Interpretation, Vol. 7-1
Interpretation, Vol. 7-1
Interpretation, Vol. 7-1
INTERPRETATION
A Journal
of
Political
Philosophy
Volume 7/1
January, 1978
age
Laurence Berns
Frances Bacon
the
and
Conquest
of
Nature
27
Mieczyslaw Maneli
Three Concepts
of
Freedom:
52
George Anastaplo
74
George Schwab
Legality
and
Illegality
of
as
Instruments
Revolutionaries
by
the
Herbert Marcuse
90
Chaninah Maschler
The
Seven-Day Story
INTERPRETATION
A Journal
Volume 7
of
Political
Philosophy
Issue 1
Editor-in-Chief
HUail Gildin
Ann McArdle
(1912-1974)
Consulting Editors
John Hallowell
-
Wilhelm Hennis
-
Erich Hula
Arnaldo Momigliano
-
Michael Oakeshott
Leo Strauss
(1899-1973)
Kenneth W. Thompson
Managing Editor
Ann McArdle
Grey
a
INTERPRETATION is
journal devoted
to the
study
of
Political Philosophy.
It appears
Its
editors
from
all
interest in
Political
Philosophy regardless
and
their orientation.
All
manuscripts
editorial
correspondence
should
be
addressed
to
the
Editor-in-Chief. INTERPRETATION
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INTERPRETATION,
NATURE*
College,
Annapolis
immeasurably larger,
rate.
and
the multitude of
was
ideas
also proceeded at an
incredible
This
man,
accompanied
mental
by
any
noticeable
advance
in the
of
more.
of events
faculties or his moral character, but it buzzed the around him assumed gigantic proportions while he
By
great
comparison
men
therefore
he actually became
Our
much smaller.
We
no
longer had
array
of
directing
we
man
manageable affairs.
need was to
discipline
an
gigantic and
turbulent
facts.
so
To this task
powers
have
at
far
proved unequal.
created
new
on
and
were
largely
beyond his control. While he nursed in his new trappings, he became the
the illusion
sport and
of
growing mastery
was
and exulted
presently
he
far
more
helpless
S.
than
long
time.
Churchill1 -Winston
The
so-called conquest
of nature
by
modern
science, the
science
Bacon, Descartes, Galileo and Newton, has transformed human life almost beyond description. The new dependency of human life upon science, or its product, technology, pervades our thinking as well as our practical lives. It might even from the recent suggestion to replace the term technology with seem, that logos too had become outdated. Our the term awareness of the depth of this fundamental dependency should help of in loose anti-scientific talk. us to avoid the hypocrisy indulging
associated with the names of
"technetronics,"
Yet
the
threat
of
nuclear and
war,
overpopulation,
environmental
in the wild, disappearance self-perpetuating nature, and so forth, have all made the problematic character of the great project for the conquest of nature increasingly
pollution,
the
imbalance
of nature
evident,
even to non-philosophic
consequences
thought.
can
But dangerous
way.
be dealt
with
in
If the
conception of nature
underlying
by
science
is sound, the
remedies
so-called
conquest
of nature
are
not
in
less, but
more
*Based
on a
lecture
given at
2
science,
or
Interpretation
in
fuller
inherent in
the application
of science
to
practice.
If,
on
the other
hand,
the
the understanding of nature presupposed by directed not only to the correction or reform of modern science, but to a consideration of the fundamental alternatives to it. In either case the fundamental problem turns out to be not only the problem of dangerous consequences, but rather the project, we are
the
truth,
or
adequacy,
notion of
the
conquest of nature.
with
modern
project, especially
Bacon
and
Descartes,
was
in
philosophy
and science.
simply historical accident. The meaning of the conquest of nature cannot be adequately understood without understanding the reasons for rejecting the view of nature it was formed explicitly
not
idea
of
nature.2
The
idea
of
the
conquest
of
nature
cannot
itself be
of
adequately
understood
apart
from
an
understanding
the
fundamental
alternatives to
it.
The
first
.
.
.
word of the
first
aphorism of
second
"
"nature":
"Homo,
et
"Man,
interpreter
nature,
does just
he
just
so much of the
order of nature as
has observed in the thing or in the mind: he neither knows nor is able to know Man is the servant of nature in so far as he can do or
more."
make
the
nothing except by obeying the hidden chain of causes. Man is interpreter of nature in so far as he does not accept what he
if it
of the
were self-evident, but rather as being results and signs hidden chain of causes. Signs must be interpreted. Man only should distrust both his natural faculties for judgement and the signs which nature on her own provides him.
receives as
It is in the third
nature
aphorism that we
find
the
decisive
phrase:
"For
is
on
is
not
conquered,
except
its
face
by being
obeyed."3
The
phrase
absurd,
or self-contradictory:
the same
thing
cannot
both be
word
Bacon too
solicits
interpretation. The
Bacon
nature
and
here is
Bacon in
being
used
in
history
provides
us with
contradiction.
conditions
Natural
which
history
and
In his discussions of natural distinctions which resolve the is divided according to the three
the
nature
is found. There is
to
(1)
nature
in its
to the
and
left
itself,
as
it
presents
itself
ordinary understanding in
heavenly
prodigies
bodies,
is
(2)
there
nature
wandering,
and
or
in error,
when
and
monstrosities are
produced;
finally (3)
state,
nature
constrained and
vexed,
art and
forced
hand
out of
her
"natural"
by
the
of man.
It is from
as
this third
kind
of
history
that Bacon
expects most.
"For just
in
secret sense of
his
is
times, The
so
likewise
bring
themselves
forward
through
they
go their own
way."4
ordinary
course.
of
The
conquest
is
to
discovery
What is
and
obedience
to
the
secret
of causes
hidden
throughout nature,
and true
which are
to
be
revealed
by
history
to
interpretation.
human cognition in its ordinary course, by nature in its ordinary course, does not provide the clue to the discovery of nature's fundamental structures and laws. We cannot assume, as the ancients did, that there is a natural harmony between the mind of
given
man
and the
world, that
science and
to
human
cognition
by
nature.
is
to
given
by
to
nature to
ordinary
of
way
the
discovery
in
the
fundamental
course
of
of
nature,
nature's
is the "refutation
the
this
of the natural
of
way human
the
to the conquest of
understanding."
This
culminates
refutation
have been
the
based
task
upon
understanding. and
These
which
are,
most
notably,
philosophies of
Plato
Aristotle,
human
take as their
fundamental
of
thinking
implications
the
orientation of
the natural
understanding.5
The
most
human understanding is
of the
set
forward
Mind in
fully by
38
Idols
of the
aphorisms
67.
The idols
are
first
mentioned
in
aphorism
23
as
4
"certain empty
mind"
Interpretation
dogmas"
in
contrast
to
"the ideas
and
of
the
divine
on of
which
are
"the
are
true
signatures
impressions
made
discovered."
creatures,
the
as
as
they
by
"ideas
divine
mind"
is
not at
first
altogether clear.
The
next
aphorism,
if in
answer
to the question,
remarks
How is
one to
know
is
what
kind
of
principles
to seek?,
that
principles constituted
by
arguments
are not to
be
relied
upon,
since the
subtlety
new
of nature
greater
many
subtlety
to
of argument.
Rather,
principles that
lead
the
discovery
active,
of new are
works,
sciences
be
sought.
In the
signatures and
impressions
of
the
divine
mind
as
the
as
ideas, but
and
for those true one is to look not for forces and laws, as it
creatures.
were, impressed in
shaping
in
governing
This is
or
not
because Bacon
that
the active
more
interested in practice,
theoretical
power
useful
inventions than he
was
thought
principles
governing
what,
are
to
be discovered
conditions
primarily
things can
by determining
how,
under
what
be done, or produced. A theory is not confirmed as because it leads to the production of new works, but simply
is
at
true
new
least
Bacon's
that
was
emphasis
is
on
light-bearing
over
fruit-bearing
immediate
experiments,
is
on
discovering
of no
usefulness.
He
fond
work
recalling "the divine procedure, which in its first day's created light only and assigned to it one entire day, on which it
material
work."7
produced
Those
argues,
of
who
confine
themselves too
closely
the
to practical utility,
he
defeat
in
long run;
not
for from
just
of
the
right kind
and
light-bearing
experiments and
will
theories,
whole
occasional
isolated inventions
result,
but
and
"troops"
of
theory
is
inventions,
Human
or
works,
reason as
ordinarily
of
used
in
the
a
study
of nature
called
by
Bacon "Anticipations
Nature,
are
(as
thing
rash and
with
premature)."
Anticipations
Interpretations
assent,
that
"sciences"
of of
nature
contrasted reason
what
he
and
calls
Nature, human
rhetorical
or
rightly
upon
used.
is, for
Bacon's
For gaining
the
purposes,
anticipations
them are
and
dialectic,9
logic, based
far
more
powerful than
as
art of
interpretation.
They
rhetoric
refine those
precisely because they base themselves on and merely universally shared delusions, or radical errors, inherent in
Bacon
the
and
5
native
primary
experiences
of
the
human
understanding.
The
analogies
by
in
based on anticipations, like the philosophies of Plato and Aristotle, lie in every man's common experience; the way of interpretation, on the other hand, must at first sight seem forbidding and uncongenial. It requires an initial suspension of belief about
philosophies
common experience
itself,
and
its
expositors must
supply
their own
in
What
they
or
must
things,
facts,
rely on most, however, is leading men to particular themselves, or to those new experiences based on
the
experiment
which
understanding left
or
to
its
natural
inclinations in the
of
The first
common
class
of
idols,
false
notions,
nature
of the
human
mind
itself,
Bacon
calls
Idols
the
Tribe,
there.
that
is
prone
to suppose there
is
regularity in
it finds
and
It is
already
adopted than
by by
whatever
with
what
It is
by
infusions from
the
will and
affections,
those
wants on
that
foster
all
superstition. or
Without
on to
warrant
especially it restlessly
presses
beyond
ends
limits,
says
the unconditioned, as
and aberration
Kant
of
would say.
"But
the
human
intellect,"
by
far
the greatest
impediment
Bacon
in
aphorism
50,
"proceeds from
In his less dullness, incompetency and deceptions of the popular natural history, Sylva Sylvarum, (paragraph 98), there is an interesting discussion of the subject of this aphorism, given as "touching the secret processes of
the
senses."
nature."
The knowledge
that whatsoever
or
of man
is
invisible,
hitherto hath been determined by the view or sight; so either in respect of the fineness of the body itself,
or of the
the smallness
yet
of
its parts,
any
subtilty
and
of
the motion,
is little inquired.
which
And
you
these
be
cannot
make
indication
of
the proceedings
of
nature.
The
spirits or
pneumaticals, that
are
in
all
tangible
bodies,
are scarce
known. Sometimes they take them for vacuum; whereas they are the most active of bodies. Sometimes they take them for air; from which they differ exceedingly, as much as wine from water; and as wood from earth. Sometimes they will have them to be natural heat, or a portion of the element of fire; whereas some of them are crude and cold. And sometimes they will have them to be the virtues and qualities of the tangible parts which they see; whereas they
are
things
by
themselves. And
then,
when
they
living
6
creatures,
Interpretation
they
call
them souls.
shew
And
such
they have;
paintings.
like prospectives,
Neither is this
spirits are a
that
things
inward,
but
they
are
but
question else
of a
words,
natural
nothing
one
but
For
and
parts of
bodies,
in
less
are at
differing
in
all
from
tangible
rest:
and
whatsoever,
and
more
integument. And they be no dense or tangible parts; and they or less; and they are never almost
an
their motions,
principally
proceed
arefaction,
and most of
goes on:
and
erring;
neither can
all
instruments for
truer
enlarging or sharpening the sense do much; but interpretation of nature is effected by instances and
apposite wherein
the
by
experiments
judges
nature and
the
thing itself.
sense
Distrusting
and
ordinary
experience,
one must
by
careful
planning
pressures,
forces,
mixtures,
course
of
and so
on,
in the ordinary
secret operations
nature, in
order that
nature's are
"which
for
the
sense"
produce
"some
effect comprehensible
by
the
sense."1
Given
is
to confirm, disconfirm or illuminate, in order kind of experience the experiment aims at. And it is still the senses, but the senses lawfully married to the rational faculty, that are our sources for evidence about the nature of things. Bacon's refutation of the natural human reason is not meant simply to disparage the intellect. The controlled experiment is to judge
experiment
is devised
to produce the
"nature
and
the
thing
itself."
And the
controlled experiment
is the
and
product of
even
mind,
instructed
inspired. "A
nature must
be
made; not
divine
fire."1 1
by
In his
speaks of this
Critique of in natural
by
men
partly discovered by and partly inspired like Galileo, Torricelli and Stahl.
that
reason
by Bacon
that
which
and carried
They learned
it
produces
Bacon
and
'
itself to be
show of reason's
kept,
the
own
but
to
who
must
itself
constraining
.
. .
nature
an
to
give
answers
questions compels
determing.
[like]
appointed
judge
the witnesses to
idols,
Idols
of
the
Cave,
once speaks of as
of our spirits
Plato's exquisitely
confined within
subtle allegory.
caves of our
error
being
idols
"the
to those
innate
tendencies to
rising from
the
other
individuals,
habits,
on
Plato's image
cave,
be thought of as encompassing the subject matter of all of Bacon's first three classes of idols, idols of the tribe, of the cave, and of the forum.
hand,
could
The idols
of the
forum,
or
market-place,
being
partly innate
are
and
partly
(those idols
all,
acquired
from
without,
are placed
innate
cave)
innate (the
of
forum
for they stem from the way words and names are formed. Words, being for the most part framed according to the capacity of the vulgar, draw the intellect along the lines and divisions that seem most evident to vulgar intellects. More acute and diligent observers find words standing in the way of communication of what they have seen
in
nature.
The
prudence
of the
mathematicians
in
beginning
the
with
cannot
cure
evil
in
dealing
form Mover;
with
natural
What is
methodical
and
orderly
things
names
and
for
do
not
exist,
on
they form
of the
confused
names 2
unskillful abstractions
The last
things.1
of
idols,
the
idols
theater,
are
are
from
the
dogmas,
innate,
or
fables,
or plays
of philosophy. upon
They
not
or
themselves
that
the
acquisition
acceptance of some
natural
philosophy;
basis. The peculiarities of are to be traced back to different special combinations of effects derived from the workings of the innate idols of the tribe and cave. The idols of the forum affect all the philosophies.
Bacon
speaks of three
like everything else they have a the different idols of the theater
prominent
types
among
the
idols
of
the
8
theater.
the
Interpretation
The first is the sophistical, which, to ensnare the assent of greater number, bases itself upon common experience and
notions.
common
The
most
conspicuous
example aphorism
with
is
Aristotle,
who
led
by
the
idol
in
44
corrupted
his
natural
philosophy
or what
"Old"
his
metaphysics
dialectic,
logic
Bacon
also calls
logic, the
of
of the
categories,
with words
he
tried to account
for
sensible
differences
when
and substances
like entelechy
in his
more
describing certain
he did resort to biological works Aristotle framed his questions in such a way that his resort to experience was bound to confirm the positions he had decided upon
kinds
of
Even
experiment
physical
and
in advance,
the tribe.
in
aphorism
49
of the
idols
of
The
second class of
idols
of
the theater
is
philosophy,
experience
basis
fly
else
or
leap
up
try
to explain
everything
tions are
which
on
the
great
experiments.
With
basis of foresight
begin
observed
in
their
Bacon
warns that
if his
admoni
heeded
means
he
experiments,
leave sophistical philosophy, by devote themselves seriously to Aristotelianism, kind of idol could become a much greater this
and men
to
to
hindrance
The
the
to sound
inquiry.
idols
of the
third class of
of
theater,
superstitious
of
philosophy,
and
corruption
philosophy
by
more
of
admixture
theology
superstition, is far more widespread, in his times, at any rate, Bacon claims. While contentious Aristotelian, sophistic philosophy ensnares
the
intellect,
this more
poetical,
fanciful philosophy
the
misleads
it
by
flattery. The
to
natural
ambition aphorism
intellect
the
to
fly
beyond
of
all
limits,
against
warned against
in
48,
and
susceptibility
the
intellect
influences from
imagination,
warned
in
aphorism
49,
flattered
by
this
kind
of
philosophy.
All idols
kind
of
to the natural
lofty
causes
spirits.
most
important
of
example
error"
school";1
but
Aristotelianism
and
shows itself in scholastic in the introduction of abstract forms, final well, first causes. This unwholesome mixture of religion and
this
"apotheosis
as
Bacon
and
philosophy
religion.
for fantastic
be stopped, Bacon said, not only because it makes philosophy, but also because it leads to heretical Effecting this separation seems to be one of the most
must successful parts of
of ancient
incontrovertibly
The
the
great
Bacon's
project.
failure
whom
philosophy,
of
Atomists
natural
Bacon
praises as superior to
Aristotle
quiescent
in
philosophy,
is
of
that
they investigated
they
things
are
the
which
moving
received
popular
principles
through
or
which
produced.
The
six
Aristotelian,
and make nineteen
vulgar,
distinctions
into
in his
of motion
are
merely
no penetration
nature.
Bacon
gives
fifteen
and,
of
later,
different
4 natural
motions
the simple
motions.1
The
the
ultimate
or
causes of these
failures
are
dealt
with
in
last of the particular idols of the tribe in aphorism 51: "The human intellect is carried to abstractions according to its own nature; and things which are in flux it feigns to be The fault of abstractions is that feign things in flux to be constant. In they aphorism 52 Bacon provides a further clue to his meaning where he
constant."
idol arising from "the mode of the What he seems to have in mind is that the moving thing makes an impression or impressions which remain constant in what is
speaks of this
impression."
impressed,
that
is,
whereas suggesting that what it is really in motion. The aphorism continues: "But it is better to dissect nature than to abstract; as the school of Democritus did, which penetrated
in the sense, memory and intellect, caused it in the thing itself is also fixed,
thereby
into
Matter
ought rather
both in its schematisms and meta-schematisms, and pure act, and law of action or motion: for forms are figments of the human spirit, unless you are willing to call those laws of action,
to
considered
forms."
be
uses the word form to describe the ultimate objects of because that word had become so venerable for so many of those he wanted to lead down the path of his new science; what he 5 means are laws of The intellect in dealing with things in flux moves towards the constant, but "in nature nothing truly exists besides individual bodies producing pure individual acts according to law."16 The given compounded bodies of nature are to be dissected down to the latent schematisms of more fundamental bodies
Bacon
science
motion.1
constituting them,
the
schematisms,
or
meta-schematisms
of the
10
more
Interpretation
be studied from their especially with a view to the laws of action inseparable existence. The natural appetite of the intellect for constancy is to be
fundamental
simple natures
constituting
them are to
satisfied
by
fixed
with
modes, orders,
natural
of
or
laws
of change.
Beginning
the
history
nature,
and the
naturally
oaks,
given
forms
of
ordinary
course
like lions,
with
men
and
water,
causes, that
is,
their
latent
and
latent processes,
motions out
a. view to
discover
are says
the
truly
simple
natures
and
of which
they
compounded.
What
is
not yet
determinable,
and
Bacon, but he
like heat
The
being
that
magnetism.17
rotation,
may be
in the
motion coalesce
as
two
inherendy
unitary
ordered material
that
may
be,
"alphabet
nature."
of
with
Metaphysics, in
the
alphabet
natures are and
the
literal
studies
sense of
"meta,"
after-physics, begins
that
and
its
"grammar,"
is how
the the
simple
collected,
the
form
bodies
of the
to
produce
operations
of
the
ordinary
course
of nature.
Metaphysics
simple
nature
studies
natures,
the
formal causes, that is the laws of action laws which order and constitute any
The
Bacon
calls
"magic"
simple
in any
operative
part of metaphysics
on
suggesting by
be able to generate before seen in nature and of such a character as to rival in power, fineness and durability the things produced by nature in its
the
of the new natural science men will
basis
things never
regular course.
The
being alien to
be of supernatural ordinary origin. Bacon's use of the term metaphysics, like his use of the term form, cannot be understood apart from considerations of his philosophic rhetoric, for it seems to have been designed first to appeal to those who might still be attracted by the traditional name, but only in order to lead them toward a very different notion of the
the
course
to
thing.
"All
and
physics,"
history
of
metaphysics."
Bacon wrote, "lies in a mean between natural Metaphysics is "itself a part of physics or
nature."19
the
doctrine concerning
of
That
is,
physics, in the
and
broad
in
sense
the
word,
begins
with
natural
history
ends
Bacon metaphysics,
with
and
11
the
laws
knew
be little left of traditional metaphysics, if his were followed. A private letter of 1622, to a Father Baranzano way in Italy, reveals his intention in part: "Be not troubled about Meta
that there
would
physics.
When
the true
there will
be
no
Metaphysics. Beyond
intellect,"
true
Physics is
Divinity
only."
"The human
with
he wrote in the Novum Organum, "must wings, but rather with lead and
weights."2
not
be
supplied
symbols.21
his laws of motion, forerunners of the formulas of Newtonian physics? It is difficult to be certain. He did say that physics should end in mathematics. He did not seem to appreciate what might be accomplished by framing one's initial hypotheses in terms that are representable by mathematical One might say that he foresaw what the goals of
Are Bacon's
mathematical
"forms,"
mathematical
physics
were
to
be,
the
without
goals.2
being
clear
about
the
"Inquiries into
physics and end
nature
have
best
The
result when
they begin
with
in
mathematics."
he said, the easier and plainer everything becomes, as one from the incommensurable to the commensurable, from surds to rational quantities. Again, "everything relating both to bodies and virtues in nature [should] be set forth (as far as possible) numbered, weighed, measured and determined. For we pursue works not
natures,
moves
speculations,
practice."
and
physics
and
mathematics
we
of
well
mixed
generate
And
most
interestingly,
the
must
[forces]
quantity
the
according
of
to
quantity
the
how far
.
depends
3
upon the
the
body.
.we
inquire
what proportion
quantity
of a
body bears to
technique
suggest
virtue."2
However,
mathematical
the
of
representing
physical
entities
by
the
symbols,
to
mathematics
represented
relationships
between
to
physical
entities,
was
evidently
not
known
him.
not
well
ad
Mathematics, he
generate or give
natural
philosophy,
mathematical
it
He does
of
not seem to
informed
vances
about
the
being
made
mathematics
times.2
or 5
own
Baconian
experiment seems to
lend itself to
12
Interpretation
Both
a view to
devised
menter
discovering the extent to which nature in advance by human reason. Both the
and
is
subject to
laws
Baconian
experi
the
mathematical
physicist,
in
the
Kantian
of
phrase,
"prescribe
seen
to nature
its
laws."
course,
in
other approaches to
physics,
in
other
sciences,
turn
be like
our
chemistry
attention
and
biology. However
this
may
to
be,
be
we
now
questionable:
which was
between
II
Instauration,"
The "Great
their affairs.
great
renewal,
of
for
on
a radical change
in
the
way
science and
philosophy
carry
the way has been from association of which the labors and industries of labors, and from succession of ages. men (especially as regards the collecting of experience) may with the best effect be first distributed and then combined.
And
then
let
may be
. .in
expected
(after
thus
indicated)
from
men
abounding in
leisure,
and
Bacon's way was "not a way time (as is the case with
over which
reasoning)."
only one man can pass at a His way required a vast new
the efforts of
many
men
in
hierarchical
"historical"
any
was
of
individuals
who were
it;
that
is,
as
we
say, it
to
become
require
and
progressive.
This
vast
enterprise
would
from society at large than science and before. There would come a time, Bacon hoped and expected, when society's dependence on science would be extensive and obvious; but before that time came about, far
greater support
ever
philosophy had
received
and
if
come
about, the
powers
that
be, "who
have
to
are
cases even
learned,"2 7
over
to the new
would
be
a considerable amount of
thought and
writing
To
understanding of,
this, his rhetorical task. his project has succeeded, the need for, and the his rhetoric has diminished. Yet without some
to
understanding
of
that
philosophic
rhetoric,
what
Bacon
accom-
Bacon
pushed,
and
the Conquest
and
of Nature
13
both theoretically
that
regretted
edifice
of
it
was
science, to
cannot be appreciated. He for him, the architect of the new necessary become herald, recruiter, and even ordinary
practically,
workman as well.
We have already
recruit
new men
seen
of
some
of
the consequences
an atmosphere
science
in
to
by
Aristotelian, Platonic
"form"
and
Scholastic
In
one
learning
of
in his
"metaphysics."
and
which
his
interesting
less
colored
unpublished
writings,
are
often
more
open and
by
classical
terminology, he
and transmitted:
speaks about
how his
plans must
be
communicated
inveterate
wit,
errors
like deliriums
of the
insane
must
be
subdued
by
art and
by
use
by
violence and
opposition.
We must, therefore,
prudence and
contradictions
humor them (as far as we can with simplicity and may be extinguished before they are inflamed.
candor), that
Jonathan Swift in
his Full
and
Last
Friday,
True Account of the Battel Fought and the Modem Books in Saint Bacon in this
a regard:
James's
Library
"Then
Aristotle, observing
Bow to the Modern
Bacon
and
advance
with
head,
let
fly
and went
hizzing
over
his Arrow, which mist the valiant his Head; but Des Cartes it hit.
science,"
Evidently
In
Bacon ducked.
to those whom
lamp"
he called "true sons of to whom "the is to be handed on, a new army of assistants, managers and administrators had to be recruited. Appeals had to be made to men who never before would have been connected with science, to induce them to forsake their green fields, humble workshops and profitable businesses to become partners in the hitherto too fastidious, or too exalted, quest for truth. Bacon
addition
"our way
of
discovering
individual
sciences almost
levels
men's wits
excellence,"
just
as a man with a
to
more perfect
else,
no matter
will
how excellent,
vast
who uses
his hand
There
be
will
array
of
of
new
technical. and
mechanical
activities
that
was
of
leave little
aware
to
special
intellectual
those who
statements
excellence;
but Bacon
and
more
the
difference between
than
after
are
ordinary
criticize
men
men
him for
ignoring
his
14
about
Interpretation
levelling
except
in the Novum
Organum, he
works
he is
the
to the
of
by
in
only."30
effects
and
This
should
be
and
considered also
connection
with
of
fruit,
works,
or
power,
the other,
for
new
institutionalized
the
future,
Bacon saw,
between
He
life. Through
after
his
long
in the
and
eminent
political was
he
support
for his
projects.
much
more
his
death,
as
Abraham Cowley's
middle
ode
"To
the Royal
of
science,
written
1600s, indicates.
of
From these In
and all
long Errors
the
Way
which our
th'
And like
In Desarts but
The barren Wilderness he past, on the very Border stand, Of the bless'd promis'd Land Did
And from the Mountains
Top
of
his
exalted
it.3
Saw it
himself,
and shew'd us
Wit,
success (and its having been taken for granted) has made it difficult for us to see the problem as he saw it. The relation between political society and science and philosophy is always a more
Bacon's
delicate one: for, he wrote, there is no form does not have "some point of contrariety
edge."
of
polity
or
society
that
towards
human knowl
And conversely,
suspect
from
a great
danger from
even a
new
truly,
not
change
distinction between civil affairs and the arts: for light is not the same. In civil affairs, for the better is suspected as likely to on
authority, consensus,
and and
disturbances; for
fame
bring
sciences,
like
metal
and
further
progress.
Although working
Bacon
wrote
extensively
on
of
political
subjects
and
can
one's
way
through the
labyrinth
his
political
thought
Bacon
and
15
be
of
fascinating
entitled
enterprise,3
specifically
utopia,
not
scientific politics.
most
important
part of
that subject
is found in
the
one
small
book,
the
fable,
there too
Bacon's ideas
art of
view, but become accessible only to a certain simply interpretation. For as he says in the Advancement of Learning
exposed to
beginning
secret and
secret:
his
treatment
of government:
"it is in
a part of
retired, in both
those respects
knowledge deemed
for some things are secret because they are hard to know, and And in the expanded Latin some because they are not fit to version of this book he begins his discussion of civil or political
utter."
science
by
telling an
old story:
that
of a
many
philosophers
foreign prince,
might
each
to
give a sample of
his
ambassador
be
able
a report of the
. .
wonderful wisdom
the ambassador turning to him, said, Greece; one of them remained silent. To whom he answered, "Tell your "What have you to say for me to king that you have found a man in Greece who knew how to hold his
report?"
tongue."
Bacon
on of
goes on to speak of an
"art,"
even an
"eloquence in
silence"
these matters.
There is
for
the
indirectness
effect
the political
discussion in
the
New Atlantis. If it is
New
own
the scientists
control politics
in
the
Atlantis,
Bacon is in
asking
to
of
his
founding
institutions
which were
deprive them, or men like them, had surely read, but did not
of
any
need,
the
a
advice and
by
his kill
Machiavelli,
weapons,
you."
that
if
you
intend
to
kill
man
want
say, "Give
me your
weapons, I
want to
It is
sufficient to
say, "Give
weapons."34
me your
written
in
explicit correction
of
Plato's
Critias; both
the
works
are
formally
incomplete.35
The
old
Atlantis in
Critias,
was
luxurious,
its
to
technological,
or
society
destroyed do
by
earthquakes; the
far,
as
but
thanks to
science
does
what
not
fall prey
account.
catastrophe as
all societies
in Plato's
The Critias
ends
just
Zeus is is
about
speak;
formally
Father
corresponds
to
Zeus's
speech
the
completed speech of
the
16
the
great new
. .
Interpretation
scientific
institute
of
the
future,
The
"the
noblest as a of
foundation.
elsewhere,
lanthorn [or
speech
description
the
the
is
6
also call
it,
the
College
so
it is
called3
in
language
natives,
enjoys
good
all
kinds
of
health-
producing fruits
and
foods,
health
medicines
surpassing
most chaste anything in Europe; and most natural, Salomon's House, it seems, is the source of customs.
to the
twin aims of
of
true
of
things,
to
the
greater
both
God, and the relief and glory The island is Christian, having received
through a special
which
was confirmed by a witnessing Father from Salomon's House true miracle. But Jews, Persians, Arabs, Chaldeans and Indians
as a
also and
live
left
the
they
too
love
7
who arranges the
It is
Jew
of
with
interesting
name of
Joabin
meeting
of
Bacon's
by
Solamona,
law-giver
Bensalem,
founding of
king,
and
called a
kingdom still,
in
into its
king, but
the
"state."
When
the
the
his
procession
into
city,
first
such
visit
chariot,
in
the
aspect
described in detail, reminds one of Old Testament. He, as Jesus is often characterized, "had an as if he pitied Fifty attendants of his own precede his
men."
chariot,
other a
and
two
others
staff
directly
a
chariot.
preceding
bear,
All
one
cross, the
and
other as of
pastoral
like
sheephook.
political
officials walk
blessing
the
people,
silence."
Salomon's
House,
Father
reports
kinds
sort
of ordnance
and
flying
"a
machines of
of
submarines.
There
and
thirty-six
Fellows
the
College,
attendants, men
The
Bacon
and
'
Fellows decide
which of
their
inventions "take
be
the
They
all an oath of
secrecy,
not."
for
concealing
of
of
those
which we think
fit
to
keep
secret:
though some
those we
do
state,
and some
What
and
all
this
indicates is
both
of the state
religion, ("which
of
has
of
minds"3
), is in
a
the
hands
the
Fellows
a
Salomon's
House,
of
the philosopher-scientists.
power as
Bacon
quence
envisaged
vast
expansion
human
good,
was
conse
of science's
conquest
of nature.
these
powers,
powers
for
evil as well as
for
be
put
of mere who
statesmen;
control
to
be kept in
the
hands
most
of those
would
be
expected
to
comprehend
them, the
powerful and
highly
the
While the
arrangement
of a
between
interest
science
and
society
clearly forecasts
the
and concern as
parties,
rule
by
wise
was
regarded
the
success.
The
of
leaders
of science of
apparently
masters
statecraft,
human philosophy, to guarantee that the would fall into hands fit to use them well.
of
Book One
of
the Novum
Organum
not
makes
clear
that
he is speaking
narrow
about
perfecting
nourished
only
philosophy in the
and
sense,
all
but
to
the sciences of
they
were
be
brought
to
along with,
was meant to
natural
philosophy.
The
science, in its
inception,
to
be
a universal
science.39
human philosophy would failure of Baconian philosophy. Can any philosophy or science which does not take the orientation of pre-scientific and pre-philosophic cognition seriously ever be adequate for human understanding
The failure
to
develop
the
expected
seem
be
things?4
However this
may
be,
Baconian
science
wins
the
support
and
of
society
as
large
by
catering
that
and
to their
fears
desires,
with with
they
those
desires,
man
and
is,
by
providing
and not
them with
protection against
injury from
comforts
especially from
and on
nature,
prosperity,
stronger
with
new
pleasures
especially
always
and
latent,
antagonism
between
of
philosophy,
the one
society, on the
other, is
not to
be bridged
by
mere
of
words,
by
the
flimsy
art
the
Gorgias,
by
the
consolations
philosophy,
by
18
exhortations
In terpretation
to
virtue,
but
rather
by
and
the
tangible
comforts
of
Baconian
charity.
Consolation for
good as
bowing
to
the
ravages
of
as
conquering
fortune; for
which
in truth, Bacon
exist, just
as
variable and
a name
for something
exist.
does
not
theoretical presupposition of
the notion
of
fortune,
matter,
does
their
of
not
excuses,
on
blaming
nature
failure
to
the
especially
matter.4
their
their
own
ignorance,
all
The depreciation
nature,
at
least
of given
in its
or
the
idea
is a,
Kant
and
Hegel it Hegel
in
disqualification
of nature
for
the provision
and
Or,
in
other
words, Kant
found
Bacon
by
modern
science, the
of
nature which
man and
is
to
be obeyed,
altogether
incapable
a
supplying
As
consequence,
for Kant
spirit
the
Hegel
moral
and
political principles
must
be
non-natural
sources:
freedom,
pure
practical
reason,
and
also in Bacon, as can be seen by considering the difficulty. Men, lake lions and oaks, are not fundamental, following but rather compounded forms of nature in its ordinary course. But of one these ordinary, compounded forms is to become the conqueror and master of all the forms of nature in its ordinary course. There must be something special, or fundamental about this one of all the non-fundamental forms, man. Bacon's division of all philosophy (apart from natural theology) into natural and human is a
which
anticipates,
or corresponds
to,
later
kind
new
of tacit special
acknowledgement,
status
still of man
insufficient
though
it may
unlike
be,
of
the
and
in his philosophy.
morality.42
Yet,
Kant
Hegel, Bacon
to
looked
to nature and
order
discern
the principles of
Sometimes he
claimed to share
philosophers, adding
attain
only
the
teaching they
position
how
to
those
goals;
the
but
that
is
not
and
long
maintained.
The
are
ancients
on
morals
politics, he
said,
lofty, like
"the stars,
which
give
Bacon
and
19 (The
they
are
so
high."4
Bacon,
goals
following
in
order
which
Machiavelli
Prince,
chapter
to guarantee actualization.
This is
way
fortune. A
Baconian
practice
read
might
cannot
reply be regarded
that goals
Good"
Advancement of Learning Bacon divides the "Platform into two basic divisions, Individual or Self Good, itself
with
concerns
virtue,
and the
Good
of
Communion,
or
Social
Good,
which concerns
subdivided subdivided
and
Good,
and
Passive Good is
finally
the
into
Conservative
Good
and
first
division is
other
explained as an appetite
it is
part of another
body: Iron
moves toward
exceeds
a
the
lodestone
quantity,
in
individual
a good
sympathy,
but if it
certain of
like
patriot, it
moves to the
its
connaturals.
The
form,
is
the good of
communion,
the
lesser inclinations,
as
emphasized
by
or
Christian
the
Faith,
good
which
more than
exalted
of
communion
other sect or
philosophy
private
the
particular good.
"All
other excellences
excess."
are subject to
excess;
only
charity
admitteth
whether
no
This
also or
decides
active
the
question
concerning
preferred,
the
contemplative
the
life is
as
to
be
against
Aristotle.
For
all are
the reasons
private.
he brings forth in
the private
favor
"But
of
the
and
contemplative
life
As far
pleasure
dignity
and
of a man's self
men must
know
that
in
to
this
angels
be lookers
for
contemplation
should
society,
and same
without
not."
casting beams
much
upon
In his
less
reserved
unpublished,
but privately
circulated, Valerius
with
Terminus,
these
divisions
of good are
discussed
as
no admixture of
Christian
theology
operating
with an
or classical
terminology,
material
appetites,
desires,
and motions
throughout
nature.
the
have
spent such
infinite quantity
cast
and the
highest good,
of
had
their eye
abroad
upon as
to see the
of
"quaternion
might
good"
which
he
presents
laws
motion, then
they
have
20 "saved
Interpretation
pleasure, virtue,
version section of
duty
religion."
and
1.)
In the
expanded
.
the
Advancement of
Learning,
with
De Augmentis.
simple
.,
the
on
physics,
same
in
the
discussion
still show
or
elementary
and
motions,
obvious
these
motions
different
the
physics.
names central
no
connection
to
morality
up in
places.
Morality, it
seems, is to
be
reduced
to
It is in Bacon's
of modern
Hobbes'
thought, Machiavellian
are
political
morality
science,
first brought are found by nature, but throughout nature as a whole. But let us try to understand how this works
together.
modified,
in human terms
would
by
trying
best,
of or
or
highest,
way
life
be for
extending
the
and
multiplying oneself, in
precedence
over the
Preservative
and
for society. Foreign policy, over domestic policy. In his most popular book, the Essays, (No. 55) Bacon assigns the highest place of honor to founders of empires, states and commonwealths, like
acting relating as it were, takes precedence
upon and
to others
in
and
and
Ismael.
In
the
Novum
political ambition
is
assigned
The first
place
to
him
who
would
of
"endeavor
instaurate itself
over
and
extend
the
power
things"
and
empire
the
human
race
the universe of
speak the
.
"And yet, to
whole
Bacon
says
later in the
very
same aphorism
".
the
very
beholding
its many
without more
of
the
light is itself
surely
or
uses: so
the
superstition
imposture,
fruits
of
error
or
worthy
inventions."
First Book
We
see
of the
Advancement of Learning:
the
monuments
then
how far
of wit and
.
.
learning
are more
durable
the images of men's wits hands. and knowledges remain in books, exempted from the wrong of time and capable of perpetual renovation. Neither are they fitly to be called images,
than the monuments of power, or of the
Figure 1 Platform
or
Exemplar
of
the
Good*
Social,
of
or
Good
-
Communion
Duty
Individual
or
Self Good
Virtue
Active Good
Quaternion
of
Good t
Motion
of
enjoying
of approach or assumption
of
affecting
of
consenting
or
*
fruition
or operation
or proportion
and
De Augmentis
Scientiorum,
1623.
estimated
1603.
22
because they
generate still
Interpretation
and
cast
their
seeds
in
the
minds
of
.
others,
provoking
ters
...
and
causing infinite
in succeeding
ages.
time,
and
let distant
.
.
illuminations,
inventions,
Apparently
perfection
Bacon
of
conceive
of contemplation of
as
the
highest
contem
kind
politic
or
plation
of the
far-seeing
"all
practice,
discloses knowledge
tive
of
operations,"
possible
the
most
long-range
practice.
He
evidently
highest level. Ambition in the highest sense, the ambition of the founder of the empire of man over nature, who is that founder because he is the first discoverer of the cosmological truth, becomes at the same time the performance of the highest of duties. The ambition of the founder of the greatest of all empires is the highest form of the active
complete coincidence
or
extensive
good; it is
realized
by
means of the
highest
perfective
good,
contemplation.
Since it is
aimed at
securing
the maximum of
relief, comfort,
the
and power
for
as
highest
of
of all
duties,
mankind as a whole, it also constitutes Bacon defined duty, the action of an society.
individual
with
regard to
the
entry himself in
his
natural
history
men
mind:
The delight
subjection
which
submission
and
of other men's
other
to
be
thing in itself,
as
consequence,
This thing
affected
(surely)
forth
that
is
signification,
else
if all
of men came
out of one
which
divine limbus;
think
or
with
others
desireth
good
name and
true
honour:
the
lighter, popularity
the more
depraved,
subjection and
introducing of
and
an affection of
tyranny
over
the understandings
As this
quote
indicates,
the
lowest
of
Bacon's
classes of
good, the
conservative
good,
or good of
enjoyment,
men
founder of the empire of man over have in fame, honor and the subjection
men's minds.
Bacon
and
23
as
if he
pitied
As Bacon
says elsewhere:
There is implanted in
compassion,
ordinance
certain
man
by
nature even
itself
to
noble
and
excellent
spirit
of
that
extends
itself
the
brutes
which
are
subject
with
to
his
command.
analogy
by
the
most
true,
worthy
is,
it has.
of
Baconian charity,
these
of
the
Baconian scientist,
with
evidently
must
combine snythesis
5
the spirit of
domination. A
Promethean
qualities
along
with
Herculean,
the
courage4
something like
grand passion of
generosity discussed
by
the
Soul.
and
Both Bacon
powers to
be
wrought
by
have
those
to
be
matched
by
correspondingly
who were
in the
souls of those
men
to
powers.
But
is
And
is
The beneficence
to
of the
project
for
increasingly
rashness.
be matched,
and
matched,
by
its
An
open-minded
the
principles
underlying
called
for.4 6
the
project
the
it
would seem to
be
'Speech
The
at
the
Massachusetts Institute
of
Houghton Mifflin
Effects in Modern
and
"Fifty
Years
Hence"
Adventures,
Plato
and
1932.
2
The
common,
Socratic,
element
in
the
philosophies
of
Aristotle is discussed in my "Socratic and Non-Socratic Philosophy: a Note on 14," The Review of Metaphysics, Septem Xenophon's Memorabilia 1.1.13 and
ber, 1974,
3
pp.
85-88.
the
most
Unfortunately, in
other
widely
read
English translation,
Spedding's,
as
among
inaccuracies,
vincitur,
"conquered,"
is
usually
translated
probably misled by the imperatur of aph. 129. See of Liberal Arts Ed., The New Organon, ed. F. H. Anderson, p. 19, lines Library 18 and 19; p. 29, line 8; and p. 39, aph. 3. 4 New Organon, (hereafter designated asiV.O.), I, aph. 98.
"commanded."
Spedding was
sThe
refutation, or
rejection of
the natural
24
tried
Interpretation
in different
Meditation
ways.
Cf.
Descartes'
"genium
malignum"
aliquem
in Meditation
annihilated''
and
VI, 76
7;
and
77:
Hobbes'
"feigning
the
world
to
be
in De
and Leviathan, chap. 13, where it is shown why the is intolerable: John Locke, Essay Concerning Human Understanding, Book I; and Essay Concerning Civil Government, chap, v, where
Corpore,
of
chap.
"condition
nature"
(compared
with
labor)
contributes
to the
value of
things
from l/10th
to
Spinoza, Ethics, Part I, Appendix: and G. W. F. Hegel, Phdnomenologie des Geistes, Hoffmeister ed., 1952, Einleitung, pp. 66-68; Baillie trans., pp. 135-37. Cf. Jacob Klein, Greek Mathematical Thought and the Origin of Algebra (M.I.T. Press, 1968) pp. 72-74 and 117-21; Leo Strauss, What is Political Philosophy? (Free Press, 1959), "Political Philosophy and and "On Classical Political Philosophy"; and Laurence Berns, "Rational Animal Political Animal:
History"
Nature
and
and
Politics,"
Essays in Honor of
knowledge
Book vi, chap. 2, represent 6Aphorisms, Bacon wrote in De Augmentis. as and incomplete, fragmentary thereby inviting the reader to
.,
contribute and
nThe
N.O.,
in
in
Book
I,
aph.
70. Francis
Bacon"
Cf. Paolo
Rossi,
"Truth
and
Utility
Arts
and
the
Science
of
in
the
Early
Modem
Era
(Harper
in The Phenomenon
usual term
Jonas, "The Practical Uses of of Life (Harper & Row, 1966), pp. 188-210, esp.
rendered
Hans
section v.
Bacon's
Spedding as
10
and
"logic."
by
Heath,
The Works of Francis Bacon, (hereafter designated Works), Spedding, Ellis eds. (London, 1875, seven volumes), vol. iv, p. 412.
Book
'AT.O.,
In
names
II,
aphs.
16
and
7.
condemns
aphorisms
60
and
15 Bacon
He
the
the use
generally
in
mind.
accepted
seems
to
have Aristotle's
of
But
1
notions
from
category
quantity
are
among
those
condemned.
3Cf. Plutarch's
In Book
Lives.
.,
Nicias, XXIII.
De Augmentis.
.
14
III,
chap.
of the
.,
48
of
N.O.,
Book II.
to search
These
out
aphorisms
dealing
with superstitious
philosophy
never or
the
failure
the
15In
tion."
the center of
was
Book I (N.O.).
evidently
Works,
best
vol.
Ill,
235-41. Cf.
what
Ellis'
be
by Bacon, but corresponding term is "direc Preface, ibid., pp. 201-05. This may
published
the
place to
study
Bacon
means
by
the remark
rule."
"that
which
in
contemplation
is
as
the cause
is in
operation as the
Rossi, Francis Bacon, from Magic to Science (London: Routledge and Paul, 1968), pp. 193-201; and Mary B. Hesse, "Francis Bacon," in A Critical History of Western Philosophy, ed. D. J. O'Conner (Free Press of Glencoe, 1964), chap. 8.
Paolo
Kegan
(N.O., I,
aph.
3.)
Cf.
Bacon
16
1
and
the Conquest
of Nature
25
NO., Book II, aph. 2. 7Cf. on "simple NO., Book II, aph. 5 and Descartes, Direction of the Mind (Ingenii), Rule 12. For Bacon's influence on
natures,"
A.
1
Lalande,
Cf. De
"Sur
quelques
textes
de Bacon
et
de
Descartes,"
Revue de Cf.
Metaphysique
et de Morale, May, 1911, pp. 296-311. Augmentis..., Book III, chap. 4, on "Abstract Laurence Berns, An Introduction to the Political Philosophy of Bacon. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Chicago, 1957, Appendix 175-78 and pp. 193-94. Cf. Rossi, op. cit, p. 202. 1 De Augmentis Book III, chap. 4, and Book IV, end; in Works,
.
Physics."
Francis
and pp.
.,
.,
vol.
IV,
pp.
347
and
404.
aph.
20BookI,
But
of
104.
op.
op.
cit,
note note
5,
above, Part
Lalande,
cit,
17,
above, pp.
.
Descartes'
announcement of sensible
(in Rules.
.,
no.
12)
"
interpretation
phenomena
in
words which
"reproduce
nearly
and
word
for
word a passage
from
the
Valerius Terminus.
and esp. and
23N.O.,
Preparative
Hans
Book
II,
aphs.
8, 45, 46,
a
and
47;
Book
I,
aphs.
96
98;
vii.
and
[Parasceve]
to
Natural
Experimental
History,
aph.
Cf.
Jonas,
Cf.
..
"The Scientific
Technological
Revolution,"
in Philosophical
pp.
(Prentice-Hall, 1974),
edition
of
63-65.
Henry Pemberton,
.),
(editor
of
the
third
Newton's
Principia
the
Introduction,
of
where
View of Sir Isaac Newton's Philosophy (London, the importance for Newtonian science of Bacon's
obstructions
1728),
critique
prejudices
and
impeding knowledge
and
and
his
treatment of
induction
2
are stressed.
24N.O.,
Book
I,
aphs.
Ellis'
96
and
80;
De Augmentis in
.,
Book
p.
III,
chap.
6.
5See ibid.,
and
notes to
the same
Works,
vol.
I,
577.
26N.O., 21N.O.,
28
Book
Book
I, I,
aph.
113. 91.
aph.
Thoughts
vol.
and
American Edition
of
Observations, (Cogitata et Visa), translated in the Montagu Bacon's Works (Philadelphia, 1855, vol. I), p. 434; original
p.
in
Works,
Ill,
Bacon
more
(University
literal
of
Chicago Press,
(Liverpool Masculine
589 ff. Cf. F.H. Anderson, The Philosophy of Francis 1948), p. 38. The translation in Montagu is
in The
Philosophy
and
of Francis
also
Bacon,
of
Benjamin Farrington
translations
of
which
contains
"The
of
"Refutation
the
Philosophies."
See A Tale of a Tub, With Other Early Works, 1696-1707, ed. Herbert Davis (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1965), p. 156. Although Swift is, in general, a partisan of the ancients, he seems to have accepted, in this book at least, Bacon's
characterization
29
of
as
Aristotle's philosophy
who,
of
"contentious."
as
regarded
Bacon
"valiant"
because he dared
according
to
to challenge the
ruling
of
philosophy,
Aristotle,
"Prince
chap.
Plato's
also
Philosophers"
place as
Swift, had usurped (ibid., p. 144) (Gulliver's Travels, Part IV, chap. 8; cf.
Part III,
8).
26
Interpretation
Cowley (London, 1721). Terminus, cap. 26, in Works, vol. Ill, p. 252: and N.O., Book I, aph. 90. Cf. Aristotle's Politics, Book II, chap. 8; Thomas Aquinas, S.T., MI, Q. 97, A. 2; and Strauss, op. cit., note 5, above, pp. 221-22; et al. 33See Berns, op. cit, n. 18, above; and Howard B. White, Peace Among the Willows: The Political Philosophy of Francis Bacon, (The Hague, Nijhoff, 1968). 34 Book I, chap. 44. Cf. Rossi, op. cit, pp. 109-16. Discourses 3sCf. White, op. cit., note 32, above, the chaps, entitled, "Of Island esp. for the comparison with The Tempest, and "The Old and the New
32
30N.O., 1
3
Valerius
.,
Utopias,"
Atlantis";
see
also
Philosophy,
36
eds.
in History of Political White's chap., "Francis Leo Strauss and Joseph Cropsey, (Rand McNally, 1972).
Bacon"
contrast to Hierusalem, (the way Jerusalem is spelled in the New Atlantis), the good-peace in contrast to the holy-peace (from the Greek hieros)? 7These things are said explicitly only of the Jews.
Is it in
8N.O.,
9More
Book
than
and
I,
aph.
89.
after
350
years
the
publication
of
the
Novum
Organum,
Maxwell's
Rutherford's successor, the Cavendish Professor of Physics, writes, "Physics, indeed, should recognise that it is not in any useful sense the
that
fundamental science, since that peculiarity its laws are, we believe, applicable in
which makes
it
fundamental,
of exclusive
such
the
fact
sciences
investigate,
on
is
achieved
by
adopting
of
attitude
concen
tration
certain
approved
aspects
which
the phenomena,
as prevents
the
development
of a scheme
by
principle can
be
translated
into
practice."
Indeed,
of
the
claim of
fundamental
with
physics
that
it is
"seeking
out the
Basic Truth
the
Universe"
is found to be
pretentious."
Reconciling
Press, 1972),
Old
science
Physics
pp.
See A.B.
Pippard, F.R.S.,
Lecture (Cambridge
University
35
and
37.
questions seem to
be opening
Is the very
quest
for
fundamental
even old
"slightly
pretentious"?
Good
and
Evil,
aph.
205.)
op.
contenders?
cit, note 5, above, pp. 23-25 Liberalism Ancient and Modem (Basic Books, 1968).
40Cf. 41Cf.
Leo
Strauss,
"An
Epilogue"
in
use of the ambiguity of the word fortune in his "architecture (Advancement of Learning, Book II), and his attack on the classical subordination of art to nature, its breeding a "premature despair in human
Bacon's
of
fortune,"
enterprises."
Works,
vol.
IV,
.
pp.
.
294-95. Cf.
Book
also
NO.,
Book
I,
aphs.
75
and
78.
42Cf.
4 44
also
De Augmentis.
IV,
chap.
1.
Advancement of Learning, Book II. Works, vol. I, p. 758. See Bacon's Wisdom of the See notes 5 and 40, above.
Ancients,
no.
26.
27
THREE CONCEPTS OF FREEDOM:
KANT
-
HEGEL
MARX
MIECZYSLAW MANELI
Queens College, CUNY
We have
nearly every
the
political
movement,
to appear
age
and even
churches seek
be
partisans of
freedom. No
one admits
being
in which, paradoxically,
lack
even
of
motherhood;
the majority suffers from oppression and a basic human rights. Freedom today is like everyone favors it, at least verbally. Nevertheless people
the
today are being persecuted, imprisoned, and tortured in freedom. Five to six centuries ago, the love of neighbor
the tormentors of the Inquisition to
persecution of creative minds.
embellish
the name
was used
of
by
justify
the
world
Today,
The
idea
the
chains
of
slavery.
us remember
that after
all
It
would
it necessary intellectual
to praise
freedom in
it
there to
to restrict
also are
easy for
are so
idea is
of
freedom;
many
freedom
are
that there
even confusion as
its elementary
represent
Kant, Hegel,
three
Marx
three
to
authors
whose
of
philosophies
contributions
the
evolution
the
idea
of
freedom.
Within
less
than
sophisticated
theories of
hundred years these three very freedom were elaborated. They represent
a
of civilization.
three stages
in
the
one
of
evolution
They
are
qualitatively
In
different from
most
writings evidence.
another,
these
yet at
they
are related.
authors,
Hegelian
other,
Aufhebung
is in
other,
Their ideas
complement each
they
deny
in
each
they
because
eternally
becomes
unimportant and
the case of
Marx
of
fundamental
questions
the
try philosophy
to answer the
of
28
Interpretation
problem
freedom. The
not
did
them,
way and they list. They arrive at the theoretical limitations queries to the old as Hegel observed, one who approaches previously established, but the frontier has in fact already passed beyond it.
conclusive,
pose
the
questions
in
a new
The three
authors
are
among
fact,
Marx
Kant's theory
on
of
freedom,
generally is
Hegel
and
dismissed
as unrealistic and of no
other
significance.
the
hand
are
among
the
in Western
are are
academic
centers;
while of
whereas
in Communist
countries
they
acclaimed
officially
being flagrantly
misinterpreted.
They
freedom in the West, as partisans of dictatorship, violence, and bureaucracy. They are accused of every vice inimical to the very foundations of freedom. These three thinkers have made a truly historic contribution to the philosophy of freedom. Without it, the modern, rationalistic concept of freedom would not have developed as it has and the mere notion of freedom would have been poorer. Many contemporary philoso phers will not admit that Kant, Hegel, and Marx have been sources of their intellectual endeavors because such an intellectual heritage is looked upon with disfavor by so many. It is the more urgent therefore to vindicate the historical truth, to a certain extent at least.
branded
as
adversaries
Kant's
concept
of
law,
and morality.
freedom is central to his theories of politics, Many of his ideas are open to various interpre
an
tations,
leading
on of
to
ever-growing
One
philosophical
and
political
literature
analysis
the subject.
thing
of
seems
to
be indisputable: An
start
with
Kant's
concept
freedom
should
his
distinction concerning
that man
the
dual
nature of
the
is
The
phenomenal
human
being
As
is
is
subject to the
laws
He is
part of the
a physical
being man
cannot
rightly be
free.
is
"thing-in-itself."
But
man
also a of choice.
He is
he has freedom
most
important
and
29
concept goes so of
feature
man's
of
freedom is
as
far
to
say
a
that
freedom is
acquired.
For
human
any
being
the will of
other
he is
not
dependent upon
Freedom is independence
tends to exist with the
sole original
the
compulsory
of all
will of
another; and
in
so
far
as
it
freedom
inborn right
belonging to
law,
it is
the one
humanity.1
Because
man
is born
to
free,
it follows
"innate
man,"
which consists of
by
others to
anything
he may
also of
reciprocally bind
virtue
them.
It is consequently the
inborn quality
own master
by
of which
he
ought to
be his
Because freedom is
that man also
man
as an
"birthright,"
Kant writes,
justness"
has "the
one
quality
of
attributable to a no
unimpeachable
natural
right,
own
wrong
to
any
prior
to
his
In this
juridical idea
defended,
of
the presumption of
concept of
innocence.
freedom
on
as a
action what
the
freedom of contract also from the idea birthright: "there is also the innate right of common part of every man, so that he may do towards others
infringe
are
one of
does
not
away anything
. .
that
is
theirs unless
they
of
willing
it
We
observe
those
coincidences
which
are
so
characteristic
Kant's
philosophy:
He draws
conclusions
corres
ponding
juridical
experience
from
influenced in any way by the external pure reason, allegedly world of phenomena. The ancient Greeks and Romans already knew
that
in
order of
rationally
each
to enter
are
into
a civil contract
the
equality
and
free
will
partner
presumed.
They
also
knew
that an
organized
society
could not
function
innocence. In
regimes of
criminal
terroristic
consistently
followed, but
to
it is
all
never
wholly denied
society
as a whole nor
indiscriminately
its
members.
30
Kant is
right when
Interpretation
he
combines
freedom
in
with
the
presumption of
individual innocence.
procedure,
In
practice,
political
life
and
juridical
together.
pro
however,
these two
ideas do
of
History
knows many
examples
regimes
officially
presumption of
innocence, but
at the
same time
democratic liberties
other
to a nullity.
should also
On the
hand,
be
limited because it is subject to reason. As controlled by reason, freedom cannot be identified with license or unbridled desire. rational According to Kant, freedom can be conceived only as
freedom,
Kant
reason.
"laws,"
"requirements,"
that
is,
subject
to
the
and
of
reason; it is the
freedom
calls man
free
by
fact
this
that
he has
of
the power of
Nathan
Rotenstreich
aspect
freedom
the
"cosmological
cosmological
freedom."4
Freedom in the
sense
is independent
of
factors.
that
Reason, Kant
which
writes
faculty
proved
of reason establishes
transcendental
freedom,
of
he
also
calls
freedom in
of practical
Freedom
by
the
apodictic
law
is
the
keystone
the whole
system
of pure
There
God, immortality,
and
only idea of speculative reason whose for this idea is revealed in the moral law.
Kant's
To
the
avoid
are three basic elements freedom. But freedom is the possibility we know a priori,
explanation of
is
as
follows:
when
having
anyone
imagine
that there
is
an
inconsistency
freedom is
reader
will only remind the only condition under which that, though freedom is certainly the ratio essendi of the moral law, the latter is the ratio cognoscendi of freedom. For had not the moral law already
been
distinctly
thought
in
our
reason,
we would
never
freedom,
even though
it is
not self-contradictory.
freedom,
the moral
law
would
never
have been
in
The
is
most
important
an
conclusion to
be drawn from
and
these thoughts
attribute
of
that
freedom,
also
indispensible
inalienable
mankind,
is the foundation
31 imperatives
would
Without freedom
make no sense.
the
categorical
and
practical
A reasonable
he
can
man knows what he should do and once he knows it, do it. This Kantian conclusion has spawned many misunder
standings.
can."
Very
you
often
it is
expressed
in
the sentence,
"ought implies
Kant
If
wanted to express a
very
simple
system:
have
one
duty,
you can
carry it
If, however,
is
ordered
by
duty
instead. He
who acts
according
even
to
his
categorical
imperative)
is
free,
if he is
by
the
For
Kant,
"can"
means
the
capability
occur
of
the
free
as
will;
it does
any
in
Kant's
freedom,
something
which
belongs
point
noumena, is truly
empirical
abstract.
From the
of view
traditional
potential relations.
philosophy, it is also subjective. Kant regards freedom as a existing in every individual rather than as a reality in social
His
concept of
but depends
Freedom
on subjective
of
of
human activity
of
the will
the true
freedom
the
individual.
was
According
rejuvenated
during
when
Renaissance
and the
Enlightenment,
an
individual is free
talents.
not
he can act according to his desires, will, True human freedom must be expressed in social activity
and
and
limited to the process of thinking, even the most rational. This is the basic deficiency of Kant's philosophy of freedom: He does not bind freedom to free human activity. His concept of freedom is theoretical, whereas the chief problem of freedom is practical: how to free people to do good deeds. Nevertheless, Kant tries to draw political conclusions from his concept of freedom.
Kant
writes
that
even
the
most
absolute
ruler
is interested in
wants
preserving freedom
the
real
situation subjects.
because he
and
to
the opinions of
preservation
of
know his
the
Therefore,
of
the
freedom
conscience,
and publication
in
32
Interpretation
and under
every country
the need
every form
of government. reason
for
This
approach
demonstrates
itself.
impractical
thinking
ent
was.
History
knows many
of their of
wholly indiffer
to
the
true
opinion
though
they may
If despotic
thereby have
other
remained
ignorant
existing
in
such
situation.
know
to
what
is going
their countries,
as
they
use and
gather
information,
speech
secret
police
and
and a
argued
being
a
misinformed.
could
be
is right
that reason
requires
freedom
or
of
thought, speech,
press:
but everybody
in reality only in
knows
rights
more
reason alone.
country.
Rulers
not motivated
by
not
it became in
the
following
His
conclusions
were
been
is
balance
political terror
Despotic
and
terroristic
governments
must suppress
intellectual freedom
of control. government
as an essential part of
any
comprehensive system
There
can of course
be brief
and
may
tolerate
free
free
press;
such a regime
might
even
tolerate
free
speech
more than
freedom
of
association.
Every
ically
may
allow
limited forms
of criticism as a
safety
valve.
But,
as
shows,
be
by
intellectual freedom
nourished
they
the
might
is
an
illusion possibly
"enlightened"
by
Kant's
for
History
have
always
been
his
many
more
unenlightened
despots
an
than
enlightened.
Notwithstanding
on on
impracticality however,
Kant had
impact
and
morality,
and even
July 23, 1943, Kurt Huber, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Munich, Germany, was executed. He was condemned
for
the crime of high treason against Hitler's regime.
statement
On
In his final
to the
judges
of
the
People's
Court, he
33
opposition to
Kant's philosophy
as
the
the
Nazis:
I deem it to be
...
not
also
my
moral
duty to speak
awaken
out against
political
misconduct.
...
It had been my
conditions, to
endeavor
appeal
to
the student
body
to an awareness of
clear-cut ethical of man.
what
...
existing
principles, to a politics of right, to a preservation of the dignity I have asked myself with a view to Kant's categorical imperative,
subjective one maxims of mine would were
would
universal
to
be be
made
answer:
There
be
order, security,
raised
confidence
against
will
in
our government.
Every
morally
right,
the
of
of
morally
good,
against
the
all
wanton
self-determination
of
principalities
over
the
the
rights
inhuman
fostering
of
relationships
distrust of man against man so that the very foundation of human has been undermined and neither father nor neighbor feels secure
before his
son.
Every
external
legislation
reaches
its
ultimate
limitation
immorality,
return
to
to the
treason.
am
jeopardizing
my
. .
through
am
convictions
my life with this defense of my inner convictions. I have acted I in accordance with the dictates of that inner voice.
. .
accepting
the
consequences
of
my actions, accepting
restored
the
responsibility
therefor.
released
to
our
people, that
that
they be
from
slavery.
...
am
convinced
. . .
the relendess
course of
my willing
and acting.
This
same
example
still
are.
At the
never
time,
this
moving
extended
beyond
a narrow circle of
intellectuals.
the
Kurt
Huber
remained
free in
Kantian
sense
till
the
last
is
of
moment of
his life. He
of
was murdered as a
this
the
paradox
Kant's
subjective,
purely intellectual,
view
freedom. follower of the tradition of subjective drew the most amazing political freedom. It concept of subjective freedom: a slave can be conclusions from the freer than his master, provided that he has been liberated from his passions. St. Augustine argues that it is better to be a slave of one
It
would seem was
that
Kant is
St. Augustine
who
34
Interpretation
master
(human)
than
of
was used
for immediate
serfs, servants,
reason
political
purposes
centuries:
to rebel against
Kant's
than
those
his
contemporaries,
counterparts.
According
foundation
to
Kant,
the
idea
of
freedom
be
placed
at
the
of
the constitution of
by
a government.
The ideal
THE
should
state and of
constitution
allowing
TO
THE
with
GREATEST
POSSIBLE
HUMAN
FREEDOM
in
IS
accordance
laws
by
which
FREEDOM
EACH
MADE
BE
do not speak of follow of itselfit is at any rate a necessary idea, which must be taken as fundamental not only in first laws."7 projecting a constitution but in all its Kant understands that this ideal will not be reached without obstacles. These obstacles do not necessarily arise out of human nature, but rather out of previous legislation. No true philosopher would argue that the ideal is unattainable because of adverse previous experience. If there has been such bad experience, then Kant argues, we should be even more energetic in our endeavors to harmonize legislation and government with the ideal.
CONSISTENT WITH THAT OF ALL OTHERS-I
the greatest
happiness, for
this will
Kant
writes a
that
he
would
be
prepared to accept
Plato's ideal
as
his
punishment
would
therefore
this
ideal
but he insists
have an archetype, a standard against which to measure all laws and governments. It is possible to existing improve laws and governments. No one after all can say how wide the chasm should be between the ideal and reality. No one can say where the development of human nature and its perfectibility will
that we should
stop.
Because
of
"that it is in
limit."8
the
power of
freedom
and the
beyond any
and
every
specified
an
It is
obvious that
ideal
of political
freedom. The ideal should be an reality absolute between the freedom of each and the freedom of harmony all. But he knows that reality is far from the ideal. Kant distinguishes various levels of perfection of actual freedom. The ideal of freedom is unchangeable; the reality of freedom however is always in a state
of transformation.
freedom
35
for the Hegelian dialectics freedom was easily transformed into the absolute idea; the rest depends on logic and profound studies of the historical realities. This historical task was performed
of
freedom. Kant's
a priori
idea
of
by Hegel.
II
There
are
fervent
adversaries of world.
as well as
in the Eastern
Hegel's philosophy in the Western Even now, a hundred and fifty years
his death, Hegel is still attacked as a living antagonist. Such animosity usually is founded on preconceived ideas and simple
after
ignorance. One
wrote about powerful
might
say
a
Paul Sartre
and
enemies
passionate
them without
enthusiasm.
Bertrand
wrote:
Russell
was
attuned
when
of
Anglo-Saxon
Essays"
prejudices and
ignorance
in
one of
his "unpopular
he
metaphysics
that true
liberty
consists
in
obedience to an
arbitrary
that the
authority, that
free
speech
is
an
evil, that
absolute when
monarchy is good,
Prussian
and that would
best existing at
. .
the time
he
wrote, that
war
is good,
international
misfortune.
organization
for
disputes
be
What he
admired
order, system,
regulation and
intensity
of governmental control.
Nearly
Hegel's
every
word of
Russell's
evaluation
is incorrect.
during
the
1920s
Hegel's philosophy
philosophers
gained
associ
an
officially
with
sponsored popularity.
The Soviet
ated and
Deborin vigorously promoted Hegelian studies. Deborin his friends often quoted Lenin's famous statement that without
serious
study
and
understanding
one
of
of
the
Hegelian dialectic it
would
be
impossible truly
Hegel became
Hegel's dialectic
to understand
Das Kapital.
victims of
the
nor
first
the
Stalinism in
the
1930s.
endure
his
views
could
It
was
gave
interpretation
of
Hegel's
philosophy
expresses
in the 1930s. He stated that Hegel Prussian Junkers, militarists, and expan-
36
sionists.
Interpretation
He
considered
Hegel's
the
philosophy
to
be
reaction one
to
of
absolutism,
feudalism,
and
French Revolution.
Every
Stalin's It
both Russell
and
Stalin
regarded
Hegel
as
the
propounder
very many
and
evils,
including
almost same
Nazism,
The
the
against which
antipodes
struggling.
about
Russell
Stalin spoke
antagonists
Hegel in
to
same
manner.
come
the
conclusion,
are mistaken.
There
are
good reasons
why
the
the
knights
of
the
kingdom
of
darkness,
in
East
and
in
non-Communist
countries,
closet
wish
to
of oblivion.
too great
for
East
the
minds
of
present-day
politicians
and
in the West.
writes
Hegel
freedom
They
their
think that
they
are
free
when
they
according
of
to
impulses. The
to
most
frequently
in
this way,
repeated
definition
ability
those to
freedom,
what we
according
please.
Hegel, is
thinks
of
that
freedom is
Why?
what
the
do
One
who
Hegel argues,
reveals who
"an
utter
immaturity
freedom
of social
thought."10
Because
identify
with
the
of
ability
right,
to
do
they
of
please
disregard
the nature
life,
of
morality,
law,
everyday
life. Freedom
and an
must
be
connected
understanding,
responsibility,
development.
In
this
way
Hegel
approached
one
of
his
most
important
statements, namely, that freedom is necessity understood; hence there are two elements in freedom: the subjective and the objective. Man can be free not from the laws of nature, but thanks to the laws of nature. The more he understands, the less he is subject to the
caprices
control.
of
the
external
world.
When
man
understands,
he
can
The
history
of
of
mankind
knowledge. Hegel
"progress
Idea
of
therefore
the
consciousness
is
the
of
acquisition
of
He
"The
freedom
...
is
history."1 2
Whenever Hegel
people
writes about
history, he
their
means the
own
who struggle
history
of the
interests,
passions,
37
ambitions.
Every
individual
tries
to attain
his
own
goals,
but
he
achieves
political and
architects
material
usually is contrary to his intentions, particularly in social life. People build their future in the same way
use
the
forces
provided
by
nature.
The
result
forces of nature, against the violence of rains, floods, winds, and fire. The situation is similar in society: people develop law and order but ultimately these measures work against them. The
against
the
history
of
of mankind
is: "the
happiness
States,
individuals have
been
that
3 of mankind,
Such is the
the
history
of
according
to
Hegel. He
means
freedom was a product of battles in the social jungles, where freedom was hardly a welcome guest. On the other hand, whenever happiness prevailed, history was uneventful. As a matter of fact, periods of happiness are blank pages; they are the periods of harmony. The contribution of these periods to the idea of freedom is minimal. Whenever people feel satisfied and happy, they discontinue struggling and their energy drops; their imagination decreases. Most
idea
energetic are
unhappy
prevailing
evil
is
ideas
We
which
now
have
is
part of
Hegel's
general
dialectic. dialectic is
in is
The
of
essence
of
the struggle of
antithesis.
forces. A
appear
thesis exists
its
The forces
other.
are
antagonistic,
but
without
the
It
would
that
absolute
difference between light and darkness, but in reality the existence of darkness would be impossible without light. One cannot see darkness or in absolute light. It is the anything, either in absolute
same
with good
and
evil.
The
existence
of good
presupposes
the
existence of
evil,
Without
evil people
the existence of
of
the
good
would
be
senseless.
Without the
existence
of
sin
the
be
unnecessary.
A kingdom
heaven does
the
purgatory
and
hell. And
were
finally,
free
idea
of
was
elaborated
because
is
people
not
and
did
of
not
history
of mankind
the
history
of
the
development
the
38
idea
the
of
Interpretation
freedom,
say
with
the same
justification
of
that
of
history
of mankind
is the
history
of various
kinds
slavery,
of
unfreedom.
In every
successive epoch
forms
and
of
slavery,
unfree-
more
sophisticated
refined.
The ideas
of
freedom therefore also became more developed and refined. Hegel feels that in his epoch the people finally began to understand the idea of freedom and that in his philosophy of freedom, the idea
found itself. There are philosophers who argue that Hegel his own system of philosophy as a closed one. They cannot be right. Hegel's dialectical method can never be regarded as closed. Although Hegel did not wish to predict the future it would accord with the spirit of his dialectical method to state that in the future gigantic struggles between the idea of freedom and the forces of
finally
regarded
This
of
be
to
resolved.
The already
If
idea
to
freedom, according
this
Hegel,
into
the
as we
is the
wish
essence of the
history of mankind.
statement more
one
translate
would
comprehensible acclaimed
language,
and
one
have
to
say
that
individual freedom is
societies,
highly by
of
individuals,
nations.
Freedom is
always
a process
fighting for freedom, of the struggle for its own expansion in the face of forces which, consciously or unconsciously, oppose it vigorously. Freedom is a way of life and of struggle ; it is the expansion of human
possibilities
and powers.
It is
way
of
operating in
order
to make
maximum use of an
individual's
find freedom, Hegel argues, in a non-societal state be nonsense to think that savages could be free. Hegel writes: "The savage is lazy and is distinguished from the educated man by his brooding When Hegel writes about savages, the word should not be interpreted in the narrow sense of the savage who lived in primitive
A
man cannot
of nature.
It
would
stupidity."14
"savage"
society
is any
thousands
of years
ago.
savage
is any
In
person who
is
not
educated
up
to the
level
of our civilization.
other
words,
a savage
his subjectivity
with
objective
possibilities,
species
of
his
unreasonable
wishful
thinking
with
reality.
This
disappeared by any means. brooding is in and for itself injustice, for the essence of "Slavery humanity is freedom; but for this man must be When will man mature? According to Hegel, that will happen in the very distant
not yet
mature."15
stupidity has
39
will mature with
future. He will mature and the forms him in an endless historical process.
Will
of
freedom
he
become
happier
when
he becomes
more
educated,
civilized,
and mature?
One
well
could argue that there are misfortunes and sorrows which are
known
to our civilized
society
to savages.
Consequently
alleged
it
would
be better for
man
to remain
ignorant. This
is merely negative, Hegel writes: "While freedom is essentially positive, it is only the blessings conferred by affirmative freedom that are regarded as such in the highest grade of conscious
advantage
ness."16
This
is
one
of
of
the
most
important
contributions
of
Hegel's
philosophy
freedom,
not
that
freedom is essentially
activity
not of
blessings
Freedom
consist of affirmative
in isolation from
around
does
consist
erecting
walls
spheres
influence separating one person's sphere from that of his neighbor, as is argued in the Kantian philosophy of freedom. This is the basic
and
of
one should
the
problems
freedom from
any
The
of
extent of
freedom,
at
stage of the
historical development
society,
is
determined
by
subjective
conditions;
and
by
the
relations;
by
the
consciousness of
ing, beliefs,
and prejudices.
External superiority in power can achieve no enduring results: Napoleon could not coerce Spain into freedom any more than Philip II could force Holland into
slavery.
This
observation
of
Hegel
either
has been
underestimated
or
forgotten;
life
of our us
it is
key
to
understanding many
this
day.
Let
try
the
to
penetrate
observation:
The
reality
a
which
determines
of
historical
content and
limits
the
of
freedom is
of of
totality
of
objective
and
subjective
elements,
plus
that
is,
the
economic,
the
political, people,
and
social
conditions
way
thinking
emotions,
their
inclinations,
their
obsessions,
their
preju
dices,
ability
fears
Economic
welfare and
poverty
also
influence
40
popular
Interpretation
thinking, but in
and
various
directions, for
and against
freedom,
for
progress
even
more
for conservatism, if not reaction. One could put it bluntly: If the people who are given a free choice in a
universal election
do
will
they
will end
up
with a
government extend
that
help
and
to create the
people
conditions required
to
the scope of
to evaluate
freedom. If
the
do
judgment
of
reality be delimited and they must wait a long time for the next step in the historical process that might again foster the dialectical evolution of freedom.
changing
material
possibilities, the
freedom,
its
contents
frontiers,
must
assert that Catholic Spain could not have been be free? The reason is that the people of Spain did not understand and did not want to understand the reality of their own did not think freely and creatively because they had condition; they become accustomed to autocratic dogmas and did not feel the need for change. Every attempt to impose reform and liberty on them was doomed. At the beginning of the 19th century the people of Spain had not been enlightened, they were intellectually and morally
Why
does Hegel
forced
to
primitive.
They
to
were
not
prepared
to
accept
new and
ideas
and
words
"liberty,
to
fraternity"
equality,
them; the
words were
unfamiliar, therefore
them.
empty
and
what
is worse,
perhaps
inimical
People
compelled
or
they
refrain
be from thinking,
cannot
obstacles
fail
to
do so, they
to accept
have
in
which
face
in
attempting
It
was
freedom.
to
not possible
impose slavery
people
the
continued.
Why? Because
a reformation of minds
the
and
Netherlands; because
had
started to
had
think
creatively
which
critically;
they
be
refused
unshakable,
The
same
observation
countries
Hegel
made
to
Communist
countries
today have
authoritarian
apparatus;
party party bosses have the force of law; the is omnipotent; censorship is unlimited. And yet there
and
of
the centralized
degrees
There is
of
slavery, servility,
and
freedom in
and
each
of those countries.
an obvious
exists
difference in
the
the atmosphere
from
that
which
in
Soviet Union
East
Germany. Polish
creative
country.
literature,
and
interesting
of the
than
they
social
are
in any
Why? Because
the
pressures,
moral standards
nation
do
be
in
as
dull, faceless,
Soviet Union
the
and other
Communist
countries.
Polish intellectuals
feel traditionally
Russians
corruption government
Enlightened
West
as
West,
whereas the of
traditionally
and
as
the
hotbed
moral
liberal
decline.
of
The
Poles
never
viewed
their
a source
inspiration.
Up
18th
century
Austrian
when
government.
they had been free, they had favored a weak, limited Afterwards, when they were under Russian, German, or rule, they regarded it their duty to fight the foreign
national
occupier.
This
of
thinking, this
rejection
abhor
of political
rence
supremacy
to
bordering
on all
at
having
is
collaborate,
why Polish
the
reality,
although
essentially
is
the same,
or
is
yet
so
different from
A
person with a
Bulgarian
realities.
the
ability
It is
to choose who
for stupidity is
silk clothing.
not
free but
brooding
savage even
well
if he
be dressed
in
known
is
His
8
Welt,"
incorrectly
limits
any
the
God
quoted.1
Hegel
be
possible to put
to the
brutal
form
state.
passions and
deeds
and
of
the
people.
There
must
be
deify deify
specific
the
state
of
Prussian
Every form
the
Hegel, is limited in its efficiency and cannot be state, according eternally reasonable. The best form of the state is the one which
coincides with the social relations.
When these
relations
change,
and
such a process
is inevitable,
was
state
which
once
The
and must
"aufgehoben,"
means
the
a
Every
form
state,
according
The
state
to
Hegel, is only
moment
in
the
history
of mankind.
42
realization of
Interpretation
freedom, but when some of its forms become hostile to freedom, then, sooner or later, they must be abolished. The state
must
exist,
but
the
government
in
power
has only
relative
and
temporary Freedom, or necessity understood, differs in every country because the reality differs in each and therefore the process of transformation must differ as well. With every understanding and change the process of freedom gains new friends and creates new freedom continues. adversaries; the eternal struggle to preserve
Ill
importance.
What Marx
of
wrote about
freedom
might
be
termed an
Aufhebung
Hegel's
philosophy.
philosophy.
Marx
was
He affirms, continues, and negates Hegel's particularly impressed by Hegel's view that
freedom
has
Marx understands,
Hegel
did,
that
necessary in all previous societies. The most important stages in human development, primitive society, feudalism and capitalism, he
regards as
the stages
in
the
development
of
exploitation, oppression,
free human activity within society. These were not, however, as Hegel implies, different stages in the development of the idea of freedom, because Marx absolutely rejects absolute ideas. For Marx the ideas of freedom developed according to the evolution of
and of
civilization,
of the
economic
bases
and political
institutions
which
and
Engels
it
was
made
the
greatest
contribution
to
the
philosophy
of
freedom because he had established that freedom was necessity understood. They firmly believe that anyone who disregards Hegel's of freedom will fall into the errors of previous times and philosophy then will be obliged to start from the beginning. They reiterate that neither scientific socialism nor modern times can be grasped without a knowledge of Hegel.
In undertaking an analysis of Marx's theory of freedom, we must define his particular contributions which went beyond Hegel's
philosophy.
of
It is
and
also well to
freedom
the primitive
being
promulgated
by
43
own
who
unceremoniously
is especially
falsify
political advantage.
The
that
'situation
complicated with
claims that
theory and practice should be one; he proclaims for a philosopher to explain the world but that he should truly seek to change it. There is an obvious gulf between Marx's predictions concerning the future Communist state and the
philosophy,
political
it is
not enough
practical application of
his
theories
in the 20th
It is
significant
that
the
first
political
and
published censorship.
by
He
Marx
never
problem
They
cannot and
be
the
regarded as products
romanticism were
as
Stalinists
neo-Stalinists
"adult"
usually
to
declare,
for they
many
times repeated
by
of
Marx.
According
on
Marx,
impose
restrictions
freedom
of
conscience, speech,
should not
be
restricted under
any
circumstances.
Every
restriction,
every censorship, is
the
cry
of a
conscience,"
"dirty
have
never
according to Marx. Needless to say, these words been quoted in Communist countries and several attempts
in
the Communist
bloc
was
"heretics."
In
a speech
in his
own
defense,
be
the
the
when
he
tried
for publishing
"It is
the
articles
in
the Neue
the
Rheinische
to
Zeitung,
public
Marx
said:
the
function
mouth
of
press
the
watchdog, eye,
the
tireless
denouncer
of
of
the
rulers,
of
omnipresent
omnipresent
guards
the
spirit
people
that
jealously
its
freedom."19
He is
the
concluded
his
the
"...
those
once and
for
all
it
duty
this
of
to
speak
up for
oppressed
in its
immediate
and
vicinity.
It does
not suffice to
press must
fight
general conditions
the
higher
authorities.
The
decide
to enter the
against
particular
gendarme,
this
procurator,
this
lists district
the
administrator."2
Marx
expressed
these
one year
after
publication of the
speaks the
of
"mature"
Marx,
the
"young"
not
a and
freedom
general.
guarantor
defender
freedom in
the
The
be
"public
watchdog"
"tireless
denouncer"
The
44
press
Interpretation
should
defend
the
weak
against
the
oppression
of
higher
authorities and
its
purview.
that
freedom
the
of
have
He
been
so
drastically
as a
curtailed
after
socialist
revolution?
characterizes
is,
society in
all
the
first
in
stage of
Communism,
"dirt"
society
In
which would
bear
of the past.
"dirt,"
order to
freedom,
civil
liberties, free
of
press and
freedom
assembly,
must
be
expanded,
he insisted.
Whatever Marx's
vision of the
dictatorship
He
have
been,
one
system would
abolition of
seems certain:
by
a
the triumph of
under
censorship
and the
enjoyed
parliamentary democ
and Engels believed despotic bureaucracy.
of
racies.
that
Marx
that the
future
be
centralized,
On
the
1871,
Marx
every
official
had been
any
its
time:
freely
elected
by the
The
cials,
have been
safeguard
recalled at
commune
must
itself
against
own
deputies
to
and
offi
moment.
by 1declaring
them
all,
without
exception,
subject
recall
at
>
any
Marx
Commune had
acquired and
to protect
itself
against
its
own
servants; the
their own
newly
freedoms had
Commune
to
be defended
against
defenders
means:
the
"infallible"
In the
first
at
place, it
the
filled
all
posts
and
educational
by
election on
recall
basis
any time
by
And, in
high
or
low,
were paid
only
wages received
by
effective
barrier
to place
22
Unfortunately,
"infallible"
the two
were of
devices which Marx and Engels regarded as doubtful value. Neither has ever been employed
in any Communist country for a long period. Although we have no direct evidence to judge their efficacy, we have every reason to believe that had these devices ever been consistently tried in Communist countries, they would not have effectively protected the
people against the cancer of a centralized
bureaucracy.
45
inhabitants
to
It is impossible in any
fill
the
thousands
of
administrative,
judicial, legislative,
Such
economic,
farce because
candidates.
be a be familiar with so many no one could conceivably Instant recall is even more likely to lead to the same dead
by
election.
an election would
end
as
Recall,
states.
at the
which
is
now
part
of
the
constitutions
of
Western
officials
"Party-maximum"
level did
and
built up his
him
dictatorship
upon
power-seeking
The
at modest salaries.
in any highly developed industrial countries, as Marx and Engels predict; it did not European, take place in Germany where the workers had a better understanding
socialist revolution
not take place
interest in theory; instead, it succeeded in a country whose majority was illiterate and did not even understand the word theory.
and
Hegelian freedom
for
The
predictions
of
Marx
and
therefore not
had
their
The
real attitude of
Engels towards
freedom is
expressed
in
Communist
away, not,
after the
as
Stalin
Communist
to start
of the
process was
declared, many generations According to Marx and Engels this immediately after the socialist revolution. The
and successors revolution.
of the proletariat was to
his
first
of
day
dictatorship
of
be
the
first
day
the the
the
withering away
of
the state.
Each
day,
functions
state's
the
state
will
be
eliminated
day by day
Ultimately,
all
interference
by
will narrow.
functions
state
institutions
will
be
sent,
as
Engels writes,
the
to the
The
exists,
that
individuals; freedom is
most
so
is its
It is
to
limit
of
freedom
of
withers
away, individual
won.
ironies
history
that the
despotic totalitarian states were built in the name of Marx, who carefully developed a theory of the withering away of the state.
no question that
There is
proclaimed
Marx
democratic liberties
in Western
constitutions
enjoyed
by
the
nations
under parliamentary regimes to be beyond any need of justification. The withering away of the state, for Marx, contains no restrictions upon individual liberties, but rather their maximum expansion. With
46
the
Interpretation
the state, the areas
withering away
of
free
of state
interference
must
inevitably
these
increase.
circumstances,
of
In
political analysis
realized.
An
the political
analysis
of philosophical
truly human freedom will be freedom is not the same as an freedom. Let us therefore go deeper into of freedom. In Anti-Duehring, which was
by
Engels, but
concept
of
corrected
by
Marx,
the
following elaboration
the appreciation of
of
Hegel's
freedom,
and
especially
necessity, is developed:
Freedom does
the
not consist
of these
in
the
dream
in
of
independence
of natural
laws, but
in
knowledge
them
laws,
and
making
means
work
towards a
possibility this gives of systematically Freedom of the will therefore definite end.
the
.
nothing but
with
. . .
the
capacity to
a
make
decisions
knowledge
to a
of
the subject.
man's
judgment is in
definite
question,
the greater
determined.
The first
essentials
Freedom therefore
which
consists
necessity is the content of his judgment in the control over ourselves and
nature
is founded
animals
the
knowledge of natural necessity. from the animal kingdom were in all themselves, but each step forward in
on
. . .
civilization was a
step
toward
freedom.
This is
clear
continuation
of
Hegel's dialectic
of
freedom,
of
freedom's
subjective
being
and
result
of
the
interdependence
person
of objective
and
elements. choice
An
ignorant
on
cannot
are not
be free because
judgment
free. Ignoramuses decisions quickly and usually freely; they live in a world of their own illusions, but they are not free. In order truly to be free one must know reality and by knowledge exercise control over it. To be free, a person must live in a
based
ignorance
their
are
self-confident,
make
own
society in
which
the
results
of
activity
must
conform
with
reasonable
expectations.
To be
free,
person
live
under
circumstances
to
bring forth
the
desired
of
effects.
will
Marx
and
ideal
individual freedom
state and
only
the
be
attained
in
society
without
without
government,
without
vision
private
property,
and
without
wars.
Such is
Marxian
of
the
and
adversaries as
of
Utopian,
the
future.
own social organization
which
Men's
them
.
has hitherto
act of men
stood
in
opposition
to
will
then
become
the
voluntary
47
under
with
forces
of
which
men
themselves.
have hitherto dominated history, will then pass It is only from this point that men,
their own
the
full
consciousness,
social causes
will
fashion
motion
history;
it is only from
set
in
by
have,
increasing
realm of
measure, the
effects
by
necessity into
see,
the realm of
freedom.
As
not
we
for Hegel
and
Marx freedom is
not static.
A free
man
is
he is a social being continually overcoming objective and subjective difficulties along the path of his development. Man is not born free; he may become free. Freedom does not lie in a separation from society; man is not a monad living in a cell separate from all others; he can realize and extend his power over external circum stances only in cooperation with other free people. Freedom is not a subjective feeling, as St. Augustine would have it; freedom is a result
passive;
of
Man
cannot
be liberated by a mechanical transfer from the country of bondage to the kingdom of freedom. Mere institutional, social, and economic changes by themselves cannot truly liberate people. Prior to and
during
liberation
the
minds
of
the
people
which
must
be
reformed
and
in
they
of
decisions
Hegel
that
man
used
the
forces
nature
forces,
build
a
to
individual
a
can
be
is
the master
his
own
being
like
die
which
being
thrown about
destiny by blind,
inscrutable forces.
man
of the
future,
will social
the
free man,
will
be
not
educated, civilized,
moral regard will
disciplined. He
rules
of will
voluntarily
observe
the
norms
and as a
accepted
burden, they
them
not
They
restrict
freedom but be its precondition. In this society man will be able to develop all his natural talents and reasonable inclinations. Not everyone will have the talent of a Raphael or a Leonardo da Vinci, Marx observed, but everyone possessing such a genius will be given an own and the public's benefit. opportunity to develop it for his The gist of Marx's considerations on freedom is:
In Communist society,
where
no
one
has any
exclusive sphere of
activity,
but
48
each
Interpretation
can
be
accomplished
regulated
by
society, thus
another
tomorrow, to
in any branch he wishes, production as a whole is do one thing today and making it possible for me to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in
after
dinner,
in
accordance with
my inclination,
without
or critic.
Marx's
that
division
of
labor
will
disappear in
the
future
society is
On
the
his theory; it is
an obvious
Utopian vestige.
theory should not be overlooked: In order to develop his personality a truly free human should be given more opportunities to use fully all his latent being talents and dormant interests. Marx interpreted social freedom as a liberation of the individual. That individual will be conscious of social needs, he will understand that he must work for society, but not in the sense of self-deprivation or asceticism. The liberated individual would nevertheless remain an individualist and a hedonist. An individual in the future Communist society will on the one hand be disciplined, on the other however he will resemble the intellectual. His way of life will constantly change, together with his profession and his artistic tastes. He will lose private property, but he will have the right to satisfy his reasonable personal drives and desires.
other
hand,
one
aspect
of
this
"anarchistic"
IV
Hegel
ridicules
Kant's philosophy
with
of pure reason.
He
to
compares this
kind
swim
of
knowledge
that
learn how
no
one
to
without
entering
the water.
as
Hegel
writes
that
if
can
know
the
thing-in-itself,
Kant argues, He
be
sure
Kant for
For
having
Hegel,
a
philosophizing,
to
but
not
philosophy. without
that
is
tantamount
teaching how
to make a
table,
or a
chair,
or a
freedom. Hegel's
priori
point of
ideas:
freedom, infinity,
and
of
Eternal
Freedom is abstract,
more
it is
more and
and more
enlightened, according to
Kant; he becomes
more
and
critical,
outgrowing
tutelage,
eventually
49
means.
reaching horizons
of
a of
clearer
understanding
of
what
freedom
The
How similar,
the
understanding incessantly broaden, Kant writes. and yet how different, Hegel sounds when he
of
speaks
history
the
Idea is
of
with
the
and
Absolute
Idea).
It
the
conversely, the
tion of the
history
of
of mankind
is
the
so
history history
of of
mankind
the transforma
Idea
of
Freedom. This is
because
the
the
Absolute Idea is
Freedom
the
demiurge
was
history.
way for
the
It
Kant
Pure Idea
of
in Hegel's The
philosophy. world
fountainhead of the idea of freedom is one of Kant's philosophical foundation stones. This notion was incorporated in Hegel's writings and connected with his ideas on dialectical contradictions. The abstract idea of freedom thus became alive and concrete. Hegel ultimately will forget that his idea of freedom once was an abstract notion and whenever he analyzes it,
supersensuous
being
he does
what
true
historian
should
do, he
of a
analyzes
given
the whole
economic, political,
enlightened
reader
and
cultural
situation
society.
The
of
should
assumptive
use
the
idea
of
freedom
which
and concentrate on
his
how
the
of
societies
manner
struggled
each
in
their
or
own
circumstances
how
in
he
affirms
denies
the
concrete
freedom
historically
notion
of
real
individuals
was realized.
prepared
freedom
and
Marx's
return to
Kant.
Marx begins his considerations on freedom with an analysis developed by Hegel: The notion of freedom has a different meaning in every different social epoch. Hegel asserted that the evolution of the idea of freedom was the cause of the changing social and political relations; according to Marx the ideas of freedom are determined by
those relations,
by
"real,"
"material"
the
basis
of
those relations.
upside
As he
declares,
thereby
to
Marx
turned
down
and
made the
idea
of
freedom
come out
According
periods:
Hegel
the
idea
of
freedom
Greek
went through
oriental
despotism,
German
the
and
tianity,
and
the
societies.
According
freedom
primitive
were
different
communism, slavery,
feudalism,
capitalism,
50
the
Interpretation
future communist society. According to Marx there were two basic philosophies of freedom under every society based on
exploitation:
exploiters.
lacking
class
antag
wither
onisms
and
oppression,
when
law. will
away, the
freedom
all
of each
individual
be
compatible
with
the
freedom
There
external
of
and
"powerless"
(Engels)
will
ideal.
will
be
no
law,
be
no
restrictions
commands;
they
will
be
replaced
by
the
conscious and
will
discipline
of
highly
of
unselfish
members
These
members
of
govern
self-legislation
themselves, ultimately expressing the Kantian ideal (not Hegel's boese Wirklichkeit).
realize
the science of
the
Kantian ideals
that
as
forecast
by
however, doubted
his
optimum state
of self-legislation could
For them
be attained. Marx and Engels had no doubts. future was not a speculative ideal of pure reason,
stage which
but
the
the
inevitable
of
iron laws
reach
in
and
Engels
more
the
non-political,
vicious
Marx asserts,
the
because
It
would of
free
non-antagonistic
easily
overcome
them.
Hegelian
always
will
process
self-realization and
self-preservation
expansion
also
find its
in
the
"museum
antiquity"
of
of
next to the
state,
law,
and religion.
Hegel's theory
and
Marx,
George
and
intermediary between
Kant
Tapley Whitney
and
Inc., 1962),
Ibid.,
p.
253.
Rotenstreich, From Substance to Subject (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1974), p. 34. Immanuel Kant, Critique of Practical Reason, trans, by Lewis White Beck (Indianapolis, New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc., 1956), p. 4.
Nathan
According
a
to
priori,
but
we can
Kant's philosophy we can think the ideas know neither God nor the world. Why
of
God
and
the world
are
not?
Because they
51
of
the
other
side.
of
no
presentation
possibility."
in
consequently
theoretical
proof
of
its
of
of Judgment, Gulik,
p.
383). This
concept
freedom is obviously
according
to
which,
the
logically
freedom
as well as
fact
6
that reason
Erwin De
Haar,
pp.
Hoffnung,
"Kurt
Verlag, 1962),
dem
Immanuel
8
333-34. Trans,
abridged
Huber, Schlusswort
Norman
vor
'Volksgerichtshof'
by
I. E. Previti (manuscript).
trans,
by
Kemp
Smith
Ibid.,
p.
312.
Cambridge
Avineri, Hegel's Theory of the Modem State (Cambridge: University Press, 1972), p. 239. Hegel, Philosophy of Right, trans, by T. M. Knox (Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., 1952), p. 16. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, The Philosophy of History, trans, by J. Sibree (New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1956), p. 19. 12 Ibid., p. 23. 13 Ibid., p. 21. Shlomo Avineri, Hegel's Theory of the Modem State (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1972), p. 132. 15 Ibid., p. 99. 16 Ibid., p. 229.
Shlomo
1 7
Georg
Wilhelm Friedrich
quote
is my own translation from the original German text which reads: "Aeussere Uebermacht vermag nichts auf die Dauer: Napoleon hat Spanien so
als
Philip
II Holland
zur
Knechtschaft
zwingen
koennen."
Welt"
Verlag, 1944),
p.
932.
Theory
to
have
of
of the Modern State. A correct read "It is the way of God in the
state."
be
(literally:
is)
the
What Hegel
meant of
to
say
is
the
"March
God"
on earth or
anything
this nature,
but that the very existence of the state is human arbitrary artefact. (Pp. 176-77).
part of a
divine
strategy,
not a
merely
ed.
Karl Marx, On Freedom of the Press and Censorship, trans, and Saul K. Padover (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1974), p. 142.
20 2 '
by
Ibid.,
p.
144.
Marx & Engels, Basic Writings on Politics & Philosophy , ed. by Lewis S. Feuer (New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., Anchor Books, 1959), p. 360.
22 23
Ibid.,
p.
361.
Frederick Engels,
Anti-Duehring
C. P.
Dutt,
ed., trans,
pp.
by
Emile Burns
(New York: International Publishers Co., Inc., 1970), 24 Ibid., pp. 309-10.
25
125-26.
Karl
Sociology
& Social
Bottomore
95.
Rosary
College
and
The
University
of Chicago
Macbeth:
One
cried
"God bless
us!"
"Amen!"
and
the other,
As they had
seen me with
these
hangman's hands,
"Amen!"
List'ning
their
fear. I
could not
say
us!"
Lady
Macbeth:
Consider it But
not so
deeply.
I
pronounce
Macbeth:
"Amen"?
I had
most need of
blessing,
"Amen"
and
Stuck in my
throat.
A
on
classical
the
"extraordinary
and
Shakespeare
observes
An Encyclopaedia Britannica
only
and
to
Shakespeare in
as
English English
literature,
that
he is
"
[g] enerally
finds
again
regarded
the greatest
novelist."
Thus,
one
again,
in
critical
discussions,
Whatever
of
elevations of
Dickens
heights.1
reservations one no
may have
which
these
assessments,
English
author
enjoyed
during
his
lifetime
came
to
so
Charles Dickens.
Only
who
Shakespeare
Lewis Carroll in
now
created
many
characters
(either in their
names or
taken on a
life
of
their own.
prepared
of
originally for the Works of the Mind Lecture Series, Liberal Education for Adults, The University of Chicago.
dedicated on that occasion, December 12, 1976, to the memory of a who had died that week, Professor Arthur Heiserman of The of University Chicago.) It will be included in Anastaplo, The Artist as Thinker (to be published by Swallow Press of Chicago). The reader is urged, as with my other publications, to begin by reading the
text
without reference
to the notes.
53 Ebenezer
Among
Scrooge,
author's
without
Dickens'
memorable
characters
is,
of
course,
hero of that 1843 tale, A Christmas Carol, one of the best known books. No Christmas among us is complete
the
its
representation
on
stage,
radio and
television,
as well as
in
the
there
are
only
two
Christmas
stories
note, that
of
the
New Testament
even
by
the
been
said that
Dickens has
and good
time."
the modern
Christmas
a
what
it is,
a time
for
feasting
cheer,
"a
p.
good
time:
kind, forgiving,
charitable,
pleasant
(C.C.,
49)2
___
The story of the conversion of Scrooge is familiar. It is the story Spirits" of "a squeezing, of the instructive "haunt[ing] by Three
sinner,"
covetous old
which
a man
"[h]ard
and
sharp
as
flint, from
and
no steel and
had
ever as ari
out generous
fire;
secret,
self-contained,
see our
solitary
hero (on Christmas Eve) disparaging the Christmas spirit in the approaches to him (in turn) of his lively nephew, of two gentlemen soliciting for the poor, of a little boy who tries to sing him a Christmas carol, and of Bob Cratchit (his
oyster."
(C.C.,
pp.
63, 46)
We first
clerk) whom he reluctantly gives the next day as a holiday with pay (but not without the parting injunction, "Be here all the earlier next
morning!"
[C.C.,
few
p.
53]).
one
Within
the
pages,
has
lively
lead
(and permanent)
not yet
awareness of
kind
of
man
aware,
however,
conversion,
of
of
anything in him
conversion which
of
to
his famous
and
follows
of
Scrooge
the ghost
of
his deceased
the
partner, Jacob
Marley,
thereupon
of
Three
Christmas Past, the Ghost Spirits, and the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come. Marley's Ghost (who is
almost as
Ghost
Christmas
Present,
of
chilling
as the sombre
Ghost
what
Christmas Yet
to
Come)
he
is
anticipated
for Scrooge
by
.
he
an
experiences when
returns
home
after
"his melancholy
.
.
dinner",
terrible
pp.
sensation
to
him "that his blood was conscious of infancy." which it had been a stranger from
this
"rejuvenating"
(C.C.,
the
experience which
of note
proves to
remainder of
in
narrator's
account of
it (C.C,
a
54-55):
nothing
at all particular about the
Now, it is
fact,
knocker
on
54
the
Interpretation
door,
and
as
except
that
it
was
very large. It is
whole
also a
fact,
that Scrooge
had
seen
it
night
morning Let it
had
called fancy about him as any man in the City of be borne in mind that Scrooge had not bestowed one dead partner that thought on Marley, since his last mention of his then let any man explain to me, if he can, how it happened that afternoon. And
during
is
his
residence
in
Scrooge
little
. . .
of what
London.
also
seven-yea
Scrooge,
face.
having
his
key
in
the
lock
of
the
door,
saw
in
the
process
of change:
not a
Marley's face. It
yard
was not
in impenetrable
in the
dismal light about it, like a bad lobster in a dark cellar. It or ferocious, but looked at Scrooge as Marley used to look: with was not angry was curiously ghostly spectacles turned up upon its ghostly forehead. The hair
were,
but had
stirred,
as
if by breath
motionless.
of
hot-air;
and
and though
perfectly
seemed
That,
to
be,
in
spite of
its livid colour, made it the face and beyond its control,
horrible; but
rather
than a part of
own expression.
this passage, lays down for us an instructive challenge he says, "And then let any man explain to me, if he can, how it happened that Scrooge saw in the knocker not a knocker, but face." how it happened that Marley's (C.C., p. 54) This Scrooge saw not only Marley's face but also, if I may expand it,
Dickens, in
when
challenge
Marley's
ghost
and
thereafter
three
more
ghosts
this challenge
is
what provides
us,
on this
novelist and
his
art
by
An opportunity is
also
discuss a great occasion, opportunity examining one of that artist's favorite stories. provided thereby to develop further what we
an
to
may know
A
about
how
to read a
of
book.3
simple
explanation
can
way he
Cannot everything that happens after Scrooge "took his melancholy dinner in his usual (C.C., pp.
presents
this story.
53-54) be understood
as an extended
dream
by
Scrooge? (This
under
standing may not be essential to my interpretation of it does add at least a diverting, and perhaps instructive,
my composition.)
An early hint
that
and
of a
dream may be
read
all
provided us
in the
observation
Scrooge,
beguiled
to
after
"having
p.
the newspapers
with
evening
his
banker's-book,
is
reported gone
home
bed."
(C.C.,
after
narrator
only
54)
after this
by
the to
to
have
"home
55
to
encountering
and noises as
the
"actually"
walking up
chambers.
his door,
he
into his
a
But
is essentially
explanation
remarkably
response
productive
Dickens'
dream is only
challenge.
what
preliminary
still
in
to
"works"
We have
says
to
consider
how
this
dream
and
it
about
Scrooge in
and,
that
indeed,
about
human beings
generally.
experience, whether
not
the
Christmas Eve
this night
was
spent
in his
usual
melancholy
manner.
Why
was
different from
nights?4
all other
with
"Marley
was
(C.C.,
be
p.
45)
And
few
emphasizes this
This
of
must
by distinctly
I
am we
nothing
the
relate."
the
story
going
are
to
still
(C.C.,
p.
45)
Scrooge's
and
counting-house,
Marley"
told,
bears
sign, "Scrooge
(C.G,
p.
46):
Scrooge
above
Old Marley's
and
name.
There it stood,
was called
years
afterwards,
as
the warehouse
door: Scrooge
people new
known
Scrooge
and
and
Marley. Sometimes
to the
business
names:
Scrooge
Scrooge,
sometimes
Marley, but he
answered to
both
it
was all
the same to
him.
and
not
only
for
example, turns
around two a
the
that of
Scrooge
an
himself,
(C.C.,
death (in
the
latter case)
in
which
is grim,
on
lonely
and
occasion
for
jesting
if
not even
"serious
delight"
pp.
119-20) But,
a manner of
speaking,
Scrooge had already died at least insofar as he is interchangeable with Marley (in whose chambers he now lives [C.C., p. 54]). Scrooge
has
was
seen someone
come
very
much
like himself,
charitable
with
his
own
interests
and
resources,
to
die. He
was reminded of
Marley's
obliged
to
inform
seven
the
gentlemen, "Mr.
seven
years
been dead
these
p.
years.
He died
ago,
this
very
night."
(C.C.,
50)
56 A few
minutes
Interpretation
earlier, Scrooge
had had
of
an
encounter
with
nephew
in
the
course
which
the
nephew
his had
as
only
time
one
long calendar
journeys.
of the
year,
seem
by
to open their
were
below
them as
if they really
to think
of people
grave,
race of creatures
bound
on other
[C.C,
p.
49.]
one of those
Scrooge does
seem
to
consider
himself
of
"creatures
somehow
bound
on
other
journeys" one
those
who
have
His
journey
is in
a substantial chariot
fashioned
died
this
man's
of silver and
gold
but
the recollection of
Perhaps Scrooge
senses
Marley, who had have reminded him that the rich detour on the route to the grave. this the nephew's liveliness may
have impressed upon him that there is something deadly about his own way of life. He may sense, that is, that he has cut himself off from genuine human contact, from a life of breadth and meaning. He
may
made even
of a
sense, especially
at
is
Birth
and
of
rebirth, that
he has
somehow
himself
the
death
which
(it is
evident
throughout
efforts to preserve
himself,
Ill
To
speak
of
vulnerability
and
what
of
preservation
is
to
direct
our
attention
(if only
briefly)
to
it is
that
really
as
Scrooge. After all, what do the avaricious seek? Avarice is an attempt to fence oneself off from death
and
any
It is
lesser,
related vulnerability.
It is
from life by
upon
providing
oneself
the means to
deal
with whatever
may
threaten one.
to
an attempt to
be
have
rely
someone else
in
a critical moment.
The helplessness which the miserly Scrooge is determined to avoid lies just below his veneer of worldly wisdom and everyday competence. The first episode that Scrooge recollects, under the aegis of the Ghost of Christmas Past, is of himself as a schoolboy
57 in his
miserable pp. so
is
abandoned
at
alone gone
boarding school,
70-73)
much
boys have
home. (C.C,
Is there
so
not
about
experience
something traumatic,
that it
is only
natural
every effort not to permit himself ever to become helpless again? (The plight of a vulnerable child means a great deal to Dickens also,
as
is
evident
in
the
first [and
best]
part
[which is autobiographical]
of David
Copperfield.)
as a
Scrooge
suffered shown to
child
(again, it
from
the
callousness
Scrooge
by
the
like Dickens before him) his father. The second episode Ghost of Christmas Past once again displays
seems,
of
but, on that occasion, he is from his loneliness by his sister, who had interceded with their father. (C.C, pp. 73-75) Scrooge repeats before us, in a more dramatic form, the conversion evidently experienced by his father, who (for an unstated reason) changed suddenly from a harsh parent to a kind one. Indeed, Scrooge can be thought of, at the beginning of A Christmas Carol, as subject still to the harsh father in himself. His
a
child abandoned at
Christmastime
rescued
rescue
on
the
reader's
Christmas Eve is
again
contributed
to
(in
effect)
by
his
now-dead sister.
She
her
son, the
to
nephew
who
had insisted
upon
bringing
on
Christmas
cheer
his
formidable
The
uncle.
unwelcome visit
nephew's
Christmas Eve
to
Scrooge's
begins a series of recollections which can be said to have naturally brought to the surface of Scrooge's consciousness a reexamination of the kind of life he had resorted to.
counting-house
IV
The
critical
problem exchange
with
Scrooge's kind
with
of
life is
pointed
up in
to
one
he has
now
his
nephew.
Scrooge
responds
uncle!
his
nephew's
opening
greeting,
you!",
uncle
with
his
Christmas,
Humbug!"
God
save
The disgruntled
goes on to
say,
"Merry
you
Christmas! What
to
right
have
you to
be
To
have
be
merry?
You're
enough."
poor
"Come,
be
then.
What
right
have
you to
be dismal? And,
have
you to
morose?
no
You're
enough."
rich
"Scrooge
having
better
answer
ready
on
58
Interpretation
'Bah!'
again; and
followed it up
a
with
"
(C.C,
which
pp.
47-48).
Scrooge does
not
It is
significant
that
have here
ready
answer
(something
with
he does have in
and
with
dealing immediately
the
thereafter
the
two
right
solicitors
invoked
and
reason
in challenging
of
merriment standards
in
his
and himself. He evidently cannot deny that he is dismal and That is, he tacitly concedes, when it is wealth. this despite his implicitly pointed out to him, that his wealth has not insulated him from childlike misery, from that vulnerability of which death is the
morose
by
which
nephew: he had thereby indicated the poor he judged others and was prepared to be judged
most
lives and
dramatic form. Scrooge is practically dead in this the nephew's argument brings home
the to
way he
his
not
unperceptive uncle.
This may be brought home as well by the aborted Christmas carol whom he sung to Scrooge through his keyhole by the little boy
drives
off
(C.C,
p.
53):
God bless
you
merry
gentlemen!
May
This has been "the
London
said
nothing
you
dismay!
by
Christmas
of
carols."
in
the time
to
in
this
story
(in
from "God
this
you"
"God bless
"Rest",
which means
context)
merry.
of
would
cannot
be kept
something,
done for
one.
The
being changed into something, boy can be considered providential in making this
well as other appropriate
vital change
(as
changes) in
dismay or
he
sings.
Perhaps he
senses what
you use
Scrooge is in
dismay!"
need of.
"May
somehow
nothing
(to
It
is
dismalness
or
moroseness
the
nephew's
language) which
Scrooge has
wealth.
accumulated with
an
And,
he is
being
aware
eminently
intelligence,
This
that
his
state of affairs
an
really does
up
this
awareness
is
put
together, in
imaginative
hence instructive
Eve.5
manner,
by
the visitations
he
conjures
Christmas
59
Critical to one's understanding of what does happen to Scrooge is how the nephew regards his Christmas Eve encounter with his uncle.
The
nephew's
opinion
is
shown
to
Scrooge
by
the
Ghost
of
Christmas
Present, when he hears the nephew explain to his Christmas Day guests what had happened the evening before upon visiting his uncle's counting-house (C.C, pp. 103-104):
[T]h.e
consequence of
,
his taking
dislike
making merry
which could
with us
do him he loses pleasanter companions than he can find in his own thoughts, either in his mouldy old office, or his dusty chambers. I mean to give him the same chance every year, whether he likes it or not, for I pity him. He it I may rail at Christmas till he dies, but he can't help thinking better of defy him if he finds me going there, in good temper, year after year, and saying Uncle Scrooge, how are you? If it only puts him in the vein to leave his poor
[today] is,
harm. I
as
some pleasant
moments,
no
am sure
clerk
fifty
and
think
shook
him,
yesterday.
The
(C.C,
now,
p.
104),
It
was
their turn to
laugh
thoroughly laughed at
merriment,
any
rate,
he
his shaking Scrooge. But being caring what they laughed at, so that they [Scrooge's nephew] encouraged them in their
at the notion of
much
and passed
the
bottle, joyously.
be laughed
very
end
Such
which
willingness to
at anticipates
of
(in
to
the
happens (at
p.
the
the
story)
(C.C,
.
134):
Some people laughed to see the alteration in him, but he let them laugh, and little heeded them; for he was wise enough to know that nothing ever happened on this globe, for good, at which some people did not have their fill of laughter in the outset; and knowing that such as these would be blind anyway, he
.
.
thought
it
quite as well
that
the
malady in less
attractive
they should wrinkle up their eyes in grins, as have forms. His own heart laughed: and that was quite
enough
for him.
Thus, both
more
associates.
to
be
more
perceptive,
of their
discerning,
Is
the
hence
of
nephew
correct
in
better"
believing
finds
that
Scrooge "can't
help
thinking
Christmas if he
the nephew
visiting
60
Interpretation
him,
for
the
"in
good
temper,
How
often
has
the nephew
gone there
before? We
to
nephew
does
in
stand
the
gentlemanly
proposition
that
should much
persist
doing
what one
believes
be
right,
without
being
concerned about
likely futility
"I
it
on
of one's efforts.
The
central question
in
our analysis of
this
to the observation
by
laugh,
what
think
shook
him,
yesterday.
story may well relate had moved the guests to I have already suggested
the nephew's
was
that
may have
shaken
Scrooge,
meeting
him
his
to
poverty
misery
and of wealth to at
happiness. We have
in
response
deadly
you to
query,
words you to
to
his
be dismal?
what reason
have
in
the
be
morose?
You're
enough."
rich
(C.C,
p.
48)
effectiveness
More
significant,
perhaps,
attack
than
the
nephew's
checking
Scrooge's
that
on
Christmas
merriment
is
that
nephew noticed
been
shaken.
Scrooge had indeed been checked, that he had But even more significant, however, is that Scrooge
the nephew noticed that
himself may have noticed that been shaken. For, it has been
understood
Scrooge had
may best be
in
which
as
Scrooge's
dream an
introspective
reverie
Scrooge is
able to
step back
in
to all
his life.
The
central question our analysis of the
there about
even
Scrooge in his
for,
perhaps
his salvation, it has also been suggested, was his perceptiveness, his awareness of what his life past and present meant and what that life was tending to. It was no accident nor the ministrations of Jacob simply due to Marley (for
conversion?
justifies, his
Critical
to
what,
after
all,
moved
or
permitted
Marley
to
intervene?)
that
Scrooge, but
on the
(such as his nephew). These efforts prompted Scrooge face up to what had become of the vulnerable child abandoned decades before in a lonely schoolroom.
to
about this view of the matter something hopeful and for it rests on the proposition (does it not?) that virtue is somehow dependent upon wisdom, that one can somehow learn to be good. Thus, cause and effect can be discerned and relied upon in
There is
reassuring,
the moral
as
in
the physical
universe:
61
one
Scrooge
wonder,
It is
the
are,
was
therefore,
not
mere
Scrooge
really
capable
might
perceptive
soul-searching I have
said
conjured
by
the narrator,
the transformation of
as
"Scrooge had
the
little
of what
is
p.
called
fancy
and
about
him
as
any
as
of
man
in
54)
Does
not
or
"fancy"
City
London."
of
(C.C,
refer,
in
dictionary,
an
to a
one
capricious
thing
delusive
an
sort
Scrooge is
not
subject
of
But
the
imagination
or
informed
by
awareness
things,
implications
pp.
tendency
of one's
life,
not
is
(C.C,
nature
117, 124,
attested to real
of
126)
That Scrooge is in in Scrooge's
characters
simply
unimaginative
by
is
first
episode presented
in Christmas Past. As
recollection as
his former
as
images
in books he
read as a neglected
child,
Marley
[C.C,
"reclamation"
p.
those
storybook
characters
of
Christmas Past
(C.C,
pp.
72-73):
The Spirit
touched
him
a
on the
his
younger
self, intent
upon
his
to
reading.
Suddenly
man, in
foreign
garments:
an ass
look at: stood outside the window, laden with wood by the bridle.
Ali
Baba!"
with an
wonderfully real and distinct axe stuck in his belt, and leading
Scrooge exclaimed in ecstasy. "It's dear old honest Ali know! One Christmas time, when yonder solitary child was left here all alone, he did come, for the first time, just like that. Poor boy! And Valentine," said Scrooge, "and his wild brother, Orson; there they go! And what's his name, who was put down in his drawers, asleep, at the Gate of Damascus; don't you see him! And the Sultan's Groom turned upside-down by the Genii; there he is upon his head! Serve him right. I'm glad of it. What business had he to be married to the
"Why, it's
Baba!
Yes,
yes, I
Princess!"
extraordinary
voice
and excited
face;
would
all the earnestness of his nature on such subjects, in a between laughing and crying; and to see his heightened have been a surprise to his business friends in the city,
indeed.
"There's
the
Parrot!"
cried
Scrooge. "Green
of
body
and yellow
tail,
with a
thing
like a lettuce growing out of the top he called him, when he came home
his head;
there
again after
sailing
island. 'Poor
Interpretation
been,
the
Robin
Crusoe?'
The
man
thought
goes
he
was
It
was
Parrot,
you
know. There
Halloo!"
Friday,
creek!
Halloa! Hoop!
Then,
said,
with a
rapidity
of transition
usual
character,
[Scrooge]
Scrooge is
alone":
by
"yonder solitary
of
child
left here
"
all
twice
in
says,
the
course
this
recollection
of
storybook
characters,
he
recollection,
which
This "in pity for his former self, 'Poor has the effect of reviving that "former self
boy!'
buried
tears
deep
businessman,
moves
Scrooge
to
(C.C,
p.
73):
and
"I
wish,"
him,
after
Scrooge muttered, putting his hand in his pocket, drying his eyes with his cuff: "but it's too late
matter?"
looking
about
now."
"What is the
"Nothing,"
asked
the
Spirit.
was a
said
boy
singing
Christmas Carol
that's
all."
at
my door last
night.
like
to
have
given
him
something:
This is, in
reform
the
book,
it
Scrooge's first in
articulation
of a
desire
to
of
explicit repudiation of
past
with
conduct
consists
identification
the
by
him
of one
boy
the
another,
the
identification
time
abandoned
child
in
schoolroom at
Christmas
singer of a
wish
Christmas
carol
before with the chased-off many the before. Scrooge expresses the evening
years
to act more
kindly
Should he
not
be
taken as now
wanting
(and
to other
the
children)
youthful
the
role
long
the
the
converted
father
toward
on
morning
after
act of
Scrooge's
toward still
little
boy,
for
the
youngster
he
rewards
whom
liberally
turkey
for
will
serving
as a messenger to the
Poulterer's from
the
be
purchased
Cratchit
to
family.)
in
The importance
to speak,
of
Scrooge,
battered
child so
is
attested
by
in the book
about
to
Tiny
in
that
than
Scrooge feels
deeply
that rather
see
trying
the
youngster
many
readers
crippled
child
something
of
himself. We
when
to
Scrooge's
relation
to
his
mysterious
father
we
notice
63
p.
father"
second
to
Tiny
Tim
(C.C,
134),
thereby from impending death of the body just as Scrooge himself is saved from impending death of the spirit. I return for a moment to Scrooge's first expression of repentance, the desire to have given something to his Christmas Eve caroller. The
saved
narrator then
smiled
thoughtfully,
and waved
"
its
p.
hand: saying
Christmas!'
us see another
(C.C,
(but
73)
This is
the
already
referred
to,
of
an
older
still
youthful) Scrooge
than the time
Things
before. "He
down
despairingly."
(C.C,
mournful
door."
shaking
p.
of
73) Scrooge watches the scene "with a his head, glancfing] anxiously towards the
p.
whence his deliverance will for the despairing boy, the schoolboy he feels deeply come, so burdened by dismay that he no longer takes refuge in imaginative
(C.C,
73)
Scrooge knows
even as
reading.
Christmas Eve
the pattern of
by
his
thereby repeating
Christmas
to release
are
(Scrooge's sister)
scenes,
came
her
There
prefigured,
essentially
caroller,
what
happens
to
to the
repent
"mature"
Scrooge
know.
When he is
moved
for his
on
treatment
way.
the
youthful
his
redemption
is
decisively
VI
its
The first
might
steps
in Scrooge's
sincere can
conversion are
the
hardest, just
as
they
of
of
be in any
repentance.
Indeed, Scrooge's
in
one
night
intense soul-searching
obliged
be
considered equivalent
to a program
session.
thoroughgoing therapy,
his
all
compressed
long
He is
face up
to
diverse
elements of
life,
initiated
by
his
in
consciousness
by
child
Christmas
time
(C.C,
pp.
55,
128). He has to
adopt a
see whether
he
can
64
Interpretation
the
him
with
first
time
around.
That
the
course of
is
suggested
to
him
by
well
the
by
Ghost
Christmas
Past,
pp.
the episode
Mr.
Fezziwig,
course
an employer of
Scrooge's
youth who
does
by
his
sion:
associates,
Fezziwig's
at
Christmas
(C.C,
75-77).
Mr.
pursue upon
his
conver
he
throws
done); he becomes
But Scrooge had
around
a generous employer
Fezziwig's
first
time
is
given
in
in
which the
parting
The
He
of
the ways
is
shown
between Scrooge
narrator reports of
Scrooge
in
(C.C,
p.
79):
was
older
of
now;
man
the prime of
not the
harsh
and
rigid lines
There
that
later
years
to wear the signs of care and avarice. the eye, which showed the passion
was an
eager, greedy,
had
growing
tree would
fall.
idol had displaced her. And, she says to him in a benevolent spirit, "if it can cheer and comfort you in time to come, as I would have tried to do, I have no just cause to
a golden
grieve"
(C.C,
p.
acquisitiveness
of the world!
in
this
fashion: "This is
nothing
on which
dealing
poverty;
There is
it is
hard
as
and
there
is nothing it
professes to
wealth!"
severity
as the pursuit of
Her reply is
You fear the
of
(C.C,
p.
79),
world too much. All your other hopes have merged into the hope beyond the chance of its sordid reproach. I have seen your nobler aspirations fall off one by one, until the master-passion, Gain, engrosses you.
being
Have I
not?
That
which
the
girl
had
tried to
to
experience
has
avoid
moved
Scrooge
learn
effort
to
the
recollections, there
he had taken out helplessness of poverty. At this point in his is an exchange between Scrooge and the Ghost
him in her gentle way, hard way, the fruitlessof fear of the world and in his
tell the
(C.C, 81):
"Spirit!"
said
Scrooge, "show
me?"
me
no
more!
Conduct
me
home. Why do
you
delight
"One
to torture
more!"
shadow
exclaimed
the
Ghost.
65
it. Show
me
no
cried
Scrooge. "No
more.
I don't
wish
to see
more!"
But
the
relendess
Ghost
pinioned
arms,
and
forced him
to
observe what
happened
next.
What he is
night
shown
next
is
an
episode
of seven
years
before,
the
Jacob
Marley
But
died.
sat
Marley had,
alone
in effect,
office as
replaced
Belle for
Scrooge and
Scrooge
in his
his
partner
died.
(C.C,
nor
p.
83)
him is
neither about
himself
about
previously had come to sense that he could not bear to fruitful life enjoyed by Belle and the man fortunate
her. The
And
now
Scrooge had
witnessed
the
happy,
marry
enough to
narrator reports
(C.C,
p.
82),
than ever, when the master of the
Scrooge looked
on more
attentively
on
house, having his daughter leaning fondly mother at his own fireside; and when he
quite as graceful and
him,
sat
down
with
her
and
her
a
spring-time
in
the
full haggard
of
promise, might
winter of
have called him father, and been his life, his sight grew very dim indeed.
Had
not
Scrooge,
ability
to calculate, come
he had
himself
was
before, he
alone
bargain in his life? Already, seven (as he has Belle's husband report to her),
gotten the worst of the against the vagaries of
"[q]uite is
in
world."
the
(C.C,
p.
83)
I
It is
Scrooge insists
to the
of
of
Ghost, "Remove
me!
cannot
usually
true
dreamers, he
his
dream as
the
controls
the
it!"
he
the
seizes an
extinguisher-cap
a past which
it down
to
upon
head
of
Ghost
of
Christmas Past in
hide
the
light
which
had illuminated
terms with
he had
misery
can
of.
come to
his past,
other
by
recognizing it
to
for
what
it is, he
then
bear
more
formidable,
course
the
future. He
of
can,
among
things, face up
others
death
himself
and the
death
which
of life tends to. to death (that Having he dreads as the extreme of helplessness), he is prepared
death of so faced up
which
his
for
a radical reclamation.
The
most
of
to
do,
when
he
returns
to the world
the
living,
is
to go to
his
nephew's
66
Interpretation
on
house
it
he had
"
...
the courage to go
(C.C,
p.
door a dozen times, before knock. But he made a dash, and did up 131). It had proved far easier to be generous to the
passed the
and
messenger-boy
gentlemen who and
sent
to
the
Poulterer's
had
solicited
money for
(the
evening
before;
his
it
was to prove
far
easier
following
morning)
to reform
relations with
Bob Cratchit.
Scrooge's marked hesitation before the visit to his house confirms what I have suggested about the impor tance of his encounter with his nephew in the counting-house the evening before. It had been in that encounter, more than anywhere else, that Scrooge had had to face up to the fact that his way of life, of which he had been so confident, had not produced for him the results he had bargained for. It had been the nephew, in his comment Perhaps
nephew's
on
Scrooge (as
made
presented
by
the
Ghost
had
the
decisive
assessment of
102):
He's
a comical old
fellow,
not so pleasant as
he
might
be.
say
offences
carry
and
I have nothing
to
And, the nephew goes on to say (echoing his decisive exchange with his uncle the evening before), "His wealth is of no use to him. He don't do any good with it. He don't make himself comfortable with it. He hasn't the satisfaction of thinking ha, ha, ha!-that he is ever (C.C, pp. 102-103). going to benefit Us with To speak thus is to account not only for Scrooge's deliverance but also for the form it takes. Otherwise, that deliverance may seem
it"
mysterious,
(in that he is
not a miraculous
deliverance but
of the world and with
in
calculations
having
to
do
with what
he fears
the
how
to
achieve
that
which
appearance
of a
miraculous
with
story
contributes to the
character of
this
story
the
the
multitudes
have
enjoyed
it for
But
even more
interesting, it
works
seems to
has been
to see
how
dramatic
of genius
miracle works
and this
has
shown us as well
how
an artist
and
what
he
understands about
the movements of
the
and
it is because
the
67
chord
a responsive
in
soulful
effect.6
an
enduring
an
artist
has
an
he does
should never
not to say, of
It may be
such as
think
somewhat
a matter
rather
of chance
whether a presentation
Dickens'
becomes
sentimental.
At times,
some
will
particularly in
or at
Cratchit
family,
especially
of
Tiny
Tim Dickens
corrected,
far. But the unduly pathetic is least moderated, by the humor employed, much of it
too
of
exaggerated,
some
it
fairly
few
subtle,
all
of
it
good-natured.
It is
corrected as well
by
the reader's
tendency
We
to regard
are given
Scrooge
as more of
pages.
the
to
say
him
in
then?
There is
not
much
hence
poetic
interest,
A
question should
passing,
death in
the stories
Dickens. Is
not
Scrooge's
terror
death
made
in
effect
legitimated
an
by
this story?
Does
not this
the modern
of
attitude
attitude
of
deep-rooted anxiety in
death, of that death which threatens the continuation of the self, of the individuality, we make so much of today? This considerable concern about death, which Dickens repeatedly puts to
the
face
as well other
in
Christmas-season tales
by
Dickens.
liberality
is
endorsed
but
at
the cost of at
accounts
that
Dickens'
of what
Christmas
feasting
like.
Does
not
really
alive?.
glorying in food and drink assert, in a way, that one is May it not be for many, and perhaps even for Dickens
himself,
death?
and
be,
in short, something
attitude toward
corrosive
perhaps
even
Dickens'
death.7
68
Interpretation
VIII
I have
a
been touching
Dickens in
considers
truly
good man.
Virtues
to the
to
be
sacrificed
by
him
fellow
feeling
of
evident
an
enthusiastic
liberality.
One
another should
pose
the question
for Dickens
of still
virtue, that
of justice and
naturally
leads,
in turn,
to
Dickens
considers a good
community,
another
do
One
that
can
effect
of
Scrooge's
avarice, it
can
be
argued, is
he does
also
for be
effective charity.
It
be
if
that
the
thriftiness
practiced
by
and
Scrooge is
desirable,
capital
not even
necessary, if there is to
required
thereby
which
many
defer desires. "[D]arkness is cheap, and Scrooge ordinary liked (C.C, p. 55). "External heat and cold had little influence on (C.C, p. 46). He can live a simple life and be satisfied with it or, at least, be reconciled to it. He can be depended upon to live up to his bargains, to deliver what he promises to deliver, to pay what he promises to pay (C.C, pp. 45, 133). He believes in minding business his own and, it turns out, is open to reconsideration of
the
not
have,
the
ability
to
gratification
it"
Scrooge"
what
is truly
one's
business (C.C,
pp.
a reliable
man
on the
likes
upon as
him for
the
remarkably high
unconverted political
with
standard of
living
an
to which we are
emphasis
accustomed.
social
The
Scrooge
places
reforms,
upon
efforts, to
the
economy permits) life (C.C, pp. 51, 108-109). Dickens himself, if not also Scrooge after his conversion, seems to have been skeptical about the value of political endeavor. He may have come to political endeavor from too low a level to appreciate its genuine scope (C.C, p. 49). He much
preferred, in
sound
inevitable ills
industrial
dealing
we
day,
to
rely
upon personal
of
Dickens'
help
do
account
for
the
dependence
that
commercial
69
exploitation
of
way
to
organize
the
economic
natural and
of
human
a
stunted.
Such
say many up in such an impersonal enterprise may not be life easily degenerates into a frantic pursuit of private
resources
is
not to
pleasures, into
Dickens'
desperate
remarkably modern-day
corrective.
Ebenezer
provide
Scrooge,
a
Faust
the
marketplace,
can
salutary
repeated
Among
the
salutary
efforts
made
by
Dickens
are
his
endorsements of
festivals,
a
particularly Christmas,
with
to commune to
mobile
from
time to time
their
"fellow-passengers
others
to the
grave,"
establish
humanizing
ordinarily
contact with
in
highly
society
made
which
isolation.
Dickens
a great
deal
of
festivals
of
family life,
of
of
however,
modern
perhaps
inadvertently
much
reinforcing thereby
our
life
private
the
festivals he does
patriotic
Even
centered
so,
are
Dickens
condemn
self-centeredness.
of grace
The
self-
characterized
by
lack
and
of graciousness.
They
they
are too
themselves, especially
with what
take to
be
their preservation, to
should
be really
open to or to care
for
others.
Christmas Carol
promote
among
commercial and
cheerfulness
may
that
patriotism which
degenerates into
ruthless,
IX
of English life in the doubt contribute to the century enduring charm of A Christmas Carol. So does the simple fact that Dickens can write. Besides, his heart is, as we say, in the right place
Its
graphic
of
descriptions
of
London
and
middle
the
nineteenth
no
as
he
in
us.
That Dickens
of
these remarks,
the past
and
by
write
is suggested,
praise
he has
during
century.
return
to the comparison of
Dickens
enough)
with
Aeschylus
Shakespeare
provided us
(providentially
by
classical scholar.
70
Interpretation
The
best known
and
stories
of
redemption
well
and
rehabilitation
by
Aeschylus
Shakespeare
of these upon
may
Tempest. In both
tales
depend ultimately
not upon
political
(including divine)
rearrangements,
Dickens'
family
circumstances or personal
inclinations. In
stories,
on the other
or more
tamer,
Shakespeare to
authors such
Dickens may
that the
reflect
shift
from
political
concerns
to
private,
from finds
a concern with
justice
to
One
petty
do interest
moderns more
Are
we to understand
that the
deep-rooted
once and
concerns
Oresteia
we
have been taken care of, all, devote ourselves to promoting benevolence and safely charity? Or have those once all-consuming concerns merely been to erupt in ever more destructive forms concealed from view, only from time to time because they have not been properly tended to by
so much so that
can
for
moderns
dedicated
and
to a
determined
were
pursuit of private
otherwise
happiness?
Dickens is
more
sentimental,
and
more
limited,
than
Aeschylus
Shakespeare
to
or were
permitted
by
their more
discerning publics
the generous
the
become. Yet,
of
cannot much
festival
case,
Christmas as "unhallowed
(C.C,
p.
45)
to
mishandle the
salutary
parable
he has
endowed us with.
'See
706.
Eric T.
p.
Owen, The Harmony of Aeschylus (Toronto: Clarke, Irwin 102; Encyclopaedia Britannica, Macropaedia (15th ed.), vol. 5,
Wilson, "Dickens:
The Two
Scrooges,"
&
p.
Edmund
in The Wound
and
the Bow
Dickens,"
(Cambridge: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1941); George Orwell, "Charles in Inside the Whale, a Book of Essays (London: Victor Gollancz Ltd.,
to
1940).
Citations
Charles A Christmas Carol
are
designated
since
"C.C."
and
are
keyed
vol.
to
(Baltimore: Penguin
this
Books, 1972),
I.
to
me,
edited
by
for
readers of
A Christmas
Carol. See
e.g. p.
64,
on
See,
on
how
to read a
book,
Leo
71
Glencoe, 1963);
Jacob Klein, A Commentary on Plato's Meno (Chapel Press, 1965). See note 7, below. An entertaining, as well as
"literary"
instructive, application of this approach to Strauss, Socrates and Aristophanes (New York:
texts
may be
seen
in
Basic
Books, 1966).
by
See, for citations to readings of literary texts by various scholars influenced Mr. Strauss, A Contemporary Bibliography in Political Philosophy and in Other Areas (1976), ed Harvey Lomax (4215 Glenaire Drive, Dallas, Texas
75229). A
the
more obvious use
by
Dickens
of a
dream may be
seen
in his
next p.
Christmas
vol.
I,
can
be
reminded
of
by
the
way "went to
of
of
Carol,
the
two
accounts
Creation in Genesis.
"Revolution
and
the Formation
at
may have been used in A Christmas See also, Hilail Gildin, Contract," Political Society in the Social 5
"work"
bed"
Interpretation 247
248
[1976] .)
how dreams
and
See, for
their
suggestions
about
in
the
Dreams: Lewis
instructive
nature of
to
notice
dreams
how solidly grounded A Christmas Carol is in at least a dreamlike recollection, in the nature
in
the
"nature"
nature
in
the
of certain assures us
vices,
and perhaps
even
of
that the
story is
deeply
Thus,
"fancy,"
realistic,
of serious when
study.
Scrooge
the
not
hence something worthy ("I know it, but I know not how.")
a close.
the
is,
what
Ghosts is
drawing to
(C.C, 57] )
p.
123)
That
arbitrary but
[C.C,
p.
interpretations
of
of various
literary
texts
which
provide
A Christmas
University
Press, 1971), pp. 651, 798-99 (Antigone), 30-32, 436-38, 651, 687, 725, 772 (Hamlet), 278-81, 552-53, 690, 791-92, 807-08 {Iliad), 790-91 (King Lear), 581, 707-08, 817 (item 1) (Little Orphan Annie et al), 439, 503, 793 (Nathan the Wise), 278-81, 546, 552-53, 612, 690, 719-20, 791-92, 797 (Odyssey), 642, 783, 798-99 (Oedipus), 510, 779, 787 (Remembrance of Things Past). (Corrections for The Constitutionalist may be found in L.P. deAlvarez, ed., Abraham Lincoln, The Gettysburg Address and American Constitutionalism [Irving, Texas: University of Dallas Press, 1976] pp. 130-32. In The Constitutionalist, as in my
,
"cf." "compare"
other
publications,
means
and points
to a qualification of or
something different from what has just been said or cited.) 5 Scrooge had been told by Marley (Prodromos?) that he
to three
nights of visitations.
would
be
subjected
(C.C,
This
p.
63)
be
But
all
three
in
one
night.
(C.C,
p.
128)
can
considered a
Trinitarian
(in
element
in
Christmas story in
are
a rationalistic
prudently muted (as can be seen even in how far the boy is permitted to singing his carol [C.C, p. 53]). See C.C, pp. 49, 56, 65, 87, 91, 94, 104, 120, 131. See, for the Trinity in still another form, Harry V. Jaffa, The Conditions of
age) go in
72
Freedom:
Philosophy
carries
(Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins
Press,
its
1975), Scrooge,
p.
"logical"
153.
as
he looks
ahead,
the carol
sung
by
the
boy
through to
said
conclusion:
of
his business
acquaintances,
by
one
own at
last,
the
hey?"
(C.C,
p.
112)
indicated in
lines
subsequent
to those
sung
our
by
boy:
Saviour
power
.
Which had
long time
gone
astray
Oxford Book of Carols (London: Oxford University Press, 1928), p. 25. Be that as it may, fragments of the Christmas Eve conversations in Scrooge's
counting-house are worked
episodes
recapitulation
of
in
that
recapitulation
challenge
positions
Scrooge has
illustrate
that even
what
has been
said
him by others. Scrooge himself comes to purpose. (C.C, p. 113) details serve his
to
Ghosts'
epigraph
to
this
essay
taken
put
from
of
Macbeth.
humour"
(Also muted, if
with
readers
are
not
to
be permanently
"out
their comic
pp.
capable of.
[C.C,
ugly
Scrooge
was
Had
the
inspired Dickens
of a
Scrooge's
experiences
have left us more clues toward the solution of such puzzles as how Scrooge knew (if merely dreaming) about Topper and "the plump sister in the lace at his nephew's house on Christmas Day.
took the
might
tucker"
form
dream, he
(C.C,
It
pp.
should
considering
original
this
and other
editions space
(as
Dickens'
well
the
before the final two paragraphs book). (C.C, p. 133) Perhaps we should entertain the possibility that the dream continues almost to the very end of the book. (It is not unusual to have a dreamer dream that he wakes up.) Thus, the ingenious Scrooge can be understood to have extended his dream to include his immediate acts of reformation, permitting him to provide the Cratchits a huge turkey for their Christmas dinner, to run into the charitable solicitor, to visit his nephew (where he can meet the guests earlier conjured up by him), and to Cratchit come in eighteen and a half minutes late to work (something highly unlikely for the clerk to do?) on the day after the Christmas holiday.
"have"
all this may be, the final two paragraphs Scrooge has been permanently reformed by his Christmas Eve. What more should be expected? That
However
of
the
book do
assure us
that
experience of this
fateful
child, if
boy,
of
should
be
. . .
named
Ebenezer? And
that
Scrooge
nephew's
will
have "the
with
satisfaction
thinking
that
family]
73
(C.C,
pp.
49, 102-03,
Scrooge
328C-D,
331D.)
not the reformation of
effected more
by
his
pained realization of
is
a selfless
dedication
to virtue
for its
own sake?
Compare Plato, Republic 588E-589C, 591A-E, 619B-D. Does not death remain for Scrooge, as for Dickens himself, too great a concern? See note 7, below.
Modern
have
One
need
or to that in Plutarch's Lives (to say nothing of that in Plato's Phaedo) to realize our decline. Compare Plato, Republic 386C, 516D-C; The Constitutionalist, pp. 278-81. Or is it that we are to believe that we have somehow become more sensitive
popular
compare
the
attitude
"situation"
than
our
predecessors
am
to the
of
man
in
the
universe?
What
we
certainly do have, I
considerable
afraid,
is considerably
more
anxiety
than
they
as well as
hostility
on
superior.
reinforces
can
See,
seen
Martin
Heidegger, ibid.,
p.
815.
"Anxiety"
reflects relativistic
and
self-centeredness.
tendencies]
over
be
in
the
or
contemporary
"substance"
for
"authentic"
the
"good"
old-fashioned
or
"true.")
Aronson) by
Leo
See,
on
death,
the
funeral
talk
(for Jason
Strauss,
reproduced
University
on
death,
in Anastaplo, "On Leo Strauss: A Yahrzeit 67 Chicago Magazine (Winter 1974), pp. 30, 38. See, also, the essays of on the Apology, on natural right, on the Crito and on Mr. Klein's
Remembrance,"
Meno in Anastaplo, Human Being and Citizen: Essays on the Common Good (Chicago: Swallow Press, 1975). See,
of
Virtue, Freedom
as
and
well, the
discussion
Animals"
On
Becoming
and
Being
Human,"
in Anastaplo, "The Public Interest in Privacy: 26 DePaul Law Review, No. 4 (Summer 1977);
,_see
W.B. Yeat's
note 3, above. On Mr. Klein's Meno See, on avarice, New Catholic Encyclopedia, vol. 1, p. 1122; Plato, Phaedo 66C-D, 68B-C. Compare the Andy Capp comic strip for June 15, 1977: the
"Death."
importunate hero
observes,
in
response
to
his
long-suffering wife's
but it 'elps
you
reminder
that
"money
a
can't
buy
'appiness,"
"True,
pet,
true
to
look for it in
lot
places."
more
Compare,
(One is
reminded of the
role assigned
by
Aristotle to
"equipment"
in the
happy life.)
he has
chosen.
One is induced to
wonder whether
(C.C, pp. 86, 90, 93, 94-96) thoroughly if he continues to deeds," on 115, 126) "Good
any villain in a Dickens story eats well. In any event, Scrooge is shown that he will die
the course
pursue
(C.C,
pp.
Ill,
p.
the
other
hand, imply
"life immortal"?
(C.C,
118)
74
George Schwab
The
CUNY
counseled
New-Left
of
revolutionaries
ouside
the
limits
to
the established
legal
the
of
order,
because, he declared,
and
overpowered
the
legal
means are
inadequate for
their
share
oppressed
minorities or
"achieve
humanity."1
place
in his
a
illegal
tactics a prominent
catapulted to the
Marcuse
forefront
West. His
topic which
had for
some years
been dormant in
instrument
the
decision
to
opt
for
illegality
as
an
by
the
which
revolutionaries
could
achieve
power might
easily be
the
understood
if
continued
to
exclude
masses
from
parlia
the
electoral
system,
and
hence from
as
Legality
an
as an
instrument
of revolutionaries would
have been
of
entirely
of
abstract
question
it
still was
in
the
days
Marx
and
and
Engels
the period of
(1848)
Yet,
League (1850).
as everyone
knows,
of
much
had happened
in the
even
in
those
days.
the
drastically
and
enlarged.
This
the traditional
factions
of new
or parties and
in
the
birth
to
ones
including
existing
on option
systems.
implications
tactics
be
by
revolutionaries
who
formerly
at
had had no
was
but
legal
framework,
*An
earlier version of
and
this paper
at
was presented
in April 1975
the Seminar on
Legal
would
Political Thought
to thank
valuable suggestions
like
my
colleague
Legality
quickly
grasped
and
Illegality
as
Instruments
75
example, Marx
by
Marx
and
Engels. In
1872, for
.
.
"do
identical
as
and we
do
.
not
.
deny
This
the the
was
existence
of
countries,
America
[and]
goal
England.
where
workers could
[conceivably]
attain their
peacefully."2
stated more
succinctly
by
Engels in 1895.
According
accomplish
to
him,
the 'subver-
The
irony
of world
history
better
[is that]
on
we, the
to
'revolutionaries,'
sionists,'
thrive much
legal
as
means
illegal
means.
The
parties of
...
order,
they
call
themselves,
self-created
legal
order.
out
'la legalite
tue'
by their legality
is
our
death,
while we with
legality
acquire
swelling
cheeks and
look like
the picture
health.3
The
recognition
of
of
legality
the
quest
as
potent
of
instrument,
weapons
and
the to
incorporation
revolutionaries
it
into
arsenal
available
in
their
for
power
in liberal
democracies,
of weapons
constitutes a
breakthrough in
and
what
may be
not
"tacticology."
called
Though Marx
available to
would ever
Engels had
enlarged
the
arsenal
revolutionaries,
abdicate
they did
truly believe
even
its
powers
willingly
in
face
of
revolution.4
peaceful
Hence,
to reach the
goal
in England
some
form of illegal work was unavoidable. Whether be on legality, on illegality, or on balancing the the concrete economic level a country has reached
the modes
of production and exchange.
This, in turn, is reflected in the intensity of the political antagonisms between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat and in the growth of the latter.
From
this
ongoing
process
emerges
definite
role
for
the
to the
Manifesto, is
to
to
instill in
a neces
ever-growing
prerequisite
proletariat
revolutionary
revolution
consciousness
sary
for
a successful
and
help
order
into
oblivion,
to
guide
the
revolution
in
positive
direction. The
the
moment political
overthrow when
of the
bourgeois
matured
state occurs at
precisely
and
the
party
recognizes
that
the
economic
for
the revolution to
be
implemented.
At
the turn
gaining
the end
became
revolu-
perhaps
the
most
widely discussed
and argued
topic
among
76
tionaries.
Interpretation
In the face of the drastic enlargement of the franchise, distinct schools of thought gradually emerged: those who believed that the end should be achieved solely by legal means, those
three
who
refused
to
compromise
about
the
necessity
illegal to
of
illegality
who
as
revolutionary instrument,
qualms
goal.
and
the
political
realists
had
no
about
using any
tactic
legal
or
gain
the
desired
their
Lenin,
economic
as
the
heir
of
Marx
and
Engels,
ideas
only
assumptions,
but
also their
for
instilling
revolutionary consciousness in the masses, and expanded on the party's role in overthrowing existing systems. On the last point,
a
Lenin
went
mentors
by
necessity
in Marx
of professional
What
seemed to
and
Engels
became
argued
quite explicit
Done?"(1902).
cohesive
engaged
He
here for
the
building
organization
to
consist
"chiefly
and
people
professionally
revolu
only.
in revolutionary
who
activity,"5
he
attacked those
tionaries
approached tactics
from
The
need
to analyze
historical
circumstances
to exploit these
abstract
following
and
of
"all
for
and
...
"Marxism
whatever
recipes."6
If anything, Lenin
makes
insisted,
claim
practice,
no
to
teach
the
masses
forms
of
struggle
invented
'systematizers'
by
to
in
the
seclusion
their
studies."7
Consequently,
who
Lenin mercilessly
abandon
denounced
and
orthodox
illegal tactics,
right-wing deviationists
"to
combine
had hoped
by
of
legal legal
means solely.
tactic, namely
with
the unwillingness
every form
struggle"
wherever
necessary,
is, according
for
revolu
to
him,
characteristic of
"poor
revolutionaries."8
Though he
tionaries to
subscribed
to and
underlined
the
need
keep
in
bourgeois
order,
predecessors, did
think
that
peaceful and
legal
in America
and
1917
the
possibility
acquired
legal
countries
had
powerful
military
complexes,
their
bureaucracies had
Legality
also grown and
and
Illegality
as
Instruments
entrenched.9
77
In short,
should combine
both
but
of
at times
it
might
be
expedient to
emphasize one at
the other.
II
Hitler
work.
fully
of
inherent in legal
The
he
was
influenced
by
Lenin
and
his
the
companions,
he had
arrived at
his
plan of action on
basis
in Weimar
that
Germany,
succeeded
must
here
remain
unanswered.
The
mere
fact
he had
in gliding
to
into
power
road
by
ostensibly legal
means
is
sufficient
reason
study
Hitler's
to success.
unconcerned with analyses of the economic modes of
Completely
intellectual German
production and of
exchange,
history in the
sense
of
scene
exclusively;
his chance of success. As is well known, three phases are clearly discernible in his quest for power: from 1919 until the Munich Beer
Hall
on
putsch of
November 1923,
illegal methods; the period between his release from prison for his role in the putsch and his appointment as Chancellor of Germany in
and
the
phase
which
culminated
Reichstag
abortive
of
1933)
of
an unprecedented
enabling
that
act.
admission
Hitler
else
claimed
until
the
thought
little
but
the
legally
cracies
authorities.10
constituted
In opting
for
this method
apparently failed
operate.
to
appreciate
the rules to
by
which modern
he had bureau
of
Moreover,
local
unable
secure
the
support
the
Reichswehr
was
and the
"responsible
for
state's
machinery
1
which
action."1
Realizing his
in
amateurishness,
the
he purportedly
stated while
still
a prisoner that
or movement would
have
to resort to
legal
means
as well:
Instead
of
working
to achieve power
by
an armed
coup,
we shall
have
to
hold
Interpretation
our noses and enter
the
Reichstag
than
against
the
Catholic
them at
and
Marxist deputies. If
the results will
. . .
outvoting
them takes
longer
guaranteed
by
their own
a
least
is
be
or
process
slow.
Sooner
later
we shall
have
majority
Germany.1
Hitler's incorporation
accord with
Weber's
Of the
legality into his arsenal of weapons was in analysis of how a bureaucracy operates in a
of
rule
modern state.
legal,
traditional
and
charismatic
according
rules
to
him, does
come
3
from
which
into
force
through
legally
must
constituted
authorities.1
Whether Hitler
was aware of
Weber
here
remain
unanswered.
But
given
in
Germany, Hitler,
like his arch-foe Lenin,1 4 was adamant on the necessity of exploiting the legal avenues available. Yet the illegal operations of Hitler's
cohesively
organized
Storm Troopers
continued
simultaneously.1
Overtly, however, it became his primary objective sufficiently large parliamentary representation in order
to to
gain
legally
to
bring
for
about
laws
which
the
bureaucracy
articles
would
then
proceed
not
implement. He
the
might not
have
had it
been
phraseology
or
of certain
in
purely legalistic
which
formalistic interpretation
thought.
the
constitution
framers of the Weimar constitution had intended it to be a liberal democratic document. But it turned out to be a truly document of political engineering in a country void of a liberal democratic tradition. To function properly, such a constitution requires a fair consensus of a country's electorate on the nature of a liberal democratic state. Yet this was not the case in Germany. Its political heritage in general, Germany's defeat in World War I, and
The
the terms of
Versailles,
was,
as
converged to undermine
the
credibility
of
Weimar.
It
many
then
believed,
eine
Republik
ohne
Republikaner.
was not
Exploiting parliament and the constitution for revolutionary ends difficult, for, with the possible exception of Article 48, the
document provided no safety valves for its own preservation. trail-blazing discussion of some of the constitution's articles which played into Hitler's hands is Arnold Brecht's Prelude to Silence.16
Weimar A One
point
the crucial
Legality
pertinent
and
Illegality
of
as
Instruments
read
as
79
first
two sentences
amended
Article 76
process of
constitution
may be
by
the
the
Reichstag relating
only if
two-thirds
to
the
of
amendment
of
are
and
effective
at
two-thirds
legal membership
parties
present,
least
assent."
This article, in
resort to
fact,
inspired revolutionary
With the
parties,
could
in
Germany
such a
to
legality
in
or
as a tactic.
required
majority
party
alone,
or
destroy,
infuse
an alien spirit
into
this
document,1 7
fundamentally
of the
amend,
leading
shared
constitutional
lawyers
and
and
commentators
Richard
Thoma's
Gerhard Anschutz's
formalistic
legalistic interpretation of the constitution, that it is at the disposal it.1 8 of the legislature and not above As Jasper has pointed out, since the constitution did not account for unconstitutional objectives, the sole requirement of parties to achieve fundamental revisions was to
proceed
legally.1 9
Although no friend of republican ideas or the Weimar republic, Hindenburg, on assuming the presidency, swore, in accordance with Article 42, to uphold this document. No one really doubted the
seriousness
with which
Hindenburg
understood
the
oath.20
But
because he was also strongly influenced by the formalistic or legalistic interpretation of the constitution, it appears that he was never certain about how far he could legally use Article 48 to meet
crises.
with
Article 48
his
constitution.
decree,2 :
For
fear
of
violating
this
can thus be ascribed to his legalistic interpretation of the document he loathed ruling by
procedures.2
parliamentary
to constitutional rule
Reichstag.2
This
longing
insisted
was reinforced on
by
many supposedly
of
the
necessity
returning
in
the
thereby his
since
oath,
by By (a) Hindenburg was violating the constitution and (b) it became necessary to appoint Hitler
the
implication
Chancellor
Despite the
he
controlled
the
largest party in
a
the
Reichstag.
fact that Hitler did not possess he promised to find one by calling for new
end
elections.24
he
again
vowed
to
all
respect
the
constitution,25
simulta
neously he denounced
dictatorship.2
those whose
intention it
was to establish a
military
80 As
Interpretation
long
as
the
constitution
did
were
not
recognize about
unconstitutional
objectives
provided that
they
brought
on
legally it prob
ably
never occurred
of
to
Hindenburg
as
what great
appointment
Hitler
Chancellor
January 30,
Hindenburg,
and
others,
failed
was
to understand was
simultaneously. responsible
it
received
Hitler's
7
appointment.
According
Dorpalen,
their
edi
they
that
revolutionary
changes
were
III
Having
operates
reviewed
the
political
of
framework
within
which
Marcuse
on
the question
on
turned
his back
tactics, it is now possible to ask why he legality in his ideologically inspired writings.
systems
in liberal democracies
are as
solidly
before,
only
and modern
bureaucratic
most and
and
military
are
machines
in
legality, i.e.,
those
part, in
accordance with
decrees
implemented
which emanate
from the legally constituted authorities. then has Marcuse opted for illegality ? In his view, has Why something happened in the liberal-parliamentary structure which is distinct from the days of Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Hitler? In
speaking
of advanced
industrial
societies
in general,
and of
America
in particular, Marcuse
economic change
which
has
had
definite
repercussion
where
parliamentary
Because
of
technical, scientific,
and mechanical
advances,
partic
ularly
since
World War
II,
according
themselves
to
him, has
split-level
"recognize
in
their commodities;
they find
their soul
in
8
their automobile,
hi-fi set,
home, kitchen
society,
equipment."2
He
the
traditional
proletariat
has
not
of
capitalist
but "in
some
establishments,
establishment
pation'
the
a
workers
even
show
interest in 'workers
the
frequently
observed
9
effect
partici
in
capitalist
enterprises."2
Legality
Based
classical stitutes
on
and
Illegality
as
Instruments
81
to
abandon
these
observations, Marcuse is
argument
forced
the
con
Marxian
laboring
But in
class
of
view of the
traditional proletariat's
virtue of
"basic
position
in
the production
process,
by
its
exploitation,"
this
agent
of revolu
force,
tion."3
the
not
[potential]
now
embody revolutionary
consciousness, Marcuse is
of
compelled to search
for
revolution,
and
he finds
these
in
"do not occupy a decisive for this reason cannot be considered potentially revolutionary forces from the viewpoint of Marxian theory. [the underprivileged] really are the mass basis of These masses can perhaps now be the national liberation struggle.
the world over.
place
Though
these minorities
process
and
in
the
productive
considered
the
new
proletariat
and
as
such
2
they
are
today
a real
danger for the world system of As for the United States, Marcuse laments
capitalism."3
the
fact
that racial
their allies
the
conflicts
outside,3
not
3
only
separate
the ghetto
population
from
but,
even
worse, the
considerable conflicts
Ricans"34
raging "in
impede
large
the
tariat
on
the one
hand,
so
nor what
Marcuse
considers to
be
the new
and
revolutionary
force,
of
because
global
there
has
of
far
is
not
occurred
critical
weakening
the the
economy
capitalism,
not
5
he
in
centers
of capitalism
yet
but
still
largely
"nonrevolutionary."3
the advanced
As already observed, the profound changes in the economies of industrial societies have, in Marcuse's view, had a deep
on
impact
advanced
parliamentary institutions in the technically most liberal democracies. He strongly implies in this context
to the
that,
prior
technical, scientific,
and mechanical
explosion,
succeeded
Madison
Avenue
advertising
techniques
outer
well
as
beliefs
that
to
and actions as
extent
he has been
the
needs
of
absorbed advanced
and
synchronized
But gradually
these techniques
have
become
so refined that
Marcuse
echoes a thought
already
expressed
82
Interpretation
the
by
not
namely, that
powerful
even
in
the
face
of
opposition, the
highly
efficient
and also
bourgeois
.
medium
is
only
able
to assimilate
but
to
"publicize.
either
6
.revolutionary
notions
without
throwing into
or
question
it."3
its
own
basis
7
or the
foundation
speaks
of
In
a similar vein
opposites"3
Marcuse
and
the
"unification
convergence of
the
antagonism"38
"flattening
vested of
out of
by
the
"manipulation
of needs
by
interests."39
reflected
in
the proceedings
*
liberal democratic parliaments. Just as for Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Hitler, so also for Marcuse, the liberal democratic parliament is a farcical institution. To him
parliamentary
order representatives are victims of opinion
and
manipulated public
machinery,
hence
their
spokesmen.4
But
in
to
this
institution
a means
Marcuse
slams the
1
door
revolutionaries.4
The Left,
can
with
resources,
voice
according
to
Marcuse,
never
hope
have
an
equal
in
the
halls
"no
facilities."4 2
He is
when
convinced
can
in America
will
falter
it
no
longer satisfy
rising
etc.4
expectations of ever-larger
strata of the
population,
as,
But in in
the meantime,
for example, he
phase to
4
Left in
the still
largely
nonrevolutionary
the
at
masses.4
instill
and raise
revolutionary
impact
of
consciousness
Under
the
student
rebellions
leading
split
American
colleges and of
universities,
the political
Left actually
and
in its
being
of
ideologically.
argued,
groups"
competing
the
Left, he
thus
"specific
grievances
in different localities
rebellions,"45
by fomenting and directing "riots [and] ghetto possible, deny to political opponents
called
what
in 1932
an
"equal
chance."46
To
political
opposition
wherever
possible,
even
in the
nonrevolutionary
violence.
phase,
Marcuse is
not
adverse
He justifies
seems to
indicate "that
classes
and
the
oppressed
cruelty,
silence
the violence emanating from the rebellions of broke the historical continuum of injustice, for a brief moment, brief but explosive enough
Legality
to achieve an
and
Illegality
as
Instruments
83 justice.
7
.
.
increase in
the scope of
freedom
and
Yet he His
cautioned the
Left in America
not to
be
too
hasty
in resorting
hesitancy
been
is based
on
his
assumption
that the
critical point
has
not yet
reached
here,
still able to
satisfy the economic expectations of the masses, and partly because there is a lack of revolutionary consciousness. Hence, he does not
believe in
the
imminence
phase
of revolution
in
America,
He
nor
(in
the event
of such an
to succeed.
argues that
in the
nonrevolutionary
continues
here
the
legally
his
constituted
support.4
government
to
and police
8 of
Though
continuing
maintain
thesis
on
the
necessity
in 1972
suppressing
in the
nonrevolu on
tionary
stage, Marcuse
did, however,
change
his
attitude
powerful political
had recently set in might succeed in destroying "any for an indefinite Because of the revolutionary conservative reaction, he no longer argues that the strength of the Left is in its being split. To meet the new situation, he now urges the split and weak radical Left to resolve its differences and organize
potential
time."49
effectively.50
Marcuse is
mechanical
convinced
that
so
because
the
productivity is
the
economic
highly
rationalized
advanced
societies, there
will
inevitably be
transforma
tion
within
process.
And, according
about
to
him,
and
over-
rationalization
will
certainly
bring
breakdowns,
a mere
"disruption
a
at one
key
place,"
dysfunctioning
will
of the
whole."5
forthcoming
sectors
argues,
set off
It
will not
be
by
laboring
'wage
class
against
of
the
working
will
labor'
population,
classes
versus
capital,
but
rather all
dependent
capital."52
against
therefore come
'"from
below.'"5 3
With the
economic
system
faltering, i.e.,
the
economy
unable to
satisfy
in the
the
expectations of
hopefully then
exploit
possession of a
revolutionary
goal.
have
to
emerged which
the
organized radical
Left
must
carefully
reach
the
desired
every
For
Marcuse,
this
means
gearing
the
revolution
by
means possible
84
Interpretation
which
society "in
uals,
'the
people'
.[will]
become
autonomous
indivi-
freed from
interest
of
struggle
for existence
in
the
government and
determining their
IV
tactics,
Marcuse, like
the
Marx
of
and
the
"Manifesto,"
fails
to recognize the
possibility
the
capitalist
bringing
easily
of
economy overcoming bottlenecks and, thereby, possibly about further technological breakthroughs. The latter could
in
a condition similar to the one which arose at the
of
result
time
the
introduction
traditional
assembly-line
techniques
of
production,
proletariat.
Though
npt
solving
the
a
the
alienation
supply
these
had,
as
Marcuse realized,
of workers
impact on the revolutionary consciousness of the traditional letariat. In Marcuse's ideologically inspired writings he fails to into
account
take
the
possibility
with
of this
happening
impact
again
and, therefore,
appears unconcerned
the possible
which technological
proletariat."
breakthroughs may have on what he calls the "new In other words, the destruction of the established order hinges primarily on Marcuse's economic determinism. Conversely, should the course of history deviate from his rigid line of thought, then his entire
construction collapses.
Contrary
for illegal
to
and
Hitler, Marcuse,
unwilling
or
tactics
either
by opting incapable of
confronting the historical process realistically. Hence, he boxes himself into a corner. What he has neglected to take into account from the immediate past is the fate which befell the orthodox
Communists
who
had
opted
from
of
the
scene,
whereas
in
for illegality. In due time they vanished the liberal democracies only those
prepared,
Communist
from
the viewpoint
tactics, to adapt to ever-changing circumstances. tell if the reformism of the sophisticated and
Only
time
will
Communist
legally
inclined
and,
parties of
Italy
and
France, for
example, is
genuine
therefore, may
internal threat
to the established
Legality
bourgeois
Aside
resilience order of
and
Illegality
or
as
Instruments
85
more
things,
whether
it is nothing
to take
and of
than a
tactical maneuver.
from Marcuse's
of
unwillingness
into
the
account
the
capitalist
modes
of production
may have
tariat,"
on
the
and
orthodox
his failure
without on
the
and
tribulations
as
Communists,
merely
argument
of
his is just
evidence,
cursory.
For example,
providing any
concrete
he debunks
legal
his assumption that the New Left does not financial resources. He concludes, therefore, that the New Left is unable to compete with bourgeois parties inside and outside of parliament, nor can it hope to have equal access to the
work
possess
sufficient
mass
media.
Has Marcuse
with
ever
asked
himself,
when,
Marx
concerned
this
problem
cognizant
the
new
reality,
he brought had
legality
into the
revolutionaries?
situation
to
realize
is
presented
Hitler
on
were
not
concerned
primarily
technical
how
best
the
example,
most of
its
existence
during
Weimar period,
the eve of
financial disintegrate, nor did its activities appear to suffer. Had Hitler not controlled the largest party in the Reichstag and, instead, relied on illegal tactics solely, he would not have become Chancellor of
circumstances.55
catastrophic
Germany
views
on
in
possibly
never.
Because
of
Marcuse's
concluded
that
abstract political
the
foremost
revolutionaries
tactics
Herbert Marcuse,
2
"Repressive
Tolerance"
p.
116. Hereafter
A Critique.
Marx-Engels Werke (Berlin: Marx, "Rede iiber den Haager Dietz Verlag, 1964), Vol. 18, p. 160. Hereafter cited as Werke. In an interview on July 3, 1871, Marx put it as follows: "In England. the road is open to the
.
.
Kongress,"
working
would
class
on
how it
wants
to achieve political
more
power.
An uprising there
and more
be silly because the end can be reached peaceful Ibid., Vol. 17, p. 641.
quickly
surely
by
agitation."
86
3
Interpretation
Friedrich
Frankreich,"
Engels, Introduction to Karl Marx's "Die Klassenkampfe in (1963), Vol. 22, p. 525. 4See Karl Marx's letter to Ludwig Kugelmann, April 12, 1871, Werke Werke (1964), pp. 160, 730 n. 182; (1966), Vol. 33, p. 205; "Rede iiber.
Werke
. .
Engels'
also
preface to
edition of
of Capitalist Production, trans, from 3rd German ed. by Samuel Moore and Edward Aveling (London: Swan, Sonnenschein, Lowery, 1887), Vol. I, p. xiv. V. I. Lenin, Collected Works (Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing
p.
464. Hereafter
are
cited as
Works.
p.
"Guerrilla
pp.
Warfare"
213.
''ibid.,
Vol.
8"'Left-Wing'
Communism, An Infantile
are
31,
context
Illegalitat"
Lenin's.) For a discussion of tactics in the of Communist revolutionary doctrine, see Georg Lukacs, "Legalitat und (1920), Geschichte und Klassenbewusstsein (Berlin: Luchterhand,
pp.
pp.
and
Engels
conceived
in
the
need
of
not
or
the
revolution
by
violent
means,
illegality
necessarily be equated with mass violence. Variations on a theme of civil war insurrection are terror, intimidation, assassination, strikes, demonstrations,
.
.
so and forth. See Lenin, "Guerrilla. Trotsky, Terrorismus und Kommunismus: 1920), p. 43.
Works
(1962),
pp.
214-16;
Lev
Anti-Kautsky
9"The
quite
State
Revolution,"
and
Works
415-16.
confess
a
In commemorating the
1923 uprising Hitler stated that "I can from 1919 to 1923 I thought of nothing else than Volkisher
coup
the
an
Beobachter,
November
10, 1936.
sich'
Hofmann,
Der
Hitlerputsch:
hat Hitlers Aktion scheitern lassen." Hanns Hubert Krisenjahre deutscher Geschichte, 1920-1924
(Munchen: Nymphenburger
See Kurt G. W.
the Blood
Verlagsanstalt, 1961),
I Knew Hitler: The
p.
266.
is it
no
of a Nazi Who Escaped Purge (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1937), pp. 234-35. There reason to doubt the credibility of this passage if it is compared to Hitler's
Ludecke,
Story
put
follows:
our different weapons today we exploit parliament, this does not mean that parliamentary parties are there for parliamentary purposes only. Parliament for us is not an end, but only a means to an end. We are. parliamentary party. .only out of necessity. We do not battle for parliamentary seats for the sake of such seats, but in order to liberate one The constitution prescribes only the day the German people ground on which the battle has to be fought, not its aim. We enter into the
... .
.a
"When among
...
constituted
bodies
legally
of constitutional
rights,
forge
the
party the decisive factor. Once in state into the form of which we
possession
approve."
Zeitung,
September
26, 1930.
&
of the
Central
. . .
(March 7,
pp.
1918),
Works
(1965),
Vol.
27,
p.
99;
'"Left- Wing'
Works
(1966),
58-59.
Legality
As
suppose.
.
and
Illegality
aptly As
a
as
Instruments
it: "It
would
'
Frederick M.
.that
Watkins
of
put
be
mistake
to
the
adoption ends.
electoral
methods of
involved
private
the
abandon
ment.
.of
revolutionary
throughout
. .
.
matter a
fact,
quite
armies
were
maintained extremist
this
period
private
on
quite
. .were
unprecedented
scale
by
the
parties.
These
armies.
ready
to use violence
for
the accomplishment of their purposes. The total result of their activities was
to make
illegal force
a problem
hardly
less
serious
in
the
later
than
in
the earlier
under
days
See
of the
republic."
Powers
pp.
54-55.
1934),
6
pp.
particularly
Carl
1
Fertig, 1968),
Duncker &
Schmitt, Legalitat
pp.
und
Legitimitat, 2nd
cited as
ed. und
(Berlin:
Humblot, 1968),
Deutschen
48-51. Hereafter
Legalitat
See Richard
Thoma, "Die
,
Funktionen der
Staatsgewalt,"
J.C.B.
1932), II, pp. 153-54; Gerhard Anschiitz, Die des Deutschen Reichs vom 11. August 1919, 14th ed. (Berlin: Georg Stilke, 1933), p. 405. The foremost exponent of the latitudinarian interpretation of the constitution was Carl Schmitt. For a discussion of his views see George
Gerhard Anschiitz
and
Verfassung
Schwab, The Challenge of the Exception: An Introduction to the Political Ideas of Carl Schmitt between 1921 and 1936 (Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 1970), pp. 37-43, 49-51, 77-89, 94-97.
Jasper, Der Schutz der Republik: Studien zur staatlichen der Demokratie in der Weimarer Republik 1922-1930 (Tubingen: J.C.B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck] 1963), pp. 11, 14-15.
Gotthard
Sicherung
Heinrich
sanstalt,
Briining, Memoiren,
p.
1918-1934
(Stuttgart:
Deutsche
Verlag-
1970),
387.
Schleicher,"
Eschenburg, "Die Rolle der Personlichkeit in der Krise der VierteljahrHindenburg, Briining, Groener, shefte fiir Zeitgeschichte, Heft 1 (1961), p. 6. See Hindenburg's letter of February 25, 1932 to Friedrich von Berg. Heft 1 (1960), Doc. I, p. 81. Also, Karl Reprinted in Vierteljahrshefte. Dietrich Bracher, Nationalsozialistische Machtergreifung und Reichskonkordat (Wiesbaden: Hessische Landesregierung, 1956), p. 31. Hereafter cited as
Theodor Weimarer Republik:
.
23See,
party, to
for
example, the
January
26 letter
of
of
the Center
state of
of a
emergency.
the government of
wrongdoings and
for
having
for
the to
on
"tolerated
need
others."
Hence he
argued
to
return
immediately
one
to "methods provided
coalitions."
bring
des
about
viable
government
day
before Hitler's
appointment.
Reprinted injahrbuch
Siebeck]
1934),
Vol.
21, 1933/34,
141-42. A copy
of
the
letter
88
Interpretation
on
Hindenburg Morsey
January
der
und
des
Fraktionsvorstands
deutschen
Zentrumspartei,
1926-1933,
ed.
Rudolf
(Mainz: Matthias-Grunewald Verlag, 1969), p. 609. Bracher, Nationalsozialistische Machtergreifung, pp. 31-32. Hans Otto Meissner, Harry Wilde, Die Machtergreifung: Ein Bericht uber die Technik des nationalsozialistischen Staatsstreichs (Stuttgart: J. G. Cotta'sche
Buchhandlung, 1958),
See the
ministers
p.
"Unterredung des
mit
. .
des
Reichsinnen-
(January 31, Heft 2 (1961), Doc. I, p. 186. 1933), Vierteljahrshefte. Andreas Dorpalen, Hindenburg and the Weimar Republic (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1964), pp. 443ff. For the swiftness with which Hitler solidified his power after his appointment see Eliot Barculo Wheaton, The Nazi
,
Frick
Perlitius"
Calamity
21 Iff.;
also
the essays
by
The Path to
2 8
Dictatorship, 1918-1933,
Books, 1966).
Conway, introd.
Fritz Stern
Ideology
Society,
29 30
Press, 1968),
p.
Ibid.,
An
p.
30.
on
Essay
p.
53. Hereafter
cited as
Beacon
34
Lectures, trans. J. J. Shapiro and S. M. Weber, 2nd printing Press, 1970), p. 85. Hereafter cited as Five Lectures. 33 An Essay, p. 57.
Five
An
Five
(Boston:
The
transition
from
a
the
nonrevolutionary
weakening
extension
of
to
the
prerevolutionary
economy
work: radical
situation
"presupposes
the
critical
and
the
global
capitalism,
and
enlightenment."
intensification Ibid.
of
the political
(Frankfurt A. M.:
Benjamin, Versuche iiber Brecht, ed. Rolf Tiedemann, 3rd Suhrkamp Verlag, 1971), p. 105. 7Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man, p. 19. 38 Ibid., p. 57. 39 Ibid., pp. 3, 104. 40"Postscript A Critique, p. 118. 4 1 "Repressive A Critique, pp. 116-17. See also An Essay,
1968," Tolerance,"
Walter
ed.
pp.
closes the
door
and
to
parliamentary
that
within
activities as a means
he,
nevertheless,
of civil
warned revolutionaries
"it
would
be fatal
to
the
defense
rights
liberties
the established
framework."
[legal]
Ibid.,
p.
65.
A Critique, p. 119. Herbert Marcuse, Counterrevolution and Revolt (Boston: Beacon Press, 1972), pp. 10, 12, 22. Hereafter cited as Counterrevolution.
42"Postscript
1968,"
Legality
44
and
Illegality
as
Instruments
89
An
Essay,
ed.
p.
57.
"On the New
Left,"
4sHerbert Marcuse,
History,
471,472.
Documentary
pp.
of
the
"equal
chance"
had
a
meant
driving
of
from
in
order
to safeguard
Weimar
state
(Legalitat
of
und
Legitimitat,
chance"
30ff. For
discussion
entails
Schmitt's
concept
the
"equal
see of
the
Exception,
withdrawal
which
pp.
of
94-97.)
toleration
Marcuse's idea
of speech and
"repressive
"the
assembly from
armament, chauvinism,
discrimination
A
on the
grounds social
religion, care,
services,
p.
security,
grateful
medical
("Repressive
Tolerance,"
Critique,
study
100).
K. A.
on
am
to
G. L. Ulmen,
the author
attention
of a
forthcoming
of
Wittfogel, for
Marcuse.
having called to my
Tolerance,"
the
impact Schmitt's
concept
had
47"Repressive
4 8
Critique,
p.
107.
Counterrevolution, 49 Ibid., p. 29. 50 Ibid., pp. 28, 42. 51 Ibid., p. 42. 52 Ibid., p. 39.
53
p.
43.
Ibid.,
p.
42.
Tolerance,"
"Repressive
paradise see
Kurt
von
schaft
55
(Berlin: Walter
A Critique, p. 105. For a critique of Marcuse's Fritz, Grundprobleme der Geschichte der antiken Wissen de Gruyter, 1971 ), pp. xxiii-xxvii. (Pittsburgh:
See Dietrich
of
The
University
Pittsburgh
Orlow, The History oj the Nazi Party, 1919-1933 Press, 1969), pp. 287-88.
90
THE SEVEN-DAY
STORY*
CHANINAH MASCHLER
St. John's College
That
which
is
concealed
belongs
G-d, but
may do
that
all
which
is
revealed
belongs
torah.
for
ever, that
we
Deut. 29:28
According
made
to
an
ancient
story, the
as
grandest
music, the
music
by
the
not
heard
heavenly by us because,
birth
It is
and
bodies
never
they
is
its
sound
being
we
in
our
ears
from
to
the
moment
of
failing,
text
cannot
mean
attend
it. Our
is
condition
with
respect so
to
the
we
to
study
says.
together
comparable:
familiar,
is
have
it
never turned to
it,
required to
hear
what
I therefore
the
propose
docilely, noticing
impatient impulse
especially
to
formal
features,
thing
and
construe,
appraise, summarize.
The first
we
is that the
most
frequently
repeated
unvarying
count.
word
times
by my
calling
Most
out
verbs
hovering,
calling
or
making, placing, creating, blessing, giving, completing, hallowing attach to G-d as their subject. Yet some abstaining from,
to,
of these
verbs
to say,
"shared"
dividing
22, 28);
on and
(vss.
(vss.
1,
12)
are,
so
between
fruitful,
creatures
others
being
types of
(vss.
one, the
though not
shared
the
the one
on
hand,
the
and
other, the
last
creature
day mankind
masculine
feminine yet
word also
seems
almost
shared
because
to
"dominion"
(a different
though
of
in the
Hebrew)
is
assigned
the
latter. Finally,
King
James
a
version
phrasing, in
certain
verses
is suggested,
In these
adhere to
the
custom of not
writing
out
G-d's (third
name unless
he is
addressed
(second person)
rather
than
person).
The
Seven-Day Story
91
known
waters
as
the
to
cognate
accusative.1
commanded
"grass
grass"
technically Thus, in vs. 11 the earth is (tadshe haarets deshe), in vs. 20 the
swarms
are
commanded
to
"swarm
[of] living
fowl
creatures"
(jishretsu hamajim
to
sherets nefesh
chajah)
and
and
fly
in
the
region
between
earth
the
heavenly
(of
jeofef al
Thus far I
much
haarets alpne rekia hashamaim). have spoken of nouns and verbs. Next we more blatant feature of the text, its use of certain
chief
observe
phrases as
punctuating refrains,
and
among
these
there
was
morning,
one
day,
a
second
day.
although
his
creature,
so"
"and it
. .
was one
off
"and it
evening.
not
day,
day,
equally
cumulate,2
Let
us now
focus
is
on the work of
be
meant
by
the
opening
verse.
G-d's
prime act
no-things
lack
yet
of
light into being, other things, lack of fullness, darkness, and form,
to call
or perhaps
water
having
been
mentioned
(vs.
to
2)
be
and
being
mentioned
as
6ff, 9ff),
In the
one
if
understood
complementary
case
creatures.
of
the
light
of
we
discriminate
holds
true
thing from
indicative
without
any mediating
act or
process,
but
this
for
day
G-d looks
his first
creature,
while
light,
and notes
the
fact
that
it is
good, as though to
say that,
he
made
it,
its
goodness
is
seen
by
him
dark
as
inherent.
after
Only
that
he has found it to be good does he separate it from the had been on the face of the abyss. Thereupon the dark's
shrunk
domain is
creature,
to
night-time.
Nevertheless,
"day"
strangely, the
new
light,
to
which
G-d
called out
as though to assign
it
its province, is
said to
be
of
one
only after,
new
of,
old old
commingling
the
(light)
the
seemingly
from
discerning
and
of the new
from
. .
While the
"and it
was
evening
it
was morning.
is
92
what makes
Interpretation
the
a
with
seven-day story
is
of
story
beginning,
as
middle,
of
and
day
light's
instead
as
being
referred to
ordinally,
first,
it is
spoken
one.4
of
cardinally,
Why?
One
plausible
reason,
to
which
the
medieval
exegetes
called
attention, is
unit
that
paradoxically,
as
in
retrospect
day
to
"one"
called
be
recognized
series.
an additional reason:
The
day
to
of
light's
may be
"one"
called as
indicate
that the
vss.
work of
that
day
in
is
to
be
as
understood
paradeigmatic:
beat"
2-5
are
be
Just
registered
as a
furnishing
meaning
good;
not
the
"basic
poem,
divergencies from
sought
the
if the
basic beat would not be heard nor their beat were not reverberating in the hearer, so
divergencies from
be;
and
it was; seeing
as
dividing
new
from
old;
calling
by
name"
could
be
if that
sequence as
it
occurs
in
description of the one day were not remembered and taken as standard for comparison. Umberto Cassuto, from whose Commentary on Genesis5 I learned
the the
reading to which I'm seeking to win you, after making a list of what was done on each day and studying the list, proposes something like the following arrangement of the
slow-motion,
emblematic
seven
days'
works:
1. light
3.
earth with
its
skin of vegetation
below 6. land
the
completed animals and man
4. luminaries
5. fish 7.
and
fowl
completion of
through abstention
and
from
work
the
of abstention
This
setting-out
calls
attention
the
fact
that
the
work
of the
fourth
day
first,
of
fifth
day
goes
second, the
work
day
with
that
of
the
The
third:
Seven-Day Story
the
93
On
the
second made
betweens")
not
was
locale for fowl (the birds as "goand, although the water below the sky does
day
become
earth
fully
itself
day,
when
the
opposite of the
wet,
still
as
dry,
locale for fish is already about-to-be on the second day. Similarly, the third day's work furnishes the locale for the sixth day's creatures, animals and man. The luminaries of the fourth day clearly go with the light of the first day, although the principle of affiliation between them is not the same as that which binds the second to fifth
the
and third to
sixth,
unless
following
ousian6
furnished
and
by
the tadshe
deshe
the
of vs.
11,
of
jishretsu
sherets of vs.
20,
of jeofef
to
of vs. 20 these
seeming
pattern
mere regions of
sky, sea,
of
land
are
be
via
understood on
light,
as
form
energy
which,
verb, is to
concresce
into
nouns.
Wild
as this
sound,
animals
vs.
24,
of
where
the
earth
is
commanded
to
"send
after vs.
12 had
shown that
and vss.
it
could
command
"grassing
grass,"7
the sequence
(meora),
it.
to
light (lehair) in
Cassuto's
3, 14, 15
little
respectively, may
Mulling
the
over
schema a
longer,
it begins
to
look
as
if
seven-day story
three
should
be
read as
falling
into three
portions: the
first
days,
three, the
day
of abstention
from
be
work.
The
principle or
first
distinguishing. It remains with us to the end, since the separating seventh day of abstention from work which concludes the work of creation is as distinct from the nothing before creation as the beats of rest in a musical composition are from the silence of no music
the minimal may be meant by Biblical idea of holiness is that the holy is something set apart from the Yet, prima facie at least, it seems as though another
"hallowing,"
and,
whatever
else
common.9
principle
gets 10
added
from
the
fourth
and
pivotal
day
on, that
of
movement. and
small
It is
by
day
big
lights
of
days,
land
both
and
seasons,
and years
(vss. 14ff);
the
birds
man
of the
fifth
is described
animals and
on
the next, a
creep,
tread
down)
of motion
(swarm, fly,
that
to
emphasize
it is
as
moving beings
that the
of
fourth, fifth,
and sixth
day are
akin
94
and that
Interpretation
they differ
continue
differ.
on p.
if
you
you
to
study
92,
and
may find
and
that
there third
are
and
important
sixth
affiliations
between
second
seventh
fourth,
fifth,
and
seventh,
first
days. And
Could it be that
seven-day story with which Genesis opens uses time intervals and sequences musically rather than chronologically? Is the intent, perhaps, to convey orders of affiliation among the constituents of happened"
the the visible
t3....?
world rather
than to tell
"what
at times
ti
t2
When,
music
at
the
beginning by
dint
of this
essay, I
said the
Bible, like
the
of the
spheres, is too
familiar for
of
us to
example, that
"research"
only
into
Beginnings
could
in favor
reading
of the
Everybody
Sometimes
of
genealogies.
begat
sexual
so-and-so
marrying
ancestral
this
or
other, in turn
recording begat.
relations are
that so-and-so
. . .
But
affiliation
and
as
sibling
In
reserved
with
strictly for
beings,
whether
dealt
as of
individuals,
nations.
non-Biblical
stories
Beginnings, however, the most prevalent method of conveying order relations is, precisely, genealogy. Some other symbol for connection,
sequence,
sub-
had
the
to
be
chosen
by
the Bible.
Temporality
sexuality
might
hearing
seem
in
Bible
to
play
J
the role of
and
a
be
tales.1
But musicality
Let
to
us now
try
to move
from
the
the
preceding
text
phenomenology
about
reader
hearer,
G-d,
man,
and world?
G-d is the
are
prime grammatical
subject,
are
but his
not
explained.
Only
his deeds
reported.
Not only
not
are
the
ab
theological epithets
extra
which
brings
to the text
(omnipotence,
features
of
omniscience,
benevolence)
I have
mentioned;12
some
the text to
which
block
says
day
.
.
G-d
this
"Let there be
be,"
firmament.
.and
let it be
dividor.
made"
"let there
unlike the
first,
is
mediated
by
"G-d
before it
The
Seven-Day Story
and
95
the same
holds
true
for
the the
seventh.
Does this
not
every day except the first and, perhaps, indicate some stay to the divine power?
saw that
Again,
the sixth
the refrain
"and G-d
of the
it
good,"
was
culminating in
day's seeing
to
totality
of
his
creation and
finding
upon
it
"very
good,"
G-d
must
good
look back
and
his
work's
outcome
learn
of
whether
it is
whether
it is
the
complete.
As
for
the
attribute
benevolence,
we
may,
indeed, by
Gospel
that
principle of
after
it is only
inference (Matthew 7:16f), conclude to it, seeing G-d has found the issue of his work good that he
of
permits the
evening
commingling
set;
but
this
is
a conclusion.
We are, perhaps,
relation
to
until after
given one further hint as to G-d's nature in his creation: G-d did not choose to abstain from work he had made a being that was to be his image. Apparently,
in
creation
big
and
little light
and
stars1
stand to
as complete.
Yet
what
exactly G-d
the
image,
to
after our
likeness,"
in saying "Let us make man in our he intended man to be or to become, bi-sexual that comes to be is true
meant what
creature14
G-d's
plan
we
are
not
(yet?)
told.
We
are
explanatory
apposition
to the
beginning
but
this
of vs.
have dominion (from a over sea, air, and land creator that we learn
something puzzling
Another
strange
"tread
or
"govern")
but
as
animals,
of
since
it is
not as ruler
G-d in
opening chapter,
there
is
likeness.
noted
feature
of vs.
26 has been
for
as
long as the
It has
Bible has been studied, namely, that G-d says: "Let us make man in likeness." The plural can not betoken majesty our image after our
since
classical
of
construction.15
therefore
been
result of the
fact
used
in
the
of
form (the
Speiser
being
-im).
E.
A.
others,
pointing
to
analogies
between
"us,"
Enuma Elis
and the
Biblical
story,1
creation
this
hypothesis
of the
to mean that
G-d,
the
in saying
is addressing
the
Council
Gods. Yet
as
96
medieval
Interpretation
Jewish
exegete
Rashi
points out a
(in
response
to a pious
reading
modern make
which
seems to
one),17
me
just
different form
as
of words
for
the
impious
verse
27 (where
Using
do
the
the
succeeding
verses.
of
shared"
about
"being
verbs, it makes better sense to understand this odd plural expressing G-d's invitation, addressed to his preceding works,
certain
as
to
collaborate with
him in
as
their
ruler.18
It is
urging his
creatures to
making of the creature which is to be though, from vs. 11 on, G-d is continually burst into further fulness but helps out their
the
vs.
6,
was not
the
sky
to
be,
Many
in the
discern have
what
is
of the text
not as
focus.
The
the
us
first,
to
which
lecture
that
mentioned
in footnote
10)
is
this:
Though
of
vs.
31
assures
"all"
that
creation"
if
you
will,19
is
"very
are
good,"
and
mankind,
not
and
each
separately
called
Does
this
likeness
of
between sky
about
man
in
terms of a shared
lack
tell us
something
the
waters
man?20
And
are we to
"up"
creature
on
that
apart
high
waters
from down
(the sky
as
holding
below)
and the
indeterminate
ness of
is
to acquire
knowledge
of good and
bad is
for
the
outstanding
the
excellence of creation as a
The
other requires
registering
implications
of vss.
28
and
29
being juxtaposed. Verse 28, as mentioned earlier, seems to say that one ingredient at least of man's being made in the image of G-d is
that
he
and
creatures creature
he below
share
alone
is
assigned
the
sky.
the other
moving
this authoritative
is
to
to
to eat none of
the
his
!
but,
as vs.
30
continues to
say,
is
food
of
these
subjects.
Man
and
beast
are
designed
nature
be
vegetarian.2
Is
not the
implication that,
G-d's
original
2
whatever the
of
the
authority
to
which
G-d
out
assigned to
mankind, however
difficult it may be
authority
make
design,
so
human
to
be
exploitative.2
Further,
long as we
The
adhere to the
at
Seven-Day Story
97
seven-day story, it appears that G-d's original intention light" and was, most, for mankind masculine to be the "big light," mankind feminine to be the "little both rulers, but not of one
another nor even of
the stars.
What
occurs.
Note, first,
seems to take
being one.
They have
populated,
been
as
we now
and and
integrated. Yet
vs.
1 is
quick
it is
not
Father
Sky
as original
Begetting Pair, we
of the
for fulness
"natural Bible
of
This warding
verse
piety"
off of
begins.2 3
point to prevent
the
common
first
things
.
G-d
the
story
runs:
"The
and
earth.
Then he
created
light. later on
.
Such
we are
reading obviously makes nonsense of the fact that told that the earth does not become distinct until the
third
day,
while the
heavens,
as
called
into
being
G-d
on the second
day.
and earth not
Not only
as
are
sky
they
were
themselves not
begotten,
not
did they
from
in
some philosophic
theories,
nor
come to
be
of
by
They
but
are
deliberate divine
are
planning,
differentiating,
only
as a
making.
As
a whole
they
"very
good."
And
not
whole,
world
also considered
severally, the
subordinate wholes
in the
good,
with
the the
in the
world most
nearly like
himself,
question
sky
and mankind.
The
text,
and
never raised
ask
by
the
the
question,24
but
and
each
being
of and
not
only mankind, is
is
commanded
assigned a station
job
the
earth
to
bring
does
forth its
stationary
Often the
moving
stars
fish;
the
sky its
fowl;
sun, moon,
and
have
their
function,
is
and
so
mankind.
which
assigned
job
of work until
self-perpetuation
merely,
may
In
seem
disappointing,
G-d
words,
it is
realized that
the
seven-day
whoever
story's
theme
is
that
seeks perpetuation of
variety of kinds.
other
according
to the
Biblical narrator,
he be,
to
effort and
blessing
is from reverting
98
that
Interpretation
homogenized
state
no
of
being
which
might
as
well
be
called
non-being because it is
longer
or not yet
any definite
being.2 5
owe much
to Robert Sacks
and
to
his unfortunately
as yet unpublished
and
the Ass.
effect of the
wonderful
2Contrast
the
Illiad,
bronze", "they
put their
hands
before them", but above all, "rosy-fingered dawn". C. S. Lewis, in his Preface to Paradise Lost (London: Oxford University Press, 1943), p. 23, described the
effect of
the
Homeric lines
in
to
perfection:
What is really in
up,
as watchers
first
catch sight of
the sea
after a
long
absence, or look
doubtall manner of
hopes
and
sentries, to see yet another daybreak? Many things, no But under all these, like a bass so deep as to be fears.
.
old
or
experience and
might very lamely express by muttering "same The permanence, the indifference, the heartrending or whether we laugh or weep the world is what it is, always enters into our plays no small part in that pressure of reality which is one of the differences
which we
morning."
old
between life
and
imagined life.
the
It is
as though were
Biblical
narrator each
time
as
he lets dusk
always,"
set
in
and
morning
break
the reader
with
saying "same
yet
only
is
to shock
him into
the newness of
history,
5
as
conspires to
something
to
become.
etymological comment on vs.
Ibn Ezra's
reported
in
by
Press,
1969),
I
p.
2.
cannot
fathom why
between
6
7
the contrast
Press,
English
edition
1961.
the the
see
phrase
if
the pangs of
thematic word of
cabalistic
Exodus)
theme of expulsion
(the word here used is the same as felt as early as the third day of creation. On or departure as the very process of creation,
Gershom
Sabbath,
the so-called
Havdalah,
223
edition of
the
Weekday,
Sabbath, and Festival (New York: Hebrew Publishing Company, 1961). 9See Leviticus chapters 19 and 20.
I
1
owe
the suggestion to
lecture
by
Leo Strauss
given at
the
University
of
Chicago in
January, 1957
Hans
and circulated
in
manuscript
of
(in The Phenomenon of Life, New York: Harper and Row, 1966), Father Ong's Ramus and the Decay of Dialogue (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1958), and Auerbach's
1Compare
Jonas'
essay "The
Nobility
Sight"
famous study of the contrast between the style of Homer and that of Genesis in Mimesis (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1953). Whether my suggestion
that the seven
days
should
be
understood as though
they
were
The
a musical
an
Seven-Day Story
day being
"a
return
99
to the
scale, the
advance,"
is something
into
the text
is,
course,
hard
to
determine. Much
depends,
obviously,
scale,
a pentatonic or a
heptatonic,
addressed.
in the
a
was in use among the people to whom the seven-day story was first While it used to be thought that they had a pentatonic scale, a snippet New York Times of March 10, 1974 (iv., 5:3) reports the decipherment of
clay
and
tablet
as
yielding
our
heptatonic
scale,
with
to
to
half-steps.
Bloch, 1972) for
of at
an
philosophers'
12See
distortions
and
its interpretation
of
It
to to
can
hardly be ignorance
and
of
the
facts
life
that
leads
identify
feminine,
is
urged
be fruitful
to
become
many.
of the
flesh."
flood) bi-sexuality
is emphatically seen as a mark of "every living thing Just as it lacks the tu/vous distinction. For an
what goes with
illuminating commentary on its elimination, see "The Pronouns of Power Solidarity" and Seboek et al, Style in by R. Brown and A. Gilman in T. Language (Cambridge: M.I.T. Press, 1960). See his translation and commentary on Genesis in the Anchor Bible series
this
distinction
and
,A.
(New York:
7
Doubleday, 1964).
G-d
was
addressing the
angels.
Publication
earth
Ginzberg, The Legends of the Jews (Philadelphia: Society, 1909-38), i, 50: "G-d now bade all beings in heaven
. .
Jewish
and on
This interpretation
to the
of the words
made"
goes
back
Renaissance
commentator
Sforno. It
in
nuce
one
Leibniz'
at least famous
is
the
best
possible
world, that
is,
the
best
the constituents
Guide
for
the
Perplexed
(New
the
York:
Dover
Not
is
opening verses
of
chapter
again
9,
meaning
the
of the
Prophet's
lie down
caught
with
22I
myself
word,
about
and
let it
stand sound
Marx's
early
writings
alienation
Just
as
the
second
Biblical
story cycle,
and
which
begins
with
Abraham,
normally
ask
detaches him
concretizes
father's
after
.
house all
that
"ancestral
seems
piety."
24Thus
is
there
it
Leibniz (and
nothing.
him
Heidegger)
are
"Why
the
something, which,
why
not
rather
they
violating
the
would as a
prohibition chapter's
according
to
an
old
at
story, is
the
contained
in
you
creation see a
opening letter: Ifyou letter that looks like this, 3_ , the motion suggested is headed
looked
towards
Hebrew text,
Looked
at
as an opener.
merely
drawing,
the
left
which, in
Hebrew, is forward
100
along
the
Interpretation
writing
and
reading line. According to the story, this beginning letter be no probing into the antecedents of G-d's creative act. "That which is concealed [what lies to the right of the first "! ] belongs to the Lord our G-d. But that which is revealed [all that follows it] belongs to us and
shows
that there
is
to
our children
for
ever, that
we
may do
cit,
all
the
and
words of
this
Torah."
2sCompare Ginzberg,
970ff.
op.
i, 52
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research
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ESSAYS
IN HONOR
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STUDY IN BLACK AND WHITE FOR HARPISCHORD: For Jacob Klein Douglas Allanbrook THE SHEPHERD AND THE WOLF: On the First Book of Plato's Republic Robert Bart HIPPOL YTUS Seth Benardete RATIONAL ANIMAL-POLITICAL ANIMAL: Nature and Convention in Human Speech and Politics Laurence Berns AN APPRECIATION OF KANT'S CRITIQUE OF PURE REASON: An Introduction for Students Eva Brann
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