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    Archives for May 2018

    Historiography Against Tyranny: The Achievement of Guglielmo Ferrero

    May 11, 2018 by Will Morrisey

    Originally published in The Political Science Reviewer, Volume XXXIII (2004).

     

     

    In Memory of Leo Raditsa

     

    Ancient Rome and Modern America: A Comparative Study of Morals and Manners. No translator listed. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1914. [ARM]

    Between the Old World and the New: A Moral and Philosophical Contrast. A. Cecil Curtis translation. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1914. [BOWN]

    Characters and Events of Roman History From Caesar to Nero. Frances Lance Ferrero translation. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1909. [CE]

    Europe’s Fatal Hour. No translator listed. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1918. [EFH]

    Four Years of Fascism. E. W. Dickes translation. Westminster: P. S. King and Son, Ltd., 1924. [FYF]

    The Gamble: Bonaparte in Italy, 1796-1797. Bertha Pritchard and Lily C. Freeman translation. New York: Walker and Company, 1961. [G]

    The Greatness and Decline of Rome. Five volumes. Alfred E. Zimmern and J. J. Chaytor translation. Freeport: Books for Libraries Press, 1971. Originally published in Milan, 1901-07. [GDR]

    The Life of Caesar. Alfred E. Zimmern translation. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1933. [LC]

    Militarism: A Contribution to the Peace Crusade. No translator listed. Boston: L. C. Page and Company, 1903. Originally published in Milan, 1898. [M]

    Problems of Peace: From the Holy Alliance to the League of Nations. No translator listed. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1919. [PPe]

    The Principles of Power: The Great Political Crises of History. Theodore R. Jaeckel translation. New York: Arno Press, 1971. Translation originally published in New York in 1942. [PPo]

    The Reconstruction of Europe: Talleyrand and the Congress of Vienna, 1814-1815. No translator listed. New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1963. Originally published in Paris, 1940. [RE]

    The Ruin of the Ancient Civilization and the Triumph of Christianity: With Some Considerations of Conditions in the Europe of Today. Hon. Lady Whitehead translation. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1921. [RAC]

    The Two French Revolutions, 1789-1796. Samuel J. Hurwitz translation. New York: Basic Books, 1968. [TFR]

    The Unity of the World. Howard Coxe translation. New York: Boni and Boni, 1930. [UW]

    The Women of the Caesars. Christian Gauss translation. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1925. [WC]

    Words to the Deaf: An Historian Contemplates His Age. Ben Ray Redman translation. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1925. [WD]

     

    Guglielmo Ferrero (1871-1942), Italian historian, culture critic, and novelist, dedicated his life to the diagnosis of two modern phenomena: the new civilization of “quantity,” which acknowledged no limits to the scope of human desires, and the new tyranny, “totalitarianism,” which acknowledged no limits to the scope of the tyrant’s ambitions.

    The intellectual culmination of these two aspects of modernity could be found, he argued, in German culture. “In philosophy, law, ethics, history, in every branch of learning indeed, the German mind has, especially during the last two centuries, steadily confounded principles and definitions, demolished traditions, confused good and evil, the beautiful and the ugly, the true and the false, in order to give a freer rein to passions and interests…. It appealed to the tendencies of an age which would submit to no discipline but that imposed by work and the state and aspired in everything else, in art and private morals, in religion and family life, in business, and pleasure alike, to an ever increasing measure of liberty” (EFH 208-209). That is, the very Kultur that makes so much of freedom—as against materialism, Anglo-Americanism, and the commercial bourgeoisie—itself only exaggerated the worst tendencies of modern life.

    Against this obscurantist trend, Ferrero sided with eighteenth- and nineteenth-century philosophers who might be described as moderate rationalists: Montesquieu, Vattel, Constant, Guizot, and perhaps (although he does not mention him) Tocqueville. Among political figures, Ferrero praised the American republicans (in contrast to the French); the story of how French politicians abandoned French political thought illuminates this contrast. Among cultures, he patriotically but not chauvinistically preferred the Latins, with their “endeavor to define principles exactly, to prevent their being confused with one another, and consequently to lay down accurate and certain laws” (EFH 208). Behind these virtues of Latin culture stands a Greek philosopher, Aristotle, “the philosopher of limitation and order par excellence” (EFH 176), who in ethics advocated the center between extremes and in politics defended the civic life of the polis against the sprawling empires of the East. The old, aristocratic republic of ancient Rome represented Aristotelianism in practice.

    In this essay I shall offer an overview of Ferrero’s historical writings, with particular emphasis on his lifelong opposition to tyranny in the name of a measured—what he came to call a legitimate—republicanism. I have divided the essay into two main parts, corresponding to what I regard as the two complementary phases of Ferrero’s career. Prior to the First World War, after a youthful orientation toward positivism, Ferrero concentrated his attention on the character of “quantitative” civilization and its implications for modern life. He found in ancient Rome an example—the example—of the effect of “quantifying” a previously “qualitative” political society. Indeed, his study of Roman antiquity led him away from his initial assumptions in favor of positivism and progressivism, by showing him the virtue of moderation, and the significance of that virtue.

    The war swept away the monarchies, the last vestiges of the old regimes that still upheld “quality” or limits. In their place arose not only democracies but also such novel tyrannies as Lenin’s Russia and Mussolini’s Italy. Ferrero’s sharp critique of Fascism in the 1920s made him increasingly unwelcome in his own country, where he was eventually placed under house arrest, and in 1930 he prudently accepted an appointment at the University of Geneva. He remained in Switzerland for the rest of his life, now directing students and readers to the French Revolution and Bonapartism as the germs of the most menacing modern political disorder. His Geneva lectures, held on Thursday afternoon every week from 1931 to 1942, filled the biggest hall at the university with listeners who well knew that they were hearing not only the research of a master historian but the diagnosis of Europe’s heightening political fever of militarism and tyranny.

    Because Ferrero’s work is now so little known in the United States—though there was a time when Charles Beard could introduce him as a man who needed no introduction to American readers—my task here is descriptive, not critical. Good essays could be written on Ferrero’s critical reception here and elsewhere, on the accuracy of his historical judgments on ancient Rome and republican France, and on his works of fiction (he published half a dozen novels). But those essays are not this essay.

     

    Introduction: Ancient and Modern

    In 1898, Ferrero wrote, “We are on the eve of a terrible [war] which will transform Europe into a huge battlefield” (M 11). But victory in that war would not go to the countries most steeped in militarism. “[T]he State which proves strongest in war is that in which morals and life at ordinary times are the furthest removed from the cruelty, egoism, and violence which during war became the normal conditions of life and action” (M 15). The commercial republics, not the monarchies, would come to dominate Europe and the world: “If men are wise, the age of Pax Christiana can now be inaugurated, of longer duration and more glorious than Pax Augusta“; this “fresh chapter” in European and American civilization will be “an unheroic chapter”—bourgeois to the core—but “let us earnestly hope, a less lugubrious and less bloody chapter” (M).

    As evidence of the military superiority of commercial republicanism over old-regime militarism, Ferrero pointed to the Spanish-American War. With “calm resolution,” America waged “a truly cheerful war” against Spain (M 35). “The mercantile American Government, composed entirely of bourgeoisie, presided over by a former tradesman (President William McKinley), knew how to prepare for conflict, to measure the forces necessary, and to deal the blow with certainty at the proper moment.” The Spanish government, despite its “military character and tradition,” was powerless (M 37).

    Spanish society was “formed, not on principles of liberty, but of protection.” The Spanish state protects a favored few, excluding the many from the opportunity to enjoy just reward for labor. Hence “the ideal of every Spanish middle-class youth” is “to be an official at Madrid, to work little… to go to bed late, get up late in the morning, go to business late, and leave it early without having done much work” (M 39). In war, Spanish policy made soldiers fight by “placing them between two dangers, of which war is the lesser, and of keeping up their failing courage with the fear of punishment and the threat of the penal code for deserters and cowards” (M 44). There were no happy warriors among the troops of Spain. In attempting to accommodate and direct the rising middle classes, old-regime Spain produced only lazy employees of the central state and spiritless soldiers.

    American society was formed on liberty. The educational system was not designed to exclude people from employment. “Let him who can do a thing well step forward and do it, no one will question where he learnt it: such is the degree required of the American engineer, barrister, clerk, or employee” (M 19). The American can change careers many times; “he is never a victim of the tyranny of a choice made once for all his whole life, often whilst still immature; and he rarely finds himself in either of those two situations so ruinous to the middle classes in Europe, more especially in the Latin countries: the absolute uncertainty of success, and the utter despair of ever recovering from sudden ruin” (M 19). And so in war: If the “larger portion” of a people “lives normally under such good material, moral, and intellectual conditions, that it can rapidly adapt itself to the situation of war by a conscious effort of will directed by a moral motive,” then those people are likely to win their wars (M 45). Far from being nations of shopkeepers, vulnerable to the disciplined militarists of Realpolitik, commercial republics fight to win, and do.

    The American advantage over Spain is the advantage of the modern over the ancient. By “modern” and “ancient,” Ferrero does not denote temporal categories. Ancient Rome displayed “modern” features—resistance to patriarchy, for example (GDR II.216); modern Turkey was quite “ancient” in its ideal of “a quiet life of absolute repose, idleness comforted by coffee and tobacco,” its delight in leisured simplicity (M 139). The “one great defect” of all ancient societies, whether nomadic or semi-nomadic tribes, military empires, mercantile towns, or commercial-agrarian polities, was “the difficulty they had in finding new productive employment for accumulated capital, a condition of things which was partly the cause and partly the effect of the unlaborious habits of the population” (M 96). Except for mining, which employed slaves, there was no major industry that coordinated large numbers of workers outside their homes. “If some fine morning an ancient Egyptian, Assyrian, or Greek, were suddenly reanimated in Oxford Street, preserving recollections of the world in which he lived, at the sight of so many people hurrying in the same direction he would imagine that something extraordinary was happening in London: a catastrophe a festival, a procession, the return of some victorious king. It would never occur to him that all this bustle was a daily occurrence, representing the urgent desire and need of numbers to reach in time their day’s work, which rarely lasts less than six or seven hours” (M 99). In antiquity, wealth was not so much invested as displayed.

    Pericles’ Athens “was probably not worth one parish of London for wealth, and yet its temples and public monuments were full of gold and silver-plated statues” (M 110). Capital stagnated and land accumulated in a few hands. The way to raise capital (and to acquire new land) was not by industry but by war; Alexander the Great forced capital to circulate from the East back to Greece; “stimulat[ing] the energy, the inventive genius, and the greed of innumerable Greeks” (124) in the only way the ancients knew how to do it. The warrior was the capitalist of the ancient world (M 132). War both builds and destroys civilization, giving antiquity its “tragic grandeur”: “Its greatest monuments have only reached us in a ruined state” (M 134).

    Modern life channels the “spirit of conquest” into business, making trade rather like “a species of tempered war.” Modern business is “an elaborate machinery which in part serves the purpose indicated by the economist”—organizing exchange of goods and dividing labor efficiently—and “in part serves to enable certain classes and nations to rule over other classes and other nations—in short, taking the place and function filed by armies in the past” (M 296).

    Ancient writers deplored what they called corruption. The Roman aristocracy, bulwark of the republic, gradually sank in “the mania for luxury and the appetite for pleasure” (CE 17). Today, by contrast, much of what the ancients call corruption is termed progress; desires are liberated and their satisfaction democratized (CE 26). Ancient egoism is modern individualism. Civic spirit has declined, “children are not wanted,” “men prefer to live in accord with those in power, ignoring their vices, rather than openly opposing them,” and “public events do not interest unless they include a personal advantage” (CE 28). Laughing at “the timid prudence of our forefathers,” moderns make it “a duty for each one to spend, to enjoy, to waste as much as he can, without any disturbing thought as to the ultimate consequences of what he does” (CE 35). The only true discipline in the modern world comes not from governments or religions but from work itself. “In compensation for the liberty granted him in everything else,” modern civilization demands from its men “a rapidity, a punctuality, an intensity, and a passivity of obedience to his work, such as no other epoch has ever dreamed of being able to exact from lazy human nature” (ARMA 10, 205, 121-214). Vulcan wins Venus back from Mars (BOWN Part III, chapter 2).

    But modernity presents a paradox. Having liberated all the desires, moderns no longer know which ones to satisfy. Embracing quantity instead of quality, inchoate desire instead of stable criteria of judgment, modern men “must resign ourselves to living in a new Tower of Babel, in the midst of a confusion of tongues. The aesthetic, intellectual, and moral confusion of our times is the price nature exacts for the treasures which she is obliged to resign into our power” (ARMA 14). As always for Ferrero, it is one thing to conquer, another to govern. The technological conquest of nature means that moderns have turned the desire to know away from disinterested love of truth, intellectual curiosity, and toward the service of impatient, contradictory desires. “Even scientists nowadays want to see their discoveries turned into money” (ARMA 172). If work is our only discipline, money is our only authority; the distinction between freeborn citizen and slave disappears, replaced by the distinction between rich and poor (ARMA 106-108). In this new social conflict, the confused upper and middle classes suffer the disadvantage of rulers who do not know what they rule for, a dilemma the aristocratic slaveholders of antiquity seldom faced.

    In the years before the First World War, then, Ferrero concerned himself with the question of how commercial republican civilization—the “American” or “New World” civilization whose triumph over the old monarchies he foresaw—could be saved from “a sort of opulent barbarism” (ARMA 129). The American idea of progress, spreading rapidly in Europe, especially in “nations like Germany”—which combined the old aristocratic militarism/monarchism and the new commercialism and industrialism in an ominous way—apparently led to the universalization of King Midas’ dilemma, whereby the sovereigns are surrounded by riches they cannot enjoy, in what another writer later would call the joyless quest for joy (ARMA 131, 145). In this circumstance, Marxism is a symptom of the problem, not its solution; the “civilization of machinery” had appeared at firs to be “a death-blow to the working classes, a godsend to the upper classes,” but a century later “we find this civilization giving complete satisfaction only to the workmen, because it contents the workmen only from the double point of view of quantity and quality”; the upper classes have immense wealth but no idea how to enjoy it (ARMA 194-195; see also BOWN 236). Worse, “in this unbridled and limitless chase after money and enjoyment… the spirit of charity is obscured; and men’s minds become accustomed to a hardness and brutality which may perhaps one day startle the world in a disagreeable and terrible way” (ARMA 217).

    Given this critique of both “ancient” and “modern,” Ferrero must reject any nostalgia for the past—”we are not incline to abjure railways and telegraphs” or “to run the risk of famine, which was such an ever-present one to the civilizations of the past” (ARMA 172). Europeans must learn that the age of limitless desires has in fact limits, namely, the absence of deliberation, of taste, of discernment, of fine art, real religion, and disinterested study. Quantity and quality cannot be maximized simultaneously (BOWN 273). That is the first lesson, for modern man, in the ancient school of limits, of moderation.

    It was to reinforce this lesson of moderation that Ferrero turned to the exposition of Roman history. Prior to the First World War, his major historical work centered on Rome, and particularly on the first Caesars. After the war, with the old monarchies gone and the new tyrannies of fascism and communism having commenced, he turned to the French Revolution and Bonapartism as the best lenses for understanding modernity. He died before the commercial republics had defeated the new tyrannies, although (as we’ve seen) this would not have surprised him. His pre-war Roman books thus in some respects speak to our circumstance today, after the defeat of the Soviet empire, even more directly than his later books do.

     

    Ancient Rome

    Republicanism and Caesarism. Ferrero regards Rome as a universal and eternal city in the sense that it presents “all the essential phenomena of social life”; “every new age has only to choose that part which most resembles it, to find its own self” (CE 242-243; see also GDR I. v). Ferrero takes aim at the German historian Theodor Mommsen, who conceived of Roman history as the conflict between republicanism and monarchism, applauding the triumph of the Caesars. Repelled by the French Revolution, Mommsen looked to Caesarism as a model for putting the republican genius, or demon, back in the bottle. Against Mommsen, whose interests Ferrero describes as “purely political,” Ferrero undertakes a “psychological and moral account of the Romans.” He means not a Freudian or other analytic approach but an assessment of the political intentions of Roman statesmen. He also explicitly rejects the accounts of economic determinists (GDR I. v-vi; CE v).

    Ferrero refutes Mommsen’s claim that the Caesars were monarchists out to revolutionize a dying republic. The Caesars were, rather, dictators not unlike those of the Latin America of Ferrero’s time—men arising from republics in crisis. The Caesars did not replace the central Roman institution, the Senate, which continued to govern the Empire well into the first century A. D. (ARMA 35; RAC 13). Equally, Ferrero refutes the claims of modern republican historians who, seizing upon “the absurd tales told by Suetonius and Tacitus about the family of the Caesars, through preconceived hate for the monarchy,” blacken the reputation of Caesarism, even as Mommsen whitewashed it. The real accomplishment of the Caesars was not to end the republic, for good or evil; it was to take possession of Gaul, and thus unwittingly to inaugurate Europe as a civilization (GDR V. iii-iv; CE 72-73).

    Ferrero particularly commends the study of Roman history to Americans, north and south. “Ancient Rome ought to live daily in the mind of the new social classes that lead onward,” lest they too end as victims of barbarism. As heirs of republicanism, they must understand republicanism’s weaknesses and strengths (CE 258-259, 263-264). They must understand, as Mommsen does not, the profoundly unbureaucratic character of republicanism, including the republicanism of the Caesars; Caesar Augustus, for example, several times liquidated the Empire’s debt out of his own pocket (ARMA 26, 29, 31; GDR II. 80). Roman studies can refine Anglo-Saxon and German minds, and especially those minds that will rule their nations, with the civilized influence of Latinity (CE vi-vii, 256-257). More important, the study of Roman history can “train the men who govern nations to discern more clearly than may be possible from their own environments the truth underlying the legends.” Legends do not come down to us from “the dawn of history.” On the contrary, they are always being spun. “A great man of state is distinguished from a mediocre by his greater ability to divine the real in his world of action beneath its superfice of confused legends; by his greater ability to discriminate in everything that is true from what is merely apparently true, in the prestige of states and institutions, in the force of parties, in the energy attributed to certain men, in the purposes claimed by parties and men, often different from their designs” (CE 65-67). By challenging partisan accounts, ancient and modern, Ferrero sets his reader on the way to combining learning and statesmanship. By pointing to the unintended consequences of the most herculean feats of the most prominent statesmen, Ferrero also shows his reader, the future statesman, that a certain humility should go with learning and rulership. The Machiavellian fantasy of mastering Fortuna ought to be resisted; “the wheel of destiny turns by a mysterious law, alike for families and for peoples: those in high position may fall; those in low, may rise.” This, he evidently thinks, is an especially wholesome notion with which to impress Americans, who will lead the empire of commercial republicanism (CE 98-99).

    The Roman republicanism that Julius Caesar sought to save, not destroy, had its social basis in a patriarchal aristocracy. The modern, individualist notion of matrimony and family as supports for personal happiness was “alien to the Roman mind, which conceived of these from an essentially political and social point of view.” Aristocratic Roman matrons supported their own social position and their husbands’ political careers by administering the household—the center of the ancient economy—and by adding their dowers to the household budget. The self-sufficiency of that household gave aristocrats the economic independence upon which political independence rested. In such a structure, marriage was scarcely to be entrusted to “passion mobile as the sea,” but to the prudential judgment of parents. (WC 15, 31-32; ARMA 68). The household’s day-to-day ruler, the matron, “a free-born woman of irreproachable habits, could live with a man only in the capacity of his legitimate wife. A marriage ceremony did not make a marriage; virtue did. A dissolute woman was by law a concubine; no ceremony could make her anything more than that” (ARMA 73-74). More than an economic unit, the aristocratic family was also a school, specifically, a military school in which a father served as “the firs military instructor of his sons,” and undertook “the duty of making good soldiers out of them.” Such early instruction made the aristocracy the indispensable source of military officers for the Roman Empire, which of course began early in the life of the republican regime. “In short, the ancient family was a sort of political society. Its members were bound to support each other in difficult and dangerous contingencies,” and also in everyday contingencies. The virtue of both partners was at a premium because the ancient world was a dangerous place (ARMA 66). (The “woman question” in modernity looks quite different because modern, democratic principles require equality under the law, and because modern society no longer centers economic or military life in the household. Ferrero has no objection to the modern liberation of women, but cautions that women will need to take greater responsibilities in order to balance their increased personal freedom. The worst of both worlds would be the liberation of women into a world of hedonism, where women would wield power only so long as their beauty lasted [WC 40-41].)

    By Caesar’s time the Roman aristocracy had declined. The title of Ferrero’s major book on Rome, The Greatness and Decline of Rome, echoes Montesquieu’s The Greatness of the Romans and Their Decadence. Ferrero agrees with his great liberal predecessor that Roman republicanism declined because empire corrupted the aristocrats. “Rome, like a great spider, was sucking blood from the provinces”—war and its trophies being the only way known to the ancients for major infusions of income. The rich turned increasingly to “the passion for amusing and good feeding,” infecting the whole community with it (GDR I. 140). The Caesars found a polity still largely republican, yet tending socially toward monarchy, a polity racked by contradictory desires for virtue and vice. The republic still possessed considerable vitality. Above all, the discipline of the Roman constitution, and the reverence Romans felt toward it, and its “impersonal authority of law and custom,” remained—weaker than it had been, but still strong (GDR I. 5-6, 327; III. 18; CE 136-137). “It was during this slow decomposition of the military, agricultural, and aristocratic society, which began after Rome had won the supreme power in the Mediterranean, and through the working of the forces of commerce and capitalism, that Roman Imperialism, as we know now know it, was called into being” (GDR I. 43). Ferrero compares this process to that undergone by England and France in the nineteenth century, northern Italy and Germany since 1848, and the United States between the founding and the Civil War (GDR I. 344-345). The first attempt to counteract increased influence of the middle class and the equestrian order by the re-establishment of aristocracy-based republicanism was that of Sulla, who succeeded in establishing, briefly, not a new version of the old constitution, or an expanded empire, but “simply a gigantic system of police” (GDR I. 116), a system that could not outlive him.

    Julius Caesar, then, confronted an aristocracy that had assumed most of the characteristics of an oligarchy. As a student of Aristotle’s writings, he hoped to establish a mixed regime, balancing monarchic, aristocratic, oligarchic, and democratic elements. Caesar’s marriage to Pompeia, a woman of the old nobility, was likely intended to balance his own early democratic leanings (GDR I. 219). This attempt to found a mixed regime failed. Insofar as he succeeded, Julius resembled a Tammany Hall boss, not an Aristotelian statesman, distributing bread to the poor in exchange for political support (GDR I. 250; 348-349; II. 307). Because the so-to-speak ’embourgeoisement’ of Rome had nothing of modern industrialism about it—neither the organization nor the technology—”the struggle of man against man was far more powerful than the struggle of man against nature,” a point best seen in the fact that the immigrant workers of antiquity were slaves and freedmen forced to come to Rome (GDR II. 38-39, 41-43, 57). Great as a general and a writer, Julius “failed to become a great statesman” because, “in a democracy bitten with the mad passion for power, riches, and self-indulgence, a man who stands aloof from these temptations may live very happily in retirement and write books upon philosophy,” “but he must not stray into the hazardous paths of politics” (GDR II. 344). Mixed-regime Rome had ‘democratized’ too much to be brought back into balance. Thus a book that appears to be an attempt to guide young scholars into the life of politics in fact warns them against doing so in such a time as the twentieth century. It would take a different, not nearly so literate or ‘intellectual’ type to rule Rome.

    Antony and Cleopatra. Julius Caesar had moved to the East in the last years of his life, eyeing the empire of Parthia. The road to Parthia led through Egypt and its queen. After the assassination of Julius, Antony and Octavianus vied for dominance. With his principal rival in Rome, Antony had to do two things: marry Octavia, his rival’s sister, so as to assure the Roman troops that he desired peace, and to center his activities in Egypt, that is to say, in his alliance with Cleopatra—all the continuation of the Julian strategy. Ferrero dismisses the legend of a grand passion, on either side of the affair. “There is in our way of thinking a vein of romanticism wanting in the ancient mind. We see in love a certain forgetfulness of ourselves, a certain blindness of egoism and the more material passions, a kind of power of self-abnegation, which, inasmuch as it is conscious, confers a certain nobility and dignity; therefore we are indulgent to mistakes and follies committed for the sake of passion, while the ancients were very severe.” It was “not a passion of love” that led Antony to Cleopatra but “a political scheme well thought out” (GDR III. 255-256; CE 42, 46, 52). He needed the treasure of the Ptolemies in order to conquer Persia GDR IV. 3). He married Cleopatra, without divorcing Octavia; brother Octavianus “was disturbed not so much by the insult to his sister as by the increase of power which the marriage would bring to his brother-in-law” (GDR IV. 8-9). For her part, Cleopatra wanted to marry Antony in order to destroy domestic opposition to her rule, as the Ptolemaic monarchy, the last surviving dynasty founded by Alexander’s generals, was now weak. With Antony as king, she would “save Egypt from the fate of the other Mediterranean peoples, the fate of servitude to Rome” (GDR III. 240). These dovetailing strategies failed not because they were conceived in some paroxysm of erotic transport, but because they failed to reckon with the fundamentally patriotic and republican-imperial sentiments of the Roman army, which wanted nothing from Egypt (or any other foreign country) but subordination and treasure (CE 60).

    The war between Antony and Octavianus “was not, as historians have stated, a struggle for monarchical power at Rome, but was to consolidate or to destroy the new Egyptian empire; it was not a war of Octavianus against Antony, but of Cleopatra against Rome.” The policy of Antony and Cleopatra foundered on the contradictory political need both to restore the republic and to introduce Eastern monarchism. When the couple arrived in Rome, it was a “genuine aristocrat of the old stock,” Domitius Ahenobarbus, who told Antony to send the Egyptian packing. “Antony was defeated in this supreme struggle, not by the valor of his adversary or by his own defective [military] strategy or tactics, but by the hopeless inconsistency of his double-faced policy, which, while professing to be republican and Roman, was actually Egyptian and monarchical” (GDR IV. 74-77, 103). The story of the fatal attraction between Antony and Cleopatra was invented by the poet Horace, friend of Octavianus, as “an anti-feminist legend, intended to reinforce in the state the power of the masculine principle,” that is, a leading principle of republicanism. It exempted the Roman, Antony, from the culpability of genuine betrayal of his country by explaining his actions in terms of seduction (GDR IV. 61-63).

    Augustus. Octavianus began his public career as a tyrant, “the abomination of Italy,” which explains why the Romans tolerated Antony’s antics in Egypt for so long. But Octavianus’ depredations were only “the temporary aberrations of a weak character, exposed to overwhelming danger and crushed by over-burdening responsibility.” He reformed himself, becoming, if not “heroic in adversity,” at least “prudent in prosperity” (GDR III. 33-34, 249). “For fifty years historians have incessantly repeated that Augustus had secretly worked with unswerving persistency throughout his life to concentrate power in his own hands…and to use the old republican forms…as a venture for the new monarchy which he was secretly and powerfully fashioning. The legend is ridiculous…” (GDR III. 146). Octavianus adopted a traditionalist policy, first in order to gather support against Antony, but then, after Antony’s defeat, to foster the stability to which Octavianus’ fundamentally timorous disposition inclined him. Victory at Actium brought Egyptian wealth into Roman coffers, without the need to ‘easternize’ Rome; under such circumstances, conservatism made sense. Public opinion favored aristocracy, not the eastern-style despotism that Rome had just averted. There was no democratic sentiment “as known to us” in Rome, as “every leader of the popular party was a noble of the old stock,” and their call on behalf of the people was for land and money, not democratic equality. The aristocrats faced a different problem: exhaustion after years of civil war. What was need was what moderns would call a strong executive or president, and that was the office that Octavianus undertook to fill under the title of Caesar Augustus. That was an office commended earlier by no less a republican than Cicero, the enemy of Julius Caesar. “The whole course of ancient history proves the tenacity and depth of republican ideas and traditions in the little Greek or Italian republics,” without the memory of which “European history would have been a counterpart of Oriental history, a monotonous succession of despotisms, rising one upon the ruins of another.” For four decades, August would attempt to restrain luxury, restore piety and traditional morality, and revive the aristocracy. “[A]ware that imperial pride and republican jealousy were two sentiments struggling within the nation,” he did what most cautious politicians would do: He temporized (GDR IV. 80, 123-141, 152).

    The tension between the mores of Roman republicanism and those of Egyptian monarchy became increasingly acute. Egyptian wealth came with all the refinements of the Alexandrian/Greek culture, the very opposite of old Roman simplicity. The Roman aristocrats lived in homes profoundly different from those of their ancestors; “their furniture costly, their paintings of the loves of Venus and of Bacchus often sensual and obscene; was it possible that such houses could become the holy precincts of that old patriarchal system, with its austere duties and occupations, which everybody professed anxiety to reconstruct? Prosperity also fed the popularity of Augustus, and the people got into the habit of calling for his increased empowerment whenever an emergency arose: Popularity was “a danger yet more serious and constant than conspiracy.” Thumos weakened, eros strengthened (GDR IV. 169, 192, 194, 201-202, 207, 233, 255).

    As the aristocracy gradually “lost all capacity for government,” a “great puritan movement” sought to restore the old virtues. Augustus sponsored a series of reforms intended to restore patriarchal authority, the most notable being the lex de adulteries, whereby a husband could kill an adulterous wife, daughter, and their lovers; more, anyone else might accuse adulterers in the law courts, in which case the penalty upon being found guilty was banishment. Ferrero notes that this was “a piece of class legislation” aimed not at the poor but at the rich. Ovid’s Amores is an attack on such laws, which in practice led to much scandal without noticeably improving aristocratic conduct (GDR IV. 216, 219; V. 55, 68-73, 159-160). Fifteen years into his rule, August turned to foreign wars as an alternative attempt to reinvigorate the aristocracy. “Campaigns in Germany,” he reasoned, “would be an excellent cure for the softness of the new generation, and the most potent antidote to the erotic poison with which Ovid was corrupting the young nobility.” This policy foundered in its turn on the problem of governance. Barbarians could be conquered, but to rule them after conquest required precisely the vanishing virtues of the aristocrats, who much preferred to remain at home and at ease. It was increasingly difficult to turn out a quorum for Senate meetings in Rome, let alone to fire ambition for a foreign post among the young noble. “Augustus remonstrated in vain” (GDR V. 131, 133, 161-162, 204).

    Augustus’ own household hardly mirrored the desired virtues. Daughter Julia “introduced a new spirit into Roman female society, which had hitherto been represented by the consistent austerity of [her mother] Livia; and worldliness, luxury, pleasure, frivolity, sensuality and skepticism now became the order of the day.” Her adulteries presented Augustus with “the alternative of destroying his daughter or of compromising his whole lifework and reputation by a monstrous scandal”; in the event, he had her exiled. But the project of preserving republicanism had clearly failed. “He left behind him a hybrid system, the vagueness and confusion of which would have puzzled the most expert of politicians; the republic had degenerated, the monarchy had been strangled at birth, the aristocracy was in its dotage and the democracy was helpless” (GDR V. 247-248, 266, 332-333).

    All this notwithstanding, Ferrero calmly remarks, “the government of Augustus was generally beneficial.” The imperial government was nothing like a modern state—”invading, omnipotent, omnipresent.” Rome acted vigorously to preserve its empire, its supremacy, from enemies internal and external, and to exploit its supremacy for its own benefit. But “for the rest, [Rome] let every people live as best pleased it.” For two centuries, “Rome continued in Orient and Occident to suppress bureaucracies, to dismiss or reduce armies, to close royal palaces, to limit the power of priestly castes or republican oligarchies, substituting for all these complicated organizations a proconsul with some dozens of vicegerent secretaries and attendants.” The Romans did not build states, they “devoured” them, leaving in their place a “regime of free exchange,” with low taxes, more often at peace in the past. “The government of Augustus, in its anxiety to avoid friction, allowed individuals to work the lands, the forests and the mines of the republic as they pleased.” The cost of peace and prosperity—in Ferrero there is always a cost for every good—was the decline of intellectual life in the East; corruption is usually a two-way street. As Roman virtue unbent, Eastern culture became “embourgeoised” (CE 212-217, 221; GDR V. 333-338, 347).

    Thus, even in decline, Roman republicanism and its empire staved off monarchism for decades. Historians like Mommsen, “who sneer at the obstinate republicanism of the Romans, and regard the republic of Augustus as nothing more than a fiction,” fail to consider the stakes. Romans regarded their polity as a res publica, owned by right by the Roman people, not as the property of a dynastic line. Finally submerged beneath civic indifference, this Roman spirit nonetheless endured long enough so that it could be recovered during the Renaissance in a Europe made possible by Augustus’ early defense of Rome against Egypt and his later treaty with the Parthians, which abandoned the policy of far eastern conquest undertaken by Alexander the Great, gave Rome freedom of action in Europe and kept the Parthians out of the Mediterranean (GDR V. 34, 349-351).

    Mommsen wants to be on the side of the winners. Eventually, in Rome, the monarchist-dynasts won. Ferrero nonetheless defends resistance to “destiny.” Had Augustus and other Romans not resisted the “mysticism and the monarchy of divine right,” Europe—if such an entity existed at all—would have resembled Asia, “carry[ing] the yoke of semidivine absolutism.” “There is nothing more useful in life than resistance, though apparently futile”; those who resist “always succeed in imposing a part of themselves on the victorious power, and the result is always better than a complete and unantagonized victory of the opposing force” (CE 225-226). “Augustus and Tiberius were deceived. They wished to reanimate what was doomed…. They are the last representatives of the policy initiated by the Scipios and not the initiators of the policy that created the bureaucratic Empire of Diocletian; yet this is exactly their glory. They were right to be wrong” (CE 226). In 1970, not long before he died, Charles de Gaulle defended his refusal to acquiesce in the Soviet conquest of Poland after the Second World War, a conquest France could do nothing to prevent. “History lasts a long time,” he said. He was exercising the right to be wrong.

    Ferrero hereby qualifies his earlier attacks on statesmanly hubris. Statesmen do not control events. They should therefore consider themselves and their actions with due humility. Machiavelli is mistaken to imagine that Fortuna might be mastered. But neither should Fortuna be worshipped, because even the winners must compromise, and history lasts a long time.

    The Need for Limits. In his writings prior to the Great War, Ferrero begins with the problem of militarism—more broadly, the problem of thumos. “War took birth in a primitive and violent exaltation of the desire for emotion”—not for mere life, but for life lived intensely, a desire that moves toward the quest to feel stronger than any other man or thing. Although this flame scarcely burns in most of us, “in all countries and in all ages there has existed a small minority of men in whom this desire was a violent passion, who wished to live a life more than humanly intense, almost, I might say, the life of several men” (M55-57). This passion is no relic of a lost age of Achilles. In modern times it may even be seen in the unlikely realm of aesthetics. In a book-length dialogue written just before the war, Ferrero has one character ask another why it is that, given the subjectivity of aesthetic judgments (a subjectivity admitted by most moderns), we nevertheless want everyone else to admire what we admire. The answer is amour-propre—political, national, religious, intellectual. Judgments about beauty and ugliness finally “depend on force,” and we want to exercise force; we want to rule, and some of us will rule or ruin (BOWN 71-75).

    “Nothing is more difficult to man than moderation.” The difficulty of moderation inheres in the act of line-drawing. Every limit we set for ourselves is arbitrary, questionable, surpassable. And yet these imaginary lines are also indispensable to guide ourselves, to avoid a tumble into either lassitude or frenetic confusion. The unrestrained exercise of power yields the impotence of disorientation. Conventions are only conventions, but the need for conventions is as natural as a rock. “Absolute liberty is for the mind what a vacuum is for the bird: it cannot fly in it” (M 20; BOWN 166, 281, 296; ARMA 236).

    Human resistance to destiny, what Ferrero commends in the early Caesars, works in exactly this way. “Destiny” sets limits; there are in human life forces that overwhelm all human intentions and efforts. These forces limit those efforts. But the efforts also limit them. Human life itself is a matter of these reciprocal limitations (BOWN 328-331).

    The conflict of the pre-war years was not, as Nietzsche would have it, between Dionysus and Apollo, but between Vulcan and Apollo. Productive fire empowered the human desire for supreme liberty and power, deranging needed limits. To re-establish them, one needs the virtues that follow from the indisputable demonstration that good compete, that to take one desired object will diminish our access to another (BOWN 346-348, 378). Ferrero’s history of Rome illustrates this. In preserving Rome by writing its history, in attempting to get closer to the truth than Mommsen had done, a historian can show the need for limits both in the pages of his books and by example.

     

    The New Tyrannies

    The Great War as Regime Event. The Great War started because the civilization of quantity, in its peculiar German manifestation, overmastered the civilization of quality in Europe. This ‘quantification’ also accounted for the scale and the savagery of the war. Even more important for the future of Europe, the war demolished the old monarchies, thus adding political disorder to the moral disorder that began the war and was intensified by it.

    In 1918 Ferrero asked the question that would haunt many intellectuals in the 1940s: Why did Germany, “a country with so many philosophers and scholars,” nonetheless start a war without limits (EFH 31)? He concluded that Germany had attempted to combine the “ancient” and the “modern” in a uniquely insidious way: It retained monarchism, but animated monarchy with the spirit of statism and of thumos—the unmoderated exaltation of courage and patriotism. Germany “had brought to greater perfection than any other nation [the] conception of progress which reconciles the idea of destruction with that of creation by affirming boldly that a people must strive to be great in peace and war alike, and that it is no less meritorious and glorious for it to force other nations to submit to its will than for it to conquer nature and to wrest her secrets from her” (EFH 224-225). As a result, a strict political discipline served moral and intellectual anarchy—a sense of limitlessness, “frenzied pride” or unfettered ambition (EFH 31). “A durable Empire cannot be built upon valor, unity, and passionate or even fanatic love of country alone; commons sense, a clear intuition of what is or is not possible, and a sense of proportion is equally essential, and in these qualities the modern German is conspicuously lacking” (EFH 36).

    Ferrero finds this tendency to overcome contradictions by sheer, willed ‘synthesis’ of opposites in the highest reaches of German thought. While supposing themselves rationalists of a new sort, Kant and Hegel conceal the incoherence of their thought by the pompous obscurity of their prose. Their project leads in practice not to the peaceful ‘end of history,’ whether republican or monarchic, but to a war of all against all, a sort of phantasmagoria of “deconstruction”: “If thought insists upon being, as it were, its own jumping off place and on formulating afresh each day the axioms from which it proposes to start on its task of reconstructing the world from top to bottom, beauty, truth and morals will necessarily cease to be anything but a noisy game of sophisms in which each player, by an arbitrary change of principles, is at liberty to uphold the most contradictory theories—a game in which the final victory is won by those theories which are most flattering to the dominant passions.” In such a culture, or Kultur, ideas serve not as limits to action but as “spurs to the ruling passions” (EFH 34). The most sovereign of the ruling passions being the passion to rule, the libido dominandi will finally order all the other passions—political discipline, called the highest form of freedom, will prevail—but at the expense of a loss of the sense of reality, of limits, of contradiction. The philosophies of almighty ‘synthesis’ or ‘Absolute Spirit’ incline toward the exaltation of victory: “There is a philosophy prevalent today which glories in awarding the crown of merit to whatever succeeds, finding in the fait accompli its own implicit justification,” instead of taking as its standard what ought to have prevailed (FYF xiii). This “philosophy fit for slaves” encourages a spirit of tyrannical conquest, ending in the nation’s self-destruction when the limited reality it seeks to overmaster proves recalcitrant to its boundless ambitions. What begins as an apparent quest for freedom ends in a submission to a supposed fatality. None of this is genuinely rational, in part because it abandons a prudent respect for conventional limits—an abandonment that the modern turn in philosophy effected, even as it liberated the desire for acquisition form the economics and politics of moderation.

    The ‘German’ atmosphere of European life contributed to the postwar rise of Italian Fascism. The only possible source of political authority in a post-monarchic and post-aristocratic world is popular sovereignty. “Now that the great machine of the Congress of Vienna”—the European system of monarchies—”has been destroyed, the peoples have no choice but to govern themselves; a harder thing than submitting to government from above, but for the future an inevitable task” (FYF 112; see also PPo 240). But when the people come to power in a civilization that has lost all sense of limits, they cannot know what they want. To be politically effective, popular sovereignty needs to devise means of expressing itself, that is, to rank its desires coherently. Without any traditions of self-government, a newly self-governing people might seize upon the expedient of a dictator-demagogue who appeals to the ruling passions of the moment in order to consolidate ‘totalizing’ rule over a people disoriented by modern limitlessness (UW 64-65; PPo viii, 172-173; WD 15). Such dictators quickly become tyrants, violating the core idea of popular sovereignty, which, to be truly popular, must respect the right of minority opposition while allowing the majority to govern without illegal subversion (RE 350; PPo 177-178). The French Revolution saw the first modern example of the self-destruction of popular sovereignty so misconceived.

    The French Revolution and the Debacle of Bonapartism. The French Revolution asserted the sovereignty of the people, but popular sovereignty is not as simple in practice as it is in principle. “Who were the people? How could their true will be recognized? Through what channels could it express itself?” (RAC 188). The people seized power, destroying the legal system of monarchism. The destruction of stable convention, of legality, made the ruling republicans fearful; their fear made them intolerant of opposition; their intolerance led them to coercion of the opposition, culminating in the political use of fear, the Terror, in order to assuage their fear. The sovereign people thus acted in an increasingly ‘statist’ manner, but without the lawfulness of the (formerly) settled monarchy (G x, 246-252). The 18th Fructidor—”liberty imposed by force,” “the Revolution seeking safety in suicide” (G 264-265)—led eventually to the 18th Brumaire, which “was not the work of Bonaparte but was carried out by part of the Directory” (RE 10; G 288-289). “Napoleon was a product of the Revolution; the fundamental secret of his whole policy, like that of the Revolution, was fear” (RE 10). Like the Directory, and equally without the reassurance of stable legality, Bonaparte “was afraid of everything: real and imaginary plots being organized, or about to be organized, to assassinate or depose him; discontent; criticisms; resistance provoked by his acts; the responsibilities which he had to assume” (RE 11). In mentality and method he anticipated every twentieth-century tyrant.

    The Revolution did not adequately apply the principle of popular sovereignty because it could not. “The majority of Frenchmen, in ’89, had never heard of the general will or the sovereignty of the nation; they were still attached to the monarchy, the Church, the past, unaware of their sovereignty and unwilling to exercise it” (PPo 102). Ferrero does not excoriate the French revolutionaries quite as neo-Burkeans do, decrying the terrible simplification of ‘abstract’ thinking. Rather, he argues that without a system of legal right to secure them, assertions of natural right raise suspicion, fear, and resistance—which in turn provoke suspicion, fear, and repression by the revolutionaries (TFR 117, 143, 184, 189). “Marat could suffer when he saw a dog being tortured because he was not afraid of the dog. When he was demanding 20,000 heads, he was a man crazed by fear” (PPo 100-101). Behind libido dominandi, fear shivers. “Fear is the original sin of life” (G297), Ferrero goes so far as to say. Rousseau has it exactly wrong: You cannot be forced to be free, because force depends upon, and inspires, the fear that is the antithesis of liberty. The revolution of 1789, intended to be the liberation of the French people along the measured likes of eighteenth-century rationalism, issued ten years later in “the first totalitarian government in Europe” (TFR 138). In the United States and, eventually, in several places elsewhere, popular sovereignty led to no such result, because constructive legalism set limits on destructive fear and force (TFR 5-9, 27, 55). Another way to say this is that the Americans never abandoned prudential reasoning; Rousseau, although attempt to overcome the fear-ridden monarchist liberalism of Hobbes, based in its turn on the fear-ridden libido dominandi liberated by Machiavelli and conceptualized by Descartes—cannot overcome modern political philosophy. And Rousseauian liberty in turn points ahead to the Germans.

    “Self-government cannot be improvised in a few months in a country accustomed for centuries to centralized monarchical rule” (TFR 62). Local governments in France simply “did not know how to proceed,” never having governed anything, before—this, in contrast to the Americans (TFR 62, 65, 70). “The principle of democratic legitimacy, which should have justified [the French Assembly’s] right to govern, did not do so because this principle was not recognized by the majority of the nation.” In the earliest days of the Revolution, Mirabeau had warned his colleagues in the Estates-General of precisely this dilemma. But the revolutionaries were too young, too inexperienced in government, too impassioned to listen (PPo 78-80; TFR 68). And so “it took twenty-five years and oceans of blood to rebuild what six weeks had sufficed to destroy,” namely, the sense of legal limits without which tyranny takes over (PPo 85).

    With such shaky support at home, the fearful revolutionaries had recourse to a longstanding strategy of statists, commended by Machiavelli: Attempt to unify the country, to avoid civil war, by provoking a foreign war, perhaps out of fear of being attacked (TFR 38, 89-90, 107). Here too they contradicted their own (initial) theory. The eighteenth-century political philosophers had devised rules of limited war. The law of nations as they conceived it was “a body of wise and humane rules, designed to prevent abuses of force in relations between states, which do more harm to the states committing them than to those upon whom they are committed.” Underlying these rules, given careful expression by Vattel, was Montesquieu’s “precept for all civilized people: that in peace men should do each other the greatest possible good and in war the least possible harm” (RE 109; see also G 33-35). Instead of Vattel and Montesquieu, the revolutionaries embraced the ideas of the military strategist Jacques-Antoine-Hippolyte de Guibert, whose 1773 Essai general de tactiques advocated the synthesis of speed and mass, with emphasis on speed. Sheer energy, Guibert argued, could overcome slow-moving mass; speed doubles the force of mass. Guibert advocated a sort of kinetic Neoplatonism, in which thumos—but now on the move, not spirit governed by stable forms—attempts not merely to rule matter but to transcend or conquer it. But, as Ferrero writes, “although spirit is the master of matter, it is bound to matter as a sort of dependent superior.” “Spirit had slowly to relearn this eternal and simple truth”—one that Plato’s Socrates had taught by means of the gentle war of dialectic—”through new and terrible experiences” (G 88-89). The spirit of unlimited war had to rediscover, by experience, the limits of war—finally by the revolutionary government’s inability to make peace when it needed peace (TFR 224-225).

    Ferrero takes Napoleon’s 1795 invasion of Italy as an exemplary case. The putative reason for the campaign was to establish France’s “natural borders,” a typical limit-concept of eighteenth-century thinkers. But the revolutionaries soon decided that “to conquer the natural limits it was necessary to go outside them,” to enter Lombardy, a territory outside any claimed border of France (G 5). although “for a century the campaign in Italy has been described as if it had arisen solely in the mind of Bonaparte, the genius who alone could have conceived this marvelous plan,” Bonaparte “was imply carrying out in an energetic and competent way the plans, advice, and orders that arrived from Paris (G 10, 153-154). Such border-crossings or limits-passing Ferreo calls instances of l’aventura, the spirit of adventure. L’aventura is “the force that impels man, at the same time impatient and reluctant, to leave the present and look for something better elsewhere in time and space” (G 31). Disciplined, l’aventura can yield real progress; undisciplined, it becomes romanticism, dreaminess. Undisciplined and put into action, it becomes tyranny at home and the derangement of the balance of power abroad (G 58, 60, 62).

    In Italy Bonaparte first experimented with the ruling tactics he would employ later in France. Endorse popular sovereignty while depriving the people of “the instruments essential to sovereignty—the right of opposition and freedom of suffrage.” To shore up his illegitimate rule, he descended into a “mania for self-advertisement,” “conduct[ing] the entire press like an orchestra and mak[ing] it into a gigantic gramophone that every day played the same record for his subjects and his enemies that he was infallible and invincible.” His administration became “a machine able to manufacture enthusiasm,” organizing “mass movements into a state monopoly, taking them away from the parties” (PPo 196-200)—Guibertism applied to politics. “Revolutionary government, desiring to pass itself off as the expression of the free and sincere will of the people, must camouflage its despotism by a parody of freedom which renders its despotism ever more tolerable,” provoking a counter-revolution as surely as the excessive statism of the French monarchy had provoked the popular revolution (PPo 205).

    What can be relearned from this adventure, Caesar Augustus had already known: It is one thing to conquer, another to rule. The Directory had wanted Napoleon to use Italy as a secure base for an attack on the real enemy, the Germans. But how to rule, how to make peace with, a revolutionized people? Bonaparte could conquer parts of Italy, he could revolutionize governments there, he could exercise what Ferrero calls the physics of force. But he could not manage the “metaphysics” of force—the unpredictable consequences of conquest and revolution themselves (G 107). “Just as the invincible army was going to spring upon Germany, the base of operations, northern Italy, slipped from under its feet and disappeared, dragging with her into the void, the general dissolution of Italian society, provoked by invasion, conquest and warfare without rules” (G 222). “The dynamics of events was stronger than prudence,” once the prudential rules of limited war were despised (G 185-186, 241-242). The reign of illusion continued, as Napoleon’s abortive invasion of Germany led to the bipartite treaty with the Court of Vienna, the secret provisions of which promised Austria control of the Republic of Venice, “the most beautiful, the most civilized, the most splendid region of Europe”; “the Revolution of the Court of Vienna had come to an understanding to eliminate Venice and to make the world believe that the peace concluded at the expense of Venice had been dictated to the monarchy of the Hapsburgs by the Revolution” (G 203-207). The regime of fear, abetted by the old monarchy, had ruined a regime of civilization, that is, a regime that had overcome fear by the cultivation of established customs and laws (G 247-248).

    Napoleon’s “agitated career” ended with the delusion of his own mind. His intuitive and impulsive character found its perfect expression in battlefield improvisation, at which he had no equal. But war, “by diverting his mind to a thousand different objects,” prevented him from developing his capacity for political creation “by continuous effort, which alone creates the enduring in politics and art.” His victories simultaneously inflated his pride. “Napoleon does not represent that victorious force of will and human genius which subject and dominate reality within the limits of reason, but the moral weakness of genius which knows not how to resist the folly of pride, and squanders all its energy to satisfy this weakness. He is a monstrosity rather than an example of human greatness, his power consisted principally in extravagances and violence” (M 180, 189). His belief, at the end of his life, that France needed a new aristocracy, only betrayed his ignorance of the social and political possibilities of a civilization now given over to popular sovereignty (M 178). His fall showed the world “how weak were the governments created by the Revolution and the Empire”—”vigorous and enterprising” to be sure, but lacking the stability that legitimacy alone can bring. “Children of their own efforts”—Machiavellian princes who acquire territories by the force of their own arms, alone—they “fell before the first breath of misfortune” (PPe 26). The ensuing cult of Napoleon, still alive in Ferrero’s days, tended by Emil Ludwig and other historical popularizers, appeals to the domination fantasies of mediocrities (M 197). Such fantasies are dangerous when new would-be demagogue-tyrants arise, appealing to them.

    Talleyrand: The Constructive Statesman. Bonaparte’s defeat in 1814 called forth the constructive statesmanship of the Congress of Vienna—more specifically, the constructive statesmanship of Talleyand. Talleyrand understood that the imbalance of the European state system owed its existence to imbalances within the states themselves. International disorder issued from regime problems, not ‘international-relations’ problems, which were symptomatic only. “In order to reconstitute Europe as a balanced system of states living in peace, it was first of all necessary to restore legitimate governments to all the states, that is, governments founded on principles—monarchic or republican, aristocratic or democratic—which are sincerely accepted by the peoples and faithfully respected by the governments” (RE vii). Europe went up in flames because irreconcilable regime conflicts arose between republics and monarchies, conflicts too hastily adjudicated by force, which further shook stability by intensifying fear. “Force of arms is transitory, whereas hatred lives on,” Talleyrand wrote (RE 23). Europe needed not some self-contradictory Hegelian ‘synthesis’ of historical forces, effected by the Absolute Spirit on horseback, but a rational principle, applicable both to regimes internally and to their external relations, which could stabilize European political societies and the European state system. This principle was legitimacy.

    Legitimacy is not simply a matter of longstanding tradition, Burkean prescription, organicism. With Aristotle, Ferrero recognizes the need for deliberation, for reasoning, in legislation. On the other hand, although legitimacy is a human construct it does have a natural foundation—in the character of the deliberating statesman. Further, because human beings by nature have freedom, there can be no social science in the same sense as seen in the physical sciences, no formula for the legislating politician to apply, because no deterministic principles are there to be exploited. In other words, Talleyrand avoided most of the errors on nineteenth-century political life: the traditionalism of the ‘Right,’ which gave too little play to human beings as rational animals; the historical relativism, ‘Left’ and ‘Right,’ which denied the existence of human nature altogether; and the increasingly radical positivism, tending toward a rationalist historicism of the ‘Left,’ which expected large socioeconomic forces in effect to take the place of political deliberation, now dismissed as a mere ‘epiphenomenon.’

    Ferrero’s Talleyrand also saw that human nature is not simply or entirely free. It has limits—the body, for example, and the requirement of social life that each individual be able to predict, to a considerable degree and while allowing for human freedom—as to how his equally free-willed citizens will act. Hence the need, not for predictive social science, but for law. A statesman is he whose intellectual and moral qualities enable him to legislate for free yet constrained humanity. These qualities are rare. To be effective, laws must be imposed, but they cannot only be imposed; consent is indispensable, and not only in republics. “Moral order is achieved through the self-regulation of each individual conscience, an extremely difficult operation, because, in spite of advice and example, violations of the rules are easily justifiable” (RE 34). Statesmen find a way to put the government into self-governing, really to limit human desire, by bringing intelligence or logos into coordination with courage, or moderated thumos (RE 36). “Self-discipline is the highest form of the constructive mind” (RE 341). Talleyrand saw that “government does not have the right to command because it is strong,” but that it must have the strength to command because it has the right to do so, a right seen philosophically in its justice but seen by non-philosophers in its legitimacy, its lawfulness. “Strength is not the parent, but the servant of the right to command” (RE 51).

    Although commercial republicans suspect that only a world of commercial republics can achieve a lasting peace, the Europe of Talleyrand’s day had no serious prospect of such sweeping regime changes—as the disorders of 1848 would prove. It would take two world wars (three, counting the Cold War) to bring all the countries of Europe into more or less the same regime, with the noticeable exception of Russia. The principle of legitimacy, like Aristotelian regime theory, has the attraction of being regime-sensitive without being regime-specific. “Monarchies as well as republics, aristocracies as well as democracies, may be legitimate or illegitimate, according as the principles of law, which justifies power in each of these forms of government, is accepted or refused by those who obey, respected or violated by those who have the right to command” (RE 54). The French Republic, like all revolutionary governments, began without legitimacy. Its founders made the mistake of continuing the revolutionary tactics instead of moving toward winning the legitimacy they needed. The statesmanship of Talleyrand sought to reestablish legitimacy in the existing regimes of Europe. In France, this meant the restoration of the monarchy, but on a new foundation. Divine right no longer had exclusive claim to legitimacy, no longer had the consent of the French (RE 143). Monarchy could rule only in conjunction with elected assemblies, a point Louis XVIII understood, to is credit (RE 58-59, 136-137). As in France, so throughout Europe. Legitimacy in the nineteenth century required a mixture of monarchy and republicanism, under the rule of law. Such legitimacy would enable rulers to rule. It would also enable them to govern interstate relations by mostly nonviolent means. Such principles, though conventional, “limited and reversible, are sacred because they are rational crystallizations of a deep feeling of justice and humanity which alone is strong enough to check the most dangerous abuses of force” and thus to constitute, to some degree, the law of nations (RE 272-273, 333-334). Talleyrand aimed to revive the moderate, Aristotelian mixed regime in modernity, in France, if not throughout the continent.

    The Struggle between Legitimacy and Tyranny. The qualified restoration of monarchy—really the restoration of legitimacy—at the Congress of Vienna featured certain grave weaknesses. The attempt to renew even a limited version of divine right failed. The settlement removed the traditional role for the aristocrats, depriving them of any right to rule but also thereby freeing them from obligations either to the middle class or the working class. Aristocrats therefore attached themselves even more firmly to the monarchic courts. That is, the social group which had served as an intermediary social form between the centralizing state and the ‘commoners’ shifted its allegiance decisively to the state. This provoked educated middle classes to form parties, secret societies, and other groups intended to discredit monarchic authority altogether, which would undermine the system of the Congress of Vienna (PPe 31-35). As for the parties of the Left, they “launched an armed revolt against the sovereignty of the people, because it was too conservative,” signifying that “they were the champions of popular sovereignty only on condition that the sovereign people voted for their programs, for their doctrines, and for them” (PPo 120). The revolutions and reactions of 1848-49 registered the underlying instability of the Congress system (PPe 90-91, 107).

    Bismarck exploited the “incoherent and inconclusive agitation into which the Continent had fallen after 1848” (PPe 139). Bismarck sought to end disorder within Germany partly by a constructive and statesmanlike project of “social progress,” co-opting the Left, but unfortunately used the Machiavellian means of military force as his main tool (PPe 145; M 275-278). Worse, as the result of his success against a weakened France, “even Republics and Democracies were now to seek in Prussia models for certain institutions, such as universal and compulsory military service and education” (PPe 173, 210-211; see also WD 66). Predictably (on Ferrerian grounds), this led to “the vicious cycle of the German peace,” consisting of “the unlimited rivalry of armaments which was a new phenomenon in history after 1870” (PPe 193). Industrialism added iron to the fires of militarism. In Germany, with its separate military class and its strong but ill-defined ambition to become an imperial power, this conjuncture was especially menacing (PPe 203; M 284-285), resulting finally in the Great War and the disorder leading to the rise of modern or ‘totalitarian’ tyranny. The regime question returned in a far more toxic form.

    The New Tyrannies and the Conditions of Legitimacy. As seen in the discussion of Rome, a dictator is a republican magistrate. Dictators such as the early Caesars did not save the Roman republic by virtue of personal heroism; in the case of Augustus, there was no heroism at all (LC 9-12). The republican dictator saves the regime by prudential rule, not by military fireworks. The new so-called dictators of the twentieth century were really tyrants, entirely illegitimate usurpers who ruled by force and fraud (WD 16, 142-143). In Italy, “Mussolini experienced what Bonaparte experienced in 1800 and what every usurper experiences; he was overcome by fear and was unable to form even a quasi-legitimate government; he was obliged to form a revolutionary government” (PPo 275).

    Like Bonaparte, and Bonaparte’s fellow revolutionaries, Mussolini’s fear caused him to lay claim to the authority of popular sovereignty while stifling opposition, invoking instead “the divine right of fists” (TFR 214; RE viii; FYF 128). Essentially the same circumstance obtained in Lenin’s Russia. Animated by the false doctrine of dialectical and historical materialism and determinism (PPo 298-300; WD 110-111; UW 140-142), the Bolsheviks swept aside legality, mislabeling it “bourgeois,” and then “replaced the court of the czars [while] retain[ing] its absolute power combined with the right to exterminate all adversaries” (PW 39). the long-range effect of the Great War and the rise of Bolshevism in Russia had been the weakening of the Orthodox Church and the consequent strengthening of Islam, of which the Church had been the “most redoubtable enemy” (WD 153). In each case, disruption of an existing legal system fosters a climate of fear within the political society. Force and the abuse of force in the overthrow and attempted consolidation of the new regime intensifies the fear, bringing about “a morbid excess of energy” as the new rulers frantically seek security (TFR 150-151). The modern state, already too strong, builds up ever more formidable instruments of domination. This in the end undercuts the romantic illusions of the tyrant and his admirers, as the bureaucracy of the state impedes the will of the tyrant (FYF 131). “What [the modern state] lacks is not force, but wisdom, dignity, moderation, justice, moral elevation and, consequently, prestige and authority” (WD 74).

    The “revolutionary spirit of the nineteenth century,” played out in the twentieth, “is right when it states that principles of legitimacy are limited, conventional, instable, extremely vulnerable to reason.” But that spirit “is wrong and shows ignorance of [the] world which it periodically devastates, when it confuses these principles with all the other fragile conventions of a civilized society” (PPo 27). These conventional, therefore changeable, but indispensable principles “establish the right to govern and the duty to obey”—ineluctable conditions of human life, because they alone can halt the escalation of fear (PPo 40-41). A regime wins legitimacy, that is, consent, not only in time, by habituation, but by governmental acts that win popular approval—the maintenance of order, prosperity, defense (PPo 141). Legitimacy was never discovered by the ancients, although Rome enjoyed it without fully knowing what it was (PPo 278); in this, Ferrero goes beyond Aristotelianism, which spoke not of the several legitimate regimes but of the several just regimes. Legitimacy became a consciously appreciated principle only with Christianity. Although one might expect Ferrero to point here to Christianity’s need to establish itself as continuous with Jewish law, Ferrero instead looks at marriage; by making marriage a sacrament, “Christianity stabilized the family sufficiently so that a rule of succession for the dynasties could be permanently established” (PPo 148). In non-Western societies, not legitimacy or succession but the deification of the monarch had been invoked; some of these regimes solved the problem of mutual fear between government and subjects by means of “ultramystical philosophies and religions” such as Hinduism, which consoles subjects by denying the reality of the physical world (PPo 279). But in Christendom divine right entailed no divinization, and so no necessary despotism.

    Monarchic legitimacy, so conceived, foundered on the problem of virtue. In a legitimate monarchy, “the more weak, incapable, and mediocre the sovereign, the more complete, affirmative, and unreserved must be the official admiration” (PPo 153). Legitimate monarchies too often exposed their noble lie to the charge that the lie protected the ignoble. But at their best, and even at their most ordinary, such regimes protected the people and won popular respect (PPo 54).

    Republican legitimacy can also founder on the same problem of virtue. “What guaranty can the sovereign people give that they will be able to choose capable delegates” (PPo 170)? Republics benefit from the monarchies’ priority in time; having proven their own competence dubious, monarchs must mute their complaints about republicanism as “the cult of incompetence,” as Émile Faguet called it. But in order to avoid the increasing danger of elites that reject both forms of legitimacy, Ferrero’s readers are invited to consider ways in which institutions of popular sovereignty might be designed to strengthen rather than undermine consent, “to make it certain that the profound and permanent will of the people will always triumph over its fleeting and capricious will” (UW 91-92, emphasis in original). This leads Ferrero, as it had the American Founders, to the defense of representative government. Without mentioning James Madison, Ferrero calls for institutional safeguards that will give a popularly-based government “time for reflection and self-comprehension” (UW 94)—what Madison’s Publius had called the refinement and enlargement of the public views by representative legislators in deliberative assembly. Also like Madison, Ferrero prefers large and heterogeneous republics; “a radical idea is never acceptable to any but a homogeneous minority; before it can dominate the state, the homogeneous minority must seize control unaided” (UW 192-193).

    What group or groups within modern European political societies would advance these sane, but then uncommon, view? Before 1789 the Church had provided an independent moral force (UW 179), and some forty years after Ferrero’s death it would begin to do so again, helping to bring down the decadent empire of Soviet Russia. But in most of Ferrero’s Europe, intellectuals had no independent authority, having tied themselves to the secular state; this is why intellectuals, even socialists, ended by siding with their own nations during the First World War, nationalism having probed to be the obverse of statism except in the hopelessly multi-national, doomed Austrian Empire. In the immediate sense, in the world that prevailed at the end of Ferrero’s life in 1942, the United States, a power outside Europe, would intervene military and then politically, in order to end the European regime impasse. The United States showed the world how to establish legitimacy in a society without hereditary orders. It had also seen itself immensely strengthened but also seriously threatened by the development of “quantitative” civilization (RE xii).

    Overall, Ferrero predicted, “we are moving towards a world without directing centers, a world divided into a large number of states, great and small, each of which will exist for its own sake, submitting less and less to the political influence of its neighbors” (UW 56). Republics, particularly, will respond only to financial and intellectual influence; the more republics there are, the less any one country will dominate the others. A certain cosmopolitanism will prevail, as “the world of tomorrow will belong to no ruler” (UW 59) Ferrero published that sentence in 1930, and while bids for world dominance have continued to intrude themselves ever since, his prediction has yet to be falsified.

    Conclusion: A Historian in Full. After Ferrero’s death, in the middle of the last war for world domination, the eminent novelist Ignazio Silone remembered the historian’s prediction of the First World War. “In the general optimism” that prevailed in Europe before that war, Ferrero’s “warnings rang like those of a hysterical Cassandra, and he was mocked and derided, especially by his compatriots, but it was not long before events confirmed his words.” The war Ferrero predicted happened. The civilization of quantity did overwhelm the civilization of quality, with results more horrific than even Ferrero foresaw.

    Yet Silone criticized Ferrero, with the optimism characteristic of the mid-century Marxists. If Ferrero admittedly had proved a prophet, he was the ineffectual “unarmed prophet” Machiavelli scorns. “Ferrero died in exile, but if truth be told, even in Italy he was already an exile. All his life Ferrero was alone. It can almost be said he was a man born in exile, a man of a bygone age,” an eighteenth-century moralist adrift in the twentieth century. “He lived his life in the closed circle of his dreams.” After all, had not the Communist Party made itself “the new prince” (as Silone’s fellow-Marxist compatriot Antonio Gramsci had styled it), the ruler of the future?

    How could a vindicated prophet nonetheless live in a dream world of his own devising? Did he prophesy at random and just get lucky? No: Silone offered an orthodox Marxist explanation. Ferrero’s analysis of the contradictions of modernity, as far as it went, remained on the surface of political life. Ferrero considered only the “superstructure,” not the deeper, socioeconomic infrastructure, of modern life. He missed “the Living” in modernity—the proletarians and other oppressed groups, who one day would rise to conquer the ossified bourgeoisie. “The aristocratic Ferrero” could not see this, ending instead as “the poet of conservative anguish in an epoch of transition.” With his “horror of everything new,” he shrank from life itself; foreseeing the night well enough, he could not foresee the dawn. As a last vestige of a dying class, Ferrero was attuned to decline like a compass to the lodestar, but his intellect pointed only there.

    Decades later, it is Silone rather than Ferrero who looks like a museum piece, at least with respect to political-historical prophecy. (Silone’s novels remain, as bread and wine to readers now as then.) Ferrero’s ‘superstructural’ analysis holds up better than Silone’s Marxist profundity. What has the best scholarship on the Left done in recent years, if not, as the saying goes, ‘bring the State back in,’ renew interest both in political institutions and also in political actors, statesmen (the latter under the bloodless term, ‘agency,’ inasmuch as social-scientism dies hard)?  Marx, even Marx’s admirers now agree, is not enough; one needs Weber too, and perhaps much more. Ferrero’s interest in cultural studies also resonates with current interests on the Left, and has the advantage of answering in advance fashionable theories of ‘deconstructionism’ and ‘multiculturalism.’ Deconstruction will not help democrats, Ferrero teaches; it will only disorient them. And whatever multiculturalism may portend, there is nothing in it to upset capitalism, as markets seek breadth, not constraint, even if they do impose their own sort of constraint or ‘market disciplines,’ variously condemned or praised as ‘bourgeois virtues.’

    Silone erred in charging that Ferrero feared everything new. Ferrero saw and explained why ‘modernity’ had defeated ‘antiquity.’ He only insisted—and this is a very big ‘only’—that modernity not push its powerful passions too far, insisted that moderns seek to set limits on themselves, ensuring that self-government really govern the self. Otherwise, the freedom of modernity might end in the self-immolation of modernity.

    Ferrero practiced his own preachment. He feared for modernity while recognizing fear (or at least fear of men) as the original sin against human life, giving rise to tyranny. He therefore tempered his fear with resistance, resistance to the civilization of quantity, resistance to modern tyranny—a resistance that brought him to live his last decade outside his country. Here Silone is also mistaken, in saying that Ferrero was alone: Alone among his scholarly peers, perhaps—although perhaps not even there, as he had intellectual friends in Switzerland, at Mount Pelerin—but his family was with him, too, and there are hints here and there in his writings that these bonds remained strong. He also had some good students. In the end, many who were with him Switzerland would live on in commercial republics, after the new tyrants, who had lived in dream worlds of domination, died in defeat, their memories detested.

    Ferrero writes well-rounded histories, exemplifying in scholarship the balance he commends to political men and to his fellow intellectuals. He coordinates psychological portraiture—ranging from his analyses of the motives of politicians to his somewhat sweeping but still telling critiques of the mindsets encouraged by various philosophic doctrines—with economic conditions, social mores, military events, and political institutions. Except for polemical purposes, it is useless to try to pin such conventional labels as ‘Right’ or ‘Left’ on him. It is fair to call him a liberal, but even those liberals who now call themselves ‘classical liberals’ seldom esteem Aristotle for the reasons Aristotle might have sought to be esteemed.

    In the contest between quality and quantity, Ferrero saw the limits of his own authority. “The historian, the moralist, the philosopher, are not authorized to assert that man ought to prefer perfection to power,” he wrote. “Man will be free in the future to resolve the problem as he has in the past, in deciding for one or other of the alternatives. But what the historian, the moralist and the philosopher can, and ought to, say is that it is impossible to want both the two at once; and to seek to increase indefinitely, at the same time, those two good things” (EFH 80). This is true now and always for human beings, as “the blessings of life are mutually allied to one another in different ways; and…if one wishes to enjoy a blessing beyond a certain degree, one must renounce the other which formed its limit” (EFH 66). And so, for example, the desire for ever greater and more intense pleasures, the desire for quantity, may lead to a war of conquest, a war that requires, what, if not the return of the sumptuary laws of antiquity, in the form of rationing, food and fuel stamps, lights out at dusk? And after victory, the tax bill will come due, requiring more work and less free time, including the habit of leisureless vacations.

    Ferrero’s lucid writings show surface and depths, and how they mutually shape one another. His lucidity proceeds from his ardent moderation, giving him the rare gift of right predictions, in which the wish is never the father of the thought.

     

     

     

    Filed Under: Nations

    Patriotism, a Natural Sentiment That Is Also Made

    May 10, 2018 by Will Morrisey

    Walter Berns: Making Patriots. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001.
    Originally published in Social Science and Modern Society, Volume 40, Number 2, January/February 2003.

     

    A scholar writing on patriotism, and not to debunk it: Will wonders never cease? After all, isn’t patriotism a bit of an intellectual embarrassment? How can the love of country, pledging allegiance to the American flag, possibly interest anyone with an education beyond grammar school? Emotion aside—even a Ph. D. might feel something for the old sod—how could patriotism have sufficient rational content to interest a human mind?

    Yet highly intelligent men have found American patriotism intellectually engaging: Franklin, Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Madison, Hamilton, Lincoln. “There was not then,” Berns writes, “as there is now, a division between intellectuals and politicians,” a division that now results in politicians knowing (perhaps blissfully) “nothing about what is goin on in the world of political theory,” and in theorists refusing “to believe it part of their job to promote the cause of republican government” (135). Thoroughly ‘politicized,’ too many intellectuals have no realistic sense of the political. What happened between, say, the Civil War and today, to make this so?

    For a model of what thoroughgoing politicization really means, Berns points to Sparta, where there were no intellectuals. Philosophy in Athens and Christianity in Europe compromised the whole-heartedly political way of life in the West, but in time the combination of philosophic precision and Christian devotion led to schisms and wars. The American Founders solved this problem by rejecting religious establishment in favor of allegiance to the American flag, to the republic for which it stands, and, ultimately, to the principle of unalienable human rights that they designed that republic to protect. That is, the Founders invited their fellow citizens to defend a country, a particular place ruled by a particular regime, for the sake of a universal principle, a quality shared by all human beings whether or not they were Americans. As Americans, this group of human beings dedicated itself to the duty of securing universal rights for themselves and their posterity.

    In so solving the problem of the tension between particular attachments and universal rights and duties, Americans brought on a new set of problems. How shall these agreed-upon, self-evident rights be secured in practice? (For example, what should be the relation between the one general government and the many small ones?) How far shall America go in defending its republican regime in a world of nations often uncongenial to republicanism? (The French went conquering in the name of universal rights, provoking the extreme particularity of nationalist politics, thereby rendering the French nation’s condition precarious, intermittently, for the next 150 years.) In the last century, America had to face down two tyrannies infected by virulent combinations of the particular and the universal. And in the 21st century Americans must consider how to defend natural-rights republicanism from countries understandably suspicious of what the powerful victor in those confrontations with tyranny might do. If American established itself as a sort of worldwide church militant for natural rights, the defense of natural right might suffer as much as Christianity did, when politicized too heavy-handedly.

    Berns writes seven succinct chapters, the first on the thoroughgoing patriotism of antiquity; the second on the division of human devotion introduced by Christianity; the third on the division of human energies introduced by commercialism; the fourth on the educational needs caused by these three phenomena; the fifth on the patriotic poetry of Lincoln, which combined the intellectual grasp of the American principle with the emotional resonance of words fitly spoken; the sixth on the special problem that race-based slavery posed to American patriots; the seventh on the problem of patriotism and the law, especially constitutional law, with respect to the symbolic object of American patriotism, the American flag. Patriotism turns out to be thought-provoking, in part because it provokes. Thinking about patriotism requires us to come to terms with the spirited part of our souls, the part that holds the near dear, and finds the universal in the near, making the near all the more with fighting for.

    Contrasting ancient Greece with America, Berns observes that patriotism requires education, and that the Spartans coordinated “every detail” of theirs to the inculcation of patriotic sentiment—even to the extent of suppressing questions concerning the right and wrong of the city’s conduct. Even Athens, whose philosophers did conspicuously raise such questions, never separated something called ‘civil society’ from another thing called ‘the state,’ never separated ‘church’ from ‘state,’ and (in)famously executed the annoying questioner, Socrates. For Athenians, love of country came to mean love of empire and the glory attendant to empire. “The institutions of both Athens and Sparta were ordered with a view to war” (17) to a degree that the institutions of American commercial republicanism never were. American patriotism might decline into individual and family self-interest. Tocqueville worried that it might. In America, the political community cannot be made to seem all-encompassing, and so patriotism will remain limited.

    Disestablished, religion moved away from ‘the state’ and was restricted to ‘civil society.’ “[B]y separating the spiritual from the temporal, Jesus not only provided the basis for the separation of church and state, he made it impossible for a Christian to be a patriotic citizen in the ancient sense” (24). For a Christian, God’s City inspires the fullest loyalty, not Rome. No prophetic religion makes a good civil religion; attempts to do so run afoul of confusion between ‘temporal and eternal’—the misattribution (for example) of the vices of the French Old Regime and its visible church to Christianity itself. Americans met this problem not by inventing a new civil religion, as the French tried so implausibly to do, but by making religion civil; by transforming laws against blasphemy into violations not of dogma but of the public peace. By removing religion as a gateway to political power, Americans retained it as a guardian of morals and sundered its dangerous association with the jealous, angry passions ambition arouses. Here, Berns goes too far in claiming that the God of the Declaration of Independence is “Nature’s God,” the god of the philosophers, only. The plain language of the Declaration also refers to the Creator-God, the God of Judgment, and the God of Providence. ‘God and country’ has been an American motto; if patriotism here centers on a particular defense of universal rights, and if those rights are endowed by the Creator of men, there need be no contradiction between patriotism and philosophy, or between patriotism and religion.

    What if religion, now at liberty in civil society, meets commercial life, equally at liberty there, and fails to balance this countervailing tendency toward materialism and selfishness? Will not patriotism too dissolve in those solvents? Jefferson supposed so, consequently preferring gun-bearing farmers to the bankers who collected farmers’ debts. And as farm populations decline and the populations of bankers, stockbrokers, and shopkeepers increase, what then? A standing army to replace yeoman militia, to be sure, but a standing army needs citizen support. Berns devotes his central chapter to citizen education.

    Jefferson wanted public education controlled locally by parents who in this way would participate (as he put it) “in the government of affairs, not merely at an election one day in the year, but every day” (65). Participation in government will foster love of the public things, making them one’s own. Given the predominantly religious persuasion of Americans, local control meant religious instruction, the strengthening of moral conduct pointing beyond the self and, under the American regime, toward the self-risking defense of the natural-rights principles the regime defends. “[N]othing in the First Amendment was then understood to prohibit the states from providing religious instruction in the schools,” and nothing did until the 1940s—that is, when the American national state began routinely to overbear local self-government. Berns laments, “Not one of the [1940] Supreme Court jutices gave any thought, any thought whatsoever, to the role of religion in republican government, specifically, the possibility of a connection between religious training and the sort of citizen required by a self-governing republic” (75). Berns associates this self-governing virtue with the modern (specifically Montesquieuian) redefinition of virtue not s the classical moral quadrivium (courage, moderation, prudence, justice) but as the self-sacrificing love of country. It would be more accurate to say that the Founders—Washington being the highest example—esteemed all of those virtues, classical and modern, but Berns’s basic point is sound: Schools wrested from parental control and handed over to secularizing bureaucrats who teach moral relativism may rot the foundations of patriotism. They have not done so, yet, but Berns might argue that our patriotism, though ardent, could be more thoughtful and principled than it is. And if it is not very thoughtful and principled, how distinctively American can it be said to be?

    “[D]evotion to a principle requires an understanding of its terms,” and “that understanding cannot be taken for granted” (83). For understanding, one needs, so to speak, Madison first, Madison Avenue second. Among statesmen who understand both the American principles and how to convey that understanding, Lincoln has no equal. The Founders knew that the truths of the Declaration of Independence respecting natural right were self-evident to Americans but not to everyone; they never expected George III to nod soberly in concurrence with his colonists’ strictures and repent. Lincoln saw that the sovereign people themselves might become blinded by the same tyrannical passions, obscuring truths in a desire to maintain slavery or studiously to overlook it. In his wartime rhetoric Lincoln set the sentiments of shared guilt and forgiveness against those evil passions. the new birth of freedom, freedom for every American regardless of race, could result from the new glimpse of natural right that Lincoln’s cleansing and healing rhetoric made possible.

    Slave emancipation only began this new life; emancipation was precisely a new birth of an infant liberty, long from being nourished and educated to maturity. Lincoln wrote the Gettysburg Address as encouragement to the first steps in that education, what would have been Lincolnian reconstruction. That reconstruction aimed at again reconciling natural right with consent; the assassination ended it, and the dynamic of Southern resistance and Northern force continued for a hundred years, ending only when a recognizable modern state, unintended by Lincoln or any other Civil War-era American, an entity needing minimum local consent, moved on the South with Hobbesian rigor. This did secure rights for the descendants of slaves, but the absence of consent did little to enhance patriotic feeling on the other side, instead recasting some of that sentiment into the now-familiar ‘pro-government’ versus ‘anti-government’ struggle.

    Insofar as they are formed by the moral-relativist ethos of bureaucratic public schools and by the impassionating appeals of entertainment and advertising, Americans begin to resemble their antebellum forbears in one respect: They begin not to see the natural rights they once held to be self-evident. This time, however, it is not the passion to enslave others but passions of self-enslavement that rightly trouble Berns. Without expecting to see a new Lincoln, one can still provide the materials with which resistance to such passions might be buttressed.

    Berns therefore concludes his argument by discussing the Constitutional debate over the American flag—specifically, the Supreme Court’s rulings holding laws that prohibit flag defilement unconstitutional. Emptied of intellectual content by the claim that the legal right to free speech trumps the natural rights that free speech and all other constitutional guarantees are intended to secure, “the flag stands for nothing in particular” (137), except maybe free speech itself. Logically that means that if free ‘speech’ includes flag defilement, free speech is entitled to put n end to free speech—that natural right re alienable by majority (or even Supreme Court-based) fiat. If freedom and/or the will of the Supreme Court trumps logic itself, then speech is chatter, and chatter cannot be desecrated. To this, Berns replies that the flag stands not only for free speech—understood as real, human speech, deliberation, not the mindless expression of the impassioned ‘self’—but for all the natural rights defended by those who live and fight under the flag, and the republic for which it stands. Those natural right are not opinion but truth. Those truths frame free ‘expression,’ not the other way around. The other way confuses libertinism with liberty.

    ‘Public intellectuals’ are a dime a dozen. Their publicity is an advertisement for themselves, their intellect often ignorant of the conditions needed for a life of the mind. In his long career as a public intellectual of a more sober sort, Walter Berns has called his more celebrated colleagues to greater thoughtfulness. They have preferred to bask in their celebrity. But others have listened, and maybe they have had some good effect, a bit removed from the limelight.

     

    Filed Under: American Politics

    Aristotle and Modern Politics

    May 8, 2018 by Will Morrisey

    Aristide Tessitore, ed.: Aristotle and Modern Politics: The Persistence of the Political. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2002.

    Originally published in Interpretation: A Journal of Political Philosophy. Volume 35, Number 2, Spring 2008. Republished with permission.

     

    By “modern politics” Aristide Tessitore means first and foremost modern liberalism, variations of which continue to flourish, despite persistent rumors of its imminent demise, some of them more than two centuries old. In recent years, the debates over liberalism have at times centered on Aristotle, of all people, a philosopher rightly described here as “unacquainted with modern politics” (2).

    Then again, philosophers tend toward some acquaintance in principle with every major human possibility. For example, Aristotle’s firm critique of those who elevate the life of acquiring goods for the household above the management of those goods after they arrive in the household stands as an expression of reluctance toward any project such as that introduced by Machiavelli in The Prince, which begins with an invitation to a life of acquisition. What is more, intelligent non-philosophers or would-be philosophers or self-imagined philosophers—contributors to scholarly journals, for example—have reached for help from Aristotle in their attempts either to shore up modern liberalism or to bring it down, whether those attempts address the question of the structure of political communities (liberalism vs. ‘communitarianism’), the moral foundations of liberalism, or the relations between political economy or ‘acquisition’ and government or ‘management.’ Finally, Aristotle continues to offer guidance on the vexed question of philosophy’s relationship to political life, a question ideologues—with their grand claims to wisdom and their often squalid, vicious practices—sharpened to an edge that even Aristotle might be supposed unacquainted.

    Another theme ought to be mentioned, however, as it haunts many of these essays rather in the manner that the specter of communism haunted industrialized Europe, according to Marx. Machiavelli conceived of a political device instrumental to his politics of acquisition, namely, the state. Centralized, bring government to bear throughout the prince’s realm in a way not seen since the ancient polis, and yet extending far beyond the polis in the size of the territory it could rule; ruling with a material effectiveness impossible for the Church; dominating hitherto independent nodes of authority such as aristocratic families, towns, provinces, the state might be formed into one of at least two regimes—monarchy and republic. But, as it actually developed, the state folded into every regime an indispensable regime-unto-itself: a new kind of regime of ‘the few.’ This regime-within-the-regime, required in practice by every modern state, features a new kind of aristocracy (eventually called ‘meritocracy’ and imbued with technical competence as its chief virtue) with a new kind of oligarchy (the rule of the few who are not personally rich, but become rich by virtue of their command of the wealth of the state, and by the state’s command, its regulation, of the wealth of even the wealthy). Aristotle never saw such a thing, but contemporary Aristotelians have, and must address it.

    This is why Tessitore’s concentration on liberalism makes sense. Insofar as political life, ruling and being ruled, finds some direct expression in modernity, within its states, liberal states permit that way of life in ways not seen in (for example) Wilhelmine Germany or today’s Russia or China, let alone in the tyrannies that oppressed those nations for much of the last century.

    The first three essayists bring Aristotle to bear on considerations of modern liberalism and communitarianism. In his unfailingly sensible contribution to the volume, Bernard Yack recalls Aristotle’s insistence that the political community is in some sense ‘prior to’ the individuals who compose it. He rightly observes that this priority does not support any aspiration to communal harmony; Aristotle understands political communities as scenes of “conflict, competition, and compromise”: “Just as there are peaks of virtue and cooperation that can be found only among citizens, so there are forms of distrust, conflict, and competition that only citizens experience” (19). Aristotle rejects the communism of Plato’s guardians, let alone “the exaggerated hopes for moral harmony and elevated behavior associated with today’s communitarians” (20).

    Aristotle’s zoon koinonikon finds pleasure in his group, finding in his capacity to reason a means “to see the mutual advantage to be gained” from ‘groupishness.’ Human groups comprise persons who differ from each other in some significant (at best complementary) ways but who also share goods and dangers, establish ways to manage what they share and their mutual relations to those things, and who bind themselves to one another by ties of friendship and justice. But Aristotelian fathers, villagers, tribesmen, and citizens differ from the communalists envisioned by such moderns as Rousseau, in at least two ways. “Nowhere will you find in Aristotle’s writings the lyric celebration that Rousseau, among others, has taught us to associate with community. Nor will you find a discussion of Rousseau’s favorite passion, love of country, in Aristotle’s account of the passions in the Rhetoric” (22). Aristotle formulates no General Will; rather, it is “individual actors”—”fathers, ship-captains, oligarchs, demagogues, or tyrants—who speak in the name of Aristotelian communities” (23). Aristotle wants to know, Who rules? Aristotelian friendship “means a disposition to give individuals what is good for them,” and rests on “a sense of mutual obligation” not an impassioned attachment (26-27). Just is still less a sentiment but develops rather from long habituation and requires “extensive training and moral education” (29). Justice derives from nature not in the Rousseauian sense of natural sentiment but from the distinctively human capacity to speak and to deliberate about the good. “[W]hile many animals surpass human beings in social friendship and mutual concern, only human being hold each other accountable to standards of justice” (30). Justice differs from friendship, “which involves other-regarding actions we are ourselves disposed to perform” because justice “concerns other-regarding actions that we are disposed to demand from others” (30). Establishing such habits of action in any community must “reflect a choice that some individuals make and impose on others” (30); in political communities these are the regimes.

    Thus Aristotle does not involve himself in such modern dichotomies, fundamentally derived from Rousseau, as mechanism versus organism, Gemeinshaft versus Gesellschaft. Not regarding human communities as contracts among anti-social or a-social beings in a state of nature, nor needing to respond powerfully to other thinkers who do so regard those communities, Aristotle feels no temptation to run to the other extreme. “Aristotle’s understanding of community cuts right across these familiar modern dichotomies” (32).

    “Communitarians have been making vain predictions about the coming dissolution of liberal and individualistic societies since the end of the French Revolution” (35). But the countries where modern liberalism is oldest give every appearance of the greatest social stability—far more so than many communities that would hold themselves together with much stronger social bonds. The experiences of the past two centuries provide “good reasons for doubting that communion always arises out of community and that the sense of belonging that communitarians seek can be anything more than a temporary social phenomenon” (36). Aristotle would not be surprised, himself having doubted, famously, that harmony can be reduced to a single beat.

    Martha C. Nussbaum writes on “Aristotelian Social Democracy.” This is an unusual theme, inasmuch as Aristotle more than suspects that the many who are poor, when they rule, will (as the expression goes) ‘soak the rich.’

    Rightly observing that Aristotle “spoke about human being and good functioning” along with “the design of political institutions,” and that he “connected these two levels of reflection through a certain conception of the task of political planning,” Nussbaum argues that the task of such planning “is to make available to each and every citizen the material, institutional, and educational circumstances in which good human functioning may be chosen; to move each and every one of them across a threshold of capability into circumstances in which they may choose to live and function well” (47). For Aristotle, such considerable political and material ambitions immediately raise the question, ‘Who is a citizen?’ Nussbaum seems to take this as settled, however, at least in the modern West. But the debates over immigration in Europe and North America remind us that Aristotle’s question remains pertinent.

    Public health, common meals for the poor, free and equal citizenship for all adults, the setting aside of half of privately-owned lands for common use as in Sparta (without either the slaver or the military aristocracy of Sparta) (48-49): These begin Nussbaum’s list of social-democratic desiderata, which also includes “being able to laugh, to play, to enjoy recreational activities” and “being able to live one’s own life in one’s very own surroundings and context” (70). “The job of government, on the Aristotelian view, does not stop until we have removed all impediments that stand between [the] citizen and fully human functioning” (60). The liberalism of this social democracy—its share of liberty—inheres mainly in one feature: “The government aims at capabilities, and leaves the rest to the citizens” (59). That is (for example), Nussbaum’s social democracy will provide us with parks but will not force us to stroll in them. “The entire structure of the polity will be designed with a view to these functions” (76). In order to choose freely and prudentially, citizens need coercively to frame and to enforce a set of social and political structures in which choice can flourish (85).

    With Yack, Nussbaum acknowledges Aristotle’s interest in the way political reasoning distinguishes human sociality from animal sociality—indeed, how it distinguishes all non-autonomic human activities from animal activities. “Practical reason is both ubiquitous and architectonic. It both infuses all the other functions and plans for their realization in a good and complete life.” (72)  Here, however, is where the silent presence of the modern state begins to loom. “It is important to notice that in defending common ownership Aristotle is not defending state ownership. Common ownership is in a very real sense ownership by all the citizens in common, and not by some remote bureaucratic entity.” (77)  “[I]t is especially difficult to foster common ownership under modern conditions of size and population,” she prudently notes, citing as an example the worker-controlled industry (77). She does not here sufficiently reflect upon the size and bureaucratic character of modern industrial corporations themselves, which Tocqueville already had compared to empires.

    Perhaps in response to the difficulties modern statism brings with it, Nussbaum finds that social democracy “needs a scheme of basic rights in order to give further definition to the concept of strong separateness,” by which she means individuality or personal integrity (85). “In this Area the Aristotelian must diverge from Aristotle” (86). Aristotle is too paternalistic and harsh in ways “likely to horrify most liberals” (86). He does not engage in “sustained philosophic reflection on the limits of the law” (86).

    This criticism might strike one as implausible, given the ‘dialogue’ between the citizen and the philosopher Aristotle presents in the late chapters of the Politics and indeed given the importance for Aristotle of the very prudential reasoning in which citizens engage—quite apart from questions of the philosopher’s way of life. But Nussbaum’s dilemma really reflects the problem of the modern state itself, the problem faced squarely by such writers as Benjamin Constant and Tocqueville. The next essay does not take up this problem. Susan D. Collins raises instead an ethical question, which in turn leads to the volume’s second set of essays, on moral virtue.

    Collins addresses the question of justice in Aristotle, considering not the Politics but the Nicomachean Ethics. Today’s “neo-Aristotelians” would bring Aristotle  into the camp of liberalism. In doing so, they tend to favor one of two aspects of human life that Aristotle himself tries to balance: virtue “as a quality of civic devotion” and virtue “as a constituent of human flourishing” (106). As a quality of civic devotion, justice differs “in different political orders or regimes,” and also according to circumstances (106). The political and the exigent can make human flourishing possible, but they can also limit it. The magnanimous man, whose soul “comprises all the virtues and each to the greatest degree” (107), might find his great soul limited in any regime, even in a kingship ruled by himself.

    Neo-Aristotelian liberals (among whom Collins numbers the democratic socialist, Nussbaum) incline to see politics and human flourishing as mutually reinforcing, in principle if not in practice. Aristotle doubts this: “Aristotle confronts in a full and systematic way the questions of either side of virtue’s coin” (111). Although human beings are indeed political animals who require the polis in order to flourish, and although politics is “the ‘authoritative’ voice with respect to the human good,” it “does not follow” that politics is therefore “the correct or true voice” (111).

    Accordingly, Aristotle presents “two meanings of justice”: justice as the lawful—”general” justice—and justice as the fair—”particular” justice (113). Justice in its “lawful” aspect points not merely to conventionality; if it did, there would be no theoretical problem, inasmuch as one could say that there is justice defined by the polis and justice defined according to nature. But “lawful” justice points to the unique feature of justice, its ‘other-directedness.’ “[J]ustice is not complete virtue simply but complete as the sum of the virtues ‘directed toward another'”; “justice is thus identical with the ‘use (chresis) of complete virtue,'” the use of virtue “‘with a view to another, and not only with a view to himself'” (115). “Citizenship in the community means that any action, including a virtuous action, has a dual aspect: it can be understood from the point of view either of one’s own good or another’s good” (115). These two things might easily contradict one another, as anyone who considers the policy of military conscription will see.

    Further, the same problem arises with respect to “particular” justice, which is that part of general justice that “pertains to the desire for gain” (117). Justice as fairness refers to either the distribution of goods, including public honors and offices, or the redress of unjust distributions. Once again, in practice it is the regime that determines what acts of particular justice will be practiced, from one polis to another. And an act of distribution that serves the common good might not entirely serve the good of the individual to whom the distribution is made. “[T]his is the dilemma of moral virtue: as justice, it looks to the good of the community, and as virtue, it looks to the good of the virtuous individual, yet these are different ends and different perfections” (122). This dilemma would be eased by not removed by taking up residence in the best regime—a regime notoriously difficult to find, even in the pages of Aristotle’s Politics. 

    The dilemma of justice in the polis may disappear among friends, who share all things and wish one another’s good. Thus Aristotle “is at one with liberalism in marking a sphere outside of the political that might be called private” (123). But in the liberal modern state the virtues seen in friendship are only “one possibility among many possible pursuits of happiness” (123). That is to say, liberalism in modernity means liberty first, perhaps because privacy marks out a sphere of protection against the state, a formidable type of political organization that Aristotle does not contemplate.

    The collection next turns not toward a consideration of the state, however, but to a consideration of virtue in essays by Tessitore, David K. O’Connor, and Charles R. Pinches. Tessitore takes up Alasdair MacIntyre’s critique of modern rationalism. MacIntyre charges that the teachings of such moral philosophers as Diderot, Hume, Smith, and Kant depend upon “a shared historical background” their rationalism rejects; the substance of that moral tradition owes its existence to Aristotle (136). In rejecting, contra Aristotle, “any notion of a human telos,” rationalists “ensured the failure” of their project, leaving only an account of human nature and a set of “moral injunctions” without “their teleological context” (137). But human nature without a telos wrecks itself on nihilism, as Nietzsche eventually insisted.

    MacIntyre himself rejects the foundations of Aristotelian moral teleology. In his view, Aristotle’s “now discredited metaphysical biology,” its “understanding of community” that assumes “the Greek polis” as the standard type of political community, and the Platonic notion of “the unity of individual and political virtue” (138) make that teleology obsolete. For these, MacIntyre substitutes, first, what he calls “practice” (“a complex form of socially established human activity that leads to the attainment of a good internal to the activity at issue”—e.g., chess, which aims at the good of checkmate, or victory); second, what he calls “narrative unity” (“the historical narrative of a particular human life”); third, “tradition” (“a set of practices and a particular understanding of their importance and meaning”) (138-140). To put it perhaps too bluntly, MacIntyre purges Aristotelian moral philosophy of nature and of politics. In Tessitore’s words, MacIntyre “attempts to establish a delicate balance between Nietzsche’s insight into the historicity of all truth claims without surrendering the Aristotelian argument for an objective order, a larger truth to which and by which our effort are and must be measured” (140).

    But, far from being a passive ‘epistemological’ victim of his historical circumstances, Aristotle “questions authority” (141). This may be seen, Tessitore observes, in Aristotle’s “notoriously problematic teaching on the relationship between ethical and intellectual virtues” (142), the account of the rival modes of life, political and philosophic, to which Aristotle provides precisely no conventional answer, and no clear answer at all. “Against MacIntyre’s view that Aristotle inadvertently codifies an existing and authoritative Greek tradition of class-based morality, his account… in fact preserves and reveals, rather than dispels, a wide range of persistent tensions that necessarily characterize human attempts to live well” (146). The polis itself turns out to be imperfect, thus “a catalyst for the full development of both practical and theoretical excellence” (147). Prudence and the capacity for political philosophy are “permanent political needs,” needs “logically prior to the notion of political authority in Aristotle’s thought,” providing “the ground by which the authoritative good held out by the polis is established and evaluated” (147). Although Aristotle never saw the modern state, he of course did see a form of political organization other than the polis, namely, the empire in which he lived, to say nothing of the sub-political communities of household, village, and tribe. “It may well be the case that the fortuitous set of circumstances that gave rise to the development of the Greek polis becomes the locus classicus for Aristotle’s study less out of cultural bias, and more because it offers the most transparent window from which to view the ethical capacities and problems of political animals (148); one might agree with Tessitore by observing that the polis may be the one circumstance in which human beings can fully achieve autarchia or self-rule. One might also add that Tocqueville’s critique of modern statism rests on a similar judgment, a fact that gives evidence for the non—’relativist’ character of Aristotle’s argument.

    MacIntyre’s attempt to replace Aristotle’s natural teleology with a historical teleology or “narrative unity” is unnecessary if one does not assume that biology is destiny. Aristotle does not so assume, and neither does much of the modern biology that has in many ways superseded Aristotelian biology. Enlightenment mechanism does not fully explain nature, which turns out to be more complicated than Newton supposed, in the estimation of Newton’s modern-scientific successors. It is Newtonian physics that underlies the attack on teleology seen in the Enlightenment moralists.

    MacIntyre’s traditionalism too easily elides the distinction between Aristotle (and philosophy generally) and the Bible. Tessitore reminds his readers that the Great Tradition didn’t start out as a tradition at all; it took Aquinas to convince generations of thinkers that philosophy and revelation could mix. And Aquinas rests the authority of his achievement not on “the verdict of history” or “the powers of human rationality” (156). “Paradoxically, MacIntyre’s historicist defense of the superiority of the Thomistic perspective is unable to account for the heart and soul of the very version of inquiry he upholds as the example par excellence of the rationality of tradition” (156). In “one respect,” Thomism, the Enlightenment ‘encyclopedia,’ and Nietzschean geneology all “have more in common with each other than with Aristotle”: “all are imbued with some form of the historical consciousness that informs MacIntyre’s own analysis” (156). In attempting a critique of these three modes of thought, MacIntyre remains within their horizons.

    None of what Tessitore here classifies as historicist versions of inquiry actually refutes the Aristotelian understanding of human ‘groundedness’ in nature or an “unchanging ground of being from which these [historical] variations arise” (157). [1]  Aristotle’s “account of nature” moreover “is free from both the hopes and disappointments entangled in historical consciousness” (157) and, if so, may prove morally superior to them.

    In contrast to MacIntyre, Leo Strauss turned to Aristotle after listening to the most radical of the historicists, Martin Heidegger. David K. O’Connor’s essay on “Strauss’s Aristotle” is a highlight of this collection.

    “The existential choice between the political life and the philosophic life informs all of Aristotle’s investigations of political affairs,” O’Connor contends (163), and Strauss’s interpretation of Aristotle “became the central vehicle through which Strauss worked out his own complicated appropriation of and resistance to Martin Heidegger” (164). Strauss appropriated some of Heidegger’s “account of philosophy’s responsibilities to prephilosophic experience” while resisting “Heidegger’s attack on the Aristotelian dichotomy between politically engaged practical reason and detached or disinterested theoretical reason” (164). Heidegger’s conflation of theory and practice (seen in his celebration of ‘resoluteness’ and ‘authenticity’) struck Strauss as politically dangerous and philosophically dubious, but that conflation does at least follow from giving the prephilosophic pragmata their due. Strauss aimed to show that the Aristotelian insistence on the integrity of prephilosophic experience as the ground of philosophy need not issue in radical historicism, as it does in Heidegger, where it “infect[s] philosophy with the very aspects of willfulness, passion, and partisanship that made Heidegger’s view of philosophy distasteful to Strauss” (167).

    Philosophy for Heidegger consists of an energeia or “being-at-work” that forms as well as informs human beings through their national culture and political existence; philosophy “is essentially practical” and “essentially patriotic”—inherent in the patria or fatherland (168). This energy, it might be said, resembles Hegel’s Absolute Spirit, not of course in its dialectical rationality but in its immanence and its thoroughgoing ‘historicity.’ O’Connor finds in Strauss’s exchanges with his philosophic friend, Alexandre Kojève, a dialogue with Heidegger ‘once-removed.’ [2]

    In Strauss’s estimation, the “unqualified attachment to human concerns” seen in historicism leads not to philosophy but to tyranny (176), to an ultimately mad attempt at Godlike creation, a comprehensive re-shaping of reality beyond the capacities even of the highest human beings. Although O’Connor does not quite say this, Strauss regards the historicist project—in its resolute commitment to practice—as profoundly imprudent, and therefore impractical as well as self-deluding. Genuine wisdom must ‘place’ human individuals, nations, and even humanity itself within their real context, which is nature. The desire to know is not the same as care for the human (178). At the same time, the philosopher does rightly and prudently care for those who do or might in his estimation share in his enterprise. This philosophic care for philosophers and for potential philosophers rests not on the historicist concern for “intersubjectivity and recognition” (179) but on the shared love of wisdom, “the intrinsic nobility of resolute openness to questioning” (180, italics in original). Philosophic resolution differs from political resolution in needing no enemies to ‘energize’ it; “philosophic friendship can often be closer among those who ‘incline’ to different solutions [to philosophic problems] than among those who incline to the same solution: One’s zetetic friends may be quite different from one’s fellow sectarians”—as the Strauss-Kojève friendship demonstrates (180). For such friendships no philosopher need engage in “the total direction of human affairs” (Strauss, quoted 181). Indeed, the attempt to direct human affairs through the impersonal bureaucratic structure of a modern state or would-be super-state might likely preclude friendship, insofar as that attempt absorbed the attention of the philosopher.

    Strauss’s Aristotle addresses political men “without inflaming political passion” and addresses philosophic men “without inflaming political passion” (182, italics in original). Strauss’s Aristotle makes this dichotomy sharper than Aristotle himself does, O’Connor argues, because historicism has changed the political and intellectual circumstances in which philosophers live. Aristotle’s own treatment of the choice between the political and the philosophic life gives more “autonomous dignity” to “morality and politics” than Strauss’s Aristotle does, because radical historicism has transformed nomos into pure will, not pure reason (185). “In resisting the Heideggerian intensification of this common ground between theory and practice, Strauss intensifies instead the philosophic perception of the ‘secondary’ status (Nicomachean Ethics 1178a9) of merely political action” (185). Secondary status does not imply either strict subordination or a complete separation of the practical from the theoretical. A philosopher might find himself a place not as a citizen-philosopher, then, but as a foreigner or ‘stranger’ who serves as “a teacher of legislators” (195), a role unlikely to endanger either the body of the philosopher (landing it in a circumstance in which it must ingest hemlock) or the philosopher’s soul, untempted by the ambition of making ‘its’ philosophic inclinations “essentially formative of nation and state” (196). “To steel oneself to Machiavellianism is not to untrammel one’s mind, but to close it” (197).

    O’Connor ends with some remarks on Strauss’s abiding philosophic interest in piety, an interest O’Connor describes as more Socratic than Aristotelian. That is to say, Strauss’s Aristotle does not exhaust the philosophic interests of Strauss. Piety is the topic of this volume’s third and concluding essay on virtue. Charles R. Pinches points to another man who “transforms Aristotle as he uses him” (208), but they share what Pinches calls a non-instrumental understanding of virtue, an appreciation of virtue as a condition of the soul ‘good for its own sake.’ As a Christian, Pinches regards neither Aristotle nor Thomas as congruent with modern liberalism and resists efforts by liberals to appropriate either.

    A crucial distinction between modern liberals’ conception of virtue and the “classical accounts” is simple: “According to liberalism, one does not need to be good (be virtuous) to know the good”—”a substantial change” from Aristotelian and Thomistic views (212-213). For modern liberals, for example, ‘prudence’ means only the ability to identify “what is advantageous or useful to the attainment of the goals that suit us or me” (213); prudence is no longer “perfected practical reason” (214), a thing noble in itself.

    Recent liberal thinkers friendly to Christianity tend to want to use Christianity: “Liberalism as a political system has a need for virtue among its citizens if it is to be sustained,” such liberals argue. “Put bluntly, liberalism is in need of virtue capital” (215). Pinches objects that the Christian regime—specifically, the Christian Bios ti or way of life—must not lend itself to the task of propping up something other than itself, subordinating itself to some way of life other than that commanded and exemplified by Jesus. Attempts to correlate or even combine Christianity can work the other way, too, amounting to attempts to lend liberalism a Christian air, but hardly the Christian spirit. Among the several extant liberalisms resulting from this ambition, Pinches refers to the attempt by Richard Rorty to make liberalism into a sort of religion, albeit a ‘secularized’ one—the sort of progressivist historicism seen in John Dewey and Walt Whitman. This effort at least refuses to abstract from the circumstances of America, but rather makes of American history a sort of teleological story or myth. Pinches clearly regards Rorty’s project as wrong, but at least it has the modest virtue of avoiding cynicism. More profoundly, it shares with Christianity (as Pinches understands it) and also with Aristotle (as Pinches understands him) a rootedness in a particular “social location” (222), not in a state of nature, a categorical imperative, or an original position. Rorty “embraces his particular location as an American ‘reformist liberal’ at the turn of the twenty-first century,” even as Aristotle “presumed the setting of the polis in fourth-century Greece” and as (if I understand Pinches) a Christian will understand himself as part of the concrete and Providential circumstances that inflect his own life (222). Liberals are insufficiently historicist, to use that term in a loose, none-too-Hegelian way, the way historians use it.

    Christians must also finally reject Aristotle as well as liberalism, Pinches argues. Following Harris Rackham, Pinches translates megalopsychia as “pride” (221). Aristotle understands vice, which he regards as reparable, but not sin, which Christians learn to be humanly irreparable, because Aristotle does not know the God of theBible, or the Bible’s Satan, for that matter. In contrast with Aristotle, “according to St. Paul and to Augustine, there is nothing we can do to break the power of sin in our lives” (225). Only God’s grace can free us from that power. That is why Aquinas “insists that the theological virtues of faith, hope, and charity, which transform the life of virtue particularly as they transform prudence, are ‘infused’ rather than ‘acquired'” (225). Human equality “resides in that we are all equally condemned by a righteous God”; but “Aristotle knew nothing of such ideas,” regarding human beings as decidedly unequal, at least with respect to virtue and vice (225-226). Rorty’s progressivism shares the pride of Aristotelianism (if little else) and therefore cannot satisfy Christians, even if it is superior in honesty to non-historicist versions of liberalism.

    Pinches does not clarify the Christian’s proper relationship to the modern, liberal state. If Christianity must not serve that state, should, can, Christians nonetheless make it serve them? Not in the sense of making the state an instrument of Christian education or legislation, but rather in the sense of using the liberal states as early Christians arguably used the Roman Empire: as a dangerous but often convenient platform for Christian evangelism. Liberalism’s hard-won freedoms of travel, of speech, and of religion itself present themselves as instruments for Christian use. Might these features of the liberal state not commend themselves to Christians, even if Christians politely (and piously) decline to serve as instruments of liberalism? The liberal state might not so much “buy virtue from the Christians” (as Pinches acidulously describes the ambition of some liberals [215]) but find a loving limit in their free activities and spirit, thus remaining liberal in that way.

    The liberty of citizens within the liberal state requires the right of property defended by the rule of law—limits to the liberal state. That Miriam Galston, Jill Frank, Douglas J. Den Uyl, and Douglas R. Rasmussen find Aristotle a helpful adviser in these matters betokens his status as a philosopher and not merely as a thoughtful observer and critic of ancient Greek politics.

    Galston considers the varieties of legal theory in the United States, recalling the textual formalism prevalent in the nineteenth century, largely replaced in the twentieth century by the legal realism of Oliver Wendell Holmes and the sociological jurisprudence of Roscoe Pound. She sees a “renewed interest in formalist-type theories, such as neo-Aristotelian natural law theory” (234) in the writings of such scholars as Russell Hittinger, John Finnis, and Robert P. George; this trend is counterbalanced by the turn toward such anti-rationalist theories as critical legal studies, post-structuralism, and some forms of feminism. In their several ways, all American legal theories address not only the ‘rule of reason’ but the role of reason in the rule of law. Between the “two extremes” of formalism and subjectivism/relativism lie “theorists of the middle way” who “reject the idea that knowledge must be absolute and unchanging to be worthy of the name” (234); Cass R. Sunstein, Suzanna Sherry, and Bruce Ackerman exemplify this approach.

    Aristotle famously teaches that the precision possible in mathematics does not obtain in ethics. He does not call this “a practical concession to the limitations of human cognition” or an admission of the superior truth of the precise sciences (235). Similarly, “middle-way” legal theorists do not quickly advert to ‘abstract’ moral and political principles, principles “that exist independently of a particular legal order”; at the same time, they do “recognize and incorporate such principles into reasoning about human affairs to some extent” (235). Middle-way theorists prefer community-wide debate, government by consent, and “transformative political participation” to any more elite-centered account of lawmaking and legal interpretation (237); they pay attention, therefore, to the conditions under which such debate is conducted and such consent obtained, lest some citizens be excluded.

    Galston finds a philosophic precedent for this in Aristotle’s practice of reviewing prevailing opinions and putting them to the dialectical test. But Aristotle differs from middle-way theorists in widening the dialogue to include those not present and even those long dead; in America, he would engage not only his neighbors but Publius and Jefferson. Nor does Aristotle adopt the principle of equality as conceived by democrats: “Aristotle equates the force of opinion of one wise man with the opinion held by all or most people” (238). Aristotle does not use the word ‘autonomy’ to describe the formation of law by citizens; rather, “the importance of being able to govern oneself (and be governed by others) finds pride of place in his philosophy” (239). He defines politics itself as such reciprocal ruling and being-ruled, a practice that requires practical wisdom. “Aristotle thus differs from contemporary legal theorists in identifying self-governance with the active exercise of reason rather than the initiation of, participation in, or assent to rules by which a person is governed” (239). One might say that Aristotle never loses sight of the regime behind the rules, of the political character of decent regimes, or the life of reasoned discussion seen in those regimes.

    Middle-way legal theorists also incline toward what might be called transformative conventionalism. They hope to generate public goods and also moral virtues in individuals out of sociopolitical processes engaged in by adults. Aristotle, less optimistic than they about the malleability of human nature, looks to childhood education as the main source of “the moral qualities upon which social cooperation depends” (240). If you would have a moral citizenry, begin before your children are old enough to join in citizenship. Moral virtue culminates in citizenship, is not ‘created’ by it. Concomitantly, Aristotle does not understand political association merely as one social activity among many; it is the authoritative political community that most clearly requires us to think comprehensively of the good life as such. “Aristotle warns the reader against imagining that fitness to govern any one type of association can be generalized to fitness to govern any other” (240).

    Galston see in this tendency among middle-way theorists a reflection of life in the modern state. “Given our enormous and diverse country, it may well be that intermediate associations bear a closer resemblance to certain aspects of the classical city than our nation as a whole ever can” (241). But such civic associations, however salutary, seldom consider the common good in the way a self-governing political community must. Further, middle-ground theorists, in imagining the production of the common good, assume an egalitarianism that modern states—centralized and bureaucratic—themselves encourage. In one sense these theorists aim too high: They suppose that if only each voice can make itself heard through the right social preconditions, selflessness will prevail in the political order. On the other hand, the very assumption that the political playing field can be so leveled reflects and conduces to the anti-political statism middle-way theorists abhor. But the common good’s commonness inheres in its political character; in ruling and being ruled, not everyone exhibits the same degree of practical wisdom. This is an ineluctable natural reality, not only an excrescence of unjust social institutions. “Aristotle’s ideas thus expose a conceptual difficulty at the core of theories of liberal constitutional democracy” (248)—or at least at the core of the theory of the theorists of the middle way.

    Under liberal constitutions the laws protect and regulate private property as a means of the reciprocal rule of civil society and the central state. Jill Frank asks, “What form of private property might more successfully integrate private right and public good and so facilitate rather than obstruct the practices integral to liberal-democratic politics?” (259)  Consulting Aristotle, she argues that private property has not only exchange value but also value in use. The ‘use value’ of private property can bind the individual and the family to “the practices of citizenship” (259).

    As a thing to be exchanged, private property means “the power to hold, to withhold, and to exclude” (261). I hold my property against you, and against the state, limiting both social and bureaucratic-governmental encroachment. This might often be very good. But it might also “thwart rather than… enable common action and politics” (261). Private property might conduce to what Tocqueville calls individualism, a comfortable anti-civic self-isolation. This invites the very overweening statism private property rights are intended to prevent.

    Frank cites Thomas Jefferson’s phrase, “the earth belongs to in usufruct to the living” (263). That is, the earth belongs to each living generation as a trust fund belongs to its trustees; the right to use comes with an obligation, “that eh beneficiaries must hand the trusty over to the next set of trustees” (263). Jeffersonian agrarianism rests upon this principle. Whereas aristocratic feudal agrarianism consisted of the few ruling the many, who did not own the property they used, and modern commerce “allows for and encourages the accumulation of wealth unlimited by use,” fostering a new kind of “privilege and hierarchy,” agrarian property-owners are (in Jefferson’s words again) “the most precious part of the state” because their property combines the stability of natural property in land with self-governing ownership of that property and of the fruits thereof (264). “Their property, via its use, anchors their independence and freedom, and it allows them to cultivate the virtues necessary for self-governance, good citizenship, and the pursuit of the common good” (264). Following Locke, Jefferson’s friend James Madison broadens this understanding of property to include human nature; one’s property includes “a person’s opinions and faculties, his labor, leisure and time, and his liberty of conscience” (265). In this sense it helps to constitute our civic identity “insofar as the use of one’s faculties relates individual owners to society at large” (265).

    Aristotle gives a fuller account of “the relation between property and virtue” 9265). For example, he elaborates parallels between the rule of the household and the rule of the polis, both of which subordinate acquisition of property to the management of it for the good of the whole. As both private and public, property is “a site of the practice of virtue” (267). In this, property instantiates virtue itself, which consists both of ‘holding’ (I might be said to ‘have’ certain virtues) and of ‘using’ (I act according to my own virtues, strengthening or weakening my moral habits with practice and with disuse). “[G]ood habit, as a matter of holding properly [that is, of holding property properly—WM] depends on using properly what is held, that is, acting well. And we can see that acting well, as a mode of proper use, depends on holding properly what one has as one’s own, hence ownership. As the practice of holding and using things properly, property, like any activity, already calls for good habit conjoined with acting well, that is, virtue. And, as the practice of holding and using habits properly virtue calls for property. It is by understanding property as a verb and not strictly as a noun, as an activity of use and not strictly as a fungible thing, that property is bound to, is indeed a site of virtue.” (268)  Property “emerges in the presence of a proper ordering of the soul, even as the practice contributes to that proper ordering,” cultivating “the individual virtues associated with both self government and the pursuit of the common good” (270). In so doing it not only resists the encroachments of the modern state but connects citizens to the state, interesting them in the common good as considered by their representatives ‘in’ the ruling institutions of the state.

    Douglas J. Den Uyl and Douglas B. Rasmussen give Aristotle an (announced) ‘libertarian’ twist—doing with Aristotle what Aquinas does with him, but on behalf of ‘classical liberalism’ not Christianity. Beginning with might be termed the Lysander Spooner thesis—that moral action requires freedom of the will, and therefore the conditions of free willing must be secured first and foremost—they reconcile libertarianism with the Aristotelian esteem for “self-perfection” (280). “The single most common and threatening encroachment upon self-directedness and consequently self-perfection is the initiation of physical force by one person (or group) against another”; to remedy this, a society must establish “a sphere of freedom whereby self-directed activities can be exercised without being trampled by others or vice-versa” (281), to “structure a political principle that protects the condition for self-perfection rather than leading to self-protection itself” (282-283).

    Central to this sphere of freedom is the right to property. Because “human beings are material beings, not disembodied ghosts, and being self-directed is not merely some psychic state,” “human beings need to have property rights to things that are the result of their own productive efforts” (283). Property inheres primarily not in non-human nature but in “the intellectual and physical efforts of individual human beings,” who are “in a significant sense value creators” (284-285). Den Uyl and Rasmussen endorse what Marx would later call the labor theory of value, an idea already propounded by Locke; “there is no such thing as pre-existing (in other words, pre-transformed) wealth” (286). Unlike Marx but like Locke, they regard the right to property as natural, and as the indispensable precondition of the “human flourishing” sought by Aristotle (289).

    On the economic side of the ledger this of course leads to the free market. On the political side the right to property in this sense leads to civic friendship, an association for mutual advantage among citizens. Friendships founded upon mutual advantage are not “friendships of virtue,” which only “occur in circles much smaller than those that characterize a state” (299). “All highly pluralistic and commercial cultures fail to live up to this standard,” they rightly observe (300). At best, such large political societies can achieve the virtue of just rather than unjust mutual advantage, but they can never achieve an ethos of selflessness. In turn, this “confirms our view, not always or necessarily shared by Aristotle himself, that the attainment of the good life is an individual quest” (301). “The aim of politics is not virtue, but peace and order,” “the natural right to liberty” (301).

    Aristotle might well regard the regime of commercial republicanism as the best practicable regime under the conditions of modernity. He would not defend it on the ‘voluntarist’ ground libertarians defend. He would remain skeptical of the claim that the attainment of the good life is an individual quest primarily, recognizing the need for self-government and thus, realistically, the need for moral education in families and civil societies and the concomitant need for political life, beginning in the smallest political units—in modernity, municipalities. If the aim of politics is not virtue but peace and order, do peace and order not aim at some virtue or human good? And are not peace and order likely in need of coercive defense and of at least mildly enforce cooperation?

    It is to politics that the final three essays of the volume turn. Beyond the protection of property rights broadly understood, modern liberalism usually attempts to address the problem of how political life, understood as reciprocal ruling and being-ruled, can be sustained within the framework of the state, which centralizes authority and tends toward bureaucracy. Each author here addresses this problem.

    Gerald R. Mara contributes an excellent discussion of Aristotle’s Regime of Athens. Mara praises John Rawls’s Political Liberalism for its attentiveness to the need for “political culture” (307)—roughly the equivalent of Aristotle’s notion of the way of life of a political community. Noticing that in the tolerant regimes of modern liberalism many citizens pursue very different ways of life founded on different moral and religious principles, Rawls seeks an “overlapping consensus” among citizens—the ‘overlap’ consisting of all principles and practices consistent with liberal politics (308). As Jefferson famously contended, it matters not whether my neighbor believes in one good or a thousand; this neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg. Muslim and Hindu alike may agree that robbery and battery are wrong, and citizens who agree on such things may be able to live together in the same political community, so long as they ‘agree to disagree’ on their more strictly theological convictions. Mara notes that Rawlsian “liberal culture” is “possible only for those who already accept liberal principles as compelling” (308). An especially stern Muslim or Hindu (or Christian or Marxist) might require the justification of liberal principles themselves, and such justification cannot come from a culture that effectively commands ‘Be tolerant.’ But why should the liberal tolerate even himself? Cultural liberalism “sees practical rationality as a cultural or political, rather than a natural or anthropological possibility” (309) and thus collides with philosophic problems long associated with conventionalism.

    Aristotle understands reason as a capacity of “cross-cultural validity” (310). He treats democratic Athens not as the political equivalent of a windowless monad but “as a striking example of the most radical and most dangerous democracy, a popular regime with a (relatively) urban base which exercises its rule not by law but by decree,” yet with “a gentleness or mildness that could be extended into a certain kind of moderation” (312). In Athens Aristotle saw more than Athens, but “simultaneously the most and the least typical, the worst and the best, of democracies” (312). His study of Athens presents three themes: He considers the regime’s “central principles,” freedom and equality, as they are institutionalized and not as they might be conceived ‘abstractly’; he considers the regimes purposes and the dual temperament that strives for them, boldness and gentleness; he considers “models of democratic political activity” as seen particularly in prominent Athenian statesmen (312).

    To achieve a democratic regime, the many poor overthrew the oligarchs; the new rulers’ sense of freedom derived ‘negatively’ from their prior feeling of oppression. But of course a regime does require rule, rule now by the many poor, who might enslave the few, contradicting the principle of freedom. Aristotle suggests that a certain kind of institutionalized equality, equality before the law, as seen in the reforms of Solon, can limit the rule of the many while strengthening democratic self-government. Equality before the law gives both the many poor and the few rich a kind of political equality, a capacity to rule and to be ruled—Aristotle’s definition of political rule simply. “Solon’s reforms do not so much make Athens more democratic as make it more political” (315), less tyrannical. Solon’s reforms opened some political institutions to every class of citizens and more generally made “the regime’s legal structures into frameworks that manage conflict, rather than into strategic weapons for use within power contests” (315). “Solon does not attempt to homogenize difference by creating a common civic ethos which would make social institutions either irrelevant or pernicious. While the institution of legal equality makes the social differences between noble and base irrelevant from the point of view of justice, in another sense it maintains respect for differentiation among social classes since class positioning cannot justify social aggression” (316). This made Athenian democracy more like a ‘mixed regime’—the decent form of the rule of the many—than it otherwise would have been. But such institutional forms, however well-designed, will not work without a certain way of life consonant with them.

    Aristotle would move democracy away from the violence of revolution and toward “the peaceful virtues,” above all, “a prudent gentleness” (320). Hence his reservations about democratic imperialism. “He indicates that Athens’ boldness toward other cities and the demos’ boldness within the politeia are reciprocally related,” a point illustrated by Pericles’ Funeral Oration. Democracy brings war; war feeds democratization. [3]  “To the degree that boldness compromises prospects for regime gentleness, it threatens to undermine those activities that are most politically worthwhile” by hardening souls for combat not only against foreigners but against fellow-citizens at home (321). It damages “one of the central requirements for good citizenship” “the ability to understand that what is good for the community as a whole is not simply reducible to the interests of any single economic, social, or cultural class” (323). Citizenship requires “a sort of rationality,” an ability to look at partisan concerns and not only to engage in struggles over them (323).

    Solon’s founding of a more moderate democracy failed not because his institutions failed but because subsequent Athenian statesmen misused them. Along with his policy of imperialism, Pericles democratized the regime by paying the poor to serve in the law courts, doing so partly to compete with a political rival. Aristotle praises the contrasting policies of Theramenes, the founder of two moderate oligarchic regimes in Athens, policies aimed at “mov[ing] democratic and oligarch regimes away from conditions of extremism” (329). In this, Theramenes resembled Socrates. Both men attempted “to make the regime in which they [found] themselves less unjust,” and both were “eventually executed at the hands of extremists” (330). They diverged in that the philosopher did not exercise rule or compete with others for public honor, whereas the political man’s “moral hardness” “ensnar[ed] him in political violence” (331).

    What does Aristotle’s assessment of Athenian democracy teach moderns? He first teaches that modern liberals such as Rawls, Habermas, and Connally fail to see the “inherently strained and inconsistent” character of democratic politics—freedom and equality, boldness and gentleness. “The present focus on liberal culture can be challenged for not taking cultural complexities seriously enough” (332). This means, secondly, that none of the principles advanced by modern liberals—pluralism, proceduralism, and the like—will really serve as a guide for liberal democracy because each itself results in “drawbacks” as well as “goods” (333). Precisely because any understanding of democracy that remains on the ‘cultural’ or conventional level involves us in such contradictions and difficulties no purely cultural/conventional account of liberalism or of democracy will do. A “full consideration” of “the possibilities and dangers of the Athenian polity” will require “a rationality that is not culturally circumscribed”—an ascent from the cave, to coin a phrase (333). “The Regime of Athens’ need for this sort of theoretical supplementation is signaled by its own incompleteness” (333).

    Such supplementation need not involve us in that bugbear of modern philosophy, metaphysics. It emerges rather from the nature of politics itself, from the universal intention of citizens to identify “better and worse public choices” (333). This intention is not exhausted by what has come to be called ‘public choice theory.’ Citizens who reason with one another “practice substantive intellectual and moral virtues”; they do not merely practice “a conversation structured in a certain way” (333). They rule and are ruled, willingly, and this points them not toward pure democracy, the unfettered rule of the many, but to the mixed regime, that institutional embodiment of “political life itself” (334). Theory “should not be understood as a set of systematically related concepts, but as a kind of attentive regard which considers the full range of possibilities and problems facing people living together in a democratic regime”; “political theory is a resource for practical choices, rather than the derivation of political norms from abstract rational or moral principles” (335). For Aristotle, that is what natural right is. Under conditions of modernity, one “decent, flawed regime is liberal democracy,” and it is from there that we must proceed (335).

    Stephen A. Salkever distinguishes Aristotelian deliberation from the neo-Kantian theory of ‘deliberative democracy’ advanced by Habermas and Rawls. Deliberative democracy opposes modern liberal contractarianism, liberal utilitarianism, the ‘participatory democracy’ advanced in the 1960s by the New Left, and the communitarianism of such writers as Charles Taylor and Robert Bellah. Deliberative democrats follow Rousseau and Kant in their identification of humanity as “the natural species whose dignity lies in its transcendence of mechanical nature, in moral freedom in obedience to laws it gives itself” (343). Unlike many contractarians and utilitarians, deliberative democrats understand public reason in a non-instrumental sense; unlike many participatory democrats and communitarians, they prize reason as central to good citizenship. They do not, however, recur to reasoning as understood by Aristotle, as “the ability to discover true things about the world and our interests” (346). Rather, they regard public reason as the means by which human beings conquer their own ‘given’ natures as complex but ‘determined’ machines—even as scientific reason discovers and invents the means by which we conquer ‘external’ nature. The need for democratic deliberation comes from the moral requirement of universal consent to the laws formulated by the citizens within political societies: ‘no adult left behind’ might be its slogan.

    The deliberation prized by deliberative democrats occurs only within the confines of the regime of democracy itself and only by means of a form of reason that does not question the wisdom of the modern project of the conquest of nature. That is to say the public reason of deliberative democracy rests on a dogma. It demands that human self-legislation proceed without human self-knowledge or, at least, without reopening the question of human self-knowledge, regarding that question as settled. What it calls the triumph of reason rests on a triumph of the will. Deliberative democracy has decided once and for all the truth of its own foundations.

    “My central contention is that, for Aristotle, the core project of pre-philosophic moral education or character (ethos) development is not to instill duty or responsibility… but to develop a certain kind of practical rationality; and that the business of moral and political philosophy is not to anchor character in theoretical certainty, but to supply us with a set of questions and standards for examining our own characters and regimes and those of others” (354). Practical reason or phronesis aims at particular actions, but it “calls for the study” of political science, which aims at knowledge of human beings as political animals, neither beasts nor gods (355). Reciprocally, one cannot know human nature without the ability to reason about particulars, without the sort of character that has the presence of mind, so to speak, to see particulars clearly before ‘generalizing’ from the particulars. Human beings who are fully human exercise prohairesis: “not merely ‘choice’ or ‘intentional choice,’ and certainly not ‘free will,’ but the ability and the inclination to think through the options available to us and then to act on the basis of those deliberations” (355). This is “very hard to do” (355). “We are to learn to treat ethical practices not simply as the endoxa [reputable opinions] that they are, but as if they were criticizable solutions to problems posed by our inherited biological nature under various distinct circumstances, problems concerning how the prohairetic life can best be realized” (356). Ethics does not consist, finally, either in learning rules or in legislating for ourselves. Ethics does not require us to dare to know but to want to know, for our own good.

    ‘Wanting’ does not oppose reasoning or knowing, Aristotle argues, because desire does not mean a passive response to external stimuli. Desire or eros animates all living beings; human beings differ from others in their capacity for deliberation and reflection upon our desires and their objects. But deliberation and reflection do not oppose the desires as such; therefore, Aristotle needs nothing that transcends the desires—a rational will or categorical imperative, for example. Ethical life requires character or ethos, the combination of “emotion, desire, and reason in summing up an individual’s ‘nature,’ an identity formed initially by habituation on the basis of biologically transmitted potentials, but gradually in the course of education becoming active, a motive force in an individual life” (359).

    How exactly does character arise, and what has it to do with politics? Fred D. Miller concludes the volume with an essay distinguishing Aristotelian self-rule or autarchia from modern autonomy, a distinction crucial to understanding the differences between ancient and modern political philosophy. Miller compares the account of education in the Nicomachean Ethics and the Politics with the account of the soul in De Anima, and finds that he has a lot of explaining to do. The moral and political books present the soul as educable for a life of reasonable citizenship, for “knowing both how to rule and how to be ruled on a basis of justice” (376). But in De Anima it seems that desire or orexis animates human beings; at best, then reason would be a scout for the passions and education would consist of teaching the scout to see farther and more clearly.

    But “a careful reading of De Anima reveals that Aristotle is really committed to the rule of reason in his theoretical psychology, so that his philosophy of education is after all supported by his psychology” (380). The reading that follows proves indeed both careful and persuasive. Over-simply put, desire has objects; objects move the soul via desire, “but he way in which the object of desire plays this role depends on the cognitive condition of the agent” (382). The ‘I’ that desires the object knows or imagines things ‘about’ what is good for it. Whether I “do the right thing ultimately depends upon whether [I] seek a truly good end, as opposed to a seemingly good end, and this depends upon how [I] exercise [my] thought and imagination” (384). This is where prohairesis comes in, as described also by Salkever; Miller identifies three forms of it, namely, deliberative desire (bouleutike orexis), cognitive desire (orexis dianoetike), and desiderative thought (oretikos nous). “This characterization of choice as a commanding element is consistent with the thesis that reason ultimately initiates action” inasmuch as “reasoning may lead a person to wish for an object” (385). With education, what I want will become more and more reasonable, more and more a reflection of what I should want as a human being living in my circumstances, not the least of which will be the regime of my city. “By revealing to agents their natural end, [reason] enables this end, which is as such unmoved, to become an object of action for the agent, and thereby to bring about desire, the movement or change in the soul which is the proximate cause of action” (385).

    Autarchia means this rule of reason in the individual soul, which then recognizes that, as an individual, and even as a member of a family, village, or tribe, it cannot achieve all of the good that it should have. This is where autarchia (more often translated as ‘self-sufficiency’ than more literally as ‘self-rule’) finds fulfillment rather than contradiction in the interdependence of political life. The city or polis enables human beings to develop their “natural potentials,” which they cannot do “on their own” (386). “Hence, the city-state is one of the greatest human goods,” and “when Aristotle declares in De Anima that the faculty of desire is the moving principle in human beings as well as animals, he does not compromise his political ideal of reason’s rule in the human soul,” inasmuch as political ‘autonomy’ for Aristotle consists of “self-government of the citizens under law” (386).

    Although Aristotle did not see the modern state, his political science speaks to those who would engage in ‘state-building,’ not to say regime change, in modernity. “A population fit for political rule satisfies three requirements: it is capable of defending the city-state, it possesses sufficient wealth, and it is capable of sharing in government. Such a population must know how to rule as well as be ruled, or else they will only be capable of despotic rule.” (387)  Taking turns in holding different offices, each citizen “must be willing to rule with a view to the advantage of others and to yield up authority when it is another person’s turn,” in accordance with the laws (387). A political founder or law-giver must “prepare the citizens for rational self-rule” (390), inasmuch as political self-government requires personal self-government. The rule of law consists not of blind obedience but of the prudent and moral use of the law for the ends of the city, including justice.

    Whereas modern or ‘Kantian’ autonomy splits reason from desire and conceives of autonomy as freedom from desire or the conquest of desire by rational self-legislation, Aristotle ‘works with’ desire, seeing that desire pervades all animals, including human animals, and is not in itself bad. Reason is rightly neither the scout for the desires nor their stern ruler but their guide. The autarchic individual “is both ruled by reason and motivated by desire” (394).

    This fine volume of essays suggests a concluding thought on what Aristotle might offer to those who think about modern politics. Any science classifies the objects it knows; Aristotle’s political science classifies political communities according to their ‘regimes.’ Regimes consist of four elements: ruling persons, ruling structures, characteristic ways of life, and the purposes these persons, structures, and ways of life aim at. Ruling structures are impersonal, but the other elements are not. The ‘personalism’ of Aristotelian political science contrasts with the principled impersonality of the modern state, whether considered as a structure—a bureaucracy in which each employee directs his loyalty to his function in the apparatus, not toward some person—or as an expression of the General Will, impersonal because general. The impersonality of the modern state is one result of the impersonality of Machiavellianism; if the ruler or ‘prince’ means not to be good or evil, but to use good and evil, then ‘he’ is nothing more than a throbbing nerve of libido dominandi, one set agains persons divine and human who have characters. Rule by persons distinguishes itself from rule by persons who want to remake themselves into forces by its origin in speech and deliberation, particularly speech and deliberation about what is good and how to attain what is good for this person, family, country, in this set of circumstances. The conquest of nature commended by Machiavelli, however, must finally require the conquest of human nature itself—a vast depersonalization and thereby a vast dehumanization of mankind.

    Liberalism therefore seems in-modern in its commitment to freedom of speech. Modern liberals much esteem speech, so much so that they require toleration of all speech, marking off a sphere for talk within the modern state, the ruling apparatus of which wants above all to act. This great achievement of liberalism has moderated the Machiavellian project, which might otherwise have done more to efface humanness from the world than it has been able to do, so far.

     

    Notes

    1. MacIntyre’s account of Biblical revelation may itself partake too much of a later historicism. ‘History’ or the course of events may be the locus of divine revelation but according to the Bible the origin of such revelation is God, creator of that locus and of all else besides. Another way to put this is to say that the Holy Spirit of the Bible is not the Absolute Spirit of the historicists—the latter being immanent in physical reality, not holy or separate from it.
    2. There are limits to the Heidegger-Kojève parallel. O’Connor mentions Kojève’s employment as “a minister playing midwife to the birth of the Common Market” (193). It is unlikely that a Heideggerian would find such a job interesting; as Nietzsche said about the ‘common good,’ is not the Common Market ineluctably common?
    3. And not only in Athens. See the account of the United States in the War of 1812 by Henry Adams and Henry Cabot Lodge: “Von Holst’s History of the United States” (North American Review, CXXII, October 1876, 328-361). I am indebted to Hillsdale College professor emeritus Robert Eden for this reference.

     

     

    Filed Under: Philosophers

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