!
24
Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
CHRISTOPHER BUCK (Pittsburgh, USA)
ALAIN LOCKE’S PHILOSOPHY OF DEMOCRACY
There is no formal “Baha’i philosophy.” Yet there are professional
philosophers who are Baha’is, who therefore may be broadly
characterized as “Baha’i philosophers.”1 Foremost among Baha’i
philosophers is Alain Leroy Locke (1885–1954).2 Columbus Salley, in
The Black 100, ranks Locke as the 36th most influential African
American ever, past or present.3 More significantly, Locke has been
acknowledged as “the most influential African American intellectual born
between W. E. B. Du Bois and Martin Luther King, Jr.”4
This paper presents Alain Locke’s philosophy of democracy, in nine
dimensions, as a contribution to the study of Baha’i philosophy, in its
broader context as philosophical thinking by professional philosophers
who were religiously engaged as members of the Baha’i Faith. Baha’i
values synergized Locke’s philosophy of democracy or, at the very least,
now serve as a useful heuristic for understanding and appreciating certain
aspects of Locke’s philosophy of democracy. Locke’s grand (though not
systematic) theory of democracy sequenced local, moral, political,
economic, and cultural stages of democracy as they arced through history,
with racial, social, spiritual, and world democracy completing the
trajectory. Adjunct notions of natural, practical, progressive, creative,
intellectual, equalitarian democracy crystallized the paradigm.
Locke made history in when he became the first African American
Rhodes Scholar in 1907. As one contemporary, writing that same year,
has said: “In what he has achieved, a race has been uplifted.”5
Historically, Locke is most closely associated with the Harlem
Renaissance (c. 1919–1935), aptly characterized as a movement that
!1. Christopher Buck, “Alain Locke: Baha’i Philosopher,” Baha’i Studies Review 10
(2001/2002): 7–49.
2! . Christopher Buck, Alain Locke: Faith and Philosophy (Los Angeles: Kalimat
Press, 2005).
3! . Columbus Smalley, The Black 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential AfricanAmericans, Past and Present, revised and updated (Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Press, 1999
[1993]), p. 137.
4! . Leonard Harris & Charles Molesworth, Alain L. Locke: Biography of a
Philosopher (Chicago and London: Univ. of Chicago Press, 2008), p. 1.
5! . William C. Bolivar, “Alain LeRoy Locke.” African Methodist Episcopal Church
Review 24, no. 1 (July 1907): 19.
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
2! 5
sought to achieve “Civil Rights by Copyright.”6 In 1925, Locke edited
The New Negro: An Interpretation, the historical significance of which
Eric King Watts notes: “Only a few claims regarding the Harlem
Renaissance are uncontested: that The New Negro stands as the
‘keystone,’ the ‘revolutionary’ advertisement, and the ‘first national book’
of African America is one of them.”7
There is also synergy between the social objectives of the Harlem
Renaissance and Alain Locke’s philosophy of democracy. As to the
purpose behind the Harlem Renaissance, Locke is crystal clear: “The
Negro mind reaches out as yet to nothing but American wants, American
ideas. But this forced attempt to build his Americanism on race values is a
unique social experiment, and its ultimate success is impossible except
through the fullest sharing of American culture and institutions.”8 The
Harlem Renaissance achieved a major objective of the New Negro
movement, which was to instill a race pride in Blacks and a
corresponding respect for Blacks by mainstream America. This race pride
created the group consciousness that was a necessary precondition for the
mass mobilization of African Americans led by Dr. King during the Civil
Rights movement. As the acknowledged “Dean” of the Harlem
Renaissance, Locke sought to ennoble the perception (and selfperception) of African Americans through an “ameliorative use of
stereotypes” and by “advocacy aesthetics”9 whereby art served as a
cultural ambassador in promoting ideal race relations.
As historically important as his pivotal role in Harlem Renaissance
surely was, Locke’s legacy as philosopher may just as profound, as
Leonard Harris points out: “Alain Locke, I believe, is the sentinel
historical figure in the history of African American professional
philosophers because he conjoins an interest in the historically important
issues of social well-being crucial to the African American intellectual
!6. David Levering Lewis, When Harlem Was in Vogue (New York: Penguin, 1998),
p. xxviii.
7! . Eric King Watts, “African American Ethos and Hermeneutical Rhetoric: An
Exploration of Alain Locke’s The New Negro.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 88, no. 1
(Feb. 2002): 19–32, citing Houston Baker, Jr., Modernism and the Harlem
Renaissance (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1987), p. 85.
!8. Alain Locke, “Enter the New Negro.” Survey Graphic. Special Issue: Harlem,
Mecca of the New Negro (March 1925): 631–634 (633).
9! . Leonard Harris, “Alain L. Locke,” in A Companion to Pragmatism, ed. John R.
Shook and Joseph Margolis (Oxford: Blackwell, 2006), ch. 7, pp. 87–93 (91).
!
26
Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
agenda with central issues in the modern history of philosophy.”10 Locke
has been called “the father of multiculturalism.”11
Alain Locke was a pragmatist philosopher. Of the pragmatists, John
Dewey most influenced democratic theory from the pragmatist
perspective. But the pragmatist whom Locke admired most was likely
Franz Boas, whom Locke called a “major prophet of democracy.”12
Locke is credited with having first coined the term, “critical pragmatism.”
“The actual phrase, ‘critical pragmatism’,” writes Alison Kadlec,
“appears at least as early as 1935 in Alain Locke’s pragmatic theory of
valuation. In the context of Locke’s work, the idea of a critical
pragmatism was supposed to undergird the development of cultural
pluralism.”13 Leonard Harris, arguably the foremost scholar on Alain
Locke, notes:
Critical pragmatism was created by Locke and has its religious
sensibilities in a place other than Cornel West’s prophetic pragmatism
and Dewey and James’ American forms of Christianity. Locke was
affiliated with the B’hai faith [sic: Bahá’í Faith] and thereby a radical
cultural pluralist and influenced by the B’hai [sic: Bahá’í] demand, as
a tenet of religious faith, that racism is a sin.14
! . Leonard Harris, “The Horror of Tradition or How to Burn Babylon and Build
10
Benin While Reading A Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note.” Philosophical
Forum 24, nos. 1–3 (Fall–Spring 1992–93): 94–119. Reprinted in African-American
Perspectives and Philosophical Traditions, ed. John P. Pittman and Marx W.
Wartofsky (New York: Routledge, 1996), pp. 94–119 [112].
! . Charles Molesworth, “Alain Locke and Walt Whitman: Manifestos and
11
National Identity,” in The Critical Pragmatism of Alain Locke: A Reader on Value
Theory, Aesthetics, Community, Culture, Race, and Education, ed. Leonard Harris
(Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 1999), p. 176.
! . Alain Locke, “Major Prophet of Democracy” (Review of Race and Democratic
12
Society by Franz Boas), Journal of Negro Education 15, no. 2 (Spring 1946): 191–92.
See also Mark Helbling, “Feeling Universality and Thinking Particularistically: Alain
Locke, Franz Boas, Melville Herkskovits, and the Harlem Renaissance,” Prospects 19
(1994): 289–314.
!13. Alison Kadlec, “Reconstructing Dewey: The Philosophy of Critical
Pragmatism,” Polity 38, no. 4 (Oct. 2006): 519–42 (520, n. 3).
!14. Leonard Harris, Review of Pragmatism and the Problem of Race, Bill E.
Lawson and Donald F. Koch, eds. (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2004),
Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 41, no. 2 (Spring, 2005): 440–43 [442].
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
2! 7
Cornel West’s “prophetic pragmatism” is said to have been inspired by
“his trinity of Christ, Marx, and Dewey.”15 As the Cornel West of the Jim
Crow era, Locke’s own “critical pragmatism” drew its inspiration from
the trinity of Baha’u’llah, Royce, and Boas. One can say that Locke has
synergized faith (Baha’u’llah) and philosophy (Royce), reinforced by
scientific anthropology (Boas). While all but Josiah Royce among the
first white pragmatists had turned a blind eye to race, Locke would agree
with Cornel West in characterizing American pragmatism as “unique as a
philosophical tradition in the modern world in its preoccupation or near
obsession with the meaning and value of democracy.”16 (Here,
pragmatism is Cornel West’s synecdoche for philosopher John Dewey.)
Although West, in The American Evasion of Philosophy: A Genealogy of
Pragmatism (1989), had excluded him, Locke has finally entered the
canon of American philosophy and taken his rightful place in the
philosophical pantheon with the appearance of John Stuhr’s Pragmatism
and Classical American Philosophy (2000).17
Locke anchored philosophy in human values and formulated his own
theory of relativity by way of a naturalized epistemology of human
values. One of Locke’s lectures captures the essence of his philosophy by
its very title: “Cultural Pluralism: A New Americanism.”18 Locke’s
integrationism was not assimilationism. Locke held to the Bahá’í
! . Charles W. Mills, “Prophetic Pragmatism as a Political Philosophy,” in Cornel
15
West: A Critical Reader, ed. by George Yancy (Malden, MA and Oxford: Blackwell,
2001), p. 196, quoting Lewis R. Gordon, “Black Intellectuals and Academic
Activism: Cornel West’s ‘Dilemmas of the Black Intellectual’,” in idem, Her
Majesty’s Other Children: Sketches of Racism from a Neocolonial Age (Lanham,
MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 1997), p. 195.
! . Qtd. in Mills, “Prophetic Pragmatism,” p. 197.
16
!17. John J. Stuhr, ed., Pragmatism and Classical American Philosophy: Essential
Readings and Interpretive Essays, 2nd edn. (New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 2002).
! . Alain Locke Papers, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center (hereafter, “MSRC”),
18
Howard University, Box 164-167, Folder 4: 1950-1953 (Programs on which Locke’s
Name Appears). Sponsored by the Department of Philosophy, Locke’s lecture,
presented on November 8, 1950, was held in the faculty lounge, Douglass Hall,
Howard University.
!
28
Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
principle of “unity in diversity,”19 which he reformulated as “unity
through diversity.” 20
Seeing America as “a unique social experiment,” Locke’s larger goal
was to “Americanize Americans,”21 with the simple yet profound message
that equality benefits everyone, and that democracy itself is at stake.
Locke’s cosmopolitan paradigm of unity is a “theoretical and praxical
transformation of classical American pragmatism.”22 According to Judith
Green, Locke had precociously conceptualized “deep democracy” as
“cosmopolitan unity amidst valued diversity.”23 In raising democracy to a
new level of consciousness, Locke internationalized the race issue,
making the crucial connection between American race relations and
international relations. Racial justice, he predicted, would serve as a
social catalyst of world peace.
Locke was trained as a philosopher at Harvard University. The primary
branch of philosophy that Locke studied was the theory of values.
Locke’s dissertation was The Problem of Classification in Theory of
Value: or an Outline of a Genetic System of Values.24 Harvard University
conferred Locke’s Ph.D. on 25 February 1918, after he had successfully
defended his dissertation. 25 That same year, he adopted the Bahá’í Faith,
! . The Bahá’í Faith’s “watchword is unity in diversity.” Shoghi Effendi, The
19
World Order of Bahá’u’lláh (Wilmette, IL: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1991), p. 42.
!20. Alain Locke, “Unity through Diversity: A Bahá’í Principle,” in The Bahá’í
World: A Biennial International Record, Volume IV, 1930–1932 (Wilmette: Bahá’í
Publishing Trust, 1933) pp. 372–74. Reprint (Wilmette: Bahá’í Publishing Trust,
1980). Reprinted again in Locke, The Philosophy of Alain Locke: Harlem
Renaissance and Beyond, ed. Leonard Harris (Philadelphia: Temple University Press,
1989), pp. 133–38 [above quote from p. 137]. Harris’ reference on p. 133 n. should be
emended to read, “Volume IV, 1930–1932” (not “V, 1932–1934”).
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-124, Folder 15 (“The Preservation of the
21
Democratic Ideal”), p. 5.
! . Segun Gbadegesin, “Values, Imperatives, and the Imperative of Democratic
22
Values,” in Leonard Harris, ed., The Critical Pragmatism of Alain Locke: A Reader on
Value Theory, Aesthetics, Community, Culture, Race, and Education (Lanham, MD:
Rowman & Littlefield, 1999), p. 288.
! . Judith Green, “Cosmopolitan Unity Amidst Valued Diversity: Alain Locke’s
23
Vision of Deeply Democratic Transformation,” in Deep Democracy: Community,
Diversity, and Transformation (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 1999), p. 96.
! . Alain Leroy Locke, The Problem of Classification in the Theory of Value: or an
24
Outline of a Genetic System of Values (Ph.D. dissertation: Harvard University, 1918).
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-228, P Oversize (Diploma awarded by
25
Harvard University 25 Feb. 1918).
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
2! 9
as documented and discussed in Alain Locke: Faith and Philosophy.26
Locke, moreover, established the study of philosophy at Howard
University – an institution of higher learning aptly characterized as the
equivalent to Harvard University among traditionally black universities.
Leonard Harris credits Alain Locke for having contributed a “unique
version of pragmatism,” which “promotes a deep-seated commitment to
transforming a world” through “intellectual engagement” and “aesthetic
pluralism whereby beauty-making properties are considered subject to
transvaluation.”27 And further:
Locke’s theory of valuation, his advocacy aesthetics, his insistence
on moral imperatives as a necessary condition for the possibility of a
moral community, his pedagogy of discipline and cultural integration,
and his views of community as an evolving democratic experiment,
all form a unique chapter of American pragmatism.28
Beyond his philosophy of values, Locke also developed a
comprehensive theory of democracy. By devoting “Chapter Ten” to
“Theorizing Democracy” in their definitive biography of Locke, Leonard
Harris and Charles Molesworth identify Locke’s philosophy of
democracy as his greatest contribution as a philosopher, which has yet to
be fully understood and appreciated: “Locke’s views on democracy
deserve fuller study than they have received.”29
In the fall of 1947, Locke taught a course on the “Philosophy of
Democracy”30 at Howard University, where he was a distinguished
professor for over forty years. While the notes that have survived are
fragmentary at best, it is now possible to reconstruct Locke’s philosophy
of democracy in its broad conceptual outlines. In an unpublished
typescript, Locke sets forth his definition of democracy as follows:
In a democracy built out of many peoples by this great historical
process of immigration, the only safe principle of democracy is that
!26. Christopher Buck, Alain Locke: Faith and Philosophy (Los Angeles: Kalimat
Press, 2005), “Chapter Four: Conversion,” pp. 58–67.
!27. Leonard Harris, “Alain L. Locke,” in A Companion to Pragmatism, p. 88. See
also idem, “Alain L. Locke, 1885–1954,” in The Blackwell Guide to American
Philosophy, ed. Armen T. Marsoobian and John Ryder (Blackwell, 2004), ch. 17, pp.
263–70.
!28. Harris, “Alain L. Locke,” in A Companion to Pragmatism, pp. 91–92.
! . Harris & Molesworth, “Chapter Ten: Theorizing Democracy,” Alain L. Locke:
29
Biography of a Philosopher, pp. 328–57 (329).
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-112, Folder 6: “Concept of Democracy.”
30
Outline of lecture for Philosophy of Democracy course. 10 Dec. 1947.
!
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Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
embodied in this conception of democracy: – A democracy is a
system of government and corporate living in which there is no
distinction between minority and majority rights; and under which
life is safe and equally abundant for all minorities. In historical
perspective[,] this is really the distinctive foundation[al] principle of
American life. Our task today is to make America truly and
consistently American.31
Locke forged a vital linkage between American democracy and world
democracy. In his previously unpublished Bahá’í essay, “The Gospel for
the Twentieth Century” (2005), Locke wrote that “[t]he gospel for the
Twentieth Century” and its message of “social salvation” must first
address “[t]he fundamental problems of current America,” which are
“materiality and prejudice.”32 The sad irony is that America – “the land
that is nearest to material democracy” – happens to be the land that “is
furthest away from spiritual democracy.”33
Democracy is a process of progressive equalizing. It is a matter of
degree. For Locke, democracy was a much broader concept than its
narrow political definition. Locke proposed a multidimensional model of
democracy, against which he measured America’s fidelity to its
democratic ideal. His model ranged from concepts of “local democracy”
all the way up to “world democracy.” In the notes on his lecture,
“Concept of Democracy,” delivered on 10 Dec. 1947, Locke spoke of
how the “[i]dea of democracy has evolved.” Locke’s dimensional model
of democracy is not only typological, but evolutionary as well. In a
survey of his writings, one may begin to typologize or systematize
Locke’s thinking on democracy. These are some of the various
dimensions of democracy that Locke spoke and wrote about:
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
Local Democracy;
Moral Democracy;
Political Democracy;
Economic Democracy;
Cultural Democracy;
Racial Democracy;
Social Democracy;
Spiritual Democracy;
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-141, Folder 14 ([Notes] Democracy –
31
political, economic, cultural).
! . Alain Locke, “The Gospel for the Twentieth Century,” in idem, “Alain Locke in
32
His Own Words: Three Essays.” World Order 36, no. 3 (2005): 39–42 [39–40].
(Previously unpublished essays, introduced by Christopher Buck and co-edited with
Betty Fisher.)
! . Alain Locke, “The Gospel for the Twentieth Century,” p. 42.
33
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
3! 1
(9) World Democracy.
Locke’s philosophy of democracy was both historical and
phenomenological. It may aptly be characterized as a “grand theory” of
democracy – anchored in history, grounded in philosophy, and validated
by personal experience. Locke’s philosophy of democracy harks back to
Athens, arcs through history, and telescopes into the future. His point of
departure was, of course, the historical development or evolution of
democracy. The first five dimensions may be roughly characterized as
“Historical Democracy,” as they are sequenced in Locke’s paradigm of
social evolution. In his farewell address at Talladega College (1941),
Locke spoke of local, moral, political, economic, and cultural stages of
democracy. The present writer published the speech in 2005. 34 Locke
begins his speech by saying:
And now, I should like to talk about something that we all take for
granted – these are things we know least about. The words most
frequently used are words understood least[.] – Democracy is one of
those words. Thinking Negroes, of course, know much about what
democracy is not, and have a more workable conception of what
democracy truly means than those who have just enough to be
content with or those to whom it is just a commonplace concept and
way of life. Democracy, of course, is one of the basic human ideals,
but as an ideal of human association it is something quite superior to
any outward institution or any particular society; therefore, not only
is government too narrow to express democracy, but government
from time to time must grow to realize democracy.35
Not only is government too narrow a concept of democracy, but
democracy started out historically as a narrow concept as well.
Local Democracy: The historical origins of democracy hark back to
Athens, as one would expect. And while it is a breakthrough concept of
the profoundest historical moment, Locke emphasizes its limitations:
It may be a little daring in the time we have at our disposal, but let
us put on seven-league boots and trace democracy – one of the great
social concepts. Both in concept and in practice democracy began in
Greece – in the Greek city[-]state. In its day it was a great
achievement, but in that day democracy was a concept of local
! . Alain Locke, “Five Phases of Democracy: Farewell Address at Talladega
34
College,” in idem, “Alain Locke in His Own Words: Three Essays.” World Order 36,
no. 3 (2005): 45–48.
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-113, Folder 4 ([re: democracy] Departure
35
speech to students at Talladega College, 1941), p. 1.
!
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Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
citizenship. Our nearest approach to it is the kind of fellowship we
find in college fraternities and sororities in which the bonds are of
“like-mindedness” excluding others. The rim of the Greek concept of
democracy was the barbarian: it was then merely the principle of
fraternity within a narrow, limited circle. There was a dignity
accorded to each member on the basis of membership in the group. It
excluded foreigners, slaves and women. This concept carried over
into the Roman empire.36
In staging the evolution of democracy, the next developmental phase in
the evolution of democracy, accordingly, was Christianity.
Moral Democracy: Christianity, in Locke’s estimate of it, provided
the ideal basis for a moral democracy. Ideally universal, and socially so in
its pristine beginnings, over time Christianity became circumscribed, as
Locke, true to his critical temper, points out:
Christianity was responsible for the introduction of the next great
revision in the concept of democracy. We owe to Christianity one of
the great basic ideals of democracy – the ideal of the moral equality
of human beings. The Christian ideal of democracy was in its initial
stages more democratic than it subsequently became. It always held
on to the essential ideal of moral equality of man within the limits of
organized Christianity – anybody else was a potential member only
as he became converted. Christianity was thus a crusading ideal in
bringing humanity into wider association. But the Christian church
was a political institution and in making compromises often failed in
bringing about real human equality.37
Notwithstanding its contribution to the evolution of democracy by
promoting “the ideal of the moral equality of human beings,” Christianity
later failed to live up to its own ideals.
Political Democracy: Locke explains the profound influence of the
French Revolution on the establishment of American democracy by the
Founding Fathers. In one speech, Locke states:
Then later came that political and secular strand of colonial
experience, which out of the fight against tyranny and taxation grew
into the issue of political freedom and the liberty of self-government.
But even then, when these developments had been fought for and
won, and were being institutionalized, it took another strain of radical
thinking imported from Revolutionary France to consolidate this into
a formally democratic doctrine, the fundamental historical creed of
!36. Ibid., pp. 1–2.
!37. Ibid., p. 2.
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
3! 3
American democracy that we know so well and rightly treasure so
highly.38
It was the political philosophy of the French that most impressed
Thomas Jefferson, and profoundly influenced the development of
democracy in America:
The third great step in democracy came from [P]rotestant lands and
people who evolved the ideal of political equality: (1) equality before
the law; (2) political citizenship. This political democracy pivoted
on individualism, and the freedom of the individual in terms of what
we know as the fundamental rights of man. It found its best
expression in the historic formula of “Liberty, equality and
fraternity.” 39
Locke appreciated the Bill of Rights and subsequent Amendments as
milestones in the evolution of American democracy. But the political
system – not to mention the social manifestations of democracy – were
still far from perfect:
In terms of this ideology our country’s government was founded.
But for generations after many of the fundamentals of our democracy
were pious objectives, not fully expressed in practice. In the
perspective of democracy’s long evolution, we must regard our
country’s history as a progressive process of democratization, not yet
fully achieved, but certainly progressing importantly in terms of the
[T]hirteenth, [F]ourteenth and F]ifteenth [A]mendments, and the
amendment extending the right of franchise to women. It is still
imperfect.40
The perfection of democracy requires a “democratic spirit,”
without which democracy, by legislation standing alone, cannot
succeed: “[I]f we are going to have effective democracy in America
we must have the democratic spirit as well as the democratic
tradition, we must have more social democracy and more economic
democracy in order to have or keep political democracy.”41
This statement reveals the cornerstone of Locke’s philosophy of
democracy: that democratic ideals must be complemented by democratic
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-112, Folder 18 (“Creative Democracy”),
38
p. 2.
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-113, Folder 4 ([re: democracy] Departure
39
speech to students at Talladega College, 1941), p. 2.
! . Ibid., pp. 2–3.
40
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-124, Folder 15 (“The Preservation of the
41
Democratic Ideal”), p. 5.
!
34
Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
attitudes. In other words, the democratic spirit is what really animates a
democracy, not simply its institutions and legal safeguards. Consistent
with this analysis is Locke’s stage-wise progression from political to
economic democracy, in which human values (on which political
democracy is ostensibly based) can and must be linked to economic
values.
Economic Democracy: Although Locke was no economist, he clearly
understood that reality. It was totally obvious in the ghettoes. Economic
reform was a necessary development of democracy:
The fourth crucial stage in the enlargement of democracy began, I
think, with the income tax amendment. Woodrow Wilson tried to put
into operation an extension of democracy which may well have been
seriously hindered by World War number one. The income tax
[A]mendment was an initial step in social [economic] democracy as
distinguished from the purely political, – a step toward economic
equality through the partial appropriation of surplus wealth for the
benefit of the commonwealth.
In this country for many generations we thought we had economic
equality. What we really had was a frontier expansion which
developed such surpluses and offered such practical equality of
opportunity as to give us the illusion of economic equality. We later
learned that we did not have economic democracy, and that in order
to have this, we must have guaranteed to all citizens certain minimal
standards of living and the right to earn a living. Faced with the crisis
of unemployment, the New Deal has been confronted with the
problem of inaugurating some of these beginnings of economic
democracy and of constitutionally implementing a larger measure of
social justice. The whole program of what is now called [S]ocial
[S]ecurity is directed toward such objectives. 42
Locke spoke of “the two basic economic roots of war – unequal access
to markets and sources of raw materials and widespread differentials of
living standards and economic security.”43 Locke taught that political
freedom ought to lead to economic equality. What Locke means by
economic democracy is an “equitable distribution of wealth.” 44
Redistribution of surplus wealth is part and parcel of that process. But
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-113, Folder 4 ([re: democracy] Departure
42
speech to students at Talladega College, 1941), pp. 3–4.
! . Alain Locke, “Democracy Faces a World Order,” Harvard Educational Review
43
12, no. 2 (March 1942): 124.
44
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-112, Folder 6 (“Concept of
Democracy”). Outline of lecture for Philosophy of Democracy course. 10 Dec. 1947,
p. 1.
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
3! 5
what about the connection between economic democracy and race? In the
conclusion of an unpublished essay, “Peace Between Black and White in
the United States,” Locke wrote:
We used to say that Christianity and democracy were both at stake
in the equitable solution of the race question. They were; but they
were abstract ideals that did not bleed when injured. Now we think
with more realistic logic, perhaps, that economic justice cannot stand
on one foot; and economic reconstruction is the dominant demand of
the present-day American scene.45
Cultural Democracy: Locke’s next form of democracy is clear
enough, although his name for it (“cultural democracy”) is not so much
“cultural” as it is “intercommunal.” Locke sums up the problem he is
addressing as follows: “Less acute than race prejudice, but by no means
unrelated to it, is the social bias and discrimination underlying the
problem of cultural minorities. [. . .] Cultural bias, like that directed
against the Mexican, Orientals, the Jew, the American Indian, often
intensifies into racial prejudice.”46 As an antidote to this social ill, Locke
advocates cultural pluralism, and rejects “Americanization,” whether
forced or coerced by social pressures. Think of “culture” in this context as
analogous to the idea of a “corporate culture.” As Locke explains:
A fifth phase of democracy, even if the preceding four are realized,
still remains to be achieved in order to have a fully balanced society.
The present crisis forces us to realize that without this also
democracy may go into total eclipse. This fifth phase is the struggle
for cultural democracy, and rests on the concept of the right of
difference, – that is, the guarantee of the rights of minorities. Again in
the colonial days, we achieved the basic ideals of this crucial aspect
of democracy, but scarcely realized them in fact. Today we have the
same problems of the freedom of speech, worship and conscience,
but in a complex modern situation these things are even more
difficult to work out.
One of our greatest problems then today is a real democratic
reciprocity for minorities of all sorts, both as over against the socalled majority and among themselves. These contemporary
problems of democracy can be vividly sensed if we realize that the
race question is at the very heart of this struggle for cultural
democracy. Its solution lies beyond even the realization of political
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-123: Folder 19 (“Peace between Black
45
and White in the United States”).
!46. Alain Locke, World View on Race and Democracy: A Study Guide in Human
Group Relations (Chicago: American Library Association, 1943), p. 5.
!
36
Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
and economic democracy, although of course that solution can only
be reached when we no longer have extreme political inequality and
extreme economic inequality.47
This is where the Harlem Renaissance fits in. During its heyday, and
throughout the post-Renaissance period, Locke expressed the hope that
“our writers and artists” would achieve a “victory” through “a
psychological conquest of racism, prejudice and cultural intolerance.”48
His race loyalty was the gold vein in a rock of solidarity with the rest of
humanity. As one scholar observes: “Locke was pro-human rather than
pro-negro.”49 Of course, he was both. Alain Locke was both a “race man”
and an integrationist. The role of culture in a “cultural democracy” is that
of enrichment in full representation:
Instead of saying, as was said for so long, that we should recognize
the Negro because he has been neglected and needs recognition,
recent American literature, – and for that matter, American art
generally – has come forward, at least in its more creative talents,
with a very new and democratic formula: We will recognize Negro
materials because they are intrinsically interesting and because the
national culture needs them in the picture to be truly representative. 50
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-113, Folder 4 ([re: democracy] Departure
47
speech to students at Talladega College, 1941), pp. 4–5.
! . Alain Locke, “Reason and Race,” in Stewart, The Critical Temper of Alain
48
Locke, p. 320.
!49. Yvonne Ochillo, “The Race-Consciousness of Alain Locke.” Phylon 47, no. 3
(1986): 173–81 (176).
50
! . Alain Locke, “The Negro Minority in American Literature,” in The Works of
Alain Locke, edited by Charles Molesworth (New York and Oxford: Oxford Univ.
Press, 2012), pp. 83–88 [87].
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
3! 7
Racial Democracy: Alain Locke was a precursor to Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. “[T]he race question,” wrote Locke in 1949, “has become the
number one problem of the world.” 51 The next statement follows from the
first: “Race,” Locke states, “really is a dominant issue of our thinking
about democracy[.]”52 In his small book, World View on Race and
Democracy: A Study Guide in Human Group Relations, Locke states this
another way: “Of all the barriers limiting democracy, color is the greatest,
whether viewed from a standpoint of national or world democracy.”53
Locke sees this as part of “total democracy.”54
Prophetically, Locke forged a linkage between racism as an American
problem and racism as a world problem, as he explicitly states: “Race as a
symbol of misunderstanding has become fully the great tragedy of our
time, both nationally and internationally.”55 Race is the crux, the litmus
test, the hinge on which the entire project of democracy hangs. In a
previously unpublished report on racism, Locke writes:
The American race problem may eventually become just a phase
and segment of the world relationship of races, and in slight degree it
is already in process of becoming so. Historically, and in the general
American thought of it, whether among the Negro minority or the
white majority, it is thought of as peculiarly and exclusively a
national problem. In some respects, its situations are relatively
unique. [. . .] So, as between the white and the black peoples, the
American situation is the acid test of the whole problem; and will be
crucial in its outcome for the rest of the world. This makes America,
in the judgment of many, the world’s laboratory for the progressive
solution of this great problem of social adjustment.56
Locke takes Christianity to task for what today is called self! . Alain Locke, “Dawn Patrol: A Review of the Literature of the Negro for 1948,”
51
Phylon 10, nos. 1–2 (1949): 5–14; 167–72. Reprinted in Jeffrey C. Stewart, The
Critical Temper of Alain Locke: A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture (New
York and London: Garland, 1983), pp. 337–49 [337].
! . Alain Locke, “Reason and Race,” in Stewart, The Critical Temper of Alain
52
Locke, p. 325.
53
! . Alain Locke, World View on Race and Democracy, p. 1.
! . Ibid., p. 2, citing Howard H. Brinton (no reference given).
54
! . Alain Locke, “A Critical Retrospect of the Literature of the Negro for 1947,”
55
Phylon 9, no. 1 (1948): 3–12. Reprinted in Stewart, The Critical Temper of Alain
Locke: A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture, pp. 329–36 [329].
! . Alain Locke, “[Through Mrs. Ruth Cranston] Report on The Race Problem in
56
the American Area.” Alain Locke Papers, MSRC. Box 164-43, Folder 3 (Writings by
Locke – Notes[:] Christianity, spirituality, religion.), p. 1.
!
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segregation: “It is a sad irony,” Alain Locke wrote, “that the social
institution most committed and potentially most capable of implementing
social democracy should actually be the weakest and most inconsistent,
organized religion.”57 Particularly egregious, in Locke’s view, is what
today is termed “self-segregation”: “Of all the segregated bodies, the
racially separate church is the saddest and most obviously selfcontradicting. The separate Negro church, organized in self-defensive
protest, is nonetheless just as anaomolous [sic], though perhaps, more
pardonably so.”58 Locke’s remark presaged those of the Rev. Billy
Graham and the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., both of whom later
observed that Sunday morning is the most segregated time in America.
Social Democracy: In “Reason and Race” (1947), Locke underscores
“the fact that the contemporary world situation clearly indicates that
social democracy is the only safe choice for the survival of Western and
Christian civilization.”59 In the Seventeenth Annual Convention and
Bahá’í Congress (5 July 1925), Locke was reported to have said, in gist:
Dr. Alain LeRoy Locke of Washington, D.C., delivered a polished
address, portraying the great part which America can play in the
establishment of world peace, if alive to its opportunity. The working
out of social democracy can be accomplished here. To this end we
should not think in little arcs of experience, but in the big,
comprehensive way. Let our country reform its own heart and life.
Needed reforms cannot be worked out by the action of any one
group, but a fine sense of cooperation must secure universal
fellowship. He praised Green Acre, which he declared to be an oasis
in the desert of materiality. He urged all who were favored by this
glorious experience to carry forth its glorious message and thus
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-105, Folder 34 (“American Education’s
57
Latest Task: Teaching Democracy.” [incomplete]), p. 8.
! . Ibid.
58
! . Alain Locke, “Reason and Race,” in Stewart, The Critical Temper of Alain
59
Locke, p. 327.
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
3! 9
awaken humanity. In final analysis, peace cannot exist anywhere
without existing everywhere.60
The very integrity of democracy itself is put to test by the state of its
race relations.
Spiritual Democracy: Democracy is more than a political system. It is
a state of mind, a province of the heart, a radiation of attitudes, from
which all actions flow. Spiritual democracy is the democracy of the heart.
It’s a place, a state of mind that legislation cannot reach. It is the
interiority of democracy that Locke emphasized:
Constitutional guarantees, legal and civil rights, political
machinery of democratic action and control are, of course, the
skeleton foundation of democracy, but you and I know that attitudes
are the flesh and blood of democracy, and that without their vital
reenforcement [sic] democracy is really moribund or dead. That is
my reason for thinking that in any democracy, ours included, the
crucial issue, the test touchstone of democracy is minority status,
minority protection, minority rights.61
During World War II, Locke wrote of the potential role that religion
could play in promoting democracy on a world scale:
The world crisis has led to the reexamination of the traditional
doctrines of human equality and brotherhood among the leading
thinkers of the Christian churches. As a result, a fresh crusade for
aligning organized religion with the constructive forces of world
democracy has come to the vanguard of liberal religious thought and
action. Both intercultural, intersectarian and interfaith movements
have grown out of these considerations.62
In attempting to remold the American temperament, Alain Locke led a
60
! . “The Seventeenth Annual Convention and Baha’i Congress,” Baha’i News
Letter, No. 6 (1925): 3. Here, Locke’s reference to “Green Acre” is the Green Acre
Baha’i School, Retreat, and Conference Center in Eliot, Maine, where, in 1925,
Baha’i delegates assembled primarily to elect the “National Spiritual Assembly of the
Baha’is of the United States and Canada” — a council of nine Baha’i representatives
charged with overseeing the affairs of the American and Canadian Baha’i community
at that time. (The National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is of Canada was
separately elected beginning in 1948, and was legally incorporated by an Act of
Parliament in 1949, while The National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is of the
United States would be elected annually thereafter.)
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-124, Folder 15 (“The Preservation of the
61
Democratic Ideal”), pp. 1–2.
62
! . Alain Locke, World View on Race and Democracy, p. 18.
!
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Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
civil rights movement of the American spirit. Of particular importance are
Locke’s views on “spiritual democracy” – an aspect of Locke’s thought
that, so far, has received scant attention. In an evidently unpublished
Bahá’í essay (2005), Locke expresses his conviction that “Spiritual
Democracy” is the “largest” dimension of democracy as a whole “and
most inner meaning.” In his essay, “The Gospel for the Twentieth
Century,” Locke states:
The gospel for the Twentieth Century rises out of the heart of its
greatest problems [. . .] Much has been accomplished in the name of
Democracy, but Spiritual Democracy, its largest and most inner
meaning, is so below our common horizons. [. . .] [T]he land that is
nearest to material democracy is furthest away from spiritual
democracy [. . .] The word of God is still insistent, [. . .] and we have
[. . .] Bahá’u’lláh’s “one great trumpet-call to humanity”: “That all
nations shall become one in faith, and all men as brothers; that the
bonds of affection and unity between the sons of men should be
strengthened; that diversity of religion should cease, and differences
of race be annulled [. . .] These strifes and this bloodshed and discord
must cease, and all men be as one kindred and family.[”]63
The spirit of democracy is best realized in a spirit of confraternity of
the races, as a basis for the social solidarity of society as a whole. In The
Negro in America (1933), Locke promoted ideal race relations by
emphasizing the mutual benefits that true reciprocity would foster:
If they will but see it, because of their complementary qualities, the
two racial groups have great spiritual need, one of the other. It would
truly be significant in the history of human culture, if two races so
diverse should so happily collaborate, and the one return for the gift
of a great civilization the reciprocal gift of the spiritual crossfertilization of a great and distinctive national culture.64
! . Baha’u’llah, quoted in Locke, “Gospel for the Twentieth Century,” p. 42,
63
indirectly citing J. E. Esslemont, Baha’u’llah and the New Era: An Introduction to the
Baha’i Faith, 5th rev. ed. (Wilmette, IL: Baha’i Publishing Trust, 1980, 1998
printing), pp. 39–40. This oft-quoted statement was first published by Edward
Granville Browne, Sir Thomas Adams Professor of Arabic, Cambridge University,
interview with Baha’u’llah, Acre, Palestine, on Wednesday, April 16, 1890, in
‘Abdu’-Baha, A Traveller’s Narrative Written to Illustrate the Episode of the Bab, ed.
and trans. Browne, vol. 2 (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1891) pp. xxxix–xl.
64
! . Alain Locke, The Negro in America (Chicago: American Library Association,
1933), p. 50.
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
4! 1
World democracy: Democracy, ideally, is collective self-destiny. On a
world scale, democracy is global self-governance. Locke’s universalism
is most evident in his discussion of world democracy, for which
“internationalism” appears to be a synonym. World democracy is really
the logical and pragmatic expansion of the democratic principle, from a
national to truly international level. “[W]orld democracy,” writes Locke,
“presupposes the recognition of the essential equality of all peoples and
the potential parity of all cultures.”65 On a radio program, “Woman’s Page
of the Air,” with Adelaide Hawley, broadcast 6 August 1944 while World
War II was at its height, Locke said: “Just as the foundation of democracy
as a national principle made necessary the declaration of the basic
equality of persons, so the founding of international democracy must
guarantee the basic equality of human groups.”66
Accordingly, Locke noted, “we must find common human
denominators of liberty, equality, and fraternity for humanity at large.”67
In the quest to universalize democracy, “color becomes the acid test of
our fundamental honesty in putting into practice the democracy we
preach.”68
Exploring the relationship between America and world democracy,
Locke postulated that “World leadership [. . .] must be moral leadership in
democratic concert with humanity at large.”69 In so doing, America must
perforce “abandon racial and cultural prejudice.” 70 “A world
democracy,” wrote Locke, “cannot possibly tolerate what a national
democracy has countenanced too long.”71 This is an unmistakable
allusion to America and racism.
Conclusions: Alain Locke’s philosophy of democracy is unfinished,
for the simple reason that he did not systematize it, much less apply it.
Superficially, if one accepts the multidimensional nature of Locke's
theory of democracy, it appears, at best, to be descriptive. Yet there is a
prescriptive element as well. This aspect of Locke’s thinking has yet to be
fully developed. If one reads his writings closely, the prescriptive element
falls into focus. To sharpen the focus, let us take the following statement
from “Cultural Relativism and Ideological Peace,” as a point of departure
65
! . Alain Locke, World View on Race and Democracy, p. 14.
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-105, Folder 33: [re: America’s position in
66
world affairs in relation to race.] Speech over station KMYR, Denver. 6 August 1944,
p. 6.
! . Locke, “The Unfinished Business of Democracy,” p. 455.
67
! . Ibid., p. 456.
68
! . Ibid., p. 459.
69
! . Ibid.
70
! . Locke, “Democracy Faces a World Order,” p. 128.
71
!
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Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
for the formulaic prescriptive application of Locke’s theory of democracy
on a systematic, yet theoretically practical level:
[T]hree working principles seem to be derivable for a more
objective and scientific understanding of human cultures and for the
more reasonable control of their interrelationships. They are:
1. The principle of cultural equivalence, under which we would
more wisely press the search for functional similarities in our
analyses and comparisons of human cultures . . . . Such functional
equivalences, which we might term “culture-cognates” or “culturecorrelates,” discovered underneath deceptive but superficial
institutional divergence, would provide objective but soundly neutral
common denominators for intercultural understanding and
cooperation;
2. The principle of cultural reciprocity, which, by a general
recognition of the reciprocal character of all contacts between
cultures and of the fact that all modern cultures are highly composite
ones, would . . . [provide] scientific, point-by-point comparisons with
their correspondingly limited, specific, and objectively verifiable
superiorities or inferiorities;
3. The principle of limited cultural convertibility, that, since culture
elements, though widely interchangeable, are so separable, the
institutional forms from their values and the values from their
institutional forms, the organic selectivity and assimilative capacity
of a borrowing culture becomes a limiting criterion for cultural
exchange.72
In simpler terms, Locke’s prescriptive paradigm proposes a three-step
process: (1) Correlate (by a method of formal comparison, identify
“functional equivalences” as possible “common denominators”); (2)
Confirm (by objectively making “point-by-point comparisons,” verify the
reciprocal character of such “culture-correlates,” thereby reaching a
common understanding); and (3) Convert (by justifying mutual
acceptance of comparable values, promote intercultural exchange and
collaboration). The result would be as follows:
Through functional [1] comparison a much more constructive
phase of cultural relativism seems to be developing, promising the
discovery of some less arbitrary and more objective norms. Upon
! . Alain Locke, “Cultural Relativism and Ideological Peace,” in The Works of
72
Alain Locke, ed. Charles Molesworth (New York and Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press,
2012), pp. 548–54 (550–551).
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
4! 3
them, perhaps we can build sounder intercultural [2] understanding
and promote a more equitable [3] collaboration between cultures.73
What Locke calls for is “an objective comparative analysis on a world
scale of our major culture values.”74 This can be done dimension-bydimension – in local, moral, political, economic, cultural, interracial,
social, spiritual, global, intellectual, natural, practical, and creative
contexts. Locke’s proposed method has never been rigorously tested. This
quest for intercultural exchange, recognition and cooperation is part and
parcel of what Locke called “reciprocity.” In and of itself, reciprocity is
not a method of conflict resolution per se, but is a means of cultural
diplomacy that promotes peaceful interchange.
In fine, Locke’s formula for ideal intercommunal relations (with a
democracy) intercultural relations (between democracies) is: (1)
comparison; (2) understanding; (3) collaboration. In a dynamic mode,
Locke advocates that philosophers (and other leaders of thought)
compare, understand and collaborate.
Alain Locke’s philosophy of democracy does not end with his
dimensional paradigm and comparative method for identifying equivalent
cross-cultural values and their concomitant moral imperatives. Locke
famously wrote:
All philosophies, it seems to me, are in ultimate derivation
philosophies of life and not of abstract, disembodied “objective”
reality; products of time, place and situation, and thus systems of
timed history rather than timeless eternity. . . . In de-throning our
absolutes, we must take care not to exile our imperatives, for after all,
we live by them.” 75
Locke’s Bahá’í-inspired vision incorporates the three “basic corporate
ideas” of nation, race and religion, of which Locke speaks in his paper,
“Moral Imperatives for World Order” (1944).76 Alain Locke’s prophetic
words remain true today: “The moral imperatives of a new world order
are an internationally limited idea of national sovereignty, a nonmonopolistic and culturally tolerant concept of race and religious
!73. Ibid., p. 552 (bracketed numbers and emphasis added).
!74. Ibid., p. 553.
75
! . Alain Locke, “Values and Imperatives,” in The Works of Alain Locke, pp. 451–
64 (451, 452).
! . Alain Locke, “The Moral Imperatives for World Order,” Summary of
76
Proceedings, Institute of International Relations, Mills College, Oakland, CA, June
18–28, 1944, pp. 19–20. Reprinted in Leonard Harris, ed., The Philosophy of Alain
Locke (Philadelphia: Temple Univ. Press, 1989), pp. 143, 151–52.
!
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Studies in Bahá’í Philosophy
loyalties freed of sectarian bigotry.” In “Pluralism and Intellectual
Democracy” (1942), Locke wrote that: “The intellectual core of the
problems of the peace… will be the discovery of the necessary common
denominators and the basic equivalences involved in a democratic world
order or democracy on a world scale.”77 A world democracy is a world
order established on both legal and social foundations that command
universal assent.
Locke inwardly felt that what America really needed was to embrace
Bahá’í principles (and not necessarily the Bahá’í Faith itself). “Dr. Alain
Locke of Washington, D.C., speaking on the subject, ‘America’s Part in
World Peace’,” according to a news report, “pointed out the priceless
value and the great necessity of a good example if America is to perform
a real service to the world.” Locke proclaimed:
America’s democracy must begin at home with a spiritual fusion of
all her constituent peoples in brotherhood, and in an actual mutuality
of life. Until democracy is worked out in the vital small scale of
practical human relations, it can never, except as an empty formula,
prevail on the national or international basis. Until it establishes itself
in human hearts, it can never institutionally flourish. Moreover,
America’s reputation and moral influence in the world depends on
the successful achievement of this vital spiritual democracy within
the lifetime of the present generation. (Material civilization alone
does not safeguard the progress of a nation.) Bahá’í Principles and
the leavening of our national life with their power, is to be regarded
as the salvation of democracy. In this way only can the fine
professions of American ideals be realized.78
Here, Locke says that Baha’i principles can contribute to the full
realization of the American ideals of democracy, which Locke
characterizes as the “salvation of democracy.”
Locke’s philosophy of democracy, in essence, was to “Americanize
Americans” – to realize America’s ideals in all its dimensions – locally,
morally, politically, economically, culturally, interracially, socially,
spiritually, globally, intellectually, naturally, practically, and creatively –
in order to further democratize democracy. “[B]ut now, it seems to me,”
Locke told an audience of social workers in 1938, “the soundest, wisest
! . Alain Locke. “Pluralism and Intellectual Democracy.” Conference on Science,
77
Philosophy and Religion, Second Symposium (New York: Conference on Science,
Philosophy and Religion, 1942), p. 196–212. Reprinted in The Philosophy of Alain
Locke, pp. 51–66 (62).
!78. Harlan Ober, “The Baha’i Congress at Green Acre,” Star of the West 16, no. 1
(April 1925): 525, on the occasion of the “The Seventeenth Annual Convention and
Baha’i Congress,” where Alain Locke delivered an invited presentation.
Alain Locke’s Philosophy of Democracy
4! 5
and most appropriate slogan, – if we must have a slogan [–] is to
[A]mericanize Americans in their social attitudes and behavior, to
establish democracy in the heart of our social relations.” 79 Once that
happens, America could have the requisite moral authority to adopt its
“world role.”80
Locke’s philosophy of democracy was his signal contribution to the
“salvation of democracy,” from race relations to international relations, in
connecting economic values with human values, and in predicating all
other dimensions of democracy on the health and vitality of “spiritual
democracy,” which Baha’i teachings enrich with its wealth of principles
of unity, 81 from family relations to international relations, and from local
democracy to world democracy.
Locke’s philosophy of democracy is no mere taxonomy, for it
implicates a corresponding teleology. In fine, Locke’s teleology is his
moral imperative calling on philosophers (and other leaders of thought)
prove worthy of their philosophical salt by endeavoring to (1) find
“common denominators” (2) to reach common ground (3) to achieve a
common purpose, i.e. for the commonweal, or greater good, of humanity.
Grounded in values, Locke’s philosophy expands notions of democracy
as a predicate for cosmopolitan social principles. Simply put, Locke’s call
to compare, concur, and collaborate is another of Locke’s “Moral
Imperatives for World Order” (to borrow the title of the essay cited in
Note 76, supra). This process dynamically links “Values and Imperatives”
(to invoke the title of the essay cited in Note 75, supra), for “for after all,
we live by them.”
Independent Scholar (formerly, Michigan State University)
! . Alain Locke Papers, MSRC, Box 164-124, Folder 15 (“The Preservation of the
79
Democratic Ideal”), p. 5.
! . Alain Locke, “Democracy Faces a World Order,” p. 126.
80
! . See Christopher Buck, “Fifty Baha’i Principles of Unity: A Paradigm of Social
81
Salvation.” Baha’i Studies Review 18 (2012): 3–44 (published June 2015). http://
dx.doi.org/10.1386/bsr.18.3/1. http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/intellect/bsr/
2012/00000018/00000001/art00001. See also http://bahai-library.com/
buck_unity_social_salvation. Accessed 2 August 2015. For a different configuration,
see idem, “50 Baha’i Principles of Unity: From Individual to International Relations,”
BahaiTeachings.org (June 10, 2014), at http://bahaiteachings.org/50-bahai-principlesof-unity-from-individual-to-international-relations (accessed 12 Sept. 2015).