither income nor wages has no right to demand
- anything of others: his misfortune falls on his own head; in the
- game of fortune, luck has been against him."
- From the point of view of political economy these propositions
- are irrefutable; and Malthus, who has formulated them with such
- alarming exactness, is secure against all reproach. From the
- point of view of the conditions of social science, these same
- propositions are radically false, and even contradictory.
- The error of Malthus, or rather of political economy, does not
- consist in saying that a man who has nothing to eat must die; or
- in maintaining that, under the system of individual
- appropriation, there is no course for him who has neither labor
- nor income but to withdraw from life by suicide, unless he
- prefers to be driven from it by starvation: such is, on the one
- hand, the law of our existence; such is, on the other, the
- consequence of property; and M. Rossi has taken altogether too
- much trouble to justify the good sense of Malthus on this point.
- I suspect, indeed, that M. Rossi, in making so lengthy and loving
- an apology for Malthus, intended to recommend political economy
- in the same way that his fellow-countryman Machiavel, in his book
- entitled "The Prince," recommended despotism to the
- admiration of the world. In pointing out misery as the necessary
- condition of industrial and commercial absolutism, M. Rossi seems
- to say to us: There is your law, your justice, your political
- economy; there is property.
- But Gallic simplicity does not understand artifice; and it would
- have been better to have said to France, in her immaculate
- tongue: The error of Malthus, the radical vice of political
- economy, consists, in general terms, in affirming as a definitive
- state a transitory condition,-- namely, the division of society
- into patricians and proletaires; and, particularly, in saying
- that in an organized, and consequently solidaire, society, there
- may be some who possess, labor, and consume, while others have
- neither possession, nor labor, nor bread. Finally Malthus, or
- political economy, reasons erroneously when seeing in the faculty
- of indefinite reproduction--which the human race enjoys in
- neither greater nor less degree than all animal and vegetable
- species--a permanent danger of famine; whereas it is only
- necessary to show the necessity, and consequently the existence,
- of a law of equilibrium between population and production.
- In short, the theory of Malthus--and herein lies the great merit
- of this writer, a merit which none of his colleagues has dreamed
- of attributing to him--is a reductio ad absurdum of all political
- economy.
- As for socialism, that was summed up long since by Plato and
- Thomas More in a single word, UTOPIA,--that is, NO-PLACE, a
- chimera.
- Nevertheless, for the honor of the human mind and that justice
- may be done to all, this must be said: neither could economic and
- legislative science have had any other beginning than they
- did have, nor can society remain in this original position.
- Every science must first define its domain, produce and collect
- its materials: before system, facts; before the age of art, the
- age of learning. The economic science, subject like every other
- to the law of time and the conditions of experience, before
- seeking to ascertain how things OUGHT TO TAKE PLACE in society,
- had to tell us how things DO TAKE PLACE; and all these processes
- which the authors speak of so pompously in their books as LAWS,
- PRINCIPLES, and THEORIES, in spite of their incoherence and
- inconsistency, had to be gathered up with scrupulous diligence,
- and described with strict impartiality. The fulfilment of this
- task called for more genius perhaps, certainly for more
- self-sacrifice, than will be demanded by the future progress of
- the science.
- If, then, social economy is even yet rather an aspiration towards
- the future than a knowledge of reality, it must be admitted that
- the elements of this study are all included in political economy;
- and I believe that I express the general sentiment in saying that
- this opinion has become that of the vast majority of minds. The
- present finds few defenders, it is true; but the disgust with
- utopia is no less universal: and everybody understands that the
- truth lies in a formula which shall reconcile these two terms:
- CONSERVATION and MOTION.
- Thus, thanks to Adam Smith, J. B. Say, Ricardo, and Malthus, as
- well as their rash opponents, the mysteries of fortune, atria
- Ditis, are uncovered; the power of capital, the oppression of the
- laborer, the machinations of monopoly, illumined at all points,
- shun the public gaze. Concerning the facts observed and
- described by the economists, we reason and conjecture:
- abusive laws, iniquitous customs, respected so long as the
- obscurity which sustained their life lasted, with difficulty
- dragged to the daylight, are expiring beneath the general
- reprobation; it is suspected that the government of society must
- be learned no longer from an empty ideology, after the fashion of
- the Contrat social, but, as Montesquieu foresaw, from the
- RELATION OF THINGS; and already a Left of eminently socialistic
- tendencies, composed of savants, magistrates, legists,
- professors, and even capitalists and manufacturers,--all born
- representatives and defenders of privilege,--and of a million of
- adepts, is forming in the nation above and outside of
- PARLIAMENTARY opinions, and seeking, by an analysis of economic
- facts, to capture the secrets of the life of societies.
- Let us represent political economy, then, as an immense plain,
- strewn with materials prepared for an edifice. The laborers
- await the signal, full of ardor, and burning to commence the
- work: but the architect has disappeared without leaving the plan.
- The economists have stored their memories with many things:
- unhappily they have not the shadow of an estimate. They know the
- origin and history of each piece; what it cost to make it; what
- wood makes the best joists, and what clay the best bricks; what
- has been expended in tools and carts; how much the carpenters
- earned, and how much the stone-cutters: they do not know the
- destination and the place of anything. The economists cannot
- deny that they have before them the fragments, scattered
- pell-mell, of a chef-d'oeuvre, disjecti membra poetae; but it
- has been impossible for them as yet to recover the general
- design, and, whenever they have attempted any comparisons, they
- have met only with incoherence. Driven to despair at last by
- their fruitless combinations, they have erected as a dogma the
- architectural incongruity of the science, or, as they say, the
- INCONVENIENCES of its principles; in a word, they have denied the
- science.[7]
- [7] "The principle which governs the life of nations is not pure
- science: it is the total of the complex data which depend on the
- state of enlightenment, on needs and interests." Thus expressed
- itself, in December, 1844, one of the clearest minds that France
- contained, M. Leon Faucher. Explain, if you can, how a man of
- this stamp was led by his economic convictions to declare that
- the COMPLEX DATA of society are opposed to PURE SCIENCE.
- Thus the division of labor, without which production would be
- almost nothing, is subject to a thousand inconveniences, the
- worst of which is the demoralization of the laborer; machinery
- causes, not only cheapness, but obstruction of the market and
- stoppage of business; competition ends in oppression; taxation,
- the material bond of society, is generally a scourge dreaded
- equally with fire and hail; credit is necessarily accompanied by
- bankruptcy; property is a swarm of abuses; commerce degenerates
- into a game of chance, in which it is sometimes allowable even to
- cheat: in short, disorder existing everywhere to an equal extent
- with order, and no one knowing how the latter is to banish the
- former, taxis ataxien diokein, the economists have decided that
- all is for the best, and regard every reformatory proposition as
- hostile to political economy.
- The social edifice, then, has been abandoned; the crowd has burst
- into the wood-yard; columns, capitals, and plinths, wood, stone,
- and metal, have been distributed in portions and drawn by lot:
- and, of all these materials collected for a magnificent temple,
- property, ignorant and barbarous, has built huts. The work
- before us, then, is not only to recover the plan of the edifice,
- but to dislodge the occupants, who maintain that their city is
- superb, and, at the very mention of restoration, appear in
- battle-array at their gates. Such confusion was not seen of old
- at Babel: happily we speak French, and are more courageous than
- the companions of Nimrod.
- But enough of allegory: the historical and descriptive method,
- successfully employed so long as the work was one of examination
- only, is henceforth useless: after thousands of monographs and
- tables, we are no further advanced than in the age of Xenophon
- and Hesiod. The Phenicians, the Greeks, the Italians, labored in
- their day as we do in ours: they invested their money, paid their
- laborers, extended their domains, made their expeditions and
- recoveries, kept their books, speculated, dabbled in stocks, and
- ruined themselves according to all the rules of economic art;
- knowing as well as ourselves how to gain monopolies and fleece
- the consumer and laborer. Of all this accounts are only too
- numerous; and, though we should rehearse forever our statistics
- and our figures, we should always have before our eyes only
- chaos,--chaos constant and uniform.
- It is thought, indeed, that from the era of mythology to the
- present year 57 of our great revolution, the general welfare has
- improved: Christianity has long been regarded as the chief cause
- of this amelioration, but now the economists claim all the honor
- for their own principles. For after all, they say, what has been
- the influence of Christianity upon society? Thoroughly utopian
- at its birth, it has been able to maintain and extend itself only
- by gradually adopting all the economic categories,--labor,
- capital, farm-rent, usury, traffic, property; in short, by
- consecrating the Roman law, the highest expression of political
- economy.
- Christianity, a stranger in its theological aspect to the
- theories of production and consumption, has been to European
- civilization what the trades-unions and free-masons were not long
- since to itinerant workmen,--a sort of insurance company and
- mutual aid society; in this respect, it owes nothing to political
- economy, and the good which it has done cannot be invoked by the
- latter in its own support. The effects of charity and
- self-sacrifice are outside of the domain of economy, which must
- bring about social happiness through justice and the organization
- of labor. For the rest, I am ready to admit the beneficial
- effects of the system of property; but I observe that these
- effects are entirely balanced by the misery which it is the
- nature of this system to produce; so that, as an illustrious
- minister recently confessed before the English Parliament, and as
- we shall soon show, the increase of misery in the present state
- of society is parallel and equal to the increase of
- wealth,--which completely annuls the merits of political economy.
- Thus political economy is justified neither by its maxims nor by
- its works; and, as for socialism, its whole value consists in
- having established this fact. We are forced, then, to resume the
- examination of political economy, since it alone contains, at
- least in part, the materials of social science; and to ascertain
- whether its theories do not conceal some error, the correction of
- which would reconcile fact and right, reveal the organic law of
- humanity, and give the positive conception of order.
- CHAPTER II.
- OF VALUE.
- % 1.--Opposition of value in USE and value in EXCHANGE.
- Value is the corner-stone of the economic edifice. The divine
- artist who has intrusted us with the continuation of his work has
- explained himself on this point to no one; but the few
- indications given may serve as a basis of conjecture. Value, in
- fact, presents two faces: one, which the economists call value in
- USE, or intrinsic value; another, value in EXCHANGE, or of
- opinion. The effects which are produced by value under this
- double aspect, and which are very irregular so long as it is not
- established,--or, to use a more philosophical expression, so long
- as it is not constituted,--are changed totally by this
- constitution.
- Now, in what consists the correlation between USEFUL value and
- value in EXCHANGE? What is meant by CONSTITUTED value, and by
- what sudden change is this constitution effected? To answer
- these questions is the object and end of political economy. I
- beg the reader to give his whole attention to what is to follow,
- this chapter being the only one in the work which will tax his
- patience. For my part, I will endeavor to be more and more
- simple and clear.
- Everything which can be of any service to me is of value to me,
- and the more abundant the useful thing is the richer I am: so
- far there is no difficulty. Milk and flesh, fruits and grains,
- wool, sugar, cotton, wine, metals, marble; in fact, land, water,
- air, fire, and sunlight,-- are, relatively to me, values of use,
- values by nature and function. If all the things which serve to
- sustain my life were as abundant as certain of them are, light
- for instance,--in other words, if the quantity of every valuable
- thing was inexhaustible,--my welfare would be forever assured: I
- should not have to labor; I should not even think. In such a
- state, things would always be USEFUL, but it would be no longer
- true to say that they ARE VALUABLE; for value, as we shall soon
- see, indicates an essentially social relation; and it is solely
- through exchange, reverting as it were from society to Nature,
- that we have acquired the idea of utility. The whole development
- of civilization originates, then, in the necessity which the
- human race is under of continually causing the creation of new
- values; just as the evils of society are primarily caused by the
- perpetual struggle which we maintain against our own inertia.
- Take away from man that desire which leads him to think and fits
- him for a life of contemplation, and the lord of creation stands
- on a level with the highest of the beasts.
- But how does value in use become value in exchange? For it
- should be noticed that the two kinds of value, although
- coexisting in thought (since the former becomes apparent only in
- the presence of the latter), nevertheless maintain a relation of
- succession: exchangeable value is a sort of reflex of useful
- value; just as the theologians teach that in the Trinity the
- Father, contemplating himself through all eternity, begets the
- Son. This generation of the idea of value has not been noted by
- the economists with sufficient care: it is important that we
- should tarry over it.
- Since, then, of the objects which I need, a very large number
- exist in Nature only in moderate quantities, or even not at all,
- I am forced to assist in the production of that which I lack;
- and, as I cannot turn my hand to so many things, I propose to
- other men, my collaborators in various functions, to yield me a
- portion of their products in exchange for mine. I shall then
- always have in my possession more of my own special product than
- I consume; just as my fellows will always have in their
- possession more of their respective products than they use. This
- tacit agreement is fulfilled by COMMERCE. Here we may observe
- that the logical succession of the two kinds of value is even
- more apparent in history than in theory, men having spent
- thousands of years in disputing over natural wealth (this being
- what is called PRIMITIVE COMMUNISM) before their industry
- afforded opportunity for exchange.
- Now, the capacity possessed by all products, whether natural or
- the result of labor, of serving to maintain man, is called
- distinctively value in use; their capacity of purchasing each
- other, value in exchange. At bottom this is the same thing,
- since the second case only adds to the first the idea of
- substitution, which may seem an idle subtlety; practically, the
- consequences are surprising, and beneficial or fatal by turns.
- Consequently, the distinction established in value is based on
- facts, and is not at all arbitrary: it is for man, in submitting
- to this law, to use it to increase his welfare and liberty.
- Labor, as an author (M. Walras) has beautifully expressed it, is
- a war declared against the parsimony of Nature; by it wealth and
- society are simultaneously created. Not only does labor produce
- incomparably more wealth than Nature gives us,--for instance, it
- has been remarked that the shoemakers alone in France produce
- ten times more than the mines of Peru, Brazil, and Mexico
- combined,--but, labor infinitely extending and multiplying its
- rights by the changes which it makes in natural values, it
- gradually comes about that all wealth, in running the gauntlet of
- labor, falls wholly into the hands of him who creates it, and
- that nothing, or almost nothing, is left for the possessor of the
- original material.
- Such, then, is the path of economic progress: at first,
- appropriation of the land and natural values; then, association
- and distribution through labor until complete equality is
- attained. Chasms are scattered along our road, the sword is
- suspended over our heads; but, to avert all dangers, we have
- reason, and reason is omnipotence.
- It results from the relation of useful value to exchangeable
- value that if, by accident or from malice, exchange should be
- forbidden to a single producer, or if the utility of his product
- should suddenly cease, though his storehouses were full, he would
- possess nothing. The more sacrifices he had made and the more
- courage he had displayed in producing, the greater would be his
- misery. If the utility of the product, instead of wholly
- disappearing, should only diminish,--a thing which may happen in
- a hundred ways,--the laborer, instead of being struck down and
- ruined by a sudden catastrophe, would be impoverished only;
- obliged to give a large quantity of his own value for a small
- quantity of the values of others, his means of subsistence would
- be reduced by an amount equal to the deficit in his sale: which
- would lead by degrees from competency to want. If, finally, the
- utility of the product should increase, or else if its production
- should become less costly, the balance of exchange would turn to
- the advantage of the producer, whose condition would thus be
- raised from fatiguing mediocrity to idle opulence. This
- phenomenon of depreciation and enrichment is manifested under a
- thousand forms and by a thousand combinations; it is the essence
- of the passional and intriguing game of commerce and industry.
- And this is the lottery, full of traps, which the economists
- think ought to last forever, and whose suppression the Academy of
- Moral and Political Sciences unwittingly demands, when, under the
- names of profit and wages, it asks us to reconcile value in use
- and value in exchange; that is, to find the method of rendering
- all useful values equally exchangeable, and, vice versa, all
- exchangeable values equally useful.
- The economists have very clearly shown the double character of
- value, but what they have not made equally plain is its
- contradictory nature. Here begins our criticism.
- Utility is the necessary condition of exchange; but take away
- exchange, and utility vanishes: these two things are indissolubly
- connected. Where, then, is the contradiction?
- Since all of us live only by labor and exchange, and grow richer
- as production and exchange increase, each of us produces as much
- useful value as possible, in order to increase by that amount his
- exchanges, and consequently his enjoyments. Well, the first
- effect, the inevitable effect, of the multiplication of values is
- to LOWER them: the more abundant is an article of merchandise,
- the more it loses in exchange and depreciates commercially. Is
- it not true that there is a contradiction between the necessity
- of labor and its results?
- I adjure the reader, before rushing ahead for the explanation, to
- arrest his attention upon the fact.
- A peasant who has harvested twenty sacks of wheat, which he with
- his family proposes to consume, deems himself twice as rich
- as if he had harvested only ten; likewise a housewife who has
- spun fifty yards of linen believes that she is twice as rich as
- if she had spun but twenty- five. Relatively to the household,
- both are right; looked at in their external relations, they may
- be utterly mistaken. If the crop of wheat is double throughout
- the whole country, twenty sacks will sell for less than ten would
- have sold for if it had been but half as great; so, under similar
- circumstances, fifty yards of linen will be worth less than
- twenty-five: so that value decreases as the production of utility
- increases, and a producer may arrive at poverty by continually
- enriching himself. And this seems unalterable, inasmuch as there
- is no way of escape except all the products of industry become
- infinite in quantity, like air and light, which is absurd. God
- of my reason! Jean Jacques would have said: it is not the
- economists who are irrational; it is political economy itself
- which is false to its definitions. Mentita est iniquitas sibi.
- In the preceding examples the useful value exceeds the
- exchangeable value: in other cases it is less. Then the same
- phenomenon is produced, but in the opposite direction: the
- balance is in favor of the producer, while the consumer suffers.
- This is notably the case in seasons of scarcity, when the high
- price of provisions is always more or less factitious. There are
- also professions whose whole art consists in giving to an article
- of minor usefulness, which could easily be dispensed with, an
- exaggerated value of opinion: such, in general, are the arts of
- luxury. Man, through his aesthetic passion, is eager for the
- trifles the possession of which would highly satisfy his vanity,
- his innate desire for luxury, and his more noble and more
- respectable love of the beautiful: upon this the dealers in this
- class of articles speculate. To tax fancy and elegance is no
- less odious or absurd than to tax circulation: but such a tax is
- collected by a few fashionable merchants, whom general
- infatuation protects, and whose whole merit generally consists in
- warping taste and generating fickleness. Hence no one complains;
- and all the maledictions of opinion are reserved for the
- monopolists who, through genius, succeed in raising by a few
- cents the price of linen and bread.
- It is little to have pointed out this astonishing contrast
- between useful value and exchangeable value, which the economists
- have been in the habit of regarding as very simple: it must be
- shown that this pretended simplicity conceals a profound mystery,
- which it is our duty to fathom.
- I summon, therefore, every serious economist to tell me,
- otherwise than by transforming or repeating the question, for
- what reason value decreases in proportion as production augments,
- and reciprocally what causes this same value to increase in
- proportion as production diminishes. In technical terms, useful
- value and exchangeable value, necessary to each other, are
- inversely proportional to each other; I ask, then, why scarcity,
- instead of utility, is synonymous with dearness. For--mark it
- well--the price of merchandise is independent of the amount of
- labor expended in production; and its greater or less cost does
- not serve at all to explain the variations in its price. Value
- is capricious, like liberty: it considers neither utility nor
- labor; on the contrary, it seems that, in the ordinary course of
- affairs, and exceptional derangements aside, the most useful
- objects are those which are sold at the lowest price; in other
- words, that it is just that the men who perform the most
- attractive labor should be the best rewarded, while those whose
- tasks demand the most exertion are paid the least. So that, in
- following the principle to its ultimate consequences, we
- reach the most logical of conclusions: that things whose use is
- necessary and quantity infinite must be gratuitous, while those
- which are without utility and extremely scarce must bear an
- inestimable price. But, to complete the embarrassment, these
- extremes do not occur in practice: on the one hand, no human
- product can ever become infinite in quantity; on the other, the
- rarest things must be in some degree useful, else they would not
- be susceptible of value. Useful value and exchangeable value
- remain, then, in inevitable attachment, although it is their
- nature continually to tend towards mutual exclusion.
- I shall not fatigue the reader with a refutation of the
- logomachies which might be offered in explanation of this
- subject: of the contradiction inherent in the idea of value there
- is no assignable cause, no possible explanation. The fact of
- which I speak is one of those called primitive,--that is, one of
- those which may serve to explain others, but which in themselves,
- like the bodies called simple, are inexplicable. Such is the
- dualism of spirit and matter. Spirit and matter are two terms
- each of which, taken separately, indicates a special aspect of
- spirit, but corresponds to no reality. So, given man's needs of
- a great variety of products together with the obligation of
- procuring them by his labor, the opposition of useful value to
- exchangeable value necessarily results; and from this opposition
- a contradiction on the very threshold of political economy. No
- intelligence, no will, divine or human, can prevent it.
- Therefore, instead of searching for a chimerical explanation, let
- us content ourselves with establishing the necessity of the
- contradiction. Whatever the abundance of created values and the
- proportion in which they exchange for each other, in order
- that we may exchange our products, mine must suit you when you
- are the BUYER, and I must be satisfied with yours when you are
- the SELLER. For no one has a right to impose his own
- merchandise upon another: the sole judge of utility, or in other
- words the want, is the buyer. Therefore, in the first case, you
- have the deciding power; in the second, I have it. Take away
- reciprocal liberty, and exchange is no longer the expression of
- industrial solidarity: it is robbery. Communism, by the way,
- will never surmount this difficulty.
- But, where there is liberty, production is necessarily
- undetermined, either in quantity or in quality; so that from the
- point of view of economic progress, as from that of the relation
- of consumers, valuation always is an arbitrary matter, and the
- price of merchandise will ever fluctuate. Suppose for a moment
- that all producers should sell at a fixed price: there would be
- some who, producing at less cost and in better quality, would get
- much, while others would get nothing. In every way equilibrium
- would be destroyed. Do you wish, in order to prevent business
- stagnation, to limit production strictly to the necessary amount?
- That would be a violation of liberty: for, in depriving me of the
- power of choice, you condemn me to pay the highest price; you
- destroy competition, the sole guarantee of cheapness, and
- encourage smuggling. In this way, to avoid commercial
- absolutism, you would rush into administrative absolutism; to
- create equality, you would destroy liberty, which is to deny
- equality itself. Would you group producers in a single workshop
- (supposing you to possess this secret)? That again does not
- suffice: it would be necessary also to group consumers in a
- common household, whereby you would abandon the point. We are
- not to abolish the idea of value, which is as impossible as to
- abolish labor, but to determine it; we are not to kill
- individual liberty, but to socialize it. Now, it is proved that
- it is the free will of man that gives rise to the opposition
- between value in use and value in exchange: how reconcile this
- opposition while free will exists? And how sacrifice the latter
- without sacrificing man?
- Then, from the very fact that I, as a free purchaser, am judge of
- my own wants, judge of the fitness of the object, judge of the
- price I wish to pay, and that you on the other hand, as a free
- producer, control the means of production, and consequently have
- the power to reduce your expenses, absolutism forces itself
- forward as an element of value, and causes it to oscillate
- between utility and opinion.
- But this oscillation, clearly pointed out by the economists, is
- but the effect of a contradiction which, repeating itself on a
- vast scale, engenders the most unexpected phenomena. Three years
- of fertility, in certain provinces of Russia, are a public
- calamity, just as, in our vineyards, three years of abundance are
- a calamity to the wine-grower I know well that the economists
- attribute this distress to a lack of markets; wherefore this
- question of markets is an important one with them. Unfortunately
- the theory of markets, like that of emigration with which they
- attempted to meet Malthus, is a begging of the question. The
- States having the largest market are as subject to
- over-production as the most isolated countries: where are high
- and low prices better known than in the stock-exchanges of Paris
- and London?
- From the oscillation of value and the irregular effects resulting
- therefrom the socialists and economists, each in their own way,
- have reasoned to opposite, but equally false, conclusions: the
- former have made it a text for the slander of political economy
- and its exclusion from social science; the latter, for the
- denial of all possibility of reconciliation, and the affirmation
- of the incommensurability of values, and consequently the
- inequality of fortunes, as an absolute law of commerce.
- I say that both parties are equally in error.
- 1. The contradictory idea of value, so clearly exhibited by the
- inevitable distinction between useful value and value in exchange
- does not arise from a false mental perception, or from a vicious
- terminology, or from any practical error; it lies deep in the
- nature of things, and forces itself upon the mind as a general
- form of thought,--that is, as a category. Now, as the idea of
- value is the point of departure of political economy, it follows
- that all the elements of the science--I use the word science in
- anticipation--are contradictory in themselves and opposed to each
- other: so truly is this the case that on every question the
- economist finds himself continually placed between an affirmation
- and a negation alike irrefutable. ANTINOMY, in fine, to use a
- word sanctioned by modern philosophy, is the essential
- characteristic of political economy; that is to say, it is at
- once its death-sentence and its justification.
- ANTINOMY, literally COUNTER-LAW, means opposition in principle
- or antagonism in relation, just as contradiction or ANTILOGY
- indicates opposition or discrepancy in speech. Antinomy,--I ask
- pardon for entering into these scholastic details, comparatively
- unfamiliar as yet to most economists,--antinomy is the conception
- of a law with two faces, the one positive, the other negative.
- Such, for instance, is the law called ATTRACTION, by which the
- planets revolve around the sun, and which mathematicians have
- analyzed into centripetal force and centrifugal force. Such also
- is the problem of the infinite divisibility of matter, which, as
- Kant has shown, can be denied and affirmed successively by
- arguments equally plausible and irrefutable.
- Antinomy simply expresses a fact, and forces itself imperatively
- on the mind; contradiction, properly speaking, is an absurdity.
- This distinction between antinomy (contra-lex) and contradiction
- (contra-dictio) shows in what sense it can be said that, in a
- certain class of ideas and facts, the argument of contradiction
- has not the same value as in mathematics.
- In mathematics it is a rule that, a proposition being proved
- false, its opposite is true, and vice versa. In fact, this is
- the principal method of mathematical demonstration. In social
- economy, it is not the same: thus we see, for example, that
- property being proved by its results to be false, the opposite
- formula, communism, is none the truer on this account, but is
- deniable at the same time and by the same title as property.
- Does it follow, as has been said with such ridiculous emphasis,
- that every truth, every idea, results from a contradiction,--
- that is, from a something which is affirmed and denied at the
- same moment and from the same point of view,--and that it may be
- necessary to abandon wholly the old-fashioned logic, which
- regards contradiction as the infallible sign of error? This
- babble is worthy of sophists who, destitute of faith and honesty,
- endeavor to perpetuate scepticism in order to maintain their
- impertinent uselessness. Because antinomy, immediately it is
- misunderstood, leads inevitably to contradiction, these have been
- mistaken for each other, especially among the French, who like to
- judge everything by its effects. But neither contradiction nor
- antinomy, which analysis discovers at the bottom of every simple
- idea, is the principle of truth. Contradiction is always
- synonymous with nullity; as for antinomy, sometimes called by
- the same name, it is indeed the forerunner of truth, the material
- of which, so to speak, it supplies; but it is not truth, and,
- considered in itself, it is the efficient cause of disorder, the
- characteristic form of delusion and evil.
- An antinomy is made up of two terms, necessary to each other, but
- always opposed, and tending to mutual destruction. I hardly dare
- to add, as I must, that the first of these terms has received the
- name thesis, position, and the second the name anti-thesis,
- counter-position. This method of thought is now so well-known
- that it will soon figure, I hope, in the text-books of the
- primary schools. We shall see directly how from the combination
- of these two zeros unity springs forth, or the idea which dispels
- the antinomy.
- Thus, in value, there is nothing useful that cannot be exchanged,
- nothing exchangeable if it be not useful: value in use and value
- in exchange are inseparable. But while, by industrial progress,
- demand varies and multiplies to an infinite extent, and while
- manufactures tend in consequence to increase the natural utility
- of things, and finally to convert all useful value into
- exchangeable value, production, on the other hand, continually
- increasing the power of its instruments and always reducing its
- expenses, tends to restore the venal value of things to their
- primitive utility: so that value in use and value in exchange are
- in perpetual struggle.
- The effects of this struggle are well-known: the wars of commerce
- and of the market; obstructions to business; stagnation;
- prohibition; the massacres of competition; monopoly; reductions
- of wages; laws fixing maximum prices; the crushing inequality of
- fortunes; misery,--all these result from the antinomy of value.
- The proof of this I may be excused from giving here, as it will
- appear naturally in the chapters to follow.
- The socialists, while justly demanding that this antagonism be
- brought to an end, have erred in mistaking its source, and in
- seeing in it only a mental oversight, capable of rectification by
- a legal decree. Hence this lamentable outbreak of
- sentimentalism, which has rendered socialism so insipid to
- positive minds, and which, spreading the absurdest delusions,
- makes so many fresh dupes every day. My complaint of socialism
- is not that it has appeared among us without cause, but that it
- has clung so long and so obstinately to its silliness.
- 2. But the economists have erred no less gravely in rejecting a
- priori, and just because of the contradictory, or rather
- antinomical, nature of value, every idea and hope of reform,
- never desiring to understand that, for the very reason that
- society has arrived at its highest point of antagonism,
- reconciliation and harmony are at hand. This, nevertheless, is
- what a close study of political economy would have shown to its
- adepts, had they paid more attention to the lights of modern
- metaphysics. It is indeed demonstrated, by the most positive
- evidence known to the human mind, that wherever an antinomy
- appears there is a promise of a resolution of its terms, and
- consequently an announcement of a coming change. Now, the idea
- of value, as developed by J. B. Say among others, satisfies
- exactly these conditions. But the economists, who have remained
- for the most part by an inconceivable fatality ignorant of the
- movement of philosophy, have guarded against the supposition that
- the essentially contradictory, or, as they say, variable,
- character of value might be at the same time the authentic sign
- of its constitutionality,--that is, of its eminently harmonious
- and determinable nature. However dishonorable it may be to the
- economists of the various schools, it is certain that their
- opposition to socialism results solely from this false
- conception of their own principles; one proof, taken from a
- thousand, will suffice.
- The Academy of Sciences (not that of Moral Sciences, but the
- other), going outside of its province one day, listened to a
- paper in which it was proposed to calculate tables of value for
- all kinds of merchandise upon the basis of the average product
- per man and per day's labor in each branch of industry. "Le
- Journal des Economistes" (August, 1845) immediately made this
- communication, intrusive in its eyes, the text of a protest
- against the plan of tariff which was its object, and the occasion
- of a reestablishment of what it called true principles:--
- "There is no measure of value, no standard of value," it said in
- its conclusions; "economic science tells us this, just as
- mathematical science tells us that there is no perpetual motion
- or quadrature of the circle, and that these never will be found.
- Now, if there is no standard of value, if the measure of value is
- not even a metaphysical illusion, what then is the law which
- governs exchanges? . . . . . As we have said before, it is, in a
- general way, SUPPLY and DEMAND: that is the last word of
- science."
- Now, how did "Le Journal des Economistes" prove that there is no
- measure of value? I use the consecrated expression: though I
- shall show directly that this phrase, MEASURE OF VALUE, is
- somewhat ambiguous, and does not convey the exact meaning which
- it is intended, and which it ought, to express.
- This journal repeated, with accompanying examples, the exposition
- that we have just given of the variability of value, but without
- arriving, as we did, at the contradiction. Now, if the estimable
- editor, one of the most distinguished economists of the
- school of Say, had had stricter logical habits; if he had been
- long used, not only to observing facts, but to seeking their
- explanation in the ideas which produce them,--I do not doubt that
- he would have expressed himself more cautiously, and that,
- instead of seeing in the variability of value the LAST WORD OF
- SCIENCE, he would have recognized unaided that it is the first.
- Seeing that the variability of value proceeds not from things,
- but from the mind, he would have said that, as human liberty has
- its law, so value must have its law; consequently, that the
- hypothesis of a measure of value, this being the common
- expression, is not at all irrational; quite the contrary, that it
- is the denial of this measure that is illogical, untenable.
- And indeed, what is there in the idea of measuring, and
- consequently of fixing, value, that is unscientific? All men
- believe in it; all wish it, search for it, suppose it: every
- proposition of sale or purchase is at bottom only a comparison
- between two values,--that is, a determination, more or less
- accurate if you will, but nevertheless effective. The opinion of
- the human race on the existing difference between real value and
- market price may be said to be unanimous. It is for this reason
- that so many kinds of merchandise are sold at a fixed price;
- there are some, indeed, which, even in their variations, are
- always fixed,--bread, for instance. It will not be denied that,
- if two manufacturers can supply one another by an account
- current, and at a settled price, with quantities of their
- respective products, ten, a hundred, a thousand manufacturers can
- do the same. Now, that would be a solution of the problem of the
- measure of value. The price of everything would be debated upon,
- I allow, because debate is still our only method of fixing
- prices; but yet, as all light is the result of conflict, debate,
- though it may be a proof of uncertainty, has for its object,
- setting aside the greater or less amount of good faith that
- enters into it, the discovery of the relation of values to each
- other,-- that is, their measurement, their law.
- Ricardo, in his theory of rent, has given a magnificent example
- of the commensurability of values. He has shown that arable
- lands are to each other as the crops which they yield with the
- same outlay; and here universal practice is in harmony with
- theory. Now who will say that this positive and sure method of
- estimating the value of land, and in general of all engaged
- capital, cannot be applied to products also? . . . . .
- They say: Political economy is not affected by a priori
- arguments; it pronounces only upon facts. Now, facts and
- experience teach us that there is no measure of value and can be
- none, and prove that, though the conception of such an idea was
- necessary in the nature of things, its realization is wholly
- chimerical. Supply and demand is the sole law of exchange.
- I will not repeat that experience proves precisely the contrary;
- that everything, in the economic progress of society, denotes a
- tendency toward the constitution and establishment of value; that
- that is the culminating point of political economy--which by this
- constitution becomes transformed--and the supreme indication of
- order in society: this general outline, reiterated without proof,
- would become tiresome. I confine myself for the moment within
- the limits of the discussion, and say that SUPPLY and DEMAND,
- held up as the sole regulators of value, are nothing more than
- two ceremonial forms serving to bring useful value and
- exchangeable value face to face, and to provoke their
- reconciliation. They are the two electric poles, whose
- connection must produce the economical phenomenon of affinity
- called EXCHANGE. Like the poles of a battery, supply and demand
- are diametrically opposed to each other, and tend continually to
- mutual annihilation; it is by their antagonism that the price of
- things is either increased, or reduced to nothing: we wish to
- know, then, if it is not possible, on every occasion, so to
- balance or harmonize these two forces that the price of things
- always may be the expression of their true value, the expression
- of justice. To say after that that supply and demand is the law
- of exchange is to say that supply and demand is the law of supply
- and demand; it is not an explanation of the general practice, but
- a declaration of its absurdity; and I deny that the general
- practice is absurd.
- I have just quoted Ricardo as having given, in a special
- instance, a positive rule for the comparison of values: the
- economists do better still. Every year they gather from tables
- of statistics the average prices of the various grains. Now,
- what is the meaning of an average? Every one can see that in a
- single operation, taken at random from a million, there is no
- means of knowing which prevailed, supply--that is, useful
- value--or exchangeable value,--that is, demand. But as every
- increase in the price of merchandise is followed sooner or later
- by a proportional reduction; as, in other words, in society the
- profits of speculation are equal to the losses,--we may regard
- with good reason the average of prices during a complete period
- as indicative of the real and legitimate value of products. This
- average, it is true, is ascertained too late: but who knows that
- we could not discover it in advance? Is there an economist who
- dares to deny it?
- Nolens volens, then, the measure of value must be sought for:
- logic commands it, and her conclusions are adverse to
- economists and socialists alike. The opinion which denies
- the existence of this measure is irrational, unreasonable. Say
- as often as you please, on the one hand, that political economy
- is a science of facts, and that the facts are contrary to the
- hypothesis of a determination of value, or, on the other, that
- this troublesome question would not present itself in a system of
- universal association, which would absorb all antagonism,--I will
- reply still, to the right and to the left:--
- 1. That as no fact is produced which has not its cause, so none
- exists which has not its law; and that, if the law of exchange is
- not discovered, the fault is, not with the facts, but with the
- savants.
- 2. That, as long as man shall labor in order to live, and shall
- labor freely, justice will be the condition of fraternity and the
- basis of association; now, without a determination of value,
- justice is imperfect, impossible.
- % 2.--Constitution of value; definition of wealth.
- We know value in its two opposite aspects; we do not know it in
- its TOTALITY. If we can acquire this new idea, we shall have
- absolute value; and a table of values, such as was called for in
- the memoir read to the Academy of Sciences, will be possible.
- Let us picture wealth, then, as a mass held by a chemical force
- in a permanent state of composition, in which new elements,
- continually entering, combine in different proportions, but
- according to a certain law: value is the proportional relation
- (the measure) in which each of these elements forms a part of the
- whole.
- From this two things result: one, that the economists have been
- wholly deluded when they have looked for the general measure of
- value in wheat, specie, rent, etc., and also when, after having
- demonstrated that this standard of measure was neither here nor
- there, they have concluded that value has neither law nor
- measure; the other, that the proportion of values may continually
- vary without ceasing on that account to be subject to a law,
- whose determination is precisely the solution sought.
- This idea of value satisfies, as we shall see, all the
- conditions: for it includes at once both the positive and fixed
- element in useful value and the variable element in exchangeable
- value; in the second place, it puts an end to the contradiction
- which seemed an insurmountable obstacle in the way of the
- determination of value; further, we shall show that value thus
- understood differs entirely from a simple juxtaposition of the
- two ideas of useful and exchangeable value, and that it is
- endowed with new properties.
- The proportionality of products is not a revelation that we
- pretend to offer to the world, or a novelty that we bring into
- science, any more than the division of labor was an unheard-of
- thing when Adam Smith explained its marvels. The proportionality
- of products is, as we might prove easily by innumerable
- quotations, a common idea running through the works on political
- economy, but to which no one as yet has dreamed of attributing
- its rightful importance: and this is the task which we undertake
- today. We feel bound, for the rest, to make this declaration in
- order to reassure the reader concerning our pretensions to
- originality, and to satisfy those minds whose timidity leads them
- to look with little favor upon new ideas.
- The economists seem always to have understood by the measure of
- value only a standard, a sort of original unit, existing by
- itself, and applicable to all sorts of merchandise, as the yard
- is applicable to all lengths. Consequently, many have thought
- that such a standard is furnished by the precious metals. But
- the theory of money has proved that, far from being the measure
- of values, specie is only their arithmetic, and a conventional
- arithmetic at that. Gold and silver are to value what the
- thermometer is to heat. The thermometer, with its arbitrarily
- graduated scale, indicates clearly when there is a loss or an
- increase of heat: but what the laws of heat-equilibrium are; what
- is its proportion in various bodies; what amount is necessary to
- cause a rise of ten, fifteen, or twenty degrees in the
- thermometer,--the thermometer does not tell us; it is not certain
- even that the degrees of the scale, equal to each other,
- correspond to equal additions of heat.
- The idea that has been entertained hitherto of the measure of
- value, then, is inexact; the object of our inquiry is not the
- standard of value, as has been said so often and so foolishly,
- but the law which regulates the proportions of the various
- products to the social wealth; for upon the knowledge of this law
- depends the rise and fall of prices in so far as it is normal and
- legitimate. In a word, as we understand by the measure of
- celestial bodies the relation resulting from the comparison of
- these bodies with each other, so, by the measure of values, we
- must understand the relation which results from their comparison.
- Now, I say that this relation has its law, and this comparison
- its principle.
- I suppose, then, a force which combines in certain proportions
- the elements of wealth, and makes of them a homogeneous whole: if
- the constituent elements do not exist in the desired proportion,
- the combination will take place nevertheless; but, instead of
- absorbing all the material, it will reject a portion as useless.
- The internal movement by which the combination is produced, and
- which the affinities of the various substances determine--this
- movement in society is exchange; exchange considered no longer
- simply in its elementary form and between man and man, but
- exchange considered as the fusion of all values produced by
- private industry in one and the same mass of social wealth.
- Finally, the proportion in which each element enters into the
- compound is what we call value; the excess remaining after the
- combination is NON-VALUE, until the addition of a certain
- quantity of other elements causes further combination and
- exchange.
- We will explain later the function of money.
- This determined, it is conceivable that at a given moment the
- proportions of values constituting the wealth of a country may be
- determined, or at least empirically approximated, by means of
- statistics and inventories, in nearly the same way that the
- chemists have discovered by experience, aided by analysis, the
- proportions of hydrogen and oxygen necessary to the formation of
- water. There is nothing objectionable in this method of
- determining values; it is, after all, only a matter of accounts.
- But such a work, however interesting it might be, would teach us
- nothing very useful. On the one hand, indeed, we know that the
- proportion continually varies; on the other, it is clear that
- from a statement of the public wealth giving the proportions of
- values only for the time and place when and where the statistics
- should be gathered we could not deduce the law of proportionality
- of wealth. For that, a single operation of this sort would not
- be sufficient; thousands and millions of similar ones would be
- necessary, even admitting the method to be worthy of confidence.
- Now, here there is a difference between economic science and
- chemistry. The chemists, who have discovered by experience such
- beautiful proportions, know no more of their how or why than of
- the force which governs them. Social economy, on the contrary,
- to which no a posteriori investigation could reveal directly the
- law of proportionality of values, can grasp it in the very force
- which produces it, and which it is time to announce.
- This force, which Adam Smith has glorified so eloquently, and
- which his successors have misconceived (making privilege its
- equal),--this force is LABOR. Labor differs in quantity and
- quality with the producer; in this respect it is like all the
- great principles of Nature and the most general laws, simple in
- their action and formula, but infinitely modified by a multitude
- of special causes, and manifesting themselves under an
- innumerable variety of forms. It is labor, labor alone, that
- produces all the elements of wealth, and that combines them to
- their last molecules according to a law of variable, but certain,
- proportionality. It is labor, in fine, that, as the principle of
- life, agitates (mens agitat) the material (molem) of wealth, and
- proportions it.
- Society, or the collective man, produces an infinitude of
- objects, the enjoyment of which constitutes its WELL-BEING.
- This well-being is developed not only in the ratio of the
- QUANTITY of the products, but also in the ratio of their
- VARIETY (quality) and PROPORTION. From this fundamental datum
- it follows that society always, at each instant of its life, must
- strive for such proportion in its products as will give the
- greatest amount of well-being, considering the power and means of
- production. Abundance, variety, and proportion in products are
- the three factors which constitute WEALTH: wealth, the object of
- social economy, is subject to the same conditions of existence as
- beauty, the object of art; virtue, the object of morality; and
- truth, the object of metaphysics.
- But how establish this marvelous proportion, so essential that
- without it a portion of human labor is lost,--that is, useless,
- inharmonious, untrue, and consequently synonymous with poverty
- and annihilation?
- Prometheus, according to the fable, is the symbol of human
- activity. Prometheus steals the fire of heaven, and invents the
- early arts; Prometheus foresees the future, and aspires to
- equality with Jupiter; Prometheus is God. Then let us call
- society Prometheus.
- Prometheus devotes, on an average, ten hours a day to labor,
- seven to rest, and seven to pleasure. In order to gather from
- his toil the most useful fruit, Prometheus notes the time and
- trouble that each object of his consumption costs him. Only
- experience can teach him this, and this experience lasts
- throughout his life. While laboring and producing, then,
- Prometheus is subject to an infinitude of disappointments. But,
- as a final result, the more he labors, the greater is his
- well-being and the more idealized his luxury; the further he
- extends his conquests over Nature, the more strongly he fortifies
- within him the principle of life and intelligence in the exercise
- of which he alone finds happiness; till finally, the early
- education of the Laborer completed and order introduced into his
- occupations, to labor, with him, is no longer to suffer,--it is
- to live, to enjoy. But the attractiveness of labor does not
- nullify the rule, since, on the contrary, it is the fruit of it;
- and those who, under the pretext that labor should be attractive,
- reason to the denial of justice and to communism, resemble
- children who, after having gathered some flowers in the garden,
- should arrange a flower-bed on the staircase.
- In society, then, justice is simply the proportionality of
- values; its guarantee and sanction is the responsibility of the
- producer.
- Prometheus knows that such a product costs an hour's labor, such
- another a day's, a week's, a year's; he knows at the same time
- that all these products, arranged according to their cost, form
- the progression of his wealth. First, then, he will assure his
- existence by providing himself with the least costly, and
- consequently most necessary, things; then, as fast as his
- position becomes secure, he will look forward to articles of
- luxury, proceeding always, if he is wise, according to the
- natural position of each article in the scale of prices.
- Sometimes Prometheus will make a mistake in his calculations, or
- else, carried away by passion, he will sacrifice an immediate
- good to a premature enjoyment, and, after having toiled and
- moiled, he will starve. Thus, the law carries with it its own
- sanction; its violation is inevitably accompanied by the
- immediate punishment of the transgressor.
- Say, then, was right in saying: "The happiness of this class
- (the consumers), composed of all the others, constitutes the
- general well- being, the state of prosperity of a country." Only
- he should have added that the happiness of the class of
- producers, which also is composed of all the others, equally
- constitutes the general well-being, the state of prosperity of a
- country. So, when he says: "The fortune of each consumer is
- perpetually at war with all that he buys," he should have added
- again: "The fortune of each producer is incessantly attacked by
- all that he sells." In the absence of a clear expression of this
- reciprocity, most economical phenomena become unintelligible; and
- I will soon show how, in consequence of this grave omission, most
- economists in writing their books have talked wildly about the
- balance of trade.
- I have just said that society produces first THE LEAST COSTLY,
- AND CONSEQUENTLY MOST NECESSARY, THINGS. Now, is it true that
- cheapness of products is always a correlative of their necessity,
- and vice versa; so that these two words, NECESSITY and
- CHEAPNESS, like the following ones, COSTLINESS and
- SUPERFLUITY, are synonymes?
- If each product of labor, taken alone, would suffice for the
- existence of man, the synonymy in question would not be doubtful;
- all products having the same qualities, those would be most
- advantageously produced, and therefore the most necessary, which
- cost the least. But the parallel between the utility and price
- of products is not characterized by this theoretical precision:
- either through the foresight of Nature or from some other cause,
- the balance between needs and productive power is more than a
- theory,--it is a fact, of which daily practice, as well as social
- progress, gives evidence.
- Imagine ourselves living in the day after the birth of man at the
- beginning of civilization: is it not true that the industries
- originally the simplest, those which required the least
- preparation and expense, were the following: GATHERING,
- PASTURAGE, HUNTING, and FISHING, which were followed long
- afterwards by agriculture? Since then, these four primitive
- industries have been perfected, and moreover appropriated: a
- double circumstance which does not change the meaning of the
- facts, but, on the contrary, makes it more manifest. In fact,
- property has always attached itself by preference to objects of
- the most immediate utility, to MADE VALUES, if I may so speak;
- so that the scale of values might be fixed by the progress of
- appropriation.
- In his work on the "Liberty of Labor" M. Dunoyer has positively
- accepted this principle by distinguishing four great classes of
- industry, which he arranges according to the order of their
- development,--that is, from the least labor-cost to the greatest.
- These are EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRY,--including all the semi-barbarous
- functions mentioned above,--COMMERCIAL INDUSTRY, MANUFACTURING,
- INDUSTRY, AGRICULTURAL INDUSTRY. And it is for a profound reason
- that the learned author placed agriculture last in the list.
- For, despite its great antiquity, it is certain that this
- industry has not kept pace with the others, and the succession of
- human affairs is not decided by their origin, but by their entire
- development. It may be that agricultural industry was born
- before the others, and it may be that all were contemporary; but
- that will be deemed of the latest date which shall be perfected
- last.
- Thus the very nature of things, as well as his own wants,
- indicates to the laborer the order in which he should effect the
- production of the values that make up his well-being. Our law of
- proportionality, then, is at once physical and logical, objective
- and subjective; it has the highest degree of certainty. Let us
- pursue the application.
- Of all the products of labor, none perhaps has cost longer and
- more patient efforts than the calendar. Nevertheless, there is
- none the enjoyment of which can now be procured more cheaply, and
- which, consequently, by our own definitions, has become more
- necessary. How, then, shall we explain this change? Why has the
- calendar, so useless to the early hordes, who only needed the
- alternation of night and day, as of winter and summer, become at
- last so indispensable, so unexpensive, so perfect? For, by a
- marvelous harmony, in social economy all these adjectives are
- interconvertible. How account, in short, by our law of
- proportion, for the variability of the value of the calendar?
- In order that the labor necessary to the production of the
- calendar might be performed, might be possible, man had to find
- means of gaining time from his early occupations and from those
- which immediately followed them. In other words, these
- industries had to become more productive, or less costly, than
- they were at the beginning: which amounts to saying that it was
- necessary first to solve the problem of the production of the
- calendar from the extractive industries themselves.
- Suppose, then, that suddenly, by a fortunate combination of
- efforts, by the division of labor, by the use of some machine, by
- better management of the natural resources,--in short, by his
- industry,--Prometheus finds a way of producing in one day as much
- of a certain object as he formerly produced in ten: what will
- follow? The product will change its position in the table of the
- elements of wealth; its power of affinity for other products, so
- to speak, being increased, its relative value will be
- proportionately diminished, and, instead of being quoted at one
- hundred, it will thereafter be quoted only at ten. But this
- value will still and always be none the less accurately
- determined, and it will still be labor alone which will fix the
- degree of its importance. Thus value varies, and the law of
- value is unchangeable: further, if value is susceptible of
- variation, it is because it is governed by a law whose principle
- is essentially inconstant,--namely, labor measured by time.
- The same reasoning applies to the production of the calendar as
- to that of all possible values. I do not need to explain
- how--civilization (that is, the social fact of the increase of
- life) multiplying our tasks, rendering our moments more and more
- precious, and obliging us to keep a perpetual and detailed record
- of our whole life--the calendar has become to all one of the most
- necessary things. We know, moreover, that this wonderful
- discovery has given rise, as its natural complement, to one of
- our most valuable industries, the manufacture of clocks and
- watches.
- At this point there very naturally arises an objection, the only
- one that can be offered against the theory of the proportionality
- of values.
- Say and the economists who have succeeded him have observed that,
- labor being itself an object of valuation, a species of
- merchandise indeed like any other, to take it as the principal
- and efficient cause of value is to reason in a vicious circle.
- Therefore, they conclude, it is necessary to fall back on
- scarcity and opinion.
- These economists, if they will allow me to say it, herein have
- shown themselves wonderfully careless. Labor is said TO HAVE
- VALUE, not as merchandise itself, but in view of the values
- supposed to be contained in it potentially. The VALUE OF LABOR
- is a figurative expression, an anticipation of effect from cause.
- It is a fiction by the same title as the PRODUCTIVITY OF
- CAPITAL. Labor produces, capital has value: and when, by a sort
- of ellipsis, we say the value of labor, we make an enjambement
- which is not at all contrary to the rules of language, but which
- theorists ought to guard against mistaking for a reality. Labor,
- like liberty, love, ambition, genius, is a thing vague and
- indeterminate in its nature, but qualitatively defined by its
- object,--that is, it becomes a reality through its product.
- When, therefore, we say: This man's labor is worth five francs
- per day, it is as if we should say: The daily product of this
- man's labor is worth five francs.
- Now, the effect of labor is continually to eliminate scarcity and
- opinion as constitutive elements of value, and, by necessary
- consequence, to transform natural or indefinite utilities
- (appropriated or not) into measurable or social utilities: whence
- it follows that labor is at once a war declared upon the
- parsimony of Nature and a permanent conspiracy against property.
- According to this analysis, value, considered from the point of
- view of the association which producers, by division of labor and
- by exchange, naturally form among themselves, is the PROPORTIONAL
- RELATION OF THE PRODUCTS WHICH CONSTITUTE WEALTH, and what we
- call the value of any special product is a formula which
- expresses, in terms of money, the proportion of this product to
- the general wealth.--Utility is the basis of value; labor fixes
- the relation; the price is the expression which, barring the
- fluctuations that we shall have to consider, indicates this
- relation.
- Such is the centre around which useful and exchangeable value
- oscillate, the point where they are finally swallowed up and
- disappear: such is the absolute, unchangeable law which regulates
- economic disturbances and the freaks of industry and commerce,
- and governs progress. Every effort of thinking and laboring
- humanity, every individual and social speculation, as an
- integrant part of collective wealth, obeys this law. It was the
- destiny of political economy, by successively positing all its
- contradictory terms, to make this law known; the object of social
- economy, which I ask permission for a moment to distinguish from
- political economy, although at bottom there is no difference
- between them, will be to spread and apply it universally.
- The theory of the measure or proportionality of values is, let it
- be noticed, the theory of equality itself. Indeed, just as in
- society, where we have seen that there is a complete identity
- between producer and consumer, the revenue paid to an idler
- is like value cast into the flames of Etna, so the laborer who
- receives excessive wages is like a gleaner to whom should be
- given a loaf of bread for gathering a stalk of grain: and all
- that the economists have qualified as UNPRODUCTIVE CONSUMPTION
- is in reality simply a violation of the law of proportionality.
- We shall see in the sequence how, from these simple data, the
- social genius gradually deduces the still obscure system of
- organization of labor, distribution of wages, valuation of
- products, and universal solidarity. For social order is
- established upon the basis of inexorable justice, not at all upon
- the paradisical sentiments of fraternity, self-sacrifice, and
- love, to the exercise of which so many honorable socialists are
- endeavoring now to stimulate the people. It is in vain that,
- following Jesus Christ, they preach the necessity, and set the
- example, of sacrifice; selfishness is stronger, and only the law
- of severity, economic fatality, is capable of mastering it.
- Humanitarian enthusiasm may produce shocks favorable to the
- progress of civilization; but these crises of sentiment, like the
- oscillations of value, must always result only in a firmer and
- more absolute establishment of justice. Nature, or Divinity, we
- distrust in our hearts: she has never believed in the love of man
- for his fellow; and all that science reveals to us of the ways of
- Providence in the progress of society--I say it to the shame of
- the human conscience, but our hypocrisy must be made aware of
- it--shows a profound misanthropy on the part of God. God helps
- us, not from motives of goodness, but because order is his
- essence; God promotes the welfare of the world, not because he
- deems it worthy, but because the religion of his supreme
- intelligence lays the obligation upon him: and while the vulgar
- give him the sweet name Father, it is impossible for the
- historian, for the political economist, to believe that he
- either loves or esteems us.
- Let us imitate this sublime indifference, this stoical ataraxia,
- of God; and, since the precept of charity always has failed to
- promote social welfare, let us look to pure reason for the
- conditions of harmony and virtue.
- Value, conceived as the proportionality of products, otherwise
- called CONSTITUTED VALUE, necessarily implies in an equal degree
- UTILITY and VENALITY, indivisibly and harmoniously united. It
- implies utility, for, without this condition, the product would
- be destitute of that affinity which renders it exchangeable, and
- consequently makes it an element of wealth; it implies venality,
- since, if the product was not acceptable in the market at any
- hour and at a known price, it would be only a non-value, it would
- be nothing.
- But, in constituted value, all these properties acquire a
- broader, more regular, truer significance than before. Thus,
- utility is no longer that inert capacity, so to speak, which
- things possess of serving for our enjoyments and in our
- researches; venality is no longer the exaggeration of a blind
- fancy or an unprincipled opinion; finally, variability has ceased
- to explain itself by a disingenuous discussion between supply and
- demand: all that has disappeared to give place to a positive,
- normal, and, under all possible circumstances, determinable idea.
- By the constitution of values each product, if it is allowable to
- establish such an analogy, becomes like the nourishment which,
- discovered by the alimentary instinct, then prepared by the
- digestive organs, enters into the general circulation, where it
- is converted, according to certain proportions, into flesh, bone,
- liquid, etc., and gives to the body life, strength, and beauty.
- Now, what change does the idea of value undergo when we rise from
- the contradictory notions of useful value and exchangeable value
- to that of constituted value or absolute value? There is, so to
- speak, a joining together, a reciprocal penetration, in which the
- two elementary concepts, grasping each other like the hooked
- atoms of Epicurus, absorb one another and disappear, leaving in
- their place a compound possessed, but in a superior degree, of
- all their positive properties, and divested of all their negative
- properties. A value really such--like money, first-class
- business paper, government annuities, shares in a
- well-established enterprise--can neither be increased without
- reason nor lost in exchange: it is governed only by the natural
- law of the addition of special industries and the increase of
- products. Further, such a value is not the result of a
- compromise,--that is, of eclecticism, juste-milieu, or mixture;
- it is the product of a complete fusion, a product entirely new
- and distinct from its components, just as water, the product of
- the combination of hydrogen and oxygen, is a separate body,
- totally distinct from its elements.
- The resolution of two antithetical ideas in a third of a superior
- order is what the school calls SYNTHESIS. It alone gives the
- positive and complete idea, which is obtained, as we have seen,
- by the successive affirmation or negation--for both amount to the
- same thing--of two diametrically opposite concepts. Whence we
- deduce this corollary, of the first importance in practice as
- well as in theory: wherever, in the spheres of morality, history,
- or political economy, analysis has established the antinomy of an
- idea, we may affirm on a priori grounds that this antinomy
- conceals a higher idea, which sooner or later will make its
- appearance.
- I am sorry to have to insist at so great length on ideas familiar
- to all young college graduates: but I owed these details to
- certain economists, who, apropos of my critique of property, have
- heaped dilemmas on dilemmas to prove that, if I was not a
- proprietor, I necessarily must be a communist; all because they
- did not understand THESIS, ANTITHESIS, and SYNTHESIS.
- The synthetic idea of value, as the fundamental condition of
- social order and progress, was dimly seen by Adam Smith, when, to
- use the words of M. Blanqui, "he showed that labor is the
- universal and invariable measure of values, and proved that
- everything has its natural price, toward which it continually
- gravitates amid the fluctuations of the market, occasioned by
- ACCIDENTAL CIRCUMSTANCES foreign to the venal value of the
- thing."
- But this idea of value was wholly intuitive with Adam Smith, and
- society does not change its habits upon the strength of
- intuitions; it decides only upon the authority of facts. The
- antinomy had to be expressed in a plainer and clearer manner: J.
- B. Say was its principal interpreter. But, in spite of the
- imaginative efforts and fearful subtlety of this economist,
- Smith's definition controls him without his knowledge, and is
- manifest throughout his arguments.
- "To put a value on an article," says Say, "is to DECLARE that it
- should be ESTIMATED equally with some other designated article.
- . . . . . The value of everything is vague and arbitrary UNTIL
- IT IS RECOGNIZED. . . . . ." There is, therefore, a method of
- recognizing the value of things,--that is, of determining it;
- and, as this recognition or determination results from the
- comparison of things with each other, there is, further, a common
- feature, a principle, by means of which we are able to DECLARE
- that one thing is worth more or less than, or as much as,
- another.
- Say first said: "The measure of value is the value of another
- product." Afterwards, having seen that this phrase was but a
- tautology, he modified it thus: "The measure of value is the
- QUANTITY of another product," which is quite as unintelligible.
- Moreover, this writer, generally so clear and decided,
- embarrasses himself with vain distinctions: "We may APPRECIATE
- the value of things; we cannot MEASURE it,--that is, COMPARE it
- with an invariable and known standard, for no such standard
- exists. We can do nothing but ESTIMATE THE VALUE of things by
- comparing them." At other times he distinguishes between REAL
- values and RELATIVE values: "The former are those whose value
- changes with the cost of production; the latter are those whose
- value changes relatively to the value of other kinds of
- merchandise."
- Singular prepossession of a man of genius, who does not see that
- to COMPARE, to APPRAISE, to APPRECIATE, is to MEASURE; that
- every measure, being only a comparison, indicates for that very
- reason a true relation, provided the comparison is accurate;
- that, consequently, value, or real measure, and value, or
- relative measure, are perfectly identical; and that the
- difficulty is reduced, not to the discovery of a standard of
- measure, since all quantities may serve each other in that
- capacity, but to the determination of a point of comparison. In
- geometry the point of comparison is extent, and the unit of
- measure is now the division of the circle into three hundred and
- sixty parts, now the circumference of the terrestrial globe, now
- the average dimension of the human arm, hand, thumb, or foot. In
- economic science, we have said after Adam Smith, the point of
- view from which all values are compared is labor; as for the unit
- of measure, that adopted in France is the FRANC. It is
- incredible that so many sensible men should struggle for forty
- years against an idea so simple. But no: THE COMPARISON OF
- VALUES IS EFFECTED WITH OUT A POINT OF COMPARISON BETWEEN THEM,
- AND WITHOUT A UNIT OF MEASURE,--such is the proposition which the
- economists of the nineteenth century, rather than accept the
- revolutionary idea of equality, have resolved to maintain against
- all comers. What will posterity say?
- I shall presently show, by striking examples, that the idea of
- the measure or proportion of values, theoretically necessary, is
- constantly realized in every-day life.
- % 3.--Application of the law of proportionality of values.
- Every product is a representative of labor.
- Every product, therefore, can be exchanged for some other, as
- universal practice proves.
- But abolish labor, and you have left only articles of greater or
- less usefulness, which, being stamped with no economic character,
- no human seal, are without a common measure,--that is, are
- logically unexchangeable.
- Gold and silver, like other articles of merchandise, are
- representatives of value; they have, therefore, been able to
- serve as common measures and mediums of exchange. But the
- special function which custom has allotted to the precious
- metals,--that of serving as a commercial agent,--is purely
- conventional, and any other article of merchandise, less
- conveniently perhaps, but just as authentically, could play this
- part: the economists admit it, and more than one example of it
- can be cited. What, then, is the reason of this preference
- generally accorded to the metals for the purpose of money, and
- how shall we explain this speciality of function, unparalleled in
- political economy, possessed by specie? For every unique thing
- incomparable in kind is necessarily very difficult of
- comprehension, and often even fails of it altogether. Now, is it
- possible to reconstruct the series from which money seems to have
- been detached, and, consequently, restore the latter to its true
- principle?
- In dealing with this question the economists, following their
- usual course, have rushed beyond the limits of their science;
- they have appealed to physics, to mechanics, to history, etc.;
- they have talked of all things, but have given no answer. The
- precious metals, they have said, by their scarcity, density, and
- incorruptibility, are fitted to serve as money in, a degree
- unapproached by other kinds of merchandise. In short, the
- economists, instead of replying to the economic question put to
- them, have set themselves to the examination of a question of
- art. They have laid great stress on the mechanical adaptation of
- gold and silver for the purpose of money; but not one of them has
- seen or understood the economic reason which gave to the precious
- metals the privilege they now enjoy.
- Now, the point that no one has noticed is that, of all the
- various articles of merchandise, gold and silver were the first
- whose value was determined. In the patriarchal period, gold and
- silver still were bought and sold in ingots, but already with a
- visible tendency to superiority and with a marked preference.
- Gradually sovereigns took possession of them and stamped them
- with their seal; and from this royal consecration was born
- money,--that is, the commodity par excellence; that which,
- notwithstanding all commercial shocks, maintains a determined
- proportional value, and is accepted in payment for all things.
- That which distinguishes specie, in fact, is not the durability
- of the metal, which is less than that of steel, nor its utility,
- which is much below that of wheat, iron, coal, and numerous other
- substances, regarded as almost vile when compared with gold;
- neither is it its scarcity or density, for in both these respects
- it might be replaced, either by labor spent upon other materials,
- or, as at present, by bank notes representing vast amounts of
- iron or copper. The distinctive feature of gold and silver, I
- repeat, is the fact that, owing to their metallic properties, the
- difficulties of their production, and, above all, the
- intervention of public authority, their value as merchandise was
- fixed and authenticated at an early date.
- I say then that the value of gold and silver, especially of the
- part that is made into money, although perhaps it has not yet
- been calculated accurately, is no longer arbitrary; I add that it
- is no longer susceptible of depreciation, like other values,
- although it may vary continually nevertheless. All the logic and
- erudition that has been expended to prove, by the example of gold
- and silver, that value is essentially indeterminable, is a mass
- of paralogisms, arising from a false idea of the question, ab
- ignorantia elenchi.
- Philip I., King of France, mixed with the livre tournois of
- Charlemagne one-third alloy, imagining that, since he held the
- monopoly of the power of coining money, he could do what every
- merchant does who holds the monopoly of a product. What was, in
- fact, this adulteration of money, for which Philip and his
- successors are so severely blamed? A very sound argument from
- the standpoint of commercial routine, but wholly false in the
- view of economic science,--namely, that, supply and demand being
- the regulators of value, we may, either by causing an artificial
- scarcity or by monopolizing the manufacture, raise the
- estimation, and consequently the value, of things, and that this
- is as true of gold and silver as of wheat, wine, oil, tobacco.
- Nevertheless, Philip's fraud was no sooner suspected than his
- money was reduced to its true value, and he lost himself all that
- he had expected to gain from his subjects. The same thing
- happened after all similar attempts. What was the reason of this
- disappointment?
- Because, say the economists, the quantity of gold and silver in
- reality being neither diminished nor increased by the false
- coinage, the proportion of these metals to other merchandise was
- not changed, and consequently it was not in the power of the
- sovereign to make that which was worth but two worth four. For
- the same reason, if, instead of debasing the coin, it had been in
- the king's power to double its mass, the exchangeable value of
- gold and silver would have decreased one-half immediately, always
- on account of this proportionality and equilibrium. The
- adulteration of the coin was, then, on the part of the king, a
- forced loan, or rather, a bankruptcy, a swindle.
- Marvelous! the economists explain very clearly, when they choose,
- the theory of the measure of value; that they may do so, it is
- necessary only to start them on the subject of money. Why, then,
- do they not see that money is the written law of commerce, the
- type of exchange, the first link in that long chain of creations
- all of which, as merchandise, must receive the sanction of
- society, and become, if not in fact, at least in right,
- acceptable as money in settlement of all kinds of transactions?
- "Money," M. Augier very truly says, "can serve, either as a means
- of authenticating contracts already made, or as a good medium of
- exchange, only so far as its value approaches the ideal of
- permanence; for in all cases it exchanges or buys only the value
- which it possesses."[8]
- [8] "History of Public Credit."
- Let us turn this eminently judicious observation into a general
- formula.
- Labor becomes a guarantee of well-being and equality only so far
- as the product of each individual is in proportion with the mass;
- for in all cases it exchanges or buys a value equal only to its
- own.
- Is it not strange that the defence of speculative and fraudulent
- commerce is undertaken boldly, while at the same time the attempt
- of a royal counterfeiter, who, after all, did but apply to gold
- and silver the fundamental principle of political economy, the
- arbitrary instability of values, is frowned down? If the
- administration should presume to give twelve ounces of tobacco
- for a pound,[9] the economists would cry robbery; but, if the
- same administration, using its privilege, should increase the
- price a few cents a pound, they would regard it as dear, but
- would discover no violation of principles. What an imbroglio is
- political economy!
- [9] In France, the sale of tobacco is a government monopoly.--
- Translator.
- There is, then, in the monetization of gold and silver something
- that the economists have given no account of; namely, the
- consecration of the law of proportionality, the first act in the
- constitution of values. Humanity does all things by infinitely
- small degrees: after comprehending the fact that all products of
- labor must be submitted to a proportional measure which makes all
- of them equally exchangeable, it begins by giving this attribute
- of absolute exchangeability to a special product, which shall
- become the type and model of all others. In the same way, to
- lift its members to liberty and equality, it begins by creating
- kings. The people have a confused idea of this providential
- progress when, in their dreams of fortune and in their legends,
- they speak continually of gold and royalty; and the philosophers
- only do homage to universal reason when, in their so-called moral
- homilies and their socialistic utopias, they thunder with equal
- violence against gold and tyranny. Auri sacra fames! Cursed
- gold! ludicrously shouts some communist. As well say cursed
- wheat, cursed vines, cursed sheep; for, like gold and silver,
- every commercial value must reach an exact and accurate
- determination. The work was begun long since; today it is making
- visible progress.
- Let us pass to other considerations.
- It is an axiom generally admitted by the economists that ALL
- LABOR SHOULD LEAVE AN EXCESS.
- I regard this proposition as universally and absolutely true; it
- is a corollary of the law of proportionality, which may be
- regarded as an epitome of the whole science of economy. But--I
- beg pardon of the economists--the principle that ALL LABOR
- SHOULD LEAVE AN EXCESS has no meaning in their theory, and is not
- susceptible of demonstration. If supply and demand alone
- determine value, how can we tell what is an excess and what is a
- SUFFICIENCY? If neither cost, nor market price, nor wages can
- be mathematically determined, how is it possible to conceive of a
- surplus, a profit? Commercial routine has given us the idea of
- profit as well as the word; and, since we are equal politically,
- we infer that every citizen has an equal right to realize profits
- in his personal industry. But commercial operations are
- essentially irregular, and it has been proved beyond question
- that the profits of commerce are but an arbitrary discount forced
- from the consumer by the producer,--in short, a displacement, to
- say the least. This we should soon see, if it was possible to
- compare the total amount of annual losses with the amount of
- profits. In the thought of political economy, the principle that
- ALL LABOR SHOULD LEAVE AN EXCESS is simply the consecration
- of the constitutional right which all of us gained by the
- revolution,-- the right of robbing one's neighbor.
- The law of proportionality of values alone can solve this
- problem. I will approach the question a little farther back: its
- gravity warrants me in treating it with the consideration that it
- merits.
- Most philosophers, like most philologists, see in society only a
- creature of the mind, or rather, an abstract name serving to
- designate a collection of men. It is a prepossession which all
- of us received in our infancy with our first lessons in grammar,
- that collective nouns, the names of genera and species, do not
- designate realities. There is much to say under this head, but I
- confine myself to my subject. To the true economist, society is
- a living being, endowed with an intelligence and an activity of
- its own, governed by special laws discoverable by observation
- alone, and whose existence is manifested, not under a material
- aspect, but by the close concert and mutual interdependence of
- all its members. Therefore, when a few pages back, adopting the
- allegorical method, we used a fabulous god as a symbol of
- society, our language in reality was not in the least
- metaphorical: we only gave a name to the social being, an organic
- and synthetic unit. In the eyes of any one who has reflected
- upon the laws of labor and exchange (I disregard every other
- consideration), the reality, I had almost said the personality,
- of the collective man is as certain as the reality and the
- personality of the individual man. The only difference is that
- the latter appears to the senses as an organism whose parts are
- in a state of material coherence, which is not true of society.
- But intelligence, spontaneity, development, life, all that
- constitutes in the highest degree the reality of being, is
- as essential to society as to man: and hence it is that the
- government of societies is a SCIENCE,-- that is, a study of
- natural relations,--and not an ART,-- that is, good pleasure and
- absolutism. Hence it is, finally, that every society declines
- the moment it falls into the hands of the ideologists.
- The principle that ALL LABOR SHOULD LEAVE AN EXCESS,
- undemonstrable by political economy,--that is, by proprietary
- routine,--is one of those which bear strongest testimony to the
- reality of the collective person: for, as we shall see, this
- principle is true of individuals only because it emanates from
- society, which thus confers upon them the benefit of its own
- laws.
- Let us turn to facts. It has been observed that railroad
- enterprises are a source of wealth to those who control them in a
- much less degree than to the State. The observation is a true
- one; and it might have been added that it applies, not only to
- railroads, but to every industry. But this phenomenon, which is
- essentially the result of the law of proportionality of values
- and of the absolute identity of production and consumption, is at
- variance with the ordinary notion of useful value and
- exchangeable value.
- The average price charged for the transportation of merchandise
- by the old method is eighteen centimes per ton and kilometer, the
- merchandise taken and delivered at the warehouses. It has been
- calculated that, at this price, an ordinary railroad corporation
- would net a profit of not quite ten per cent., nearly the same as
- the profit made by the old method. But let us admit that the
- rapidity of transportation by rail is to that by wheels, all
- allowances made, as four to one: in society time itself being
- value, at the same price the railroad would have an advantage
- over the stage-wagon of four hundred per cent. `Nevertheless,
- this enormous advantage, a very real one so far as society is
- concerned, is by no means realized in a like proportion by the
- carrier, who, while he adds four hundred per cent. to the social
- value, makes personally less than ten per cent. Suppose, in
- fact, to make the thing still clearer, that the railroad should
- raise its price to twenty- five centimes, the rate by the old
- method remaining at eighteen; it would lose immediately all its
- consignments; shippers, consignees, everybody would return to the
- stage-wagon, if necessary. The locomotive would be abandoned; a
- social advantage of four hundred per cent. would be sacrificed to
- a private loss of thirty-three per cent.
- The reason of this is easily seen. The advantage which results
- from the rapidity of the railroad is wholly social, and each
- individual participates in it only in a very slight degree (do
- not forget that we are speaking now only of the transportation of
- merchandise); while the loss falls directly and personally on the
- consumer. A special profit of four hundred per cent. in a
- society composed of say a million of men represents four
- ten-thousandths for each individual; while a loss to the consumer
- of thirty-three per cent. means a social deficit of thirty- three
- millions. Private interest and collective interest, seemingly so
- divergent at first blush, are therefore perfectly identical and
- equal: and this example may serve to show already how economic
- science reconciles all interests.
- Consequently, in order that society may realize the profit above
- supposed, it is absolutely necessary that the railroad's prices
- shall not exceed, or shall exceed but very little, those of the
- stage-wagon.
- But, that this condition may be fulfilled,--in other words, that
- the railroad may be commercially possible,--the amount of
- matter transported must be sufficiently great to cover at least
- the interest on the capital invested and the running expenses of
- the road. Then a railroad's first condition of existence is a
- large circulation, which implies a still larger production and a
- vast amount of exchanges.
- But production, circulation, and exchange are not self-creative
- things; again, the various kinds of labor are not developed in
- isolation and independently of each other: their progress is
- necessarily connected, solidary, proportional. There may be
- antagonism among manufacturers; but, in spite of them, social
- action is one, convergent, harmonious,--in a word, personal.
- Further, there is a day appointed for the creation of great
- instruments of labor: it is the day when general consumption
- shall be able to maintain their employment,--that is, for all
- these propositions are interconvertible, the day when ambient
- labor can feed new machinery. To anticipate the hour appointed
- by the progress of labor would be to imitate the fool who, going
- from Lyons to Marseilles, chartered a steamer for himself alone.
- These points cleared up, nothing is easier than to explain why
- labor must leave an excess for each producer.
- And first, as regards society: Prometheus, emerging from the womb
- of Nature, awakens to life in a state of inertia which is very
- charming, but which would soon become misery and torture if he
- did not make haste to abandon it for labor. In this original
- idleness, the product of Prometheus being nothing, his well-being
- is the same as that of the brute, and may be represented by zero.
- Prometheus begins to work: and from his first day's labor, the
- first of the second creation, the product of Prometheus--that is,
- his wealth, his well-being--is equal to ten.
- The second day Prometheus divides his labor, and his product
- increases to one hundred.
- The third day, and each following day, Prometheus invents
- machinery, discovers new uses in things, new forces in Nature;
- the field of his existence extends from the domain of the senses
- to the sphere of morals and intelligence, and with every step
- that his industry takes the amount of his product increases, and
- assures him additional happiness. And since, finally, with him,
- to consume is to produce, it is clear that each day's
- consumption, using up only the product of the day before, leaves
- a surplus product for the day after.
- But notice also--and give especial heed to this all-important
- fact--that the well-being of man is directly proportional to the
- intensity of labor and the multiplicity of industries: so that
- the increase of wealth and the increase of labor are correlative
- and parallel.
- To say now that every individual participates in these general
- conditions of collective development would be to affirm a truth
- which, by reason of the evidence in its support, would appear
- silly. Let us point out rather the two general forms of
- consumption in society.
- Society, like the individual, has first its articles of personal
- consumption, articles which time gradually causes it to feel the
- need of, and which its mysterious instincts command it to create.
- Thus in the middle ages there was, with a large number of cities,
- a decisive moment when the building of city halls and cathedrals
- became a violent passion, which had to be satisfied at any price;
- the life of the community depended upon it. Security and
- strength, public order, centralization, nationality, country,
- independence, these are the elements which make up the life of
- society, the totality of its mental faculties; these are the
- sentiments which must find expression and representation. Such
- formerly was the object of the temple of Jerusalem, real
- palladium of the Jewish nation; such was the temple of
- Jupiter Capitolinus of Rome. Later, after the municipal palace
- and the temple,--organs, so to speak, of centralization and
- progress,--came the other works of public utility,--bridges,
- theatres, schools, hospitals, roads, etc.
- The monuments of public utility being used essentially in common,
- and consequently gratuitously, society is rewarded for its
- advances by the political and moral advantages resulting from
- these great works, and which, furnishing security to labor and an
- ideal to the mind, give fresh impetus to industry and the arts.
- But it is different with the articles of domestic consumption,
- which alone fall within the category of exchange. These can be
- produced only upon the conditions of mutuality which make
- consumption possible,--that is, immediate payment with advantage
- to the producers. These conditions we have developed
- sufficiently in the theory of proportionality of values, which we
- might call as well the theory of the gradual reduction of cost.
- I have demonstrated theoretically and by facts the principle that
- ALL LABOR SHOULD LEAVE AN EXCESS; but this principle, as certain
- as any proposition in arithmetic, is very far from universal
- realization. While, by the progress of collective industry, each
- individual day's labor yields a greater and greater product, and
- while, by necessary consequence, the laborer, receiving the same
- wages, must grow ever richer, there exist in society classes
- which THRIVE and classes which PERISH; laborers paid twice,
- thrice, a hundred times over, and laborers continually out of
- pocket; everywhere, finally, people who enjoy and people who
- suffer, and, by a monstrous division of the means of industry,
- individuals who consume and do not produce. The distribution of
- well-being follows all the movements of value, and reproduces
- them in misery and luxury on a frightful scale and with terrible
- energy. But everywhere, too, the progress of wealth--that is,
- the proportionality of values--is the dominant law; and when the
- economists combat the complaints of the socialists with the
- progressive increase of public wealth and the alleviations of the
- condition of even the most unfortunate classes, they proclaim,
- without suspecting it, a truth which is the condemnation of their
- theories.
- For I entreat the economists to question themselves for a moment
- in the silence of their hearts, far from the prejudices which
- disturb them, and regardless of the employments which occupy them
- or which they wait for, of the interests which they serve, of the
- votes which they covet, of the distinctions which tickle their
- vanity: let them tell me whether, hitherto, they have viewed the
- principle that all labor should leave an excess in connection
- with this series of premises and conclusions which we have
- elaborated, and whether they ever have understood these words to
- mean anything more than the right to speculate in values by
- manipulating supply and demand; whether it is not true that they
- affirm at once, on the one hand the progress of wealth and
- well-being, and consequently the measure of values, and on the
- other the arbitrariness of commercial transactions and the
- incommensurability of values,--the flattest of contradictions?
- Is it not because of this contradiction that we continually hear
- repeated in lectures, and read in the works on political economy,
- this absurd hypothesis: If THE PRICE OF ALL THINGS WAS DOUBLED.
- . . . . . ? As if the price of all things was not the proportion
- of things, and as if we could double a proportion, a relation, a
- law! Finally, is it not because of the proprietary and abnormal
- routine upheld by political economy that every one, in
- commerce, industry, the arts, and the State, on the pretended
- ground of services rendered to society, tends continually to
- exaggerate his importance, and solicits rewards, subsidies, large
- pensions, exorbitant fees: as if the reward of every service was
- not determined necessarily by the sum of its expenses? Why do
- not the economists, if they believe, as they appear to, that the
- labor of each should leave an excess, use all their influence in
- spreading this truth, so simple and so luminous: Each man's
- labor can buy only the value which it contains, and this value is
- proportional to the services of all other laborers?
- But here a last consideration presents itself, which I will
- explain in a few words.
- J. B. Say, who of all the economists has insisted the most
- strenuously upon the absolute indeterminability of value, is also
- the one who has taken the most pains to refute that idea. He, if
- I am not mistaken, is the author of the formula: EVERY PRODUCT
- IS WORTH WHAT IT COSTS; or, what amounts to the same thing:
- PRODUCTS ARE BOUGHT WITH PRODUCTS. This aphorism, which leads
- straight to equality, has been controverted since by other
- economists; we will examine in turn the affirmative and the
- negative.
- When I say that every product is worth the products which it has
- cost, I mean that every product is a collective unit which, in a
- new form, groups a certain number of other products consumed in
- various quantities. Whence it follows that the products of human
- industry are, in relation to each other, genera and species, and
- that they form a series from the simple to the composite,
- according to the number and proportion of the elements, all
- equivalent to each other, which constitute each product. It
- matters little, for the present, that this series, as well
- as the equivalence of its elements, is expressed in practice more
- or less exactly by the equilibrium of wages and fortunes; our
- first business is with the relation of things, the economic law.
- For here, as ever, the idea first and spontaneously generates the
- fact, which, recognized then by the thought which has given it
- birth, gradually rectifies itself and conforms to its principle.
- Commerce, free and competitive, is but a long operation of
- redressal, whose object is to define more and more clearly the
- proportionality of values, until the civil law shall recognize it
- as a guide in matters concerning the condition of persons. I
- say, then, that Say's principle, EVERY PRODUCT IS WORTH WHAT IT
- COSTS, indicates a series in human production analogous to the
- animal and vegetable series, in which the elementary units (day's
- works) are regarded as equal. So that political economy affirms
- at its birth, but by a contradiction, what neither Plato, nor
- Rousseau, nor any ancient or modern publicist has thought
- possible,-- equality of conditions and fortunes.
- Prometheus is by turns husbandman, wine-grower, baker, weaver.
- Whatever trade he works at, laboring only for himself, he buys
- what he consumes (his products) with one and the same money (his
- products), whose unit of measurement is necessarily his day's
- work. It is true that labor itself is liable to vary; Prometheus
- is not always in the same condition, and from one moment to
- another his enthusiasm, his fruitfulness, rises and falls. But,
- like everything that is subject to variation, labor has its
- average, which justifies us in saying that, on the whole, day's
- work pays for day's work, neither more nor less. It is quite
- true that, if we compare the products of a certain period of
- social life with those of another, the hundred millionth day's
- work of the human race will show a result incomparably superior
- to that of the first; but it must be remembered also that the
- life of the collective being can no more be divided than that of
- the individual; that, though the days may not resemble each
- other, they are indissolubly united, and that in the sum total of
- existence pain and pleasure are common to them. If, then, the
- tailor, for rendering the value of a day's work, consumes ten
- times the product of the day's work of the weaver, it is as if
- the weaver gave ten days of his life for one day of the tailor's.
- This is exactly what happens when a peasant pays twelve francs to
- a lawyer for a document which it takes him an hour to prepare;
- and this inequality, this iniquity in exchanges, is the most
- potent cause of misery that the socialists have unveiled,--as the
- economists confess in secret while awaiting a sign from the
- master that shall permit them to acknowledge it openly.
- Every error in commutative justice is an immolation of the
- laborer, a transfusion of the blood of one man into the body of
- another. . . . . Let no one be frightened; I have no intention
- of fulminating against property an irritating philippic;
- especially as I think that, according to my principles, humanity
- is never mistaken; that, in establishing itself at first upon the
- right of property, it only laid down one of the principles of its
- future organization; and that, the preponderance of property once
- destroyed, it remains only to reduce this famous antithesis to
- unity. All the objections that can be offered in favor of
- property I am as well acquainted with as any of my critics, whom
- I ask as a favor to show their hearts when logic fails them. How
- can wealth that is not measured by labor be VALUABLE? And if it
- is labor that creates wealth and legitimates property, how
- explain the consumption of the idler? Where is the honesty in a
- system of distribution in which a product is worth, according to
- the person, now more, now less, than it costs.
- Say's ideas led to an agrarian law; therefore, the conservative
- party hastened to protest against them. "The original source of
- wealth," M. Rossi had said, "is labor. In proclaiming this great
- principle, the industrial school has placed in evidence not only
- an economic principle, but that social fact which, in the hands
- of a skilful historian, becomes the surest guide in following the
- human race in its marchings and haltings upon the face of the
- earth."
- Why, after having uttered these profound words in his lectures,
- has M. Rossi thought it his duty to retract them afterwards in a
- review, and to compromise gratuitously his dignity as a
- philosopher and an economist?
- "Say that wealth is the result of labor alone; affirm that labor
- is always the measure of value, the regulator of prices; yet, to
- escape one way or another the objections which these doctrines
- call forth on all hands, some incomplete, others absolute, you
- will be obliged to generalize the idea of labor, and to
- substitute for analysis an utterly erroneous synthesis."
- I regret that a man like M. Rossi should suggest to me so sad a
- thought; but, while reading the passage that I have just quoted,
- I could not help saying: Science and truth have lost their
- influence: the present object of worship is the shop, and, after
- the shop, the desperate constitutionalism which represents it.
- To whom, then, does M. Rossi address himself? Is he in favor of
- labor or something else; analysis or synthesis? Is he in favor
- of all these things at once? Let him choose, for the conclusion
- is inevitably against him.
- If labor is the source of all wealth, if it is the surest guide
- in tracing the history of human institutions on the face of the
- earth, why should equality of distribution, equality as measured
- by labor, not be a law?
- If, on the contrary, there is wealth which is not the product of
- labor, why is the possession of it a privilege? Where is the
- legitimacy of monopoly? Explain then, once for all, this theory
- of the right of unproductive consumption; this jurisprudence of
- caprice, this religion of idleness, the sacred prerogative of a
- caste of the elect.
- What, now, is the significance of this appeal from ANALYSIS to
- the false judgments of the synthesis? These metaphysical terms
- are of no use, save to indoctrinate simpletons, who do not
- suspect that the same proposition can be construed, indifferently
- and at will, analytically or synthetically. LABOR IS THE
- PRINCIPLE OF VALUE END THE SOURCE OF WEALTH: an analytic
- proposition such as M. Rossi likes, since it is the summary of an
- analysis in which it is demonstrated that the primitive notion of
- labor is identical with the subsequent notions of product, value,
- capital, wealth, etc. Nevertheless, we see that M. Rossi rejects
- the doctrine which results from this analysis. LABOR, CAPITAL,
- AND LAND ARE THE SOURCES OF WEALTH: a synthetic proposition,
- precisely such as M. Rossi does not like. Indeed, wealth is
- considered here as a general notion, produced in three distinct,
- but not identical, ways. And yet the doctrine thus formulated is
- the one that M. Rossi prefers. Now, would it please M. Rossi to
- have us render his theory of monopoly analytically and ours of
- labor synthetically? I can give him the satisfaction. . . . .
- But I should blush, with so earnest a man, to prolong such
- badinage. M. Rossi knows better than any one that analysis and
- synthesis of themselves prove absolutely nothing, and that the
- important work, as Bacon said, is to make exact comparisons and
- complete enumerations.
- Since M. Rossi was in the humor for abstractions, why did he not
- say to the phalanx of economists who listen so respectfully to
- the least word that falls from his lips:
- "Capital is the MATERIAL of wealth, as gold and silver are the
- material of money, as wheat is the material of bread, and,
- tracing the series back to the end, as earth, water, fire, and
- air are the material of all our products. But it is labor, labor
- alone, which successively creates each utility given to these
- MATERIALS, and which consequently transforms them into capital
- and wealth. Capital is the result of labor,-- that is, realized
- intelligence and life,--as animals and plants are realizations of
- the soul of the universe, and as the chefs d'oeuvre of Homer,
- Raphael, and Rossini are expressions of their ideas and
- sentiments. Value is the proportion in which all the
- realizations of the human soul must balance each other in order
- to produce a harmonious whole, which, being wealth, gives us
- well-being, or rather is the token, not the object, of our
- happiness.
- "The proposition, THERE IS NO MEASURE OF VALUE, is illogical and
- contradictory, as is shown by the very arguments which have been
- offered in its support.
- "The proposition, LABOR IS THE PRINCIPLE OF PROPORTIONALITY OF
- VALUES, not only is true, resulting as it does from an
- irrefutable analysis, but it is the object of progress, the
- condition and form of social well-being, the beginning and end
- of political economy. From this proposition and its corollaries,
- EVERY PRODUCT IS WORTH WHAT IT COSTS, and PRODUCTS ARE BOUGHT
- WITH PRODUCTs, follows the dogma of equality of conditions.
- "The idea of value socially constituted, or of proportionality of
- values, serves to explain further: (a) how a mechanical
- invention, notwithstanding the privilege which it temporarily
- creates and the disturbances which it occasions, always produces
- in the end a general amelioration; (b) how the value of an
- economical process to its discoverer can never equal the profit
- which it realizes for society; (c) how, by a series of
- oscillations between supply and demand, the value of every
- product constantly seeks a level with cost and with the needs of
- consumption, and consequently tends to establish itself in a
- fixed and positive manner; (d) how, collective production
- continually increasing the amount of consumable things, and the
- day's work constantly obtaining higher and higher pay, labor must
- leave an excess for each producer; (e) how the amount of work to
- be done, instead of being diminished by industrial progress, ever
- increases in both quantity and quality--that is, in intensity and
- difficulty--in all branches of industry; (f) how social value
- continually eliminates fictitious values,--in other words, how
- industry effects the socialization of capital and property; (g)
- finally, how the distribution of products, growing in regularity
- with the strength of the mutual guarantee resulting from the
- constitution of value, pushes society onward to equality of
- conditions and fortunes.
- "Finally, the theory of the successive constitution of all
- commercial values implying the infinite progress of labor,
- wealth, and well-being, the object of society, from the economic
- point of view, is revealed to us: TO PRODUCE INCESSANTLY, WITH
- THEE LEAST POSSIBLE AMOUNT OF LABOR FOR EACH PRODUCT, THE
- GREATEST POSSIBLE QUANTITY AND VARIETY OF VALUES, IN SUCH A WAY
- AS TO REALIZE, FOR EACH INDIVIDUAL, THE GREATEST AMOUNT OF
- PHYSICAL, MORAL, AND INTELLECTUAL WELL-BEING, AND, FOR THE RACE,
- THE HIGHEST PERFECTION AND INFINITE GLORY.
- Now that we have determined, not without difficulty, the meaning
- of the question asked by the Academy of Moral Sciences touching
- the oscillations of profit and wages, it is time to begin the
- essential part of our work. Wherever labor has not been
- socialized,--that is, wherever value is not synthetically
- determined,--there is irregularity and dishonesty in exchange; a
- war of stratagems and ambuscades; an impediment to production,
- circulation, and consumption; unproductive labor; insecurity;
- spoliation; insolidarity; want; luxury: but at the same time an
- effort of the genius of society to obtain justice, and a constant
- tendency toward association and order. Political economy is
- simply the history of this grand struggle. On the one hand,
- indeed, political economy, in so far as it sanctions and pretends
- to perpetuate the anomalies of value and the prerogatives of
- selfishness, is truly the theory of misfortune and the
- organization of misery; but in so far as it explains the means
- invented by civilization to abolish poverty, although these means
- always have been used exclusively in the interest of monopoly,
- political economy is the preamble of the organization of wealth.
- It is important, then, that we should resume the study of
- economic facts and practices, discover their meaning, and
- formulate their philosophy. Until this is done, no knowledge of
- social progress can be acquired, no reform attempted. The error
- of socialism has consisted hitherto in perpetuating religious
- reverie by launching forward into a fantastic future instead of
- seizing the reality which is crushing it; as the wrong of the
- economists has been in regarding every accomplished fact as an
- injunction against any proposal of reform.
- For my own part, such is not my conception of economic science,
- the true social science. Instead of offering a priori arguments
- as solutions of the formidable problems of the organization of
- labor and the distribution of wealth, I shall interrogate
- political economy as the depositary of the secret thoughts of
- humanity; I shall cause it to disclose the facts in the order of
- their occurrence, and shall relate their testimony without
- intermingling it with my own. It will be at once a triumphant
- and a lamentable history, in which the actors will be ideas, the
- episodes theories, and the dates formulas.
- CHAPTER III.
- ECONOMIC EVOLUTIONS.--FIRST PERIOD.--THE DIVISION OF LABOR.
- The fundamental idea, the dominant category, of political economy
- is VALUE.
- Value reaches its positive determination by a series of
- oscillations between SUPPLY and DEMAND.
- Consequently, value appears successively under three aspects:
- useful value, exchangeable value, and synthetic, or social,
- value, which is true value. The first term gives birth to the
- second in contradiction to it, and the two together, absorbing
- each other in reciprocal penetration, produce the third: so that
- the contradiction or antagonism of ideas appears as the point of
- departure of all economic science, allowing us to say of it,
- parodying the sentence of Tertullian in relation to the Gospel,
- Credo quia absurdum: There is, in social economy, a latent truth
- wherever there is an apparent contradiction, Credo quia
- contrarium.
- From the point of view of political economy, then, social
- progress consists in a continuous solution of the problem of the
- constitution of values, or of the proportionality and solidarity
- of products.
- But while in Nature the synthesis of opposites is contemporary
- with their opposition, in society the antithetic elements seem to
- appear at long intervals, and to reach solution only`after long
- and tumultuous agitation. Thus there is no example--the idea
- even is inconceivable--of a valley without a hill, a left without
- a right, a north pole without a south pole, a stick with but one
- end, or two ends without a middle, etc. The human body, with its
- so perfectly antithetic dichotomy, is formed integrally at the
- very moment of conception; it refuses to be put together and
- arranged piece by piece, like the garment patterned after it
- which, later, is to cover it.[10]
- [10] A subtle philologist, M. Paul Ackermann, has shown, using
- the French language as an illustration, that, since every word in
- a language has its opposite, or, as the author calls it, its
- antonym, the entire vocabulary might be arranged in couples,
- forming a vast dualistic system. (See Dictionary of Antonyms.
- By Paul Ackermann. Paris: Brockhaus & Avenarius. 1842)
- In society, on the contrary, as well as in the mind, so far from
- the idea reaching its complete realization at a single bound, a
- sort of abyss separates, so to speak, the two antinomical
- positions, and even when these are recognized at last, we still
- do not see what the synthesis will be. The primitive concepts
- must be fertilized, so to speak, by burning controversy and
- passionate struggle; bloody battles will be the preliminaries of
- peace. At the present moment, Europe, weary of war and
- discussion, awaits a reconciling principle; and it is the vague
- perception of this situation which induces the Academy of Moral
- and Political Sciences to ask, "What are the general facts which
- govern the relations of profits to wages and determine their
- oscillations?" in other words, what are the most salient episodes
- and the most remarkable phases of the war between labor and
- capital?
- If, then, I demonstrate that political economy, with all its
- contradictory hypotheses and equivocal conclusions, is nothing
- but an organization of privilege and misery, I shall have proved
- thereby that it contains by implication the promise of an
- organization of labor and equality, since, as has been said,
- every systematic contradiction is the announcement of a
- composition; further, I shall have fixed the bases of this
- composition. Then, indeed, to unfold the system of economical
- contradictions is to lay the foundations of universal
- association; to show how the products of collective labor COME
- OUT of society is to explain how it will be possible to make them
- RETURN to it; to exhibit the genesis of the problems of
- production and distribution is to prepare the way for their
- solution. All these propositions are identical and equally
- evident.
- % 1.--Antagonistic effects of the principle of division.
- All men are equal in the state of primitive communism, equal in
- their nakedness and ignorance, equal in the indefinite power of
- their faculties. The economists generally look at only the first
- of these aspects; they neglect or overlook the second.
- Nevertheless, according to the profoundest philosophers of modern
- times, La Rochefoucault, Helvetius, Kant, Fichte, Hegel,
- Jacotot, intelligence differs in individuals only QUALITATIVELY,
- each having thereby his own specialty or genius; in its
- essence,--namely, judgment,--it is QUANTITATIVELY equal in all.
- Hence it follows that, a little sooner or a little later,
- according as circumstances shall be more or less favorable,
- general progress must lead all men from original and negative
- equality to a positive equivalence of talents and acquirements.
- I insist upon this precious datum of psychology, the necessary
- consequence of which is that the HIERARCHY OF CAPACITIES
- henceforth cannot be allowed as a principle and law of
- organization: equality alone is our rule, as it is also our
- ideal. Then, just as the equality of misery must change
- gradually into equality of well-being, as we have proved by the
- theory of value, so the equality of minds, negative in the
- beginning, since it represents only emptiness, must reappear in a
- positive form at the completion of humanity's education. The
- intellectual movement proceeds parallelly with the economic
- movement; they are the expression, the translation, of each
- other; psychology and social economy are in accord, or rather,
- they but unroll the same history, each from a different point of
- view. This appears especially in Smith's great law, the DIVISION
- OF LABOR.
- Considered in its essence, the division of labor is the way in
- which equality of condition and intelligence is realized.
- Through diversity of function, it gives rise to proportionality
- of products and equilibrium in exchange, and consequently opens
- for us the road to wealth; as also, in showing us infinity
- everywhere in art and Nature, it leads us to idealize our acts,
- and makes the creative mind--that is, divinity itself, mentem
- diviniorem--immanent and perceptible in all laborers.
- Division of labor, then, is the first phase of economic evolution
- as well as of intellectual development: our point of departure is
- true as regards both man and things, and the progress of our
- exposition is in no wise arbitrary.
- But, at this solemn hour of the division of labor, tempestuous
- winds begin to blow upon humanity. Progress does not improve the
- condition of all equally and uniformly, although in the end it
- must include and transfigure every intelligent and industrious
- being. It commences by taking possession of a small number of
- privileged persons, who thus compose the elite of nations, while
- the mass continues, or even buries itself deeper, in
- barbarism. It is this exception of persons on the part of
- progress which has perpetuated the belief in the natural and
- providential inequality of conditions, engendered caste, and
- given an hierarchical form to all societies. It has not been
- understood that all inequality, never being more than a negation,
- carries in itself the proof of its illegitimacy and the
- announcement of its downfall: much less still has it been
- imagined that this same inequality proceeds accidentally from a
- cause the ulterior effect of which must be its entire
- disappearance.
- Thus, the antinomy of value reappearing in the law of division,
- it is found that the first and most potent instrument of
- knowledge and wealth which Providence has placed in our hands has
- become for us an instrument of misery and imbecility. Here is
- the formula of this new law of antagonism, to which we owe the
- two oldest maladies of civilization, aristocracy and the
- proletariat: Labor, in dividing itself according to the law
- which is peculiar to it, and which is the primary condition of
- its productivity, ends in the frustration of its own objects, and
- destroys itself, in other words: Division, in the absence of
- which there is no progress, no wealth, no equality, subordinates
- the workingman, and renders intelligence useless, wealth harmful,
- and equality impossible. All the economists, since Adam Smith,
- have pointed out the ADVANTAGES and the INCONVENIENCES of the law
- of division, but at the same time insisting much more strenuously
- upon the first than the second, because such a course was more in
- harmony with their optimistic views, and not one of them ever
- asking how a LAW can have INCONVENIENCES. This is the way in
- which J. B. Say summed up the question:--
- "A man who during his whole life performs but one operation,
- certainly acquires the power to execute it better and more
- readily than another; but at the same time he becomes less
- capable of any other occupation, whether physical or moral;
- his other faculties become extinct, and there results a
- degeneracy in the individual man. That one has made only the
- eighteenth part of a pin is a sad account to give of one's self:
- but let no one imagine that it is the workingman who spends his
- life in handling a file or a hammer that alone degenerates in
- this way from the dignity of his nature; it is the same with the
- man whose position leads him to exercise the most subtle
- faculties of his mind. . . On the whole, it may be said that the
- separation of tasks is an advantageous use of human forces; that
- it increases enormously the products of society; but that it
- takes something from the capacity of each man taken
- individually."[11]
- [11] "Treatise on Political Economy."
- What, then, after labor, is the primary cause of the
- multiplication of wealth and the skill of laborers? Division.
- What is the primary cause of intellectual degeneracy and, as we
- shall show continually, civilized misery? Division.
- How does the same principle, rigorously followed to its
- conclusions, lead to effects diametrically opposite? There is
- not an economist, either before or since Adam Smith, who has even
- perceived that here is a problem to be solved. Say goes so far
- as to recognize that in the division of labor the same cause
- which produces the good engenders the evil; then, after a few
- words of pity for the victims of the separation of industries,
- content with having given an impartial and faithful exhibition of
- the facts, he leaves the matter there. "You know," he seems to
- say, "that the more we divide the workmen's tasks, the more we
- increase the productive power of labor; but at the same time the
- more does labor, gradually reducing itself to a mechanical
- operation, stupefy intelligence."
- In vain do we express our indignation against a theory which,
- creating by labor itself an aristocracy of capacities, leads
- inevitably to political inequality; in vain do we protest in the
- name of democracy and progress that in the future there will be
- no nobility, no bourgeoisie no pariahs. The economist replies,
- with the impassibility of destiny: You are condemned to produce
- much, and to produce cheaply; otherwise your industry will be
- always insignificant, your commerce will amount to nothing, and
- you will drag in the rear of civilization instead of taking the
- lead.--What! among us, generous men, there are some predestined
- to brutishness; and the more perfect our industry becomes, the
- larger will grow the number of our accursed brothers! . . . . .
- --Alas! . . . . . That is the last word of the economist.
- We cannot fail to recognize in the division of labor, as a
- general fact and as a cause, all the characteristics of a LAW;
- but as this law governs two orders of phenomena radically
- opposite and destructive of each other, it must be confessed also
- that this law is of a sort unknown in the exact sciences,--that
- it is, strange to say, a contradictory law, a counter-law an
- antinomy. Let us add, in anticipation, that such appears to be
- the identifying feature of social economy, and consequently of
- philosophy.
- Now, without a RECOMPOSITION of labor which shall obviate the
- inconveniences of division while preserving its useful effects,
- the contradiction inherent in the principle is irremediable. It
- is necessary,--following the style of the Jewish priests,
- plotting the death of Christ,--it is necessary that the poor
- should perish to secure the proprietor his for tune, expedit unum
- hominem pro populo mori. I am going to demonstrate the necessity
- of this decree; after which, if the parcellaire laborer still
- retains a glimmer of intelligence, he will console himself with
- the thought that he dies according to the rules of political
- economy.
- Labor, which ought to give scope to the conscience and render it
- more and more worthy of happiness, leading through parcellaire
- division to prostration of mind, dwarfs man in his noblest part,
- minorat capitis, and throws him back into animality. Thenceforth
- the fallen man labors as a brute, and consequently must be
- treated as a brute. This sentence of Nature and necessity
- society will execute.
- The first effect of parcellaire labor, after the depravation of
- the mind, is the lengthening of the hours of labor, which
- increase in inverse proportion to the amount of intelligence
- expended. For, the product increasing in quantity and quality at
- once, if, by any industrial improvement whatever, labor is
- lightened in one way, it must pay for it in another. But as the
- length of the working-day cannot exceed from sixteen to eighteen
- hours, when compensation no longer can be made in time, it will
- be taken from the price, and wages will decrease. And this
- decrease will take place, not, as has been foolishly imagined,
- because value is essentially arbitrary, but because it is
- essentially determinable. Little matters it that the struggle
- between supply and demand ends, now to the advantage of the
- employer, now to the benefit of the employee; such oscillations
- may vary in amplitude, this depending on well-known accessory
- circumstances which have been estimated a thousand times. The
- certain point, and the only one for us to notice now, is that the
- universal conscience does not set the same price upon the labor
- of an overseer and the work of a hod-carrier. A reduction in the
- price of the day's work, then, is necessary: so that the laborer,
- after having been afflicted in mind by a degrading function,
- cannot fail to be struck also in his body by the meagreness of
- his reward. This is the literal application of the words of the
- Gospel: HE THAT HATH NOT, FROM HIM SHALL BE TAKEN EVEN THAT
- WHICH HE HATH.
- There is in economic accidents a pitiless reason which laughs at
- religion and equity as political aphorisms, and which renders man
- happy or unhappy according as he obeys or escapes the
- prescriptions of destiny. Certainly this is far from that
- Christian charity with which so many honorable writers today are
- inspired, and which, penetrating to the heart of the bourgeoisie,
- endeavors to temper the rigors of the law by numerous religious
- institutions. Political economy knows only justice, justice as
- inflexible and unyielding as the miser's purse; and it is because
- political economy is the effect of social spontaneity and the
- expression of the divine will that I have been able to say: God
- is man's adversary, and Providence a misanthrope. God makes us
- pay, in weight of blood and measure of tears, for each of our
- lessons; and to complete the evil, we, in our relations with our
- fellows, all act like him. Where, then, is this love of the
- celestial father for his creatures? Where is human fraternity?
- Can he do otherwise? say the theists. Man falling, the animal
- remains: how could the Creator recognize in him his own image?
- And what plainer than that he treats him then as a beast of
- burden? But the trial will not last for ever, and sooner or
- later labor, having been PARTICULARIZED, will be synthetized.
- Such is the ordinary argument of all those who seek to justify
- Providence, but generally succeed only in lending new weapons to
- atheism. That is to say, then, that God would have envied us,
- for six thousand years, an idea which would have saved millions
- of victims, a distribution of labor at once special and
- synthetic! In return, he has given us, through his servants
- Moses, Buddha, Zoroaster, Mahomet, etc., those insipid writings,
- the disgrace of our reason, which have killed more men than they
- contain letters! Further, if we must believe primitive
- revelation, social economy was the cursed science, the fruit of
- the tree reserved for God, which man was forbidden to touch! Why
- this religious depreciation of labor, if it is true, as economic
- science already shows, that labor is the father of love and the
- organ of happiness? Why this jealousy of our advancement? But
- if, as now sufficiently appears, our progress depends upon
- ourselves alone, of what use is it to adore this phantom of
- divinity, and what does he still ask of us through the multitude
- of inspired persons who pursue us with their sermons? All of
- you, Christians, protestant and orthodox, neo-revelators,
- charlatans and dupes, listen to the first verse of the
- humanitarian hymn upon God's mercy: "In proportion as the
- principle of division of labor receives complete application, the
- worker becomes weaker, narrower, and more dependent. Art
- advances: the artisan recedes!"[12]
- [12] Tocqueville, "Democracy in America."
- Then let us guard against anticipating conclusions and prejudging
- the latest revelation of experience. At present God seems less
- favorable than hostile: let us confine ourselves to establishing
- the fact.
- Just as political economy, then, at its point of departure, has
- made us understand these mysterious and dismal words: IN
- PROPORTION AS THE PRODUCTION OF UTILITY INCREASES, VENALITY
- DECREASES; so arrived at its first station, it warns us in a
- terrible voice: IN PROPORTION AS ART ADVANCES, THE ARTISAN
- RECEDES. To fix the ideas better, let us cite a few examples.
- In all the branches of metal-working, who are the least
- industrious of the wage-laborers? Precisely those who are called
- MACHINISTS. Since tools have been so admirably perfected, a
- machinist is simply a man who knows how to handle a file or
- a plane: as for mechanics, that is the business of engineers and
- foremen. A country blacksmith often unites in his own person, by
- the very necessity of his position, the various talents of the
- locksmith, the edge-tool maker, the gunsmith, the machinist, the
- wheel-wright, and the horse-doctor: the world of thought would be
- astonished at the knowledge that is under the hammer of this man,
- whom the people, always inclined to jest, nickname brule-fer. A
- workingman of Creuzot, who for ten years has seen the grandest
- and finest that his profession can offer, on leaving his shop,
- finds himself unable to render the slightest service or to earn
- his living. The incapacity of the subject is directly
- proportional to the perfection of the art; and this is as true of
- all the trades as of metal-working.
- The wages of machinists are maintained as yet at a high rate:
- sooner or later their pay must decrease, the poor quality of the
- labor being unable to maintain it.
- I have just cited a mechanical art; let us now cite a liberal
- industry.
- Would Gutenburg and his industrious companions, Faust and
- Schoffer, ever have believed that, by the division of labor,
- their sublime invention would fall into the domain of
- ignorance--I had almost said idiocy? There are few men so
- weak-minded, so UNLETTERED, as the mass of workers who follow
- the various branches of the typographic industry,-- compositors,
- pressmen, type-founders, book-binders, and paper-makers. The
- printer, as he existed even in the days of the Estiennes, has
- become almost an abstraction. The employment of women in
- type-setting has struck this noble industry to the heart, and
- consummated its degradation. I have seen a female
- compositor--and she was one of the best--who did not know how to
- read, and was acquainted only with the forms of the letters.
- The whole art has been withdrawn into the hands of foremen and
- proof-readers, modest men of learning whom the impertinence of
- authors and patrons still humiliates, and a few workmen who are
- real artists. The press, in a word, fallen into mere mechanism,
- is no longer, in its PERSONNEL, at the level of civilization:
- soon there will be left of it but a few souvenirs.
- I am told that the printers of Paris are endeavoring by
- association to rise again from their degradation: may their
- efforts not be exhausted in vain empiricism or misled into barren
- utopias!
- After private industries, let us look at public administration.
- In the public service, the effects of parcellaire labor are no
- less frightful, no less intense: in all the departments of
- administration, in proportion as the art develops, most of the
- employees see their salaries diminish. A letter-carrier receives
- from four hundred to six hundred francs per annum, of which the
- administration retains about a tenth for the retiring pension.
- After thirty years of labor, the pension, or rather the
- restitution, is three hundred francs per annum, which, when given
- to an alms-house by the pensioner, entitles him to a bed, soup,
- and washing. My heart bleeds to say it, but I think,
- nevertheless, that the administration is generous: what reward
- would you give to a man whose whole function consists in walking?
- The legend gives but FIVE SOUS to the Wandering Jew; the
- letter-carriers receive twenty or thirty; true, the greater part
- of them have a family. That part of the service which calls into
- exercise the intellectual faculties is reserved for the
- postmasters and clerks: these are better paid; they do the work
- of men.
- Everywhere, then, in public service as well as free industry,
- things are so ordered that nine-tenths of the laborers serve as
- beasts of burden for the other tenth: such is the inevitable
- effect of industrial progress and the indispensable condition of
- all wealth. It is important to look well at this elementary
- truth before talking to the people of equality, liberty,
- democratic institutions, and other utopias, the realization of
- which involves a previous complete revolution in the relations of
- laborers.
- The most remarkable effect of the division of labor is the decay
- of literature.
- In the Middle Ages and in antiquity the man of letters, a sort of
- encyclopaedic doctor, a successor of the troubadour and the poet,
- all-knowing, was almighty. Literature lorded it over society
- with a high hand; kings sought the favor of authors, or revenged
- themselves for their contempt by burning them,--them and their
- books. This, too, was a way of recognizing literary sovereignty.
- Today we have manufacturers, lawyers, doctors, bankers,
- merchants, professors, engineers, librarians, etc.; we have no
- men of letters. Or rather, whoever has risen to a remarkable
- height in his profession is thereby and of necessity lettered:
- literature, like the baccalaureate, has become an elementary part
- of every profession. The man of letters, reduced to his simplest
- expression, is the PUBLIC WRITER, a sort of writing commissioner
- in the pay of everybody, whose best-known variety is the
- journalist.
- It was a strange idea that occurred to the Chambers four years
- ago,-- that of making a law on literary property! As if
- henceforth the idea was not to become more and more the
- all-important point, the style nothing. Thanks to God, there is
- an end of parliamentary eloquence as of epic poetry and
- mythology; the theatre rarely attracts business men and savants;
- and while the connoisseurs are astonished at the decline of art,
- the philosophic observer sees only the progress of manly reason,
- troubled rather than rejoiced at these dainty trifles. The
- interest in romance is sustained only as long as it resembles
- reality; history is reducing itself to anthropological exegesis;
- everywhere, indeed, the art of talking well appears as a
- subordinate auxiliary of the idea, the fact. The worship of
- speech, too mazy and slow for impatient minds, is neglected, and
- its artifices are losing daily their power of seduction. The
- language of the nineteenth century is made up of facts and
- figures, and he is the most eloquent among us who, with the
- fewest words, can say the most things. Whoever cannot speak this
- language is mercilessly relegated to the ranks of the
- rhetoricians; he is said to have no ideas.
- In a young society the progress of letters necessarily outstrips
- philosophical and industrial progress, and for a long time serves
- for the expression of both. But there comes a day when thought
- leaves language in the rear, and when, consequently, the
- continued preeminence of literature in a society becomes a sure
- symptom of decline. Language, in fact, is to every people the
- collection of its native ideas, the encyclopaedia which
- Providence first reveals to it; it is the field which its reason
- must cultivate before directly attacking Nature through
- observation and experience. Now, as soon as a nation, after
- having exhausted the knowledge contained in its vocabulary,
- instead of pursuing its education by a superior philosophy, wraps
- itself in its poetic mantle, and begins to play with its periods
- and its hemistichs, we may safely say that such a society is
- lost. Everything in it will become subtle, narrow, and false; it
- will not have even the advantage of maintaining in its splendor
- the language of which it is foolishly enamored; instead of going
- forward in the path of the geniuses of transition, the Tacituses,
- the Thucydides, the Machiavels, and the Montesquieus, it will be
- seen to fall, with irresistible force, from the majesty of Cicero
- to the subtleties of Seneca, the antitheses of St. Augustine, and
- the puns of St. Bernard.
- Let no one, then, be deceived: from the moment that the mind, at
- first entirely occupied with speech, passes to experience and
- labor, the man of letters, properly speaking, is simply the puny
- personification of the least of our faculties; and literature,
- the refuse of intelligent industry, finds a market only with the
- idlers whom it amuses and the proletaires whom it fascinates, the
- jugglers who besiege power and the charlatans who shelter
- themselves behind it, the hierophants of divine right who blow
- the trumpet of Sinai, and the fanatical proclaimers of the
- sovereignty of the people, whose few mouth-pieces, compelled to
- practise their tribunician eloquence from tombs until they can
- shower it from the height of rostrums, know no better than to
- give to the public parodies of Gracchus and Demosthenes.
- All the powers of society, then, agree in indefinitely
- deteriorating the condition of the parcellaire laborer; and
- experience, universally confirming the theory, proves that this
- worker is condemned to misfortune from his mother's womb, no
- political reform, no association of interests, no effort either
- of public charity or of instruction, having the power to aid him.
- The various specifics proposed in these latter days, far from
- being able to cure the evil, would tend rather to inflame it by
- irritation; and all that has been written on this point has only
- exhibited in a clear light the vicious circle of political
- economy.
- This we shall demonstrate in a few words.
- % 2.--Impotence of palliatives.--MM. Blanqui, Chevalier, Dunoyer,
- Rossi, and Passy.
- All the remedies proposed for the fatal effects of parcellaire
- division may be reduced to two, which really are but one, the
- second being the inversion of the first: to raise the mental and
- moral condition of the workingman by increasing his comfort and
- dignity; or else, to prepare the way for his future emancipation
- and happiness by instruction.
- We will examine successively these two systems, one of which is
- represented by M. Blanqui, the other by M. Chevalier.
- M. Blanqui is a friend of association and progress, a writer of
- democratic tendencies, a professor who has a place in the hearts
- of the proletariat. In his opening discourse of the year 1845,
- M. Blanqui proclaimed, as a means of salvation, the association
- of labor and capital, the participation of the working man in the
- profits,--that is, a beginning of industrial solidarity. "Our
- century," he exclaimed, "must witness the birth of the collective
- producer." M. Blanqui forgets that the collective producer was
- born long since, as well as the collective consumer, and that the
- question is no longer a genetic, but a medical, one. Our task is
- to cause the blood proceeding from the collective digestion,
- instead of rushing wholly to the head, stomach, and lungs, to
- descend also into the legs and arms. Besides, I do not know what
- method M. Blanqui proposes to employ in order to realize his
- generous thought,--whether it be the establishment of national
- workshops, or the loaning of capital by the State, or the
- expropriation of the conductors of business enterprises and the
- substitution for them of industrial associations, or, finally,
- whether he will rest content with a recommendation of the
- savings bank to workingmen, in which case the participation would
- be put off till doomsday.
- However this may be, M. Blanqui's idea amounts simply to an
- increase of wages resulting from the copartnership, or at least
- from the interest in the business, which he confers upon the
- laborers. What, then, is the value to the laborer of a
- participation in the profits?
- A mill with fifteen thousand spindles, employing three hundred
- hands, does not pay at present an annual dividend of twenty
- thousand francs. I am informed by a Mulhouse manufacturer that
- factory stocks in Alsace are generally below par and that this
- industry has already become a means of getting money by
- STOCK-JOBBING instead of by LABOR. To SELL; to sell at the
- right time; to sell dear,--is the only object in view; to
- manufacture is only to prepare for a sale. When I assume, then,
- on an average, a profit of twenty thousand francs to a factory
- employing three hundred persons, my argument being general, I am
- twenty thousand francs out of the way. Nevertheless, we will
- admit the correctness of this amount. Dividing twenty thousand
- francs, the profit of the mill, by three hundred, the number of
- persons, and again by three hundred, the number of working days,
- I find an increase of pay for each person of twenty-two and
- one-fifth centimes, or for daily expenditure an addition of
- eighteen centimes, just a morsel of bread. Is it worth while,
- then, for this, to expropriate mill-owners and endanger the
- public welfare, by erecting establishments which must be
- insecure, since, property being divided into infinitely small
- shares, and being no longer supported by profit, business
- enterprises would lack ballast, and would be unable to weather
- commercial gales. And even if no expropriation was involved,
- what a poor prospect to offer the working class is an
- increase of eighteen centimes in return for centuries of economy;
- for no less time than this would be needed to accumulate the
- requisite capital, supposing that periodical suspensions of
- business did not periodically consume its savings!
- The fact which I have just stated has been pointed out in several
- ways. M. Passy[13] himself took from the books of a mill in
- Normandy where the laborers were associated with the owner the
- wages of several families for a period of ten years, and he found
- that they averaged from twelve to fourteen hundred francs per
- year. He then compared the situation of mill-hands paid in
- proportion to the prices obtained by their employers with that of
- laborers who receive fixed wages, and found that the difference
- is almost imperceptible. This result might easily have been
- foreseen. Economic phenomena obey laws as abstract and immutable
- as those of numbers: it is only privilege, fraud, and absolutism
- which disturb the eternal harmony.
- [13] Meeting of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences,
- September, 1845.
- M. Blanqui, repentant, as it seems, at having taken this first
- step toward socialistic ideas, has made haste to retract his
- words. At the same meeting in which M. Passy demonstrated the
- inadequacy of cooperative association, he exclaimed: "Does it
- not seem that labor is a thing susceptible of organization, and
- that it is in the power of the State to regulate the happiness of
- humanity as it does the march of an army, and with an entirely
- mathematical precision? This is an evil tendency, a delusion
- which the Academy cannot oppose too strongly, because it is not
- only a chimera, but a dangerous sophism. Let us respect good and
- honest intentions; but let us not fear to say that to publish a
- book upon the ORGANIZATION OF LABOR is to rewrite for the
- fiftieth time a treatise upon the quadrature of the circle or the
- philosopher's stone."
- Then, carried away by his zeal, M. Blanqui finishes the
- destruction of his theory of cooperation, which M. Passy already
- had so rudely shaken, by the following example: "M. Dailly, one
- of the most enlightened of farmers, has drawn up an account for
- each piece of land and an account for each product; and he proves
- that within a period of thirty years the same man has never
- obtained equal crops from the same piece of land. The products
- have varied from twenty-six thousand francs to nine thousand or
- seven thousand francs, sometimes descending as low as three
- hundred francs. There are also certain products--potatoes, for
- instance--which fail one time in ten. How, then, with these
- variations and with revenues so uncertain, can we establish even
- distribution and uniform wages for laborers? . . . ."
- It might be answered that the variations in the product of each
- piece of land simply indicate that it is necessary to associate
- proprietors with each other after having associated laborers with
- proprietors, which would establish a more complete solidarity:
- but this would be a prejudgment on the very thing in question,
- which M. Blanqui definitively decides, after reflection, to be
- unattainable,--namely, the organization of labor. Besides, it is
- evident that solidarity would not add an obolus to the common
- wealth, and that, consequently, it does not even touch the
- problem of division.
- In short, the profit so much envied, and often a very uncertain
- matter with employers, falls far short of the difference between
- actual wages and the wages desired; and M. Blanqui's former plan,
- miserable in its results and disavowed by its author, would be a
- scourge to the manufacturing industry. Now, the division of
- labor being henceforth universally established, the argument is
- generalized, and leads us to the conclusion that MISERY IS AN
- EFFECT OF LABOR, as well as of idleness.
- The answer to this is, and it is a favorite argument with the
- people: Increase the price of services; double and triple wages.
- I confess that if such an increase was possible it would be a
- complete success, whatever M. Chevalier may have said, who needs
- to be slightly corrected on this point.
- According to M. Chevalier, if the price of any kind of
- merchandise whatever is increased, other kinds will rise in a
- like proportion, and no one will benefit thereby.
- This argument, which the economists have rehearsed for more than
- a century, is as false as it is old, and it belonged to M.
- Chevalier, as an engineer, to rectify the economic tradition.
- The salary of a head clerk being ten francs per day, and the
- wages of a workingman four, if the income of each is increased
- five francs, the ratio of their fortunes, which was formerly as
- one hundred to forty, will be thereafter as one hundred to sixty.
- The increase of wages, necessarily taking place by addition and
- not by proportion, would be, therefore, an excellent method of
- equalization; and the economists would deserve to have thrown
- back at them by the socialists the reproach of ignorance which
- they have bestowed upon them at random.
- But I say that such an increase is impossible, and that the
- supposition is absurd: for, as M. Chevalier has shown very
- clearly elsewhere, the figure which indicates the price of the
- day's labor is only an algebraic exponent without effect on the
- reality: and that which it is necessary first to endeavor to
- increase, while correcting the inequalities of distribution, is
- not the monetary expression, but the quantity of products. Till
- then every rise of wages can have no other effect than that
- produced by a rise of the price of wheat, wine, meat, sugar,
- soap, coal, etc.,--that is, the effect of a scarcity. For what
- is wages?
- It is the cost price of wheat, wine, meat, coal; it is the
- integrant price of all things. Let us go farther yet: wages is
- the proportionality of the elements which compose wealth, and
- which are consumed every day reproductively by the mass of
- laborers. Now, to double wages, in the sense in which the people
- understand the words, is to give to each producer a share greater
- than his product, which is contradictory: and if the rise
- pertains only to a few industries, a general disturbance in
- exchange ensues,--that is, a scarcity. God save me from
- predictions! but, in spite of my desire for the amelioration of
- the lot of the working class, I declare that it is impossible for
- strikes followed by an increase of wages to end otherwise than in
- a general rise in prices: that is as certain as that two and two
- make four. It is not by such methods that the workingmen will
- attain to wealth and--what is a thousand times more precious than
- wealth--liberty. The workingmen, supported by the favor of an
- indiscreet press, in demanding an increase of wages, have served
- monopoly much better than their own real interests: may they
- recognize, when their situation shall become more painful, the
- bitter fruit of their inexperience!
- Convinced of the uselessness, or rather, of the fatal effects, of
- an increase of wages, and seeing clearly that the question is
- wholly organic and not at all commercial, M. Chevalier attacks
- the problem at the other end. He asks for the working class,
- first of all, instruction, and proposes extensive reforms in this
- direction.
- Instruction! this is also M. Arago's word to the workingmen; it
- is the principle of all progress. Instruction! . . . . It
- should be known once for all what may be expected from it in the
- solution of the problem before us; it should be known, I say, not
- whether it is desirable that all should receive it,--this no one
- doubts,--but whether it is possible.
- To clearly comprehend the complete significance of M. Chevalier's
- views, a knowledge of his methods is indispensable.
- M. Chevalier, long accustomed to discipline, first by his
- polytechnic studies, then by his St. Simonian connections, and
- finally by his position in the University, does not seem to admit
- that a pupil can have any other inclination than to obey the
- regulations, a sectarian any other thought than that of his
- chief, a public functionary any other opinion than that of the
- government. This may be a conception of order as respectable as
- any other, and I hear upon this subject no expressions of
- approval or censure. Has M. Chevalier an idea to offer peculiar
- to himself? On the principle that all that is not forbidden by
- law is allowed, he hastens to the front to deliver his opinion,
- and then abandons it to give his adhesion, if there is occasion,
- to the opinion of authority. It was thus that M. Chevalier,
- before settling down in the bosom of the Constitution, joined M.
- Enfantin: it was thus that he gave his views upon canals,
- railroads, finance, property, long before the administration had
- adopted any system in relation to the construction of railways,
- the changing of the rate of interest on bonds, patents, literary
- property, etc.
- M. Chevalier, then, is not a blind admirer of the University
- system of instruction,--far from it; and until the appearance of
- the new order of things, he does not hesitate to say what he
- thinks. His opinions are of the most radical.
- M. Villemain had said in his report: "The object of the higher
- education is to prepare in advance a choice of men to occupy and
- serve in all the positions of the administration, the magistracy,
- the bar and the various liberal professions, including the higher
- ranks and learned specialties of the army and navy."
- "The higher education," thereupon observes M. Chevalier,[14] "is
- designed also to prepare men some of whom shall be farmers,
- others manufacturers, these merchants, and those private
- engineers. Now, in the official programme, all these classes are
- forgotten. The omission is of considerable importance; for,
- indeed, industry in its various forms, agriculture, commerce, are
- neither accessories nor accidents in a State: they are its chief
- dependence. . . . If the University desires to justify its name,
- it must provide a course in these things; else an INDUSTRIAL
- UNIVERSITY will be established in opposition to it. . . . We
- shall have altar against altar, etc. . . ."
- [14] Journal des Economistes," April, 1843.
- And as it is characteristic of a luminous idea to throw light on
- all questions connected with it, professional instruction
- furnishes M. Chevalier with a very expeditious method of
- deciding, incidentally, the quarrel between the clergy and the
- University on liberty of education.
- "It must be admitted that a very great concession is made to the
- clergy in allowing Latin to serve as the basis of education. The
- clergy know Latin as well as the University; it is their own
- tongue. Their tuition, moreover, is cheaper; hence they must
- inevitably draw a large portion of our youth into their small
- seminaries and their schools of a higher grade. . . ."
- The conclusion of course follows: change the course of study, and
- you decatholicize the realm; and as the clergy know only Latin
- and the Bible, when they have among them neither masters of art,
- nor farmers, nor accountants; when, of their forty thousand
- priests, there are not twenty, perhaps, with the ability to make
- a plan or forge a nail,--we soon shall see which the fathers of
- families will choose, industry or the breviary, and whether they
- do not regard labor as the most beautiful language in which to
- pray to God.
- Thus would end this ridiculous opposition between religious
- education and profane science, between the spiritual and the
- temporal, between reason and faith, between altar and throne, old
- rubrics henceforth meaningless, but with which they still impose
- upon the good nature of the public, until it takes offence.
- M. Chevalier does not insist, however, on this solution: he knows
- that religion and monarchy are two powers which, though
- continually quarrelling, cannot exist without each other; and
- that he may not awaken suspicion, he launches out into another
- revolutionary idea,--equality.
- "France is in a position to furnish the polytechnic school with
- twenty times as many scholars as enter at present (the average
- being one hundred and seventy-six, this would amount to three
- thousand five hundred and twenty). The University has but to say
- the word. . . . If my opinion was of any weight, I should
- maintain that mathematical capacity is MUCH LESS SPECIAL than is
- commonly supposed. I remember the success with which children,
- taken at random, so to speak, from the pavements of Paris, follow
- the teaching of La Martiniere by the method of Captain Tabareau."
- If the higher education, reconstructed according to the views of
- M. Chevalier, was sought after by all young French men instead of
- by only ninety thousand as commonly, there would be no
- exaggeration in raising the estimate of the number of minds
- mathematically inclined from three thousand five hundred and
- twenty to ten thousand; but, by the same argument, we should have
- ten thousand artists, philologists, and philosophers; ten
- thousand doctors, physicians, chemists, and naturalists; ten
- thousand economists, legists, and administrators; twenty thousand
- manufacturers, foremen, merchants, and accountants; forty
- thousand farmers, wine-growers, miners, etc.,--in all, one
- hundred thousand specialists a year, or about one-third of our
- youth. The rest, having, instead of special adaptations, only
- mingled adaptations, would be distributed indifferently
- elsewhere.
- It is certain that so powerful an impetus given to intelligence
- would quicken the progress of equality, and I do not doubt that
- such is the secret desire of M. Chevalier. But that is precisely
- what troubles me: capacity is never wanting, any more than
- population, and the problem is to find employment for the one and
- bread for the other. In vain does M. Chevalier tell us: "The
- higher education would give less ground for the complaint that it
- throws into society crowds of ambitious persons without any means
- of satisfying their desires, and interested in the overthrow of
- the State; people without employment and unable to get any, good
- for nothing and believing themselves fit for anything, especially
- for the direction of public affairs. Scientific studies do not
- so inflate the mind. They enlighten and regulate it at once;
- they fit men for practical life. . . ." Such language, I reply,
- is good to use with patriarchs: a professor of political economy
- should have more respect for his position and his audience. The
- government has only one hundred and twenty offices annually at
- its disposal for one hundred and seventy-six students
- admitted to the polytechnic school: what, then, would be its
- embarrassment if the number of admissions was ten thousand, or
- even, taking M. Chevalier's figures, three thousand five hundred?
- And, to generalize, the whole number of civil positions is sixty
- thousand, or three thousand vacancies annually; what dismay would
- the government be thrown into if, suddenly adopting the
- reformatory ideas of M. Chevalier, it should find itself besieged
- by fifty thousand office- seekers! The following objection has
- often been made to republicans without eliciting a reply: When
- everybody shall have the electoral privilege, will the deputies
- do any better, and will the proletariat be further advanced? I
- ask the same question of M. Chevalier: When each academic year
- shall bring you one hundred thousand fitted men, what will you do
- with them?
- To provide for these interesting young people, you will go down
- to the lowest round of the ladder. You will oblige the young
- man, after fifteen years of lofty study, to begin, no longer as
- now with the offices of aspirant engineer, sub-lieutenant of
- artillery, second lieutenant, deputy, comptroller, general
- guardian, etc., but with the ignoble positions of pioneer,
- train-soldier, dredger, cabin-boy, fagot- maker, and exciseman.
- There he will wait, until death, thinning the ranks, enables him
- to advance a step. Under such circumstances a man, a graduate of
- the polytechnic school and capable of becoming a Vauban, may die
- a laborer on a second class road, or a corporal in a regiment
- Oh! how much more prudent Catholicism has shown itself, and how
- far it has surpassed you all, St. Simonians, republicans,
- university men, economists, in the knowledge of man and society!
- The priest knows that our life is but a voyage, and that our
- perfection cannot be realized here below; and he contents
- himself with outlining on earth an education which must be
- completed in heaven. The man whom religion has moulded, content
- to know, do, and obtain what suffices for his earthly destiny,
- never can become a source of embarrassment to the government:
- rather would he be a martyr. O beloved religion! is it necessary
- that a bourgeoisie which stands in such need of you should disown
- you? . . . Into what terrible struggles of pride and misery
- does this mania for universal instruction plunge us! Of what use
- is professional education, of what good are agricultural and
- commercial schools, if your students have neither employment nor
- capital? And what need to cram one's self till the age of twenty
- with all sorts of knowledge, then to fasten the threads of a
- mule-jenny or pick coal at the bottom of a pit? What! you have
- by your own confession only three thousand positions annually to
- bestow upon fifty thousand possible capacities, and yet you talk
- of establishing schools! Cling rather to your system of
- exclusion and privilege, a system as old as the world, the
- support of dynasties and patriciates, a veritable machine for
- gelding men in order to secure the pleasures of a caste of
- Sultans. Set a high price upon your teaching, multiply
- obstacles, drive away, by lengthy tests, the son of the
- proletaire whom hunger does not permit to wait, and protect with
- all your power the ecclesiastical schools, where the students are
- taught to labor for the other life, to cultivate resignation, to
- fast, to respect those in high places, to love the king, and to
- pray to God. For every useless study sooner or later becomes an
- abandoned study: knowledge is poison to slaves.
- Surely M. Chevalier has too much sagacity not to have seen the
- consequences of his idea. But he has spoken from the bottom of
- his heart, and we can only applaud his good intentions: men must
- first be men; after that, he may live who can.
- Thus we advance at random, guided by Providence, who never warns
- us except with a blow: this is the beginning and end of political
- economy.
- Contrary to M. Chevalier, professor of political economy at the
- College of France, M. Dunoyer, an economist of the Institute,
- does not wish instruction to be organized. The organization of
- instruction is a species of organization of labor; therefore, no
- organization. Instruction, observes M. Dunoyer, is a profession,
- not a function of the State; like all professions, it ought to be
- and remain free. It is communism, it is socialism, it is the
- revolutionary tendency, whose principal agents have been
- Robespierre, Napoleon, Louis XVIII, and M. Guizot, which have
- thrown into our midst these fatal ideas of the centralization and
- absorption of all activity in the State. The press is very free,
- and the pen of the journalist is an object of merchandise;
- religion, too, is very free, and every wearer of a gown, be it
- short or long, who knows how to excite public curiosity, can draw
- an audience about him. M. Lacordaire has his devotees, M. Leroux
- his apostles, M. Buchez his convent. Why, then, should not
- instruction also be free? If the right of the instructed, like
- that of the buyer, is unquestionable, and that of the instructor,
- who is only a variety of the seller, is its correlative, it is
- impossible to infringe upon the liberty of instruction without
- doing violence to the most precious of liberties, that of the
- conscience. And then, adds M. Dunoyer, if the State owes
- instruction to everybody, it will soon be maintained that it owes
- labor; then lodging; then shelter. . . . Where does that lead
- to?
- The argument of M. Dunoyer is irrefutable: to organize
- instruction is to give to every citizen a pledge of liberal
- employment and comfortable wages; the two are as intimately
- connected as the circulation of the arteries and the veins. But
- M. Dunoyer's theory implies also that progress belongs only to a
- certain select portion of humanity, and that barbarism is the
- eternal lot of nine-tenths of the human race. It is this which
- constitutes, according to M. Dunoyer, the very essence of
- society, which manifests itself in three stages, religion,
- hierarchy, and beggary. So that in this system, which is that of
- Destutt de Tracy, Montesquieu, and Plato, the antinomy of
- division, like that of value, is without solution.
- It is a source of inexpressible pleasure to me, I confess, to see
- M. Chevalier, a defender of the centralization of instruction,
- opposed by M. Dunoyer, a defender of liberty; M. Dunoyer in his
- turn antagonized by M. Guizot; M. Guizot, the representative of
- the centralizers, contradicting the Charter, which posits liberty
- as a principle; the Charter trampled under foot by the University
- men, who lay sole claim to the privilege of teaching, regardless
- of the express command of the Gospel to the priests: GO AND
- TEACH. And above all this tumult of economists, legislators,
- ministers, academicians, professors, and priests, economic
- Providence giving the lie to the Gospel, and shouting:
- Pedagogues! what use am I to make of your instruction?
- Who will relieve us of this anxiety? M. Rossi leans toward
- eclecticism: Too little divided, he says, labor remains
- unproductive; too much divided, it degrades man. Wisdom lies
- between these extremes; in medio virtus. Unfortunately this
- intermediate wisdom is only a small amount of poverty joined with
- a small amount of wealth, so that the condition is not
- modified in the least. The proportion of good and evil, instead
- of being as one hundred to one hundred, becomes as fifty to
- fifty: in this we may take, once for all, the measure of
- eclecticism. For the rest, M. Rossi's juste-milieu is in direct
- opposition to the great economic law: TO PRODUCE WITH THE LEAST
- POSSIBLE EXPENSE THE GREATEST POSSIBLE QUANTITY OF VALUES. . . .
- Now, how can labor fulfil its destiny without an extreme
- division? Let us look farther, if you please.
- "All economic systems and hypotheses," says M. Rossi, "belong to
- the economist, but the intelligent, free, responsible man is
- under the control of the moral law. . . Political economy is
- only a science which examines the relations of things, and draws
- conclusions therefrom. It examines the effects of labor; in the
- application of labor, you should consider the importance of the
- object in view. When the application of labor is unfavorable to
- an object higher than the production of wealth, it should not be
- applied. . . Suppose that it would increase the national wealth
- to compel children to labor fifteen hours a day: morality would
- say that that is not allowable. Does that prove that political
- economy is false? No; that proves that you confound things which
- should be kept separate."
- If M. Rossi had a little more of that Gallic simplicity so
- difficult for foreigners to acquire, he would very summarily have
- THROWN HIS TONGUE TO THE DOGS, as Madame de Sevigne said. But a
- professor must talk, talk, talk, not for the sake of saying
- anything, but in order to avoid silence. M. Rossi takes three
- turns around the question, then lies down: that is enough to make
- certain people believe that he has answered it.
- It is surely a sad symptom for a science when, in developing
- itself according to its own principles, it reaches its object
- just in time to be contradicted by another; as, for example, when
- the postulates of political economy are found to be opposed to
- those of morality, for I suppose that morality is a science as
- well as political economy. What, then, is human knowledge, if
- all its affirmations destroy each other, and on what shall we
- rely? Divided labor is a slave's occupation, but it alone is
- really productive; undivided labor belongs to the free man, but
- it does not pay its expenses. On the one hand, political economy
- tells us to be rich; on the other, morality tells us to be free;
- and M. Rossi, speaking in the name of both, warns us at the same
- time that we can be neither free nor rich, for to be but half of
- either is to be neither. M. Rossi's doctrine, then, far from
- satisfying this double desire of humanity, is open to the
- objection that, to avoid exclusiveness, it strips us of
- everything: it is, under another form, the history of the
- representative system.
- But the antagonism is even more profound than M. Rossi has
- supposed. For since, according to universal experience (on this
- point in harmony with theory), wages decrease in proportion to
- the division of labor, it is clear that, in submitting ourselves
- to parcellaire slavery, we thereby shall not obtain wealth; we
- shall only change men into machines: witness the laboring
- population of the two worlds. And since, on the other hand,
- without the division of labor, society falls back into barbarism,
- it is evident also that, by sacrificing wealth, we shall not
- obtain liberty: witness all the wandering tribes of Asia and
- Africa. Therefore it is necessary--economic science and morality
- absolutely command it--for us to solve the problem of division:
- now, where are the economists? More than thirty years ago,
- Lemontey, developing a remark of Smith, exposed the demoralizing
- and homicidal influence of the division of labor. What has
- been the reply; what investigations have been made; what remedies
- proposed; has the question even been understood?
- Every year the economists report, with an exactness which I would
- commend more highly if I did not see that it is always fruitless,
- the commercial condition of the States of Europe. They know how
- many yards of cloth, pieces of silk, pounds of iron, have been
- manufactured; what has been the consumption per head of wheat,
- wine, sugar, meat: it might be said that to them the ultimate of
- science is to publish inventories, and the object of their labor
- is to become general comptrollers of nations. Never did such a
- mass of material offer so fine a field for investigation. What
- has been found; what new principle has sprung from this mass;
- what solution of the many problems of long standing has been
- reached; what new direction have studies taken?
- One question, among others, seems to have been prepared for a
- final judgment,--pauperism. Pauperism, of all the phenomena of
- the civilized world, is today the best known: we know pretty
- nearly whence it comes, when and how it arrives, and what it
- costs; its proportion at various stages of civilization has been
- calculated, and we have convinced ourselves that all the
- specifics with which it hitherto has been fought have been
- impotent. Pauperism has been divided into genera, species, and
- varieties: it is a complete natural history, one of the most
- important branches of anthropology. Well I the unquestionable
- result of all the facts collected, unseen, shunned, covered by
- the economists with their silence, is that pauperism is
- constitutional and chronic in society as long as the antagonism
- between labor and capital continues, and that this antagonism can
- end only by the absolute negation of political economy.
- What issue from this labyrinth have the economists discovered?
- This last point deserves a moment's attention.
- In primitive communism misery, as I have observed in a preceding
- paragraph, is the universal condition.
- Labor is war declared upon this misery.
- Labor organizes itself, first by division, next by machinery,
- then by competition, etc.
- Now, the question is whether it is not in the essence of this
- organization, as given us by political economy, at the same time
- that it puts an end to the misery of some, to aggravate that of
- others in a fatal and unavoidable manner. These are the terms in
- which the question of pauperism must be stated, and for this
- reason we have undertaken to solve it.
- What means, then, this eternal babble of the economists about the
- improvidence of laborers, their idleness, their want of dignity,
- their ignorance, their debauchery, their early marriages, etc.?
- All these vices and excesses are only the cloak of pauperism; but
- the cause, the original cause which inexorably holds four-fifths
- of the human race in disgrace,--what is it? Did not Nature make
- all men equally gross, averse to labor, wanton, and wild? Did
- not patrician and proletaire spring from the same clay? Then how
- happens it that, after so many centuries, and in spite of so many
- miracles of industry, science, and art, comfort and culture have
- not become the inheritance of all? How happens it that in Paris
- and London, centres of social wealth, poverty is as hideous as in
- the days of Caesar and Agricola? Why, by the side of this
- refined aristocracy, has the mass remained so uncultivated? It
- is laid to the vices of the people: but the vices of the upper
- class appear to be no less; perhaps they are even greater. The
- original stain affected all alike: how happens it, once more,
- that the baptism of civilization has not been equally efficacious
- for all? Does this not show that progress itself is a privilege,
- and that the man who has neither wagon nor horse is forced to
- flounder about for ever in the mud? What do I say? The totally
- destitute man has no desire to improve: he has fallen so low that
- ambition even is extinguished in his heart.
- "Of all the private virtues," observes M. Dunoyer with infinite
- reason, "the most necessary, that which gives us all the others
- in succession, is the passion for well-being, is the violent
- desire to extricate one's self from misery and abjection, is that
- spirit of emulation and dignity which does not permit men to rest
- content with an inferior situation. . . . But this sentiment,
- which seems so natural, is unfortunately much less common than is
- thought. There are few reproaches which the generality of men
- deserve less than that which ascetic moralists bring against them
- of being too fond of their comforts: the opposite reproach might
- be brought against them with infinitely more justice. . . .
- There is even in the nature of men this very remarkable feature,
- that the less their knowledge and resources, the less desire they
- have of acquiring these. The most miserable savages and the
- least enlightened of men are precisely those in whom it is most
- difficult to arouse wants, those in whom it is hardest to inspire
- the desire to rise out of their condition; so that man must
- already have gained a certain degree of comfort by his labor,
- before he can feel with any keenness that need of improving his
- condition, of perfecting his existence, which I call the love of
- well-being."[15]
- [15] "The Liberty of Labor," Vol. II, p. 80.
- Thus the misery of the laboring classes arises in general from
- their lack of heart and mind, or, as M. Passy has said somewhere,
- from the weakness, the inertia of their moral and intellectual
- faculties. This inertia is due to the fact that the said
- laboring classes, still half savage, do not have a sufficiently
- ardent desire to ameliorate their condition: this M. Dunoyer
- shows. But as this absence of desire is itself the effect of
- misery, it follows that misery and apathy are each other's effect
- and cause, and that the proletariat turns in a circle.
- To rise out of this abyss there must be either well-being,--that
- is, a gradual increase of wages,--or intelligence and
- courage,--that is, a gradual development of faculties: two things
- diametrically opposed to the degradation of soul and body which
- is the natural effect of the division of labor. The misfortune
- of the proletariat, then, is wholly providential, and to
- undertake to extinguish it in the present state of political
- economy would be to produce a revolutionary whirlwind.
- For it is not without a profound reason, rooted in the loftiest
- considerations of morality, that the universal conscience,
- expressing itself by turns through the selfishness of the rich
- and the apathy of the proletariat, denies a reward to the man
- whose whole function is that of a lever and spring. If, by some
- impossibility, material well-being could fall to the lot of the
- parcellaire laborer, we should see something monstrous happen:
- the laborers employed at disagreeable tasks would become like
- those Romans, gorged with the wealth of the world, whose
- brutalized minds became incapable of devising new pleasures.
- Well-being without education stupefies people and makes them
- insolent: this was noticed in the most ancient times.
- Incrassatus est, et recalcitravit, says Deuteronomy. For
- the rest, the parcellaire laborer has judged himself: he is
- content, provided he has bread, a pallet to sleep on, and plenty
- of liquor on Sunday. Any other condition would be prejudicial to
- him, and would endanger public order.
- At Lyons there is a class of men who, under cover of the monopoly
- given them by the city government, receive higher pay than
- college professors or the head-clerks of the government
- ministers: I mean the porters. The price of loading and
- unloading at certain wharves in Lyons, according to the schedule
- of the Rigues or porters' associations, is thirty centimes per
- hundred kilogrammes. At this rate, it is not seldom that a man
- earns twelve, fifteen, and even twenty francs a day: he only has
- to carry forty or fifty sacks from a vessel to a warehouse. It
- is but a few hours' work. What a favorable condition this would
- be for the development of intelligence, as well for children as
- for parents, if, of itself and the leisure which it brings,
- wealth was a moralizing principle! But this is not the case: the
- porters of Lyons are today what they always have been, drunken,
- dissolute, brutal, insolent, selfish, and base. It is a painful
- thing to say, but I look upon the following declaration as a
- duty, because it is the truth: one of the first reforms to be
- effected among the laboring classes will be the reduction of the
- wages of some at the same time that we raise those of others.
- Monopoly does not gain in respectability by belonging to the
- lowest classes of people, especially when it serves to maintain
- only the grossest individualism. The revolt of the silk-workers
- met with no sympathy, but rather hostility, from the porters and
- the river population generally. Nothing that happens off the
- wharves has any power to move them. Beasts of burden fashioned
- in advance for despotism, they will not mingle with politics as
- long as their privilege is maintained. Nevertheless, I ought to
- say in their defence that, some time ago, the necessities of
- competition having brought their prices down, more social
- sentiments began to awaken in these gross natures: a few more
- reductions seasoned with a little poverty, and the Rigues of
- Lyons will be chosen as the storming-party when the time comes
- for assaulting the bastilles.
- In short, it is impossible, contradictory, in the present system
- of society, for the proletariat to secure well-being through
- education or education through well-being. For, without
- considering the fact that the proletaire, a human machine, is as
- unfit for comfort as for education, it is demonstrated, on the
- one hand, that his wages continually tend to go down rather than
- up, and, on the other, that the cultivation of his mind, if it
- were possible, would be useless to him; so that he always
- inclines towards barbarism and misery. Everything that has been
- attempted of late years in France and England with a view to the
- amelioration of the condition of the poor in the matters of the
- labor of women and children and of primary instruction, unless it
- was the fruit of some hidden thought of radicalism, has been done
- contrary to economic ideas and to the prejudice of the
- established order. Progress, to the mass of laborers, is always
- the book sealed with the seven seals; and it is not by
- legislative misconstructions that the relentless enigma will be
- solved.
- For the rest, if the economists, by exclusive attention to their
- old routine, have finally lost all knowledge of the present state
- of things, it cannot be said that the socialists have better
- solved the antinomy which division of labor raised. Quite the
- contrary, they have stopped with negation; for is it not
- perpetual negation to oppose, for instance, the uniformity of
- parcellaire labor with a so-called variety in which each one can
- change his occupation ten, fifteen, twenty times a day at will?
- As if to change ten, fifteen, twenty times a day from one kind of
- divided labor to another was to make labor synthetic; as if,
- consequently, twenty fractions of the day's work of a manual
- laborer could be equal to the day's work of an artist! Even if
- such industrial vaulting was practicable,--and it may be asserted
- in advance that it would disappear in the presence of the
- necessity of making laborers responsible and therefore functions
- personal,--it would not change at all the physical, moral, and
- intellectual condition of the laborer; the dissipation would only
- be a surer guarantee of his incapacity and, consequently, his
- dependence. This is admitted, moreover, by the organizers,
- communists, and others. So far are they from pretending to solve
- the antinomy of division that all of them admit, as an essential
- condition of organization, the hierarchy of labor,--that is, the
- classification of laborers into parcellaires and generalizers or
- organizers,--and in all utopias the distinction of capacities,
- the basis or everlasting excuse for inequality of goods, is
- admitted as a pivot. Those reformers whose schemes have nothing
- to recommend them but logic, and who, after having complained of
- the SIMPLISM, monotony, uniformity, and extreme division of
- labor, then propose a PLURALITY as a SYNTHESIS,--such inventors,
- I say, are judged already, and ought to be sent back to school.
- But you, critic, the reader undoubtedly will ask, what is your
- solution? Show us this synthesis which, retaining the
- responsibility, the personality, in short, the specialty of the
- laborer, will unite extreme division and the greatest variety in
- one complex and harmonious whole.
- My reply is ready: Interrogate facts, consult humanity: we can
- choose no better guide. After the oscillations of value,
- division of labor is the economic fact which influences most
- perceptibly profits and wages. It is the first stake driven by
- Providence into the soil of industry, the starting-point of the
- immense triangulation which finally must determine the right and
- duty of each and all. Let us, then, follow our guides, without
- which we can only wander and lose ourselves.
- Tu longe sequere, et vestigia semper adora.
- CHAPTER IV.
- SECOND PERIOD.--MACHINERY.
- "I have witnessed with profound regret the CONTINUANCE OF
- DISTRESS in the manufacturing districts of the country."
- Words of Queen Victoria on the reassembling of parliament.
- If there is anything of a nature to cause sovereigns to reflect,
- it is that, more or less impassible spectators of human
- calamities, they are, by the very constitution of society and the
- nature of their power, absolutely powerless to cure the
- sufferings of their subjects; they are even prohibited from
- paying any attention to them. Every question of labor and wages,
- say with one accord the economic and representative theorists,
- must remain outside of the attributes of power. From the height
- of the glorious sphere where religion has placed them, thrones,
- dominations, principalities, powers, and all the heavenly host
- view the torment of society, beyond the reach of its stress; but
- their power does not extend over the winds and floods. Kings can
- do nothing for the salvation of mortals. And, in truth, these
- theorists are right: the prince is established to maintain, not
- to revolutionize; to protect reality, not to bring about utopia.
- He represents one of the antagonistic principles: hence, if he
- were to establish harmony, he would eliminate himself, which
- on his part would be sovereignly unconstitutional and absurd.
- But as, in spite of theories, the progress of ideas is
- incessantly changing the external form of institutions in such a
- way as to render continually necessary exactly that which the
- legislator neither desires nor foresees,--so that, for instance,
- questions of taxation become questions of distribution; those of
- public utility, questions of national labor and industrial
- organization; those of finance, operations of credit; and those
- of international law, questions of customs duties and
- markets,--it stands as demonstrated that the prince, who,
- according to theory, should never interfere with things which
- nevertheless, without theory's foreknowledge, are daily and
- irresistibly becoming matters of government, is and can be
- henceforth, like Divinity from which he emanates, whatever may be
- said, only an hypothesis, a fiction.
- And finally, as it is impossible that the prince and the
- interests which it is his mission to defend should consent to
- diminish and disappear before emergent principles and new rights
- posited, it follows that progress, after being accomplished in
- the mind insensibly, is realized in society by leaps, and that
- force, in spite of the calumny of which it is the object, is the
- necessary condition of reforms. Every society in which the power
- of insurrection is suppressed is a society dead to progress:
- there is no truth of history better proven.
- And what I say of constitutional monarchies is equally true of
- representative democracies: everywhere the social compact has
- united power and conspired against life, it being impossible for
- the legislator either to see that he was working against his own
- ends or to proceed otherwise.
- Monarchs and representatives, pitiable actors in
- parliamentary comedies, this in the last analysis is what
- you are: talismans against the future! Every year brings you the
- grievances of the people; and when you are asked for the remedy,
- your wisdom covers its face! Is it necessary to support
- privilege,--that is, that consecration of the right of the
- strongest which created you and which is changing every day?
- Promptly, at the slightest nod of your head, a numerous army
- starts up, runs to arms, and forms in line of battle. And when
- the people complain that, in spite of their labor and precisely
- because of their labor, misery devours them, when society asks
- you for life, you recite acts of mercy! All your energy is
- expended for conservatism, all your virtue vanishes in
- aspirations! Like the Pharisee, instead of feeding your father,
- you pray for him! Ah! I tell you, we possess the secret of your
- mission: you exist only to prevent us from living. Nolite ergo
- imperare, get you gone!
- As for us, who view the mission of power from quite another
- standpoint, and who wish the special work of government to be
- precisely that of exploring the future, searching for progress,
- and securing for all liberty, equality, health, and wealth, we
- continue our task of criticism courageously, entirely sure that,
- when we have laid bare the cause of the evils of society, the
- principle of its fevers, the motive of its disturbances, we shall
- not lack the power to apply the remedy.
- % 1.--Of the function of machinery in its relations to liberty.
- The introduction of machinery into industry is accomplished in
- opposition to the law of division, and as if to reestablish the
- equilibrium profoundly compromised by that law. To truly
- appreciate the significance of this movement and grasp its
- spirit, a few general considerations become necessary.
- Modern philosophers, after collecting and classifying their
- annals, have been led by the nature of their labors to deal also
- with history: then it was that they saw, not without surprise,
- that the HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY was the same thing at bottom as
- the PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY; further, that these two branches of
- speculation, so different in appearance, the history of
- philosophy and the philosophy of history, were also only the
- stage representation of the concepts of metaphysics, which is
- philosophy entire.
- Now, dividing the material of universal history among a certain
- number of frames, such as mathematics, natural history, social
- economy, etc., it will be found that each of these divisions
- contains also metaphysics. And it will be the same down to the
- last subdivision of the totality of history: so that entire
- philosophy lies at the bottom of every natural or industrial
- manifestation; that it is no respecter of degrees or qualities;
- that, to rise to its sublimest conceptions, all prototypes may be
- employed equally well; and, finally, that, all the postulates of
- reason meeting in the most modest industry as well as in the most
- general sciences, to make every artisan a philosopher,--that is,
- a generalizing and highly synthetic mind,--it would be enough to
- teach him--what? his profession.
- Hitherto, it is true, philosophy, like wealth, has been reserved
- for certain classes: we have the philosophy of history, the
- philosophy of law, and some other philosophies also; this is a
- sort of appropriation which, like many others of equally noble
- origin, must disappear. But, to consummate this immense
- equation, it is necessary to begin with the philosophy of labor,
- after which each laborer will be able to attempt in his turn the
- philosophy of his trade.
- Thus every product of art and industry, every political and
- religious constitution, like every creature organized or
- unorganized, being only a realization, a natural or practical
- application, of philosophy, the identity of the laws of nature
- and reason, of being and idea, is demonstrated; and when, for our
- own purpose, we establish the constant conformity of economic
- phenomena to the pure laws of thought, the equivalence of the
- real and the ideal in human facts, we only repeat in a particular
- case this eternal demonstration.
- What do we say, in fact?
- To determine value,--in other words, to organize within itself
- the production and distribution of wealth,--society proceeds
- exactly as the mind does in the generation of concepts. First it
- posits a primary fact, acts upon a primary hypothesis, the
- division of labor, a veritable antinomy, the antagonistic results
- of which are evolved in social economy, just as the consequences
- might have been deduced in the mind: so that the industrial
- movement, following in all respects the deduction of ideas, is
- divided into a double current, one of useful effects, the other
- of subversive results, all equally necessary and legitimate
- products of the same law. To harmonically establish this
- two-faced principle and solve this antinomy, society evokes a
- second, soon to be followed by a third; and such will be the
- progress of the social genius until, having exhausted all its
- contradictions,--supposing, though it is not proved, that there
- is an end to contradiction in humanity,--it shall cover with one
- backward leap all its previous positions and in a single formula
- solve all problems. In following in our exposition this
- method of the parallel development of the reality and the idea,
- we find a double advantage: first, that of escaping the reproach
- of materialism, so often applied to economists, to whom facts are
- truth simply because they are facts, and material facts. To us,
- on the contrary, facts are not matter,--for we do not know what
- the word matter means,--but visible manifestations of invisible
- ideas. So viewed, the value of facts is measured by the idea
- which they represent; and that is why we have rejected as
- illegitimate and non-conclusive useful value and value in
- exchange, and later the division of labor itself, although to the
- economists all these have an absolute authority.
- On the other hand, it is as impossible to accuse us of
- spiritualism, idealism, or mysticism: for, admitting as a point
- of departure only the external manifestation of the idea,--the
- idea which we do not know, which does not exist, as long as it is
- not reflected, like light, which would be nothing if the sun
- existed by itself in an infinite void,--and brushing aside all a
- priori reasoning upon theogony and cosmogony, all inquiry into
- substance, cause, the me and the not-me, we confine ourselves to
- searching for the LAWS of being and to following the order of
- their appearance as far as reason can reach.
- Doubtless all knowledge brings up at last against a mystery:
- such, for instance, as matter and mind, both of which we admit as
- two unknown essences, upon which all phenomena rest. But this is
- not to say that mystery is the point of departure of knowledge,
- or that mysticism is the necessary condition of logic: quite the
- contrary, the spontaneity of our reason tends to the perpetual
- rejection of mysticism; it makes an a priori protest against all
- mystery, because it has no use for mystery except to deny it, and
- because the negation of mysticism is the only thing for which
- reason has no need of experience.
- In short, human facts are the incarnation of human ideas:
- therefore, to study the laws of social economy is to
- constitute the theory of the laws of reason and create
- philosophy. We may now pursue the course of our investigation.
- At the end of the preceding chapter we left the laborer at
- loggerheads with the law of division: how will this indefatigable
- Oedipus manage to solve this enigma?
- In society the incessant appearance of machinery is the
- antithesis, the inverse formula, of the division of labor; it is
- the protest of the industrial genius against parcellaire and
- homicidal labor. What is a machine, in fact? A method of
- reuniting divers particles of labor which division had separated.
- Every machine may be defined as a summary of several operations,
- a simplification of powers, a condensation of labor, a reduction
- of costs. In all these respects machinery is the counterpart of
- division. Therefore through machinery will come a restoration of
- the parcellaire laborer, a decrease of toil for the workman, a
- fall in the price of his product, a movement in the relation of
- values, progress towards new discoveries, advancement of the
- general welfare.
- As the discovery of a formula gives a new power to the geometer,
- so the invention of a machine is an abridgment of manual labor
- which multiplies the power of the producer, from which it may be
- inferred that the antinomy of the division of labor, if not
- entirely destroyed, will be balanced and neutralized. No one
- should fail to read the lectures of M. Chevalier setting forth
- the innumerable advantages resulting to society from the
- intervention of machinery; they make a striking picture to which
- I take pleasure in referring my reader.
- Machinery, positing itself in political economy in opposition to
- the division of labor, represents synthesis opposing itself in
- the human mind to analysis; and just as in the division of labor
- and in machinery, as we shall soon see, political economy
- entire is contained, so with analysis and synthesis goes the
- possession of logic entire, of philosophy. The man who labors
- proceeds necessarily and by turns by division and the aid of
- tools; likewise, he who reasons performs necessarily and by turns
- the operations of synthesis and analysis, nothing more,
- absolutely nothing. And labor and reason will never get beyond
- this: Prometheus, like Neptune, attains in three strides the
- confines of the world.
- From these principles, as simple and as luminous as axioms,
- immense consequences follow.
- As in the operation of the mind analysis and synthesis are
- essentially inseparable, and as, looking at the matter from
- another point, theory becomes legitimate only on condition of
- following experience foot by foot, it follows that labor, uniting
- analysis and synthesis, theory and experience, in a continuous
- action,--labor, the external form of logic and consequently a
- summary of reality and idea,--appears again as a universal method
- of instruction. Fit fabricando faber: of all systems of
- education the most absurd is that which separates intelligence
- from activity, and divides man into two impossible entities,
- theorizer and automaton. That is why we applaud the just
- complaints of M. Chevalier, M. Dunoyer, and all those who demand
- reform in university education; on that also rests the hope of
- the results that we have promised ourselves from such reform. If
- education were first of all experimental and practical, reserving
- speech only to explain, summarize, and coordinate work; if those
- who cannot learn with imagination and memory were permitted to
- learn with their eyes and hands,--soon we should witness a
- multiplication, not only of the forms of labor, but of
- capacities; everybody, knowing the theory of something, would
- thereby possess the language of philosophy; on occasion he
- could, were it only for once in his life, create, modify,
- perfect, give proof of intelligence and comprehension, produce
- his master-piece, in a word, show himself a man. The inequality
- in the acquisitions of memory would not affect the equivalence of
- faculties, and genius would no longer seem to us other than what
- it really is,--mental health.
- The fine minds of the eighteenth century went into extended
- disputations about what constitutes GENIUS, wherein it differs
- from TALENT, what we should understand by MIND, etc. They had
- transported into the intellectual sphere the same distinctions
- that, in society, separate persons. To them there were kings and
- rulers of genius, princes of genius, ministers of genius; and
- then there were also noble minds and bourgeois minds, city
- talents and country talents. Clear at the foot of the ladder lay
- the gross industrial population, souls imperfectly outlined,
- excluded from the glory of the elect. All rhetorics are still
- filled with these impertinences, which monarchical interests,
- literary vanity, and socialistic hypocrisy strain themselves to
- sanction, for the perpetual slavery of nations and the
- maintenance of the existing order.
- But, if it is demonstrated that all the operations of the mind
- are reducible to two, analysis and synthesis, which are
- necessarily inseparable, although distinct; if, by a forced
- consequence, in spite of the infinite variety of tasks and
- studies, the mind never does more than begin the same canvas over
- again,--the man of genius is simply a man with a good
- constitution, who has worked a great deal, thought a great deal,
- analyzed, compared, classified, summarized, and concluded a great
- deal; while the limited being, who stagnates in an endemic
- routine, instead of developing his faculties, has killed his
- intelligence through inertia and automatism. It is absurd
- to distinguish as differing in nature that which really differs
- only in age, and then to convert into privilege and exclusion the
- various degrees of a development or the fortunes of a spontaneity
- which must gradually disappear through labor and education.
- The psychological rhetoricians who have classified human souls
- into dynasties, noble races, bourgeois families, and the
- proletariat observed nevertheless that genius was not universal,
- and that it had its specialty; consequently Homer, Plato,
- Phidias, Archimedes, Caesar, etc., all of whom seemed to them
- first in their sort, were declared by them equals and sovereigns
- of distinct realms. How irrational! As if the specialty of
- genius did not itself reveal the law of the equality of minds!
- As if, looking at it in another light, the steadiness of success
- in the product of genius were not a proof that it works according
- to principles outside of itself, which are the guarantee of the
- perfection of its work, as long as it follows them with fidelity
- and certainty! This apotheosis of genius, dreamed of with open
- eyes by men whose chatter will remain forever barren, would
- warrant a belief in the innate stupidity of the majority of
- mortals, if it were not a striking proof of their perfectibility.
- Labor, then, after having distinguished capacities and arranged
- their equilibrium by the division of industries, completes the
- armament of intelligence, if I may venture to say so, by
- machinery. According to the testimony of history as well as
- according to analysis, and notwithstanding the anomalies caused
- by the antagonism of economic principles, intelligence differs in
- men, not by power, clearness, or reach, but, in the first place,
- by specialty, or, in the language of the schools, by qualitative
- determination, and, in the second place, by exercise and
- education. Hence, in the individual as in the collective
- man, intelligence is much more a faculty which comes, forms, and
- develops, qu{ae} fit, than an entity or entelechy which exists,
- wholly formed, prior to apprenticeship. Reason, by whatever name
- we call it,--genius, talent, industry,--is at the start a naked
- and inert potentiality, which gradually grows in size and
- strength, takes on color and form, and shades itself in an
- infinite variety of ways. By the importance of its acquirements,
- by its capital, in a word, the intelligence of one individual
- differs and will always differ from that of another; but, being a
- power equal in all at the beginning, social progress must consist
- in rendering it, by an ever increasing perfection of methods,
- again equal in all at the end. Otherwise labor would remain a
- privilege for some and a punishment for others.
- But the equilibrium of capacities, the prelude of which we have
- seen in the division of labor, does not fulfil the entire destiny
- of machinery, and the views of Providence extend far beyond.
- With the introduction of machinery into economy, wings are given
- to LIBERTY.
- The machine is the symbol of human liberty, the sign of our
- domination over nature, the attribute of our power, the
- expression of our right, the emblem of our personality. Liberty,
- intelligence,--those constitute the whole of man: for, if we
- brush aside as mystical and unintelligible all speculation
- concerning the human being considered from the point of view of
- substance (mind or matter), we have left only two categories of
- manifestations,--the first including all that we call sensations,
- volitions, passions, attractions, instincts, sentiments; the
- other, all phenomena classed under the heads of attention,
- perception, memory, imagination, comparison, judgment, reasoning,
- etc. As for the organic apparatus, very far from being the
- principle or base of these two orders of faculties, it must be
- considered as their synthetic and positive realization, their
- living and harmonious expression. For just as from the
- long-continued issue by humanity of its antagonistic principles
- must some day result social organization, so man must be
- conceived as the result of two series of potentialities.
- Thus, after having posited itself as logic, social economy,
- pursuing its work, posits itself as psychology. The education of
- intelligence and liberty,--in a word, the welfare of man,--all
- perfectly synonymous expressions,--such is the common object of
- political economy and philosophy. To determine the laws of the
- production and distribution of wealth will be to demonstrate, by
- an objective and concrete exposition, the laws of reason and
- liberty; it will be to create philosophy and right a posteriori:
- whichever way we turn, we are in complete metaphysics.
- Let us try, now, with the joint data of psychology and political
- economy, to define liberty.
- If it is allowable to conceive of human reason, in its origin, as
- a lucid and reflecting atom, capable of some day representing the
- universe, but at first giving no image at all, we may likewise
- consider liberty, at the birth of conscience, as a living point,
- punctum saliens, a vague, blind, or, rather, indifferent
- spontaneity, capable of receiving all possible impressions,
- dispositions, and inclinations. Liberty is the faculty of acting
- and of not acting, which, through any choice or determination
- whatever (I use the word determination here both passively and
- actively), abandons its indifference and becomes WILL.
- I say, then, that liberty, like intelligence, is naturally an
- undetermined, unformed faculty, which gets its value and
- character later from external impressions,--a faculty, therefore,
- which is negative at the beginning, but which gradually defines
- and outlines itself by exercise,--I mean, by education.
- The etymology of the word liberty, at least as I understand it,
- will serve still better to explain my thought. The root is
- lib-et, he pleases (German, lieben, to love); whence have been
- constructed lib-eri, children, those dear to us, a name reserved
- for the children of the father of a family; lib-ertas, the
- condition, character, or inclination of children of a noble race;
- lib-ido, the passion of a slave, who knows neither God nor law
- nor country, synonymous with licentia, evil conduct. When
- spontaneity takes a useful, generous, or beneficent direction, it
- is called libertas; when, on the contrary, it takes a harmful,
- vicious, base, or evil direction, it is called libido.
- A learned economist, M. Dunoyer, has given a definition of
- liberty which, by its likeness to our own, will complete the
- demonstration of its exactness.
- I call liberty that power which man acquires of using his forces
- more easily in PROPORTION AS HE FREES HIMSELF from the obstacles
- which originally hindered the exercise thereof. I say that he is
- the FREER the more thoroughly DELIVERED he is from the causes
- which prevented him from making use of his forces, the farther
- from him he has driven these causes, the more he has extended and
- cleared the sphere of his action . . . . Thus it is said that a
- man has a free mind, that he enjoys great liberty of mind, not
- only when his intelligence is not disturbed by any external
- violence, but also when it is neither obscured by intoxication,
- nor changed by disease, nor kept in impotence by lack of
- exercise.
- M. Dunoyer has here viewed liberty only on its negative
- side,--that is, as if it were simply synonymous with FREEDOM
- FROM OBSTACLES. At that rate liberty would not be a faculty of
- man; it would be nothing. But immediately M. Dunoyer, though
- persisting in his incomplete definition, seizes the true side of
- the matter: then it is that it occurs to him to say that man, in
- inventing a machine, serves his liberty, not, as we express
- ourselves, because he determines it, but, in M. Dunoyer's style,
- because he removes a difficulty from its path.
- Thus articulate language is a better instrument than language by
- sign; therefore one is freer to express his thought and impress
- it upon the mind of another by speech than by gesture. The
- written word is a more potent instrument than the spoken word;
- therefore one is freer to act on the mind of his fellows when he
- knows how to picture the word to their eyes than when he simply
- knows how to speak it. The press is an instrument two or three
- hundred times more potent than the pen; therefore one is two or
- three hundred times freer to enter into relation with other men
- when he can spread his ideas by printing than when he can publish
- them only by writing.
- I will not point out all that is inexact and illogical in this
- fashion of representing liberty. Since Destutt de Tracy, the
- last representative of the philosophy of Condillac, the
- philosophical spirit has been obscured among economists of the
- French school; the fear of ideology has perverted their language,
- and one perceives, in reading them, that adoration of fact has
- caused them to lose even the perception of theory. I prefer to
- establish the fact that M. Dunoyer, and political economy with
- him, is not mistaken concerning the essence of liberty, a force,
- energy, or spontaneity indifferent in itself to every action, and
- consequently equally susceptible of any determination, good or
- bad, useful or harmful. M. Dunoyer has had so strong a suspicion
- of the truth that he writes himself:
- Instead of considering liberty as a dogma, I shall present it as
- a RESULT; instead of making it the attribute of man, I shall
- make it the ATTRIBUTE OF CIVILIZATION; instead of imagining
- forms of government calculated to establish it, I shall do my
- best to explain how it is BORN OF EVERY STEP OF OUR PROGRESS.
- Then he adds, with no less reason:
- It will be noticed how much this method differs from that of
- those dogmatic philosophers who talk only of rights and duties;
- of what it is the duty of governments to do and the right of
- nations to demand, etc. I do not say sententiously: men have a
- right to be free; I confine myself to asking: how does it happen
- that they are so?
- In accordance with this exposition one may sum up in four lines
- the work that M. Dunoyer has tried to do: A REVIEW of the
- obstacles that IMPEDE liberty and the means (instruments,
- methods, ideas, customs, religions, governments, etc.) that
- FAVOR it. But for its omissions, the work of M. Dunoyer would
- have been the very philosophy of political economy.
- After having raised the problem of liberty, political economy
- furnishes us, then, with a definition conforming in every point
- to that given by psychology and suggested by the analogies of
- language: and thus we see how, little by little, the study of man
- gets transported from the contemplation of the me to the
- observation of realities.
- Now, just as the determinations of man's reason have received the
- name of IDEAS (abstract, supposed a priori ideas, or principles,
- conceptions, categories; and secondary ideas, or those more
- especially acquired and empirical), so the determinations of
- liberty have received the name of VOLITIONS, sentiments, habits,
- customs. Then, language, figurative in its nature, continuing to
- furnish the elements of primary psychology, the habit has been
- formed of assigning to ideas, as the place or capacity where they
- reside, the INTELLIGENCE, and to volitions, sentiments, etc.,
- the CONSCIENCE. All these abstractions have been long taken for
- realities by the philosophers, not one of whom has seen that all
- distribution of the faculties of the soul is necessarily a work
- of caprice, and that their psychology is but an illusion.
- However that may be, if we now conceive these two orders of
- determinations, reason and liberty, as united and blended by
- organization in a living, reasonable, and free PERSON, we shall
- understand immediately that they must lend each other mutual
- assistance and influence each other reciprocally. If, through an
- error or oversight of the reason, liberty, blind by nature,
- acquires a false and fatal habit, the reason itself will not be
- slow to feel the effects; instead of true ideas, conforming to
- the natural relations of things, it will retain only prejudices,
- as much more difficult to root out of the intelligence
- afterwards, as they have become dearer to the conscience through
- age. In this state of things reason and liberty are impaired;
- the first is disturbed in its development, the second restricted
- in its scope, and man is led astray, becomes, that is, wicked and
- unhappy at once.
- Thus, when, in consequence of a contradictory perception and an
- incomplete experience, reason had pronounced through the lips of
- the economists that there was no regulating principle of value
- and that the law of commerce was supply and demand, liberty
- abandoned itself to the passion of ambition, egoism, and
- gambling; commerce was thereafter but a wager subjected to
- certain police regulations; misery developed from the sources of
- wealth; socialism, itself a slave of routine, could only protest
- against effects instead of rising against causes; and reason was
- obliged, by the sight of so many evils, to recognize that it had
- taken a wrong road.
- Man can attain welfare only in proportion as his reason and his
- liberty not only progress in harmony, but never halt in their
- development. Now, as the progress of liberty, like that of
- reason, is indefinite, and as, moreover, these two powers are
- closely connected and solidary, it must be concluded that
- liberty is the more perfect the more closely it defines itself in
- conformity with the laws of reason, which are those of things,
- and that, if this reason were infinite, liberty itself would
- become infinite. In other words, the fullness of liberty lies in
- the fullness of reason: summa lex summa libertas.
- These preliminaries were indispensable in order to clearly
- appreciate the role of machinery and to make plain the series of
- economic evolutions. And just here I will remind the reader that
- we are not constructing a history in accordance with the order of
- events, but in accordance with the succession of ideas. The
- economic phases or categories are now contemporary, now inverted,
- in their manifestation; hence the extreme difficulty always felt
- by the economists in systematizing their ideas; hence the chaos
- of their works, even those most to be commended in every other
- respect, such as Adam Smith's, Ricardo's, and J. B. Say's. But
- economic theories none the less have their logical succession and
- their series in the mind: it is this order which we flatter
- ourselves that we have discovered, and which will make this work
- at once a philosophy and a history.
- % 2.--Machinery's contradiction.--Origin of capital and wages.
- From the very fact that machinery diminishes the workman's toil,
- it abridges and diminishes labor, the supply of which thus grows
- greater from day to day and the demand less. Little by little,
- it is true, the reduction in prices causing an increase in
- consumption, the proportion is restored and the laborer set at
- work again: but as industrial improvements steadily succeed each
- other and continually tend to substitute mechanical operations
- for the labor of man, it follows that there is a constant
- tendency to cut off a portion of the service and consequently to
- eliminate laborers from production. Now, it is with the economic
- order as with the spiritual order: outside of the church there is
- no salvation; outside of labor there is no subsistence. Society
- and nature, equally pitiless, are in accord in the execution of
- this new decree.
- "When a new machine, or, in general, any process whatever that
- expedites matters," says J. B. Say, "replaces any human labor
- already employed, some of the industrious arms, whose services
- are usefully supplanted, are left without work. A new machine,
- therefore, replaces the labor of a portion of the laborers, but
- does not diminish the amount of production, for, if it did, it
- would not be adopted; IT DISPLACES REVENUE. But the ultimate
- advantage is wholly on the side of machinery, for, if abundance
- of product and lessening of cost lower the venal value, the
- consumer--that is, everybody--will benefit thereby."
- Say's optimism is infidelity to logic and to facts. The question
- here is not simply one of a small number of accidents which have
- happened during thirty centuries through the introduction of one,
- two, or three machines; it is a question of a regular, constant,
- and general phenomenon. After revenue has been DISPLACED as Say
- says, by one machine, it is then displaced by another, and again
- by another, and always by another, as long as any labor remains
- to be done and any exchanges remain to be effected. That is the
- light in which the phenomenon must be presented and considered:
- but thus, it must be admitted, its aspect changes singularly.
- The displacement of revenue, the suppression of labor and wages,
- is a chronic, permanent, indelible plague, a sort of cholera
- which now appears wearing the features of Gutenberg, now
- assumes those of Arkwright; here is called Jacquard, there James
- Watt or Marquis de Jouffroy. After carrying on its ravages for a
- longer or shorter time under one form, the monster takes another,
- and the economists, who think that he has gone, cry out: "It was
- nothing!" Tranquil and satisfied, provided they insist with all
- the weight of their dialectics on the positive side of the
- question, they close their eyes to its subversive side,
- notwithstanding which, when they are spoken to of poverty, they
- again begin their sermons upon the improvidence and drunkenness
- of laborers.
- In 1750,--M. Dunoyer makes the observation, and it may serve as a
- measure of all lucubrations of the same sort,--"in 1750 the
- population of the duchy of Lancaster was 300,000 souls. In 1801,
- thanks to the development of spinning machines, this population
- was 672,000 souls. In 1831 it was 1,336,000 souls. Instead of
- the 40,000 workmen whom the cotton industry formerly employed, it
- now employs, since the invention of machinery, 1,500,000."
- M. Dunoyer adds that at the time when the number of workmen
- employed in this industry increased in so remarkable a manner,
- the price of labor rose one hundred and fifty per cent.
- Population, then, having simply followed industrial progress, its
- increase has been a normal and irreproachable fact,--what do I
- say?--a happy fact, since it is cited to the honor and glory of
- the development of machinery. But suddenly M. Dunoyer executes
- an about-face: this multitude of spinning-machines soon being out
- of work, wages necessarily declined; the population which the
- machines had called forth found itself abandoned by the machines,
- at which M. Dunoyer declares: Abuse of marriage is the cause of
- poverty.
- English commerce, in obedience to the demand of the immense body
- of its patrons, summons workmen from all directions, and
- encourages marriage; as long as labor is abundant, marriage is an
- excellent thing, the effects of which they are fond of quoting in
- the interest of machinery; but, the patronage fluctuating, as
- soon as work and wages are not to be had, they denounce the abuse
- of marriage, and accuse laborers of improvidence. Political
- economy--that is, proprietary despotism--can never be in the
- wrong: it must be the proletariat.
- The example of printing has been cited many a time, always to
- sustain the optimistic view. The number of persons supported
- today by the manufacture of books is perhaps a thousand times
- larger than was that of the copyists and illuminators prior to
- Gutenberg's time; therefore, they conclude with a satisfied air,
- printing has injured nobody. An infinite number of similar facts
- might be cited, all of them indisputable, but not one of which
- would advance the question a step. Once more, no one denies that
- machines have contributed to the general welfare; but I affirm,
- in regard to this incontestable fact, that the economists fall
- short of the truth when they advance the absolute statement that
- THE SIMPLIFICATION OF PROCESSES HAS NOWHERE RESULTED IN A
- DIMINUTION OF THE NUMBER OF HANDS EMPLOYED IN ANY INDUSTRY
- WHATEVER. What the economists ought to say is that machinery,
- like the division of labor, in the present system of social
- economy is at once a source of wealth and a permanent and fatal
- cause of misery.
- In 1836, in a Manchester mill, nine frames, each having three
- hundred and twenty-four spindles, were tended by four spinners.
- Afterwards the mules were doubled in length, which gave each of
- the nine six hundred and eighty spindles and enabled two men to
- tend them.
- There we have the naked fact of the elimination of the workman by
- the machine. By a simple device three workmen out of four are
- evicted; what matters it that fifty years later, the population
- of the globe having doubled and the trade of England having
- quadrupled, new machines will be constructed and the English
- manufacturers will reemploy their workmen? Do the economists
- mean to point to the increase of population as one of the
- benefits of machinery? Let them renounce, then, the theory of
- Malthus, and stop declaiming against the excessive fecundity
- of marriage.
- They did not stop there: soon a new mechanical improvement
- enabled a single worker to do the work that formerly occupied
- four.
- A new three-fourths reduction of manual work: in all, a reduction
- of human labor by fifteen-sixteenths.
- A Bolton manufacturer writes: "The elongation of the mules of
- our frames permits us to employ but twenty-six spinners where we
- employed thirty-five in 1837."
- Another decimation of laborers: one out of four is a victim.
- These facts are taken from the "Revue Economique" of 1842; and
- there is nobody who cannot point to similar ones. I have
- witnessed the introduction of printing machines, and I can say
- that I have seen with my own eyes the evil which printers have
- suffered thereby. During the fifteen or twenty years that the
- machines have been in use a portion of the workmen have gone back
- to composition, others have abandoned their trade, and some have
- died of misery: thus laborers are continually crowded back in
- consequence of industrial innovations. Twenty years ago eighty
- canal-boats furnished the navigation service between Beaucaire
- and Lyons; a score of steam-packets has displaced them all.
- Certainly commerce is the gainer; but what has become of the
- boating-population? Has it been transferred from the boats to
- the packets? No: it has gone where all superseded industries
- go,--it has vanished.
- For the rest, the following documents, which I take from the same
- source, will give a more positive idea of the influence of
- industrial improvements upon the condition of the workers.
- The average weekly wages, at Manchester, is ten shillings. Out
- of four hundred and fifty workers there are not forty who earn
- twenty shillings.
- The author of the article is careful to remark that an Englishman
- consumes five times as much as a Frenchman; this, then, is as if
- a French workingman had to live on two francs and a half a week.
- "Edinburgh Review," 1835: "To a combination of workmen (who did
- not want to see their wages reduced) we owe the mule of Sharpe
- and Roberts of Manchester; and this invention has severely
- punished the imprudent unionists."
- PUNISHED should merit punishment. The invention of Sharpe and
- Roberts of Manchester was bound to result from the situation; the
- refusal of the workmen to submit to the reduction asked of them
- was only its determining occasion. Might not one infer, from the
- air of vengeance affected by the "Edinburgh Review," that
- machines have a retroactive effect?
- An English manufacturer: "The insubordination of our workmen has
- given us the idea of DISPENSING WITH THEM. We have made and
- stimulated every imaginable effort of the mind to replace the
- service of men by tools more docile, and we have achieved our
- object. Machinery has delivered capital from the oppression of
- labor. Wherever we still employ a man, we do so only
- temporarily, pending the invention for us of some means of
- accomplishing his work without him."
- What a system is that which leads a business man to think with
- delight that society will soon be able to dispense with men!
- MACHINERY HAS DELIVERED CAPITAL FROM THE OPPRESSION OF LABOR!
- That is exactly as if the cabinet should undertake to deliver the
- treasury from the oppression of the taxpayers. Fool! though the
- workmen cost you something, they are your customers: what will
- you do with your products, when, driven away by you, they shall
- consume them no longer? Thus machinery, after crushing the
- workmen, is not slow in dealing employers a counter-blow; for, if
- production excludes consumption, it is soon obliged to stop
- itself.
- During the fourth quarter of 1841 four great failures, happening
- in an English manufacturing city, threw seventeen hundred and
- twenty people on the street.
- These failures were caused by over-production,--that is, by an
- inadequate market, or the distress of the people. What a pity
- that machinery cannot also deliver capital from the oppression of
- consumers! What a misfortune that machines do not buy the
- fabrics which they weave! The ideal society will be reached when
- commerce, agriculture, and manufactures can proceed without a man
- upon earth!
- In a Yorkshire parish for nine months the operatives have been
- working but two days a week.
- Machines!
- At Geston two factories valued at sixty thousand pounds sterling
- have been sold for twenty-six thousand. They produced more than
- they could sell.
- Machines!
- In 1841 the number of children UNDER thirteen years of age
- engaged in manufactures diminishes, because children OVER
- thirteen take their place.
- Machines! The adult workman becomes an apprentice, a child,
- again: this result was foreseen from the phase of the division of
- labor, during which we saw the quality of the workman degenerate
- in the ratio in which industry was perfected.
- In his conclusion the journalist makes this reflection: "Since
- 1836 there has been a retrograde movement in the cotton
- industry";--that is, it no longer keeps up its relation with
- other industries: another result foreseen from the theory of the
- proportionality of values.
- Today workmen's coalitions and strikes seem to have stopped
- throughout England, and the economists rightly rejoice over this
- return to order,-- let us say even to common sense. But because
- laborers henceforth--at least I cherish the hope--will not add
- the misery of their voluntary periods of idleness to the misery
- which machines force upon them, does it follow that the situation
- is changed? And if there is no change in the situation, will not
- the future always be a deplorable copy of the past?
- The economists love to rest their minds on pictures of public
- felicity: it is by this sign principally that they are to be
- recognized, and that they estimate each other. Nevertheless
- there are not lacking among them, on the other hand, moody and
- sickly imaginations, ever ready to offset accounts of growing
- prosperity with proofs of persistent poverty.
- M. Theodore Fix thus summed up the general situation in December,
- 1844:
- The food supply of nations is no longer exposed to those terrible
- disturbances caused by scarcities and famines, so frequent up to
- the beginning of the nineteenth century. The variety of
- agricultural growths and improvements has abolished this double
- scourge almost absolutely. The total wheat crop in France in
- 1791 was estimated at about 133,000,000 bushels, which gave,
- after deducting seed, 2.855 bushels to each inhabitant. In 1840
- the same crop was estimated at 198,590,000 bushels, or 2.860
- bushels to each individual, the area of cultivated surface being
- almost the same as before the Revolution. . . . The rate of
- increase of manufactured goods has been at least as high as
- that of food products; and we are justified in saying that the
- mass of textile fabrics has more than doubled and perhaps tripled
- within fifty years. The perfecting of technical processes has
- led to this result. . . .
- Since the beginning of the century the average duration of life
- has increased by two or three years,--an undeniable sign of
- greater comfort, or, if you will, a diminution of poverty.
- Within twenty years the amount of indirect revenue, without any
- burdensome change in legislation, has risen from $40,000,000
- francs to 720,000,000,--a symptom of economic, much more than of
- fiscal, progress.
- On January 1, 1844, the deposit and consignment office owed the
- savings banks 351,500,000 francs, and Paris figured in this sum
- for 105,000,000. Nevertheless the development of the institution
- has taken place almost wholly within twelve years, and it should
- be noticed that the 351,500,000 francs now due to the savings
- banks do not constitute the entire mass of economies effected,
- since at a given time the capital accumulated is disposed of
- otherwise. . . . In 1843, out of 320,000 workmen and 80,000
- house-servants living in the capital, 90,000 workmen have
- deposited in the savings banks 2,547,000 francs, and 34,000
- house-servants 1,268,000 francs.
- All these facts are entirely true, and the inference to be drawn
- from them in favor of machines is of the exactest,--namely, that
- they have indeed given a powerful impetus to the general welfare.
- But the facts with which we shall supplement them are no less
- authentic, and the inference to be drawn from these against
- machines will be no less accurate,--to wit, that they are a
- continual cause of pauperism. I appeal to the figures of M. Fix
- himself.
- Out of 320,000 workmen and 80,000 house-servants residing in
- Paris, there are 230,000 of the former and 46,000 of the
- latter--a total of 276,000--who do not deposit in the savings
- banks. No one would dare pretend that these are 276,000
- spendthrifts and ne'er-do-weels who expose themselves to misery
- voluntarily. Now, as among the very ones who make the savings
- there are to be found poor and inferior persons for whom the
- savings bank is but a respite from debauchery and misery, we may
- conclude that, out of all the individuals living by their labor,
- nearly three-fourths either are imprudent, lazy, and depraved,
- since they do not deposit in the savings banks, or are too poor
- to lay up anything. There is no other alternative. But common
- sense, to say nothing of charity, permits no wholesale accusation
- of the laboring class: it is necessary, therefore, to throw the
- blame back upon our economic system. How is it that M. Fix did
- not see that his figures accused themselves?
- They hope that, in time, all, or almost all, laborers will
- deposit in the savings banks. Without awaiting the testimony of
- the future, we may test the foundations of this hope immediately.
- According to the testimony of M. Vee, mayor of the fifth
- arrondissement of Paris, "the number of needy families inscribed
- upon the registers of the charity bureaus is 30,000,-- which is
- equivalent to 65,000 individuals." The census taken at the
- beginning of 1846 gave 88,474. And poor families not
- inscribed,--how many are there of those? As many. Say, then,
- 180,000 people whose poverty is not doubtful, although not
- official. And all those who live in straitened circumstances,
- though keeping up the appearance of comfort,--how many are there
- of those? Twice as many,--a total of 360,000 persons, in Paris,
- who are somewhat embarrassed for means.
- "They talk of wheat," cries another economist, M. Louis Leclerc,
- "but are there not immense populations which go without bread?
- Without leaving our own country, are there not populations which
- live exclusively on maize, buckwheat, chestnuts?"
- M. Leclerc denounces the fact: let us interpret it. If, as there
- is no doubt, the increase of population is felt principally
- in the large cities,--that is, at those points where the most
- wheat is consumed,--it is clear that the average per head may
- have increased without any improvement in the general condition.
- There is no such liar as an average.
- "They talk," continues the same writer, "of the increase of
- indirect consumption. Vain would be the attempt to acquit
- Parisian adulteration: it exists; it has its masters, its adepts,
- its literature, its didactic and classic treatises. . . . France
- possessed exquisite wines; what has been done with them? What
- has become of this splendid wealth? Where are the treasures
- created since Probus by the national genius? And yet, when one
- considers the excesses to which wine gives rise wherever it is
- dear, wherever it does not form a part of the regular life of the
- people; when in Paris, capital of the kingdom of good wines, one
- sees the people gorging themselves with I know not what,--stuff
- that is adulterated, sophisticated, sickening, and sometimes
- execrable,--and well-to-do persons drinking at home or accepting
- without a word, in famous restaurants, so-called wines, thick,
- violet-colored, and insipid, flat, and miserable enough to make
- the poorest Burgundian peasant shudder,--can one honestly doubt
- that alcoholic liquids are one of the most imperative needs of
- our nature?
- I quote this passage at length, because it sums up in relation to
- a special case all that could be said upon the INCONVENIENCES of
- machinery. To the people it is with wine as with fabrics, and
- generally with all goods and merchandise created for the
- consumption of the poor. It is always the same deduction: to
- reduce by some process or other the cost of manufacture, in
- order, first, to maintain advantageously competition with more
- fortunate or richer rivals; second, to serve the vast numbers of
- plundered persons who cannot disregard price simply because the
- quality is good. Produced in the ordinary ways, wine is too
- expensive for the mass of consumers; it is in danger of remaining
- in the cellars of the retailers. The manufacturer of wines gets
- around the difficulty: unable to introduce machinery into the
- cultivation of the vine, he finds a means, with the aid of
- some accompaniments, of placing the precious liquid within the
- reach of all. Certain savages, in their periods of scarcity, eat
- earth; the civilized workman drinks water. Malthus was a great
- genius.
- As far as the increase of the average duration of life is
- concerned, I recognize the fact, but at the same time I declare
- the observation incorrect. Let us explain that. Suppose a
- population of ten million souls: if, from whatever cause you
- will, the average life should increase five years for a million
- individuals, mortality continuing its ravages at the same rate as
- before among the nine other millions, it would be found, on
- distributing this increase among the whole, that on an average
- six months had been added to the life of each individual. It is
- with the average length of life, the so-called indicator of
- average comfort, as with average learning: the level of knowledge
- does not cease to rise, which by no means alters the fact that
- there are today in France quite as many barbarians as in the days
- of Francois I. The charlatans who had railroad speculation in
- view made a great noise about the importance of the locomotive in
- the circulation of ideas; and the economists, always on the
- lookout for civilized stupidities, have not failed to echo this
- nonsense. As if ideas, in order to spread, needed locomotives!
- What, then, prevents ideas from circulating from the Institute to
- the Faubourgs Saint-Antoine and Saint-Marceau, in the narrow and
- wretched streets of Old Paris and the Temple Quarter, everywhere,
- in short, where dwells this multitude even more destitute of
- ideas than of bread? How happens it that between a Parisian and
- a Parisian, in spite of the omnibus and the letter-carrier, the
- distance is three times greater today than in the fourteenth
- century?
- The ruinous influence of machinery on social economy and the
- condition of the laborers is exercised in a thousand ways, all of
- which are bound together and reciprocally labelled: cessation of
- labor, reduction of wages, over-production, obstruction of the
- market, alteration and adulteration of products, failures,
- displacement of laborers, degeneration of the race, and, finally,
- diseases and death.
- M. Theodore Fix has remarked himself that in the last fifty years
- the average stature of man, in France, has diminished by a
- considerable fraction of an inch. This observation is worth his
- previous one: upon whom does this diminution take effect?
- In a report read to the Academy of Moral Sciences on the results
- of the law of March 22, 1841, M. Leon Faucher expressed himself
- thus:
- Young workmen are pale, weak, short in stature, and slow to think
- as well as to move. At fourteen or fifteen years they seem no
- more developed than children of nine or ten years in the normal
- state. As for their intellectual and moral development, there
- are some to be found who, at the age of thirteen, have no notion
- of God, who have never heard of their duties, and whose first
- school of morality was a prison.
- That is what M. Leon Faucher has seen, to the great displeasure
- of M. Charles Dupin, and this state of things he declares that
- the law of March 22 is powerless to remedy. And let us not get
- angry over this impotence of the legislator: the evil arises from
- a cause as necessary for us as the sun; and in the path upon
- which we have entered, anger of any kind, like palliatives of any
- kind, could only make our situation worse. Yes, while science
- and industry are making such marvellous progress, it is a
- necessity, unless civilization's centre of gravity should
- suddenly change, that the intelligence and comfort of the
- proletariat be diminished; while the lives of the well-to-do
- classes grow longer and easier, it is inevitable that those of
- the needy should grow harder and shorter. This is established in
- the writings of the best--I mean, the most optimistic--thinkers.
- According to M. de Morogues, 7,500,000 men in France have only
- ninety- one francs a year to spend, 25 centimes a day. Cinq
- sous! cinq sous! (Five cents! five cents!). There is something
- prophetic, then, in this odious refrain.
- In England (not including Scotland and Ireland) the poor-rate
- was:
- 1801.--L
- 4,078,891 for a population of. . . . .8,872,980
- 1818.--L
- 7,870,801 " " " " . . . .11,978,875
- 1833.--L
- 8,000,000 " " " " . . . .14,000,000
- The progress of poverty, then, has been more rapid than that of
- population; in face of this fact, what becomes of the hypotheses
- of Malthus? And yet it is indisputable that during the same
- period the average comfort increased: what, then, do statistics
- signify?
- The death-rate for the first arrondissement of Paris is one to
- every fifty-two inhabitants, and for the twelfth one to every
- twenty-six. Now, the latter contains one needy person to every
- seven inhabitants, while the former has only one to every
- twenty-eight. That does not prevent the average duration of
- life, even in Paris, from increasing, as M. Fix has very
- correctly observed.
- At Mulhouse the probabilities of average life are twenty-nine
- years for children of the well-to-do class and TWO years for
- those of the workers; in 1812 the average life in the same
- locality was twenty-five years, nine months, and twelve days,
- while in 1827 it was not over twenty-one years and nine months.
- And yet throughout France the average life is longer. What does
- this mean?
- M. Blanqui, unable to explain so much prosperity and so much
- poverty at once, cries somewhere: "Increased production does not
- mean additional wealth. . . . Poverty, on the contrary, becomes
- the wider spread in proportion to the concentration of
- industries. There must be some radical vice in a system which
- guarantees no security either to capital or labor, and which
- seems to multiply the embarrassments of producers at the same
- time that it forces them to multiply their products."
- There is no radical vice here. What astonishes M. Blanqui is
- simply that of which the Academy to which he belongs has asked a
- determination,--namely, the oscillations of the economic
- pendulum, VALUE, beating alternately and in regular time good and
- evil, until the hour of the universal equation shall strike. If
- I may be permitted another comparison, humanity in its march is
- like a column of soldiers, who, starting in the same step and at
- the same moment to the measured beating of the drum, gradually
- lose their distances. The whole body advances, but the distance
- from head to tail grows ever longer; and it is a necessary effect
- of the movement that there should be some laggards and
- stragglers.
- But it is necessary to penetrate still farther into the antinomy.
- Machines promised us an increase of wealth; they have kept their
- word, but at the same time endowing us with an increase of
- poverty. They promised us liberty; I am going to prove that they
- have brought us slavery.
- I have stated that the determination of value, and with it the
- tribulations of society, began with the division of industries,
- without which there could be no exchange, or wealth, or progress.
- The period through which we are now passing--that of
- machinery--is distinguished by a special characteristic,--WAGES.
- Wages issued in a direct line from the employment of
- machinery,--that is, to give my thought the entire generality of
- expression which it calls for, from the economic fiction by which
- capital becomes an agent of production. Wages, in short, coming
- after the division of labor and exchange, is the necessary
- correlative of the theory of the reduction of costs, in whatever
- way this reduction may be accomplished. This genealogy is too
- interesting to be passed by without a few words of explanation.
- The first, the simplest, the most powerful of machines is the
- WORKSHOP.
- Division simply separates the various parts of labor, leaving
- each to devote himself to the specialty best suited to his
- tastes: the workshop groups the laborers according to the
- relation of each part to the whole. It is the most elementary
- form of the balance of values, undiscoverable though the
- economists suppose this to be. Now, through the workshop,
- production is going to increase, and at the same time the
- deficit.
- Somebody discovered that, by dividing production into its various
- parts and causing each to be executed by a separate workman, he
- would obtain a multiplication of power, the product of which
- would be far superior to the amount of labor given by the same
- number of workmen when labor is not divided.
- Grasping the thread of this idea, he said to himself that, by
- forming a permanent group of laborers assorted with a view to his
- special purpose, he would produce more steadily, more abundantly,
- and at less cost. It is not indispensable, however, that the
- workmen should be gathered into one place: the existence of the
- workshop does not depend essentially upon such contact. It
- results from the relation and proportion of the different tasks
- and from the common thought directing them. In a word,
- concentration at one point may offer its advantages, which are
- not to be neglected; but that is not what constitutes the
- workshop.
- This, then, is the proposition which the speculator makes to
- those whose collaboration he desires: I guarantee you a perpetual
- market for your products, if you will accept me as purchaser or
- middle-man. The bargain is so clearly advantageous that the
- proposition cannot fail of acceptance. The laborer finds in it
- steady work, a fixed price, and security; the employer, on the
- other hand, will find a readier sale for his goods, since,
- producing more advantageously, he can lower the price; in short,
- his profits will be larger because of the mass of his
- investments. All, even to the public and the magistrate, will
- congratulate the employer on having added to the social wealth by
- his combinations, and will vote him a reward.
- But, in the first place, whoever says reduction of expenses says
- reduction of services, not, it is true, in the new shop, but for
- the workers at the same trade who are left outside, as well as
- for many others whose accessory services will be less needed in
- future. Therefore every establishment of a workshop corresponds
- to an eviction of workers: this assertion, utterly contradictory
- though it may appear, is as true of the workshop as of a machine.
- The economists admit it: but here they repeat their eternal
- refrain that, after a lapse of time, the demand for the product
- having increased in proportion to the reduction of price, labor
- in turn will come finally to be in greater demand than ever.
- Undoubtedly, WITH TIME, the equilibrium will be restored; but, I
- must add again, the equilibrium will be no sooner restored at
- this point than it will be disturbed at another, because the
- spirit of invention never stops, any more than labor. Now, what
- theory could justify these perpetual hecatombs?" When we have
- reduced the number of toilers," wrote Sismondi, "to a fourth or a
- fifth of what it is at present, we shall need only a fourth or a
- fifth as many priests, physicians, etc. When we have cut them
- off altogether, we shall be in a position to dispense with the
- human race." And that is what really would happen if, in order
- to put the labor of each machine in proportion to the needs of
- consumption,--that is, to restore the balance of values
- continually destroyed,--it were not necessary to continually
- create new machines, open other markets, and consequently
- multiply services and displace other arms. So that on the one
- hand industry and wealth, on the other population and misery,
- advance, so to speak, in procession, one always dragging the
- other after it.
- I have shown the contractor, at the birth of industry,
- negotiating on equal terms with his comrades, who have since
- become HIS WORKMEN. It is plain, in fact, that this original
- equality was bound to disappear through the advantageous position
- of the master and the dependence of the wage-workers. In vain
- does the law assure to each the right of enterprise, as well as
- the faculty to labor alone and sell one's products directly.
- According to the hypothesis, this last resource is impracticable,
- since it was the object of the workshop to annihilate isolated
- labor. And as for the right to take the plough, as they say, and
- go at speed, it is the same in manufactures as in agriculture; to
- know how to work is nothing, it is necessary to arrive at the
- right time; the shop, as well as the land, is to the first comer.
- When an establishment has had the leisure to develop itself,
- enlarge its foundations, ballast itself with capital, and assure
- itself a body of patrons, what can the workman who has only
- his arms do against a power so superior? Hence it was not by an
- arbitrary act of sovereign power or by fortuitous and brutal
- usurpation that the guilds and masterships were established in
- the Middle Ages: the force of events had created them long before
- the edicts of kings could have given them legal consecration;
- and, in spite of the reform of '89, we see them reestablishing
- themselves under our eyes with an energy a hundred times more
- formidable. Abandon labor to its own tendencies, and the
- subjection of three-fourths of the human race is assured.
- But this is not all. The machine, or the workshop, after having
- degraded the laborer by giving him a master, completes his
- degeneracy by reducing him from the rank of artisan to that of
- common workman.
- Formerly the population on the banks of the Saone and Rhone was
- largely made up of watermen, thoroughly fitted for the conduct of
- canal-boats or row-boats. Now that the steam-tug is to be found
- almost everywhere, most of the boatmen, finding it impossible to
- get a living at their trade, either pass three-fourths of their
- life in idleness, or else become stokers.
- If not misery, then degradation: such is the last alternative
- which machinery offers to the workman. For it is with a machine
- as with a piece of artillery: the captain excepted, those whom it
- occupies are servants, slaves.
- Since the establishment of large factories, a multitude of little
- industries have disappeared from the domestic hearth: does any
- one believe that the girls who work for ten and fifteen cents
- have as much intelligence as their ancestors?
- "After the establishment of the railway from Paris to Saint
- Germain," M. Dunoyer tells us, "there were established between
- Pecq and a multitude of places in the more or less immediate
- vicinity such a number of omnibus and stage lines that this
- establishment, contrary to all expectation, has considerably
- increased the employment of horses."
- CONTRARY TO ALL EXPECTATION! It takes an economist not to
- expect these things. Multiply machinery, and you increase the
- amount of arduous and disagreeable labor to be done: this
- apothegm is as certain as any of those which date from the
- deluge. Accuse me, if you choose, of ill-will towards the most
- precious invention of our century,--nothing shall prevent me from
- saying that the principal result of railways, after the
- subjection of petty industry, will be the creation of a
- population of degraded laborers,--signalmen, sweepers, loaders,
- lumpers, draymen, watchmen, porters, weighers, greasers,
- cleaners, stokers, firemen, etc. Two thousand miles of railway
- will give France an additional fifty thousand serfs: it is not
- for such people, certainly, that M. Chevalier asks professional
- schools.
- Perhaps it will be said that, the mass of transportation having
- increased in much greater proportion than the number of
- day-laborers, the difference is to the advantage of the railway,
- and that, all things considered, there is progress. The
- observation may even be generalized and the same argument applied
- to all industries.
- But it is precisely out of this generality of the phenomenon that
- springs the subjection of laborers. Machinery plays the leading
- role in industry, man is secondary: all the genius displayed by
- labor tends to the degradation of the proletariat. What a
- glorious nation will be ours when, among forty millions of
- inhabitants, it shall count thirty-five millions of drudges,
- paper-scratchers, and flunkies!
- With machinery and the workshop, divine right--that is, the
- principle of authority--makes its entrance into political
- economy. Capital, Mastership, Privilege, Monopoly, Loaning,
- Credit, Property, etc.,--such are, in economic language, the
- various names of I know not what, but which is otherwise called
- Power, Authority, Sovereignty, Written Law, Revelation, Religion,
- God in short, cause and principle of all our miseries and all our
- crimes, and who, the more we try to define him, the more eludes
- us.
- Is it, then, impossible that, in the present condition of
- society, the workshop with its hierarchical organization, and
- machinery, instead of serving exclusively the interests of the
- least numerous, the least industrious, and the wealthiest class,
- should be employed for the benefit of all?
- That is what we are going to examine.
- % 3.--Of preservatives against the disastrous influence of
- machinery.
- Reduction of manual labor is synonymous with lowering of price,
- and, consequently, with increase of exchange, since, if the
- consumer pays less, he will buy more.
- But reduction of manual labor is synonymous also with restriction
- of market, since, if the producer earns less, he will buy less.
- And this is the course that things actually take. The
- concentration of forces in the workshop and the intervention of
- capital in production, under the name of machinery, engender at
- the same time overproduction and destitution; and everybody has
- witnessed these two scourges, more to be feared than incendiarism
- and plague, develop in our day on the vastest scale and with
- devouring intensity. Nevertheless it is impossible for us to
- retreat: it is necessary to produce, produce always, produce
- cheaply; otherwise, the existence of society is compromised. The
- laborer, who, to escape the degradation with which the principle
- of division threatened him, had created so many marvellous
- machines, now finds himself either prohibited or subjugated by
- his own works. Against this alternative what means are proposed?
- M. de Sismondi, like all men of patriarchal ideas, would like the
- division of labor, with machinery and manufactures, to be
- abandoned, and each family to return to the system of primitive
- indivision,--that is, to EACH ONE BY HIMSELF, EACH ONE FOR
- HIMSELF, in the most literal meaning of the words. That would be
- to retrograde; it is impossible.
- M. Blanqui returns to the charge with his plan of participation
- by the workman, and of consolidation of all industries in a
- joint-stock company for the benefit of the collective laborer. I
- have shown that this plan would impair public welfare without
- appreciably improving the condition of the laborers; and M.
- Blanqui himself seems to share this sentiment. How reconcile, in
- fact, this participation of the workman in the profits with the
- rights of inventors, contractors, and capitalists, of whom the
- first have to reimburse themselves for large outlays, as well as
- for their long and patient efforts; the second continually
- endanger the wealth they have acquired, and take upon themselves
- alone the chances of their enterprises, which are often very
- hazardous; and the third could sustain no reduction of their
- dividends without in some way losing their savings? How
- harmonize, in a word, the equality desirable to establish between
- laborers and employers with the preponderance which cannot be
- taken from heads of establishments, from loaners of capital, and
- from inventors, and which involves so clearly their exclusive
- appropriation of the profits? To decree by a law the admission
- of all workmen to a share of the profits would be to pronounce
- the dissolution of society: all the economists have seen
- this so clearly that they have finally changed into an
- exhortation to employers what had first occurred to them as a
- project. Now, as long as the wage-worker gets no profit save
- what may be allowed him by the contractor, it is perfectly safe
- to assume that eternal poverty will be his lot: it is not in the
- power of the holders of labor to make it otherwise.
- For the rest, the idea, otherwise very laudable, of associating
- workmen with employers tends to this communistic conclusion,
- evidently false in its premises: The last word of machinery is to
- make man rich and happy without the necessity of labor on his
- part. Since, then, natural agencies must do everything for us,
- machinery ought to belong to the State, and the goal of progress
- is communism.
- I shall examine the communistic theory in its place.
- But I believe that I ought to immediately warn the partisans of
- this utopia that the hope with which they flatter themselves in
- relation to machinery is only an illusion of the economists,
- something like perpetual motion, which is always sought and never
- found, because asked of a power which cannot give it. Machines
- do not go all alone: to keep them in motion it is necessary to
- organize an immense service around them; so that in the end, man
- creating for himself an amount of work proportional to the number
- of instruments with which he surrounds himself, the principal
- consideration in the matter of machinery is much less to divide
- its products than to see that it is fed,--that is, to continually
- renew the motive power. Now, this motive power is not air,
- water, steam, electricity; it is labor,--that is, the market.
- A railroad suppresses all along its line conveyances, stages,
- harness- makers, saddlers, wheelwrights, inn-keepers: I take
- facts as they are just after the establishment of the road.
- Suppose the State, as a measure of preservation or in obedience
- to the principle of indemnity, should make the laborers displaced
- by the railroad its proprietors or operators: the transportation
- rates, let us suppose, being reduced by twenty-five per cent.
- (otherwise of what use is the railroad?), the income of all these
- laborers united will be diminished by a like amount,--which is to
- say that a fourth of the persons formerly living by conveyances
- will find themselves literally without resources, in spite of the
- munificence of the State. To meet their deficit they have but
- one hope,--that the mass of transportation effected over the line
- may be increased by twenty-five per cent., or else that they may
- find employment in other lines of industry,--which seems at first
- impossible, since, by the hypothesis and in fact, places are
- everywhere filled, proportion is maintained everywhere, and the
- supply is sufficient for the demand.
- Moreover it is very necessary, if it be desired to increase the
- mass of transportation, that a fresh impetus be given to labor in
- other industries. Now, admitting that the laborers displaced by
- this over- production find employment, and that their
- distribution among the various kinds of labor proves as easy in
- practice as in theory, the difficulty is still far from settled.
- For the number of those engaged in circulation being to the
- number of those engaged in production as one hundred to one
- thousand, in order to obtain, with a circulation one- fourth less
- expensive,--in other words, one-fourth more powerful,--the same
- revenue as before, it will be necessary to strengthen production
- also by one-fourth,--that is, to add to the agricultural and
- industrial army, not twenty-five,--the figure which indicates the
- proportionality of the carrying industry,--but two hundred and
- fifty. But, to arrive at this result, it will be necessary
- to create machines,--what is worse, to create men: which
- continually brings the question back to the same point. Thus
- contradiction upon contradiction: now not only is labor, in
- consequence of machinery, lacking to men, but also men, in
- consequence of their numerical weakness and the insufficiency of
- their consumption, are lacking to machinery: so that, pending the
- establishment of equilibrium, there is at once a lack of work and
- a lack of arms, a lack of products and a lack of markets. And
- what we say of the railroad is true of all industries: always the
- man and the machine pursue each other, the former never attaining
- rest, the latter never attaining satisfaction.
- Whatever the pace of mechanical progress; though machines should
- be invented a hundred times more marvellous than the mule-jenny,
- the knitting-machine, or the cylinder press; though forces should
- be discovered a hundred times more powerful than steam,--very far
- from freeing humanity, securing its leisure, and making the
- production of everything gratuitous, these things would have no
- other effect than to multiply labor, induce an increase of
- population, make the chains of serfdom heavier, render life more
- and more expensive, and deepen the abyss which separates the
- class that commands and enjoys from the class that obeys and
- suffers.
- Suppose now all these difficulties overcome; suppose the laborers
- made available by the railroad adequate to the increase of
- service demanded for the support of the locomotive,--compensation
- being effected without pain, nobody will suffer; on the contrary,
- the well-being of each will be increased by a fraction of the
- profit realized by the substitution of the railway for the
- stage-coach. What then, I shall be asked, prevents these things
- from taking place with such regularity and precision? And what
- is easier than for an intelligent government to so manage all
- industrial transitions?
- I have pushed the hypothesis as far as it could go in order to
- show, on the one hand, the end to which humanity is tending, and,
- on the other, the difficulties which it must overcome in order to
- attain it. Surely the providential order is that progress should
- be effected, in so far as machinery is concerned, in the way that
- I have just spoken of: but what embarrasses society's march and
- makes it go from Charybdis to Scylla is precisely the fact that
- it is not organized. We have reached as yet only the second
- phase of its evolution, and already we have met upon our road two
- chasms which seem insuperable,--division of labor and machinery.
- How save the parcellaire workman, if he is a man of intelligence,
- from degradation, or, if he is degraded already, lift him to
- intellectual life? How, in the second place, give birth among
- laborers to that solidarity of interest without which industrial
- progress counts its steps by its catastrophes, when these same
- laborers are radically divided by labor, wages, intelligence, and
- liberty,--that is, by egoism? How, in short, reconcile what the
- progress already accomplished has had the effect of rendering
- irreconcilable? To appeal to communism and fraternity would be
- to anticipate dates: there is nothing in common, there can exist
- no fraternity, between such creatures as the division of labor
- and the service of machinery have made. It is not in that
- direction--at least for the present--that we must seek a
- solution.
- Well! it will be said, since the evil lies still more in the
- minds than in the system, let us come back to instruction, let us
- labor for the education of the people.
- In order that instruction may be useful, in order that it may
- even be received, it is necessary, first of all, that the pupil
- should be free, just as, before planting a piece of ground, we
- clear it of thorns and dog-grass. Moreover, the best system
- of education, even so far as philosophy and morality are
- concerned, would be that of professional education: once more,
- how reconcile such education with parcellaire division and the
- service of machinery? How shall the man who, by the effect of
- his labor, has become a slave,--that is, a chattel, a thing,--
- again become a person by the same labor, or in continuing the
- same exercise? Why is it not seen that these ideas are mutually
- repellent, and that, if, by some impossibility, the proletaire
- could reach a certain degree of intelligence, he would make use
- of it in the first place to revolutionize society and change all
- civil and industrial relations? And what I say is no vain
- exaggeration. The working class, in Paris and the large cities,
- is vastly superior in point of ideas to what it was twenty-five
- years ago; now, let them tell me if this class is not decidedly,
- energetically revolutionary! And it will become more and more so
- in proportion as it shall acquire the ideas of justice and order,
- in proportion especially as it shall reach an understanding of
- the mechanism of property.
- Language,--I ask permission to recur once more to
- etymology,--language seems to me to have clearly expressed the
- moral condition of the laborer, after he has been, if I may so
- speak, depersonalized by industry. In the Latin the idea of
- servitude implies that of subordination of man to things; and
- when later feudal law declared the serf ATTACHED TO THE GLEBE, it
- only periphrased the literal meaning of the word servus.[16]
- Spontaneous reason, oracle of fate itself, had therefore
- condemned the subaltern workman, before science had established
- his debasement. Such being the case, what can the efforts of
- philanthropy do for beings whom Providence has rejected?
- [16] In spite of the most approved authorities, I cannot accept
- the idea that serf, in Latin servus, was so called from servare,
- to keep, because the slave was a prisoner of war who was kept for
- labor. Servitude, or at least domesticity, is certainly prior to
- war, although war may have noticeably strengthened it. Why,
- moreover, if such was the origin of the idea as well as of the
- thing, should they not have said, instead of serv-us, serv-atus,
- in conformity with grammatical deduction? To me the real
- etymology is revealed in the opposition of serv-are and serv-ire,
- the primitive theme of which is ser-o, in-sero, to join, to
- press,whence ser-ies, joint, continuity, ser-a, lock, sertir,
- insert, etc. All these words imply the idea of a principal
- thing, to which is joined an accessory, as an object of special
- usefulness. Thence serv-ire, to be an object of usefulness, a
- thing secondary to another; serv-are, as we say to press, to put
- aside, to assign a thing its utility; serv-us, a man at hand, a
- utility, a chattel, in short, a man of service. The opposite of
- servus is dom-inus (dom-us, dom-anium, and dom-are); that is, the
- head of the household, the master of the house, he who utilizes
- men, servat, animals, domat, and things, possidet. That
- consequently prisoners of war should have been reserved for
- slavery, servati ad servitium, or rather serti ad glebam, is
- perfectly conceivable; their destiny being known, they have
- simply taken their name from it.
- Labor is the education of our liberty. The ancients had a
- profound perception of this truth when they distinguished the
- servile arts from the liberal arts. For, like profession, like
- ideas; like ideas, like morals. Everything in slavery takes on
- the character of degradation,-- habits, tastes, inclinations,
- sentiments, pleasures: it involves universal subversion. Occupy
- one's self with the education of the poor! But that would create
- the most cruel antagonism in these degenerate souls; that would
- inspire them with ideas which labor would render intolerable to
- them, affections incompatible with the brutishness of their
- condition, pleasures of which the perception is dulled in them.
- If such a project could succeed, instead of making a man of the
- laborer, it would make a demon of him. Just study those faces
- which people the prisons and the galleys, and tell me if most of
- them do not belong to subjects whom the revelation of the
- beautiful, of elegance, of wealth, of comfort, of honor, and of
- science, of all that makes the dignity of man, has found too
- weak, and so has demoralized and killed.
- At least wages should be fixed, say the less audacious; schedules
- of rates should be prepared in all industries, to be accepted by
- employers and workmen.
- This hypothesis of salvation is cited by M. Fix. And he answers
- victoriously:
- Such schedules have been made in England and elsewhere; their
- value is known; everywhere they have been violated as soon as
- accepted, both by employers and by workmen.
- The causes of the violation of the schedules are easy to fathom:
- they are to be found in machinery, in the incessant processes and
- combinations of industry. A schedule is agreed upon at a given
- moment: but suddenly there comes a new invention which gives its
- author the power to lower the price of merchandise. What will
- the other employers do? They will cease to manufacture and will
- discharge their workmen, or else they will propose to them a
- reduction. It is the only course open to them, pending a
- discovery by them in turn of some process by means of which,
- without lowering the rate of wages, they will be able to produce
- more cheaply than their competitors: which will be equivalent
- again to a suppression of workmen.
- M. Leon Faucher seems inclined to favor a system of indemnity.
- He says:
- We readily conceive that, in some interest or other, the State,
- representing the general desire, should command the sacrifice of
- an industry.
- It is always supposed to command it, from the moment that it
- grants to each the liberty to produce, and protects and defends
- this liberty against all encroachment.
- But this is an extreme measure, an experiment which is always
- perilous, and which should be accompanied by all possible
- consideration for individuals. The State has no right to take
- from a class of citizens the labor by which they live, before
- otherwise providing for their subsistence or assuring itself that
- they will find in some new industry employment for their minds
- and arms. It is a principle in civilized countries that the
- government cannot seize a piece of private property, even on
- grounds of public utility, without first buying out the
- proprietor by a just indemnity paid in advance. Now, labor seems
- to us property quite as legitimate, quite as sacred, as a field
- or a house, and we do not understand why it should be
- expropriated without any sort of compensation. . . .
- As chimerical as we consider the doctrines which represent
- government as the universal purveyor of labor in society, to the
- same extent does it seem to us just and necessary that every
- displacement of labor in the name of public utility should be
- effected only by means of a compensation or a transition, and
- that neither individuals nor classes should be sacrificed to
- State considerations. Power, in well- constituted nations, has
- always time and money to give for the mitigation of these partial
- sufferings. And it is precisely because industry does not
- emanate from it, because it is born and developed under the free
- and individual initiative of citizens, that the government is
- bound, when it disturbs its course, to offer it a sort of
- reparation or indemnity.
- There's sense for you: whatever M. Leon Faucher may say, he calls
- for the organization of labor. For government to see to it that
- EVERY DISPLACEMENT OF LABOR IS EFFECTED ONLY BY MEANS OF A
- COMPENSATION OR A TRANSITION, AND THAT INDIVIDUALS AND CLASSES
- ARE NEVER SACRIFICED TO STATE CONSIDERATIONS,--that is, to the
- progress of industry and the liberty of enterprise, the supreme
- law of the State,--is without any doubt to constitute itself, in
- some way that the future shall determine, the PURVEYOR OF LABOR
- IN SOCIETY and the guardian of wages. And, as we have many times
- repeated, inasmuch as industrial progress and consequently the
- work of disarranging and rearranging classes in society is
- continual, it is not a special transition for each innovation
- that needs to be discovered, but rather a general principle, an
- organic law of transition, applicable to all possible cases and
- producing its effect itself. Is M. Leon Faucher in a position to
- formulate this law and reconcile the various antagonisms which we
- have described? No, since he prefers to stop at the idea of an
- indemnity. POWER, he says, IN WELL-ORGANIZED NATIONS, HAS ALWAYS
- TIME AND MONEY TO GIVE FOR THE MITIGATION OF THESE PARTIAL
- SUFFERINGS. I am sorry for M. Faucher's generous intentions, but
- they seem to me radically impracticable.
- Power has no time and money save what it takes from the
- taxpayers. To indemnify by taxation laborers thrown out of work
- would be to visit ostracism upon new inventions and establish
- communism by means of the bayonet; that is no solution of the
- difficulty. It is useless to insist further on indemnification
- by the State. Indemnity, applied according to M. Faucher's
- views, would either end in industrial despotism, in something
- like the government of Mohammed-Ali, or else would degenerate
- into a poor-tax,--that is, into a vain hypocrisy. For the good
- of humanity it were better not to indemnify, and to let labor
- seek its own eternal constitution.
- There are some who say: Let government carry laborers thrown out
- of work to points where private industry is not established,
- where individual enterprise cannot reach. We have mountains to
- plant again with trees, ten or twelve million acres of land to
- clear, canals to dig, in short, a thousand things of immediate
- and general utility to undertake.
- "We certainly ask our readers' pardon for it," answers M. Fix;
- "but here again we are obliged to call for the intervention of
- capital. These surfaces, certain communal lands excepted, are
- fallow, because, if cultivated, they would yield no net product,
- and very likely not even the costs of cultivation. These lands
- are possessed by proprietors who either have or have not the
- capital necessary to cultivate them. In the former case, the
- proprietor would very probably content himself, if he cultivated
- these lands, with a very small profit, and perhaps would forego
- what is called the rent of the land: but he has found that,
- in undertaking such cultivation, he would lose his original
- capital, and his other calculations have shown him that the sale
- of the products would not cover the costs of cultivation. . . .
- All things considered, therefore, this land will remain fallow,
- because capital that should be put into it would yield no profit
- and would be lost. If it were otherwise, all these lands would
- be immediately put in cultivation; the savings now disposed of in
- another direction would necessarily gravitate in a certain
- proportion to the cultivation of land; for capital has no
- affections: it has interests, and always seeks that employment
- which is surest and most lucrative."
- This argument, very well reasoned, amounts to saying that the
- time to cultivate its waste lands has not arrived for France,
- just as the time for railroads has not arrived for the Kaffres
- and the Hottentots. For, as has been said in the second chapter,
- society begins by working those sources which yield most easily
- and surely the most necessary and least expensive products: it is
- only gradually that it arrives at the utilization of things
- relatively less productive. Since the human race has been
- tossing about on the face of its globe, it has struggled with no
- other task; for it the same care is ever recurrent,--that of
- assuring its subsistence while going forward in the path of
- discovery. In order that such clearing of land may not become a
- ruinous speculation, a cause of misery, in other words, in order
- that it may be possible, it is necessary, therefore, to multiply
- still further our capital and machinery, discover new processes,
- and more thoroughly divide labor. Now, to solicit the government
- to take such an initiative is to imitate the peasants who, on
- seeing the approach of a storm, begin to pray to God and to
- invoke their saint. Governments--today it cannot be too often
- repeated--are the representatives of Divinity,--I had almost said
- executors of celestial vengeance: they can do nothing for us.
- Does the English government, for instance, know any way of
- giving labor to the unfortunates who take refuge in its
- workhouses? And if it knew, would it dare? AID YOURSELF, AND
- HEAVEN WILL AID YOU! This note of popular distrust of Divinity
- tells us also what we must expect of power,--nothing.
- Arrived at the second station of our Calvary, instead of
- abandoning ourselves to sterile contemplations, let us be more
- and more attentive to the teachings of destiny. The guarantee of
- our liberty lies in the progress of our torture.
- CHAPTER V.
- THIRD PERIOD.--COMPETITION.
- Between the hundred-headed hydra, division of labor, and the
- unconquered dragon, machinery, what will become of humanity? A
- prophet has said it more than two thousand years ago: Satan
- looks on his victim, and the fires of war are kindled, Aspexit
- gentes, et dissolvit. To save us from two scourges, famine and
- pestilence, Providence sends us discord.
- Competition represents that philosophical era in which, a semi-
- understanding of the antinomies of reason having given birth to
- the art of sophistry, the characteristics of the false and the
- true were confounded, and in which, instead of doctrines, they
- had nothing but deceptive mental tilts. Thus the industrial
- movement faithfully reproduces the metaphysical movement; the
- history of social economy is to be found entire in the writings
- of the philosophers. Let us study this interesting phase, whose
- most striking characteristic is to take away the judgment of
- those who believe as well as those who protest.
- % 1.--Necessity of competition.
- M. Louis Reybaud, novelist by profession, economist on occasion,
- breveted by the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences for
- his anti-reformatory caricatures, and become, with the lapse of
- time, one of the writers most hostile to social ideas,--M. Louis
- Reybaud, whatever he may do, is none the less profoundly imbued
- with these same ideas: the opposition which he thus exhibits is
- neither in his heart nor in his mind; it is in the facts.
- In the first edition of his "Studies of Contemporary Reformers,"
- M. Reybaud, moved by the sight of social sufferings as well as
- the courage of these founders of schools, who believed that they
- could reform the world by an explosion of sentimentalism, had
- formally expressed the opinion that the surviving feature of all
- their systems was ASSOCIATION. M. Dunoyer, one of M. Reybaud's
- judges, bore this testimony, the more flattering to M. Reybaud
- from being slightly ironical in form:
- M. Reybaud, who has exposed with so much accuracy and talent, in
- a book which the French Academy has crowned, the vices of the
- three principal reformatory systems, holds fast to the principle
- common to them, which serves as their base,--association.
- Association in his eyes, he declares, is THE GREATEST PROBLEM OF
- MODERN TIMES. It is called, he says, to solve that of the
- distribution of the fruits of labor. Though authority can do
- nothing towards the solution of this problem, association COULD
- DO EVERYTHING. M. Reybaud speaks here like a writer of the
- phalansterian school. . . .
- M. Reybaud had advanced a little, as one may see. Endowed with
- too much good sense and good faith not to perceive the precipice,
- he soon felt that he was straying, and began a retrograde
- movement. I do not call this about-face a crime on his part: M.
- Reybaud is one of those men who cannot justly be held responsible
- for their metaphors. He had spoken before reflecting, he
- retracted: what more natural! If the socialists must blame any
- one, let it be M. Dunoyer, who had prompted M. Reybaud's
- recantation by this singular compliment.
- M. Dunoyer was not slow in perceiving that his words had not
- fallen on closed ears. He relates, for the glory of sound
- principles, that, "in a second edition of the `Studies of
- Reformers,' M. Reybaud has himself tempered the absolute tone of
- his expressions. He has said, instead of could do EVERYTHING,
- could do MUCH."
- It was an important modification, as M. Dunoyer brought clearly
- to his notice, but it still permitted M. Reybaud to write at the
- same time:
- These symptoms are grave; they may be considered as prophecies of
- a confused organization, in which labor would seek an equilibrium
- and a regularity which it now lacks. . . . At the bottom of all
- these efforts is hidden a principle, association, which it would
- be wrong to condemn on the strength of irregular manifestations.
- Finally M. Reybaud has loudly declared himself a partisan of
- competition, which means that he has decidedly abandoned the
- principle of association. For if by association we are to
- understand only the forms of partnership fixed by the commercial
- code, the philosophy of which has been summarized for us by MM.
- Troplong and Delangle, it is no longer worth while to distinguish
- between socialists and economists, between one party which seeks
- association and another which maintains that association exists.
- Let no one imagine, because M. Reybaud has happened to say
- heedlessly yes and no to a question of which he does not seem to
- have yet formed a clear idea, that I class him among those
- speculators of socialism, who, after having launched a hoax into
- the world, begin immediately to make their retreat, under the
- pretext that, the idea now belonging to the public domain, there
- is nothing more for them to do but to leave it to make its way.
- M. Reybaud, in my opinion, belongs rather to the category of
- dupes, which includes in its bosom so many honest people and
- people of so much brains. M. Reybaud will remain, then, in my
- eyes, the vir probus dicendi peritus, the conscientious and
- skilful writer, who may easily be caught napping, but who never
- expresses anything that he does not see or feel. Moreover, M.
- Reybaud, once placed on the ground of economic ideas, would find
- the more difficulty in being consistent with himself because of
- the clearness of his mind and the accuracy of his reasoning. I
- am going to make this curious experiment under the reader's eyes.
- If I could be understood by M. Reybaud, I would say to him: Take
- your stand in favor of competition, you will be wrong; take your
- stand against competition, still you will be wrong: which
- signifies that you will always be right. After that, if,
- convinced that you have not erred either in the first edition of
- your book or in the fourth, you should succeed in formulating
- your sentiment in an intelligible manner, I will look upon you as
- an economist of as great genius as Turgot and A. Smith; but I
- warn you that then you will resemble the latter, of whom you
- doubtless know little; you will be a believer in equality. Do
- you accept the wager?
- To better prepare M. Reybaud for this sort of reconciliation with
- himself, let us show him first that this versatility of judgment,
- for which anybody else in my place would reproach him with
- insulting bitterness, is a treason, not on the part of the
- writer, but on the part of the facts of which he has made himself
- the interpreter.
- In March, 1844, M. Reybaud published on oleaginous seeds--a
- subject which interested the city of Marseilles, his
- birthplace--an article in which he took vigorous ground in favor
- of free competition and the oil of sesame. According to the
- facts gathered by the author, which seem authentic, sesame would
- yield from forty-five to forty-six per cent. of oil, while the
- poppy and the colza yield only twenty-five to thirty per cent.,
- and the olive simply twenty to twenty-two. Sesame, for this
- reason, is disliked by the northern manufacturers, who have
- asked and obtained its prohibition. Nevertheless the English are
- on the watch, ready to take possession of this valuable branch of
- commerce. Let them prohibit the seed, says M. Reybaud, the oil
- will reach us mixed, in soap, or in some other way: we shall have
- lost the profit of manufacture. Moreover, the interest of our
- marine service requires the protection of this trade; it is a
- matter of no less than forty thousand casks of seed, which
- implies a maritime outfit of three hundred vessels and three
- thousand sailors.
- These facts are conclusive: forty-five per cent. of oil instead
- of twenty-five; in quality superior to all the oils of France;
- reduction in the price of an article of prime necessity; a saving
- to consumers; three hundred ships, three thousand sailors,--such
- would be the value to us of liberty of commerce. Therefore, long
- live competition and sesame!
- Then, in order to better assure these brilliant results, M.
- Reybaud, impelled by his patriotism and going straight in pursuit
- of his idea, observes--very judiciously in our opinion--that the
- government should abstain henceforth from all treaties of
- reciprocity in the matter of transportation: he asks that French
- vessels may carry the imports as well as the exports of French
- commerce.
- "What we call reciprocity," he says, "is a pure fiction, the
- advantage of which is reaped by whichever of the parties can
- furnish navigation at the smallest expense. Now, as in France
- the elements of navigation, such as the purchase of the ships,
- the wages of the crews, and the costs of outfit, rise to an
- excessive figure, higher than in any of the other maritime
- nations, it follows that every reciprocity treaty is equivalent
- on our part to a treaty of abdication, and that, instead of
- agreeing to an act of mutual convenience, we resign ourselves,
- knowingly or involuntarily, to a sacrifice."
- And M. Reybaud then points out the disastrous consequences of
- reciprocity:
- France consumes five hundred thousand bales of cotton, and the
- Americans land them on our wharves; she uses enormous quantities
- of coal, and the English do the carrying thereof; the Swedes and
- Norwegians deliver to us themselves their iron and wood; the
- Dutch, their cheeses; the Russians, their hemp and wheat; the
- Genoese, their rice; the Spaniards, their oils; the Sicilians,
- their sulphur; the Greeks and Armenians, all the commodities of
- the Mediterranean and Black seas."
- Evidently such a state of things is intolerable, for it ends in
- rendering our merchant marine useless. Let us hasten back, then,
- into our ship yards, from which the cheapness of foreign
- navigation tends to exclude us. Let us close our doors to
- foreign vessels, or at least let us burden them with a heavy tax.
- Therefore, down with competition and rival marines!
- Does M. Reybaud begin to understand that his
- economico-socialistic oscillations are much more innocent than he
- would have believed? What gratitude he owes me for having
- quieted his conscience, which perhaps was becoming alarmed!
- The reciprocity of which M. Reybaud so bitterly complains is only
- a form of commercial liberty. Grant full and entire liberty of
- trade, and our flag is driven from the surface of the seas, as
- our oils would be from the continent. Therefore we shall pay
- dearer for our oil, if we insist on making it ourselves; dearer
- for our colonial products, if we wish to carry them ourselves.
- To secure cheapness it would be necessary, after having abandoned
- our oils, to abandon our marine: as well abandon straightway our
- cloths, our linens, our calicoes, our iron products, and then, as
- an isolated industry necessarily costs too much, our wines, our
- grains, our forage! Whichever course you may choose, privilege
- or liberty, you arrive at the impossible, at the absurd.
- Undoubtedly there exists a principle of reconciliation; but,
- unless it be utterly despotic, it must be derived from a law
- superior to liberty itself: now, it is this law which no one has
- yet defined, and which I ask of the economists, if they really
- are masters of their science. For I cannot consider him a savant
- who, with the greatest sincerity and all the wit in the world,
- preaches by turns, fifteen lines apart, liberty and monopoly.
- Is it not immediately and intuitively evident that COMPETITION
- DESTROYS COMPETITION? Is there a theorem in geometry more
- certain, more peremptory, than that? How then, upon what
- conditions, in what sense, can a principle which is its own
- denial enter into science? How can it become an organic law of
- society? If competition is necessary; if, as the school says, it
- is a postulate of production,--how does it become so devastating
- in its effects? And if its most certain effect is to ruin those
- whom it incites, how does it become useful? For the
- INCONVENIENCES which follow in its train, like the good which it
- procures, are not accidents arising from the work of man: both
- follow logically from the principle, and subsist by the same
- title and face to face.
- And, in the first place, competition is as essential to labor as
- division, since it is division itself returning in another form,
- or rather, raised to its second power; division, I say, no
- longer, as in the first period of economic evolution, adequate to
- collective force, and consequently absorbing the personality of
- the laborer in the workshop, but giving birth to liberty by
- making each subdivision of labor a sort of sovereignty in which
- man stands in all his power and independence. Competition, in a
- word, is liberty in division and in all the divided parts:
- beginning with the most comprehensive functions, it tends toward
- its realization even in the inferior operations of parcellaire
- labor.
- Here the communists raise an objection. It is necessary, they
- say, in all things, to distinguish between use and abuse. There
- is a useful, praiseworthy, moral competition, a competition which
- enlarges the heart and the mind, a noble and generous
- competition,--it is emulation; and why should not this emulation
- have for its object the advantage of all? There is another
- competition, pernicious, immoral, unsocial, a jealous competition
- which hates and which kills,--it is egoism.
- So says communism; so expressed itself, nearly a year ago, in its
- social profession of faith, the journal, "La Reforme."
- Whatever reluctance I may feel to oppose men whose ideas are at
- bottom my own, I cannot accept such dialectics. "La Reforme," in
- believing that it could reconcile everything by a distinction
- more grammatical than real, has made use, without suspecting it,
- of the golden mean,-- that is, of the worst sort of diplomacy.
- Its argument is exactly the same as that of M. Rossi in regard to
- the division of labor: it consists in setting competition and
- morality against each other, in order to limit them by each
- other, as M. Rossi pretended to arrest and restrict economic
- inductions by morality, cutting here, lopping there, to suit the
- need and the occasion. I have refuted M. Rossi by asking him
- this simple question: How can science be in disagreement with
- itself, the science of wealth with the science of duty? Likewise
- I ask the communists: How can a principle whose development is
- clearly useful be at the same time pernicious?
- They say: emulation is not competition. I note, in the first
- place, that this pretended distinction bears only on the
- divergent effects of the principle, which leads one to suppose
- that there were two principles which had been confounded.
- Emulation is nothing but competition itself; and, since they have
- thrown themselves into abstractions, I willingly plunge in also.
- There is no emulation without an object, just as there is no
- passional initiative without an object; and as the object of
- every passion is necessarily analogous to the passion
- itself,--woman to the lover, power to the ambitious, gold to the
- miser, a crown to the poet,--so the object of industrial
- emulation is necessarily profit.
- No, rejoins the communist, the laborer's object of emulation
- should be general utility, fraternity, love.
- But society itself, since, instead of stopping at the individual
- man, who is in question at this moment, they wish to attend only
- to the collective man,--society, I say, labors only with a view
- to wealth; comfort, happiness, is its only object. Why, then,
- should that which is true of society not be true of the
- individual also, since, after all, society is man and entire
- humanity lives in each man? Why substitute for the immediate
- object of emulation, which in industry is personal welfare, that
- far-away and almost metaphysical motive called general welfare,
- especially when the latter is nothing without the former and can
- result only from the former?
- Communists, in general, build up a strange illusion: fanatics on
- the subject of power, they expect to secure through a central
- force, and in the special case in question, through collective
- wealth, by a sort of reversion, the welfare of the laborer who
- has created this wealth: as if the individual came into existence
- after society, instead of society after the individual. For that
- matter, this is not the only case in which we shall see the
- socialists unconsciously dominated by the traditions of the
- regime against which they protest.
- But what need of insisting? From the moment that the communist
- changes the name of things, vera rerum vocabala, he tacitly
- admits his powerlessness, and puts himself out of the question.
- That is why my sole reply to him shall be: In denying
- competition, you abandon the thesis; henceforth you have no place
- in the discussion. Some other time we will inquire how far man
- should sacrifice himself in the interest of all: for the moment
- the question is the solution of the problem of competition,--that
- is, the reconciliation of the highest satisfaction of egoism with
- social necessities; spare us your moralities.
- Competition is necessary to the constitution of value,--that is,
- to the very principle of distribution, and consequently to the
- advent of equality. As long as a product is supplied only by a
- single manufacturer, its real value remains a mystery, either
- through the producer's misrepresentation or through his neglect
- or inability to reduce the cost of production to its extreme
- limit. Thus the privilege of production is a real loss to
- society, and publicity of industry, like competition between
- laborers, a necessity. All the utopias ever imagined or
- imaginable cannot escape this law.
- Certainly I do not care to deny that labor and wages can and
- should be guaranteed; I even entertain the hope that the time of
- such guarantee is not far off: but I maintain that a guarantee of
- wages is impossible without an exact knowledge of value, and that
- this value can be discovered only by competition, not at all by
- communistic institutions or by popular decree. For in this there
- is something more powerful than the will of the legislator and of
- citizens,--namely, the absolute impossibility that man should do
- his duty after finding himself relieved of all responsibility to
- himself: now, responsibility to self, in the matter of labor,
- necessarily implies competition with others. Ordain that,
- beginning January 1, 1847, labor and wages are guaranteed to all:
- immediately an immense relaxation will succeed the extreme
- tension to which industry is now subjected; real value will
- fall rapidly below nominal value; metallic money, in spite of its
- effigy and stamp, will experience the fate of the assignats; the
- merchant will ask more and give less; and we shall find ourselves
- in a still lower circle in the hell of misery in which
- competition is only the third turn.
- Even were I to admit, with some socialists, that the
- attractiveness of labor may some day serve as food for emulation
- without any hidden thought of profit, of what utility could this
- utopia be in the phase which we are studying? We are yet only in
- the third period of economic evolution, in the third age of the
- constitution of labor,--that is, in a period when it is
- impossible for labor to be attractive. For the attractiveness of
- labor can result only from a high degree of physical, moral, and
- intellectual development of the laborer. Now, this development
- itself, this education of humanity by industry, is precisely the
- object of which we are in pursuit through the contradictions of
- social economy. How, then, could the attractiveness of labor
- serve us as a principle and lever, when it is still our object
- and our end?
- But, if it is unquestionable that labor, as the highest
- manifestation of life, intelligence, and liberty, carries with it
- its own attractiveness, I deny that this attractiveness can ever
- be wholly separated from the motive of utility, and consequently
- from a return of egoism; I deny, I say, labor for labor, just as
- I deny style for style, love for love, art for art. Style for
- style has produced in these days hasty literature and thoughtless
- improvisation; love for love leads to unnatural vice, onanism,
- and prostitution; art for art ends in Chinese knick-knacks,
- caricature, the worship of the ugly. When man no longer looks to
- labor for anything but the pleasure of exercise, he soon ceases
- to labor, he plays. History is full of facts which attest
- this degradation. The games of Greece, Isthmian, Olympic,
- Pythian, Nemean, exercises of a society which produced everything
- by its slaves; the life of the Spartans and the ancient Cretans,
- their models; the gymnasiums, playgrounds, horse-races, and
- disorders of the market-place among the Athenians; the
- occupations which Plato assigns to the warriors in his Republic,
- and which but represent the tastes of his century; finally, in
- our feudal society, the tilts and tourneys,--all these
- inventions, as well as many others which I pass in silence, from
- the game of chess, invented, it is said, at the siege of Troy by
- Palamedes, to the cards illustrated for Charles VI. by
- Gringonneur, are examples of what labor becomes as soon as the
- serious motive of utility is separated from it. Labor, real
- labor, that which produces wealth and gives knowledge, has too
- much need of regularity and perseverance and sacrifice to be long
- the friend of passion, fugitive in its nature, inconstant, and
- disorderly; it is something too elevated, too ideal, too
- philosophical, to become exclusively pleasure and
- enjoyment,--that is, mysticism and sentiment. The faculty of
- laboring, which distinguishes man from the brutes, has its source
- in the profoundest depths of the reason: how could it become in
- us a simple manifestation of life, a voluptuous act of our
- feeling?
- But if now they fall back upon the hypothesis of a transformation
- of our nature, unprecedented in history, and of which there has
- been nothing so far that could have expressed the idea, it is
- nothing more than a dream, unintelligible even to those who
- defend it, an inversion of progress, a contradiction given to the
- most certain laws of economic science; and my only reply is to
- exclude it from the discussion.
- Let us stay in the realm of facts, since facts alone have a
- meaning and can aid us. The French Revolution was effected for
- industrial liberty as well as for political liberty: and although
- France in 1789 had not seen all the consequences of the principle
- for the realization of which she asked,--let us say it
- boldly,--she was mistaken neither in her wishes nor in her
- expectation. Whoever would try to deny it would lose in my eyes
- the right to criticism: I will never dispute with an adversary
- who would posit as a principle the spontaneous error of
- twenty-five millions of men.
- At the end of the eighteenth century France, wearied with
- privileges, desired at any price to shake off the torpor of her
- corporations, and restore the dignity of the laborer by
- conferring liberty upon him. Everywhere it was necessary to
- emancipate labor, stimulate genius, and render the manufacturer
- responsible by arousing a thousand competitors and loading upon
- him alone the consequences of his indolence, ignorance, and
- insincerity. Before '89 France was ripe for the transition; it
- was Turgot who had the glory of effecting the first passage.
- Why then, if competition had not been a principle of social
- economy, a decree of destiny, a necessity of the human soul, why,
- instead of ABOLISHING corporations, masterships, and
- wardenships, did they not think rather of REPAIRING them all?
- Why, instead of a revolution, did they not content themselves
- with a reform? Why this negation, if a modification was
- sufficient? Especially as this middle party was entirely in the
- line of conservative ideas, which the bourgeoisie shared. Let
- communism, let quasi-socialistic democracy, which, in regard to
- the principle of competition, represent--though they do not
- suspect it--the system of the golden mean, the
- counter-revolutionary idea, explain to me this unanimity of the
- nation, if they can!
- Moreover the event confirmed the theory. Beginning with the
- Turgot ministry, an increase of activity and well-being
- manifested itself in the nation. The test seemed so decisive
- that it obtained the approval of all legislatures. Liberty of
- industry and commerce figure in our constitutions on a level with
- political liberty. To this liberty, in short, France owes the
- growth of her wealth during the last sixty years.
- After this capital fact, which establishes so triumphantly the
- necessity of competition, I ask permission to cite three or four
- others, which, being less general in their nature, will throw
- into bolder relief the influence of the principle which I defend.
- Why is our agriculture so prodigiously backward? How is it that
- routine and barbarism still hover, in so many localities, over
- the most important branch of national labor? Among the numerous
- causes that could be cited, I see, in the front rank, the absence
- of competition. The peasants fight over strips of ground; they
- compete with each other before the notary; in the fields, no.
- And speak to them of emulation, of the public good, and with what
- amazement you fill them! Let the king, they say (to them the
- king is synonymous with the State, with the public good, with
- society), let the king attend to his business, and we will attend
- to ours! Such is their philosophy and their patriotism. Ah! if
- the king could excite competition with them! Unfortunately it is
- impossible. While in manufactures competition follows from
- liberty and property, in agriculture liberty and property are a
- direct obstacle to competition. The peasant, rewarded, not
- according to his labor and intelligence, but according to the
- quality of the land and the caprice of God, aims, in cultivating,
- to pay the lowest possible wages and to make the least possible
- advance outlays. Sure of always finding a market for his goods,
- he is much more solicitous about reducing his expenses than about
- improving the soil and the quality of its products. He sows, and
- Providence does the rest. The only sort of competition known to
- the agricultural class is that of rents; and it cannot be denied
- that in France, and for instance in Beauce, it has led to useful
- results. But as the principle of this competition takes effect
- only at second hand, so to speak, as it does not emanate directly
- from the liberty and property of the cultivators, it disappears
- with the cause that produces it, so that, to insure the decline
- of agricultural industry in many localities, or at least to
- arrest its progress, perhaps it would suffice to make the farmers
- proprietors.
- Another branch of collective labor, which of late years has given
- rise to sharp debates, is that of public works. "To manage the
- building of a road, M. Dunoyer very well says, "perhaps a pioneer
- and a postilion would be better than an engineer fresh from the
- School of Roads and Bridges." There is no one who has not had
- occasion to verify the correctness of this remark.
- On one of our finest rivers, celebrated by the importance of its
- navigation, a bridge was being built. From the beginning of the
- work the rivermen had seen that the arches would be much too low
- to allow the circulation of boats at times when the river was
- high: they pointed this out to the engineer in charge of the
- work. Bridges, answered the latter with superb dignity, are made
- for those who pass over, not for those who pass under. The
- remark has become a proverb in that vicinity. But, as it is
- impossible for stupidity to prevail forever, the government has
- felt the necessity of revising the work of its agent, and as I
- write the arches of the bridge are being raised. Does any
- one believe that, if the merchants interested in the course of
- the navigable way had been charged with the enterprise at their
- own risk and peril, they would have had to do their work twice?
- One could fill a book with masterpieces of the same sort achieved
- by young men learned in roads and bridges, who, scarcely out of
- school and given life positions, are no longer stimulated by
- competition.
- In proof of the industrial capacity of the State, and
- consequently of the possibility of abolishing competition
- altogether, they cite the administration of the tobacco industry.
- There, they say, is no adulteration, no litigation, no
- bankruptcy, no misery. The condition of the workmen, adequately
- paid, instructed, sermonized, moralized, and assured of a
- retiring pension accumulated by their savings, is incomparably
- superior to that of the immense majority of workmen engaged in
- free industry.
- All this may be true: for my part, I am ignorant on the subject.
- I know nothing of what goes on in the administration of the
- tobacco factories; I have procured no information either from the
- directors or the workmen, and I have no need of any. How much
- does the tobacco sold by the administration cost? How much is it
- worth? You can answer the first of these questions: you only
- need to call at the first tobacco shop you see. But you can tell
- me nothing about the second, because you have no standard of
- comparison and are forbidden to verify by experiment the items of
- cost of administration, which it is consequently impossible to
- accept. Therefore the tobacco business, made into a monopoly,
- necessarily costs society more than it brings in; it is an
- industry which, instead of subsisting by its own product, lives
- by subsidies, and which consequently, far from furnishing us a
- model, is one of the first abuses which reform should strike
- down.
- And when I speak of the reform to be introduced in the production
- of tobacco, I do not refer simply to the enormous tax which
- triples or quadruples the value of this product; neither do I
- refer to the hierarchical organization of its employees, some of
- whom by their salaries are made aristocrats as expensive as they
- are useless, while others, hopeless receivers of petty wages, are
- kept forever in the situation of subalterns. I do not even speak
- of the privilege of the tobacco shops and the whole world of
- parasites which they support: I have particularly in view the
- useful labor, the labor of the workmen. From the very fact that
- the administration's workman has no competitors and is interested
- neither in profit nor loss, from the fact that he is not free, in
- a word, his product is necessarily less, and his service too
- expensive. This being so, let them say that the government
- treats its employees well and looks out for their comfort: what
- wonder? Why do not people see that liberty bears the burdens of
- privilege, and that, if, by some impossibility, all industries
- were to be treated like the tobacco industry, the source of
- subsidies failing, the nation could no longer balance its
- receipts and its expenses, and the State would become a bankrupt?
- Foreign products: I cite the testimony of an educated man, though
- not a political economist,--M. Liebig.
- Formerly France imported from Spain every year soda to the value
- of twenty or thirty millions of francs; for Spanish soda was the
- best. All through the war with England the price of soda, and
- consequently that of soap and glass, constantly rose. French
- manufacturers therefore had to suffer considerably from this
- state of things. Then it was that Leblanc discovered the method
- of extracting soda from common salt. This process was a source
- of wealth to France; the manufacture of soda acquired
- extraordinary proportions; but neither Leblanc nor Napoleon
- enjoyed the profit of the invention. The Restoration, which took
- advantage of the wrath of the people against the author of the
- continental blockade, refused to pay the debt of the emperor,
- whose promises had led to Leblanc's discoveries. . . .
- A few years ago, the king of Naples having undertaken to convert
- the Sicilian sulphur trade into a monopoly, England, which
- consumes an immense quantity of this sulphur, warned the king of
- Naples that, if the monopoly were maintained, it would be
- considered a casus belli. While the two governments were
- exchanging diplomatic notes, fifteen patents were taken out in
- England for the extraction of sulphuric acid from the limestones,
- iron pyrites, and other mineral substances in which England
- abounds. But the affair being arranged with the king of Naples,
- nothing came of these exploitations: it was simply established,
- by the attempts which were made, that the extraction of sulphuric
- acid by the new processes could have been carried on
- successfully, which perhaps would have annihilated Sicily's
- sulphur trade.
- Had it not been for the war with England, had not the king of
- Naples had a fancy for monopoly, it would have been a long time
- before any one in France would have thought of extracting soda
- from sea salt, or any one in England of getting sulphuric acid
- from the mountains of lime and pyrites which she contains. Now,
- that is precisely the effect of competition upon industry. Man
- rouses from his idleness only when want fills him with anxiety;
- and the surest way to extinguish his genius is to deliver him
- from all solicitude and take away from him the hope of profit and
- of the social distinction which results from it, by creating
- around him PEACE EVERYWHERE, PEACE ALWAYS, and transferring to
- the State the responsibility of his inertia.
- Yes, it must be admitted, in spite of modern quietism,--man's
- life is a permanent war, war with want, war with nature, war with
- his fellows, and consequently war with himself. The theory of a
- peaceful equality, founded on fraternity and sacrifice, is only a
- counterfeit of the Catholic doctrine of renunciation of the
- goods and pleasures of this world, the principle of beggary, the
- panegyric of misery. Man may love his fellow well enough to die
- for him; he does not love him well enough to work for him.
- To the theory of sacrifice, which we have just refuted in fact
- and in right, the adversaries of competition add another, which
- is just the opposite of the first: for it is a law of the mind
- that, when it does not know the truth, which is its point of
- equilibrium, it oscillates between two contradictions. This new
- theory of anti-competitive socialism is that of encouragements.
- What more social, more progressive in appearance, than
- encouragement of labor and of industry? There is no democrat who
- does not consider it one of the finest attributes of power, no
- utopian theorist who does not place it in the front rank as a
- means of organizing happiness. Now, government is by nature so
- incapable of directing labor that every reward bestowed by it is
- a veritable larceny from the common treasury. M. Reybaud shall
- furnish us the text of this induction.
- "The premiums granted to encourage exportation," observes M.
- Reybaud somewhere, "are equivalent to the taxes paid for the
- importation of raw material; the advantage remains absolutely
- null, and serves to encourage nothing but a vast system of
- smuggling."
- This result is inevitable. Abolish customs duties, and national
- industry suffers, as we have already seen in the case of sesame;
- maintain the duties without granting premiums for exportation,
- and national commerce will be beaten in foreign markets. To
- obviate this difficulty do you resort to premiums? You but
- restore with one hand what you have received with the other, and
- you provoke fraud, the last result, the caput mortuum, of all
- encouragements of industry. Hence it follows that every
- encouragement to labor, every reward bestowed upon industry,
- beyond the natural price of its product, is a gratuitous gift, a
- bribe taken out of the consumer and offered in his name to a
- favorite of power, in exchange for zero, for nothing. To
- encourage industry, then, is synonymous at bottom with
- encouraging idleness: it is one of the forms of swindling.
- In the interest of our navy the government had thought it best to
- grant to outfitters of transport-ships a premium for every man
- employed on their vessels. Now, I continue to quote M. Reybaud:
- On every vessel that starts for Newfoundland from sixty to
- seventy men embark. Of this number twelve are sailors: the
- balance consists of villagers snatched from their work in the
- fields, who, engaged as day laborers for the preparation of fish,
- remain strangers to the rigging, and have nothing that is marine
- about them except their feet and stomach. Nevertheless, these
- men figure on the rolls of the naval inscription, and there
- perpetuate a deception. When there is occasion to defend the
- institution of premiums, these are cited in its favor; they swell
- the numbers and contribute to success.
- Base jugglery! doubtless some innocent reformer will exclaim. Be
- it so: but let us analyze the fact, and try to disengage the
- general idea to be found therein.
- In principle the only encouragement to labor that science can
- admit is profit. For, if labor cannot find its reward in its own
- product, very far from encouraging it, it should be abandoned as
- soon as possible, and, if this same labor results in a net
- product, it is absurd to add to this net product a gratuitous
- gift, and thus overrate the value of the service. Applying this
- principle, I say then: If the merchant service calls only for
- ten thousand sailors, it should not be asked to support fifteen
- thousand; the shortest course for the government is to put five
- thousand conscripts on State vessels, and send them on their
- expeditions, like princes. Every encouragement offered to the
- merchant marine is a direct invitation to fraud,--what do I
- say?--a proposal to pay wages for an impossible service. Do the
- handling and discipline of vessels and all the conditions of
- maritime commerce accommodate themselves to these adjuncts of a
- useless personnel? What, then, can the ship-owner do in face of
- a government which offers him a bonus to embark on his vessel
- people of whom he has no need? If the ministry throws the money
- of the treasury into the street, am I guilty if I pick it up?
- Thus--and it is a point worthy of notice--the theory of
- encouragements emanates directly from the theory of sacrifice;
- and, in order to avoid holding man responsible, the opponents of
- competition, by the fatal contradiction of their ideas, are
- obliged to make him now a god, now a brute. And then they are
- astonished that society is not moved by their appeal! Poor
- children! men will never be better or worse than you see them now
- and than they always have been. As soon as their individual
- welfare solicits them, they desert the general welfare: in which
- I find them, if not honorable, at least worthy of excuse. It is
- your fault if you now demand of them more than they owe you and
- now stimulate their greed with rewards which they do not deserve.
- Man has nothing more precious than himself, and consequently no
- other law than his responsibility. The theory of self-sacrifice,
- like that of rewards, is a theory of rogues, subversive of
- society and morality; and by the very fact that you look either
- to sacrifice or to privilege for the maintenance of order, you
- create a new antagonism in society. Instead of causing the birth
- of harmony from the free activity of persons, you render the
- individual and the State strangers to each other; in commanding
- union, you breathe discord.
- To sum up, outside of competition there remains but this
- alternative,-- encouragement, which is a mystification, or
- sacrifice, which is hypocrisy.
- Therefore competition, analyzed in its principle, is an
- inspiration of justice; and yet we shall see that competition, in
- its results, is unjust.
- % 2.--Subversive effects of competition, and the destruction of
- liberty thereby.
- The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, says the Gospel, and
- the violent take it by force. These words are the allegory of
- society. In society regulated by labor, dignity, wealth, and
- glory are objects of competition; they are the reward of the
- strong, and competition may be defined as the regime of force.
- The old economists did not at first perceive this contradiction:
- the moderns have been forced to recognize it.
- "To elevate a State from the lowest degree of barbarism to the
- highest degree of opulence," wrote A. Smith, "but three things
- are necessary,-- peace, moderate taxes, and a tolerable
- administration of justice. All the rest is brought about by the
- NATURAL COURSE OF THINGS."
- On which the last translator of Smith, M. Blanqui, lets fall this
- gloomy comment:
- We have seen the natural course of things produce disastrous
- effects, and create anarchy in production, war for markets, and
- piracy in competition. The division of labor and the perfecting
- of machinery, which should realize for the great working family
- of the human race the conquest of a certain amount of leisure to
- the advantage of its dignity, have produced at many points
- nothing but degradation and misery. . . . . When A. Smith wrote,
- liberty had not yet come with its embarrassments and its abuses,
- and the Glasgow professor foresaw only its blessings. . . Smith
- would have written like M. de Sismondi, if he had been a witness
- of the sad condition of Ireland and the manufacturing districts
- of England in the times in which we live.
- Now then, litterateurs, statesmen, daily publicists, believers
- and half-believers, all you who have taken upon yourselves the
- mission of indoctrinating men, do you hear these words which one
- would take for a translation from Jeremiah? Will you tell us at
- last to what end you pretend to be conducting civilization? What
- advice do you offer to society, to the country, in alarm?
- But to whom do I speak? Ministers, journalists, sextons, and
- pedants! Do such people trouble themselves about the problems of
- social economy? Have they ever heard of competition?
- A citizen of Lyons, a soul hardened to mercantile war, travelled
- in Tuscany. He observes that from five to six hundred thousand
- straw hats are made annually in that country, the aggregate value
- of which amounts to four or five millions of francs. This
- industry is almost the sole support of the people of the little
- State. "How is it," he says to himself, "that so easily
- conducted a branch of agriculture and manufactures has not been
- transported into Provence and Languedoc, where the climate is the
- same as in Tuscany?" But, thereupon observes an economist, if
- the industry of the peasants of Tuscany is taken from them, how
- will they contrive to live?
- The manufacture of black silks had become for Florence a
- specialty the secret of which she guarded preciously.
- A shrewd Lyons manufacturer, the tourist notices with
- satisfaction, has come to set up an establishment in Florence,
- and has finally got possession of the peculiar processes of
- dyeing and weaving. Probably this DISCOVERY will diminish
- Florentine exportation.--A Journey in Italy, by M. Fulchiron.
- Formerly the breeding of the silk-worm was abandoned to the
- peasants of Tuscany; whom it aided to live.
- Agricultural societies have been formed; they have represented
- that the silk-worm, in the peasant's sleeping-room, did not get
- sufficient ventilation or sufficient steadiness of temperature,
- or as good care as it would have if the laborers who breed them
- made it their sole business. Consequently rich, intelligent, and
- generous citizens have built, amid the applause of the public,
- what are called bigattieres (from bigatti, silk-worm).--M. de
- Sismondi.
- And then, you ask, will these breeders of silk-worms, these
- manufacturers of silks and hats, lose their work? Precisely: it
- will even be proved to them that it is for their interest that
- they should, since they will be able to buy the same products for
- less than it costs them to manufacture them. Such is
- competition.
- Competition, with its homicidal instinct, takes away the bread of
- a whole class of laborers, and sees in it only an improvement, a
- saving; it steals a secret in a cowardly manner, and glories in
- it as a DISCOVERY; it changes the natural zones of production to
- the detriment of an entire people, and pretends to have done
- nothing but utilize the advantages of its climate. Competition
- overturns all notions of equity and justice; it increases the
- real cost of production by needlessly multiplying the capital
- invested, causes by turns the dearness of products and their
- depreciation, corrupts the public conscience by putting chance in
- the place of right, and maintains terror and distrust everywhere.
- But what! Without this atrocious characteristic, competition
- would lose its happiest effects; without the arbitrary element in
- exchange and the panics of the market, labor would not
- continually build factory against factory, and, not being
- maintained in such good working order, production would realize
- none of its marvels. After having caused evil to arise from the
- very utility of its principle, competition again finds a way to
- extract good from evil; destruction engenders utility,
- equilibrium is realized by agitation, and it may be said of
- competition, as Samson said of the lion which he had slain: De
- comedente cibus exiit, et de forti dulcedo. Is there anything,
- in all the spheres of human knowledge, more surprising than
- political economy?
- Let us take care, nevertheless, not to yield to an impulse of
- irony, which would be on our part only unjust invective. It is
- characteristic of economic science to find its certainty in its
- contradictions, and the whole error of the economists consists in
- not having understood this. Nothing poorer than their criticism,
- nothing more saddening than their mental confusion, as soon as
- they touch this question of competition: one would say that they
- were witnesses forced by torture to confess what their conscience
- would like to conceal. The reader will take it kindly if I put
- before his eyes the arguments for laissez-passer, introducing
- him, so to speak, into the presence of a secret meeting of
- economists.
- M. Dunoyer opens the discussion.
- Of all the economists M. Dunoyer has most energetically embraced
- the positive side of competition, and consequently, as might have
- been expected, most ineffectually grasped the negative side. M.
- Dunoyer, with whom nothing can be done when what he calls
- principles are under discussion, is very far from believing that
- in matters of political economy yes and no may be true at the
- same moment and to the same extent; let it be said even to his
- credit, such a conception is the more repugnant to him because of
- the frankness and honesty with which he holds his doctrines.
- What would I not give to gain an entrance into this pure but so
- obstinate soul for this truth as certain to me as the existence
- of the sun,--that all the categories of political economy are
- contradictions! Instead of uselessly exhausting himself in
- reconciling practice and theory; instead of contenting
- himself with the ridiculous excuse that everything here below has
- its advantages and its inconveniences,--M. Dunoyer would seek the
- synthetic idea which solves all the antinomies, and, instead of
- the paradoxical conservative which he now is, he would become
- with us an inexorable and logical revolutionist.
- "If competition is a false principle," says M. Dunoyer, "it
- follows that for two thousand years humanity has been pursuing
- the wrong road."
- No, what you say does not follow, and your prejudicial remark is
- refuted by the very theory of progress. Humanity posits its
- principles by turns, and sometimes at long intervals: never does
- it give them up in substance, although it destroys successively
- their expressions and formulas. This destruction is called
- NEGATION; because the general reason, ever progressive,
- continually denies the completeness and sufficiency of its prior
- ideas. Thus it is that, competition being one of the periods in
- the constitution of value, one of the elements of the social
- synthesis, it is true to say at the same time that it is
- indestructible in its principle, and that nevertheless in its
- present form it should be abolished, denied. If, then, there is
- any one here who is in opposition to history, it is you.
- I have several remarks to make upon the accusations of which
- competition has been the object. The first is that this regime,
- good or bad, ruinous or fruitful, does not really exist as yet;
- that it is established nowhere except in a partial and most
- incomplete manner.
- This first observation has no sense. COMPETITION KILLS
- COMPETITION, as we said at the outset; this aphorism may be taken
- for a definition. How, then, could competition ever be complete?
- Moreover, though it should be admitted that competition does not
- yet exist in its integrity, that would simply prove that
- competition does not act with all the power of elimination that
- there is in it; but that will not change at all its contradictory
- nature. What need have we to wait thirty centuries longer to
- find out that, the more competition develops, the more it tends
- to reduce the number of competitors?
- The second is that the picture drawn of it is unfaithful; and
- that sufficient heed is not paid to the extension which the
- general welfare has undergone, including even that of the
- laboring classes.
- If some socialists fail to recognize the useful side of
- competition, you on your side make no mention of its pernicious
- effects. The testimony of your opponents coming to complete your
- own, competition is shown in the fullest light, and from a double
- falsehood we get the truth as a result. As for the gravity of
- the evil, we shall see directly what to think about that.
- The third is that the evil experienced by the laboring classes is
- not referred to its real causes.
- If there are other causes of poverty than competition, does that
- prevent it from contributing its share? Though only one
- manufacturer a year were ruined by competition, if it were
- admitted that this ruin is the necessary effect of the principle,
- competition, as a principle, would have to be rejected.
- The fourth is that the principal means proposed for obviating it
- would be inexpedient in the extreme.
- Possibly: but from this I conclude that the inadequacy of the
- remedies proposed imposes a new duty upon you,--precisely that of
- seeking the most expedient means of preventing the evil of
- competition.
- The fifth, finally, is that the real remedies, in so far as it is
- possible to remedy the evil by legislation, would be found
- precisely in the regime which is accused of having produced
- it,--that is, in a more and more real regime of liberty and
- competition.
- Well! I am willing. The remedy for competition, in your
- opinion, is to make competition universal. But, in order that
- competition may be universal, it is necessary to procure for all
- the means of competing; it is necessary to destroy or modify the
- predominance of capital over labor, to change the relations
- between employer and workman, to solve, in a word, the antinomy
- of division and that of machinery; it is necessary to ORGANIZE
- LABOR: can you give this solution?
- M. Dunoyer then develops, with a courage worthy of a better
- cause, his own utopia of universal competition: it is a labyrinth
- in which the author stumbles and contradicts himself at every
- step.
- "Competition," says M. Dunoyer, "meets a multitude of obstacles."
- In fact, it meets so many and such powerful ones that it becomes
- impossible itself. For how is triumph possible over obstacles
- inherent in the constitution of society and consequently
- inseparable from competition itself?
- In addition to the public services, there is a certain number of
- professions the practice of which the government has seen fit to
- more or less exclusively reserve; there is a larger number of
- which legislation has given a monopoly to a restricted number of
- individuals. Those which are abandoned to competition are
- subjected to formalities and restrictions, to numberless
- barriers, which keep many from approaching, and in these
- consequently competition is far from being unlimited. In short,
- there are few which are not submitted to varied taxes, necessary
- doubtless, etc.
- What does all this mean? M. Dunoyer doubtless does not intend
- that society shall dispense with government, administration,
- police, taxes, universities, in a word, with everything that
- constitutes a society. Then, inasmuch as society necessarily
- implies exceptions to competition, the hypothesis of
- universal competition is chimerical, and we are back again
- under the regime of caprice,--a result foretold in the definition
- of competition. Is there anything serious in this reasoning of
- M. Dunoyer?
- Formerly the masters of the science began by putting far away
- from them every preconceived idea, and devoted themselves to
- tracing facts back to general laws, without ever altering or
- concealing them. The researches of Adam Smith, considering the
- time of their appearance, are a marvel of sagacity and lofty
- reasoning. The economic picture presented by Quesnay, wholly
- unintelligible as it appears, gives evidence of a profound
- sentiment of the general synthesis. The introduction to J. B.
- Say's great treatise dwells exclusively upon the scientific
- characteristics of political economy, and in every line is to be
- seen how much the author felt the need of absolute ideas. The
- economists of the last century certainly did not constitute the
- science, but they sought this constitution ardently and honestly.
- How far we are today from these noble thoughts! No longer do
- they seek a science; they defend the interests of dynasty and
- caste. The more powerless routine becomes, the more stubbornly
- they adhere to it; they make use of the most venerated names to
- stamp abnormal phenomena with a quality of authenticity which
- they lack; they tax accusing facts with heresy; they calumniate
- the tendencies of the century; and nothing irritates an economist
- so much as to pretend to reason with him.
- "The peculiar characteristic of the present time," cries M.
- Dunoyer, in a tone of keen discontent, "is the agitation of all
- classes; their anxiety, their inability to ever stop at anything
- and be contented; the infernal labor performed upon the less
- fortunate that they may become more and more discontented in
- proportion to the increased efforts of society to make their lot
- really less pitiful."
- Indeed! Because the socialists goad political economy, they are
- incarnate devils! Can there be anything more impious, in fact,
- than to teach the proletaire that he is wronged in his labor and
- his wages, and that, in the surroundings in which he lives, his
- poverty is irremediable?
- M. Reybaud repeats, with greater emphasis, the wail of his
- master, M. Dunoyer: one would think them the two seraphim of
- Isaiah chanting a Sanctus to competition. In June, 1844, at the
- time when he published the fourth edition of his "Contemporary
- Reformers," M. Reybaud wrote, in the bitterness of his soul:
- To socialists we owe the organization of labor, the right to
- labor; they are the promoters of the regime of surveillance. . .
- . The legislative chambers on either side of the channel are
- gradually succumbing to their influence. . . . Thus utopia is
- gaining ground. . . .
- And M. Reybaud more and more deplores the SECRET INFLUENCE OF
- SOCIALISM on the best minds, and stigmatizes--see the
- malice!--the UNPERCEIVED CONTAGION with which even those who
- have broken lances against socialism allow themselves to be
- inoculated. Then he announces, as a last act of his high justice
- against the wicked, the approaching publication, under the title
- of "Laws of Labor," of a work in which he will prove (unless some
- new evolution takes place in his ideas) that the laws of labor
- have nothing in common, either with the right to labor or with
- the organization of labor, and that the best of reforms is
- laissez-faire.
- "Moreover," adds M. Reybaud, "the tendency of political economy
- is no longer to theory, but to practice. The abstract portions
- of the science seem henceforth fixed. The controversy over
- definitions is exhausted, or nearly so. The works of the great
- economists on value, capital, supply and demand, wages, taxes,
- machinery, farm-rent, increase of population, over-accumulation
- of products, markets, banks, monopolies, etc., seem to have set
- the limit of dogmatic researches, and form a body of doctrine
- beyond which there is little to hope."
- FACILITY OF SPEECH, IMPOTENCE IN ARGUMENT,--such would have been
- the conclusion of Montesquieu upon this strange panegyric of the
- founders of social economy. THE SCIENCE IS COMPLETE! M. Reybaud
- makes oath to it; and what he proclaims with so much authority is
- repeated at the Academy, in the professors' chairs, in the
- councils of State, in the legislative halls; it is published in
- the journals; the king is made to say it in his New Year's
- addresses; and before the courts the cases of claimants are
- decided accordingly.
- THE SCIENCE IS COMPLETE! What fools we are, then, socialists, to
- hunt for daylight at noonday, and to protest, with our lanterns
- in our hands, against the brilliancy of these solar rays!
- But, gentlemen, it is with sincere regret and profound distrust
- of myself that I find myself forced to ask you for further light.
- If you cannot cure our ills, give us at least kind words, give us
- evidence, give us resignation.
- "It is obvious," says M. Dunoyer, "that wealth is infinitely
- better distributed in our day than it ever has been."
- "The equilibrium of pains and pleasures," promptly continues M.
- Reybaud, "ever tends to restore itself on earth."
- What, then! What do you say? WEALTH BETTER DISTRIBUTED,
- EQUILIBRIUM RESTORED! Explain yourselves, please, as to this
- better distribution. Is equality coming, or inequality going?
- Is solidarity becoming closer, or competition diminishing? I
- will not quit you until you have answered me, non missura cutem.
- . . . For, whatever the cause of the restoration of equilibrium
- and of the better distribution which you point out, I embrace it
- with ardor, and will follow it to its last consequences. Before
- 1830--I select the date at random--wealth was not so well
- distributed: how so? Today, in your opinion, it is better
- distributed: why? You see what I am coming at: distribution
- being not yet perfectly equitable and the equilibrium not
- absolutely perfect, I ask, on the one hand, what obstacle it is
- that disturbs the equilibrium, and, on the other, by virtue of
- what principle humanity continually passes from the greater to
- the less evil and from the good to the better? For, in fact,
- this secret principle of amelioration can be neither competition,
- nor machinery, nor division of labor, nor supply and demand: all
- these principles are but levers which by turns cause value to
- oscillate, as the Academy of Moral Sciences has very clearly
- seen. What, then, is the sovereign law of well-being? What is
- this rule, this measure, this criterion of progress, the
- violation of which is the perpetual cause of poverty? Speak, and
- quit your haranguing.
- Wealth is better distributed, you say. Show us your proofs. M.
- Dunoyer:
- According to official documents, taxes are assessed on scarcely
- less than eleven million separate parcels of landed property.
- The number of proprietors by whom these taxes are paid is
- estimated at six millions; so that, assuming four individuals to
- a family, there must be no less than twenty-four million
- inhabitants out of thirty-four who participate in the ownership
- of the soil.
- Then, according to the most favorable figures, there must be ten
- million proletaires in France, or nearly one-third of the
- population. Now, what have you to say to that? Add to these ten
- millions half of the twenty- four others, whose property,
- burdened with mortgages, parcelled out, impoverished, wretched,
- gives them no support, and still you will not have the number of
- individuals whose living is precarious.
- The number of twenty-four million proprietors perceptibly tends
- to increase.
- I maintain that it perceptibly tends to decrease. Who is the
- real proprietor, in your opinion,--the nominal holder, assessed,
- taxed, pawned, mortgaged, or the creditor who collects the rent?
- Jewish and Swiss money-lenders are today the real proprietors of
- Alsace; and proof of their excellent judgment is to be found in
- the fact that they have no thought of acquiring landed estates:
- they prefer to invest their capital.
- To the landed proprietors must be added about fifteen hundred
- thousand holders of patents and licenses, or, assuming four
- persons to a family, six million individuals interested as
- leaders in industrial enterprises.
- But, in the first place, a great number of these licensed
- individuals are landed proprietors, and you count them twice.
- Further, it may be safely said that, of the whole number of
- licensed manufacturers and merchants, a fourth at most realize
- profits, another fourth hold their own, and the rest are
- constantly running behind in their business. Take, then, half at
- most of the six million so-called leaders in enterprises, which
- we will add to the very problematical twelve million landed
- proprietors, and we shall attain a total of fifteen million
- Frenchmen in a position, by their education, their industry,
- their capital, their credit, their property, to engage in
- competition. For the rest of the nation, or nineteen million
- souls, competition, like Henri IV.'s pullet in the pot, is a dish
- which they produce for the class which can pay for it, but which
- they never touch.
- Another difficulty. These nineteen million men, within whose
- reach competition never comes, are hirelings of the competitors.
- In the same way formerly the serfs fought for the lords, but
- without being able themselves to carry a banner or put an army on
- foot. Now, if competition cannot by itself become the common
- condition, why should not those for whom it offers nothing but
- perils, exact guarantees from the barons whom they serve? And if
- these guarantees can not be denied them, how could they be other
- than barriers to competition, just as the truce of God, invented
- by the bishops, was a barrier to feudal wars? By the
- constitution of society, I said a little while ago, competition
- is an exceptional matter, a privilege; now I ask how it is
- possible for this privilege to coexist with equality of rights?
- And think you, when I demand for consumers and wage-receivers
- guarantees against competition, that it is a socialist's dream?
- Listen to two of your most illustrious confreres, whom you will
- not accuse of performing an infernal work.
- M. Rossi (Volume I., Lecture 16) recognizes in the State the
- right to regulate labor, WHEN THE DANGER IS TOO GREAT AND THE
- GUARANTEES INSUFFICIENT, which means always. For the legislator
- must secure public order by PRINCIPLES and LAWS: he does not
- wait for unforeseen facts to arise in order that he may drive
- them back with an arbitrary hand. Elsewhere (Volume II., pp.
- 73-77) the same professor points out, as consequences of
- exaggerated competition, the incessant formation of a financial
- and landed aristocracy and the approaching downfall of small
- holders, and he raises the cry of alarm. M. Blanqui, on his
- side, declares that the organization of labor is recognized by
- economic science as in the order of the day (he has since
- retracted the statement), urges the participation of workers in
- the profits and the advent of the collective laborer, and
- thunders continually against the monopolies, prohibitions, and
- tyranny of capital. Qui habet aures audiendi audiat! M. Rossi,
- as a writer on criminal law, decrees against the robberies of
- competition; M. Blanqui, as examining magistrate, proclaims the
- guilty parties: it is the counterpart of the duet sung just now
- by MM. Reybaud and Dunoyer. When the latter cry HOSANNA, the
- former respond, like the Fathers in the Councils, ANATHEMA.
- But, it will be said, MM. Blanqui and Rossi mean to strike only
- the ABUSES of competition; they have taken care not to proscribe
- the PRINCIPLE, and in that they are thoroughly in accord with
- MM. Reybaud and Dunoyer.
- I protest against this distinction, in the interest of the fame
- of the two professors.
- In fact, abuse has invaded everything, and the exception has
- become the rule. When M. Troplong, defending, with all the
- economists, the liberty of commerce, admitted that the coalition
- of the cab companies was one of those facts against which the
- legislator finds himself absolutely powerless, and which seem to
- contradict the sanest notions of social economy, he still had the
- consolation of saying to himself that such a fact was wholly
- exceptional, and that there was reason to believe that it would
- not become general. Now, this fact has become general: the most
- conservative jurisconsult has only to put his head out of his
- window to see that today absolutely everything has been
- monopolized through competition,--transportation (by land, rail,
- and water), wheat and flour, wine and brandy, wood, coal, oil,
- iron, fabrics, salt, chemical products, etc. It is sad for
- jurisprudence, that twin sister of political economy, to see its
- grave anticipations contradicted in less than a lustre, but it is
- sadder still for a great nation to be led by such poor geniuses
- and to glean the few ideas which sustain its life from the
- brushwood of their writings.
- In theory we have demonstrated that competition, on its useful
- side, should be universal and carried to its maximum of
- intensity; but that, viewed on its negative side, it must be
- everywhere stifled, even to the last vestige. Are the economists
- in a position to effect this elimination? Have they foreseen the
- consequences, calculated the difficulties? If the answer
- should be affirmative, I should have the boldness to propose the
- following case to them for solution.
- A treaty of coalition, or rather of association,--for the courts
- would be greatly embarrassed to define either term,--has just
- united in one company all the coal mines in the basin of the
- Loire. On complaint of the municipalities of Lyons and Saint
- Etienne, the ministry has appointed a commission charged with
- examining the character and tendencies of this frightful society.
- Well, I ask, what can the intervention of power, with the
- assistance of civil law and political economy, accomplish here?
- They cry out against coalition. But can the proprietors of mines
- be prevented from associating, from reducing their general
- expenses and costs of exploitation, and from working their mines
- to better advantage by a more perfect understanding with each
- other? Shall they be ordered to begin their old war over again,
- and ruin themselves by increased expenses, waste,
- over-production, disorder, and decreased prices? All that is
- absurd.
- Shall they be prevented from increasing their prices so as to
- recover the interest on their capital? Then let them be
- protected themselves against any demands for increased wages on
- the part of the workmen; let the law concerning joint-stock
- companies be reenacted; let the sale of shares be prohibited; and
- when all these measures shall have been taken, as the
- capitalist-proprietors of the basin cannot justly be forced to
- lose capital invested under a different condition of things, let
- them be indemnified.
- Shall a tariff be imposed upon them? That would be a law of
- maximum. The State would then have to put itself in the place of
- the exploiters; keep the accounts of their capital, interest, and
- office expenses; regulate the wages of the miners, the salaries
- of the engineers and directors, the price of the wood employed in
- the extraction of the coal, the expenditure for material; and,
- finally, determine the normal and legitimate rate of profit. All
- this cannot be done by ministerial decree: a law is necessary.
- Will the legislator dare, for the sake of a special industry, to
- change the public law of the French, and put power in the place
- of property? Then of two things one: either commerce in coals
- will fall into the hands of the State, or else the State must
- find some means of reconciling liberty and order in carrying on
- the mining industry, in which case the socialists will ask that
- what has been executed at one point be imitated at all points.
- The coalition of the Loire mines has posited the social question
- in terms which permit no more evasion. Either competition,--that
- is, monopoly and what follows; or exploitation by the
- State,--that is, dearness of labor and continuous impoverishment;
- or else, in short, a solution based upon equality,--in other
- words, the organization of labor, which involves the negation of
- political economy and the end of property.
- But the economists do not proceed with this abrupt logic: they
- love to bargain with necessity. M. Dupin (session of the Academy
- of Moral and Political Sciences, June 10, 1843) expresses the
- opinion that, "though competition may be useful within the
- nation, it must be prevented between nations."
- To PREVENT or to LET ALONE,--such is the eternal alternative of
- the economists: beyond it their genius does not go. In vain is
- it cried out at them that it is not a question of PREVENTING
- anything or of PERMITTING everything; that what is asked of
- them, what society expects of them, is a RECONCILIATION: this
- double idea does not enter their head.
- "It is necessary," M. Dunoyer replies to M. Dupin, "to
- DISTINGUISH theory from practice."
- My God! everybody knows that M. Dunoyer, inflexible as to
- principles in his works, is very accommodating as to practice in
- the Council of State. But let him condescend to once ask himself
- this question: Why am I obliged to continually distinguish
- practice from theory? Why do they not harmonize?
- M. Blanqui, as a lover of peace and harmony, supports the learned
- M. Dunoyer,--that is, theory. Nevertheless he thinks, with M.
- Dupin,--that is, with practice,--that competition is not EXEMPT
- FROM REPROACH. So afraid is M. Blanqui of calumniating and
- stirring up the fire!
- M. Dupin is obstinate in his opinion. He cites, as evils for
- which competition is responsible, fraud, sale by false weights,
- the exploitation of children. All doubtless in order to prove
- that competition WITHIN THE NATION may be useful!
- M. Passy, with his usual logic, observes that there will always
- be dishonest people who, etc. Accuse human nature, he cries, but
- not competition.
- At the very outset M. Passy's logic wanders from the question.
- Competition is reproached with the inconveniences which result
- from its nature, not with the frauds of which it is the occasion
- or pretext. A manufacturer finds a way of replacing a workman
- who costs him three francs a day by a woman to whom he gives but
- one franc. This expedient is the only one by which he can meet a
- falling market and keep his establishment in motion. Soon to the
- working women he will add children. Then, forced by the
- necessities of war, he will gradually reduce wages and add to the
- hours of labor. Where is the guilty party here? This argument
- may be turned about in a hundred ways and applied to all
- industries without furnishing any ground for accusing human
- nature.
- M. Passy himself is obliged to admit it when he adds: "As for
- the compulsory labor of children, the fault is on the parents."
- Exactly. And the fault of the parents on whom?
- "In Ireland," continues this orator, "there is no competition,
- and yet poverty is extreme."
- On this point M. Passy's ordinary logic has been betrayed by an
- extraordinary lack of memory. In Ireland there is a complete,
- universal monopoly of the land, and unlimited, desperate
- competition for farms. Competition-monopoly are the two balls
- which unhappy Ireland drags, one after each foot.
- When the economists are tired of accusing human nature, the greed
- of parents, and the turbulence of radicals, they find delectation
- in picturing the felicity of the proletariat. But there again
- they cannot agree with each other or with themselves; and nothing
- better depicts the anarchy of competition than the disorder of
- their ideas.
- Today the wife of the workingman dresses in elegant robes which
- in a previous century great ladies would not have disdained.--M.
- Chevalier: Lecture 4.
- And this is the same M. Chevalier who, according to his own
- calculation, estimates that the total national income would give
- thirteen cents a day to each individual. Some economists even
- reduce this figure to eleven cents. Now, as all that goes to
- make up the large fortunes must come out of this sum, we may
- accept the estimate of M. de Morogues that the daily income of
- half the French people does not exceed five cents each.
- "But," continues M. Chevalier, with mystical exaltation, "does
- not happiness consist in the harmony of desires and enjoyments,
- in thebalance of needs and satisfactions? Does it not consist in
- a certain condition of soul, the conditions of which it is not
- the function of political economy to prevent, and which it is not
- its mission to engender? This is the work of religion and
- philosophy."
- Economist, Horace would say to M: Chevalier, if he were living at
- the present day, attend simply to my income, and leave me to take
- care of my soul: Det vitam, det opes; {ae}quum mi animum ipse
- parabo.
- M. Dunoyer again has the floor:
- It would be easy, in many cities, on holidays, to confound the
- working class with the bourgeois class [why are there two
- classes?], so fine is the dress of the former. No less has been
- the progress in nourishment. Food is at once more abundant, more
- substantial, and more varied. Bread is better everywhere. Meat,
- soup, white bread, have become, in many factory towns, infinitely
- more common than they used to be. In short, the average duration
- of life has been raised from thirty-five years to forty.
- Farther on M. Dunoyer gives a picture of English fortunes
- according to Marshall. It appears from this picture that in
- England two million five hundred thousand families have an income
- of only two hundred and forty dollars. Now, in England an income
- of two hundred and forty dollars corresponds to an income of one
- hundred and forty-six dollars in our country, which, divided
- between four persons, gives each thirty-six dollars and a half,
- or ten cents a day. That is not far from the thirteen cents
- which M. Chevalier allows to each individual in France: the
- difference in favor of the latter arises from the fact that, the
- progress of wealth being less advanced in France, poverty is
- likewise less. What must one think of the economists' luxuriant
- descriptions or of their figures?
- "Pauperism has increased to such an extent in England," confesses
- M. Blanqui, "that the English government has had to seek a refuge
- in those frightful work-houses". . . .
- As a matter of fact, those pretended work-houses, where the work
- consists in ridiculous and fruitless occupations, are, whatever
- may be said, simply torture-houses. For to a reasonable being
- there is no torture like that of turning a mill without grain and
- without flour, with the sole purpose of avoiding rest, without
- thereby escaping idleness.
- "This organization [the organization of competition]," continues
- M. Blanqui, "tends to make all the profits of labor pass into the
- hands of capital. . . . It is at Reims, at Mulhouse, at
- Saint-Quentin, as at Manchester, at Leeds, at Spitalfields, that
- the existence of the workers is most precarious". . . .
- Then follows a frightful picture of the misery of the workers.
- Men, women, children, young girls, pass before you, starved,
- blanched, ragged, wan, and wild. The description ends with this
- stroke:
- The workers in the mechanical industries can no longer supply
- recruits for the army.
- It would seem that these do not derive much benefit from M.
- Dunoyer's white bread and soup.
- M. Villerme regards the licentiousness of young working girls as
- INEVITABLE. Concubinage is their customary status; they are
- entirely subsidized by employers, clerks, and students. Although
- as a general thing marriage is more attractive to the people than
- to the bourgeoisie, there are many proletaires, Malthusians
- without knowing it, who fear the family and go with the current.
- Thus, as workingmen are flesh for cannon, workingwomen are flesh
- for prostitution: that explains the elegant dressing on Sunday.
- After all, why should these young women be expected to be more
- virtuous than their mistresses?
- M. Buret, crowned by the Academy:
- I affirm that the working class is abandoned body and soul to the
- good pleasure of industry.
- The same writer says elsewhere:
- The feeblest efforts of speculation may cause the price of bread
- to vary a cent a pound and more: which represents $124,100 for
- thirty-four million men.
- I may remark, in passing, that the much-lamented Buret regarded
- the idea of the existence of monopolists as a popular prejudice.
- Well, sophist! monopolist or speculator, what matters the name,
- if you admit the thing?
- Such quotations would fill volumes. But the object of this
- treatise is not to set forth the contradictions of the economists
- and to wage fruitless war upon persons. Our object is loftier
- and worthier: it is to unfold the System of Economical
- Contradictions, which is quite a different matter. Therefore we
- will end this sad review here; and, before concluding, we will
- throw a glance at the various means proposed whereby to remedy
- the inconveniences of competition.
- % 3.--Remedies against competition.
- Can competition in labor be abolished?
- It would be as well worth while to ask if personality, liberty,
- individual responsibility can be suppressed.
- Competition, in fact, is the expression of collective activity;
- just as wages, considered in its highest acceptation, is the
- expression of the merit and demerit, in a word, the
- responsibility, of the laborer. It is vain to declaim and revolt
- against these two essential forms of liberty and discipline in
- labor. Without a theory of wages there is no distribution, no
- justice; without an organization of competition there is no
- social guarantee, consequently no solidarity.
- The socialists have confounded two essentially distinct things
- when, contrasting the union of the domestic hearth with
- industrial competition, they have asked themselves if society
- could not be constituted precisely like a great family all of
- whose members would be bound by ties of blood, and not as a sort
- of coalition in which each is held back by the law of his own
- interests.
- The family is not, if I may venture to so speak, the type, the
- organic molecule, of society. In the family, as M. de Bonald has
- very well observed, there exists but one moral being, one mind,
- one soul, I had almost said, with the Bible, one flesh. The
- family is the type and the cradle of monarchy and the patriciate:
- in it resides and is preserved the idea of authority and
- sovereignty, which is being obliterated more and more in the
- State. It was on the model of the family that all the ancient
- and feudal societies were organized, and it is precisely against
- this old patriarchal constitution that modern democracy protests
- and revolts.
- The constitutive unit of society is the workshop.
- Now, the workshop necessarily implies an interest as a body and
- private interests, a collective person and individuals. Hence a
- system of relations unknown in the family, among which the
- opposition of the collective will, represented by the EMPLOYER,
- and individual wills, represented by the WAGE-RECEIVERS, figures
- in the front rank. Then come the relations from shop to shop,
- from capital to capital,--in other words, competition and
- association. For competition and association are supported by
- each other; they do not exist independently; very far from
- excluding each other, they are not even divergent. Whoever says
- competition already supposes a common object; competition, then,
- is not egoism, and the most deplorable error of socialism
- consists in having regarded it as the subversion of society.
- Therefore there can be no question here of destroying
- competition, as impossible as to destroy liberty; the
- problem is to find its equilibrium, I would willingly say its
- police. For every force, every form of spontaneity, whether
- individual or collective, must receive its determination: in this
- respect it is the same with competition as with intelligence and
- liberty. How, then, will competition be harmoniously determined
- in society?
- We have heard the reply of M. Dunoyer, speaking for political
- economy: Competition must be determined by itself. In other
- words, according to M. Dunoyer and all the economists, the remedy
- for the inconveniences of competition is more competition; and,
- since political economy is the theory of property, of the
- absolute right of use and abuse, it is clear that political
- economy has no other answer to make. Now, this is as if it
- should be pretended that the education of liberty is effected by
- liberty, the instruction of the mind by the mind, the
- determination of value by value, all of which propositions are
- evidently tautological and absurd.
- And, in fact, to confine ourselves to the subject under
- discussion, it is obvious that competition, practised for itself
- and with no other object than to maintain a vague and discordant
- independence, can end in nothing, and that its oscillations are
- eternal. In competition the struggling elements are capital,
- machinery, processes, talent, and experience,--that is, capital
- again; victory is assured to the heaviest battalions. If, then,
- competition is practised only to the advantage of private
- interests, and if its social effects have been neither determined
- by science nor reserved by the State, there will be in
- competition, as in democracy, a continual tendency from civil war
- to oligarchy, from oligarchy to despotism, and then dissolution
- and return to civil war, without end and without rest. That is
- why competition, abandoned to itself, can never arrive at
- its own constitution: like value, it needs a superior principle
- to socialize and define it. These facts are henceforth well
- enough established to warrant us in considering them above
- criticism, and to excuse us from returning to them. Political
- economy, so far as the police of competition is concerned, having
- no means but competition itself, and unable to have any other, is
- shown to be powerless.
- It remains now to inquire what solution socialism contemplates.
- A single example will give the measure of its means, and will
- permit us to come to general conclusions regarding it.
- Of all modern socialists M. Louis Blanc, perhaps, by his
- remarkable talent, has been most successful in calling public
- attention to his writings. In his "Organization of Labor," after
- having traced back the problem of association to a single point,
- competition, he unhesitatingly pronounces in favor of its
- abolition. From this we may judge to what an extent this writer,
- generally so cautious, is deceived as to the value of political
- economy and the range of socialism. On the one hand, M. Blanc,
- receiving his ideas ready made from I know not what source,
- giving everything to his century and nothing to history, rejects
- absolutely, in substance and in form, political economy, and
- deprives himself of the very materials of organization; on the
- other, he attributes to tendencies revived from all past epochs,
- which he takes for new, a reality which they do not possess, and
- misconceives the nature of socialism, which is exclusively
- critical. M. Blanc, therefore, has given us the spectacle of a
- vivid imagination ready to confront an impossibility; he has
- believed in the divination of genius; but he must have perceived
- that science does not improvise itself, and that, be one's name
- Adolphe Boyer, Louis Blanc, or J. J. Rousseau, provided there is
- nothing in experience, there is nothing in the mind.
- M. Blanc begins with this declaration:
- We cannot understand those who have imagined I know not what
- mysterious coupling of two opposite principles. To graft
- association upon competition is a poor idea: it is to substitute
- hermaphrodites for eunuchs.
- These three lines M. Blanc will always have reason to regret.
- They prove that, when he published the fourth edition of his
- book, he was as little advanced in logic as in political economy,
- and that he reasoned about both as a blind man would reason about
- colors. Hermaphrodism, in politics, consists precisely in
- exclusion, because exclusion always restores, in some form or
- other and in the same degree, the idea excluded; and M. Blanc
- would be greatly surprised were he to be shown, by his continual
- mixture in his book of the most contrary principles,-- authority
- and right, property and communism, aristocracy and equality,
- labor and capital, reward and sacrifice, liberty and
- dictatorship, free inquiry and religious faith,--that the real
- hermaphrodite, the double- sexed publicist, is himself. M.
- Blanc, placed on the borders of democracy and socialism, one
- degree lower than the Republic, two degrees beneath M. Barrot,
- three beneath M. Thiers, is also, whatever he may say and
- whatever he may do, a descendant through four generations from M.
- Guizot, a doctrinaire.
- "Certainly," cries M. Blanc, "we are not of those who
- anathematize the principle of authority. This principle we have
- a thousand times had occasion to defend against attacks as
- dangerous as absurd. We know that, when organized force exists
- nowhere in a society, despotism exists everywhere."
- Thus, according to M. Blanc, the remedy for competition, or
- rather, the means of abolishing it, consists in the intervention
- of authority, in the substitution of the State for individual
- liberty: it is the inverse of the system of the economists.
- I should dislike to have M. Blanc, whose social tendencies are
- well known, accuse me of making impolitic war upon him in
- refuting him. I do justice to M. Blanc's generous intentions; I
- love and I read his works, and I am especially thankful to him
- for the service he has rendered in revealing, in his "History of
- Ten Years," the hopeless poverty of his party. But no one can
- consent to seem a dupe or an imbecile: now, putting personality
- entirely aside, what can there be in common between socialism,
- that universal protest, and the hotch-potch of old prejudices
- which make up M. Blanc's republic? M. Blanc is never tired of
- appealing to authority, and socialism loudly declares itself
- anarchistic; M. Blanc places power above society, and socialism
- tends to subordinate it to society; M. Blanc makes social life
- descend from above, and socialism maintains that it springs up
- and grows from below; M. Blanc runs after politics, and socialism
- is in quest of science. No more hypocrisy, let me say to M.
- Blanc: you desire neither Catholicism nor monarchy nor nobility,
- but you must have a God, a religion, a dictatorship, a
- censorship, a hierarchy, distinctions, and ranks. For my part, I
- deny your God, your authority, your sovereignty, your judicial
- State, and all your representative mystifications; I want neither
- Robespierre's censer nor Marat's rod; and, rather than submit to
- your androgynous democracy, I would support the status quo. For
- sixteen years your party has resisted progress and blocked
- opinion; for sixteen years it has shown its despotic origin by
- following in the wake of power at the extremity of the left
- centre: it is time for it to abdicate or undergo a metamorphosis.
- Implacable theorists of authority, what then do you propose which
- the government upon which you make war cannot accomplish in
- a fashion more tolerable than yours?
- M. Blanc's SYSTEM may be summarized in three points:
- 1. To give power a great force of initiative,--that is, in plain
- English, to make absolutism omnipotent in order to realize a
- utopia.
- 2. To establish public workshops, and supply them with capital,
- at the State's expense.
- 3. To extinguish private industry by the competition of national
- industry.
- And that is all.
- Has M. Blanc touched the problem of value, which involves in
- itself alone all others? He does not even suspect its existence.
- Has he given a theory of distribution? No. Has he solved the
- antinomy of the division of labor, perpetual cause of the
- workingman's ignorance, immorality, and poverty? No. Has he
- caused the contradiction of machinery and wages to disappear, and
- reconciled the rights of association with those of liberty? On
- the contrary, M. Blanc consecrates this contradiction. Under the
- despotic protection of the State, he admits in principle the
- inequality of ranks and wages, adding thereto, as compensation,
- the ballot. Are not workingmen who vote their regulations and
- elect their leaders free? It may very likely happen that these
- voting workingmen will admit no command or difference of pay
- among them: then, as nothing will have been provided for the
- satisfaction of industrial capacities, while maintaining
- political equality, dissolution will penetrate into the workshop,
- and, in the absence of police intervention, each will return to
- his own affairs. These fears seem to M. Blanc neither serious
- nor well-founded: he awaits the test calmly, very sure that
- society will not go out of his way to contradict him.
- And such complex and intricate questions as those of taxation,
- credit, international trade, property, heredity,--has M. Blanc
- fathomed them? Has he solved the problem of population? No, no,
- no, a thousand times no: when M. Blanc cannot solve a difficulty,
- he eliminates it. Regarding population, he says:
- As only poverty is prolific, and as the social workshop will
- cause poverty to disappear, there is no reason for giving it any
- thought.
- In vain does M. de Sismondi, supported by universal experience,
- cry out to him:
- We have no confidence in those who exercise delegated powers. We
- believe that any corporation will do its business worse than
- those who are animated by individual interest; that on the part
- of the directors there will be negligence, display, waste,
- favoritism, fear of compromise, all the faults, in short, to be
- noticed in the administration of the public wealth as contrasted
- with private wealth. We believe, further, that in an assembly of
- stockholders will be found only carelessness, caprice,
- negligence, and that a mercantile enterprise would be constantly
- compromised and soon ruined, if it were dependent upon a
- deliberative commercial assembly.
- M. Blanc hears nothing; he drowns all other sounds with his own
- sonorous phrases; private interest he replaces by devotion to the
- public welfare; for competition he substitutes emulation and
- rewards. After having posited industrial hierarchy as a
- principle, it being a necessary consequence of his faith in God,
- authority, and genius, he abandons himself to mystic powers,
- idols of his heart and his imagination.
- Thus M. Blanc begins by a coup d' Etat, or rather, according to
- his original expression, by an application of the FORCE OF
- INITIATIVE which he gives to power; and he levies an
- extraordinary tax upon the rich in order to supply the
- proletariat with capital. M. Blanc's logic is very simple,--it
- is that of the Republic: power can accomplish what the people
- want, and what the people want is right. A singular fashion
- of reforming society, this of repressing its most spontaneous
- tendencies, denying its most authentic manifestations, and,
- instead of generalizing comfort by the regular development of
- traditions, displacing labor and income! But, in truth, what is
- the good of these disguises? Why so much beating about the bush?
- Was it not simpler to adopt the agrarian law straightway? Could
- not power, by virtue of its force of initiative, at once declare
- all capital and tools the property of the State, save an
- indemnity to be granted to the present holders as a transitional
- measure? By means of this peremptory, but frank and sincere,
- policy, the economic field would have been cleared away; it would
- not have cost utopia more, and M. Blanc could then have proceeded
- at his ease, and without any hindrance, to the organization of
- society.
- But what do I say? organize! The whole organic work of M. Blanc
- consists in this great act of expropriation, or substitution, if
- you prefer: industry once displaced and republicanized and the
- great monopoly established, M. Blanc does not doubt that
- production will go on exactly as one would wish; he does not
- conceive it possible that any one can raise even a single
- difficulty in the way of what he calls his SYSTEM. And, in
- fact, what objection can be offered to a conception so radically
- null, so intangible as that of M. Blanc? The most curious part
- of his book is in the select collection which he has made of
- objections proposed by certain incredulous persons, which he
- answers, as may be imagined, triumphantly. These critics had not
- seen that, in discussing M. Blanc's SYSTEM, they were arguing
- about the dimensions, weight, and form of a mathematical point.
- Now, as it has happened, the controversy maintained by M. Blanc
- has taught him more than his own meditations had done; and one
- can see that, if the objections had continued, he would have
- ended by discovering what he thought he had invented,--the
- organization of labor.
- But, in fine, has the aim, however narrow, which M. Blanc
- pursued,-- namely, the abolition of competition and the guarantee
- of success to an enterprise patronized and backed by the
- State,--been attained? On this subject I will quote the
- reflections of a talented economist, M. Joseph Garnier, to whose
- words I will permit myself to add a few comments.
- The government, according to M. Blanc, would choose MORAL
- WORKMEN, and would give them GOOD WAGES.
- So M. Blanc must have men made expressly for him: he does not
- flatter himself that he can act on any sort of temperaments. As
- for wages, M. Blanc promises that they shall be GOOD; that is
- easier than to define their measure.
- M. Blanc admits by his hypothesis that these workshops would
- yield a net product, and, further, would compete so successfully
- with private industry that the latter would change into national
- workshops.
- How could that be, if the cost of the national workshops is
- higher than that of the free workshops? I have shown in the
- third chapter that three hundred workmen in a mill do not produce
- for their employer, among them all, a regular net income of
- twenty thousand francs, and that these twenty thousand francs,
- distributed among the three hundred laborers, would add but
- eighteen centimes a day to their income. Now, this is true of
- all industries. How will the national workshop, which owes ITS
- WORKMEN GOOD WAGES, make up this deficit? By emulation, says M.
- Blanc.
- M. Blanc points with extreme complacency to the Leclaire
- establishment, a society of house-painters doing a very
- successful business, which he regards as a living
- demonstration of his system. M. Blanc might have added to this
- example a multitude of similar societies, which would prove quite
- as much as the Leclaire establishment,--that is, no more. The
- Leclaire establishment is a collective monopoly, supported by the
- great society which envelops it. Now, the question is whether
- entire society can become a monopoly, in M. Blanc's sense and
- patterned after the Leclaire establishment: I deny it positively.
- But a fact touching more closely the question before us, and
- which M. Blanc has not taken into consideration, is that it
- follows from the distribution accounts furnished by the Leclaire
- establishment that, the wages paid being much above the general
- average, the first thing to do in a reorganization of society
- would be to start up competition with the Leclaire establishment,
- either among its own workmen or outside.
- Wages would be regulated by the government. The members of the
- social workshop would dispose of them as they liked, and THE
- INDISPUTABLE EXCELLENCE OF LIFE IN COMMON WOULD NOT BE LONG IN
- CAUSING ASSOCIATION IN LABOR TO GIVE BIRTH TO VOLUNTARY
- ASSOCIATION IN PLEASURE.
- Is M. Blanc a communist, yes or no? Let him declare himself once
- for all, instead of holding off; and if communism does not make
- him more intelligible, we shall at least know what he wants.
- In reading the supplement in which M. Blanc has seen fit to
- combat the objections which some journals have raised, we see
- more clearly the incompleteness of his conception, daughter of at
- least three fathers,-- Saint-Simonism, Fourierism, and
- communism,--with the aid of politics and a little, a very little,
- political economy.
- According to his explanations, the State would be only the
- regulator, legislator, protector of industry, not the universal
- manufacturer or producer. But as he exclusively protects the
- social workshops to destroy private industry, he necessarily
- brings up in monopoly and falls back into the Saint-Simonian
- theory in spite of himself, at least so far as production is
- concerned.
- M. Blanc cannot deny it: his SYSTEM is directed against private
- industry; and with him power, by its force of initiative, tends
- to extinguish all individual initiative, to proscribe free labor.
- The coupling of contraries is odious to M. Blanc: accordingly we
- see that, after having sacrificed competition to association, he
- sacrifices to it liberty also. I am waiting for him to abolish
- the family.
- Nevertheless hierarchy would result from the elective principle,
- as in Fourierism, as in constitutional politics. But these
- social workshops again, regulated by law,--will they be anything
- but corporations? What is the bond of corporations? The law.
- Who will make the law? The government. You suppose that it will
- be good? Well, experience has shown that it has never been a
- success in regulating the innumerable accidents of industry. You
- tell us that it will fix the rate of profits, the rate of wages;
- you hope that it will do it in such a way that laborers and
- capital will take refuge in the social workshop. But you do not
- tell us how equilibrium will be established between these
- workshops which will have a tendency to life in common, to the
- phalanstery; you do not tell us how these workshops will avoid
- competition within and without; how they will provide for the
- excess of population in relation to capital; how the
- manufacturing social workshops will differ from those of the
- fields; and many other things besides. I know well that you will
- answer: By the specific virtue of the law! And if your
- government, your State, knows not how to make it? Do you not see
- that you are sliding down a declivity, and that you are obliged
- to grasp at something similar to the existing law? It is easy to
- see by reading you that you are especially devoted to the
- invention of a power susceptible of application to your system;
- but I declare, after reading you carefully, that in my opinion
- you have as yet no clear and precise idea of what you need. What
- you lack, as well as all of us, is the true conception of liberty
- and equality, which you would not like to disown, and which you
- are obliged to sacrifice, whatever precautions you may take.
- Unacquainted with the nature and functions of power, you have not
- dared to stop for a single explanation; you have not given the
- slightest example.
- Suppose we admit that the workshops succeed as producers; there
- will also be commercial workshops to put products in circulation
- and effect exchanges. And who then will regulate the price?
- Again the law? In truth, I tell you, you will need a new
- appearance on Mount Sinai; otherwise you will never get out of
- your difficulties, you, your Council of State, your chamber of
- representatives, or your areopagus of senators.
- The correctness of these reflections cannot be questioned. M.
- Blanc, with his organization by the State, is obliged always to
- end where he should have begun (so beginning, he would have been
- saved the trouble of writing his book),--that is, in the STUDY OF
- ECONOMIC SCIENCE. As his critic very well says: "M. Blanc has
- made the grave mistake of using political strategy in dealing
- with questions which are not amenable to such treatment"; he has
- tried to summon the government to a fulfillment of its
- obligations, and he has succeeded only in demonstrating more
- clearly than ever the incompatibility of socialism with
- haranguing and parliamentary democracy. His pamphlet, all
- enamelled with eloquent pages, does honor to his literary
- capacity: as for the philosophical value of the book, it would be
- absolutely the same if the author had confined himself to writing
- on each page, in large letters, this single phrase: I PROTEST.
- To sum up:
- Competition, as an economic position or phase, considered in its
- origin, is the necessary result of the intervention of machinery,
- of the establishment of the workshop, and of the theory of
- reduction of general costs; considered in its own significance
- and in its tendency, it is the mode by which collective activity
- manifests and exercises itself, the expression of social
- spontaneity, the emblem of democracy and equality, the most
- energetic instrument for the constitution of value, the support
- of association. As the essay of individual forces, it is
- the guarantee of their liberty, the first moment of their
- harmony, the form of responsibility which unites them all and
- makes them solidary.
- But competition abandoned to itself and deprived of the direction
- of a superior and efficacious principle is only a vague movement,
- an endless oscillation of industrial power, eternally tossed
- about between those two equally disastrous extremes,--on the one
- hand, corporations and patronage, to which we have seen the
- workshop give birth, and, on the other, monopoly, which will be
- discussed in the following chapter.
- Socialism, while protesting, and with reason, against this
- anarchical competition, has as yet proposed nothing satisfactory
- for its regulation, as is proved by the fact that we meet
- everywhere, in the utopias which have seen the light, the
- determination or socialization of value abandoned to arbitrary
- control, and all reforms ending, now in hierarchical corporation,
- now in State monopoly, or the tyranny of communism.
- CHAPTER VI.
- FOURTH PERIOD.--MONOPOLY.
- Monopoly, the exclusive commerce, exploitation, or enjoyment of a
- thing.
- Monopoly is the natural opposite of competition. This simple
- observation suffices, as we have remarked, to overthrow the
- utopias based upon the idea of abolishing competition, as if its
- contrary were association and fraternity. Competition is the
- vital force which animates the collective being: to destroy it,
- if such a supposition were possible, would be to kill society.
- But, the moment we admit competition as a necessity, it implies
- the idea of monopoly, since monopoly is, as it were, the seat of
- each competing individuality. Accordingly the economists have
- demonstrated--and M. Rossi has formally admitted it--that
- monopoly is the form of social possession, outside of which there
- is no labor, no product, no exchange, no wealth. Every landed
- possession is a monopoly; every industrial utopia tends to
- establish itself as a monopoly; and the same must be said of
- other functions not included in these two categories.
- Monopoly in itself, then, does not carry the idea of injustice;
- in fact, there is something in it which, pertaining to society as
- well as to man, legitimates it: that is the POSITIVE side of the
- principle which we are about to examine.
- But monopoly, like competition, becomes anti-social and
- disastrous: how does this happen? By ABUSE, reply the
- economists. And it is to defining and repressing the abuses of
- monopoly that the magistrates apply themselves; it is in
- denouncing them that the new school of economists glories.
- We shall show that the so-called abuses of monopoly are only the
- effects of the development, in a NEGATIVE sense, of legal
- monopoly; that they cannot be separated from their principle
- without ruining this principle; consequently, that they are
- inaccessible to the law, and that all repression in this
- direction is arbitrary and unjust. So that monopoly, the
- constitutive principle of society and the condition of wealth, is
- at the same time and in the same degree a principle of spoliation
- and pauperism; that, the more good it is made to produce, the
- more evil is received from it; that without it progress comes to
- a standstill, and that with it labor becomes stationary and
- civilization disappears.
- % 1.--Necessity of monopoly.
- Thus monopoly is the inevitable end of competition, which
- engenders it by a continual denial of itself: this generation of
- monopoly is already its justification. For, since competition is
- inherent in society as motion is in living beings, monopoly which
- comes in its train, which is its object and its end, and without
- which competition would not have been accepted,--monopoly is and
- will remain legitimate as long as competition, as long as
- mechanical processes and industrial combinations, as long, in
- fact, as the division of labor and the constitution of values
- shall be necessities and laws.
- Therefore by the single fact of its logical generation monopoly
- is justified. Nevertheless this justification would seem of
- little force and would end only in a more energetic rejection of
- competition than ever, if monopoly could not in turn posit itself
- by itself and as a principle.
- In the preceding chapters we have seen that division of labor is
- the specification of the workman considered especially as
- intelligence; that the creation of machinery and the organization
- of the workshop express his liberty; and that, by competition,
- man, or intelligent liberty, enters into action. Now, monopoly
- is the expression of victorious liberty, the prize of the
- struggle, the glorification of genius; it is the strongest
- stimulant of all the steps in progress taken since the beginning
- of the world: so true is this that, as we said just now, society,
- which cannot exist with it, would not have been formed without
- it.
- Where, then, does monopoly get this singular virtue, which the
- etymology of the word and the vulgar aspect of the thing would
- never lead us to suspect?
- Monopoly is at bottom simply the autocracy of man over himself:
- it is the dictatorial right accorded by nature to every producer
- of using his faculties as he pleases, of giving free play to his
- thought in whatever direction it prefers, of speculating, in such
- specialty as he may please to choose, with all the power of his
- resources, of disposing sovereignly of the instruments which he
- has created and of the capital accumulated by his economy for any
- enterprise the risks of which he may see fit to accept on the
- express condition of enjoying alone the fruits of his discovery
- and the profits of his venture.
- This right belongs so thoroughly to the essence of liberty that
- to deny it is to mutilate man in his body, in his soul, and in
- the exercise of his faculties, and society, which progresses only
- by the free initiative of individuals, soon lacking explorers,
- finds itself arrested in its onward march.
- It is time to give body to all these ideas by the testimony of
- facts.
- I know a commune where from time immemorial there had been no
- roads either for the clearing of lands or for communication with
- the outside world. During three-fourths of the year all
- importation or exportation of goods was prevented; a barrier of
- mud and marsh served as a protection at once against any invasion
- from without and any excursion of the inhabitants of the holy and
- sacred community. Six horses, in the finest weather, scarcely
- sufficed to move a load that any jade could easily have taken
- over a good road. The mayor resolved, in spite of the council,
- to build a road through the town. For a long time he was
- derided, cursed, execrated. They had got along well enough
- without a road up to the time of his administration: why need he
- spend the money of the commune and waste the time of farmers in
- road-duty, cartage, and compulsory service? It was to satisfy
- his pride that Monsieur the Mayor desired, at the expense of the
- poor farmers, to open such a fine avenue for his city friends who
- would come to visit him! In spite of everything the road was
- made and the peasants applauded! What a difference! they said:
- it used to take eight horses to carry thirty sacks to market, and
- we were gone three days; now we start in the morning with two
- horses, and are back at night. But in all these remarks nothing
- further was heard of the mayor. The event having justified him,
- they spoke of him no more: most of them, in fact, as I found out,
- felt a spite against him.
- This mayor acted after the manner of Aristides. Suppose that,
- wearied by the absurd clamor, he had from the beginning proposed
- to his constituents to build the road at his expense, provided
- they would pay him toll for fifty years, each, however,
- remaining free to travel through the fields, as in the past: in
- what respect would this transaction have been fraudulent?
- That is the history of society and monopolists.
- Everybody is not in a position to make a present to his
- fellow-citizens of a road or a machine: generally the inventor,
- after exhausting his health and substance, expects reward. Deny
- then, while still scoffing at them, to Arkwright, Watt, and
- Jacquard the privilege of their discoveries; they will shut
- themselves up in order to work, and possibly will carry their
- secret to the grave. Deny to the settler possession of the soil
- which he clears, and no one will clear it.
- But, they say, is that true right, social right, fraternal right?
- That which is excusable on emerging from primitive communism, an
- effect of necessity, is only a temporary expedient which must
- disappear in face of a fuller understanding of the rights and
- duties of man and society.
- I recoil from no hypothesis: let us see, let us investigate. It
- is already a great point that the opponents confess that, during
- the first period of civilization, things could not have gone
- otherwise. It remains to ascertain whether the institutions of
- this period are really, as has been said, only temporary, or
- whether they are the result of laws immanent in society and
- eternal. Now, the thesis which I maintain at this moment is the
- more difficult because in direct opposition to the general
- tendency, and because I must directly overturn it myself by its
- contradiction.
- I pray, then, that I may be told how it is possible to make
- appeal to the principles of sociability, fraternity, and
- solidarity, when society itself rejects every solidary and
- fraternal transaction? At the beginning of each industry, at the
- first gleam of a discovery, the man who invents is isolated;
- society abandons him and remains in the background. To put
- it better, this man, relatively to the idea which he has
- conceived and the realization of which he pursues, becomes in
- himself alone entire society. He has no longer any associates,
- no longer any collaborators, no longer any sureties; everybody
- shuns him: on him alone falls the responsibility; to him alone,
- then, the advantages of the speculation.
- But, it is insisted, this is blindness on the part of society, an
- abandonment of its most sacred rights and interests, of the
- welfare of future generations; and the speculator, better
- informed or more fortunate, cannot fairly profit by the monopoly
- which universal ignorance gives into his hands.
- I maintain that this conduct on the part of society is, as far as
- the present is concerned, an act of high prudence; and, as for
- the future, I shall prove that it does not lose thereby. I have
- already shown in the second chapter, by the solution of the
- antinomy of value, that the advantage of every useful discovery
- is incomparably less to the inventor, whatever he may do, than to
- society; I have carried the demonstration of this point even to
- mathematical accuracy. Later I shall show further that, in
- addition to the profit assured it by every discovery, society
- exercises over the privileges which it concedes, whether
- temporarily or perpetually, claims of several kinds, which
- largely palliate the excess of certain private fortunes, and the
- effect of which is a prompt restoration of equilibrium. But let
- us not anticipate.
- I observe, then, that social life manifests itself in a double
- fashion,--PRESERVATION and DEVELOPMENT.
- Development is effected by the free play of individual energies;
- the mass is by its nature barren, passive, and hostile to
- everything new. It is, if I may venture to use the comparison,
- the womb, sterile by itself, but to which come to deposit
- themselves the germs created by private activity, which, in
- hermaphroditic society, really performs the function of the male
- organ.
- But society preserves itself only so far as it avoids solidarity
- with private speculations and leaves every innovation absolutely
- to the risk and peril of individuals. It would take but a few
- pages to contain the list of useful inventions. The enterprises
- that have been carried to a successful issue may be numbered; no
- figure would express the multitude of false ideas and imprudent
- ventures which every day are hatched in human brains. There is
- not an inventor, not a workman, who, for one sane and correct
- conception, has not given birth to thousands of chimeras; not an
- intelligence which, for one spark of reason, does not emit
- whirlwinds of smoke. If it were possible to divide all the
- products of the human reason into two parts, putting on one side
- those that are useful, and on the other those on which strength,
- thought, capital, and time have been spent in error, we should be
- startled by the discovery that the excess of the latter over the
- former is perhaps a billion per cent. What would become of
- society, if it had to discharge these liabilities and settle all
- these bankruptcies? What, in turn, would become of the
- responsibility and dignity of the laborer, if, secured by the
- social guarantee, he could, without personal risk, abandon
- himself to all the caprices of a delirious imagination and trifle
- at every moment with the existence of humanity?
- Wherefore I conclude that what has been practised from the
- beginning will be practised to the end, and that, on this point,
- as on every other, if our aim is reconciliation, it is absurd to
- think that anything that exists can be abolished. For, the world
- of ideas being infinite, like nature, and men, today as ever,
- being subject to speculation,--that is, to error,--individuals
- have a constant stimulus to speculate and society a constant
- reason to be suspicious and cautious, wherefore monopoly never
- lacks material.
- To avoid this dilemma what is proposed? Compensation? In the
- first place, compensation is impossible: all values being
- monopolized, where would society get the means to indemnify the
- monopolists? What would be its mortgage? On the other hand,
- compensation would be utterly useless: after all the monopolies
- had been compensated, it would remain to organize industry.
- Where is the system? Upon what is opinion settled? What
- problems have been solved? If the organization is to be of the
- hierarchical type, we reenter the system of monopoly; if of the
- democratic, we return to the point of departure, for the
- compensated industries will fall into the public domain,--that
- is, into competition,--and gradually will become monopolies
- again; if, finally, of the communistic, we shall simply have
- passed from one impossibility to another, for, as we shall
- demonstrate at the proper time, communism, like competition and
- monopoly, is antinomical, impossible.
- In order not to involve the social wealth in an unlimited and
- consequently disastrous solidarity, will they content themselves
- with imposing rules upon the spirit of invention and enterprise?
- Will they establish a censorship to distinguish between men of
- genius and fools? That is to suppose that society knows in
- advance precisely that which is to be discovered. To submit the
- projects of schemers to an advance examination is an a priori
- prohibition of all movement. For, once more, relatively to the
- end which he has in view, there is a moment when each
- manufacturer represents in his own person society itself, sees
- better and farther than all other men combined, and frequently
- without being able to explain himself or make himself
- understood. When Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo, Newton's
- predecessors, came to the point of saying to Christian society,
- then represented by the Church: "The Bible is mistaken; the
- earth revolves, and the sun is stationary," they were right
- against society, which, on the strength of its senses and
- traditions, contradicted them. Could society then have accepted
- solidarity with the Copernican system? So little could it do it
- that this system openly denied its faith, and that, pending the
- accord of reason and revelation, Galileo, one of the responsible
- inventors, underwent torture in proof of the new idea. We are
- more tolerant, I presume; but this very toleration proves that,
- while according greater liberty to genius, we do not mean to be
- less discreet than our ancestors. Patents rain, but WITHOUT
- GOVERNMENTAL GUARANTEE. Property titles are placed in the
- keeping of citizens, but neither the property list nor the
- charter guarantee their value: it is for labor to make them
- valuable. And as for the scientific and other missions which the
- government sometimes takes a notion to entrust to penniless
- explorers, they are so much extra robbery and corruption.
- In fact, society can guarantee to no one the capital necessary
- for the testing of an idea by experiment; in right, it cannot
- claim the results of an enterprise to which it has not
- subscribed: therefore monopoly is indestructible. For the rest,
- solidarity would be of no service: for, as each can claim for his
- whims the solidarity of all and would have the same right to
- obtain the government's signature in blank, we should soon arrive
- at the universal reign of caprice,--that is, purely and simply at
- the statu quo.
- Some socialists, very unhappily inspired--I say it with all the
- force of my conscience--by evangelical abstractions, believe
- that they have solved the difficulty by these fine maxims:
- "Inequality of capacities proves the inequality of duties"; "You
- have received more from nature, give more to your brothers," and
- other high-sounding and touching phrases, which never fail of
- their effect on empty heads, but which nevertheless are as simple
- as anything that it is possible to imagine. The practical
- formula deduced from these marvellous adages is that each laborer
- owes all his time to society, and that society should give back
- to him in exchange all that is necessary to the satisfaction of
- his wants in proportion to the resources at its disposal.
- May my communistic friends forgive me! I should be less severe
- upon their ideas if I were not irreversibly convinced, in my
- reason and in my heart, that communism, republicanism, and all
- the social, political, and religious utopias which disdain facts
- and criticism, are the greatest obstacle which progress has now
- to conquer. Why will they never understand that fraternity can
- be established only by justice; that justice alone, the
- condition, means, and law of liberty and fraternity, must be the
- object of our study; and that its determination and formula must
- be pursued without relaxation, even to the minutest details? Why
- do writers familiar with economic language forget that
- superiority of talents is synonymous with superiority of wants,
- and that, instead of expecting more from vigorous than from
- ordinary personalities, society should constantly look out that
- they do not receive more than they render, when it is already so
- hard for the mass of mankind to render all that it receives?
- Turn which way you will, you must always come back to the cash
- book, to the account of receipts and expenditures, the sole
- guarantee against large consumers as well as against small
- producers. The workman continually lives IN ADVANCE of his
- production; his tendency is always to get CREDIT, contract DEBTS
- and go into BANKRUPTCY; it is perpetually necessary to remind him
- of Say's aphorism: PRODUCTS ARE BOUGHT ONLY WITH PRODUCTS.
- To suppose that the laborer of great capacity will content
- himself, in favor of the weak, with half his wages, furnish his
- services gratuitously, and produce, as the people say, FOR THE
- KING OF PRUSSIA--that is, for that abstraction called society,
- the sovereign, or my brothers,--is to base society on a
- sentiment, I do not say beyond the reach of man, but one which,
- erected systematically into a principle, is only a false virtue,
- a dangerous hypocrisy. Charity is recommended to us as a
- reparation of the infirmities which afflict our fellows by
- accident, and, viewing it in this light, I can see that charity
- may be organized; I can see that, growing out of solidarity
- itself, it may become simply justice. But charity taken as an
- instrument of equality and the law of equilibrium would be the
- dissolution of society. Equality among men is produced by the
- rigorous and inflexible law of labor, the proportionality of
- values, the sincerity of exchanges, and the equivalence of
- functions,--in short, by the mathematical solution of all
- antagonisms.
- That is why charity, the prime virtue of the Christian, the
- legitimate hope of the socialist, the object of all the efforts
- of the economist, is a social vice the moment it is made a
- principle of constitution and a law; that is why certain
- economists have been able to say that legal charity had caused
- more evil in society than proprietary usurpation. Man, like the
- society of which he is a part, has a perpetual account current
- with himself; all that he consumes he must produce. Such is the
- general rule, which no one can escape without being, ipso facto
- struck with dishonor or suspected of fraud. Singular idea,
- truly,--that of decreeing, under pretext of fraternity, the
- relative inferiority of the majority of men! After this
- beautiful declaration nothing will be left but to draw its
- consequences; and soon, thanks to fraternity, aristocracy will be
- restored.
- Double the normal wages of the workman, and you invite him to
- idleness, humiliate his dignity, and demoralize his conscience;
- take away from him the legitimate price of his efforts, and you
- either excite his anger or exalt his pride. In either case you
- damage his fraternal feelings. On the contrary, make enjoyment
- conditional upon labor, the only way provided by nature to
- associate men and make them good and happy, and you go back under
- the law of economic distribution, PRODUCTS ARE BOUGHT WITH
- PRODUCTS. Communism, as I have often complained, is the very
- denial of society in its foundation, which is the progressive
- equivalence of functions and capacities. The communists, toward
- whom all socialism tends, do not believe in equality by nature
- and education; they supply it by sovereign decrees which they
- cannot carry out, whatever they may do. Instead of seeking
- justice in the harmony of facts, they take it from their
- feelings, calling justice everything that seems to them to be
- love of one's neighbor, and incessantly confounding matters of
- reason with those of sentiment.
- Why then continually interject fraternity, charity, sacrifice,
- and God into the discussion of economic questions? May it not be
- that the utopists find it easier to expatiate upon these grand
- words than to seriously study social manifestations?
- Fraternity! Brothers as much as you please, provided I am the
- big brother and you the little; provided society, our common
- mother, honors my primogeniture and my services by doubling my
- portion. You will provide for my wants, you say, in proportion
- to your resources. I intend, on the contrary, that such
- provision shall be in proportion to my labor; if not, I cease to
- labor.
- Charity! I deny charity; it is mysticism. In vain do you talk
- to me of fraternity and love: I remain convinced that you love me
- but little, and I feel very sure that I do not love you. Your
- friendship is but a feint, and, if you love me, it is from
- self-interest. I ask all that my products cost me, and only what
- they cost me: why do you refuse me?
- Sacrifice! I deny sacrifice; it is mysticism. Talk to me of
- DEBT and CREDIT, the only criterion in my eyes of the just and
- the unjust, of good and evil in society. To each according to
- his works, first; and if, on occasion, I am impelled to aid you,
- I will do it with a good grace; but I will not be constrained.
- To constrain me to sacrifice is to assassinate me.
- God! I know no God; mysticism again. Begin by striking this
- word from your remarks, if you wish me to listen to you; for
- three thousand years of experience have taught me that whoever
- talks to me of God has designs on my liberty or on my purse. How
- much do you owe me? How much do I owe you? That is my religion
- and my God.
- Monopoly owes its existence both to nature and to man: it has its
- source at once in the profoundest depths of our conscience and in
- the external fact of our individualization. Just as in our body
- and our mind everything has its specialty and property, so our
- labor presents itself with a proper and specific character, which
- constitutes its quality and value. And as labor cannot manifest
- itself without material or an object for its exercise, the person
- necessarily attracting the thing, monopoly is established from
- subject to object as infallibly as duration is constituted from
- past to future. Bees, ants, and other animals living in society
- seem endowed individually only with automatism; with them soul
- and instinct are almost exclusively collective. That is why,
- among such animals, there can be no room for privilege and
- monopoly; why, even in their most volitional operations, they
- neither consult nor deliberate. But, humanity being
- individualized in its plurality, man becomes inevitably a
- monopolist, since, if not a monopolist, he is nothing; and the
- social problem is to find out, not how to abolish, but how to
- reconcile, all monopolies.
- The most remarkable and the most immediate effects of monopoly
- are:
- 1. In the political order, the classification of humanity into
- families, tribes, cities, nations, States: this is the elementary
- division of humanity into groups and sub-groups of laborers,
- distinguished by race, language, customs, and climate. It was by
- monopoly that the human race took possession of the globe, as it
- will be by association that it will become complete sovereign
- thereof.
- Political and civil law, as conceived by all legislators without
- exception and as formulated by jurists, born of this patriotic
- and national organization of societies, forms, in the series of
- social contradictions, a first and vast branch, the study of
- which by itself alone would demand four times more time than we
- can give it in discussing the question of industrial economy
- propounded by the Academy.
- 2. In the economic order, monopoly contributes to the increase of
- comfort, in the first place by adding to the general wealth
- through the perfecting of methods, and then by
- CAPITALIZING,--that is, by consolidating the conquests of labor
- obtained by division, machinery, and competition. From this
- effect of monopoly has resulted the economic fiction by which the
- capitalist is considered a producer and capital an agent of
- production; then, as a consequence of this fiction, the theory of
- NET PRODUCT and GROSS PRODUCT.
- On this point we have a few considerations to present. First let
- us quote J. B. Say:
- The value produced is the GROSS product: after the costs of
- production have been deducted, this value is the NET product.
- Considering a nation as a whole, it has no net product; for, as
- products have no value beyond the costs of production, when these
- costs are cut off, the entire value of the product is cut off.
- National production, annual production, should always therefore
- be understood as gross production.
- The annual revenue is the gross revenue.
- The term net production is applicable only when considering the
- interests of one producer in opposition to those of other
- producers. The manager of an enterprise gets his PROFIT from
- the value PRODUCED after deducting the value CONSUMED. But
- what to him is value consumed, such as the purchase of a
- productive service, is so much income to the performer of the
- service.--Treatise on Political Economy: Analytical Table.
- These definitions are irreproachable. Unhappily J. B. Say did
- not see their full bearing, and could not have foreseen that one
- day his immediate successor at the College of France would attack
- them. M. Rossi has pretended to refute the proposition of J. B.
- Say that TO A NATION NET PRODUCT IS THE SAME THING AS GROSS
- PRODUCT by this consideration,--that nations, no more than
- individuals of enterprise, can produce without advances, and
- that, if J. B. Say's formula were true, it would follow that the
- axiom, Ex nihilo nihil fit, is not true
- Now, that is precisely what happens. Humanity, in imitation of
- God, produces everything from nothing, de nihilo hilum just as it
- is itself a product of nothing, just as its thought comes out of
- the void; and M. Rossi would not have made such a mistake, if,
- like the physiocrats, he had not confounded the products of the
- INDUSTRIAL KINGDOM with those of the animal, vegetable, and
- mineral kingdoms. Political economy begins with labor; it is
- developed by labor; and all that does not come from labor,
- falling into the domain of pure utility,--that is, into the
- category of things submitted to man's action, but not yet
- rendered exchangeable by labor,--remains radically foreign to
- political economy. Monopoly itself, wholly established as it is
- by a pure act of collective will, does not change these relations
- at all, since, according to history, and according to the written
- law, and according to economic theory, monopoly exists, or is
- reputed to exist, only after labor's appearance.
- Say's doctrine, therefore, is unassailable. Relatively to the
- man of enterprise, whose specialty always supposes other
- manufacturers cooperating with him, profit is what remains of the
- value produced after deducting the values consumed, among which
- must be included the salary of the man of enterprise,--in other
- words, his wages. Relatively to society, which contains all
- possible specialties, net product is identical with gross
- product.
- But there is a point the explanation of which I have vainly
- sought in Say and in the other economists,--to wit, how the
- reality and legitimacy of net product is established. For it is
- plain that, in order to cause the disappearance of net product,
- it would suffice to increase the wages of the workmen and the
- price of the values consumed, the selling-price remaining the
- same. So that, there being nothing seemingly to distinguish net
- product from a sum withheld in paying wages or, what amounts to
- the same thing, from an assessment laid upon the consumer in
- advance, net product has every appearance of an extortion
- effected by force and without the least show of right.
- This difficulty has been solved in advance in our theory of the
- proportionality of values.
- According to this theory, every exploiter of a machine, of an
- idea, or of capital should be considered as a man who increases
- with equal outlay the amount of a certain kind of products, and
- consequently increases the social wealth by economizing time.
- The principle of the legitimacy of the net product lies, then, in
- the processes previously in use: if the new device succeeds,
- there will be a surplus of values, and consequently a
- profit,--that is, net product; if the enterprise rests on a false
- basis, there will be a deficit in the gross product, and in the
- long run failure and bankruptcy. Even in the case--and it is the
- most frequent-- where there is no innovation on the part of the
- man of enterprise, the rule of net product remains applicable,
- for the success of an industry depends upon the way in which it
- is carried on. Now, it being in accordance with the nature of
- monopoly that the risk and peril of every enterprise should be
- taken by the initiator, it follows that the net product belongs
- to him by the most sacred title recognized among men,-- labor and
- intelligence.
- It is useless to recall the fact that the net product is often
- exaggerated, either by fraudulently secured reductions of wages
- or in some other way. These are abuses which proceed, not from
- the principle, but from human cupidity, and which remain outside
- the domain of the theory. For the rest, I have shown, in
- discussing the constitution of value (Chapter II., % 2): 1, how
- the net product can never exceed the difference resulting from
- inequality of the means of production; 2, how the profit which
- society reaps from each new invention is incomparably greater
- than that of its originator. As these points have been exhausted
- once for all, I will not go over them again; I will simply
- remark that, by industrial progress, the net product of the
- ingenious tends steadily to decrease, while, on the other hand,
- their comfort increases, as the concentric layers which make up
- the trunk of a tree become thinner as the tree grows and as they
- are farther removed from the centre.
- By the side of net product, the natural reward of the laborer, I
- have pointed out as one of the happiest effects of monopoly the
- CAPITALIZATION of values, from which is born another sort of
- profit,--namely, INTEREST, or the hire of capital. As for
- RENT, although it is often confounded with interest, and
- although, in ordinary language, it is included with profit and
- interest under the common expression REVENUE, it is a different
- thing from interest; it is a consequence, not of monopoly, but of
- property; it depends on a special theory., of which we will speak
- in its place.
- What, then, is this reality, known to all peoples, and
- nevertheless still so badly defined, which is called interest or
- the price of a loan, and which gives rise to the fiction of the
- productivity of capital?
- Everybody knows that a contractor, when he calculates his costs
- of production, generally divides them into three classes: 1, the
- values consumed and services paid for; 2, his personal salary; 3,
- recovery of his capital with interest. From this last class of
- costs is born the distinction between contractor and capitalist,
- although these two titles always express but one faculty,
- monopoly.
- Thus an industrial enterprise which yields only interest on
- capital and nothing for net product, is an insignificant
- enterprise, which results only in a transformation of values
- without adding anything to wealth,-- an enterprise, in short,
- which has no further reason for existence and is immediately
- abandoned. Why is it, then, that this interest on capital
- is not regarded as a sufficient supplement of net product? Why
- is it not itself the net product?
- Here again the philosophy of the economists is wanting. To
- defend usury they have pretended that capital was productive, and
- they have changed a metaphor into a reality. The
- anti-proprietary socialists have had no difficulty in overturning
- their sophistry; and through this controversy the theory of
- capital has fallen into such disfavor that today, in the minds of
- the people, CAPITALIST and IDLER are synonymous terms.
- Certainly it is not my intention to retract what I myself have
- maintained after so many others, or to rehabilitate a class of
- citizens which so strangely misconceives its duties: but the
- interests of science and of the proletariat itself oblige me to
- complete my first assertions and maintain true principles.
- 1. All production is effected with a view to consumption,--that
- is, to enjoyment. In society the correlative terms production
- and consumption, like net product and gross product, designate
- identically the same thing. If, then, after the laborer has
- realized a net product, instead of using it to increase his
- comfort, he should confine himself to his wages and steadily
- apply his surplus to new production, as so many people do who
- earn only to buy, production would increase indefinitely, while
- comfort and, reasoning from the standpoint of society, population
- would remain unchanged. Now, interest on capital which has been
- invested in an industrial enterprise and which has been gradually
- formed by the accumulation of net product, is a sort of
- compromise between the necessity of increasing production, on the
- one hand, and, on the other, that of increasing comfort; it is a
- method of reproducing and consuming the net product at the same
- time. That is why certain industrial societies pay their
- stockholders a dividend even before the enterprise has yielded
- anything. Life is short, success comes slowly; on the one hand
- labor commands, on the other man wishes to enjoy. To meet all
- these exigencies the net product shall be devoted to production,
- but meantime (inter-ea, inter-esse)--that is, while waiting for
- the new product--the capitalist shall enjoy.
- Thus, as the amount of net product marks the progress of wealth,
- interest on capital, without which net product would be useless
- and would not even exist, marks the progress of comfort.
- Whatever the form of government which may be established among
- men; whether they live in monopoly or in communism; whether each
- laborer keeps his account by credit and debit, or has his labor
- and pleasure parcelled out to him by the community,--the law
- which we have just disengaged will always be fulfilled. Our
- interest accounts do nothing else than bear witness to it.
- 2. Values created by net product are classed as savings and
- capitalized in the most highly exchangeable form, the form which
- is freest and least susceptible of depreciation,--in a word, the
- form of specie, the only constituted value. Now, if capital
- leaves this state of freedom and ENGAGES ITSELF,--that is, takes
- the form of machines, buildings, etc.,--it will still be
- susceptible of exchange, but much more exposed than before to the
- oscillations of supply and demand. Once engaged, it cannot be
- DISENGAGED without difficulty; and the sole resource of its owner
- will be exploitation. Exploitation alone is capable of
- maintaining engaged capital at its nominal value; it may increase
- it, it may diminish it. Capital thus transformed is as if it had
- been risked in a maritime enterprise: the interest is the
- insurance premium paid on the capital. And this premium will be
- greater or less according to the scarcity or abundance of
- capital.
- Later a distinction will also be established between the
- insurance premium and interest on capital, and new facts will
- result from this subdivision: thus the history of humanity is
- simply a perpetual distinction of the mind's concepts.
- 3. Not only does interest on capital cause the laborer to enjoy
- the fruit of his toil and insure his savings, but--and this is
- the most marvellous effect of interest--while rewarding the
- producer, it obliges him to labor incessantly and never stop.
- If a contractor is his own capitalist, it may happen that he will
- content himself with a profit equal to the interest on his
- investment: but in that case it is certain that his industry is
- no longer making progress and consequently is suffering. This we
- see when the capitalist is distinct from the contractor: for
- then, after the interest is paid, the manufacturer's profit is
- absolutely nothing; his industry becomes a perpetual peril to
- him, from which it is important that he should free himself as
- soon as possible. For as society's comfort must develop in an
- indefinite progression, so the law of the producer is that he
- should continually realize a surplus: otherwise his existence is
- precarious, monotonous, fatiguing. The interest due to the
- capitalist by the producer therefore is like the lash of the
- planter cracking over the head of the sleeping slave; it is the
- voice of progress crying: "On, on! Toil, toil!" Man's destiny
- pushes him to happiness: that is why it denies him rest.
- 4. Finally, interest on money is the condition of capital's
- circulation and the chief agent of industrial solidarity. This
- aspect has been seized by all the economists, and we shall give
- it special treatment when we come to deal with credit.
- I have proved, and better, I imagine, than it has ever been
- proved before:
- That monopoly is necessary, since it is the antagonism of
- competition;
- That it is essential to society, since without it society would
- never have emerged from the primeval forests and without it would
- rapidly go backwards;
- Finally, that it is the crown of the producer, when, whether by
- net product or by interest on the capital which he devotes to
- production, it brings to the monopolist that increase of comfort
- which his foresight and his efforts deserve.
- Shall we, then, with the economists, glorify monopoly, and
- consecrate it to the benefit of well-secured conservatives? I am
- willing, provided they in turn will admit my claims in what is to
- follow, as I have admitted theirs in what has preceded.
- % 2.--The disasters in labor and the perversion of ideas caused
- by monopoly.
- Like competition, monopoly implies a contradiction in its name
- and its definition. In fact, since consumption and production
- are identical things in society, and since selling is synonymous
- with buying, whoever says privilege of sale or exploitation
- necessarily says privilege of consumption and purchase: which
- ends in the denial of both. Hence a prohibition of consumption
- as well as of production laid by monopoly upon the
- wage-receivers. Competition was civil war, monopoly is the
- massacre of the prisoners.
- These various propositions are supported by all sorts of
- evidence,-- physical, algebraic, and metaphysical. What I shall
- add will be only the amplified exposition: their simple
- announcement demonstrates them.
- Every society considered in its economic relations naturally
- divides itself into capitalists and laborers, employers and wage-
- receivers, distributed upon a scale whose degrees mark the income
- of each, whether this income be composed of wages, profit,
- interest, rent, or dividends.
- From this hierarchical distribution of persons and incomes it
- follows that Say's principle just referred to: IN A NATION THE
- NET PRODUCT IS EQUAL TO THE GROSS PRODUCT, is no longer true,
- since, in consequence of monopoly, the SELLING PRICE is much
- higher than the COST PRICE. Now, as it is the cost price
- nevertheless which must pay the selling price, since a nation
- really has no market but itself, it follows that exchange, and
- consequently circulation and life, are impossible.
- In France, twenty millions of laborers, engaged in all the
- branches of science, art, and industry, produce everything which
- is useful to man. Their aggregate annual wages amount, it is
- estimated, to twenty thousand millions; but, in consequence of
- the profit (net product and interest) accruing to monopolists,
- twenty-five thousand millions must be paid for their products.
- Now, as the nation has no other buyers than its wage- receivers
- and wage-payers, and as the latter do not pay for the former, and
- as the selling-price of merchandise is the same for all, it is
- clear that, to make circulation possible, the laborer would have
- to pay five for that for which he has received but four.--What is
- Property: Chapter IV.[17]
- [17] A comparison of this passage, as given here, with the
- English translation of "What is Property" will show a marked
- variation in the language. This is explained by the fact that
- the author, in reproducing the passage, modified it considerably.
- The same is true of another quotation from the same work which
- will be found a few pages farther on.--Translator.
- This, then, is the reason why wealth and poverty are correlative,
- inseparable, not only in idea, but in fact; this is the reason
- why they exist concurrently; this is what justifies the
- pretension of the wage- receiver that the rich man possesses no
- more than the poor man, except that of which the latter has been
- defrauded. After the monopolist has drawn up his account of
- cost, profit, and interest, the wage-paid consumer draws up his;
- and he finds that, though promised wages stated in the contract
- as one hundred, he has really been given but seventy- five.
- Monopoly, therefore, puts the wage-receivers into bankruptcy, and
- it is strictly true that it lives upon the spoils.
- Six years ago I brought out this frightful contradiction: why has
- it not been thundered through the press? Why have no teachers of
- renown warned public opinion? Why have not those who demand
- political rights for the workingman proclaimed that he is robbed?
- Why have the economists kept silent? Why?
- Our revolutionary democracy is so noisy only because it fears
- revolutions: but, by ignoring the danger which it dares not look
- in the face, it succeeds only in increasing it. "We resemble,"
- says M. Blanqui, "firemen who increase the quantity of steam at
- the same time that they place weights on the safety-valve."
- Victims of monopoly, console yourselves! If your tormentors will
- not listen, it is because Providence has resolved to strike them:
- Non audierunt, says the Bible, quia Deus volebat occidere eos.
- Sale being unable to fulfil the conditions of monopoly,
- merchandise accumulates; labor has produced in a year what its
- wages will not allow it to consume in less than fifteen months:
- hence it must remain idle one-fourth of the year. But, if it
- remains idle, it earns nothing: how will it ever buy? And if the
- monopolist cannot get rid of his products, how will his
- enterprise endure? Logical impossibility multiplies around the
- workshop; the facts which translate it are everywhere.
- "The hosiers of England," says Eugene Buret, "had come to the
- point where they did not eat oftener than every other day.
- This state of things lasted eighteen months." And he cites a
- multitude of similar cases.
- But the distressing feature in the spectacle of monopoly's
- effects is the sight of the unfortunate workingmen blaming each
- other for their misery and imagining that by uniting and
- supporting each other they will prevent the reduction of wages.
- "The Irish," says an observer, "have given a disastrous lesson to
- the working classes of Great Britain. . . . . They have
- taught our laborers the fatal secret of confining their needs to
- the maintenance of animal life alone, and of contenting
- themselves, like savages, with the minimum of the means of
- subsistence sufficient to prolong life. . . . . Instructed by
- this fatal example, yielding partly to necessity, the working
- classes have lost that laudable pride which led them to furnish
- their houses properly and to multiply about them the decent
- conveniences which contribute to happiness."
- I have never read anything more afflicting and more stupid. And
- what would you have these workingmen do? The Irish came: should
- they have been massacred? Wages were reduced: should death have
- been accepted in their stead? Necessity commanded, as you say
- yourselves. Then followed the interminable hours, disease,
- deformity, degradation, debasement, and all the signs of
- industrial slavery: all these calamities are born of monopoly and
- its sad predecessors,--competition, machinery, and the division
- of labor: and you blame the Irish!
- At other times the workingmen blame their luck, and exhort
- themselves to patience: this is the counterpart of the thanks
- which they address to Providence, when labor is abundant and
- wages are sufficient.
- I find in an article published by M. Leon Faucher, in the
- "Journal des Economistes" (September, 1845), that the English
- workingmen lost some time ago the habit of combining, which
- is surely a progressive step on which they are only to be
- congratulated, but that this improvement in the morale of the
- workingmen is due especially to their economic instruction.
- "It is not upon the manufacturers," cried a spinner at the
- meeting in Bolton, "that wages depend. In periods of depression
- the employers, so to speak, are only the lash with which
- necessity is armed; and whether they will or no, they have to
- strike. The regulative principle is the relation of supply to
- demand; and the employers have not this power. . . . Let us act
- prudently, then; let us learn to be resigned to bad luck and to
- make the most of good luck: by seconding the progress of our
- industry, we shall be useful not only to ourselves, but to the
- entire country." [Applause.]
- Very good: well-trained, model workmen, these! What men these
- spinners must be that they should submit without complaint to the
- LASH OF NECESSITY, because the regulative principle of wages is
- SUPPLY AND DEMAND! M. Leon Faucher adds with a charming
- simplicity:
- English workingmen are fearless reasoners. Give them a FALSE
- PRINCIPLE, and they will push it mathematically to absurdity,
- without stopping or getting frightened, as if they were marching
- to the triumph of the truth.
- For my part, I hope that, in spite of all the efforts of economic
- propagandism, French workingmen will never become reasoners of
- such power. SUPPLY AND DEMAND, as well as the LASH OF NECESSITY,
- has no longer any hold upon their minds. This was the one misery
- that England lacked: it will not cross the channel.
- By the combined effect of division, machinery, net product, and
- interest, monopoly extends its conquests in an increasing
- progression; its developments embrace agriculture as well as
- commerce and industry, and all sorts of products. Everybody
- knows the phrase of Pliny upon the landed monopoly which
- determined the fall of Italy, latifundia perdidere Italiam.
- It is this same monopoly which still impoverishes and renders
- uninhabitable the Roman Campagna and which forms the vicious
- circle in which England moves convulsively; it is this monopoly
- which, established by violence after a war of races, produces all
- the evils of Ireland, and causes so many trials to O'Connell,
- powerless, with all his eloquence, to lead his repealers through
- this labyrinth. Grand sentiments and rhetoric are the worst
- remedy for social evils: it would be easier for O'Connell to
- transport Ireland and the Irish from the North Sea to the
- Australian Ocean than to overthrow with the breath of his
- harangues the monopoly which holds them in its grasp. General
- communions and sermons will do no more: if the religious
- sentiment still alone maintains the morale of the Irish people,
- it is high time that a little of that profane science, so much
- disdained by the Church, should come to the aid of the lambs
- which its crook no longer protects.
- The invasion of commerce and industry by monopoly is too well
- known to make it necessary that I should gather proofs: moreover,
- of what use is it to argue so much when results speak so loudly?
- E. Buret's description of the misery of the working-classes has
- something fantastic about it, which oppresses and frightens you.
- There are scenes in which the imagination refuses to believe, in
- spite of certificates and official reports. Couples all naked,
- hidden in the back of an unfurnished alcove, with their naked
- children; entire populations which no longer go to church on
- Sunday, because they are naked; bodies kept a week before they
- are buried, because the deceased has left neither a shroud in
- which to lay him out nor the wherewithal to pay for the coffin
- and the undertaker (and the bishop enjoys an income of from four
- to five hundred thousand francs); families heaped up over sewers,
- living in rooms occupied by pigs, and beginning to rot while
- yet alive, or dwelling in holes, like Albinoes; octogenarians
- sleeping naked on bare boards; and the virgin and the prostitute
- expiring in the same nudity: everywhere despair, consumption,
- hunger, hunger! . . And this people, which expiates the crimes
- of its masters, does not rebel! No, by the flames of Nemesis!
- when a people has no vengeance left, there is no longer any
- Providence for it.
- Exterminations en masse by monopoly have not yet found their
- poets. Our rhymers, strangers to the things of this world,
- without bowels for the proletaire, continue to breathe to the
- moon their melancholy DELIGHTS. What a subject for
- MEDITATIONS, nevertheless, is the miseries engendered by
- monopoly!
- It is Walter Scott who says:
- Formerly, though many years since, each villager had his cow and
- his pig, and his yard around his house. Where a single farmer
- cultivates today, thirty small farmers lived formerly; so that
- for one individual, himself alone richer, it is true, than the
- thirty farmers of old times, there are now twenty-nine wretched
- day-laborers, without employment for their minds and arms, and
- whose number is too large by half. The only useful function
- which they fulfil is to pay, WHEN THEY CAN, a rent of sixty
- shillings a year for the huts in which they dwell.[18]
- [18] This extract from Scott, as well as that from a
- parliamentary report cited a few paragraphs later, is here
- translated from the French, and presumably differs in form
- somewhat, therefore, from the original English.--Translator.
- A modern ballad, quoted by E. Buret, sings the solitude of
- monopoly:
- Le rouet est silencieux dans la vallee:
- C'en est fait des sentiments de famille.
- Sur un peu de fumee le vieil aieul
- Etend ses mains pales; et le foyer vide
- Est aussi desole que son coeur.[19]
- [19] The spinning-wheel is silent in the valley: family feelings
- are at an end. Over a little smoke the aged grandsire spreads
- his pale hands; and the empty hearth is as desolate as his
- heart.--Translator.
- The reports made to parliament rival the novelist and the poet:
- The inhabitants of Glensheil, in the neighborhood of the valley
- of Dundee, were formerly distinguished from all their neighbors
- by the superiority of their physical qualities. The men were of
- high stature, robust, active, and courageous; the women comely
- and graceful. Both sexes possessed an extraordinary taste for
- poetry and music. Now, alas! a long experience of poverty,
- prolonged privation of sufficient food and suitable clothing,
- have profoundly deteriorated this race, once so remarkably fine.
- This is a notable instance of the inevitable degradation pointed
- out by us in the two chapters on division of labor and machinery.
- And our litterateurs busy themselves with the pretty things of
- the past, as if the present were not adequate to their genius!
- The first among them to venture on these infernal paths has
- created a scandal in the coterie! Cowardly parasites, vile
- venders of prose and verse, all worthy of the wages of Marsyas!
- Oh! if your punishment were to last as long as my contempt, you
- would be forced to believe in the eternity of hell.
- Monopoly, which just now seemed to us so well founded in justice,
- is the more unjust because it not only makes wages illusory, but
- deceives the workman in the very valuation of his wages by
- assuming in relation to him a false title, a false capacity.
- M. de Sismondi, in his "Studies of Social Economy," observes
- somewhere that, when a banker delivers to a merchant bank-notes
- in exchange for his values, far from giving credit to the
- merchant, he receives it, on the contrary, from him.
- "This credit," adds M. de Sismondi, "is in truth so short that
- the merchant scarcely takes the trouble to inquire whether the
- banker is worthy, especially as the former asks credit instead of
- granting it."
- So, according to M. de Sismondi, in the issue of bank paper, the
- functions of the merchant and the banker are inverted: the first
- is the creditor, and the second is the credited.
- Something similar takes place between the monopolist and
- wage-receiver.
- In fact, the workers, like the merchant at the bank, ask to have
- their labor discounted; in right, the contractor ought to furnish
- them bonds and security. I will explain myself.
- In any exploitation, no matter of what sort, the contractor
- cannot legitimately claim, in addition to his own personal labor,
- anything but the IDEA: as for the EXECUTION, the result of the
- cooperation of numerous laborers, that is an effect of collective
- power, with which the authors, as free in their action as the
- chief, can produce nothing which should go to him gratuitously.
- Now, the question is to ascertain whether the amount of
- individual wages paid by the contractor is equivalent to the
- collective effect of which I speak: for, were it otherwise, Say's
- axiom, EVERY PRODUCT IS WORTH WHAT IT COSTS, would be violated.
- "The capitalist," they say, "has paid the laborers their daily
- wages at a rate agreed upon; consequently he owes them nothing."
- To be accurate, it must be said that he has paid as many times
- one day's wage as he has employed laborers,--which is not at all
- the same thing. For he has paid nothing for that immense power
- which results from the union of laborers and the convergence and
- harmony of their efforts; that saving of expense, secured by
- their formation into a workshop; that multiplication of product,
- foreseen, it is true, by the capitalist, but realized by free
- forces. Two hundred grenadiers, working under the direction of
- an engineer, stood the obelisk upon its base in a few hours; do
- you think that one man could have accomplished the same task in
- two hundred days? Nevertheless, on the books of the capitalist,
- the amount of wages is the same in both cases, because he allots
- to himself the benefit of the collective power. Now, of two
- things one: either this is usurpation on his part, or it is
- error.--What is Property: Chapter III.
- To properly exploit the mule-jenny, engineers, builders, clerks,
- brigades of workingmen and workingwomen of all sorts, have been
- needed. In the name of their liberty, of their security, of
- their future, and of the future of their children, these workmen,
- on engaging to work in the mill, had to make reserves; where are
- the letters of credit which they have delivered to the employers?
- Where are the guarantees which they have received? What!
- millions of men have sold their arms and parted with their
- liberty without knowing the import of the contract; they have
- engaged themselves upon the promise of continuous work and
- adequate reward; they have executed with their hands what the
- thought of the employers had conceived; they have become, by this
- collaboration, associates in the enterprise: and when monopoly,
- unable or unwilling to make further exchanges, suspends its
- manufacture and leaves these millions of laborers without bread,
- they are told to be RESIGNED! By the new processes they have
- lost nine days of their labor out of ten; and for reward they are
- pointed to the LASH OF NECESSITY flourished over them! Then, if
- they refuse to work for lower wages, they are shown that they
- punish themselves. If they accept the rate offered them, they
- lose THAT NOBLE PRIDE, that taste for DECENT CONVENIENCES which
- constitute the happiness and dignity of the workingman and
- entitle him to the sympathies of the rich. If they combine to
- secure an increase of wages, they are thrown into prison!
- Whereas they ought to prosecute their exploiters in the courts,
- on them the courts will avenge the violations of liberty of
- commerce! Victims of monopoly, they will suffer the penalty due
- to the monopolists! O justice of men, stupid courtesan, how
- long, under your goddess's tinsel, will you drink the blood of
- the slaughtered proletaire?
- Monopoly has invaded everything,--land, labor, and the
- instruments of labor, products and the distribution of pro ducts.
- Political economy itself has not been able to avoid admitting it.
- "You almost always find across your path," says M. Rossi, "some
- monopoly. There is scarcely a product that can be regarded as
- the pure and simple result of labor; accordingly the economic law
- which proportions price to cost of production is never completely
- realized. It is a formula which is profoundly MODIFIED by the
- intervention of one or another of the monopolies to which the
- instruments of production are subordinated.--Course in Political
- Economy: Volume I., page 143.
- M. Rossi holds too high an office to give his language all the
- precision and exactness which science requires when monopoly is
- in question. What he so complacently calls a MODIFICATION OF
- ECONOMIC FORMULAS is but a long and odious violation of the
- fundamental laws of labor and exchange. It is in consequence of
- monopoly that in society, net product being figured over and
- above gross product, the collective laborer must repurchase his
- own product at a price higher than that which this product costs
- him,--which is contradictory and impossible; that the natural
- balance between production and consumption is destroyed; that the
- laborer is deceived not only in his settlements, but also as to
- the amount of his wages; that in his case progress in comfort is
- changed into an incessant progress in misery: it is by monopoly,
- in short, that all notions of commutative justice are perverted,
- and that social economy, instead of the positive science that it
- is, becomes a veritable utopia.
- This disguise of political economy under the influence of
- monopoly is a fact so remarkable in the history of social ideas
- that we must not neglect to cite a few instances.
- Thus, from the standpoint of monopoly, value is no longer that
- synthetic conception which serves to express the relation of
- a special object of utility to the sum total of wealth: monopoly
- estimating things, not in their relation to society, but in their
- relation to itself, value loses its social character, and is
- nothing but a vague, arbitrary, egoistic, and essentially
- variable thing. Starting with this principle, the monopolist
- extends the term PRODUCT to cover all sorts of servitude, and
- applies the idea of CAPITAL to all the frivolous and shameful
- industries which his passions and vices exploit. The charms of a
- courtesan, says Say, are so much CAPITAL, of which the PRODUCT
- follows the general LAW of VALUES,--namely, SUPPLY and
- DEMAND. Most of the works on political economy are full of such
- applications. But as prostitution and the state of dependence
- from which it emanates are condemned by morality, M. Rossi will
- bid us observe the further fact that political economy, after
- having MODIFIED its formula in consequence of the intervention
- of monopoly, will have to submit to a new CORRECTIVE, although
- its conclusions are in themselves irreproachable. For, he says,
- political economy has nothing in common with morality: it is for
- us to accept it, to modify or correct its formulas, whenever our
- welfare, that of society, and the interests of morality call for
- it. How many things there are between political economy and
- truth!
- Likewise, the theory of net product, so highly social,
- progressive, and conservative, has been individualized, if I may
- say so, by monopoly, and the principle which ought to secure
- society's welfare causes its ruin. The monopolist, always
- striving for the greatest possible net product, no longer acts as
- a member of society and in the interest of society; he acts with
- a view to his exclusive interest, whether this interest be
- contrary to the social interest or not. This change of
- perspective is the cause to which M. de Sismondi attributes the
- depopulation of the Roman Campagna. From the comparative
- researches which he has made regarding the product of the agro
- romano when in a state of cultivation and its product when left
- as pasture-land, he has found that the GROSS product would be
- twelve times larger in the former case than in the latter; but,
- as cultivation demands relatively a greater number of hands, he
- has discovered also that in the former case the NET product
- would be less. This calculation, which did not escape the
- proprietors, sufficed to confirm them in the habit of leaving
- their lands uncultivated, and hence the Roman Campagna is
- uninhabited.
- "All parts of the Roman States," adds M. de Sismondi, "present
- the same contrast between the memories of their prosperity in the
- Middle Ages and their present desolation. The town of Ceres,
- made famous by Renzo da Ceri, who defended by turns Marseilles
- against Charles V. and Geneva against the Duke of Savoy, is
- nothing but a solitude. In all the fiefs of the Orsinis and the
- Colonnes not a soul. From the forests which surround the pretty
- Lake of Vico the human race has disappeared; and the soldiers
- with whom the formidable prefect of Vico made Rome tremble so
- often in the fourteenth century have left no descendants. Castro
- and Ronciglione are desolated."--Studies in Political Economy.
- In fact, society seeks the greatest possible gross product, and
- consequently the greatest possible population, because with it
- gross product and net product are identical. Monopoly, on the
- contrary, aims steadily at the greatest net product, even though
- able to obtain it only at the price of the extermination of the
- human race.
- Under this same influence of monopoly, interest on capital,
- perverted in its idea, has become in turn a principle of death to
- society. As we have explained it, interest on capital is, on the
- one hand, the form under which the laborer enjoys his net
- product, while utilizing it in new creations; on the other, this
- interest is the material bond of solidarity between producers,
- viewed from the standpoint of the increase of wealth. Under
- the first aspect, the aggregate interest paid can never exceed
- the amount of the capital itself; under the second, interest
- allows, in addition to reimbursement, a premium as a reward of
- service rendered. In no case does it imply perpetuity.
- But monopoly, confounding the idea of capital, which is
- attributable only to the creations of human industry, with that
- of the exploitable material which nature has given us, and which
- belongs to all, and favored moreover in its usurpation by the
- anarchical condition of a society in which possession can exist
- only on condition of being exclusive, sovereign, and
- perpetual,--monopoly has imagined and laid it down as a principle
- that capital, like land, animals, and plants, had in itself an
- activity of its own, which relieved the capitalist of the
- necessity of contributing anything else to exchange and of taking
- any part in the labors of the workshop. From this false idea of
- monopoly has come the Greek name of usury, tokos, as much as to
- say the child or the increase of capital, which caused Aristotle
- to perpetrate this witticism: COINS BEGET NO CHILDREN. But the
- metaphor of the usurers has prevailed over the joke of the
- Stagyrite; usury, like rent, of which it is an imitation, has
- been declared a perpetual right; and only very lately, by a
- half-return to the principle, has it reproduced the idea of
- REDEMPTION.
- Such is the meaning of the enigma which has caused so many
- scandals among theologians and legists, and regarding which the
- Christian Church has blundered twice,--first, in condemning every
- sort of interest, and, second, in taking the side of the
- economists and thus contradicting its old maxims. Usury, or the
- right of increase, is at once the expression and the condemnation
- of monopoly; it is the spoliation of labor by organized and
- legalized capital; of all the economic subversions it is
- that which most loudly accuses the old society, and whose
- scandalous persistence would justify an unceremonious and
- uncompensated dispossession of the entire capitalistic class.
- Finally, monopoly, by a sort of instinct of self-preservation,
- has perverted even the idea of association, as something that
- might infringe upon it, or, to speak more accurately, has not
- permitted its birth.
- Who could hope today to define what association among men should
- be? The law distinguishes two species and four varieties of
- civil societies, and as many commercial societies, from the
- simple partnership to the joint-stock company. I have read the
- most respectable commentaries that have been written upon all
- these forms of association, and I declare that I have found in
- them but one application of the routine practices of monopoly
- between two or more partners who unite their capital and their
- efforts against everything that produces and consumes, that
- invents and exchanges, that lives and dies. The sine qua non of
- all these societies is capital, whose presence alone constitutes
- them and gives them a basis; their object is monopoly,--that is,
- the exclusion of all other laborers and capitalists, and
- consequently the negation of social universality so far as
- persons are concerned.
- Thus, according to the definition of the statute, a commercial
- society which should lay down as a principle the right of any
- stranger to become a member upon his simple request, and to
- straightway enjoy the rights and prerogatives of associates and
- even managers, would no longer be a society; the courts would
- officially pronounce its dissolution, its nonexistence. So,
- again, articles of association in which the contracting parties
- should stipulate no contribution of capital, but, while
- reserving to each the express right to compete with all, should
- confine themselves to a reciprocal guarantee of labor and wages,
- saying nothing of the branch of exploitation, or of capital, or
- of interest, or of profit and loss,--such articles would seem
- contradictory in their tenor, as destitute of purpose as of
- reason, and would be annulled by the judge on the complaint of
- the first rebellious associate. Covenants thus drawn up could
- give rise to no judicial action; people calling themselves the
- associates of everybody would be considered associates of nobody;
- treatises contemplating guarantee and competition between
- associates at the same time, without any mention of social
- capital and without any designation of purpose, would pass for a
- work of transcendental charlatanism, whose author could readily
- be sent to a madhouse, provided the magistrates would consent to
- regard him as only a lunatic.
- And yet it is proved, by the most authentic testimony which
- history and social economy furnish, that humanity has been thrown
- naked and without capital upon the earth which it cultivates;
- consequently that it has created and is daily creating all the
- wealth that exists; that monopoly is only a relative view serving
- to designate the grade of the laborer, with certain conditions of
- enjoyment; and that all progress consists, while indefinitely
- multiplying products, in determining their proportionality,--that
- is, in organizing labor and comfort by division, machinery, the
- workshop, education, and competition. On the other hand, it is
- evident that all the tendencies of humanity, both in its politics
- and in its civil laws, are towards universalization,--that is,
- towards a complete transformation of the idea of society as
- determined by our statutes.
- Whence I conclude that articles of association which should
- regulate, no longer the contribution of the associates,--since
- each associate, according to the economic theory, is supposed to
- possess absolutely nothing upon his entrance into society,--but
- the conditions of labor and exchange, and which should allow
- access to all who might present themselves,--I conclude, I say,
- that such articles of association would contain nothing that was
- not rational and scientific, since they would be the very
- expression of progress, the organic formula of labor, and since
- they would reveal, so to speak, humanity to itself by giving it
- the rudiment of its constitution.
- Now, who, among the jurisconsults and economists, has ever
- approached even within a thousand leagues of this magnificent and
- yet so simple idea?
- "I do not think," says M. Troplong, "that the spirit of
- association is called to greater destinies than those which it
- has accomplished in the past and up to the present time. . . ;
- and I confess that I have made no attempt to realize such hopes,
- which I believe exaggerated. . . . There are well-defined limits
- which association should not overstep. No! association is not
- called upon in France to govern everything. The spontaneous
- impulse of the individual mind is also a living force in our
- nation and a cause of its originality. . . .
- "The idea of association is not new. . . . Even among the Romans
- we see the commercial society appear with all its paraphernalia
- of monopolies, corners, collusions, combinations, piracy, and
- venality. . . . The joint-stock company realizes the civil,
- commercial, and maritime law of the Middle Ages: at that epoch it
- was the most active instrument of labor organized in society. . .
- . From the middle of the fourteenth century we see societies
- form by stock subscriptions; and up to the time of Law's
- discomfiture, we see their number continually increase. . . .
- What! we marvel at the mines, factories, patents, and newspapers
- owned by stock companies! But two centuries ago such companies
- owned islands, kingdoms, almost an entire hemisphere. We
- proclaim it a miracle that hundreds of stock subscribers should
- group themselves around an enterprise; but as long ago as the
- fourteenth century the entire city of Florence was in similar
- silent partnership with a few merchants, who pushed the genius of
- enterprise as far as possible. Then, if our speculations
- are bad, if we have been rash, imprudent, or credulous, we
- torment the legislator with our cavilling complaints; we call
- upon him for prohibitions and nullifications. In our mania for
- regulating everything, EVEN THAT WHICH IS ALREADY CODIFIED; for
- enchaining everything by texts reviewed, corrected, and added to;
- for administering everything, even the chances and reverses of
- commerce,--we cry out, in the midst of so many existing laws:
- `There is still something to do!'"
- M. Troplong believes in Providence, but surely he is not its man.
- He will not discover the formula of association clamored for
- today by minds disgusted with all the protocols of combination
- and rapine of which M. Troplong unrolls the picture in his
- commentary. M. Troplong gets impatient, and rightly, with those
- who wish to enchain everything in texts of laws; and he himself
- pretends to enchain the future in a series of fifty articles, in
- which the wisest mind could not discover a spark of economic
- science or a shadow of philosophy. IN OUR MANIA, he cries, FOR
- REGULATING EVERYTHING, EVEN THAT WHICH IS ALREADY CODIFIED! . . .
- . I know nothing more delicious than this stroke, which paints
- at once the jurisconsult and the economist. After the Code
- Napoleon, take away the ladder! . . .
- "Fortunately," M. Troplong continues, "all the projects of change
- so noisily brought to light in 1837 and 1838 are forgotten today.
- The conflict of propositions and the anarchy of reformatory
- opinions have led to negative results. At the same time that the
- reaction against speculators was effected, the common sense of
- the public did justice to the numerous official plans of
- organization, much inferior in wisdom to the existing law, much
- less in harmony with the usages of commerce, much less liberal,
- after 1830, than the conceptions of the imperial Council of
- State! Now order is restored in everything, and the commercial
- code has preserved its integrity, its excellent integrity. When
- commerce needs it, it finds, by the side of partnership,
- temporary partnership, and the joint-stock company, the free
- silent partnership, tempered only by the prudence of the silent
- partners and by the provisions of the penal code regarding
- swindling."--Troplong: Civil and Commercial Societies: Preface.
- What a philosophy is that which rejoices in the miscarriage of
- reformatory endeavors, and which counts its triumphs by the
- NEGATIVE RESULTS of the spirit of inquiry! We cannot now enter
- upon a more fundamental criticism of the civil and commercial
- societies, which have furnished M. Troplong material for two
- volumes. We will reserve this subject for the time when, the
- theory of economic contradictions being finished, we shall have
- found in their general equation the programme of association,
- which we shall then publish in contrast with the practice and
- conceptions of our predecessors.
- A word only as to silent partnership.
- One might think at first blush that this form of joint-stock
- company, by its expansive power and by the facility for change
- which it offers, could be generalized in such a way as to take in
- an entire nation in all its commercial and industrial relations.
- But the most superficial examination of the constitution of this
- society demonstrates very quickly that the sort of enlargement of
- which it is susceptible, in the matter of the number of
- stockholders, has nothing in common with the extension of the
- social bond.
- In the first place, like all other commercial societies, it is
- necessarily limited to a single branch of exploitation: in this
- respect it is exclusive of all industries foreign to that
- peculiarly its own. If it were otherwise, it would have changed
- its nature; it would be a new form of society, whose statutes
- would regulate, no longer the profits especially, but the
- distribution of labor and the conditions of exchange; it would be
- exactly such an association as M. Troplong denies and as the
- jurisprudence of monopoly excludes.
- As for the personal composition of the company, it naturally
- divides itself into two categories,--the managers and the
- stockholders. The managers, very few in number, are chosen
- from the promoters, organizers, and patrons of the enterprise: in
- truth, they are the only associates. The stockholders, compared
- with this little government, which administers the society with
- full power, are a people of taxpayers who, strangers to each
- other, without influence and without responsibility, have nothing
- to do with the affair beyond their investments. They are lenders
- at a premium, not associates.
- One can see from this how all the industries of the kingdom could
- be carried on by such companies, and each citizen, thanks to the
- facility for multiplying his shares, be interested in all or most
- of these companies without thereby improving his condition: it
- might happen even that it would be more and more compromised.
- For, once more, the stockholder is the beast of burden, the
- exploitable material of the company: not for him is this society
- formed. In order that association may be real, he who
- participates in it must do so, not as a gambler, but as an active
- factor; he must have a deliberative voice in the council; his
- name must be expressed or implied in the title of the society;
- everything regarding him, in short, should be regulated in
- accordance with equality. But these conditions are precisely
- those of the organization of labor, which is not taken into
- consideration by the code; they form the ULTERIOR object of
- political economy, and consequently are not to be taken for
- granted, but to be created, and, as such, are radically
- incompatible with monopoly.[20]
- [20] Possibly these paragraphs will not be clear to all without
- the explanation that the form of association discussed in them,
- called in French the commandite, is a joint-stock company to
- which the shareholders simply lend their capital, without
- acquiring a share in the management or incurring responsibility
- for the results thereof.-- Translator.
- Socialism, in spite of its high-sounding name, has so far been no
- more fortunate than monopoly in the definition of society:
- we may even assert that, in all its plans of organization, it has
- steadily shown itself in this respect a plagiarist of political
- economy. M. Blanc, whom I have already quoted in discussing
- competition, and whom we have seen by turns as a partisan of the
- hierarchical principle, an officious defender of inequality,
- preaching communism, denying with a stroke of the pen the law of
- contradiction because he cannot conceive it, aiming above all at
- power as the final sanction of his system,--M. Blanc offers us
- again the curious example of a socialist copying political
- economy without suspecting it, and turning continually in the
- vicious circle of proprietary routine. M. Blanc really denies
- the sway of capital; he even denies that capital is equal to
- labor in production, in which he is in accord with healthy
- economic theories. But he can not or does not know how to
- dispense with capital; he takes capital for his point of
- departure; he appeals to the State for its silent partnership:
- that is, he gets down on his knees before the capitalists and
- recognizes the sovereignty of monopoly. Hence the singular
- contortions of his dialectics. I beg the reader's pardon for
- these eternal personalities: but since socialism, as well as
- political economy, is personified in a certain number of writers,
- I cannot do otherwise than quote its authors.
- "Has or has not capital," said "La Phalange," "in so far as it is
- a faculty in production, the legitimacy of the other productive
- faculties? If it is illegitimate, its pretensions to a share of
- the product are illegitimate; it must be excluded; it has no
- interest to receive: if, on the contrary, it is legitimate, it
- cannot be legitimately excluded from participation in the
- profits, in the increase which it has helped to create."
- The question could not be stated more clearly. M. Blanc holds,
- on the contrary, that it is stated in a VERY CONFUSED manner,
- which means that it embarrasses him greatly, and that he is much
- worried to find its meaning.
- In the first place, he supposes that he is asked "whether it is
- equitable to allow the capitalist a share of the profits of
- production EQUAL TO THE LABORER'S." To which M. Blanc answers
- unhesitatingly that that would be unjust. Then follows an
- outburst of eloquence to establish this injustice.
- Now, the phalansterian does not ask whether the share of the
- capitalist should or should not be EQUAL TO THE LABORER'S; he
- wishes to know simply WHETHER HE IS TO HAVE A SHARE. And to this
- M. Blanc makes no reply.
- Is it meant, continues M. Blanc, that capital is INDISPENSABLE
- to production, like labor itself? Here M. Blanc distinguishes:
- he grants that capital is indispensable, AS labor is, but not
- TO THE EXTENT THAT labor is.
- Once again, the phalansterian does not dispute as to quantity,
- but as to right.
- Is it meant--it is still M. Blanc who interrogates--that all
- capitalists are not idlers? M. Blanc, generous to capitalists
- who work, asks why so large a share should be given to those who
- do not work? A flow of eloquence as to the IMPERSONAL services
- of the capitalist and the PERSONAL services of the laborer,
- terminated by an appeal to Providence.
- For the third time, you are asked whether the participation of
- capital in profits is legitimate, since you admit that it is
- indispensable in production.
- At last M. Blanc, who has understood all the time, decides to
- reply that, if he allows interest to capital, he does so only as
- a transitional measure and to ease the descent of the
- capitalists. For the rest, his project leading inevitably to the
- absorption of private capital in association, it would be folly
- and an abandonment of principle to do more. M. Blanc, if he had
- studied his subject, would have needed to say but a single
- phrase: "I deny capital."
- Thus M. Blanc,--and under his name I include the whole of
- socialism,-- after having, by a first contradiction of the title
- of his book, "ORGANIZATION OF LABOR," declared that capital was
- INDISPENSABLE in production, and consequently that it should be
- organized and participate in profits like labor, by a second
- contradiction rejects capital from organization and refuses to
- recognize it: by a third contradiction he who laughs at
- decorations and titles of nobility distributes civic crowns,
- rewards, and distinctions to such litterateurs inventors, and
- artists as shall have deserved well of the country; he allows
- them salaries according to their grades and dignities; all of
- which is the restoration of capital as really, though not with
- the same mathematical precision, as interest and net product: by
- a fourth contradiction M. Blanc establishes this new aristocracy
- on the principle of equality,-- that is, he pretends to vote
- masterships to equal and free associates, privileges of idleness
- to laborers, spoliation in short to the despoiled: by a fifth
- contradiction he rests this equalitarian aristocracy on the basis
- of a POWER ENDOWED WITH GREAT FORCE,--that is, on despotism,
- another form of monopoly: by a sixth contradiction, after having,
- by his encouragements to labor and the arts, tried to proportion
- reward to service, like monopoly, and wages to capacity, like
- monopoly, he sets himself to eulogize life in common, labor and
- consumption in common, which does not prevent him from wishing to
- withdraw from the effects of common indifference, by means of
- national encouragements taken out of the common product, the
- grave and serious writers whom common readers do not care for: by
- a seventh contradiction. . . . but let us stop at seven, for we
- should not have finished at seventy-seven.
- It is said that M. Blanc, who is now preparing a history of the
- French Revolution, has begun to seriously study political
- economy. The first fruit of this study will be, I do not
- doubt, a repudiation of his pamphlet on "Organization of Labor,"
- and consequently a change in all his ideas of authority and
- government. At this price the "History of the French
- Revolution," by M. Blanc, will be a truly useful and original
- work.
- All the socialistic sects, without exception, are possessed by
- the same prejudice; all, unconsciously, inspired by the economic
- contradiction, have to confess their powerlessness in presence of
- the necessity of capital; all are waiting, for the realization of
- their ideas, to hold power and money in their hands. The utopias
- of socialism in the matter of association make more prominent
- than ever the truth which we announced at the beginning: THERE
- IS NOTHING IN SOCIALISM WHICH IS NOT FOUND IN POLITICAL ECONOMY;
- and this perpetual plagiarism is the irrevocable condemnation of
- both. Nowhere is to be seen the dawn of that mother-idea, which
- springs with so much eclat from the generation of the economic
- categories,--that the superior formula of association has nothing
- to do with capital, a matter for individual accounts, but must
- bear solely upon equilibrium of production, the conditions of
- exchange, the gradual reduction of cost, the one and only source
- of the increase of wealth. Instead of determining the relations
- of industry to industry, of laborer to laborer, of province to
- province, and of people to people, the socialists dream only of
- providing themselves with capital, always conceiving the problem
- of the solidarity of laborers as if it were a question of
- founding some new institution of monopoly. The world, humanity,
- capital, industry, business machinery, exist; it is a matter now
- simply of finding their philosophy,--in other words, of
- organizing them: and the socialists are in search of capital!
- Always outside of reality, is it astonishing that they miss it?
- Thus M. Blanc asks for State aid and the establishment of
- national workshops; thus Fourier asked for six million francs,
- and his followers are still engaged today in collecting that sum;
- thus the communists place their hope in a revolution which shall
- give them authority and the treasury, and exhaust themselves in
- waiting for useless subscriptions. Capital and power, secondary
- organs in society, are always the gods whom socialism adores: if
- capital and power did not exist, it would invent them. Through
- its anxieties about power and capital, socialism has completely
- overlooked the meaning of its own protests: much more, it has not
- seen that, in involving itself, as it has done, in the economic
- routine, it has deprived itself of the very right to protest. It
- accuses society of antagonism, and through the same antagonism it
- goes in pursuit of reform. It asks capital for the poor
- laborers, as if the misery of laborers did not come from the
- competition of capitalists as well as from the factitious
- opposition of labor and capital; as if the question were not
- today precisely what it was before the creation of capital,--that
- is, still and always a question of equilibrium; as if, in
- short,--let us repeat it incessantly, let us repeat it to
- satiety,--the question were henceforth of something other than a
- synthesis of all the principles brought to light by civilization,
- and as if, provided this synthesis, the idea which leads the
- world, were known, there would be any need of the intervention of
- capital and the State to make them evident.
- Socialism, in deserting criticism to devote itself to declamation
- and utopia and in mingling with political and religious
- intrigues, has betrayed its mission and misunderstood the
- character of the century. The revolution of 1830 demoralized us;
- socialism is making us effeminate. Like political economy, whose
- contradictions it simply sifts again, socialism is powerless
- to satisfy the movement of minds: it is henceforth, in those whom
- it subjugates, only a new prejudice to destroy, and, in those who
- propagate it, a charlatanism to unmask, the more dangerous
- because almost always sincere.
- CHAPTER VII.
- FIFTH PERIOD.--POLICE, OR TAXATION.
- In positing its principles humanity, as if in obedience to a
- sovereign order, never goes backward. Like the traveller who by
- oblique windings rises from the depth of the valley to the
- mountain-top, it follows intrepidly its zigzag road, and marches
- to its goal with confident step, without repentance and without
- pause. Arriving at the angle of monopoly, the social genius
- casts backward a melancholy glance, and, in a moment of profound
- reflection, says to itself:
- "Monopoly has stripped the poor hireling of everything,--bread,
- clothing, home, education, liberty, and security. I will lay a
- tax upon the monopolist; at this price I will save him his
- privilege.
- "Land and mines, woods and waters, the original domain of man,
- are forbidden to the proletaire. I will intervene in their
- exploitation, I will have my share of the products, and land
- monopoly shall be respected.
- "Industry has fallen into feudalism, but I am the suzerain. The
- lords shall pay me tribute, and they shall keep the profit of
- their capital.
- "Commerce levies usurious profits on the consumer. I will strew
- its road with toll-gates, I will stamp its checks and indorse its
- invoices, and it shall pass.
- "Capital has overcome labor by intelligence. I will open
- schools, and the laborer, made intelligent himself, shall
- become a capitalist in his turn.
- "Products lack circulation, and social life is cramped. I will
- build roads, bridges, canals, marts, theatres, and temples, and
- thus furnish at one stroke work, wealth, and a market.
- "The rich man lives in plenty, while the workman weeps in famine.
- I will establish taxes on bread, wine, meat, salt, and honey, on
- articles of necessity and on objects of value, and these shall
- supply alms for my poor.
- "And I will set guards over the waters, the woods, the fields,
- the mines, and the roads; I will send collectors to gather the
- taxes and teachers to instruct the children; I will have an army
- to put down refractory subjects, courts to judge them, prisons to
- punish them, and priests to curse them. All these offices shall
- be given to the proletariat and paid by the monopolists.
- "Such is my certain and efficacious will."
- We have to prove that society could neither think better nor act
- worse: this will be the subject of a review which, I hope, will
- throw new light upon the social problem.
- Every measure of general police, every administrative and
- commercial regulation, like every law of taxation, is at bottom
- but one of the innumerable articles of this ancient bargain, ever
- violated and ever renewed, between the patriciate and the
- proletariat. That the parties or their representatives knew
- nothing of it, or even that they frequently viewed their
- political constitutions from another standpoint, is of little
- consequence to us: not to the man, legislator, or prince do we
- look for the meaning of his acts, but to the acts themselves.
- % 1.--Synthetic idea of the tax.--Point of departure and
- development of this idea.
- In order to render that which is to follow more intelligible, I
- will explain, inverting, as it were, the method which we have
- followed hitherto, the superior theory of the tax; then I will
- give its genesis; finally I will show the contradiction and
- results. The synthetic idea of the tax, as well as its original
- conception, would furnish material for the most extensive
- developments. I shall confine myself to a simple announcement of
- the propositions, with a summary indication of the proofs.
- The tax, in its essence and positive destiny, is the form of
- distribution among that species of functionaries which Adam Smith
- has designated by the word UNPRODUCTIVE, although he admits as
- much as any one the utility and even the necessity of their labor
- in society. By this adjective, UNPRODUCTIVE, Adam Smith, whose
- genius dimly foresaw everything and left us to do everything,
- meant that the product of these laborers is NEGATIVE, which is a
- very different thing from null, and that consequently
- distribution so far as they are concerned follows a method other
- than exchange.
- Let us consider, in fact, what takes place, from the point of
- view of distribution, in the four great divisions of collective
- labor,-- EXTRACTION,[21] MANUFACTURES, COMMERCE, AGRICULTURE.
- Each producer brings to market a real product whose quantity can
- be measured, whose quality can be estimated, whose price can be
- debated, and, finally, whose value can be discounted, either in
- other services or merchandise, or else in money. In all these
- industries distribution, therefore, is nothing but the mutual
- exchange of products according to the law of proportionality of
- values.
- [21] Hunting, fishing, mining,--in short, the gathering of all
- natural products.--Translator.
- Nothing like this takes place with the functionaries called
- PUBLIC. These obtain their right to subsistence, not by the
- production of real utilities, but by the very state of
- unproductivity in which, by no fault of their own, they are kept.
- For them the law of proportionality is inverted: while social
- wealth is formed and increased in the direct ratio of the
- quantity, variety, and proportion of the effective products
- furnished by the four great industrial categories, the
- development of this same wealth, the perfecting of social order,
- suppose, on the contrary, so far as the personnel of police is
- concerned, a progressive and indefinite reduction. State
- functionaries, therefore, are very truly unproductive. On this
- point J. B. Say agreed with A. Smith, and all that he has written
- on this subject in correction of his master, and which has been
- stupidly included among his titles to glory, arises entirely, it
- is easy to see, from a misunderstanding. In a word, the wages of
- the government's employees constitute a social DEFICIT; they
- must be carried to the account of LOSSES, which it must be the
- object of industrial organization to continually diminish: in
- this view what other adjective could be used to describe the men
- of power than that of Adam Smith?
- Here, then, is a category of services which, furnishing no real
- products, cannot be rewarded in the ordinary way; services which
- do not fall under the law of exchange, which cannot become the
- object of private speculation, competition, joint-stock
- association, or any sort of commerce, but which, theoretically
- regarded as performed gratuitously by all, but entrusted, by
- virtue of the law of division of labor, to a small number of
- special men who devote themselves exclusively to them, must
- consequently be paid for. History confirms this general datum.
- The human mind, which tries all solutions of every problem, has
- tried accordingly to submit public functions to exchange; for a
- long time French magistrates, like notaries, etc., lived solely
- by their fees. But experience has proved that this method of
- distribution applied to unproductive laborers was too expensive
- and subject to too many disadvantages, and it became necessary to
- abandon it.
- The organization of the unproductive services contributes to the
- general welfare in several ways: first, by relieving producers of
- public cares, in which all must participate, and to which,
- consequently, all are more or less slaves; secondly, by
- establishing in society an artificial centralization, the image
- and prelude of the future solidarity of industries; and, finally,
- by furnishing a first attempt at balance and discipline.
- So we admit, with J. B. Say, the usefulness of magistrates and
- the other agents of public authority; but we hold that this
- usefulness is wholly negative, and we insist, therefore, on
- describing these functionaries by the adjective unproductive
- which A. Smith applied to them, not to bring them into discredit,
- but because they really cannot be classed in the category of
- producers. "Taxation," very well says an economist of Say's
- school, M. J. Garnier,--"taxation is a PRIVATION which we should
- try to reduce to the furthest point of compatibility with the
- needs of society." If the writer whom I quote has reflected upon
- the meaning of his words, he has seen that the word PRIVATION
- which he uses is synonymous with NON-PRODUCTION, and that
- consequently those for whose benefit taxes are collected are very
- truly UNPRODUCTIVE laborers.
- I insist upon this definition, which seems to me the less
- questionable from the fact that, however much they may
- dispute over the word, all agree upon the thing, because it
- contains the germ of the greatest revolution yet to be
- accomplished in the world,--I mean the subordination of the
- unproductive functions to the productive functions, in a word,
- the effective submission, always asked and never obtained, of
- authority to the citizens.
- It is a consequence of the development of the economical
- contradictions that order in society first shows itself inverted;
- that that which should be above is placed below, that which
- should be in relief seems sunken, and that which should receive
- the light is thrown into the shadow. Thus power, which, in its
- essence, is, like capital, the auxiliary and subordinate of
- labor, becomes, through the antagonism of society, the spy,
- judge, and tyrant of the productive functions; power, whose
- original inferiority lays upon it the duty of obedience, is
- prince and sovereign.
- In all ages the laboring classes have pursued against the
- office-holding class the solution of this antinomy, of which
- economic science alone can give the key. The oscillations--that
- is, the political agitations which result from this struggle of
- labor against power--now lead to a depression of the central
- force, which compromises the very existence of society; now,
- exaggerating this same force beyond measure, give birth to
- despotism. Then, the privileges of command, the infinite joy
- which it gives to ambition and pride, making the unproductive
- functions an object of universal lust, a new leaven of discord
- penetrates society, which, divided already in one direction into
- capitalists and wage-workers, and in another into producers and
- non-producers, is again divided as regards power into monarchists
- and democrats. The conflicts between royalty and the republic
- would furnish us most marvellous and interesting material
- for our episodes. The confines of this work do not permit us so
- long an excursion; and after having pointed out this new branch
- in the vast network of human aberrations, we shall confine
- ourselves exclusively, in dealing with taxation, to the economic
- question.
- Such, then, in succinctest statement, is the synthetic theory of
- the tax,--that is, if I may venture to use the familiar
- comparison, of this fifth wheel of the coach of humanity, which
- makes so much noise, and which, in governmental parlance, is
- styled the State. The State, the police, or their means of
- existence, the tax, is, I repeat, the official name of the class
- designated in political economy as nonproducers,--in short, as
- the domestics of society.
- But public reason does not attain at a single bound this simple
- idea, which for centuries had to remain in the state of a
- transcendental conception. Before civilization can mount to such
- a height, it must pass through frightful tempests and innumerable
- revolutions, in each of which, one might say, it renews its
- strength in a bath of blood. And when at last production,
- represented by capital, seems on the point of thoroughly
- subordinating the unproductive organ, the State, then society
- rises in indignation, labor weeps at the prospect of its
- immediate freedom, democracy shudders at the abasement of power,
- justice cries out as if scandalized, and all the oracles of the
- departing gods exclaim with terror that the abomination of
- desolation is in the holy places and that the end of the world
- has come. So true is it that humanity never desires what it
- seeks, and that the slightest progress cannot be realized without
- spreading panic among the peoples.
- What, then, in this evolution, is the point of departure of
- society, and by what circuitous route does it reach
- political reform,--that is, economy in its expenditures, equality
- in the assessment of its taxes, and the subordination of power to
- industry? That is what we are about to state in a few words,
- reserving developments for the sequel.
- The original idea of the tax is that of REDEMPTION.
- As, by the law of Moses, each first-born was supposed to belong
- to Jehovah, and had to be redeemed by an offering, so the tax
- everywhere presents itself in the form of a tithe or royal
- prerogative by which the proprietor annually redeems from the
- sovereign the profit of exploitation which he is supposed to hold
- only by his pleasure. This theory of the tax, moreover, is but
- one of the special articles of what is called the social
- contract.
- Ancients and moderns all agree, in terms more or less explicit,
- in regarding the juridical status of societies as a reaction of
- weakness against strength. This idea is uppermost in all the
- works of Plato, notably in the "Gorgias," where he maintains,
- with more subtlety than logic, the cause of the laws against that
- of violence,--that is, legislative absolutism against
- aristocratic and military absolutism. In this knotty dispute, in
- which the weight of evidence is equal on both sides, Plato simply
- expresses the sentiment of entire antiquity. Long before him,
- Moses, in making a distribution of lands, declaring patrimony
- inalienable, and ordering a general and uncompensated
- cancellation of all mortgages every fiftieth year, had opposed a
- barrier to the invasions of force. The whole Bible is a hymn to
- JUSTICE,--that is, in the Hebrew style, to charity, to kindness
- to the weak on the part of the strong, to voluntary renunciation
- of the privilege of power. Solon, beginning his legislative
- mission by a general abolition of debts, and creating rights and
- reserves,--that is, barriers to prevent their return,--was
- no less reactionary. Lycurgus went farther; he forbade
- individual possession, and tried to absorb the man in the State,
- annihilating liberty the better to preserve equilibrium. Hobbes,
- deriving, and with great reason, legislation from the state of
- war, arrived by another road at the establishment of equality
- upon an exception,--despotism. His book, so much calumniated, is
- only a development of this famous antithesis. The charter of
- 1830, consecrating the insurrection made in '89 by the plebeians
- against the nobility, and decreeing the abstract equality of
- persons before the law, in spite of the real inequality of powers
- and talents which is the veritable basis of the social system now
- in force, is also but a protest of society in favor of the poor
- against the rich, of the small against the great. All the laws
- of the human race regarding sale, purchase, hire, property,
- loans, mortgages, prescription, inheritance, donation, wills,
- wives' dowries, minority, guardianship, etc., etc., are real
- barriers erected by judicial absolutism against the absolutism of
- force. Respect for contracts, fidelity to promises, the religion
- of the oath, are fictions, osselets,[22] as the famous Lysander
- aptly said, with which society deceives the strong and brings
- them under the yoke.
- [22] Little bones taken from the joints of animals and serving as
- playthings for children.--Translator.
- The tax belongs to that great family of preventive, coercive,
- repressive, and vindictive institutions which A. Smith designated
- by the generic term police, and which is, as I have said, in its
- original conception, only the reaction of weakness against
- strength. This follows, independently of abundant historical
- testimony which we will put aside to confine ourselves
- exclusively to economic proof, from the distinction naturally
- arising between taxes.
- All taxes are divisible into two great categories: (1) taxes of
- assessment, or of privilege: these are the oldest taxes; (2)
- taxes of consumption, or of quotite,[23] whose tendency is, by
- absorbing the former, to make public burdens weigh equally upon
- all.
- [23] A tax whose total product is not fixed in advance, but
- depends upon the quantity of things or persons upon whom it
- happens to fall.-- Translator.
- The first sort of taxes--including in France the tax on land, the
- tax on doors and windows, the poll-tax, the tax on personal
- property, the tax on tenants, license-fees, the tax on transfers
- of property, the tax on officials' fees, road-taxes, and
- brevets--is the share which the sovereign reserves for himself
- out of all the monopolies which he concedes or tolerates; it is,
- as we have said, the indemnity of the poor, the permit granted to
- property. Such was the form and spirit of the tax in all the old
- monarchies: feudalism was its beau ideal. Under that regime the
- tax was only a TRIBUTE paid by the holder to the universal
- proprietor or sleeping-partner (commanditaire), the king.
- When later, by the development of public right, royalty, the
- patriarchal form of sovereignty, begins to get impregnated by the
- democratic spirit, the tax becomes a quota which each voter owes
- to the COMMONWEALTH, and which, instead of falling into the hand
- of the prince, is received into the State treasury. In this
- evolution the principle of the tax remains intact; as yet there
- is no transformation of the institution; the real sovereign
- simply succeeds the figurative sovereign. Whether the tax enters
- into the peculium of the prince or serves to liquidate a common
- debt, it is in either case only a claim of society against
- privilege; otherwise, it is impossible to say why the tax is
- levied in the ratio of fortunes.
- Let all contribute to the public expenses: nothing more just.
- But why should the rich pay more than the poor? That is just,
- they say, because they possess more. I confess that such justice
- is beyond my comprehension. . . . One of two things is true:
- either the proportional tax guarantees a privilege to the larger
- tax-payers, or else it is a wrong. Because, if property is a
- natural right, as the Declaration of '93 declares, all that
- belongs to me by virtue of this right is as sacred as my person;
- it is my blood, my life, myself: whoever touches it offends the
- apple of my eye. My income of one hundred thousand francs is as
- inviolable a the grisette's daily wage of seventy-five centimes;
- her attic is no more sacred than my suite of apartments. The tax
- is not levied in proportion to physical strength, size, or skill:
- no more should it be levied in proportion to property.--What is
- Property: Chapter II.
- These observations are the more just because the principle which
- it was their purpose to oppose to that of proportional assessment
- has had its period of application. The proportional tax is much
- later in history than liege-homage, which consisted in a simple
- officious demonstration without real payment.
- The second sort of taxes includes in general all those
- designated, by a sort of antiphrasis, by the term INDIRECT, such
- as taxes on liquor, salt, and tobacco, customs duties, and, in
- short, all the taxes which DIRECTLY affect the only thing which
- should be taxed,--product. The principle of this tax, whose name
- is an actual misnomer, is unquestionably better founded in theory
- and more equitable in tendency than the preceding: accordingly,
- in spite of the opinion of the mass, always deceived as to that
- which serves it as well as to that which is prejudicial to it, I
- do not hesitate to say that this tax is the only normal one,
- barring its assessment and collection, with which it is not my
- purpose now to deal.
- For, if it is true, as we have just explained, that the real
- nature of the tax is to pay, according to a particular form of
- wages, for certain services which elude the usual form of
- exchange, it follows that all producers, enjoying these services
- equally as far as personal use is concerned, should contribute to
- their payment in equal portions. The share for each, therefore,
- would be a fraction of his exchangeable product, or, in other
- words, an amount taken from the values delivered by him for
- purposes of consumption. But, under the monopoly system, and
- with collection upon land, the treasury strikes the product
- before it has entered into exchange, even before it is
- produced,--a circumstance which results in throwing back the
- amount of the tax into the cost of production, and consequently
- puts the burden upon the consumer and lifts it from monopoly.
- Whatever the significance of the tax of assessment or the tax of
- quotite, one thing is sure, and this is the thing which it is
- especially important for us to know,--namely, that, in making the
- tax proportional, it was the intention of the sovereign to make
- citizens contribute to the public expenses, no longer, according
- to the old feudal principle, by means of a poll-tax, which would
- involve the idea of an assessment figured in the ratio of the
- number of persons taxed, and not in the ratio of their
- possessions, but so much per franc of capital, which supposes
- that capital has its source in an authority superior to the
- capitalists. Everybody, spontaneously and with one accord,
- considers such an assessment just; everybody, therefore,
- spontaneously and with one accord, looks upon the tax as a
- resumption on the part of society, a sort of redemption exacted
- from monopoly. This is especially striking in England, where, by
- a special law, the proprietors of the soil and the manufacturers
- pay, in proportion to their incomes, a tax of forty million
- dollars, which is called the poor-rate.
- In short, the practical and avowed object of the tax is to effect
- upon the rich, for the benefit of the people, a proportional
- resumption of their capital.
- Now, analysis and the facts demonstrate:
- That the tax of assessment, the tax upon monopoly, instead of
- being paid by those who possess, is paid almost entirely by those
- who do not possess;
- That the tax of quotite, separating the producer from the
- consumer, falls solely upon the latter, thereby taking from the
- capitalist no more than he would have to pay if fortunes were
- absolutely equal;
- Finally, that the army, the courts, the police, the schools, the
- hospitals, the almshouses, the houses of refuge and correction,
- public functions, religion itself, all that society creates for
- the protection, emancipation, and relief of the proletaire, paid
- for in the first place and sustained by the proletaire, is then
- turned against the proletaire or wasted as far as he is
- concerned; so that the proletariat, which at first labored only
- for the class that devours it,--that of the capitalists,--must
- labor also for the class that flogs it,--that of the
- nonproducers.
- These facts are henceforth so well known, and the economists--I
- owe them this justice--have shown them so clearly, that I shall
- abstain from correcting their demonstrations, which, for the
- rest, are no longer contradicted by anybody. What I propose to
- bring to light, and what the economists do not seem to have
- sufficiently understood, is that the condition in which the
- laborer is placed by this new phase of social economy is
- susceptible of no amelioration; that, unless industrial
- organization, and therefore political reform, should bring about
- an equality of fortunes, evil is inherent in police institutions
- as in the idea of charity which gave them birth; in short, that
- the STATE, whatever form it affects, aristocratic or theocratic,
- monarchical or republican, until it shall have become the
- obedient and submissive organ of a society of equals, will be for
- the people an inevitable hell,--I had almost said a deserved
- damnation.
- % 2.--Antinomy of the tax.
- I sometimes hear the champions of the statu quo maintain that for
- the present we enjoy liberty enough, and that, in spite of the
- declamation against the existing order, we are below the level of
- our institutions. So far at least as taxation is concerned, I am
- quite of the opinion of these optimists.
- According to the theory that we have just seen, the tax is the
- reaction of society against monopoly. Upon this point opinions
- are unanimous: citizens and legislators, economists, journalists,
- and ballad-writers, rendering, each in their own tongue, the
- social thought, vie with each other in proclaiming that the tax
- should fall upon the rich, strike the superfluous and articles of
- luxury, and leave those of prime necessity free. In short, they
- have made the tax a sort of privilege for the privileged: a bad
- idea, since it involved a recognition of the legitimacy of
- privilege, which in no case, whatever shape it may take, is good
- for anything. The people had to be punished for this egoistic
- inconsistency: Providence did not fail in its duty.
- From the moment, then, of the conception of the tax as a
- counter-claim, it had to be fixed proportionally to means,
- whether it struck capital or affected income more especially.
- Now, I will point out that the levying of the tax at so much a
- franc being precisely that which should be adopted in a country
- where all fortunes were equal, saving the differences in the cost
- of assessment and collection, the treasury is the most liberal
- feature of our society, and that on this point our morals are
- really behind our institutions. But as with the wicked the best
- things cannot fail to be detestable, we shall see the
- equalitarian tax crush the people precisely because the people
- are not up to it.
- I will suppose that the gross income in France, for each family
- of four persons, is 1,000 francs: this is a little above the
- estimate of M. Chevalier, who places it at only 63 centimes a day
- for each individual, or 919 francs 80 centimes for each
- household. The tax being today more than a thousand millions, or
- about an eighth of the total income, each family, earning 1,000
- francs a year, is taxed 125 francs.
- Accordingly, an income of 2,000 francs pays 250 francs; an income
- of 3,000 francs, 375; an income of 4,000 francs, 500, etc. The
- proportion is strict and mathematically irreproachable; the
- treasury, by arithmetic, is sure of losing nothing.
- But on the side of the taxpayers the affair totally changes its
- aspect. The tax, which, in the intention of the legislator, was
- to have been proportioned to fortune, is, on the contrary,
- progressive in the ratio of poverty, so that, the poorer the
- citizen is, the more he pays. This I shall try to make plain by
- a few figures.
- According to the proportional tax, there is due to the treasury:
- for an income of
- 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 francs, etc. a tax of
- 125 250 375 500 625 750
- According to this series, then, the tax seems to increase
- proportionally to income.
- But when it is remembered that each annual income is made up of
- 365 units, each of which represents the daily income of the
- taxpayer, the tax will no longer be found proportional; it will
- be found equal. In fact, if the State levies a tax of 125 francs
- on an income of 1,000 francs, it is as if it took from the taxed
- family 45 days' subsistence; likewise the assessments of 250,
- 375, 500, 625, and 750 francs, corresponding to incomes of 2,000,
- 3,000, 4,000, 5,000, and 6,000 francs, constitute in each case a
- tax of 45 days' pay upon each of those who enjoy these incomes.
- I say now that this equality of taxation is a monstrous
- inequality, and that it is a strange illusion to imagine that,
- because the daily income is larger, the tax of which it is the
- base is higher. Let us change our point of view from that of
- personal to that of collective income.
- As an effect of monopoly social wealth abandoning the laboring
- class to go to the capitalistic class, the object of taxation has
- been to moderate this displacement and react against usurpation
- by enforcing a proportional replevin upon each privileged person.
- But proportional to what? To the excess which the privileged
- person has received undoubtedly, and not to the fraction of the
- social capital which his income represents. Now, the object of
- taxation is missed and the law turned into derision when the
- treasury, instead of taking its eighth where this eighth exists,
- asks it precisely of those to whom it should be restored. A
- final calculation will make this evident.
- Setting the daily income of each person in France at 68 centimes,
- the father of a family who, whether as wages or as income from
- his capital, receives 1,000 francs a year receives four shares of
- the national income; he who receives 2,000 francs has eight
- shares; he who receives 4,000 francs has sixteen, etc. Hence it
- follows that the workman who, on an income of 1,000 francs, pays
- 125 francs into the treasury renders to public order half a
- share, or an eighth of his income and his family's subsistence;
- whereas the capitalist who, on an income of 6,000 francs, pays
- only 750 francs realizes a profit of 17 shares out of the
- collective income, or, in other words, gains by the tax 425 per
- cent.
- Let us reproduce the same truth in another form.
- The voters of France number about 200,000. I do not know the
- total amount of taxes paid by these 200,000 voters, but I do not
- believe that I am very far from the truth in supposing an average
- of 300 francs each, or a total of 60,000,000 for the 200,000
- voters, to which we will add twenty-five per cent. to represent
- their share of indirect taxes, making in all 75,000,000, or 75
- francs for each person (supposing the family of each voter to
- consist of five persons), which the electoral class pays to the
- State. The appropriations, according to the "Annuaire
- Economique" for 1845, being 1,106,000,000, there remains
- 1,031,000,000, which makes the tax paid by each non-voting
- citizen 31 francs 30 centimes,--two-fifths of the tax paid by the
- wealthy class. Now, for this proportion to be equitable, the
- average welfare of the non-voting class would have to be
- two-fifths of the average welfare of the voting class: but such
- is not the truth, as it falls short of this by more than
- three-fourths.
- But this disproportion will seem still more shocking when it is
- remembered that the calculation which we have just made
- concerning the electoral class is altogether wrong, altogether in
- favor of the voters.
- In fact, the only taxes which are levied for the enjoyment of the
- right of suffrage are: (1) the land tax; (2) the tax on polls and
- personal property; (3) the tax on doors and windows; (4)
- license-fees. Now, with the exception of the tax on polls and
- personal property, which varies little, the three other taxes are
- thrown back on the consumers; and it is the same with all the
- indirect taxes, for which the holders of capital are reimbursed
- by the consumers, with the exception, however, of the taxes on
- property transfers, which fall directly on the proprietor and
- amount in all to 150,000,000. Now, if we estimate that in this
- last amount the property of voters figures as one-sixth, which is
- placing it high, the portion of direct taxes (409,000,000) being
- 12 francs for each person, and that of indirect taxes
- (547,000,000) 16 francs, the average tax paid by each voter
- having a household of five will reach a total of 265 francs,
- while that paid by the laborer, who has only his arms to support
- himself, his wife, and two children, will be 112 francs. In more
- general terms, the average tax upon each person belonging to the
- upper classes will be 53 francs; upon each belonging to the
- lower, 28. Whereupon I renew my question: Is the welfare of
- those below the voting standard half as great as that of those
- above it?
- It is with the tax as with periodical publications, which really
- cost more the less frequently they appear. A daily journal costs
- forty francs, a weekly ten francs, a monthly four. Supposing
- other things to be equal, the subscription prices of these
- journals are to each other as the numbers forty, seventy, and one
- hundred and twenty, the price rising with the infrequency of
- publication. Now, this exactly represents the increase of the
- tax: it is a subscription paid by each citizen in exchange for
- the right to labor and to live. He who uses this right in the
- smallest proportion pays much; he who uses it a little more pays
- less; he who uses it a great deal pays little.
- The economists are generally in agreement about all this. They
- have attacked the proportional tax, not only in its principle,
- but in its application; they have pointed out its anomalies,
- almost all of which arise from the fact that the relation of
- capital to income, or of cultivated surface to rent, is never
- fixed.
- Given a levy of one-tenth on the income from lands, and lands of
- different qualities producing, the first eight francs' worth of
- grain, the second six francs' worth, the third five francs'
- worth, the tax will call for one-eighth of the income from the
- most fertile land, one-sixth from that a little less fertile,
- and, finally, one-fifth from that less fertile still.[24] Will
- not the tax thus established be just the reverse of what it
- should be? Instead of land, we may suppose other instruments of
- production, and compare capitals of the same value, or amounts of
- labor of the same order, applied to branches of industry
- differing in productivity: the conclusion will be the same.
- There is injustice in requiring the same poll-tax of ten francs
- from the laborer who earns one thousand francs and from the
- artist or physician who has an income of sixty thousand.--J.
- Garnier: Principles of Political Economy.
- [24] This sentence, as it stands, is unintelligible, and probably
- is not correctly quoted by Proudhon. At any rate, one of
- Garnier's works contains a similar passage, which begins thus:
- "Given a levy of one on the area of the land, and lands of
- different qualities producing, the first eight, the second six,
- the third five, the tax will call for one- eighth," etc. This is
- perfectly clear, and the circumstances supposed are aptly
- illustrative of Proudhon's point. I should unhesitatingly
- pronounce it the correct version, except for the fact that
- Proudhon, in the succeeding paragraph, interprets Garnier as
- supposing income to be assessed instead of capital.--Translator.
- These reflections are very sound, although they apply only to
- collection or assessment, and do not touch the principle of the
- tax itself. For, in supposing the assessment to be made upon
- income instead of upon capital, the fact always remains that the
- tax, which should be proportional to fortunes, is borne by the
- consumer.
- The economists have taken a resolve; they have squarely
- recognized the iniquity of the proportional tax.
- "The tax," says Say, "can never be levied upon the necessary."
- This author, it is true, does not tell us what we are to
- understand by the necessary, but we can supply the omission. The
- necessary is what each individual gets out of the total product
- of the country, after deducting what must be taken for taxes.
- Thus, making the estimate in round numbers, the production of
- France being eight thousand millions and the tax one thousand
- millions, the necessary in the case of each individual amounts to
- fifty-six and a half centimes a day. Whatever is in excess of
- this income is alone susceptible of being taxed, according to J.
- B. Say; whatever falls short of it must be regarded by the
- treasury as inviolable.
- The same author expresses this idea in other words when he says:
- "The proportional tax is not equitable." Adam Smith had already
- said before him: "It is not unreasonable that the rich man
- should contribute to the public expenses, not only in proportion
- to his income, but something more." "I will go further," adds
- Say; "I will not fear to say that the progressive tax is the only
- equitable tax." And M. J. Garnier, the latest abridger of the
- economists, says: "Reforms should tend to establish a
- progressional equality, if I may use the phrase, much more just,
- much more equitable, than the pretended equality of taxation,
- which is only a monstrous inequality."
- So, according to general opinion and the testimony of the
- economists, two things are acknowledged: one, that in its
- principle the tax is a reaction against monopoly and directed
- against the rich; the other, that in practice this same tax is
- false to its object; that, in striking the poor by preference, it
- commits an injustice; and that the constant effort of the
- legislator must be to distribute its burden in a more equitable
- fashion.
- I needed to establish this double fact solidly before passing to
- other considerations: now commences my criticism.
- The economists, with that simplicity of honest folk which they
- have inherited from their elders and which even today is all that
- stands to their credit, have taken no pains to see that the
- progressional theory of the tax, which they point out to
- governments as the ne plus ultra of a wise and liberal
- administration, was contradictory in its terms and pregnant with
- a legion of impossibilities. They have attributed the oppression
- of the treasury by turns to the barbarism of the time, the
- ignorance of princes, the prejudices of caste, the avarice of
- collectors, everything, in short, which, in their opinion,
- preventing the progression of the tax, stood in the way of the
- sincere practice of equality in the distribution of public
- burdens; they have not for a moment suspected that what they
- asked under the name of progressive taxation was the overturn of
- all economic ideas.
- Thus they have not seen, for instance, that the tax was
- progressive from the very fact that it was proportional, the only
- difference being that the progression was in the wrong direction,
- the percentage being, as we have said, not directly, but
- inversely proportional to fortunes. If the economists had had a
- clear idea of this overturn, invariable in all countries where
- taxation exists, so singular a phenomenon would not have failed
- to draw their attention; they would have sought its causes, and
- would have ended by discovering that what they took for an
- accident of civilization, an effect of the inextricable
- difficulties of human government, was the product of the
- contradiction inherent in all political economy.
- The progressive tax, whether applied to capital or to income, is
- the very negation of monopoly, of that monopoly which is met
- everywhere, according to M. Rossi, across the path of social
- economy; which is the true stimulant of industry, the hope of
- economy, the preserver and parent of all wealth; of which we have
- been able to say, in short, that society cannot exist without it,
- but that, except for it, there would be no society. Let the tax
- become suddenly what it unquestionably must sometime be,--namely,
- the proportional (or progressional, which is the same thing)
- contribution of each producer to the public expenses, and
- straightway rent and profit are confiscated everywhere for the
- benefit of the State; labor is stripped of the fruits of its
- toil; each individual being reduced to the proper allowance of
- fifty-six and a half centimes, poverty becomes general; the
- compact formed between labor and capital is dissolved, and
- society, deprived of its rudder, drifts back to its original
- state.
- It will be said, perhaps, that it is easy to prevent the absolute
- annihilation of the profits of capital by stopping the
- progression at any moment.
- Eclecticism, the golden mean, compromise with heaven or with
- morality: is it always to be the same philosophy, then? True
- science is repugnant to such arrangements. All invested capital
- must return to the producer in the form of interest; all labor
- must leave a surplus, all wages be equal to product. Under the
- protection of these laws society continually realizes, by the
- greatest variety of production, the highest possible degree of
- welfare. These laws are absolute; to violate them is to wound,
- to mutilate society. Capital, accordingly, which, after all, is
- nothing but accumulated labor, is inviolable. But, on the other
- hand, the tendency to equality is no less imperative; it is
- manifested at each economic phase with increasing energy and an
- invincible authority. Therefore you must satisfy labor and
- justice at once; you must give to the former guarantees more
- and more real, and secure the latter without concession or
- ambiguity.
- Instead of that, you know nothing but the continual substitution
- of the good pleasure of the prince for your theories, the arrest
- of the course of economic law by arbitrary power, and, under the
- pretext of equity, the deception of the wage worker and the
- monopolist alike! Your liberty is but a half-liberty, your
- justice but a half-justice, and all your wisdom consists in those
- middle terms whose iniquity is always twofold, since they justify
- the pretensions of neither one party nor the other! No, such
- cannot be the science which you have promised us, and which, by
- unveiling for us the secrets of the production and consumption of
- wealth, must unequivocally solve the social antinomies. Your
- semi- liberal doctrine is the code of despotism, and shows that
- you are powerless to advance as well as ashamed to retreat.
- If society, pledged by its economic antecedents, can never
- retrace its steps; if, until the arrival of the universal
- equation, monopoly must be maintained in its possession,--no
- change is possible in the laying of taxes: only there is a
- contradiction here, which, like every other, must be pushed till
- exhausted. Have, then, the courage of your opinions,-- respect
- for wealth, and no pity for the poor, whom the God of monopoly
- has condemned. The less the hireling has wherewith to live, the
- more he must pay: qui minus habet, etiam quod habet auferetur ab
- eo. This is necessary, this is inevitable; in it lies the safety
- of society.
- Let us try, nevertheless, to reverse the progression of the tax,
- and so arrange it that the capitalist, instead of the laborer,
- will pay the larger share.
- I observe, in the first place, that with the usual method of
- collection, such a reversal is impracticable.
- In fact, if the tax falls on exploitable capital, this tax, in
- its entirety, is included among the costs of production, and then
- of two things one: either the product, in spite of the increase
- in its selling value, will be bought by the consumer, and
- consequently the producer will be relieved of the tax; or else
- this same product will be thought too dear, and in that case the
- tax, as J. B. Say has very well said, acts like a tithe levied on
- seed,--it prevents production. Thus it is that too high a tax on
- the transfer of titles arrests the circulation of real property,
- and renders estates less productive by keeping them from changing
- hands.
- If, on the contrary, the tax falls on product, it is nothing but
- a tax of quotite, which each pays in the ratio of his
- consumption, while the capitalist, whom it is purposed to strike,
- escapes.
- Moreover, the supposition of a progressive tax based either on
- product or on capital is perfectly absurd. How can we imagine
- the same product paying a duty of ten per cent. at the store of
- one dealer and a duty of but five at another's? How are estates
- already encumbered with mortgages and which change owners every
- day, how is a capital formed by joint investment or by the
- fortune of a single individual, to be distinguished upon the
- official register, and taxed, not in the ratio of their value or
- rent, but in the ratio of the fortune or presumed profits of the
- proprietor?
- There remains, then, a last resource,--to tax the net income of
- each tax-payer, whatever his method of getting it. For instance,
- an income of one thousand francs would pay ten per cent.; an
- income of two thousand francs, twenty per cent.; an income of
- three thousand francs, thirty per cent., etc. We will set aside
- the thousand difficulties and annoyances that must be met in
- ascertaining these incomes, and suppose the operation as
- easy as you like. Well! that is exactly the system which I
- charge with hypocrisy, contradiction, and injustice.
- I say in the first place that this system is hypocritical,
- because, instead of taking from the rich that entire portion of
- their income in excess of the average national product per
- family, which is inadmissible, it does not, as is imagined,
- reverse the order of progression in the direction of wealth; at
- most it changes the rate of progression. Thus the present
- progression of the tax, for fortunes yielding incomes of a
- thousand francs and UNDER, being as that of the numbers 10, 11,
- 12, 13, etc., and, for fortunes yielding incomes of a thousand
- francs and OVER, as that of the numbers 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, etc.,--
- the tax always increasing with poverty and decreasing with
- wealth,--if we should confine ourselves to lifting the indirect
- tax which falls especially on the poorer class and imposing a
- corresponding tax upon the incomes of the richer class, the
- progression thereafter, it is true, would be, for the first, only
- as that of the numbers 10, 10.25, 10.50, 10.75, 11, 11.25, etc.,
- and, for the second, as 10, 9.75, 9.50, 9.25, 9, 8.75, etc. But
- this progression, although less rapid on both sides, would still
- take the same direction nevertheless, would still be a reversal
- of justice; and it is for this reason that the so-called
- progressive tax, capable at most of giving the philanthropist
- something to babble about, is of no scientific value. It changes
- nothing in fiscal jurisprudence; as the proverb says, it is
- always the poor man who carries the pouch, always the rich man
- who is the object of the solicitude of power.
- I add that this system is contradictory.
- In fact, ONE CANNOT BOTH GIVE AND KEEP, say the jurisconsults.
- Instead, then, of consecrating monopolies from which the holders
- are to derive no privilege save that of straightway losing, with
- the income, all the enjoyment thereof, why not decree the
- agrarian law at once? Why provide in the constitution that each
- shall freely enjoy the fruit of his labor and industry, when, by
- the fact or the tendency of the tax, this permission is granted
- only to the extent of a dividend of fifty-six and a half centimes
- a day,--a thing, it is true, which the law could not have
- foreseen, but which would necessarily result from progression?
- The legislator, in confirming us in our monopolies, intended to
- favor production, to feed the sacred fire of industry: now, what
- interest shall we have to produce, if, though not yet associated,
- we are not to produce for ourselves alone? After we have been
- declared free, how can we be made subject to conditions of sale,
- hire, and exchange which annul our liberty?
- A man possesses government securities which bring him an income
- of twenty thousand francs. The tax, under the new system of
- progression, will take fifty per cent. of this from him. At this
- rate it is more advantageous to him to withdraw his capital and
- consume the principal instead of the income. Then let him be
- repaid. What! repaid! The State cannot be obliged to repay;
- and, if it consents to redeem, it will do so in proportion to the
- net income. Therefore a bond for twenty thousand francs will be
- worth not more than ten thousand to the bondholder, because of
- the tax, if he wishes to get it redeemed by the State: unless he
- divides it into twenty lots, in which case it will return him
- double the amount. Likewise an estate which rents for fifty
- thousand francs, the tax taking two-thirds of the income, will
- lose two- thirds of its value. But let the proprietor divide
- this estate into a hundred lots and sell it at auction, and then,
- the terror of the treasury no longer deterring purchasers, he can
- get back his entire capital. So that, with the progressive
- tax, real estate no longer follows the law of supply and demand
- and is not valued according to the real income which it yields,
- but according to the condition of the owner. The consequence
- will be that large capitals will depreciate in value, and
- mediocrity be brought to the front; land-owners will hasten to
- sell, because it will be better for them to consume their
- property than to get an insufficient rent from it; capitalists
- will recall their investments, or will invest only at usurious
- rates; all exploitation on a large scale will be prohibited,
- every visible fortune proceeded against, and all accumulation of
- capital in excess of the figure of the necessary proscribed.
- Wealth, driven back, will retire within itself and never emerge
- except by stealth; and labor, like a man attached to a corpse,
- will embrace misery in an endless union. Does it not well become
- the economists who devise such reforms to laugh at the reformers?
- After having demonstrated the contradiction and delusion of the
- progressive tax, must I prove its injustice also? The
- progressive tax, as understood by the economists and, in their
- wake, by certain radicals, is impracticable, I said just now, if
- it falls on capital and product: consequently I have supposed it
- to fall on incomes. But who does not see that this purely
- theoretical distinction between capital, product, and income
- falls so far as the treasury is concerned, and that the same
- impossibilities which we have pointed out reappear here with all
- their fatal character?
- A manufacturer discovers a process by means of which, saving
- twenty per cent. of his cost of production, he secures an income
- of twenty-five thousand francs. The treasury calls on him for
- fifteen thousand. He is obliged, therefore, to raise his prices,
- since, by the fact of the tax, his process, instead of saving
- twenty per cent., saves only eight per cent. Is not this as
- if the treasury prevented cheapness? Thus, in trying to reach
- the rich, the progressive tax always reaches the consumer; and it
- is impossible for it not to reach him without suppressing
- production altogether: what a mistake!
- It is a law of social economy that all invested capital must
- return continually to the capitalist in the form of interest.
- With the progressive tax this law is radically violated, since,
- by the effect of progression, interest on capital is so reduced
- that industries are established only at a loss of a part or the
- whole of the capital. To make it otherwise, interest on capital
- would have to increase progressively in the same ratio as the tax
- itself, which is absurd. Therefore the progressive tax stops the
- creation of capital; furthermore it hinders its circulation.
- Whoever, in fact, should want to buy a plant for any enterprise
- or a piece of land for cultivation would have to consider, under
- the system of progressive taxation, not the real value of such
- plant or land, but rather the tax which it would bring upon him;
- so that, if the real income were four per cent., and, by the
- effect of the tax or the condition of the buyer, must go down to
- three, the purchase could not be effected. After having run
- counter to all interests and thrown the market into confusion by
- its categories, the progressive tax arrests the development of
- wealth and reduces venal value below real value; it contracts, it
- petrifies society. What tyranny! What derision!
- The progressive tax resolves itself, then, whatever may be done,
- into a denial of justice, prohibition of production,
- confiscation. It is unlimited and unbridled absolutism, given to
- power over everything which, by labor, by economy, by
- improvements, contributes to public wealth.
- But what is the use of wandering about in chimerical hypotheses
- when the truth is at hand. It is not the fault of the
- proportional principle if the tax falls with such shocking
- inequality upon the various classes of society; the fault is in
- our prejudices and our morals. The tax, as far as is possible in
- human operations, proceeds with equity, precision. Social
- economy commands it to apply to product; it applies to product.
- If product escapes it, it strikes capital: what more natural!
- The tax, in advance of civilization, supposes the equality of
- laborers and capitalists: the inflexible expression of necessity,
- it seems to invite us to make ourselves equals by education and
- labor, and, by balancing our functions and associating our
- interests, to put ourselves in accord with it. The tax refuses
- to distinguish between one man and another: and we blame its
- mathematical severity for the differences in our fortunes! We
- ask equality itself to comply with our injustice! Was I not
- right in saying at the outset that, relatively to the tax, we are
- behind our institutions?
- Accordingly we always see the legislator stopping, in his fiscal
- laws, before the subversive consequences of the progressive tax,
- and consecrating the necessity, the immutability of the
- proportional tax. For equality in well-being cannot result from
- the violation of capital: the antinomy must be methodically
- solved, under penalty, for society, of falling back into chaos.
- Eternal justice does not accommodate itself to all the whims of
- men: like a woman, whom one may outrage, but whom one does not
- marry without a solemn alienation of one's self, it demands on
- our part, with the abandonment of our egoism, the recognition of
- all its rights, which are those of science.
- The tax, whose final purpose, as we have shown, is the reward of
- the non-producers, but whose original idea was a restoration of
- the laborer,--the tax, under the system of monopoly, reduces
- itself therefore to a pure and simple protest, a sort of
- extra-judicial act, the whole effect of which is to aggravate the
- situation of the wage-worker by disturbing the monopolist in his
- possession. As for the idea of changing the proportional tax
- into a progressive tax, or, to speak more accurately, of
- reversing the order in which the tax progresses, that is a
- blunder the entire responsibility for which belongs to the
- economists.
- But henceforth menace hovers over privilege. With the power of
- modifying the proportionality of the tax, government has under
- its hand an expeditious and sure means of dispossessing the
- holders of capital when it will; and it is a frightful thing to
- see everywhere that great institution, the basis of society, the
- object of so many controversies, of so many laws, of so many
- cajoleries, and of so many crimes, PROPERTY, suspended at the end
- of a thread over the yawning mouth of the proletariat.
- % 3.--Disastrous and inevitable consequences of the tax.
- (Provisions, sumptuary laws, rural and industrial police,
- patents, trade-marks, etc.)
- M. Chevalier addressed to himself, in July, 1843, on the subject
- of the tax, the following questions:
- (1) Is it asked of all or by preference of a part of the nation?
- (2) Does the tax resemble a levy on polls, or is it exactly
- proportioned to the fortunes of the tax-payers? (3) Is
- agriculture more or less burdened than manufactures or commerce?
- (4) Is real estate more or less spared than personal property?
- (5) Is he who produces more favored than he who consumes? (6)
- Have our taxation laws the character of sumptuary laws?
- To these various questions M. Chevalier makes the reply which I
- am about to quote, and which sums up all of the most
- philosophical considerations upon the subject which I have met:
- (a) The tax affects the universality, applies to the mass, takes
- the nation as a whole; nevertheless, as the poor are the most
- numerous, it taxes them willingly, certain of collecting more.
- (b) By the nature of things the tax sometimes takes the form of a
- levy on polls, as in the case of the salt tax. (c, d, e) The
- treasury addresses itself to labor as well as to consumption,
- because in France everybody labors, to real more than to personal
- property, and to agriculture more than to manufactures. (f) By
- the same reasoning, our laws partake little of the character of
- sumptuary laws.
- What, professor! is that all that science has taught you? THE
- TAX APPLIES TO THE MASS, you say; IT TAKES THE NATION AS A WHOLE.
- Alas! we know it only too well; but it is this which is
- iniquitous, and which we ask you to explain. The government,
- when engaged in the assessment and distribution of the tax, could
- not have believed, did not believe, that all fortunes were equal;
- consequently it could not have wished, did not wish, the sums
- paid to be equal. Why, then, is the practice of the government
- always the opposite of its theory? Your opinion, if you please,
- on this difficult matter? Explain; justify or condemn the
- exchequer; take whatever course you will, provided you take some
- course and say something. Remember that your readers are men,
- and that they cannot excuse in a doctor, speaking ex cathedra,
- such propositions as this: AS THE POOR ARE THE MOST NUMEROUS, IT
- TAXES THEM WILLINGLY, CERTAIN OF COLLECTING MORE. No, Monsieur:
- NUMBERS do not regulate the tax; the tax knows perfectly well
- that millions of poor added to millions of poor do not make one
- voter. You render the treasury odious by making it absurd, and I
- maintain that it is neither the one nor the other. The poor man
- pays more than the rich because Providence, to whom misery is
- odious like vice, has so ordered things that the miserable
- must always be the most ground down. The iniquity of the tax is
- the celestial scourge which drives us towards equality. God! if
- a professor of political economy, who was formerly an apostle,
- could but understand this revelation!
- BY THE NATURE OF THINGS, says m. Chevalier, THE TAX SOMETIMES
- TAKES THE FORM OF A LEVY ON POLLS. Well, in what case is it just
- that the tax should take the form of a levy on polls? Is it
- always, or never? What is the principle of the tax? What is its
- object? Speak, answer.
- And what instruction, pray, can we derive from the remark,
- scarcely worthy of quotation, that THE TREASURY ADDRESSES ITSELF
- TO LABOR AS WELL AS TO CONSUMPTION, TO REAL MORE THAN TO PERSONAL
- PROPERTY, TO AGRICULTURE MORE THAN TO MANUFACTURES? Of what
- consequence to science is this interminable recital of crude
- facts, if your analysis never extracts a single idea from them?
- All the deductions made from consumption by taxation, rent,
- interest on capital, etc., enter into the general expense account
- and figure in the selling price, so that nearly always the
- consumer pays the tax: that we know. And as the goods most
- consumed are also those which yield the most revenue, it
- necessarily follows that the poorest people are the most heavily
- burdened: this consequence, like the first, is inevitable. Once
- more, then, of what importance to us are your fiscal
- distinctions? Whatever the classification of taxable material,
- as it is impossible to tax capital beyond its income, the
- capitalist will be always favored, while the proletaire will
- suffer iniquity, oppression. The trouble is not in the
- distribution of taxes; it is in the distribution of goods. M.
- Chevalier cannot be ignorant of this: why, then, does not M.
- Chevalier, whose word would carry more weight than that of a
- writer suspected of not loving the existing order, say as much?
- From 1806 to 1811 (this observation, as well as the following, is
- M. Chevalier's) the annual consumption of wine in Paris was one
- hundred and forty quarts for each individual; now it is not more
- than eighty-three. Abolish the tax of seven or eight cents a
- quart collected from the retailer, and the consumption of wine
- will soon rise from eighty-three quarts to one hundred and
- seventy-five; and the wine industry, which does not know what to
- do with its products, will have a market. Thanks to the duties
- laid upon the importation of cattle, the consumption of meat by
- the people has diminished in a ratio similar to that of the
- falling-off in the consumption of wine; and the economists have
- recognized with fright that the French workman does less work
- than the English workman, because he is not as well fed.
- Out of sympathy for the laboring classes M. Chevalier would like
- our manufacturers to feel the goad of foreign competition a
- little. A reduction of the tax on woollens to the extent of
- twenty cents on each pair of pantaloons would leave six million
- dollars in the pockets of the consumers,--half enough to pay the
- salt tax. Four cents less in the price of a shirt would effect a
- saving probably sufficient to keep a force of twenty thousand men
- under arms.
- In the last fifteen years the consumption of sugar has risen from
- one hundred and sixteen million pounds to two hundred and sixty
- million, which gives at present an average of seven pounds and
- three-quarters for each individual. This progress demonstrates
- that sugar must be classed henceforth with bread, wine, meat,
- wool, cotton, wood, and coal, among the articles of prime
- necessity. To the poor man sugar is a whole medicine-chest:
- would it be too much to raise the average individual consumption
- of this article from seven pounds and three-quarters to fifteen
- pounds? Abolish the tax, which is about four dollars and a
- half on a hundred pounds, and your consumption will double.
- Thus the tax on provisions agitates and tortures the poor
- proletaire in a thousand ways: the high price of salt hinders the
- production of cattle; the duties on meat diminish also the
- rations of the laborer. To satisfy at once the tax and the need
- of fermented beverages which the laboring class feels, they serve
- him with mixtures unknown to the chemist as well as to the brewer
- and the wine-grower. What further need have we of the dietary
- prescriptions of the Church? Thanks to the tax, the whole year
- is Lent to the laborer, and his Easter dinner is not as good as
- Monseigneur's Good Friday lunch. It is high time to abolish
- everywhere the tax on consumption, which weakens and starves the
- people: this is the conclusion of the economists as well as of
- the radicals.
- But if the proletaire does not fast to feed Caesar, what will
- Caesar eat? And if the poor man does not cut his cloak to cover
- Caesar's nudity, what will Caesar wear?
- That is the question, the inevitable question, the question to be
- solved.
- M. Chevalier, then, having asked himself as his sixth question
- whether our taxation laws have the character of sumptuary laws,
- has answered: No, our taxation laws have not the character of
- sumptuary laws. M. Chevalier might have added--and it would have
- been both new and true-- that that is the best thing about our
- taxation laws. But M. Chevalier, who, whatever he may do, always
- retains some of the old leaven of radicalism, has preferred to
- declaim against luxury, whereby he could not compromise himself
- with any party. "If in Paris," he cries, "the tax collected from
- meat should be laid upon private carriages, saddle- horses and
- carriage-horses, servants, and dogs, it would be a perfectly
- equitable operation."
- Does M. Chevalier, then, sit in the College of France to expound
- the politics of Masaniello? I have seen the dogs at Basle
- wearing the treasury badge upon their necks as a sign that they
- had been taxed, and I looked upon the tax on dogs, in a country
- where taxation is almost nothing, as rather a moral lesson and a
- hygienic precaution than a source of revenue. In 1844 the dog
- tax of forty-two cents a head gave a revenue of $12,600 in the
- entire province of Brabant, containing 667,000 inhabitants. From
- this it may be estimated that the same tax, producing in all
- France $600,000, would lighten the taxes of QUOTITE LESS THAN TWO
- CENTS a year for each individual. Certainly I am far from
- pretending that $600,000 is a sum to be disdained, especially
- with a prodigal ministry; and I regret that the Chamber should
- have rejected the dog tax, which would always have served to
- endow half a dozen highnesses. But I remember that a tax of this
- nature is levied much less in the interest of the treasury than
- as a promoter of order; that consequently it is proper to look
- upon it, from the fiscal point of view, as of no importance; and
- that it will even have to be abolished as an annoyance when the
- mass of the people, having become a little more humanized, shall
- feel a disgust for the companionship of beasts. TWO CENTS A
- YEAR, what a relief for poverty!
- But M. Chevalier has other resources in reserve,--horses,
- carriages, servants, articles of luxury, luxury at last! How
- much is contained in that one word, LUXURY!
- Let us cut short this phantasmagoria by a simple calculation;
- reflections will be in order later. In 1842 the duties collected
- on imports amounted to $25,800,000. In this sum of $25,800,000,
- sixty-one articles in common use figure for $24,800,000, and one
- hundred and seventy-seven, used only by those who enjoy a high
- degree of luxury, for TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS. In the first
- class sugar yielded a revenue of $8,600,000, coffee $2,400,000,
- cotton $2,200,000, woollens $2,000,000, oils $1,600,000, coal
- $800,000, linens and hemp $600,000,-- making a total of
- $18,200,000 on seven articles. The amount of revenue, then, is
- lower in proportion as the article of merchandise from which it
- is derived is less generally used, more rarely consumed, and
- found accompanying a more refined degree of luxury. And yet
- articles of luxury are subject to much the highest taxes.
- Therefore, even though, to obtain an appreciable reduction upon
- articles of primary necessity, the duties upon articles of luxury
- should be made a hundred times higher, the only result would be
- the suppression of a branch of commerce by a prohibitory tax.
- Now, the economists all favor the abolition of custom-houses;
- doubtless they do not wish them replaced by city toll- gates?
- Let us generalize this example: salt brings the treasury
- $11,400,000, tobacco $16,800,000. Let them show me, figures in
- hand, by what taxes upon articles of luxury, after having
- abolished the taxes on salt and tobacco, this deficit will be
- made up.
- You wish to strike articles of luxury; you take civilization at
- the wrong end. I maintain, for my part, that articles of luxury
- should be free. In economic language what are luxuries? Those
- products which bear the smallest ratio to the total wealth, those
- which come last in the industrial series and whose creation
- supposes the preexistence of all the others. From this point of
- view all the products of human labor have been, and in turn have
- ceased to be, articles of luxury, since we mean by luxury nothing
- but a relation of succession, whether chronological or
- commercial, in the elements of wealth. Luxury, in a word, is
- synonymous with progress; it is, at each instant of social life,
- the expression of the maximum of comfort realized by labor
- and at which it is the right and destiny of all to arrive. Now,
- just as the tax respects for a time the newly-built house and the
- newly-cleared field, so it should freely welcome new products and
- precious articles, the latter because their scarcity should be
- continually combatted, the former because every invention
- deserves encouragement. What! under a pretext of luxury would
- you like to establish new classes of citizens? And do you take
- seriously the city of Salente and the prosopopoeia of Fabricius?
- Since the subject leads us to it, let us talk of morality.
- Doubtless you will not deny the truth so often dwelt upon by the
- Senecas of all ages,--that luxury CORRUPTS and WEAKENS morals:
- which means that it humanizes, elevates, and ennobles habits, and
- that the first and most effective education for the people, the
- stimulant of the ideal in most men, is luxury. The Graces were
- naked, according to the ancients; where has it ever been said
- that they were needy? It is the taste for luxury which in our
- day, in the absence of religious principles, sustains the social
- movement and reveals to the lower classes their dignity. The
- Academy of Moral and Political Sciences clearly understood this
- when it chose luxury as the subject of one of its essays, and I
- applaud its wisdom from the bottom of my heart. Luxury, in fact,
- is already more than a right in our society, it is a necessity;
- and he is truly to be pitied who never allows himself a little
- luxury. And it is when universal effort tends to popularize
- articles of luxury more and more that you would confine the
- enjoyment of the people to articles which you are pleased to
- describe as articles of necessity! It is when ranks approach and
- blend into each other through the generalization of luxury that
- you would dig the line of demarcation deeper and increase the
- height of your steps! The workman sweats and sacrifices and
- grinds in order to buy a set of jewelry for his sweetheart, a
- necklace for his granddaughter, or a watch for his son; and you
- would deprive him of this happiness, unless he pays your
- tax,--that is, your fine.
- But have you reflected that to tax articles of luxury is to
- prohibit the luxurious arts? Do you think that the silk-workers,
- whose average wages does not reach forty cents; the milliners at
- ten cents; the jewellers, goldsmiths, and clockmakers, with their
- interminable periods of idleness; servants at forty dollars,--do
- you think that they earn too much?
- Are you sure that the tax on luxuries would not be paid by the
- worker in the luxurious arts, as the tax on beverages is paid by
- the consumer of beverages? Do you even know whether higher
- prices for articles of luxury would not be an obstacle to the
- cheapness of necessary objects, and whether, in trying to favor
- the most numerous class, you would not render the general
- condition worse? A fine speculation, in truth! Four dollars to
- be returned to the laborer on his wine and sugar, and eight to be
- taken from him in the cost of his pleasures! He shall gain
- fifteen cents on the leather in his boots, and, to take his
- family into the country four times a year, he shall pay one
- dollar and twenty cents more for carriage-hire! A small
- bourgeois spends one hundred and twenty dollars for a
- housekeeper, laundress, linen-tender, and errand-boys; but if,
- by a wiser economy which works for the interest of all, he takes
- a domestic, the exchequer, in the interest of articles of
- subsistence, will punish this plan of economy! What an absurd
- thing is the philanthropy of the economists, when closely
- scrutinized!
- Nevertheless I wish to satisfy your whim; and, since you
- absolutely must have sumptuary laws, I undertake to give you
- the receipt. And I guarantee that in my system collection shall
- be easy: no comptrollers, assessors, tasters, assayers,
- inspectors, receivers; no watching, no office expenses; not the
- smallest annoyance or the slightest indiscretion; no constraint
- whatever. Let it be decreed by a law that no one in future shall
- receive two salaries at the same time, and that the highest fees,
- in any situation, shall not exceed twelve hundred dollars in
- Paris and eight hundred in the departments. What! you lower your
- eyes! Confess, then, that your sumptuary laws are but hypocrisy.
- To relieve the people some would apply commercial practices to
- taxation. If, for instance, they say, the price of salt were
- reduced one-half, if letter-postage were lightened in the same
- proportion, consumption would not fail to increase, the revenue
- would be more than doubled, the treasury would gain, and so would
- the consumer.
- Let us suppose the event to confirm this anticipation. Then I
- say: If letter-postage should be reduced three-fourths, and if
- salt should be given away, would the treasury still gain?
- Certainly not. What, then, is the significance of what is called
- the postal reform? That for every kind of product there is a
- natural rate, ABOVE which profit becomes usurious and tends to
- decrease consumption, but BELOW which the producer suffers loss.
- This singularly resembles the determination of value which the
- economists reject, and in relation to which we said: There is a
- secret force that fixes the extreme limits between which value
- oscillates, of which there is a mean term that expresses true
- value.
- Surely no one wishes the postal service to be carried on at a
- loss; the opinion, therefore, is that this service should be
- performed AT COST. This is so rudimentary in its simplicity
- that one is astonished that it should have been necessary to
- resort to a laborious investigation of the results of reducing
- letter-postage in England; to pile up frightful figures and
- probabilities beyond the limit of vision, to put the mind to
- torture, all to find out whether a reduction in France would lead
- to a surplus or a deficit, and finally to be unable to agree upon
- anything! What! there was not a man to be found in the Chamber
- with sense enough to say: There is no need of an ambassador's
- report or examples from England; letter-postage should be
- gradually reduced until receipts reach the level of
- expenditures.[25] What, then, has become of our old Gallic wit?
- [25] Thank heaven! the minister has settled the question, and I
- tender him my very sincere compliments. By the proposed tariff
- letter-postage will be reduced to 2 cents for distances under 12
- 1/2 miles; 4 cents, for distances between 12 1/2 and 25 miles; 6
- cents, between 25 and 75 miles; 8 cents, between 75 and 225
- miles; 10 cents, for longer distances.
- But, it will be said, if the tax should furnish salt, tobacco,
- letter-carriage, sugar, wines, meat, etc., at cost, consumption
- would undoubtedly increase, and the improvement would be
- enormous; but then how would the State meet its expenses? The
- amount of indirect taxes is nearly one hundred and twenty million
- dollars; upon what would you have the State levy this sum? If
- the treasury makes nothing out of the postal service, it will
- have to increase the tax on salt; if the tax on salt be lifted
- also, it will have to throw the burden back upon drinks; there
- would be no end to this litany. Therefore the supply of products
- at cost, whether by the State or by private industry, is
- impossible.
- Therefore, I will reply in turn, relief of the unfortunate
- classes by the State is impossible, as sumptuary laws are
- impossible, as the progressive tax is impossible; and all your
- irrelevancies regarding the tax are lawyer's quibbles. You
- have not even the hope that the increase of population, by
- dividing the assessments, may lighten the burden of each; because
- with population misery increases, and with misery the work and
- the personnel of the State are augmented.
- The various fiscal laws voted by the Chamber of Deputies during
- the session of 1845-46 are so many examples of the absolute
- incapacity of power, whatever it may be and however it may go to
- work, to procure the comfort of the people. From the very fact
- that it is power,--that is, the representative of divine right
- and of property, the organ of force,--it is necessarily sterile,
- and all its acts are stamped in the corner with a fatal
- deception.
- I referred just now to the reform in the postage rates, which
- reduces the price of letter-carriage about one-third. Surely, if
- motives only are in question, I have no reason to reproach the
- government which has effected this useful reduction; much less
- still will I seek to diminish its merit by miserable criticisms
- upon matters of detail, the vile pasturage of the daily press. A
- tax, considerably burdensome, is reduced thirty per cent.; its
- distribution is made more equitable and more regular; I see only
- the fact, and I applaud the minister who has accomplished it.
- But that is not the question.
- In the first place, the advantage which the government gives us
- by changing the tax on letters leaves the proportional--that is,
- the unjust--character of this tax intact: that scarcely requires
- demonstration. The inequality of burdens, so far as the postal
- tax is concerned, stands as before, the advantage of the
- reduction going principally, not to the poorest, but to the
- richest. A certain business house which paid six hundred dollars
- for letter-postage will pay hereafter only four hundred; it will
- add, then, a net profit of two hundred dollars to the ten
- thousand which its business brings it, and it will owe this to
- the munificence of the treasury. On the other hand, the peasant,
- the laborer, who shall write twice a year to his son in the army,
- and shall receive a like number of replies, will have saved ten
- cents. Is it not true that the postal reform acts in direct
- opposition to the equitable distribution of the tax? that if,
- according to M. Chevalier's wish, the government had desired to
- strike the rich and spare the poor, the tax on letters was the
- last that it would have needed to reduce? Does it not seem that
- the treasury, false to the spirit of its institution, has only
- been awaiting the pretext of a reduction inappreciable by poverty
- in order to seize the opportunity to make a present to wealth?
- That is what the critics of the bill should have said, and that
- is what none of them saw. It is true that then the criticism,
- instead of applying to the minister, struck power in its essence,
- and with power property, which was not the design of the
- opponents. Truth today has all opinions against it.
- And now could it have been otherwise? No, since, if they kept
- the old tax, they injured all without relieving any; and, if they
- reduced it, they could not make different rates for classes of
- citizens without violating the first article of the Charter,
- which says: "All Frenchmen are equal before the law,"--that is,
- before the tax. Now, the tax on letters is necessarily personal;
- therefore it is a capitation-tax; therefore, that which is equity
- in this respect being iniquity from another standpoint, an
- equilibrium of burdens is impossible.
- At the same time another reform was effected by the care of the
- government,--that of the tax on cattle. Formerly the duties on
- cattle, whether on importation from foreign countries, or from
- the country into the cities, were collected at so much a
- head; henceforth they will be collected according to weight.
- This useful reform, which has been clamored for so long, is due
- in part to the influence of the economists, who, on this occasion
- as on many others which I cannot recall, have shown the most
- honorable zeal, and have left the idle declamations of socialism
- very far in the rear. But here again the good resulting from the
- law for the amelioration of the condition of the poor is wholly
- illusory. They have equalized, regulated, the collection from
- beasts; they have not distributed it equitably among men. The
- rich man, who consumes twelve hundred pounds of meat a year, will
- feel the effects of the new condition laid upon the butchers; the
- immense majority of the people, who never eat meat, will not
- notice it. And I renew my question of a moment ago: Could the
- government, the Chamber, do otherwise than as it has done? No,
- once more; for you cannot say to the butcher: You shall sell
- your meat to the rich man for twenty cents a pound and to the
- poor man for five cents. It would be rather the contrary that
- you would obtain from the butcher.
- So with salt. The government has reduced four-fifths the tax on
- salt used in agriculture, on condition of its undergoing a
- transformation. A certain journalist, having no better objection
- to raise, has made thereupon a complaint in which he grieves over
- the lot of those poor peasants who are more maltreated by the law
- than their cattle. For the third time I ask: Could it be
- otherwise? Of two things one: either the reduction will be
- absolute, and then the tax on salt must be replaced by a tax on
- something else; now I defy entire French journalism to invent a
- tax which will bear two minutes' examination; or else the
- reduction will be partial, whether by maintaining a portion of
- the duties on salt in all its uses, or by abolishing
- entirely the duties on salt used in certain ways. In the first
- case, the reduction is insufficient for agriculture and the poor;
- in the second, the capitation-tax still exists, in its enormous
- disproportion. Whatever may be done, it is the poor man, always
- the poor man, who is struck, since, in spite of all theories, the
- tax can never be laid except in the ratio of the capital
- possessed or consumed, and since, if the treasury should try to
- proceed otherwise, it would arrest progress, prohibit wealth, and
- kill capital.
- The democrats, who reproach us with sacrificing the revolutionary
- interest (what is the revolutionary interest?) to the socialistic
- interest, ought really to tell us how, without making the State
- the sole proprietor and without decreeing the community of goods
- and gains, they mean, by any system of taxation whatever, to
- relieve the people and restore to labor what capital takes from
- it. In vain do I rack my brains; on all questions I see power
- placed in the falsest situation, and the opinion of journals
- straying into limitless absurdity.
- In 1842 M. Arago was in favor of the administration of railways
- by corporations, and the majority in France thought with him. In
- 1846 he has announced a change in his opinion; and, apart from
- the speculators in railways, it may be said again that the
- majority of citizens have changed as M. Arago has. What is to be
- believed and what is to be done amid this see-sawing of the
- savants and of France?
- State administration, it would seem, ought to better assure the
- interests of the country; but it is slow, expensive, and
- unintelligent. Twenty-five years of mistakes, miscalculations,
- improvidence, hundreds of millions thrown away, in the great work
- of canalizing the country, have proved it to the most
- incredulous. We have even seen engineers, members of the
- administration, loudly proclaiming the incapacity of the
- State in the matter of public works as well as of industry.
- Administration by corporations is irreproachable, it is true,
- from the standpoint of the interest of the stockholders; but with
- these the general interest is sacrificed, the door opened to
- speculation, and the exploitation of the public by monopoly
- organized.
- The ideal system would be one uniting the advantages of both
- methods without presenting any of their shortcomings. Now, the
- means of realizing these contradictory characteristics? the means
- of breathing zeal, economy, penetration into these irremovable
- officers who have nothing to gain or to lose? the means of
- rendering the interests of the public as dear to a corporation as
- its own, of making these interests veritably its own, and still
- keeping it distinct from the State and having consequently its
- private interests? Who is there, in the official world, that
- conceives the necessity and therefore the possibility of such a
- reconciliation? much more, then, who possesses its secret?
- In such an emergency the government, as usual, has chosen the
- course of eclecticism; it has taken a part of the administration
- for itself and left the rest to the corporations; that is,
- instead of reconciling the contraries, it has placed them exactly
- in conflict. And the press, which in all things is precisely on
- a par with power in the matter of wit,--the press, dividing
- itself into three fractions, has decided, one for the ministerial
- compromise, another for the exclusion of the State, and the third
- for the exclusion of the corporations. So that today no more
- than before do the public or M. Arago, in spite of their
- somersault, know what they want.
- What a herd is the French nation in this nineteenth century, with
- its three powers, its press, its scientific bodies, its
- literature, its instruction! A hundred thousand men, in our
- country, have their eyes constantly open upon everything that
- interests national progress and the country's honor. Now,
- propound to these hundred thousand men the simplest question of
- public order, and you may be assured that all will rush pell-mell
- into the same absurdity.
- Is it better that the promotion of officials should be governed
- by merit or by length of service?
- Certainly there is no one who would not like to see this double
- method of estimating capacities blended into one. What a society
- it would be in which the rights of talent would be always in
- harmony with those of age! But, they say, such perfection is
- utopian, for it is contradictory in its statement. And instead
- of seeing that it is precisely the contradiction which makes the
- thing possible, they begin to dispute over the respective value
- of the two opposed systems, which, each leading to the absurd,
- equally give rise to intolerable abuses.
- Who shall be the judge of merit? asks one: the government. Now,
- the government recognizes merit only in its creatures. Therefore
- no promotion by choice, none of that immoral system which
- destroys the independence and the dignity of the office-holder.
- But, says another, length of service is undoubtedly very
- respectable. It is a pity that it has the disadvantage of
- rendering stagnant things which are essentially voluntary and
- free,--labor and thought; of creating obstacles to power even
- among its agents, and of bestowing upon chance, often upon
- incapacity, the reward of genius and audacity.
- Finally they compromise: to the government is accorded the power
- of appointing arbitrarily to a certain number of offices
- pretended men of merit, who are supposed to have no need of
- experience, while the rest, apparently deemed incapable, are
- promoted in turn. And the press, that ambling old nag of all
- presumptuous mediocrities, which generally lives only by the
- gratuitous compositions of young people as destitute of talent as
- of acquired knowledge, hastens to begin again its attacks upon
- power, accusing it,--not without reason too,--here of favoritism,
- there of routine.
- Who could hope ever to do anything to the satisfaction of the
- press? After having declaimed and gesticulated against the
- enormous size of the budget, here it is clamoring for increased
- salaries for an army of officials, who, to tell the truth, really
- have not the wherewithal to live. Now it is the teachers, of
- high and low grade, who make their complaints heard through its
- columns; now it is the country clergy, so insufficiently paid
- that they have been forced to maintain their fees, a fertile
- source of scandal and abuse. Then it is the whole administrative
- nation, which is neither lodged, nor clothed, nor warmed, nor
- fed: it is a million men with their families, nearly an eighth of
- the population, whose poverty brings shame upon France and for
- whom one hundred million dollars should at once be added to the
- budget. Note that in this immense personnel there is not one man
- too many; on the contrary, if the population grows, it will
- increase proportionally. Are you in a position to tax the nation
- to the extent of four hundred million dollars? Can you take, out
- of an average income of $184 for four persons, $47.25--more than
- one-fourth--to pay, together with the other expenses of the
- State, the salaries of the non-productive laborers? And if you
- cannot, if you can neither pay your expenses nor reduce them,
- what do you want? of what do you complain?
- Let the people know it, then, once for all: all the hopes of
- reduction and equity in taxation, with which they are lulled by
- turns by the harangues of power and the diatribes of party
- leaders, are so many mystifications; the tax cannot be reduced,
- nor can its assessment be more equitable, under the monopoly
- system. On the contrary, the lower the condition of the
- citizen becomes, the heavier becomes his tax; that is inevitable,
- irresistible, in spite of the avowed design of the legislator and
- the repeated efforts of the treasury. Whoever cannot become or
- remain rich, whoever has entered the cavern of misfortune, must
- make up his mind to pay in proportion to his poverty: Lasciate
- ogni speranza, voi ch' entrate.
- Taxation, then, police,--henceforth we shall not separate these
- two ideas,--is a new source of pauperism; taxation aggravates the
- subversive effects of the preceding antinomies,--division of
- labor, machinery, competition, monopoly. It attacks the laborer
- in his liberty and in his conscience, in his body and in his
- soul, by parasitism, vexations, the frauds which it prompts, and
- the punishments which follow them.
- Under Louis XIV. the smuggling of salt alone caused annually
- thirty- seven hundred domiciliary seizures, two thousand arrests
- of men, eighteen hundred of women, sixty-six hundred of children,
- eleven hundred seizures of horses, fifty confiscations of
- carriages, and three hundred condemnations to the galleys. And
- this, observes the historian, was the result of one tax
- alone,--the salt-tax. What, then, was the total number of
- unfortunates imprisoned, tortured, expropriated, on account of
- the tax?
- In England, out of every four families, one is unproductive, and
- that is the family which enjoys an abundance. What an advantage
- it would be for the working-class, you think, if this leprosy of
- parasitism should be removed! Undoubtedly, in theory, you are
- right; in practice, the suppression of parasitism would be a
- calamity. Though one-fourth of the population of England is
- unproductive, another fourth of the same population is at work
- for it: now, what would these laborers do, if they should
- suddenly lose the market for their products? An absurd
- supposition, you say. Yes, an absurd supposition, but a very
- real supposition, and one which you must admit precisely because
- it is absurd. In France a standing army of five hundred thousand
- men, forty thousand priests, twenty thousand doctors, eighty
- thousand lawyers, and I know not how many hundred thousand other
- nonproducers of every sort, constitute an immense market for our
- agriculture and our manufactures. Let this market suddenly
- close, and manufactures will stop, commerce will go into
- bankruptcy, and agriculture will be smothered beneath its
- products.
- But how is it conceivable that a nation should find its market
- clogged because of having got rid of its useless mouths? Ask
- rather why an engine, whose consumption has been figured at six
- hundred pounds of coal an hour, loses its power if it is given
- only three hundred. But again, might not these non-producers be
- made producers, since we cannot get rid of them? Eh! child: tell
- me, then, how you will do without police, and monopoly, and
- competition, and all the contradictions, in short, of which your
- order of things is made up. Listen.
- In 1844, at the time of the troubles in Rive-de-Gier, M. Anselme
- Petetin published in the "Revue Independante" two articles, full
- of reason and sincerity, concerning the anarchy prevailing in the
- conduct of the coal mines in the basin of the Loire. M. Petetin
- pointed out the necessity of uniting the mines and centralizing
- their administration. The facts which he laid before the public
- were not unknown to power; has power troubled itself about
- the union of the mines and the organization of that industry?
- Not at all. Power has followed the principle of free
- competition; it has let alone and looked on.
- Since that time the mining companies have combined, not without
- causing some anxiety to consumers, who have seen in this
- combination a plot to raise the price of fuel. Will power, which
- has received numerous complaints upon this subject, intervene to
- restore competition and prevent monopoly? It cannot do it; the
- right of combination is identical in law with the right of
- association; monopoly is the basis of our society, as competition
- is its conquest; and, provided there is no riot, power will let
- alone and look on. What other course could it pursue? Can it
- prohibit a legally established commercial association? Can it
- oblige neighbors to destroy each other? Can it forbid them to
- reduce their expenses? Can it establish a maximum? If power
- should do any one of these things, it would overturn the
- established order. Power, therefore, can take no initiative: it
- is instituted to defend and protect monopoly and competition at
- once, within the limitations of patents, licenses, land taxes,
- and other bonds which it has placed upon property. Apart from
- these limitations power has no sort of right to act in the name
- of society. The social right is not defined; moreover, it would
- be a denial of monopoly and competition. How, then, could power
- take up the defence of that which the law did not foresee or
- define, of that which is the opposite of the rights recognized by
- the legislator?
- Consequently, when the miner, whom we must consider in the events
- of Rive-de-Gier as the real representative of society against the
- mine- owners, saw fit to resist the scheme of the monopolists by
- defending his wages and opposing combination to combination,
- power shot the miner down. And the political brawlers accused
- authority, saying it was partial, ferocious, sold to monopoly,
- etc. For my part, I declare that this way of viewing the acts of
- authority seems to me scarcely philosophical, and I reject it
- with all my energies. It is possible that they might have killed
- fewer people, possible also that they might have killed more: the
- fact to be noticed here is not the number of dead and wounded,
- but the repression of the workers. Those who have criticised
- authority would have done as it did, barring perhaps the
- impatience of its bayonets and the accuracy of its aim: they
- would have repressed, I say; they would not have been able to do
- anything else. And the reason, which it would be vain to try to
- brush aside, is that competition is legal, joint-stock
- association is legal, supply and demand are legal, and all the
- consequences which flow directly from competition, joint-stock
- association, and free commerce are legal, whereas workingmen's
- strikes are ILLEGAL. And it is not only the penal code which
- says this, but the economic system, the necessity of the
- established order. As long as labor is not sovereign, it must be
- a slave; society is possible only on this condition. That each
- worker individually should have the free disposition of his
- person and his arms may be tolerated;[26] but that the workers
- should undertake, by combinations, to do violence to monopoly
- society cannot permit. Crush monopoly, and you abolish
- competition, and you disorganize the workshop, and you sow
- dissolution everywhere. Authority, in shooting down the miners,
- found itself in the position of Brutus placed between his
- paternal love and his consular duties: he had to sacrifice either
- his children or the republic. The alternative was horrible, I
- admit; but such is the spirit and letter of the social compact,
- such is the tenor of the charter, such is the order of
- Providence.
- [26] The new law regarding service-books has confined the
- independence of workers within narrower limits. The democratic
- press has again thundered its indignation this subject against
- those in power, as if they had been guilty of anything more than
- the application of the principles of authority and property,
- which are those of democracy. What the Chambers have done in
- regard to service-books was inevitable, and should have been
- expected. It is as impossible for a society founded on the
- proprietary principle not to end in class distinctions as for a
- democracy to avoid despotism, for a religion to be reasonable,
- for fanaticism to show tolerance. This is the law of
- contradiction: how long will it take us to understand it?
- Thus the police function, instituted for the defence of the
- proletariat, is directed entirely against the proletariat. The
- proletaire is driven from the forests, from the rivers, from the
- mountains; even the cross- roads are forbidden him; soon he will
- know no road save that which leads to prison.
- The advance in agriculture has made the advantage of artificial
- meadows and the necessity of abolishing common land generally
- felt. Everywhere communal lands are being cleared, let,
- enclosed; new advances, new wealth. But the poor day-laborer,
- whose only patrimony is the communal land and who supports a cow
- and several sheep in summer by letting them feed along the roads,
- through the underbrush, and over the stripped fields, will lose
- his sole and last resource. The landed proprietor, the purchaser
- or farmer of the communal lands, will alone thereafter sell, with
- his wheat and vegetables, milk and cheese. Instead of weakening
- an old monopoly, they create a new one. Even the road- laborers
- reserve for themselves the edges of the roads as a meadow
- belonging to them, and drive off all non-administrative cattle.
- What follows? That the day-laborer, before abandoning his cow,
- lets it feed in contravention of the law, becomes a marauder,
- commits a thousand depredations, and is punished by fine and
- imprisonment: of what use to him are police and agricultural
- progress? Last year the mayor of Mulhouse, to prevent
- grape-stealing, forbade every individual not an owner of vines to
- travel by day or night over roads running by or through
- vineyards,--a charitable precaution, since it prevented even
- desires and regrets. But if the public highway is nothing but an
- accessory of private property; if the communal lands are
- converted into private property; if the public domain, in short,
- assimilated to private property, is guarded, exploited, leased,
- and sold like private property,--what remains for the proletaire?
- Of what advantage is it to him that society has left the state of
- war to enter the regime of police?
- Industry, as well as land, has its privileges,--privileges
- consecrated by the law, as always, under conditions and
- reservations, but, as always also, to the great disadvantage of
- the consumer. The question is interesting; we will say a few
- words upon it.
- I quote M. Renouard.
- "Privileges," says M. Renouard, "were a corrective of
- regulation."
- I ask M. Renouard's permission to translate his thought by
- reversing his phrase: Regulation was a corrective of privilege.
- For whoever says regulation says limitation: now, how conceive of
- limiting privilege before it existed? I can conceive a sovereign
- submitting privileges to regulations; but I cannot at all
- understand why he should create privileges expressly to weaken
- the effect of regulations. There is nothing to prompt such a
- concession; it would be an effect without a cause. In logic as
- well as in history, everything is appropriated and monopolized
- when laws and regulations arrive: in this respect civil
- legislation is like penal legislation. The first results
- from possession and appropriation, the second from the appearance
- of crimes and offences. M. Renouard, preoccupied with the idea
- of servitude inherent in all regulation, has considered privilege
- as a compensation for this servitude; and it was this which led
- him to say that PRIVILEGES ARE A CORRECTIVE OF REGULATION. But
- what M. Renouard adds proves that he meant the opposite:
- The fundamental principle of our legislation, that of granting
- temporary monopoly as a condition of a contract between society
- and the laborer, has always prevailed, etc.
- What is, in reality, this grant of a monopoly? A simple
- acknowledgment, a declaration. Society, wishing to favor a new
- industry and enjoy the advantages which it promises, BARGAINS
- with the inventor, as it has bargained with the farmer; it
- guarantees him the monopoly of his industry for a time; but it
- does not create the monopoly. The monopoly exists by the very
- fact of the invention; and the acknowledgment of the monopoly is
- what constitutes society.
- This ambiguity cleared up, I pass to the contradictions of the
- law.
- All industrial nations have adopted the establishment of a
- temporary monopoly as a condition of a contract between society
- and the inventor. . . . . I do not take readily to the belief
- that all legislators of all countries have committed robbery.
- M. Renouard, if ever he reads this work, will do me the justice
- to admit that, in quoting him, I do not criticise his thought; he
- himself has perceived the contradictions of the patent law. All
- that I pretend is to connect this contradiction with the general
- system.
- Why, in the first place, a TEMPORARY monopoly in manufacture,
- while land monopoly is PERPETUAL? The Egyptians were more
- logical; with them these two monopolies were alike hereditary,
- perpetual, inviolable. I know the considerations which have
- prevailed against the perpetuity of literary property, and I
- admit them all; but these considerations apply equally well to
- property in land; moreover, they leave intact all the arguments
- brought forward against them. What, then, is the secret of all
- these variations of the legislator? For the rest, I do not need
- to say that, in pointing out this inconsistency, it is not my
- purpose either to slander or to satirize; I admit that the course
- of the legislator is determined, not by his will, but by
- necessity.
- But the most flagrant contradiction is that which results from
- the enacting section of the law. Title IV, article 30, % 3,
- reads: "If the patent relates to principles, methods, systems,
- discoveries, theoretical or purely scientific conceptions,
- without indicating their industrial applications, the patent is
- void."
- Now, what is a PRINCIPLE, a METHOD, a THEORETICAL CONCEPTION,
- a SYSTEM? It is the especial fruit of genius, it is invention
- in its purity, it is the idea, it is everything. The application
- is the gross fact, nothing. Thus the law excludes from the
- benefit of the patent the very thing which deserves it,--namely,
- the idea; on the contrary, it grants a patent to the
- application,--that is, to the material fact, to a pattern of the
- idea, as Plato would have said. Therefore it is wrongly called a
- PATENT FOR INVENTION; it should be called a PATENT FOR FIRST
- OCCUPANCY.
- In our day, if a man had invented arithmetic, algebra, or the
- decimal system, he would have obtained no patent; but Bareme
- would have had a right of property in his Computations. Pascal,
- for his theory of the weight of the atmosphere, would not have
- been patented; instead of him, a glazier would have obtained the
- privilege of the barometer. I quote M. Arago:
- After two thousand years it occurred to one of our
- fellow-countrymen that the screw of Archimedes, which is used to
- raise water, might be employed in forcing down gases; it
- suffices, without making any change, to turn it from right to
- left, instead of turning it, as when raising water, from left to
- right. Large volumes of gas, charged with foreign substances,
- are thus forced into water to a great depth; the gas is purified
- in rising again. I maintain that there was an invention; that
- the person who saw a way to make the screw of Archimedes a
- blowing machine was entitled to a patent.
- What is more extraordinary is that Archimedes himself would thus
- be obliged to buy the right to use his screw; and M. Arago
- considers that just.
- It is useless to multiply these examples: what the law meant to
- monopolize is, as I said just now, not the idea, but the fact;
- not the invention, but the occupancy. As if the idea were not
- the category which includes all the facts that express it; as if
- a method, a system, were not a generalization of experiences, and
- consequently that which properly constitutes the fruit of
- genius,--invention! Here legislation is more than anti-economic,
- it borders on the silly. Therefore I am entitled to ask the
- legislator why, in spite of free competition, which is nothing
- but the right to apply a theory, a principle, a method, a
- non-appropriable system, he forbids in certain cases this same
- competition, this right to apply a principle?" It is no longer
- possible," says M. Renouard, with strong reason, "to stifle
- competitors by combining in corporations and guilds; the loss is
- supplied by patents." Why has the legislator given hands to this
- conspiracy of monopolies, to this interdict upon theories
- belonging to all?
- But what is the use of continually questioning one who can say
- nothing? The legislator did not know in what spirit he was
- acting when he made this strange application of the right of
- property, which, to be exact, we ought to call the right of
- priority. Let him explain himself, then, at least, regarding the
- clauses of the contract made by him, in our name, with the
- monopolists.
- I pass in silence the part relating to dates and other
- administrative and fiscal formalities, and come to this article:
- The patent does not guarantee the invention.
- Doubtless society, or the prince who represents it, cannot and
- should not guarantee the invention, since, in granting a monopoly
- for fourteen years, society becomes the purchaser of the
- privilege, and consequently it is for the patentee to furnish the
- guarantee. How, then, can legislators proudly say to their
- constituents: "We have negotiated in your name with an inventor;
- he pledges himself to give you the enjoyment of his discovery on
- condition of having the exclusive exploitation for fourteen
- years. But we do not guarantee the invention"? On what, then,
- have you relied, legislators? How did you fail to see that,
- without a guarantee of the invention, you conceded a privilege,
- not for a real discovery, but for a possible discovery, and that
- thus the field of industry was given up by you before the plough
- was found? Certainly, your duty bade you to be prudent; but who
- gave you a commission to be dupes?
- Thus the patent for invention is not even the fixing of a date;
- it is an abandonment in anticipation. It is as if the law should
- say: "I assure the land to the first occupant, but without
- guaranteeing its quality, its location, or even its existence;
- not even knowing whether I ought to give it up or that it falls
- within the domain of appropriation!" A pretty use of the
- legislative power!
- I know that the law had excellent reasons for abstaining; but I
- maintain that it also had good reasons for intervening. Proof:
- "It cannot be concealed," says M. Renouard, "it cannot be
- prevented; patents are and will be instruments of quackery as
- well as a legitimate reward of labor and genius. . . . It is for
- the good sense of the public to do justice to juggleries."
- As well say it is for the good sense of the public to distinguish
- true remedies from false, pure wine from adulterated; or, it is
- for the good sense of the public to distinguish in a buttonhole
- the decoration awarded to merit from that prostituted to
- mediocrity and intrigue. Why, then, do you call yourselves the
- State, Power, Authority, Police, if the work of Police must be
- performed by the good sense of the public?
- As the proverb says, he who owns land must defend it; likewise,
- he who holds a privilege is liable to attack.
- Well! how will you judge the counterfeit, if you have no
- guarantee? In vain will they offer you the plea: in right first
- occupancy, in fact similarity. Where reality depends upon
- quality, not to demand a guarantee is to grant no right over
- anything, is to take away the means of comparing processes and
- identifying the counterfeit. In the matter of industrial
- processes success depends upon such trifles! Now, these trifles
- are the whole.
- I infer from all this that the law regarding patents for
- inventions, indispensable so far as its motives are concerned, is
- impossible--that is, illogical, arbitrary, disastrous--in its
- economy. Under the control of certain necessities the legislator
- has thought best, in the general interest, to grant a privilege
- for a definite thing; and he finds that he has given a
- signature-in-blank to monopoly, that he has abandoned the chances
- which the public had of making the discovery or some other
- similar to it, that he has sacrificed the rights of competitors
- without compensation, and abandoned the good faith of defenceless
- consumers to the greed of quacks. Then, in order that nothing
- might be lacking to the absurdity of the contract, he has said to
- those whom he ought to guarantee: "Guarantee yourselves!"
- I do not believe, any more than M. Renouard, that the legislators
- of all ages and all countries have wilfully committed robbery in
- sanctioning the various monopolies which are pivotal in public
- economy. But M. Renouard might well also agree with me that the
- legislators of all ages and all countries have never understood
- at all their own decrees. A deaf and blind man once learned to
- ring the village bells and wind the village clock. It was
- fortunate for him, in performing his bell- ringer's functions,
- that neither the noise of the bells nor the height of the
- bell-tower made him dizzy. The legislators of all ages and all
- countries, for whom I profess, with M. Renouard, the profoundest
- respect, resemble that blind and deaf man; they are the
- Jacks-in-the- clock-house of all human follies.
- What a feather it would be in my cap if I should succeed in
- making these automata reflect! if I could make them understand
- that their work is a Penelope's web, which they are condemned to
- unravel at one end as fast as they weave at the other!
- Thus, while applauding the creation of patents, on other points
- they demand the abolition of privileges, and always with the same
- pride, the same satisfaction. M. Horace Say wishes trade in meat
- to be free. Among other reasons he puts forward this strictly
- mathematical argument:
- The butcher who wants to retire from business seeks a purchaser
- for his investment; he figures in the account his tools, his
- merchandise, his reputation, and his custom; but under the
- present system, he adds to these the value of the bare
- title,--that is, the right to share in a monopoly. Now, this
- supplementary capital which the purchasing butcher gives for the
- title bears interest; it is not a new creation; this interest
- must enter into the price of his meat. Hence the limitation of
- the number of butchers' stalls has a tendency to raise the price
- of meat rather than lower it.
- I do not fear to affirm incidentally that what I have just said
- about the sale of a butcher's stall applies to every charge
- whatever having a salable title.
- M. Horace Say's reasons for the abolition of the butcher's
- privilege are unanswerable; moreover, they apply to printers,
- notaries, attorneys, process-servers, clerks of courts,
- auctioneers, brokers, dealers in stocks, druggists, and others,
- as well as to butchers. But they do not destroy the reasons
- which have led to the adoption of these monopolies, and which are
- generally deduced from the need of security, authenticity, and
- regularity in business, as well as from the interests of commerce
- and the public health. The object, you say, is not attained. My
- God! I know it: leave the butcher's trade to competition, and you
- will eat carrion; establish a monopoly in the butcher's trade,
- and you will eat carrion. That is the only fruit you can hope
- for from your monopoly and patent legislation.
- Abuses! cry the protective economists. Establish over commerce a
- supervisory police, make trade-marks obligatory, punish the
- adulteration of products, etc.
- In the path upon which civilization has entered, whichever way we
- turn, we always end, then, either in the despotism of monopoly,
- and consequently the oppression of consumers, or else in the
- annihilation of privilege by the action of the police, which is
- to go backwards in economy and dissolve society by destroying
- liberty. Marvellous thing! in this system of free industry,
- abuses, like lice, being generated by their own remedies, if the
- legislator should try to suppress all offences, be on the watch
- against all frauds, and secure persons, property, and the public
- welfare against any attack, going from reform to reform, he would
- finally so multiply the non-productive functions that the entire
- nation would be engaged in them, and that at last there would be
- nobody left to produce. Everybody would be a policeman; the
- industrial class would become a myth. Then, perhaps, order would
- reign in monopoly.
- "The principle of the law yet to be made concerning trade-marks,"
- says M. Renouard, "is that these marks cannot and should not be
- transformed into guarantees of quality."
- This is a consequence of the patent law, which, as we have seen,
- does not guarantee the invention. Adopt M. Renouard's principle;
- after that of what use will marks be? Of what importance is it
- to me to read on the cork of a bottle, instead of TWELVE-CENT
- WINE or FIFTEEN-CENT WINE, WINE-DRINKERS' COMPANY or the name of
- any other concern you will? What I care for is not the name of
- the merchant, but the quality and fair price of the merchandise.
- The name of the manufacturer is supposed, it is true, to serve as
- a concise sign of good or bad manufacture, of superior or
- inferior quality. Then why not frankly take part with those who
- ask, besides the mark of ORIGIN, a mark significant of
- something? Such a reservation is incomprehensible. The two
- sorts of marks have the same purpose; the second is only a
- statement or paraphrase of the first, a condensation of the
- merchant's prospectus; why, once more, if the origin signifies
- something, should not the mark define this significance?
- M. Wolowski has very clearly developed this argument in his
- opening lecture of 1843-44, the substance of which lies entirely
- in the following analogy:
- Just as the government has succeeded in determining a standard of
- QUANTITY, it may, it should also fix a standard of QUALITY; one
- of these standards is the necessary complement of the other. The
- monetary unit, the system of weights and measures, have not
- infringed upon industrial liberty; no more would it be damaged by
- a system of trade-marks.
- M. Wolowski then supports himself on the authority of the princes
- of the science, A. Smith and J. B. Say,--a precaution always
- useful with hearers who bow to authority much more than to
- reason.
- I declare, for my part, that I thoroughly share M. Wolowski's
- idea, and for the reason that I find it profoundly revolutionary.
- The trade-mark, being, according to M. Wolowski's expression,
- nothing but a standard of qualities, is equivalent in my eyes to
- a general scheduling of prices. For, whether a particular
- administration marks in the name of the State and guarantees the
- quality of the merchandise, as is the case with gold and silver,
- or whether the matter of marking is left to the manufacturer,
- from the moment that the mark must give THE INTRINSIC COMPOSITION
- OF THE MERCHANDISE (these are M. Wolowski's own words) AND
- GUARANTEE THE CONSUMER AGAINST ALL SURPRISE, it necessarily
- resolves itself into a fixed price. It is not the same thing as
- price; two similar products, but differing in origin and quality,
- may be of equal value, as a bottle of Burgundy may be worth a
- bottle of Bordeaux; but the mark, being significant, leads to an
- exact knowledge of the price, since it gives the analysis. To
- calculate the price of an article of merchandise is to decompose
- it into its constituent parts; now, that is exactly what the
- trade-mark must do, if designed to signify anything. Therefore
- we are on the road, as I have said, to a general scheduling of
- prices.
- But a general scheduling of prices is nothing but a determination
- of all values, and here again political economy comes into
- conflict with its own principles and tendencies. Unfortunately,
- to realize M. Wolowski's reform, it is necessary to begin by
- solving all the previous contradictions and enter a higher sphere
- of association; and it is this absence of solution which has
- brought down upon M. Wolowski's system the condemnation of most
- of his fellow-economists.
- In fact, the system of trade-marks is inapplicable in the
- existing order, because this system, contrary to the interests of
- the manufacturers and repugnant to their habits, could be
- sustained only by the energetic will of power. Suppose for a
- moment that the administration be charged with affixing the
- marks; its agents will have to interpose continually in the work
- of manufacture, as it interposes in the liquor business and the
- manufacture of beer; further, these agents, whose functions seem
- already so intrusive and annoying, deal only with taxable
- quantities, not with exchangeable qualities. These fiscal
- supervisors and inspectors will have to carry their investigation
- into all details in order to repress and prevent fraud; and what
- fraud? The legislator will have defined it either incorrectly or
- not at all; it is at this point that the task becomes appalling.
- There is no fraud in selling wine of the poorest quality, but
- there is fraud in passing off one quality for another; then you
- are obliged to differentiate the qualities of wines, and
- consequently to guarantee them. Is it fraudulent to mix wines?
- Chaptal, in his treatise on the art of making wine, advises this
- as eminently useful; on the other hand, experience proves that
- certain wines, in some way antagonistic to each other or
- incompatible, produce by their mixture a disagreeable and
- unhealthy drink. Then you are obliged to say what wines can be
- usefully mixed, and what cannot. Is it fraudulent to aromatize,
- alcoholize, and water wines? Chaptal recommends this also;
- and everybody knows that this drugging produces sometimes
- advantageous results, sometimes pernicious and detestable
- effects. What substances will you proscribe? In what cases? In
- what proportion? Will you prohibit chicory in coffee, glucose in
- beer, water, cider, and three-six alcohol in wine?
- The Chamber of Deputies, in the rude attempt at a law which it
- was pleased to make this year regarding the adulteration of
- wines, stopped in the very middle of its work, overcome by the
- inextricable difficulties of the question. It succeeded in
- declaring that the introduction of water into wine, and of
- alcohol above the proportion of eighteen per cent., was
- fraudulent, and in putting this fraud into the category of
- offences. It was on the ground of ideology; there one never
- meets an obstacle. But everybody has seen in this redoubling of
- severity the interest of the treasury much more than that of the
- consumer; the Chamber did not dare to create a whole army of
- wine-tasters, inspectors, etc., to watch for fraud and identify
- it, and thus load the budget with a few extra millions; in
- prohibiting watering and alcoholization, the only means left to
- the merchant-manufacturers of putting wine within the reach of
- all and realizing profits, it did not succeed in increasing the
- market by a decrease in production. The chamber, in a word, in
- prosecuting the adulteration of wines, has simply set back the
- limits of fraud. To make its work accomplish its purpose it
- would first have to show how the liquor trade is possible without
- adulteration, and how the people can buy unadulterated
- wine,--which is beyond the competency and escapes the capacity of
- the Chamber.
- If you wish the consumer to be guaranteed, both as to value and
- as to healthfulness, you are forced to know and to determine all
- that constitutes good and honest production, to be continually at
- the heels of the manufacturer, and to guide him at every step.
- He no longer manufactures; you, the State, are the real
- manufacturer.
- Thus you find yourself in a trap. Either you hamper the liberty
- of commerce by interfering in production in a thousand ways, or
- you declare yourself sole producer and sole merchant.
- In the first case, through annoying everybody, you will finally
- cause everybody to rebel; and sooner or later, the State getting
- itself expelled, trade-marks will be abolished. In the second
- you substitute everywhere the action of power for individual
- initiative, which is contrary to the principles of political
- economy and the constitution of society. Do you take a middle
- course? It is favor, nepotism, hypocrisy, the worst of systems.
- Suppose, now, that the marking be left to the manufacturer. I
- say that then the marks, even if made obligatory, will gradually
- lose their SIGNIFICANCE, and at last become only proofs of
- ORIGIN. He knows but little of commerce who imagines that a
- merchant, a head of a manufacturing enterprise, making use of
- processes that are not patentable, will betray the secret of his
- industry, of his profits, of his existence. The significance
- will then be a delusion; it is not in the power of the police to
- make it otherwise. The Roman emperors, to discover the
- Christians who dissembled their religion, obliged everybody to
- sacrifice to the idols. They made apostates and martyrs; and the
- number of Christians only increased. Likewise significant marks,
- useful to some houses, will engender innumerable frauds and
- repressions; that is all that can be expected of them. To induce
- the manufacturer to frankly indicate the intrinsic
- composition--that is, the industrial and commercial
- value--of his merchandise, it is necessary to free him from the
- perils of competition and satisfy his monopolistic instincts: can
- you do it? It is necessary, further, to interest the consumer in
- the repression of fraud, which, so long as the producer is not
- utterly disinterested, is at once impossible and contradictory.
- Impossible: place on the one hand a depraved consumer, China; on
- the other a desperate merchant, England; between them a venomous
- drug causing excitement and intoxication; and, in spite of all
- the police in the world, you will have trade in opium.
- Contradictory: in society the consumer and the producer are but
- one,--that is, both are interested in the production of that
- which it is injurious to them to consume; and as, in the case of
- each, consumption follows production and sale, all will combine
- to guard the first interest, leaving it to each to guard himself
- against the second.
- The thought which prompted trade-marks is of the same character
- as that which formerly inspired the maximum laws. Here again is
- one of the innumerable cross-roads of political economy.
- It is indisputable that maximum laws, though made and supported
- by their authors entirely as a relief from famine, have
- invariably resulted in an aggravation of famine. Accordingly it
- is not injustice or malice with which the economists charge these
- abhorred laws, but stupidity, inexpediency. But what a
- contradiction in the theory with which they oppose them!
- To relieve famine it is necessary to call up provisions, or, to
- put it better, to bring them to light; so far there is nothing to
- reproach. To secure a supply of provisions it is necessary to
- attract the holders by profits, excite their competition,
- and assure them complete liberty in the market: does not this
- process strike you as the absurdest homoeopathy? How is it that
- the more easily I can be taxed the sooner I shall be provided?
- Let alone, they say, let pass; let competition and monopoly act,
- especially in times of famine, and even though famine is the
- effect of competition and monopoly. What logic! but, above all,
- what morality!
- But why, then, should there not be a tariff for farmers as well
- as for bakers? Why not a registration of the sowing, of the
- harvest, of the vintage, of the pasturage, and of the cattle, as
- well as a stamp for newspapers, circulars, and orders, or an
- administration for brewers and wine-merchants? Under the
- monopoly system this would be, I admit, an increase of torments;
- but with our tendencies to unfairness in trade and the
- disposition of power to continually increase its personnel and
- its budget, a law of inquisition regarding crops is becoming
- daily more indispensable.
- Besides, it would be difficult to say which, free trade or the
- maximum, causes the more evil in times of famine.
- But, whichever course you choose,--and you cannot avoid the
- alternative,--the deception is sure and the disaster immense.
- With the maximum goods seek concealment; the terror increasing
- from the very effect of the law, the price of provisions rises
- and rises; soon circulation stops, and the catastrophe follows,
- as prompt and pitiless as a band of plunderers. With competition
- the progress of the scourge is slower, but no less fatal: how
- many deaths from exhaustion or hunger before the high prices
- attract food to the market! how many victims of extortion after
- it has arrived! It is the story of the king to whom God, in
- punishment for his pride, offered the alternative of three days'
- pestilence, three months' famine, or three years' war. David
- chose the shortest; the economists prefer the longest. Man
- is so miserable that he would rather end by consumption than by
- apoplexy; it seems to him that he does not die as much. This is
- the reason why the disadvantages of the maximum and the benefits
- of free trade have been so much exaggerated.
- For the rest, if France during the last twenty-five years has
- experienced no general famine, the cause is not in the liberty of
- commerce, which knows very well, when it wishes, how to produce
- scarcity in the midst of plenty and how to make famine prevail in
- the bosom of abundance; it is in the improvement in the methods
- of communication, which, shortening distances, soon restore the
- equilibrium disturbed for a moment by local penury. A striking
- example of that sad truth that in society the general welfare is
- never the effect of a conspiracy of individual wills!
- The farther we delve into this system of illusory compromises
- between monopoly and society,--that is, as we have explained in %
- 1 of this chapter, between capital and labor, between the
- patriciate and the proletariat,--the more we discover that it is
- all foreseen, regulated, and executed in accordance with this
- infernal maxim, with which Hobbes and Machiavel, those theorists
- of despotism, were unacquainted: EVERYTHING BY THE PEOPLE AND
- AGAINST THE PEOPLE. While labor produces, capital, under the
- mask of a false fecundity, enjoys and abuses; the legislator, in
- offering his mediation, thought to recall the privileged class to
- fraternal feelings and surround the laborer with guarantees; and
- now he finds, by the fatal contradiction of interests, that each
- of these guarantees is an instrument of torture. It would
- require a hundred volumes, the life of ten men, and a heart of
- iron, to relate from this standpoint the crimes of the State
- towards the poor and the infinite variety of its tortures. A
- summary glance at the principal classes of police will be
- enough to enable us to estimate its spirit and economy.
- After having sown trouble in all minds by a confusion of civil,
- commercial, and administrative laws, made the idea of justice
- more obscure by multiplying contradictions, and rendered
- necessary a whole class of interpreters for the explanation of
- this system, it has been found necessary also to organize the
- repression of crimes and provide for their punishment. Criminal
- justice, that particularly rich order of the great family of
- non-producers, whose maintenance costs France annually more than
- six million dollars, has become to society a principle of
- existence as necessary as bread is to the life of man; but with
- this difference,--that man lives by the product of his hands,
- while society devours its members and feeds on its own flesh.
- It is calculated by some economists that there is,
- In London . . 1 criminal to every 89 inhabitants.
- In Liverpool . . 1 " " " 45 "
- In Newcastle . . 1 " " " 27 "
- But these figures lack accuracy, and, utterly frightful as they
- seem, do not express the real degree of social perversion due to
- the police. We have to determine here not only the number of
- recognized criminals, but the number of offences. The work of
- the criminal courts is only a special mechanism which serves to
- place in relief the moral destruction of humanity under the
- monopoly system; but this official exhibition is far from
- including the whole extent of the evil. Here are other figures
- which will lead us to a more certain approximation.
- The police courts of Paris disposed,
- In 1835 . . . . of 106,467 cases.
- In 1836 . . . . " 128,489 "
- In 1837 . . . . " 140,247 "
- Supposing this rate of increase to have continued up to 1846, and
- to this total of misdemeanors adding the cases of the criminal
- courts, the simple matters that go no further than the police,
- and all the offences unknown or left unpunished,--offences far
- surpassing in number, so the magistrates say, those which justice
- reaches,--we shall arrive at the conclusion that in one year, in
- the city of Paris, there are more infractions of the law
- committed than there are inhabitants. And as it is necessary to
- deduct from the presumable authors of these infractions children
- of seven years and under, who are outside the limits of guilt,
- the figures will show that every adult citizen is guilty, three
- or four times a year, of violating the established order.
- Thus the proprietary system is maintained at Paris only by the
- annual consummation of one or two millions of offences! Now,
- though all these offences should be the work of a single man, the
- argument would still hold good: this man would be the scapegoat
- loaded with the sins of Israel: of what consequence is the number
- of the guilty, provided justice has its contingent?
- Violence, perjury, robbery, cheating, contempt of persons and
- society, are so much a part of the essence of monopoly; they flow
- from it so naturally, with such perfect regularity, and in
- accordance with laws so certain,--that it is possible to submit
- their perpetration to calculation, and, given the number of a
- population, the condition of its industry, and the stage of its
- enlightenment, to rigorously deduce therefrom the statistics of
- its morality. The economists do not know yet what the principle
- of value is; but they know, within a few decimals, the
- proportionality of crime. So many thousand souls, so many
- malefactors, so many condemnations: about that there can be no
- mistake. It is one of the most beautiful applications of the
- theory of chances, and the most advanced branch of economic
- science. If socialism had invented this accusing theory, the
- whole world would have cried calumny.
- Yet, after all, what is there in it that should surprise us? As
- misery is a necessary result of the contradictions of society, a
- result which it is possible to determine mathematically from the
- rate of interest, the rate of wages, and the prevailing
- market-prices, so crimes and misdemeanors are another effect of
- this same antagonism, susceptible, like its cause, of estimation
- by figures. The materialists have drawn the silliest inferences
- from this subordination of liberty to the laws of numbers: as if
- man were not under the influence of all that surrounds him, and
- as if, since all that surrounds him is governed by inexorable
- laws, he must not experience, in his freest manifestations, the
- reaction of those laws!
- The same character of necessity which we have just pointed out in
- the establishment and sustenance of criminal justice is found,
- but under a more metaphysical aspect, in its morality.
- In the opinion of all moralists, the penalty should be such as to
- secure the reformation of the offender, and consequently free
- from everything that might cause his degradation. Far be it from
- me to combat this blessed tendency of minds and disparage
- attempts which would have been the glory of the greatest men of
- antiquity. Philanthropy, in spite of the ridicule which
- sometimes attaches to its name, will remain, in the eyes of
- posterity, the most honorable characteristic of our time: the
- abolition of the death penalty, which is merely postponed; the
- abolition of the stigma; the studies regarding the effects of the
- cellular system; the establishment of workshops in the prisons;
- and a multitude of other reforms which I cannot even
- name,--give evidence of real progress in our ideas and in our
- morals. What the author of Christianity, in an impulse of
- sublime love, related of his mystical kingdom, where the
- repentant sinner was to be glorified above the just and the
- innocent man,--that utopia of Christian charity has become the
- aspiration of our sceptical society; and when one thinks of the
- unanimity of feeling which prevails in respect to it, he asks
- himself with surprise who then prevents this aspiration from
- being realized.
- Alas! it is because reason is still stronger than love, and logic
- more tenacious than crime; it is because here as everywhere in
- our civilization there reigns an insoluble contradiction. Let us
- not wander into fantastic worlds; let us embrace, in all its
- frightful nudity, the real one.
- Le crime fait la honte, et non pas l'echafaud,[27]
- says the proverb. By the simple fact that man is punished,
- provided he deserved to be, he is degraded: the penalty renders
- him infamous, not by virtue of the definition of the code, but by
- reason of the fault which caused the punishment. Of what
- importance, then, is the materiality of the punishment? of what
- importance all your penitentiary systems? What you do is to
- satisfy your feelings, but is powerless to rehabilitate the
- unfortunate whom your justice strikes. The guilty man, once
- branded by chastisement, is incapable of reconciliation; his
- stain is indelible, and his damnation eternal. If it were
- possible for it to be otherwise, the penalty would cease to be
- proportional to the offence; it would be no more than a fiction,
- it would be nothing. He whom misery has led to larceny, if he
- suffers himself to fall into the hands of justice, remains
- forever the enemy of God and men; better for him that he had
- never been born; it was Jesus Christ who said it: Bonum erat ei,
- si natus non fuisset homo ille. And what Jesus Christ declared,
- Christians and infidels do not dispute: the irreparability of
- shame is, of all the revelations of the Gospel, the only one
- which the proprietary world has understood. Thus, separated from
- nature by monopoly, cut off from humanity by poverty, the mother
- of crime and its punishment, what refuge remains for the plebeian
- whom labor cannot support, and who is not strong enough to take?
- [27] The crime makes the shame, and not the scaffold.
- --Translator.
- To conduct this offensive and defensive war against the
- proletariat a public force was indispensable: the executive power
- grew out of the necessities of civil legislation, administration,
- and justice. And there again the most beautiful hopes have
- changed into bitter disappointments.
- As legislator, as burgomaster, and as judge, the prince has set
- himself up as a representative of divine authority. A defender
- of the poor, the widow, and the orphan, he has promised to cause
- liberty and equality to prevail around the throne, to come to the
- aid of labor, and to listen to the voice of the people. And the
- people have thrown themselves lovingly into the arms of power;
- and, when experience has made them feel that power was against
- them, instead of blaming the institution, they have fallen to
- accusing the prince, ever unwilling to understand that, the
- prince being by nature and destination the chief of non-producers
- and greatest of monopolists, it was impossible for him, in spite
- of himself, to take up the cause of the people.
- All criticism, whether of the form or the acts of government,
- ends in this essential contradiction. And when the self-styled
- theorists of the sovereignty of the people pretend that the
- remedy for the tyranny of power consists in causing it to emanate
- from popular suffrage, they simply turn, like the squirrel, in
- their cage. For, from the moment that the essential conditions
- of power--that is, authority, property, hierarchy--are preserved,
- the suffrage of the people is nothing but the consent of the
- people to their oppression,--which is the silliest charlatanism.
- In the system of authority, whatever its origin, monarchical or
- democratic, power is the noble organ of society; by it society
- lives and moves; all initiative emanates from it; order and
- perfection are wholly its work. According to the definitions of
- economic science, on the contrary,--definitions which harmonize
- with the reality of things,-- power is the series of
- non-producers which social organization must tend to indefinitely
- reduce. How, then, with the principle of authority so dear to
- democrats, shall the aspiration of political economy, an
- aspiration which is also that of the people, be realized? How
- shall the government, which by the hypothesis is everything,
- become an obedient servant, a subordinate organ? Why should the
- prince have received power simply to weaken it, and why should he
- labor, with a view to order, for his own elimination? Why should
- he not try rather to fortify himself, to add to his courtiers, to
- continually obtain new subsidies, and finally to free himself
- from dependence on the people, the inevitable goal of all power
- originating in the people?
- It is said that the people, naming its legislators and through
- them making its will known to power, will always be in a position
- to arrest its invasions; that thus the people will fill at once
- the role of prince and that of sovereign. Such, in a word, is
- the utopia of democrats, the eternal mystification with which
- they abuse the proletariat.
- But will the people make laws against power; against the
- principle of authority and hierarchy, which is the principle
- upon which society is based; against liberty and property?
- According to our hypothesis, this is more than impossible, it is
- contradictory. Then property, monopoly, competition, industrial
- privileges, the inequality of fortunes, the preponderance of
- capital, hierarchical and crushing centralization, administrative
- oppression, legal absolutism, will be preserved; and, as it is
- impossible for a government not to act in the direction of its
- principle, capital will remain as before the god of society, and
- the people, still exploited, still degraded, will have gained by
- their attempt at sovereignty only a demonstration of their
- powerlessness.
- In vain do the partisans of power, all those dynastico-republican
- doctrinaires who are alike in everything but tactics, flatter
- themselves that, once in control of affairs, they will inaugurate
- reform everywhere. Reform what?
- Reform the constitution? It is impossible. Though the entire
- nation should enter the constitutional convention, it would not
- leave it until it had either voted its servitude under another
- form, or decreed its dissolution.
- Reconstruct the code, the work of the emperor, the pure substance
- of Roman law and custom? It is impossible. What have you to put
- in the place of your proprietary routine, outside of which you
- see and understand nothing? in the place of your laws of
- monopoly, the limits of whose circle your imagination is
- powerless to overstep? More than half a century ago royalty and
- democracy, those two sibyls which the ancient world has
- bequeathed to us, undertook, by a constitutional compromise, to
- harmonize their oracles; since the wisdom of the prince has
- placed itself in unison with the voice of the people, what
- revelation has resulted? what principle of order has been
- discovered? what issue from the labyrinth of privilege pointed
- out? Before prince and people had signed this strange
- compromise, in what were their ideas not similar? and now that
- each is trying to break the contract, in what do they differ?
- Diminish public burdens, assess taxes on a more equitable basis?
- It is impossible: to the treasury as to the army the man of the
- people will always furnish more than his contingent.
- Regulate monopoly, bridle competition? It is impossible; you
- would kill production.
- Open new markets? It is impossible.[28]
- Organize credit? It is impossible.[29]
- Attack heredity? It is impossible.[30]
- [28] See volume II., chapter IX.
- [29] Ibid., chapter X.
- [30] Ibid., chapter XI.
- Create national workshops, assure a minimum to unemployed
- workmen, and assign to employees a share of the profits? It is
- impossible. It is in the nature of government to be able to deal
- with labor only to enchain laborers, as it deals with products
- only to levy its tithe.
- Repair, by a system of indemnities, the disastrous effects of
- machinery? It is impossible.
- Combat by regulations the degrading influence of parcellaire
- division? It is impossible.
- Cause the people to enjoy the benefits of education? It is
- impossible.
- Establish a tariff of prices and wages, and fix the value of
- things by sovereign authority? It is impossible, it is
- impossible.
- Of all the reforms which society in its distress solicits not one
- is within the competence of power; not one can be realized
- by it, because the essence of power is repugnant to them all, and
- it is not given to man to unite what God has divided.
- At least, the partisans of governmental initiative will say, you
- will admit that, in the accomplishment of the revolution promised
- by the development of antinomies, power would be a potent
- auxiliary. Why, then, do you oppose a reform which, putting
- power in the hands of the people, would second your views so
- well? Social reform is the object; political reform is the
- instrument: why, if you wish the end, do you reject the means?
- Such is today the reasoning of the entire democratic press, which
- I forgive with all my heart for having at last, by this
- quasi-socialistic confession of faith, itself proclaimed the
- emptiness of its theories. It is in the name of science, then,
- that democracy calls for a political reform as a preliminary to
- social reform. But science protests against this subterfuge as
- an insult; science repudiates any alliance with politics, and,
- very far from expecting from it the slightest aid, must begin
- with politics its work of exclusion.
- How little affinity there is between the human mind and truth!
- When I see the democracy, socialistic but yesterday, continually
- asking for capital in order to combat capital's influence; for
- wealth, in order to cure poverty; for the abandonment of liberty,
- in order to organize liberty; for the reformation of government,
- in order to reform society,--when I see it, I say, taking upon
- itself the responsibility of society, provided social questions
- be set aside or solved, it seems to me as if I were listening to
- a fortune-teller who, before answering the questions of those who
- consult her, begins by inquiring into their age, their condition,
- their family, and all the accidents of their life. Eh! miserable
- sorceress, if you know the future, you know who I am and what I
- want; why do you ask me to tell you?
- Likewise I will answer the democrats: If you know the use that
- you should make of power, and if you know how power should be
- organized, you possess economic science. Now, if you possess
- economic science, if you have the key of its contradictions, if
- you are in a position to organize labor, if you have studied the
- laws of exchange, you have no need of the capital of the nation
- or of public force. From this day forth you are more potent than
- money, stronger than power. For, since the laborers are with
- you, you are by that fact alone masters of production; you hold
- commerce, manufactures, and agriculture enchained; you have the
- entire social capital at your disposition; you have full control
- of taxation; you block the wheels of power, and you trample
- monopoly under foot. What other initiative, what greater
- authority, do you ask? What prevents you from applying your
- theories?
- Surely not political economy, although generally followed and
- accredited: for, everything in political economy having a true
- side and a false side, your only problem is to combine the
- economic elements in such a way that their total shall no longer
- present a contradiction.
- Nor is it the civil law: for that law, sanctioning economic
- routine solely because of its advantages and in spite of its
- disadvantages, is susceptible, like political economy itself, of
- being bent to all the exigencies of an exact synthesis, and
- consequently is as favorable to you as possible.
- Finally, it is not power, which, the last expression of
- antagonism and created only to defend the law, could stand in
- your way only by forswearing itself.
- Once more, then, what stops you?
- If you possess social science, you know that the problem of
- association consists in organizing, not only the
- NON-PRODUCERS,--in that direction, thank heaven! little remains
- to be done,--but also the PRODUCERS, and by this organization
- subjecting capital and subordinating power. Such is the war that
- you have to sustain: a war of labor against capital; a war of
- liberty against authority; a war of the producer against the
- non-producer; a war of equality against privilege. What you
- ask, to conduct the war to a successful conclusion, is precisely
- that which you must combat. Now, to combat and reduce power, to
- put it in its proper place in society, it is of no use to change
- the holders of power or introduce some variation into its
- workings: an agricultural and industrial combination must be
- found by means of which power, today the ruler of society, shall
- become its slave. Have you the secret of that combination?
- But what do I say? That is precisely the thing to which you do
- not consent. As you cannot conceive of society without
- hierarchy, you have made yourselves the apostles of authority;
- worshippers of power, you think only of strengthening it and
- muzzling liberty; your favorite maxim is that the welfare of the
- people must be achieved in spite of the people; instead of
- proceeding to social reform by the extermination of power and
- politics, you insist on a reconstruction of power and politics.
- Then, by a series of contradictions which prove your sincerity,
- but the illusory character of which is well known to the real
- friends of power, the aristocrats and monarchists, your
- competitors, you promise us, in the name of power, economy in
- expenditures, an equitable assessment of taxes, protection to
- labor, gratuitous education, universal suffrage, and all the
- utopias repugnant to authority and property. Consequently power
- in your hands has never been anything but ruinous, and that is
- why you have never been able to retain it; that is why, on the
- Eighteenth of Brumaire,[31] four men were sufficient to take
- it away from you, and why today the bourgeoisie, which is as fond
- of power as you are and which wants a strong power, will not
- restore it to you.
- [31] Date of the Napoleonic coup d'Etat, according to the
- revolutionary calendar.
- Thus power, the instrument of collective might, created in
- society to serve as a mediator between labor and privilege, finds
- itself inevitably enchained to capital and directed against the
- proletariat. No political reform can solve this contradiction,
- since, by the confession of the politicians themselves, such a
- reform would end only in increasing the energy and extending the
- sphere of power, and since power would know no way of touching
- the prerogatives of monopoly without overturning the hierarchy
- and dissolving society. The problem before the laboring classes,
- then, consists, not in capturing, but in subduing both power and
- monopoly,--that is, in generating from the bowels of the people,
- from the depths of labor, a greater authority, a more potent
- fact, which shall envelop capital and the State and subjugate
- them. Every proposition of reform which does not satisfy this
- condition is simply one scourge more, a rod doing sentry duty,
- virgam vigilantem, as a prophet said, which threatens the
- proletariat.
- The crown of this system is religion. There is no occasion for
- me to deal here with the philosophic value of religious opinions,
- relate their history, or seek their interpretation. I confine
- myself to a consideration of the economic origin of religion, the
- secret bond which connects it with police, the place which it
- occupies in the series of social manifestations.
- Man, despairing of finding the equilibrium of his powers, leaps,
- as it were, outside of himself and seeks in infinity that
- sovereign harmony the realization of which is to him the highest
- degree of reason, power, and happiness. Unable to harmonize with
- himself, he kneels before God and prays. He prays, and his
- prayer, a hymn sung to God, is a blasphemy against society.
- It is from God, man says to himself, that authority and power
- come to me: then, let us obey God and the prince. Obedite Deo et
- principibus. It is from God that law and justice come to me.
- Per me reges regnant et potentes decernunt justitiam. Let us
- respect the commands of the legislator and the magistrate. It is
- God who controls the prosperity of labor, who makes and unmakes
- fortunes: may his will be done! Dominus dedit, Dominus abstulit,
- sit nomen Domini benedictum. It is God who punishes me when
- misery devours me, and when I am persecuted for righteousness's
- sake: let us receive with respect the scourges which his mercy
- employs for our purification. Humiliamini igitur sub potenti
- manu Dei. This life, which God has given me, is but an ordeal
- which leads me to salvation: let us shun pleasure; let us love
- and invite pain; let us find our pleasure in doing penance. The
- sadness which comes from injustice is a favor from on high;
- blessed are they that mourn! Beati qui lugent! . . . . Haec
- est enim gratia, si quis sustinet tristitias, patiens injuste.
- A century ago a missionary, preaching before an audience made up
- of financiers and grandees, did justice to this odious morality.
- "What have I done?" he cried, with tears. "I have saddened the
- poor, the best friends of my God! I have preached the rigors of
- penance to unfortunates who want for bread! It is here, where my
- eyes fall only on the powerful and on the rich, on the oppressors
- of suffering humanity, that I must launch the word of God in
- all the force of its thunder!"
- Let us admit, nevertheless, that the theory of resignation has
- served society by preventing revolt. Religion, consecrating by
- divine right the inviolability of power and of privilege, has
- given humanity the strength to continue its journey and exhaust
- its contradictions. Without this bandage thrown over the eyes of
- the people society would have been a thousand times dissolved.
- Some one had to suffer that it might be cured; and religion, the
- comforter of the afflicted, decided that it should be the poor
- man. It is this suffering which has led us to our present
- position; civilization, which owes all its marvels to the
- laborer, owes also to his voluntary sacrifice its future and its
- existence. Oblatus est quia ipse voluit, et livore ejus sanati
- sumus.
- O people of laborers! disinherited, harassed, proscribed people!
- people whom they imprison, judge, and kill! despised people,
- branded people! Do you not know that there is an end, even to
- patience, even to devotion? Will you not cease to lend an ear to
- those orators of mysticism who tell you to pray and to wait,
- preaching salvation now through religion, now through power, and
- whose vehement and sonorous words captivate you? Your destiny is
- an enigma which neither physical force, nor courage of soul, nor
- the illuminations of enthusiasm, nor the exaltation of any
- sentiment, can solve. Those who tell you to the contrary deceive
- you, and all their discourses serve only to postpone the hour of
- your deliverance, now ready to strike. What are enthusiasm and
- sentiment, what is vain poesy, when confronted with necessity?
- To overcome necessity there is nothing but necessity itself, the
- last reason of nature, the pure essence of matter and spirit.
- Thus the contradiction of value, born of the necessity of free
- will, must be overcome by the proportionality of value, another
- necessity produced by the union of liberty and intelligence.
- But, in order that this victory of intelligent and free labor
- might produce all its consequences, it was necessary that society
- should pass through a long succession of torments.
- It was a necessity that labor, in order to increase its power,
- should be divided; and a necessity, in consequence of this
- division, that the laborer should be degraded and impoverished.
- It was a necessity that this original division should be
- reconstructed by scientific instruments and combinations; and a
- necessity, in consequence of this reconstruction, that the
- subordinated laborer should lose, together with his legitimate
- wages, even the exercise of the industry which supported him.
- It was a necessity that competition then should step in to
- emancipate liberty on the point of perishing; and a necessity
- that this deliverance should end in a vast elimination of
- laborers.
- It was a necessity that the producer, ennobled by his art, as
- formerly the warrior was by arms, should bear aloft his banner,
- in order that the valor of man might be honored in labor as in
- war; and a necessity that of privilege should straightway be born
- the proletariat.
- It was a necessity that society should then take under its
- protection the conquered plebeian, a beggar without a roof; and a
- necessity that this protection should be converted into a new
- series of tortures.
- We shall meet on our way still other necessities, all of which
- will disappear, like the others, before greater necessities,
- until shall come at last the general equation, the supreme
- necessity, the triumphant fact, which must establish the kingdom
- of labor forever.
- But this solution cannot result either from surprise or from a
- vain compromise. It is as impossible to associate labor and
- capital as to produce without labor and without capital; as
- impossible to establish equality by power as to suppress power
- and equality and make a society without people and without
- police.
- There is a necessity, I repeat, of a MAJOR FORCE to invert the
- actual formulas of society; a necessity that the LABOR of the
- people, not their valor nor their votes, should, by a scientific,
- legitimate, immortal, insurmountable combination, subject capital
- to the people and deliver to them power.
- CHAPTER VIII.
- OF THE RESPONSIBILITY OF MAN AND OF GOD, UNDER THE LAW OF
- CONTRADICTION, OR A SOLUTION OF THE PROBLEM OF PROVIDENCE.
- The ancients blamed human nature for the presence of evil in the
- world.
- Christian theology has only embroidered this theme in its own
- fashion; and, as that theology sums up the whole religious period
- extending from the origin of society to our own time, it may be
- said that the dogma of original sin, having in its favor the
- assent of the human race, acquires by that very fact the highest
- degree of probability.
- So, according to all the testimony of ancient wisdom, each people
- defending its own institutions as excellent and glorifying them,
- it is not to religions, or to governments, or to traditional
- customs accredited by the respect of generations, that the cause
- of evil must be traced, but rather to a primitive perversion, to
- a sort of congenital malice in the will of man. As to the
- question how a being could have perverted and corrupted itself
- ORIGINALLY, the ancients avoided that difficulty by fables:
- Eve's apple and Pandora's box have remained celebrated among
- their symbolic solutions.
- Not only, then, had antiquity posited in its myths the question
- of the origin of evil; it had solved it by another myth, in
- unhesitatingly affirming the criminality ab ovo of our race.
- Modern philosophers have erected against the Christian dogma a
- dogma no less obscure,--that of the depravity of society. MAN IS
- BORN GOOD, cries Rousseau, in his peremptory style; BUT
- SOCIETY--that is, the forms and institutions of society--DEPRAVES
- HIM. In such terms was formulated the paradox, or, better, the
- protest, of the philosopher of Geneva.
- Now, it is evident that this idea is only the ancient hypothesis
- turned about. The ancients accused the individual man; Rousseau
- accuses the collective man: at bottom, it is always the same
- proposition, an absurd proposition.
- Nevertheless, in spite of the fundamental identity of the
- principle, Rousseau's formula, precisely because it was an
- opposition, was a step forward; consequently it was welcomed with
- enthusiasm, and it became the signal of a reaction full of
- contradictions and absurdities. Singular thing! it is to the
- anathema launched by the author of "Emile" against society that
- modern socialism is to be traced.
- For the last seventy or eighty years the principle of social
- perversion has been exploited and popularized by various
- sectarians, who, while copying Rousseau, reject with all their
- might the anti-social philosophy of that writer, without
- perceiving that, by the very fact that they aspire to reform
- society, they are as unsocial or unsociable as he. It is a
- curious spectacle to see these pseudo-innovators, condemning
- after Jean Jacques monarchy, democracy, property, communism,
- thine and mine, monopoly, wages, police, taxation, luxury,
- commerce, money, in a word, all that constitutes society and
- without which society is inconceivable, and then accusing this
- same Jean Jacques of misanthropy and paralogism, because, after
- having seen the emptiness of all utopias, at the same time that
- he pointed out the antagonism of civilization, he sternly
- concluded against society, though recognizing that without
- society there is no humanity.
- I advise those who, on the strength of what slanderers and
- plagiarists say, imagine that Rousseau embraced his theory only
- from a vain love of eccentricity, to read "Emile" and the "Social
- Contract" once more. That admirable dialectician was led to deny
- society from the standpoint of justice, although he was forced to
- admit it as necessary; just as we, who believe in an indefinite
- progress, do not cease to deny, as normal and definitive, the
- existing state of society. Only, whereas Rousseau, by a
- political combination and an educational system of his own, tried
- to bring man nearer to what he called NATURE, and what seemed to
- him the ideal society, we, instructed in a profounder school, say
- that the task of society is to continually solve its
- antinomies,--a matter of which Rousseau could have had no idea.
- Thus, apart from the now abandoned system of the "Social
- Contract," and so far as criticism alone is concerned, socialism,
- whatever it may say, is still in the same position as Rousseau,
- forced to reform society incessantly,--that is, to perpetually
- deny it.
- Rousseau, in short, simply declared in a summary and definitive
- manner what the socialists repeat in detail and at every moment
- of progress,-- namely, that social order is imperfect, always
- lacking something. Rousseau's error does not, can not lie in
- this negation of society: it consists, as we shall show, in his
- failure to follow his argument to the end and deny at once
- society, man, and God.
- However that may be, the theory of man's innocence, corresponding
- to that of the depravity of society, has at last got the upper
- hand. The immense majority of socialists--Saint-Simon, Owen,
- Fourier, and their disciples; communists, democrats, progressives
- of all sorts--have solemnly repudiated the Christian myth of the
- fall to substitute there for the system of an aberration on
- the part of society. And, as most of these sectarians, in spite
- of their flagrant impiety, were still too religious, too pious,
- to finish the work of Jean Jacques and trace back to God the
- responsibility for evil, they have found a way of deducing from
- the hypothesis of God the dogma of the native goodness of man,
- and have begun to fulminate against society in the finest
- fashion.
- The theoretical and practical consequences of this reaction were
- that, evil--that is, the effect of internal and external
- struggle--being abnormal and transitory, penal and repressive
- institutions are likewise transitory; that in man there is no
- native vice, but that his environment has depraved his
- inclinations; that civilization has been mistaken as to its own
- tendencies; that constraint is immoral, that our passions are
- holy; that enjoyment is holy and should be sought after like
- virtue itself, because God, who caused us to desire it, is holy.
- And, the women coming to the aid of the eloquence of the
- philosophers, a deluge of anti-restrictive protests has fallen,
- quasi de vulva erumpens, to make use of a comparison from the
- Holy Scriptures, upon the wonder-stricken public.
- The writings of this school are recognizable by their evangelical
- style, their melancholy theism, and, above all, their enigmatical
- dialectics.
- "They blame human nature," says M. Louis Blanc, "for almost all
- our evils; the blame should be laid upon the vicious character of
- social institutions. Look around you: how many talents
- misplaced, and CONSEQUENTLY depraved! How many activities have
- become turbulent for want of having found their legitimate and
- natural object! They force our passions to traverse an impure
- medium; is it at all surprising that they become altered? Place
- a healthy man in a pestilent atmosphere, and he will inhale
- death. . . . Civilization has taken a wrong road, . . . and to
- say that it could not have been otherwise is to lose the right to
- talk of equity, of morality, of progress; it is to lose the right
- to talk of God. Providence disappears to give place to the
- grossest fatalism."
- The name of God recurs forty times, and always to no purpose, in
- M. Blanc's "Organization of Labor," which I quote from
- preference, because in my view it represents advanced democratic
- opinion better than any other work, and because I like to do it
- honor by refuting it.
- Thus, while socialism, aided by extreme democracy, deifies man by
- denying the dogma of the fall, and consequently dethrones God,
- henceforth useless to the perfection of his creature, this same
- socialism, through mental cowardice, falls back upon the
- affirmation of Providence, and that at the very moment when it
- denies the providential authority of history.
- And as nothing stands such chance of success among men as
- contradiction, the idea of a religion of pleasure, renewed from
- Epicurus during an eclipse of public reason, has been taken as an
- inspiration of the national genius; it is this that distinguishes
- the new theists from the Catholics, against whom the former have
- inveighed so loudly during the last two years only out of rivalry
- in fanaticism. It is the fashion today to speak of God on all
- occasions and to declaim against the pope; to invoke Providence
- and to scoff at the Church. THANK GOD! WE ARE NOT ATHEISTS, said
- "La Reforme" one day; all the more, it might have added by way of
- increasing its absurdity, we are not Christians. The word has
- gone forth to every one who holds a pen to bamboozle the people,
- and the first article of the new faith is that an infinitely good
- God has created man as good as himself; which does not prevent
- man, under the eye of God, from becoming wicked in a detestable
- society.
- Nevertheless it is plain, in spite of these semblances of
- religion, we might even say these desires for it, that the
- quarrel between socialism and Christian tradition, between man
- and society, must end by a denial of Divinity. Social reason is
- not distinguishable by us from absolute Reason, which is no other
- than God himself, and to deny society in its past phases is to
- deny Providence, is to deny God.
- Thus, then, we are placed between two negations, two
- contradictory affirmations: one which, by the voice of entire
- antiquity, setting aside as out of the question society and God
- which it represents, finds in man alone the principle of evil;
- another which, protesting in the name of free, intelligent, and
- progressive man, throws back upon social infirmity and, by a
- necessary consequence, upon the creative and inspiring genius of
- society all the disturbances of the universe.
- Now, as the anomalies of social order and the oppression of
- individual liberties arise principally from the play of economic
- contradictions, we have to inquire, in view of the data which we
- have brought to light:
- 1. Whether fate, whose circle surrounds us, exercises a control
- over our liberty so imperious and compulsory that infractions of
- the law, committed under the dominion of antinomies, cease to be
- imputable to us? And, if not, whence arises this culpability
- peculiar to man?
- 2. Whether the hypothetical being, utterly good, omnipotent,
- omniscient, to whom faith attributes the supreme direction of
- human agitations, has not himself failed society at the moment of
- danger? And, if so, to explain this insufficiency of Divinity.
- In short, we are to find out whether man is God, whether God
- himself is God, or whether, to attain the fullness of
- intelligence and liberty, we must search for a superior cause.
- % 1.--The culpability of man.--Exposition of the myth of
- the fall.
- As long as man lives under the law of egoism, he accuses himself;
- as soon as he rises to the conception of a social law, he accuses
- society. In both cases humanity accuses humanity; and so far the
- clearest result of this double accusation is the strange faculty,
- which we have not yet pointed out, and which religion attributes
- to God as well as to man, of REPENTANCE.
- Of what, then, does humanity repent? For what does God, who
- repents as well as ourselves, desire to punish us? Poenituit
- Deum quod hominem fecisset in terra, et tactus dolore cordis
- intrinsecus, delebo, inquit, hominem. . . . If I demonstrate
- that the offences charged upon humanity are not the consequence
- of its economic embarrassments, although the latter result from
- the constitution of its ideas; that man does evil gratuitously
- and when not under compulsion, just as he honors himself by acts
- of heroism which justice does not exact,--it will follow that
- man, at the tribunal of his conscience, may be allowed to plead
- certain extenuating circumstances, but can never be entirely
- discharged of his guilt; that the struggle is in his heart as
- well as in his mind; that he deserves now praise, now blame,
- which is a confession, in either case, of his inharmonious state;
- finally, that the essence of his soul is a perpetual compromise
- between opposing attractions, his morality a system of seesaw, in
- a word,--and this word tells the whole story,-- eclecticism.
- My proof shall be soon made.
- There exists a law, older than our liberty, promulgated from the
- beginning of the world, completed by Jesus Christ, preached
- and certified by apostles, martyrs, confessors, and virgins,
- graven on the heart of man, and superior to all metaphysics: it
- is LOVE. LOVE THY NEIGHBOR AS THYSELF, Jesus Christ tells us,
- after Moses. That is the whole of it. Love thy neighbor as
- thyself, and society will be perfect; love thy neighbor as
- thyself, and all distinctions of prince and shepherd, of rich and
- poor, of learned and ignorant, disappear, all clashing of human
- interests ceases. Love thy neighbor as thyself, and happiness
- with industry, without care for the future, shall fill thy days.
- To fulfil this law and make himself happy man needs only to
- follow the inclination of his heart and listen to the voice of
- his sympathies. He resists; he does more: not content with
- preferring himself to his neighbor, he labors constantly to
- destroy his neighbor; after having betrayed love through egoism,
- he overturns it by injustice.
- Man, I say, faithless to the law of charity, has, of himself and
- without any necessity, made the contradictions of society so many
- instruments of harm; through his egoism civilization has become a
- war of surprises and ambushes; he lies, he steals, he murders,
- when not compelled to do so, without provocation, without excuse.
- In short, he does evil with all the characteristics of a nature
- deliberately maleficent, and all the more wicked because, when it
- so wishes, it knows how to do good gratuitously also and is
- capable of self-sacrifice; wherefore it has been said of it, with
- as much reason as depth: Homo homini lupus, vel deus. Not to
- unduly extend the subject, and especially in order to avoid
- prejudging the questions that I shall have to consider, I limit
- myself to the economic facts already analyzed.
- With the fact that the division of labor is by nature, pending
- the attainment of a synthetic organization, an irresistible
- cause of physical, moral, and mental inequality among men neither
- society nor conscience have anything to do. That is a fact of
- necessity, of which the rich man is as innocent as the
- parcellaire workman, consigned by his position to all sorts of
- poverty.
- But how happens it that this inevitable inequality is converted
- into a title of nobility for some, of abjection for others? How
- happens it, if man is good, that he has not succeeded in
- levelling by his goodness this wholly metaphysical obstacle, and
- that, instead of strengthening the fraternal tie that binds men,
- pitiless necessity breaks it? Here man cannot be excused on the
- ground of his economic inexperience or legislative
- shortsightedness; it was enough that he had a heart. Since the
- martyrs of the division of labor should have been helped and
- honored by the rich, why have they been rejected as impure? Why
- is it an unheard-of thing for masters to occasionally relieve
- their slaves, for princes, magistrates, and priests to change
- places with mechanics, and for nobles to assume the task of the
- peasants on the land? What is the reason of this brutal pride of
- the powerful?
- And note that such conduct on their part would have been not only
- charitable and fraternal, but in accord with the sternest
- justice. By virtue of the principle of collective force,
- laborers are the equals and associates of their leaders; so that
- in the system of monopoly itself, community of action restoring
- the equilibrium which parcellaire individualism has disturbed,
- justice and charity blend. On the hypothesis of the essential
- goodness of man, how then is to be explained the monstrous
- attempt to change the authority of some into nobility and the
- obedience of others into plebeianism? Labor, between the serf
- and the free man, like color between the black and the white, has
- always drawn an impassable line; and we ourselves, who glory so
- in our philanthropy, at the bottom of our hearts are of the same
- opinion as our predecessors. The sympathy which we feel for the
- proletaire is like that with which animals inspire us; delicacy
- of organs, dread of misery, pride in separating ourselves from
- all suffering,--it is these shifts of egoism that prompt our
- charity.
- For in fact--and I desire only this fact to confound us--is it
- not true that spontaneous benevolence, so pure in its primitive
- conception (eleemosyna, sympathy, tenderness), alms, in fine, has
- become for the unfortunate a sign of degradation, a public
- stigma? And socialists, rebuking Christianity, dare to talk to
- us of love! The Christian thought, the conscience of humanity,
- hit the mark precisely, when it founded so many institutions for
- the relief of misfortune. To grasp the evangelical precept in
- its depth and render legal charity as honorable to those who had
- been its objects as to those who had exercised it, there was
- needed--what? Less pride, less greed, less egoism. If man is
- good, will any one tell me how the right to alms has become the
- first link in the long chain of infractions, misdemeanors, and
- crimes? Will any one still dare to blame the misdeeds of man
- upon the antagonisms of social economy, when these antagonisms
- offered him so beautiful an opportunity of manifesting the
- charity of his heart, I do not say by self-sacrifice, but by the
- simple doing of justice?
- I know--and this objection is the only one that can be offered
- against my position--that charity is covered with shame and
- dishonor because the individual who asks it is too often, alas!
- suspected of misconduct and rarely to be recommended on the score
- of dignity of morals and of labor. And statistics prove that
- those who are poor through cowardice and negligence outnumber ten
- times those who are poor through accident or mischance.
- Far be it from me to challenge this observation, the truth of
- which is demonstrated by too many facts, and which, moreover, has
- received the sanction of the people. The people are the first to
- accuse the poor of laziness; and there is nothing more common
- than to meet in the lower classes men who boast, as if it were a
- title of nobility, that they have never been in the hospital and
- in their greatest distress have never been recipients of public
- charity. Thus, just as opulence avows its robberies, misery
- confesses its shame. Man is a tyrant or a slave by will before
- becoming so by fortune; the heart of the proletaire is like that
- of the rich man,--a sewer of boiling sensuality, the home of
- crapulence and imposture.
- Upon this unexpected revelation I ask how it happens, if man is
- good and charitable, that the rich calumniate charity while the
- poor defile it? It is perversion of judgment on the part of the
- rich, say some; it is degradation of faculties on the part of the
- poor, say others. But how is it that judgment is perverted on
- the one hand, and on the other that faculties are degraded? How
- comes it that a true and cordial fraternity has not arrested on
- the one side and on the other the effects of pride and labor?
- Let my questions be answered by reasons, not by phrases.
- Labor, in inventing processes and machines which infinitely
- multiply its power, and then in stimulating industrial genius by
- rivalry and assuring its conquests by means of the profits of
- capital and privileges of exploitation, has rendered the
- hierarchical constitution of society more profound and more
- inevitable; I repeat that no blame attaches to any one for this.
- But I call the holy law of the Gospel to witness that it was
- within our power to draw wholly different consequences from this
- subordination of man to man, or, better, of laborer to laborer.
- The traditions of feudal life and of that of the patriarchs set
- the example for the manufacturers. The division of labor and the
- other accidents of production were only calls to the great family
- life, indications of the preparatory system in accordance with
- which fraternity was to appear and be developed. Masterships,
- corporations, and rights of primogeniture were conceived under
- the influence of this idea; many communists even are not hostile
- to this form of association; is it surprising that the ideal is
- so tenacious among those who, conquered but not converted, still
- appear as its representatives? What, then, prevented charity,
- union, sacrifice from maintaining themselves in the hierarchy,
- when the hierarchy might have been only a condition of labor? To
- this end it would have sufficed if men having machines, valiant
- knights fighting with equal weapons, had not made a mystery of
- their secrets or withheld them from others; if barons had set to
- work, not to monopolize their products, but to cheapen them; and
- if vassals, assured that war would result only in increasing
- their wealth, had always shown themselves enterprising,
- industrious, and faithful. The chief of the workshop would then
- have been simply a captain putting his men through manoeuvres in
- their interest as well as in his own, and maintaining them, not
- with his perquisites, but with their own services.
- Instead of these fraternal relations, we have had pride,
- jealousy, and perjury; the employer, like the vampire of the
- fable, exploiting the degraded wage-worker, and the wage-worker
- conspiring against the employer; the idler devouring the
- substance of the laborer, and the serf, squatting in filth,
- having no strength left but for hatred.
- Called on to furnish for the work of production, these tools,
- those labor, capitalists and laborers are today in a struggle:
- why? Because absolutism presides over all their relations;
- because the capitalist speculates on the need which the laborer
- feels of procuring tools, while the laborer, in turn, seeks to
- derive advantage from the need which the capitalist feels of
- fertilizing his capital.--L. Blanc: Organization of Labor.
- And why this ABSOLUTISM in the relations of capitalist and
- laborer? Why this hostility of interests? Why this reciprocal
- enmity? Instead of eternally explaining the fact by the fact
- itself, go to the bottom, and you will find everywhere, as
- original motive, a passion for enjoyment which neither law nor
- justice nor charity restrain; you will see egoism continually
- discounting the future, and sacrificing to its monstrous caprices
- labor, capital, life, and the security of all.
- The theologians have given the name CONCUPISCENCE or
- CONCUPISCIBLE APPETITE to the passionate greed for sensual
- things, the effect, according to them, of original sin. I
- trouble myself little, for the present, as to the nature of the
- original sin; I simply observe that the concupiscible appetite of
- the theologians is no other than that NEED OF LUXURY pointed out
- by the Academy of Moral Sciences as the ruling motive of our
- epoch. Now, the theory of proportionality of values demonstrates
- that luxury is naturally measured by production; that every
- consumption in advance is recovered by an equivalent later
- privation; and that the exaggeration of luxury in a society
- necessarily has an increase of misery as its correlative. Now,
- were man to sacrifice his personal welfare for luxurious and
- advance enjoyments, perhaps I should accuse him only of
- imprudence; but, when he injures the welfare of his
- neighbor,--a welfare which he should regard as inviolable, both
- from charity and on the ground of justice,--I say then that man
- is wicked, inexcusably wicked.
- WHEN GOD, according to Bossuet, FORMED THE BOWELS OF MAN, HE
- ORIGINALLY PLACED GOODNESS THERE. Thus love is our first law;
- the prescriptions of pure reason, as well as the promptings of
- the senses, take second and third rank only. Such is the
- hierarchy of our faculties,--a principle of love forming the
- foundation of our conscience and served by an intelligence and
- organs. Hence of two things one: either the man who violates
- charity to obey his cupidity is guilty; or else, if this
- psychology is false, and the need of luxury in man must hold a
- place beside charity and reason, man is a disorderly animal,
- utterly wicked, and the most execrable of beings.
- Thus the organic contradictions of society cannot cover the
- responsibility of man; viewed in themselves, moreover, these
- contradictions are only the theory of the hierarchical regime,
- the first form and consequently an irreproachable form of
- society. By the antinomy of their development labor and capital
- have been continually led back to equality at the same time as to
- subordination, to solidarity as well as to dependence; one was
- the agent, the other the stimulator and guardian of the common
- wealth. This indication has been indistinctly seen by the
- theorists of the feudal system; Christianity came in time to
- cement the compact; and it is still the sentiment of this
- misunderstood and broken, but in itself innocent and legitimate,
- organization which causes regrets among us and sustains the hope
- of a party. As this system was written in the book of destiny,
- it cannot be said to be bad in itself, just as the embryonic
- state cannot be called bad because it precedes adult age in
- physiological development.
- I insist, therefore, on my accusation:
- Under the regime abolished by Luther and the French Revolution
- man could be happy in proportion to the progress of his industry;
- he did not choose to be; on the contrary, he forbade himself to
- be.
- Labor has been regarded as dishonorable; the clergy and the
- nobility have made themselves the devourers of the poor; to
- satisfy their animal passions, they have extinguished charity in
- their hearts; they have ruined, oppressed, assassinated the
- laborer. And thus it is that we see capital still hunting the
- proletariat. Instead of tempering the subversive tendency of
- economic principles by association and mutuality, the capitalist
- exaggerates it unnecessarily and with evil design; he abuses the
- senses and the conscience of the workman; he makes him a valet in
- his intrigues, a purveyor of his debaucheries, an accomplice in
- his robberies; he makes him in all respects like himself, and
- then it is that he can defy the justice of revolutions to touch
- him. Monstrous thing! the man who lives in misery, and whose
- soul therefore seems a nearer neighbor of charity and honor,
- shares his master's corruption; like him, he gives everything to
- pride and luxury, and if he sometimes cries out against the
- inequality from which he suffers, it is still less from zeal for
- justice than from rivalry in desire. The greatest obstacle which
- equality has to overcome is not the aristocratic pride of the
- rich man, but the ungovernable egoism of the poor man. And you
- rely on his native goodness to reform at once both the
- spontaneity and the premeditation of his malice!
- "As the false and anti-social education given to the present
- generation," says Louis Blanc, "permits no search for any other
- motive for emulation and encouragement than an increase of
- reward, the difference of wages should be graduated according to
- the hierarchy of functions, an entirely new education having
- to change ideas and morals in this matter."
- Dismissing the hierarchy of functions and the inequality of wages
- for what they are worth, let us consider here only the motive
- assigned by the author. Is it not strange to see M. Blanc affirm
- the goodness of our nature, and at the same time address himself
- to the most ignoble of our propensities,--avarice? Truly, evil
- must seem to you very deeply rooted, if you deem it necessary to
- begin the restoration of charity by a violation of charity.
- Jesus Christ broke openly with pride and greed; apparently the
- libertines whom he catechised were holy personages compared with
- the herd infected with socialism. But tell us then, in short,
- how our ideas have been warped, why our education is anti-social,
- since it is now demonstrated that society has followed the route
- traced by destiny and can no longer be charged with the crimes of
- man.
- Really, the logic of socialism is marvellous.
- Man is good, they say; but it is necessary to DETACH HIS
- INTERESTS from evil to secure his abstinence from it. Man is
- good; but he must be INTERESTED in the good, else he will not do
- it. For, if the interest of his passions leads him to evil, he
- will do evil; and, if this same interest leaves him indifferent
- to good, he will not do good. And society will have no right to
- reproach him for having listened to his passions, because it was
- for society to conduct him by his passions. What a rich and
- precious nature was that of Nero, who killed his mother because
- she wearied him, and who caused Rome to be burned in order to
- have a representation of the pillage of Troy! What an artist's
- soul was that of Heliogabalus, who organized prostitution! What
- a potent character was Tiberius! But what an abominable society
- was that which perverted those divine souls, and produced,
- moreover, Tacitus and Marcus Aurelius!
- This, then, is what is called the harmlessness of man,--the
- holiness of his passions! An aged Sappho, abandoned by her
- lovers, goes back under the conjugal law; her interest detached
- from love, she returns to marriage, and is holy. What a pity
- that this word HOLY (saint) has not in French the double meaning
- which it possesses in the Hebrew language! All would be in
- accord regarding the holiness of Sappho.
- I read in a report upon the railways of Belgium that, the Belgian
- administration having allowed its engineers a premium of two and
- one- half cents for every bushel of coke saved out of an average
- consumption of two hundred and ten pounds for a given distance
- traversed, this premium bore such fruits that the consumption
- fell from two hundred and ten pounds to one hundred and six.
- This fact sums up the whole socialistic philosophy: to gradually
- train the workingman to justice, encourage him to labor, lift him
- to the sublimity of devotion, by increase of wages,
- profit-sharing, distinctions, and rewards. Certainly I do not
- mean to blame this method, which is as old as the world: whatever
- way you take to tame serpents and tigers and render them useful,
- I applaud it. But do not say that your beasts are doves; for
- then, as sole reply, I shall point you to their claws and teeth.
- Before the Belgian engineers became interested in the economy of
- fuel, they burned double the quantity. Therefore on their part
- there was carelessness, negligence, prodigality, waste, perhaps
- theft, although they were bound to the administration by a
- contract which obliged them to practise all the contrasted
- virtues. IT IS GOOD, you say, TO INTEREST THE LABORER. I say
- further that it is just. But I maintain that this INTEREST,
- more powerful over man than voluntarily accepted obligation, more
- powerful, in a word, than DUTY, accuses man. Socialism goes
- backward in morality, and it turns up its nose at Christianity.
- It does not understand charity, and yet, to hear it, one would
- suppose that it invented charity.
- See, moreover, observe the socialists, what fortunate fruits the
- perfecting of our social order has already borne! The present
- generation is undeniably better than its predecessors: are we
- wrong in concluding that a perfect society will produce perfect
- citizens? Say rather, reply the conservative believers in the
- dogma of the fall, that, religion having purified hearts, it is
- not astonishing that institutions have felt the effects. Now let
- religion finish its work, and have no fears about society.
- So speak and retort in an endless wandering from the question the
- theorists of the two schools. Neither understand that humanity,
- to use a Biblical expression, is one and constant in its
- generations,--that is, that everything in it, at every period of
- its development, in the individual as in the mass, proceeds from
- the same principle, which is, not BEING, but BECOMING. They do
- not see, on the one hand, that progress in morality is a
- continual conquest of mind over animality, just as progress in
- wealth is the fruit of the war waged by labor upon the parsimony
- of nature; consequently that the idea of native goodness lost
- through society is as absurd as the idea of native wealth lost
- through labor, and that a compromise with the passions should be
- viewed in the same light as a compromise with rest. On the other
- hand, they refuse to understand that, if there is progress in
- humanity, whether through religion or from some other cause, the
- hypothesis of constitutional corruption is nonsense, a
- contradiction.
- But I anticipate the conclusions at which I must arrive: let us,
- for the present, establish simply that the moral perfection of
- humanity, like material welfare, is realized by a series of
- oscillations between vice and virtue, MERIT and DEMERIT.
- Yes, humanity grows in justice, but this growth of our liberty,
- due entirely to the growth of our intelligence, surely gives no
- proof of the goodness of our nature; and, far from authorizing us
- to glorify our passions, it really destroys their sway. The
- fashion and style of our malice change with time: the barons of
- the middle ages plundered the traveller on the highway, and then
- offered him hospitality in their castles; mercantile feudality,
- less brutal, exploits the proletaire and builds hospitals for
- him: who would dare to say which of the two has deserved the palm
- of virtue?
- Of all the economic contradictions value is that which,
- dominating the others and summing them up, holds in a sense the
- sceptre of society, I had almost said of the moral world. Until
- value, oscillating between its two poles,--useful value and value
- in exchange,--arrives at its constitution, thine and mine remain
- fixed arbitrarily; the conditions of fortune are the effect of
- chance; property rests on a precarious title; everything in
- social economy is provisional. What should social, intelligent,
- and free beings have learned from this uncertainty of value? To
- make amicable regulations that should protect labor and guarantee
- exchange and cheapness. What a happy opportunity for all to make
- up, by honesty, disinterestedness, and tenderness of heart, for
- the ignorance of the objective laws of the just and the unjust!
- Instead of that, commerce has everywhere become, by spontaneous
- effort and unanimous consent, an uncertain operation, a
- venturesome enterprise, a lottery, and often a deceitful and
- fraudulent speculation.
- What obliges the holder of provisions, the storekeeper of
- society, to pretend that there is a scarcity, sound the
- alarm, and provoke a rise of prices? Public short-sightedness
- places the consumer at his mercy; some change of temperature
- furnishes him a pretext; the assured prospect of gain finally
- corrupts him, and fear, skilfully spread abroad, throws the
- population into his toils. Certainly the motive which actuates
- the swindler, the thief, the assassin, those natures warped, it
- is said, by the social order, is the same which animates the
- monopolist who is not in need. How, then, does this passion for
- gain, abandoned to itself, turn to the prejudice of society? Why
- has preventive, repressive, and coercive legislation always been
- necessary to set a limit to liberty? For that is the accusing
- fact, which it is impossible to deny: everywhere the law has
- grown out of abuse; everywhere the legislator has found himself
- forced to make man powerless to harm, which is synonymous with
- muzzling a lion or infibulating a boar. And socialism itself,
- ever imitating the past, makes no other pretence: what is,
- indeed, the organization which it claims, if not a stronger
- guarantee of justice, a more complete limitation of liberty?
- The characteristic trait of the merchant is to make everything
- either an object or an instrument of traffic. Disassociated from
- his fellows, his interests separated from those of others, he is
- for and against all deeds, all opinions, all parties. A
- discovery, a science, is in his eyes an instrument of war, out of
- the way of which he tries to keep, and which he would like to
- annihilate, unless he can make use of it himself to kill his
- competitors. An artist, an educated person, is an artilleryman
- who knows how to handle the weapon, and whom he tries to corrupt,
- if he cannot win him. The merchant is convinced that logic is
- the art of proving at will the true and the false; he was the
- inventor of political venality, traffic in consciences,
- prostitution of talents, corruption of the press. He knows how
- to find arguments and advocates for all lies, all iniquities. He
- alone has never deceived himself as to the value of political
- parties: he deems them all equally exploitable,--that is, equally
- absurd.
- Without respect for his avowed opinions, which he abandons and
- resumes by turns; sharply pursuing in others those violations of
- faith of which he is himself guilty,--he lies in his claims, he
- lies in his representations, he lies in his inventories; he
- exaggerates, he extenuates, he over-rates; he regards himself as
- the centre of the world, and everything outside of him has only a
- relative existence, value, and truth. Subtle and shrewd in his
- transactions, he stipulates, he reserves, trembling always lest
- he may say too much or not enough; abusing words with the simple,
- generalizing in order not to compromise himself, specifying in
- order to allow nothing, he turns three times upon himself and
- thinks seven times under his chin before saying his last word.
- Has he at last concluded? He rereads himself, he interprets
- himself, he comments on himself; he tortures himself to find a
- deep meaning in every part of his contract, and in the clearest
- phrases the opposite of what they say.
- What infinite art, what hypocrisy, in his relations with the
- manual laborer! From the simple shopkeeper to the big
- contractor, how skilful they are in exploiting his arms! How
- well they know how to contend with labor, in order to obtain it
- at a low price! In the first place, it is a hope for which the
- master receives a slight service; then it is a promise which he
- discounts by requiring some duty; then a trial, a sacrifice,--for
- he needs nobody,--which the unfortunate man must recognize by
- contenting himself with the lowest wages; there are endless
- exactions and overcharges, compensated by settlements on
- pay-days effected in the most rapacious and deceitful spirit.
- And the workman must keep silent and bend the knee, and clench
- his fist under his frock: for the employer has the work, and only
- too happy is he who can obtain the favor of his swindles. And
- because society has not yet found a way to prevent, repress, and
- punish this odious grinding process, so spontaneous, so
- ingenuous, so disengaged from all superior impulse, it is
- attributed to social constraint. What folly!
- The commission-merchant is the type, the highest expression, of
- monopoly, the embodiment of commerce, that is, of civilization.
- Every function depends upon his, participates in it, or is
- assimilated to it: for, as from the standpoint of the
- distribution of wealth the relations of men with each other are
- all reducible to exchanges,--that is, to transfers of values,--it
- may be said that civilization is personified in the
- commission-merchant.
- Now, question the commission-merchants as to the morality of
- their trade; they will be frank with you; all will tell you that
- the commission business is extortion. Complaints are made of the
- frauds and adulterations which disgrace manufactures: commerce--I
- refer especially to the commission business--is only a gigantic
- and permanent conspiracy of monopolists, by turns competing or
- joined in pools; it is not a function performed with a view to a
- legitimate profit, but a vast organization of speculation in all
- articles of consumption, as well as on the circulation of persons
- and products. Already swindling is tolerated in this profession:
- how many way-bills overcharged, erased, altered! how many stamps
- counterfeited! how much damage concealed or fraudulently
- compounded! how many lies as to quality! how many promises given
- and retracted! how many documents suppressed! what intrigues
- and combinations! and then what treasons!
- The commission-merchant--that is, the merchant--that is, the
- man--is a gambler, a slanderer, a charlatan, a mercenary, a
- thief, a forger. . . .
- This is the effect of our antagonistic society, observe the
- neo-mystics. So say the commercial people, the first under all
- circumstances to accuse the corruption of the century. They act
- as they do, if we may believe them, simply to indemnify
- themselves and wholly against their inclination: they follow
- necessity; theirs is a case of legitimate defence.
- Does it require an effort of genius to see that these mutual
- recriminations strike at the very nature of man, that the
- pretended perversion of society is nothing but the perversion of
- man, and that the opposition of principles and interests is only
- an external accident, so to speak, which brings into relief, but
- without exerting a necessitating influence, both the blackness of
- our egoism and the rare virtues with which our race is honored?
- I understand inharmonious competition and its irresistible
- eliminating effects: this is inevitable. Competition, in its
- higher expression, is the gearing by means of which laborers
- reciprocally stimulate and sustain each other. But, pending the
- realization of that organization which must elevate competition
- to its veritable nature, it remains a civil war in which
- producers, instead of aiding each other in labor, grind and crush
- each other by labor. The danger here was imminent; man, to avert
- it, had this supreme law of love; and nothing was easier, while
- pushing competition to its extreme limits in the interest of
- production, than to then repair its murderous effects by an
- equitable distribution. Far from that, this anarchical
- competition has become, as it were, the soul and spirit of
- the laborer. Political economy placed in the hands of man this
- weapon of death, and he has struck; he has used competition, as
- the lion uses his paws and jaws, to kill and devour. How is it,
- then, I repeat, that a wholly external accident has changed the
- nature of man, which is supposed to be good and gentle and
- social?
- The wine merchant calls to his aid jelly, magnin, insects, water,
- and poisons; by combinations of his own he adds to the
- destructive effects of competition. Whence comes this mania?
- From the fact, you say, that his competitor sets him the example!
- And this competitor, who incites him? Some other competitor. So
- that, if we make the tour of society, we shall find that it is
- the mass, and in the mass each particular individual, who, by a
- tacit agreement of their passions,--pride, indolence, greed,
- distrust, jealousy,--have organized this detestable war.
- After having gathered about him tools, material, and workmen, the
- contractor must recover in the product, besides the amount of his
- outlay, first the interest of his capital, and then a profit. It
- is in consequence of this principle that lending at interest has
- finally become established, and that gain, considered in itself,
- has always passed for legitimate. Under this system, the police
- of nations not having seen at first the essential contradiction
- of loans at interest, the wage-worker, instead of depending
- directly upon himself, had to depend upon an employer, as the
- soldier belonged to the count, or the tribe to the patriarch.
- This order of things was necessary, and, pending the
- establishment of complete equality, it was not impossible that
- the welfare of all should be secured by it. But when the master,
- in his disorderly egoism, has said to the servant: "You shall
- not share with me," and robbed him at one stroke of labor and
- wages, where is the necessity, where the excuse? Will it be
- necessary further, in order to justify the CONCUPISCIBLE
- APPETITE, to fall back on the IRASCIBLE APPETITE? Take care: in
- drawing back in order to justify the human being in the series of
- his lusts, instead of saving his morality, you abandon it. For
- my part, I prefer the guilty man to the wild-beast man.
- Nature has made man sociable: the spontaneous development of his
- instincts now makes him an angel of charity, now robs him even of
- the sentiment of fraternity and the idea of devotion. Did any
- one ever see a capitalist, weary of gain, conspiring for the
- general good and making the emancipation of the proletariat his
- last speculation? There are many people, favorites of fortune,
- to whom nothing is lacking but the crown of beneficence: now,
- where is the grocer who, having grown rich, begins to sell at
- cost? Where the baker who, retiring from business, leaves his
- customers and his establishment to his assistants? Where the
- apothecary who, under the pretence of winding up his affairs,
- surrenders his drugs at their true value? When charity has its
- martyrs, why has it not its amateurs? If there should suddenly
- be formed a congress of bondholders, capitalists, and men of
- business, retired but still fit for service, with a view to
- carrying on a certain number of industries gratuitously, in a
- short time society would be reformed from top to bottom. But
- work for nothing! That is for the Vincent de Pauls, the
- Fenelons, all those whose souls have always been weaned and whose
- hearts have been pure. The man enriched by gain will be a
- municipal councillor, a member of the committee on charities, an
- officer of the infant schools: he will perform all the honorary
- functions, barring exactly that which would be efficacious, but
- which is repugnant to his habits. Work without hope of profits!
- That cannot be, for it would be self-destruction. He would
- like to, perhaps; he has not the courage. Video meliora
- proboque, deteriora sequor. The retired proprietor is really the
- owl of the fable gathering beech-nuts for its mutilated mice
- until it is ready to devour them. Is society also to be blamed
- for these effects of a passion so long, so freely, so fully
- gratified?
- Who, then, will explain this mystery of a manifold and discordant
- being, capable at once of the highest virtues and the most
- frightful crimes? The dog licks his master who strikes him,
- because the dog's nature is fidelity and this nature never leaves
- him. The lamb takes refuge in the arms of the shepherd who
- fleeces and eats him, because the sheep's inseparable
- characteristics are gentleness and peace. The horse dashes
- through flame and grape-shot without touching with his
- swiftly-moving feet the wounded and dead lying in his path,
- because the horse's soul is unalterable in its generosity. These
- animals are martyrs for our sakes through the constancy and
- devotion of their natures. The servant who defends his master at
- the peril of his life, for a little gold betrays and murders him;
- the chaste wife pollutes her bed because of some disgust or
- absence, and in Lucrece we find Messalina; the proprietor, by
- turns father and tyrant, refits and restores his ruined farmer
- and drives from his lands the farmer's too numerous family, which
- has increased on the strength of the feudal contract; the
- warrior, mirror and paragon of chivalry, makes the corpses of his
- companions a stepping- stone to advancement. Epaminondas and
- Regulus traffic in the blood of their soldiers,--how many
- instances have my own eyes witnessed!--and by a horrible contrast
- the profession of sacrifice is the most fruitful in cowardice.
- Humanity has its martyrs and its apostates: to what, I ask again,
- must this division be attributed?
- To the antagonism of society, you always say; to the state of
- separation, isolation, hostility to his fellows, in which man has
- hitherto lived; in a word, to that alienation of his heart which
- has led him to mistake enjoyment for love, property for
- possession, pain for labor, intoxication for joy; to that warped
- conscience, in short, which remorse has not ceased to pursue
- under the name of ORIGINAL SIN. When man, reconciled with
- himself, shall cease to look upon his neighbor and nature as
- hostile powers, then will he love and produce simply by the
- spontaneity of his energy; then it will be his passion to give,
- as it is today to acquire; and then will he seek in labor and
- devotion his only happiness, his supreme delight. Then, love
- becoming really and indivisibly the law of man, justice will
- thereafter be but an empty name, painful souvenir of a period of
- violence and tears.
- Certainly I do not overlook the fact of antagonism, or, as it
- will please you to call it, of religious alienation, any more
- than the necessity of reconciling man with himself; my whole
- philosophy is but a perpetuity of reconciliations. You admit
- that the divergence of our nature is the preliminary of society,
- or, let us rather say, the material of civilization. This is
- precisely the fact, but, remember well, the indestructible fact
- of which I seek the meaning. Certainly we should be very near an
- understanding, if, instead of considering the dissidence and
- harmony of the human faculties as two distinct periods, clean-cut
- and consecutive in history, you would consent to view them with
- me simply as the two faces of our nature, ever adverse, ever in
- course of reconciliation, but never entirely reconciled. In a
- word, as individualism is the primordial fact of humanity, so
- association is its complementary term; but both are in incessant
- manifestation, and on earth justice is eternally the condition of
- love.
- Thus the dogma of the fall is not simply the expression of a
- special and transitory state of human reason and morality: it is
- the spontaneous confession, in symbolic phrase, of this fact as
- astonishing as it is indestructible, the culpability, the
- inclination to evil, of our race. Curse upon me a sinner! cries
- on every hand and in every tongue the conscience of the human
- race. V{ae} nobis quia peccavimus! Religion, in giving this
- idea concrete and dramatic form, has indeed gone back of history
- and beyond the limits of the world for that which is essential
- and immanent in our soul; this, on its part, was but an
- intellectual mirage; it was not mistaken as to the essentiality
- and permanence of the fact. Now, it is this fact for which we
- have to account, and it is also from this point of view that we
- are to interpret the dogma of original sin.
- All peoples have had their expiatory customs, their penitential
- sacrifices, their repressive and penal institutions, born of the
- horror and regret of sin. Catholicism, which built a theory
- wherever social spontaneity had expressed an idea or deposited a
- hope, converted into a sacrament the at once symbolic and
- effective ceremony by which the sinner expressed his repentance,
- asked pardon of God and men for his fault, and prepared himself
- for a better life. Consequently I do not hesitate to say that
- the Reformation, in rejecting contrition, cavilling over the word
- metanoia, attributing to faith alone the virtue of justification,
- deconsecrating repentance in short, took a step backward and
- utterly failed to recognize the law of progress. To deny was not
- to reply. On this point as on so many others the abuses of the
- Church called for reform; the theories of repentance, of
- damnation, of the remission of sin, and of grace contained, if I
- may venture to say so, in a latent state, the entire system of
- humanity's education; these theories needed to be developed
- and grown into rationalism; Luther knew nothing but their
- destruction. Auricular confession was a degradation of
- repentance, an equivocal demonstration substituted for a great
- act of humility; Luther surpassed papist hypocrisy by reducing
- the primitive confession before God and men (exomologoumai to
- theo. . . . kai humin, adelphoi) to a soliloquy. The Christian
- meaning then was lost, and not until three centuries later was it
- restored by philosophy.
- Since, then, Christianity--that is, religious humanity--has not
- been in error as to the REALITY of a fact essential in human
- nature,--a fact which it has designated by the words ORIGINAL
- PREVARICATION, let us further interrogate Christianity, humanity,
- as to the MEANING of this fact. Let us not be astonished either
- by metaphor or by allegory: truth is independent of figures. And
- besides, what is truth to us but the continuous progress of our
- mind from poetry to prose?
- And first let us inquire whether this at least singular idea of
- original prevarication had not, somewhere in the Christian
- theology, its correlative. For the true idea, the generic idea,
- cannot result from an isolated conception; there must be a
- series.
- Christianity, after having posited the dogma of the fall as the
- first term, followed up its thought by affirming, for all who
- should die in this state of pollution, an irrevocable separation
- from God, an eternity of punishment. Then it completed its
- theory by reconciling these two opposites by the dogma of
- rehabilitation or of grace, according to which every creature
- born in the hatred of God is reconciled by the merits of Jesus
- Christ, which faith and repentance render efficacious. Thus,
- essential corruption of our nature and perpetuity of punishment,
- except in the case of redemption through voluntary participation
- in Christ's sacrifice,--such is, in brief, the evolution of the
- theological idea. The second affirmation is a consequence of the
- first; the third is a negation and transformation of the two
- others: in fact, a constitutional vice being necessarily
- indestructible, the expiation which it involves is as eternal as
- itself, unless a superior power comes to break destiny and lift
- the anathema by an integral renovation.
- The human mind, in its religious caprices as well as in its most
- positive theories, has always but one method; the same
- metaphysics produced the Christian mysteries and the
- contradictions of political economy; faith, without knowing it,
- hangs upon reason; and we, explorers of divine and human
- manifestations, are entitled to verify, in the name of reason,
- the hypotheses of theology.
- What was it, then, that the universal reason, formulated in
- religious dogmas, saw in human nature, when, by so regular a
- metaphysical construction, it declared successively the
- INGENUOUSNESS of the offence, the eternity of the penalty, the
- necessity of grace? The veils of theology are becoming so
- transparent that it quite resembles natural history.
- If we conceive the operation by which the supreme being is
- supposed to have produced all beings, no longer as an emanation,
- an exertion of the creative force and infinite substance, but as
- a division or differentiation of this substantial force, each
- being, organized or unorganized, will appear to us the special
- representative of one of the innumerable potentialities of the
- infinite being, as a section of the absolute; and the collection
- of all these individualities (fluids, minerals, plants, insects,
- fish, birds, and quadrupeds) will be the creation, the universe.
- Man, an abridgment of the universe, sums up and syncretizes
- in his person all the potentialities of being, all the sections
- of the absolute; he is the summit at which these potentialities,
- which exist only by their divergence, meet in a group, but
- without penetrating or becoming confounded with each other. Man,
- therefore, by this aggregation, is at once spirit and matter,
- spontaneity and reflection, mechanism and life, angel and brute.
- He is venomous like the viper, sanguinary like the tiger,
- gluttonous like the hog, obscene like the ape; and devoted like
- the dog, generous like the horse, industrious like the bee,
- monogamic like the dove, sociable like the beaver and sheep. And
- in addition he is man,--that is, reasonable and free, susceptible
- of education and improvement. Man enjoys as many names as
- Jupiter; all these names he carries written on his face; and, in
- the varied mirror of nature, his infallible instinct is able to
- recognize them. A serpent is beautiful to the reason; it is the
- conscience that finds it odious and ugly. The ancients as well
- as the moderns grasped this idea of the constitution of man by
- agglomeration of all terrestrial potentialities: the labors of
- Gall and Lavater were, if I may say so, only attempts at
- disintegration of the human syncretism, and their classification
- of our faculties a miniature picture of nature. Man, in short,
- like the prophet in the lions' den, is veritably given over to
- the beasts; and if anything is destined to exhibit to posterity
- the infamous hypocrisy of our epoch, it is the fact that educated
- persons, spiritualistic bigots, have thought to serve religion
- and morality by altering the nature of our race and giving the
- lie to anatomy.
- Therefore the only question left to decide is whether it depends
- upon man, notwithstanding the contradictions which the
- progressive emission of his ideas multiplies around him, to give
- more or less scope to the potentialities placed under his
- control, or, as the moralists say, to his passions; in other
- words, whether, like Hercules of old, he can conquer the
- animality which besets him, the infernal legion which seems ever
- ready to devour him.
- Now, the universal consent of peoples bears witness--and we have
- shown it in the third and fourth chapters--that man, all his
- animal impulses set aside, is summed up in intelligence and
- liberty,--that is, first, a faculty of appreciation and choice,
- and, second, a power of action indifferently applicable to good
- and evil. We have shown further that these two faculties, which
- exercise a necessary influence over each other, are susceptible
- of indefinite development and improvement.
- Social destiny, the solution of the human enigma, is found, then,
- in these words: EDUCATION, PROGRESS.
- The education of liberty, the taming of our instincts, the
- enfranchisement or REDEMPTION of our soul,--this, then, as
- Lessing has proved, is the meaning of the Christian mystery.
- This education will last throughout our life and that of
- humanity: the contradictions of political economy may be solved;
- the essential contradiction of our being never will be. That is
- why the great teachers of humanity, Moses, Buddha, Jesus Christ,
- Zoroaster, were all apostles of expiation, living symbols of
- repentance. Man is by nature a sinner,--that is, not essentially
- ILL-DOING, but rather ILL-DONE,-- and it is his destiny to
- perpetually re-create his ideal in himself. That is what the
- greatest of painters, Raphael, felt profoundly, when he said that
- art consists in rendering things, not as nature made them, but as
- it should have made them.
- Henceforth, then, it is ours to teach the theologians, for we
- alone continue the tradition of the Church, we alone possess the
- meaning of the Scriptures, of the Councils, and of the Fathers.
- Our interpretation rests on the most certain and most authentic
- grounds, on the greatest authority to which men can appeal, the
- metaphysical construction of ideas and facts. Yes, the human
- being is vicious because he is illogical, because his
- constitution is but an eclecticism which holds in perpetual
- struggle the potentialities of his being, independently of the
- contradictions of society. The life of man is only a continual
- compromise between labor and pain, love and enjoyment, justice
- and egoism; and the voluntary sacrifice which man makes in
- obedience to his inferior attractions is the baptism which
- prepares the way for his reconciliation with God and renders him
- worthy of that beatific union and eternal happiness.
- The object of social economy, in incessantly securing order in
- labor and favoring the education of the race, is then to render
- charity--that charity which knows not how to rule its
- slaves--superfluous as far as possible by equality, or better, to
- make charity develop from justice, as a flower from its stem.
- Ah! if charity had had the power to create happiness among men,
- it would have proved it long ago; and socialism, instead of
- seeking the organization of labor, would have had but to say:
- "Take care, you are lacking in charity."
- But, alas! charity in man is stunted, sly, sluggish, and
- lukewarm; in order to act, it needs elixirs and aromas. That is
- why I have clung to the triple dogma of prevarication, damnation,
- and redemption,--that is, perfectibility through justice.
- Liberty here below is always in need of assistance, and the
- Catholic theory of celestial favors comes to complete this too
- real demonstration of the miseries of our nature.
- Grace, say the theologians, is, in the order of salvation, every
- help or means which can conduct us to eternal life. That is to
- say, man perfects himself, civilizes himself, humanizes himself
- only by the incessant aid of experience, by industry, science,
- and art, by pleasure and pain, in a word, by all bodily and
- mental exercises.
- There is an HABITUAL grace, called also JUSTIFYING and
- SANCTIFYING, which is conceived as a quality residing in the
- soul, containing the innate virtues and gifts of the Holy Spirit,
- and inseparable from charity. In other words, habitual grace is
- the symbol of the predominance of good impulses, which lead man
- to order and love, and by means of which he succeeds in subduing
- his evil tendencies and remaining master in his own domain. As
- for ACTUAL grace, that indicates the external means which give
- scope to the orderly passions and serve to combat the subversive
- passions.
- Grace, according to Saint Augustine, is essentially gratuitous,
- and precedes sin in man. Bossuet expressed the same thought in
- his style so full of poesy and tenderness: When God formed the
- bowels of man, he originally placed goodness there. In fact, the
- first determination of free will is in this natural GOODNESS, by
- which man is continually incited to order, to labor, to study, to
- modesty, to charity, and to sacrifice. Therefore Saint Paul
- could say, without attacking free will, that, in everything
- concerning the accomplishment of good, God worketh in us both to
- will and to do. For all the holy aspirations of man are in him
- before he begins to think and feel; and the pangs of heart which
- he experiences when he violates them, the delight with which he
- is filled when he obeys them, all the invitations, in short,
- which come to him from society and his education, do not belong
- to him.
- When grace is such that the will chooses the good with joy and
- love, without hesitation and without recall, it is styled
- EFFICACIOUS. Every one has witnessed those transports of soul
- which suddenly decide a vocation, an act of heroism. Liberty
- does not perish therein; but from its predeterminations it may be
- said that it was inevitable that it should so decide. And the
- Pelagians, Lutherans, and others have been mistaken in saying
- that grace compromised free choice and killed the creative force
- of the will; since all determinations of the will come
- necessarily either from society which sustains it, or from nature
- which opens its career and points out its destiny.
- But, on the other hand, the Augustinians, the Thomists, the
- congruists, Jansen, Thomassin, Molina, etc., were strangely
- mistaken when, sustaining at once free will and grace, they
- failed to see that between these two terms the same relation
- exists as between substance and form, and that they have
- confessed an opposition which does not exist. Liberty, like
- intelligence, like all substance and all force, is necessarily
- determined,--that is, it has its forms and its attributes. Now,
- while in matter the form and the attribute are inherent in and
- contemporary with substance, in liberty the form is given by
- three external agents, as it were,--the human essence, the laws
- of thought, exercise or education. GRACE, in fine, like its
- opposite, TEMPTATION, indicates precisely the fact of the
- determination of liberty.
- To sum up, all modern ideas regarding the education of humanity
- are only an interpretation, a philosophy of the Catholic doctrine
- of grace, a doctrine which seemed obscure to its authors only
- because of their ideas upon free will, which they supposed to be
- threatened as soon as grace or the source of its determinations
- was spoken of. We affirm, on the contrary, that liberty,
- indifferent in itself to all modality, but destined to act and to
- take shape according to a preestablished order, receives its
- first impulse from the Creator who inspires it with love,
- intelligence, courage, resolution, and all the gifts of the Holy
- Spirit, and then delivers it to the labor of experience. It
- follows from this that grace is necessarily PRE-MOVING, that
- without it man is capable of no sort of good, and that
- nevertheless free will accomplishes its own destiny
- spontaneously, with reflection and choice. In all this there is
- neither contradiction nor mystery. Man, in so far as he is man,
- is good; but, like the tyrant described by Plato, who was, he
- too, a teacher of grace, man carries in his bosom a thousand
- monsters, which the worship of justice and science, music and
- gymnastics, all the graces of opportunity and condition, must
- cause him to overcome. Correct one definition in Saint
- Augustine, and all that doctrine of grace, famous because of the
- disputes which it excited and which disconcerted the Reformation,
- will seem to you brilliant with clearness and harmony.
- And now is man God?
- God, according to the theological hypothesis, being the
- sovereign, absolute, highly synthetic being, the infinitely wise
- and free, and therefore indefectible and holy, Me, it is plain
- that man, the syncretism of the creation, the point of union of
- all the potentialities manifested by the creation, physical,
- organic, mental, and moral; man, perfectible and fallible, does
- not satisfy the conditions of Divinity as he, from the nature of
- his mind, must conceive them. Neither is he God, nor can he,
- living, become God.
- All the more, then, the oak, the lion, the sun, the universe
- itself, sections of the absolute, are not God. At the same
- stroke the worship of man and the worship of nature are
- overthrown.
- Now we have to present the counter-proof of this theory.
- From the standpoint of social contradictions we have judged of
- the morality of man. We are to judge, in its turn and from the
- same standpoint, the morality of Providence. In other words, is
- God possible, as speculation and faith offer him for the
- adoration of mortals?
- % 2.--Exposition of the myth of Providence.--Retrogression of
- God.
- Among the proofs, to the number of three, which theologians and
- philosophers are accustomed to bring forward to show the
- existence of a God, they give the foremost position to universal
- consent.
- This argument I considered when, without rejecting or admitting
- it, I promptly asked myself: What does universal consent affirm
- in affirming a God? And in this connection I should recall the
- fact that the difference of religions is not a proof that the
- human race has fallen into error in affirming a supreme Me
- outside of itself, any more than the diversity of languages is a
- proof of the non-reality of reason. The hypothesis of God, far
- from being weakened, is strengthened and established by the very
- divergence and opposition of faiths.
- An argument of another sort is that which is drawn from the order
- of the world. In regard to this I have observed that, nature
- affirming spontaneously, by the voice of man, its own distinction
- into mind and matter, it remained to find out whether an infinite
- mind, a soul of the world, governs and moves the universe, as
- conscience, in its obscure intuition, tells us that a mind
- animates man. If, then, I added, order were an infallible sign
- of the presence of mind, the presence of a God in the universe
- could not be overlooked.
- Unfortunately this IF is not demonstrated and cannot be. For, on
- the one hand, pure mind, conceived as the opposite of matter, is
- a contradictory entity, the reality of which, consequently,
- nothing can attest. On the other hand, certain beings ordered in
- themselves--such as crystals, plants, and the planetary system,
- which, in the sensations that they make us feel, do not return us
- sentiment for sentiment, as the animals do--seeming to us utterly
- destitute of conscience, there is no more reason for supposing a
- mind in the centre of the world than for placing one in a stick
- of sulphur; and it may be that, if mind, conscience, exists
- anywhere, it is only in man.
- Nevertheless, if the order of the world can tell us nothing as to
- the existence of God, it reveals a thing no less precious
- perhaps, and which will serve us as a landmark in our
- inquiries,--namely, that all beings, all essences, all phenomena
- are bound together by a totality of laws resulting from their
- properties, a totality which in the third chapter I have named
- FATALITY or NECESSITY. Whether or not there exists then an
- infinite intelligence, embracing the whole system of these laws,
- the whole field of fatalism; whether or not to this infinite
- intelligence is united in profound penetration a superior will,
- eternally determined by the totality of the cosmic laws and
- consequently infinitely powerful and free; whether or not,
- finally, these three things, fatality, intelligence, will, are
- contemporary in the universe, adequate to each other and
- identical,--it is clear that so far we find nothing repugnant to
- these positions; but it is precisely this hypothesis, this
- anthropomorphism, which is yet to be demonstrated.
- Thus, while the testimony of the human race reveals to us a God,
- without saying what this God may be, the order of the world
- reveals to us a fatality,--that is, an absolute and peremptory
- totality of causes and effects,--in short, a system of
- laws,--which would be, if God exists, like the sight and
- knowledge of this God.
- The third and last proof of the existence of God proposed by the
- theists and called by them the metaphysical proof is nothing but
- a tautological construction of categories, which proves
- absolutely nothing.
- Something exists; therefore there is something in existence.
- Something is multiple; therefore something is one.
- Something comes after something; therefore something is prior to
- something.
- Something is smaller of greater than something; therefore
- something is greater than all things.
- Something is moved; therefore something is mover, etc., ad
- infinitum.
- That is what is called even today, in the faculties and the
- seminaries, by the minister of public education and by
- Messeigneurs the bishops, proving the existence of God by
- metaphysics. That is what the elite of the French youth are
- condemned to bleat after their professors, for a year, or else
- forfeit their diplomas and the privilege of studying law,
- medicine, polytechnics, and the sciences. Certainly, if anything
- is calculated to surprise, it is that with such philosophy Europe
- is not yet atheistic. The persistence of the theistic idea by
- the side of the jargon of the schools is the greatest of
- miracles; it constitutes the strongest prejudice that can be
- cited in favor of Divinity.
- I do not know what humanity calls God.
- I cannot say whether it is man, the universe, or some invisible
- reality that we are to understand by that name; or indeed whether
- the word stands for anything more than an ideal, a creature of
- the mind. Nevertheless, to give body to my hypothesis and
- influence to my inquiries, I shall consider God in accordance
- with the common opinion, as a being apart, omnipresent, distinct
- from creation, endowed with imperishable life as well as infinite
- knowledge and activity, but above all foreseeing and just,
- punishing vice and rewarding virtue. I shall put aside the
- pantheistic hypothesis as hypocritical and lacking courage. God
- is personal, or he does not exist: this alternative is the axiom
- from which I shall deduce my entire theodicy.
- Not concerning myself therefore for the present with questions
- which the idea of God may raise later, the problem before me now
- is to decide, in view of the facts the evolution of which in
- society I have established, what I should think of the conduct of
- God, as it is held up for my faith and relatively to humanity.
- In short, it is from the standpoint of the demonstrated existence
- of evil that I, with the aid of a new dialectical process, mean
- to fathom the Supreme Being. Evil exists: upon this point
- everybody seems to agree.
- Now, have asked the stoics, the Epicureans, the manicheans, and
- the atheists, how harmonize the presence of evil with the idea of
- a sovereignly good, wise, and powerful God? How can God, after
- allowing the introduction of evil into the world, whether through
- weakness or negligence or malice, render responsible for their
- acts creatures which he himself has created imperfect, and which
- he thus delivers to all the dangers of their attractions? Why,
- finally, since he promises the just a never-ending bliss after
- death, or, in other words, gives us the idea and desire of
- happiness, does he not cause us to enjoy this life by stripping
- us of the temptation of evil, instead of exposing us to an
- eternity of torture?
- Such used to be the purport of the protest of the atheists.
- Today this is scarcely discussed: the theists are no longer
- troubled by the logical impossibilities of their system. They
- want a God, especially a Providence: there is competition for
- this article between the radicals and the Jesuits. The
- socialists preach happiness and virtue in the name of God; in the
- schools those who talk the loudest against the Church are the
- first of mystics.
- The old theists were more anxious about their faith. They tried,
- if not to demonstrate it, at least to render it reasonable,
- feeling sure, unlike their successors, that there is neither
- dignity nor rest for the believer except in certainty.
- The Fathers of the Church then answered the incredulous that evil
- is only DEPRIVATION OF A GREATER GOOD, and that those who always
- reason about the BETTER lack a point of support upon which to
- establish themselves, which leads straight to absurdity. In
- fact, every creature being necessarily confined and imperfect,
- God, by his infinite power, can continually add to his
- perfections: in this respect there is always, in some degree, a
- deprivation of good in the creature. Reciprocally, however
- imperfect and confined the creature is supposed to be, from the
- moment that it exists it enjoys a certain degree of good, better
- for it than annihilation. Therefore, though it is a rule that
- man is considered good only so far as he accomplishes all the
- good that he can, it is not the same with God, since the
- obligation to do good infinitely is contradictory to the very
- faculty of creation, perfection and creature being two terms that
- necessarily exclude each other. God, then, was sole judge of the
- degree of perfection which it was proper to give to each
- creature: to prefer a charge against him under this head is to
- slander his justice.
- As for sin,--that is, moral evil,--the Fathers, to reply to the
- objections of the atheists, had the theories of free will,
- redemption, justification, and grace, to the discussion of which
- we need not return.
- I have no knowledge that the atheists have replied categorically
- to this theory of the essential imperfection of the creature, a
- theory reproduced with brilliancy by M. de Lamennais in his
- "Esquisse." It was impossible, indeed, for them to reply to it;
- for, reasoning from a false conception of evil and of free will,
- and in profound ignorance of the laws of humanity, they were
- equally without reasons by which either to triumph over their own
- doubts or to refute the believers.
- Let us leave the sphere of the finite and infinite, and place
- ourselves in the conception of order. Can God make a round
- circle, a right-angled square? Certainly.
- Would God be guilty if, after having created the world according
- to the laws of geometry, he had put it into our minds, or even
- allowed us to believe without fault of our own, that a circle may
- be square or a square circular, though, in consequence of this
- false opinion, we should have to suffer an incalculable series of
- evils? Again, undoubtedly.
- Well! that is exactly what God, the God of Providence, has done
- in the government of humanity; it is of that that I accuse him.
- He knew from all eternity--inasmuch as we mortals have discovered
- it after six thousand years of painful experience--that order in
- society--that is, liberty, wealth, science--is realized by the
- reconciliation of opposite ideas which, were each to be taken as
- absolute in itself, would precipitate us into an abyss of misery:
- why did he not warn us? Why did he not correct our judgment at
- the start? Why did he abandon us to our imperfect logic,
- especially when our egoism must find a pretext in his acts of
- injustice and perfidy? He knew, this jealous God, that, if he
- exposed us to the hazards of experience, we should not find until
- very late that security of life which constitutes our entire
- happiness: why did he not abridge this long apprenticeship
- by a revelation of our own laws? Why, instead of fascinating us
- with contradictory opinions, did he not reverse experience by
- causing us to reach the antinomies by the path of analysis of
- synthetic ideas, instead of leaving us to painfully clamber up
- the steeps of antinomy to synthesis?
- If, as was formerly thought, the evil from which humanity suffers
- arose solely from the imperfection inevitable in every creature,
- or better, if this evil were caused only by the antagonism of the
- potentialities and inclinations which constitute our being, and
- which reason should teach us to master and guide, we should have
- no right to complain. Our condition being all that it could be,
- God would be justified.
- But, in view of this wilful delusion of our minds, a delusion
- which it was so easy to dissipate and the effects of which must
- be so terrible, where is the excuse of Providence? Is it not
- true that grace failed man here? God, whom faith represents as a
- tender father and a prudent master, abandons us to the fatality
- of our incomplete conceptions; he digs the ditch under our feet;
- he causes us to move blindly: and then, at every fall, he
- punishes us as rascals. What do I say? It seems as if it were
- in spite of him that at last, covered with bruises from our
- journey, we recognize our road; as if we offended his glory in
- becoming more intelligent and free through the trials which he
- imposes upon us. What need, then, have we to continually invoke
- Divinity, and what have we to do with those satellites of a
- Providence which for sixty centuries, by the aid of a thousand
- religions, has deceived and misled us?
- What! God, through his gospel-bearers and by the law which he
- has put in our hearts, commands us to love our neighbor as
- ourselves, to do to others as we wish to be done by, to render
- each his due, not to keep back anything from the laborer's hire,
- and not to lend at usury; he knows, moreover, that in us charity
- is lukewarm and conscience vacillating, and that the slightest
- pretext always seems to us a sufficient reason for exemption from
- the law: and yet he involves us, with such dispositions, in the
- contradictions of commerce and property, in which, by the
- necessity of the theory, charity and justice are bound to perish!
- Instead of enlightening our reason concerning the bearing of
- principles which impose themselves upon it with all the power of
- necessity, but whose consequences, adopted by egoism, are fatal
- to human fraternity, he places this abused reason at the service
- of our passion; by seduction of the mind, he destroys our
- equilibrium of conscience; he justifies in our own eyes our
- usurpations and our avarice; he makes the separation of man from
- his fellow inevitable and legitimate; he creates division and
- hatred among us in rendering equality by labor and by right
- impossible; he makes us believe that this equality, the law of
- the world, is unjust among men; and then he proscribes us en
- masse for not having known how to practise his incomprehensible
- precepts! I believe I have proved, to be sure, that our
- abandonment by Providence does not justify us; but, whatever our
- crime, toward it we are not guilty; and if there is a being who,
- before ourselves and more than ourselves, is deserving of
- hell,--I am bound to name him,--it is God.
- When the theists, in order to establish their dogma of
- Providence, cite the order of nature as a proof, although this
- argument is only a begging of the question, at least it cannot be
- said that it involves a contradiction, and that the fact cited
- bears witness against the hypothesis. In the system of the
- world, for instance, nothing betrays the smallest anomaly,
- the slightest lack of foresight, from which any prejudice
- whatever can be drawn against the idea of a supreme, intelligent,
- personal motor. In short, though the order of nature does not
- prove the reality of a Providence, it does not contradict it.
- It is a very different thing with the government of humanity.
- Here order does not appear at the same time as matter; it was not
- created, as in the system of the world, once and for eternity.
- It is gradually developed according to an inevitable series of
- principles and consequences which the human being himself, the
- being to be ordered, must disengage spontaneously, by his own
- energy and at the solicitation of experience. No revelation
- regarding this is given him. Man is submitted at his origin to a
- preestablished necessity, to an absolute and irresistible order.
- That this order may be realized, man must discover it; that it
- may exist, he must have divined it. This labor of invention
- might be abridged; no one, either in heaven or on earth, will
- come to man's aid; no one will instruct him. Humanity, for
- hundreds of centuries, will devour its generations; it will
- exhaust itself in blood and mire, without the God whom it
- worships coming once to illuminate its reason and abridge its
- time of trial. Where is divine action here? Where is
- Providence?
- "IF GOD DID NOT EXIST,"--it is Voltaire, the enemy of religions,
- who says so,--"IT WOULD BE NECESSARY TO INVENT HIM." Why?
- "Because," adds the same Voltaire, "if I were dealing with an
- atheist prince whose interest it might be to have me pounded in a
- mortar, I am very sure that I should be pounded." Strange
- aberration of a great mind! And if you were dealing with a pious
- prince, whose confessor, speaking in the name of God, should
- command that you be burned alive, would you not be very sure of
- being burned also? Do you forget, then, anti-Christ, the
- Inquisition, and the Saint Bartholomew, and the stakes of Vanini
- and Bruno, and the tortures of Galileo, and the martyrdom of so
- many free thinkers? Do not try to distinguish here between use
- and abuse: for I should reply to you that from a mystical and
- supernatural principle, from a principle which embraces
- everything, which explains everything, which justifies
- everything, such as the idea of God, all consequences are
- legitimate, and that the zeal of the believer is the sole judge
- of their propriety.
- "I once believed," says Rousseau, "that it was possible to be an
- honest man and dispense with God; but I have recovered from that
- error." Fundamentally the same argument as that of Voltaire, the
- same justification of intolerance: Man does good and abstains
- from evil only through consideration of a Providence which
- watches over him; a curse on those who deny its existence! And,
- to cap the climax of absurdity, the man who thus seeks for our
- virtue the sanction of a Divinity who rewards and punishes is the
- same man who teaches the native goodness of man as a religious
- dogma.
- And for my part I say: The first duty of man, on becoming
- intelligent and free, is to continually hunt the idea of God out
- of his mind and conscience. For God, if he exists, is
- essentially hostile to our nature, and we do not depend at all
- upon his authority. We arrive at knowledge in spite of him, at
- comfort in spite of him, at society in spite of him; every step
- we take in advance is a victory in which we crush Divinity.
- Let it no longer be said that the ways of God are impenetrable.
- We have penetrated these ways, and there we have read in letters
- of blood the proofs of God's impotence, if not of his
- malevolence. My reason, long humiliated, is gradually rising to
- a level with the infinite; with time it will discover all that
- its inexperience hides from it; with time I shall be less and
- less a worker of misfortune, and by the light that I shall have
- acquired, by the perfection of my liberty, I shall purify myself,
- idealize my being, and become the chief of creation, the equal of
- God. A single moment of disorder which the Omnipotent might have
- prevented and did not prevent accuses his Providence and shows
- him lacking in wisdom; the slightest progress which man,
- ignorant, abandoned, and betrayed, makes towards good honors him
- immeasurably. By what right should God still say to me: BE
- HOLY, FOR I AM HOLY? Lying spirit, I will answer him, imbecile
- God, your reign is over; look to the beasts for other victims. I
- know that I am not holy and never can become so; and how could
- you be holy, if I resemble you? Eternal father, Jupiter or
- Jehovah, we have learned to know you; you are, you were, you ever
- will be, the jealous rival of Adam, the tyrant of Prometheus.
- So I do not fall into the sophism refuted by St. Paul, when he
- forbids the vase to say to the potter: Why hast thou made me
- thus? I do not blame the author of things for having made me an
- inharmonious creature, an incoherent assemblage; I could exist
- only in such a condition. I content myself with crying out to
- him: Why do you deceive me? Why, by your silence, have you
- unchained egoism within me? Why have you submitted me to the
- torture of universal doubt by the bitter illusion of the
- antagonistic ideas which you have put in my mind? Doubt of
- truth, doubt of justice, doubt of my conscience and my liberty,
- doubt of yourself, O God! and, as a result of this doubt,
- necessity of war with myself and with my neighbor! That, supreme
- Father, is what you have done for our happiness and your glory;
- such, from the beginning, have been your will and your
- government; such the bread, kneaded in blood and tears, upon
- which you have fed us. The sins which we ask you to forgive, you
- caused us to commit; the traps from which we implore you to
- deliver us, you set for us; and the Satan who besets us is
- yourself.
- You triumphed, and no one dared to contradict you, when, after
- having tormented in his body and in his soul the righteous Job, a
- type of our humanity, you insulted his candid piety, his prudent
- and respectful ignorance. We were as naught before your
- invisible majesty, to whom we gave the sky for a canopy and the
- earth for a footstool. And now here you are dethroned and
- broken. Your name, so long the last word of the savant, the
- sanction of the judge, the force of the prince, the hope of the
- poor, the refuge of the repentant sinner,--this incommunicable
- name, I say, henceforth an object of contempt and curses, shall
- be a hissing among men. For God is stupidity and cowardice; God
- is hypocrisy and falsehood; God is tyranny and misery; God is
- evil. As long as humanity shall bend before an altar, humanity,
- the slave of kings and priests, will be condemned; as long as one
- man, in the name of God, shall receive the oath of another man,
- society will be founded on perjury; peace and love will be
- banished from among mortals. God, take yourself away! for, from
- this day forth, cured of your fear and become wise, I swear, with
- hand extended to heaven, that you are only the tormentor of my
- reason, the spectre of my conscience.
- I deny, therefore, the supremacy of God over humanity; I reject
- his providential government, the non-existence of which is
- sufficiently established by the metaphysical and economical
- hallucinations of humanity,--in a word, by the martyrdom of
- our race; I decline the jurisdiction of the Supreme Being over
- man; I take away his titles of father, king, judge, good,
- merciful, pitiful, helpful, rewarding, and avenging. All these
- attributes, of which the idea of Providence is made up, are but a
- caricature of humanity, irreconcilable with the autonomy of
- civilization, and contradicted, moreover, by the history of its
- aberrations and catastrophes. Does it follow, because God can no
- longer be conceived as Providence, because we take from him that
- attribute so important to man that he has not hesitated to make
- it the synonym of God, that God does not exist, and that the
- theological dogma from this moment is shown to be false in its
- content?
- Alas! no. A prejudice relative to the divine essence has been
- destroyed; by the same stroke the independence of man is
- established: that is all. The reality of the divine Being is
- left intact, and our hypothesis still exists. In demonstrating
- that it was impossible for God to be Providence, we have taken a
- first step in the determination of the idea of God; the question
- now is to find out whether this first datum accords with the rest
- of the hypothesis, and consequently to determine, from the same
- standpoint of intelligence, what God is, if he is.
- For just as, after having established the guilt of man under the
- influence of the economical contradictions, we have had to
- account for this guilt, if we would not leave man wounded after
- having made him a contemptible satire, likewise, after having
- admitted the chimerical nature of the doctrine of a Providence in
- God, we must inquire how this lack of Providence harmonizes with
- the idea of sovereign intelligence and liberty, if we would not
- sacrifice the proposed hypothesis, which nothing yet shows to be
- false.
- I affirm, then, that God, if there is a God, does not resemble
- the effigies which philosophers and priests have made of him;
- that he neither thinks nor acts according to the law of analysis,
- foresight, and progress, which is the distinctive characteristic
- of man; that, on the contrary, he seems rather to follow an
- inverse and retrogressive course; that intelligence, liberty,
- personality in God are constituted not as in us; and that this
- originality of nature, perfectly accounted for, makes God an
- essentially anti-civilizing, anti-liberal, anti-human being.
- I prove my proposition by going from the negative to the
- positive,--that is, by deducing the truth of my thesis from the
- progress of the objections to it.
- 1. God, say the believers, can be conceived only as infinitely
- good, infinitely wise, infinitely powerful, etc.,--the whole
- litany of the infinites. Now, infinite perfection cannot be
- reconciled with the datum of a will holding an indifferent or
- even reactionary attitude toward progress: therefore, either God
- does not exist, or the objection drawn from the development of
- the antinomies proves only our ignorance of the mysteries of
- infinity.
- I answer these reasoners that, if, to give legitimacy to a wholly
- arbitrary opinion, it suffices to fall back on the
- unfathomability of mysteries, I am as well satisfied with the
- mystery of a God without providence as with that of a Providence
- without efficacy. But, in view of the facts, there is no
- occasion to invoke such a consideration of probability; we must
- confine ourselves to the positive declaration of experience.
- Now, experience and facts prove that humanity, in its
- development, obeys an inflexible necessity, whose laws are made
- clear and whose system is realized as fast as the collective
- reason reveals it, without anything in society to give evidence
- of an external instigation, either from a providential
- command or from any superhuman thought. The basis of the belief
- in Providence is this necessity itself, which is, as it were, the
- foundation and essence of collective humanity. But this
- necessity, thoroughly systematic and progressive as it may
- appear, does not on that account constitute providence either in
- humanity or in God; to become convinced thereof it is enough to
- recall the endless oscillations and painful gropings by which
- social order is made manifest.
- 2. Other arguers come unexpectedly across our path, and cry:
- What is the use of these abstruse researches? There is no more
- an infinite intelligence than a Providence; there is neither me
- nor will in the universe outside of man. All that happens, evil
- as well as good, happens necessarily. An irresistible ensemble
- of causes and effects embraces man and nature in the same
- fatality; and those faculties in ourselves which we call
- conscience, will, judgment, etc., are only particular accidents
- of the eternal, immutable, and inevitable whole.
- This argument is the preceding one inverted. It consists in
- substituting for the idea of an omnipotent and omniscient author
- that of a necessary and eternal, but unconscious and blind,
- coordination. From this opposition we can already form a
- presentiment that the reasoning of the materialists is no firmer
- than that of the believers.
- Whoever says necessity or fatality says absolute and inviolable
- order; whoever, on the contrary, says disturbance and disorder
- affirms that which is most repugnant to fatality. Now, there is
- disorder in the world, disorder produced by the play of
- spontaneous forces which no power enchains: how can that be, if
- everything is the result of fate?
- But who does not see that this old quarrel between theism and
- materialism proceeds from a false notion of liberty and fatality,
- two terms which have been considered contradictory, though really
- they are not. If man is free, says the one party, all the more
- surely is God free too, and fatality is but a word; if everything
- is enchained in nature, answers the other party, there is neither
- liberty nor Providence: and so each party argues in its own
- direction till out of sight, never able to understand that this
- pretended opposition of liberty and fatality is only the natural,
- but not antithetical, distinction between the facts of activity
- and those of intelligence.
- Fatality is the absolute order, the law, the code, fatum, of the
- constitution of the universe. But this code, very far from being
- exclusive in itself of the idea of a sovereign legislator,
- supposes it so naturally that all antiquity has not hesitated to
- admit it; and today the whole question is to find out whether, as
- the founders of religions have believed, the legislator preceded
- the law in the universe,--that is, whether intelligence is prior
- to fatality,--or whether, as the moderns claim, the law preceded
- the legislator,--in other words, whether mind is born of nature.
- BEFORE or AFTER, this alternative sums up all philosophy. To
- dispute over the posteriority or priority of mind is all very
- well, but to deny mind in the name of fatality is an exclusion
- which nothing justifies. To refute it, it is sufficient to
- recall the very fact on which it is based,--the existence of
- evil.
- Given matter and attraction, the system of the world is their
- product: that is fatal. Given two correlative and contradictory
- ideas, a composition must follow: that also is fatal. Fatality
- clashes, not with liberty, whose destiny, on the contrary, is to
- secure the accomplishment of fatality within a certain sphere,
- but with disorder, with everything that acts as a barrier to the
- execution of the law. Is there disorder in the world, yes or no?
- The fatalists do not deny it, for, by the strangest blunder, it
- is the presence of evil which has made them fatalists. Now, I
- say that the presence of evil, far from giving evidence of
- fatality, breaks fatality, does violence to destiny, and supposes
- a cause whose erroneous but voluntary initiative is in
- discordance with the law. This cause I call liberty; and I have
- proved, in the fourth chapter, that liberty, like reason which
- serves man as a torch, is as much greater and more perfect as it
- harmonizes more completely with the order of nature, which is
- fatality.
- Therefore to oppose fatality to the testimony of the conscience
- which feels itself free, and vice versa, is to prove that one
- misconstrues ideas and has not the slightest appreciation of the
- question. The progress of humanity may be defined as the
- education of reason and human liberty by fatality: it is absurd
- to regard these three terms as exclusive of each other and
- irreconcilable, when in reality they sustain each other, fatality
- serving as the base, reason coming after, and liberty crowning
- the edifice. It is to know and penetrate fatality that human
- reason tends; it is to conform to it that liberty aspires; and
- the criticism in which we are now engaged of the spontaneous
- development and instinctive beliefs of the human race is at
- bottom only a study of fatality. Let us explain this.
- Man, endowed with activity and intelligence, has the power to
- disturb the order of the world, of which he forms a part. But
- all his digressions have been foreseen, and are effected within
- certain limits, which, after a certain number of goings and
- comings, lead man back to order. From these oscillations of
- liberty may be determined the role of humanity in the world; and,
- since the destiny of man is bound up with that of creatures, it
- is possible to go back from him to the supreme law of things and
- even to the sources of being.
- Accordingly I will no longer ask: How is it that man has the
- power to violate the providential order, and how is it that
- Providence allows him to do so? I state the question in other
- terms: How is it that man, an integrant part of the universe, a
- product of fatality, is able to break fatality? How is it that a
- fatal organization, the organization of humanity, is
- adventitious, contradictory, full of tumult and catastrophes?
- Fatality is not confined to an hour, to a century, to a thousand
- years: if science and liberty must inevitably be ours, why do
- they not come sooner? For, the moment we suffer from the delay,
- fatality contradicts itself; evil is as exclusive of fatality as
- of Providence.
- What sort of a fatality, in short, is that which is contradicted
- every instant by the facts which take place within its bosom?
- This the fatalists are bound to explain, quite as much as the
- theists are bound to explain what sort of an infinite
- intelligence that can be which is unable either to foresee or
- prevent the misery of its creatures.
- But that is not all. Liberty, intelligence, fatality, are at
- bottom three adequate expressions, serving to designate three
- different faces of being. In man reason is only a defined
- liberty conscious of its limit. But within the circle of its
- limitations this liberty is also fatality, a living and personal
- fatality. When, therefore, the conscience of the human race
- proclaims that the fatality of the universe--that is, the
- highest, the supreme fatality--is adequate to an infinite reason
- as well as to an infinite liberty, it simply puts forth an
- hypothesis in every way legitimate, the verification of which is
- incumbent upon all parties.
- 3. Now come the HUMANISTS, the new atheists, and say:
- Humanity in its ensemble is the reality sought by the social
- genius under the mystical name of God. This phenomenon of
- the collective reason,--a sort of mirage in which humanity,
- contemplating itself, takes itself for an external and
- transcendent being who considers its destinies and presides over
- them,--this illusion of the conscience, we say, has been analyzed
- and explained; and henceforth to reproduce the theological
- hypothesis is to take a step backward in science. We must
- confine ourselves strictly to society, to man. GOD in religion,
- the STATE in politics, PROPERTY in economy, such is the triple
- form under which humanity, become foreign to itself, has not
- ceased to rend itself with its own hands, and which today it must
- reject.
- I admit that every affirmation or hypothesis of Divinity proceeds
- from anthropomorphism, and that God in the first place is only
- the ideal, or rather, the spectre of man. I admit further that
- the idea of God is the type and foundation of the principle of
- authority and absolutism, which it is our task to destroy or at
- least to subordinate wherever it manifests itself, in science,
- industry, public affairs. Consequently I do not contradict
- humanism; I continue it. Taking up its criticism of the divine
- being and applying it to man, I observe:
- That man, in adoring himself as God, has posited of himself an
- ideal contrary to his own essence, and has declared himself an
- antagonist of the being supposed to be sovereignly perfect,--in
- short, of the infinite;
- That man consequently is, in his own judgment, only a false
- divinity, since in setting up God he denies himself; and that
- humanism is a religion as detestable as any of the theisms of
- ancient origin;
- That this phenomenon of humanity taking itself for God is not
- explainable in the terms of humanism, and requires a further
- interpretation.
- God, according to the theological conception, is not only
- sovereign master of the universe, the infallible and
- irresponsible king of creatures, the intelligible type of man; he
- is the eternal, immutable, omnipresent, infinitely wise,
- infinitely free being. Now, I say that these attributes of God
- contain more than an ideal, more than an elevation--to whatever
- power you will--of the corresponding attributes of humanity; I
- say that they are a contradiction of them. God is contradictory
- of man, just as charity is contradictory of justice; as sanctity,
- the ideal of perfection, is contradictory of perfectibility; as
- royalty, the ideal of legislative power, is contradictory of law,
- etc. So that the divine hypothesis is reborn from its resolution
- into human reality, and the problem of a complete, harmonious,
- and absolute existence, ever put aside, ever comes back.
- To demonstrate this radical antinomy it suffices to put facts in
- juxtaposition with definitions.
- Of all facts the most certain, most constant, most indubitable,
- is certainly that in man knowledge is progressive, methodical,
- the result of reflection,--in short, experimental; so much so
- that every theory not having the sanction of experience--that is,
- of constancy and concatenation in its representations--thereby
- lacks a scientific character. In regard to this not the
- slightest doubt can be raised. Mathematics themselves, though
- called pure, are subject to the CONCATENATION of propositions,
- and hence depend upon experience and acknowledge its law.
- Man's knowledge, starting with acquired observation, then
- progresses and advances in an unlimited sphere. The goal which
- it has in view, the ideal which it tends to realize without ever
- being able to attain it,-- placing it on the contrary farther and
- farther ahead of it,--is the infinite, the absolute.
- Now, what would be an infinite knowledge, an absolute knowledge,
- determining an equally infinite liberty, such as speculation
- supposes in God? It would be a knowledge not only universal, but
- intuitive, spontaneous, as thoroughly free from hesitation as
- from objectivity, although embracing at once the real and the
- possible; a knowledge sure, but not demonstrative; complete, not
- sequential; a knowledge, in short, which, being eternal in its
- formation, would be destitute of any progressive character in the
- relation of its parts.
- Psychology has collected numerous examples of this mode of
- knowing in the instinctive and divinatory faculties of animals;
- in the spontaneous talent of certain men born mathematicians and
- artists, independent of all education; finally, in most of the
- primitive human institutions and monuments, products of
- unconscious genius independent of theories. And the regular and
- complex movements of the heavenly bodies; the marvellous
- combinations of matter,--could it not be said that these too are
- the effects of a special instinct, inherent in the elements?
- If, then, God exists, something of him appears to us in the
- universe and in ourselves: but this something is in flagrant
- opposition with our most authentic tendencies, with our most
- certain destiny; this something is continually being effaced from
- our soul by education, and to make it disappear is the object of
- our care. God and man are two natures which shun each other as
- soon as they know each other; in the absence of a transformation
- of one or the other or both, how could they ever be reconciled?
- If the progress of reason tends to separate us from Divinity, how
- could God and man be identical in point of reason? How,
- consequently, could humanity become God by education?
- Let us take another example.
- The essential characteristic of religion is feeling. Hence, by
- religion, man attributes feeling to God, as he attributes reason
- to him; moreover, he affirms, following the ordinary course of
- his ideas, that feeling in God, like knowledge, is infinite.
- Now, that alone is sufficient to change the quality of feeling in
- God, and make it an attribute totally distinct from that of man.
- In man sentiment flows, so to speak, from a thousand different
- sources: it contradicts itself, it confuses itself, it rends
- itself; otherwise, it would not feel itself. In God, on the
- contrary, sentiment is infinite,--that is, one, complete, fixed,
- clear, above all storms, and not needing irritation as a contrast
- in order to arrive at happiness. We ourselves experience this
- divine mode of feeling when a single sentiment, absorbing all our
- faculties, as in the case of ecstasy, temporarily imposes silence
- upon the other affections. But this rapture exists always only
- by the aid of contrast and by a sort of provocation from without;
- it is never perfect, or, if it reaches fulness, it is like the
- star which attains its apogee, for an indivisible instant.
- Thus we do not live, we do not feel, we do not think, except by a
- series of oppositions and shocks, by an internal warfare; our
- ideal, then, is not infinity, but equilibrium; infinity expresses
- something other than ourselves.
- It is said: God has no attributes peculiar to himself; his
- attributes are those of man; then man and God are one and the
- same thing.
- On the contrary, the attributes of man, being infinite in God,
- are for that very reason peculiar and specific: it is the nature
- of the infinite to become speciality, essence, from the fact that
- the finite exists. Deny then, if you will, the reality of God,
- as one denies the reality of a contradictory idea; reject
- from science and morality this inconceivable and bloody phantom
- which seems to pursue us the more, the farther it gets from us;
- up to a certain point that may be justified, and at any rate can
- do no harm. But do not make God into humanity, for that would be
- slander of both.
- Will it be said that the opposition between man and the divine
- being is illusory, and that it arises from the opposition that
- exists between the individual man and the essence of entire
- humanity? Then it must be maintained that humanity, since it is
- humanity that they deify, is neither progressive, nor contrasted
- in reason and feeling; in short, that it is infinite in
- everything,--which is denied not only by history, but by
- psychology.
- This is not a correct understanding, cry the humanists. To have
- the right ideal of humanity, it must be considered, not in its
- historic development, but in the totality of its manifestations,
- as if all human generations, gathered into one moment, formed a
- single man, an infinite and immortal man.
- That is to say, they abandon the reality to seize a projection;
- the true man is not the real man; to find the veritable man, the
- human ideal, we must leave time and enter eternity,--what do I
- say?--desert the finite for infinity, man for God! Humanity, in
- the shape we know it, in the shape in which it is developed, in
- the only shape in fact in which it can exist, is erect; they show
- us its reversed image, as in a mirror, and then say to us: That
- is man! And I answer: It is no longer man, it is God. Humanism
- is the most perfect theism.
- What, then, is this providence which the theists suppose in God?
- An essentially human faculty, an anthropomorphic attribute, by
- which God is thought to look into the future according to the
- progress of events, in the same way that we men look into
- the past, following the perspective of chronology and history.
- Now, it is plain that, just as infinity--that is, spontaneous and
- universal intuition in knowledge--is incompatible with humanity,
- so providence is incompatible with the hypothesis of the divine
- being. God, to whom all ideas are equal and simultaneous; God,
- whose reason does not separate synthesis from antinomy; God, to
- whom eternity renders all things present and contemporary,--was
- unable, when creating us, to reveal to us the mystery of our
- contradictions; and that precisely because he is God, because he
- does not see contradiction, because his intelligence does not
- fall under the category of time and the law of progress, because
- his reason is intuitive and his knowledge infinite. Providence
- in God is a contradiction within a contradiction; it was through
- providence that God was actually made in the image of man; take
- away this providence, and God ceases to be man, and man in turn
- must abandon all his pretensions to divinity.
- Perhaps it will be asked of what use it is to God to have
- infinite knowledge, if he is ignorant of what takes place in
- humanity.
- Let us distinguish. God has a perception of order, the sentiment
- of good. But this order, this good, he sees as eternal and
- absolute; he does not see it in its successive and imperfect
- aspects; he does not grasp its defects. We alone are capable of
- seeing, feeling, and appreciating evil, as well as of measuring
- duration, because we alone are capable of producing evil, and
- because our life is temporary. God sees and feels only order;
- God does not grasp what happens, because what happens is BENEATH
- him, beneath his horizon. We, on the contrary, see at once the
- good and the evil, the temporal and the eternal, order and
- disorder, the finite and the infinite; we see within us and
- outside of us; and our reason, because it is finite, surpasses
- our horizon.
- Thus, by the creation of man and the development of society, a
- finite and providential reason, our own, has been posited in
- contradiction of the intuitive and infinite reason, God; so that
- God, without losing anything of his infinity in any direction,
- seems diminished by the very fact of the existence of humanity.
- Progressive reason resulting from the projection of eternal ideas
- upon the movable and inclined plane of time, man can understand
- the language of God, because he comes from God and his reason at
- the start is like that of God; but God cannot understand us or
- come to us, because he is infinite and cannot re-clothe himself
- in finite attributes without ceasing to be God, without
- destroying himself. The dogma of providence in God is shown to
- be false, both in fact and in right.
- It is easy now to see how the same reasoning turns against the
- system of the deification of man.
- Man necessarily positing God as absolute and infinite in his
- attributes, whereas he himself develops in a direction the
- inverse of this ideal, there is discord between the progress of
- man and what man conceives as God. On the one hand, it appears
- that man, by the syncretism of his constitution and the
- perfectibility of his nature, is not God and cannot become God;
- on the other, it is plain that God, the supreme Being, is the
- antipode of humanity, the ontological summit from which it
- indefinitely separates itself. God and man, having divided
- between them the antagonistic faculties of being, seem to be
- playing a game in which the control of the universe is the stake,
- the one having spontaneity, directness, infallibility, eternity,
- the other having foresight, deduction, mobility, time. God and
- man hold each other in perpetual check and continually avoid
- each other; while the latter goes ahead in reflection and theory
- without ever resting, the former, by his providential incapacity,
- seems to withdraw into the spontaneity of his nature. There is a
- contradiction, therefore, between humanity and its ideal, an
- opposition between man and God, an opposition which Christian
- theology has allegorized and personified under the name of Devil
- or Satan,--that is, contradictor, enemy of God and man.
- Such is the fundamental antinomy which I find that modern critics
- have not taken into account, and which, if neglected, having
- sooner or later to end in the negation of the man-God and
- consequently in the negation of this whole philosophical
- exegesis, reopens the door to religion and fanaticism.
- God, according to the humanists, is nothing but humanity itself,
- the collective me to which the individual me is subjected as to
- an invisible master. But why this singular vision, if the
- portrait is a faithful copy of the original? Why has man, who
- from his birth has known directly and with out a telescope his
- body, his soul, his chief, his priest, his country, his
- condition, been obliged to see himself as in a mirror, and
- without recognizing himself, under the fantastic image of God?
- Where is the necessity of this hallucination? What is this dim
- and ambiguous consciousness which, after a certain time, becomes
- purified, rectified, and, instead of taking itself for another,
- definitively apprehends itself as such? Why on the part of man
- this transcendental confession of society, when society itself
- was there, present, visible, palpable, willing, and
- acting,--when, in short, it was known as society and named as
- such?
- No, it is said, society did not exist; men were agglomerated, but
- not associated; the arbitrary constitution of property and
- the State, as well as the intolerant dogmatism of religion, prove
- it.
- Pure rhetoric: society exists from the day that individuals,
- communicating by labor and speech, assume reciprocal obligations
- and give birth to laws and customs. Undoubtedly society becomes
- perfect in proportion to the advances of science and economy, but
- at no epoch of civilization does progress imply any such
- metamorphosis as those dreamed of by the builders of utopia; and
- however excellent the future condition of humanity is to be, it
- will be none the less the natural continuation, the necessary
- consequence, of its previous positions.
- For the rest, no system of association being exclusive in itself,
- as I have shown, of fraternity and justice, it has never been
- possible to confound the political ideal with God, and we see in
- fact that all peoples have distinguished society from religion.
- The first was taken as END, the second regarded only as MEANS;
- the prince was the minister of the collective will, while God
- reigned over consciences, awaiting beyond the grave the guilty
- who escaped the justice of men. Even the idea of progress and
- reform has never been anywhere absent; nothing, in short, of that
- which constitutes social life has been entirely ignored or
- misconceived by any religious nation. Why, then, once more, this
- tautology of Society-Divinity, if it is true, as is pretended,
- that the theological hypothesis contains nothing other than the
- ideal of human society, the preconceived type of humanity
- transfigured by equality, solidarity, labor, and love?
- Certainly, if there is a prejudice, a mysticism, which now seems
- to me deceptive in a high degree, it is no longer Catholicism,
- which is disappearing, but rather this humanitary philosophy,
- making man a holy and sacred being on the strength of a
- speculation too learned not to have something of the arbitrary in
- its composition; proclaiming him God,--that is, essentially good
- and orderly in all his powers, in spite of the disheartening
- evidence which he continually gives of his doubtful morality;
- attributing his vices to the constraint in which he has lived,
- and promising from him in complete liberty acts of the purest
- devotion, because in the myths in which humanity, according to
- this philosophy, has painted itself, we find described and
- opposed to each other, under the names of hell and paradise, a
- time of constraint and penalty and an era of happiness and
- independence! With such a doctrine it would suffice--and
- moreover it would be inevitable--for man to recognize that he is
- neither God, nor good, nor holy, nor wise, in order to fall back
- immediately into the arms of religion; so that in the last
- analysis all that the world will have gained by the denial of God
- will be the resurrection of God.
- Such is not my view of the meaning of the religious fables.
- Humanity, in recognizing God as its author, its master, its alter
- ego, has simply determined its own essence by an antithesis,--an
- eclectic essence, full of contrasts, emanated from the infinite
- and contradictory of the infinite, developed in time and aspiring
- to eternity, and for all these reasons fallible, although guided
- by the sentiment of beauty and order. Humanity is the daughter
- of God, as every opposition is the daughter of a previous
- position: that is why humanity has formed God like itself, has
- lent him its own attributes, but always by giving them a specific
- character,--that is, by defining God in contradiction of itself.
- Humanity is a spectre to God, just as God is a spectre to
- humanity; each of the two is the other's cause, reason, and end
- of existence.
- It was not enough, then, to have demonstrated, by criticism
- of religious ideas, that the conception of the divine me leads
- back to the perception of the human me; it was also necessary to
- verify this deduction by a criticism of humanity itself, and to
- see whether this humanity satisfies the conditions that its
- apparent divinity supposes. Now, such is the task that we
- solemnly inaugurated when, starting at once with human reality
- and the divine hypothesis, we began to unroll the history of
- society in its economic institutions and speculative thoughts.
- We have shown, on the one hand, that man, although incited by the
- antagonism of his ideas, and although up to a certain point
- excusable, does evil gratuitously and by the bestial impulse of
- his passions, which are repugnant to the character of a free,
- intelligent, and holy being. We have shown, on the other hand,
- that the nature of man is not harmoniously and synthetically
- constituted, but formed by an agglomeration of the potentialities
- specialized in each creature,--a circumstance which, in revealing
- to us the principle of the disorders committed by human liberty,
- has finished the demonstration of the non- divinity of our race.
- Finally, after having proved that in God providence not only does
- not exist, but is impossible; after having, in other words,
- separated the divine attributes of the infinite Being from the
- anthropomorphic attributes,--we have concluded, contrary to the
- affirmations of the old theodicy, that, relatively to the destiny
- of man, a destiny essentially progressive, intelligence and
- liberty in God suffered a contrast, a sort of limitation and
- diminution, resulting from his eternal, immutable, and infinite
- nature; so that man, instead of adoring in God his sovereign and
- his guide, could and should look on him only as his antagonist.
- And this last consideration will suffice to make us reject
- humanism also, as tending invincibly, by the deification of
- humanity, to a religious restoration. The true remedy for
- fanaticism, in our view, is not to identify humanity with God,
- which amounts to affirming, in social economy communism, in
- philosophy mysticism and the statu quo; it is to prove to
- humanity that God, in case there is a God, is its enemy.
- What solution will result later from these data? Will God, in
- the end, be found to be a reality?
- I do not know whether I shall ever know. If it is true, on the
- one hand, that I have today no more reason for affirming the
- reality of man, an illogical and contradictory being, than the
- reality of God, an inconceivable and unmanifested being, I know
- at least, from the radical opposition of these two natures, that
- I have nothing to hope or to fear from the mysterious author whom
- my consciousness involuntarily supposes; I know that my most
- authentic tendencies separate me daily from the contemplation of
- this idea; that practical atheism must be henceforth the law of
- my heart and my reason; that from observable necessity I must
- continually learn the rule of my conduct; that any mystical
- commandment, any divine right, which should be proposed to me,
- must be rejected and combatted by me; that a return to God
- through religion, idleness, ignorance, or submission, is an
- outrage upon myself; and that if I must sometime be reconciled
- with God, this reconciliation, impossible as long as I live and
- in which I should have everything to gain and nothing to lose,
- can be accomplished only by my destruction.
- Let us then conclude, and inscribe upon the column which must
- serve as a landmark in our later researches:
- The legislator DISTRUSTS man, an abridgment of nature and a
- syncretism of all beings. He DOES NOT RELY on Providence, an
- inadmissible faculty in the infinite mind.
- But, attentive to the succession of phenomena, submissive to the
- lessons of destiny, he seeks in necessity the law of humanity,
- the perpetual prophecy of his future.
- He remembers also, sometimes, that, if the sentiment of Divinity
- is growing weaker among men; if inspiration from above is
- gradually withdrawing to give place to the deductions of
- experience; if there is a more and more flagrant separation of
- man and God; if this progress, the form and condition of our
- life, escapes the perceptions of an infinite and consequently
- non-historic intelligence; if, to say it all, appeal to
- Providence on the part of a government is at once a cowardly
- hypocrisy and a threat against liberty,--nevertheless the
- universal consent of the peoples, manifested by the establishment
- of so many different faiths, and the forever insoluble
- contradiction which strikes humanity in its ideas, its
- manifestations, and its tendencies indicate a secret relation of
- our soul, and through it of entire nature, with the infinite,--a
- relation the determination of which would express at the same
- time the meaning of the universe and the reason of our existence.
- END OF VOLUME FIRST.
- End of Project Gutenberg Etext of The Philosophy of Misery by Proudhon
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