I have oneword for this book, Extremelyinformative. Fucking read it.
“Behold! human beings living in a sort of underground
den, which has a mouth open towards the light and reaching all across the den;
they have been here from their childhood, and have their legs and necks chained
so that they cannot move, and can only see before them; for the chains are
arranged in such a manner as to prevent them from turning round their heads. At
a distance above and behind them the light of a fire is blazing, and between
the fire and the prisoners there is a raised way; and you will see, if you
look, a low wall built along the way, like the screen which marionette players
have before them, over which they show the puppets.
I see, he said.
And do you see, I said, men passing along the wall
carrying vessels, which appear over the wall; also figures of men and animals,
made of wood and stone and various materials; and some of the prisoners, as you
would expect, are talking, and some of them are silent?
This is a strange image, he said, and they are
strange prisoners.
Like ourselves, I replied; and they see only their
own shadows, or the shadows of one another, which the fire throws on the
opposite wall of the cave?
True, he said: how could they see anything but the
shadows if they were never allowed to move their heads?
And of the objects which are being carried in like
manner they would see only the shadows?
Yes, he said.
And if they were able to talk with one another, would
they not suppose that they were naming what was actually before them?” — The
Republic of Plato, Book Seven. (Jowett Translation.)
CONTENTS
PART I. INTRODUCTION
I. The World Outside and
the Pictures in Our Heads
PART II. APPROACHES TO
THE WORLD OUTSIDE
II. Censorship and
Privacy
III. Contact and Opportunity
IV. Time and Attention
V. Speed, Words, and
Clearness
PART III. STEREOTYPES
VI. Stereotypes
VII. Stereotypes as
Defense
VIII. Blind Spots and
Their Value
IX. Codes and Their
Enemies
X. The Detection of
Stereotypes
PART IV. INTERESTS
XI. The Enlisting of
Interest
XII. Self-Interest
Reconsidered
PART V. THE MAKING OF A
COMMON WILL
XIII. The Transfer of
Interest
XIV. Yes or No
XV. Leaders and the Rank
and File
PART VI. THE IMAGE OF
DEMOCRACY
XVI. The Self-Centered
Man
XVII. The Self-Contained
Community
XVIII. The Role of Force,
Patronage, and Privilege
XIX. The Old Image in a
New Form: Guild Socialism
XX. A New Image
PART VII. NEWSPAPERS
XXI. The Buying Public
XXII. The Constant Reader
XXIII. The Nature of News
XXIV. News, Truth, and a
Conclusion
PART VIII. ORGANIZED
INTELLIGENCE
XXV. The Entering Wedge
XXVI. Intelligence Work
XXVII. The Appeal to the
Public
XXVIII. The Appeal to
Reason
PART I. INTRODUCTION
I. THE WORLD OUTSIDE AND
THE PICTURES IN OUR HEADS
There is an island in the ocean where in 1914 a few
Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Germans lived. No cable reaches that island, and the
British mail steamer comes but once in sixty days. In September it had not yet
come, and the islanders were still talking about the latest newspaper which
told about the approaching trial of Madame Caillaux for the shooting of Gaston
Calmette. It was, therefore, with more than usual eagerness that the whole
colony assembled at the quay on a day in mid-September to hear from the captain
what the verdict had been. They learned that for over six weeks now those of
them who were English and those of them who were French had been fighting in
behalf of the sanctity of treaties against those of them who were Germans. For
six strange weeks they had acted as if they were friends, when in fact they
were enemies.
But their plight was not so different from that of
most of the population of Europe. They had been mistaken for six weeks, on the
continent the interval may have been only six days or six hours. There was an
interval. There was a moment when the picture of Europe on which men were
conducting their business as usual, did not in any way correspond to the Europe
which was about to make a jumble of their lives. There was a time for each man
when he was still adjusted to an environment that no longer existed. All over
the world as late as July 25th men were making goods that they would not be
able to ship, buying goods they would not be able to import, careers were being
planned, enterprises contemplated, hopes and expectations entertained, all in
the belief that the world as known was the world as it was. Men were writing
books describing that world. They trusted the picture in their heads. And then
over four years later, on a Thursday morning, came the news of an armistice,
and people gave vent to their unutterable relief that the slaughter was over.
Yet in the five days before the real armistice came, though the end of the war
had been celebrated, several thousand young men died on the battlefields.
Looking back we can see how indirectly we know the
environment in which nevertheless we live. We can see that the news of it comes
to us now fast, now slowly; but that whatever we believe to be a true picture,
we treat as if it were the environment itself. It is harder to remember that about
the beliefs upon which we are now acting, but in respect to other peoples and
other ages we flatter ourselves that it is easy to see when they were in deadly
earnest about ludicrous pictures of the world. We insist, because of our
superior hindsight, that the world as they needed to know it, and the world as
they did know it, were often two quite contradictory things. We can see, too,
that while they governed and fought, traded and reformed in the world as they
imagined it to be, they produced results, or failed to produce any, in the
world as it was. They started for the Indies and found America. They diagnosed
evil and hanged old women. They thought they could grow rich by always selling
and never buying. A caliph, obeying what he conceived to be the Will of Allah,
burned the library at Alexandria.
Writing about the year 389,
St. Ambrose stated the case for the prisoner in Plato’s cave who
resolutely declines to turn his head. “To discuss the nature and position of
the earth does not help us in our hope of the life to come. It is enough to
know what Scripture states. ‘That He hung up the earth upon nothing’ (Job xxvi.
7). Why then argue whether He hung it up in air or upon the water, and raise a
controversy as to how the thin air could sustain the earth; or why, if upon the
waters, the earth does not go crashing down to the bottom?… Not because the
earth is in the middle, as if suspended on even balance, but because the
majesty of God constrains it by the law of His will, does it endure stable upon
the unstable and the void.” [Footnote: Hexaemeron, i. cap 6, quoted in The
Mediæval Mind, by Henry Osborn Taylor, Vol. i, p. 73.]
It does not help us in our hope of the life to come.
It is enough to know what Scripture states. Why then argue? But a century and a
half after St. Ambrose, opinion was still troubled, on this occasion by the
problem of the antipodes. A monk named Cosmas,
famous for his scientific attainments, was therefore deputed to write a
Christian Topography, or “Christian Opinion concerning the World.” [Footnote:
Lecky, Rationalism in Europe, Vol. I, pp. 276-8.] It is clear that he knew
exactly what was expected of him, for he based all his conclusions on the
Scriptures as he read them. It appears, then, that the world is a flat
parallelogram, twice as broad from east to west as it is long from north to
south., In the center is the earth surrounded by ocean, which is in turn
surrounded by another earth, where men lived before the deluge. This other
earth was Noah’s port of embarkation. In the north is a high conical mountain
around which revolve the sun and moon. When the sun is behind the mountain it
is night. The sky is glued to the edges of the outer earth. It consists of four
high walls which meet in a concave roof, so that the earth is the floor of the
universe. There is an ocean on the other side of the sky, constituting the
“waters that are above the firmament.” The space between the celestial ocean
and the ultimate roof of the universe belongs to the blest. The space between
the earth and sky is inhabited by the angels. Finally, since St. Paul said that
all men are made to live upon the “face of the earth” how could they live on
the back where the Antipodes are supposed to be? With such a passage before his
eyes, a Christian, we are told, should not ‘even speak of the Antipodes.’“
[Footnote: Id.]
Far less should he go to the Antipodes; nor should
any Christian prince give him a ship to try; nor would any pious mariner wish
to try. For Cosmas there was nothing in the least absurd about his map. Only by
remembering his absolute conviction that this was the map of the universe can
we begin to understand how he would have dreaded Magellan or Peary or the
aviator who risked a collision with the angels and the vault of heaven by
flying seven miles up in the air. In the same way we can best understand the
furies of war and politics by remembering that almost the whole of each party
believes absolutely in its picture of the opposition, that it takes as fact,
not what is, but what it supposes to be the fact. And that therefore, like
Hamlet, it will stab Polonius behind the rustling curtain, thinking him the
king, and perhaps like Hamlet add:
“Thou wretched, rash, intruding fool, farewell!
I took thee for thy better; take thy fortune.”
2
Great men, even during their lifetime, are usually
known to the public only through a fictitious personality. Hence the modicum of
truth in the old saying that no man is a hero to his valet. There is only a
modicum of truth, for the valet, and the private secretary, are often immersed
in the fiction themselves. Royal personages are, of
course, constructed personalities. Whether they themselves believe in their
public character, or whether they merely permit the chamberlain to stage-manage
it, there are at least two distinct selves, the public and regal self, the
private and human. The biographies of great people fall more or less
readily into the histories of these two selves. The official biographer
reproduces the public life, the revealing memoir the other. The Charnwood Lincoln,
for example, is a noble portrait, not of an actual human being, but of an epic
figure, replete with significance, who moves on much the same level of reality
as Aeneas or St. George. Oliver’s Hamilton is a majestic abstraction, the
sculpture of an idea, “an essay” as Mr. Oliver himself calls it, “on American
union.” It is a formal monument to the state-craft of federalism, hardly the
biography of a person. Sometimes people create their own facade when they think
they are revealing the interior scene. The Repington diaries and Margot Asquith’s
are a species of self-portraiture in which the intimate detail is most
revealing as an index of how the authors like to think about themselves.
But the most interesting kind of portraiture is that
which arises spontaneously in people’s minds. When Victoria came to the throne,
says Mr. Strachey, [Footnote: Lytton Strachey, Queen Victoria, p. 72.] “among
the outside public there was a great wave of enthusiasm. Sentiment and romance
were coming into fashion; and the spectacle of the little girl-queen, innocent,
modest, with fair hair and pink cheeks, driving through her capital, filled the
hearts of the beholders with raptures of affectionate loyalty. What, above all,
struck everybody with overwhelming force was the contrast between Queen
Victoria and her uncles. The nasty old men, debauched and selfish, pigheaded
and ridiculous, with their perpetual burden of debts, confusions, and
disreputabilities—they had vanished like the snows of winter and here at last,
crowned and radiant, was the spring.”
M. Jean de Pierrefeu [Footnote: Jean de Pierrefeu, G.
Q. G. Trois ans au Grand Quartier General, pp 94-95.] saw hero-worship at first
hand, for he was an officer on Joffre’s staff at the moment of that soldier’s
greatest fame:
“For two years, the entire world paid an almost
divine homage to the victor of the Marne. The baggage-master literally bent
under the weight of the boxes, of the packages and letters which unknown people
sent him with a frantic testimonial of their admiration. I think that outside
of General Joffre, no commander in the war has been able to realize a
comparable idea of what glory is. They sent him boxes of candy from all the
great confectioners of the world, boxes of champagne, fine wines of every
vintage, fruits, game, ornaments and utensils, clothes, smoking materials,
inkstands, paperweights. Every territory sent its specialty. The painter sent
his picture, the sculptor his statuette, the dear old lady a comforter or
socks, the shepherd in his hut carved a pipe for his sake. All the
manufacturers of the world who were hostile to Germany shipped their products,
Havana its cigars, Portugal its port wine. I have known a hairdresser who had
nothing better to do than to make a portrait of the General out of hair
belonging to persons who were dear to him; a professional penman had the same
idea, but the features were composed of thousands of little phrases in tiny
characters which sang the praise of the General. As to letters, he had them in
all scripts, from all countries, written in every dialect, affectionate
letters, grateful, overflowing with love, filled with adoration. They called
him Savior of the World, Father of his Country, Agent of God, Benefactor of
Humanity, etc…. And not only Frenchmen, but Americans, Argentinians,
Australians, etc. etc…. Thousands of little children, without their parents’
knowledge, took pen in hand and wrote to tell him their love: most of them
called him Our Father. And there was poignancy about their effusions, their
adoration, these sighs of deliverance that escaped from thousands of hearts at
the defeat of barbarism. To all these naif little souls, Joffre seemed like St.
George crushing the dragon. Certainly he incarnated for the conscience of
mankind the victory of good over evil, of light over darkness.
Lunatics, simpletons, the half-crazy and the crazy
turned their darkened brains toward him as toward reason itself. I have read
the letter of a person living in Sydney, who begged the General to save him
from his enemies; another, a New Zealander, requested him to send some soldiers
to the house of a gentleman who owed him ten pounds and would not pay.
Finally, some hundreds of young girls, overcoming the
timidity of their sex, asked for engagements, their families not to know about
it; others wished only to serve him.”
This ideal Joffre was compounded out of the victory
won by him, his staff and his troops, the despair of the war, the personal
sorrows, and the hope of future victory. But beside hero-worship there is the
exorcism of devils. By the same mechanism through which heroes are incarnated,
devils are made. If everything good was to come from Joffre, Foch, Wilson, or
Roosevelt, everything evil originated in the Kaiser Wilhelm, Lenin and Trotsky.
They were as omnipotent for evil as the heroes were omnipotent for good. To
many simple and frightened minds there was no political reverse, no strike, no
obstruction, no mysterious death or mysterious conflagration anywhere in the
world of which the causes did not wind back to these personal sources of evil.
3
Worldwide concentration of this kind on a symbolic
personality is rare enough to be clearly remarkable, and every author has a
weakness for the striking and irrefutable example. The vivisection of war
reveals such examples, but it does not make them out of nothing. In a more
normal public life, symbolic pictures are no less governant of behavior, but
each symbol is far less inclusive because there are so many competing ones. Not
only is each symbol charged with less feeling because at most it represents
only a part of the population, but even within that part there is infinitely
less suppression of individual difference. The symbols of public opinion, in
times of moderate security, are subject to check and comparison and argument.
They come and go, coalesce and are forgotten, never organizing perfectly the
emotion of the whole group. There is, after all, just one human activity left
in which whole populations accomplish the union sacrée. It occurs in those
middle phases of a war when fear, pugnacity, and hatred have secured complete
dominion of the spirit, either to crush every other instinct or to enlist it,
and before weariness is felt.
At almost all other times, and even in war when it is
deadlocked, a sufficiently greater range of feelings is aroused to establish
conflict, choice, hesitation, and compromise. The symbolism of public opinion
usually bears, as we shall see, [Footnote: Part V.] the marks of this balancing
of interest. Think, for example, of how rapidly, after the armistice, the
precarious and by no means successfully established symbol of Allied Unity
disappeared, how it was followed almost immediately by the breakdown of each
nation’s symbolic picture of the other: Britain the Defender of Public Law, France
watching at the Frontier of Freedom, America the Crusader. And think then of
how within each nation the symbolic picture of itself frayed out, as party and
class conflict and personal ambition began to stir postponed issues. And then
of how the symbolic pictures of the leaders gave way, as one by one, Wilson,
Clemenceau, Lloyd George, ceased to be the incarnation of human hope, and
became merely the negotiators and administrators for a disillusioned world.
Whether we regret this as one of the soft evils of
peace or applaud it as a return to sanity is obviously no matter here. Our
first concern with fictions and symbols is to forget their value to the
existing social order, and to think of them simply as an important part of the
machinery of human communication. Now in any society that is not completely
self-contained in its interests and so small that everyone can know all about
everything that happens, ideas deal with events that are out of sight and hard
to grasp. Miss Sherwin of Gopher Prairie, [Footnote: See Sinclair Lewis, Main
Street.] is aware that a war is raging in France and tries to conceive it. She
has never been to France, and certainly she has never been along what is now
the battlefront.
Pictures of French and German soldiers she has seen,
but it is impossible for her to imagine three million men. No one, in fact, can
imagine them, and the professionals do not try. They think of them as, say, two
hundred divisions. But Miss Sherwin has no access to the order of battle maps,
and so if she is to think about the war, she fastens upon Joffre and the Kaiser
as if they were engaged in a personal duel. Perhaps if you could see what she
sees with her mind’s eye, the image in its composition might be not unlike an
Eighteenth Century engraving of a great soldier. He stands there boldly
unruffled and more than life size, with a shadowy army of tiny little figures
winding off into the landscape behind. Nor it seems are great men oblivious to
these expectations. M. de Pierrefeu tells of a photographer’s visit to Joffre.
The General was in his “middle class office, before the worktable without
papers, where he sat down to write his signature. Suddenly it was noticed that
there were no maps on the walls. But since according to popular ideas it is not
possible to think of a general without maps, a few were placed in position for
the picture, and removed soon afterwards.” [Footnote: Op. cit., p. 99.]
The only feeling that anyone
can have about an event he does not experience is the feeling aroused by his
mental image of that event. That is why until we know what others think they
know, we cannot truly understand their acts. I have seen a young girl,
brought up in a Pennsylvania mining town, plunged suddenly from entire
cheerfulness into a paroxysm of grief when a gust of wind cracked the kitchen
window-pane. For hours she was inconsolable, and to me incomprehensible. But
when she was able to talk, it transpired that if a window-pane broke it meant
that a close relative had died. She was, therefore, mourning for her father,
who had frightened her into running away from home. The father was, of course,
quite thoroughly alive as a telegraphic inquiry soon proved. But until the
telegram came, the cracked glass was an authentic message to that girl. Why it
was authentic only a prolonged investigation by a skilled psychiatrist could
show. But even the most casual observer could see that the girl, enormously
upset by her family troubles, had hallucinated a complete fiction out of one
external fact, a remembered superstition, and a turmoil of remorse, and fear
and love for her father.
Abnormality in these instances is only a matter of
degree. When an Attorney-General, who has been frightened by a bomb exploded on
his doorstep, convinces himself by the reading of revolutionary literature that
a revolution is to happen on the first of May 1920, we recognize that much the
same mechanism is at work. The war, of course, furnished many examples of this
pattern: the casual fact, the creative imagination, the will to believe, and
out of these three elements, a counterfeit of reality to which there was a
violent instinctive response. For it is clear enough that under certain
conditions men respond as powerfully to fictions as they do to realities, and
that in many cases they help to create the very fictions to which they respond.
Let him cast the first stone who did not believe in the Russian army that
passed through England in August, 1914, did not accept any tale of atrocities
without direct proof, and never saw a plot, a traitor, or a spy where there was
none. Let him cast a stone who never passed on as the real inside truth what he
had heard someone say who knew no more than he did.
In all these instances we must note particularly one
common factor. It is the insertion between man and his environment of a
pseudo-environment. To that pseudo-environment his behavior is a response. But
because it is behavior, the consequences, if they are acts, operate not in the
pseudo-environment where the behavior is stimulated, but in the real environment
where action eventuates. If the behavior is not a practical act, but what we
call roughly thought and emotion, it may be a long time before there is any
noticeable break in the texture of the fictitious world. But when the stimulus
of the pseudo-fact results in action on things or other people, contradiction
soon develops. Then comes the sensation of butting one’s head against a stone
wall, of learning by experience, and witnessing Herbert Spencer’s tragedy of
the murder of a Beautiful Theory by a Gang of Brutal Facts, the discomfort in
short of a maladjustment. For certainly, at the level of social life, what is
called the adjustment of man to his environment takes place through the medium
of fictions.
By fictions I do not mean lies. I mean a representation of
the environment which is in lesser or greater degree made by man himself. The range of fiction extends all the way from complete
hallucination to the scientists’ perfectly self-conscious use of a schematic
model, or his decision that for his particular problem accuracy beyond a
certain number of decimal places is not important. A work of fiction may have
almost any degree of fidelity, and so long as the degree of fidelity can be
taken into account, fiction is not misleading. In fact, human culture is very
largely the selection, the rearrangement, the tracing of patterns upon, and the
stylizing of, what William James called “the random irradiations and
resettlements of our ideas.” [Footnote: James, Principles of Psychology, Vol.
II, p. 638] The alternative to the use of fictions is direct exposure to the
ebb and flow of sensation. That is not a real alternative, for however
refreshing it is to see at times with a perfectly innocent eye, innocence
itself is not wisdom, though a source and corrective of wisdom. For the real
environment is altogether too big, too complex, and too fleeting for direct
acquaintance. We are not equipped to deal with so much subtlety, so much
variety, so many permutations and combinations. And although we have to act in
that environment, we have to reconstruct it on a simpler model before we can
manage with it. To traverse the world men must have maps of the world. Their
persistent difficulty is to secure maps on which their own need, or someone
else’s need, has not sketched in the coast of Bohemia.
4
The analyst of public opinion must begin then, by
recognizing the triangular relationship between the scene of action, the human
picture of that scene, and the human response to that picture working itself
out upon the scene of action. It is like a play suggested to the actors by
their own experience, in which the plot is transacted in the real lives of the
actors, and not merely in their stage parts. The moving picture often
emphasizes with great skill this double drama of interior motive and external
behavior. Two men are quarreling, ostensibly about some money, but their
passion is inexplicable. Then the picture fades out and what one or the other
of the two men sees with his mind’s eye is reënacted. Across the table they were
quarreling about money. In memory they are back in their youth when the girl
jilted him for the other man. The exterior drama is explained: the hero is not
greedy; the hero is in love.
A scene not so different was played in the United
States Senate. At breakfast on the morning of September 29, 1919, some of the
Senators read a news dispatch in the Washington Post about the landing of
American marines on the Dalmatian coast. The newspaper said:
FACTS
NOW ESTABLISHED
“The following important facts appear already
established. The orders to Rear Admiral Andrews commanding the American naval
forces in the Adriatic, came from the British Admiralty via the War Council and
Rear Admiral Knapps in London. The approval or disapproval of the American Navy
Department was not asked….
WITHOUT
DANIELS’ KNOWLEDGE
“Mr. Daniels was admittedly placed in a peculiar
position when cables reached here stating that the forces over which he is
presumed to have exclusive control were carrying on what amounted to naval
warfare without his knowledge. It was fully realized that the British Admiralty
might desire to issue orders to Rear Admiral Andrews to act on behalf of Great
Britain and her Allies, because the situation required sacrifice on the part of
some nation if D’Annunzio’s followers were to be held in check.
“It was further realized that under the new league of
nations plan foreigners would be in a position to direct American Naval forces
in emergencies with or without the consent of the American Navy Department….”
etc. (Italics mine).
The first Senator to comment is Mr. Knox of
Pennsylvania. Indignantly he demands investigation. In Mr. Brandegee of
Connecticut, who spoke next, indignation has already stimulated credulity.
Where Mr. Knox indignantly wishes to know if the report is true, Mr. Brandegee,
a half a minute later, would like to know what would have happened if marines
had been killed. Mr. Knox, interested in the question, forgets that he asked
for an inquiry, and replies. If American marines had been killed, it would be
war. The mood of the debate is still conditional. Debate proceeds. Mr.
McCormick of Illinois reminds the Senate that the Wilson administration is
prone to the waging of small unauthorized wars. He repeats Theodore Roosevelt’s
quip about “waging peace.” More debate. Mr. Brandegee notes that the marines
acted “under orders of a Supreme Council sitting somewhere,” but he cannot
recall who represents the United States on that body. The Supreme Council is
unknown to the Constitution of the United States. Therefore Mr. New of Indiana
submits a resolution calling for the facts.
So far the Senators still recognize vaguely that they
are discussing a rumor. Being lawyers they still remember some of the forms of
evidence. But as red-blooded men they already experience all the indignation
which is appropriate to the fact that American marines have been ordered into
war by a foreign government and without the consent of Congress. Emotionally
they want to believe it, because they are Republicans fighting the League of
Nations. This arouses the Democratic leader, Mr. Hitchcock of Nebraska. He
defends the Supreme Council: it was acting under the war powers. Peace has not
yet been concluded because the Republicans are delaying it. Therefore the
action was necessary and legal. Both sides now assume that the report is true,
and the conclusions they draw are the conclusions of their partisanship. Yet
this extraordinary assumption is in a debate over a resolution to investigate
the truth of the assumption. It reveals how difficult it is, even for trained
lawyers, to suspend response until the returns are in. The response is
instantaneous. The fiction is taken for truth because the fiction is badly
needed.
A few days later an official report showed that the
marines were not landed by order of the British Government or of the Supreme
Council. They had not been fighting the Italians. They had been landed at the
request of the Italian Government to protect Italians, and the American
commander had been officially thanked by the Italian authorities. The marines
were not at war with Italy. They had acted according to an established
international practice which had nothing to do with the League of Nations.
The scene of action was the Adriatic. The picture of
that scene in the Senators’ heads at Washington was furnished, in this case
probably with intent to deceive, by a man who cared nothing about the Adriatic,
but much about defeating the League. To this picture the Senate responded by a
strengthening of its partisan differences over the League.
5
Whether in this particular case the Senate was above
or below its normal standard, it is not necessary to decide. Nor whether the
Senate compares favorably with the House, or with other parliaments. At the
moment, I should like to think only about the world-wide spectacle of men
acting upon their environment, moved by stimuli from their pseudo-environments.
For when full allowance has been made for deliberate fraud, political science
has still to account for such facts as two nations attacking one another, each
convinced that it is acting in self-defense, or two classes at war each certain
that it speaks for the common interest. They live, we are likely to say, in
different worlds. More accurately, they live in the same world, but they think and
feel in different ones.
It is to these special worlds, it is to these private
or group, or class, or provincial, or occupational, or national, or sectarian
artifacts, that the political adjustment of mankind in the Great Society takes
place. Their variety and complication are impossible to describe. Yet these
fictions determine a very great part of men’s political behavior. We must think
of perhaps fifty sovereign parliaments consisting of at least a hundred
legislative bodies. With them belong at least fifty hierarchies of provincial
and municipal assemblies, which with their executive, administrative and
legislative organs, constitute formal authority on earth. But that does not
begin to reveal the complexity of political life. For in each of these innumerable
centers of authority there are parties, and these parties are themselves
hierarchies with their roots in classes, sections, cliques and clans; and
within these are the individual politicians, each the personal center of a web
of connection and memory and fear and hope.
Somehow or other, for reasons often necessarily
obscure, as the result of domination or compromise or a logroll, there emerge
from these political bodies commands, which set armies in motion or make peace,
conscript life, tax, exile, imprison, protect property or confiscate it,
encourage one kind of enterprise and discourage another, facilitate immigration
or obstruct it, improve communication or censor it, establish schools, build
navies, proclaim “policies,” and “destiny,” raise economic barriers, make
property or unmake it, bring one people under the rule of another, or favor one
class as against another. For each of these decisions some view of the facts is
taken to be conclusive, some view of the circumstances is accepted as the basis
of inference and as the stimulus of feeling. What view of the facts, and why
that one?
And yet even this does not begin to exhaust the real
complexity. The formal political structure exists in a social environment,
where there are innumerable large and small corporations and institutions,
voluntary and semi-voluntary associations, national, provincial, urban and
neighborhood groupings, which often as not make the decision that the political
body registers. On what are these decisions based?
“Modern society,” says Mr. Chesterton, “is
intrinsically insecure because it is based on the notion that all men will do
the same thing for different reasons…. And as within the head of any convict
may be the hell of a quite solitary crime, so in the house or under the hat of
any suburban clerk may be the limbo of a quite separate philosophy. The first
man may be a complete Materialist and feel his own body as a horrible machine
manufacturing his own mind. He may listen to his thoughts as to the dull
ticking of a clock. The man next door may be a Christian Scientist and regard
his own body as somehow rather less substantial than his own shadow. He may
come almost to regard his own arms and legs as delusions like moving serpents
in the dream of delirium tremens. The third man in the street may not be a
Christian Scientist but, on the contrary, a Christian. He may live in a fairy
tale as his neighbors would say; a secret but solid fairy tale full of the
faces and presences of unearthly friends. The fourth man may be a theosophist,
and only too probably a vegetarian; and I do not see why I should not gratify
myself with the fancy that the fifth man is a devil worshiper…. Now whether or
not this sort of variety is valuable, this sort of unity is shaky. To expect
that all men for all time will go on thinking different things, and yet doing
the same things, is a doubtful speculation. It is not founding society on a
communion, or even on a convention, but rather on a coincidence. Four men may
meet under the same lamp post; one to paint it pea green as part of a great
municipal reform; one to read his breviary in the light of it; one to embrace
it with accidental ardour in a fit of alcoholic enthusiasm; and the last merely
because the pea green post is a conspicuous point of rendezvous with his young
lady. But to expect this to happen night after night is unwise….” [Footnote: G.
K. Chesterton, “The Mad Hatter and the Sane Householder,” Vanity Fair, January,
1921, p. 54]
For the four men at the lamp post substitute the
governments, the parties, the corporations, the societies, the social sets, the
trades and professions, universities, sects, and nationalities of the world.
Think of the legislator voting a statute that will affect distant peoples, a
statesman coming to a decision. Think of the Peace Conference reconstituting
the frontiers of Europe, an ambassador in a foreign country trying to discern
the intentions of his own government and of the foreign government, a promoter
working a concession in a backward country, an editor demanding a war, a
clergyman calling on the police to regulate amusement, a club lounging-room
making up its mind about a strike, a sewing circle preparing to regulate the
schools, nine judges deciding whether a legislature in Oregon may fix the
working hours of women, a cabinet meeting to decide on the recognition of a
government, a party convention choosing a candidate and writing a platform,
twenty-seven million voters casting their ballots, an Irishman in Cork thinking
about an Irishman in Belfast, a Third International planning to reconstruct the
whole of human society, a board of directors confronted with a set of their
employees’ demands, a boy choosing a career, a merchant estimating supply and
demand for the coming season, a speculator predicting the course of the market,
a banker deciding whether to put credit behind a new enterprise, the
advertiser, the reader of advertisments…. Think of the different sorts of
Americans thinking about their notions of “The British Empire” or “France” or
“Russia” or “Mexico.” It is not so different from Mr. Chesterton’s four men at
the pea green lamp post.
6
And so before we involve ourselves in the jungle of
obscurities about the innate differences of men, we shall do well to fix our
attention upon the extraordinary differences in what men know of the world.
[Footnote: Cf. Wallas, Our Social Heritage, pp. 77 et seq.] I do not doubt that
there are important biological differences. Since man is an animal it would be
strange if there were not. But as rational beings it is worse than shallow to
generalize at all about comparative behavior until there is a measurable
similarity between the environments to which behavior is a response.
The pragmatic value of this idea is that it
introduces a much needed refinement into the ancient controversy about nature
and nurture, innate quality and environment. For the pseudo-environment is a
hybrid compounded of “human nature” and “conditions.” To my mind it shows the
uselessness of pontificating about what man is and always will be from what we
observe man to be doing, or about what are the necessary conditions of society.
For we do not know how men would behave in response to the facts of the Great
Society. All that we really know is how they behave in response to what can
fairly be called a most inadequate picture of the Great Society. No conclusion
about man or the Great Society can honestly be made on evidence like that.
This, then, will be the clue to our inquiry. We shall
assume that what each man does is based not on direct and certain knowledge,
but on pictures made by himself or given to him. If his atlas tells him that
the world is flat he will not sail near what he believes to be the edge of our
planet for fear of falling off. If his maps include a fountain of eternal
youth, a Ponce de Leon will go in quest of it. If someone digs up yellow dirt
that looks like gold, he will for a time act exactly as if he had found gold.
The way in which the world is imagined determines at any particular moment what
men will do. It does not determine what they will achieve. It determines their
effort, their feelings, their hopes, not their accomplishments and results. The
very men who most loudly proclaim their “materialism” and their contempt for
“ideologues,” the Marxian communists, place their entire hope on what? On the
formation by propaganda of a class-conscious group. But what is propaganda, if
not the effort to alter the picture to which men respond, to substitute one
social pattern for another? What is class consciousness but a way of realizing
the world? National consciousness but another way? And Professor Giddings’
consciousness of kind, but a process of believing that we recognize among the
multitude certain ones marked as our kind?
Try to explain social life as the pursuit of pleasure
and the avoidance of pain. You will soon be saying that the hedonist begs the
question, for even supposing that man does pursue these ends, the crucial
problem of why he thinks one course rather than another likely to produce
pleasure, is untouched. Does the guidance of man’s conscience explain? How then
does he happen to have the particular conscience which he has? The theory of
economic self-interest? But how do men come to conceive their interest in one
way rather than another? The desire for security, or prestige, or domination,
or what is vaguely called self-realization? How do men conceive their security,
what do they consider prestige, how do they figure out the means of domination,
or what is the notion of self which they wish to realize? Pleasure, pain,
conscience, acquisition, protection, enhancement, mastery, are undoubtedly
names for some of the ways people act. There may be instinctive dispositions
which work toward such ends. But no statement of the end, or any description of
the tendencies to seek it, can explain the behavior which results. The very
fact that men theorize at all is proof that their pseudo-environments, their
interior representations of the world, are a determining element in thought,
feeling, and action. For if the connection between reality and human response
were direct and immediate, rather than indirect and inferred, indecision and
failure would be unknown, and (if each of us fitted as snugly into the world as
the child in the womb), Mr. Bernard Shaw would not have been able to say that
except for the first nine months of its existence no human being manages its
affairs as well as a plant.
The chief difficulty in adapting the psychoanalytic
scheme to political thought arises in this connection. The Freudians are
concerned with the maladjustment of distinct individuals to other individuals
and to concrete circumstances. They have assumed that if internal derangements
could be straightened out, there would be little or no confusion about what is
the obviously normal relationship. But public opinion deals with indirect,
unseen, and puzzling facts, and there is nothing obvious about them. The
situations to which public opinions refer are known only as opinions. The
psychoanalyst, on the other hand, almost always assumes that the environment is
knowable, and if not knowable then at least bearable, to any unclouded
intelligence. This assumption of his is the problem of public opinion. Instead
of taking for granted an environment that is readily known, the social analyst
is most concerned in studying how the larger political environment is
conceived, and how it can be conceived more successfully. The psychoanalyst
examines the adjustment to an X, called by him the environment; the social
analyst examines the X, called by him the pseudo-environment.
He is, of course, permanently and constantly in debt
to the new psychology, not only because when rightly applied it so greatly
helps people to stand on their own feet, come what may, but because the study
of dreams, fantasy and rationalization has thrown light on how the
pseudo-environment is put together. But he cannot assume as his criterion
either what is called a “normal biological career” [Footnote: Edward J. Kempf,
Psychopathology, p. 116.] within the existing social order, or a career “freed
from religious suppression and dogmatic conventions” outside. [Footnote: Id.,
p. 151.] What for a sociologist is a normal social career? Or one freed from
suppressions and conventions? Conservative critics do, to be sure, assume the
first, and romantic ones the second. But in assuming them they are taking the
whole world for granted. They are saying in effect either that society is the
sort of thing which corresponds to their idea of what is normal, or the sort of
thing which corresponds to their idea of what is free. Both ideas are merely
public opinions, and while the psychoanalyst as physician may perhaps assume
them, the sociologist may not take the products of existing public opinion as
criteria by which to study public opinion.
7
The world that we have to deal with politically is
out of reach, out of sight, out of mind. It has to be explored, reported, and
imagined. Man is no Aristotelian god contemplating all existence at one glance.
He is the creature of an evolution who can just about
span a sufficient portion of reality to manage his survival, and snatch what on
the scale of time are but a few moments of insight and happiness. Yet
this same creature has invented ways of seeing what no naked eye could see, of
hearing what no ear could hear, of weighing immense masses and infinitesimal
ones, of counting and separating more items than he can individually remember.
He is learning to see with his mind vast portions of the world that he could
never see, touch, smell, hear, or remember. Gradually he makes for himself a
trustworthy picture inside his head of the world beyond his reach.
Those features of the world
outside which have to do with the behavior of other human beings, in so far as
that behavior crosses ours, is dependent upon us, or is interesting to us, we
call roughly public affairs. The pictures inside the heads of these human
beings, the pictures of themselves, of others, of their needs, purposes, and
relationship, are their public opinions. Those pictures which are acted upon by
groups of people, or by individuals acting in the name of groups, are Public
Opinion with capital letters. And so in the chapters which follow we shall
inquire first into some of the reasons why the picture inside so often misleads
men in their dealings with the world outside. Under this heading we shall
consider first the chief factors which limit their access to the facts. They
are the artificial censorships, the limitations of social contact, the
comparatively meager time available in each day for paying attention to public
affairs, the distortion arising because events have to be compressed into very
short messages, the difficulty of making a small vocabulary express a
complicated world, and finally the fear of facing those facts which would seem
to threaten the established routine of men’s lives.
The analysis then turns from these more or less
external limitations to the question of how this trickle of messages from the
outside is affected by the stored up images, the preconceptions, and prejudices
which interpret, fill them out, and in their turn powerfully direct the play of
our attention, and our vision itself. From this it proceeds to examine how in
the individual person the limited messages from outside, formed into a pattern
of stereotypes, are identified with his own interests as he feels and conceives
them. In the succeeding sections it examines how opinions are crystallized into
what is called Public Opinion, how a National Will, a Group Mind, a Social
Purpose, or whatever you choose to call it, is formed.
The first five parts constitute the descriptive
section of the book. There follows an analysis of the traditional democratic
theory of public opinion. The substance of the argument is that democracy in
its original form never seriously faced the problem which arises because the
pictures inside people’s heads do not automatically correspond with the world
outside. And then, because the democratic theory is under criticism by
socialist thinkers, there follows an examination of the most advanced and coherent
of these criticisms, as made by the English Guild Socialists. My purpose here
is to find out whether these reformers take into account the main difficulties
of public opinion. My conclusion is that they ignore the difficulties, as
completely as did the original democrats, because they, too, assume, and in a
much more complicated civilization, that somehow mysteriously there exists in
the hearts of men a knowledge of the world beyond their reach.
I argue that representative government, either in
what is ordinarily called politics, or in industry, cannot be worked
successfully, no matter what the basis of election, unless there is an
independent, expert organization for making the unseen facts intelligible to
those who have to make the decisions. I attempt, therefore, to argue that the
serious acceptance of the principle that personal representation must be
supplemented by representation of the unseen facts would alone permit a
satisfactory decentralization, and allow us to escape from the intolerable and
unworkable fiction that each of us must acquire a competent opinion about all
public affairs. It is argued that the problem of the press is confused because
the critics and the apologists expect the press to realize this fiction, expect
it to make up for all that was not foreseen in the theory of democracy, and
that the readers expect this miracle to be performed at no cost or trouble to
themselves. The newspapers are regarded by democrats as a panacea for their own
defects, whereas analysis of the nature of news and of the economic basis of
journalism seems to show that the newspapers necessarily and inevitably
reflect, and therefore, in greater or lesser measure, intensify, the defective
organization of public opinion. My conclusion is that public opinions must be
organized for the press if they are to be sound, not by the press as is the
case today. This organization I conceive to be in the first instance the task
of a political science that has won its proper place as formulator, in advance
of real decision, instead of apologist, critic, or reporter after the decision
has been made. I try to indicate that the perplexities of government and
industry are conspiring to give political science this enormous opportunity to
enrich itself and to serve the public. And, of course, I hope that these pages
will help a few people to realize that opportunity more vividly, and therefore
to pursue it more consciously.
PART II. APPROACHES TO
THE WORLD OUTSIDE
CHAPTER II. CENSORSHIP
AND PRIVACY
1
The picture of a general presiding over an editorial
conference at the most terrible hour of one of the great battles of history
seems more like a scene from The Chocolate Soldier than a page from life. Yet
we know at first hand from the officer who edited the French communiqués that
these conferences were a regular part of the business of war; that in the worst
moment of Verdun, General Joffre and his cabinet met and argued over the nouns,
adjectives, and verbs that were to be printed in the newspapers the next
morning.
“The evening communiqué of the twenty-third (February
1916)” says M. de Pierrefeu, [Footnote: G. Q. G., pp. 126-129.] “was edited in
a dramatic atmosphere. M. Berthelot, of the Prime Minister’s office, had just
telephoned by order of the minister asking General Pellé to strengthen the
report and to emphasize the proportions of the enemy’s attack. It was necessary
to prepare the public for the worst outcome in case the affair turned into a
catastrophe. This anxiety showed clearly that neither at G. H. Q. nor at the Ministry
of War had the Government found reason for confidence. As M. Berthelot spoke,
General Pellé made notes. He handed me the paper on which he had written the
Government’s wishes, together with the order of the day issued by General von
Deimling and found on some prisoners, in which it was stated that this attack
was the supreme offensive to secure peace. Skilfully used, all this was to
demonstrate that Germany was letting loose a gigantic effort, an effort without
precedent, and that from its success she hoped for the end of the war. The
logic of this was that nobody need be surprised at our withdrawal. When, a half
hour later, I went down with my manuscript, I found gathered together in
Colonel Claudel’s office, he being away, the major-general, General Janin,
Colonel Dupont, and Lieutenant-Colonel Renouard. Fearing that I would not
succeed in giving the desired impression, General Pellé had himself prepared a
proposed communiqué. I read what I had just done. It was found to be too
moderate. General Pellé’s, on the other hand, seemed too alarming. I had
purposely omitted von Deimling’s order of the day. To put it into the
communiqué would be to break with the formula to which the public was
accustomed, would be to transform it into a kind of pleading. It would seem to
say: ‘How do you suppose we can resist?’ There was reason to fear that the
public would be distracted by this change of tone and would believe that
everything was lost. I explained my reasons and suggested giving Deimling’s
text to the newspapers in the form of a separate note.
“Opinion being divided, General Pellé went to ask
General de Castelnau to come and decide finally. The General arrived smiling,
quiet and good humored, said a few pleasant words about this new kind of
literary council of war, and looked at the texts. He chose the simpler one,
gave more weight to the first phrase, inserted the words ‘as had been
anticipated,’ which supply a reassuring quality, and was flatly against
inserting von Deimling’s order, but was for transmitting it to the press in a
special note … “ General Joffre that evening read the communiqué carefully and
approved it.
Within a few hours those two or three hundred words
would be read all over the world. They would paint a picture in men’s minds of
what was happening on the slopes of Verdun, and in front of that picture people
would take heart or despair. The shopkeeper in Brest, the peasant in Lorraine,
the deputy in the Palais Bourbon, the editor in Amsterdam or Minneapolis had to
be kept in hope, and yet prepared to accept possible defeat without yielding to
panic. They are told, therefore, that the loss of ground is no surprise to the
French Command. They are taught to regard the affair as serious, but not
strange. Now, as a matter of fact, the French General Staff was not fully
prepared for the German offensive. Supporting trenches had not been dug,
alternative roads had not been built, barbed wire was lacking. But to confess
that would have aroused images in the heads of civilians that might well have
turned a reverse into a disaster. The High Command could be disappointed, and
yet pull itself together; the people at home and abroad, full of uncertainties,
and with none of the professional man’s singleness of purpose, might on the
basis of a complete story have lost sight of the war in a melee of faction and
counter-faction about the competence of the officers. Instead, therefore, of
letting the public act on all the facts which the generals knew, the
authorities presented only certain facts, and these only in such a way as would
be most likely to steady the people.
In this case the men who arranged the
pseudo-environment knew what the real one was. But a few days later an incident
occurred about which the French Staff did not know the truth. The Germans
announced [Footnote: On February 26, 1916. Pierrefeu, G. Q. G., pp. 133 et
seq.] that on the previous afternoon they had taken Fort Douaumont by assault.
At French headquarters in Chantilly no one could understand this news. For on
the morning of the twenty-fifth, after the engagement of the XXth corps, the
battle had taken a turn for the better. Reports from the front said nothing
about Douaumont. But inquiry showed that the German report was true, though no
one as yet knew how the fort had been taken. In the meantime, the German
communiqué was being flashed around the world, and the French had to say
something. So headquarters explained. “In the midst of total ignorance at
Chantilly about the way the attack had taken place, we imagined, in the evening
communiqué of the 26th, a plan of the attack which certainly had a thousand to
one chance of being true.” The communiqué of this imaginary battle read:
“A bitter struggle is taking place around Fort de
Douaumont which is an advanced post of the old defensive organization of
Verdun. The position taken this morning by the enemy, after several
unsuccessful assaults that cost him very heavy losses, has been reached again
and passed by our troops whom the enemy has not been able to drive back.”
[Footnote: This is my own translation: the English translation from London
published in the New York Times of Sunday, Feb. 27, is as follows:
London, Feb. 26 (1916). A furious struggle has been
in progress around Fort de Douaumont which is an advance element of the old
defensive organization of Verdun fortresses. The position captured this morning
by the enemy after several fruitless assaults which cost him extremely heavy
losses, [Footnote: The French text says “pertes tres elevees.” Thus the English
translation exaggerates the original text.] was reached again and gone beyond
by our troops, which all the attempts of the enemy have not been able to push
back.”]
What had actually happened differed from both the
French and German accounts. While changing troops in the line, the position had
somehow been forgotten in a confusion of orders. Only a battery commander and a
few men remained in the fort. Some German soldiers, seeing the door open, had
crawled into the fort, and taken everyone inside prisoner. A little later the
French who were on the slopes of the hill were horrified at being shot at from
the fort. There had been no battle at Douaumont and no losses. Nor had the
French troops advanced beyond it as the communiqués seemed to say. They were
beyond it on either side, to be sure, but the fort was in enemy hands.
Yet from the communiqué everyone believed that the
fort was half surrounded. The words did not explicitly say so, but “the press,
as usual, forced the pace.” Military writers concluded that the Germans would
soon have to surrender. In a few days they began to ask themselves why the
garrison, since it lacked food, had not yet surrendered. “It was necessary
through the press bureau to request them to drop the encirclement theme.”
[Footnote: Pierrefeu, op. cit., pp. 134-5.]
2
The editor of the French communiqué tells us that as
the battle dragged out, his colleagues and he set out to neutralize the
pertinacity of the Germans by continual insistence on their terrible losses. It
is necessary to remember that at this time, and in fact until late in 1917, the
orthodox view of the war for all the Allied peoples was that it would be
decided by “attrition.” Nobody believed in a war of movement. It was insisted
that strategy did not count, or diplomacy. It was simply a matter of killing
Germans. The general public more or less believed the dogma, but it had
constantly to be reminded of it in face of spectacular German successes.
“Almost no day passed but the communiqué…. ascribed
to the Germans with some appearance of justice heavy losses, extremely heavy,
spoke of bloody sacrifices, heaps of corpses, hecatombs. Likewise the wireless
constantly used the statistics of the intelligence bureau at Verdun, whose
chief, Major Cointet, had invented a method of calculating German losses which
obviously produced marvelous results. Every fortnight the figures increased a
hundred thousand or so. These 300,000, 400,000, 500,000 casualties put out,
divided into daily, weekly, monthly losses, repeated in all sorts of ways,
produced a striking effect. Our formulae varied little: ‘according to prisoners
the German losses in the course of the attack have been considerable’ … ‘it is
proved that the losses’ … ‘the enemy exhausted by his losses has not renewed
the attack’ … Certain formulae, later abandoned because they had been
overworked, were used each day: ‘under our artillery and machine gun fire’ … ‘mowed
down by our artillery and machine gun fire’ … Constant repetition impressed the
neutrals and Germany itself, and helped to create a bloody background in spite
of the denials from Nauen (the German wireless) which tried vainly to destroy
the bad effect of this perpetual repetition.” [Footnote: Op. cit., pp.
138-139.]
The thesis of the French Command, which it wished to
establish publicly by these reports, was formulated as follows for the guidance
of the censors:
“This offensive engages the active forces of our
opponent whose manpower is declining. We have learned that the class of 1916 is
already at the front. There will remain the 1917 class already being called up,
and the resources of the third category (men above forty-five, or
convalescents). In a few weeks, the German forces exhausted by this effort,
will find themselves confronted with all the forces of the coalition (ten
millions against seven millions).” [Footnote: Op. cit., p. 147.]
According to M. de Pierrefeu, the French command had
converted itself to this belief. “By an extraordinary aberration of mind, only
the attrition of the enemy was seen; it appeared that our forces were not subject
to attrition. General Nivelle shared these ideas. We saw the result in 1917.”
We have learned to call this propaganda. A group of
men, who can prevent independent access to the event, arrange the news of it to
suit their purpose. That the purpose was in this case patriotic does not affect
the argument at all. They used their power to make the Allied publics see
affairs as they desired them to be seen. The casualty figures of Major Cointet
which were spread about the world are of the same order. They were intended to
provoke a particular kind of inference, namely that the war of attrition was
going in favor of the French. But the inference is not drawn in the form of
argument. It results almost automatically from the creation of a mental picture
of endless Germans slaughtered on the hills about Verdun. By putting the dead
Germans in the focus of the picture, and by omitting to mention the French
dead, a very special view of the battle was built up. It was a view designed to
neutralize the effects of German territorial advances and the impression of
power which the persistence of the offensive was making. It was also a view
that tended to make the public acquiesce in the demoralizing defensive strategy
imposed upon the Allied armies. For the public, accustomed to the idea that war
consists of great strategic movements, flank attacks, encirclements, and
dramatic surrenders, had gradually to forget that picture in favor of the
terrible idea that by matching lives the war would be won. Through its control
over all news from the front, the General Staff substituted a view of the facts
that comported with this strategy.
The General Staff of an army in the field is so
placed that within wide limits it can control what the public will perceive. It
controls the selection of correspondents who go to the front, controls their
movements at the front, reads and censors their messages from the front, and
operates the wires. The Government behind the army by its command of cables and
passports, mails and custom houses and blockades increases the control. It
emphasizes it by legal power over publishers, over public meetings, and by its
secret service. But in the case of an army the control is far from perfect.
There is always the enemy’s communiqué, which in these days of wireless cannot
be kept away from neutrals. Above all there is the talk of the soldiers, which
blows back from the front, and is spread about when they are on leave.
[Footnote: For weeks prior to the American attack at St. Mihiel and in the
Argonne-Meuse, everybody in France told everybody else the deep secret.] An
army is an unwieldy thing. And that is why the naval and diplomatic censorship
is almost always much more complete. Fewer people know what is going on, and
their acts are more easily supervised.
3
Without some form of censorship, propaganda in the
strict sense of the word is impossible. In order to conduct a propaganda there
must be some barrier between the public and the event. Access to the real
environment must be limited, before anyone can create a pseudo-environment that
he thinks wise or desirable. For while people who have direct access can
misconceive what they see, no one else can decide how they shall misconceive
it, unless he can decide where they shall look, and at what. The military censorship
is the simplest form of barrier, but by no means the most important, because it
is known to exist, and is therefore in certain measure agreed to and
discounted.
At different times and for different subjects some
men impose and other men accept a particular standard of secrecy. The frontier
between what is concealed because publication is not, as we say, “compatible
with the public interest” fades gradually into what is concealed because it is
believed to be none of the public’s business. The notion of what constitutes a
person’s private affairs is elastic. Thus the amount of a man’s fortune is
considered a private affair, and careful provision is made in the income tax
law to keep it as private as possible. The sale of a piece of land is not
private, but the price may be. Salaries are generally treated as more private
than wages, incomes as more private than inheritances. A person’s credit rating
is given only a limited circulation. The profits of big corporations are more
public than those of small firms. Certain kinds of conversation, between man
and wife, lawyer and client, doctor and patient, priest and communicant, are
privileged. Directors’ meetings are generally private. So are many political
conferences. Most of what is said at a cabinet meeting, or by an ambassador to
the Secretary of State, or at private interviews, or dinner tables, is private.
Many people regard the contract between employer and employee as private. There
was a time when the affairs of all corporations were held to be as private as a
man’s theology is to-day. There was a time before that when his theology was
held to be as public a matter as the color of his eyes. But infectious
diseases, on the other hand, were once as private as the processes of a man’s
digestion. The history of the notion of privacy would be an entertaining tale.
Sometimes the notions violently conflict, as they did when the bolsheviks
published the secret treaties, or when Mr. Hughes investigated the life
insurance companies, or when somebody’s scandal exudes from the pages of Town
Topics to the front pages of Mr. Hearst’s newspapers.
Whether the reasons for privacy are good or bad, the
barriers exist. Privacy is insisted upon at all kinds of places in the area of
what is called public affairs. It is often very illuminating, therefore, to ask
yourself how you got at the facts on which you base your opinion. Who actually
saw, heard, felt, counted, named the thing, about which you have an opinion?
Was it the man who told you, or the man who told him, or someone still further
removed? And how much was he permitted to see? When he informs you that France
thinks this and that, what part of France did he watch? How was he able to
watch it? Where was he when he watched it? What Frenchmen was he permitted to talk
to, what newspapers did he read, and where did they learn what they say? You
can ask yourself these questions, but you can rarely answer them. They will
remind you, however, of the distance which often separates your public opinion
from the event with which it deals. And the reminder is itself a protection.
CHAPTER III. CONTACT AND
OPPORTUNITY
1
While censorship and privacy intercept much
information at its source, a very much larger body of fact never reaches the
whole public at all, or only very slowly. For there are very distinct limits
upon the circulation of ideas.
A rough estimate of the effort it takes to reach
“everybody” can be had by considering the Government’s propaganda during the
war. Remembering that the war had run over two years and a half before America
entered it, that millions upon millions of printed pages had been circulated
and untold speeches had been delivered, let us turn to Mr. Creel’s account of
his fight “for the minds of men, for the conquest of their convictions” in
order that “the gospel of Americanism might be carried to every corner of the
globe.” [Footnote: George Creel, How We Advertised America.]
Mr. Creel had to assemble machinery which included a
Division of News that issued, he tells us, more than six thousand releases, had
to enlist seventy-five thousand Four Minute Men who delivered at least seven
hundred and fifty-five thousand, one hundred and ninety speeches to an
aggregate of over three hundred million people. Boy scouts delivered annotated
copies of President Wilson’s addresses to the householders of America.
Fortnightly periodicals were sent to six hundred thousand teachers. Two hundred
thousand lantern slides were furnished for illustrated lectures. Fourteen
hundred and thirty-eight different designs were turned out for posters, window
cards, newspaper advertisements, cartoons, seals and buttons. The chambers of
commerce, the churches, fraternal societies, schools, were used as channels of
distribution. Yet Mr. Creel’s effort, to which I have not begun to do justice,
did not include Mr. McAdoo’s stupendous organization for the Liberty Loans, nor
Mr. Hoover’s far reaching propaganda about food, nor the campaigns of the Red
Cross, the Y. M. C. A., Salvation Army, Knights of Columbus, Jewish Welfare
Board, not to mention the independent work of patriotic societies, like the
League to Enforce Peace, the League of Free Nations Association, the National
Security League, nor the activity of the publicity bureaus of the Allies and of
the submerged nationalities.
Probably this is the largest and the most intensive
effort to carry quickly a fairly uniform set of ideas to all the people of a
nation. The older proselyting worked more slowly, perhaps more surely, but
never so inclusively. Now if it required such extreme measures to reach
everybody in time of crisis, how open are the more normal channels to men’s
minds? The Administration was trying, and while the war continued it very
largely succeeded, I believe, in creating something that might almost be called
one public opinion all over America. But think of the dogged work, the
complicated ingenuity, the money and the personnel that were required. Nothing
like that exists in time of peace, and as a corollary there are whole sections,
there are vast groups, ghettoes, enclaves and classes that hear only vaguely
about much that is going on.
They live in grooves, are shut in among their own
affairs, barred out of larger affairs, meet few people not of their own sort,
read little. Travel and trade, the mails, the wires, and radio, railroads,
highways, ships, motor cars, and in the coming generation aeroplanes, are, of
course, of the utmost influence on the circulation of ideas. Each of these
affects the supply and the quality of information and opinion in a most
intricate way. Each is itself affected by technical, by economic, by political
conditions. Every time a government relaxes the passport ceremonies or the
customs inspection, every time a new railway or a new port is opened, a new
shipping line established, every time rates go up or down, the mails move
faster or more slowly, the cables are uncensored and made less expensive,
highways built, or widened, or improved, the circulation of ideas is
influenced. Tariff schedules and subsidies affect the direction of commercial
enterprise, and therefore the nature of human contracts. And so it may well
happen, as it did for example in the case of Salem, Massachusetts, that a
change in the art of shipbuilding will reduce a whole city from a center where
international influences converge to a genteel provincial town. All the
immediate effects of more rapid transit are not necessarily good. It would be
difficult to say, for example, that the railroad system of France, so highly
centralized upon Paris, has been an unmixed blessing to the French people.
It is certainly true that problems arising out of the
means of communication are of the utmost importance, and one of the most
constructive features of the program of the League of Nations has been the
study given to railroad transit and access to the sea. The monopolizing of
cables, [Footnote: Hence the wisdom of taking Yap seriously.] of ports, fuel
stations, mountain passes, canals, straits, river courses, terminals, market
places means a good deal more than the enrichment of a group of business men,
or the prestige of a government. It means a barrier upon the exchange of news
and opinion. But monopoly is not the only barrier. Cost and available supply
are even greater ones, for if the cost of travelling or trading is prohibitive,
if the demand for facilities exceeds the supply, the barriers exist even
without monopoly.
2
The size of a man’s income has considerable effect on
his access to the world beyond his neighborhood. With money he can overcome
almost every tangible obstacle of communication, he can travel, buy books and
periodicals, and bring within the range of his attention almost any known fact
of the world. The income of the individual, and the income of the community
determine the amount of communication that is possible. But men’s ideas
determine how that income shall be spent, and that in turn affects in the long
run the amount of income they will have. Thus also there are limitations, none
the less real, because they are often self-imposed and self-indulgent.
There are portions of the sovereign people who spend
most of their spare time and spare money on motoring and comparing motor cars,
on bridge-whist and post-mortems, on moving-pictures and potboilers, talking
always to the same people with minute variations on the same old themes. They
cannot really be said to suffer from censorship, or secrecy, the high cost or
the difficulty of communication. They suffer from anemia, from lack of appetite
and curiosity for the human scene. Theirs is no problem of access to the world
outside. Worlds of interest are waiting for them to explore, and they do not
enter.
They move, as if on a leash, within a fixed radius of
acquaintances according to the law and the gospel of their social set. Among
men the circle of talk in business and at the club and in the smoking car is
wider than the set to which they belong. Among women the social set and the
circle of talk are frequently almost identical. It is in the social set that
ideas derived from reading and lectures and from the circle of talk converge,
are sorted out, accepted, rejected, judged and sanctioned. There it is finally
decided in each phase of a discussion which authorities and which sources of
information are admissible, and which not.
Our social set consists of those who figure as people
in the phrase “people are saying”; they are the people whose approval matters
most intimately to us. In big cities among men and women of wide interests and
with the means for moving about, the social set is not so rigidly defined. But
even in big cities, there are quarters and nests of villages containing
self-sufficing social sets. In smaller communities there may exist a freer
circulation, a more genuine fellowship from after breakfast to before dinner.
But few people do not know, nevertheless, which set they really belong to, and
which not.
Usually the distinguishing mark of a social set is
the presumption that the children may intermarry. To marry outside the set
involves, at the very least, a moment of doubt before the engagement can be
approved. Each social set has a fairly clear picture of its relative position
in the hierarchy of social sets. Between sets at the same level, association is
easy, individuals are quickly accepted, hospitality is normal and
unembarrassed. But in contact between sets that are “higher” or “lower,” there
is always reciprocal hesitation, a faint malaise, and a consciousness of
difference. To be sure in a society like that of the United States, individuals
move somewhat freely out of one set into another, especially where there is no
racial barrier and where economic position changes so rapidly.
Economic position, however, is not measured by the
amount of income. For in the first generation, at least, it is not income that
determines social standing, but the character of a man’s work, and it may take
a generation or two before this fades out of the family tradition. Thus
banking, law, medicine, public utilities, newspapers, the church, large
retailing, brokerage, manufacture, are rated at a different social value from salesmanship,
superintendence, expert technical work, nursing, school teaching, shop keeping;
and those, in turn, are rated as differently from plumbing, being a chauffeur,
dressmaking, subcontracting, or stenography, as these are from being a butler,
lady’s maid, a moving picture operator, or a locomotive engineer. And yet the
financial return does not necessarily coincide with these gradations.
3
Whatever the tests of admission, the social set when
formed is not a mere economic class, but something which more nearly resembles
a biological clan. Membership is intimately connected with love, marriage and
children, or, to speak more exactly, with the attitudes and desires that are
involved. In the social set, therefore, opinions encounter the canons of Family
Tradition, Respectability, Propriety, Dignity, Taste and Form, which make up
the social set’s picture of itself, a picture assiduously implanted in the
children. In this picture a large space is tacitly given to an authorized
version of what each set is called upon inwardly to accept as the social
standing of the others. The more vulgar press for an outward expression of the
deference due, the others are decently and sensitively silent about their own
knowledge that such deference invisibly exists. But that knowledge, becoming
overt when there is a marriage, a war, or a social upheaval, is the nexus of a
large bundle of dispositions classified by Trotter [Footnote: W. Trotter,
Instincts of the Herd in War and Peace.] under the general term instinct of the
herd.
Within each social set there are augurs like the van
der Luydens and Mrs. Manson Mingott in “The Age of Innocence,” [Footnote: Edith
Wharton, The Age of Innocence.] who are recognized as the custodians and the
interpreters of its social pattern. You are made, they say, if the van der
Luydens take you up. The invitations to their functions are the high sign of
arrival and status. The elections to college societies, carefully graded and
the gradations universally accepted, determine who is who in college. The
social leaders, weighted with the ultimate eugenic responsibility, are
peculiarly sensitive. Not only must they be watchfully aware of what makes for
the integrity of their set, but they have to cultivate a special gift for
knowing what other social sets are doing. They act as a kind of ministry of
foreign affairs. Where most of the members of a set live complacently within
the set, regarding it for all practical purposes as the world, the social
leaders must combine an intimate knowledge of the anatomy of their own set with
a persistent sense of its place in the hierarchy of sets.
The hierarchy, in fact, is bound together by the
social leaders. At any one level there is something which might almost be
called a social set of the social leaders. But vertically the actual binding
together of society, in so far as it is bound together at all by social
contact, is accomplished by those exceptional people, frequently suspect, who
like Julius Beaufort and Ellen Olenska in “The Age of Innocence” move in and
out. Thus there come to be established personal channels from one set to
another, through which Tarde’s laws of imitation operate. But for large
sections of the population there are no such channels. For them the patented
accounts of society and the moving pictures of high life have to serve. They
may develop a social hierarchy of their own, almost unnoticed, as have the
Negroes and the “foreign element,” but among that assimilated mass which always
considers itself the “nation,” there is in spite of the great separateness of
sets, a variety of personal contacts through which a circulation of standards
takes place.
Some of the sets are so placed that they become what
Professor Ross has called “radiant points of conventionality.” [Footnote: Ross,
Social Psychology, Ch. IX, X, XI.] Thus the social superior is likely to be
imitated by the social inferior, the holder of power is imitated by
subordinates, the more successful by the less successful, the rich by the poor,
the city by the country. But imitation does not stop at frontiers. The
powerful, socially superior, successful, rich, urban social set is
fundamentally international throughout the western hemisphere, and in many ways
London is its center. It counts among its membership the most influential people
in the world, containing as it does the diplomatic set, high finance, the upper
circles of the army and the navy, some princes of the church, a few great
newspaper proprietors, their wives and mothers and daughters who wield the
scepter of invitation. It is at once a great circle of talk and a real social
set. But its importance comes from the fact that here at last the distinction
between public and private affairs practically disappears. The private affairs
of this set are public matters, and public matters are its private, often its
family affairs. The confinements of Margot Asquith like the confinements of
royalty are, as the philosophers say, in much the same universe of discourse as
a tariff bill or a parliamentary debate.
There are large areas of governments in which this
social set is not interested, and in America, at least, it has exercised only a
fluctuating control over the national government. But its power in foreign
affairs is always very great, and in war time its prestige is enormously enhanced.
That is natural enough because these cosmopolitans have a contact with the
outer world that most people do not possess. They have dined with each other in
the capitals, and their sense of national honor is no mere abstraction; it is a
concrete experience of being snubbed or approved by their friends. To Dr.
Kennicott of Gopher Prairie it matters mighty little what Winston thinks and a
great deal what Ezra Stowbody thinks, but to Mrs. Mingott with a daughter
married to the Earl of Swithin it matters a lot when she visits her daughter,
or entertains Winston himself. Dr. Kennicott and Mrs. Mingott are both socially
sensitive, but Mrs. Mingott is sensitive to a social set that governs the
world, while Dr. Kennicott’s social set governs only in Gopher Prairie. But in
matters that effect the larger relationships of the Great Society, Dr.
Kennicott will often be found holding what he thinks is purely his own opinion,
though, as a matter of fact, it has trickled down to Gopher Prairie from High
Society, transmuted on its passage through the provincial social sets.
4
It is no part of our inquiry to attempt an account of
the social tissue. We need only fix in mind how big is the part played by the
social set in our spiritual contact with the world, how it tends to fix what is
admissible, and to determine how it shall be judged. Affairs within its
immediate competence each set more or less determines for itself. Above all it
determines the detailed administration of the judgment. But the judgment itself
is formed on patterns [Footnote: Cf. Part III] that may be inherited from the
past, transmitted or imitated from other social sets. The highest social set
consists of those who embody the leadership of the Great Society. As against
almost every other social set where the bulk of the opinions are first hand
only about local affairs, in this Highest Society the big decisions of war and
peace, of social strategy and the ultimate distribution of political power, are
intimate experiences within a circle of what, potentially at least, are
personal acquaintances.
Since position and contact play so big a part in
determining what can be seen, heard, read, and experienced, as well as what it
is permissible to see, hear, read, and know, it is no wonder that moral
judgment is so much more common than constructive thought. Yet in truly
effective thinking the prime necessity is to liquidate judgments, regain an
innocent eye, disentangle feelings, be curious and open-hearted. Man’s history
being what it is, political opinion on the scale of the Great Society requires
an amount of selfless equanimity rarely attainable by any one for any length of
time. We are concerned in public affairs, but immersed in our private ones. The
time and attention are limited that we can spare for the labor of not taking
opinions for granted, and we are subject to constant interruption.
CHAPTER IV. TIME AND
ATTENTION
NATURALLY it is possible to make a rough estimate
only of the amount of attention people give each day to informing themselves
about public affairs. Yet it is interesting that three estimates that I have
examined agree tolerably well, though they were made at different times, in
different places, and by different methods. [Footnote: July, 1900. D. F.
Wilcox, The American Newspaper: A Study in Social Psychology, Annals of the
American Academy of Political and Social Science, vol. xvi, p. 56. (The
statistical tables are reproduced in James Edward Rogers, The American
Newspaper.)
1916 (?) W. D. Scott, The Psychology of Advertising,
pp. 226-248. See also Henry Foster Adams, Advertising and its Mental Laws, Ch.
IV.
1920 Newspaper Reading Habits of College Students, by
Prof. George Burton Hotchkiss and Richard B. Franken, published by the Association
of National Advertisers, Inc., 15 East 26th Street, New York City.]
A questionnaire was sent by
Hotchkiss and Franken to 1761 men and women college students in New York City,
and answers came from all but a few. Scott used a questionnaire on four
thousand prominent business and professional men in Chicago and received
replies from twenty-three hundred. Between seventy and seventy-five percent of
all those who replied to either inquiry thought they spent a quarter of an hour
a day reading newspapers. Only four percent of the Chicago group guessed at
less than this and twenty-five percent guessed at more. Among the New Yorkers a
little over eight percent figured their newspaper reading at less than fifteen
minutes, and seventeen and a half at more.
Very few people have an accurate idea of fifteen minutes, [Accurate.]
so the figures are not to be taken literally. Moreover, business men,
professional people, and college students are most of them liable to a curious
little bias against appearing to spend too much time over the newspapers, and
perhaps also to a faint suspicion of a desire to be known as rapid readers. All
that the figures can justly be taken to mean is that over three quarters of
those in the selected groups rate rather low the attention they give to printed
news of the outer world.
These time estimates are fairly well confirmed by a
test which is less subjective. Scott asked his Chicagoans how many papers they
read each day, and was told that
14 percent read but one paper
46 “ “ two papers
21 “ “ three papers
10 “ “ four papers
3 “ “ five papers
2 “ “ six papers
3 “ “ all the papers (eight at the time of this
inquiry).
The two- and three-paper readers are sixty-seven
percent, which comes fairly close to the seventy-one percent in Scott’s group
who rate themselves at fifteen minutes a day. The omnivorous readers of from
four to eight papers coincide roughly with the twenty-five percent who rated
themselves at more than fifteen minutes.
2
It is still more difficult to guess how the time is
distributed. The college students were asked to name “the five features which
interest you most.” Just under twenty percent voted for “general news,” just
under fifteen for editorials, just under twelve for “politics,” a little over
eight for finance, not two years after the armistice a little over six for foreign
news, three and a half for local, nearly three for business, and a quarter of
one percent for news about “labor.” A scattering said they were most interested
in sports, special articles, the theatre, advertisements, cartoons, book
reviews, “accuracy,” music, “ethical tone,” society, brevity, art, stories,
shipping, school news, “current news,” print. Disregarding these, about
sixty-seven and a half percent picked as the most interesting features news and
opinion that dealt with public affairs.
This was a mixed college group. The girls professed
greater interest than the boys in general news, foreign news, local news,
politics, editorials, the theatre, music, art, stories, cartoons,
advertisements, and “ethical tone.” The boys on the other hand were more
absorbed in finance, sports, business page, “accuracy” and “brevity.” These
discriminations correspond a little too closely with the ideals of what is
cultured and moral, manly and decisive, not to make one suspect the utter
objectivity of the replies.
Yet they agree fairly well with the replies of Scott’s
Chicago business and professional men. They were asked, not what features
interested them most, but why they preferred one newspaper to another. Nearly
seventy-one percent based their conscious preference on local news (17.8%), or
political (15.8%) or financial (11.3%), or foreign (9.5%), or general (7.2%),
or editorials (9%). The other thirty percent decided on grounds not connected
with public affairs. They ranged from not quite seven who decided for ethical
tone, down to one twentieth of one percent who cared most about humor.
How do these preferences correspond with the space
given by newspapers to various subjects? Unfortunately there are no data
collected on this point for the newspapers read by the Chicago and New York
groups at the time the questionnaires were made. But there is an interesting
analysis made over twenty years ago by Wilcox. He studied one hundred and ten
newspapers in fourteen large cities, and classified the subject matter of over
nine thousand columns.
Averaged for the whole country the various newspaper
matter was found to fill:
{ (a) War News 17.9
{ { Foreign 1.2
{ (b) General “ 21.8 { Politics 6.4
I. News 55.3 { { Crime 3.1
{ { Misc. 11.1
{
{ { Business 8.2
{ (c) Special “ 15.6 { Sport 5.1
{ Society 2.3
II. Illustrations 3.1
III. Literature 2.4 { (a) Editorials 3.9
IV. Opinion 7.1 { (b) Letters & Exchange 3.2
V. Advertisements 32.1
In order to bring this table into a fair comparison,
it is necessary to exclude the space given to advertisements, and recompute the
percentages. For the advertisements occupied only an infinitesimal part of the
conscious preference of the Chicago group or the college group. I think this is
justifiable for our purposes because the press prints what advertisements it
can get, [Footnote: Except those which it regards as objectionable, and those
which, in rare instances, are crowded out.] whereas the rest of the paper is
designed to the taste of its readers. The table would then read:
{War News 26.4-
{ {Foreign 1.8-
I. News 81.4+{General News 32.0+ {Political 9.4+
{ {Crime 4.6-
{ {Misc. 16.3+
{
{ {Business 12.1-
{Special “ 23.0- {Sporting 7.5+
{Society 3.3-
II. Illustrations 4.6-
III. Literature 3.5+
IV. Opinion 10.5- {Editorials 5.8-
{Letters 4.7+
In this revised table if you add up the items which
may be supposed to deal with public affairs, that is to say war, foreign,
political, miscellaneous, business news, and opinion, you find a total of 76.5%
of the edited space devoted in 1900 to the 70.6% of reasons given by Chicago
business men in 1916 for preferring a particular newspaper, and to the five
features which most interested 67.5% of the New York College students in 1920.
This would seem to show that the tastes of business
men and college students in big cities to-day still correspond more or less to
the averaged judgments of newspaper editors in big cities twenty years ago.
Since that time the proportion of features to news has undoubtedly increased,
and so has the circulation and the size of newspapers. Therefore, if to-day you
could secure accurate replies from more typical groups than college students or
business and professional men, you would expect to find a smaller percentage of
time devoted to public affairs, as well as a smaller percentage of space. On
the other hand you would expect to find that the average man spends more than
the quarter of an hour on his newspaper, and that while the percentage of space
given to public affairs is less than twenty years ago the net amount is
greater.
No elaborate deductions are to be drawn from these
figures. They help merely to make somewhat more concrete our notions of the
effort that goes day by day into acquiring the data of our opinions. The
newspapers are, of course, not the only means, but they are certainly the
principal ones. Magazines, the public forum, the chautauqua, the church,
political gatherings, trade union meetings, women’s clubs, and news serials in
the moving picture houses supplement the press. But taking it all at the most
favorable estimate, the time each day is small when any of us is directly
exposed to information from our unseen environment.
CHAPTER V. SPEED, WORDS,
AND CLEARNESS
1
The unseen environment is reported to us chiefly by
words. These words are transmitted by wire or radio from the reporters to the
editors who fit them into print. Telegraphy is expensive, and the facilities
are often limited. Press service news is, therefore, usually coded. Thus a
dispatch which reads,—
“Washington, D. C. June I.—The United States regards
the question of German shipping seized in this country at the outbreak of
hostilities as a closed incident,”
may pass over the wires in the following form:
“Washn i. The Uni Stas rgds tq of Ger spg seized in
ts cou at t outbk o hox as a clod incident.” [Footnote: Phillip’s Code.]
A news item saying:
“Berlin, June 1, Chancellor Wirth told the Reichstag
to-day in outlining the Government’s program that ‘restoration and
reconciliation would be the keynote of the new Government’s policy.’ He added
that the Cabinet was determined disarmament should be carried out loyally and
that disarmament would not be the occasion of the imposition of further
penalties by the Allies.”
may be cabled in this form:
“Berlin 1. Chancellor Wirth told t Reichstag tdy in
outlining the gvts pgn tt qn restoration & reconciliation wd b the keynote
f new gvts policy. qj He added ttt cabinet ws dtmd disarmament sd b carried out
loyally & tt disarmament wd n b. the ocan f imposition of further penalties
bi t alis.”
In this second item the substance has been culled
from a long speech in a foreign tongue, translated, coded, and then decoded.
The operators who receive the messages transcribe them as they go along, and I
am told that a good operator can write fifteen thousand or even more words per
eight hour day, with a half an hour out for lunch and two ten minute periods
for rest.
2
A few words must often stand for a whole succession
of acts, thoughts, feelings and consequences. We read:
“Washington, Dec. 23—A statement charging Japanese
military authorities with deeds more ‘frightful and barbarous’ than anything
ever alleged to have occurred in Belgium during the war was issued here to-day
by the Korean Commission, based, the Commission said, on authentic reports
received by it from Manchuria.”
Here eyewitnesses, their accuracy unknown, report to
the makers of ‘authentic reports’; they in turn transmit these to a commission
five thousand miles away. It prepares a statement, probably much too long for
publication, from which a correspondent culls an item of print three and a half
inches long. The meaning has to be telescoped in such a way as to permit the
reader to judge how much weight to give to the news.
It is doubtful whether a supreme master of style
could pack all the elements of truth that complete justice would demand into a
hundred word account of what had happened in Korea during the course of several
months. For language is by no means a perfect vehicle of meanings. Words, like
currency, are turned over and over again, to evoke one set of images to-day,
another to-morrow. There is no certainty whatever that the same word will call
out exactly the same idea in the reader’s mind as it did in the reporter’s.
Theoretically, if each fact and each relation had a name that was unique, and
if everyone had agreed on the names, it would be possible to communicate
without misunderstanding. In the exact sciences there is an approach to this
ideal, and that is part of the reason why of all forms of world-wide cooperation,
scientific inquiry is the most effective.
Men command fewer words than they have ideas to
express, and language, as Jean Paul said, is a dictionary of faded metaphors.
[Footnote: Cited by White, Mechanisms of Character Formation.] The journalist
addressing half a million readers of whom he has only a dim picture, the
speaker whose words are flashed to remote villages and overseas, cannot hope
that a few phrases will carry the whole burden of their meaning. “The words of
Lloyd George, badly understood and badly transmitted,” said M. Briand to the
Chamber of Deputies, [Footnote: Special Cable to The New York Times, May 25,
1921, by Edwin L, James. ] “seemed to give the Pan-Germanists the idea that the
time had come to start something.” A British Prime Minister, speaking in
English to the whole attentive world, speaks his own meaning in his own words
to all kinds of people who will see their meaning in those words. No matter how
rich or subtle—or rather the more rich and the more subtle that which he has to
say, the more his meaning will suffer as it is sluiced into standard speech and
then distributed again among alien minds. [Footnote: In May of 1921, relations
between England and France were strained by the insurrection of M. Korfanty in
Upper Silesia. The London Correspondence of the Manchester Guardian (May 20,
1921), contained the following item:
“The Franco-English Exchange in Words.
“In quarters well acquainted with French ways and
character I find a tendency to think that undue sensibility has been shown by
our press and public opinion in the lively and at times intemperate language of
the French press through the present crisis. The point was put to me by a
well-informed neutral observer in the following manner.
“Words, like money, are tokens of value. They
represent meaning, therefore, and just as money, their representative value
goes up and down. The French word ‘etonnant’ was used by Bossuet with a
terrible weight of meaning which it has lost to-day. A similar thing can be
observed with the English word ‘awful.’ Some nations constitutionally tend to
understate, others to overstate. What the British Tommy called an unhealthy
place could only be described by an Italian soldier by means of a rich
vocabulary aided with an exuberant mimicry. Nations that understate keep their
word-currency sound. Nations that overstate suffer from inflation in their
language.
“Expressions such as ‘a distinguished scholar,’ ‘a
clever writer,’ must be translated into French as ‘a great savant,’ ‘an
exquisite master.’ It is a mere matter of exchange, just as in France one pound
pays 46 francs, and yet one knows that that does not increase its value at
home. Englishmen reading the French press should endeavour to work out a mental
operation similar to that of the banker who puts back francs into pounds, and
not forget in so doing that while in normal times the change was 25 it is now
46 on account of the war. For there is a war fluctuation on word exchanges as
well as on money exchanges.
“The argument, one hopes, works both ways, and
Frenchmen do not fail to realize that there is as much value behind English
reticence as behind their own exuberance of expression.”]
Millions of those who are watching him can read
hardly at all. Millions more can read the words but cannot understand them. Of
those who can both read and understand, a good three-quarters we may assume
have some part of half an hour a day to spare for the subject. To them the
words so acquired are the cue for a whole train of ideas on which ultimately a
vote of untold consequences may be based. Necessarily the ideas which we allow
the words we read to evoke form the biggest part of the original data of our
opinions. The world is vast, the situations that concern us are intricate, the
messages are few, the biggest part of opinion must be constructed in the
imagination.
When we use the word “Mexico” what picture does it
evoke in a resident of New York? Likely as not, it is some composite of sand,
cactus, oil wells, greasers, rum-drinking Indians, testy old cavaliers flourishing
whiskers and sovereignty, or perhaps an idyllic peasantry à la Jean Jacques,
assailed by the prospect of smoky industrialism, and fighting for the Rights of
Man. What does the word “Japan” evoke? Is it a vague horde of slant-eyed yellow
men, surrounded by Yellow Perils, picture brides, fans, Samurai, banzais, art,
and cherry blossoms? Or the word “alien”? [RidleyScott.]
According to a group of New England college students, writing in the year 1920,
an alien was the following: [Footnote: The New Republic: December 29, 1920, p.
142.]
“A person hostile to this
country.”
“A person against the
government.”
“A person who is on the
opposite side.”
“A native of an unfriendly
country.”
“A foreigner at war.”
“A foreigner who tries to do
harm to the country he is in.”
“An enemy from a foreign
land.”
“A person against a country.”
etc….
Yet the word alien is an
unusually exact legal term, far more exact than words like sovereignty,
independence, national honor, rights, defense, aggression, imperialism, capitalism,
socialism, about which we so readily take sides “for” or “against.”
3
The power to dissociate superficial analogies, attend
to differences and appreciate variety is lucidity of mind. It is a relative
faculty. Yet the differences in lucidity are extensive, say as between a newly
born infant and a botanist examining a flower. To the infant there is precious
little difference between his own toes, his father’s watch, the lamp on the
table, the moon in the sky, and a nice bright yellow edition of Guy de
Maupassant. To many a member of the Union League Club there is no remarkable
difference between a Democrat, a Socialist, an anarchist, and a burglar, while
to a highly sophisticated anarchist there is a whole universe of difference
between Bakunin, Tolstoi, and Kropotkin. These examples show how difficult it
might be to secure a sound public opinion about de Maupassant among babies, or
about Democrats in the Union League Club.
A man who merely rides in other people’s automobiles
may not rise to finer discrimination than between a Ford, a taxicab, and an
automobile. But let that same man own a car and drive it, let him, as the
psychoanalysts would say, project his libido upon automobiles, and he will
describe a difference in carburetors by looking at the rear end of a car a city
block away. That is why it is often such a relief when the talk turns from
“general topics” to a man’s own hobby. It is like turning from the landscape in
the parlor to the ploughed field outdoors. It is a return to the three dimensional
world, after a sojourn in the painter’s portrayal of his own emotional response
to his own inattentive memory of what he imagines he ought to have seen.
We easily identify, says Ferenczi, two only partially
similar things: [Footnote: Internat. Zeitschr, f. Arztl. Psychoanalyse, 1913.
Translated and republished by Dr. Ernest Jones in S. Ferenczi, Contributions to
Psychoanalysis, Ch. VIII, Stages in the Development of the Sense of Reality.]
the child more easily than the adult, the primitive or arrested mind more
readily than the mature. As it first appears in the child, consciousness seems
to be an unmanageable mixture of sensations. The child has no sense of time,
and almost none of space, it reaches for the chandelier with the same
confidence that it reaches for its mother’s breast, and at first with almost
the same expectation. Only very gradually does function define itself. To
complete inexperience this is a coherent and undifferentiated world, in which,
as someone has said of a school of philosophers, all facts are born free and
equal. Those facts which belong together in the world have not yet been
separated from those which happen to lie side by side in the stream of
consciousness.
At first, says Ferenczi, the baby gets some of the
things it wants by crying for them. This is “the period of magical
hallucinatory omnipotence.” In its second phase the child points to the things
it wants, and they are given to it. “Omnipotence by the help of magic
gestures.” Later, the child learns to talk, asks for what it wishes, and is
partially successful. “The period of magic thoughts and magic words.” Each
phase may persist for certain situations, though overlaid and only visible at
times, as for example, in the little harmless superstitions from which few of us
are wholly free. In each phase, partial success tends to confirm that way of
acting, while failure tends to stimulate the development of another. Many
individuals, parties, and even nations, rarely appear to transcend the magical
organization of experience. But in the more advanced sections of the most
advanced peoples, trial and error after repeated failure has led to the
invention of a new principle. The moon, they learn, is not moved by baying at
it. Crops are not raised from the soil by spring festivals or Republican
majorities, but by sunlight, moisture, seeds, fertilizer, and cultivation.
[Footnote: Ferenczi, being a pathologist, does not describe this maturer period
where experience is organized as equations, the phase of realism on the basis
of science.]
Allowing for the purely schematic value of Ferenczi’s
categories of response, the quality which we note as critical is the power to
discriminate among crude perceptions and vague analogies. This power has been
studied under laboratory conditions. [Footnote: See, for example, Diagnostische
Assoziation Studien, conducted at the Psychiatric University Clinic in Zurich
under the direction of Dr. C. G. Jung. These tests were carried on principally
under the so-called Krapelin-Aschaffenburg classification. They show reaction
time, classify response to the stimulant word as inner, outer, and clang, show
separate results for the first and second hundred words, for reaction time and
reaction quality when the subject is distracted by holding an idea in mind, or
when he replies while beating time with a metronome. Some of the results are
summarized in Jung, Analytical Psychology, Ch. II, transl. by Dr. Constance E.
Long.] The Zurich Association Studies indicate clearly that slight mental
fatigue, an inner disturbance of attention or an external distraction, tend to
“flatten” the quality of the response. An example of the very “flat” type is
the clang association (cat-hat), a reaction to the sound and not to the sense
of the stimulant word. One test, for example, shows a 9% increase of clang in
the second series of a hundred reactions. Now the clang is almost a repetition,
a very primitive form of analogy.
4
If the comparatively simple conditions of a
laboratory can so readily flatten out discrimination, what must be the effect
of city life? In the laboratory the fatigue is slight enough, the distraction
rather trivial. Both are balanced in measure by the subject’s interest and
self-consciousness. Yet if the beat of a metronome will depress intelligence,
what do eight or twelve hours of noise, odor, and heat in a factory, or day
upon day among chattering typewriters and telephone bells and slamming doors,
do to the political judgments formed on the basis of newspapers read in
street-cars and subways? Can anything be heard in the hubbub that does not
shriek, or be seen in the general glare that does not flash like an electric
sign? The life of the city dweller lacks solitude, silence, ease. The nights
are noisy and ablaze. The people of a big city are assaulted by incessant
sound, now violent and jagged, now falling into unfinished rhythms, but endless
and remorseless. Under modern industrialism thought goes on in a bath of noise.
If its discriminations are often flat and foolish, here at least is some small
part of the reason. The sovereign people determines life and death and
happiness under conditions where experience and experiment alike show thought
to be most difficult. “The intolerable burden of thought” is a burden when the
conditions make it burdensome. It is no burden when the conditions are
favorable. It is as exhilarating to think as it is to dance, and just as
natural.
Every man whose business it is to think knows that he
must for part of the day create about himself a pool of silence. But in that
helter-skelter which we flatter by the name of civilization, the citizen
performs the perilous business of government under the worst possible
conditions. A faint recognition of this truth inspires the movement for a
shorter work day, for longer vacations, for light, air, order, sunlight and
dignity in factories and offices. But if the intellectual quality of our life
is to be improved that is only the merest beginning. So long as so many jobs
are an endless and, for the worker, an aimless routine, a kind of automatism
using one set of muscles in one monotonous pattern, his whole life will tend
towards an automatism in which nothing is particularly to be distinguished from
anything else unless it is announced with a thunderclap. So long as he is physically imprisoned in crowds by day and
even by night his attention will flicker and relax. It will not hold fast and
define clearly where he is the victim of all sorts of pother, in a home which
needs to be ventilated of its welter of drudgery, shrieking children, raucous assertions,
indigestible food, bad air, and suffocating ornament.
Occasionally perhaps we enter a building which is
composed and spacious; we go to a theatre where modern stagecraft has cut away
distraction, or go to sea, or into a quiet place, and we remember how
cluttered, how capricious, how superfluous and clamorous is the ordinary urban
life of our time. We learn to understand why our addled minds seize so little
with precision, why they are caught up and tossed about in a kind of tarantella
by headlines and catch-words, why so often they cannot tell things apart or
discern identity in apparent differences.
5
But this external disorder is complicated further by
internal. Experiment shows that the speed, the accuracy, and the intellectual
quality of association is deranged by what we are taught to call emotional
conflicts. Measured in fifths of a second, a series of a hundred stimuli
containing both neutral and hot words may show a variation as between 5 and 32
or even a total failure to respond at all. [Footnote: Jung, Clark Lectures.]
Obviously our public opinion is in intermittent contact with complexes of all
sorts; with ambition and economic interest, personal animosity, racial
prejudice, class feeling and what not. They distort our reading, our thinking,
our talking and our behavior in a great variety of ways.
And finally since opinions do not stop at the normal
members of society, since for the purposes of an election, a propaganda, a
following, numbers constitute power, the quality of attention is still further
depressed. The mass of absolutely illiterate, of feeble-minded, grossly
neurotic, undernourished and frustrated individuals, is very considerable, much
more considerable there is reason to think than we generally suppose. Thus a
wide popular appeal is circulated among persons who are mentally children or
barbarians, people whose lives are a morass of entanglements, people whose
vitality is exhausted, shut-in people, and people whose experience has
comprehended no factor in the problem under discussion. The stream of public
opinion is stopped by them in little eddies of misunderstanding, where it is
discolored with prejudice and far fetched analogy.
A “broad appeal” takes account of the quality of
association, and is made to those susceptibilities which are widely
distributed. A “narrow” or a “special” appeal is one made to those
susceptibilities which are uncommon. But the same individual may respond with
very different quality to different stimuli, or to the same stimuli at
different times. Human susceptibilities are like an alpine country. There are
isolated peaks, there are extensive but separated plateaus, and there are
deeper strata which are quite continuous for nearly all mankind. Thus the
individuals whose susceptibilities reach the rarefied atmosphere of those peaks
where there exists an exquisitive difference between Frege and Peano, or
between Sassetta’s earlier and later periods, may be good stanch Republicans at
another level of appeal, and when they are starving and afraid, indistinguishable
from any other starving and frightened person. No wonder that the magazines
with the large circulations prefer the face of a pretty girl to any other trade
mark, a face, pretty enough to be alluring, but innocent enough to be
acceptable. For the “psychic level” on which the stimulus acts determines
whether the public is to be potentially a large or a small one.
6
Thus the environment with
which our public opinions deal is refracted in many ways, by censorship and
privacy at the source, by physical and social barriers at the other end, by
scanty attention, by the poverty of language, by distraction, by unconscious
constellations of feeling, by wear and tear, violence, monotony. These
limitations upon our access to that environment combine with the obscurity and
complexity of the facts themselves to thwart clearness and justice of
perception, to substitute misleading fictions for workable ideas, and to
deprive us of adequate checks upon those who consciously strive to mislead.
PART III. STEREOTYPES
CHAPTER VI. STEREOTYPES
1
Each of us lives and works on a small part of the
earth’s surface, moves in a small circle, and of these acquaintances knows only
a few intimately. Of any public event that has wide effects we see at best only
a phase and an aspect. This is as true of the eminent insiders who draft
treaties, make laws, and issue orders, as it is of those who have treaties
framed for them, laws promulgated to them, orders given at them. Inevitably our
opinions cover a bigger space, a longer reach of time, a greater number of
things, than we can directly observe. They have, therefore, to be pieced
together out of what others have reported and what we can imagine.
Yet even the eyewitness does not bring back a naéve
picture of the scene. [Footnote: E. g. cf. Edmond Locard, L’Enquête Criminelle
et les Méthodes Scientifiques. A great deal of
interesting material has been gathered in late years on the credibility of the
witness, which shows, as an able reviewer of Dr. Locard’s book says in The
Times (London) Literary Supplement (August 18, 1921), that credibility varies
as to classes of witnesses and classes of events, and also as to type of
perception. Thus, perceptions of touch, odor, and taste have low evidential
value. Our hearing is defective and arbitrary when it judges the source and
direction of sound, and in listening to the talk of other people “words which
are not heard will be supplied by the witness in all good faith. He will have a
theory of the purport of the conversation, and will arrange the sounds he heard
to fit it.” Even visual perceptions are liable to great error, as in
identification, recognition, judgment of distance, estimates of numbers, for
example, the size of a crowd. In the untrained observer, the sense of time is
highly variable. All these original weaknesses are complicated by tricks of
memory, and the incessant creative quality of the imagination. Cf. also
Sherrington, The Integrative Action of the Nervous System, pp. 318-327.
The late Professor Hugo Münsterberg wrote a popular
book on this subject called On the Witness Stand.]
For experience seems to show that he himself brings
something to the scene which later he takes away from it, that oftener than not
what he imagines to be the account of an event is really a transfiguration of
it. Few facts in consciousness seem to be merely given. Most facts in
consciousness seem to be partly made. A report is the joint product of the
knower and known, in which the role of the observer is always selective and
usually creative. The facts we see depend on where we are placed, and the
habits of our eyes.
An unfamiliar scene is like the baby’s world, “one
great, blooming, buzzing confusion.” [Footnote: Wm. James, Principles of
Psychology, Vol. I, p. 488.] This is the way, says Mr. John Dewey, [Footnote: John Dewey,
How We Think, pg 121.] that any new thing strikes an adult, so far as the thing
is really new and strange. “Foreign languages that we do not understand
always seem jibberings, babblings, in which it is impossible to fix a definite,
clear-cut, individualized group of sounds. The countryman in the crowded
street, the landlubber at sea, the ignoramus in sport at a contest between
experts in a complicated game, are further instances. Put an inexperienced man
in a factory, and at first the work seems to him a meaningless medley. All
strangers of another race proverbially look alike to the visiting stranger.
Only gross differences of size or color are perceived by an outsider in a flock
of sheep, each of which is perfectly individualized to the shepherd. A
diffusive blur and an indiscriminately shifting suction characterize what we do
not understand. The problem of the acquisition of meaning by things, or (stated
in another way) of forming habits of simple apprehension, is thus the problem
of introducing (1) definiteness and distinction and (2) consistency or
stability of meaning into what is otherwise vague and wavering.”
But the kind of definiteness and consistency
introduced depends upon who introduces them. In a later passage [Footnote: op.
cit., p. 133.] Dewey gives an example of how differently an experienced layman
and a chemist might define the word metal. “Smoothness, hardness, glossiness,
and brilliancy, heavy weight for its size … the serviceable properties of
capacity for being hammered and pulled without breaking, of being softened by
heat and hardened by cold, of retaining the shape and form given, of resistance
to pressure and decay, would probably be included” in the layman’s definition.
But the chemist would likely as not ignore these esthetic and utilitarian
qualities, and define a metal as “any chemical element that enters into
combination with oxygen so as to form a base.”
For the most part we do not
first see, and then define, we define first and then see. In the great
blooming, buzzing confusion of the outer world we pick out what our culture has
already defined for us, and we tend to perceive that which we have picked out
in the form stereotyped for us by our culture. Of the great men who
assembled at Paris to settle the affairs of mankind, how many were there who
were able to see much of the Europe about them, rather than their commitments
about Europe? Could anyone have penetrated the mind of M. Clemenceau, would he
have found there images of the Europe of 1919, or a great sediment of
stereotyped ideas accumulated and hardened in a long and pugnacious existence?
Did he see the Germans of 1919, or the German type as he had learned to see it
since 1871? He saw the type, and among the reports that came to him from
Germany, he took to heart those reports, and, it seems, those only, which
fitted the type that was in his mind. If a junker blustered, that was an
authentic German; if a labor leader confessed the guilt of the empire, he was
not an authentic German.
At a Congress of Psychology in Göttingen an
interesting experiment was made with a crowd of presumably trained observers.
[Footnote: A. von Gennep, La formation des légendes, pp. 158-159. Cited F. van Langenhove,
The Growth of a Legend, pp. 120-122.]
“Not far from the hall in which the Congress was
sitting there was a public fete with a masked ball. Suddenly the door of the
hall was thrown open and a clown rushed in madly pursued by a negro, revolver
in hand. They stopped in the middle of the room fighting; the clown fell, the
negro leapt upon him, fired, and then both rushed out of the hall. The whole
incident hardly lasted twenty seconds.
“The President asked those present to write
immediately a report since there was sure to be a judicial inquiry. Forty
reports were sent in. Only one had less than 20% of mistakes in regard to the
principal facts; fourteen had 20% to 40% of mistakes; twelve from 40% to 50%;
thirteen more than 50%. Moreover in twenty-four accounts 10% of the details
were pure inventions and this proportion was exceeded in ten accounts and
diminished in six. Briefly a quarter of the accounts were false.
“It goes without saying that the whole scene had been
arranged and even photographed in advance. The ten false reports may then be
relegated to the category of tales and legends; twenty-four accounts are half
legendary, and six have a value approximating to exact evidence.”
Thus out of forty trained observers writing a
responsible account of a scene that had just happened before their eyes, more
than a majority saw a scene that had not taken place. What then did they see?
One would suppose it was easier to tell what had occurred, than to invent
something which had not occurred. They saw their stereotype of such a brawl.
All of them had in the course of their lives acquired a series of images of
brawls, and these images flickered before their eyes. In one man these images
displaced less than 20% of the actual scene, in thirteen men more than half. In
thirty-four out of the forty observers the stereotypes preempted at least
one-tenth of the scene.
A distinguished art critic has said [Footnote:
Bernard Berenson, The Central Italian Painters of the Renaissance, pp. 60, et
seq.] that “what with the almost numberless shapes assumed by an object. … What
with our insensitiveness and inattention, things scarcely would have for us
features and outlines so determined and clear that we could recall them at
will, but for the stereotyped shapes art has lent them.” The truth is even
broader than that, for the stereotyped shapes lent to the world come not merely
from art, in the sense of painting and sculpture and literature, but from our
moral codes and our social philosophies and our political agitations as well.
Substitute in the following passage of Mr. Berenson’s the words ‘politics,’ ‘business,’
and ‘society,’ for the word ‘art’ and the sentences will be no less true: “…
unless years devoted to the study of all schools of art have taught us also to
see with our own eyes, we soon fall into the habit of moulding whatever we look
at into the forms borrowed from the one art with which we are acquainted. There
is our standard of artistic reality. Let anyone give us shapes and colors which
we cannot instantly match in our paltry stock of hackneyed forms and tints, and
we shake our heads at his failure to reproduce things as we know they certainly
are, or we accuse him of insincerity.”
Mr. Berenson speaks of our displeasure when a painter
“does not visualize objects exactly as we do,” and of the difficulty of
appreciating the art of the Middle Ages because since then “our manner of
visualizing forms has changed in a thousand ways.” [Footnote: Cf. also his
comment on Dante’s Visual Images, and his Early Illustrators in The Study and
Criticism of Italian Art (First Series), p. 13. “We cannot help dressing Virgil
as a Roman, and giving him a ‘classical profile’ and ‘statuesque carriage,’ but
Dante’s visual image of Virgil was probably no less mediaeval, no more based on
a critical reconstruction of antiquity, than his entire conception of the Roman
poet. Fourteenth Century illustrators make Virgil look like a mediaeval
scholar, dressed in cap and gown, and there is no reason why Dante’s visual
image of him should have been other than this.”] He goes on to show how in
regard to the human figure we have been taught to see what we do see. “Created
by Donatello and Masaccio, and sanctioned by the Humanists, the new canon of
the human figure, the new cast of features … presented to the ruling classes of
that time the type of human being most likely to win the day in the combat of
human forces… Who had the power to break through this new standard of vision
and, out of the chaos of things, to select shapes more definitely expressive of
reality than those fixed by men of genius? No one had such power. People had
perforce to see things in that way and in no other, and to see only the shapes
depicted, to love only the ideals presented….” [Footnote: The Central Italian
Painters, pp. 66-67.]
2
If we cannot fully understand the acts of other
people, until we know what they think they know, then in order to do justice we
have to appraise not only the information which has been at their disposal, but
the minds through which they have filtered it. For the accepted types, the
current patterns, the standard versions, intercept information on its way to
consciousness. Americanization, for example, is
superficially at least the substitution of American for European stereotypes.
Thus the peasant who might see his landlord as if he were the lord of the
manor, his employer as he saw the local magnate, is taught by Americanization
to see the landlord and employer according to American standards. This
constitutes a change of mind, which is, in effect, when the inoculation
succeeds, a change of vision. His eye sees differently. One kindly
gentlewoman has confessed that the stereotypes are of such overweening
importance, that when hers are not indulged, she at least is unable to accept
the brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God: “we are strangely affected by
the clothes we wear. Garments create a mental and social atmosphere. What can
be hoped for the Americanism of a man who insists on employing a London tailor?
One’s very food affects his Americanism. What kind of American consciousness
can grow in the atmosphere of sauerkraut and Limburger cheese? Or what can you
expect of the Americanism of the man whose breath always reeks of garlic?”
[Footnote: Cited by Mr. Edward Hale Bierstadt, New Republic, June 1 1921 p.
21.]
This lady might well have been the patron of a
pageant which a friend of mine once attended. It was called the Melting Pot,
and it was given on the Fourth of July in an automobile town where many
foreign-born workers are employed. In the center of the baseball park at second
base stood a huge wooden and canvas pot. There were flights of steps up to the
rim on two sides. After the audience had settled itself, and the band had
played, a procession came through an opening at one side of the field. It was
made up of men of all the foreign nationalities employed in the factories. They
wore their native costumes, they were singing their national songs; they danced
their folk dances, and carried the banners of all Europe. The master of
ceremonies was the principal of the grade school dressed as Uncle Sam. He led
them to the pot. He directed them up the steps to the rim, and inside. He
called them out again on the other side. They came, dressed in derby hats,
coats, pants, vest, stiff collar and polka-dot tie, undoubtedly, said my
friend, each with an Eversharp pencil in his pocket, and all singing the
Star-Spangled Banner.
To the promoters of this pageant, and probably to
most of the actors, it seemed as if they had managed to express the most
intimate difficulty to friendly association between the older peoples of
America and the newer. The contradiction of their stereotypes interfered with
the full recognition of their common humanity. The people who change their
names know this. They mean to change themselves, and the attitude of strangers
toward them.
There is, of course, some connection between the
scene outside and the mind through which we watch it, just as there are some
long-haired men and short-haired women in radical gatherings. But to the
hurried observer a slight connection is enough. If there are two bobbed heads
and four beards in the audience, it will be a bobbed and bearded audience to
the reporter who knows beforehand that such gatherings are composed of people
with these tastes in the management of their hair. There is a connection
between our vision and the facts, but it is often a strange connection. A man
has rarely looked at a landscape, let us say, except to examine its
possibilities for division into building lots, but he has seen a number of
landscapes hanging in the parlor. And from them he has learned to think of a
landscape as a rosy sunset, or as a country road with a church steeple and a
silver moon. One day he goes to the country, and for hours he does not see a
single landscape. Then the sun goes down looking rosy. At once he recognizes a
landscape and exclaims that it is beautiful. But two days later, when he tries
to recall what he saw, the odds are that he will remember chiefly some
landscape in a parlor.
Unless he has been drunk or dreaming or insane he did
see a sunset, but he saw in it, and above all remembers from it, more of what
the oil painting taught him to observe, than what an impressionist painter, for
example, or a cultivated Japanese would have seen and taken away with him. And
the Japanese and the painter in turn will have seen and remembered more of the
form they had learned, unless they happen to be the very rare people who find
fresh sight for mankind. In untrained observation we
pick recognizable signs out of the environment. The signs stand for ideas, and
these ideas we fill out with our stock of images. We do not so much see this
man and that sunset; rather we notice that the thing is man or sunset, and then
see chiefly what our mind is already full of on those subjects.
3
There is economy in this. For the attempt to see all
things freshly and in detail, rather than as types and generalities, is
exhausting, and among busy affairs practically out of the question. In a circle
of friends, and in relation to close associates or competitors, there is no
shortcut through, and no substitute for, an individualized understanding. Those
whom we love and admire most are the men and women whose consciousness is
peopled thickly with persons rather than with types, who know us rather than
the classification into which we might fit. For even without phrasing it to
ourselves, we feel intuitively that all classification is in relation to some
purpose not necessarily our own; that between two human beings no association
has final dignity in which each does not take the other as an end in himself.
There is a taint on any contact between two people which does not affirm as an
axiom the personal inviolability of both.
But modern life is hurried
and multifarious, above all physical distance separates men who are often in
vital contact with each other, such as employer and employee, official and
voter. There is neither time nor opportunity for intimate acquaintance. Instead
we notice a trait which marks a well known type, and fill in the rest of the
picture by means of the stereotypes we carry about in our heads. He is an
agitator. That much we notice, or are told. Well, an agitator is this
sort of person, and so he is this sort of person. He is an intellectual. He is
a plutocrat. He is a foreigner. He is a “South European.” He is from Back Bay.
He is a Harvard Man. How different from the statement: he is a Yale Man. He is
a regular fellow. He is a West Pointer. He is an old army sergeant. He is a
Greenwich Villager: what don’t we know about him then, and about her? He is an
international banker. He is from Main Street.
The subtlest and most pervasive of all influences ere
those which create and maintain the repertory of stereotypes. We are told about
the world before we see it. We imagine most things before we experience them.
And those preconceptions, unless education has made us acutely aware, govern
deeply the whole process of perception. They mark out certain objects as
familiar or strange, emphasizing the difference, so that the slightly familiar
is seen as very familiar, and the somewhat strange as sharply alien. They are
aroused by small signs, which may vary from a true index to a vague analogy.
Aroused, they flood fresh vision with older images, and project into the world
what has been resurrected in memory. Were there no practical uniformities in
the environment, there would be no economy and only error in the human habit of
accepting foresight for sight. But there are uniformities sufficiently
accurate, and the need of economizing attention is so inevitable, that the
abandonment of all stereotypes for a wholly innocent approach to experience
would impoverish human life.
What matters is the character
of the stereotypes, and the gullibility with which we employ them. And
these in the end depend upon those inclusive patterns which constitute our
philosophy of life. If in that philosophy we assume that the world is codified
according to a code which we possess, we are likely to make our reports of what
is going on describe a world run by our code. But if our philosophy tells us
that each man is only a small part of the world, that his intelligence catches
at best only phases and aspects in a coarse net of ideas, then, when we use our
stereotypes, we tend to know that they are only stereotypes, to hold them
lightly, to modify them gladly. We tend, also, to realize more and more clearly
when our ideas started, where they started, how they came to us, why we
accepted them. All useful history is antiseptic in this fashion. It enables us
to know what fairy tale, what school book, what tradition, what novel, play,
picture, phrase, planted one preconception in this mind, another in that mind.
4
Those who wish to censor art do not at least
underestimate this influence. They generally misunderstand it, and almost
always they are absurdly bent on preventing other people from discovering
anything not sanctioned by them. But at any rate, like Plato in his argument
about the poets, they feel vaguely that the types acquired through fiction tend
to be imposed on reality. Thus there can be little doubt that the moving
picture is steadily building up imagery which is then evoked by the words
people read in their newspapers. In the whole
experience of the race there has been no aid to visualization comparable to the
cinema. If a Florentine wished to visualize the saints, he could go to the
frescoes in his church, where he might see a vision of saints standardized for
his time by Giotto. If an Athenian wished to visualize the gods he went to the
temples. But the number of objects which were pictured was not great. And in
the East, where the spirit of the second commandment was widely accepted, the
portraiture of concrete things was even more meager, and for that reason
perhaps the faculty of practical decision was by so much reduced. In the
western world, however, during the last few centuries there has been an
enormous increase in the volume and scope of secular description, the word
picture, the narrative, the illustrated narrative, and finally the moving
picture and, perhaps, the talking picture.
Photographs have the kind of authority over
imagination to-day, which the printed word had yesterday, and the spoken word
before that. They seem utterly real. They come, we imagine, directly to us without
human meddling, and they are the most effortless food for the mind conceivable.
Any description in words, or even any inert picture, requires an effort of
memory before a picture exists in the mind. But on the screen the whole process
of observing, describing, reporting, and then imagining, has been accomplished
for you. Without more trouble than is needed to stay awake the result which
your imagination is always aiming at is reeled off on the screen. The shadowy
idea becomes vivid; your hazy notion, let us say, of the Ku Klux Klan, thanks
to Mr. Griffiths, takes vivid shape when you see the Birth of a Nation.
Historically it may be the wrong shape, morally it may be a pernicious shape,
but it is a shape, and I doubt whether anyone who has seen the film and does
not know more about the Ku Klux Klan than Mr. Griffiths, will ever hear the
name again without seeing those white horsemen. [Scorsese & the obedient
lapdog, KentJones.]
5
And so when we speak of the mind of a group of
people, of the French mind, the militarist mind, the bolshevik mind, we are
liable to serious confusion unless we agree to separate the instinctive
equipment from the stereotypes, the patterns, and the formulae which play so
decisive a part in building up the mental world to which the native character
is adapted and responds. Failure to make this distinction accounts for oceans
of loose talk about collective minds, national souls, and race psychology. To
be sure a stereotype may be so consistently and authoritatively transmitted in
each generation from parent to child that it seems almost like a biological
fact. In some respects, we may indeed have become, as Mr. Wallas says,
[Footnote: Graham Wallas, Our Social Heritage, p. 17.] biologically parasitic
upon our social heritage. But certainly there is not the least scientific
evidence which would enable anyone to argue that men are born with the
political habits of the country in which they are born. In so far as political
habits are alike in a nation, the first places to look for an explanation are
the nursery, the school, the church, not in that limbo inhabited by Group Minds
and National Souls. Until you have thoroughly failed to see tradition being
handed on from parents, teachers, priests, and uncles, it is a solecism of the
worst order to ascribe political differences to the germ plasm.
It is possible to generalize tentatively and with a
decent humility about comparative differences within the same category of
education and experience. Yet even this is a tricky enterprise. For almost no
two experiences are exactly alike, not even of two children in the same
household. The older son never does have the experience of being the younger.
And therefore, until we are able to discount the difference in nurture, we must
withhold judgment about differences of nature. As well judge the productivity
of two soils by comparing their yield before you know which is in Labrador and
which in Iowa, whether they have been cultivated and enriched, exhausted, or
allowed to run wild.
CHAPTER VII. STEREOTYPES
AS DEFENSE
1
THERE is another reason, besides economy of effort,
why we so often hold to our stereotypes when we might pursue a more
disinterested vision. The systems of stereotypes may be the core of our
personal tradition, the defenses of our position in society.
They are an ordered, more or
less consistent picture of the world, to which our habits, our tastes, our
capacities, our comforts and our hopes have adjusted themselves. They may not
be a complete picture of the world, but they are a picture of a possible world
to which we are adapted. In that world people and things have their well-known
places, and do certain expected things. We feel at home there. We fit
in. We are members. We know the way around. There we find the charm of the
familiar, the normal, the dependable; its grooves and shapes are where we are
accustomed to find them. And though we have abandoned much that might have
tempted us before we creased ourselves into that mould, once we are firmly in,
it fits as snugly as an old shoe.
No wonder, then, that any disturbance of the
stereotypes seems like an attack upon the foundations of the universe. It is an
attack upon the foundations of our universe, and, where big things are at
stake, we do not readily admit that there is any distinction between our
universe and the universe. A world which turns out to be one in which those we
honor are unworthy, and those we despise are noble, is nerve-racking. There is
anarchy if our order of precedence is not the only possible one. For if the meek
should indeed inherit the earth, if the first should be last, if those who are
without sin alone may cast a stone, if to Caesar you render only the things
that are Caesar’s, then the foundations of self-respect would be shaken for
those who have arranged their lives as if these maxims were not true. A pattern
of stereotypes is not neutral. It is not merely a way of substituting order for
the great blooming, buzzing confusion of reality. It is not merely a short cut.
It is all these things and something more. It is the guarantee of our
self-respect; it is the projection upon the world of our own sense of our own
value, our own position and our own rights. The stereotypes are, therefore,
highly charged with the feelings that are attached to them. They are the
fortress of our tradition, and behind its defenses we can continue to feel
ourselves safe in the position we occupy.
2
When, for example, in the fourth century B. C.,
Aristotle wrote his defense of slavery in the face of increasing skepticism, [Footnote:
Zimmern: Greek Commonwealth. See his footnote, p. 383.]
the Athenian slaves were in great part indistinguishable from free citizens Mr.
Zimmern quotes an amusing passage from the Old Oligarch explaining the good
treatment of the slaves. “Suppose it were legal for a
slave to be beaten by a citizen, it would frequently happen that an Athenian
might be mistaken for a slave or an alien and receive a beating;—since the
Athenian people is not better clothed than the slave or alien, nor in personal
appearance is there any superiority.” This absence of distinction would
naturally tend to dissolve the institution. If free men and slaves looked
alike, what basis was there for treating them so differently? It was this
confusion which Aristotle set himself to clear away in the first book of his
Politics. With unerring instinct he understood that to justify slavery he must
teach the Greeks a way of seeing their slaves that comported with the
continuance of slavery.
So, said Aristotle, there
are beings who are slaves by nature. [Footnote: Politics, Bk. 1, Ch. 5.] “He
then is by nature formed a slave, who is fitted to become the chattel of
another person, and on that account is so.” All this really says is that
whoever happens to be a slave is by nature intended to be one. Logically the
statement is worthless, but in fact it is not a proposition at all, and logic
has nothing to do with it. It is a stereotype, or rather it is part of a
stereotype. The rest follows almost immediately. After asserting that slaves perceive reason, but are not
endowed with the use of it, Aristotle insists that “it is the intention of
nature to make the bodies of slaves and free men different from each other,
that the one should be robust for their necessary purposes, but the other
erect; useless indeed for such servile labours, but fit for civil life… It is
clear then that some men are free by nature, and others are slaves. …”
If we ask ourselves what is
the matter with Aristotle’s argument, we find that he has begun by erecting a
great barrier between himself and the facts. When he had said that those who
are slaves are by nature intended to be slaves, he at one stroke excluded the
fatal question whether those particular men who happened to be slaves were the
particular men intended by nature to be slaves. For that question would have
tainted each case of slavery with doubt. And since the fact of being a
slave was not evidence that a man was destined to be one, no certain test would
have remained. Aristotle, therefore, excluded entirely that destructive doubt.
Those who are slaves are intended to be slaves. Each slave holder was to look
upon his chattels as natural slaves. When his eye had been trained to see them
that way, he was to note as confirmation of their servile character the fact
that they performed servile work, that they were competent to do servile work,
and that they had the muscles to do servile work.
This is the perfect stereotype. Its hallmark is that it
precedes the use of reason; is a form of perception, imposes a certain
character on the data of our senses before the data reach the intelligence. The
stereotype is like the lavender window-panes on Beacon Street, like the
door-keeper at a costume ball who judges whether the guest has an appropriate
masquerade. There is nothing so obdurate to education or to criticism as the
stereotype. It stamps itself upon the evidence in the very act of securing the
evidence. That is why the accounts of returning travellers are often an
interesting tale of what the traveller carried abroad with him on his trip. If
he carried chiefly his appetite, a zeal for tiled bathrooms, a conviction that
the Pullman car is the acme of human comfort, and a belief that it is proper to
tip waiters, taxicab drivers, and barbers, but under no circumstances station
agents and ushers, then his Odyssey will be replete with good meals and bad
meals, bathing adventures, compartment-train escapades, and voracious demands
for money. Or if he is a more serious soul he may while on tour have found
himself at celebrated spots. Having touched base, and cast one furtive glance
at the monument, he buried his head in Baedeker, read every word through, and
moved on to the next celebrated spot; and thus returned with a compact and
orderly impression of Europe, rated one star, or two.
In some measure, stimuli from the outside, especially
when they are printed or spoken words, evoke some part of a system of
stereotypes, so that the actual sensation and the preconception occupy
consciousness at the same time. The two are blended, much as if we looked at
red through blue glasses and saw green. If what we are looking at corresponds
successfully with what we anticipated, the stereotype is reinforced for the
future, as it is in a man who knows in advance that the Japanese are cunning
and has the bad luck to run across two dishonest Japanese.
If the experience contradicts
the stereotype, one of two things happens. If the man is no longer
plastic, or if some powerful interest makes it highly inconvenient to rearrange
his stereotypes, he pooh- poohs the contradiction as an exception that proves
the rule, discredits the witness, finds a flaw somewhere, and manages to forget
it. But if he is still curious and open-minded, the novelty is taken into the
picture, and allowed to modify it. Sometimes, if the incident is striking
enough, and if he has felt a general discomfort with his established scheme, he
may be shaken to such an extent as to distrust all accepted ways of looking at
life, and to expect that normally a thing will not be what it is generally
supposed to be. In the extreme case, especially if he is literary, he may
develop a passion for inverting the moral canon by making Judas, Benedict
Arnold, or Caesar Borgia the hero of his tale.
3
The role played by the stereotype can be seen in the
German tales about Belgian snipers. Those tales curiously enough were first
refuted by an organization of German Catholic priests known as Pax. [Footnote:
Fernand van Langenhove, The Growth of a Legend. The author is a Belgian
sociologist.] The existence of atrocity stories is itself not remarkable, nor
that the German people gladly believed them. But it is remarkable that a great
conservative body of patriotic Germans should have set out as early as August
16, 1914, to contradict a collection of slanders on the enemy, even though such
slanders were of the utmost value in soothing the troubled conscience of their
fellow countrymen. Why should the Jesuit order in particular have set out to
destroy a fiction so important to the fighting morale of Germany?
I quote from M. van Langenhove’s account:
“Hardly had the German armies entered Belgium when
strange rumors began to circulate. They spread from place to place, they were
reproduced by the press, and they soon permeated the whole of Germany. It was
said that the Belgian people, instigated by the clergy, had intervened
perfidiously in the hostilities; had attacked by surprise isolated detachments;
had indicated to the enemy the positions occupied by the troops; that old men,
and even children, had been guilty of horrible atrocities upon wounded and
defenseless German soldiers, tearing out their eyes and cutting off fingers,
nose or ears; that the priests from their pulpits had exhorted the people to
commit these crimes, promising them as a reward the kingdom of heaven, and had
even taken the lead in this barbarity.
“Public credulity accepted these stories. The highest
powers in the state welcomed them without hesitation and endorsed them with
their authority…
“In this way public opinion in Germany was disturbed
and a lively indignation manifested itself, directed especially against the
priests who were held responsible for the barbarities attributed to the
Belgians… By a natural diversion the anger to which they were a prey was
directed by the Germans against the Catholic clergy generally. Protestants
allowed the old religious hatred to be relighted in their minds and delivered
themselves to attacks against Catholics. A new Kulturkampf was let loose.
“The Catholics did not delay in taking action against
this hostile attitude.” (Italics mine) [Footnote: Op. cit., pp. 5-7]
There may have been some sniping. It would be
extraordinary if every angry Belgian had rushed to the library, opened a manual
of international law, and had informed himself whether he had a right to take
potshot at the infernal nuisance tramping through his streets. It would be no
less extraordinary if an army that had never been under fire, did not regard
every bullet that came its way as unauthorized, because it was inconvenient,
and indeed as somehow a violation of the rules of the Kriegspiel, which then
constituted its only experience of war. One can imagine
the more sensitive bent on convincing themselves that the people to whom they
were doing such terrible things must be terrible people. And so the legend may
have been spun until it reached the censors and propagandists, who, whether
they believed it or not, saw its value, and let it loose on the German civilians.
They too were not altogether sorry to find that the people they were outraging
were sub-human. And, above all, since the legend came from their heroes, they
were not only entitled to believe it, they were unpatriotic if they did not.
But where so much is left to the imagination because
the scene of action is lost in the fog of war, there is no check and no
control. The legend of the ferocious Belgian priests soon tapped an old hatred.
For in the minds of most patriotic protestant Germans, especially of the upper
classes, the picture of Bismarck’s victories included a long quarrel with the
Roman Catholics. By a process of association, Belgian priests became priests,
and hatred of Belgians a vent for all their hatreds. These German protestants
did what some Americans did when under the stress of war they created a
compound object of hatred out of the enemy abroad and all their opponents at
home. Against this synthetic enemy, the Hun in Germany and the Hun within the
Gate, they launched all the animosity that was in them.
The Catholic resistance to the atrocity tales was, of
course, defensive. It was aimed at those particular fictions which aroused
animosity against all Catholics, rather than against Belgian Catholics alone.
The Informations Pax, says M. van Langenhove, had only an ecclesiastical
bearing and “confined their attention almost exclusively to the reprehensible
acts attributed to the priests.” And yet one cannot help wondering a little
about what was set in motion in the minds of German Catholics by this
revelation of what Bismarck’s empire meant in relation to them; and also
whether there was any obscure connection between that knowledge and the fact
that the prominent German politician who was willing in the armistice to sign
the death warrant of the empire was Erzberger, [Footnote: Since this was
written, Erzberger has been assassinated.] the leader of the Catholic Centre
Party.
CHAPTER VIII. BLIND SPOTS
AND THEIR VALUE
1
I HAVE been speaking of stereotypes rather than
ideals, because the word ideal is usually reserved for what we consider the
good, the true and the beautiful. Thus it carries the hint that here is
something to be copied or attained. But our repertory of fixed impressions is
wider than that. It contains ideal swindlers, ideal Tammany politicians, ideal
jingoes, ideal agitators, ideal enemies. Our stereotyped world is not
necessarily the world we should like it to be. It is simply the kind of world
we expect it to be. If events correspond there is a sense of familiarity, and we
feel that we are moving with the movement of events. Our slave must be a slave
by nature, if we are Athenians who wish to have no qualms. If we have told our
friends that we do eighteen holes of golf in 95, we tell them after doing the
course in 110, that we are not ourselves to-day. That is to say, we are not
acquainted with the duffer who foozled fifteen strokes.
Most of us would deal with affairs through a rather
haphazard and shifting assortment of stereotypes, if a comparatively few men in
each generation were not constantly engaged in arranging, standardizing, and
improving them into logical systems, known as the Laws of Political Economy,
the Principles of Politics, and the like. Generally
when we write about culture, tradition, and the group mind, we are thinking of
these systems perfected by men of genius. Now there is no disputing the
necessity of constant study and criticism of these idealized versions, but the historian
of people, the politician, and the publicity man cannot stop there. For what
operates in history is not the systematic idea as a genius formulated it, but
shifting imitations, replicas, counterfeits, analogies, and distortions in
individual minds.
Thus Marxism is not
necessarily what Karl Marx wrote in Das Kapital, but whatever it is that all
the warring sects believe, who claim to be the faithful. From the gospels you
cannot deduce the history of Christianity, nor from the Constitution the
political history of America. It is Das Kapital as conceived, the gospels as
preached and the preachment as understood, the Constitution as interpreted and
administered, to which you have to go. For while there is a
reciprocating influence between the standard version and the current versions,
it is these current versions as distributed among men which affect their
behavior. [Footnote: But unfortunately it is ever so much harder to know this
actual culture than it is to summarize and to comment upon the works of genius.
The actual culture exists in people far too busy to indulge in the strange trade
of formulating their beliefs. They record them only incidentally, and the
student rarely knows how typical are his data. Perhaps the best he can do is to
follow Lord Bryce’s suggestion [Modern Democracies, Vol. i, p. 156] that he
move freely “among all sorts and conditions of men,” to seek out the unbiassed
persons in every neighborhood who have skill in sizing up. “There is a flair
which long practise and ‘sympathetic touch’ bestow. The trained observer learns
how to profit by small indications, as an old seaman discerns, sooner than the
landsman, the signs of coming storm.” There is, in short, a vast amount of
guess work involved, and it is no wonder that scholars, who enjoy precision, so
often confine their attentions to the neater formulations of other scholars.]
“The theory of Relativity,” says a critic whose
eyelids, like the Lady Lisa’s, are a little weary, “promises to develop into a
principle as adequate to universal application as was the theory of Evolution.
This latter theory, from being a technical biological hypothesis, became an
inspiring guide to workers in practically every branch of knowledge: manners
and customs, morals, religions, philosophies, arts, steam engines, electric
tramways—everything had ‘evolved.’ ‘Evolution’ became a very general term; it also became
imprecise until, in many cases, the original, definite meaning of the word was
lost, and the theory it had been evoked to describe was misunderstood.
[Soderbergh.] We are hardy enough to prophesy a similar career and fate
for the theory of Relativity. The technical physical theory, at present
imperfectly understood, will become still more vague and dim. History repeats
itself, and Relativity, like Evolution, after receiving a number of
intelligible but somewhat inaccurate popular expositions in its scientific
aspect, will be launched on a world-conquering career. We suggest that, by that
time, it will probably be called Relativismus. Many of these larger
applications will doubtless be justified; some will be absurd and a
considerable number will, we imagine, reduce to truisms. And the physical
theory, the mere seed of this mighty growth, will become once more the purely
technical concern of scientific men.” [Footnote: The Times (London), Literary
Supplement, June 2, 1921, p. 352. Professor Einstein said when he was in
America in 1921 that people tended to overestimate the influence of his theory,
and to under-estimate its certainty.]
But for such a world-conquering career an idea must
correspond, however imprecisely, to something. Professor Bury shows for how
long a time the idea of progress remained a speculative toy. “It is not easy,”
he writes, [Footnote: J. B. Bury, The Idea of Progress, p. 324.] “for a new
idea of the speculative order to penetrate and inform the general consciousness
of a community until it has assumed some external and concrete embodiment, or
is recommended by some striking material evidence. In the case of Progress both
these conditions were fulfilled (in England) in the period 1820-1850.” The most
striking evidence was furnished by the mechanical revolution. “Men who were
born at the beginning of the century had seen, before they had passed the age
of thirty, the rapid development of steam navigation, the illumination of towns
and houses by gas, the opening of the first railway.” In the consciousness of
the average householder miracles like these formed the pattern of his belief in
the perfectibility of the human race.
Tennyson, who was in philosophical matters a fairly
normal person, tells us that when he went by the first train from Liverpool to
Manchester (1830) he thought that the wheels ran in grooves. Then he wrote this
line:
“Let the great world spin forever down the ringing
grooves of change.” [Footnote: 2 Tennyson, Memoir by his Son, Vol. I, p. 195.
Cited by Bury, op. cit., p. 326.]
And so a notion more or less
applicable to a journey between Liverpool and Manchester was generalized into a
pattern of the universe “for ever.” This pattern, taken up by others,
reinforced by dazzling inventions, imposed an optimistic turn upon the theory
of evolution. That theory, of course, is, as Professor Bury says, neutral
between pessimism and optimism. But it promised continual change, and the
changes visible in the world marked such extraordinary conquests of nature,
that the popular mind made a blend of the two. Evolution first in Darwin
himself, and then more elaborately in Herbert Spencer, was a “progress towards
perfection.” [SamHarris. RichardDawkins.]
2
The stereotype represented by such words as
“progress” and “perfection” was composed fundamentally of mechanical
inventions. And mechanical it has remained, on the whole, to this day. In
America more than anywhere else, the spectacle of mechanical progress has made
so deep an impression, that it has suffused the whole moral code. An American
will endure almost any insult except the charge that he is not progressive. Be
he of long native ancestry, or a recent immigrant, the aspect that has always
struck his eye is the immense physical growth of American civilization. That
constitutes a fundamental stereotype through which he views the world: the
country village will become the great metropolis, the modest building a
skyscraper, what is small shall be big; what is slow shall be fast; what is
poor shall be rich; what is few shall be many; whatever is shall be more so.
Not every American, of course, sees the world this
way. Henry Adams didn’t, and William Allen White doesn’t. But those men do, who
in the magazines devoted to the religion of success appear as Makers of
America. They mean just about that when they preach
evolution, progress, prosperity, being constructive, the American way of doing
things. It is easy to laugh, but, in fact, they are using a very great
pattern of human endeavor. For one thing it adopts an impersonal criterion; for
another it adopts an earthly criterion; for a third it is habituating men to
think quantitatively. To be sure the ideal
confuses excellence with size, happiness with speed, and human nature with
contraption. Yet the same motives are at work which have ever actuated any
moral code, or ever will. The desire for the biggest, the fastest, the highest, or if
you are a maker of wristwatches or microscopes the smallest; the love in short
of the superlative and the “peerless,” is in essence and possibly a noble
passion. [Accurate.]
Certainly the American version of progress has fitted
an extraordinary range of facts in the economic situation and in human nature.
It turned an unusual amount of pugnacity, acquisitiveness, and lust of power
into productive work. Nor has it, until more recently perhaps, seriously
frustrated the active nature of the active members of the community. They have
made a civilization which provides them who made it with what they feel to be
ample satisfaction in work, mating and play, and the rush of their victory over
mountains, wildernesses, distance, and human competition has even done duty for
that part of religious feeling which is a sense of communion with the purpose
of the universe. The pattern has been a success so nearly perfect in the
sequence of ideals, practice, and results, that any challenge to it is called
un-American.
And yet, this pattern is a very partial and
inadequate way of representing the world. The habit of thinking about progress
as “development” has meant that many aspects of the environment were simply
neglected. With the stereotype of “progress” before their eyes, Americans have
in the mass seen little that did not accord with that progress. They saw the
expansion of cities, but not the accretion of slums; they cheered the census
statistics, but refused to consider overcrowding; they pointed with pride to
their growth, but would not see the drift from the land, or the unassimilated
immigration. They expanded industry furiously at reckless cost to their natural
resources; they built up gigantic corporations without arranging for industrial
relations. They grew to be one of the most powerful nations on earth without
preparing their institutions or their minds for the ending of their isolation.
They stumbled into the World War morally and physically unready, and they
stumbled out again, much disillusioned, but hardly more experienced.
In the World War the good and the evil influence of
the American stereotype was plainly visible. The idea that the war could be won
by recruiting unlimited armies, raising unlimited credits, building an
unlimited number of ships, producing unlimited munitions, and concentrating
without limit on these alone, fitted the traditional stereotype, and resulted
in something like a physical miracle. [Footnote: I
have in mind the transportation and supply of two million troops overseas.
Prof. Wesley Mitchell points out that the total production of goods after our
entrance into the war did not greatly increase in volume over that of the year
1916; but that production for war purposes did increase.] But among
those most affected by the stereotype, there was no place for the consideration
of what the fruits of victory were, or how they were to be attained. Therefore,
aims were ignored, or regarded as automatic, and victory was conceived, because
the stereotype demanded it, as nothing but an annihilating victory in the
field. In peace time you did not ask what the fastest motor car was for, and in
war you did not ask what the completest victory was for. Yet in Paris the
pattern did not fit the facts. In peace you can go on endlessly supplanting
small things with big ones, and big ones with bigger ones; in war when you have
won absolute victory, you cannot go on to a more absolute victory. You have to
do something on an entirely different pattern. And if you lack such a pattern,
the end of the war is to you what it was to so many good people, an anticlimax
in a dreary and savorless world.
This marks the point where the stereotype and the
facts, that cannot be ignored, definitely part company. There is always such a
point, because our images of how things behave are simpler and more fixed than
the ebb and flow of affairs. There comes a time, therefore, when the blind spots
come from the edge of vision into the center. Then unless there are critics who
have the courage to sound an alarm, and leaders capable of understanding the
change, and a people tolerant by habit, the stereotype, instead of economizing
effort, and focussing energy as it did in 1917 and 1918, may frustrate effort
and waste men’s energy by blinding them, as it did for those people who cried
for a Carthaginian peace in 1919 and deplored the Treaty of Versailles in 1921.
3
Uncritically held, the stereotype not only censors
out much that needs to be taken into account, but when the day of reckoning
comes, and the stereotype is shattered, likely as not that which it did wisely
take into account is ship-wrecked with it. That is the punishment assessed by
Mr. Bernard Shaw against Free Trade, Free Contract, Free Competition, Natural
Liberty, Laissez-faire, and Darwinism. A hundred years
ago, when he would surely have been one of the tartest advocates of these
doctrines, he would not have seen them as he sees them to-day, in the Infidel
Half Century, [Footnote: Back to Methuselah. Preface.] to be excuses for “‘doing
the other fellow down’ with impunity, all interference by a guiding government,
all organization except police organization to protect legalized fraud against
fisticuffs, all attempt to introduce human purpose and design and forethought
into the industrial welter being ‘contrary to the laws of political economy’”
He would have seen, then, as one of the pioneers of the march to the plains of
heaven [Footnote: The Quintessence of Ibsenism] that, of the kind of human
purpose and design and forethought to be found in a government like that of
Queen Victoria’s uncles, the less the better. He would have seen, not the
strong doing the weak down, but the foolish doing the strong down. He would
have seen purposes, designs and forethoughts at work, obstructing invention,
obstructing enterprise, obstructing what he would infallibly have recognized as
the next move of Creative Evolution.
Even now Mr. Shaw is none too eager for the guidance
of any guiding government he knows, but in theory he has turned a full loop
against laissez-faire. Most advanced thinking before the war had made the same
turn against the established notion that if you unloosed everything, wisdom
would bubble up, and establish harmony. Since the war, with its definite
demonstration of guiding governments, assisted by censors, propagandists, and
spies, Roebuck Ramsden and Natural Liberty have been readmitted to the company
of serious thinkers.
One thing is common to these cycles. There is in each
set of stereotypes a point where effort ceases and things happen of their own
accord, as you would like them to. The progressive stereotype, powerful to
incite work, almost completely obliterates the attempt to decide what work and
why that work. Laissez-faire, a blessed release from stupid officialdom,
assumes that men will move by spontaneous combustion towards a pre-established
harmony. Collectivism, an antidote to ruthless selfishness, seems, in the
Marxian mind, to suppose an economic determinism towards efficiency and wisdom
on the part of socialist officials. Strong government, imperialism at home and
abroad, at its best deeply conscious of the price of disorder, relies at last
on the notion that all that matters to the governed will be known by the
governors. In each theory there is a spot of blind automatism.
That spot covers up some fact, which if it were taken
into account, would check the vital movement that the stereotype provokes. If
the progressive had to ask himself, like the Chinaman in the joke, what he
wanted to do with the time he saved by breaking the record, if the advocate of
laissez-faire had to contemplate not only free and exuberant energies of men,
but what some people call their human nature, if the collectivist let the
center of his attention be occupied with the problem of how he is to secure his
officials, if the imperialist dared to doubt his own inspiration, you would
find more Hamlet and less Henry the Fifth. For these blind spots keep away
distracting images, which with their attendant emotions, might cause hesitation
and infirmity of purpose. Consequently the stereotype not only saves time in a
busy life and is a defense of our position in society, but tends to preserve us
from all the bewildering effect of trying to see the world steadily and see it
whole.
CHAPTER IX. CODES AND
THEIR ENEMIES
ANYONE who has stood at the end of a railroad
platform waiting for a friend, will recall what queer people he mistook for
him. The shape of a hat, a slightly characteristic gait, evoked the vivid
picture in his mind’s eye. In sleep a tinkle may sound like the pealing of a
great bell; the distant stroke of a hammer like a thunderclap. For our
constellations of imagery will vibrate to a stimulus that is perhaps but
vaguely similar to some aspect of them. They may, in hallucination, flood the
whole consciousness. They may enter very little into perception, though I am
inclined to think that such an experience is extremely rare and highly
sophisticated, as when we gaze blankly at a familiar word or object, and it
gradually ceases to be familiar. Certainly for the most part, the way we see
things is a combination of what is there and of what we expected to find. The heavens
are not the same to an astronomer as to a pair of lovers; a page of Kant will
start a different train of thought in a Kantian and in a radical empiricist;
the Tahitian belle is a better looking person to her Tahitian suitor than to
the readers of the National Geographic Magazine.
Expertness in any subject is, in fact, a
multiplication of the number of aspects we are prepared to discover, plus the
habit of discounting our expectations. Where to the ignoramus all things look
alike, and life is just one thing after another, to the specialist things are
highly individual. For a chauffeur, an epicure, a connoisseur, a member of the
President’s cabinet, or a professor’s wife, there are evident distinctions and
qualities, not at all evident to the casual person who discusses automobiles,
wines, old masters, Republicans, and college faculties.
But in our public opinions few can be expert, while
life is, as Mr. Bernard Shaw has made plain, so short. Those who are expert are
so on only a few topics. Even among the expert soldiers, as we learned during
the war, expert cavalrymen were not necessarily brilliant with trench-warfare
and tanks. Indeed, sometimes a little expertness on a small topic may simply
exaggerate our normal human habit of trying to squeeze into our stereotypes all
that can be squeezed, and of casting into outer darkness that which does not
fit.
Whatever we recognize as familiar we tend, if we are
not very careful, to visualize with the aid of images already in our mind. Thus in the American view of Progress and Success there is a
definite picture of human nature and of society. It is the kind of human nature
and the kind of society which logically produce the kind of progress that is
regarded as ideal. And then, when we seek to describe or explain actually
successful men, and events that have really happened, we read back into them
the qualities that are presupposed in the stereotypes.
These qualities were
standardized rather innocently by the older economists. They set out
to describe the social system under which they lived, and found it too
complicated for words. [Accurate. JamesEllroy and his equally dumbass friend,
BruceWagner.] So they constructed what they sincerely hoped was a simplified
diagram, not so different in principle and in veracity from the parallelogram
with legs and head in a child’s drawing of a complicated cow. The scheme consisted of a capitalist who had diligently
saved capital from his labor, an entrepreneur who conceived a socially useful
demand and organized a factory, a collection of workmen who freely contracted,
take it or leave it, for their labor, a landlord, and a group of consumers who
bought in the cheapest market those goods which by the ready use of the
pleasure-pain calculus they knew would give them the most pleasure. The model
worked. The kind of people, which the model assumed, living in the sort of
world the model assumed, invariably coöperated harmoniously in the books where
the model was described.
With modification and embroidery, this pure fiction,
used by economists to simplify their thinking, was retailed and popularized
until for large sections of the population it prevailed as the economic
mythology of the day. It supplied a standard version of capitalist, promoter,
worker and consumer in a society that was naturally more bent on achieving
success than on explaining it. The buildings which rose, and the bank accounts
which accumulated, were evidence that the stereotype of how the thing had been
done was accurate. And those who benefited most by success came to believe they
were the kind of men they were supposed to be. No wonder that the candid
friends of successful men, when they read the official biography and the
obituary, have to restrain themselves from asking whether this is indeed their
friend.
2
To the vanquished and the victims, the official
portraiture was, of course, unrecognizable. For while those who exemplified
progress did not often pause to inquire whether they had arrived according to
the route laid down by the economists, or by some other just as creditable, the
unsuccessful people did inquire. “No one,” says William James, [Footnote: The
Letters of William James, Vol. I, p.65] “sees further into a generalization
than his own knowledge of detail extends.” The captains of industry saw in the
great trusts monuments of (their) success; their defeated competitors saw the
monuments of (their) failure. So the captains expounded the economies and
virtues of big business, asked to be let alone, said they were the agents of
prosperity, and the developers of trade. The vanquished insisted upon the
wastes and brutalities of the trusts, and called loudly upon the Department of
Justice to free business from conspiracies. In the same situation one side saw
progress, economy, and a splendid development; the other, reaction,
extravagance, and a restraint of trade. Volumes of statistics, anecdotes about
the real truth and the inside truth, the deeper and the larger truth, were
published to prove both sides of the argument.
For when a system of
stereotypes is well fixed, our attention is called to those facts which support
it, and diverted from those which contradict. So perhaps it is because
they are attuned to find it, that kindly people discover so much reason for
kindness, malicious people so much malice. We speak quite accurately of seeing
through rose-colored spectacles, or with a jaundiced eye. If, as Philip Littell
once wrote of a distinguished professor, we see life as through a class darkly,
our stereotypes of what the best people and the lower classes are like will not
be contaminated by understanding. What is alien will be
rejected, what is different will fall upon unseeing eyes. We do not see what
our eyes are not accustomed to take into account. Sometimes consciously, more
often without knowing it, we are impressed by those facts which fit our
philosophy.
3
This philosophy is a more or less organized series of
images for describing the unseen world. But not only for describing it. For
judging it as well. And, therefore, the stereotypes are loaded with preference,
suffused with affection or dislike, attached to fears, lusts, strong wishes,
pride, hope. Whatever invokes the stereotype is judged with the appropriate
sentiment. Except where we deliberately keep prejudice in suspense, we do not
study a man and judge him to be bad. We see a bad man. We see a dewy morn, a
blushing maiden, a sainted priest, a humorless Englishman, a dangerous Red, a
carefree bohemian, a lazy Hindu, a wily Oriental, a dreaming Slav, a volatile
Irishman, a greedy Jew, a 100% American. In the workaday world that is often
the real judgment, long in advance of the evidence, and it contains within
itself the conclusion which the evidence is pretty certain to confirm. Neither
justice, nor mercy, nor truth, enter into such a judgment, for the judgment has
preceded the evidence. Yet a people without prejudices, a people with
altogether neutral vision, is so unthinkable in any civilization of which it is
useful to think, that no scheme of education could be based upon that ideal.
Prejudice can be detected, discounted, and refined, but so long as finite men
must compress into a short schooling preparation for dealing with a vast
civilization, they must carry pictures of it around with them, and have
prejudices. The quality of their thinking and doing will depend on whether
those prejudices are friendly, friendly to other people, to other ideas,
whether they evoke love of what is felt to be positively good, rather than
hatred of what is not contained in their version of the good.
Morality, good taste and good form first standardize
and then emphasize certain of these underlying prejudices. As we adjust
ourselves to our code, we adjust the facts we see to that code. Rationally, the
facts are neutral to all our views of right and wrong. Actually, our canons
determine greatly what we shall perceive and how.
For a moral code is a scheme of conduct applied to a
number of typical instances. To behave as the code directs is to serve whatever
purpose the code pursues. It may be God’s will, or the king’s, individual
salvation in a good, solid, three dimensional paradise, success on earth, or
the service of mankind. In any event the makers of the code fix upon certain
typical situations, and then by some form of reasoning or intuition, deduce the
kind of behavior which would produce the aim they acknowledge. The rules apply
where they apply.
But in daily living how does a man know whether his
predicament is the one the law-giver had in mind? He is told not to kill. But
if his children are attacked, may he kill to stop a killing? The Ten
Commandments are silent on the point. Therefore, around
every code there is a cloud of interpreters who deduce more specific cases. Suppose, then, that the doctors of the law decide that he
may kill in self-defense. For the next man the doubt is almost as great; how
does he know that he is defining self-defense correctly, or that he has not
misjudged the facts, imagined the attack, and is really the aggressor? Perhaps
he has provoked the attack. But what is a provocation? Exactly these confusions
infected the minds of most Germans in August, 1914.
Far more serious in the modern world than any
difference of moral code is the difference in the assumptions about facts to
which the code is applied. Religious, moral and political formulae are nothing
like so far apart as the facts assumed by their votaries. Useful discussion,
then, instead of comparing ideals, reexamines the visions of the facts. Thus
the rule that you should do unto others as you would have them do unto you rests
on the belief that human nature is uniform. Mr. Bernard Shaw’s statement that
you should not do unto others what you would have them do unto you, because
their tastes may be different, rests on the belief that human nature is not
uniform. The maxim that competition is the life of trade consists of a whole
tome of assumptions about economic motives, industrial relations, and the
working of a particular commercial system. The claim that America will never
have a merchant marine, unless it is privately owned and managed, assumes a
certain proved connection between a certain kind of profit-making and
incentive. The justification by the bolshevik
propagandist of the dictatorship, espionage, and the terror, because “every
state is an apparatus of violence” [Footnote: See Two Years of Conflict on the
Internal Front, published by the Russian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic,
Moscow, 1920. Translated by Malcolm W. Davis for the New York Evening Post,
January 15, 1921.] is an historical judgment, the truth of which is by no means
self-evident to a non-communist.
At the core of every moral code there is a picture of
human nature, a map of the universe, and a version of history. To human nature
(of the sort conceived), in a universe (of the kind imagined), after a history
(so understood), the rules of the code apply. So far as the facts of
personality, of the environment and of memory are different, by so far the
rules of the code are difficult to apply with success. Now every moral code has
to conceive human psychology, the material world, and tradition some way or
other. But in the codes that are under the influence of science, the conception
is known to be an hypothesis, whereas in the codes that come unexamined from
the past or bubble up from the caverns of the mind, the conception is not taken
as an hypothesis demanding proof or contradiction, but as a fiction accepted
without question. In the one case, man is humble about his beliefs, because he
knows they are tentative and incomplete; in the other he is dogmatic, because
his belief is a completed myth. The moralist who submits to the scientific
discipline knows that though he does not know everything, he is in the way of
knowing something; the dogmatist, using a myth, believes himself to share part
of the insight of omniscience, though he lacks the criteria by which to tell
truth from error. For the distinguishing mark of a myth is that truth and
error, fact and fable, report and fantasy, are all on the same plane of
credibility.
The myth is, then, not necessarily false. It might
happen to be wholly true. It may happen to be partly true. If it has affected
human conduct a long time, it is almost certain to contain much that is
profoundly and importantly true. What a myth never contains is the critical
power to separate its truths from its errors. For that power comes only by
realizing that no human opinion, whatever its supposed origin, is too exalted
for the test of evidence, that every opinion is only somebody’s opinion. And if
you ask why the test of evidence is preferable to any other, there is no answer
unless you are willing to use the test in order to test it.
4
The statement is, I think, susceptible of
overwhelming proof, that moral codes assume a particular view of the facts.
Under the term moral codes I include all kinds: personal, family, economic,
professional, legal, patriotic, international. At the center of each there is a
pattern of stereotypes about psychology, sociology, and history. The same view
of human nature, institutions or tradition rarely persists through all our
codes. Compare, for example, the economic and the patriotic codes. There is a
war supposed to affect all alike. Two men are partners in business. One
enlists, the other takes a war contract. The soldier sacrifices everything,
perhaps even his life. He is paid a dollar a day, and no one says, no one
believes, that you could make a better soldier out of him by any form of
economic incentive. That motive disappears out of his human nature. The
contractor sacrifices very little, is paid a handsome profit over costs, and
few say or believe that he would produce the munitions if there were no economic
incentive. That may be unfair to him. The point is that
the accepted patriotic code assumes one kind of human nature, the commercial
code another. And the codes are probably founded on true expectations to this
extent, that when a man adopts a certain code he tends to exhibit the kind of
human nature which the code demands.
That is one reason why it is so dangerous to
generalize about human nature. A loving father can be a
sour boss, an earnest municipal reformer, and a rapacious jingo abroad. His
family life, his business career, his politics, and his foreign policy rest on
totally different versions of what others are like and of how he should act. These
versions differ by codes in the same person, the codes differ somewhat among
persons in the same social set, differ widely as between social sets, and
between two nations, or two colors, may differ to the point where there is no
common assumption whatever. That is why people professing the same stock of
religious beliefs can go to war. The element of their belief which determines
conduct is that view of the facts which they assume.
That is where codes enter so
subtly and so pervasively into the making of public opinion. The orthodox
theory holds that a public opinion constitutes a moral judgment on a group of
facts. The theory I am suggesting is that, in the present state of education, a
public opinion is primarily a moralized and codified version of the facts. I am
arguing that the pattern of stereotypes at the center of our codes largely
determines what group of facts we shall see, and in what light we shall see
them. That is why, with the best will in the world, the news policy of a
journal tends to support its editorial policy; why a capitalist sees one set of facts, and certain aspects
of human nature, literally sees them; his socialist opponent another set and
other aspects, and why each regards the other as unreasonable or perverse, when
the real difference between them is a difference of perception. That difference
is imposed by the difference between the capitalist and socialist pattern of
stereotypes. “There are no classes in America,” writes an American editor. “The
history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles,”
says the Communist Manifesto. If you have the editor’s pattern in your mind,
you will see vividly the facts that confirm it, vaguely and ineffectively those
that contradict. If you have the communist pattern, you will not only look for
different things, but you will see with a totally different emphasis what you
and the editor happen to see in common.
5
And since my moral system rests on my accepted
version of the facts, he who denies either my moral judgments or my version of
the facts, is to me perverse, alien, dangerous. How shall I account for him?
The opponent has always to be explained, and the last explanation that we ever
look for is that he sees a different set of facts. Such an explanation we avoid,
because it saps the very foundation of our own assurance that we have seen life
steadily and seen it whole. It is only when we are in
the habit of recognizing our opinions as a partial experience seen through our
stereotypes that we become truly tolerant of an opponent. Without that habit,
we believe in the absolutism of our own vision, and consequently in the
treacherous character of all opposition. For while men are willing to admit
that there are two sides to a “question,” they do not believe that there are
two sides to what they regard as a “fact.” And they never do believe it until
after long critical education, they are fully conscious of how second-hand and
subjective is their apprehension of their social data.
So where two factions see vividly each its own
aspect, and contrive their own explanations of what they see, it is almost
impossible for them to credit each other with honesty. If the pattern fits
their experience at a crucial point, they no longer look upon it as an
interpretation. They look upon it as “reality.” It may not resemble the
reality, except that it culminates in a conclusion which fits a real
experience. I may represent my trip from New York to Boston by a straight line
on a map, just as a man may regard his triumph as the end of a straight and
narrow path. The road by which I actually went to Boston may have involved many
detours, much turning and twisting, just as his road may have involved much
besides pure enterprise, labor and thrift. But provided I reach Boston and he
succeeds, the airline and the straight path will serve as ready made charts.
Only when somebody tries to follow them, and does not arrive, do we have to
answer objections. If we insist on our charts, and he insists on rejecting
them, we soon tend to regard him as a dangerous fool, and he to regard us as
liars and hypocrites. Thus we gradually paint portraits of each other. For the
opponent presents himself as the man who says, evil be thou my good. He is an
annoyance who does not fit into the scheme of things. Nevertheless he
interferes. And since that scheme is based in our minds on incontrovertible
fact fortified by irresistible logic, some place has to be found for him in the
scheme. Rarely in politics or industrial disputes is a place made for him by
the simple admission that he has looked upon the same reality and seen another
aspect of it. That would shake the whole scheme.
Thus to the Italians in Paris Fiume was Italian It
was not merely a city that it would be desirable to include within the Italian
kingdom. It was Italian. They fixed their whole mind upon the Italian majority
within the legal boundaries of the city itself. The American delegates, having
seen more Italians in New York than there are in Fiume, without regarding New
York as Italian, fixed their eyes on Fiume as a central European port of entry.
They saw vividly the Jugoslavs in the suburbs and the non-Italian hinterland.
Some of the Italians in Paris were therefore in need of a convincing
explanation of the American perversity. They found it in a rumor which started,
no one knows where, that an influential American diplomat was in the snares of
a Jugoslav mistress. She had been seen…. He had been seen…. At Versailles just
off the boulevard. … The villa with the large trees.
This is a rather common way of explaining away
opposition. In their more libelous form such charges rarely reach the printed
page, and a Roosevelt may have to wait years, or a Harding months, before he
can force an issue, and end a whispering campaign that has reached into every
circle of talk. Public men have to endure a fearful amount of poisonous
clubroom, dinner table, boudoir slander, repeated, elaborated, chuckled over,
and regarded as delicious. While this sort of thing is, I believe, less
prevalent in America than in Europe, yet rare is the American official about
whom somebody is not repeating a scandal.
Out of the opposition we make villains and conspiracies. If prices go up unmercifully the profiteers have conspired;
if the newspapers misrepresent the news, there is a capitalist plot; if the
rich are too rich, they have been stealing; if a closely fought election is
lost, the electorate was corrupted; if a statesman does something of which you
disapprove, he has been bought or influenced by some discreditable person. If
workingmen are restless, they are the victims of agitators; if they are
restless over wide areas, there is a conspiracy on foot. If you do not produce
enough aeroplanes, it is the work of spies; if there is trouble in Ireland, it
is German or Bolshevik “gold.” And if you go stark, staring mad looking for
plots, you see all strikes, the Plumb plan, Irish rebellion, Mohammedan unrest,
the restoration of King Constantine, the League of Nations, Mexican disorder,
the movement to reduce armaments, Sunday movies, short skirts, evasion of the
liquor laws, Negro self-assertion, as sub-plots under some grandiose plot
engineered either by Moscow, Rome, the Free Masons, the Japanese, or the Elders
of Zion.
CHAPTER X. THE DETECTION
OF STEREOTYPES
1
Skilled diplomatists, compelled to talk out loud to
the warring peoples, learned how to use a large repertory of stereotypes. They
were dealing with a precarious alliance of powers, each of which was
maintaining its war unity only by the most careful leadership. The ordinary
soldier and his wife, heroic and selfless beyond anything in the chronicles of
courage, were still not heroic enough to face death gladly for all the ideas
which were said by the foreign offices of foreign powers to be essential to the
future of civilization. There were ports, and mines, rocky mountain passes, and
villages that few soldiers would willingly have crossed No Man’s Land to obtain
for their allies.
Now it happened in one nation that the war party
which was in control of the foreign office, the high command, and most of the
press, had claims on the territory of several of its neighbors. These claims
were called the Greater Ruritania by the cultivated classes who regarded
Kipling, Treitschke, and Maurice Barres as one hundred percent Ruritanian. But
the grandiose idea aroused no enthusiasm abroad. So holding this finest flower
of the Ruritanian genius, as their poet laureate said, to their hearts,
Ruritania’s statesmen went forth to divide and conquer. They divided the claim
into sectors. For each piece they invoked that stereotype which some one or
more of their allies found it difficult to resist, because that ally had claims
for which it hoped to find approval by the use of this same stereotype.
The first sector happened to be a mountainous region
inhabited by alien peasants. Ruritania demanded it to complete her natural
geographical frontier. If you fixed your attention long enough on the ineffable
value of what is natural, those alien peasants just dissolved into fog, and
only the slope of the mountains was visible. The next sector was inhabited by
Ruritanians, and on the principle that no people ought to live under alien
rule, they were re-annexed. Then came a city of considerable commercial
importance, not inhabited by Ruritanians. But until the Eighteenth Century it
had been part of Ruritania, and on the principle of Historic Right it was
annexed. Farther on there was a splendid mineral deposit owned by aliens and
worked by aliens. On the principle of reparation for damage it was annexed. Beyond
this there was a territory inhabited 97% by aliens, constituting the natural
geographical frontier of another nation, never historically a part of
Ruritania. But one of the provinces which had been federated into Ruritania had
formerly traded in those markets, and the upper class culture was Ruritanian.
On the principle of cultural superiority and the necessity of defending
civilization, the lands were claimed. Finally, there was a port wholly
disconnected from Ruritania geographically, ethnically, economically,
historically, traditionally. It was demanded on the ground that it was needed
for national defense.
In the treaties that concluded the Great War you can
multiply examples of this kind. Now I do not wish to imply that I think it was
possible to resettle Europe consistently on any one of these principles. I am
certain that it was not. The very use of these principles, so pretentious and
so absolute, meant that the spirit of accommodation did not prevail and that,
therefore, the substance of peace was not there. For
the moment you start to discuss factories, mines, mountains, or even political
authority, as perfect examples of some eternal principle or other, you are not
arguing, you are fighting. That eternal principle censors out all the objections,
isolates the issue from its background and its context, and sets going in you
some strong emotion, appropriate enough to the principle, highly inappropriate
to the docks, warehouses, and real estate. And having started in that mood you
cannot stop. A real danger exists. To meet it you have to invoke more absolute
principles in order to defend what is open to attack. Then you have to defend
the defenses, erect buffers, and buffers for the buffers, until the whole
affair is so scrambled that it seems less dangerous to fight than to keep on
talking.
There are certain clues which often help in detecting
the false absolutism of a stereotype. In the case of the Ruritanian propaganda
the principles blanketed each other so rapidly that one could readily see how the
argument had been constructed. The series of contradictions showed that for
each sector that stereotype was employed which would obliterate all the facts
that interfered with the claim. Contradiction of this sort is often a good
clue.
2
Inability to take account of
space is another. In the spring of 1918, for example, large numbers of
people, appalled by the withdrawal of Russia, demanded the “reestablishment of
an Eastern Front.” The war, as they had conceived it, was on two fronts, and
when one of them disappeared there was an instant demand that it be recreated.
The unemployed Japanese army was to man the front, substituting for the
Russian. But there was one insuperable obstacle. Between Vladivostok and the
eastern battleline there were five thousand miles of country, spanned by one
broken down railway. Yet those five thousand miles would not stay in the minds
of the enthusiasts. So overwhelming was their conviction that an eastern front
was needed, and so great their confidence in the valor of the Japanese army,
that, mentally, they had projected that army from Vladivostok to Poland on a
magic carpet. In vain our military authorities argued that to land troops on
the rim of Siberia had as little to do with reaching the Germans, as climbing
from the cellar to the roof of the Woolworth building had to do with reaching
the moon.
The stereotype in this instance was the war on two
fronts. Ever since men had begun to imagine the Great War they had conceived
Germany held between France and Russia. One generation of strategists, and
perhaps two, had lived with that visual image as the starting point of all
their calculations. For nearly four years every battle-map they saw had
deepened the impression that this was the war. When affairs took a new turn, it
was not easy to see them as they were then. They were seen through the
stereotype, and facts which conflicted with it, such as the distance from Japan
to Poland, were incapable of coming vividly into consciousness.
It is interesting to note that the American
authorities dealt with the new facts more realistically than the French. In
part, this was because (previous to 1914) they had no preconception of a war
upon the continent; in part because the Americans, engrossed in the
mobilization of their forces, had a vision of the western front which was
itself a stereotype that excluded from their consciousness any very vivid sense
of the other theatres of war. In the spring of 1918 this American view could
not compete with the traditional French view, because while the Americans
believed enormously in their own powers, the French at that time (before
Cantigny and the Second Marne) had the gravest doubts. The
American confidence suffused the American stereotype, gave it that power to
possess consciousness, that liveliness and sensible pungency, that stimulating
effect upon the will, that emotional interest as an object of desire, that
congruity with the activity in hand, which James notes as characteristic of
what we regard as “real.” [Footnote: Principles of Psychology, Vol. II, p.
300.] The French in despair remained fixed on their accepted image. And
when facts, gross geographical facts, would not fit with the preconception,
they were either censored out of mind, or the facts were themselves stretched
out of shape. Thus the difficulty of the Japanese reaching the Germans five
thousand miles away was, in measure, overcome by bringing the Germans more than
half way to meet them. Between March and June 1918, there was supposed to be a
German army operating in Eastern Siberia. This phantom army consisted of some
German prisoners actually seen, more German prisoners thought about, and
chiefly of the delusion that those five thousand intervening miles did not
really exist. [Footnote: See in this connection Mr. Charles Grasty’s interview
with Marshal Foch, New York Times, February 26, 1918. “Germany is walking
through Russia. America and Japan, who are in a position to do so, should go to
meet her in Siberia.” See also the resolution by Senator King of Utah, June 10,
1918, and Mr. Taft’s statement in the New York Times, June 11, 1918, and the
appeal to America on May 5, 1918, by Mr. A. J. Sack, Director of the Russian
Information Bureau: “If Germany were in the Allied place… she would have
3,000,000 fighting on the East front within a year.”]
3
A true conception of space is not a simple matter. If
I draw a straight line on a map between Bombay and Hong Kong and measure the
distance, I have learned nothing whatever about the distance I should have to
cover on a voyage. And even if I measure the actual distance that I must
traverse, I still know very little until I know what ships are in the service,
when they run, how fast they go, whether I can secure accommodation and afford
to pay for it. In practical life space is a matter of available transportation,
not of geometrical planes, as the old railroad magnate knew when he threatened
to make grass grow in the streets of a city that had offended him. If I am
motoring and ask how far it is to my destination, I curse as an unmitigated
booby the man who tells me it is three miles, and does not mention a six mile
detour. It does me no good to be told that it is three miles if you walk. I
might as well be told it is one mile as the crow flies. I do not fly like a
crow, and I am not walking either. I must know that it is nine miles for a
motor car, and also, if that is the case, that six of them are ruts and
puddles. I call the pedestrian a nuisance who tells me it is three miles and
think evil of the aviator who told me it was one mile. Both of them are talking
about the space they have to cover, not the space I must cover.
In the drawing of boundary lines absurd complications
have arisen through failure to conceive the practical geography of a region.
Under some general formula like self-determination statesmen have at various
times drawn lines on maps, which, when surveyed on the spot, ran through the
middle of a factory, down the center of a village street, diagonally across the
nave of a church, or between the kitchen and bedroom of a peasant’s cottage.
There have been frontiers in a grazing country which separated pasture from
water, pasture from market, and in an industrial country, railheads from
railroad. On the colored ethnic map the line was ethnically just, that is to
say, just in the world of that ethnic map.
4
But time, no less than space,
fares badly. A common example is that of the man who tries by making an
elaborate will to control his money long after his death. “It had been the purpose
of the first William James,” writes his great-grandson Henry James, [Footnote:
The Letters of William James, Vol. I, p. 6.] “to provide that his children
(several of whom were under age when he died) should qualify themselves by
industry and experience to enjoy the large patrimony which he expected to
bequeath to them, and with that in view he left a will which was a voluminous
compound of restraints and instructions. He showed thereby how great were both
his confidence in his own judgment and his solicitude for the moral welfare of
his descendants.” The courts upset the will. For the law in its objection to
perpetuities recognizes that there are distinct limits to the usefulness of
allowing anyone to impose his moral stencil upon an unknown future. But the
desire to impose it is a very human trait, so human that the law permits it to
operate for a limited time after death.
The amending clause of any constitution is a good
index of the confidence the authors entertained about the reach of their opinions
in the succeeding generations. There are, I believe, American state
constitutions which are almost incapable of amendment. The men who made them
could have had but little sense of the flux of time: to them the Here and Now
was so brilliantly certain, the Hereafter so vague or so terrifying, that they
had the courage to say how life should run after they were gone. And then
because constitutions are difficult to amend, zealous people with a taste for
mortmain have loved to write on this imperishable brass all kinds of rules and
restrictions that, given any decent humility about the future, ought to be no
more permanent than an ordinary statute.
A presumption about time
enters widely into our opinions. To one person an institution which has
existed for the whole of his conscious life is part of the permanent furniture
of the universe: to another it is ephemeral. Geological time is very different
from biological time. Social time is most complex. The statesman has to decide
whether to calculate for the emergency or for the long run. Some decisions have
to be made on the basis of what will happen in the next two hours; others on
what will happen in a week, a month, a season, a decade, when the children have
grown up, or their children’s children. An important part
of wisdom is the ability to distinguish the time-conception that properly
belongs to the thing in hand. The person who uses the wrong time-conception
ranges from the dreamer who ignores the present to the philistine who can see
nothing else. A true scale of values has a very acute sense of relative time.
Distant time, past and future, has somehow to be
conceived. But as James says, “of the longer duration we have no direct ‘realizing’
sense.” [Footnote: Principles of Psychology, Vol. I, p. 638.] The longest
duration which we immediately feel is what is called the “specious present.” It
endures, according to Titchener, for about six seconds. [Footnote: Cited by
Warren, Human Psychology, p. 255.] “All impressions within this period of time
are present to us at once. This makes it possible for us to perceive changes
and events as well as stationary objects. The perceptual present is
supplemented by the ideational present. Through the combination of perceptions
with memory images, entire days, months, and even years of the past are brought
together into the present.”
In this ideational present, vividness, as James said,
is proportionate to the number of discriminations we perceive within it. Thus a
vacation in which we were bored with nothing to do passes slowly while we are
in it, but seems very short in memory. Great activity kills time rapidly, but
in memory its duration is long. On the relation between the amount we
discriminate and our time perspective James has an interesting passage:
[Footnote: Op. cit., Vol. I, p. 639.]
“We have every reason to think that creatures may
possibly differ enormously in the amounts of duration which they intuitively
feel, and in the fineness of the events that may fill it. Von Baer has indulged
in some interesting computations of the effect of such differences in changing
the aspect of Nature. Suppose we were able, within the length of a second, to
note 10,000 events distinctly, instead of barely 10 as now; [Footnote: In the
moving picture this effect is admirably produced by the ultra-rapid camera.] if
our life were then destined to hold the same number of impressions, it might be
1000 times as short. We should live less than a month, and personally know
nothing of the change of seasons. If born in winter, we should believe in
summer as we now believe in the heats of the carboniferous era. The motions of
organic beings would be so slow to our senses as to be inferred, not seen. The
sun would stand still in the sky, the moon be almost free from change, and so
on. But now reverse the hypothesis and suppose a being to get only one 1000th
part of the sensations we get in a given time, and consequently to live 1000
times as long. Winters and summers will be to him like quarters of an hour.
Mushrooms and the swifter growing plants will shoot into being so rapidly as to
appear instantaneous creations; annual shrubs will rise and fall from the earth
like restless boiling water springs; the motions of animals will be as
invisible as are to us the movements of bullets and cannon-balls; the sun will
scour through the sky like a meteor, leaving a fiery trail behind him, etc.”
5
In his Outline of History Mr. Wells has made a
gallant effort to visualize “the true proportions of historical to geological
time” [Footnote: 1 Vol. II, p. 605. See also James Harvey Robinson, The New
History, p. 239.] On a scale which represents the time from Columbus to
ourselves by three inches of space, the reader would have to walk 55 feet to
see the date of the painters of the Altamara caves, 550 feet to see the earlier
Neanderthalers, a mile or so to the last of the dinosaurs. More or less precise
chronology does not begin until after 1000 B.C., and at that time “Sargon I of
the Akkadian-Sumerian Empire was a remote memory,… more remote than is
Constantine the Great from the world of the present day…. Hammurabi had been
dead a thousand years… Stonehedge in England was already a thousand years old.”
Mr. Wells was writing with a purpose. “In the brief
period of ten thousand years these units (into which men have combined) have
grown from the small family tribe of the early neolithic culture to the vast
united realms—vast yet still too small and partial—of the present time.” Mr.
Wells hoped by changing the time perspective on our present problems to change
the moral perspective. Yet the astronomical measure of
time, the geological, the biological, any telescopic measure which minimizes
the present is not “more true” than a microscopic. Mr. Simeon Strunsky
is right when he insists that “if Mr. Wells is thinking of his subtitle, The
Probable Future of Mankind, he is entitled to ask for any number of centuries
to work out his solution. If he is thinking of the salvaging of this western
civilization, reeling under the effects of the Great War, he must think in
decades and scores of years.” [Footnote: In a review of The Salvaging of
Civilization, The Literary Review of the N. Y. Evening Post, June 18, 1921, p.
5.] It all depends upon the practical purpose for which
you adopt the measure. There are situations when the time perspective needs to
be lengthened, and others when it needs to be shortened.
The man who says that it does not matter if
15,000,000 Chinese die of famine, because in two generations the birthrate will
make up the loss, has used a time perspective to excuse his inertia. A person
who pauperizes a healthy young man because he is sentimentally overimpressed
with an immediate difficulty has lost sight of the duration of the beggar’s
life. The people who for the sake of an immediate peace are willing to buy off
an aggressive empire by indulging its appetite have allowed a specious present
to interfere with the peace of their children. The people who will not be
patient with a troublesome neighbor, who want to bring everything to a
“showdown” are no less the victims of a specious present.
6
Into almost every social problem the proper
calculation of time enters. Suppose, for example, it is a question of timber.
Some trees grow faster than others. Then a sound forest policy is one in which
the amount of each species and of each age cut in each season is made good by
replanting. In so far as that calculation is correct the truest economy has
been reached. To cut less is waste, and to cut more is exploitation. But there
may come an emergency, say the need for aeroplane spruce in a war, when the
year’s allowance must be exceeded. An alert government will recognize that and
regard the restoration of the balance as a charge upon the future.
Coal involves a different theory of time, because
coal, unlike a tree, is produced on the scale of geological time. The supply is
limited. Therefore a correct social policy involves intricate computation of
the available reserves of the world, the indicated possibilities, the present
rate of use, the present economy of use, and the alternative fuels. But when
that computation has been reached it must finally be squared with an ideal
standard involving time. Suppose, for example, that engineers conclude that the
present fuels are being exhausted at a certain rate; that barring new discoveries
industry will have to enter a phase of contraction at some definite time in the
future. We have then to determine how much thrift and self-denial we will use,
after all feasible economies have been exercised, in order not to rob
posterity. But what shall we consider posterity? Our grandchildren? Our great
grandchildren? Perhaps we shall decide to calculate on a hundred years,
believing that to be ample time for the discovery of alternative fuels if the
necessity is made clear at once. The figures are, of course, hypothetical. But
in calculating that way we shall be employing what reason we have. We shall be
giving social time its place in public opinion. Let us now imagine a
somewhat different case: a contract between a city and a trolley-car company.
The company says that it will not invest its capital unless it is granted a
monopoly of the main highway for ninety-nine years. In the minds of the men who
make that demand ninety-nine years is so long as to mean “forever.” But suppose
there is reason to think that surface cars, run from a central power plant on
tracks, are going out of fashion in twenty years. Then it is a most unwise
contract to make, for you are virtually condemning a future generation to
inferior transportation. In making such a contract the city officials lack a
realizing sense of ninety-nine years. Far better to give the company a subsidy
now in order to attract capital than to stimulate investment by indulging a
fallacious sense of eternity. No city official and no company official has a
sense of real time when he talks about ninety-nine years.
Popular history is a happy
hunting ground of time confusions. To the average Englishman, for
example, the behavior of Cromwell, the corruption of the Act of Union, the
Famine of 1847 are wrongs suffered by people long dead and done by actors long
dead with whom no living person, Irish or English, has any real connection. But
in the mind of a patriotic Irishman these same events are almost contemporary.
His memory is like one of those historical paintings, where Virgil and Dante
sit side by side conversing. These perspectives and foreshortenings are a great
barrier between peoples. It is ever so difficult for a person of one tradition
to remember what is contemporary in the tradition of another.
Almost nothing that goes by
the name of Historic Rights or Historic Wrongs can be called a truly objective
view of the past. Take, for example, the Franco-German debate about
Alsace-Lorraine. It all depends on the original date you select. If you start
with the Rauraci and Sequani, the lands are historically part of Ancient Gaul.
If you prefer Henry I, they are historically a German territory; if you take
1273 they belong to the House of Austria; if you take 1648 and the Peace of
Westphalia, most of them are French; if you take Louis XIV and the year 1688
they are almost all French. If you are using the argument from history you are
fairly certain to select those dates in the past which support your view of
what should be done now.
Arguments about “races” and
nationalities often betray the same arbitrary view of time. During the
war, under the influence of powerful feeling, the difference between “Teutons”
on the one hand, and “Anglo-Saxons” and French on the other, was popularly believed
to be an eternal difference. They had always been opposing races. Yet a
generation ago, historians, like Freeman, were emphasizing the common Teutonic
origin of the West European peoples, and ethnologists would certainly insist
that the Germans, English, and the greater part of the French are branches of
what was once a common stock. The general rule is: if you like a people to-day
you come down the branches to the trunk; if you dislike them you insist that
the separate branches are separate trunks. In one case you fix your attention
on the period before they were distinguishable; in the other on the period
after which they became distinct. And the view which fits the mood is taken as
the “truth.”
An amiable variation is the
family tree. Usually one couple are appointed the original ancestors, if
possible, a couple associated with an honorific event like the Norman Conquest.
That couple have no ancestors. They are not descendants. Yet they were the
descendants of ancestors, and the expression that So-and-So was the founder of
his house means not that he is the Adam of his family, but that he is the
particular ancestor from whom it is desirable to start, or perhaps the earliest
ancestor of which there is a record. But genealogical tables exhibit a deeper prejudice.
Unless the female line happens to be especially remarkable descent is traced
down through the males. The tree is male. At various moments females accrue to
it as itinerant bees light upon an ancient apple tree.
7
But the future is the most
illusive time of all. Our temptation here is to jump over necessary
steps in the sequence; and as we are governed by hope or doubt, to exaggerate
or to minimize the time required to complete various parts of a process. The
discussion of the role to be exercised by wage-earners in the management of
industry is riddled with this difficulty. For management is a word that covers
many functions. [Footnote: Cf. Carter L. Goodrich, The Frontier of Control.]
Some of these require no training; some require a little training; others can
be learned only in a lifetime. And the truly discriminating program of
industrial democratization would be one based on the proper time sequence, so
that the assumption of responsibility would run parallel to a complementary
program of industrial training. The proposal for a sudden dictatorship of the
proletariat is an attempt to do away with the intervening time of preparation;
the resistance to all sharing of responsibility an attempt to deny the
alteration of human capacity in the course of time. Primitive notions of
democracy, such as rotation in office, and contempt for the expert, are really
nothing but the old myth that the Goddess of Wisdom sprang mature and fully
armed from the brow of Jove. They assume that what it takes years to learn need
not be learned at all.
Whenever the phrase “backward
people” is used as the basis of a policy, the conception of time is a decisive
element. The Covenant of the League of Nations says, [Footnote: Article
XIX.] for example, that “the character of the mandate must differ according to
the stage of the development of the people,” as well as on other grounds.
Certain communities, it asserts, “have reached a stage of development” where
their independence can be provisionally recognized, subject to advice and
assistance “until such time as they are able to stand alone.” The way in which
the mandatories and the mandated conceive that time will influence deeply their
relations. Thus in the case of Cuba the judgment of the American government
virtually coincided with that of the Cuban patriots, and though there has been
trouble, there is no finer page in the history of how strong powers have dealt
with the weak. Oftener in that history the estimates have not coincided. Where
the imperial people, whatever its public expressions, has been deeply convinced
that the backwardness of the backward was so hopeless as not to be worth
remedying, or so profitable that it was not desirable to remedy it, the tie has
festered and poisoned the peace of the world. There have been a few cases, very
few, where backwardness has meant to the ruling power the need for a program of
forwardness, a program with definite standards and definite estimates of time.
Far more frequently, so frequently in fact as to seem the rule, backwardness
has been conceived as an intrinsic and eternal mark of inferiority. And then
every attempt to be less backward has been frowned upon as the sedition, which,
under these conditions, it undoubtedly is. In our own race wars we can see some
of the results of the failure to realize that time would gradually obliterate
the slave morality of the Negro, and that social adjustment based on this
morality would begin to break down.
It is hard not to picture the
future as if it obeyed our present purposes, to annihilate whatever delays our
desire, or immortalize whatever stands between us and our fears.
8
In putting together our
public opinions, not only do we have to picture more space than we can see with
our eyes, and more time than we can feel, but we have to describe and judge
more people, more actions, more things than we can ever count, or vividly
imagine. We have to summarize and generalize. We have to pick out samples, and
treat them as typical.
To pick fairly a good sample of a large class is not
easy. The problem belongs to the science of statistics, and it is a most
difficult affair for anyone whose mathematics is primitive, and mine remain
azoic in spite of the half dozen manuals which I once devoutly imagined that I
understood. All they have done for me is to make me a little more conscious of
how hard it is to classify and to sample, how readily we spread a little butter
over the whole universe.
Some time ago a group of social workers in Sheffield,
England, started out to substitute an accurate picture of the mental equipment
of the workers of that city for the impressionistic one they had. [Footnote:
The Equipment of the Worker.] They wished to say, with some decent grounds for
saying it, how the workers of Sheffield were equipped. They found, as we all
find the moment we refuse to let our first notion prevail, that they were beset
with complications. Of the test they employed nothing need be said here except
that it was a large questionnaire. For the sake of the illustration, assume
that the questions were a fair test of mental equipment for English city life.
Theoretically, then, those questions should have been put to every member of
the working class. But it is not so easy to know who are the working class.
However, assume again that the census knows how to classify them. Then there
were roughly 104,000 men and 107,000 women who ought to have been questioned.
They possessed the answers which would justify or refute the casual phrase
about the “ignorant workers” or the “intelligent workers.” But nobody could
think of questioning the whole two hundred thousand.
So the social workers consulted an eminent
statistician, Professor Bowley. He advised them that not less than 408 men and
408 women would prove to be a fair sample. According to mathematical calculation
this number would not show a greater deviation from the average than 1 in 22.
[Footnote: Op. cit., p. 65.] They had, therefore, to question at least 816
people before they could pretend to talk about the average workingman. But
which 816 people should they approach? “We might have gathered particulars
concerning workers to whom one or another of us had a pre-inquiry access; we
might have worked through philanthropic gentlemen and ladies who were in
contact with certain sections of workers at a club, a mission, an infirmary, a
place of worship, a settlement. But such a method of selection would produce
entirely worthless results. The workers thus selected would not be in any sense
representative of what is popularly called ‘the average run of workers;’ they
would represent nothing but the little coteries to which they belonged.
“The right way of securing ‘victims,’ to which at
immense cost of time and labour we rigidly adhered, is to get hold of your
workers by some ‘neutral’ or ‘accidental’ or ‘random’ method of approach.” This
they did. And after all these precautions they came to no more definite
conclusion than that on their classification and according to their
questionnaire, among 200,000 Sheffield workers “about one quarter” were “well
equipped,” “approaching three-quarters” were “inadequately equipped” and that
“about one-fifteenth” were “mal-equipped.”
Compare this conscientious and almost pedantic method
of arriving at an opinion, with our usual judgments about masses of people,
about the volatile Irish, and the logical French, and the disciplined Germans,
and the ignorant Slavs, and the honest Chinese, and the untrustworthy Japanese,
and so on and so on. All these are generalizations drawn from samples, but the
samples are selected by a method that statistically is wholly unsound. Thus the
employer will judge labor by the most troublesome employee or the most docile
that he knows, and many a radical group has imagined that it was a fair sample
of the working class. How many women’s views on the “servant question” are
little more than the reflection of their own treatment of their servants? The
tendency of the casual mind is to pick out or stumble upon a sample which
supports or defies its prejudices, and then to make it the representative of a
whole class.
A great deal of confusion arises when people decline
to classify themselves as we have classified them. Prophecy would be so much
easier if only they would stay where we put them. But, as a matter of fact, a
phrase like the working class will cover only some of the truth for a part of
the time. When you take all the people, below a certain level of income, and
call them the working class, you cannot help assuming that the people so
classified will behave in accordance with your stereotype. Just who those
people are you are not quite certain. Factory hands and mine workers fit in
more or less, but farm hands, small farmers, peddlers, little shop keepers,
clerks, servants, soldiers, policemen, firemen slip out of the net. The
tendency, when you are appealing to the “working class,” is to fix your
attention on two or three million more or less confirmed trade unionists, and
treat them as Labor; the other seventeen or eighteen million, who might qualify
statistically, are tacitly endowed with the point of view ascribed to the
organized nucleus. How very misleading it was to impute to the British working
class in 1918-1921 the point of view expressed in the resolutions of the Trades
Union Congress or in the pamphlets written by intellectuals.
The stereotype of Labor as
Emancipator selects the evidence which supports itself and rejects the other.
And so parallel with the real movements of working men there exists a fiction
of the Labor Movement, in which an idealized mass moves towards an ideal goal. The
fiction deals with the future. In the future possibilities are almost
indistinguishable from probabilities and probabilities from certainties. If the
future is long enough, the human will might turn what is just conceivable into
what is very likely, and what is likely into what is sure to happen. James
called this the faith ladder, and said that “it is a slope of goodwill on which
in the larger questions of life men habitually live.” [Footnote: William James,
Some Problems of Philosophy, p. 224.]
“1. There is nothing absurd in a certain view of the
world being true, nothing contradictory;
2. It might have been true under certain conditions;
3. It may be true even now;
4. It is fit to be true;
5. It ought to be true;
6. It must be true;
7. It shall be true, at any rate true for me.”
And, as he added in another place, [Footnote: A
Pluralistic Universe, p. 329.] “your acting thus may in certain special cases
be a means of making it securely true in the end.” Yet no one would have
insisted more than he, that, so far as we know how, we must avoid substituting
the goal for the starting point, must avoid reading back into the present what
courage, effort and skill might create in the future. Yet this truism is
inordinately difficult to live by, because every one of us is so little trained
in the selection of our samples.
If we believe that a certain thing ought to be true,
we can almost always find either an instance where it is true, or someone who
believes it ought to be true. It is ever so hard when a concrete fact
illustrates a hope to weigh that fact properly. When the first six people we
meet agree with us, it is not easy to remember that they may all have read the
same newspaper at breakfast. And yet we cannot send out a questionnaire to 816
random samples every time we wish to estimate a probability. In dealing with
any large mass of facts, the presumption is against our having picked true
samples, if we are acting on a casual impression.
9
And when we try to go one step further in order to
seek the causes and effects of unseen and complicated affairs, haphazard
opinion is very tricky. There are few big issues in public life where cause and
effect are obvious at once. They are not obvious to scholars who have devoted
years, let us say, to studying business cycles, or price and wage movements, or
the migration and the assimilation of peoples, or the diplomatic purposes of
foreign powers. Yet somehow we are all supposed to have opinions on these matters,
and it is not surprising that the commonest form of reasoning is the intuitive,
post hoc ergo propter hoc.
The more untrained a
mind, the more readily it works out a theory that two things which catch its
attention at the same time are causally connected. We have already dwelt
at some length on the way things reach our attention. We have seen that our
access to information is obstructed and uncertain, and that our apprehension is
deeply controlled by our stereotypes; that the evidence available to our reason
is subject to illusions of defense, prestige, morality, space, time, and
sampling. We must note now that with this initial taint, public opinions are
still further beset, because in a series of events seen mostly through
stereotypes, we readily accept sequence or parallelism as equivalent to cause
and effect.
This is most likely to happen when two ideas that
come together arouse the same feeling. If they come together they are likely to
arouse the same feeling; and even when they do not arrive together a powerful
feeling attached to one is likely to suck out of all the corners of memory any
idea that feels about the same. Thus everything painful tends to collect into
one system of cause and effect, and likewise everything pleasant.
“IId IIm (1675) This day I hear that G[od] has shot
an arrow into the midst of this Town. The small pox is in an ordinary ye sign
of the Swan, the ordinary Keepers name is Windsor. His daughter is sick of the
disease. It is observable that this disease begins at an alehouse, to testify
God’s displeasure agt the sin of drunkenness & yt of multiplying
alehouses!” [Footnote: The Heart of the Puritan, p. 177, edited by Elizabeth
Deering Hanscom.]
Thus Increase Mather, and thus in the year 1919 a
distinguished Professor of Celestial Mechanics discussing the Einstein theory:
“It may well be that…. Bolshevist uprisings are in
reality the visible objects of some underlying, deep, mental disturbance,
world-wide in character…. This same spirit of unrest has invaded science.”
[Footnote: Cited in The New Republic, Dec. 24, 1919, p. 120.]
In hating one thing
violently, we readily associate with it as cause or effect most of the other
things we hate or fear violently. They may have no more connection than
smallpox and alehouses, or Relativity and Bolshevism, but they are bound
together in the same emotion. In a superstitious mind, like that of the
Professor of Celestial Mechanics, emotion is a stream of molten lava which
catches and imbeds whatever it touches. When you excavate in it you find, as in
a buried city, all sorts of objects ludicrously entangled in each other.
Anything can be related to anything else, provided it feels like it. Nor has a
mind in such a state any way of knowing how preposterous it is. Ancient fears,
reinforced by more recent fears, coagulate into a snarl of fears where anything
that is dreaded is the cause of anything else that is dreaded.
10
Generally it all culminates in the fabrication of a
system of all evil, and of another which is the system of all good. Then our
love of the absolute shows itself. For we do not like
qualifying adverbs. [Footnote: Cf. Freud’s discussion of absolutism in dreams,
Interpretation of Dreams, Chapter VI, especially pp. 288, et seq.] They
clutter up sentences, and interfere with irresistible feeling. We prefer most
to more, least to less, we dislike the words rather, perhaps, if, or, but,
toward, not quite, almost, temporarily, partly. Yet nearly every opinion about
public affairs needs to be deflated by some word of this sort. But in our free
moments everything tends to behave absolutely,—one hundred percent, everywhere,
forever.
It is not enough to say that
our side is more right than the enemy’s, that our victory will help democracy
more than his. One must insist that our victory will end war forever, and make
the world safe for democracy. And when the war is over, though we have thwarted
a greater evil than those which still afflict us, the relativity of the result
fades out, the absoluteness of the present evil overcomes our spirit, and we
feel that we are helpless because we have not been irresistible. Between
omnipotence and impotence the pendulum swings.
Real space, real time, real numbers, real
connections, real weights are lost. The perspective and the background and the
dimensions of action are clipped and frozen in the stereotype.
PART IV. INTERESTS
CHAPTER XI. THE ENLISTING
OF INTEREST
BUT the human mind is not a film which registers once and for
all each impression that comes through its shutters and lenses. The human mind
is endlessly and persistently creative. The pictures fade or combine, are
sharpened here, condensed there, as we make them more completely our own. They
do not lie inert upon the surface of the mind, but are reworked by the poetic
faculty into a personal expression of ourselves. We distribute the emphasis and
participate in the action.
In order to do this we tend to personalize
quantities, and to dramatize relations. As some sort of allegory, except in
acutely sophisticated minds, the affairs of the world are represented. Social
Movements, Economic Forces, National Interests, Public Opinion are treated as
persons, or persons like the Pope, the President, Lenin, Morgan or the King
become ideas and institutions. The deepest of all the stereotypes is the human
stereotype which imputes human nature to inanimate or collective things.
The bewildering variety of our impressions, even
after they have been censored in all kinds of ways, tends to force us to adopt
the greater economy of the allegory. So great is the multitude of things that
we cannot keep them vividly in mind. Usually, then, we name them, and let the
name stand for the whole impression. But a name is porous. Old meanings slip
out and new ones slip in, and the attempt to retain the full meaning of the
name is almost as fatiguing as trying to recall the original impressions. Yet
names are a poor currency for thought. They are too empty, too abstract, too
inhuman. And so we begin to see the name through some personal stereotype, to
read into it, finally to see in it the incarnation of some human quality.
Yet human qualities are themselves vague and
fluctuating. They are best remembered by a physical sign. And therefore, the
human qualities we tend to ascribe to the names of our impressions, themselves
tend to be visualized in physical metaphors. The people of England, the history
of England, condense into England, and England becomes John Bull, who is jovial
and fat, not too clever, but well able to take care of himself. The migration
of a people may appear to some as the meandering of a river, and to others like
a devastating flood. The courage people display may be objectified as a rock;
their purpose as a road, their doubts as forks of the road, their difficulties
as ruts and rocks, their progress as a fertile valley. If they mobilize their
dread-naughts they unsheath a sword. If their army surrenders they are thrown
to earth. If they are oppressed they are on the rack or under the harrow.
When public affairs are popularized in speeches,
headlines, plays, moving pictures, cartoons, novels, statues or paintings,
their transformation into a human interest requires first abstraction from the
original, and then animation of what has been abstracted. We cannot be much
interested in, or much moved by, the things we do not see. Of public affairs
each of us sees very little, and therefore, they remain dull and unappetizing,
until somebody, with the makings of an artist, has translated them into a
moving picture. Thus the abstraction, imposed upon our knowledge of reality by
all the limitations of our access and of our prejudices, is compensated. Not
being omnipresent and omniscient we cannot see much of what we have to think
and talk about. Being flesh and blood we will not feed on words and names and
gray theory. Being artists of a sort we paint pictures, stage dramas and draw cartoons
out of the abstractions.
Or, if possible, we find gifted men who can visualize
for us. For people are not all endowed to the same degree with the pictorial
faculty. Yet one may, I imagine, assert with Bergson that the practical
intelligence is most closely adapted to spatial qualities. [Footnote: Creative
Evolution, Chs. III, IV.] A “clear” thinker is almost always a good visualizer.
But for that same reason, because he is “cinematographic,” he is often by that
much external and insensitive. For the people who have intuition, which is
probably another name for musical or muscular perception, often appreciate the
quality of an event and the inwardness of an act far better than the
visualizer. They have more understanding when the crucial element is a desire
that is never crudely overt, and appears on the surface only in a veiled
gesture, or in a rhythm of speech. Visualization may catch the stimulus and the
result. But the intermediate and internal is often as badly caricatured by a
visualizer, as is the intention of the composer by an enormous soprano in the
sweet maiden’s part.
Nevertheless, though they have often a peculiar
justice, intuitions remain highly private and largely incommunicable. But
social intercourse depends on communication, and while a person can often steer
his own life with the utmost grace by virtue of his intuitions, he usually has
great difficulty in making them real to others. When he talks about them they
sound like a sheaf of mist. For while intuition does give a fairer perception
of human feeling, the reason with its spatial and tactile prejudice can do
little with that perception. Therefore, where action depends on whether a
number of people are of one mind, it is probably true that in the first
instance no idea is lucid for practical decision until it has visual or tactile
value. But it is also true, that no visual idea is significant to us until it
has enveloped some stress of our own personality. Until it releases or resists,
depresses or enhances, some craving of our own, it remains one of the objects
which do not matter.
2
Pictures have always been the surest way of conveying
an idea, and next in order, words that call up pictures in memory. But the idea
conveyed is not fully our own until we have identified ourselves with some
aspect of the picture. The identification, or what Vernon Lee has called
empathy, [Footnote: Beauty and Ugliness.] may be almost infinitely subtle and
symbolic. The mimicry may be performed without our being aware of it, and
sometimes in a way that would horrify those sections of our personality which
support our self-respect. In sophisticated people the participation may not be
in the fate of the hero, but in the fate of the whole idea to which both hero
and villain are essential. But these are refinements.
In popular representation the handles for
identification are almost always marked. You know who the hero is at once. And
no work promises to be easily popular where the marking is not definite and the
choice clear. [Footnote: A fact which bears heavily on the character of news.
Cf. Part VII.] But that is not enough. The audience must have something to do,
and the contemplation of the true, the good and the beautiful is not something
to do. In order not to sit inertly in the presence of the picture, and this
applies as much to newspaper stories as to fiction and the cinema, the audience
must be exercised by the image. Now there are two forms of exercise which far
transcend all others, both as to ease with which they are aroused, and
eagerness with which stimuli for them are sought. They are sexual passion and
fighting, and the two have so many associations with each other, blend into
each other so intimately, that a fight about sex outranks every other theme in
the breadth of its appeal. There is none so engrossing or so careless of all
distinctions of culture and frontiers.
The sexual motif figures hardly at all in American
political imagery. Except in certain minor ecstasies of war, in an occasional
scandal, or in phases of the racial conflict with Negroes or Asiatics, to speak
of it at all would seem far-fetched. Only in moving pictures, novels, and some
magazine fiction are industrial relations, business competition, politics, and
diplomacy tangled up with the girl and the other woman. But the fighting motif
appears at every turn. Politics is interesting when there is a fight, or as we say,
an issue. And in order to make politics popular, issues have to be found, even
when in truth and justice, there are none,—none, in the sense that the differences
of judgment, or principle, or fact, do not call for the enlistment of pugnacity. [Footnote: Cf. Frances Taylor
Patterson, Cinema Craftsmanship, pp. 31-32. “III. If the plot lacks suspense:
1. Add an antagonist, 2. Add an obstacle, 3. Add a problem, 4. Emphasize one of
the questions in the minds of the spectator.,..”]
But where pugnacity is not enlisted, those of us who
are not directly involved find it hard to keep up our interest. For those who
are involved the absorption may be real enough to hold them even when no issue
is involved. They may be exercised by sheer joy in activity, or by subtle
rivalry or invention. But for those to whom the whole problem is external and
distant, these other faculties do not easily come into play. In order that the
faint image of the affair shall mean something to them, they must be allowed to
exercise the love of struggle, suspense, and victory.
Miss Patterson [Footnote: Op. cit., pp. 6-7.] insists
that “suspense… constitutes the difference between the masterpieces in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art and the pictures at the Rivoli or the Rialto
Theatres.” Had she made it clear that the masterpieces lack either an easy mode
of identification or a theme popular for this generation, she would be wholly
right in saying that this “explains why the people straggle into the
Metropolitan by twos and threes and struggle into the Rialto and Rivoli by
hundreds. The twos and threes look at a picture in the Art Museum for less than
ten minutes—unless they chance to be art students, critics, or connoisseurs.
The hundreds in the Rivoli or the Rialto look at the picture for more than an
hour. As far as beauty is concerned there can be no comparison of the merits of
the two pictures. Yet the motion picture draws more people and holds them at
attention longer than do the masterpieces, not through any intrinsic merit of
its own, but because it depicts unfolding events, the outcome of which the
audience is breathlessly waiting. It possesses the element of struggle, which
never fails to arouse suspense.”
In order then that the distant situation shall not be
a gray flicker on the edge of attention, it should be capable of translation
into pictures in which the opportunity for identification is recognizable.
Unless that happens it will interest only a few for a little while. It will
belong to the sights seen but not felt, to the sensations that beat on our
sense organs, and are not acknowledged. We have to take sides. We have to be
able to take sides. In the recesses of our being we must step out of the
audience on to the stage, and wrestle as the hero for the victory of good over
evil. We must breathe into the allegory the breath of our life.
3
And so, in spite of the critics, a verdict is
rendered in the old controversy about realism and romanticism. Our popular
taste is to have the drama originate in a setting realistic enough to make
identification plausible and to have it terminate in a setting romantic enough
to be desirable, but not so romantic as to be inconceivable. In between the
beginning and the end the canons are liberal, but the true beginning and the
happy ending are landmarks. The moving picture audience rejects fantasy
logically developed, because in pure fantasy there is no familiar foothold in
the age of machines. It rejects realism relentlessly pursued because it does
not enjoy defeat in a struggle that has become its own.
What will be accepted as true, as realistic, as good,
as evil, as desirable, is not eternally fixed. These are fixed by stereotypes,
acquired from earlier experiences and carried over into judgment of later ones.
And, therefore, if the financial investment in each film and in popular
magazines were not so exorbitant as to require instant and widespread
popularity, men of spirit and imagination would be able to use the screen and
the periodical, as one might dream of their being used, to enlarge and to
refine, to verify and criticize the repertory of images with which our
imaginations work. But, given the present costs, the men who make moving
pictures, like the church and the court painters of other ages, must adhere to
the stereotypes that they find, or pay the price of frustrating expectation.
The stereotypes can be altered, but not in time to guarantee success when the
film is released six months from now.
The men who do alter the stereotypes, the pioneering
artists and critics, are naturally depressed and angered at managers and
editors who protect their investments. They are risking everything, then why
not the others? That is not quite fair, for in their righteous fury they have
forgotten their own rewards, which are beyond any that their employers can hope
to feel. They could not, and would not if they could, change places. And they
have forgotten another thing in the unceasing war with Philistia. They have forgotten
that they are measuring their own success by standards that artists and wise
men of the past would never have dreamed of invoking. They are asking for
circulations and audiences that were never considered by any artist until the
last few generations. And when they do not get them, they are disappointed.
Those who catch on, like Sinclair Lewis in “Main
Street,” are men who have succeeded in projecting definitely what great numbers
of other people were obscurely trying to say inside their heads. “You have said
it for me.” They establish a new form which is then endlessly copied until it,
too, becomes a stereotype of perception. The next pioneer finds it difficult to
make the public see Main Street any other way. And he, like the forerunners of
Sinclair Lewis, has a quarrel with the public.
This quarrel is due not only to the conflict of
stereotypes, but to the pioneering artist’s reverence for his material.
Whatever the plane he chooses, on that plane he remains. If he is dealing with
the inwardness of an event he follows it to its conclusion regardless of the
pain it causes. He will not tag his fantasy to help anyone, or cry peace where
there is no peace. There is his America. But big audiences have no stomach for
such severity. They are more interested in themselves than in anything else in
the world. The selves in which they are interested are the selves that have
been revealed by schools and by tradition. They insist that a work of art shall
be a vehicle with a step where they can climb aboard, and that they shall ride,
not according to the contours of the country, but to a land where for an hour
there are no clocks to punch and no dishes to wash. To satisfy these demands
there exists an intermediate class of artists who are able and willing to confuse
the planes, to piece together a realistic-romantic compound out of the
inventions of greater men, and, as Miss Patterson advises, give “what real life
so rarely does-the triumphant resolution of a set of difficulties; the anguish
of virtue and the triumph of sin… changed to the glorifications of virtue and
the eternal punishment of its enemy.” [Footnote: Op. cit., p. 46. “The hero and
heroine must in general possess youth, beauty, goodness, exalted
self-sacrifice, and unalterable constancy.”]
4
The ideologies of politics obey these rules. The
foothold of realism is always there. The picture of some real evil, such as the
German threat or class conflict, is recognizable in the argument. There is a
description of some aspect of the world which is convincing because it agrees
with familiar ideas. But as the ideology deals with an unseen future, as well
as with a tangible present, it soon crosses imperceptibly the frontier of
verification. In describing the present you are more or less tied down to
common experience. In describing what nobody has experienced you are bound to
let go. You stand at Armageddon, more or less, but you battle for the Lord,
perhaps…. A true beginning, true according to the standards prevailing, and a
happy ending. Every Marxist is hard as nails about the brutalities of the
present, and mostly sunshine about the day after the dictatorship. So were the
war propagandists: there was not a bestial quality in human nature they did not
find everywhere east of the Rhine, or west of it if they were Germans. The
bestiality was there all right. But after the victory, eternal peace. Plenty of
this is quite cynically deliberate. For the skilful propagandist knows that
while you must start with a plausible analysis, you must not keep on analyzing,
because the tedium of real political accomplishment will soon destroy interest.
So the propagandist exhausts the interest in reality by a tolerably plausible
beginning, and then stokes up energy for a long voyage by brandishing a
passport to heaven.
The formula works when the public fiction enmeshes
itself with a private urgency. But once enmeshed, in the heat of battle, the
original self and the original stereotype which effected the junction may be
wholly lost to sight.
CHAPTER XII. SELF-INTEREST
RECONSIDERED
1
THEREFORE, the identical story is not the same story
to all who hear it. Each will enter it at a slightly different point, since no
two experiences are exactly alike; he will reenact it in his own way, and
transfuse it with his own feelings. Sometimes an artist of compelling skill
will force us to enter into lives altogether unlike our own, lives that seem at
first glance dull, repulsive, or eccentric. But that is rare. In almost every
story that catches our attention we become a character and act out the role
with a pantomime of our own. The pantomime may be subtle or gross, may be
sympathetic to the story, or only crudely analogous; but it will consist of
those feelings which are aroused by our conception of the role. And so, the
original theme as it circulates, is stressed, twisted, and embroidered by all
the minds through which it goes. It is as if a play of Shakespeare’s were
rewritten each time it is performed with all the changes of emphasis and
meaning that the actors and audience inspired.
Something very like that seems to have happened to
the stories in the sagas before they were definitively written down. In our
time the printed record, such as it is, checks the exuberance of each
individual’s fancy. But against rumor there is little or no checks and the
original story, true or invented, grows wings and horns, hoofs and beaks, as
the artist in each gossip works upon it. The first narrator’s account does not
keep its shape and proportions. It is edited and revised by all who played with
it as they heard it, used it for day dreams, and passed it on. [Footnote: For
an interesting example, see the case described by C. J. Jung, Zentralblatt für
Psychoanalyse, 1911, Vol. I, p. 81. Translated by Constance Long, in Analytical
Psychology, Ch. IV.]
Consequently the more mixed the audience, the greater
will be the variation in the response. For as the audience grows larger, the
number of common words diminishes. Thus the common factors in the story become
more abstract. This story, lacking precise character of its own, is heard by
people of highly varied character. They give it their own character.
2
The character they give it varies not only with sex
and age, race and religion and social position, but within these cruder
classifications, according to the inherited and acquired constitution of the
individual, his faculties, his career, the progress of his career, an
emphasized aspect of his career, his moods and tenses, or his place on the
board in any of the games of life that he is playing. What reaches him of
public affairs, a few lines of print, some photographs, anecdotes, and some
casual experience of his own, he conceives through his set patterns and
recreates with his own emotions. He does not take his personal problems as
partial samples of the greater environment. He takes his stories of the greater
environment as a mimic enlargement of his private life.
But not necessarily of that private life as he would
describe it to himself. For in his private life the choices are narrow, and
much of himself is squeezed down and out of sight where it cannot directly
govern his outward behavior. And thus, beside the more average people who
project the happiness of their own lives into a general good will, or their
unhappiness into suspicion and hate, there are the outwardly happy people who
are brutal everywhere but in their own circle, as well as the people who, the
more they detest their families, their friends, their jobs, the more they
overflow with love for mankind.
As you descend from generalities to detail, it
becomes more apparent that the character in which men deal with their affairs
is not fixed. Possibly their different selves have a common stem and common
qualities, but the branches and the twigs have many forms. Nobody confronts
every situation with the same character. His character varies in some degree
through the sheer influence of time and accumulating memory, since he is not an
automaton. His character varies, not only in time, but according to
circumstance. The legend of the solitary Englishman in the South Seas, who
invariably shaves and puts on a black tie for dinner, bears witness to his own
intuitive and civilized fear of losing the character which he has acquired. So
do diaries, and albums, and souvenirs, old letters, and old clothes, and the
love of unchanging routine testify to our sense of how hard it is to step twice
in the Heraclitan river.
There is no one self always at work. And therefore it
is of great importance in the formation of any public opinion, what self is
engaged. The Japanese ask the right to settle in California. Clearly it makes a
whole lot of difference whether you conceive the demand as a desire to grow
fruit or to marry the white man’s daughter. If two nations are disputing a
piece of territory, it matters greatly whether the people regard the
negotiations as a real estate deal, an attempt to humiliate them, or, in the
excited and provocative language which usually enclouds these arguments, as a
rape. For the self which takes charge of the instincts when we are thinking
about lemons or distant acres is very different from the self which appears
when we are thinking even potentially as the outraged head of a family. In one
case the private feeling which enters into the opinion is tepid, in the other,
red hot. And so while it is so true as to be mere tautology that
“self-interest” determines opinion, the statement is not illuminating, until we
know which self out of many selects and directs the interest so conceived.
Religious teaching and popular wisdom have always
distinguished several personalities in each human being. They have been called
the Higher and Lower, the Spiritual and the Material, the Divine and the
Carnal; and although we may not wholly accept this classification, we cannot
fail to observe that distinctions exist. Instead of two antithetic selves, a
modern man would probably note a good many not so sharply separated. He would
say that the distinction drawn by theologians was arbitrary and external,
because many different selves were grouped together as higher provided they
fitted into the theologian’s categories, but he would recognize nevertheless
that here was an authentic clue to the variety of human nature.
We have learned to note many
selves, and to be a little less ready to issue judgment upon them. We
understand that we see the same body, but often a different man, depending on
whether he is dealing with a social equal, a social inferior, or a social
superior; on whether he is making love to a woman he is eligible to marry, or
to one whom he is not; on whether he is courting a woman, or whether he
considers himself her proprietor; on whether he is dealing with his children,
his partners, his most trusted subordinates, the boss who can make him or break
him; on whether he is struggling for the necessities of life, or successful; on
whether he is dealing with a friendly alien, or a despised one; on whether he
is in great danger, or in perfect security; on whether he is alone in Paris or
among his family in Peoria.
People differ widely, of
course, in the consistency of their characters, so widely that they may cover
the whole gamut of differences between a split soul like Dr. Jekyll’s and an
utterly singleminded Brand, Parsifal, or Don Quixote. If the selves are too
unrelated, we distrust the man; if they are too inflexibly on one track we find
him arid, stubborn, or eccentric. In the repertory of characters, meager
for the isolated and the self-sufficient, highly varied for the adaptable,
there is a whole range of selves, from that one at the top which we should wish
God to see, to those at the bottom that we ourselves do not dare to see. There
may be octaves for the family,—father, Jehovah, tyrant,—husband, proprietor,
male,—lover, lecher,—for the occupation,—employer, master, exploiter,—competitor,
intriguer, enemy,—subordinate, courtier, snob. Some never come out into public
view. Others are called out only by exceptional circumstances. But the
characters take their form from a man’s conception of the situation in which he
finds himself. If the environment to which he is sensitive happens to be the
smart set, he will imitate the character he conceives to be appropriate. That
character will tend to act as modulator of his bearing, his speech, his choice
of subjects, his preferences. Much of the comedy of life lies here, in the way
people imagine their characters for situations that are strange to them: the
professor among promoters, the deacon at a poker game, the cockney in the
country, the paste diamond among real diamonds.
3
Into the making of a man’s characters there enters a
variety of influences not easily separated. [Footnote: For an interesting
sketch of the more noteworthy early attempts to explain character, see the
chapter called “The Antecedents of the Study of Character and Temperament,” in
Joseph Jastrow’s The Psychology of Conviction.] The analysis in its
fundamentals is perhaps still as doubtful as it was in the fifth century B. C.
when Hippocrates formulated the doctrine of the humors, distinguished the
sanguine, the melancholic, the choleric, and the phlegmatic dispositions, and
ascribed them to the blood, the black bile, the yellow bile, and the phlegm.
The latest theories, such as one finds them in Cannon, [Footnote: Bodily
Changes in Pleasure, Pain and Anger.] Adler, [Footnote: The Neurotic
Constitution.] Kempf, [Footnote: The Autonomic Functions and the Personality;
Psychopathology. Cf. also Louis Berman: The Glands Regulating Personality.]
appear to follow much the same scent, from the outward behavior and the inner
consciousness to the physiology of the body. But in spite of an immensely
improved technique, no one would be likely to claim that there are settled
conclusions which enable us to set apart nature from nurture, and abstract the
native character from the acquired. It is only in what
Joseph Jastrow has called the slums of psychology that the explanation of
character is regarded as a fixed system to be applied by phrenologists,
palmists, fortune-tellers, mind-readers, and a few political professors. There
you will still find it asserted that “the Chinese are fond of colors, and have
their eyebrows much vaulted” while “the heads of the Calmucks are depressed
from above, but very large laterally, about the organ which gives the
inclination to acquire; and this nation’s propensity to steal, etc., is
admitted.” [Footnote: Jastrow, op. cit., p. 156.]
The modern psychologists are disposed to regard the
outward behavior of an adult as an equation between a number of variables, such
as the resistance of the environment, repressed cravings of several maturities,
and the manifest personality. [Footnote: Formulated by Kempf, Psychopathology,
p. 74, as follows:
Manifest wishes } over } Later Repressed Wishes }
Over } opposed by the resistance of the Adolescent Repressed Wishes } environment=Behavior
Over } Preadolescent Repressed Wishes } ]
They permit us to suppose, though I have not seen the
notion formulated, that the repression or control of cravings is fixed not in
relation to the whole person all the time, but more or less in respect to his
various selves. There are things he will not do as a patriot that he will do
when he is not thinking of himself as a patriot. No doubt there are impulses,
more or less incipient in childhood, that are never exercised again in the
whole of a man’s life, except as they enter obscurely and indirectly into
combination with other impulses. But even that is not certain, since repression
is not irretrievable. For just as psychoanalysis can bring to the surface a
buried impulse, so can social situations. [Footnote: Cf. the very interesting
book of Everett Dean Martin, The Behavior of Crowds. Also Hobbes, Leviathan,
Part II, Ch. 25. “For the passions of men, which asunder are moderate, as the
heat of one brand, in an assembly are like many brands, that inflame one
another, especially when they blow one another with orations….” LeBon, The
Crowd, elaborates this observation of Hobbes’s.]
It is only when our surroundings remain normal and
placid, when what is expected of us by those we meet is consistent, that we
live without knowledge of many of our dispositions. When the unexpected occurs,
we learn much about ourselves that we did not know.
The selves, which we construct with the help of all
who influence us, prescribe which impulses, how emphasized, how directed, are
appropriate to certain typical situations for which we have learned prepared
attitudes. For a recognizable type of experience, there is a character which
controls the outward manifestations of our whole being. Murderous hate is, for
example, controlled in civil life. Though you choke with rage, you must not
display it as a parent, child, employer, politician. You would not wish to
display a personality that exudes murderous hate. You frown upon it, and the
people around you also frown. But if a war breaks out, the chances are that
everybody you admire will begin to feel the justification of killing and
hating. At first the vent for these feelings is very narrow. The selves which
come to the front are those which are attuned to a real love of country, the
kind of feeling that you find in Rupert Brooke, and in Sir Edward Grey’s speech
on August 3, 1914, and in President Wilson’s address to Congress on April 2,
1917. The reality of war is still abhorred, and what war actually means is
learned but gradually. For previous wars are only transfigured memories. In
that honeymoon phase, the realists of war rightly insist that the nation is not
yet awake, and reassure each other by saying: “Wait for the casualty lists.”
Gradually the impulse to kill becomes the main business, and all those
characters which might modify it, disintegrate. The impulse becomes central, is
sanctified, and gradually turns unmanageable. It seeks a vent not alone on the
idea of the enemy, which is all the enemy most people actually see during the
war, but upon all the persons and objects and ideas that have always been
hateful. Hatred of the enemy is legitimate. These other hatreds have themselves
legitimized by the crudest analogy, and by what, once having cooled off, we
recognize as the most far-fetched analogy. It takes a long time to subdue so
powerful an impulse once it goes loose. And therefore, when the war is over in
fact, it takes time and struggle to regain self-control, and to deal with the
problems of peace in civilian character.
Modern war, as Mr. Herbert
Croly has said, is inherent in the political structure of modern society, but
outlawed by its ideals. For the civilian population there exists no ideal code
of conduct in war, such as the soldier still possesses and chivalry once
prescribed. The civilians are without standards, except those that the best of
them manage to improvise. The only standards they possess make war an accursed
thing. Yet though the war may be a necessary one, no moral training has
prepared them for it. Only their higher selves have a code and patterns, and
when they have to act in what the higher regards as a lower character profound
disturbance results.
The preparation of characters for all the situations
in which men may find themselves is one function of a moral education. Clearly
then, it depends for its success upon the sincerity and knowledge with which
the environment has been explored. For in a world falsely conceived, our own
characters are falsely conceived, and we misbehave. So the moralist must
choose: either he must offer a pattern of conduct for every phase of life,
however distasteful some of its phases may be, or he must guarantee that his
pupils will never be confronted by the situations he disapproves. Either he must abolish war, or teach people how to wage it
with the greatest psychic economy; either he must abolish the economic life of
man and feed him with stardust and dew, or he must investigate all the
perplexities of economic life and offer patterns of conduct which are applicable
in a world where no man is self-supporting. But that is just what the
prevailing moral culture so generally refuses to do. In its best aspects it is
diffident at the awful complication of the modern world. In its worst, it is
just cowardly. Now whether the moralists study economics and politics and
psychology, or whether the social scientists educate the moralists is no great
matter. Each generation will go unprepared into the modern world, unless it has
been taught to conceive the kind of personality it will have to be among the
issues it will most likely meet.
4
Most of this the naive view of self-interest leaves
out of account. It forgets that self and interest are both conceived somehow,
and that for the most part they are conventionally conceived. The ordinary
doctrine of self-interest usually omits altogether the cognitive function. So
insistent is it on the fact that human beings finally refer all things to
themselves, that it does not stop to notice that men’s ideas of all things and
of themselves are not instinctive. They are acquired.
Thus it may be true enough,
as James Madison wrote in the tenth paper of the Federalist, that “a landed
interest, a manufacturing interest, a mercantile interest, a moneyed interest,
with many lesser interests, grow up of necessity in civilized nations, and
divide them into different classes, actuated by different sentiments and
views.” But if you examine the context of Madison’s paper, you discover
something which I think throws light upon that view of instinctive fatalism,
called sometimes the economic interpretation of history. Madison was arguing
for the federal constitution, and “among the numerous advantages of the union”
he set forth “its tendency to break and control the violence of faction.”
Faction was what worried Madison. And the causes of faction he traced to “the
nature of man,” where latent dispositions are “brought into different degrees
of activity, according to the different circumstances of civil society. A zeal
for different opinions concerning religion, concerning government and many
other points, as well of speculation as of practice; an attachment to different
leaders ambitiously contending for preeminence and power, or to persons of
other descriptions whose fortunes have been interesting to the human passions,
have, in turn, divided mankind into parties, inflamed them with mutual
animosity, and rendered them much more disposed to vex and oppress each other,
than to coöperate for their common good. So strong is this propensity of
mankind to fall into mutual animosities, that where no substantial occasion
presents itself, the most frivolous and fanciful distinctions have been
sufficient to kindle their unfriendly passions and excite their most violent
conflicts. But the most common and durable source of factions has been the
various and unequal distribution of property.”
Madison’s theory, therefore,
is that the propensity to faction may be kindled by religious or political
opinions, by leaders, but most commonly by the distribution of property. Yet
note that Madison claims only that men are divided by their relation to
property. He does not say that their property and their opinions are cause and
effect, but that differences of property are the causes of differences of
opinion. The pivotal word in Madison’s argument is “different.” From the
existence of differing economic situations you can tentatively infer a probable
difference of opinions, but you cannot infer what those opinions will
necessarily be.
This reservation cuts radically into the claims of
the theory as that theory is usually held. That the reservation is necessary,
the enormous contradiction between dogma and practice among orthodox socialists
bears witness. They argue that the next stage in social evolution is the
inevitable result of the present stage. But in order to produce that inevitable
next stage they organize and agitate to produce “class consciousness.” Why, one
asks, does not the economic situation produce consciousness of class in
everybody? It just doesn’t, that is all. And therefore the proud claim will not
stand that the socialist philosophy rests on prophetic insight into destiny. It
rests on an hypothesis about human nature. [Footnote: Cf. Thorstein Veblen,
“The Socialist Economics of Karl Marx and His Followers,” in The Place of
Science in Modern Civilization, esp. pp. 413-418.]
The socialist practice is based on a belief that if
men are economically situated in different ways, they can then be induced to
hold certain views. Undoubtedly they often come to believe, or can be induced
to believe different things, as they are, for example, landlords or tenants,
employees or employers, skilled or unskilled laborers, wageworkers or salaried
men, buyers or sellers, farmers or middle-men, exporters or importers,
creditors or debtors. Differences of income make a profound difference in
contact and opportunity. Men who work at machines will tend, as Mr. Thorstein
Veblen has so brilliantly demonstrated, [Footnote: The Theory of Business
Enterprise.] to interpret experience differently from handicraftsmen or
traders. If this were all that the materialistic conception of politics
asserted, the theory would be an immensely valuable hypothesis that every
interpreter of opinion would have to use. But he would often have to abandon
the theory, and he would always have to be on guard. For in trying to explain a
certain public opinion, it is rarely obvious which of a man’s many social
relations is effecting a particular opinion. Does
Smith’s opinion arise from his problems as a landlord, an importer, an owner of
railway shares, or an employer? Does Jones’s opinion, Jones being a weaver in a
textile mill, come from the attitude of his boss, the competition of new
immigrants, his wife’s grocery bills, or the ever present contract with the
firm which is selling him a Ford car and a house and lot on the instalment
plan? Without special inquiry you cannot tell.
The economic determinist cannot tell.
A man’s various economic contacts limit or enlarge
the range of his opinions. But which of the contacts, in what guise, on what
theory, the materialistic conception of politics cannot predict. It can
predict, with a high degree of probability, that if a man owns a factory, his
ownership will figure in those opinions which seem to have some bearing on that
factory. But how the function of being an owner will figure, no economic
determinist as such, can tell you. There is no fixed set of opinions on any
question that go with being the owner of a factory, no views on labor, on
property, on management, let alone views on less immediate matters. The
determinist can predict that in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred the owner
will resist attempts to deprive him of ownership, or that he will favor
legislation which he thinks will increase his profits. But since there is no
magic in ownership which enables a business man to know what laws will make him
prosper, there is no chain of cause and effect described in economic
materialism which enables anyone to prophesy whether the owner will take a long
view or a short one, a competitive or a cooperative.
Did the theory have the validity which is so often
claimed for it, it would enable us to prophesy. We could analyze the economic
interests of a people, and deduce what the people was bound to do. Marx tried
that, and after a good guess about the trusts, went wholly wrong. The first
socialist experiment came, not as he predicted, out of the culmination of
capitalist development in the West, but out of the collapse of a pre-capitalist
system in the East. Why did he go wrong? Why did his greatest disciple, Lenin,
go wrong? Because the Marxians thought that men’s economic position would
irresistibly produce a clear conception of their economic interests. They
thought they themselves possessed that clear conception, and that what they
knew the rest of mankind would learn. The event has shown, not only that a
clear conception of interest does not arise automatically in everyone, but that
it did not arise even in Marx and Lenin themselves. After all that Marx and
Lenin have written, the social behavior of mankind is still obscure. It ought
not to be, if economic position alone determined public opinion. Position
ought, if their theory were correct, not only to divide mankind into classes,
but to supply each class with a view of its interest and a coherent policy for
obtaining it. Yet nothing is more certain than that all classes of men are in
constant perplexity as to what their interests are. [Footnote:
As a matter of fact, when it came to the test, Lenin completely abandoned the
materialistic interpretation of politics. Had he held sincerely to the Marxian
formula when he seized power in 1917, he would have said to himself: according
to the teachings of Marx, socialism will develop out of a mature capitalism…
here am I, in control of a nation that is only entering upon a capitalist
development… it is true that I am a socialist, but I am a scientific socialist…
it follows that for the present all idea of a socialist republic is out of the
question… we must advance capitalism in order that the evolution which Marx
predicted may take place. But Lenin did nothing of the sort. Instead of waiting
for evolution to evolve, he tried by will, force, and education, to defy the
historical process which his philosophy assumed.
Since this was written Lenin has abandoned communism on the
ground that Russia does not possess the necessary basis in a mature capitalism.
He now says that Russia must create capitalism, which will create a
proletariat, which will some day create communism. This is at least consistent
with Marxist dogma. But it shows how little determinism there is in the
opinions of a determinist.] [Probablyaccurate. Research required.] [Scorsese.
Thesame in his rationalisation.]
This dissolves the impact of economic determinism.
For if our economic interests are made up of our variable concepts of those
interests, then as the master key to social processes the theory fails. That
theory assumes that men are capable of adopting only one version of their
interest, and that having adopted it, they move fatally to realize it. It
assumes the existence of a specific class interest. That assumption is false. A
class interest can be conceived largely or narrowly, selfishly or unselfishly,
in the light of no facts, some facts, many facts, truth and error. And so
collapses the Marxian remedy for class conflicts. That remedy assumes that if
all property could be held in common, class differences would disappear. The
assumption is false. Property might well be held in common, and yet not be
conceived as a whole. The moment any group of people failed to see communism in
a communist manner, they would divide into classes on the basis of what they
saw.
In respect to the existing social order Marxian
socialism emphasizes property conflict as the maker of opinion, in respect to
the loosely defined working class it ignores property conflict as the basis of
agitation, in respect to the future it imagines a society without property
conflict, and, therefore, without conflict of opinion. Now in the existing social
order there may be more instances where one man must lose if another is to
gain, than there would be under socialism, but for every case where one must
lose for another to gain, there are endless cases where men simply imagine the
conflict because they are uneducated. And under socialism, though you removed
every instance of absolute conflict, the partial access of each man to the
whole range of facts would nevertheless create conflict. A socialist state will
not be able to dispense with education, morality, or liberal science, though on
strict materialistic grounds the communal ownership of properties ought to make
them superfluous. The communists in Russia would not propagate their faith with
such unflagging zeal if economic determinism were alone determining the opinion
of the Russian people.
5
The socialist theory of human nature is, like the
hedonistic calculus, an example of false determinism. Both assume that the
unlearned dispositions fatally but intelligently produce a certain type of
behavior. The socialist believes that the dispositions pursue the economic
interest of a class; the hedonist believes that they pursue pleasure and avoid
pain. Both theories rest on a naive view of instinct, a
view, defined by James, [Footnote: Principles of Psychology, Vol. II, p. 383.]
though radically qualified by him, as “the faculty of acting in such a way as
to produce certain ends, without foresight of the ends and without previous
education in the performance.”
It is doubtful whether instinctive action of this
sort figures at all in the social life of mankind. For as James pointed out:
[Footnote: Op. cit., Vol. II, p. 390.] “every instinctive act in an animal with
memory must cease to be ‘blind’ after being once repeated.” Whatever the
equipment at birth, the innate dispositions are from earliest infancy immersed
in experience which determines what shall excite them as stimulus. “They become
capable,” as Mr. McDougall says, [Footnote: Introduction to Social Psychology,
Fourth Edition, pp. 31-32.] “of being initiated, not only by the perception of
objects of the kind which directly excite the innate disposition, the natural
or native excitants of the instinct, but also by ideas of such objects, and by
perceptions and by ideas of objects of other kinds.” [Footnote: “Most
definitions of instincts and instinctive actions take account only of their
conative aspects… and it is a common mistake to ignore the cognitive and
affective aspects of the instinctive mental process.” Footnote op. cit., p.
29.]
It is only the “central part of the disposition”
[Footnote: p. 34.] says Mr. McDougall further, “that retains its specific
character and remains common to all individuals and all situations in which the
instinct is excited.” The cognitive processes, and the actual bodily movements
by which the instinct achieves its end may be indefinitely complicated. In
other words, man has an instinct of fear, but what he will fear and how he will
try to escape, is determined not from birth, but by experience.
If it were not for this variability, it would be
difficult to conceive the inordinate variety of human nature. But when you
consider that all the important tendencies of the creature, his appetites, his
loves, his hates, his curiosity, his sexual cravings, his fears, and pugnacity,
are freely attachable to all sorts of objects as stimulus, and to all kinds of
objects as gratification, the complexity of human nature is not so
inconceivable. And when you think that each new
generation is the casual victim of the way a previous generation was
conditioned, as well as the inheritor of the environment that resulted, the
possible combinations and permutations are enormous.
There is no prima facie case then for supposing that
because persons crave some particular thing, or behave in some particular way,
human nature is fatally constituted to crave that and act thus. The craving and
the action are both learned, and in another generation might be learned
differently. Analytic psychology and social history unite in supporting this
conclusion. Psychology indicates how essentially casual is the nexus between
the particular stimulus and the particular response. Anthropology in the widest
sense reinforces the view by demonstrating that the things which have excited
men’s passions, and the means which they have used to realize them, differ
endlessly from age to age and from place to place.
Men pursue their interest. But how they shall pursue
it is not fatally determined, and, therefore, within whatever limits of time
this planet will continue to support human life, man can set no term upon the
creative energies of men. He can issue no doom of automatism. He can say, if he
must, that for his life there will be no changes which he can recognize as
good. But in saying that he will be confining his life to what he can see with
his eye, rejecting what he might see with his mind; he will be taking as the
measure of good a measure which is only the one he happens to possess. He can
find no ground for abandoning his highest hopes and relaxing his conscious
effort unless he chooses to regard the unknown as the unknowable, unless he
elects to believe that what no one knows no one will know, and that what
someone has not yet learned no one will ever be able to teach.
PART V. THE MAKING OF A
COMMON WILL
CHAPTER XIII. THE
TRANSFER OF INTEREST
This goes to show that there are many variables in
each man’s impressions of the invisible world. The points of contact vary, the
stereotyped expectations vary, the interest enlisted varies most subtly of all.
The living impressions of a large number of people are to an immeasurable
degree personal in each of them, and unmanageably complex in the mass. How,
then, is any practical relationship established between what is in people’s
heads and what is out there beyond their ken in the environment? How in the
language of democratic theory, do great numbers of people feeling each so
privately about so abstract a picture, develop any common will? How does a
simple and constant idea emerge from this complex of variables? How are those
things known as the Will of the People, or the National Purpose, or Public
Opinion crystallized out of such fleeting and casual imagery?
That there is a real difficulty here was shown by an
angry tilt in the spring of 1921 between the American Ambassador to England and
a very large number of other Americans. Mr. Harvey, speaking at a British
dinner table, had assured the world without the least sign of hesitancy what
were the motives of Americans in 1917. [Footnote: New York Times, May 20,
1921.] As he described them, they were not the motives which President Wilson
had insisted upon when he enunciated the American mind. Now, of course, neither
Mr. Harvey nor Mr. Wilson, nor the critics and friends of either, nor any one
else, can know quantitatively and qualitatively what went on in thirty or forty
million adult minds. But what everybody knows is that a war was fought and won
by a multitude of efforts, stimulated, no one knows in what proportion, by the
motives of Wilson and the motives of Harvey and all kinds of hybrids of the
two. People enlisted and fought, worked, paid taxes,
sacrificed to a common end, and yet no one can begin to say exactly what moved
each person to do each thing that he did. It is no use, then, Mr. Harvey
telling a soldier who thought this was a war to end war that the soldier did
not think any such thing. The soldier who thought that thought that. And Mr.
Harvey, who thought something else, thought something else.
In the same speech Mr. Harvey formulated with equal
clarity what the voters of 1920 had in their minds. That is a rash thing to do,
and, if you simply assume that all who voted your ticket voted as you did, then
it is a disingenuous thing to do. The count shows that sixteen millions voted
Republican, and nine millions Democratic. They voted, says Mr. Harvey, for and
against the League of Nations, and in support of this claim, he can point to
Mr. Wilson’s request for a referendum, and to the undeniable fact that the
Democratic party and Mr. Cox insisted that the League was the issue. But then,
saying that the League was the issue did not make the League the issue, and by
counting the votes on election day you do not know the real division of opinion
about the League. There were, for example, nine million Democrats. Are you entitled
to believe that all of them are staunch supporters of the League? Certainly you
are not. For your knowledge of American politics tells you that many of the
millions voted, as they always do, to maintain the existing social system in
the South, and that whatever their views on the League, they did not vote to
express their views. Those who wanted the League were no doubt pleased that the
Democratic party wanted it too. Those who disliked the League may have held
their noses as they voted. But both groups of Southerners voted the same
ticket.
Were the Republicans more unanimous? Anybody can pick
Republican voters enough out of his circle of friends to cover the whole gamut
of opinion from the irreconcilability of Senators Johnson and Knox to the advocacy
of Secretary Hoover and Chief Justice Taft. No one can say definitely how many
people felt in any particular way about the League, nor how many people let
their feelings on that subject determine their vote. When there are only two
ways of expressing a hundred varieties of feeling, there is no certain way of
knowing what the decisive combination was. Senator Borah found in the
Republican ticket a reason for voting Republican, but so did President Lowell.
The Republican majority was composed of men and women who thought a Republican
victory would kill the League, plus those who thought it the most practical way
to secure the League, plus those who thought it the surest way offered to
obtain an amended League. All these voters were inextricably entangled with
their own desire, or the desire of other voters to improve business, or put
labor in its place, or to punish the Democrats for going to war, or to punish
them for not having gone sooner, or to get rid of Mr. Burleson, or to improve
the price of wheat, or to lower taxes, or to stop Mr. Daniels from outbuilding
the world, or to help Mr. Harding do the same thing.
And yet a sort of decision emerged; Mr. Harding moved
into the White House. For the least common denominator of all the votes was
that the Democrats should go and the Republicans come in. That was the only
factor remaining after all the contradictions had cancelled each other out. But
that factor was enough to alter policy for four years. The precise reasons why
change was desired on that November day in 1920 are not recorded, not even in
the memories of the individual voters. The reasons are not fixed. They grow and
change and melt into other reasons, so that the public opinions Mr. Harding has
to deal with are not the opinions that elected him. That there is no inevitable
connection between an assortment of opinions and a particular line of action
everyone saw in 1916. Elected apparently on the cry that he kept us out of war,
Mr. Wilson within five months led the country into war.
The working of the popular will, therefore, has
always called for explanation. Those who have been most impressed by its
erratic working have found a prophet in M. LeBon, and have welcomed
generalizations about what Sir Robert Peel called “that great compound of
folly, weakness, prejudice, wrong feeling, right feeling, obstinacy and
newspaper paragraphs which is called public opinion.” Others have concluded
that since out of drift and incoherence, settled aims do appear, there must be
a mysterious contrivance at work somewhere over and above the inhabitants of a
nation. They invoke a collective soul, a national mind, a spirit of the age
which imposes order upon random opinion. An oversoul seems to be needed, for
the emotions and ideas in the members of a group do not disclose anything so
simple and so crystalline as the formula which those same individuals will
accept as a true statement of their Public Opinion.
2
But the facts can, I think, be explained more
convincingly without the help of the oversoul in any of its disguises. After
all, the art of inducing all sorts of people who think differently to vote
alike is practiced in every political campaign. In 1916, for example, the
Republican candidate had to produce Republican votes out of many different
kinds of Republicans. Let us look at Mr. Hughes’ first speech after accepting
the nomination. [Footnote: Delivered at Carnegie Hall, New York City, July 31,
1916.] The context is still clear enough in our minds to obviate much
explanation; yet the issues are no longer contentious. The candidate was a man
of unusually plain speech, who had been out of politics for several years and
was not personally committed on the issues of the recent past. He had,
moreover, none of that wizardry which popular leaders like Roosevelt, Wilson,
or Lloyd George possess, none of that histrionic gift by which such men
impersonate the feelings of their followers. From that aspect of politics he
was by temperament and by training remote. But yet he knew by calculation what
the politician’s technic is. He was one of those people who know just how to do
a thing, but who can not quite do it themselves. They are often better teachers
than the virtuoso to whom the art is so much second nature that he himself does
not know how he does it. The statement that those who can, do; those who
cannot, teach, is not nearly so much of a reflection on the teacher as it
sounds.
Mr. Hughes knew the occasion was momentous, and he
had prepared his manuscript carefully. In a box sat Theodore Roosevelt just
back from Missouri. All over the house sat the veterans of Armageddon in
various stages of doubt and dismay. On the platform and in the other boxes the
ex-whited sepulchres and ex-second-story men of 1912 were to be seen, obviously
in the best of health and in a melting mood. Out beyond the hall there were
powerful pro-Germans and powerful pro-Allies; a war party in the East and in
the big cities; a peace party in the middle and far West. There was strong
feeling about Mexico. Mr. Hughes had to form a majority against the Democrats
out of people divided into all sorts of combinations on Taft vs. Roosevelt,
pro-Germans vs. pro-Allies, war vs. neutrality, Mexican intervention vs.
non-intervention.
About the morality or the wisdom of the affair we
are, of course, not concerned here. Our only interest is in the method by which
a leader of heterogeneous opinion goes about the business of securing a
homogeneous vote.
“This representative gathering is a happy augury. It
means the strength of reunion. It means that the party of Lincoln is
restored….”
The italicized words are
binders: Lincoln in such a speech has of course, no relation to Abraham
Lincoln. It is merely a stereotype by which the piety which surrounds
that name can be transferred to the Republican candidate who now stands in his
shoes. Lincoln reminds the Republicans, Bull
Moose and Old Guard, that before the schism they had a common history. About
the schism no one can afford to speak. But it is there, as yet unhealed.
The speaker must heal it. Now the schism of 1912 had
arisen over domestic questions; the reunion of 1916 was, as Mr. Roosevelt had
declared, to be based on a common indignation against Mr. Wilson’s conduct of
international affairs. But international affairs were also a dangerous source
of conflict. It was necessary to find an opening subject which would not only
ignore 1912 but would avoid also the explosive conflicts of 1916. The speaker
skilfully selected the spoils system in diplomatic appointments. “Deserving
Democrats” was a discrediting phrase, and Mr. Hughes at once evokes it. The
record being indefensible, there is no hesitation in the vigor of the attack.
Logically it was an ideal introduction to a common mood.
Mr. Hughes then turns to Mexico, beginning with an
historical review. He had to consider the general sentiment that affairs were
going badly in Mexico; also, a no less general sentiment that war should be
avoided; and two powerful currents of opinion, one of which said President
Wilson was right in not recognizing Huerta, the other which preferred Huerta to
Carranza, and intervention to both. Huerta was the first sore spot in the
record…
“He was certainly in fact the head of the Government
in Mexico.”
But the moralists who regarded Huerta as a drunken
murderer had to be placated.
“Whether or not he should be recognized was a
question to be determined in the exercise of a sound discretion, but according
to correct principles.”
So instead of saying that Huerta should have been
recognized, the candidate says that correct principles ought to be applied.
Everybody believes in correct principles, and everybody, of course, believes he
possesses them. To blur the issue still further President Wilson’s policy is
described as “intervention.” It was that in law, perhaps, but not in the sense
then currently meant by the word. By stretching the word to cover what Mr.
Wilson had done, as well as what the real interventionists wanted, the issue
between the two factions was to be repressed.
Having got by the two explosive points “Huerta” and
“intervention” by letting the words mean all things to all men, the speech
passes for a while to safer ground. The candidate tells the story of Tampico,
Vera Cruz, Villa, Santa Ysabel, Columbus and Carrizal. Mr. Hughes is specific,
either because the facts as known from the newspapers are irritating, or
because the true explanation is, as for example in regard to Tampico, too
complicated. No contrary passions could be aroused by such a record. But at the
end the candidate had to take a position. His audience expected it. The
indictment was Mr. Roosevelt’s. Would Mr. Hughes adopt his remedy,
intervention?
“The nation has no policy of aggression toward Mexico.
We have no desire for any part of her territory. We wish her to have peace,
stability and prosperity. We should be ready to aid her in binding up her
wounds, in relieving her from starvation and distress, in giving her in every
practicable way the benefits of our disinterested friendship. The conduct of
this administration has created difficulties which we shall have to surmount….
We shall have to adopt a new policy, a policy of firmness and consistency
through which alone we can promote an enduring friendship.”
The theme friendship is for the non-interventionists,
the theme “new policy” and “firmness” is for the interventionists. On the
non-contentious record, the detail is overwhelming; on the issue everything is
cloudy.
Concerning the European war Mr. Hughes employed an
ingenious formula:
“I stand for the unflinching maintenance of all
American rights on land and sea.”
In order to understand the force of that statement at
the time it was spoken, we must remember how each faction during the period of
neutrality believed that the nations it opposed in Europe were alone violating
American rights. Mr. Hughes seemed to say to the pro-Allies: I would have
coerced Germany. But the pro-Germans had been insisting that British sea power
was violating most of our rights. The formula covers two diametrically opposed
purposes by the symbolic phrase “American rights.”
But there was the Lusitania. Like the 1912 schism, it
was an invincible obstacle to harmony.
“… I am confident that there would have been no destruction
of American lives by the sinking of the Lusitania.”
Thus, what cannot be compromised must be obliterated,
when there is a question on which we cannot all hope to get together, let us
pretend that it does not exist. About the future of American relations with
Europe Mr. Hughes was silent. Nothing he could say would possibly please the
two irreconcilable factions for whose support he was bidding.
It is hardly necessary to say that Mr. Hughes did not
invent this technic and did not employ it with the utmost success. But he
illustrated how a public opinion constituted out of divergent opinions is
clouded; how its meaning approaches the neutral tint formed out of the blending
of many colors. Where superficial harmony is the aim and conflict the fact, obscurantism
in a public appeal is the usual result. Almost always vagueness at a crucial
point in public debate is a symptom of cross-purposes.
3
But how is it that a vague idea so often has the
power to unite deeply felt opinions? These opinions, we recall, however deeply
they may be felt, are not in continual and pungent contact with the facts they
profess to treat. On the unseen environment, Mexico, the European war, our grip
is slight though our feeling may be intense. The original pictures and words which
aroused it have not anything like the force of the feeling itself. The account
of what has happened out of sight and hearing in a place where we have never
been, has not and never can have, except briefly as in a dream or fantasy, all
the dimensions of reality. But it can arouse all, and sometimes even more
emotion than the reality. For the trigger can be pulled by more than one
stimulus.
The stimulus which originally pulled the trigger may
have been a series of pictures in the mind aroused by printed or spoken words.
These pictures fade and are hard to keep steady; their contours and their pulse
fluctuate. Gradually the process sets in of knowing what you feel without being
entirely certain why you feel it. The fading pictures are displaced by other pictures,
and then by names or symbols. But the emotion goes on, capable now of being
aroused by the substituted images and names. Even in
severe thinking these substitutions take place, for if a man is trying to
compare two complicated situations, he soon finds exhausting the attempt to
hold both fully in mind in all their detail. He employs a shorthand of names
and signs and samples. He has to do this if he is to advance at all, [Accurate.] because he cannot carry the whole baggage in every phrase
through every step he takes. But if he forgets that he has substituted and simplified, he
soon lapses into verbalism, and begins to talk about names regardless of
objects. And then he has no way of knowing when the name divorced from
its first thing is carrying on a misalliance with some other thing. It is more
difficult still to guard against changelings in casual politics.
For by what is known to psychologists as conditioned
response, an emotion is not attached merely to one idea. There are no end of
things which can arouse the emotion, and no end of things which can satisfy it.
This is particularly true where the stimulus is only dimly and indirectly
perceived, and where the objective is likewise indirect. For you can associate
an emotion, say fear, first with something immediately dangerous, then with the
idea of that thing, then with something similar to that idea, and so on and on.
The whole structure of human culture is in one respect an elaboration of the
stimuli and responses of which the original emotional capacities remain a
fairly fixed center. No doubt the quality of emotion has changed in the course
of history, but with nothing like the speed, or elaboration, that has
characterized the conditioning of it.
People differ widely in their susceptibility to
ideas. There are some in whom the idea of a starving child in Russia is
practically as vivid as a starving child within sight. There are others who are
almost incapable of being excited by a distant idea. There are many gradations
between. And there are people who are insensitive to facts, and aroused only by
ideas. But though the emotion is aroused by the idea, we are unable to satisfy
the emotion by acting ourselves upon the scene itself. The idea of the starving
Russian child evokes a desire to feed the child. But the person so aroused
cannot feed it. He can only give money to an impersonal organization, or to a
personification which he calls Mr. Hoover. His money does not reach that child.
It goes to a general pool from which a mass of children are fed. And so just as
the idea is second hand, so are the effects of the action second hand. The
cognition is indirect, the conation is indirect, only the effect is immediate.
Of the three parts of the process, the stimulus comes from somewhere out of
sight, the response reaches somewhere out of sight, only the emotion exists
entirely within the person. Of the child’s hunger he has only an idea, of the
child’s relief he has only an idea, but of his own desire to help he has a real
experience. It is the central fact of the business, the emotion within himself,
which is first hand.
Within limits that vary, the emotion is transferable
both as regards stimulus and response. Therefore, if among a number of people,
possessing various tendencies to respond, you can find a stimulus which will
arouse the same emotion in many of them, you can substitute it for the original
stimuli. If, for example, one man dislikes the League, another hates Mr.
Wilson, and a third fears labor, you may be able to unite them if you can find
some symbol which is the antithesis of what they all hate. Suppose that symbol
is Americanism. The first man may read it as meaning the preservation of
American isolation, or as he may call it, independence; the second as the
rejection of a politician who clashes with his idea of what an American
president should be, the third as a call to resist revolution. The symbol in
itself signifies literally no one thing in particular, but it can be associated
with almost anything. And because of that it can become the common bond of
common feelings, even though those feelings were originally attached to
disparate ideas.
When political parties or newspapers declare for Americanism,
Progressivism, Law and Order, Justice, Humanity, they hope to amalgamate the
emotion of conflicting factions which would surely divide, if, instead of these
symbols, they were invited to discuss a specific program. [Holyfuckingshit.
Themoststraightfoward statement I have yet encountered.] For when a coalition around the symbol has been effected,
feeling flows toward conformity under the symbol rather than toward critical
scrutiny of the measures. It is, I think, convenient and technically correct to
call multiple phrases like these symbolic. They do not stand for
specific ideas, but for a sort of truce or junction between ideas. They are
like a strategic railroad center where many roads converge regardless of their
ultimate origin or their ultimate destination. But he who captures the symbols
by which public feeling is for the moment contained, controls by that much the
approaches of public policy. And as long as a particular symbol has the power
of coalition, ambitious factions will fight for possession. Think, for example,
of Lincoln’s name or of Roosevelt’s. A leader or an interest that can make
itself master of current symbols is master of the current situation. There are
limits, of course. Too violent abuse of the actualities which groups of people
think the symbol represents, or too great resistance in the name of that symbol
to new purposes, will, so to speak, burst the symbol. In this manner, during
the year 1917, the imposing symbol of Holy Russia and the Little Father burst
under the impact of suffering and defeat.
4
The tremendous consequences
of Russia’s collapse were felt on all the fronts and among all the
peoples. They led directly to a striking experiment in the crystallization of a
common opinion out of the varieties of opinion churned up by the war. The
Fourteen Points were addressed to all the governments, allied, enemy, neutral,
and to all the peoples. They were an attempt to knit together the chief
imponderables of a world war. Necessarily this was a new departure, because
this was the first great war in which all the deciding elements of mankind
could be brought to think about the same ideas, or at least about the same
names for ideas, simultaneously. Without cable, radio, telegraph, and daily
press, the experiment of the Fourteen Points would have been impossible. It was
an attempt to exploit the modern machinery of communication to start the return
to a “common consciousness” throughout the world.
But first we must examine some of the circumstances
as they presented themselves at the end of 1917. For in the form which the
document finally assumed, all these considerations are somehow represented.
During the summer and autumn a series of events had occurred which profoundly
affected the temper of the people and the course of the war. In July the
Russians had made a last offensive, had been disastrously beaten, and the
process of demoralization which led to the Bolshevik revolution of November had
begun. Somewhat earlier the French had suffered a severe and almost disastrous
defeat in Champagne which produced mutinies in the army and a defeatist
agitation among the civilians. England was suffering from the effects of the
submarine raids, from the terrible losses of the Flanders battles, and in
November at Cambrai the British armies met a reverse that appalled the troops
at the front and the leaders at home. Extreme war weariness pervaded the whole
of western Europe.
In effect, the agony and disappointment had jarred
loose men’s concentration on the accepted version of the war. Their interests
were no longer held by the ordinary official pronouncements, and their
attention began to wander, fixing now upon their own suffering, now upon their
party and class purposes, now upon general resentments against the governments.
That more or less perfect organization of perception by official propaganda, of
interest and attention by the stimuli of hope, fear, and hatred, which is
called morale, was by way of breaking down. The minds of men everywhere began
to search for new attachments that promised relief.
Suddenly they beheld a tremendous drama. On the
Eastern front there was a Christmas truce, an end of slaughter, an end of
noise, a promise of peace. At Brest-Litovsk the dream of all simple people had
come to life: it was possible to negotiate, there was some other way to end the
ordeal than by matching lives with the enemy. Timidly, but with rapt attention,
people began to turn to the East. Why not, they asked? What is it all for? Do
the politicians know what they are doing? Are we really fighting for what they
say? Is it possible, perhaps, to secure it without fighting? Under the ban of
the censorship, little of this was allowed to show itself in print, but, when
Lord Lansdowne spoke, there was a response from the heart. The earlier symbols
of the war had become hackneyed, and had lost their power to unify. Beneath the
surface a wide schism was opening up in each Allied country.
Something similar was happening in Central Europe.
There too the original impulse of the war was weakened; the union sacrée was
broken. The vertical cleavages along the battle front were cut across by
horizontal divisions running in all kinds of unforeseeable ways. The moral
crisis of the war had arrived before the military decision was in sight. All
this President Wilson and his advisers realized. They had not, of course, a
perfect knowledge of the situation, but what I have sketched they knew.
They knew also that the Allied Governments were bound
by a series of engagements that in letter and in spirit ran counter to the
popular conception of what the war was about. The resolutions of the Paris
Economic Conference were, of course, public property, and the network of secret
treaties had been published by the Bolsheviks in November of 1917. [Footnote: President Wilson stated at his conference with the
Senators that he had never heard of these treaties until he reached Paris. That
statement is perplexing. The Fourteen Points, as the text shows, could not have
been formulated without a knowledge of the secret treaties. The substance of
those treaties was before the President when he and Colonel House prepared the
final published text of the Fourteen Points.] Their terms were only
vaguely known to the peoples, but it was definitely believed that they did not
comport with the idealistic slogan of self-determination, no annexations and no
indemnities. Popular questioning took the form of asking how many thousand
English lives Alsace-Lorraine or Dalmatia were worth, how many French lives
Poland or Mesopotamia were worth. Nor was such questioning entirely unknown in America.
The whole Allied cause had been put on the defensive by the refusal to
participate at Brest-Litovsk.
Here was a highly sensitive state of mind which no
competent leader could fail to consider. The ideal response would have been
joint action by the Allies. That was found to be impossible when it was
considered at the Interallied Conference of October. But by December the
pressure had become so great that Mr. George and Mr. Wilson were moved
independently to make some response. The form selected by the President was a
statement of peace terms under fourteen heads. The numbering of them was an
artifice to secure precision, and to create at once the impression that here
was a business-like document. The idea of stating “peace terms” instead of “war
aims” arose from the necessity of establishing a genuine alternative to the
Brest-Litovsk negotiations. They were intended to compete for attention by
substituting for the spectacle of Russo-German parleys the much grander
spectacle of a public world-wide debate.
Having enlisted the interest of the world, it was
necessary to hold that interest unified and flexible for all the different
possibilities which the situation contained. The terms had to be such that the
majority among the Allies would regard them as worth while. They had to meet
the national aspirations of each people, and yet to limit those aspirations so
that no one nation would regard itself as a catspaw for another. The terms had
to satisfy official interests so as not to provoke official disunion, and yet
they had to meet popular conceptions so as to prevent the spread of
demoralization. They had, in short, to preserve and confirm Allied unity in
case the war was to go on.
But they had also to be the terms of a possible
peace, so that in case the German center and left were ripe for agitation, they
would have a text with which to smite the governing class. The terms had,
therefore, to push the Allied governors nearer to their people, drive the
German governors away from their people, and establish a line of common
understanding between the Allies, the non-official Germans, and the subject
peoples of Austria-Hungary. The Fourteen Points were a daring attempt to raise
a standard to which almost everyone might repair. If a sufficient number of the
enemy people were ready there would be peace; if not, then the Allies would be
better prepared to sustain the shock of war.
All these considerations entered into the making of
the Fourteen Points. No one man may have had them all in mind, but all the men concerned
had some of them in mind. Against this background let us examine certain
aspects of the document. The first five points and the fourteenth deal with
“open diplomacy,” “freedom of the seas,” “equal trade opportunities,”
“reduction of armaments,” no imperialist annexation of colonies, and the League
of Nations. They might be described as a statement of the popular
generalizations in which everyone at that time professed to believe. But number
three is more specific. It was aimed consciously and directly at the
resolutions of the Paris Economic Conference, and was meant to relieve the
German people of their fear of suffocation.
Number six is the first point dealing with a
particular nation. It was intended as a reply to Russian suspicion of the
Allies, and the eloquence of its promises was attuned to the drama of
Brest-Litovsk. Number seven deals with Belgium, and is as unqualified in form
and purpose as was the conviction of practically the whole world, including
very large sections of Central Europe. Over number eight we must pause. It
begins with an absolute demand for evacuation and restoration of French
territory, and then passes on to the question of Alsace-Lorraine. The phrasing
of this clause most perfectly illustrates the character of a public statement
which must condense a vast complex of interests in a few words. “And the wrong
done to France by Prussia in 1871 in the matter of Alsace-Lorraine, which has
unsettled the peace of the world for nearly fifty years, should be righted. …”
Every word here was chosen with meticulous care. The wrong done should be
righted; why not say that Alsace-Lorraine should be restored? It was not said,
because it was not certain that all of the French at that time would fight on
indefinitely for reannexation if they were offered a plebiscite; and because it
was even less certain whether the English and Italians would fight on. The
formula had, therefore, to cover both contingencies. The word “righted”
guaranteed satisfaction to France, but did not read as a commitment to simple
annexation. But why speak of the wrong done by Prussia in 1871? The word
Prussia was, of course, intended to remind the South Germans that
Alsace-Lorraine belonged not to them but to Prussia. Why speak of peace
unsettled for “fifty years,” and why the use of “1871”? In the first place,
what the French and the rest of the world remembered was 1871. That was the
nodal point of their grievance. But the formulators of the Fourteen Points knew
that French officialdom planned for more than the Alsace-Lorraine of 1871. The
secret memoranda that had passed between the Czar’s ministers and French
officials in 1916 covered the annexation of the Saar Valley and some sort of
dismemberment of the Rhineland. It was planned to include the Saar Valley under
the term “Alsace-Lorraine” because it had been part of Alsace-Lorraine in 1814,
though it had been detached in 1815, and was no part of the territory at the
close of the Franco-Prussian war. The official French formula for annexing the
Saar was to subsume it under “Alsace-Lorraine” meaning the Alsace-Lorraine of
1814-1815. By insistence on “1871” the President was really defining the
ultimate boundary between Germany and France, was adverting to the secret
treaty, and was casting it aside.
Number nine, a little less subtly, does the same
thing in respect to Italy. “Clearly recognizable lines of nationality” are
exactly what the lines of the Treaty of London were not. Those lines were
partly strategic, partly economic, partly imperialistic, partly ethnic. The only
part of them that could possibly procure allied sympathy was that which would
recover the genuine Italia Irredenta. All the rest, as everyone who was
informed knew, merely delayed the impending Jugoslav revolt.
5
It would be a mistake to suppose that the apparently
unanimous enthusiasm which greeted the Fourteen Points represented agreement on
a program. Everyone seemed to find something that he liked and stressed this
aspect and that detail. But no one risked a discussion. The phrases, so
pregnant with the underlying conflicts of the civilized world, were accepted.
They stood for opposing ideas, but they evoked a common emotion. And to that
extent they played a part in rallying the western peoples for the desperate ten
months of war which they had still to endure.
As long as the Fourteen Points dealt with that hazy
and happy future when the agony was to be over, the real conflicts of
interpretation were not made manifest. They were plans for the settlement of a
wholly invisible environment, and because these plans inspired all groups each
with its own private hope, all hopes ran together as a public hope. For
harmonization, as we saw in Mr. Hughes’s speech, is a hierarchy of symbols. As
you ascend the hierarchy in order to include more and more factions you may for
a time preserve the emotional connection though you lose the intellectual. But
even the emotion becomes thinner. As you go further away from experience, you
go higher into generalization or subtlety. As you go up in the balloon you
throw more and more concrete objects overboard, and when you have reached the
top with some phrase like the Rights of Humanity or the World Made Safe for
Democracy, you see far and wide, but you see very little. Yet the people whose
emotions are entrained do not remain passive. As the public appeal becomes more
and more all things to all men, as the emotion is stirred while the meaning is
dispersed, their very private meanings are given a universal application.
Whatever you want badly is the Rights of Humanity. For the phrase, ever more
vacant, capable of meaning almost anything, soon comes to mean pretty nearly
everything. Mr. Wilson’s phrases were understood in endlessly different ways in
every corner of the earth. No document negotiated and made of public record existed
to correct the confusion. [Footnote: The American interpretation of the
fourteen points was explained to the allied statesmen just before the
armistice.] And so, when the day of settlement came, everybody expected
everything. The European authors of the treaty had a large choice, and they
chose to realize those expectations which were held by those of their
countrymen who wielded the most power at home.
They came down the hierarchy from the Rights of
Humanity to the Rights of France, Britain and Italy. They did not abandon the
use of symbols. They abandoned only those which after the war had no permanent
roots in the imagination of their constituents. They preserved the unity of
France by the use of symbolism, but they would not risk anything for the unity
of Europe. The symbol France was deeply attached, the symbol Europe had only a
recent history. Nevertheless the distinction between an omnibus like Europe and
a symbol like France is not sharp. The history of states and empires reveals
times when the scope of the unifying idea increases and also times when it
shrinks. One cannot say that men have moved consistently from smaller loyalties
to larger ones, because the facts will not bear out the claim. The Roman Empire
and the Holy Roman Empire bellied out further than those national unifications
in the Nineteenth Century from which believers in a World State argue by
analogy. Nevertheless, it is probably true that the real integration has
increased regardless of the temporary inflation and deflation of empires.
6
Such a real integration has undoubtedly occurred in
American history. In the decade before 1789 most men, it seems, felt that their
state and their community were real, but that the confederation of states was
unreal. The idea of their state, its flag, its most conspicuous leaders, or
whatever it was that represented Massachusetts, or Virginia, were genuine
symbols. That is to say, they were fed by actual experiences from childhood,
occupation, residence, and the like. The span of men’s experience had rarely
traversed the imaginary boundaries of their states. The word Virginian was
related to pretty nearly everything that most Virginians had ever known or
felt. It was the most extensive political idea which had genuine contact with
their experience.
Their experience, not their needs. For their needs
arose out of their real environment, which in those days was at least as large
as the thirteen colonies. They needed a common defense. They needed a financial
and economic regime as extensive as the Confederation. But as long as the
pseudo-environment of the state encompassed them, the state symbols exhausted
their political interest. An interstate idea, like the Confederation,
represented a powerless abstraction. It was an omnibus, rather than a symbol, and
the harmony among divergent groups, which the omnibus creates, is transient.
I have said that the idea of confederation was a
powerless abstraction. Yet the need of unity existed in the decade before the
Constitution was adopted. The need existed, in the sense that affairs were
askew unless the need of unity was taken into account. Gradually certain
classes in each colony began to break through the state experience. Their
personal interests led across the state lines to interstate experiences, and
gradually there was constructed in their minds a picture of the American
environment which was truly national in scope. For them the idea of federation
became a true symbol, and ceased to be an omnibus. The
most imaginative of these men was Alexander Hamilton. It happened that he had
no primitive attachment to any one state, for he was born in the West Indies,
and had, from the very beginning of his active life, been associated with the
common interests of all the states. Thus to most men of the time the question
of whether the capital should be in Virginia or in Philadelphia was of enormous
importance, because they were locally minded. To Hamilton this question was of
no emotional consequence; what he wanted was the assumption of the state debts
because they would further nationalize the proposed union. So he gladly traded
the site of the capitol for two necessary votes from men who represented the
Potomac district. To Hamilton the Union was a symbol that represented all his
interests and his whole experience; to White and Lee from the Potomac, the
symbol of their province was the highest political entity they served, and they
served it though they hated to pay the price. They agreed, says Jefferson, to
change their votes, “White with a revulsion of stomach almost convulsive.”
[Footnote: Works, Vol. IX, p. 87. Cited by Beard, Economic Origins of
Jeffersonian Democracy, p. 172.]
In the crystallizing of a
common will, there is always an Alexander Hamilton at work. [i.e. Cool
observer. Soderbergh.]
CHAPTER XIV. YES OR NO
1
Symbols are often so useful and so mysteriously
powerful that the word itself exhales a magical glamor. In thinking about
symbols it is tempting to treat them as if they possessed independent energy.
Yet no end of symbols which once provoked ecstasy have quite ceased to affect
anybody. The museums and the books of folklore are full of dead emblems and
incantations, since there is no power in the symbol, except that which it
acquires by association in the human mind. The symbols that have lost their
power, and the symbols incessantly suggested which fail to take root, remind us
that if we were patient enough to study in detail the circulation of a symbol,
we should behold an entirely secular history.
In the Hughes campaign
speech, in the Fourteen Points, in Hamilton’s project, symbols are employed.
But they are employed by somebody at a particular moment. The words themselves
do not crystallize random feeling. The words must be spoken by people who are
strategically placed, and they must be spoken at the opportune moment.
Otherwise they are mere wind. The symbols must be earmarked. For in themselves
they mean nothing, and the choice of possible symbols is always so great that
we should, like the donkey who stood equidistant between two bales of hay, perish
from sheer indecision among the symbols that compete for our attention.
Here, for example, are the reasons for their vote as
stated by certain private citizens to a newspaper just before the election of
1920.
For Harding:
“The patriotic men and women of to-day, who cast
their ballots for Harding and Coolidge will be held by posterity to have signed
our Second Declaration of Independence.”
Mr. Wilmot—, inventor.
“He will see to it that the United States does not
enter into ‘entangling alliances,’ Washington as a city will benefit by
changing the control of the government from the Democrats to the Republicans.”
Mr. Clarence—, salesman.
For Cox:
“The people of the United States realize that it is
our duty pledged on the fields of France, to join the League of Nations. We
must shoulder our share of the burden of enforcing peace throughout the world.”
Miss Marie—, stenographer.
“We should lose our own respect and the respect of
other nations were we to refuse to enter the League of Nations in obtaining
international peace.”
Mr. Spencer—, statistician.
The two sets of phrases are equally noble, equally
true, and almost reversible. Would Clarence and Wilmot have admitted for an
instant that they intended to default in our duty pledged on the fields of
France; or that they did not desire international peace? Certainly not. Would
Marie and Spencer have admitted that they were in favor of entangling alliances
or the surrender of American independence? They would have argued with you that
the League was, as President Wilson called it, a disentangling alliance, as
well as a Declaration of Independence for all the world, plus a Monroe Doctrine
for the planet.
2
Since the offering of symbols
is so generous, and the meaning that can be imputed is so elastic, how does any
particular symbol take root in any particular person’s mind? It is planted
there by another human being whom we recognize as authoritative. If it is
planted deeply enough, it may be that later we shall call the person
authoritative who waves that symbol at us. But in the first instance symbols
are made congenial and important because they are introduced to us by congenial
and important people.
For we are not born out of an egg at the age of
eighteen with a realistic imagination; we are still, as Mr. Shaw recalls, in
the era of Burge and Lubin, where in infancy we are dependent upon older beings
for our contacts. And so we make our connections with the outer world through
certain beloved and authoritative persons. They are the first bridge to the
invisible world. And though we may gradually master for ourselves many phases
of that larger environment, there always remains a vaster one that is unknown.
To that we still relate ourselves through authorities. Where all the facts are
out of sight a true report and a plausible error read alike, sound alike, feel
alike.
Except on a few subjects where our own knowledge is
great, we cannot choose between true and false accounts. So we choose between
trustworthy and untrustworthy reporters. [Footnote: See an interesting, rather
quaint old book: George Cornewall Lewis, An Essay on the Influence of Authority
in Matters of Opinion.]
Theoretically we ought to choose the most expert on
each subject. But the choice of the expert, though a good deal easier than the
choice of truth, is still too difficult and often impracticable. The experts
themselves are not in the least certain who among them is the most expert. And
at that, the expert, even when we can identify him, is, likely as not, too busy
to be consulted, or impossible to get at. But there are people whom we can
identify easily enough because they are the people who are at the head of
affairs. Parents, teachers, and masterful friends are the first people of this
sort we encounter. Into the difficult question of why children trust one parent
rather than another, the history teacher rather than the Sunday school teacher,
we need not try to enter. Nor how trust gradually spreads through a newspaper
or an acquaintance who is interested in public affairs to public personages.
The literature of psychoanalysis is rich in suggestive hypothesis.
At any rate we do find ourselves trusting certain
people, who constitute our means of junction with pretty nearly the whole realm
of unknown things. Strangely enough, this fact is sometimes regarded as
inherently undignified, as evidence of our sheep-like, ape-like nature. But
complete independence in the universe is simply unthinkable. If we could not
take practically everything for granted, we should spend our lives in utter triviality.
The nearest thing to a wholly independent adult is a hermit, and the range of a
hermit’s action is very short. Acting entirely for himself, he can act only
within a tiny radius and for simple ends. If he has time to think great
thoughts we can be certain that he has accepted without question, before he
went in for being a hermit, a whole repertory of painfully acquired information
about how to keep warm and how to keep from being hungry, and also about what
the great questions are.
On all but a very few matters for short stretches in
our lives, the utmost independence that we can exercise is to multiply the
authorities to whom we give a friendly hearing. As congenital amateurs our
quest for truth consists in stirring up the experts, and forcing them to answer
any heresy that has the accent of conviction. In such a debate we can often
judge who has won the dialectical victory, but we are virtually defenseless
against a false premise that none of the debaters has challenged, or a
neglected aspect that none of them has brought into the argument. We shall see
later how the democratic theory proceeds on the opposite assumption and assumes
for the purposes of government an unlimited supply of self-sufficient
individuals.
The people on whom we depend for contact with the
outer world are those who seem to be running it. [Footnote: Cf. Bryce, Modern
Democracies Vol. II, pp. 544-545.] They may be running only a very small part
of the world. The nurse feeds the child, bathes it, and puts it to bed. That
does not constitute the nurse an authority on physics, zoology, and the Higher
Criticism. Mr. Smith runs, or at least hires, the man who runs the factory.
That does not make him an authority on the Constitution of the United States,
nor on the effects of the Fordney tariff. Mr. Smoot runs the Republican party
in the State of Utah. That in itself does not prove he is the best man to
consult about taxation. But the nurse may nevertheless
determine for a while what zoology the child shall learn, Mr. Smith will have much
to say on what the Constitution shall mean to his wife, his secretary, and
perhaps even to his parson, and who shall define the limits of Senator Smoot’s
authority?
The priest, the lord of the manor, the captains and
the kings, the party leaders, the merchant, the boss, however these men are
chosen, whether by birth, inheritance, conquest or election, they and their
organized following administer human affairs. They are the officers, and
although the same man may be field marshal at home, second lieutenant at the
office, and scrub private in politics, although in many institutions the
hierarchy of rank is vague or concealed, yet in every institution that requires
the cooperation of many persons, some such hierarchy exists. [Footnote: Cf. M.
Ostrogorski, Democracy and the Organization of Political Parties, passim; R.
Michels, Political Parties, passim; and Bryce, Modern Democracies, particularly
Chap. LXXV; also Ross, Principles of Sociology, Chaps. XXII-XXIV. ] In American
politics we call it a machine, or “the organization.”
3
There are a number of important distinctions between
the members of the machine and the rank and file. The leaders, the steering
committee and the inner circle, are in direct contact with their environment.
They may, to be sure, have a very limited notion of what they ought to define
as the environment, but they are not dealing almost wholly with abstractions.
There are particular men they hope to see elected, particular balance sheets
they wish to see improved, concrete objectives that must be attained. I do not
mean that they escape the human propensity to stereotyped vision. Their
stereotypes often make them absurd routineers. But whatever their limitations,
the chiefs are in actual contact with some crucial part of that larger environment.
They decide. They give orders. They bargain. And something definite, perhaps
not at all what they imagined, actually happens.
Their subordinates are not tied to them by a common
conviction. That is to say the lesser members of a machine do not dispose their
loyalty according to independent judgment about the wisdom of the leaders. In
the hierarchy each is dependent upon a superior and is in turn superior to some
class of his dependents. What holds the machine together is a system of
privileges. These may vary according to the opportunities and the tastes of
those who seek them, from nepotism and patronage in all their aspects to
clannishness, hero-worship or a fixed idea. They vary from military rank in
armies, through land and services in a feudal system, to jobs and publicity in
a modern democracy. That is why you can breakup a particular machine by
abolishing its privileges. But the machine in every coherent group is, I
believe, certain to reappear. For privilege is entirely relative, and uniformity
is impossible. Imagine the most absolute communism of which your mind is
capable, where no one possessed any object that everyone else did not possess,
and still, if the communist group had to take any action whatever, the mere
pleasure of being the friend of the man who was going to make the speech that
secured the most votes, would, I am convinced, be enough to crystallize an
organization of insiders around him.
It is not necessary, then, to invent a collective
intelligence in order to explain why the judgments of a group are usually more
coherent, and often more true to form than the remarks of the man in the
street. One mind, or a few can pursue a train of thought, but a group trying to
think in concert can as a group do little more than assent or dissent. The
members of a hierarchy can have a corporate tradition. As apprentices they
learn the trade from the masters, who in turn learned it when they were
apprentices, and in any enduring society, the change of personnel within the
governing hierarchies is slow enough to permit the transmission of certain
great stereotypes and patterns of behavior. From father to son, from prelate to
novice, from veteran to cadet, certain ways of seeing and doing are taught.
These ways become familiar, and are recognized as such by the mass of
outsiders.
4
Distance alone lends enchantment to the view that masses of
human beings ever coöperate in any complex affair without a central machine
managed by a very few people. “No one,” says Bryce, [Footnote: Op. cit.,
Vol. II, p. 542.] “can have had some years’ experience of the conduct of
affairs in a legislature or an administration without observing how extremely
small is the number of persons by whom the world is governed.” He is referring,
of course, to affairs of state. To be sure if you consider all the affairs of
mankind the number of people who govern is considerable, but if you take any
particular institution, be it a legislature, a party, a trade union, a
nationalist movement, a factory, or a club, the number of those who govern is a
very small percentage of those who are theoretically supposed to govern.
Landslides can turn one machine out and put another
in; revolutions sometimes abolish a particular machine altogether. The
democratic revolution set up two alternating machines, each of which in the
course of a few years reaps the advantage from the mistakes of the other. But
nowhere does the machine disappear. Nowhere is the idyllic theory of democracy
realized. Certainly not in trades unions, nor in socialist parties, nor in
communist governments. There is an inner circle, surrounded by concentric
circles which fade out gradually into the disinterested or uninterested rank
and file.
Democrats have never come to terms with this
commonplace of group life. They have invariably regarded it as perverse. For
there are two visions of democracy: one presupposes the self-sufficient
individual; the other an Oversoul regulating everything.
Of the two the Oversoul has some advantage because it
does at least recognize that the mass makes decisions that are not
spontaneously born in the breast of every member. But the Oversoul as presiding
genius in corporate behavior is a superfluous mystery if we fix our attention
upon the machine. The machine is a quite prosaic reality. It consists of human
beings who wear clothes and live in houses, who can be named and described.
They perform all the duties usually assigned to the Oversoul.
5
The reason for the machine is not the perversity of
human nature. It is that out of the private notions of any group no common idea
emerges by itself. For the number of ways is limited in which a multitude of
people can act directly upon a situation beyond their reach. Some of them can
migrate, in one form or another, they can strike or boycott, they can applaud
or hiss. They can by these means occasionally resist what they do not like, or
coerce those who obstruct what they desire. But by mass action nothing can be
constructed, devised, negotiated, or administered. A public as such, without an
organized hierarchy around which it can gather, may refuse to buy if the prices
are too high, or refuse to work if wages are too low. A trade union can by mass
action in a strike break an opposition so that the union officials can
negotiate an agreement. It may win, for example, the right to joint control.
But it cannot exercise the right except through an organization. A nation can
clamor for war, but when it goes to war it must put itself under orders from a
general staff.
The limit of direct action is for all practical
purposes the power to say Yes or No on an issue presented to the mass.
[Footnote: Cf. James, Some Problems of Philosophy, p. 227. “But for most of our
emergencies, fractional solutions are impossible. Seldom can we act
fractionally.” Cf. Lowell, Public Opinion and Popular Government, pp. 91, 92.]
For only in the very simplest cases does an issue present itself in the same
form spontaneously and approximately at the same time to all the members of a
public. There are unorganized strikes and boycotts, not merely industrial ones,
where the grievance is so plain that virtually without leadership the same
reaction takes place in many people. But even in these rudimentary cases there
are persons who know what they want to do more quickly than the rest, and who
become impromptu ringleaders. Where they do not appear a crowd will mill about
aimlessly beset by all its private aims, or stand by fatalistically, as did a
crowd of fifty persons the other day, and watch a man commit suicide.
For what we make out of most of the impressions that
come to us from the invisible world is a kind of pantomime played out in
revery. The number of times is small that we consciously decide anything about
events beyond our sight, and each man’s opinion of what he could accomplish if
he tried, is slight. There is rarely a practical issue, and therefore no great
habit of decision. This would be more evident were it not that most information
when it reaches us carries with it an aura of suggestion as to how we ought to
feel about the news. That suggestion we need, and if we do not find it in the
news we turn to the editorials or to a trusted adviser. The revery, if we feel
ourselves implicated, is uncomfortable until we know where we stand, that is,
until the facts have been formulated so that we can feel Yes or No in regard to
them.
When a number of people all say Yes they may have all
kinds of reasons for saying it. They generally do. For the pictures in their
minds are, as we have already noted, varied in subtle and intimate ways. But
this subtlety remains within their minds; it becomes represented publicly by a
number of symbolic phrases which carry the individual emotion after evacuating
most of the intention. The hierarchy, or, if it is a contest, then the two
hierarchies, associate the symbols with a definite action, a vote of Yes or No,
an attitude pro or con. Then Smith who was against the League and Jones who was
against Article X, and Brown who was against Mr. Wilson and all his works, each
for his own reason, all in the name of more or less the same symbolic phrase,
register a vote against the Democrats by voting for the Republicans. A common
will has been expressed.
A concrete choice had to be presented, the choice had
to be connected, by the transfer of interest through the symbols, with
individual opinion. The professional politicians learned this long before the
democratic philosophers. And so they organized the caucus, the nominating
convention, and the steering committee, as the means of formulating a definite
choice. Everyone who wishes to accomplish anything that requires the
cooperation of a large number of people follows their example. Sometimes it is
done rather brutally as when the Peace Conference reduced itself to the Council
of Ten, and the Council of Ten to the Big Three or Four; and wrote a treaty
which the minor allies, their own constituents, and the enemy were permitted to
take or leave. More consultation than that is generally possible and desirable.
But the essential fact remains that a small number of heads present a choice to
a large group.
6
The abuses of the steering committee have led to
various proposals such as the initiative, referendum and direct primary. But
these merely postponed or obscured the need for a machine by complicating the
elections, or as H. G. Wells once said with scrupulous accuracy, the
selections. For no amount of balloting can obviate
the need of creating an issue, be it a measure or a candidate, on which the
voters can say Yes, or No. There is, in fact, no such thing as “direct
legislation.” For what happens where it is supposed to exist? The citizen goes
to the polls, receives a ballot on which a number of measures are printed,
almost always in abbreviated form, and, if he says anything at all, he says Yes
or No. The most brilliant amendment in the world may occur to him. He votes Yes
or No on that bill and no other. You have to commit violence against the
English language to call that legislation. I do not argue, of course,
that there are no benefits, whatever you call the process. I think that for
certain kinds of issues there are distinct benefits. But
the necessary simplicity of any mass decision is a very important fact in view
of the inevitable complexity of the world in which those decisions operate. The
most complicated form of voting that anyone proposes is, I suppose, the
preferential ballot. Among a number of candidates presented the voter under
that system, instead of saying yes to one candidate and no to all the others,
states the order of his choice. But even here, immensely more flexible though
it is, the action of the mass depends upon the quality of the choices
presented. [Footnote: Cf. H. J. Laski, Foundations of Sovereignty, p.
224. “… proportional representation… by leading, as it seems to lead, to the
group system… may deprive the electors of their choice of leaders.” The group
system undoubtedly tends, as Mr. Laski says, to make the selection of the
executive more indirect, but there is no doubt also that it tends to produce
legislative assemblies in which currents of opinion are more fully represented.
Whether that is good or bad cannot be determined a priori. But one can say that
successful cooperation and responsibility in a more accurately representative
assembly require a higher organization of political intelligence and political
habit, than in a rigid two-party house. It is a more complex political form and
may therefore work less well.] And those choices are presented by the energetic
coteries who hustle about with petitions and round up the delegates. The Many
can elect after the Few have nominated.
CHAPTER XV. LEADERS AND
THE RANK AND FILE
I
BECAUSE of their transcendent practical importance,
no successful leader has ever been too busy to cultivate the symbols which
organize his following. What privileges do within the hierarchy, symbols do for
the rank and file. They conserve unity. From the totem
pole to the national flag, from the wooden idol to God the Invisible King, from
the magic word to some diluted version of Adam Smith or Bentham, symbols have been cherished by leaders, many of whom were
themselves unbelievers, because they were focal points where differences
merged. The detached observer may scorn the
“star-spangled” ritual which hedges the symbol, perhaps as much as the king who
told himself that Paris was worth a few masses. But
the leader knows by experience that only when symbols have done their work is
there a handle he can use to move a crowd. In the symbol emotion is discharged
at a common target, and the idiosyncrasy of real ideas blotted out. No wonder
he hates what he calls destructive criticism, sometimes called by free spirits
the elimination of buncombe. “Above all things,” says Bagehot, “our
royalty is to be reverenced, and if you begin to poke about it you cannot
reverence it.” [Footnote: The English Constitution, p. 127. D. Appleton &
Company, 1914.] For poking about with clear definitions and candid statements
serves all high purposes known to man, except the easy conservation of a common
will. Poking about, as every responsible leader
suspects, tends to break the transference of emotion from the individual mind
to the institutional symbol. And the first result of that is, as he rightly
says, a chaos of individualism and warring sects. The disintegration of a symbol, like Holy Russia, or the
Iron Diaz, is always the beginning of a long upheaval.
These great symbols possess by transference all the
minute and detailed loyalties of an ancient and stereotyped society. They evoke
the feeling that each individual has for the landscape, the furniture, the
faces, the memories that are his first, and in a static society, his only reality.
That core of images and devotions without which he is unthinkable to himself,
is nationality. The great symbols take up these devotions, and can arouse them
without calling forth the primitive images. The lesser symbols of public
debate, the more casual chatter of politics, are always referred back to these
proto-symbols, and if possible associated with them. The
question of a proper fare on a municipal subway is symbolized as an issue
between the People and the Interests, and then the People is inserted in the
symbol American, so that finally in the heat of a campaign, an eight cent fare
becomes unAmerican. The Revolutionary fathers died to prevent it.
Lincoln suffered that it might not come to pass, resistance to it was implied
in the death of those who sleep in France.
Because of its power to
siphon emotion out of distinct ideas, the symbol is both a mechanism of
solidarity, and a mechanism of exploitation. It enables people to work for a
common end, but just because the few who are strategically placed must choose
the concrete objectives, [This must be eradicated.] the symbol is also an instrument by which a few can fatten on
many, deflect criticism, and
seduce men into facing agony for objects they do not understand.
Many aspects of our subjection to symbols are not
flattering if we choose to think of ourselves as realistic, self-sufficient,
and self-governing personalities. Yet it is impossible to conclude that symbols
are altogether instruments of the devil. In the realm of science and contemplation
they are undoubtedly the tempter himself. But in the world of action they may
be beneficent, and are sometimes a necessity. The necessity is often imagined,
the peril manufactured. But when quick results are imperative, the manipulation
of masses through symbols may be the only quick way of having a critical thing
done. It is often more important to act than to understand. It is sometimes
true that the action would fail if everyone understood it. There are many
affairs which cannot wait for a referendum or endure publicity, and there are
times, during war for example, when a nation, an army, and even its commanders
must trust strategy to a very few minds; when two conflicting opinions, though
one happens to be right, are more perilous than one opinion which is wrong. The
wrong opinion may have bad results, but the two opinions may entail disaster by
dissolving unity. [Footnote: Captain Peter S. Wright, Assistant Secretary of
the Supreme War Council, At the Supreme War Council, is well worth careful reading
on secrecy and unity of command, even though in respect to the allied leaders
he wages a passionate polemic.]
Thus Foch and Sir Henry Wilson, who foresaw the
impending disaster to Cough’s army, as a consequence of the divided and
scattered reserves, nevertheless kept their opinions well within a small
circle, knowing that even the risk of a smashing defeat was less certainly
destructive, than would have been an excited debate in the newspapers. For what
matters most under the kind of tension which prevailed in March, 1918, is less
the rightness of a particular move than the unbroken expectation as to the
source of command. Had Foch “gone to the people” he might have won the debate,
but long before he could have won it, the armies which he was to command would
have dissolved. For the spectacle of a row on Olympus is diverting and
destructive.
But so also is a conspiracy of silence. Says Captain
Wright: “It is in the High Command and not in the line, that the art of
camouflage is most practiced, and reaches to highest flights. All chiefs
everywhere are now kept painted, by the busy work of numberless publicists, so
as to be mistaken for Napoleons—at a distance….It becomes almost impossible to
displace these Napoleons, whatever their incompetence, because of the enormous
public support created by hiding or glossing failure, and exaggerating or
inventing success…. But the most insidious and worst effect of this so highly
organized falsity is on the generals themselves: modest and patriotic as they
mostly are, and as most men must be to take up and follow the noble profession
of arms, they themselves are ultimately affected by these universal illusions,
and reading it every morning in the paper, they also grow persuaded they are
thunderbolts of war and infallible, however much they fail, and that their
maintenance in command is an end so sacred that it justifies the use of any
means…. These various conditions, of which this great deceit is the greatest,
at last emancipate all General Staffs from all control. They no longer live for
the nation: the nation lives, or rather dies, for them. Victory or defeat
ceases to be the prime interest. What matters to these semi-sovereign
corporations is whether dear old Willie or poor old Harry is going to be at
their head, or the Chantilly party prevail over the Boulevard des Invalides
party.” [Footnote: Op. cit., pp. 98, 101-105.]
Yet Captain Wright who can be so eloquent and so
discerning about the dangers of silence is forced nevertheless to approve the
silence of Foch in not publicly destroying the illusions. There is here a
complicated paradox, arising as we shall see more fully later on, because the
traditional democratic view of life is conceived, not for emergencies and
dangers, but for tranquillity and harmony. And so where masses of people must
coöperate in an uncertain and eruptive environment, it is usually necessary to
secure unity and flexibility without real consent. The symbol does that. It
obscures personal intention, neutralizes discrimination, and obfuscates individual
purpose. It immobilizes personality, yet at the same time it enormously
sharpens the intention of the group and welds that group, as nothing else in a
crisis can weld it, to purposeful action. It renders the mass mobile though it
immobilizes personality. The symbol is the instrument by which in the short run
the mass escapes from its own inertia, the inertia of indecision, or the
inertia of headlong movement, and is rendered capable of being led along the
zigzag of a complex situation.
2
But in the longer run, the give and take increases
between the leaders and the led. The word most often used to describe the state
of mind in the rank and file about its leaders is morale. That is said to be
good when the individuals do the part allotted to them with all their energy;
when each man’s whole strength is evoked by the command from above. It follows
that every leader must plan his policy with this in mind. He must consider his
decision not only on “the merits,” but also in its effect on any part of his
following whose continued support he requires. If he is a general planning an
attack, he knows that his organized military units will scatter into mobs if
the percentage of casualties rises too high.
In the Great War previous calculations were upset to
an extraordinary degree, for “out of every nine men who went to France five
became casualties.” [Footnote: Op. cit., p. 37. Figures taken by Captain Wright
from the statistical abstract of the war in the Archives of the War Office. The
figures refer apparently to the English losses alone, possibly to the English
and French.] The limit of endurance was far greater than anyone had supposed.
But there was a limit somewhere. And so, partly because of its effect on the
enemy, but also in great measure because of its effect on the troops and their
families, no command in this war dared to publish a candid statement of its
losses. In France the casualty lists were never published. In England, America,
and Germany publication of the losses of a big battle were spread out over long
periods so as to destroy a unified impression of the total. Only the insiders
knew until long afterwards what the Somme had cost, or the Flanders battles;
[Footnote: Op. cit., p. 34, the Somme cost nearly 500,000 casualties; the Arras
and Flanders offensives of 1917 cost 650,000 British casualties.] and
Ludendorff undoubtedly had a very much more accurate idea of these casualties
than any private person in London, Paris or Chicago. All the leaders in every
camp did their best to limit the amount of actual war which any one soldier or
civilian could vividly conceive. But, of course, among old veterans like the
French troops of 1917, a great deal more is known about war than ever reaches
the public. Such an army begins to judge its commanders in terms of its own
suffering. And then, when another extravagant promise of victory turns out to
be the customary bloody defeat, you may find that a mutiny breaks out over some
comparatively minor blunder, [Footnote: The Allies suffered many bloodier
defeats than that on the Chemin des Dames.] like Nivelle’s offensive of 1917,
because it is a cumulative blunder. Revolutions and mutinies generally follow a
small sample of a big series of evils. [Footnote: Cf. Pierrefeu’s account, op.
cit., on the causes of the Soissons mutinies, and the method adopted by Pétain
to deal with them. Vol. I, Part III, et seq.]
The incidence of policy determines the relation
between leader and following. If those whom he needs in his plan are remote
from the place where the action takes place, if the results are hidden or
postponed, if the individual obligations are indirect or not yet due, above all
if assent is an exercise of some pleasurable emotion, the leader is likely to
have a free hand. Those programs are immediately most popular, like prohibition
among teetotalers, which do not at once impinge upon the private habits of the
followers. That is one great reason why governments have such a free hand in
foreign affairs. Most of the frictions between two states involve a series of obscure
and long-winded contentions, occasionally on the frontier, but far more often
in regions about which school geographies have supplied no precise ideas. In
Czechoslovakia America is regarded as the Liberator; in American newspaper
paragraphs and musical comedy, in American conversation by and large, it has
never been finally settled whether the country we liberated is Czechoslavia or
Jugoslovakia.
In foreign affairs the incidence of policy is for a
very long time confined to an unseen environment. Nothing that happens out
there is felt to be wholly real. And so, because in the ante-bellum period,
nobody has to fight and nobody has to pay, governments go along according to
their lights without much reference to their people. In local affairs the cost
of a policy is more easily visible. And therefore, all but the most exceptional
leaders prefer policies in which the costs are as far as possible indirect.
They do not like direct taxation. They do not like to
pay as they go. They like long term debts. They like to have the voters believe
that the foreigner will pay. They have always been compelled to calculate
prosperity in terms of the producer rather than in terms of the consumer,
because the incidence on the consumer is distributed over so many trivial items.
Labor leaders have always preferred an increase of money wages to a decrease in
prices. There has always been more popular interest in the profits of
millionaires, which are visible but comparatively unimportant, than in the
wastes of the industrial system, which are huge but elusive. A legislature
dealing with a shortage of houses, such as exists when this is written,
illustrates this rule, first by doing nothing to increase the number of houses,
second by smiting the greedy landlord on the hip, third by investigating the
profiteering builders and working men. For a constructive policy deals with
remote and uninteresting factors, while a greedy landlord, or a profiteering
plumber is visible and immediate.
But while people will readily believe that in an unimagined
future and in unseen places a certain policy will benefit them, the actual
working out of policy follows a different logic from their opinions. A nation
may be induced to believe that jacking up the freight rates will make the
railroads prosperous. But that belief will not make the roads prosperous, if
the impact of those rates on farmers and shippers is such as to produce a
commodity price beyond what the consumer can pay. Whether the consumer will pay
the price depends not upon whether he nodded his head nine months previously at
the proposal to raise rates and save business, but on whether he now wants a
new hat or a new automobile enough to pay for them.
3
Leaders often pretend that they have merely uncovered
a program which existed in the minds of their public. When they believe it,
they are usually deceiving themselves. Programs do not invent themselves
synchronously in a multitude of minds. That is not because a multitude of minds
is necessarily inferior to that of the leaders, but because thought is the
function of an organism, and a mass is not an organism.
This fact is obscured because the mass is constantly
exposed to suggestion. It reads not the news, but the news with an aura of
suggestion about it, indicating the line of action to be taken. It hears
reports, not objective as the facts are, but already stereotyped to a certain
pattern of behavior. Thus the ostensible leader often finds that the real
leader is a powerful newspaper proprietor. But if, as in a laboratory, one
could remove all suggestion and leading from the experience of a multitude, one
would, I think, find something like this: A mass exposed to the same stimuli
would develop responses that could theoretically be charted in a polygon of
error. There would be a certain group that felt sufficiently alike to be
classified together. There would be variants of feeling at both ends. These
classifications would tend to harden as individuals in each of the
classifications made their reactions vocal. That is to say, when the vague feelings
of those who felt vaguely had been put into words, they would know more
definitely what they felt, and would then feel it more definitely.
Leaders in touch with popular
feeling are quickly conscious of these reactions. They know that high prices are
pressing upon the mass, or that certain classes of individuals are becoming
unpopular, or that feeling towards another nation is friendly or hostile. But,
always barring the effect of suggestion which is merely the assumption of
leadership by the reporter, there would be nothing in the feeling of the mass
that fatally determined the choice of any particular policy. All that the
feeling of the mass demands is that policy as it is developed and exposed shall
be, if not logically, then by analogy and association, connected with the
original feeling.
So when a new policy is to be launched, there is a
preliminary bid for community of feeling, as in Mark Antony’s speech to the
followers of Brutus. [Footnote: Excellently analyzed in Martin, The Behavior of
Crowds, pp. 130-132,] In the first phase, the leader vocalizes the prevalent
opinion of the mass. He identifies himself with the familiar attitudes of his
audience, sometimes by telling a good story, sometimes by brandishing his
patriotism, often by pinching a grievance. Finding that he is trustworthy, the
multitude milling hither and thither may turn in towards him. He will then be
expected to set forth a plan of campaign. But he will not find that plan in the
slogans which convey the feelings of the mass. It will not even always be
indicated by them. Where the incidence of policy is remote, all that is
essential is that the program shall be verbally and emotionally connected at
the start with what has become vocal in the multitude. Trusted men in a
familiar role subscribing to the accepted symbols can go a very long way on
their own initiative without explaining the substance of their programs.
But wise leaders are not content to do that. Provided
they think publicity will not strengthen opposition too much, and that debate
will not delay action too long, they seek a certain measure of consent. They
take, if not the whole mass, then the subordinates of the hierarchy
sufficiently into their confidence to prepare them for what might happen, and
to make them feel that they have freely willed the result. But however sincere
the leader may be, there is always, when the facts are very complicated, a
certain amount of illusion in these consultations. For it is impossible that
all the contingencies shall be as vivid to the whole public as they are to the
more experienced and the more imaginative. A fairly large percentage are bound
to agree without having taken the time, or without possessing the background,
for appreciating the choices which the leader presents to them. No one,
however, can ask for more. And only theorists do. If we have had our day in
court, if what we had to say was heard, and then if what is done comes out
well, most of us do not stop to consider how much our opinion affected the
business in hand.
And therefore, if the established powers are
sensitive and well-informed, if they are visibly trying to meet popular
feeling, and actually removing some of the causes of dissatisfaction, no matter
how slowly they proceed, provided they are seen to be proceeding, they have
little to fear. It takes stupendous and persistent blundering, plus almost
infinite tactlessness, to start a revolution from below. Palace revolutions,
interdepartmental revolutions, are a different matter. So, too, is demagogy.
That stops at relieving the tension by expressing the feeling. But the
statesman knows that such relief is temporary, and if indulged too often,
unsanitary. He, therefore, sees to it that he arouses no feeling which he
cannot sluice into a program that deals with the facts to which the feelings
refer.
The mending of fences
consists in offering an occasional scapegoat, in redressing a minor grievance
affecting a powerful individual or faction, rearranging certain jobs, placating
a group of people who want an arsenal in their home town, or a law to stop
somebody’s vices. Study the daily activity of any public official who
depends on election and you can enlarge this list. There are Congressmen
elected year after year who never think of dissipating their energy on public
affairs. They prefer to do a little service for a lot of people on a lot of
little subjects, rather than to engage in trying to do a big service out there
in the void. But the number of people to whom any organization can be a
successful valet is limited, and shrewd politicians take care to attend either
the influential, or somebody so blatantly uninfluential that to pay any
attention to him is a mark of sensational magnanimity. The far greater number
who cannot be held by favors, the anonymous multitude, receive propaganda.
The established leaders of any organization have
great natural advantages. They are believed to have better sources of
information. The books and papers are in their offices. They took part in the
important conferences. They met the important people. They have responsibility.
It is, therefore, easier for them to secure attention and to speak in a
convincing tone. But also they have a very great deal of control over the
access to the facts. Every official is in some degree a censor. And since no
one can suppress information, either by concealing it or forgetting to mention
it, without some notion of what he wishes the public to know, every leader is
in some degree a propagandist. Strategically placed, and compelled often to
choose even at the best between the equally cogent though conflicting ideals of
safety for the institution, and candor to his public, the official finds
himself deciding more and more consciously what facts, in what setting, in what
guise he shall permit the public to know.
4
That the manufacture of
consent is capable of great refinements no one, I think, denies. The process by
which public opinions arise is certainly no less intricate than it has appeared
in these pages, and the opportunities for manipulation open to anyone who
understands the process are plain enough.
The creation of consent is not a new art. It is a
very old one which was supposed to have died out with the appearance of
democracy. But it has not died out. It has, in fact, improved enormously in
technic, because it is now based on analysis rather than on rule of thumb. And
so, as a result of psychological research, coupled with the modern means of
communication, the practice of democracy has turned a corner. A revolution is
taking place, infinitely more significant than any shifting of economic power.
Within the life of the generation now in control of
affairs, persuasion has become a self-conscious art and a regular organ of
popular government. None of us begins to understand the consequences, but it is
no daring prophecy to say that the knowledge of how to create consent will
alter every political calculation and modify every political premise. Under the
impact of propaganda, not necessarily in the sinister meaning of the word
alone, the old constants of our thinking have become variables. It is no longer
possible, for example, to believe in the original dogma of democracy; that the
knowledge needed for the management of human affairs comes up spontaneously
from the human heart. Where we act on that theory we expose ourselves to
self-deception, and to forms of persuasion that we cannot verify. It has been
demonstrated that we cannot rely upon intuition, conscience, or the accidents
of casual opinion if we are to deal with the world beyond our reach.
PART VI. THE IMAGE OF
DEMOCRACY
“I confess that in America I saw more than America;
I sought the image of democracy itself.”
Alexis de Tocqueville.
CHAPTER XVI. THE
SELF-CENTERED MAN
I
SINCE Public Opinion is supposed to be the prime
mover in democracies, one might reasonably expect to find a vast literature.
One does not find it. There are excellent books on government and parties, that
is, on the machinery which in theory registers public opinions after they are
formed. But on the sources from which these public opinions arise, on the
processes by which they are derived, there is relatively little. The existence
of a force called Public Opinion is in the main taken for granted, and American
political writers have been most interested either in finding out how to make
government express the common will, or in how to prevent the common will from
subverting the purposes for which they believe the government exists. According
to their traditions they have wished either to tame opinion or to obey it. Thus
the editor of a notable series of text-books writes that “the most difficult
and the most momentous question of government (is) how to transmit the force of
individual opinion into public action.” [Footnote: Albert Bushnell Hart in the
Introductory note to A. Lawrence Lowell’s Public Opinion and Popular Government.]
But surely there is a still more momentous question,
the question of how to validate our private versions of the political scene.
There is, as I shall try to indicate further on, the prospect of radical
improvement by the development of principles already in operation. But this development
will depend on how well we learn to use knowledge of the way opinions are put
together to watch over our own opinions when they are being put together. For
casual opinion, being the product of partial contact, of tradition, and
personal interests, cannot in the nature of things take kindly to a method of
political thought which is based on exact record, measurement, analysis and
comparison. Just those qualities of the mind which determine what shall seem
interesting, important, familiar, personal, and dramatic, are the qualities
which in the first instance realistic opinion frustrates. Therefore, unless
there is in the community at large a growing conviction that prejudice and
intuition are not enough, the working out of realistic opinion, which takes
time, money, labor, conscious effort, patience, and equanimity, will not find
enough support. That conviction grows as self-criticism increases, and makes us
conscious of buncombe, contemptuous of ourselves when we employ it, and on
guard to detect it. Without an ingrained habit of analyzing opinion when we
read, talk, and decide, most of us would hardly suspect the need of better
ideas, nor be interested in them when they appear, nor be able to prevent the
new technic of political intelligence from being manipulated.
Yet democracies, if we are to judge by the oldest and
most powerful of them, have made a mystery out of public opinion. There have
been skilled organizers of opinion who understood the mystery well enough to
create majorities on election day. But these organizers have been regarded by
political science as low fellows or as “problems,” not as possessors of the
most effective knowledge there was on how to create and operate public opinion.
The tendency of the people who have voiced the ideas of democracy, even when
they have not managed its action, the tendency of students, orators, editors,
has been to look upon Public Opinion as men in other societies looked upon the
uncanny forces to which they ascribed the last word in the direction of events.
For in almost every political theory there is an
inscrutable element which in the heyday of that theory goes unexamined. Behind
the appearances there is a Fate, there are Guardian Spirits, or Mandates to a
Chosen People, a Divine Monarchy, a Vice-Regent of Heaven, or a Class of the
Better Born. The more obvious angels, demons, and kings are gone out of
democratic thinking, but the need for believing that there are reserve powers
of guidance persists. It persisted for those thinkers
of the Eighteenth Century who designed the matrix of democracy. They had a pale
god, but warm hearts, and in the doctrine of popular sovereignty they found the
answer to their need of an infallible origin for the new social order. There
was the mystery, and only enemies of the people touched it with profane and
curious hands.
2
They did not remove the veil because they were
practical politicians in a bitter and uncertain struggle. They had themselves
felt the aspiration of democracy, which is ever so much deeper, more intimate and
more important than any theory of government. They were engaged, as against the
prejudice of ages, in the assertion of human dignity. What possessed them was
not whether John Smith had sound views on any public question, but that John
Smith, scion of a stock that had always been considered inferior, would now
bend his knee to no other man. It was this spectacle that made it bliss “in
that dawn to be alive.” But every analyst seems to
degrade that dignity, to deny that all men are reasonable all the time, or
educated, or informed, to note that people are fooled, that they do not always
know their own interests, and that all men are not equally fitted to govern.
The critics were about as welcome as a small boy with
a drum. Every one of these observations on the fallibility of man was being
exploited ad nauseam. Had democrats admitted there was truth in any of the
aristocratic arguments they would have opened a breach in the defenses. And so just as Aristotle had to insist that the slave was
a slave by nature, the democrats had to insist that the free man was a
legislator and administrator by nature. They could not stop to explain that a
human soul might not yet have, or indeed might never have, this technical
equipment, and that nevertheless it had an inalienable right not to be used as
the unwilling instrument of other men. The superior people were still too strong
and too unscrupulous to have refrained from capitalizing so candid a statement.
So the early democrats insisted that a reasoned
righteousness welled up spontaneously out of the mass of men. All of them hoped
that it would, many of them believed that it did, although the cleverest, like
Thomas Jefferson, had all sorts of private reservations. But one thing was
certain: if public opinion did not come forth spontaneously, nobody in that age
believed it would come forth at all. For in one fundamental respect the
political science on which democracy was based was the same science that
Aristotle formulated. It was the same science for
democrat and aristocrat, royalist and republican, in that its major premise
assumed the art of government to be a natural endowment. Men differed radically
when they tried to name the men so endowed; but they agreed in thinking that
the greatest question of all was to find those in whom political wisdom was
innate. [Accurate.] Royalists were sure that kings were born to govern.
Alexander Hamilton thought that while “there are strong minds in every walk of
life… the representative body, with too few exceptions to have any influence on
the spirit of the government, will be composed of landholders, merchants, and
men of the learned professions.” [Footnote: The Federalist, Nos. 35, 36. Cf.
comment by Henry Jones Ford in his Rise and Growth of American Politics. Ch.
V.] Jefferson thought the political faculties were deposited by God in
farmers and planters, and sometimes spoke as if they were found in all the
people. [Footnote: See below p. 268.] The main premise was the same: to govern
was an instinct that appeared, according to your social preferences, in one man
or a chosen few, in all males, or only in males who were white and twenty-one,
perhaps even in all men and all women.
In deciding who was most fit to govern, knowledge of
the world was taken for granted. The aristocrat believed that those who dealt
with large affairs possessed the instinct, the democrats asserted that all men
possessed the instinct and could therefore deal with large affairs. It was no
part of political science in either case to think out how knowledge of the
world could be brought to the ruler. If you were for the people you did not try
to work out the question of how to keep the voter informed. By the age of
twenty-one he had his political faculties. What counted was a good heart, a
reasoning mind, a balanced judgment. These would ripen with age, but it was not
necessary to consider how to inform the heart and feed the reason. Men took in
their facts as they took in their breath.
3
But the facts men could come to possess in this
effortless way were limited. They could know the customs and more obvious
character of the place where they lived and worked. But the outer world they
had to conceive, and they did not conceive it instinctively, nor absorb
trustworthy knowledge of it just by living. Therefore, the only environment in
which spontaneous politics were possible was one confined within the range of
the ruler’s direct and certain knowledge. There is no escaping this conclusion,
wherever you found government on the natural range of men’s faculties. “If,” as
Aristotle said, [Footnote: Politics, Bk. VII, Ch. 4.] “the citizens of a state
are to judge and distribute offices according to merit, then they must know
each other’s characters; where they do not possess this knowledge, both the
election to offices and the decision of law suits will go wrong.”
Obviously this maxim was binding upon every school of
political thought. But it presented peculiar difficulties to the democrats.
Those who believed in class government could fairly claim that in the court of
the king, or in the country houses of the gentry, men did know each other’s
characters, and as long as the rest of mankind was passive, the only characters
one needed to know were the characters of men in the ruling class. But the
democrats, who wanted to raise the dignity of all men, were immediately
involved by the immense size and confusion of their ruling class—the male
electorate. Their science told them that politics was an instinct, and that the
instinct worked in a limited environment. Their hopes bade them insist that all
men in a very large environment could govern. In this deadly conflict between
their ideals and their science, the only way out was to assume without much
discussion that the voice of the people was the voice of God.
The paradox was too great, the stakes too big, their
ideal too precious for critical examination. They could not show how a citizen
of Boston was to stay in Boston and conceive the views of a Virginian, how a
Virginian in Virginia could have real opinions about the government at
Washington, how Congressmen in Washington could have opinions about China or
Mexico. For in that day it was not possible for many men to have an unseen
environment brought into the field of their judgment. There had been some
advances, to be sure, since Aristotle. There were a few newspapers, and there
were books, better roads perhaps, and better ships. But there was no great
advance, and the political assumptions of the Eighteenth Century had
essentially to be those that had prevailed in political science for two
thousand years. The pioneer democrats did not possess the material for
resolving the conflict between the known range of man’s attention and their
illimitable faith in his dignity.
Their assumptions antedated not only the modern
newspaper, the world-wide press services, photography and moving pictures, but,
what is really more significant, they antedated measurement and record,
quantitative and comparative analysis, the canons of evidence, and the ability
of psychological analysis to correct and discount the prejudices of the
witness. I do not mean to say that our records are satisfactory, our analysis
unbiased, our measurements sound. I do mean to say that the key inventions have
been made for bringing the unseen world into the field of judgment. They had
not been made in the time of Aristotle, and they were not yet important enough
to be visible for political theory in the age of Rousseau, Montesquieu, or
Thomas Jefferson. In a later chapter I think we shall see that even in the
latest theory of human reconstruction, that of the English Guild Socialists,
all the deeper premises have been taken over from this older system of
political thought.
That system, whenever it was competent and honest,
had to assume that no man could have more than a very partial experience of
public affairs. In the sense that he can give only a little time to them, that
assumption is still true, and of the utmost consequence. But ancient theory was
compelled to assume, not only that men could give little attention to public
questions, but that the attention available would have to be confined to
matters close at hand. It would have been visionary to suppose that a time
would come when distant and complicated events could conceivably be reported,
analyzed, and presented in such a form that a really valuable choice could be
made by an amateur. That time is now in sight. There is no longer any doubt
that the continuous reporting of an unseen environment is feasible. It is often
done badly, but the fact that it is done at all shows that it can be done, and
the fact that we begin to know how badly it is often done, shows that it can be
done better. With varying degrees of skill and honesty distant complexities are
reported every day by engineers and accountants for business men, by
secretaries and civil servants for officials, by intelligence officers for the
General Staff, by some journalists for some readers. These are crude beginnings
but radical, far more radical in the literal meaning of that word than the
repetition of wars, revolutions, abdications and restorations; as radical as
the change in the scale of human life which has made it possible for Mr. Lloyd
George to discuss Welsh coal mining after breakfast in London, and the fate of
the Arabs before dinner in Paris.
For the possibility of bringing any aspect of human
affairs within the range of judgment breaks the spell which has lain upon
political ideas. There have, of course, been plenty of men who did not realize
that the range of attention was the main premise of political science. They
have built on sand. They have demonstrated in their own persons the effects of
a very limited and self-centered knowledge of the world. But for the political
thinkers who have counted, from Plato and Aristotle through Machiavelli and Hobbes
to the democratic theorists, speculation has revolved around the self-centered
man who had to see the whole world by means of a few pictures in his head.
CHAPTER XVII. THE
SELF-CONTAINED COMMUNITY
1
THAT groups of self-centered people would engage in a
struggle for existence if they rubbed against each other has always been
evident. This much truth there is at any rate in that famous passage in the
Leviathan where Hobbes says that “though there had never been any time wherein
particular men were in a condition of war one against another, yet at all times
kings and persons of sovereign authority because of their independency, are in
continual jealousies and in the state and posture of gladiators, having their
weapons pointing, and their eyes fixed on one another…” [Footnote: Leviathan,
Ch. XIII. Of the Natural Condition of Mankind as concerning their Felicity and
Misery.]
2
To circumvent this conclusion
one great branch of human thought, which had and has many schools, proceeded in
this fashion: it conceived an ideally just pattern of human relations in which
each person had well defined functions and rights. If he conscientiously filled
the role allotted to him, it did not matter whether his opinions were right or
wrong. He did his duty, the next man did his, and all the dutiful people
together made a harmonious world. Every caste system illustrates this
principle; you find it in Plato’s Republic and in Aristotle, in the feudal
ideal, in the circles of Dante’s Paradise, in the bureaucratic type of
socialism, and in laissez-faire, to an amazing degree in syndicalism, guild
socialism, anarchism, and in the system of international law idealized by Mr.
Robert Lansing. All of them assume a pre-established harmony, inspired,
imposed, or innate, by which the self-opinionated person, class, or community
is orchestrated with the rest of mankind. The more authoritarian imagine a
conductor for the symphony who sees to it that each man plays his part; the
anarchistic are inclined to think that a more divine concord would be heard if
each player improvised as he went along.
But there have also been
philosophers who were bored by these schemes of rights and duties, took
conflict for granted, and tried to see how their side might come out on top. They
have always seemed more realistic, even when they seemed alarming, because all
they had to do was to generalize the experience that nobody could escape.
Machiavelli is the classic of this school, a man most mercilessly maligned,
because he happened to be the first naturalist who used plain language in a
field hitherto preempted by supernaturalists. [Footnote: F. S. Oliver in his
Alexander Hamilton, says of Machiavelli (p. 174): “Assuming the conditions
which exist—the nature of man and of things—to be unchangeable, he proceeds in
a calm, unmoral way, like a lecturer on frogs, to show how a valiant and
sagacious ruler can best turn events to his own advantage and the security of
his dynasty.”] He has a worse name and more disciples than any political
thinker who ever lived. He truly described the technic of existence for the
self-contained state. That is why he has the disciples. He has the bad name chiefly
because he cocked his eye at the Medici family, dreamed in his study at night
where he wore his “noble court dress” that Machiavelli was himself the Prince,
and turned a pungent description of the way things are done into an eulogy on
that way of doing them.
In his most infamous chapter
[Footnote: The Prince, Ch. XVIII. “Concerning the way in which Princes should
keep faith.” Translation by W. K. Marriott.] he wrote that “a prince ought to
take care that he never lets anything slip from his lips that is not replete
with the above-named five qualities, that he may appear to him who hears and
sees him altogether merciful, faithful, humane, upright, and religious. There
is nothing more necessary to appear to have than this last quality, inasmuch as
men judge generally more by the eye than by the hand, because it belongs to
everybody to see you, to few to come in touch with you. Everyone sees what you
appear to be, few really know what you are, and those few dare not oppose
themselves to the opinion of the many, who have the majesty of the state to
defend them; and in the actions of all men, and especially of princes, which it
is not prudent to challenge, one judges by the result…. One prince of the
present time, whom it is not well to name, never preaches anything else but
peace and good faith, and to both he is most hostile, and either, if he had
kept it, would have deprived him of reputation and kingdom many a time.”
That is cynical. But it is the cynicism of a man who
saw truly without knowing quite why he saw what he saw. Machiavelli is thinking
of the run of men and princes “who judge generally more by the eye than by the
hand,” which is his way of saying that their judgments are subjective. He was
too close to earth to pretend that the Italians of his day saw the world
steadily and saw it whole. He would not indulge in fantasies, and he had not
the materials for imagining a race of men that had learned how to correct their
vision.
The world, as he found it,
was composed of people whose vision could rarely be corrected, and Machiavelli
knew that such people, since they see all public relations in a private way,
are involved in perpetual strife. What they see is their own personal, class,
dynastic, or municipal version of affairs that in reality extend far beyond the
boundaries of their vision. They see their aspect. They see it as right. But
they cross other people who are similarly self-centered. Then their very
existence is endangered, or at least what they, for unsuspected private
reasons, regard as their existence and take to be a danger. The end, which is
impregnably based on a real though private experience justifies the means. They
will sacrifice any one of these ideals to save all of them,… “one judges by the
result…”
3
These elemental truths confronted the democratic
philosophers. Consciously or otherwise, they knew that the range of political
knowledge was limited, that the area of self-government would have to be
limited, and that self-contained states when they rubbed against each other were
in the posture of gladiators. But they knew just as certainly, that there was
in men a will to decide their own fate, and to find a peace that was not
imposed by force. How could they reconcile the wish and the fact?
They looked about them. In the city states of Greece
and Italy they found a chronicle of corruption, intrigue and war. [Footnote:
“Democracies have ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention… and have
in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their
deaths.” Madison, Federalist, No. 10.] In their own cities they saw faction,
artificiality, fever. This was no environment in which the democratic ideal
could prosper, no place where a group of independent and equally competent
people managed their own affairs spontaneously. They looked further, guided
somewhat perhaps by Jean Jacques Rousseau, to remote, unspoiled country
villages. They saw enough to convince themselves that there the ideal was at
home. Jefferson in particular felt this, and Jefferson more than any other man
formulated the American image of democracy. From the townships had come the
power that had carried the American Revolution to victory. From the townships
were to come the votes that carried Jefferson’s party to power. Out there in
the farming communities of Massachusetts and Virginia, if you wore glasses that
obliterated the slaves, you could see with your mind’s eye the image of what
democracy was to be.
“The American Revolution broke out,” says de
Tocqueville, [Footnote: Democracy in America, Vol. I, p. 51. Third Edition]
“and the doctrine of the sovereignty of the people, which had been nurtured in
the townships, took possession of the state.” It certainly took possession of
the minds of those men who formulated and popularized the stereotypes of
democracy. “The cherishment of the people was our principle,” wrote Jefferson.
[Footnote: Cited in Charles Beard, Economic Origins of Jeffersonian Democracy.
Ch. XIV. ] But the people he cherished almost exclusively were the small
landowning farmers: “Those who labor in the earth are the chosen people of God,
if ever He had a chosen people, whose breasts He has made his peculiar deposit
for substantial and genuine virtue. It is the focus in which He keeps alive
that sacred fire, which otherwise might escape from the face of the earth.
Corruption of morals in the mass of cultivators is a phenomenon of which no age
nor nation has furnished an example.”
However much of the romantic return to nature may
have entered into this exclamation, there was also an element of solid sense.
Jefferson was right in thinking that a group of independent farmers comes
nearer to fulfilling the requirements of spontaneous democracy than any other
human society. But if you are to preserve the ideal, you must fence off these
ideal communities from the abominations of the world. If
the farmers are to manage their own affairs, they must confine affairs to those
they are accustomed to managing. Jefferson drew all these logical conclusions.
He disapproved of manufacture, of foreign commerce, and a navy, of intangible
forms of property, and in theory of any form of government that was not
centered in the small self-governing group. He
had critics in his day: one of them remarked that “wrapt up in the fullness of
self-consequence and strong enough, in reality, to defend ourselves against
every invader, we might enjoy an eternal rusticity and live, forever, thus
apathized and vulgar under the shelter of a selfish, satisfied indifference.”
[Footnote: Op. cit., p. 426.]
4
The democratic ideal, as Jefferson moulded it,
consisting of an ideal environment and a selected class, did not conflict with
the political science of his time. It did conflict with the realities. And when
the ideal was stated in absolute terms, partly through exuberance and partly
for campaign purposes, it was soon forgotten that the theory was originally
devised for very special conditions. It became the political gospel, and
supplied the stereotypes through which Americans of all parties have looked at
politics.
That gospel was fixed by the necessity that in
Jefferson’s time no one could have conceived public opinions that were not
spontaneous and subjective. The democratic tradition is therefore always trying
to see a world where people are exclusively concerned with affairs of which the
causes and effects all operate within the region they inhabit. Never has
democratic theory been able to conceive itself in the context of a wide and
unpredictable environment. The mirror is concave. And although democrats
recognize that they are in contact with external affairs, they see quite surely
that every contact outside that self-contained group is a threat to democracy
as originally conceived. That is a wise fear. If democracy is to be
spontaneous, the interests of democracy must remain simple, intelligible, and
easily managed. Conditions must approximate those of the isolated rural
township if the supply of information is to be left to casual experience. The
environment must be confined within the range of every man’s direct and certain
knowledge.
The democrat has understood what an analysis of
public opinion seems to demonstrate: that in dealing with an unseen environment
decisions “are manifestly settled at haphazard, which clearly they ought not to
be.” [Footnote: Aristotle, Politics, Bk. VII, Ch. IV.] So he has always tried
in one way or another to minimize the importance of that unseen environment. He
feared foreign trade because trade involves foreign connections; he distrusted
manufactures because they produced big cities and collected crowds; if he had
nevertheless to have manufactures, he wanted protection in the interest of
self-sufficiency. When he could not find these conditions in the real world, he
went passionately into the wilderness, and founded Utopian communities far from
foreign contacts. His slogans reveal his prejudice. He is for Self-Government,
Self-Determination, Independence. Not one of these ideas carries with it any
notion of consent or community beyond the frontiers of the self-governing
groups. The field of democratic action is a circumscribed area. Within
protected boundaries the aim has been to achieve self-sufficiency and avoid
entanglement. This rule is not confined to foreign policy, but it is plainly
evident there, because life outside the national boundaries is more distinctly
alien than any life within. And as history shows, democracies in their foreign
policy have had generally to choose between splendid isolation and a diplomacy
that violated their ideals. The most successful democracies, in fact, Switzerland,
Denmark, Australia, New Zealand, and America until recently, have had no
foreign policy in the European sense of that phrase. Even a rule like the
Monroe Doctrine arose from the desire to supplement the two oceans by a glacis
of states that were sufficiently republican to have no foreign policy.
Whereas danger is a great, perhaps an indispensable
condition of autocracy, [Footnote: Fisher Ames, frightened by the democratic
revolution of 1800, wrote to Rufus King in 1802: “We need, as all nations do,
the compression on the outside of our circle of a formidable neighbor, whose
presence shall at all times excite stronger fears than demagogues can inspire
the people with towards their government.” Cited by Ford, Rise and Growth of
American Politics, p. 69.] security was seen to be a necessity if democracy was
to work. There must be as little disturbance as possible of the premise of a
self-contained community. Insecurity involves surprises. It means that there
are people acting upon your life, over whom you have no control, with whom you
cannot consult. It means that forces are at large which disturb the familiar
routine, and present novel problems about which quick and unusual decisions are
required. Every democrat feels in his bones that dangerous crises are
incompatible with democracy, because he knows that the inertia of masses is
such that to act quickly a very few must decide and the rest follow rather
blindly. This has not made non-resistants out of democrats, but it has resulted
in all democratic wars being fought for pacifist aims. Even when the wars are
in fact wars of conquest, they are sincerely believed to be wars in defense of
civilization.
These various attempts to enclose a part of the earth’s
surface were not inspired by cowardice, apathy, or, what one of Jefferson’s
critics called a willingness to live under monkish discipline. The democrats
had caught sight of a dazzling possibility, that every human being should rise
to his full stature, freed from man-made limitations. With what they knew of
the art of government, they could, no more than Aristotle before them, conceive
a society of autonomous individuals, except an enclosed and simple one. They
could, then, select no other premise if they were to reach the conclusion that
all the people could spontaneously manage their public affairs.
5
Having adopted the premise because it was necessary
to their keenest hope, they drew other conclusions as well. Since in order to
have spontaneous self-government, you had to have a simple self-contained
community, they took it for granted that one man was as competent as the next
to manage these simple and self-contained affairs. Where the wish is father to
the thought such logic is convincing. Moreover, the doctrine of the
omnicompetent citizen is for most practical purposes true in the rural
township. Everybody in a village sooner or later tries his hand at everything
the village does. There is rotation in office by men who are jacks of all
trades. There was no serious trouble with the doctrine of the omnicompetent
citizen until the democratic stereotype was universally applied, so that men
looked at a complicated civilization and saw an enclosed village.
Not only was the individual citizen fitted to deal
with all public affairs, but he was consistently public-spirited and endowed
with unflagging interest. He was public-spirited enough in the township, where
he knew everybody and was interested in everybody’s business. The idea of
enough for the township turned easily into the idea of enough for any purpose,
for as we have noted, quantitative thinking does not suit a stereotype. But
there was another turn to the circle. Since everybody was assumed to be
interested enough in important affairs, only those affairs came to seem
important in which everybody was interested.
This meant that men formed their picture of the world
outside from the unchallenged pictures in their heads. These pictures came to
them well stereotyped by their parents and teachers, and were little corrected
by their own experience. Only a few men had affairs that took them across state
lines. Even fewer had reason to go abroad. Most voters lived their whole lives
in one environment, and with nothing but a few feeble newspapers, some
pamphlets, political speeches, their religious training, and rumor to go on,
they had to conceive that larger environment of commerce and finance, of war
and peace. The number of public opinions based on any objective report was very
small in proportion to those based on casual fancy.
And so for many different reasons, self-sufficiency
was a spiritual ideal in the formative period. The physical isolation of the
township, the loneliness of the pioneer, the theory of democracy, the
Protestant tradition, and the limitations of political science all converged to
make men believe that out of their own consciences they must extricate
political wisdom. It is not strange that the deduction of laws from absolute
principles should have usurped so much of their free energy. The American
political mind had to live on its capital. In legalism it found a tested body
of rules from which new rules could be spun without the labor of earning new
truths from experience. The formulae became so curiously sacred that every good
foreign observer has been amazed at the contrast between the dynamic practical
energy of the American people and the static theorism of their public life.
That steadfast love of fixed principles was simply the only way known of
achieving self-sufficiency. But it meant that the public opinions of any one
community about the outer world consisted chiefly of a few stereotyped images
arranged in a pattern deduced from their legal and their moral codes, and
animated by the feeling aroused by local experiences.
Thus democratic theory, starting from its fine vision
of ultimate human dignity, was forced by lack of the instruments of knowledge
for reporting its environment, to fall back upon the wisdom and experience
which happened to have accumulated in the voter. God had, in the words of
Jefferson, made men’s breasts “His peculiar deposit for substantial and genuine
virtue.” These chosen people in their self-contained
environment had all the facts before them. The environment was so familiar that
one could take it for granted that men were talking about substantially the same
things. The only real disagreements, therefore, would be in judgments about the
same facts. There was no need to guarantee the sources of information. They
were obvious, and equally accessible to all men. Nor was there need to trouble
about the ultimate criteria. In the self-contained community one could assume,
or at least did assume, a homogeneous code of morals. The only place,
therefore, for differences of opinion was in the logical application of
accepted standards to accepted facts. And since the reasoning faculty was also
well standardized, an error in reasoning would be quickly exposed in a free
discussion. It followed that truth could be obtained by liberty within these
limits. The community could take its supply of information for granted; its codes
it passed on through school, church, and family, and the power to draw
deductions from a premise, rather than the ability to find the premise, was
regarded as the chief end of intellectual training.
CHAPTER XVIII. THE ROLE
OF FORCE, PATRONAGE AND PRIVILEGE
1
“IT has happened as was to have been foreseen,” wrote
Hamilton, [Footnote: Federalist, No. 15] “the measures of the Union have not
been executed; the delinquencies of the States have, step by step, matured
themselves to an extreme which has at length arrested all the wheels of the
national government and brought them to an awful stand.”… For “in our case the
concurrence of thirteen distinct sovereign wills is requisite, under the
confederation, to the complete execution of every important measure that
proceeds from the Union.” How could it be otherwise, he asked: “The rulers of
the respective members… will undertake to judge of the propriety of the
measures themselves. They will consider the conformity of the thing proposed or
required to their immediate interests or aims; the momentary conveniences or
inconveniences that would attend its adoption. All this will be done, and in a
spirit of interested and suspicious scrutiny, without that knowledge of
national circumstances and reasons of state which is essential to right
judgment, and with that strong predilection in favor of local objects which can
hardly fail to mislead the decision. The same process must be repeated in every
member of which the body is constituted; and the execution of the plans framed
by the councils of the whole, will always fluctuate on the discretion of the
ill-informed and prejudiced opinion of every part. Those who have been
conversant in the proceedings of popular assemblies, who have seen how
difficult it often is, when there is no exterior pressure of circumstances, to
bring them to harmonious resolutions on important points, will readily conceive
how impossible it must be to induce a number of such assemblies, deliberating
at a distance from each other, at different times, and under different
impressions, long to coöperate in the same views and pursuits.”
Over ten years of storm and stress with a congress
that was, as John Adams said, [Footnote: Ford, op. cit., p. 36.] “only a
diplomatic assembly,” had furnished the leaders of the revolution “with an
instructive but afflicting lesson” [Footnote: Federalist, No. 15.] in what
happens when a number of self-centered communities are entangled in the same
environment. And so, when they went to Philadelphia in May of 1787, ostensibly
to revise the Articles of Confederation, they were really in full reaction
against the fundamental premise of Eighteenth Century democracy. Not only were
the leaders consciously opposed to the democratic spirit of the time, feeling,
as Madison said, that “democracies have ever been spectacles of turbulence and
contention,” but within the national frontiers they were determined to offset
as far as they could the ideal of self-governing communities in self-contained
environments. The collisions and failures of concave democracy, where men
spontaneously managed all their own affairs, were before their eyes. The
problem as they saw it, was to restore government as against democracy. They
understood government to be the power to make national decisions and enforce
them throughout the nation; democracy they believed was the insistence of
localities and classes upon self-determination in accordance with their
immediate interests and aims.
They could not consider in their calculations the
possibility of such an organization of knowledge that separate communities
would act simultaneously on the same version of the facts. We just begin to
conceive this possibility for certain parts of the world where there is free
circulation of news and a common language, and then only for certain aspects of
life. The whole idea of a voluntary federalism in industry and world politics
is still so rudimentary, that, as we see in our own experience, it enters only
a little, and only very modestly, into practical politics. What we, more than a
century later, can only conceive as an incentive to generations of intellectual
effort, the authors of the Constitution had no reason to conceive at all. In
order to set up national government, Hamilton and his colleagues had to make
plans, not on the theory that men would coöperate because they had a sense of
common interest, but on the theory that men could be governed, if special
interests were kept in equilibrium by a balance of power. “Ambition,” Madison
said, [Footnote: Federalist, No. 51, cited by Ford, op. cit., p. 60.] “must be
made to counteract ambition.”
They did not, as some writers have supposed, intend
to balance every interest so that the government would be in a perpetual
deadlock. They intended to deadlock local and class interest to prevent these
from obstructing government. “In framing a government
which is to be administered by men over men,” wrote Madison, [Footnote: Id.]
“the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to
control the governed, and in the next place, oblige it to control itself.” In
one very important sense, then, the doctrine of checks and balances was the
remedy of the federalist leaders for the problem of public opinion. They saw no
other way to substitute “the mild influence of the magistracy” for the
“sanguinary agency of the sword” [Footnote: Federalist, No. 15.] except by
devising an ingenious machine to neutralize local opinion. They did not
understand how to manipulate a large electorate, any more than they saw the
possibility of common consent upon the basis of common information. It is true
that Aaron Burr taught Hamilton a lesson which impressed him a good deal when
he seized control of New York City in 1800 by the aid of Tammany Hall. But
Hamilton was killed before he was able to take account of this new discovery,
and, as Mr. Ford says, [Footnote: Ford, op. cit., p. 119.] Burr’s pistol blew
the brains out of the Federal party.
2
When the constitution was written, “politics could
still be managed by conference and agreement among gentlemen” [Footnote: Op.
cit., p. 144] and it was to the gentry that Hamilton turned for a government.
It was intended that they should manage national affairs when local prejudice
had been brought into equilibrium by the constitutional checks and balances. No
doubt Hamilton, who belonged to this class by adoption, had a human prejudice
in their favor. But that by itself is a thin explanation of his statecraft.
Certainly there can be no question of his consuming passion for union, and it
is, I think, an inversion of the truth to argue that he made the Union to
protect class privileges, instead of saying that he used class privileges to
make the Union. “We must take man as we find him,” Hamilton said, “and if we
expect him to serve the public we must interest his passions in doing so.”
[Footnote: Op. cit., p. 47] He needed men to govern, whose passions could be
most quickly attached to a national interest. These were the gentry, the public
creditors, manufacturers, shippers, and traders, [Footnote: Beard, Economic
Interpretation of the Constitution, passim.] and there is probably no better
instance in history of the adaptation of shrewd means to clear ends, than in
the series of fiscal measures, by which Hamilton attached the provincial
notables to the new government.
Although the constitutional convention worked behind
closed doors, and although ratification was engineered by “a vote of probably
not more than one-sixth of the adult males,” [Footnote: Beard, op. cit., p.
325.] there was little or no pretence. The Federalists argued for union, not
for democracy, and even the word republic had an unpleasant sound to George
Washington when he had been for more than two years a republican president. The
constitution was a candid attempt to limit the sphere of popular rule; the only
democratic organ it was intended the government should possess was the House,
based on a suffrage highly limited by property qualifications. And even at
that, the House, it was believed, would be so licentious a part of the government,
that it was carefully checked and balanced by the Senate, the electoral
college, the Presidential veto, and by judicial interpretation.
Thus at the moment when the French Revolution was
kindling popular feeling the world over, the American revolutionists of 1776
came under a constitution which went back, as far as it was expedient, to the
British Monarchy for a model. This conservative reaction could not endure. The
men who had made it were a minority, their motives were under suspicion, and
when Washington went into retirement, the position of the gentry was not strong
enough to survive the inevitable struggle for the succession. The anomaly
between the original plan of the Fathers and the moral feeling of the age was
too wide not to be capitalized by a good politician.
3
Jefferson referred to his election as “the great
revolution of 1800,” but more than anything else it was a revolution in the
mind. No great policy was altered, but a new tradition was established. For it
was Jefferson who first taught the American people to regard the Constitution
as an instrument of democracy, and he stereotyped the images, the ideas, and
even many of the phrases, in which Americans ever since have described politics
to each other. So complete was the mental victory, that twenty-five years later
de Tocqueville, who was received in Federalist homes, noted that even those who
were “galled by its continuance”—were not uncommonly heard to “laud the
delights of a republican government, and the advantages of democratic institutions
when they are in public.” [Footnote: Democracy in America, Vol. I, Ch. X (Third
Edition, 1838), p. 216.]
The Constitutional Fathers with all their sagacity
had failed to see that a frankly undemocratic constitution would not long be
tolerated. The bold denial of popular rule was bound to offer an easy point of
attack to a man, like Jefferson, who so far as his constitutional opinions ran,
was not a bit more ready than Hamilton to turn over government to the
“unrefined” will of the people. [Footnote: Cf. his plan for the Constitution of
Virginia, his ideas for a senate of property holders, and his views on the
judicial veto. Beard, Economic Origins of Jeffersonian Democracy, pp. 450 et
seq.] The Federalist leaders had been men of definite convictions who stated
them bluntly. There was little real discrepancy between their public and their
private views. But Jefferson’s mind was a mass of ambiguities, not solely
because of its defects, as Hamilton and his biographers have thought, but
because he believed in a union and he believed in spontaneous democracies, and
in the political science of his age there was no satisfactory way to reconcile
the two. Jefferson was confused in thought and action because he had a vision
of a new and tremendous idea that no one had thought out in all its bearings.
But though popular sovereignty was not clearly understood by anybody, it seemed
to imply so great an enhancement of human life, that no constitution could
stand which frankly denied it. The frank denials were therefore expunged from
consciousness, and the document, which is on its face an honest example of
limited constitutional democracy, was talked and thought about as an instrument
for direct popular rule. Jefferson actually reached the point of believing that
the Federalists had perverted the Constitution, of which in his fancy they were
no longer the authors. And so the Constitution was, in spirit, rewritten.
Partly by actual amendment, partly by practice, as in the case of the electoral
college, but chiefly by looking at it through another set of stereotypes, the
facade was no longer permitted to look oligarchic.
The American people came to believe that their
Constitution was a democratic instrument, and treated it as such. They owe that
fiction to the victory of Thomas Jefferson, and a great conservative fiction it
has been. It is a fair guess that if everyone had always regarded the
Constitution as did the authors of it, the Constitution would have been
violently overthrown, because loyalty to the Constitution and loyalty to
democracy would have seemed incompatible. Jefferson resolved that paradox by
teaching the American people to read the Constitution as an expression of
democracy. He himself stopped there. But in the course of twenty-five years or
so social conditions had changed so radically, that Andrew Jackson carried out
the political revolution for which Jefferson had prepared the tradition.
[Footnote: The reader who has any doubts as to the extent of the revolution
that separated Hamilton’s opinions from Jackson’s practice should turn to Mr.
Henry Jones Ford’s Rise and Growth of American Politics.]
4
The political center of that revolution was the
question of patronage. By the men who founded the government public office was
regarded as a species of property, not lightly to be disturbed, and it was
undoubtedly their hope that the offices would remain in the hands of their
social class. But the democratic theory had as one of its main principles the
doctrine of the omnicompetent citizen. Therefore, when people began to look at
the Constitution as a democratic instrument, it was certain that permanence in
office would seem undemocratic. The natural ambitions of men coincided here
with the great moral impulse of their age. Jefferson had popularized the idea
without carrying it ruthlessly into practice, and removals on party grounds
were comparatively few under the Virginian Presidents. It was Jackson who
founded the practice of turning public office into patronage.
Curious as it sounds to us, the principle of rotation
in office with short terms was regarded as a great reform. Not only did it
acknowledge the new dignity of the average man by treating him as fit for any
office, not only did it destroy the monopoly of a small social class and appear
to open careers to talent, but “it had been advocated for centuries as a
sovereign remedy for political corruption,” and as the one way to prevent the
creation of a bureaucracy. [Footnote: Ford, op. cit., p. 169.] The practice of
rapid change in public office was the application to a great territory of the
image of democracy derived from the self-contained village.
Naturally it did not have the same results in the
nation that it had in the ideal community on which the democratic theory was
based. It produced quite unexpected results, for it
founded a new governing class to take the place of the submerged federalists.
Unintentionally, patronage did for a large electorate what Hamilton’s fiscal
measures had done for the upper classes. We often fail to realize how much of
the stability of our government we owe to patronage. For it was
patronage that weaned natural leaders from too much attachment to the
self-centered community, it was patronage that weakened the local spirit and
brought together in some kind of peaceful cooperation, the very men who, as
provincial celebrities, would, in the absence of a sense of common interest,
have torn the union apart.
But of course, the democratic theory was not supposed
to produce a new governing class, and it has never accommodated itself to the
fact. When the democrat wanted to abolish monopoly of offices, to have rotation
and short terms, he was thinking of the township where anyone could do a public
service, and return humbly to his own farm. The idea of a special class of politicians
was just what the democrat did not like. But he could not have what he did
like, because his theory was derived from an ideal environment, and he was
living in a real one. The more deeply he felt the moral impulse of democracy,
the less ready he was to see the profound truth of Hamilton’s statement that
communities deliberating at a distance and under different impressions could
not long coöperate in the same views and pursuits. For that truth postpones
anything like the full realization of democracy in public affairs until the art
of obtaining common consent has been radically improved. And so while the
revolution under Jefferson and Jackson produced the patronage which made the
two party system, which created a substitute for the rule of the gentry, and a
discipline for governing the deadlock of the checks and balances, all that
happened, as it were, invisibly.
Thus, rotation in office might be the ostensible
theory, in practice the offices oscillated between the henchmen. Tenure might
not be a permanent monopoly, but the professional politician was permanent.
Government might be, as President Harding once said, a simple thing, but
winning elections was a sophisticated performance. The salaries in office might
be as ostentatiously frugal as Jefferson’s home-spun, but the expenses of party
organization and the fruits of victory were in the grand manner. The stereotype
of democracy controlled the visible government; the corrections, the exceptions
and adaptations of the American people to the real facts of their environment
have had to be invisible, even when everybody knew all about them. It was only
the words of the law, the speeches of politicians, the platforms, and the
formal machinery of administration that have had to conform to the pristine
image of democracy.
5
If one had asked a philosophical democrat how these
self-contained communities were to coöperate, when their public opinions were
so self-centered, he would have pointed to representative government embodied
in the Congress. And nothing would surprise him more than the discovery of how
steadily the prestige of representative government has declined, while the
power of the Presidency has grown.
Some critics have traced this to the custom of
sending only local celebrities to Washington. They have thought that if
Congress could consist of the nationally eminent men, the life of the capital
would be more brilliant. It would be, of course, and it would be a very good
thing if retiring Presidents and Cabinet officers followed the example of John
Quincy Adams. But the absence of these men does not explain the plight of
Congress, for its decline began when it was relatively the most eminent branch
of the government. Indeed it is more probable that the reverse is true, and
that Congress ceased to attract the eminent as it lost direct influence on the
shaping of national policy.
The main reason for the discredit, which is world
wide, is, I think, to be found in the fact that a congress of representatives
is essentially a group of blind men in a vast, unknown world. With some
exceptions, the only method recognized in the Constitution or in the theory of
representative government, by which Congress can inform itself, is to exchange
opinions from the districts. There is no systematic, adequate, and authorized
way for Congress to know what is going on in the world. The theory is that the
best man of each district brings the best wisdom of his constituents to a
central place, and that all these wisdoms combined are all the wisdom that
Congress needs. Now there is no need to question the value of expressing local
opinions and exchanging them. Congress has great value as the market-place of a
continental nation. In the coatrooms, the hotel
lobbies, the boarding houses of Capitol Hill, at the tea-parties of the Congressional
matrons, and from occasional entries into the drawing rooms of cosmopolitan
Washington, new vistas are opened, and wider horizons. But even if the
theory were applied, and the districts always sent their wisest men, the sum or
a combination of local impressions is not a wide enough base for national
policy, and no base at all for the control of foreign policy. Since the real
effects of most laws are subtle and hidden, they cannot be understood by
filtering local experiences through local states of mind. They can be known
only by controlled reporting and objective analysis. And just as the head of a
large factory cannot know how efficient it is by talking to the foreman, but
must examine cost sheets and data that only an accountant can dig out for him,
so the lawmaker does not arrive at a true picture of the state of the union by
putting together a mosaic of local pictures. He needs to know the local
pictures, but unless he possesses instruments for calibrating them, one picture
is as good as the next, and a great deal better.
The President does come to the assistance of Congress
by delivering messages on the state of the Union. He is in a position to do
that because he presides over a vast collection of bureaus and their agents,
which report as well as act. But he tells Congress what he chooses to tell it.
He cannot be heckled, and the censorship as to what is compatible with the
public interest is in his hands. It is a wholly one-sided and tricky
relationship, which sometimes reaches such heights of absurdity, that Congress,
in order to secure an important document has to thank the enterprise of a
Chicago newspaper, or the calculated indiscretion of a subordinate official. So
bad is the contact of legislators with necessary facts that they are forced to
rely either on private tips or on that legalized atrocity, the Congressional
investigation, where Congressmen, starved of their legitimate food for thought,
go on a wild and feverish man-hunt, and do not stop at cannibalism.
Except for the little that these investigations
yield, the occasional communications from the executive departments, interested
and disinterested data collected by private persons, such newspapers,
periodicals, and books as Congressmen read, and a new and excellent practice of
calling for help from expert bodies like the Interstate Commerce Commission,
the Federal Trade Commission, and the Tariff Commission, the creation of
Congressional opinion is incestuous. From this it follows either that
legislation of a national character is prepared by a few informed insiders, and
put through by partisan force; or that the legislation is broken up into a
collection of local items, each of which is enacted for a local reason. Tariff
schedules, navy yards, army posts, rivers and harbors, post offices and federal
buildings, pensions and patronage: these are fed out to concave communities as
tangible evidence of the benefits of national life. Being concave, they can see
the white marble building which rises out of federal funds to raise local realty
values and employ local contractors more readily than they can judge the
cumulative cost of the pork barrel. It is fair to say that in a large assembly
of men, each of whom has practical knowledge only of his own district, laws
dealing with translocal affairs are rejected or accepted by the mass of
Congressmen without creative participation of any kind. They participate only
in making those laws that can be treated as a bundle of local issues. For a
legislature without effective means of information and analysis must oscillate
between blind regularity, tempered by occasional insurgency, and logrolling.
And it is the logrolling which makes the regularity palatable, because it is by
logrolling that a Congressman proves to his more active constituents that he is
watching their interests as they conceive them.
This is no fault of the individual Congressman’s,
except when he is complacent about it. The cleverest and most industrious
representative cannot hope to understand a fraction of the bills on which he
votes. The best he can do is to specialize on a few bills, and take somebody’s
word about the rest. I have known Congressmen, when they were boning up on a
subject, to study as they had not studied since they passed their final
examinations, many large cups of black coffee, wet towels and all. They had to
dig for information, sweat over arranging and verifying facts, which, in any
consciously organized government, should have been easily available in a form
suitable for decision. And even when they really knew a subject, their
anxieties had only begun. For back home the editors, the board of trade, the
central federated union, and the women’s clubs had spared themselves these
labors, and were prepared to view the Congressman’s performance through local
spectacles.
6
What patronage did to attach political chieftains to
the national government, the infinite variety of local subsidies and privileges
do for self-centered communities. Patronage and pork amalgamate and stabilize
thousands of special opinions, local discontents, private ambitions. There are
but two other alternatives. One is government by terror and obedience, the other is government based on such a highly developed
system of information, analysis, and self-consciousness that “the knowledge of
national circumstances and reasons of state” is evident to all men. The
autocratic system is in decay, the voluntary system is in its very earliest
development; and so, in calculating the prospects of association among large
groups of people, a League of Nations, industrial government, or a federal
union of states, the degree to which the material for a common consciousness
exists, determines how far cooperation will depend upon force, or upon the
milder alternative to force, which is patronage and privilege. The secret of
great state-builders, like Alexander Hamilton, is that they know how to
calculate these principles.
CHAPTER XIX. THE OLD
IMAGE IN A NEW FORM: GUILD SOCIALISM.
Whenever the quarrels of self-centered groups become
unbearable, reformers in the past found themselves forced to choose between two
great alternatives. They could take the path to Rome and impose a Roman peace
upon the warring tribes. They could take the path to isolation, to autonomy and
self-sufficiency. Almost always they chose that path which they had least
recently travelled. If they had tried out the deadening monotony of empire,
they cherished above all other things the simple freedom of their own
community. But if they had seen this simple freedom squandered in parochial
jealousies they longed for the spacious order of a great and powerful state.
Whichever choice they made, the essential difficulty
was the same. If decisions were decentralized they soon floundered in a chaos
of local opinions. If they were centralized, the policy of the state was based
on the opinions of a small social set at the capital. In any case force was
necessary to defend one local right against another, or to impose law and order
on the localities, or to resist class government at the center, or to defend the
whole society, centralized or decentralized, against the outer barbarian.
Modern democracy and the industrial system were both
born in a time of reaction against kings, crown government, and a regime of
detailed economic regulation. In the industrial sphere this reaction took the
form of extreme devolution, known as laissez-faire individualism. Each economic
decision was to be made by the man who had title to the property involved.
Since almost everything was owned by somebody, there would be somebody to manage
everything. This was plural sovereignty with a vengeance.
It was economic government by anybody’s economic
philosophy, though it was supposed to be controlled by immutable laws of
political economy that must in the end produce harmony. It produced many
splendid things, but enough sordid and terrible ones to start counter-currents.
One of these was the trust, which established a kind of Roman peace within
industry, and a Roman predatory imperialism outside. People turned to the
legislature for relief. They invoked representative government, founded on the
image of the township farmer, to regulate the semi-sovereign corporations. The
working class turned to labor organization. There followed a period of
increasing centralization and a sort of race of armaments. The trusts
interlocked, the craft unions federated and combined into a labor movement, the
political system grew stronger at Washington and weaker in the states, as the
reformers tried to match its strength against big business.
In this period practically all the schools of
socialist thought from the Marxian left to the New Nationalists around Theodore
Roosevelt, looked upon centralization as the first stage of an evolution which
would end in the absorption of all the semi-sovereign powers of business by the
political state. The evolution never took place, except for a few months during
the war. That was enough, and there was a turn of the wheel against the
omnivorous state in favor of several new forms of pluralism. But this time
society was to swing back not to the atomic individualism of Adam Smith’s
economic man and Thomas Jefferson’s farmer, but to a sort of molecular
individualism of voluntary groups.
One of the interesting things about all these
oscillations of theory is that each in turn promises a world in which no one
will have to follow Machiavelli in order to survive. They are all established
by some form of coercion, they all exercise coercion in order to maintain
themselves, and they are all discarded as a result of coercion. Yet they do not
accept coercion, either physical power or special position, patronage, or
privilege, as part of their ideal. The individualist said that self-enlightened
self-interest would bring internal and external peace. The socialist is sure
that the motives to aggression will disappear. The new pluralist hopes they
will. [Footnote: See G. D. H. Cole, Social Theory, p. 142.] Coercion is the
surd in almost all social theory, except the Machiavellian. The temptation to
ignore it, because it is absurd, inexpressible, and unmanageable, becomes
overwhelming in any man who is trying to rationalize human life.
2
The lengths to which a clever man will sometimes go
in order to escape a full recognition of the role of force is shown by Mr. G.
D. H. Cole’s book on Guild Socialism. The present state, he says, “is primarily
an instrument of coercion;” [Footnote: Cole, Guild Socialism, p. 107.] in a
guild socialist society there will be no sovereign power, though there will be
a coordinating body. He calls this body the Commune.
He then begins to enumerate the powers of the
Commune, which, we recall, is to be primarily not an instrument of coercion.
[Footnote: Op. cit. Ch. VIII.] It settles price disputes. Sometimes it fixes
prices, allocates the surplus or distributes the loss. It allocates natural
resources, and controls the issue of credit. It also “allocates communal
labor-power.” It ratifies the budgets of the guilds and the civil services. It
levies taxes. “All questions of income” fall within its jurisdiction. It “allocates”
income to the non-productive members of the community. It is the final arbiter
in all questions of policy and jurisdiction between the guilds. It passes
constitutional laws fixing the functions of the functional bodies. It appoints
the judges. It confers coercive powers upon the guilds, and ratifies their
by-laws wherever these involve coercion. It declares war and makes peace. It
controls the armed forces. It is the supreme representative of the nation
abroad. It settles boundary questions within the national state. It calls into
existence new functional bodies, or distributes new functions to old ones. It
runs the police. It makes whatever laws are necessary to regulate personal
conduct and personal property.
These powers are exercised not by one commune, but by
a federal structure of local and provincial communes with a National commune at
the top. Mr. Cole is, of course, welcome to insist that this is not a sovereign
state, but if there is a coercive power now enjoyed by any modern government
for which he has forgotten to make room, I cannot think of it.
He tells us, however, that Guild society will be
non-coercive: “we want to build a new society which will be conceived in the
spirit, not of coercion, but of free service.” [Footnote: Op. cit., p. 141.]
Everyone who shares that hope, as most men and women do, will therefore look
closely to see what there is in the Guild Socialist plan which promises to
reduce coercion to its lowest limits, even though the Guildsmen of to-day have
already reserved for their communes the widest kind of coercive power. It is
acknowledged at once that the new society cannot be brought into existence by
universal consent. Mr. Cole is too honest to shirk the element of force
required to make the transition. [Footnote: Cf. op. cit., Ch. X. ] And while
obviously he cannot predict how much civil war there might be, he is quite
clear that there would have to be a period of direct action by the trade
unions.
3
But leaving aside the problems of transition, and any
consideration of what the effect is on their future action, when men have
hacked their way through to the promised land, let us imagine the Guild Society
in being. What keeps it running as a non-coercive society?
Mr. Cole has two answers to this question. One is the
orthodox Marxian answer that the abolition of capitalist property will remove
the motive to aggression. Yet he does not really believe that, because if he
did, he would care as little as does the average Marxian how the working class
is to run the government, once it is in control. If his diagnosis were correct,
the Marxian would be quite right: if the disease were the capitalist class and
only the capitalist class, salvation would automatically follow its extinction.
But Mr. Cole is enormously concerned about whether the society which follows
the revolution is to be run by state collectivism, by guilds or cooperative
societies, by a democratic parliament or by functional representation. In fact,
it is as a new theory of representative government that guild socialism
challenges attention.
The guildsmen do not expect a miracle to result from
the disappearance of capitalist property rights. They do expect, and of course
quite rightly, that if equality of income were the rule, social relations would
be profoundly altered. But they differ, as far as I can make out, from the
orthodox Russian communist in this respect: The communist proposes to establish
equality by force of the dictatorship of the proletariat, believing that if
once people were equalized both in income and in service, they would then lose
the incentives to aggression. The guildsmen also propose to establish equality
by force, but are shrewd enough to see that if an equilibrium is to be
maintained they have to provide institutions for maintaining it. Guildsmen,
therefore, put their faith in what they believe to be a new theory of
democracy.
Their object, says Mr. Cole, is “to get the mechanism
right, and to adjust it as far as possible to the expression of men’s social
wills.” [Reference: Op. cit., p. 16.] These wills need to be given opportunity
for self-expression in self-government “in any and every form of social
action.” Behind these words is the true democratic impulse, the desire to
enhance human dignity, as well as the traditional assumption that this human
dignity is impugned, unless each person’s will enters into the management of
everything that affects him. The guildsman, like the earlier democrat
therefore, looks about him for an environment in which this ideal of
self-government can be realized. A hundred years and more have passed since
Rousseau and Jefferson, and the center of interest has shifted from the country
to the city. The new democrat can no longer turn to the idealized rural
township for the image of democracy. He turns now to the workshop. “The spirit
of association must be given free play in the sphere in which it is best able
to find expression. This is manifestly the factory, in which men have the habit
and tradition of working together. The factory is the natural and fundamental
unit of industrial democracy. This involves, not only that the factory must be
free, as far as possible, to manage its own affairs, but also that the
democratic unit of the factory must be made the basis of the larger democracy
of the Guild, and that the larger organs of Guild administration and government
must be based largely on the principle of factory representation.” [Footnote:
Op. cit., p. 40.]
Factory is, of course, a very loose word, and Mr.
Cole asks us to take it as meaning mines, shipyards, docks, stations, and every
place which is “a natural center of production.” [Footnote: Op. cit., p. 41]
But a factory in this sense is quite a different thing from an industry. The
factory, as Mr. Cole conceives it, is a work place where men are really in personal
contact, an environment small enough to be known directly to all the workers.
“This democracy if it is to be real, must come home to, and be exercisable
directly by, every individual member of the Guild.” [Footnote: Op. cit., p.
40.] This is important, because Mr. Cole, like Jefferson, is seeking a natural
unit of government. The only natural unit is a perfectly familiar environment.
Now a large plant, a railway system, a great coal field, is not a natural unit
in this sense. Unless it is a very small factory indeed, what Mr. Cole is
really thinking about is the shop. That is where men can be supposed to have
“the habit and tradition of working together.” The rest of the plant, the rest
of the industry, is an inferred environment.
4
Anybody can see, and almost everybody will admit,
that self-government in the purely internal affairs of the shop is government
of affairs that “can be taken in at a single view.” [Footnote: Aristotle,
Politics, Bk. VII, Ch. IV.] But dispute would arise as to what constitute the
internal affairs of a shop. Obviously the biggest interests, like wages,
standards of production, the purchase of supplies, the marketing of the
product, the larger planning of work, are by no means purely internal. The shop
democracy has freedom, subject to enormous limiting conditions from the
outside. It can deal to a certain extent with the arrangement of work laid out
for the shop, it can deal with the temper and temperament of individuals, it
can administer petty industrial justice, and act as a court of first instance
in somewhat larger individual disputes. Above all it can act as a unit in
dealing with other shops, and perhaps with the plant as a whole. But isolation
is impossible. The unit of industrial democracy is thoroughly entangled in foreign
affairs. And it is the management of these external relations that constitutes
the test of the guild socialist theory.
They have to be managed by representative government
arranged in a federal order from the shop to the plant, the plant to the industry,
the industry to the nation, with intervening regional grouping of
representatives. But all this structure derives from the shop, and all its
peculiar virtues are ascribed to this source. The representatives who choose
the representatives who choose the representatives who finally “coordinate” and
“regulate” the shops are elected, Mr. Cole asserts, by a true democracy.
Because they come originally from a self-governing unit, the whole federal
organism will be inspired by the spirit and the reality of self-government.
Representatives will aim to carry out the workers’ “actual will as understood
by themselves,” [Footnote: Op. cit., p. 42.] that is, as understood by the
individual in the shops.
A government run literally on this principle would,
if history is any guide, be either a perpetual logroll, or a chaos of warring
shops. For while the worker in the shop can have a real opinion about matters
entirely within the shop, his “will” about the relation of that shop to the
plant, the industry, and the nation is subject to all the limitations of
access, stereotype, and self-interest that surround any other self-centered
opinion. His experience in the shop at best brings only aspects of the whole to
his attention. His opinion of what is right within the shop he can reach by
direct knowledge of the essential facts. His opinion of what is right in the
great complicated environment out of sight is more likely to be wrong than
right if it is a generalization from the experience of the individual shop. As
a matter of experience, the representatives of a guild society would find, just
as the higher trade union officials find today, that on a great number of
questions which they have to decide there is no “actual will as understood” by
the shops.
5
The guildsmen insist, however, that such criticism is
blind because it ignores a great political discovery. You may be quite right,
they would say, in thinking that the representatives of the shops would have to
make up their own minds on many questions about which the shops have no
opinion. But you are simply entangled in an ancient fallacy: you are looking
for somebody to represent a group of people. He cannot be found. The only
representative possible is one who acts for “some particular function,”
[Footnote: Op. cit., pp. 23-24.] and therefore each person must help choose as
many representatives “as there are distinct essential groups of functions to be
performed.”
Assume then that the representatives speak, not for
the men in the shops, but for certain functions in which the men are
interested. They are, mind you, disloyal if they do not carry out the will of
the group about the function, as understood by the group. [Footnote: Cf. Part
V, “The Making of a Common Will.”] These functional representatives meet. Their
business is to coordinate and regulate. By what standard does each judge the
proposals of the other, assuming, as we must, that there is conflict of opinion
between the shops, since if there were not, there would be no need to
coordinate and regulate?
Now the peculiar virtue of functional democracy is
supposed to be that men vote candidly according to their own interests, which
it is assumed they know by daily experience. They can do that within the
self-contained group. But in its external relations the group as a whole, or
its representative, is dealing with matters that transcend immediate
experience. The shop does not arrive spontaneously at a view of the whole
situation. Therefore, the public opinions of a shop about its rights and duties
in the industry and in society, are matters of education or propaganda, not the
automatic product of shop-consciousness. Whether the guildsmen elect a
delegate, or a representative, they do not escape the problem of the orthodox
democrat. Either the group as a whole, or the elected spokesman, must stretch
his mind beyond the limits of direct experience. He must vote on questions
coming up from other shops, and on matters coming from beyond the frontiers of
the whole industry. The primary interest of the shop does not even cover the
function of a whole industrial vocation. The function of a vocation, a great
industry, a district, a nation is a concept, not an experience, and has to be
imagined, invented, taught and believed. And even though you define function as
carefully as possible, once you admit that the view of each shop on that
function will not necessarily coincide with the view of other shops, you are
saying that the representative of one interest is concerned in the proposals
made by other interests. You are saying that he must conceive a common
interest. And in voting for him you are choosing a man who will not simply
represent your view of your function, which is all that you know at first hand,
but a man who will represent your views about other people’s views of that
function. You are voting as indefinitely as the orthodox democrat.
6
The guildsmen in their own minds have solved the
question of how to conceive a common interest by playing with the word
function. They imagine a society in which all the main work of the world has
been analysed into functions, and these functions in turn synthesized
harmoniously. [Footnote: Cf. op. cit., Ch. XIX.] They suppose essential
agreement about the purposes of society as a whole, and essential agreement
about the role of every organized group in carrying out those purposes. It was
a nice sentiment, therefore, which led them to take the name of their theory
from an institution that arose in a Catholic feudal society. But they should
remember that the scheme of function which the wise men of that age assumed was
not worked out by mortal man. It is unclear how the guildsmen think the scheme
is going to be worked out and made acceptable in the modern world. Sometimes
they seem to argue that the scheme will develop from trade union organization,
at other times that the communes will define the constitutional function of the
groups. But it makes a considerable practical difference whether they believe
that the groups define their own functions or not.
In either case, Mr. Cole assumes that society can be
carried on by a social contract based on an accepted idea of “distinct
essential groups of functions.” How does one recognize these distinct essential
groups? So far as I can make out, Mr. Cole thinks that a function is what a
group of people are interested in. “The essence of functional democracy is that
a man should count as many times over as there are functions in which he is
interested.” [Footnote: Social Theory, p. 102 et seq.] Now there are at least
two meanings to the word interested. You can use it to mean that a man is
involved, or that his mind is occupied. John Smith, for example, may have been
tremendously interested in the Stillman divorce case. He may have read every
word of the news in every lobster edition. On the other hand, young Guy
Stillman, whose legitimacy was at stake, probably did not trouble himself at
all. John Smith was interested in a suit that did not affect his “interests,”
and Guy was uninterested in one that would determine the whole course of his
life. Mr. Cole, I am afraid, leans towards John Smith. He is answering the
“very foolish objection” that to vote by functions is to be voting very often:
“If a man is not interested enough to vote, and cannot be aroused to interest
enough to make him vote, on, say, a dozen distinct subjects, he waives his
right to vote and the result is no less democratic than if he voted blindly and
without interest.”
Mr. Cole thinks that the uninstructed voter “waives
his right to vote.” From this it follows that the votes of the instructed
reveal their interest, and their interest defines the function. [Footnote: Cf.
Ch. XVIII of this book. “Since everybody was assumed to be interested enough in
important affairs, only those affairs came to seem important in which everybody
was interested.”] “Brown, Jones, and Robinson must therefore have, not one vote
each, but as many different functional votes as there are different questions
calling for associative action in which they are interested.” [Footnote: Guild
Socialism, p. 24. ] I am considerably in doubt whether Mr. Cole thinks that
Brown, Jones and Robinson should qualify in any election where they assert that
they are interested, or that somebody else, not named, picks the functions in
which they are entitled to be interested. If I were asked to say what I believe
Mr. Cole thinks, it would be that he has smoothed over the difficulty by the
enormously strange assumption that it is the uninstructed voter who waives his
right to vote; and has concluded that whether functional voting is arranged by
a higher power, or “from below” on the principle that a man may vote when it
interests him to vote, only the instructed will be voting anyway, and therefore
the institution will work.
But there are two kinds of
uninstructed voter. There is the man who does not know and knows that he
does not know. He is generally an enlightened person. He is the man who waives
his right to vote. But there is also the man who is
uninstructed and does not know that he is, or care. He can always be gotten to
the polls, if the party machinery is working. His vote is the basis of the
machine. And since the communes of the guild
society have large powers over taxation, wages, prices, credit, and natural
resources, it would be preposterous to assume that elections will not be fought
at least as passionately as our own.
The way people exhibit their interest will not then
delimit the functions of a functional society. There are two other ways that
function might be defined. One would be by the trade unions which fought the battle
that brought guild socialism into being. Such a struggle would harden groups of
men together in some sort of functional relation, and these groups would then
become the vested interests of the guild socialist society. Some of them, like
the miners and railroad men, would be very strong, and probably deeply attached
to the view of their function which they learned from the battle with
capitalism. It is not at all unlikely that certain favorably placed trade
unions would under a socialist state become the center of coherence and
government. But a guild society would inevitably find them a tough problem to
deal with, for direct action would have revealed their strategic power, and
some of their leaders at least would not offer up this power readily on the
altar of freedom. In order to “coordinate” them, guild society would have to
gather together its strength, and fairly soon one would find, I think, that the
radicals under guild socialism would be asking for communes strong enough to
define the functions of the guilds.
But if you are going to have the government (commune)
define functions, the premise of the theory disappears. It had to suppose that
a scheme of functions was obvious in order that the concave shops would
voluntarily relate themselves to society. If there is no settled scheme of
functions in every voter’s head, he has no better way under guild socialism
than under orthodox democracy of turning a self-centered opinion into a social
judgment. And, of course, there can be no such settled scheme, because, even if
Mr. Cole and his friends devised a good one, the shop democracies from which
all power derives, would judge the scheme in operation by what they learn of it
and by what they can imagine. The guilds would see the same scheme differently.
And so instead of the scheme being the skeleton that keeps guild society
together, the attempt to define what the scheme ought to be, would be under
guild socialism as elsewhere, the main business of politics. If we could allow
Mr. Cole his scheme of functions we could allow him almost everything.
Unfortunately he has inserted in his premise what he wishes a guild society to
deduce. [Footnote: I have dealt with Mr. Cole’s theory
rather than with the experience of Soviet Russia because, while the testimony is
fragmentary, all competent observers seem to agree that Russia in 1921 does not
illustrate a communist state in working order. Russia is in revolution, and
what you can learn from Russia is what a revolution is like. You can learn very
little about what a communist society would be like. It is, however, immensely
significant that, first as practical revolutionists and then as public
officials, the Russian communists have relied not upon the spontaneous
democracy of the Russian people, but on the discipline, special interest and
the noblesse oblige of a specialized class-the loyal and indoctrinated members
of the Communist party. In the “transition,” on which no time limit has been
set, I believe, the cure for class government and the coercive state is strictly
homeopathic.
There is also the question of why I selected Mr. Cole’s
books rather than the much more closely reasoned “Constitution for the
Socialist Commonwealth of Great Britain” by Sidney and Beatrice Webb. I admire
that book very much; but I have not been able to convince myself that it is not
an intellectual tour de force. Mr. Cole seems to me far more authentically in
the spirit of the socialist movement, and therefore, a better witness.]
CHAPTER XX. A NEW IMAGE
1
THE lesson is, I think, a fairly
clear one. In the absence of institutions and education by which the
environment is so successfully reported that the realities of public life stand
out sharply against self-centered opinion, the common interests very largely
elude public opinion entirely, and can be managed only by a specialized class
whose personal interests reach beyond the locality. This class is
irresponsible, for it acts upon information that is not common property, in
situations that the public at large does not conceive, and it can be held to
account only on the accomplished fact.
The democratic theory by failing to admit that
self-centered opinions are not sufficient to procure good government, is
involved in perpetual conflict between theory and practice. According to the theory,
the full dignity of man requires that his will should be, as Mr. Cole says,
expressed “in any and every form of social action.” It is supposed that the
expression of their will is the consuming passion of men, for they are assumed
to possess by instinct the art of government. But as a matter of plain
experience, self-determination is only one of the many interests of a human
personality. The desire to be the master of one’s own destiny is a strong
desire, but it has to adjust itself to other equally strong desires, such as
the desire for a good life, for peace, for relief from burdens. In the original
assumptions of democracy it was held that the expression of each man’s will
would spontaneously satisfy not only his desire for self-expression, but his desire
for a good life, because the instinct to express one’s self in a good life was
innate.
The emphasis, therefore, has always been on the
mechanism for expressing the will. The democratic El Dorado has always been
some perfect environment, and some perfect system of voting and representation,
where the innate good will and instinctive statesmanship of every man could be
translated into action. In limited areas and for brief periods the environment
has been so favorable, that is to say so isolated, and so rich in opportunity,
that the theory worked well enough to confirm men in thinking that it was sound
for all time and everywhere. Then when the isolation ended, and society became
complex, and men had to adjust themselves closely to one another, the democrat
spent his time trying to devise more perfect units of voting, in the hope that
somehow he would, as Mr. Cole says, “get the mechanism right, and adjust it as
far as possible to men’s social wills.” But while the democratic theorist was
busy at this, he was far away from the actual interests of human nature. He was
absorbed by one interest: self-government. Mankind was interested in all kinds
of other things, in order, in its rights, in prosperity, in sights and sounds
and in not being bored. In so far as spontaneous democracy does not satisfy
their other interests, it seems to most men most of the time to be an empty
thing. Because the art of successful self-government is not instinctive, men do
not long desire self-government for its own sake. They desire it for the sake
of the results. That is why the impulse to self-government is always strongest
as a protest against bad conditions.
The democratic fallacy has been its preoccupation
with the origin of government rather than with the processes and results. The
democrat has always assumed that if political power could be derived in the
right way, it would be beneficent. His whole attention has been on the source
of power, since he is hypnotized by the belief that the great thing is to
express the will of the people, first because expression is the highest
interest of man, and second because the will is instinctively good. But no
amount of regulation at the source of a river will completely control its
behavior, and while democrats have been absorbed in trying to find a good
mechanism for originating social power, that is to say a good mechanism of
voting and representation, they neglected almost every other interest of men.
For no matter how power originates, the crucial interest is in how power is
exercised. What determines the quality of civilization is the use made of
power. And that use cannot be controlled at the source.
If you try to control government wholly at the
source, you inevitably make all the vital decisions invisible. For since there
is no instinct which automatically makes political decisions that produce a
good life, the men who actually exercise power not only fail to express the
will of the people, because on most questions no will exists, but they exercise
power according to opinions which are hidden from the electorate.
If, then, you root out of the democratic philosophy
the whole assumption in all its ramifications that government is instinctive,
and that therefore it can be managed by self-centered opinions, what becomes of
the democratic faith in the dignity of man? It takes a fresh lease of life by
associating itself with the whole personality instead of with a meager aspect
of it. For the traditional democrat risked the dignity of man on one very
precarious assumption, that he would exhibit that dignity instinctively in wise
laws and good government. Voters did not do that, and so the democrat was
forever being made to look a little silly by tough-minded men. But if, instead
of hanging human dignity on the one assumption about self-government, you
insist that man’s dignity requires a standard of living, in which his
capacities are properly exercised, the whole problem changes. The criteria
which you then apply to government are whether it is producing a certain
minimum of health, of decent housing, of material necessities, of education, of
freedom, of pleasures, of beauty, not simply whether at the sacrifice of all
these things, it vibrates to the self-centered opinions that happen to be
floating around in men’s minds. In the degree to which these criteria can be
made exact and objective, political decision, which is inevitably the concern
of comparatively few people, is actually brought into relation with the
interests of men.
There is no prospect, in any time which we can
conceive, that the whole invisible environment will be so clear to all men that
they will spontaneously arrive at sound public opinions on the whole business
of government. And even if there were a prospect, it is extremely doubtful
whether many of us would wish to be bothered, or would take the time to form an
opinion on “any and every form of social action” which affects us. The only
prospect which is not visionary is that each of us in his own sphere will act
more and more on a realistic picture of the invisible world, and that we shall
develop more and more men who are expert in keeping these pictures realistic.
Outside the rather narrow range of our own possible attention, social control
depends upon devising standards of living and methods of audit by which the acts
of public officials and industrial directors are measured. We cannot ourselves
inspire or guide all these acts, as the mystical democrat has always imagined.
But we can steadily increase our real control over these acts by insisting that
all of them shall be plainly recorded, and their results objectively measured.
I should say, perhaps, that we can progressively hope to insist. For the
working out of such standards and of such audits has only begun.
PART VII. NEWSPAPERS
CHAPTER XXI. THE BUYING
PUBLIC
1
THE idea that men have to go forth and study the
world in order to govern it, has played a very minor part in political thought.
It could figure very little, because the machinery for reporting the world in
any way useful to government made comparatively little progress from the time
of Aristotle to the age in which the premises of democracy were established.
Therefore, if you had asked a pioneer democrat where
the information was to come from on which the will of the people was to be
based, he would have been puzzled by the question. It would have seemed a
little as if you had asked him where his life or his soul came from. The will
of the people, he almost always assumed, exists at all times; the duty of
political science was to work out the inventions of the ballot and
representative government. If they were properly worked out and applied under
the right conditions, such as exist in the self-contained village or the
self-contained shop, the mechanism would somehow overcome the brevity of
attention which Aristotle had observed, and the narrowness of its range, which
the theory of a self-contained community tacitly acknowledged. We have seen how
even at this late date the guild socialists are transfixed by the notion that
if only you can build on the right unit of voting and representation, an
intricate cooperative commonwealth is possible.
Convinced that the wisdom was there if only you could
find it, democrats have treated the problem of making public opinions as a
problem in civil liberties. [Footnote: The best study is Prof. Zechariah Chafee’s,
Freedom of Speech.] “Who ever knew Truth put to the worse, in a free and open
encounter?” [Footnote: Milton, Areopagitica, cited at the opening of Mr. Chafee’s
book. For comment on this classic doctrine of liberty as stated by Milton, John
Stuart Mill, and Mr. Bertrand Russel, see my Liberty and the News, Ch. II.]
Supposing that no one has ever seen it put to the worse, are we to believe then
that the truth is generated by the encounter, like fire by rubbing two sticks?
Behind this classic doctrine of liberty, which American democrats embodied in
their Bill of Rights, there are, in fact, several different theories of the
origin of truth. One is a faith that in the competition of opinions, the truest
will win because there is a peculiar strength in the truth. This is probably
sound if you allow the competition to extend over a sufficiently long time.
When men argue in this vein they have in mind the verdict of history, and they
think specifically of heretics persecuted when they lived, canonized after they
were dead. Milton’s question rests also on a belief that the capacity to
recognize truth is inherent in all men, and that truth freely put in
circulation will win acceptance. It derives no less from the experience, which
has shown that men are not likely to discover truth if they cannot speak it,
except under the eye of an uncomprehending policeman.
No one can possibly overestimate the practical value
of these civil liberties, nor the importance of maintaining them. When they are
in jeopardy, the human spirit is in jeopardy, and should there come a time when
they have to be curtailed, as during a war, the suppression of thought is a
risk to civilization which might prevent its recovery from the effects of war,
if the hysterics, who exploit the necessity, were numerous enough to carry over
into peace the taboos of war. Fortunately, the mass of men is too tolerant long
to enjoy the professional inquisitors, as gradually, under the criticism of men
not willing to be terrorized, they are revealed as mean-spirited creatures who
nine-tenths of the time do not know what they are talking about. [Footnote: Cf.
for example, the publications of the Lusk Committee in New York, and the public
statements and prophecies of Mr. Mitchell Palmer, who was Attorney-General of
the United States during the period of President Wilson’s illness.]
But in spite of its fundamental importance, civil
liberty in this sense does not guarantee public opinion in the modern world.
For it always assumes, either that truth is spontaneous, or that the means of
securing truth exist when there is no external interference. But when you are
dealing with an invisible environment, the assumption is false. The truth about
distant or complex matters is not self-evident, and the machinery for
assembling information is technical and expensive. Yet political science, and
especially democratic political science, has never freed itself from the
original assumption of Aristotle’s politics sufficiently to restate the
premises, so that political thought might come to grips with the problem of how
to make the invisible world visible to the citizens of a modern state.
So deep is the tradition, that until quite recently,
for example, political science was taught in our colleges as if newspapers did
not exist. I am not referring to schools of journalism, for they are trade
schools, intended to prepare men and women for a career. I am referring to
political science as expounded to future business men, lawyers, public
officials, and citizens at large. In that science a study of the press and the
sources of popular information found no place. It is a curious fact. To anyone
not immersed in the routine interests of political science, it is almost
inexplicable that no American student of government, no American sociologist,
has ever written a book on news-gathering. There are occasional references to
the press, and statements that it is not, or that it ought to be, “free” and
“truthful.” But I can find almost nothing else. And this disdain of the
professionals finds its counterpart in public opinions. Universally it is
admitted that the press is the chief means of contact with the unseen
environment. And practically everywhere it is assumed that the press should do
spontaneously for us what primitive democracy imagined each of us could do
spontaneously for himself, that every day and twice a day it will present us
with a true picture of all the outer world in which we are interested.
2
This insistent and ancient belief that truth is not
earned, but inspired, revealed, supplied gratis, comes out very plainly in our
economic prejudices as readers of newspapers. We expect the newspaper to serve
us with truth however unprofitable the truth may be. For this difficult and
often dangerous service, which we recognize as fundamental, we expected to pay
until recently the smallest coin turned out by the mint. We have accustomed
ourselves now to paying two and even three cents on weekdays, and on Sundays,
for an illustrated encyclopedia and vaudeville entertainment attached, we have
screwed ourselves up to paying a nickel or even a dime. Nobody thinks for a
moment that he ought to pay for his newspaper. He expects the fountains of
truth to bubble, but he enters into no contract, legal or moral, involving any
risk, cost or trouble to himself. He will pay a nominal price when it suits
him, will stop paying whenever it suits him, will turn to another paper when
that suits him. Somebody has said quite aptly that the newspaper editor has to
be re-elected every day.
This casual and one-sided relationship between
readers and press is an anomaly of our civilization. There is nothing else
quite like it, and it is, therefore, hard to compare the press with any other
business or institution. It is not a business pure and simple, partly because
the product is regularly sold below cost, but chiefly because the community
applies one ethical measure to the press and another to trade or manufacture.
Ethically a newspaper is judged as if it were a church or a school. But if you
try to compare it with these you fail; the taxpayer pays for the public school,
the private school is endowed or supported by tuition fees, there are subsidies
and collections for the church. You cannot compare journalism with law,
medicine or engineering, for in every one of these professions the consumer
pays for the service. A free press, if you judge by the attitude of the
readers, means newspapers that are virtually given away.
Yet the critics of the press are merely voicing the
moral standards of the community, when they expect such an institution to live
on the same plane as that on which the school, the church, and the
disinterested professions are supposed to live. This illustrates again the
concave character of democracy. No need for artificially acquired information
is felt to exist. The information must come naturally, that is to say gratis,
if not out of the heart of the citizen, then gratis out of the newspaper. The
citizen will pay for his telephone, his railroad rides, his motor car, his
entertainment. But he does not pay openly for his news.
He will, however, pay handsomely for the privilege of
having someone read about him. He will pay directly to advertise. And he will
pay indirectly for the advertisements of other people, because that payment,
being concealed in the price of commodities is part of an invisible environment
that he does not effectively comprehend. It would be regarded as an outrage to
have to pay openly the price of a good ice cream soda for all the news of the
world, though the public will pay that and more when it buys the advertised
commodities. The public pays for the press, but only when the payment is
concealed.
3
Circulation is, therefore, the means to an end. It
becomes an asset only when it can be sold to the advertiser, who buys it with
revenues secured through indirect taxation of the reader. [Footnote: “An
established newspaper is entitled to fix its advertising rates so that its net
receipts from circulation may be left on the credit side of the profit and loss
account. To arrive at net receipts, I would deduct from the gross the cost of
promotion, distribution, and other expenses incidental to circulation.” From an
address by Mr. Adolph S. Ochs, publisher of the New York Times, at the
Philadelphia Convention of the Associated Advertising Clubs of The World, June
26, 1916. Cited, Elmer Davis, History of The New York Times, 1851-1921, pp.
397-398.] The kind of circulation which the advertiser will buy depends on what
he has to sell. It may be “quality” or “mass.” On the whole there is no sharp
dividing line, for in respect to most commodities sold by advertising, the
customers are neither the small class of the very rich nor the very poor. They
are the people with enough surplus over bare necessities to exercise discretion
in their buying. The paper, therefore, which goes into the homes of the fairly
prosperous is by and large the one which offers most to the advertiser. It may
also go into the homes of the poor, but except for certain lines of goods, an
analytical advertising agent does not rate that circulation as a great asset,
unless, as seems to be the case with certain of Mr. Hearst’s properties, the
circulation is enormous.
A newspaper which angers those whom it pays best to
reach through advertisements is a bad medium for an advertiser. And since no
one ever claimed that advertising was philanthropy, advertisers buy space in
those publications which are fairly certain to reach their future customers.
One need not spend much time worrying about the unreported scandals of the
dry-goods merchants. They represent nothing really significant, and incidents
of this sort are less common than many critics of the press suppose. The real
problem is that the readers of a newspaper, unaccustomed to paying the cost of
newsgathering, can be capitalized only by turning them into circulation that
can be sold to manufacturers and merchants. And those whom it is most important
to capitalize are those who have the most money to spend. Such a press is bound
to respect the point of view of the buying public. It is for this buying public
that newspapers are edited and published, for without that support the
newspaper cannot live. A newspaper can flout an advertiser, it can attack a
powerful banking or traction interest, but if it alienates the buying public,
it loses the one indispensable asset of its existence.
Mr. John L. Given, [Footnote: Making a Newspaper, p.
13. This is the best technical book I know, and should be read by everyone who
undertakes to discuss the press. Mr. G. B. Diblee, who wrote the volume on The
Newspaper in the Home University Library says (p. 253), that “on the press for
pressmen I only know of one good book, Mr. Given’s.”] formerly of the New York
Evening Sun, stated in 1914 that out of over two thousand three hundred dailies
published in the United States, there were about one hundred and seventy-five
printed in cities having over one hundred thousand inhabitants. These
constitute the press for “general news.” They are the key papers which collect
the news dealing with great events, and even the people who do not read any one
of the one hundred and seventy-five depend ultimately upon them for news of the
outer world. For they make up the great press associations which coöperate in
the exchange of news. Each is, therefore, not only the informant of its own
readers, but it is the local reporter for the newspapers of other cities. The
rural press and the special press by and large, take their general news from
these key papers. And among these there are some very much richer than others,
so that for international news, in the main, the whole press of the nation may
depend upon the reports of the press associations and the special services of a
few metropolitan dailies.
Roughly speaking, the economic support for general
news gathering is in the price paid for advertised goods by the fairly
prosperous sections of cities with more than one hundred thousand inhabitants.
These buying publics are composed of the members of families, who depend for
their income chiefly on trade, merchandising, the direction of manufacture, and
finance. They are the clientele among whom it pays best to advertise in a
newspaper. They wield a concentrated purchasing power, which may be less in
volume than the aggregate for farmers and workingmen; but within the radius
covered by a daily newspaper they are the quickest assets.
4
They have, moreover, a double claim to attention.
They are not only the best customers for the advertiser, they include the
advertisers. Therefore the impression made by the newspapers on this public
matters deeply. Fortunately this public is not unanimous. It may be
“capitalistic” but it contains divergent views on what capitalism is, and how
it is to be run. Except in times of danger, this respectable opinion is sufficiently
divided to permit of considerable differences of policy. These would be greater
still if it were not that publishers are themselves usually members of these
urban communities, and honestly see the world through the lenses of their
associates and friends.
They are engaged in a speculative business,
[Footnote: Sometimes so speculative that in order to secure credit the
publisher has to go into bondage to his creditors. Information on this point is
very difficult to obtain, and for that reason its general importance is often
much exaggerated.] which depends on the general condition of trade, and more
peculiarly on a circulation based not on a marriage contract with their
readers, but on free love. The object of every publisher is, therefore, to turn
his circulation from a medley of catch-as-catch-can news stand buyers into a
devoted band of constant readers. A newspaper that can really depend upon the
loyalty of its readers is as independent as a newspaper can be, given the
economics of modern journalism. [Footnote: “It is an axiom in newspaper
publishing—’more readers, more independence of the influence of advertisers;
fewer readers and more dependence on the advertiser’ It may seem like a
contradiction (yet it is the truth) to assert: the greater the number of
advertisers, the less influence they are individually able to exercise with the
publisher.” Adolph S. Ochs, of. supra.] A body of readers who stay by it
through thick and thin is a power greater than any which the individual
advertiser can wield, and a power great enough to break up a combination of
advertisers. Therefore, whenever you find a newspaper betraying its readers for
the sake of an advertiser, you can be fairly certain either that the publisher
sincerely shares the views of the advertiser, or that he thinks, perhaps
mistakenly, he cannot count upon the support of his readers if he openly
resists dictation. It is a question of whether the readers, who do not pay in
cash for their news, will pay for it in loyalty.
CHAPTER XXII. THE CONSTANT
READER
I
THE loyalty of the buying public to a newspaper is
not stipulated in any bond. In almost every other enterprise the person who
expects to be served enters into an agreement that controls his passing whims.
At least he pays for what he obtains. In the publishing of periodicals the
nearest approach to an agreement for a definite time is the paid subscription,
and that is not, I believe, a great factor in the economy of a metropolitan
daily. The reader is the sole and the daily judge of his loyalty, and there can
be no suit against him for breach of promise or nonsupport.
Though everything turns on the constancy of the
reader, there does not exist even a vague tradition to call that fact to the
reader’s mind. His constancy depends on how he happens to feel, or on his
habits. And these depend not simply on the quality of the news, but more often
on a number of obscure elements that in our casual relation to the press, we
hardly take the trouble to make conscious. The most important of these is that
each of us tends to judge a newspaper, if we judge it at all, by its treatment
of that part of the news in which we feel ourselves involved. The newspaper
deals with a multitude of events beyond our experience. But it deals also with
some events within our experience. And by its handling of those events we most
frequently decide to like it or dislike it, to trust it or refuse to have the
sheet in the house. If the newspaper gives a satisfactory account of that which
we think we know, our business, our church, our party, it is fairly certain to
be immune from violent criticism by us. What better criterion does the man at
the breakfast table possess than that the newspaper version checks up with his
own opinion? Therefore, most men tend to hold the newspaper most strictly
accountable in their capacity, not of general readers, but of special pleaders
on matters of their own experience.
Rarely is anyone but the interested party able to
test the accuracy of a report. If the news is local, and if there is competition,
the editor knows that he will probably hear from the man who thinks his
portrait unfair and inaccurate. But if the news is not local, the corrective
diminishes as the subject matter recedes into the distance. The only people who
can correct what they think is a false picture of themselves printed in another
city are members of groups well enough organized to hire publicity men.
Now it is interesting to note that the general reader
of a newspaper has no standing in law if he thinks he is being misled by the
news. It is only the aggrieved party who can sue for slander or libel, and he
has to prove a material injury to himself. The law embodies the tradition that
general news is not a matter of common concern, [Footnote: The reader will not
mistake this as a plea for censorship. It might, however, be a good thing if
there were competent tribunals, preferably not official ones, where charges of
untruthfulness and unfairness in the general news could be sifted. Cf. Liberty
and the News, pp. 73-76. ] except as to matter which is vaguely described as
immoral or seditious.
But the body of the news,
though unchecked as a whole by the disinterested reader, consists of items
about which some readers have very definite preconceptions. Those items are the
data of his judgment, and news which men read without this personal criterion,
they judge by some other standard than their standard of accuracy. They are
dealing here with a subject matter which to them is indistinguishable from
fiction. The canon of truth cannot be applied. They do not boggle over such
news if it conforms to their stereotypes, and they continue to read it if it
interests them. [Footnote: Note, for example, how absent is indignation
in Mr. Upton Sinclair against socialist papers, even those which are as
malignantly unfair to employers as certain of the papers cited by him are
unfair to radicals.]
2
There are newspapers, even in large cities, edited on
the principle that the readers wish to read about themselves. The theory is
that if enough people see their own names in the paper often enough, can read
about their weddings, funerals, sociables, foreign travels, lodge meetings,
school prizes, their fiftieth birthdays, their sixtieth birthdays, their silver
weddings, their outings and clambakes, they will make a reliable circulation.
The classic formula for such a newspaper is contained
in a letter written by Horace Greeley on April 3, 1860, to “Friend Fletcher”
who was about to start a country newspaper: [Footnote: Cited, James Melvin Lee,
The History of American Journalism, p. 405.]
“I. Begin with a clear conception that the subject of
deepest interest to an average human being is himself; next to that he is most
concerned about his neighbors. Asia and the Tongo Islands stand a long way
after these in his regard…. Do not let a new church be organized, or new
members be added to one already existing, a farm be sold, a new house raised, a
mill set in motion, a store opened, nor anything of interest to a dozen
families occur, without having the fact duly, though briefly, chronicled in
your columns. If a farmer cuts a big tree, or grows a mammoth beet, or harvests
a bounteous yield of wheat or corn, set forth the fact as concisely and
unexceptionally as possible.”
The function of becoming, as Mr. Lee puts it, “the
printed diary of the home town” is one that every newspaper no matter where it
is published must in some measure fill. And where, as in a great city like New
York, the general newspapers circulated broadcast cannot fill it, there exist
small newspapers published on Greeley’s pattern for sections of the city. In
the boroughs of Manhattan and the Bronx there are perhaps twice as many local
dailies as there are general newspapers. [Footnote: Cf. John L. Given, Making a
Newspaper, p. 13.] And they are supplemented by all kinds of special
publications for trades, religions, nationalities.
These diaries are published for people who find their
own lives interesting. But there are also great numbers of people who find
their own lives dull, and wish, like Hedda Gabler, to live a more thrilling
life. For them there are published a few whole newspapers, and sections of
others, devoted to the personal lives of a set of imaginary people, with whose
gorgeous vices the reader can in his fancy safely identify himself. Mr. Hearst’s
unflagging interest in high society caters to people who never hope to be in
high society, and yet manage to derive some enhancement out of the vague
feeling that they are part of the life that they read about. In the great
cities “the printed diary of the home town” tends to be the printed diary of a
smart set.
And it is, as we have already noted, the dailies of
the cities which carry the burden of bringing distant news to the private
citizen. But it is not primarily their political and social news which holds
the circulation. The interest in that is intermittent, and few publishers can
bank on it alone. The newspaper, therefore, takes to itself a variety of other
features, all primarily designed to hold a body of readers together, who so far
as big news is concerned, are not able to be critical. Moreover, in big news
the competition in any one community is not very serious. The press services
standardize the main events; it is only once in a while that a great scoop is
made; there is apparently not a very great reading public for such massive
reporting as has made the New York Times of recent years indispensable to men
of all shades of opinion. In order to differentiate themselves and collect a
steady public most papers have to go outside the field of general news. They go
to the dazzling levels of society, to scandal and crime, to sports, pictures,
actresses, advice to the lovelorn, highschool notes, women’s pages, buyer’s
pages, cooking receipts, chess, whist, gardening, comic strips, thundering
partisanship, not because publishers and editors are interested in everything
but news, but because they have to find some way of holding on to that alleged
host of passionately interested readers, who are supposed by some critics of
the press to be clamoring for the truth and nothing but the truth.
The newspaper editor occupies a strange position. His
enterprises depend upon indirect taxation levied by his advertisers upon his
readers; the patronage of the advertisers depends upon the editor’s skill in holding
together an effective group of customers. These customers deliver judgment
according to their private experiences and their stereotyped expectations, for
in the nature of things they have no independent knowledge of most news they
read. If the judgment is not unfavorable, the editor is at least within range
of a circulation that pays. But in order to secure that circulation, he cannot
rely wholly upon news of the greater environment. He handles that as
interestingly as he can, of course, but the quality of the general news,
especially about public affairs, is not in itself sufficient to cause very
large numbers of readers to discriminate among the dailies.
This somewhat left-handed relationship between
newspapers and public information is reflected in the salaries of newspaper
men. Reporting, which theoretically constitutes the foundation of the whole
institution, is the most poorly paid branch of newspaper work, and is the least
regarded. By and large, able men go into it only by necessity or for experience,
and with the definite intention of being graduated as soon as possible. For
straight reporting is not a career that offers many great rewards. The rewards
in journalism go to specialty work, to signed correspondence which has
editorial quality, to executives, and to men with a knack and flavor of their
own. This is due, no doubt, to what economists call the rent of ability. But
this economic principle operates with such peculiar violence in journalism that
newsgathering does not attract to itself anything like the number of trained
and able men which its public importance would seem to demand. The fact that
the able men take up “straight reporting” with the intention of leaving it as
soon as possible is, I think, the chief reason why it has never developed in
sufficient measure those corporate traditions that give to a profession
prestige and a jealous self-respect. For it is these corporate traditions which
engender the pride of craft, which tend to raise the standards of admission,
punish breaches of the code, and give men the strength to insist upon their
status in society.
3
Yet all this does not go to the root of the matter.
For while the economics of journalism is such as to depress the value of news
reporting, it is, I am certain, a false determinism which would abandon the
analysis at that point. The intrinsic power of the reporter appears to be so
great, the number of very able men who pass through reporting is so large, that
there must be some deeper reason why, comparatively speaking, so little serious
effort has gone into raising the vocation to the level say of medicine,
engineering, or law.
Mr. Upton Sinclair speaks for a large body of opinion
in America, [Footnote: Mr. Hilaire Belloc makes practically the same analysis
for English newspapers. Cf. The Free Press.] when he claims that in what he
calls “The Brass Check” he has found this deeper reason:
“The Brass Check is found in
your pay envelope every week—you who write and print and distribute our
newspapers and magazines. The Brass check is the price of your shame—you who
take the fair body of truth and sell it in the market place, who betray the
virgin hopes of mankind into the loathsome brothel of Big Business.” [Footnote:
Upton Sinclair, The Brass Check. A Study of American Journalism. p. 116.]
It would seem from this that there exists a body of
known truth, and a set of well founded hopes, which are prostituted by a more
or less conscious conspiracy of the rich owners of newspapers. If this theory
is correct, then a certain conclusion follows. It is that the fair body of
truth would be inviolate in a press not in any way connected with Big Business.
For if it should happen that a press not controlled by, and not even friendly
with, Big Business somehow failed to contain the fair body of truth, something
would be wrong with Mr. Sinclair’s theory.
There is such a press. Strange to say, in proposing a
remedy Mr. Sinclair does not advise his readers to subscribe to the nearest
radical newspaper. Why not? If the troubles of American journalism go back to
the Brass Check of Big Business why does not the remedy lie in reading the
papers that do not in any remote way accept the Brass Check? Why subsidize a
“National News” with a large board of directors “of all creeds or causes” to
print a paper full of facts “regardless of what is injured, the Steel Trust or
the I. W. W., the Standard Oil Company or the Socialist Party?” If the trouble
is Big Business, that is, the Steel Trust, Standard Oil and the like, why not
urge everybody to read I. W. W. or Socialist papers? Mr. Sinclair does not say
why not. But the reason is simple. He cannot convince anybody, not even
himself, that the anti-capitalist press is the remedy for the capitalist press.
He ignores the anti-capitalist press both in his theory of the Brass Check and
in his constructive proposal. But if you are diagnosing American journalism you
cannot ignore it. If what you care about is “the fair body of truth,” you do
not commit the gross logical error of assembling all the instances of unfairness
and lying you can find in one set of newspapers, ignore all the instances you
could easily find in another set, and then assign as the cause of the lying,
the one supposedly common characteristic of the press to which you have
confined your investigation. If you are going to blame “capitalism” for the
faults of the press, you are compelled to prove that those faults do not exist
except where capitalism controls. That Mr. Sinclair cannot do this, is shown by
the fact that while in his diagnosis he traces everything to capitalism, in his
prescription he ignores both capitalism and anti-capitalism.
One would have supposed that the inability to take
any non-capitalist paper as a model of truthfulness and competence would have
caused Mr. Sinclair, and those who agree with him, to look somewhat more
critically at their assumptions. They would have asked themselves, for example,
where is the fair body of truth, that Big Business prostitutes, but anti-Big
Business does not seem to obtain? For that question leads, I believe, to the
heart of the matter, to the question of what is news.
CHAPTER XXIII. THE NATURE
OF NEWS
1
ALL the reporters in the world working all the hours
of the day could not witness all the happenings in the world. There are not a
great many reporters. And none of them has the power to be in more than one
place at a time. Reporters are not clairvoyant, they do not gaze into a crystal
ball and see the world at will, they are not assisted by thought-transference.
Yet the range of subjects these comparatively few men manage to cover would be
a miracle indeed, if it were not a standardized routine.
Newspapers do not try to keep an eye on all mankind.
[Footnote: See the illuminating chapter in Mr. John L. Given’s book, already
cited, on “Uncovering the News,” Ch. V.] They have watchers stationed at
certain places, like Police Headquarters, the Coroner’s Office, the County
Clerk’s Office, City Hall, the White House, the Senate, House of
Representatives, and so forth. They watch, or rather in the majority of cases
they belong to associations which employ men who watch “a comparatively small
number of places where it is made known when the life of anyone… departs from
ordinary paths, or when events worth telling about occur. For example, John
Smith, let it be supposed, becomes a broker. For ten years he pursues the even
tenor of his way and except for his customers and his friends no one gives him
a thought. To the newspapers he is as if he were not. But in the eleventh year
he suffers heavy losses and, at last, his resources all gone, summons his
lawyer and arranges for the making of an assignment. The lawyer posts off to
the County Clerk’s office, and a clerk there makes the necessary entries in the
official docket. Here in step the newspapers. While the clerk is writing Smith’s
business obituary a reporter glances over his shoulder and a few minutes later
the reporters know Smith’s troubles and are as well informed concerning his
business status as they would be had they kept a reporter at his door every day
for over ten years. [Footnote: Op. cit., p. 57.]
When Mr. Given says that the newspapers know “Smith’s
troubles” and “his business status,” he does not mean that they know them as
Smith knows them, or as Mr. Arnold Bennett would know them if he had made Smith
the hero of a three volume novel. The newspapers know only “in a few minutes”
the bald facts which are recorded in the County Clerk’s Office. That overt act
“uncovers” the news about Smith. Whether the news will be followed up or not is
another matter. The point is that before a series of events become news they
have usually to make themselves noticeable in some more or less overt act.
Generally too, in a crudely overt act. Smith’s friends may have known for years
that he was taking risks, rumors may even have reached the financial editor if
Smith’s friends were talkative. But apart from the fact that none of this could
be published because it would be libel, there is in these rumors nothing
definite on which to peg a story. Something definite must occur that has
unmistakable form. It may be the act of going into bankruptcy, it may be a
fire, a collision, an assault, a riot, an arrest, a denunciation, the
introduction of a bill, a speech, a vote, a meeting, the expressed opinion of a
well known citizen, an editorial in a newspaper, a sale, a wage-schedule, a
price change, the proposal to build a bridge…. There must be a manifestation.
The course of events must assume a certain definable shape, and until it is in
a phase where some aspect is an accomplished fact, news does not separate
itself from the ocean of possible truth.
2
Naturally there is room for wide difference of
opinion as to when events have a shape that can be reported. A good journalist
will find news oftener than a hack. If he sees a building with a dangerous
list, he does not have to wait until it falls into the street in order to
recognize news. It was a great reporter who guessed the name of the next Indian
Viceroy when he heard that Lord So-and-So was inquiring about climates. There
are lucky shots but the number of men who can make them is small. Usually it is
the stereotyped shape assumed by an event at an obvious place that uncovers the
run of the news. The most obvious place is where people’s affairs touch public
authority. De minimis non curat lex. It is at these places that marriages,
births, deaths, contracts, failures, arrivals, departures, lawsuits, disorders,
epidemics and calamities are made known.
In the first instance, therefore, the news is not a
mirror of social conditions, but the report of an aspect that has obtruded
itself. The news does not tell you how the seed is germinating in the ground,
but it may tell you when the first sprout breaks through the surface. It may
even tell you what somebody says is happening to the seed under ground. It may
tell you that the sprout did not come up at the time it was expected. The more
points, then, at which any happening can be fixed, objectified, measured,
named, the more points there are at which news can occur.
So, if some day a legislature, having exhausted all
other ways of improving mankind, should forbid the scoring of baseball games,
it might still be possible to play some sort of game in which the umpire
decided according to his own sense of fair play how long the game should last,
when each team should go to bat, and who should be regarded as the winner. If
that game were reported in the newspapers it would consist of a record of the
umpire’s decisions, plus the reporter’s impression of the hoots and cheers of
the crowd, plus at best a vague account of how certain men, who had no
specified position on the field moved around for a few hours on an unmarked
piece of sod. The more you try to imagine the logic of so absurd a predicament,
the more clear it becomes that for the purposes of newsgathering, (let alone
the purposes of playing the game) it is impossible to do much without an
apparatus and rules for naming, scoring, recording. Because that machinery is
far from perfect, the umpire’s life is often a distracted one. Many crucial
plays he has to judge by eye. The last vestige of dispute could be taken out of
the game, as it has been taken out of chess when people obey the rules, if
somebody thought it worth his while to photograph every play. It was the moving
pictures which finally settled a real doubt in many reporters’ minds, owing to
the slowness of the human eye, as to just what blow of Dempsey’s knocked out
Carpentier.
Wherever there is a good machinery of record, the
modern news service works with great precision. There is one on the stock
exchange, and the news of price movements is flashed over tickers with
dependable accuracy. There is a machinery for election returns, and when the
counting and tabulating are well done, the result of a national election is
usually known on the night of the election. In civilized communities deaths,
births, marriages and divorces are recorded, and are known accurately except
where there is concealment or neglect. The machinery exists for some, and only
some, aspects of industry and government, in varying degrees of precision for
securities, money and staples, bank clearances, realty transactions, wage
scales. It exists for imports and exports because they pass through a custom
house and can be directly recorded. It exists in nothing like the same degree
for internal trade, and especially for trade over the counter.
It will be found, I think, that there is a very
direct relation between the certainty of news and the system of record. If you
call to mind the topics which form the principal indictment by reformers
against the press, you find they are subjects in which the newspaper occupies
the position of the umpire in the unscored baseball game. All news about states
of mind is of this character: so are all descriptions of personalities, of
sincerity, aspiration, motive, intention, of mass feeling, of national feeling,
of public opinion, the policies of foreign governments. So is much news about
what is going to happen. So are questions turning on private profit, private
income, wages, working conditions, the efficiency of labor, educational
opportunity, unemployment, [Footnote: Think of what guess work went into the
Reports of Unemployment in 1921.] monotony, health, discrimination, unfairness,
restraint of trade, waste, “backward peoples,” conservatism, imperialism,
radicalism, liberty, honor, righteousness. All involve data that are at best
spasmodically recorded. The data may be hidden because of a censorship or a
tradition of privacy, they may not exist because nobody thinks record important,
because he thinks it red tape, or because nobody has yet invented an objective
system of measurement. Then the news on these subjects is bound to be
debatable, when it is not wholly neglected. The events which are not scored are
reported either as personal and conventional opinions, or they are not news.
They do not take shape until somebody protests, or somebody investigates, or
somebody publicly, in the etymological meaning of the word, makes an issue of
them.
This is the underlying reason for the existence of
the press agent. The enormous discretion as to what facts and what impressions
shall be reported is steadily convincing every organized group of people that
whether it wishes to secure publicity or to avoid it, the exercise of
discretion cannot be left to the reporter. It is safer to hire a press agent
who stands between the group and the newspapers. Having hired him, the
temptation to exploit his strategic position is very great. “Shortly before the war,” says Mr. Frank Cobb, “the
newspapers of New York took a census of the press agents who were regularly
employed and regularly accredited and found that there were about twelve
hundred of them. How many there are now (1919) I do not pretend to know, but
what I do know is that many of the direct channels to news have been closed and
the information for the public is first filtered through publicity agents. The
great corporations have them, the banks have them, the railroads have them, all
the organizations of business and of social and political activity have them,
and they are the media through which news comes. Even statesmen have them.”
[Footnote: Address before the Women’s City Club of New York, Dec. 11, 1919.
Reprinted, New Republic, Dec. 31, 1919, p. 44.]
Were reporting the simple recovery of obvious facts,
the press agent would be little more than a clerk. But since, in respect to
most of the big topics of news, the facts are not simple, and not at all
obvious, but subject to choice and opinion, it is natural that everyone should
wish to make his own choice of facts for the newspapers to print. The publicity
man does that. And in doing it, he certainly saves the reporter much trouble,
by presenting him a clear picture of a situation out of which he might
otherwise make neither head nor tail. But it follows that the picture which the
publicity man makes for the reporter is the one he wishes the public to see. He
is censor and propagandist, responsible only to his employers, and to the whole
truth responsible only as it accords with the employers’ conception of his own
interests.
The development of the publicity man is a clear sign
that the facts of modern life do not spontaneously take a shape in which they
can be known. They must be given a shape by somebody, and since in the daily
routine reporters cannot give a shape to facts, and since there is little
disinterested organization of intelligence, the need for some formulation is
being met by the interested parties.
3
The good press agent understands that the virtues of
his cause are not news, unless they are such strange virtues that they jut
right out of the routine of life. This is not because the newspapers do not
like virtue, but because it is not worth while to say that nothing has happened
when nobody expected anything to happen. So if the publicity man wishes free
publicity he has, speaking quite accurately, to start something. He arranges a
stunt: obstructs the traffic, teases the police, somehow manages to entangle
his client or his cause with an event that is already news. The suffragists
knew this, did not particularly enjoy the knowledge but acted on it, and kept
suffrage in the news long after the arguments pro and con were straw in their
mouths, and people were about to settle down to thinking of the suffrage
movement as one of the established institutions of American life. [Footnote:
Cf. Inez Haynes Irwin, The Story of the Woman’s Party. It is not only a good
account of a vital part of a great agitation, but a reservoir of material on
successful, non-revolutionary, non-conspiring agitation under modern conditions
of public attention, public interest, and political habit.]
Fortunately the suffragists, as distinct from the
feminists, had a perfectly concrete objective, and a very simple one. What the
vote symbolizes is not simple, as the ablest advocates and the ablest opponents
knew. But the right to vote is a simple and familiar right. Now in labor
disputes, which are probably the chief item in the charges against newspapers,
the right to strike, like the right to vote, is simple enough. But the causes
and objects of a particular strike are like the causes and objects of the woman’s
movement, extremely subtle.
Let us suppose the conditions leading up to a strike
are bad. What is the measure of evil? A certain conception of a proper standard
of living, hygiene, economic security, and human dignity. The industry may be
far below the theoretical standard of the community, and the workers may be too
wretched to protest. Conditions may be above the standard, and the workers may
protest violently. The standard is at best a vague measure. However, we shall
assume that the conditions are below par, as par is understood by the editor.
Occasionally without waiting for the workers to threaten, but prompted say by a
social worker, he will send reporters to investigate, and will call attention
to bad conditions. Necessarily he cannot do that often. For these
investigations cost time, money, special talent, and a lot of space. To make
plausible a report that conditions are bad, you need a good many columns of
print. In order to tell the truth about the steel worker in the Pittsburgh
district, there was needed a staff of investigators, a great deal of time, and
several fat volumes of print. It is impossible to suppose that any daily
newspaper could normally regard the making of Pittsburgh Surveys, or even
Interchurch Steel Reports, as one of its tasks. News which requires so much
trouble as that to obtain is beyond the resources of a daily press. [Footnote:
Not long ago Babe Ruth was jailed for speeding. Released from jail just before
the afternoon game started, he rushed into his waiting automobile, and made up
for time lost in jail by breaking the speed laws on his way to the ball
grounds. No policeman stopped him, but a reporter timed him, and published his
speed the next morning. Babe Ruth is an exceptional man. Newspapers cannot time
all motorists. They have to take their news about speeding from the police.]
The bad conditions as such are not news, because in
all but exceptional cases, journalism is not a first hand report of the raw
material. It is a report of that material after it has been stylized. Thus bad
conditions might become news if the Board of Health reported an unusually high
death rate in an industrial area. Failing an intervention of this sort, the
facts do not become news, until the workers organize and make a demand upon
their employers. Even then, if an easy settlement is certain the news value is
low, whether or not the conditions themselves are remedied in the settlement.
But if industrial relations collapse into a strike or lockout the news value
increases. If the stoppage involves a service on which the readers of the
newspapers immediately depend, or if it involves a breach of order, the news
value is still greater.
The underlying trouble appears in the news through
certain easily recognizable symptoms, a demand, a strike, disorder. From the
point of view of the worker, or of the disinterested seeker of justice, the
demand, the strike, and the disorder, are merely incidents in a process that
for them is richly complicated. But since all the immediate realities lie
outside the direct experience both of the reporter, and of the special public
by which most newspapers are supported, they have normally to wait for a signal
in the shape of an overt act. When that signal comes, say through a walkout of
the men or a summons for the police, it calls into play the stereotypes people
have about strikes and disorders. The unseen struggle has none of its own
flavor. It is noted abstractly, and that abstraction is then animated by the
immediate experience of the reader and reporter. Obviously this is a very
different experience from that which the strikers have. They feel, let us say,
the temper of the foreman, the nerve-racking monotony of the machine, the
depressingly bad air, the drudgery of their wives, the stunting of their
children, the dinginess of their tenements. The slogans of the strike are
invested with these feelings. But the reporter and reader see at first only a
strike and some catchwords. They invest these with their feelings. Their
feelings may be that their jobs are insecure because the strikers are stopping
goods they need in their work, that there will be shortage and higher prices,
that it is all devilishly inconvenient. These, too, are realities. And when
they give color to the abstract news that a strike has been called, it is in
the nature of things that the workers are at a disadvantage. It is in the
nature, that is to say, of the existing system of industrial relations that
news arising from grievances or hopes by workers should almost invariably be
uncovered by an overt attack on production.
You have, therefore, the circumstances in all their
sprawling complexity, the overt act which signalizes them, the stereotyped bulletin
which publishes the signal, and the meaning that the reader himself injects,
after he has derived that meaning from the experience which directly affects
him. Now the reader’s experience of a strike may be very important indeed, but
from the point of view of the central trouble which caused the strike, it is
eccentric. Yet this eccentric meaning is automatically the most interesting.
[Footnote: Cf. Ch. XI, “The Enlisting of Interest.”] To enter imaginatively
into the central issues is for the reader to step out of himself, and into very
different lives.
It follows that in the reporting of strikes, the
easiest way is to let the news be uncovered by the overt act, and to describe
the event as the story of interference with the reader’s life. That is where
his attention is first aroused, and his interest most easily enlisted. A great
deal, I think myself the crucial part, of what looks to the worker and the
reformer as deliberate misrepresentation on the part of newspapers, is the
direct outcome of a practical difficulty in uncovering the news, and the
emotional difficulty of making distant facts interesting unless, as Emerson
says, we can “perceive (them) to be only a new version of our familiar
experience” and can “set about translating (them) at once into our parallel
facts.” [Footnote: From his essay entitled Art and Criticism. The quotation
occurs in a passage cited on page 87 of Professor R. W. Brown’s, The Writer’s
Art.]
If you study the way many a strike is reported in the
press, you will find, very often, that the issues are rarely in the headlines,
barely in the leading paragraphs, and sometimes not even mentioned anywhere. A
labor dispute in another city has to be very important before the news account
contains any definite information as to what is in dispute. The routine of the
news works that way, with modifications it works that way in regard to
political issues and international news as well. The news is an account of the
overt phases that are interesting, and the pressure on the newspaper to adhere
to this routine comes from many sides. It comes from the economy of noting only
the stereotyped phase of a situation. It comes from the difficulty of finding
journalists who can see what they have not learned to see. It comes from the
almost unavoidable difficulty of finding sufficient space in which even the
best journalist can make plausible an unconventional view. It comes from the
economic necessity of interesting the reader quickly, and the economic risk
involved in not interesting him at all, or of offending him by unexpected news
insufficiently or clumsily described. All these difficulties combined make for
uncertainty in the editor when there are dangerous issues at stake, and cause
him naturally to prefer the indisputable fact and a treatment more readily
adapted to the reader’s interest. The indisputable fact and the easy interest,
are the strike itself and the reader’s inconvenience.
All the subtler and deeper truths are in the present
organization of industry very unreliable truths. They involve judgments about
standards of living, productivity, human rights that are endlessly debatable in
the absence of exact record and quantitative analysis. And as long as these do
not exist in industry, the run of news about it will tend, as Emerson said,
quoting from Isocrates, “to make of moles mountains, and of mountains moles.”
[Footnote: Id., supra] Where there is no constitutional procedure in industry,
and no expert sifting of evidence and the claims, the fact that is sensational
to the reader is the fact that almost every journalist will seek. Given the
industrial relations that so largely prevail, even where there is conference or
arbitration, but no independent filtering of the facts for decision, the issue
for the newspaper public will tend not to be the issue for the industry. And so
to try disputes by an appeal through the newspapers puts a burden upon
newspapers and readers which they cannot and ought not to carry. As long as
real law and order do not exist, the bulk of the news will, unless consciously
and courageously corrected, work against those who have no lawful and orderly
method of asserting themselves. The bulletins from the scene of action will
note the trouble that arose from the assertion, rather than the reasons which
led to it. The reasons are intangible.
4
The editor deals with these bulletins. He sits in his
office, reads them, rarely does he see any large portion of the events
themselves. He must, as we have seen, woo at least a section of his readers
every day, because they will leave him without mercy if a rival paper happens
to hit their fancy. He works under enormous pressure, for the competition of
newspapers is often a matter of minutes. Every bulletin requires a swift but
complicated judgment. It must be understood, put in relation to other bulletins
also understood, and played up or played down according to its probable
interest for the public, as the editor conceives it. Without standardization,
without stereotypes, without routine judgments, without a fairly ruthless disregard
of subtlety, the editor would soon die of excitement. The final page is of a
definite size, must be ready at a precise moment; there can be only a certain
number of captions on the items, and in each caption there must be a definite
number of letters. Always there is the precarious urgency of the buying public,
the law of libel, and the possibility of endless trouble. The thing could not
be managed at all without systematization, for in a standardized product there
is economy of time and effort, as well as a partial guarantee against failure.
It is here that newspapers influence each other most
deeply. Thus when the war broke out, the American newspapers were confronted
with a subject about which they had no previous experience. Certain dailies,
rich enough to pay cable tolls, took the lead in securing news, and the way
that news was presented became a model for the whole press. But where did that
model come from? It came from the English press, not because Northcliffe owned
American newspapers, but because at first it was easier to buy English
correspondence, and because, later, it was easier for American journalists to
read English newspapers than it was for them to read any others. London was the
cable and news center, and it was there that a certain technic for reporting
the war was evolved. Something similar occurred in the reporting of the Russian
Revolution. In that instance, access to Russia was closed by military
censorship, both Russian and Allied, and closed still more effectively by the
difficulties of the Russian language. But above all it was closed to effective
news reporting by the fact that the hardest thing to report is chaos, even
though it is an evolving chaos. This put the formulating of Russian news at its
source in Helsingfors, Stockholm, Geneva, Paris and London, into the hands of
censors and propagandists. They were for a long time subject to no check of any
kind. Until they had made themselves ridiculous they created, let us admit, out
of some genuine aspects of the huge Russian maelstrom, a set of stereotypes so
evocative of hate and fear, that the very best instinct of journalism, its
desire to go and see and tell, was for a long time crushed. [Footnote: Cf. A
Test of the News, by Walter Lippmann and Charles Merz, assisted by Faye
Lippmann, New Republic, August 4, 1920.]
5
Every newspaper when it
reaches the reader is the result of a whole series of selections as to what
items shall be printed, in what position they shall be printed, how much space
each shall occupy, what emphasis each shall have. There are no objective
standards here. There are conventions. Take two newspapers published in
the same city on the same morning. The headline of one reads: “Britain pledges
aid to Berlin against French aggression; France openly backs Poles.” The
headline of the second is “Mrs. Stillman’s Other Love.” Which you prefer is a
matter of taste, but not entirely a matter of the editor’s taste. It is a
matter of his judgment as to what will absorb the half hour’s attention a
certain set of readers will give to his newspaper. Now the problem of securing
attention is by no means equivalent to displaying the news in the perspective
laid down by religious teaching or by some form of ethical culture. It is a
problem of provoking feeling in the reader, of inducing him to feel a sense of
personal identification with the stories he is reading. News which does not
offer this opportunity to introduce oneself into the struggle which it depicts
cannot appeal to a wide audience. The audience must participate in the news,
much as it participates in the drama, by personal identification. Just as
everyone holds his breath when the heroine is in danger, as he helps Babe Ruth
swing his bat, so in subtler form the reader enters into the news. In order
that he shall enter he must find a familiar foothold in the story, and this is
supplied to him by the use of stereotypes. They tell him that if an association
of plumbers is called a “combine” it is appropriate to develop his hostility;
if it is called a “group of leading business men” the cue is for a favorable
reaction.
It is in a combination of
these elements that the power to create opinion resides. Editorials reinforce.
Sometimes in a situation that on the news pages is too confusing to permit of
identification, they give the reader a clue by means of which he engages
himself. A clue he must have if, as most of us must, he is to seize the news in
a hurry. A suggestion of some sort he demands, which tells him, so to speak,
where he, a man conceiving himself to be such and such a person, shall
integrate his feelings with the news he reads.
“It has been said” writes Walter Bagehot, [Footnote:
On the Emotion of Conviction, Literary Studies, Vol. Ill, p. 172.] “that if you
can only get a middleclass Englishman to think whether there are ‘snails in
Sirius,’ he will soon have an opinion on it. It will be difficult to make him
think, but if he does think, he cannot rest in a negative, he will come to some
decision. And on any ordinary topic, of course, it is so. A grocer has a full
creed as to foreign policy, a young lady a complete theory of the sacraments,
as to which neither has any doubt whatever.”
Yet that same grocer will have many doubts about his
groceries, and that young lady, marvelously certain about the sacraments, may
have all kinds of doubts as to whether to marry the grocer, and if not whether
it is proper to accept his attentions. The ability to rest in the negative
implies either a lack of interest in the result, or a vivid sense of competing
alternatives. In the case of foreign policy or the sacraments, the interest in
the results is intense, while means for checking the opinion are poor. This is
the plight of the reader of the general news. If he is to read it at all he
must be interested, that is to say, he must enter into the situation and care
about the outcome. But if he does that he cannot rest in a negative, and unless
independent means of checking the lead given him by his newspaper exists, the
very fact that he is interested may make it difficult to arrive at that balance
of opinions which may most nearly approximate the truth. The more passionately
involved he becomes, the more he will tend to resent not only a different view,
but a disturbing bit of news. That is why many a newspaper finds that, having
honestly evoked the partisanship of its readers, it can not easily, supposing
the editor believes the facts warrant it, change position. If a change is
necessary, the transition has to be managed with the utmost skill and delicacy.
Usually a newspaper will not attempt so hazardous a performance. It is easier
and safer to have the news of that subject taper off and disappear, thus
putting out the fire by starving it.
CHAPTER XXIV. NEWS,
TRUTH, AND A CONCLUSION
As we begin to make more and more exact studies of
the press, much will depend upon the hypothesis we hold. If we assume with Mr. Sinclair, and most of his opponents,
that news and truth are two words for the same thing, we shall, I believe,
arrive nowhere. We shall prove that on this point the newspaper lied. We
shall prove that on that point Mr. Sinclair’s account lied. We shall
demonstrate that Mr. Sinclair lied when he said that somebody lied, and that
somebody lied when he said Mr. Sinclair lied. We shall vent our feelings, but
we shall vent them into air.
The hypothesis, which seems to me the most fertile,
is that news and truth are not the same thing, and must be clearly
distinguished. [Footnote: When I wrote Liberty and the News, I did not
understand this distinction clearly enough to state it, but cf. p. 89 ff.] The
function of news is to signalize an event, the function of truth is to bring to
light the hidden facts, to set them into relation with each other, and make a
picture of reality on which men can act. Only at those points, where social
conditions take recognizable and measurable shape, do the body of truth and the
body of news coincide. That is a comparatively small part of the whole field of
human interest. In this sector, and only in this sector, the tests of the news
are sufficiently exact to make the charges of perversion or suppression more
than a partisan judgment. There is no defense, no extenuation, no excuse
whatever, for stating six times that Lenin is dead, when the only information
the paper possesses is a report that he is dead from a source repeatedly shown
to be unreliable. The news, in that instance, is not “Lenin Dead” but
“Helsingfors Says Lenin is Dead.” And a newspaper can be asked to take the
responsibility of not making Lenin more dead than the source of the news is
reliable; if there is one subject on which editors are most responsible it is
in their judgment of the reliability of the source. But when it comes to
dealing, for example, with stories of what the Russian people want, no such
test exists.
The absence of these exact tests accounts, I think,
for the character of the profession, as no other explanation does. There is a
very small body of exact knowledge, which it requires no outstanding ability or
training to deal with. The rest is in the journalist’s own discretion. Once he
departs from the region where it is definitely recorded at the County Clerk’s
office that John Smith has gone into bankruptcy, all fixed standards disappear.
The story of why John Smith failed, his human frailties, the analysis of the
economic conditions on which he was shipwrecked, all of this can be told in a
hundred different ways. There is no discipline in applied psychology, as there
is a discipline in medicine, engineering, or even law, which has authority to
direct the journalist’s mind when he passes from the news to the vague realm of
truth. There are no canons to direct his own mind, and no canons that coerce
the reader’s judgment or the publisher’s. His version of the truth is only his
version. How can he demonstrate the truth as he sees it? He cannot demonstrate
it, any more than Mr. Sinclair Lewis can demonstrate that he has told the whole
truth about Main Street. And the more he understands his own weaknesses, the
more ready he is to admit that where there is no objective test, his own
opinion is in some vital measure constructed out of his own stereotypes,
according to his own code, and by the urgency of his own interest. He knows
that he is seeing the world through subjective lenses. He cannot deny that he
too is, as Shelley remarked, a dome of many-colored glass which stains the
white radiance of eternity.
And by this knowledge his assurance is tempered. He
may have all kinds of moral courage, and sometimes has, but he lacks that sustaining
conviction of a certain technic which finally freed the physical sciences from
theological control. It was the gradual development of an irrefragable method
that gave the physicist his intellectual freedom as against all the powers of
the world. His proofs were so clear, his evidence so sharply superior to
tradition, that he broke away finally from all control. But the journalist has
no such support in his own conscience or in fact. The control exercised over
him by the opinions of his employers and his readers, is not the control of
truth by prejudice, but of one opinion by another opinion that it is not
demonstrably less true. Between Judge Gary’s assertion that the unions will
destroy American institutions, and Mr. Gomper’s assertion that they are
agencies of the rights of man, the choice has, in large measure, to be governed
by the will to believe.
The task of deflating these controversies, and
reducing them to a point where they can be reported as news, is not a task
which the reporter can perform. It is possible and necessary for journalists to
bring home to people the uncertain character of the truth on which their
opinions are founded, and by criticism and agitation to prod social science
into making more usable formulations of social facts, and to prod statesmen
into establishing more visible institutions. The press, in other words, can
fight for the extension of reportable truth. But as social truth is organized
to-day, the press is not constituted to furnish from one edition to the next the
amount of knowledge which the democratic theory of public opinion demands. This
is not due to the Brass Check, as the quality of news in radical papers shows,
but to the fact that the press deals with a society in which the governing
forces are so imperfectly recorded. The theory that the press can itself record
those forces is false. It can normally record only what has been recorded for
it by the working of institutions. Everything else is argument and opinion, and
fluctuates with the vicissitudes, the self-consciousness, and the courage of
the human mind.
If the press is not so universally wicked, nor so
deeply conspiring, as Mr. Sinclair would have us believe, it is very much more
frail than the democratic theory has as yet admitted. It is too frail to carry
the whole burden of popular sovereignty, to supply spontaneously the truth
which democrats hoped was inborn. And when we expect it to supply such a body
of truth we employ a misleading standard of judgment. We misunderstand the
limited nature of news, the illimitable complexity of society; we overestimate
our own endurance, public spirit, and all-round competence. We suppose an
appetite for uninteresting truths which is not discovered by any honest
analysis of our own tastes.
If the newspapers, then, are to be charged with the
duty of translating the whole public life of mankind, so that every adult can
arrive at an opinion on every moot topic, they fail, they are bound to fail, in
any future one can conceive they will continue to fail. It is not possible to
assume that a world, carried on by division of labor and distribution of
authority, can be governed by universal opinions in the whole population.
Unconsciously the theory sets up the single reader as theoretically
omnicompetent, and puts upon the press the burden of accomplishing whatever
representative government, industrial organization, and diplomacy have failed
to accomplish. Acting upon everybody for thirty minutes in twenty-four hours,
the press is asked to create a mystical force called Public Opinion that will
take up the slack in public institutions. The press has often mistakenly
pretended that it could do just that. It has at great moral cost to itself,
encouraged a democracy, still bound to its original premises, to expect
newspapers to supply spontaneously for every organ of government, for every
social problem, the machinery of information which these do not normally supply
themselves. Institutions, having failed to furnish themselves with instruments
of knowledge, have become a bundle of “problems,” which the population as a
whole, reading the press as a whole, is supposed to solve.
The press, in other words, has come to be regarded as
an organ of direct democracy, charged on a much wider scale, and from day to
day, with the function often attributed to the initiative, referendum, and
recall. The Court of Public Opinion, open day and night, is to lay down the law
for everything all the time. It is not workable. And when you consider the
nature of news, it is not even thinkable. For the news, as we have seen, is
precise in proportion to the precision with which the event is recorded. Unless
the event is capable of being named, measured, given shape, made specific, it
either fails to take on the character of news, or it is subject to the accidents
and prejudices of observation.
Therefore, on the whole, the quality of the news
about modern society is an index of its social organization. The better the
institutions, the more all interests concerned are formally represented, the
more issues are disentangled, the more objective criteria are introduced, the
more perfectly an affair can be presented as news. At its best the press is a
servant and guardian of institutions; at its worst it is a means by which a few
exploit social disorganization to their own ends. In the degree to which
institutions fail to function, the unscrupulous journalist can fish in troubled
waters, and the conscientious one must gamble with uncertainties.
The press is no substitute for institutions. It is
like the beam of a searchlight that moves restlessly about, bringing one
episode and then another out of darkness into vision. Men cannot do the work of
the world by this light alone. They cannot govern society by episodes,
incidents, and eruptions. It is only when they work by a steady light of their
own, that the press, when it is turned upon them, reveals a situation
intelligible enough for a popular decision. The trouble lies deeper than the
press, and so does the remedy. It lies in social organization based on a system
of analysis and record, and in all the corollaries of that principle; in the
abandonment of the theory of the omnicompetent citizen, in the decentralization
of decision, in the coordination of decision by comparable record and analysis.
If at the centers of management there is a running audit, which makes work
intelligible to those who do it, and those who superintend it, issues when they
arise are not the mere collisions of the blind. Then, too, the news is
uncovered for the press by a system of intelligence that is also a check upon
the press.
That is the radical way. For the troubles of the
press, like the troubles of representative government, be it territorial or
functional, like the troubles of industry, be it capitalist, cooperative, or
communist, go back to a common source: to the failure of self-governing people
to transcend their casual experience and their prejudice, by inventing,
creating, and organizing a machinery of knowledge. It is because they are
compelled to act without a reliable picture of the world, that governments,
schools, newspapers and churches make such small headway against the more
obvious failings of democracy, against violent prejudice, apathy, preference
for the curious trivial as against the dull important, and the hunger for sideshows
and three legged calves. This is the primary defect of popular government, a
defect inherent in its traditions, and all its other defects can, I believe, be
traced to this one.
PART VIII. ORGANIZED
INTELLIGENCE
CHAPTER XXV. THE ENTERING
WEDGE
1
If the remedy were interesting, American pioneers
like Charles McCarthy, Robert Valentine, and Frederick W. Taylor would not have
had to fight so hard for a hearing. But it is clear why they had to fight, and
why bureaus of governmental research, industrial audits, budgeting and the like
are the ugly ducklings of reform. They reverse the process by which interesting
public opinions are built up. Instead of presenting a casual fact, a large
screen of stereotypes, and a dramatic identification, they break down the
drama, break through the stereotypes, and offer men a picture of facts, which
is unfamiliar and to them impersonal. When this is not painful, it is dull, and
those to whom it is painful, the trading politician and the partisan who has
much to conceal, often exploit the dullness that the public feels, in order to
remove the pain that they feel.
2
Yet every complicated community has sought the
assistance of special men, of augurs, priests, elders. Our own democracy, based
though it was on a theory of universal competence, sought lawyers to manage its
government, and to help manage its industry. It was recognized that the
specially trained man was in some dim way oriented to a wider system of truth
than that which arises spontaneously in the amateur’s mind. But experience has
shown that the traditional lawyer’s equipment was not enough assistance. The
Great Society had grown furiously and to colossal dimensions by the application
of technical knowledge. It was made by engineers who had learned to use exact measurements
and quantitative analysis. It could not be governed, men began to discover, by
men who thought deductively about rights and wrongs. It could be brought under
human control only by the technic which had created it. Gradually, then, the
more enlightened directing minds have called in experts who were trained, or
had trained themselves, to make parts of this Great Society intelligible to
those who manage it. These men are known by all kinds of names, as
statisticians, accountants, auditors, industrial counsellors, engineers of many
species, scientific managers, personnel administrators, research men,
“scientists,” and sometimes just as plain private secretaries. They have
brought with them each a jargon of his own, as well as filing cabinets, card catalogues,
graphs, loose-leaf contraptions, and above all the perfectly sound ideal of an
executive who sits before a flat-top desk, one sheet of typewritten paper
before him, and decides on matters of policy presented in a form ready for his
rejection or approval.
This whole development has been the work, not so much
of a spontaneous creative evolution, as of blind natural selection. The
statesman, the executive, the party leader, the head of a voluntary
association, found that if he had to discuss two dozen different subjects in
the course of the day, somebody would have to coach him. He began to clamor for
memoranda. He found he could not read his mail. He demanded somebody who would
blue-pencil the interesting sentences in the important letters. He found he
could not digest the great stacks of type-written reports that grew mellow on
his desk. He demanded summaries. He found he could not read an unending series
of figures. He embraced the man who made colored pictures of them. He found
that he really did not know one machine from another. He hired engineers to
pick them, and tell him how much they cost and what they could do. He peeled
off one burden after another, as a man will take off first his hat, then his
coat, then his collar, when he is struggling to move an unwieldy load.
3
Yet curiously enough, though he knew that he needed
help, he was slow to call in the social scientist. The chemist, the physicist,
the geologist, had a much earlier and more friendly reception. Laboratories
were set up for them, inducements offered, for there was quick appreciation of
the victories over nature. But the scientist who has human nature as his
problem is in a different case. There are many reasons for this: the chief one,
that he has so few victories to exhibit. He has so few, because unless he deals
with the historic past, he cannot prove his theories before offering them to
the public. The physical scientist can make an hypothesis, test it, revise the
hypothesis hundreds of times, and, if after all that, he is wrong, no one else
has to pay the price. But the social scientist cannot begin to offer the
assurance of a laboratory test, and if his advice is followed, and he is wrong,
the consequences may be incalculable. He is in the nature of things far more
responsible, and far less certain.
But more than that. In the laboratory sciences the
student has conquered the dilemma of thought and action. He brings a sample of
the action to a quiet place, where it can be repeated at will, and examined at
leisure. But the social scientist is constantly being impaled on a dilemma. If
he stays in his library, where he has the leisure to think, he has to rely upon
the exceedingly casual and meager printed record that comes to him through
official reports, newspapers, and interviews. If he goes out into “the world”
where things are happening, he has to serve a long, often wasteful,
apprenticeship, before he is admitted to the sanctum where they are being
decided. What he cannot do is to dip into action and out again whenever it suits
him. There are no privileged listeners. The man of affairs, observing that the
social scientist knows only from the outside what he knows, in part at least,
from the inside, recognizing that the social scientist’s hypothesis is not in
the nature of things susceptible of laboratory proof, and that verification is
possible only in the “real” world, has developed a rather low opinion of social
scientists who do not share his views of public policy.
In his heart of hearts the social scientist shares
this estimate of himself. He has little inner certainty about his own work. He
only half believes in it, and being sure of nothing, he can find no compelling
reason for insisting on his own freedom of thought. What can he actually claim
for it, in the light of his own conscience? [Footnote: Cf. Charles E. Merriam,
The Present State of the Study of Politics, American Political Science Review,
Vol. XV. No. 2, May, 1921.] His data are uncertain, his means of verification
lacking. The very best qualities in him are a source of frustration. For if he
is really critical and saturated in the scientific spirit, he cannot be
doctrinaire, and go to Armageddon against the trustees and the students and the
Civic Federation and the conservative press for a theory of which he is not
sure. If you are going to Armageddon, you have to battle for the Lord, but the
political scientist is always a little doubtful whether the Lord called him.
Consequently if so much of social science is
apologetic rather than constructive, the explanation lies in the opportunities
of social science, not in “capitalism.” The physical scientists achieved their
freedom from clericalism by working out a method that produced conclusions of a
sort that could not be suppressed or ignored. They convinced themselves and
acquired dignity, and knew what they were fighting for. The social scientist
will acquire his dignity and his strength when he has worked out his method. He
will do that by turning into opportunity the need among directing men of the
Great Society for instruments of analysis by which an invisible and made
intelligible.
But as things go now, the social scientist assembles
his data out of a mass of unrelated material. Social processes are recorded
spasmodically, quite often as accidents of administration. A report to
Congress, a debate, an investigation, legal briefs, a census, a tariff, a tax
schedule; the material, like the skull of the Piltdown man, has to be put
together by ingenious inference before the student obtains any sort of picture
of the event he is studying. Though it deals with the conscious life of his
fellow citizens, it is all too often distressingly opaque, because the man who
is trying to generalize has practically no supervision of the way his data are
collected. Imagine medical research conducted by students who could rarely go
into a hospital, were deprived of animal experiment, and compelled to draw
conclusions from the stories of people who had been ill, the reports of nurses,
each of whom had her own system of diagnosis, and the statistics compiled by
the Bureau of Internal Revenue on the excess profits of druggists. The social
scientist has usually to make what he can out of categories that were
uncritically in the mind of an official who administered some part of a law, or
who was out to justify, to persuade, to claim, or to prove. The student knows
this, and, as a protection against it, has developed that branch of scholarship
which is an elaborated suspicion about where to discount his information.
That is a virtue, but it becomes a very thin virtue
when it is merely a corrective for the unwholesome position of social science.
For the scholar is condemned to guess as shrewdly as he can why in a situation
not clearly understood something or other may have happened. But the expert who
is employed as the mediator among representatives, and as the mirror and
measure of administration, has a very different control of the facts. Instead
of being the man who generalizes from the facts dropped to him by the men of
action, he becomes the man who prepares the facts for the men of action. This
is a profound change in his strategic position. He no longer stands outside,
chewing the cud provided by busy men of affairs, but he takes his place in
front of decision instead of behind it. To-day the sequence is that the man of
affairs finds his facts, and decides on the basis of them; then, some time
later, the social scientist deduces excellent reasons why he did or did not
decide wisely. This ex post facto relationship is academic in the bad sense of
that fine word. The real sequence should be one where the disinterested expert
first finds and formulates the facts for the man of action, and later makes
what wisdom he can out of comparison between the decision, which he
understands, and the facts, which he organized.
4
For the physical sciences this change in strategic
position began slowly, and then accelerated rapidly. There was a time when the
inventor and the engineer were romantic half-starved outsiders, treated as
cranks. The business man and the artisan knew all the mysteries of their craft.
Then the mysteries grew more mysterious, and at last industry began to depend
upon physical laws and chemical combinations that no eye could see, and only a
trained mind could conceive. The scientist moved from his noble garret in the
Latin Quarter into office buildings and laboratories. For he alone could
construct a working image of the reality on which industry rested. From the new
relationship he took as much as he gave, perhaps more: pure science developed
faster than applied, though it drew its economic support, a great deal of its
inspiration, and even more of its relevancy, from constant contact with
practical decision. But physical science still labored under the enormous
limitation that the men who made decisions had only their commonsense to guide
them. They administered without scientific aid a world complicated by
scientists. Again they had to deal with facts they could not apprehend, and as
once they had to call in engineers, they now have to call in statisticians,
accountants, experts of all sorts.
These practical students are the true pioneers of a
new social science. They are “in mesh with the driving wheels” [Footnote: Cf.
The Address of the President of the American Philosophical Association, Mr.
Ralph Barton Perry, Dec. 28, 1920. Published in the Proceedings of the
Twentieth Annual Meeting.] and from this practical engagement of science and
action, both will benefit radically: action by the clarification of its
beliefs; beliefs by a continuing test in action. We are in the earliest
beginnings. But if it is conceded that all large forms of human association
must, because of sheer practical difficulty, contain men who will come to see
the need for an expert reporting of their particular environment, then the
imagination has a premise on which to work. In the exchange of technic and
result among expert staffs, one can see, I think, the beginning of experimental
method in social science. When each school district and budget, and health
department, and factory, and tariff schedule, is the material of knowledge for
every other, the number of comparable experiences begins to approach the
dimensions of genuine experiment. In forty-eight states, and 2400 cities, and
277,000 school houses, 270,000 manufacturing establishments, 27,000 mines and
quarries, there is a wealth of experience, if only it were recorded and
available. And there is, too, opportunity for trial and error at such slight
risk that any reasonable hypothesis might be given a fair test without shaking
the foundations of society.
The wedge has been driven, not only by some directors
of industry and some statesmen who had to have help, but by the bureaus of
municipal research, [Footnote: The number of these organizations in the United
States is very great. Some are alive, some half dead. They are in rapid flux.
Lists of them supplied to me by Dr. L. D. Upson of the Detroit Bureau of
Governmental Research, Miss Rebecca B. Rankin of the Municipal Reference
Library of New York City, Mr. Edward A. Fitzpatrick, Secretary of the State
Board of Education (Wisconsin), Mr. Savel Zimand of the Bureau of Industrial
Research (New York City), run into the hundreds.] the legislative reference
libraries, the specialized lobbies of corporations and trade unions and public
causes, and by voluntary organizations like the League of Women Voters, the
Consumers’ League, the Manufacturers’ Associations: by hundreds of trade
associations, and citizens’ unions; by publications like the Searchlight on
Congress and the Survey; and by foundations like the General Education Board.
Not all by any means are disinterested. That is not the point. All of them do
begin to demonstrate the need for interposing some form of expertness between
the private citizen and the vast environment in which he is entangled.
CHAPTER XXVI. INTELLIGENCE
WORK
1
THE practice of democracy has been ahead of its
theory. For the theory holds that the adult electors taken together make
decisions out of a will that is in them. But just as there grew up governing
hierarchies which were invisible in theory, so there has been a large amount of
constructive adaptation, also unaccounted for in the image of democracy. Ways
have been found to represent many interests and functions that are normally out
of sight.
We are most conscious of this in our theory of the
courts, when we explain their legislative powers and their vetoes on the theory
that there are interests to be guarded which might be forgotten by the elected
officials. But the Census Bureau, when it counts, classifies, and correlates
people, things, and changes, is also speaking for unseen factors in the
environment. The Geological Survey makes mineral resources evident, the
Department of Agriculture represents in the councils of the nation factors of which
each farmer sees only an infinitesimal part. School authorities, the Tariff
Commission, the consular service, the Bureau of Internal Revenue give
representation to persons, ideas, and objects which would never automatically
find themselves represented in this perspective by an election. The Children’s
Bureau is the spokesman of a whole complex of interests and functions not
ordinarily visible to the voter, and, therefore, incapable of becoming
spontaneously a part of his public opinions. Thus the printing of comparative
statistics of infant mortality is often followed by a reduction of the death
rate of babies. Municipal officials and voters did not have, before
publication, a place in their picture of the environment for those babies. The
statistics made them visible, as visible as if the babies had elected an
alderman to air their grievances.
In the State Department
the government maintains a Division of Far Eastern Affairs. What is it for? The
Japanese and the Chinese Governments both maintain ambassadors in Washington.
Are they not qualified to speak for the Far East? They are its representatives.
Yet nobody would argue that the American Government could learn all that it
needed to know about the Far East by consulting these ambassadors. Supposing
them to be as candid as they know how to be, they are still limited channels of
information. Therefore, to supplement them we maintain embassies in Tokio and
Peking, and consular agents at many points. Also, I assume, some secret agents.
These people are supposed to send reports which pass through the Division of
Far Eastern Affairs to the Secretary of State. Now what does the Secretary
expect of the Division? I know one who expected it to spend its appropriation.
But there are Secretaries to whom special revelation is denied, and they turn
to their divisions for help. The last thing they expect to find is a neat
argument justifying the American position.
What they demand is that the experts shall bring the
Far East to the Secretary’s desk, with all the elements in such relation that
it is as if he were in contact with the Far East itself. The expert must
translate, simplify, generalize, but the inference from the result must apply
in the East, not merely on the premises of the report. If the Secretary is
worth his salt, the very last thing he will tolerate in his experts is the
suspicion that they have a “policy.” He does not want to know from them whether
they like Japanese policy in China. He wants to know what different classes of
Chinese and Japanese, English, Frenchmen, Germans, and Russians, think about
it, and what they are likely to do because of what they think. He wants all
that represented to him as the basis of his decision. The more faithfully the
Division represents what is not otherwise represented, either by the Japanese
or American ambassadors, or the Senators and Congressmen from the Pacific
coast, the better Secretary of State he will be. He may decide to take his
policy from the Pacific Coast, but he will take his view of Japan from Japan.
2
It is no accident that the best diplomatic service in
the world is the one in which the divorce between the assembling of knowledge
and the control of policy is most perfect. During the war in many British
Embassies and in the British Foreign Office there were nearly always men,
permanent officials or else special appointees, who quite successfully
discounted the prevailing war mind. They discarded the rigmarole of being pro
and con, of having favorite nationalities, and pet aversions, and undelivered
perorations in their bosoms. They left that to the political chiefs. But in an
American Embassy I once heard an ambassador say that he never reported anything
to Washington which would not cheer up the folks at home. He charmed all those
who met him, helped many a stranded war worker, and was superb when he unveiled
a monument.
He did not understand that the power of the expert
depends upon separating himself from those who make the decisions, upon not
caring, in his expert self, what decision is made. The man who, like the
ambassador, takes a line, and meddles with the decision, is soon discounted.
There he is, just one more on that side of the question. For when he begins to
care too much, he begins to see what he wishes to see, and by that fact ceases
to see what he is there to see. He is there to represent the unseen. He
represents people who are not voters, functions of voters that are not evident,
events that are out of sight, mute people, unborn people, relations between
things and people. He has a constituency of intangibles. And intangibles cannot
be used to form a political majority, because voting is in the last analysis a
test of strength, a sublimated battle, and the expert represents no strength
available in the immediate. But he can exercise force by disturbing the line up
of the forces. By making the invisible visible, he confronts the people who
exercise material force with a new environment, sets ideas and feelings at work
in them, throws them out of position, and so, in the profoundest way, affects
the decision.
Men cannot long act in a way that they know is a
contradiction of the environment as they conceive it. If they are bent on
acting in a certain way they have to reconceive the environment, they have to
censor out, to rationalize. But if in their presence, there is an insistent
fact which is so obtrusive that they cannot explain it away, one of three
courses is open. They can perversely ignore it, though they will cripple
themselves in the process, will overact their part and come to grief. They can
take it into account but refuse to act. They pay in internal discomfort and
frustration. Or, and I believe this to be the most frequent case, they adjust
their whole behavior to the enlarged environment.
The idea that the expert is an ineffectual person
because he lets others make the decisions is quite contrary to experience. The
more subtle the elements that enter into the decision, the more irresponsible
power the expert wields. He is certain, moreover, to exercise more power in the
future than ever he did before, because increasingly the relevant facts will
elude the voter and the administrator. All governing agencies will tend to
organize bodies of research and information, which will throw out tentacles and
expand, as have the intelligence departments of all the armies in the world.
But the experts will remain human beings. They will enjoy power, and their
temptation will be to appoint themselves censors, and so absorb the real
function of decision. Unless their function is correctly defined they will tend
to pass on the facts they think appropriate, and to pass down the decisions
they approve. They will tend, in short, to become a bureaucracy.
The only institutional safeguard is to separate as
absolutely as it is possible to do so the staff which executes from the staff
which investigates. The two should be parallel but quite distinct bodies of
men, recruited differently, paid if possible from separate funds, responsible
to different heads, intrinsically uninterested in each other’s personal
success. In industry, the auditors, accountants, and inspectors should be
independent of the manager, the superintendents, foremen, and in time, I
believe, we shall come to see that in order to bring industry under social
control the machinery of record will have to be independent of the boards of
directors and the shareholders.
3
But in building the intelligence sections of industry
and politics, we do not start on cleared ground. And, apart from insisting on
this basic separation of function, it would be cumbersome to insist too
precisely on the form which in any particular instance the principle shall
take. There are men who believe in intelligence work, and will adopt it; there
are men who do not understand it, but cannot do their work without it; there
are men who will resist. But provided the principle has a foothold somewhere in
every social agency it will make progress, and the way to begin is to begin. In
the federal government, for example, it is not necessary to straighten out the
administrative tangle and the illogical duplications of a century’s growth in
order to find a neat place for the intelligence bureaus which Washington so
badly needs. Before election you can promise to rush bravely into the breach.
But when you arrive there all out of breath, you find that each absurdity is
invested with habits, strong interests, and chummy Congressmen. Attack all
along the line and you engage every force of reaction. You go forth to battle,
as the poet said, and you always fall. You can lop off an antiquated bureau
here, a covey of clerks there, you can combine two bureaus. And by that time
you are busy with the tariff and the railroads, and the era of reform is over.
Besides, in order to effect a truly logical reorganization of the government,
such as all candidates always promise, you would have to disturb more passions
than you have time to quell. And any new scheme, supposing you had one ready,
would require officials to man it. Say what one will about officeholders, even
Soviet Russia was glad to get many of the old ones back; and these old
officials, if they are too ruthlessly treated, will sabotage Utopia itself.
No administrative scheme is workable without good
will, and good will about strange practices is impossible without education.
The better way is to introduce into the existing machinery, wherever you can
find an opening, agencies that will hold up a mirror week by week, month by
month. You can hope, then, to make the machine visible to those who work it, as
well as to the chiefs who are responsible, and to the public outside. When the
office-holders begin to see themselves,—or rather when the outsiders, the
chiefs, and the subordinates all begin to see the same facts, the same damning
facts if you like, the obstruction will diminish. The reformer’s opinion that a
certain bureau is inefficient is just his opinion, not so good an opinion in
the eyes of the bureau, as its own. But let the work of that bureau be analysed
and recorded, and then compared with other bureaus and with private corporations,
and the argument moves to another plane.
There are ten departments at Washington represented
in the Cabinet. Suppose, then, there was a permanent intelligence section for
each. What would be some of the conditions of effectiveness? Beyond all others that
the intelligence officials should be independent both of the Congressional
Committees dealing with that department, and of the Secretary at the head of
it; that they should not be entangled either in decision or in action.
Independence, then, would turn mainly on three points on funds, tenure, and
access to the facts. For clearly if a particular Congress or departmental
official can deprive them of money, dismiss them, or close the files, the staff
becomes its creature.
4
The question of funds is both important and
difficult. No agency of research can be really free if it depends upon annual
doles from what may be a jealous or a parsimonious congress. Yet the ultimate
control of funds cannot be removed from the legislature. The financial
arrangement should insure the staff against left-handed, joker and rider
attack, against sly destruction, and should at the same time provide for
growth. The staff should be so well entrenched that an attack on its existence
would have to be made in the open. It might, perhaps, work behind a federal
charter creating a trust fund, and a sliding scale over a period of years based
on the appropriation for the department to which the intelligence bureau
belonged. No great sums of money are involved anyway. The trust fund might
cover the overhead and capital charges for a certain minimum staff, the sliding
scale might cover the enlargements. At any rate the appropriation should be put
beyond accident, like the payment of any long term obligation. This is a much
less serious way of “tying the hands of Congress” than is the passage of a
Constitutional amendment or the issuance of government bonds. Congress could
repeal the charter. But it would have to repeal it, not throw monkey wrenches
into it.
Tenure should be for life, with provision for
retirement on a liberal pension, with sabbatical years set aside for advanced
study and training, and with dismissal only after a trial by professional
colleagues. The conditions which apply to any non-profit-making intellectual
career should apply here. If the work is to be salient, the men who do it must
have dignity, security, and, in the upper ranks at least, that freedom of mind
which you find only where men are not too immediately concerned in practical
decision.
Access to the materials should be established in the
organic act. The bureau should have the right to examine all papers, and to
question any official or any outsider. Continuous investigation of this sort
would not at all resemble the sensational legislative inquiry and the spasmodic
fishing expedition which are now a common feature of our government. The bureau
should have the right to propose accounting methods to the department, and if
the proposal is rejected, or violated after it has been accepted, to appeal
under its charter to Congress.
In the first instance each intelligence bureau would
be the connecting link between Congress and the Department, a better link, in
my judgment, than the appearance of cabinet officers on the floor of both House
and Senate, though the one proposal in no way excludes the other. The bureau
would be the Congressional eye on the execution of its policy. It would be the
departmental answer to Congressional criticism. And then, since operation of
the Department would be permanently visible, perhaps Congress would cease to
feel the need of that minute legislation born of distrust and a false doctrine
of the separation of powers, which does so much to make efficient
administration difficult.
5
But, of course, each of the ten bureaus could not
work in a watertight compartment. In their relation one to another lies the
best chance for that “coordination” of which so much is heard and so little
seen. Clearly the various staffs would need to adopt, wherever possible,
standards of measurement that were comparable. They would exchange their
records. Then if the War Department and the Post Office both buy lumber, hire
carpenters, or construct brick walls they need not necessarily do them through
the same agency, for that might mean cumbersome over-centralization; but they
would be able to use the same measure for the same things, be conscious of the
comparisons, and be treated as competitors. And the more competition of this
sort the better.
For the value of competition is determined by the
value of the standards used to measure it. Instead, then, of asking ourselves
whether we believe in competition, we should ask ourselves whether we believe
in that for which the competitors compete. No one in his senses expects to
“abolish competition,” for when the last vestige of emulation had disappeared,
social effort would consist in mechanical obedience to a routine, tempered in a
minority by native inspiration. Yet no one expects to work out competition to
its logical conclusion in a murderous struggle of each against all. The problem
is to select the goals of competition and the rules of the game. Almost always
the most visible and obvious standard of measurement will determine the rules
of the game: such as money, power, popularity, applause, or Mr. Veblen’s
“conspicuous waste.” What other standards of measurement does our civilization
normally provide? How does it measure efficiency, productivity, service, for
which we are always clamoring?
By and large there are no measures, and there is,
therefore, not so much competition to achieve these ideals. For the difference
between the higher and the lower motives is not, as men often assert, a
difference between altruism and selfishness. [Footnote: Cf. Ch. XII] It is a
difference between acting for easily understood aims, and for aims that are
obscure and vague. Exhort a man to make more profit than his neighbor, and he
knows at what to aim. Exhort him to render more social service, and how is he
to be certain what service is social? What is the test, what is the measure? A subjective
feeling, somebody’s opinion. Tell a man in time of peace that he ought to serve
his country and you have uttered a pious platitude, Tell him in time of war,
and the word service has a meaning; it is a number of concrete acts,
enlistment, or buying bonds, or saving food, or working for a dollar a year,
and each one of these services he sees definitely as part of a concrete purpose
to put at the front an army larger and better armed, than the enemy’s.
So the more you are able to analyze administration
and work out elements that can be compared, the more you invent quantitative
measures for the qualities you wish to promote, the more you can turn
competition to ideal ends. If you can contrive the right index numbers
[Footnote: I am not using the term index numbers in its purely technical
meaning, but to cover any device for the comparative measurement of social
phenomena.] you can set up a competition between individual workers in a shop;
between shops; between factories; between schools; [Footnote: See, for example,
An Index Number for State School Systems by Leonard P. Ayres, Russell Sage
Foundation, 1920. The principle of the quota was very successfully applied in
the Liberty Loan Campaigns, and under very much more difficult circumstances by
the Allied Maritime Transport Council.] between government departments; between
regiments; between divisions; between ships; between states; counties; cities;
and the better your index numbers the more useful the competition.
6
The possibilities that lie in the exchange of
material are evident. Each department of government is all the time asking for
information that may already have been obtained by another department, though
perhaps in a somewhat different form. The State Department needs to know, let
us say, the extent of the Mexican oil reserves, their relation to the rest of
the world’s supply, the present ownership of Mexican oil lands, the importance
of oil to warships now under construction or planned, the comparative costs in
different fields. How does it secure such information to-day? The information
is probably scattered through the Departments of Interior, Justice, Commerce,
Labor and Navy. Either a clerk in the State Department looks up Mexican oil in
a book of reference, which may or may not be accurate, or somebody’s private
secretary telephones somebody else’s private secretary, asks for a memorandum,
and in the course of time a darkey messenger arrives with an armful of
unintelligible reports. The Department should be able to call on its own intelligence
bureau to assemble the facts in a way suited to the diplomatic problem up for
decision. And these facts the diplomatic intelligence bureau would obtain from
the central clearing house. [Footnote: There has been a vast development of
such services among the trade associations. The possibilities of a perverted
use were revealed by the New York Building Trades investigation of 1921.]
This establishment would pretty soon become a focus
of information of the most extraordinary kind. And the men in it would be made
aware of what the problems of government really are. They would deal with
problems of definition, of terminology, of statistical technic, of logic; they
would traverse concretely the whole gamut of the social sciences. It is
difficult to see why all this material, except a few diplomatic and military
secrets, should not be open to the scholars of the country. It is there that
the political scientist would find the real nuts to crack and the real
researches for his students to make. The work need not all be done in
Washington, but it could be done in reference to Washington. The central agency
would, thus, have in it the makings of a national university. The staff could
be recruited there for the bureaus from among college graduates. They would be
working on theses selected after consultation between the curators of the
national university and teachers scattered over the country. If the association
was as flexible as it ought to be, there would be, as a supplement to the
permanent staff, a steady turnover of temporary and specialist appointments
from the universities, and exchange lecturers called out from Washington. Thus
the training and the recruiting of the staff would go together. A part of the
research itself would be done by students, and political science in the
universities would be associated with politics in America.
7
In its main outlines the principle is equally
applicable to state governments, to cities, and to rural counties. The work of
comparison and interchange could take place by federations of state and city
and county bureaus. And within those federations any desirable regional
combination could be organized. So long as the accounting systems were
comparable, a great deal of duplication would be avoided. Regional coordination
is especially desirable. For legal frontiers often do not coincide with the
effective environments. Yet they have a certain basis in custom that it would
be costly to disturb. By coordinating their information several administrative
areas could reconcile autonomy of decision with cooperation. New York City, for
example, is already an unwieldy unit for good government from the City Hall.
Yet for many purposes, such as health and transportation, the metropolitan
district is the true unit of administration. In that district, however, there
are large cities, like Yonkers, Jersey City, Paterson, Elizabeth, Hoboken,
Bayonne. They could not all be managed from one center, and yet they should act
together for many functions. Ultimately perhaps some such flexible scheme of
local government as Sidney and Beatrice Webb have suggested may be the proper
solution. [Footnote: “The Reorganization of Local Government” (Ch. IV), in A
Constitution for the Socialist Commonwealth of Great Britain.] But the first
step would be a coordination, not of decision and action, but of information
and research. Let the officials of the various municipalities see their common
problems in the light of the same facts.
8
It would be idle to deny that such a net work of
intelligence bureaus in politics and industry might become a dead weight and a
perpetual irritation. One can easily imagine its attraction for men in search
of soft jobs, for pedants, for meddlers. One can see red tape, mountains of
papers, questionnaires ad nauseam, seven copies of every document,
endorsements, delays, lost papers, the use of form 136 instead of form 2gb, the
return of the document because pencil was used instead of ink, or black ink
instead of red ink. The work could be done very badly. There are no fool-proof institutions.
But if one could assume that there was circulation
through the whole system between government departments, factories, offices,
and the universities; a circulation of men, a circulation of data and of
criticism, the risks of dry rot would not be so great. Nor would it be true to
say that these intelligence bureaus will complicate life. They will tend, on
the contrary, to simplify, by revealing a complexity now so great as to be
humanly unmanageable. The present fundamentally invisible system of government
is so intricate that most people have given up trying to follow it, and because
they do not try, they are tempted to think it comparatively simple. It is, on
the contrary, elusive, concealed, opaque. The employment of an intelligence
system would mean a reduction of personnel per unit of result, because by
making available to all the experience of each, it would reduce the amount of
trial and error; and because by making the social process visible, it would
assist the personnel to self-criticism. It does not involve a great additional
band of officials, if you take into account the time now spent vainly by
special investigating committees, grand juries, district attorneys, reform
organizations, and bewildered office holders, in trying to find their way
through a dark muddle.
If the analysis of public opinion and of the
democratic theories in relation to the modern environment is sound in
principle, then I do not see how one can escape the conclusion that such
intelligence work is the clue to betterment. I am not referring to the few
suggestions contained in this chapter. They are merely illustrations. The task
of working out the technic is in the hands of men trained to do it, and not
even they can to-day completely foresee the form, much less the details. The
number of social phenomena which are now recorded is small, the instruments of
analysis are very crude, the concepts often vague and uncriticized. But enough
has been done to demonstrate, I think, that unseen environments can be reported
effectively, that they can be reported to divergent groups of people in a way
which is neutral to their prejudice, and capable of overcoming their
subjectivism.
If that is true, then in working out the intelligence
principle men will find the way to overcome the central difficulty of
self-government, the difficulty of dealing with an unseen reality. Because of
that difficulty, it has been impossible for any self-governing community to
reconcile its need for isolation with the necessity for wide contact, to reconcile
the dignity and individuality of local decision with security and wide
coordination, to secure effective leaders without sacrificing responsibility,
to have useful public opinions without attempting universal public opinions on
all subjects. As long as there was no way of establishing common versions of
unseen events, common measures for separate actions, the only image of
democracy that would work, even in theory, was one based on an isolated
community of people whose political faculties were limited, according to
Aristotle’s famous maxim, by the range of their vision.
But now there is a way out, a long one to be sure,
but a way. It is fundamentally the same way as that which has enabled a citizen
of Chicago, with no better eyes or ears than an Athenian, to see and hear over
great distances. It is possible to-day, it will become more possible when more
labor has gone into it, to reduce the discrepancies between the conceived
environment and the effective environment. As that is done, federalism will work
more and more by consent, less and less by coercion. For while federalism is
the only possible method of union among self-governing groups, [Footnote: Cf.
H. J. Laski, The Foundations of Sovereignty, and other Essays, particularly the
Essay of this name, as well as the Problems of Administrative Areas, The Theory
of Popular Sovereignty, and The Pluralistic State.] federalism swings either
towards imperial centralization or towards parochial anarchy wherever the union
is not based on correct and commonly accepted ideas of federal matters. These
ideas do not arise spontaneously. They have to be pieced together by
generalization based on analysis, and the instruments for that analysis have to
be invented and tested by research.
No electoral device, no manipulation of areas, no
change in the system of property, goes to the root of the matter. You cannot
take more political wisdom out of human beings than there is in them. And no
reform, however sensational, is truly radical, which does not consciously
provide a way of overcoming the subjectivism of human opinion based on the
limitation of individual experience. There are systems of government, of
voting, and representation which extract more than others. But in the end
knowledge must come not from the conscience but from the environment with which
that conscience deals. When men act on the principle of intelligence they go
out to find the facts and to make their wisdom. When they ignore it, they go
inside themselves and find only what is there. They elaborate their prejudice,
instead of increasing their knowledge.
CHAPTER XXVII. THE APPEAL
TO THE PUBLIC
1
IN real life no one acts on the theory that he can
have a public opinion on every public question, though this fact is often
concealed where a person thinks there is no public question because he has no
public opinion. But in the theory of our politics we continue to think more
literally than Lord Bryce intended, that “the action of Opinion is continuous,”
[Footnote: Modern Democracies, Vol. I, p. 159.] even though “its action… deals
with broad principles only.” [Footnote: Id., footnote, p. 158.] And then
because we try to think of ourselves having continuous opinions, without being
altogether certain what a broad principle is, we quite naturally greet with an anguished
yawn an argument that seems to involve the reading of more government reports,
more statistics, more curves and more graphs. For all these are in the first
instance just as confusing as partisan rhetoric, and much less entertaining.
The amount of attention available is far too small
for any scheme in which it was assumed that all the citizens of the nation
would, after devoting themselves to the publications of all the intelligence
bureaus, become alert, informed, and eager on the multitude of real questions
that never do fit very well into any broad principle. I am not making that
assumption. Primarily, the intelligence bureau is an instrument of the man of
action, of the representative charged with decision, of the worker at his work,
and if it does not help them, it will help nobody in the end. But in so far as
it helps them to understand the environment in which they are working, it makes
what they do visible. And by that much they become more responsible to the
general public.
The purpose, then, is not to burden every citizen
with expert opinions on all questions, but to push that burden away from him
towards the responsible administrator. An intelligence system has value, of
course, as a source of general information, and as a check on the daily press.
But that is secondary. Its real use is as an aid to representative government
and administration both in politics and industry. The demand for the assistance
of expert reporters in the shape of accountants, statisticians, secretariats,
and the like, comes not from the public, but from men doing public business,
who can no longer do it by rule of thumb. It is in origin and in ideal an
instrument for doing public business better, rather than an instrument for
knowing better how badly public business is done.
2
As a private citizen, as a sovereign voter, no one
could attempt to digest these documents. But as one party to a dispute, as a
committeeman in a legislature, as an officer in government, business, or a
trade union, as a member of an industrial council, reports on the specific
matter at issue will be increasingly welcome. The private citizen interested in
some cause would belong, as he does now, to voluntary societies which employed
a staff to study the documents, and make reports that served as a check on
officialdom. There would be some study of this material by newspaper men, and a
good deal by experts and by political scientists. But the outsider, and every
one of us is an outsider to all but a few aspects of modern life, has neither
time, nor attention, nor interest, nor the equipment for specific judgment. It
is on the men inside, working under conditions that are sound, that the daily
administrations of society must rest.
The general public outside can arrive at judgments
about whether these conditions are sound only on the result after the event,
and on the procedure before the event. The broad principles on which the action
of public opinion can be continuous are essentially principles of procedure.
The outsider can ask experts to tell him whether the relevant facts were duly
considered; he cannot in most cases decide for himself what is relevant or what
is due consideration. The outsider can perhaps judge whether the groups
interested in the decision were properly heard, whether the ballot, if there
was one, was honestly taken, and perhaps whether the result was honestly
accepted. He can watch the procedure when the news indicates that there is
something to watch. He can raise a question as to whether the procedure itself
is right, if its normal results conflict with his ideal of a good life.
[Footnote: Cf. Chapter XX. ] But if he tries in every case to substitute
himself for the procedure, to bring in Public Opinion like a providential uncle
in the crisis of a play, he will confound his own confusion. He will not follow
any train of thought consecutively.
For the practice of appealing to the public on all
sorts of intricate matters means almost always a desire to escape criticism
from those who know by enlisting a large majority which has had no chance to
know. The verdict is made to depend on who has the loudest or the most
entrancing voice, the most skilful or the most brazen publicity man, the best
access to the most space in the newspapers. For even when the editor is
scrupulously fair to “the other side,” fairness is not enough. There may be
several other sides, unmentioned by any of the organized, financed and active
partisans.
The private citizen, beset by partisan appeals for
the loan of his Public Opinion, will soon see, perhaps, that these appeals are
not a compliment to his intelligence, but an imposition on his good nature and
an insult to his sense of evidence. As his civic education takes account of the
complexity of his environment, he will concern himself about the equity and the
sanity of procedure, and even this he will in most cases expect his elected
representative to watch for him. He will refuse himself to accept the burden of
these decisions, and will turn down his thumbs in most cases on those who, in
their hurry to win, rush from the conference table with the first dope for the
reporters.
Only by insisting that problems shall not come up to
him until they have passed through a procedure, can the busy citizen of a
modern state hope to deal with them in a form that is intelligible. For issues,
as they are stated by a partisan, almost always consist of an intricate series
of facts, as he has observed them, surrounded by a large fatty mass of
stereotyped phrases charged with his emotion. According to the fashion of the
day, he will emerge from the conference room insisting that what he wants is
some soulfilling idea like Justice, Welfare, Americanism, Socialism. On such
issues the citizen outside can sometimes be provoked to fear or admiration, but
to judgment never. Before he can do anything with the argument, the fat has to
be boiled out of it for him.
3
That can be done by having the representative inside
carry on discussion in the presence of some one, chairman or mediator, who
forces the discussion to deal with the analyses supplied by experts. This is
the essential organization of any representative body dealing with distant
matters. The partisan voices should be there, but the partisans should find
themselves confronted with men, not personally involved, who control enough
facts and have the dialectical skill to sort out what is real perception from
what is stereotype, pattern and elaboration. It is the Socratic dialogue, with
all of Socrates’s energy for breaking through words to meanings, and something
more than that, because the dialectic in modern life must be done by men who
have explored the environment as well as the human mind.
There is, for example, a grave dispute in the steel
industry. Each side issues a manifesto full of the highest ideals. The only public
opinion that is worth respect at this stage is the opinion which insists that a
conference be organized. For the side which says its cause is too just to be
contaminated by conference there can be little sympathy, since there is no such
cause anywhere among mortal men. Perhaps those who object to conference do not
say quite that. Perhaps they say that the other side is too wicked; they cannot
shake hands with traitors. All that public opinion can do then is to organize a
hearing by public officials to hear the proof of wickedness. It cannot take the
partisans’ word for it. But suppose a conference is agreed to, and suppose
there is a neutral chairman who has at his beck and call the consulting experts
of the corporation, the union, and, let us say, the Department of Labor.
Judge Gary states with perfect sincerity that his men
are well paid and not overworked, and then proceeds to sketch the history of
Russia from the time of Peter the Great to the murder of the Czar. Mr. Foster
rises, states with equal sincerity that the men are exploited, and then
proceeds to outline the history of human emancipation from Jesus of Nazareth to
Abraham Lincoln. At this point the chairman calls upon the intelligence men for
wage tables in order to substitute for the words “well paid” and “exploited” a
table showing what the different classes are paid. Does Judge Gary think they
are all well paid? He does. Does Mr. Foster think they are all exploited? No,
he thinks that groups C, M, and X are exploited. What does he mean by
exploited? He means they are not paid a living wage. They are, says Judge Gary.
What can a man buy on that wage, asks the chairman. Nothing, says Mr. Foster.
Everything he needs, says Judge Gary. The chairman consults the budgets and
price statistics of the government. [Footnote: See an article on “The Cost of
Living and Wage Cuts,” in the New Republic, July 27, 1921, by Dr. Leo Wolman,
for a brilliant discussion of the naive use of such figures and
“pseudo-principles.” The warning is of particular importance because it comes
from an economist and statistician who has himself done so much to improve the
technic of industrial disputes.] He rules that X can meet an average budget,
but that C and M cannot. Judge Gary serves notice that he does not regard the official
statistics as sound. The budgets are too high, and prices have come down. Mr.
Foster also serves notice of exception. The budget is too low, prices have gone
up. The chairman rules that this point is not within the jurisdiction of the
conference, that the official figures stand, and that Judge Gary’s experts and
Mr. Foster’s should carry their appeals to the standing committee of the
federated intelligence bureaus.
Nevertheless, says Judge Gary, we shall be ruined if
we change these wage scales. What do you mean by ruined, asks the chairman,
produce your books. I can’t, they are private, says Judge Gary. What is private
does not interest us, says the chairman, and, therefore, issues a statement to
the public announcing that the wages of workers in groups C and M are so-and-so
much below the official minimum living wage, and that Judge Gary declines to
increase them for reasons that he refuses to state. After a procedure of that
sort, a public opinion in the eulogistic sense of the term [Footnote: As used
by Mr. Lowell in his Public Opinion and Popular Government.] can exist.
The value of expert mediation is not that it sets up
opinion to coerce the partisans, but that it disintegrates partisanship. Judge
Gary and Mr. Foster may remain as little convinced as when they started, though
even they would have to talk in a different strain. But almost everyone else
who was not personally entangled would save himself from being entangled. For
the entangling stereotypes and slogans to which his reflexes are so ready to
respond are by this kind of dialectic untangled.
4
On many subjects of great public importance, and in
varying degree among different people for more personal matters, the threads of
memory and emotion are in a snarl. The same word will connote any number of
different ideas: emotions are displaced from the images to which they belong to
names which resemble the names of these images. In the uncriticized parts of
the mind there is a vast amount of association by mere clang, contact, and
succession. There are stray emotional attachments, there are words that were
names and are masks. In dreams, reveries, and panic, we uncover some of the
disorder, enough to see how the naive mind is composed, and how it behaves when
not disciplined by wakeful effort and external resistance. We see that there is
no more natural order than in a dusty old attic. There is often the same
incongruity between fact, idea, and emotion as there might be in an opera
house, if all the wardrobes were dumped in a heap and all the scores mixed up,
so that Madame Butterfly in a Valkyr’s dress waited lyrically for the return of
Faust. “At Christmas-tide” says an editorial, “old memories soften the heart.
Holy teachings are remembered afresh as thoughts run back to childhood. The
world does not seem so bad when seen through the mist of half-happy, half-sad
recollections of loved ones now with God. No heart is untouched by the
mysterious influence…. The country is honeycombed with red propaganda—but there
is a good supply of ropes, muscles and lampposts… while this world moves the
spirit of liberty will burn in the breast of man.”
The man who found these phrases in his mind needs
help. He needs a Socrates who will separate the words, cross-examine him until
he has defined them, and made words the names of ideas. Made them mean a
particular object and nothing else. For these tense syllables have got
themselves connected in his mind by primitive association, and are bundled
together by his memories of Christmas, his indignation as a conservative, and
his thrills as the heir to a revolutionary tradition. Sometimes the snarl is
too huge and ancient for quick unravelling. Sometimes, as in modern
psychotherapy, there are layers upon layers of memory reaching back to infancy,
which have to be separated and named.
The effect of naming, the effect, that is, of saying
that the labor groups C and M, but not X, are underpaid, instead of saying that
Labor is Exploited, is incisive. Perceptions recover their identity, and the
emotion they arouse is specific, since it is no longer reinforced by large and
accidental connections with everything from Christmas to Moscow. The
disentangled idea with a name of its own, and an emotion that has been
scrutinized, is ever so much more open to correction by new data in the
problem. It had been imbedded in the whole personality, had affiliations of
some sort with the whole ego: a challenge would reverberate through the whole
soul. After it has been thoroughly criticized, the idea is no longer me but
that. It is objectified, it is at arm’s length. Its fate is not bound up with
my fate, but with the fate of the outer world upon which I am acting.
5
Re-education of this kind will help to bring our
public opinions into grip with the environment. That is the way the enormous
censoring, stereotyping, and dramatizing apparatus can be liquidated. Where
there is no difficulty in knowing what the relevant environment is, the critic,
the teacher, the physician, can unravel the mind. But where the environment is
as obscure to the analyst as to his pupil, no analytic technic is sufficient.
Intelligence work is required. In political and industrial problems the critic
as such can do something, but unless he can count upon receiving from expert
reporters a valid picture of the environment, his dialectic cannot go far.
Therefore, though here, as in most other matters,
“education” is the supreme remedy, the value of this education will depend upon
the evolution of knowledge. And our knowledge of human institutions is still
extraordinarily meager and impressionistic. The gathering of social knowledge
is, on the whole, still haphazard; not, as it will have to become, the normal
accompaniment of action. And yet the collection of information will not be
made, one may be sure, for the sake of its ultimate use. It will be made
because modern decision requires it to be made. But as it is being made, there
will accumulate a body of data which political science can turn into
generalization, and build up for the schools into a conceptual picture of the
world. When that picture takes form, civic education can become a preparation
for dealing with an unseen environment.
As a working model of the social system becomes
available to the teacher, he can use it to make the pupil acutely aware of how
his mind works on unfamiliar facts. Until he has such a model, the teacher
cannot hope to prepare men fully for the world they will find. What he can do
is to prepare them to deal with that world with a great deal more
sophistication about their own minds. He can, by the use of the case method,
teach the pupil the habit of examining the sources of his information. He can
teach him, for example, to look in his newspaper for the place where the
dispatch was filed, for the name of the correspondent, the name of the press
service, the authority given for the statement, the circumstances under which
the statement was secured. He can teach the pupil to ask himself whether the
reporter saw what he describes, and to remember how that reporter described
other events in the past. He can teach him the character of censorship, of the
idea of privacy, and furnish him with knowledge of past propaganda. He can, by
the proper use of history, make him aware of the stereotype, and can educate a
habit of introspection about the imagery evoked by printed words. He can, by
courses in comparative history and anthropology, produce a life-long
realization of the way codes impose a special pattern upon the imagination. He
can teach men to catch themselves making allegories, dramatizing relations, and
personifying abstractions. He can show the pupil how he identifies himself with
these allegories, how he becomes interested, and how he selects the attitude,
heroic, romantic, economic which he adopts while holding a particular opinion.
The study of error is not only in the highest degree prophylactic, but it
serves as a stimulating introduction to the study of truth. As our minds become
more deeply aware of their own subjectivism, we find a zest in objective method
that is not otherwise there. We see vividly, as normally we should not, the
enormous mischief and casual cruelty of our prejudices. And the destruction of
a prejudice, though painful at first, because of its connection with our
self-respect, gives an immense relief and a fine pride when it is successfully
done. There is a radical enlargement of the range of attention. As the current
categories dissolve, a hard, simple version of the world breaks up. The scene
turns vivid and full. There follows an emotional incentive to hearty appreciation
of scientific method, which otherwise it is not easy to arouse, and is
impossible to sustain. Prejudices are so much easier and more interesting. For
if you teach the principles of science as if they had always been accepted,
their chief virtue as a discipline, which is objectivity, will make them dull.
But teach them at first as victories over the superstitions of the mind, and
the exhilaration of the chase and of the conquest may carry the pupil over that
hard transition from his own self-bound experience to the phase where his
curiosity has matured, and his reason has acquired passion.
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE
APPEAL TO REASON
1
I HAVE written, and then thrown away, several endings
to this book. Over all of them there hung that fatality of last chapters, in
which every idea seems to find its place, and all the mysteries, that the
writer has not forgotten, are unravelled. In politics the hero does not live
happily ever after, or end his life perfectly. There is no concluding chapter,
because the hero in politics has more future before him than there is recorded
history behind him. The last chapter is merely a place where the writer
imagines that the polite reader has begun to look furtively at his watch.
2
When Plato came to the point where it was fitting that
he should sum up, his assurance turned into stage-fright as he thought how
absurd it would sound to say what was in him about the place of reason in
politics. Those sentences in book five of the Republic were hard even for Plato
to speak; they are so sheer and so stark that men can neither forget them nor
live by them. So he makes Socrates say to Glaucon that
he will be broken and drowned in laughter for telling “what is the least change
which will enable a state to pass into the truer form,” [Footnote: Republic,
Bk. V, 473. Jowett transl.] because the thought he “would fain have uttered if
it had not seemed too extravagant” was that “until philosophers are kings, or
the kings and princes of this world have the spirit and power of philosophy,
and political greatness and wisdom meet in one… cities will never cease from
ill,—no, nor the human race…”
Hardly had he said these awful words, when he
realized they were a counsel of perfection, and felt embarrassed at the
unapproachable grandeur of his idea. So he hastens to add that, of course, “the
true pilot” will be called “a prater, a star-gazer, a good-for-nothing.”
[Footnote: 2 Bk. VI, 488-489.] But this wistful admission, though it protects
him against whatever was the Greek equivalent for the charge that he lacked a
sense of humor, furnished a humiliating tailpiece to a solemn thought. He becomes defiant and warns Adeimantus that he must
“attribute the uselessness” of philosophers “to the fault of those who will not
use them, and not to themselves. The pilot should not humbly beg the sailors to
be commanded by him—that is not the order of nature.” And with this
haughty gesture, he hurriedly picked up the tools of reason, and disappeared
into the Academy, leaving the world to Machiavelli.
Thus, in the first great encounter between reason and
politics, the strategy of reason was to retire in anger. But meanwhile, as
Plato tells us, the ship is at sea. There have been many ships on the sea,
since Plato wrote, and to-day, whether we are wise or foolish in our belief, we
could no longer call a man a true pilot, simply because he knows how to “pay attention to the year and seasons and sky and stars and
winds, and whatever else belongs to his art.” [Footnote: Bk. VI,
488-489.] He can dismiss nothing which is necessary to make that ship sail
prosperously. Because there are mutineers aboard, he cannot say: so much the
worse for us all… it is not in the order of nature that I should handle a
mutiny… it is not in the order of philosophy that I should consider mutiny… I
know how to navigate… I do not know how to navigate a ship full of sailors… and
if they do not see that I am the man to steer, I cannot help it. We shall all
go on the rocks, they to be punished for their sins; I, with the assurance that
I knew better….
3
Whenever we make an appeal to reason in politics, the
difficulty in this parable recurs. For there is an inherent difficulty about
using the method of reason to deal with an unreasoning world. Even if you
assume with Plato that the true pilot knows what is best for the ship, you have
to recall that he is not so easy to recognize, and that this uncertainty leaves
a large part of the crew unconvinced. By definition the crew does not know what
he knows, and the pilot, fascinated by the stars and winds, does not know how
to make the crew realize the importance of what he knows. There is no time
during mutiny at sea to make each sailor an expert judge of experts. There is
no time for the pilot to consult his crew and find out whether he is really as
wise as he thinks he is. For education is a matter of years, the emergency a
matter of hours. It would be altogether academic, then, to tell the pilot that
the true remedy is, for example, an education that will endow sailors with a
better sense of evidence. You can tell that only to shipmasters on dry land. In
the crisis, the only advice is to use a gun, or make a speech, utter a stirring
slogan, offer a compromise, employ any quick means available to quell the
mutiny, the sense of evidence being what it is. It is only on shore where men
plan for many voyages, that they can afford to, and must for their own salvation,
deal with those causes that take a long time to remove. They will be dealing in
years and generations, not in emergencies alone. And nothing will put a greater
strain upon their wisdom than the necessity of distinguishing false crises from
real ones. For when there is panic in the air, with one crisis tripping over
the heels of another, actual dangers mixed with imaginary scares, there is no
chance at all for the constructive use of reason, and any order soon seems
preferable to any disorder.
It is only on the premise of a certain stability over
a long run of time that men can hope to follow the method of reason. This is
not because mankind is inept, or because the appeal to reason is visionary, but
because the evolution of reason on political subjects is only in its
beginnings. Our rational ideas in politics are still large, thin generalities,
much too abstract and unrefined for practical guidance, except where the
aggregates are large enough to cancel out individual peculiarity and exhibit
large uniformities. Reason in politics is especially immature in predicting the
behavior of individual men, because in human conduct the smallest initial
variation often works out into the most elaborate differences. That, perhaps,
is why when we try to insist solely upon an appeal to reason in dealing with
sudden situations, we are broken and drowned in laughter.
4
For the rate at which reason, as we possess it, can
advance itself is slower than the rate at which action has to be taken. In the
present state of political science there is, therefore, a tendency for one
situation to change into another, before the first is clearly understood, and
so to make much political criticism hindsight and little else. Both in the
discovery of what is unknown, and in the propagation of that which has been
proved, there is a time-differential, which ought to, in a much greater degree
than it ever has, occupy the political philosopher. We have begun, chiefly
under the inspiration of Mr. Graham Wallas, to examine the effect of an invisible
environment upon our opinions. We do not, as yet, understand, except a little
by rule of thumb, the element of time in politics, though it bears most
directly upon the practicability of any constructive proposal. [Footnote: Cf.
H. G. Wells in the opening chapters of Mankind in the Making.] We can see, for
example, that somehow the relevancy of any plan depends upon the length of time
the operation requires. Because on the length of time it will depend whether
the data which the plan assumes as given, will in truth remain the same.
[Footnote: The better the current analysis in the intelligence work of any
institution, the less likely, of course, that men will deal with tomorrow’s
problems in the light of yesterday’s facts.] There is a factor here which
realistic and experienced men do take into account, and it helps to mark them
off somehow from the opportunist, the visionary, the philistine and the pedant.
[Footnote: Not all, but some of the differences between reactionaries,
conservatives, liberals, and radicals are due, I think, to a different
intuitive estimate of the rate of change in social affairs.] But just how the
calculation of time enters into politics we do not know at present in any
systematic way.
Until we understand these matters more clearly, we
can at least remember that there is a problem of the utmost theoretical
difficulty and practical consequence. It will help us to cherish Plato’s ideal,
without sharing his hasty conclusion about the perversity of those who do not
listen to reason. It is hard to obey reason in politics, because you are trying
to make two processes march together, which have as yet a different gait and a
different pace. Until reason is subtle and particular, the immediate struggle
of politics will continue to require an amount of native wit, force, and
unprovable faith, that reason can neither provide nor control, because the
facts of life are too undifferentiated for its powers of understanding. The
methods of social science are so little perfected that in many of the serious
decisions and most of the casual ones, there is as yet no choice but to gamble
with fate as intuition prompts.
But we can make a belief in reason one of those
intuitions. We can use our wit and our force to make footholds for reason.
Behind our pictures of the world, we can try to see the vista of a longer
duration of events, and wherever it is possible to escape from the urgent
present, allow this longer time to control our decisions. And yet, even when
there is this will to let the future count, we find again and again that we do
not know for certain how to act according to the dictates of reason. The number
of human problems on which reason is prepared to dictate is small.
5
There is, however, a noble counterfeit in that
charity which comes from self-knowledge and an unarguable belief that no one of
our gregarious species is alone in his longing for a friendlier world. So many
of the grimaces men make at each other go with a flutter of their pulse, that
they are not all of them important. And where so much is uncertain, where so
many actions have to be carried out on guesses, the demand upon the reserves of
mere decency is enormous, and it is necessary to live as if good will would
work. We cannot prove in every instance that it will, nor why hatred,
intolerance, suspicion, bigotry, secrecy, fear, and lying are the seven deadly
sins against public opinion. We can only insist that they have no place in the
appeal to reason, that in the longer run they are a poison; and taking our
stand upon a view of the world which outlasts our own predicaments, and our own
lives, we can cherish a hearty prejudice against them.
We can do this all the better if we do not allow
frightfulness and fanaticism to impress us so deeply that we throw up our hands
peevishly, and lose interest in the longer run of time because we have lost
faith in the future of man. There is no ground for this despair, because all
the ifs on which, as James said, our destiny hangs, are as pregnant as they
ever were. What we have seen of brutality, we have seen, and because it was
strange, it was not conclusive. It was only Berlin, Moscow, Versailles in 1914
to 1919, not Armageddon, as we rhetorically said. The more realistically men
have faced out the brutality and the hysteria, the more they have earned the
right to say that it is not foolish for men to believe, because another great
war took place, that intelligence, courage and effort cannot ever contrive a
good life for all men.
Great as was the horror, it
was not universal. There were corrupt, and there were incorruptible. There was
muddle and there were miracles. There was huge lying. There were men with the
will to uncover it. It is no judgment, but only a mood, when men deny that what
some men have been, more men, and ultimately enough men, might be. You can
despair of what has never been. You can despair of ever having three heads,
though Mr. Shaw has declined to despair even of that. But you cannot despair of
the possibilities that could exist by virtue of any human quality which a human
being has exhibited. And if amidst all the evils of this decade, you have not
seen men and women, known moments that you would like to multiply, the Lord
himself cannot help you.
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