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    Archives for October 2018

    Aron Companion

    October 5, 2018 by Will Morrisey

    José Colen and Elisabeth Dutartre-Michaut, eds.: The Companion to Raymond Aron. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.

    Originally published in Interpretation: A Journal of Political Philosophy. Volume 42, Number 2, Winter 2016. Republished with permission.

     

    Prescient and judicious Raymond Aron stood firm in his defense of liberal republicanism in exactly those debates when the regimes of liberty so desperately needed every courageous, independent voice they could find. And he did that in France—central to Nazi and Soviet Communist schemes for the domination of Europe—when so many of his fellow intellectuals sided with the enemy. At precisely the time when brilliant men and women supposed that ‘the center will not hold, Aron saw that it could.

    Aron’s large and many-sided body of writings may well need many minds to help his readers understand it. This collection has the merit of bringing together not only the American, French, and German scholars we might anticipate but also several very able Portuguese Aronians (including the lead editor) whose work will not likely be known to Anglophone readers.

    In his foreword to the volume, Aron’s most prominent contemporary student, Pierre Manent, rightly calls his mentor “a very rare bird, a theoretical man who took very seriously the realm of action” (ix). Aron sought to develop a theory of action—he called it a “praxeology”—but did so in opposition to philosophers who attempt to unite theory and practice and who claim “that the innumerable human actions in the past constitute a coherent system that gives us the clue to future human actions” (x) in accordance with discernible and deterministic historical laws modeled on similar laws in physics and chemistry. In France, Marxism was the best known of these systems, but Aron also identified Auguste Comte’s positivism as another example of such “necessitarian thinking” aimed at ending the course of history and indeed the need for politics by “substitut[ing] the administration of thing for the governing of men” (x). Manent identifies two “theoretical endeavors” Aron undertook to establish his praxeology: first, the elaboration of a regime theory that accounted for the kinds of political orders seen in the twentieth century, an effort that involved him in an amendment but also a continuation of the work of Aristotle and Montesquieu; second, an account of political disorder, as seen in international, that is also to say interregime, relations. Here, Thucydides and Clausewitz proved useful.

    Nicolas Baverez, a French attorney who teaches at the National School of Administration, and who has authored what is widely regarded as the definitive biography of Aron, elaborates on these themes in the first article, in which he narrates Aron’s intellectual journey. Born in 1905 to a “fully integrated, patriotic, and republican” French-Jewish family, Aron saw his country survive World War I, “which marked the suicide of liberal Europe” (3). In the 1920s he became a friend of Jean-Paul Sartre and Paul Nizan, fellow students at the École normale supérieure, and the three of them would go on to study Heidegger and Husserl, taking the first step toward French existentialism. Aron thus turned away from “the idealism and positivism that then dominated the Sorbonne” (5). He lived in Germany between 1930 and 1933, where he not only read the phenomenologists and Max Weber but saw the rise of Nazism. Although Sartre arrived in Germany around the same time, he didn’t seem to pay as much attention to Germany’s political agony; one suspects that Aron was more alert politically, less inclined to abstraction than his friend. Being Jewish, he could scarcely have overlooked Hitler’s poisonous animosity. With Élie Halévy, Aron was “among the first to highlight the novelty of, and the common traits linking, Fascism, Nazism, and Communism, their common opposition to democracy, and the lack of any solution other than war to the challenge they presented” (5). He fought the Germans when they invaded France in 1940, then joined the Free French organization of Charles de Gaulle, remaining with the Gaullists for a time after the war when the celebrated novelist André Malraux aligned himself with the Gaullist project; Aron served under Malraux in the Ministry of Information during the short-lived de Gaulle administration of 1946. He remained Malraux’s ally during the early years of the Cold War, when both men broke publicly with the French Left and joined the Gaullist party. The by-then-fashionable Sartre disapproved, and “from 1947 to 1955, [Aron] was a lonely man”—an antifascist anticommunist in Paris, writing newspaper articles on international politics and eventually finding a position at the Sorbonne, where he was elected (by a margin of one vote) to a chair in sociology. Eventually he broke with the Gaullists, too, regarding the general’s policy of quasi-independence from the Atlantic Alliance, implemented after his founding of the Fifth Republic in 1958, as impractical; Aron remained a confirmed Atlanticist, strongly supporting NATO, until his death in 1983.

    Baverez distinguishes Aron from Sartre not only on the political issue of communism but more fundamentally on his understanding of political freedom. While both “are philosophers of freedom and commitment,” Aron identified the bases of freedom in practical political action in defense of republicanism and its institutions, whereas Sartre claimed that human ‘consciousness’ had become so radically alienated from, and by, the conditions of modern life that it can free itself only by violent, collective revolt, “welded by a pact of mutual terror” (8). Thus Sartre could admire a thinker like Maurice Merleau-Ponty and his book Humanism and Terror, when Aron regarded such valorizations of political violence as a fascism of the Left. At the same time, Aron rejected the utilitarian liberalism of another well-known contemporary, Friedrich von Hayek, with its faith in free markets; again, political life mattered for Aron in a way that it fundamentally did not for the main line of French existentialists—who were rather reminiscent of the literary intellectuals who gave France the Terror in the 1790s—or for the libertarians, who maintained that economics mattered more than politics. Later on, as “one of the first theorists to recognize the global age” (110) that combined capitalism, technology, and geopolitical multipolarity, Aron never succumbed to dreams of an ‘end of history’—even as he did envision an eventual end of the Cold War.

    If not historicism or existentialism, what formed the formation of Aron’s understanding of right? Baverez argues that it was Kantianism; reason was “a hidden universal,” although not identical to any historicized dialectic (10). That is, reason provides a moral standard, a source of political right that is neither itself historical nor a species of natural right. But this raises an obvious question: If, as Baverez and Manent both acknowledge, Aron put a premium on prudential reasoning, where does that leave Kantianism—a philosophy of right in which prudence plays a decidedly subordinate role? Not for Aron plans for perpetual peace under a league of nations. The first of the book’s three main sections addresses the question  of right s it manifests itself in international relations, the real self-named ‘realist’ describe as an amoral war of all against all.

    Jean-Vincent Holeindre, a political scientist at the University of Poitiers, offers the first of the six essays in this group. Holeindre finds the link between Aron’s theory of war and his political thought generally in his understanding of history or the course of event as a series of examples of human freedom and unfreedom, not a  teleological march towards a projected realm of absolute freedom. Initially a follower of Émile-Auguste Chartier, a pacifist philosopher who wrote under the pen name of Alain, Aron rejected pacifism when he witnessed the rise of modern tyranny or ‘totalitarianism’; at the same time, he never went to the opposite extreme of the ‘realist’ school, which inclined toward treating all states in the international system alike, regardless of their regimes. International politics, he decided, was simply too variegated a thing to be brought into the domain of any systematic theory. Although each country typically had a regime to give it sufficient internal coherence to permit theorizing, international politics could be understood in the terms offered by Carl von Clausewitz—namely, as the clash of regimes bent on advancing the characteristic interests of each regime. This is the sense in which war is political; not that it involves the give-and-take, the ruling-and-being-ruled of political life, but that it serves regime purposes. Insofar as international politics does amount to a war of all against all, every ‘each’ in the ‘all’ has a regime; its regime may be better or worse than another; who wins any given war matters, morally.

    Holeindre observes that “totalitarianism reversed Clausewitz’s formula both in theory and practice” (23) because it used war as an instrument of terror complementary to its domestic use of terror in an attempt to remake human being and to overcome politics itself. Aron saw that the democratic republics were not helpless in the face of this project, if they refused pacifist surrender and the total war of the tyrants. Nuclear weapons—seemingly the ultimate technological challenge to limitations on war—in fact gave new life to the practice of limited war for political ends in defense of republicanism because, in Aron’s formulation, they made a major war improbable even as the persistence of regime conflict made peace improbable. The increased frequency of small wars under conditions of a nuclear standoff came as no surprise to Aron, who understood small wars as a tactic of the weak against the strong and, simultaneously, as a tactic the strong could encourage in wars fought by their proxy allies among the weak against their strong enemies. Aron saw that it was precisely in alliances between strong states and weak states, or weak non-state groups, that strong states might overbear their strong rivals without destruction in nuclear war.

    University of Potsdam historian Matthias Opperman connects Aron’s witness of the disastrous politics of late Weimar Germany with a moral foundation for his newfound anti-pacifism: the ethic of responsibility seen in Max Weber, another thinker he studied in those years. Aron eventually came to reject Weber’s complementary notion of a ‘value-free’ social science, and therewith the Weberian distinction between facts and values. But his focus on sociological problems, taken from Weber, had a double effect: it got him away from naïve notion of historical progress founded upon German Idealism and focused his mind on the concrete, practical problems that a citizen intent on resisting modern tyranny would need to address. At the same time, Aron didn’t identify the crisis of liberalism so much with the underlying principles of modern philosophy, as Leo Strauss (“whom Aron met at the end of his stay in Berlin and whom he greatly admired later on”) would do (34). Instead, he began a lifelong interest in addressing the question he would repeat throughout his life: “What should the cabinet minister do?” Aron inclined to take the statesman’s perspective as more thoroughly dispositive of the right philosophic perspective than a Platonic political philosopher would do.

    This statesman’ perspective caused Aron to see Hitler’s strategy much more clearly than many of his contemporaries in Europe and the United States. Hitler had read the English geopolitician Halford Mackinder: He wanted to rule the “Heartland,” the European core of the “World Island” consisting of Europe itself, Asia, and Africa (38). Unlike the ‘realist’ Mackinder, however, Aron never lost sight of the (as it were) moral-political motives for wanting to do such a thing, and Holeindre quotes Aron as saying that “true realism consists nowadays in acknowledging the effect of ideologies on diplomacy and strategy…. Nobody understands the diplomacy of a state without knowing the regime, without scrutinizing the philosophy which motivates the political leaders of that state” (40). In the end, therefore, neither Kantian idealism nor Machiavellianism will suffice. “What tradition teaches,” Aron wrote, “is not cynicism but Aristotelian prudence” (41).

    Carlos Gaspar, a professor of international relations at Lusiadan University of Lisbon, shows how Aron exercised such prudence during the long Cold War, in which nationalities were suppressed in the European core within the two enemy blocs but were revivified (and in some cases invented) in the periphery, now free of European imperial rule. The Cold War featured an overall stability punctuated by crises that reinforced the stability of the overall balance of power, but Aron hardly found satisfaction in stability alone. Europe’s subordination to the United States and the Soviet Union rankled, and while he didn’t go so far as de Gaulle did in his invocations of nationality, he too wanted a more united Western Europe—a Europe des patries —to reassert its own interests in its own voice. Like de Gaulle and Churchill, he regarded Franco-German reconciliation as central to this policy. He considered the Soviets’ 1956 invasion of Hungary as the beginning of the end of Soviet legitimacy—and ultimately of its imperial control—in Eastern Europe. The invasion “destroyed the credibility of Soviet communism for the coming generations” (53), and while US-Soviet alignment against Great Britain, France, and Israel in the Suez Crisis of the same year also showed that the two major powers had become “enemy brothers” in maintaining their rival hegemonies, the Soviet hegemon was likely to crack first.

    But what has this astute analysis of Cold War practice to do with Aron’s political theory, his praxeology? For this we must turn to his two major books, Peace and War, published in 1962, and Clausewitz: Philosopher of War, published in 1976.

    Bryan-Paul Frost of the University of Louisiana-Lafayette emphasizes the sobriety of Aron’s assessment of military strategy and international relations in the era of nuclear weapons. Against many of his contemporaries, Aron judged that “the fundamentals of human nature” and therefore of “international relations” had “not changed” (61). There had indeed been a technological revolution and also what Aron called a global extension of the diplomatic field—meaning that the two major powers had built alliance systems extending to every continent—but those two facts were logically unrelated. The blocs could have formed with or without the new weapons. This meant that the underlying logic of international politics remained what it had been on several previous occasions in human history: a bipolar balance of power. This in turn meant that tactics of deterrence, persuasion, and subversion came into play and that war remained the continuation of politics by other means, even if direct warfare between the two major powers was highly unlikely. “As a civic-minded theorist, Aron had to remind his audience—and especially the practitioners of politics—that the implicit logic of modern diplomacy was not revolutionary and could still be understood in the terms of Clausewitz” (64), a point that had the moral effect of calming citizens down and, as a consequence, enabling them to clear their minds for long-term thinking. Recalling the pacifism of the interwar period and its malign effect on the willingness to defend oneself, Aron also worked to strengthen the resolve of the Western republics. “The morality of prudence is a morality of responsibility” (65); the absolutist morality of pacifism, even under the dire threat of nuclear war, would neither prevent such war nor preserve republican liberty.

    Again unlike so many of his peers, Aron did not regard international organizations and international law as the core of peacemaking. Rather, “universal peace” could be achieved only with “the universality of republican regimes, the rigorous homogeneity of the international community, and the renunciation of the recourse to arms,” conditions Aron regarded as highly unlikely to be achieved in either “the near or distant future” (65). The Machiavellian insistence on the need for force in light of the persistence of human struggle and the Kantian desire for collective security and universal peace constituted an antimony that would not disappear “so long as states remain what they are” (66). At the same time, the virtues of moderation and prudence would never be replaced by any scientistic-technological ‘fix’ such as game theory; not only are there too many variables at play for any but the most probabilistic of calculations, but such ‘factors’ as glory, justice, prestige, and religion do not lend themselves to quantification (66-67). International relation can be thought about, rationally, but not in term of rationalism, if that means the application of mathematical formulas. “All political claims inevitably contain a greater or lesser degree of justice, and… these assertions must be properly weighted, assessed, and appreciated by a prospective theorist” (67); such shortcuts to understanding as self-interest or power will not do. Looking back at French history, Aron observed that “Clemenceau sought the security, Napoleon the power, Louis IV the glory of France” (68), a tripartite characterization that Aron did not hesitate to associate with the body (and the soul’s desire for safety), the heart (and its desire to conquer, to be victorious), and the mind (the desire “to spread the idea of which the state represents a unique incarnation” [68]) of France. (This may be the only judicious application of Platonism to international politics.) Because, as in Plato and the other classical theorists, the division of the human soul expresses itself in the several political regimes, and human nature has not changed, a change in regime will likely result in a change in the relations of one country to another. Aron’s example par excellence in this regard remained Nazi Germany in the 1930s.

    With fine irony, Frost observes, “Aron stood squarely against the dominant trends in international relations, and this, in part, helps to explain why he had such a limited impact on Anglo-American social science” (69). This is most evident in the central section of Peace and War, where Aron rejects any effort to  “articulat[e] a system of interconnected hypotheses attempting to explain certain limited aspects of international relations” in the manner of Anglophone social scientists but instead points to perennial “variables of political life,” both material and moral (70). By keeping track of several material causes of international action (geography, demography, resources) and moral causes (regimes, civilizations, “human and social nature”), Aron avoided the errors of all monocausal systems, Marxism-Leninism (class) and Nazism (race) being the most lethal in his time (70-71). Instead of system building, Aron favored comparative and historical studies, exemplified by Montesquieu and Tocqueville. “By plunging sociological analysis back into history, Aron prevents his theoretical analysis from becoming too deterministic and abstract”—a Procrustean effort to fit facts into a simple set of supposed laws—”and by stepping back from the historical landscape, Aron avoids the mistake of claiming that international relations display no recurrent patterns of behavior” (72). It might be added that this methodological pluralism goes well with Aron’s social and political liberalism, which provides space for a variety of human ‘types’ without succumbing to moral relativism.

    Aron understood Clausewitz as the Montesquieu of military thought: so argues Joel Mouric, professor of history and geography at the University of Western Brittany. Although Ludendorff and Hitler on the Right along with Lenin and Mao Zedong on the Left were “avid readers of Clausewitz,” Aron was far from viewing them a competent readers. Considered in itself war lends itself to anything but moderation, but Aron understood that Clausewitz viewed it as a means to an end. Statesmen should undertake war for strategic purposes, for the sake of political ends, including the physical survival of their nations and the defense of their regimes.

    During World War II, Aron worried that the Allies’ policy of unconditional surrender and their concomitant tactic of area bombing of Germany and Japan would stiffen resistance in both countries (he was right about that) and produce broken societies likely to prove fertile of tyranny in the years following the peace (on that he was wrong). During the Korean War he sided with President Truman against General Douglas MacArthur, that seeker of victory over North Korea. Both when right and when wrong, Aron favored limited war over total war as both wiser and more just. This inclination served him especially well during the Cold War, when his influence was at its height. With the two major powers deadlocked by their mutual possession of nuclear weapons, limited wars of attrition on the peripheries of their spheres of influence would proliferate. In such wars, it is better to deal with the small enemy forces by limiting their depredations and not by attempting to bring them to justice. The latter policy will exhaust you. But this patient policy should never incline republican statesmen to imagine that their main enemy will somehow ‘come around’—as seen in the once-fashionable belief that liberal republicanism and communist oligarchy would converge, come together as fellow social democracies by each adopting the socialism of the communists and the representative institutions of the republics. That wasn’t in the cards, and Aron considered any strategy based upon such a synthesis another example of historical determinism—itself a specimen of wishful thinking.

    Mouric does a fine scholarly service by noticing that Aron learned from the nineteenth-century German scholar Hans Delbrück, who had launched (and lost) a strategic debate in Germany, taking the side of a limited-war, Clausewitzian strategy against the “strategy of annihilation” favored by other military thinkers (83). It was Delbrück who led Aron back to Clausewitz, who in turn gave Aron his argument against Carl Schmitt, whose military and political thought followed the Ludendorff-Hitler misinterpretation. The policy of Franco-German reconciliation depended on getting Clausewitz right, an insight Aron shared with de Gaulle. “Rehabilitating a Prussian liberal tradition, albeit a more conservative one, Aron supported the regime of the Federal Republic of Germany, which since 1956 he had described as a ‘peaceful democracy.” (85). De Gaulle concurred, and pursued rapprochement with FRG chancellor Konrad Adenauer at the first opportunity. For Aron, support for such a rapprochement followed from Aron’s early decision to abandon existentialist decisionism for Aristotelian prudentialism.

    Carlos Gaspar contributes the last essay in the first section of the book, a discussion of Aron’s thoughts on the likely consequences of the end of Cold-War bipolarity. The 1973 Yom Kippur War showed that the apparent US-Soviet condominium seen in the Suez Canal War no longer held. “At the crucial moment, no one remembered the rules of détente that were part of the code of conduct solemnly adopted by the United States and the Soviet Union at their last summit before the conflict” (92). In the years immediately following détente weakened still further, as the Soviets attempted to take advantage of American reversals foreign (Vietnam) and domestic (Watergate). In Gaspar’s Portugal, in nearby Spain, and in Italy, the Communist Party seemed poised to make political gains. Soviet rulers decided that the correlation of forces in the world had shifted in their favor.

    While Aron understood that the decline of Western Europe might be hard to reverse in the face of this new correlation, he distinguished sharply between decline and decadence. “Decline, as a decrease in the relative power of a given state, could be measured with quantitative rigor in its material dimension, while decadence is a qualitative change referring to Machiavellian virtù, to the ‘historical vitality’ of a political community, and to the state’s ‘capacity for collective action.'” (93). So, the Europe of 1945 had declined in power but had not become decadent; Europeans still had plenty of fight left in them. But thirty years later Europe and perhaps America had suffered a loss of confidence, moral and intellectual confusion. Unlike decline, decadence can be remedied by an effort within the power of human souls, in part simply by refusing to give in to fear. Aron’s writings from this period—particularly his wryly titled In Defense of Decadent Europe—aimed at strengthening Europeans’ resolve and clarifying their minds.

    No more than anyone else did Aron foresee the collapse of the Soviet regime in the twentieth century, although he did expect that collapse in the long run. Looking forward to that moment, he remarked pointedly, “It is my view that the most important and indeed the most neglected question in contemporary International Relations scholarship is: what will the West do when and if the Soviets decline? How we answer this question will perhaps determine whether there will be war or peace in our time” (96).

    If the first section of essays shows how Aron shifted from pacifism to just-war doctrine, from existentialism to prudentialism, it doesn’t quite explain the relationship between Aron’s putatively Kantian understanding of rights and that prudentialism. More, it doesn’t explain why the actual operation of reason in Kant’s moral theory, which issues in the categorical imperative, really functions in Aron’s thought. He does not actually seem to invoke the categorical imperative; in that case, where does that leave his alleged Kantianism? We turn to the second and central section of essays, “Theory, History, Philosophy: The Primacy of the Political,” with the hope of finding some suggested answers to this question, which evidently reaches to the core of his political thought.

    As a historian, Perrine Simon-Nahum of L’École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales doesn’t attempt an answer but rather digs back into Aron’s earliest writings, a 1935 study of Weber and his 1938 doctoral dissertation, in which he offered a critique of Hegelianism. Rejecting both positivism and historical teleology, Aron urged an understanding of the course of events seen in terms of the actions of the actors and their motives—taking his bearings from Weberian responsibility, not Hegelian determinism. A historian should attempt to understand the circumstances in which the political actor operated so as to understand the choices available and then to judge whether that actor chose well. “Despite irreducible ambivalences, ambiguities, and contradictions, Aron maintained that intelligibility was within the historian’s grasp” (107). This implies, first, that there must be a human nature that a historian can recognize in a person who lived in another time; it also implies that the historian must take what amounts to a Socratic turn, attempt to know himself, to try to understand the “multiplicity of individual experiences of which each one refers to its own vision of the world.” The historian thus enjoys a certain “interpretive freedom”—an imagining oneself into the souls and circumstances of past actors—but also “an austere restraint that takes the form of modesty, of knowing that one is after all limited by one’s own finite human fund of knowledge” (110). Both that freedom and that restraint or modesty contrast sharply with the assumptions of philosophy-of-history historians, who effectively deny the possibility that one can understand past actors as they understood themselves (on grounds of the relativity of historical knowledge, the supposed impossibility of truly knowing another historical ‘epoch’) and who, at the same time, confidently claim to understand laws of historical development or evolution, conceiving themselves thereby empowered to understand past actors in light of their place in that evolution. Simon-Nahum confirms the observation of previous contributors in remarking that this conception of history (and of social science) brought Aron to Thucydides and Clausewitz.

    One might acknowledge the existence of human nature—and therefore of a historiography and a social science founded upon the study of human motives—without deriving moral or political right from it. The question of Aron’s derivation of right, the question of Aron’s stance as a political thinker and indeed philosopher, begins to be addressed more thoroughly in the essay by Institut Catholique Paris political scientist Giulio De Ligio, which is one of the highlights of the volume. Since Plato, the analogy between the order of the soul and the order of the city has attracted philosophic attention. De Ligio writes, “The question of the political regime is at the heart of the work—and one could say the life—of Raymond Aron. The thinking of this French philosopher and sociologist demonstrates how and to what extent this question is at the heart of the human problem qua human problem” (119).

    Aron understood human moral and political choices as philosophical—in the sense that they reflect nature—and historical/circumstantial, in that they reflect (in the case of Aron himself) action constrained by the conditions of modernity. Although it had long been known that the poleis of antiquity acted as a direct result of their regimes—there being no meaningful distinction between ‘state’ and ‘society’ in such small places—what about the large modern states, in which civil-social and economic forces evidently rival political actions in their importance? Here De Ligio holds up an important finding: “As [Aron] himself wrote, if his education is neo-Kantian and owes much to German philosophy… his conclusions belong to a different spiritual family, or, one could say, to a tradition that prolongs an older political approach right at the heart of modernity: the school of Montesquieu and Tocqueville” (121). Even Weber, with his ethic of responsibility, fails to see the importance of the political regime to the degree that Montesquieu and Tocqueville saw it. Further, both philosophers carried on the Platonic and Aristotelian practice not merely of classifying and describing regimes but of judging them: Tocqueville, Aron maintained, “does not think that the ‘fact’ of a regime can be understood and described as an abstract apart from its ‘quality.’ The judgment of a regime is intrinsically linked to its description” (122). If sociology as an academic discipline had elevated society above politics, treating politics as epiphenomenal, Aron puts politics back in its place as a realm that is not determined by “more basic” phenomena such as economics or social groups. As in antiquity, the political structure or politeia of a community decisively shapes its bios tis or way of life. This is why two modern societies—say, France and Germany in 1939—might both be described as industrial but nonetheless serve profoundly different ends. To be sure, the size and complexity of modern societies have made nonpolitical features more influential on political action than they were in antiquity. Analysis of a modern regime does not exhaust the description of any modern society. One must still consult mainstream sociologists and the economists to understand such a society more fully, inasmuch as social and economic conditions obviously limit politicians’ conditions of action. But politics remain an independent and also in many ways the decisive element in understanding modern societies, when describing them both structurally and morally.

    Aron did abandon one element of the classical approach, the search for the best regime. He retained the Aristotelian element, namely, the insistence that there can be a ‘best regime’ in a given set of circumstances. This again raises the question of the derivation of right. If there is no best regime ‘abstractly’ considered, how does the philosopher recognize the best one in the circumstances of his own time and place? What are the criteria of judgment? De Ligio doesn’t provide a clear answer to this question, although he does observe that Aron identified the existence of certain human virtues, recognizable across historical periods. The definition of corruption remarked by Gaspar evidently points to the absence or derangement of these virtues. If then there is such a thing as human nature for Aron, and if human virtues may be said to amount to instantiations of that nature ‘at its best’—perhaps when it isn’t self-destructive, self-contradictory?—then one might think Aron has a notion of natural right. This would bring him very close to Tocqueville, who defines rights as the obverse of virtues and both as bound up with the natural greatness of man. But this must remain a speculation on the basis of the evidence provided by De Ligio.

    Be this as it may, De Ligio forthrightly maintains that “Aron derives from Plato a hermeneutical principle of political life: political regimes are what the men are who give them life” (131). If so (and again as in the Republic) “despotism can arise from license” (131), and a democracy without the virtue of moderation, a democracy that “push[es] too far the application of the principle” peculiar to it, namely egalitarianism, will ruin itself. This is true of all regimes. If Aron (unlike Plato) eschews the quest for the best regime simply or ‘in abstraction,’ he does have some firm notion of the best practicable regime or order, probably within fairly generous parameters allowing for individual proclivities and tastes, of the human soul And that soul then expresses itself in relation to self-expression of the soul or souls that comprise a given regime.

    The redoubtable Daniel J. Mahoney of Assumption College in Massachusetts contributes the tenth of the book’s nineteen principal essays. He gives us a somewhat more Burkean Aron than De Ligio. In their “unabashed Machiavellianism,” Nazism and Italian Fascism “mocked the traditional categories of Western civilization,” repudiating “the ‘old virtues’ held dear by bourgeois civilization: ‘respect for the person, respect for the mind… personal autonomy,'” and replacing them with “‘virtues of action, of asceticism, of devotion'” (138). But this is no simple traditionalism, as seen in the title of Aron’s 1944 book, Man against the Tyrants —man as such. Mahoney regards Aron’s moral foundation as located on the crossroad of “biblical, liberal, and Kantian” principles (139). Although Aron never accepted the theology of the Bible, its “ideals and affirmations still spoke to his soul” (140), and these could indeed be reconciled with liberalism and the Kantian refusal to treat man not as a means but only as an end.

    Regarding the Stalinist tyranny that the West confronted after the defeat of the tyrants of the Right, Aron “was one of the first to acknowledge the Leninist roots of Stalinist totalitarianism” (140). Stalinism wasn’t a deformation of Leninism (as Trotsky and his followers had claimed) but its culmination in practice: “After 1930, the Soviet regime was totalitarian not only in aspiration but in reality” (140), and even the Nazis could never catch up to the sheer numbers of persons it murdered. As with the Germans, however, so with the Russians; the tyrannical regime did not destroy the fundamental human characteristics of the people, and although Aron “had his doubts about whether a post-Communist Russia would evolve in the direction of English or American democracy,” he did think it could get out from under totalitarianism.

    After studying both forms of totalitarianism or modern tyranny, Aron concluded that it featured an institutional marker, namely, the rule of one party, and a teleological one, the rule of ideology, that is, the rule of a comprehensive lie. Pace Karl Popper, a comprehensive lie isn’t the ‘noble lie’  proposed by Plato’s Socrates. Socrates’ lies aim at teaching certain truths about human nature; the myth of the metals, for example, gives citizens the image of his (itself simplified) descriptions of the three parts of the human soul. The modern tyrants’ lies serve to destroy the memory of the very notion of the human soul; instead of pointing toward nature they assault it.

    Serge Audier, who teaches philosophy at the University of Paris-Sorbonne, offers a fascinating if not entirely persuasive attempt to find a Machiavellian side to Aron’s thought, although it must immediately be observed that he understands Machiavelli quite differently than De Ligio or Mahoney. Audier rejects Leo Strauss’s interpretation of Machiavelli as the founder of the modern project insofar as he calls upon men generally and the prince especially to master fortune by learning how not to be good; he also rejects the claim that Machiavelli forms part of a tradition of civic republicanism that began with Aristotle—the argument of J. G. A. Pocock and Quentin Skinner. While he concurs with Mahoney in saying that the young Aron held something much like Strauss’s view, he contends that Aron gradually changed his opinion before World War II and “proceed[ed] in a new direction” after the war (152).

    In Audier’s account, Aron shifted his position after reading James Burnham’s The Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom, published  in 1943. He was so impressed that he had the volume translated and published in France. Burnham argues that Machiavelli and his followers opposed the tyranny of princes with a new form of republicanism, one that gave free play to political conflict so long as it stayed within legal and institutional bounds. A balanced government, a mixed regime or at least a democracy with many factions in it, all contending for power—a constitution not unlike the one the American Founders enacted in the 1780s—would, in Aron’s words, “preserve freedom by maintaining rivalry within the law” (153) or, as Audier puts it, “private ambitions must be channeled through public institutions” (154). For Burnham, and for Burnham’s Machiavelli, man is anything but the political animal described in Aristotle; he is selfish and contentious.

    This gives Audier a different opinion of Aron’s refusal to seek the ‘ideal’ regime or ‘city in speech’ seen in pre-Machiavellian political philosophy. There can be no end to political conflict; the several parts of the city, its various social groups, can never be harmonized. “Like the Florentine, [Aron] does not condemn ambition as such or adopt a moralizing stance” because human ambition is normal, natural; “the whole problem is simply to ensure that such ambition proves useful to the State” (156). Audier goes so far as to say that Machiavelli intends that “channel[ing] human ambitions by law” can “make those ambitions useful to the community” (157). It may be safer to say that Aron and the American Founders that that.

    Audier provides us with Aron’s own formulation: “The merits [of the institutionalization of conflict] are immense—and it is here that Machiavellianism intervenes—if you do not seek a perfect regime. If one starts out from the idea that all plans are a reflection of human nature, and democracy is among the worst regimes classified, the democratic system is probably by far the best of the bad regimes, that is to say the best of all possible regimes” (158). That is a witty restatement of the defense of democratic republicanism seen in the American Founders and in their admirer, Tocqueville. The good regimes of Aristotle are no longer possible in the modern world. Aristotle himself seems to have judged that two of them (kingship and aristocracy) were quite improbable in his own world. But under modern, socially egalitarian conditions (the ones Tocqueville describes), Aristotle’s best practicable regime, the mixed regime, is no longer possible, either, inasmuch as there are no stable aristocratic or oligarchic classes to ‘mix’ with the demos. This leaves what Aristotle judged to be the least bad regime, democracy, as the best reliable choice, especially if one founds it on a pluralistic society (Madison’s “interests”) and designs it so that ambitious men—following Pareto, he calls the “the elites”—check and balance one another under the rule of law.

    Audier concludes by saying that Aron dealt with Machiavelli the way Machiavelli recommends that princes deal with everyone: Aron used Machiavelli, he did not seek carefully to follow him down the winding path on which Machiavelli leads his readers. “It is pointless to seek from him a true interpretation of the Florentine Secretary”—the ambition of Strauss and Skinner (159). “It is also true that, due to the influence of Burnham and the elite theorists (Pareto, Mosca), Aron probably has a far too liberal and traditional view of Machiavelli, which does not adequately scrutinize the destabilizing force of the desire of the people for freedom in Machiavellian thought” (160). Rather, Aron follows in the tradition of writers who sought to tame, if not the prince—the princes of Aron’s day were the likes of Hitler, Stalin, and Mao, and taming them was not the solution—but the citizens whose ambitions revolve within the normal range. Audier cites Montesquieu, especially his account of Roman republicanism, and the earlier Cato’s Letters of Thomas Gordon and John Trenchard, as the Aronian forebears in the line. A judicious selection of Machiavellian techniques might indeed serve as a defense of freedom in modernity, without necessarily serving Machiavellian ends, just as American constitutionalism, framing the large, many-factioned population cited in Federalist 10, aims at securing natural rights not propounded by Machiavelli.

    The essays by De Ligio, Mahoney, and Audier form the core of the central section of the collection, presenting several dimensions of Aron’s many-sided political thought. The final essays of the section, by French sociologist Serge Paugam and Iain Stewart, Lecturer in Modern European History at Queen Mary College, University of London, bring us back to the social and economic aspects of Aron’s argument.

    Given the importance of social pluralism to Aron, Paugam’s interest in Aron’s sociological writings from the 1950s makes sense as the follow-on article after Audier. How exactly does Aron understand the social conflicts that he wants republics to channel? Thinking of Marxism and its derivatives, Aron wrote, “Western, especially European, societies are both obsessed with the notion of class and unable to define it” (164). No strictly materialist understanding of social classes will do because the ‘parts’ of society don’t interact like the parts of a chair; they are conscious, not only of their economic or material conditions but of their own and others’ ideas and sentiments respecting philosophic and religious doctrines, political opinions, and other considerations that interact with economic interests without being determined by them. In comparing the then-dominant American and Soviet societies, Aron rightly suspected that Soviet workers no less than American workers regarded heir bosses as less than favorable to their own welfare.

    Three social issues concerned Aron at this time: the increasing heterogeneity of the working class; the transformation of social conflict; and the problem of sustained poverty in wealthy societies. Working-class heterogeneity went against the Marxian prediction of an increasingly united and more sizeable working class facing off in sharp dialectic conflict with an ever-shrinking but also increasingly united bourgeoisie. “The worker,” as Paugam puts it, “does not belong solely to a world of workers,” but also belongs to other communities, whether religious or political (166). Such multiple allegiances were resulting not in the proletarianization of the lower bourgeoisie but in the embourgeoisement of the workers—their acceptance of many opinions and sentiments Marxists (and the several ‘bohemian’ movements that had sprung up since the early nineteenth century) scorned as ‘bourgeois,’ such as work discipline, cleanliness, and indeed the godliness cleanliness was said to be next to. The fact of working-class heterogeneity would transform social class into the political arena. intensifying their demands if only because they will have a greater variety of them, but using republican institutions rather than revolutionary violence as the preferred means of pressing those demands. They will become ‘Machiavellianized’ in Burnham’s sense of the term. It would nonetheless be a mistake to assume that poverty will disappear. Although the economist John Kenneth Galbraith and other fashionable authors of the time expected the abolition of poverty, Aron agreed that the social complexity of the working class—with ethnic and religious differences complicating its attempts at economic advancement—would keep poverty alive in the West indefinitely. Paugam regards this last concern as the prelude to, although somewhat different from, the contemporary way in which “the class struggle of yesterday is now merging with a struggle for protection and recognition” (175).

    Iain Stewart approaches the economic problem not with sociological analysis but via an account of the collaboration between academic and political socialists, beginning in the 1920s when Aron studied at university. In the 1920s, a group of French socialists established a study group at the École normale supérieure. Modeled on the British Fabian Society, the group linked itself with one of the Socialist Party’s leaders, Marcel Déat. These young Socialists broke with the Marxist-oriented mainstream of the Party, arguing for a policy of electoral appeals to middle-class as well as working-class voters instead of class struggle. They favored a program of gradual nationalization of major companies and economic planning. Upon his return to Germany in 1934, Aron renewed his university-days friendship with one of the most able Socialist academics of the group, Robert Marjolin; they joined in opposing the policies of the Socialist Party government led by Léon Blum, contending that economic redistribution and other reforms wouldn’t work unless the French economy became more productive. Among socialist thinkers, esteem for production as a means of achieving social justice was most prominent in the writings of Saint-Simon, who valorized “industrial civilization” (184). Industrialism could supply the important burst of productive energy needed to sustain social reform.

    Thus during the 1940s and 1950s Aron advocated what Anglo-Americans would have recognized as Keynesian or dirigiste economics, sympathetic to (for example) US President Franklin Roosevelt’s famous call for a “New Bill of Rights” including “freedom from want” (181). Aron explicitly criticized the economic libertarianism of Friedrich von Hayek, whose magnum opus, The Constitution of Liberty, Aron criticized at some length when it appeared in 1961. At the same time, as noted also by Mahoney, Aron never succumbed to the easy optimism of 1950s Keynesians, always recognizing that dirigisme could at best amount to “a partial solution that posed its own new challenges to the liberal order” (187) including the potential for bureaucratic sclerosis. It is nonetheless probably fair to say that Aron underestimated the prescience of Tocqueville’s dystopic warning against “soft despotism,” which appears rather more plausible now, more than half a century removed from those days.

    In view of the question raised by previous contributors—to what extent does Aron endorse Machiavellianism?—Stewart finds a decidedly apposite passage: “I think [Aron wrote] that democratic regimes are those which have a minimum of respect for the human person [that is, as distinguished from tyrannies, which have no respect for that at all] and do not consider individuals as means of production or objects of propaganda” (181). Respect for the human person might be a Catholic or a Kantian formulation, but it does not figure conspicuously in the doctrines of the smiling Florentine.

    Part III consists of six articles on Aron’s understanding of the modern thinkers (several of them philosophers) whose intellectual company he kept most frequently: Kant, Weber, Marx, Machiavelli, Montesquieu, and Tocqueville. Pierre Hassner of the Johns Hopkins University’s European Center at Bologna contends that Aron “never gave up his commitment to Kant or the Enlightenment” (198), a commitment initiated at university in the 1920s. He did abandon Kant’s belief that the course of events would work itself out into a condition of perpetual peace in Europe—”a happy ending for history” (198). For Aron, rational behavior may or may not someday infuse international politics more thoroughly than it has done—and it might very well become more prevalent than it was in the first half of the twentieth century (a low bar, indeed)—but to any “Knatian conclusions” about the future Aron always appended “a protestation of ignorance and a question mark following the profession of moral faith” (199). Unlike Kant, he invested few hopes in any ‘league of nations.’

    The moral dimension of Kantianism finds a larger place in Aron’s thought than the historical dimension. “He says in his Mémoires that he never forgot the categorical imperative of or the ‘Religion within the limits of Reason'” (201)—itself a rather weak endorsement, inasmuch as never forgetting isn’t the quite the same thing as adherence. But unlike Kant, whose political philosophy “is not, strictly speaking, ultimately political” but legal, moral, and historical (200), “the center of [Aron’s] thinking is political” (201). Rationalism, yes: but a prudential rationalism for statesmen guided by a moral rationalism that appears based primarily on a more or less naturalistic conception of “the human person.”

    As a sociologist by training, Aron found in Weber crucial elements of his own moral and political thinking, as Scott Nelson and coeditor José Colon show in their essay. “It was in Max Weber’s writings that Aron eventually found the resources and the words to express the relationship between politics and morality. Moreover, Aron also found in Weber an exposition of the tension between knowledge (science) and action (politics). There are genuine trade-offs between a profession that demands the absolute pursuit of truth and one that demands the willingness to compromise not only one’s own morals (anathema to the moralist) but even the truth itself (anathema to the scientist).” (205)  The Weberian distinction between an ethic of conviction and an ethic of responsibility drew Aron’s particular attention. Unlike Machiavelli, Aron saw, Weber did not advise the politician to abandon moral conviction but rather to take responsibility for the consequences of actions that deviated from conviction. “Conviction” moralists—Aron thought Weber was thinking of two kinds, Christians and revolutionaries—inclined either towards pacifist incapability of meeting force with force or ill-judged attempts at treating a good goal “as an absolute value whose price of attainment could never be too high” (207). Aron saw himself as “stand[ing] up for reason and responsibility in the carnival of French political life” (207).

    At the same time, Aron rightly worried that “false realists” might twist the ethic of responsibility into “disregard[ing] moral injunctions with impunity” even as “false idealists” might “wantonly blind themselves to the critical role they are playing in contributing to the collapse of the existing order, thereby paving the way for revolutionaries or tyrants to rule” (207). And even a sincere and sober attempt to follow an ethic of responsibility “assume[s] that the actor in question has had the opportunity to consider (or refuse to consider) the potential consequences of his actions” (207)—clearly impossible on many occasions in politics. Weber’s own call for a “charismatic Übermensch who would rescue Germany from Christian servility, revolutionary stupidity, and bureaucratic sterility” had the worst sort of unintended consequences a few decades after he made it (208-209). What is more, insofar as Weber tempered his nationalism with liberalism it was liberalism “not rooted in metaphysics or natural law” or even in utilitarianism but in “the pragmatism of power” (209). Having seen for himself the consequences of this severing of liberalism from any universal principle, which leaves it untethered against nationalist passion if that passion can claim that its very extremism ‘works’ in practice, Aron demurred. Rather like Aristotle (and of course exactly like Kant), Aron insisted that some actions are morally wrong, whatever the circumstances.

    For Aron, “the essence of politics… consists of the tensions between the exigencies of the moment, the political morality that seeks to accommodate the citizens’ private moralities”—which often contradict one another—”and the statesman’s own private moralities (some of which are reconcilable with each other, some of which are not), that exist both within and between human beings. The great statesman is he who can navigate his way through this stormy sea of uncertainty—knowing full well that many of his decisions will leave him little-to-no time for reflection and therefore be based entirely on political knack—and arrive at the action that is, given the circumstances, the least detestable both for himself and for the collectivity” (214). No starry utopianism there.

    The Aronially-named Sylvie Mesure, a sociologist who serves as Director of Research at the Centre nationale de la recherché scientifique in Paris, addresses Aron’s interpretation of Marx. She concurs with previous contributors in observing that Aron rejected Marxian historical determinism, insisting always on what one of  his avid readers, Henry Kissinger, would call the necessity for choice. Marx’s claim for the foundational character of economics in historical causation and his millenarian faith in a communist future for mankind were equally suspect in Aron’s view.

    In the early 1960s Aron revisited Marx in response to the ongoing controversy between Sartre and Louis Althusser. Sartre and his followers maintained that “the young Marx” had been a humanist and a social activist, but the mature Marx’s turn to economics was fully inline with his original humanist leanings. Althusser claimed that an “epistemological break” had occurred, as Marx turned from “ideology” toward hard, empirical economic science. Aron sided with his old, estranged friend Sartre in defending Marx’s intellectual consistency but disagreed that he had ever been a humanist in the sense of a humanitarian. Young and old, Marx adhered to a non-idealist, materialist form of Hegelianism, in which the dialectic of economic class struggle rather than the dialectical unfolding of an ‘Absolute Spirit’ drove ‘History’ forward to its end. It is true, Aron conceded, that the young Marx was more nearly Hegelian than the Marx of Capital, but this was ‘a matter of degree not of kind.’

    Mesure concludes by citing Aron’s opinion that Marx was mistaken in his proudest claim: to have discovered “a scientific basis for his theory of the collapse of capitalism” and thus “to theoretically explain the movement of history” (225). He did share with Marx a refusal of complacency in the face of social injustice, remaining a reformist if not a revolutionary throughout his career. Aron also shared with Marx an interest in understanding the thoughts of philosophers and statesmen in their “socio-political context” even as he insisted that understanding an author’s intention is the preliminary step to doing this. That is, Aron exhibited a ‘Marxian’ interest in historical context without reducing thought to an epiphenomenon of its context.

    New University of Lisbon philosophy professor Diogo Pires Aurélio brings us back to Machiavelli. Illustrating exactly Mesure’s observation about Aron’s dual interest in a philosopher’s intention and his influence in a given social circumstance, Aurélio points to Aron’s distinction between Machiavelli’s teaching and “Machiavellianism”—that is, the way in which Machiavelli’s teaching was used in the twentieth century. Modern tyranny was one form of such Machiavellianism; Machiavelli, describer and encourager of tyrannical princes, found eager students in Aron’s time. Aron recognized and endorsed several of Machiavelli’s teachings: “human passions do not change throughout history, and thus men and groups come into conflict with one another” (233); within certain limits, nature changes but not always for the better, as everything on earth will decline after its time of flourishing, even and especially human associations; there being no sustained progress in nature, but also no permanent decline, political orders run in cycles The nature of human beings, “nasty and ambitious” (234), makes moral rules ineffective in restraining them; the ruler needs to employ threats of violence and at times violence itself, to be feared more than loved. Modern Machiavellians such as Pareto add to this a distinction between masses and leaders; the latter use force and fraud to dominate the former. With Strauss, Aron saw that The Prince and the Discourses “share the same perspective on politics” (235). It is a perspective that rejects cunning and violence not for moral reasons but only when they fail to secure the rule of the prince or (in republics) the elites; this is what Machiavelli means by saying he seeks the effectual truth.

    Machiavelli wants the ruler or rulers to construct (as Aron phrases it) “a strong, flourishing, ordered, and legal state” (235). Unlike the feudal orders of his own time, this state will be centralized; unlike the petty principalities of his Italy, it will be substantial in size and population. It will not, however, be an impersonal administrative state, such as Europeans built later on; Machiavelli’s state belongs to persons, whether the one or the few. But Machiavelli’s refusal to accept any “transcendent purpose” for political action, which results in a political science that attends merely to the acquisition and maintenance of power, might be said to prepare for such an impersonal state by making human beings (and especially rulers) unprecedentedly impersonal, inviting them to become throbbing nerves of ambition, guided by calculating, vulpine brains.

    In his contribution to the volume, Serge Audier emphasized the difference between the Machiavelli Aron described in the 1930s and 1940s and the republican Machiavellian he commended, with serious reservations, later on. Aurélio elaborates on this, writing that “the problem with modern Machiavellianism is that it reads The Prince as if it constituted Machiavelli’s entire oeuvre” (236). With Pareto, it also inclines toward progressivism and the leadership principle. Aron’s “moderate Machiavellianism” (39) does indeed extract teachings useful to republican regimes founded in modern states, but Aurélio’s Aron thinks that “the Florentine’s methodology, in spite of his love for liberty, leads to Machiavellianism and gives a rational basis for those who would apply the techniques of tyranny in the twentieth century” (240). Putting it somewhat differently, having seen the defects of Machiavellian republicanism in Germany, Aron became alert to the way it might issue in the tyrannical Machiavellianism of the Nazis. Against the latter Machiavellianism, Aron characteristically argued for the use of the ‘Machiavellian technique of force against force instead of an ineffectual ‘Christian’ pacifism. And while Pareto’s Machiavellian remark that all regimes, whether princely or republican, really amount to the rule of elites, Aurélio quotes Aron: “What is really interesting to see is the constitution of the dominant oligarchy and the relationship between this dominant oligarchy and the great number, or, more precisely still, the capacity of action of this dominant oligarch concerning the mass of citizens, and on the other hand the guarantees given to its citizens concerning government” (241). For Aron (as for Aristotle, one might add), politics means ruling and being ruled, with ‘transcendent’ ends in mind.

    All these valuable articles notwithstanding, it remains clear that the two modern political philosophers closest to Aron are Montesquieu and Tocqueville. Fortunately, the editors have found two scholars equal to the responsibility of doing justice to these relationships: Miguel Morgado, a political scientist at Portuguese Catholic University and Aurelian Criautu, a political scientist at Indiana University.

    Morgado remarks that Montesquieu and Aron have both attracted the same criticism, a criticism that raises once more a central theme of this collection: Do these thinkers offer “a coherent structure of natural right for the basis of [their] political philosophy” (246)? Or do they silently abandon natural right for elaborate sociological and institutional descripts and analyses? Morgado shows that while both men understand modern societies as being larger and more complex than ancient poleis, they continue to regard the political regime as the primary if not the simply dominant causative factor in modern states and the societies that undergird them. That is to say, they are “political sociologists” (247). They identify three elements of the regime: its “nature” or institutional form; its “principle” or moving passions; and its purpose or predominant idea—for example, political liberty in England (248-249).

    The reason critics find Montesquieu and Aron confusing is their recognition that regimes also have specific tasks to fulfill, here and now. They must survive and seek their purpose in geographic, international, and social conditions that may vary over time, organizing and reorganizing themselves accordingly. A republic in France might be very different from a republic in Iraq; for a variety of reasons, a republic in Iraq might prove even harder to secure than a republic in France was, and that is saying a lot. Thus the judgment of regimes in terms of the universal character of natural right might vary considerably depending on the customs and other circumstances of the people it rules. This, it might be added, reminds one of the classical claim that natural right is flexible, not a thing simply to be arrived at by deductive reasoning. It isn’t quite right to say, with Morgado and his Aron, that the political sociology of Montesquieu and Aron “turns Greek absolutism on its head” (251); it is more likely that they are responding to what natural right must look like under the conditions of the modern state—large, centralized, socially pluralistic. Both men share Aristotle’s understanding that, as Aron puts it, “men are only human if they obey and rule humanely” (252)—that is to say, above all, with the virtue of moderation. Political considered, moderation often entails compromise, “a synonym for moderation” (253). But compromise does not exhaust political life. Compromise might paralyze political life, preventing the state from “pursuing a coherent and stable political strategy” (255)—as de Gaulle had argued against the parliamentarism of the Third and Fourth Republics in France.

    Morgado ends his comparison of Montesquieu and Aron with a sober reminder of their sense of the limitations of all political regimes, their anti-utopianism. Montesquieu famously commended the regime of commercial republicanism against the military republic seen most spectacularly in Rome. For his part, as we’ve seen, Aron wanted a commercial-industrial society combined with republican political institutions. “For Aron, modern democracies are condemned to be an object of disappointment. They disappoint citizens and scientists because democracies are ‘pedestrian'” (257). Moderate democracy is prosaic, unpoetic. Given the modern-tyrannical alternative, so much the better for their citizens, and for the world.

    Aurelian Craiutu observes that Aron had studied Marx and the other principal German political philosophers before seriously engaging Tocqueville. In some respects he had already thought his way towards Tocqueville by thinking about the Germans critically. In contrasting Tocqueville with Marx in a way that favored the former he put Tocqueville back on the French intellectual map while performing a service that the two philosophers themselves never did; although contemporaries, “they ignored each other” (264). Aron was struck by the way Tocqueville, no very close student of political economy and an opponent of historical determinism, nonetheless predicted the future more accurately than Marx. The workers of the world did not unite.

    Tocqueville and Aron share a “common concern for safeguarding liberty and reconciling it with the demands for equality in modern democratic societies” (267). To be sure, Aron saw and emphasized the importance of industrialism more than Tocqueville did, but he shared Tocqueville’s insistence (against the socialist Marx but also against the libertarian Hayek) that both “negative” liberty or freedom from constraint and “positive” liberty or freedom to participate in government must be combined in order for citizens of modern societies to sustain the degree of genuinely political life that is possible in modern states. Unlike the economics-centered defenders of socialism or of capitalism, Tocqueville and Aron insisted on the integrity of the political sphere.

    Both agreed on the unfortunate role intellectuals tended to play in politics, especially in France, whether in the revolutionary turmoil of 1848 (narrated with some irony by Tocqueville in his Souvenirs) or that of 1968 (as seen in Aron’s La revolution introuvable). Both men raised an eyebrow at the spectacle of intellectuals who inclined to indulge in political passions instead of exercising their, well, intellects. “Aron reiterated Tocqueville’s point… that intellectuals tend to search in politics for what is ingenuous [sic: ingenious?] and new instead of what is true, and are inclined to appreciate good acting, grandiose gesturing, and fine speaking for their own sake and (often) without reference to the facts themselves” (270). Aron added, “To tell the truth, the whole nation shares it a little, and the French public as a whole often takes a literary man’s view of politics” (270). Against this impassioned politics valorizing the eloquent enunciation of what Tocqueville calls a general idea, both men favored strengthening civil association and administrative decentralization, which afford citizens practical experience in self-government, redirecting their minds and hearts toward realities on the ground as perceived and judged by common sense. Moderation and “trust in human freedom” joined with “respect for human dignity” remained the prosaic, nonrevolutionary, and best pathways for citizens whose societies marshaled unprecedented technological power.

    Centre Aron research associate Christian Bachelier’s epilogue complements Nicolas Baverez’s account of Aron’s life and works. Bachelier assigns particular importance to the place of Élie Halévy in Aron’s intellectual journey—the critique of pacifism, the esteem for republicanism against then-fashionable claims that ‘the center cannot hold’ against tyrannies Left and Right, the way that those tyrannies end up mimicking one another as the hyper-nationalist fascism appropriated socialist economics and the hyper-socialist communists invoked loyalty to the Glorious Motherland as soon as military threats to their regime arose. Halévy died suddenly in 1937, but Aron remained faithful to the core of his mentor’s insights on ‘totalitarian’ tyranny.

    Aron himself attracted many students. Manent recalls that he never sought disciples. His humane pluralism extended to his personal conduct. This Companion continues in the Aronian spirit, giving us a variety of ‘takes’ on Aron urged by scholars drawn from several countries and academic disciplines. In politics and academia today we are seeing less of this spirit. The writers here resist the trend with Aronian resolution, moderation, and intelligence. Their well-informed disagreements may bring readers to a closer study of Aron—to join him, and them, as companions.

     

    Filed Under: Nations

    Lincoln Criticized in the Currently Fashionable Mode

    October 5, 2018 by Will Morrisey

    George Kateb: Lincoln’s Political Thought. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2015.

     

    Before and during the American Civil War, “political theory came to life too vividly,” Kateb remarks, as principles were written, so to speak, in blood. Identifying “the underlying causes of the war” as “the integrity of the Union and the slaves’ human status,” he wonders why Lincoln seemed to hold the survival of the former dearer than the firm recognition of the latter. He is inclined to wish Lincoln more Garrisonian—more the impassioned moral absolutist—than he was, and even tries to help him along in that direction, calling Lincoln’s devotion to the Declaration and the Constitution a “political religion.” Like William Lloyd Garrison, he criticizes the Founders harshly (as Lincoln did not). He applauds Lincoln’s eventual moves to abolish slavery but deplores the suspension of constitutional rights Lincoln judged necessary to win the war that made abolition possible. In sum, Kateb may be said to lack sufficient appreciation for the moral status of prudential reasoning. Accordingly, this is not the first book to read on Lincoln’s political thought. Harry V. Jaffa’s Crisis of the House Divided (1959) and A New Birth of Freedom (2001) still tower over their rivals. But readers who have equipped themselves by studying Lincoln’s writings will find themselves challenged if not persuaded by Kateb’s probing intelligence.

    Although Kateb refers to Lincoln’s political thought, he mostly means Lincoln’s moral and political passion. He often writes as if he agrees with Marx’s claim that thought is not a passion of the head (as in Plato) but the head of a passion. Unlike Marx, however, he wants Lincoln to have been more passionate, more passionately opposed to slavery. He describes Lincoln as motivated by two passions, one for saving the Union and the other for ending slavery. “Both passions came from his moral commitment to human equality,” but where did that moral commitment itself come from? Kateb will struggle to find an answer.

    He begins by addressing Lincoln’s political circumstance. “Who else electable in the North could have had his will?” he asks, quite sensibly implying that there was no one. And in order to be electable, he remarks, Lincoln couldn’t simply lay his cards on the table, when it came to slavery abolition. “His whole political life illustrates the generalization that in democratic politics, perhaps in all politics, it is nearly impossible to do the right thing for the right reasons, actually held and honestly stated.” This held true particularly in the years between the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act, legalizing slavery in the territories claimed and settled by Americans but not yet states, and the end of the Civil War. “Group ferocities” prevailed throughout, although Kateb is careful not to claim, nor to ascribe to Lincoln the claim, that these were the furies of Greek tragedy—somehow fated, entirely out of human control. Although Lincoln speaks of Providence, he does so in the manner of the Bible; according to Kateb, he uses Providence as an excuse “to blot out human responsibility.” Slavery was introduced to American society by choice. Therefore, “The people cursed themselves; they brought their suffering on themselves.” Kateb nonetheless errs in denying that “the integrity of the Union and the slaves’ human status” amounted to “some high worldly value of the sort that tragic individual heroes contend for, like position or influence or honor or successful revenge.” The integrity of the Union and the slaves’ human status were if anything of higher worldly value than those things, and made higher still for having been political, for bearing upon the ‘fate’ of the American Founders’ effort to frame a government that secured the natural rights of human beings as such.

    At the same time, Kateb unjustly minimizes the slaveholders’ dilemma. Their fears of slave rebellion proved overblown—”there was no imitation of the Haitian revolution”—but how could they know that at the time? Thomas Jefferson’s image of slaveholders having a wolf by the ears, fearing to let go, registered an understandable fear and a serious dilemma. “Perhaps Jefferson could not imagine himself as a slave who would not try to kill his master before or after manumission.” Then again, perhaps not. What he could imagine was that this might happen, and had happened elsewhere, whatever his imagination might conjure. Moreover, Jefferson’s generation of slaveholders lived before claims of ‘scientific racism’ had taken hold of Southerners, as it most assuredly had done by the 1850s. Kateb needs this claim because he wants to show that Lincoln gave too much credence to Southern fears. When Lincoln says that Southerners “are just what we [Northerners] would be in their situation,” he is warning his political friends against self-righteousness—a trait not absent in Abolitionist circles, and hardly conducive to reunion after the war.

    Similarly, Kateb downplays arguments from moral and cultural relativism, arguments tending to excuse Southern behavior. While citing Lincoln’s 1859 statement that “Questions of abstract right and wrong cannot be questions of locality,” he denies that those who thought slavery permissible made such an argument. But in fact one did: Lincoln’s opponent in the Illinois Senate election the year before, Stephen A. Douglas. “The essence of the struggle over the rightness of slavery was not between moral absolutism and cultural relativism, the obsessive theme of some of Leo Strauss’s followers.” Leaving aside who those followers might be, and why such concern might be “obsessive” (Kateb offers us no further information on either point), one must recall that Douglas had in fact argued that (to use his word) “diversity” was one of America’s strengths, and diversity of climate made diversity of socioeconomic relations useful in service of America’s cross-continent march to greatness and prosperity. “In any event you do not need moral absolutism to condemn slavery, because if slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. All you need is decency extended by enlightenment to include people not of your color.” But from what does “decency” derive? And what does enlightenment illuminate? Lincoln knew: it was natural right. Does Kateb? It seems not. Of course, Douglas’s talk of “diversity” might make a man of the Left a bit nervous, given the valorization of that term in contemporary political discourse, but, as Lincoln would say, let us not judge, lest we be judged.

    Kateb’s impatience with Lincoln’s supposed waffling on the slavery issue is thankfully not untinctured by an appreciation for a statesmanlike need for rhetorical caution. Lincoln “had to face the fact that his own side was divided not only between slave states and free state” (several slave states remained in the Union) “but also between Unionist citizens, whatever their state, who favored or opposed emancipation as a tactic of war and abolition as a war aim.” Kateb doubts that Lincoln had intended to end slavery all along, although he does acknowledge that on “at least one occasion”—the “House Divided” speech of 1858—Lincoln did indicate such an intention, indirectly. “He came to see perhaps that only the election of a Republican president would impel the South to initiate a war that would provide the chance for the stronger North to win and then abolish slavery, somehow.” And he could hardly have come to this conclusion happily, being “keenly aware of the cost in human life that a war between the sections would exact.” Still, Lincoln’s “moral outrage before the war was not a dominating passion that made every other consideration secondary to abolishing slavery.” True enough, but Kateb’s passion for moral passion does not necessarily constitute a morality superior to one that derives both moral principles and moral conduct from reason.

    Here is where Lincoln’s “political religion” comes in. Lincoln himself used the term in his speech to the Springfield Lyceum, long before his presidency; he wanted the boys to respect the rule of law, to revere the Constitution, to maintain the Founders’ republicanism in their generation. By “religion” Kateb means the “master principle” of one’s life, and for Lincoln that was the equality principle of the Declaration of Independence, as instantiated in the Constitution, itself undergirded by the Union. As he well says, for Lincoln “the substantive principle of human equality determines the fundamental law that establishes government as the means to the protection and advancement of a society that practices human equality” by means of the republican form of government guaranteed by Article IV, section 4 of the Constitution.

    In answer to those who criticize Lincoln for advocating voluntary African-American colonization, he replies, “The best that could be said is that he sincerely thought that whites would never accept blacks as equal citizens and that it would be good for blacks to emigrate”—a policy, it might be added, that whites themselves had followed, first in leaving Europe and then in settling the West. The constitution of the Confederate States of America amounted to a revolution or regime change “against the principle of the equality of all races,” a new regime based squarely on ‘race theory.’ Kateb struggles more with Lincoln’s suspension of the writ of habeas corpus and other wartime measure violative of some Constitutional provisions, over-dramatically claiming that the president “destroyed the Constitution temporarily in order to save it.” His real problem is with the Constitution itself, which was “unworthy of reverence just because it was a Constitution of slavery”—a pact with the devil, as more than one Abolitionist had said. But of course the Constitution didn’t constitute slavery; it limited its influence to the degree politically possible at the time. Lincoln “knew the bald truth that the Constitution established slavery in the United States”—an assertion that is indeed bald, without being true. Kateb claims that Taney’s decision in the Dred Scott case was “constitutionally plausible,” but it wasn’t: There is nothing in the Constitution saying that the black man has no rights that the white man must respect.

    Kateb doesn’t much like the Declaration of Independence, either. “When we look at the Declaration of Independence we barely see theoretical backing for human equality; even though we see a few dramatic assertions about the divine endowment of human beings with certain inalienable rights.” This means that the Declaration denounces “the colonists’ political slavery, but not black chattel slavery.” Such an interpretation overlooks the phrase, “all men are created equal,” equal in the sense that they are endowed with those unalienable right Kateb does acknowledge. “We should notice that the discourse of the Declaration did not build up to the conclusion that all persons are created equal but rather to the conclusion that all peoples are equal and therefore the American people were equal to all other peoples.” He should notice that the conclusion of the syllogism rests on the premise that all men are created equal. He goes on to blame Jefferson for failing to condemn slavery in the Declaration, when in fact he did; his colleagues removed that condemnation because they wanted to keep South Carolina and Georgia in the Union. Once South Carolina and Georgia tried to get out of the Union, no such worries prevailed and slavery was placed not just on the road to extinction but on the fast track, at the cost of a brutal civil war.

    Kateb wants to establish that Lincoln’s “political religion” entailed not only a master commitment but a mythology. Needing “a stainless American source of devotion to human equality,” Lincoln fixed upon the Declaration. “The distortion of truth”—as Kateb mistakenly calls it—”came from Lincoln’s insistence that the Declaration and the man who wrote it were single-minded in their commitment to the human equality of all persons and races and made that commitment uppermost.” But Lincoln never called Jefferson single-minded in any “commitment.” Like Lincoln himself, Jefferson understood political life as uncongenial to the single-minded. Lincoln finds the principle of human equality in the Declaration because it is there. “One of the meanings of the very word religion among Christians—not that Lincoln was one—is going beyond the evidence (that is, having faith) and turning away from evidence that might threaten the religion’s solidity (that is, having faith)”—a hope resting on the evidence of things unseen, as the Apostle Paul puts it in his Letter to the Hebrews. If so, then Lincoln’s adherence to the Declaration was entirely rational, resting on the plain words of the document, and not religious at all.

    Prior to the war, Kateb asserts, “Lincoln’s commitment to human equality was seriously flawed” because he “was not an abolitionist.” Nothing more dramatically illustrates Kateb’s moralizing incapacity to think prudentially, that is, with moral seriousness. Had Lincoln announced a “commitment” to abolitionism before the war, thereby disqualifying himself for the presidency, he never would have attained a position from which he could have made abolition happen. Similarly, on Lincoln August 1862 meeting with a delegation of freemen, in which he suggested that they consider emigration, he calls this “a slap on the face meant to resound throughout the country.” “Lincoln calmly said that the white race suffered from the black presence,” and vice-versa; therefore, black colonization in some other part of the world would remove the trouble. Kateb waxes indignant, but as a matter of fact the white race was suffering at the time of the meeting: the Civil War was less than halfway done. Kateb detests the way in which Lincoln often makes the existence of slavery to be ‘about’ American whites—slavery fosters habits of despotism antithetical to the perpetuation of republicanism—but in view of the fact that the future of slavery depended primarily upon what the white majority did, why would he not address that majority in terms of their moral self-interest?

    The inadequacy of Kateb’s moral theorizing reappears as he considers Lincoln’s relation to the Constitution. He recognizes that “the defense of the compromise by which the Framers accepted the incorporation of slavery in order to be able to get a constitution approved and then ratified must be subjected to moral questioning.” Very well then, what is the question? Kateb claims that by this incorporation “declared rights were mocked and denatured by their context,” that is, by the continued existence of slavery and the allowance of that continuation in the Constitution. But no political institution can “denature” a natural right. Natural rights exist, whatever men may say or do. As for Lincoln, he “reasoned that incorporating slavery into the Constitution was a necessary price to pay to secure the great good of the Constitution.” Not quite: the great good of the Constitution was subservient to the greater good of the Union, and the greater good of the Union was subservient to the greatest good of securing natural rights. This is “doing evil to secure good,” Kateb avers, but the evil already existed; if the Union was indispensable to abolishing slavery sooner than later, as indeed it proved to be, then Lincoln was in fact “doing the lesser evil for the sake of preventing or remedying a greater evil,” a possibility Kateb states only to deny immediately. Peaceful disunion with abolition was not going to occur in 1787 or the 1850s. And Kateb never gets around to saying why disunion would have been a greater evil than the failure to abolish slavery had been, in the minds of the Founders and Lincoln, although the refusal to allow North America to become a Europe-like continent of perpetual war among small and medium-sized sovereign states was clearly stated by the Founders, and therefore well known to Lincoln.

    On slavery and the Constitution, “the South’s appeal to social necessity”—their fear of a slave uprising—”was finally countered by Lincoln’s appeal to military necessity”—that slave emancipation was a necessary wartime measure—”even as secession had made the idea of constitutional necessity otiose on both sides”—the South having rejected constitutional union altogether, Lincoln having suspended certain provisions of the Constitution. Kateb very much dislikes claims of military necessity, as seen in “the surplus violence of Sherman’s march through Georgia and South Carolina to the sea.” He ignores the purpose of that supposedly “surplus” violence, which was not only to get to Savannah in order to move north to Richmond and assist Grant in breaking Lee’s army, but to crush the political regime of the Confederacy by ruining the planter oligarchy of the deep South—the ruling class which had forced the slavery-compromise clauses into the Constitution in the first place, and which had led the secessionist movement. In countenancing this action, and in taking his other actions to suspend elements of the Constitution, Lincoln did not merely violate but “destroyed” the Constitution. “To be sure, elections in the North were never canceled. The structure of the government was not touched.” But Lincoln “became a dictator in his dealings with some citizens.” True enough, but who were those citizens if not traitors?

    In effect, secession was a declaration of independence from the constitutional Union, and therefore a declaration of war, once the Southern independence movement asserted itself in the seizure of United States property at Fort Sumter and elsewhere. The Confederate States of American was thence targeted by the United States for military defeat and political revolution, regime change. Regarding treacherous individuals within the states still in the Union, the war entailed suspension of some ordinary legal procedures for the duration of the war. “I do not know which is more troubling: to think that the Constitution allows its own suspension or that the Constitution in an emergency needs to be supplemented by a doctrine external to it and contradictory to it.” But what if the doctrine external to the Constitution isn’t contradictory to it? Kateb cites Ulysses S. Grant on this point: “the right to resist or suppress the rebellion is as inherent as the right of self-defense, and as natural as the right of an individual to preserve his life when in jeopardy. The Constitution was therefore in abeyance for the time being, so far as it in any way affected the progress and termination of the war.” To which Kateb replies: “My conceptual claim is that if rights are treated as provisional entitlements, they cease being rights and become mere privileges.” The reply to this is obvious. Constitutional rights are indeed provisional if natural rights are at stake. All men are created equal, but not all rights are. Legal or conventional rights must give way to natural rights, if defense of the former would sacrifice defense of the latter, given the principle enunciated in the Declaration of Independence, that governments are instituted to secure unalienable, natural rights. Similarly, if, within civil society, somebody comes at me with a knife, I am entitled to ‘suspend’ my attackers civil and natural right to life in the course of defending myself. This hardly “destroys” either civil or natural right.

    In his concluding chapter Kateb addresses the difficult question of Lincoln’s “metaphysical outlook,” an outlook he made difficult to discern because he left no extended record of his thoughts on God and because he was a politic as well as a political man. Kateb accepts the claim of Lincoln’s old friend William Herndon, who describes Lincoln as a materialist and indeed a Darwinian, and also a thoroughgoing determinist. Kateb regards Lincoln’s references to Providence and to “the idea of personal responsibility” as “rhetorically expedient” tropes.

    However, Kateb immediately begins to hedge. We should not assume that Lincoln’s “sincere metaphysics was only and always remained Enlightenment materialism, with no purpose in the world and where necessitous bodies constantly pushed against each other in inevitable conflict.” Lincoln’s thought was unconventional, evincing “the willingness to believe that providential purpose and enlightened human judgment (including the best moral judgment) might not coincide.” The best human moral judgment was neither omniscient nor pure. God’s intentions “were not understandable,” and not necessarily “in conformity with moral judgment”; “God is beyond good and evil.”

    With this Nietzschean notion in mind, Kateb considers Lincoln’s unpublished “Meditation on the Divine Will,” which he wrote in September 1862, while considering the Emancipation Proclamation. The Meditation is a note preparatory to the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, itself explained more fully in Lincoln’s “Reply to Emancipation Memorial Presented by Chicago Christians of All Denominations” of September 13. Lincoln begins the Meditation by noting: “The will of God prevails. In great contests each party claims to act in accordance with the will of God. Both may be, and one must be wrong. God can not be for, and against the same thing at the same time.” Kateb finds this puzzling. “If one side must be wrong, can the other and radically opposite side be wrong at all?” He admits, “There is a tangle here that I cannot straighten out.” The tangle exists only if one thinks of the syllogism in simple and abstract terms. If I say ‘x’ and you say ‘not-x,’ then one of us must be wrong but both of us cannot be. However, if I say, ‘x, y, and z’ and you say ‘not-x, a, and b,’ then we could both be wrong. Further, if, as Lincoln goes on to say, “in the present civil war it is quite possible that God’s purpose is something different from the purpose of either party”—if God is thinking ‘m, n, and o’—then of course both sides could be wrong. In his Reply to the Chicago Christians Lincoln makes the latter point, that we don’t know what God is thinking. Hence his famous formula: “With firmness in the right, as God grants us to see the right.” That is the best a human being can do. Or, as he puts it in the Reply, “I must study the plain physical facts of the case, ascertain what is possible and learn what appears to be wise and right.” It isn’t that “God is beyond good and evil,” as Kateb would have it, but that His thoughts are not our thoughts, necessarily.

    Kateb similarly botches his interpretation of the Second Inaugural. Lincoln doesn’t “blame providence or God for ordaining moral evil in the form of slavery and bringing about moral evil in the form of atrocious war to end slavery.” As he did consistently throughout the war, he wants the North, especially in victory, to avoid self-righteousness—the besetting vice not only of the Abolitionists but of moralists generally. Lincoln’s call for “charity for all” at the end of the speech is not “hatred of God or his providence,” and “the only hope for the future” in Lincoln’s view could not be “that human solidarity would prevail over attachment to incomprehensible providence and the accompanying theology of merciless retaliation and punishment”—a claim that encapsulates Kateb’s own materialist democratic socialism, and has nothing to do with Lincoln. As for self-righteousness, Kateb provides his readers with an excellent example of it, when he comments on Lincoln’s “single greatest sentence”: “Yet if God wills that [the war] continue, until all the wealth piled by the bond-man’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be paid by another drawn with sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said ‘the judgments of the Lord, are true and righteous altogether.'” This, Kateb claims, means that Lincoln admits that the “apocalypse of extermination” of America’s “living white population” would be just, meaning, “his outrage at the white race’s prolonged and remorseless violation of human equality, which the white race defended tenaciously, was so great that he contemplated the possibility that God’s mercy or grace alone could be an adequate basis for pardon.” But of course this is absurd. What race was not guilty of prolonged and remorseless violation of human equality? And what country was “the last, best hope of mankind” for abjuring that violation? And what regime had upheld equal natural rights as its fundamental principle, even as it failed to enact that principle for a substantial portion of its population? What regime was even then correcting that failure, precisely at the cost of all that blood?

     

     

    Filed Under: American Politics

    Manent on Thinking Politically

    October 4, 2018 by Will Morrisey

    Pierre Manent: Seeing Things Politically: Interviews with Bénédicte Delorme-Montini. Translated by Ralph Hancock. South Bend: St. Augustine’s Press, 2015.

    Originally published in Interpretation: A Journal of Political Philosophy. Volume 42, Number 2, Winter 2016. Republished with permission.

     

    At the end of his essay, “Progress or Return?” Leo Strauss writes, “No one can be both a philosopher and a theologian, nor, for that matter some possibility which transcends the conflict between philosophy and theology, or pretends to be a synthesis of both. But every one of us can and ought to be either one or the other, the philosopher open to the challenge of theology or the theologian open to the challenge of philosophy,” [1] In this series of interview, Pierre Manent comes before us as a thinker who does attempt to hold these rival ways of life in balance within himself, yet without attempting the “synthesis” Strauss criticizes.

    As Daniel J. Mahoney observes in his excellent introduction, Manent describes his life’s intention as the desire to understand “what is” (1). To this Socratic ambition he adds the distinctive Socratic turn: “the political order is what truly gives human life its form”(2). But, contra current fashion, not everything is political. The political is the starting point for philosophizing, not its animating principle. To conceive of politics as merely the quest for and exercise of ‘power,’ and then to conceive of Being itself as will to power, turned twentieth-century politics toward unprecedented forms of tyranny. At least one of the century’s greatest philosophers, Heidegger, went along for that disastrous ride. Manent recalls how France emerged from an earlier exercise of political terror (generated by the Jacobin “murder machine,” as Chateaubriand called it) “with the capacity for a marvelous literature, a splendid poetry, and for the analysis of modern society and of modern politics characterized by a precision an elegance and the scope that we have admired since the rediscovery of Benjamin Constant Guizot, and Tocqueville” (7). As the politically monarchic, socially aristocratic Ancien Régime declined, this “liberal political science of democratic society” gave the French both political and intellectual breathing space. Politically, it showed how democratic societies might defend natural rights, including the rights to liberty, under the conditions of modern social egalitarianism and statism. Intellectually, these new societies worked toward a possible settlement of the theological-political controversies that had raced Europe throughout the early centuries of modernity. Such a recovery from the worse-than-Jacobin tyrannies of the past century can occur, Manent hopes, if the politics of the ancients, rooted in the compact, highly “politicized” society seen in the polis and the politics of the moderns, rooted in the expansive society seen in the state, can both be understood, can be brought together, “in a histoire raisonné based upon this single hypothesis: man is a political animal. To lay out our whole history starting from our political nature that is what I would like to show and to make comprehensible” (9). Such a nonhistoricist history would overcome the implausible, not-really-rational, unrealistic historical narratives that have prevailed in the past two centuries.

    If Socratic philosophy is a way of life, then it makes sense to give an account of the life of the one who philosophizes. Manent’s interviewer thus begins by eliciting an account of Manent’s life as a thinker. Karl Marx was the tutelary deity of the Manent household when Manent began to think of political things during the American occupation of France at the end of the Second World War. “One hardly met anyone of the right” in his “homogeneous milieu” (16). This changed at the lycée, that well-established republican institution in which French youth came together not as Communists or Catholics, democrats or monarchists, but as citizens—young citizens who, moreover, shared the arduous experience of really learning French, Latin, Greek, and mathematics, “the four dragons that had to be conquered” (17). In particular, “the French language was the bond that held together all the subjects”; even the math teacher’s classes “were always French classes,” exercises in the precise use of words, not only of numbers (18).

    It was at the lycée that Manent encountered the dialectical contradiction to his father’s Marxism in the person of Louis Jugnet, a Thomist in the line of Jacques Maritain and Étienne Gilson. “The first thing he taught me is that there is much to be known in the subject of religion” (20). “My approach to religion was through speculative theology, and not through piety” (21). Manent counts himself fortunate for having encountered, early in life, teachers who recognized his intellectual needs and proclivities and put them ahead of indoctrination. Crucially, it was the Catholic Jugnet who guided Manent to the Jewish Raymond Aron, and thereby to a conception of the political, understood as a realm of thought related to but independent of philosophy and religion. Manent found the Sorbonne itself to be a place where a politics of the radical Left existed side-by-side with philosophic studies of Descartes, Kant, and Hegel, among others; only in Aron’s classes could he “find a way to unite my intellectual and my political interests” (25), which by now included (thanks to Juget) a serious interest in religion dismissed by his classmates. “The more the academic philosophy became mechanical, technical, and systematic, the more political passions fermented, became focused, and heated up beneath the surface. They exploded in 1968” (26). The explosion never singed Manent, who found himself “indifferent” to the intellectual and political fashions of the period (29). To put it in American terms, he was the kid who heard the Rolling Stones but found that he preferred Sinatra.

    Given his theological interests, “I was looking for a reference point beyond politics,” but Aron, “the perfect gentleman,” “experienced no need of transcendence” (39). Perceiving the needs of the young person before him, Aron pointed Manent to Strauss—specifically, to Natural Right and History. The rediscovery of classical natural right seen there convinced Manent of the freedom of the human mind—its essential freedom from its own social setting. Strauss’s recovery in modernity of “the ancients” showed Manent that human beings are not “socially determined” beings, slaves to the thoughts and passions of their own time and place. Strauss also showed Manent that the Thomist tradition that he’d encountered with Jugnet inclined to depreciate politics; its treatment of Aristotle confined itself to the Nicomachean Ethics and Book I of the Politics. Such an approach scants Aristotle’s distinctive contribution to the study of politics, his classification of political societies in terms of their regimes. Reading Strauss enabled Manent to connect his moral concerns with his intention to understand politics—to connect Jugnet and Aron.

    Manent nonetheless did not follow Strauss all the way, did not become a ‘Straussian.’ “I have never really succeeded in making sense” of Strauss’s portrait of “the philosopher” (49), which Manent takes to mean a human being whose intellectual ascent raises him above human society itself, one whose noetic perception of the Good replaces the interest in the human things—to politics understood as the quest for justice. To Strauss’s Platonic Socrates, political life is the philosopher’s gateway to this otherworldly way of life, a gateway to be left behind. Manent wants to linger at the gateway. But unlike the moderns, Manent doesn’t deny the existence of the transcendent, the existence of the Good. He affirms that “there are…’higher things’ than man” (50). However, he finds “more humanity” in “the religious person.” Although does not explain why this is so, it may be because the religious person (or perhaps the religious person centered in Biblical revelation rather than, say, Buddhist meditation) understands human persons in light of the divine Person—that is, in terms of a love of God that equally commands love of neighbor. But Manent himself leaves this uncertain.

    In his conversations with Strauss’s most famous student (and ardent Francophile) Allan Bloom, Manent confirmed his sense that the philosopher as Strauss conceives him finally does not love family or country so much as nature. Still, Bloom showed that the philosopher loves human nature, seeking philosophic friends—chatting with Manent’s young daughters, for example, to find out if they were souls “capable of philosophy” (56), capable of someday joining Bloom in the philosophic quest. At least physically, Socrates did linger at the gateway; Socratic self-knowledge in this sociable understanding the philosophic way of life, the philosophic regime, amounts not to knowledge of the self as an “incommunicable or incomparable particularity” but as “discerning how human motives, the motives common to all human beings, are configured in one’s own soul” and then putting that soul in such order as to “hold oneself in the world” in such a way as to discard the false signals every society sends to those who live within it and to fulfill human nature, the nature that (in Aristotle’s phrase) “wants to know”—to know what is (58-59).

    And so, Manent tells his interlocutor, “I am in a triangle: politics, philosophy, religion. I have never been able to settle one of those poles”—Aron, Strauss, or Jugnet (and behind him Maritain and Aquinas). “There are thus three human attitudes, each of which claims a complete devotion that I cannot or will not grant to any of them because the two others also appeal to me” (59-60). In this he finds himself to be quite French: “one thing that distinguishes France is that there are among us quite a number of individuals who have produced considerable work that cannot be classified according to the standard academic categories” (68).

    In the book’s central section, Manent outlines the substance of his histoire raisonné. In doing so, he clarifies a distinction many political scientists (even those schooled by the writings of Plato and Aristotle) often miss: the distinction between two ways of classifying political communities, namely, regimes and what Manent calls political orders. The classic texts elaborate the first classification. The second was known to ‘the ancients’ but not formally analyzed by the Greeks; it is a classification based upon the size of a political community combined with its degree of governmental centralization. In antiquity, the polis was small but centralized. Benjamin Constant’s well-known definition of “the liberty of the ancients,” which consisted of direct citizen participation in governing activities, derives from the obvious fact that in a small place there’s no easy way to escape political authority. To be free in a small community is to share in its governance. Ancient empires, by contrast, were huge but decentralized, often consisting of a sort of protection racket: I have conquered you but I will let you live if you guarantee to pay tribute to me and remain a loyal ally; otherwise, you may govern yourselves with your own customs and laws so long as they interfere in now way with my interests. A polis or an empire might have any of the several regimes, but is not itself defined solely by its regime.

    Manent focuses on two major transformations of these political orders. The first kind consisted of the transition from polis to empire, effected in Greece by Alexander and then in Rome by ambitious citizens of Rome itself. Both left the technological underpinning of existing regimes more or less as they had been. The second transformation consisted of the Machiavellian reconstitution of the feudal order which Manent regards as mostly inchoate, as much a disorder as an order) into the modern state, a new political order much bigger than a polis but much more centralized than any ancient empire. Under the guiding spirit of Machiavelli, “Europeans decided to do something new, something absolutely unprecedented, which appeared as the modern, which they called modern and by which the distinguished themselves or separated themselves form everything previous”—”an enterprise that progressively rose in power before winning over all of Europe and finally the whole world” (86). This transformation did challenge the theological underpinnings of existing regimes and of the existing political demi-order. Hegel and his epigones have told this story before, but in writing history as a reflection of human nature, indeed of man as a political animal, Manent rejects the historicists’ claim that human nature is rather an instantiation of ‘History’—whether that be understood as the self-unfolding of the Absolute Spirit or the materialist dialectics of class or of race. For Manent as for Strauss, man is emphatically not a historical being at his core; a genuine history of human beings must take account of that.

    Under conditions of modern statism, human beings have vindicated their political nature by demanding their rights—rights tied “to the individual human being.” By nature, man is a rights-bearing animal and the modern state should be designed to secure those rights. That is, “the very notion of right presupposes society and relation because the very definition of right is to organize society and the relations among its members” in a certain way. Rights as “we moderns” conceive them inhere in each of us but we need political society, including the formidable and potentially overbearing modern state, for their security. “That is a problem, isn’t it?” (90-91).

    This leads Manent to Tocqueville, who addressed this problem in the most cogent way seen in Europe Unlike Aron (and, it should be added, unlike almost all American scholars) Manent sees that Democracy in America is first and foremost what its title says it is: a book about democracy—defined as a pervasive social egalitarianism or absence of aristocracy—as it existed in American when Tocqueville saw it, and not primarily a book about America. America matters to Tocqueville because it is as democratic in its social structure as Europe and the rest of the world is fast becoming. It is what our contemporaries in academia call a case study. But it’s democracy that he wants to understand, and how Americans have governed themselves under democratic conditions.

    In focusing on Tocqueville’s interest in democracy Manent initially mistakes Tocqueville for a historicist, saying that he resembles Marx and Nietzsche in their historical determinism even as he differs from them in his description of what the laws of history are and what they will produce at “the end of history” (98). But under the salutary prodding of his interlocutor, he soon recalls that even under the leveling conditions of democracy “the aristocratic parts of the soul”—by which he means the spirited part, the part that demands its rights, fights for them, sometimes to the point of regretting that we have only one life to give to our country—will not suffer “complete disappearance” (103). And of course Tocqueville himself explicitly denies that he regards the dystopian vision of a human herd ruled by mild despots as something inevitable, averring that he has written his book precisely in order to resist such an outcome. Manent actually continues Tocqueville’s task, very much against historical determinists: “the problem I face is… to hold together Tocqueville’s analysis of democracy’s power to carry us toward ever greater equality, and the recognition of the eternal play between the few and the many” (105).

    The ancient political orders, polis and empire, developed as it were naturally or spontaneously, “in the absence of any prior idea or conception,” such as Machiavelli’s asserted uncovering of “the effectual truth” of human life against the Platonic ideas and Aristotelian teleology. The ancient political orders predated philosophy; the modern state came out of a set of philosophic claims. (Insofar as rulers of the modern state have failed to understand religion insofar as they allow themselves to be animated by what Strauss calls antitheological ire, they reflect philosophic doctrines that mismanage their relation to religion.) As the modern philosophic project was elaborated, the language of modern science attempted to capture “the effectual truth” with language unmoored from “the ordinary language of political life” (110)—again a point first given careful attention by Strauss. Manent says that as a result of this increasingly abstract, modern-scientific (and therefore) un-commonsensical account of politics, “most of the knowledge that society has had of itself [in modernity] has come through literature. It suffices to mention Balzac” (111). But with the continued augmentation of the modern state and the pervasiveness of its technocratic language within common speech, “confidence in the power of meaningful speech in literary speech, has largely dissipated, and such speech has almost entirely ceased to be a political institution, at least in France, at least since the beginning of the 1960s” (111). Politics, the life of citizens ruling one another, declines in in the face of administrative rule, a form of rule that lacks the reciprocity, the character of ruling and being ruled, seen in political life rightly understood.

    To understand the transition from one political order to another, Manent returns to two periods when this happened namely, the transition of Rome from a polis to an empire and then to the transition of Europe from the feudal demi-order to the modern state. He regards Cicero as the much-neglected thinker who attempted to understand Rome’s transition and to guide it. “Cicero was truly the first to confront the political problem of the West, that of the viability of the city, that of the ‘exit’ from the city, and that of the passage from the city to another political form” (112). Having learned regime theory from the Greeks, knowing from it that Rome’s republican regime suited it so long as it remained a polis but came under increasing strain as the city acquired an empire, Cicero tried to preserve political (and thus fully human) life in this new circumstance, one that “was no longer essentially civic” (112). First, he “defined the magistrate as one who ‘bore the public person,'” although “the notion of a public person was unknown in the Greek city”; second, “he defined the function of the political order as that of protecting property”; and finally he “insist[ed] on the individual form of each person, on his particularity, distinguishing between the common nature of humanity and the nature proper to a person and inviting each person to follow, not only nature in general (as prescribed by classical Greek philosophy), but especially his nature” (113). The first of these steps relocates political life primarily in the ruling offices; the second and third steps tend toward protecting citizens who are no longer fully citizens under conditions of political giantism.

    Manent regards Cicero’s attempt as indispensable but insufficient because it could not preserve “what Machiavelli will call the vivere civile or the vivere politico” (114). Cicero “gathered most intelligently and wisely all the usable elements of the pagan political tradition and transformed them, but still without being able to give them an operational form” (114). For centuries to come, this was the best philosophers and theologians could do. The political order—whether the Roman empire or the later, smaller entities resulting from its dissolution—became increasingly indeterminate, as did the regimes associated with those successive orders. We’ve given this post-Roman demi-order the name ‘feudalism.’ In effect, Manent shows the need for the establishment of Machiavelli’s state but finds that it need not result in the bifurcation of loyalties resulting from dual allegiance to the City of God and the City of Man but rather in the imperial project of Rome, which began before Christianity appeared. This account of political history follows from Manent’s underlying claim: “The cause of history is humanity’s political nature” (116). The centuries-long “Ciceronian moment”—from Julius Caesar to Machiavelli from ‘Rome’ to ‘Florence’—amounted to an arduous quest to satisfy “the need or desire of human beings to be governed and, preferably to be well-governed or not too badly governed” (116). The moderns “sought and found order”; only once that had been found, in the modern state, could the regime question then be seriously addressed (118). For more or less opposite theological reasons, Machiavelli in philosophy and the Reformation in theology both sought in the modern state a protective shield against feudal civil disorder and its weakness in war. Both of these anti-feudal stances require nations to got with states—Machiavelli, with his famous call for the rise of Italy, the Lutherans with their pan-Germanism, both against the church which aspired to Catholicism, universalism.

    Under the aegis of the state, social activity accelerated. Weber was mistaken: It wasn’t Protestantism and its ‘ethic’ that spawned capitalism but statism that protected Protestantism and fostered capitalism, the goose that laid golden eggs for the state, provided that the state protected the acquisitive and individualistic social activity that the Catholic Church had bridled. “As you see,” Manet tells his interviewer, “I am careful to proceed in such a way that historical causality is always tied to non-historical causality, that is to say, to something that simply belongs to the human condition” (124). European republicanism moved from a nostalgia for Cato the Younger, whose suicide marked the death of the republicanism of the polis, to the friendship of Montaigne and La Boétie, an embryonic civil-social association that affirms “virile human nature”—a republicanism consistent with individualism, a “regime of self-affirmation for human beings” (127). “It is impossible not to encounter the limits of political judgment when one political form transforms into another, when a regime that was good but corrupt gives place to one that is not as good but in a way necessary, and when the very principles of human order have become uncertain”; “the radical character of the modern enterprise was, in part, the price that finally had to be paid to leave behind [the] alienating legacy” of Rome—alienating because it required one to choose between Cato’s republican suicide and the self-deification of Caesarism (129).

    That enterprise now may have reached its limits, in which case we are in for another “Ciceronian moment.” In Europe and, increasingly, around the world, the characteristic modern identity, citizenship in a nation, has weakened: One might now conceive of oneself as “at once Breton, French, European, and a citizen of the world” (146). “American protection and dominance” have made this possible, up until now, but not good or sustainable. Europeans prefer not to admit that ‘globalization’ needs to rest on some foundation, which turns out to be Westernization, which turns out to be unpalatable to, for example, Chinese and Muslim people. Because “humanity does not constitute a political body”—being “incapable of self-government”—and because “the religion of humanity” or secular humanism which accompanies globalization doesn’t command the elementary characteristic of any religion (the ability to bind souls to one another by a set of enforceable laws), “the European area will soon be the space of powerful recompositions of common life, and we do not know what form these recompositions will take” (147). “We are talking about something deeper than a revolution, because a revolution involves only a change of regime” (147); Manent hopes for a political form that draws from “the old nation and the old religion” (148), but he does not try to “play Cicero”—to suggest what that form might be. Such fashionable proposals as democratization and globalization he judges too nearly empty of content to be of much real use, although they have preoccupied academic discussants: “I do not know whether what Marx called ‘the world becoming philosophical’ has been good for the world, but there is no doubt that it has not been good for philosophy” (154). The ‘postmodern’ philosophies or ideologies that have superseded Marxism offer only “identity politics” without a firm identity; they will lose steam as we succumb to a “bad mixture of sentimental humanitarianism and unchained competition” (159).

    In order to begin to draw upon the old nations and the old religion, Manent seeks to define the old religion by distinguishing it from the new one, the religion of humanity. That is, he returns to what Strauss calls the theological-political question. He remarks the difference between compassion and charity. Compassion consists of identifying oneself “with the suffering other” and (perhaps discreetly) sighing in relief that one is not the sufferer (160). Compassion amounts to the sentimental side of egalitarianism or the belief that we are all the same. “Charity is altogether different,” “a virtue that man cannot acquire or produce by his own strength” (161). “Charity is the love of God, the love by which God loves mankind and, first of all, the love by which God loves himself in the Trinitarian communion”; “something is charitable if it partakes, by God’s grace, in God’s love” (161). It is inegalitarian, an expression of condescension in the old, laudatory sense of the term, a sense that has disappeared precisely as egalitarianism has advanced. Jane Austen could still say “condescending” in a laudatory tone, but for us it is an affront. “Charity has nothing to do with the return to the self that belongs to the very life of the feeling of sameness because charity involves neither identification with the suffering other nor the satisfied and pleasant feeling of not suffering oneself” (161). Christians love God and love their neighbor “as the image of God,” inasmuch as “only God is truly loveable” (161). Humanitarianism (to say nothing of romanticism) does not apply. Mother Teresa wants not only to save your body but also and preeminently wants to become the human agent of the divine love that will save your soul, if you will let it.

    For this reason Manent doubts that Tocqueville is correct to ascribe the beginning of modern democracy or egalitarianism to Christianity. “I have never yet found anything in the Gospels that resembles democratic equality or the principles of the philosophy of human rights” (164). “The very meaning of Christian equality resides in God and relates to the other world, and the very meaning of democratic equality relates to this world!” he exclaims. To ‘secularize’ Christianity is to de-Christianize it, inasmuch as the very notion of a Christ, a Savior, implies a radically superior Being. (To be fair to Tocqueville, this may be what he meant to convey in describing Christianity as a precious legacy of the aristocracy; after all, a divine revelation that includes the idea of the equality of all men under God is both ‘aristocratic’—or perhaps monarchic—in origin, even as it posits equality among human beings.) In any event, Manent observes that the centuries in which Christianity provided Europeans with their spiritual orientation “accommodated themselves very well to immense differences of rank and of fortune,” reinforced as they were by the Pauline injunction to obey the powers that be. It was the Enlightenment that pushed Europeans to democratize their societies.

    And yet, as before, Manent relents, noticing that Christianity did prepare European souls for the seeds of egalitarianism in two ways. Although it did not at first “demand the abolition of slavery,” Christianity did undermine “the spirit of pagan warfare,” specifically the practice of “massacring the men and… reducing the women and children to slavery” (165). Christianity diminished the supply of slaves and thus served egalitarianism. More significantly, Christianity equalizes “access to truth” by teaching a truth that is “absolutely the same for the shepherd and the theologian” (167).

    Christianity also induced Europeans to understand liberty in a new way by giving it a new (so to speak) ontological dimension, namely, free will. “One might even say that the notion of free will is, at bottom a Christian notion”—the “series of free responses that each individual addresses to the divine initiative” (168). Conscience, “an eternal capacity of judgment” (168), differs from (for example) Antigone’s love of family and provides a strong moral foundation for resistance to the encroachments of political authority upon the integrity of the person. But conscience as conceived by Christians isn’t a natural or human right, as the moderns say. Conscience is the self-alignment of the human soul toward God’s will. But a right derives “from man’s simple humanity and not from his final purpose in God” (170). For the early moderns, a right was natural, not fundamentally covenantal. It was Calvinism, not Roman Catholicism or Lutheranism, that associated conscience “with modern freedom and with confidence in one’s own strength” (171). It was Calvinism that combined freedom of conscience and modern freedom with respect for the rule of law. In so describing the theological-political strengths of the West, Manent also shows how he began his journey in a Marxist family and, after encountering Catholicism in Jugnet, political prudence in Aron, and political philosophy in Strauss and Bloom, he has come in the end to an appreciation of the Huguenots.

    Nor does his political incorrectness end there. Manent does not hesitate to ascribe “a certain superiority” to the West over other civilizations. “Our civilization’s exploration of human possibilities is more complete than in other civilizations,” although this strength “obviously does not exempt us from the vices, defects, and weaknesses associated with the human condition” and also “exposes us to certain risks to which other civilizations are not exposed or are less exposed” (172). The aspiration to break with customs, with the law of ancestors, makes the West at once more likely to discover nature and at the same time assume the risky responsibility of mastering it. And if “the Greeks are the first to expose their nakedness and… take pride in it, in this capacity to show one’s nakedness” or nature, the Israelites upheld another kind of universalism, the universalism of a people who acted under the command to be a light for the nations (174-175). Taken together, Athens and Jerusalem both exhibit the capacity to acknowledge the universal without erasing or attempting to erase the particular, the political, the city. If man’s nature is political, and if God’s laws themselves imply a political regime, then human beings are not doomed to lives of tribal warfare on one hand or of a weak and unsustainable humanitarianism on the other.

    “I believe this confidence in the strength of the soul is the great power of the West, the pagan West as well as the Christian West. Of course, the soul’s philosophic adventure and the religious adventure are quite distinct, but the human source is the same” (184). “In this sense, Christian-democratic America sums up and recapitulates these transformations of the soul that gave the soul this confidence in its own strength” (186). But the European Union, by contrast, “is not political; it does not mediate [between universal and particular]; it blends in its own eyes with humanity as it moves toward unification” (187). Except that the expected historical movement or progress isn’t really there, and can never be, given the political nature of human beings.

    Although Manent does not attempt to envision a new political order for Europe, the book ends with his account of the kind of political science that might enable Europeans to frame one. It is Aristotelian. Contemporary political science suffers from two principal flaws: it “is not really political, but rather social”—reducing political life to sub-political components—and it is animated by a “philosophy that is not really practical, that is, that does not quite know what to do with the question, ‘what is to be done?'” (197). (A question, it should be noted, Manent learned during his Marxist upbringing: Lenin raised it, and, whatever one may think of him, he did raise a perfectly sensible question.) But Aristotle’s purpose “is to clarify the deliberations of citizens, no matter the city to which they belong, in order to improve their political regime, whatever the type of regime” (198). This is “a science of action in general,” “capable of determining what concrete action the acting human being should produce, and therefore a general action or an action in conformity with some general rule, but a determinate action appropriate to the characteristics of the agent and the circumstances of the action” (199). By sundering ‘facts’ from ‘values,’ deliberation from purpose, modern social science has rendered human life incoherent, insofar as human beings take such science as authoritative.

    Having praised Christianity for its discovery of the conscience and of a certain kind of human equality, Manent proceeds to criticize it for “endanger[ing] the political framework of human life by requiring human beings to love their enemies” (205). This disruption of the natural understanding of politics disrupted the philosophic understanding of human action by pointing the intellect toward unmediated or apolitical ‘humanity’ and also by so altering the intellect’s sense of human events that it comes to think of itself as historical the intellect BC and AD, as it were. That is, the notion of God’s providential intervention into the flow of human events outside the framework of a particular political regime, Israel, takes a step toward the familiar historicisms of modernity. These tend to undermine the freedoms of the ancients, the Christians, and the moderns. It is therefore in some respects just as well that the modern West now meet resistance, inasmuch as resistance calls forth the ‘ancient’ virtues of courage, justice, moderation, and wisdom that modern social science neglects but that remain necessary to fulfilling human nature.

    Filed Under: Philosophers

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