TWO SYSTEMS OF MORALS.
Arrived at the end of the preceding
chapter, if he gets so far, I imagine I hear the reader
say:
“Well, now, was I wrong in accusing
political economists of being dry and cold? What
a picture of humanity! Spoliation is a fatal power,
almost normal, assuming every form, practiced under
every pretext, against law and according to law, abusing
the most sacred things, alternately playing upon the
feebleness and the credulity of the masses, and ever
growing by what it feeds on. Could a more mournful
picture of the world be imagined than this?”
The problem is, not to find whether
the picture is mournful, but whether it is true.
And for that we have the testimony of history.
It is singular that those who decry
political economy, because it investigates men and
the world as it finds them, are more gloomy than political
economy itself, at least as regards the past and the
present. Look into their books and their journals.
What do you find? Bitterness and hatred of society.
The very word civilization is for them a synonym
for injustice, disorder and anarchy. They have
even come to curse liberty, so little confidence
have they in the development of the human race, the
result of its natural organization. Liberty,
according to them, is something which will bring humanity
nearer and nearer to destruction.
It is true that they are optimists
as regards the future. For, although humanity,
in itself incapable, for six thousand years has gone
astray, a revelation has come, which has pointed out
to men the way of safety, and, if the flock are docile
and obedient to the shepherd’s call, will lead
them to the promised land, where well-being may be
attained without effort, where order, security and
prosperity are the easy reward of improvidence.
To this end humanity, as Rousseau
said, has only to allow these reformers to change
the physical and moral constitution of man.
Political economy has not taken upon
itself the mission of finding out the probable condition
of society had it pleased God to make men different
from what they are. It may be unfortunate that
Providence, at the beginning, neglected to call to
his counsels a few of our modern reformers. And,
as the celestial mechanism would have been entirely
different had the Creator consulted Alphonso the
Wise, society, also, had He not neglected the
advice of Fourier, would have been very different
from that in which we are compelled to live, and move,
and breathe. But, since we are here, our duty
is to study and to understand His laws, especially
if the amelioration of our condition essentially depends
upon such knowledge.
We cannot prevent the existence of
unsatisfied desires in the hearts of men.
We cannot satisfy these desires except by labor.
We cannot deny the fact that man has
as much repugnance for labor as he has satisfaction
with its results.
Since man has such characteristics,
we cannot prevent the existence of a constant tendency
among men to obtain their part of the enjoyments of
life while throwing upon others, by force or by trickery,
the burdens of labor. It is not for us to belie
universal history, to silence the voice of the past,
which attests that this has been the condition of
things since the beginning of the world. We cannot
deny that war, slavery, superstition, the abuses of
government, privileges, frauds of every nature, and
monopolies, have been the incontestable and terrible
manifestations of these two sentiments united in the
heart of man: desire for enjoyment; repugnance
to labor.
“In the sweat of thy face shalt
thou eat bread!” But every one wants as much
bread and as little sweat as possible. This is
the conclusion of history.
Thank Heaven, history also teaches
that the division of blessings and burdens tends to
a more exact equality among men. Unless one is
prepared to deny the light of the sun, it must be
admitted that, in this respect at least, society has
made some progress.
If this be true, there exists in society
a natural and providential force, a law which causes
iniquity gradually to cease, and makes justice more
and more a reality.
We say that this force exists in society,
and that God has placed it there. If it did not
exist we should be compelled, with the socialists,
to search for it in those artificial means, in those
arrangements which require a fundamental change in
the physical and moral constitution of man, or rather
we should consider that search idle and vain, for the
reason that we could not comprehend the action of a
lever without a place of support.
Let us, then, endeavor to indicate
that beneficent force which tends progressively to
overcome the maleficent force to which we have given
the name spoliation, and the existence of which is
only too well explained by reason and proved by experience.
Every maleficent act necessarily has
two terms the point of beginning and the
point of ending; the man who performs the act and the
man upon whom it is performed; or, in the language
of the schools, the active and the passive agent.
There are, then, two means by which the maleficent
act can be prevented: by the voluntary absence
of the active, or by the resistance of the passive
agent. Whence two systems of morals arise, not
antagonistic but concurrent; religious or philosophical
morality, and the morality to which I permit myself
to apply the name economical (utilitarian).
Religious morality, to abolish and
extirpate the maleficent act, appeals to its author,
to man in his capacity of active agent. It says
to him: “Reform yourself; purify yourself;
cease to do evil; learn to do well; conquer your passions;
sacrifice your interests; do not oppress your neighbor,
to succor and relieve whom is your duty; be first just,
then generous.” This morality will always
be the most beautiful, the most touching, that which
will exhibit the human race in all its majesty; which
will the best lend itself to the offices of eloquence,
and will most excite the sympathy and admiration of
mankind.
Utilitarian morality works to the
same end, but especially addresses itself to man in
his capacity of passive agent. It points out to
him the consequences of human actions, and, by this
simple exhibition, stimulates him to struggle against
those which injure, and to honor those which are useful
to him. It aims to extend among the oppressed
masses enough good sense, enlightenment and just defiance,
to render oppression both difficult and dangerous.
It may also be remarked that utilitarian
morality is not without its influence upon the oppressor.
An act of spoliation causes good and evil evil
for him who suffers it, good for him in whose favor
it is exercised else the act would not
have been performed. But the good by no means
compensates the evil. The evil always, and necessarily,
predominates over the good, because the very fact of
oppression occasions a loss of force, creates dangers,
provokes reprisals, and requires costly precautions.
The simple exhibition of these effects is not then
limited to retaliation of the oppressed; it places
all, whose hearts are not perverted, on the side of
justice, and alarms the security of the oppressors
themselves.
But it is easy to understand that
this morality which is simply a scientific demonstration,
and would even lose its efficiency if it changed its
character; which addresses itself not to the heart
but to the intelligence; which seeks not to persuade
but to convince; which gives proofs not counsels;
whose mission is not to move but to enlighten, and
which obtains over vice no other victory than to deprive
it of its booty it is easy to understand,
I say, how this morality has been accused of being
dry and prosaic. The reproach is true without
being just. It is equivalent to saying that political
economy is not everything, does not comprehend everything,
is not the universal solvent. But who has ever
made such an exorbitant pretension in its name?
The accusation would not be well founded unless political
economy presented its processes as final, and denied
to philosophy and religion the use of their direct
and proper means of elevating humanity. Look at
the concurrent action of morality, properly so called,
and of political economy the one inveighing
against spoliation by an exposure of its moral ugliness,
the other bringing it into discredit in our judgment,
by showing its evil consequences. Concede that
the triumph of the religious moralist, when realized,
is more beautiful, more consoling and more radical;
at the same time it is not easy to deny that the triumph
of economical science is more facile and more certain.
In a few lines, more valuable than
many volumes, J.B. Say has already remarked that
there are two ways of removing the disorder introduced
by hypocrisy into an honorable family; to reform Tartuffe,
or sharpen the wits of Orgon. Moliere, that great
painter of human life, seems constantly to have had
in view the second process as the more efficient.
Such is the case on the world’s
stage. Tell me what Cæsar did, and I will tell
you what were the Romans of his day.
Tell me what modern diplomacy has
accomplished, and I will describe the moral condition
of the nations.
We should not pay two milliards
of taxes if we did not appoint those who consume them
to vote them.
We should not have so much trouble,
difficulty and expense with the African question if
we were as well convinced that two and two make four
in political economy as in arithmetic.
M. Guizot would never have had occasion
to say: “France is rich enough to pay for
her glory,” if France had never conceived a false
idea of glory.
The same statesman never would have
said: “Liberty is too precious for France
to traffic in it,” if France had well understood
that liberty and a large budget are
incompatible.
Let religious morality then, if it
can, touch the heart of the Tartuffes, the Caesars,
the conquerors of Algeria, the sinecurists, the monopolists,
etc. The mission of political economy is
to enlighten their dupes. Of these two processes,
which is the more efficient aid to social progress?
I believe it is the second. I believe that humanity
cannot escape the necessity of first learning a defensive
morality. I have read, observed, and made
diligent inquiry, and have been unable to find any
abuse, practiced to any considerable extent, that has
perished by voluntary renunciation on the part of
those who profited by it. On the contrary, I
have seen many that have yielded to the manly resistance
of those who suffered by them.
To describe the consequences of abuses,
is the most efficient way of destroying the abuses
themselves. And this is true particularly in
regard to abuses which, like the protective system,
while inflicting real evil upon the masses, are to
those who seem to profit by them only an illusion
and a deception.
Well, then, does this species of morality
realize all the social perfection which the sympathetic
nature of the human heart and its noblest faculties
cause us to hope for? This I by no means pretend.
Admit the general diffusion of this defensive morality which,
after all, is only a knowledge that the best understood
interests are in accord with general utility and justice.
A society, although very well regulated, might not
be very attractive, where there were no knaves, only
because there were no fools; where vice, always latent,
and, so to speak, overcome by famine, would only stand
in need of available plunder in order to be restored
to vigor; where the prudence of the individual would
be guarded by the vigilance of the mass, and, finally,
where reforms, regulating external acts, would not
have penetrated to the consciences of men. Such
a state of society we sometimes see typified in one
of those exact, rigorous and just men who is ever ready
to resent the slightest infringement of his rights,
and shrewd in avoiding impositions. You esteem
him possibly you admire him. You may
make him your deputy, but you would not necessarily
choose him for a friend.
Let, then, the two moral systems,
instead of criminating each other, act in concert,
and attack vice at its opposite poles. While the
economists perform their task in uprooting prejudice,
stimulating just and necessary opposition, studying
and exposing the real nature of actions and things,
let the religious moralist, on his part, perform his
more attractive, but more difficult, labor; let him
attack the very body of iniquity, follow it to its
most vital parts, paint the charms of beneficence,
self-denial and devotion, open the fountains of virtue
where we can only choke the sources of vice this
is his duty. It is noble and beautiful.
But why does he dispute the utility of that which
belongs to us?
In a society which, though not superlatively
virtuous, should nevertheless be regulated by the
influences of economical morality (which is
the knowledge of the economy of society), would there
not be a field for the progress of religious morality?
Habit, it has been said, is a second
nature. A country where the individual had become
unaccustomed to injustice, simply by the force of
an enlightened public opinion, might, indeed, be pitiable;
but it seems to me it would be well prepared to receive
an education more elevated and more pure. To
be disaccustomed to evil is a great step towards becoming
good. Men cannot remain stationary. Turned
aside from the paths of vice which would lead only
to infamy, they appreciate better the attractions
of virtue. Possibly it may be necessary for society
to pass through this prosaic state, where men practice
virtue by calculation, to be thence elevated to that
more poetic region where they will no longer have
need of such an exercise.