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    Does Privilege Ruin Liberty?

    December 12, 2025 by Will Morrisey

    Aurel Kolnai: Privilege and Liberty and Other Essays. Lanham: Lexington Books, 1999.

     

    Modern political thought inclines to associate equality closely with liberty. That assumption needs scrutiny, not necessarily with a view to denying it but with a view to making it more precise, more accurate. Kolnai undertakes this critical task.

    Born in 1900, the Hungarian Jew and Catholic convert Aurel Kolnai witnessed the technologically brilliant, politically catastrophic first three-quarters of the twentieth century. In his excellent introduction to this collection, Daniel J. Mahoney calls him “one of the greatest thinkers of the century to place the restoration of common-sense evaluation and philosophical realism at the very center of his philosophical and political itinerary”—a distinction that makes Kolnai a very rare specimen indeed. He was especially critical of the fashionable ideologies of Existentialism and Marxism, which twisted political life in malignant directions throughout the period, each holding out the utopian prospect of human perfection without God. As Mahoney writes, “Kolnai’s deepest, most original contribution to the understanding of the utopian mind is his recognition of the ‘utterly fundamental contradiction’ at the heart of the ideological enterprise,” which promises “a new world without human alienation and divisions of any kind” while “the attainment of such a new reality is impossible without a radically unprecedented ‘revolutionary’ schism between the old humanity and the new—a schism that cannot ever be surmounted.” Instead of realizing perfection, regimes animated by utopian ideologies crush liberty, murder innocent people, and achieve social equality under conditions of political tyranny because their rulers cannot understand, or stand, that they are not forming new human beings out of formless clay.

    In his substantial 1949 essay, “Privilege and Liberty,” Kolnai takes up the question of aristocracy and democracy addressed variously by Montesquieu, Chateaubriand, and Tocqueville. In the postwar years, with Stalin still securely ensconced in the Kremlin, his regime having made colonies of a half-dozen countries in eastern and central Europe, and Mao completing his conquest of China, the Western commercial republics were on the defensive. Kolnai sees that the moral and intellectual defenses of those regimes were weak because they share the egalitarian claims of the Communists, seen in their mutual espousal of what he calls “the cult of the ‘Common Man,'” “a construct of subversive sophists and seekers for power” who, although “dread[ing] Communism as the blighting tyranny it is,” incline “to submit to it half-heartedly,” lacking any serious argument against the Communists’ stated aims. Communists could stage their claim to power on the right of the “great multitude of people as such, in regard to its rights, interests, welfare, security, perfection, and so forth” to overthrow “Privilege.” 

    Kolnai identifies three fallacies in both Marxism and, crucially, ‘Progressive’ egalitarianism: the notion of class conflict, which assumes that life is a zero-sum game; the notion that egalitarian distribution of goods and services by the state is just; and the notion that the common good is the same as sameness, that “collectivism is only individualism raised to the high power of an absolute monism,” that ‘society’ resembles a person. In both of these ideologies, “Privilege is not merely an ‘injustice’ which favors ‘the few’ to the detriment of ‘the many’ but above all, a symbol of the imperfection of Man as compared with God…a symbol of the ‘irksome,’ ‘irritating,’ ‘humiliating’ transcendence of the Good in relation to human Will.” A comical example of this was the undergraduate in an English class who complained that the problem with God in Paradise Lost is that He has a holier-than-thou attitude. But in politics the mindset of egalitarian resentment can prove lethal.

    Egalitarianism runs up against “the fact that a few or rather, very many men in different ways transcend the ‘common level’ of mankind.” Egalitarians war against reality, even as Milton’s Satan wars against God. In both instances, the rebellion looks like a campaign for liberty but ends in tyranny, however temporary that regime may be. In opposition, Kolnai “propose[s] to envisage Privilege most of all in its close interrelation with Liberty”—indeed, as Montesquieu, Chateaubriand, and Tocqueville saw the European aristocrats as liberty’s defenders against excesses committed by both the rule of the One and the rule of the Many.

    By “Privilege,” Kolnai means distinction: to be set apart from others but not above the laws. He does not mean a hierarchy of ruling offices (the Communists had that) or the sort of ‘Platonist’ regime that veers into utopianism (if taken literally). He means, under modern conditions of ‘statism,’ a civil society in which dissimilar and distinct persons and classes, ‘privileged’ and ‘underprivileged’ alike, participate in civic life, the former as trustees for the latter because their participation occurs on the private or civil-social level and aims at the good of the latter. Such a civil society is reasonable without being rationalist, without expecting reason to rule outright. That is, in such a society, reasonable persons will recognize the limitations of reason as a means of civil-social and political organization—which may indeed be the point of Plato’s Republic.

    Rationalism operates on “the principle of Identity,” the express hostility to anything that is not the same as itself. ‘Identity politics’ homogenizes. (Today, it might be added, what is now called identity politics homogenizes under the guise of ‘diversity,’ with the ‘New Left’ proposing the same egalitarian socialist regime as the ‘Old Left’ of Communism and Progressivism.) “The new Caliph Omar will not content himself with having the library of Alexandria burnt but cause most of the books to be ‘edited’ so as to form ‘future’ chapters in the progressive Koran.” Without confusing human regimes with God’s regimes, Kolnai insists that those who deny that there are some people who by their very nature orient their souls to the cultivation of “a certain set of higher values,” incline also to deny the existence of a holy, that is, separate and superior God. “The ideal of Identity precludes the reality of Participation: in other words, Pantheists or Anthropotheists cannot realize, or live by, their status as children of God.” It is true that “every high value is ‘meant for me,'” no matter who I am, “not only in the sense of benefiting me as a recipient of its causal effects but of perfecting me through an appreciative response on my part,” but it is meant for me as something ‘above’ me, “not as an immanent function of the unfolding of my volitions, needs or capacities.” Privileges persons and classes are not intrinsically better in some metaphysical sense; all men are in “bondage” to “what is intrinsically better than they, tow what essentially transcends their scope yet enters into the constitution of their goal.” As a Catholic, Kolnai identifies the Pope as one whose holiness and fatherliness exists because he serves God. Some persons may indeed by “more saintly personally than the Holy Father,” but they properly approach in with reverence as “the symbol and guardian, not so much of human saintliness as of our corporate super-natural ‘subjectness'” to God. “Hierarchy stands for the submission of man to what is highest in man and higher than man but claiming his attention: ultimately, along with many necessary or completive avenues of approach to God; whereas ‘Emancipation’ stands for the subjection of man to man, and his bondage to what is lowest in him; or again, ultimately, to the Spirit that seeks to destroy him.” While Participation registers “the basic truth that response, not fiat, is the prime gesture of the human person,” ‘Emancipation” and ‘Equality,” in “proclaiming the equal and joint sovereignty of men, speak the idiom of Identity,” “supplanting or, indeed, ‘creating’ God.” In Aristotelian terms, Participation is reciprocal, political in the strict sense, whereas Identity is the principle of a command-and-obey relationship, not merely camouflaged by egalitarianism but animated by it in “a pledge of (sham) perfection”. Egalitarianism intends to override human reality because although human beings are all equally human and equally under God, they are not equally gifted or positioned, and the attempt to make them so requires a decidedly inegalitarian regime to enforce the equality it demands. It “aspires to surmount the individuation, plurality and contingent inequality of men, inherent in the specific imperfection of man and his position in the order of being.” Such a regime “will insist not only on enforcing the allegiance” to itself “but on determining the wills and creating the souls of all”—an ambition that distinguishes modern tyrants from “the comparatively harmless tyrants of old who contented themselves with being obeyed.”

    Communism redefines liberty in terms of egalitarianism. According to the regime of the Soviet Union, real, as distinct from bourgeois freedom consists of the unlimited rule of “the supreme power” because it supposedly “embodies the power of ‘every one and all,'” with the exception of those who refuse to go along, which it deems “outside the pales of humanity.” That is, “government shall be omnipotent” and “it shall represent the identical thought, will and power of all.” Unlike the republican regime as understood by (for example) James Madison, in which elected officials can be voted out of office if their constituents decide that they no longer represent the sovereign people who put them there, modern tyrants lead the people, posing as the vanguards of an unfolding, immanent dialectical process that progressively and in the last inevitably shapes humanity into a homogeneous mass whose constituents will be capable of communitarian life. Because this amounts to a form of Pantheism, “Communism is nothing but the determinate attempt to take seriously, and to actually realize the one true and ultimate Freedom of the Common Man: man’s ‘Freedom from God.'” “Man as such is elevated to the rank of god head” and rightly so, according to the ideology, because “universal Matter” is ultimately identical to “rational humanity”: matter is evolving according to rational, dialectical laws toward a fully rational, communitarian worldwide society. “Man’s ’emancipation from God’ is coined out, as it were, in the concrete scheme of his emancipation from his ‘self-forged chains’: from the ‘natural law’ and ‘moral order’ on the one hand, from the limiting and paralyzing fact of his substantial dividedness and his multicentric will on the other.” After all, “if I recognize any valid law and authority over and above my will…I cannot be God.” But in reality, Communism betokens not liberation but “the self-enslavement of man.“

    As for Progressivism in contemporary liberal democratic regimes, it makes them increasingly less liberal, less free. President Franklin Roosevelt’s “Four Freedoms,” and especially his “Freedom from Want,” amounts to a demagogic appeal to the insecurity of industrial populations vulnerable to the ups and downs of a market economy. What is now called ‘welfare” is thereby made a part of freedom, no longer simply a good; as in the Marxist critique of ‘bourgeois liberalism’ and ‘bourgeois freedoms,’ real freedom is said to be the guarantee of material well-being. Similarly, “Freedom from Fear,” once named as a virtue, courage, now becomes “a boon” citizens can “demand from the State.” “It connotes the suggestion that people cannot be really ‘free’ so long as they are in any sense subject to fear: until, that is, the State has removed all cause for their being afraid of economic insecurity, or even made psychoanalytic treatment freely available for everyone suffering from ‘anxiety neurosis.'” Liberty now means not the “Constitutional State,” a state subject to “checks placed on public power, be it state-power as such or class oligarchy,” but the “Welfare State,” with welfare “including psychic ‘welfare,’ which opens up the perspective of the so-called ‘conditioning‘ of the citizen, and thus involves a tendency running counter even more fundamentally to the original meaning of civic liberty.” “Democracy has progressively come to look upon ‘freedom’ no longer a s a high good in itself, as the signature of the civic status of man, but as a title-deed to ‘real’ goods only, a mere ‘formal’ or promissory scheme which acquires its true value, indeed its actual meaning, by its ‘implementation’ with tangible need-gratifications also to be guaranteed by social organization…to be furnished by public power itself.”

    Madison regarded what he called the “manly and vigilant” spirit of the American people as the final guard of their liberty. But in “the ‘common man’ world of silly matrons, meddlesome maiden aunts, vociferous viragos and literate wenches of both sexes—the world of a Puritanism sunk down to the morasses of pacifism, prohibitionism, psychoanalysis and milksop promiscuity—the ‘opposites interblend'” or ‘synthesize’ “not on the high plane of a tense revolutionary dialectic,” as in Marxism, “but in the sense of a paradise ‘available’ here and now, of an ‘ideal’ society designed to be at once a department store, a brothel and a nursery.” Freedom indeed—as defined by the Common, or perhaps the Last, Man.

    This is why “totalitarian subversion” can “disguise itself under a cloak of ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy’ within the liberal democratic regimes themselves. There is a “totalitarian aspect implicit in Liberal Democracy itself,” as it has been redefined by Progressivism. Only if the liberal democracies rests “on axioms, conventions, traditions and habits…which transcend the liberal-democratic framework itself”—as seen in the Declaration of Independence’s “laws of Nature and of Nature’s God”—and “impose certain ‘material’ or ‘objective’ limits on both individual liberty and popular sovereignty, thus helping to maintain a kind of accord among the multiple individual ‘wills,’ between the between the free citizenship of the individual on the one hand, and the ‘General Will,” as monistically embodied in state power, on the other,” can real liberty be secured. One impediment to this security is the historical fact that the original liberalism arose as a response to the “pseudo-Christianity” of Machiavellian and Hobbesian statism; statism preceded liberalism in time, and inclines to usurp it because liberals too often share the philosophic assumptions of the statists, even as they attempt to resist them, just as Progressives today share many of the same philosophic assumptions of the Communists.

    Considered historically, the “root” of political liberty as seen in constitutional democracy lies in “Privilege”—specifically, the privileges of titled aristocrats held against monarchs and only later extended to ‘commoners.’ The extension of liberty to citizens generally does not eliminate privilege or liberty; if anything, it arms it more formidably against the ‘monarch,’ the centralized modern state, ‘the Crown.’ But there is a danger. Aristotle’s politeia or ‘mixed’ regime, in which the few and the many balance one another, may easily become too democratic, too much the rule of ‘the many,’ and then incline toward tyranny “as the all but inevitable ‘next step.'” Kolnai sees one effective way of preventing that from happening, a way unavailable to Aristotle: Christianity, which resists tyranny because it considers all human beings equally children of God, equally persons not to be tyrannized. But “Christian society,” as distinguished from Christianity itself, also faces a danger, the danger of a “humanistic misreading of the Gospel as a promise of man’s terrestrial paradise and perfection (with a stolen flavor of true Heaven about it), as a divinization of man’s abstract ‘reason’ and ‘will’ (a travesty of the beatific vision), as a doctrine of supernatural grace being taken for granted and as a part of man’s natural constitution itself”—in sum, the false, pantheistic assertion of “man’s union with Divinity in the sense of Its expropriation and absorption by the autonomous ‘energy’ of mankind.”

    Obviously, privilege too has its hazards, “necessarily open to abuses,” as is “every form of official power or of professional authority.” Anything that “reduces to making the entire order of society the function of One all-determining central consciousness, the object of One omnipotent arbitrary human will” endangers liberty. That is why privilege must be constitutionally limited; such limitation, but also Privilege itself, so limited, makes Privilege the guardian of liberty. And even then, some abuses will occur: “With privilege existing in society, the freedom of some men will inevitably be trespassed upon and unduly circumscribed of narrowed down by others; with privilege eliminated from society.” Nonetheless, without any privilege “there will be no one possessing any substantial kind of freedom—and capable of using it—at all.”

    In terms of practice, Kolnai remarks that federalism alone does not suffice to guard liberty if all the ruling offices are elective because egalitarianism “always tends to centralization and uniformity.” And so, to take the example of the United States Constitution, it is a very good thing that the Supreme Court is appointed, not elected. Kolnai cites the Catholic Church and independent universities as examples of such undemocratic institutions in civil societies. The Church and the universities share the “salutary mission” of “inoculating the national mind with the seeds of objective value-reference, a vision of things ‘sub specie aeterni,’ of intellectual independence and moral backbone.” Without such institutions, “civic liberty” comes into “mortal peril.” The same is true of private property and its attendant inequalities. “Private property without ‘wealth’ is possible in pure logic but not in social reality.” By ‘socializing’ it, “we can get nothing but a monistic central power tending to omnipotence and compassing the death of liberty.”

    In the same year, Kolnai elaborated on his critique of “the Common Man” in an essay titled “The Meaning of the ‘Common Man.'” The Common Man is common to communism, liberal democracy, and social democracy; if liberals in the West embrace undiluted popular sovereignty they will weaken themselves in their struggle against the communists.

    It is simply not true that “all social superiority as such relates antagonistically to the Common Man.” It is one thing to say that we are all “born equal,” equally human, with certain unalienable rights we all share and properly intend to guard, but quite another to say that this must entail equalization of “material ‘conditions’ or ‘chances'” as well. Such an attempt to perfect civil societies (if indeed equalization of material conditions would perfect them) presumes Godlike power, wisdom, and justice in the human beings who would be in charge of the equalization. This means that imperfect human beings would be in charge of the perfection of everyone else—what gamblers would call a ‘long shot,’ to put it mildly.

    Kolnai affirms that any two men “are presumed fundamentally ‘equal’—which in fact they are in regard to the natural rights of the person as such.” But “once we go beyond the wholesome and Christian principle of a limited equality, formal and material, as implied by Man’s basic dignity and rational nature as well as by the radical transcendence of the person’s ultimate value before God above his social, physical, intellectual and cultural, and even, in a tangible sense, moral, distinctions or shortcomings,” then “we cannot help sliding down the path that leads to the abyss of material equality, with its concomitants of an impoverishing, oppressing, suffocating and deadening uniformity,” seen in actual socialist regimes.

    Socialists will protest, saying that egalitarianism is “hostile neither to the division of labor nor to personal genius, talents or accomplishments, but merely to the social hierarchy of artificial group privileges which perverts the division of labor and stifles rather than brings to fruition personal prowess or merit.” Creativity will flourish, even as acquisitiveness will disappear. Socialism will “liberate genius from the shackles of poverty and the handicap of a humble origin,” enabling “true art, true science, true individuality [to] flourish.” This was indeed the claim of Leon Trotsky in his unintentionally hilarious 1924 book, Literature and Revolution. [1] Kolnai contents himself with irony: “The Common Man, then, is a very mysterious, not to say a mystical fellow, who according to need is admirably fitted even to ascend the highest peaks, inaccessible to a privilege-ridden mankind, of Uncommonness.”

    And then there are some egalitarians without such utopian dreams, who instead endorse a policy of “break[ing] down the high peaks of human worth” while “rais[ing] up the low levels of human existence to an acceptable average standard.” This aspiration rests on “the crude fallacy” that there exists “a constant ‘sum total’ of ‘goods,’ in the all-embracing sense of the term, which can be ‘distributed’ in more unequal or more equal ways.” This ignores the dynamism of real human societies and of reality itself. Peaks will arise, like it or not, and any comprehensive effort to prevent that, or to demolish them when they occur, can only stifle the enrichment of human life. Biology itself, but also “early education and coining influence of the family atmosphere” (more succinctly known as ‘good parenting’) will tell. Aristocracy defined as ‘titled nobility’ once reflected this, if roughly—such terms as ‘titled’ and ‘nobility’ indicate prominence, the fact of being known. Nobility in this sense “represents value intrinsic, distinctively ‘qualitative,’ pervading the essence of its bearer as it were, and as such directly underlying a claim to social prerogative or leadership,” a “quasi-natural, quasi-essential superiority that is necessarily not only in  society but also of society and so far inseparable from an aspect of artificiality not, however, by  or from society” because it “originates in supra-social, quasi ‘entitative’ human value.” This in no way suggests that those who are ‘in the aristocracy’ are less “liable to sin, sickness and ignorance as any proletarian.” It does more than suggest that conventional privileges recognize the existence, in civil society, of the natural inequalities that enrich civil society, in some respects making it civil—differentiated and thereby free from tyrannical centralized rule. “What matters is the humility displayed by society as a whole in accepting and elaborating a manifold pattern of ‘distinctions between higher and lower’ as part of its own vital constitution.”

    Egalitarian ideology does not confine itself to government and relations among socioeconomic classes. It has spread to “the relationships of the sexes and the domain of parental authority.” “Its main theme with regard to the emancipation of women is really the superimposition of artificial similarity upon natural dissimilarity in the place of ‘artificial’ mores shaped in reverent awareness of the natural order and the elemental differences between the sexes which it implies.” As for “the destruction of parental authority, linked with the odd idea of the emancipation of youth” (odd because youth is “a necessarily transitory stage in human life,” unlike sexuality and class), it “strikes even more fundamentally at the root of the concept of a social order pervaded with natural bases of authority” and “is obviously inherent in the drive for totalitarian State regimentation.” 

    Kolnai distinguishes between the “Common Man” and the “Plain Man.” The “Common Man” represents man absent custom, convention—an abstraction who does not exist in actual life. The “Plain Man” is man as most men actually exist in civil societies everywhere—unprivileged but not ‘underprivileged,’ an ordinary guy. He will differ from one country to the next because conventions vary from one country to the next. “He is not the ideologist of his own grandeur”; “the last thing that would naturally occur to him is to abolish ‘his betters,’ in the broadest sense of the term, and to actually step into their place.” And “though it is nothing but vulgar obscurantist mysticism to believe that the ‘plain man’ can ‘govern himself’ better than a Prince and a State aristocracy can govern society, it is indubitably true that a system of government in which the ‘plain man’ as such ‘has a say’ is intrinsically better than government by an esoteric caste of public officials no  matter how well bred, ‘cultured’ and ‘public spirited.'” The “sane sense” of democracy isn’t egalitarianism but participation, “at various levels, of the broad strata of the people in the shaping of public policy,” ensuring that a prince or an aristocrat is “reminded of his limits and of his duty of subordination to the whole of which he is a part.” 

    The only real Common Man, “in the sense of being the Head and Representative of all Mankind,” is Jesus Christ. He is the sole embodiment of the “common good,” being “a universal Cause and End,” the one Person truly “common to mankind.” The Common Man as “molded and formed by the intelligentsia,” however, has no divinity about him, lacking either the wisdom, the justice, or the power to redeem human beings. This is why Kolnai calls “the war against nobility, that ostensibly righteous social rebellion,” actually amounts to a “metaphysical rebellion leveled at something that towers infinitely above kings, dukes, barons, squires, factory owners, generals and admirals, fops or usurers,” its proximate targets. The Common Man so conceived is “a robot sublimized into an angel,” “a man prepared and trained for slavery to that Power which is constituted upon the principle of his claim to sovereignty and in terms of his consciousness of unchecked selfhood” but fashioning “the yoke of a comprehensive scientific knowledge of necessity,” whether socioeconomic (Marxism) or racialist (Nazism). In order to impose such (pseudo-)scientific rule, human beings must be induced to suppose that their good is the satisfaction of their appetites, physical phenomena that can be satisfied empirically. “It is no accident that it should have been Spinoza, the ‘sublime’ and ‘pious’ rationalist, monist, and pantheist, not some unruly voluptuary, not an empirical or materialist epicurean, who first codified with classical rigor the great modern principle of the good defined in terms of the appetite.” The ‘low’ needed to be presented as if it were the ‘high,’ indeed the highest. Spinoza, it will be recalled, was neither a Marxist nor a Nazi but a ‘liberal’ of a new sort. The ‘progressivist’ liberalism he prepared the ground for (it needed the historicism of Hegel to complete it) constitutes “the primal form of the ‘Common Man’ world, instinct with an ‘ideology’ of its own.” And while Progressives typically oppose Communism and Nazism (they do not recognize the children of their own mother-assumptions), they often cannot separate themselves from them with sufficient rigor to really fight them in any thoroughgoing way, as Kolnai had seen in the 1930s, when appeasement of fascism and collaboration with Communism afflicted ‘the democracies.’

    A decade after the publication of “Privilege and Liberty” and “The Meaning of the ‘Common Man,'” Kolnai offered a critique of utopianism, which he distinguished from utopias. Utopias, seen in such literary works as Plato’s Republic and Thomas More’s Utopia, do not exist anywhere and are not intended so to do. “Every utopia suggests a human world (a society conceived as a whole) determined by one unitary and sovereign human authorship: sprung from one human mind with its peculiar vision, scale of preferences, habits of reasoning, and imagination, although calculate to carry a more or less universal appeal”—a world “analogous in some way to Divine creation” and characterized by an imitation of  the “streamlined perfection” seen in the world as God indeed created it. And as in Eden before evil crawled into it, “the things of Utopia are not right as opposed to wrong things but manifestations of the right way of being.” By contrast, utopianism claims that such perfection can be achieved in the postlapsarian world. This ambition rests upon a contradiction: “a Will operating on behalf of the total good, the total needs, the unitary mind of mankind, yet necessarily against most of what men really want and cannot cease to want.” Against this, Kolnai concurs with the German philosopher and follower of Husserl, Max Scheler: “Repentance, not Utopia, is the greatest revolutionary force in the moral world.” [2]

    In the final essays in the volume, Kolnai turns from a critique of egalitarianism from an examination of conservatism, emphasizing “the pluralist trait of all true conservative thought,” thought not to be confused with “the inflexibility of archaic societies” with their lives of “unthinking habit” or, “above all,” the “counter-revolutionary or fascist-influenced conservatism of panic.” Conservatives uphold “public liberty, which rests on the fully realistic multiformity and mutual limitation of authorities, hierarchies and power relations, on the idea not of equality but of equilibrium.” Conservatives know how to defer, never assuming that they ‘know better’ than those ranked above them in society while readily guarding themselves against tyrannical encroachment. Kolnai gives as his example Tocqueville, who “could not have known Marx’s febrile dream of a ‘realization of the human race’—the real totalitarian ideal—or the ‘historical necessity’ of this operation, or of the Marxist vision, as highly revolutionary as it is reactionary, of the future abolition of the division of labor. Yet he saw, with piercing vision and fearful foreboding, the danger that the demand for ‘equal rights,’ with which he completely sympathized, leads with almost logically unavoidable necessity to the demand for an equal level of culture and welfare.” Tocqueville saw that aristocrats such as himself could no longer rule modern ‘democracy,’ but they could still guide it, advise it, temper its excesses. 

    A genuine conservative is an ‘authoritarian,’ not in the sense of unthinking subservience to whoever happens to be ‘in power’ but in the sense of acknowledging the sovereignty of God in the manner of “the great Duns Scotus” and “certain scattered protestant theologians of the present day” (Reinhold Niebuhr, for example?) who define “the morally good as what is in accord with God’s will,” as distinguished from Hobbes and his epigoni, who derive “what is morally good from the will of the state, especially the undivided and unambiguous decree of one man, the monarch.” Conservatives incline to what Anglophone philosophers call an ‘intuitionist’ ethics and “the closely related doctrine of objective value,” against “any kind of ‘vitalistic,’ pre- or antimoral, defiantly immanent affirmation of the primary order,” which denies the transcendent character of what (indeed Who) sets the standard for flawed human beings. “Hegel’s historicist, emphatically developmental ‘dialectical’ theory of ‘absolute consciousness’ has imparted new impetus to the modern extremisms of the Right, but it is an even more important basis for Marxism’s egalitarian and all-human, ultra-revolutionary vision of perfection, which has in our own century legitimized a totalitarian state power which goes incomparably further than any earlier known form of tyranny.” “The more subtle virtue of patience is almost a natural prerogative of the conservative, something which the revolutionary in general—we might venture to add, necessarily—lacks.” Patience fortifies the conservative’s “innermost secret,” the “most puzzling of all virtues, hardest to analyze and to justify, trust in God.” Kolnai “gladly concede[s] that blind confidence is a neither advisable nor praiseworthy caricature of trust,” which “should be bestowed in the knowledge that one can be deceived” by men, including men who claim to speak for God.

    Kolnai refines these distinctions still further, distancing himself somewhat from such sober conservatives as Michael Oakeshott and Jacques Maritain. “Professor Oakeshott is liable to overshoot the mark and attribute to habit, routine, tradition, casual expedients, the ‘skill’ and ‘know-how’ of the experienced and the ‘self-propelling’ virtue of activity once engaged in, both a larger space in human life and a more independent status than they really possess,” “inclin[ing] to underestimate the inherent spiritual stature of man and the intellectual claims it implies,” including the spiritual claim of reasoning. For his part, in his Man and the State, Maritain offers a confused mixture of Catholicism and modern progressivism. This consists of “a synthesis, suffused with all the religious afflatus of the soul, between Christ and the idol of modernity,” between “Christ and His modern caricature,” between “the true Crist of the faith and the substituted Christ of humanism,” “Christ and the Anti-Christ.” This “sentimental and romantic attempt” at “dressing poor Thomas Aquinas in the rags of a laicist apostle of democracy” overlooks the fact that “men only deified the state because they took to deifying man.” (One might also say that Maritain makes Catholicism look a bit too much like the Protestantism of Woodrow Wilson.) 

    Daniel J. Mahoney concludes his Forward to this volume with the just observation that “Kolnai’s conservatism is undoubtedly too European, too attentive—for an American audience—to the role that socially recognized traditional institutions such as monarchy and aristocracy can play in supporting liberty and maintaining the larger equilibrium of the social order.” It is also likely that Kolnai’s hopes in that regard, plausible as they may have been in Chateaubriand’s and Tocqueville’s day, were much wanner in the decades following the Second World War. The European revolutions and the Napoleonic wars wounded the aristocratic class and hollowed out legitimist monarchies, but the two world wars of the twentieth century and the Communist regimes that followed them in Eastern and Central Europe eradicated them as political entities. European conservatives have instead turned to organizing the ‘plain men’ in national organizations that so far have resisted the excesses of Fascism, although Kolnai would worry that populism cannot long resist despotic tendencies.

     

    Notes

    1. See Leon Trotsky: Literature and Revolution (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 1971). For a brief and decidedly unimpressed commentary, see Will Morrisey: Reflections on Malraux: Cultural Founding in Modernity (Lanham: University Press of America, 1996, pp.161-163).
    2. This aphorism may well trace back to Scheler’s days as a Catholic, which he later repudiated, adopting none other than the pantheism Kolnai himself decries.

     

     

     

    Filed Under: Philosophers

    The Man Who Organized American Conservatism

    December 3, 2025 by Will Morrisey

    Daniel J. Flynn: The Man Who Invented Conservatism: The Unlikely Life of Frank S. Meyer. New York: Encounter Books, 2025.

     

    Born a few years prior to the First World War, Frank S. Meyer began his political life as a member of the Communist Party, which seized control of Russia a few years after his birth. After nearly two decades as a successful Party organizer, he rejected both the Party and the Marxism-Leninism that animated it, becoming one of the most important post-World War II American conservatives, both as a theoretician and a practitioner of the politics of liberty. The thing he intended to conserve was, in the words of his biographer, “the ordered freedom inherent in the American Founding.” To do so, he worked to form an alliance between the two main groups who esteemed the Founding and opposed Communism, democratic socialism, and Progressivism: the “traditionalists” and the “libertarians.” He succeeded, and although he didn’t live to see it, his efforts helped to bring about the election of Ronald Reagan and, as a consequence of that, the defeat of Russian Communism in the Cold War.

    A New Jersey boy, Meyer was the son of a wealthy German-Jewish manufacturer in Newark, a man whose political hero was Woodrow Wilson. The boy was a rebel from the start, admiring Satan in Paradise Lost and, in a Nietzschean stroke, writing a poem hailing Dionysus. As a young man in the 1920s, he despised “the Judeo-Christian moral code” that upheld sexual abstinence as a conspicuous virtue, calling it “disgusting, dangerous and indecent.” He lasted for three semesters at then-conservative, monied Princeton before leaving for England and Balliol College, Oxford. There, he became a Marxist and founded the October Club—named after the Soviet revolution, of course—and guided it into the Communist Party of Great Britain, “an instrument of the Soviet Union,” then ruled by Stalin. Thus, “an American ran this youth wing of Great Britain’s Russian-directed Communist Party,” giving much needed life to a small and moribund organization, one long characterized by British dottiness. In that capacity, and quite possibly thanks to his rich-kid connections, he met any number of luminaries: Albert Einstein, Bertrand Russell, David Loyd George, Harold Laski, T. S. Eliot, George Bernard Shaw. He earned the attentions of the British security service, too.

    Laski became his teacher when he enrolled in the London School of Economics in 1932, as did the eminent ethnographer Bronislaw Malinowski. Meyer’s doctoral dissertation in the anthropology department was a study of Mexican and Pueblo Indian culture, but his academic career failed to interest him so much as Communist Party activism. By the mid-1930s, the Party was organizing mass rallies of the Popular Front, events with such titles as the “World Congress Against War” and the “European Anti-Fascist Workers’ Congress.” Continuing his work as a youth organizer, he won the approval of the Comintern hierarchy in Europe. No wonder: he had taken Communism at Oxford “from nothing to three hundred members” and prepared the favorable reception of the “King-and-Country” pledge (“This House will in no circumstances fight for King and Country but will do all in its power to prevent transfer of arms to belligerent countries”), which originated at Oxford but carried the day at the London School by a vote of ten to one, “illustrat[ing] the seizure of campus politics by his Marxist clique.” As is well known, the pledge unintentionally served to buoy Hitler’s hopes that the Brits wouldn’t fight.

    LSE administrators wearied of his activism. “The student leader’s conspicuous presence as an activist and a playboy, and his conspicuous absence from the classroom” along with his “scoffing at the edicts of the school’s director,” earned him expulsion from the university. The government soon followed, expelling him from the country in the spring of 1934. He left for—where else?—Paris, working for Walter Ulbrich, the future Communist Party leader of East Germany, his fellow dedicated (to use the current term of praise) Stalinist. But he soon returned to the United States, landing at the University of Chicago, where he “looked forward to again using the cover of academia to recruit party members, promote Marxism, and capture institutions for Stalinism.” Edward Shils, who eventually became an eminence among American sociologists, described his contemporary as “a demonic figure with flashing black eyes, a mop of black hair before mops on the head became the fashion, shabby in dress, eloquent, voluble, excitable,” and a born “mischief maker.” Meyer quickly established connection with the burgeoning “peace movement” in the American Popular Front, which combined Communists with Quakers and other fauna of the non-Communist American Left. “Communists found the campus liberals useful,” and Meyer did use them. That didn’t prevent him from criticizing the very liberal University of Chicago president Robert Hutchins for promoting his “Great Books” curriculum, a project that gave scant encouragement to Marxist ideologues. He was expelled from the Ph.D. program in 1938.

    No worries. He became the director of the Chicago Writers’ School, which “attracted non-Communists as it imparted undiluted Marxist theory to the initiated.” Meyer taught the latter, using as his text The History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, a tome written by some of Stalin’s close colleagues “and revised by them whenever a line changed or a Communist fell from favor.” Flynn adds, “Both occurred often when Meyer served as director from 1938 to 1941,” the years of the Nazi-Soviet Pact, a treaty that signaled the end of the Popular Front, too many non-Communist members of which couldn’t quite stomach the alliance of fascism and communism. Following orders, Meyer relinquished his role as a teacher and went into Party organizing as an assistant of Morris Childs, a veteran Communist, close associate of CPUSA chairman Earl Browder, who did espionage work for the Soviets for many years before turning his coat and working for the U.S. government as a double agent after the Second World War. In the wake of the controversial Pact, Party discipline and fundraising were more important than ever; Meyers’ “history of catalyzing the student movement in England and transforming campus activism at the University of Chicago provided the ideal background” for that work.

    This didn’t mean he abandoned his ideological efforts. In the sort of implausible ‘synthesis’ that made the CPUSA ‘line’ increasingly notorious, “the budding party theorist attempted to meld the American Founding with Marxism,” arguing that the ‘capitalist’ and ‘treasonous’ Federalist Party had opposed the Democratic Party’s “progressive war” against the British in 1812, just as today, in 1941, “the forces of reaction are dragging our country” into a war, but “a very different kind of war, a war of imperialist conquest” on the side of Great Britain against those laudable allies, the Soviet Union and National-Socialist Germany. Flynn remarks that “this propaganda piece bore an unfortunate publication date of July 1941,” a couple of weeks after Hitler’s attack on the Soviet Union. Recovering quickly, a year later Meyer cranked out another piece, averring that just as we “must fight shoulder to shoulder with all who will carry the struggle against the Axis tyranny” today, “so in Jefferson’s day, the United States had to make its alliances, to bind itself closely with the forces which were fighting against the enemies of progress, and especially with the militant democracy of revolutionary France.” Inasmuch as militant, democratic, revolutionary France had arisen after the American alliance in the 1770s and early 1780s, and had disappeared into Bonapartist despotism by 1812, Meyer might be described as suggesting a chronological marvel, although it is conceivable that he identified yesterday’s Napoleon with today’s Stalin, the latter the leader of the only genuine democracy, according to contemporary Communists. “He reached,” Flynn suggests. Reached for the bleach, your rhyming reviewer adds.

    Having gone “from vehemently denouncing Nazi Germany to opposing any war effort against it as imperialism to urging the taking up of arms against the Third Reich,” Meyer asked his Party bosses permission to enlist, overcoming their initial refusal and joining the U.S. Army in the summer of 1942. This gave him his first experience with real proletarians, and it proved enlightening. From their own point of view, the Communists were right because, “like a cult member separated from the group,” Meyer “developed independence of mind.” 

    He did not initially break from the Party, instead “wonder[ing] if he could reform it.” Fat chance of that, to employ a proletarian expression of the time, but his initial efforts actually enhanced his standing with Browder and Company, who had begun to wonder the same thing. Was class warfare really “the best road to socialism,” given real proletarians’ preference for beer and bowling, and given Americans’ aversion generally to “democratic centralism,” as Stalinist dictatorship of the worldwide Communist movement was so ringingly called. Meyer doubled down on his proposed synthesis of Communism and Americanism as a way of fashioning “a Marxism that appealed to his countrymen. “This will only come about,” he wrote, “when our leaders from top to bottom are as familiar with the struggles of Jefferson and Jackson and Lincoln, and what we have inherited from those struggles, as they are with 1848, 1902, 1917, and fuse these understandings into one tool.” American Communists should, as Flynn puts it, present Marxism as a doctrine “growing organically out of the Declaration of Independence, Federalist Papers, and Constitution”. Sure enough, Comrade Browder, “whether coincidentally or consequentially, pursued almost all” of Meyers’ recommendations, “particularly fusionism.” 

    The 1943 Tehran Conference, with its seeming thaw in U.S.-Soviet relations, made the Browder-Meyer line plausible. “It all recalled the Popular Front period of the mid-1930” and its slogan, “Communism Is Twentieth Century Americanism.” Now, with President Roosevelt commuting Browder’s prison sentence for passport fraud, Browder could predict “postwar unity” between the two countries. This was too much, even for such ardent American Communists as William Z. Foster and Sam Darcy, who denounced such meliorism as a betrayal of Marxism, a move that earned Foster a reprimand and Darcy expulsion from the Party. Communist fusionism ruled the day, to the extent that the Party itself was dissolved and replaced by “a political association” carrying forward “the traditions of Washington, Jefferson, Paine, Jackson, and Lincoln, under the changed conditions of modern industrial society.” Browder went so far as to begin his speeches with “Ladies and Gentlemen” instead of “Comrades.” 

    This softening of the previous hard line had an unintended consequence in the mind of Frank Meyer. The publication of F. A. Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom in 1944, with its powerful challenge to policies of centralized economic planning, came at a hitherto unaccustomed moment of intellectual openness. Hayek, he wrote in a review for the Communist publication, New Masses, argues that the necessity to implement plans ‘from above’ “will in the end amount to the choice being arbitrarily made by those who exercise the power,” which obviates the possibility that they will be made democratically, even in a republic. The rulers “will then have continually to increase their use of sheer power to enforce those decisions,” resulting in “a completely regimented society in which the individual would have no freedom and no real voice.” Understandably, that was Meyer’s last article for New Masses. Moscow itself clinched the matter, changing its policy of detente and rehabilitating the hard-liners. Meyer denounced this move as warmongering. This, and Meyer’s refusal to turn away from The Daily Worker‘s editor Leo Budenz when he converted to Catholicism, spurred the Party to order Meyer’s wife and fellow Communist, Elsie to file for divorce. She refused and, with the collapse of Browderism, Meyer was adrift. “In what did he believe?” He also considered himself and his family to be in physical danger; in the years immediately following the war, not only were many American Communists expelled from the Party but some 500 to 1,000 were murdered by Stalin’s political police. 

    By 1947, as the danger eased, he was earning money as a lecturer, simultaneously studying the thought of Henry Adams, Thomas Aquinas, Arnold Toynbee, and André Malraux—the latter a former ‘fellow traveler’ from the Popular Front days, by then a firm anti-Communist and political ally of Charles de Gaulle. And in 1948 he joined with his childhood friend, Eugene O’Neill, Jr., himself a former Party member, in backing Harry Truman for president against Henry Wallace, the muddle-headed former vice president, now the candidate backed by the reconstituted CPUSA. He also read Richard Weaver’s seminal Ideas Have Consequences, “a book that so profoundly influenced him that he later called it the fons et origo of the conservative movement” in the United States. He agonized over an invitation to testify against former comrades accused of violating the Alienation Registration Act, a 1940 law making it a crime to “knowingly or willfully advocate, abet, advise, or teach the duty, necessity, desirability, or propriety of overthrowing or destroying any government in the Unted States by force or violence, or by the assassination of any officer of any such government.” The Act, colloquially known as the Smith Act for its sponsor, Congressman Howard W. Smith of Virginia, was aimed at Nazis and therefore initially backed by the CPUSA. “Whether the law violated the Constitution became the subject of a fierce debate, but not until the government began using it on Stalinists.” In the end, Meyer did testify, earning denunciation from the editorialists at The Daily Worker, who tagged him, in their typically colorful manner, as “an unscholarly scholar, fished from the cesspools of intellectual decay.”

    In testimony before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee in 1957, Meyer concurred with Josephine Truslow Adams, who had previously testified that she had acted as a link between President Roosevelt and Comrade Brower. As Meyer remembered his conversations with Adams, FDR was “convinced that the Soviet Union would move from its lack of civil liberties toward civil liberties while the United States moved from it constitutional and free enterprise situation to socialism, and both would end at the same point”—what would later be called the ‘convergence theory’ of U.S-U.S.S.R. relations. Years later, questions arose regarding Adams’s mental stability and hence the validity of her claims; it is unlikely that she actually visited the White House, although she did send numerous letters to the president, receiving mostly perfunctory replies. “Meyer forever believed Adams,” as did Robert Morris, the chief aide to the Subcommittee, but the preponderance of the evidence is against the charge. On ‘convergence theory,’ however, there is no doubt that many liberals of the FDR stripe believed it, and there is also no doubt that it was mistaken, at least on the Soviet side of the ledger. Before Stalin, during Stalin’s rule, and until the Soviet Union finally collapsed, there was no plan to ‘converge’ with liberalism within the walls of the Kremlin.

    It was in a book review for The American Mercury in 1953 that Meyer first used the term “fusionism” to refer not to the Popular Front-type strategy he had advanced when a Communist but to a possible alliance between traditionalist conservatism and “individualism” or liberalism. Meyer published “a respectful if mixed review” of Russell Kirk’s The Conservative Mind, which to this day finds many readers among American conservatives; Kirk pointedly excludes Thomas Jefferson and Herbert Spencer from his pantheon of intellectual heroes, and that was the rub. Kirk rejected natural right as a dangerous abstraction, the source of Jacobin fanaticism, holding up Edmund Burke and English traditionalism as the antidote to both. A decade later, Meyer would reply with a book of his own, In Defense of Freedom: A Conservative Credo. [1] In the meantime, and on the level of practice, “fusionism slowly morphed from Browderism to an alternative to the popular conception of conservatism to, ultimately, conservative itself.”

    Rose Wilder Lane, daughter of Laura Ingalls Wilder, hurried Meyer along in his intellectual struggle. Lane pushed him to answer the question, “What do you believe?” Meyer answered: “The West was the first civilization to break through [the] worship of Necessity and to give a charter to the individual. Freedom is not for Western man ‘freedom to do right,’ but freedom to choose right or wrong—the only kind of freedom that has meaning in individual terms. That, from another point of view, is original sin, a fearful burden and a gift of freedom.” Lane, a libertarian, identified such individualism not as a charter written by “the West”—she “regarded Europe as cultivating collectivism” in the form of nationalism, monarchy established religion, and aristocracy—from which the early Americans aimed to escape. Meyer persisted, noticing that such thinkers as Locke and Montesquieu were, after all, Europeans.

    The founding of National Review by William F. Buckley, Jr. in 1955 gave Meyer a new platform on which to enunciate his thoughts. Buckley described the conservative literary magazine as “out of place” in contemporary America, in the sense that “literate America” had “rejected conservativism in favor of radical social experimentation.” Russell Kirk was among the magazine’s editors and columnists; to his displeasure, Meyer signed on as a “contributor,” with his own column. Buckley soon brought in Robert Morris’s former assistant on the Internal Security Subcommittee, William Rusher, as the magazine’s publisher; Rusher’s political activism proved congenial to a man of Meyer’s background and predilections, although some of the editors and contributors dismissed him as “a rigid ideologue.” Buckley eventually appointed him as the editor of the “Books, Arts, and Manners” section, in which he published such academic literary luminaries as Hugh Kenner and Guy Davenport, the young Garry Wills, and Whittaker Chambers, who wrote a devastating review of Ayn Rand’s novel, Atlas Shrugged.

    Meyer’s main rival on the editorial staff was James Burnham, author of The Managerial Revolution, an early account of the administrative state reviewed memorably by George Orwell, and Containment or Liberation? An Inquiry into the Aims of United States Foreign Policy, published in 1953 and very likely the source of the President Reagan’s complementary policy aims vis-à-vis the Soviets in the 1980s (“We win; they lose.”) Burnham wanted to turn National Review in a more popular, somewhat less conservative magazine, befitting his deprecation of ideas and his attitude of ‘realism’ or Machiavellianism in politics. In Meyer’s words, Burnham, as a “positivist and relativist” of the “Machiavellian-Paretan” stripe, “both in metaphysical and political-philosophical terms, stands outside of conservatism.” Flynn puts the matter in more biographical terms: “Meyer converted to conservatism” from Marxism; Burnham, also a lapsed Marxist, “turned to [conservativism] as a last available option after not just the left but liberals regarded him as persona non grata.”

    Meyer had a rather different sense of the real. In 1960, he argued that conservatism was gaining political ground but that President Eisenhower and Vice President Nixon, his heir apparent, were moving the Republican Party leftward, making it more and more like a moderate form of New Dealism. Meyer judged that to be a mistake. In fifteen to twenty years, he predicted, conservative “intellectual leadership” will translate into “political reality.” The American people may well lose confidence in the Establishment, including ‘liberal’ Democrats and ‘moderate’ Republicans, turning toward conservatism. Therefore, in the run-up to the Republican Party nomination, National Review should endorse neither Nixon nor his liberal-Republican rival, Governor Nelson Rockefeller, but conservative Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater. Goldwater won’t win the nomination, Meyer readily conceded, but the important think was to hammer a stake into the ground, for future reference.

    The year 1960 also saw the publication of Meyer’s important book, The Moulding of Communists, which remains an excellent account of how Party members are instructed and disciplined, shaping them into men and women who think and act entirely within the parameters of Marxism-Leninism. [2] As Flynn correctly observes, the Communist Party, in Meyer’s description “demands a total-politics mindset,” compelling members “to shut out people, including relatives,” who do not follow them into the Party, which becomes the Communist’s new family. “Meyer experienced in the 1930s what others had not yet experienced by the early 1960s”; as a result, most Americans simply did not conceive of the radicalism of Communism as the secular equivalent of a maximally demanding religion or cult. The book remains relevant today, as it is impossible to understand the actions of the Chinese Communist Party without understanding the mindset of the Soviet-centered Party of Meyer’s day. And although Flynn thinks that Meyer’s analysis, drawing heavily from his anthropological training under Malinowski, precluded its wide acceptance, the book was quite successful commercially as well as critically, to the extent that Meyer was interviewed on television by Mike Wallace.

    Editor, author, and pundit, Meyer nonetheless made time for his longtime practical métier, political activism. He advised Young Americans for Freedom and the New York Conservative Party, the latter becoming Buckley’s vehicle for his brio-filled 1965 mayoral campaign against liberal Republican John Lindsey and Democrat war-horse Abe Beame. (Buckley came in a distant third, of course, but not before charming a lot of New Yorkers, who had hitherto supposed conservatives to be crude and rather stupid.) In the background, Meyer, a master of ‘networking,’ brought in much-needed campaign donations and also spoke effectively to local groups around the city. On another front, he joined the Buckley-National Review campaign against the conspiracy-theory conservatism of the John Birch Society, which boasted some 100,000 members and an extensive publishing arm in the 1960s. Canceled subscriptions resulted, but in the end the Birchers declined, and the fusionist conservatives gained.

    Meyer began to concentrate more and more on activism, less on editing NR‘s book review section. The balance of editorial power at National Review shifted in the mid-1960s. Willmoore Kendall and L. Brent Bozell both departed, Kendall for the University of Dallas and Bozell for Francoist Spain, for which regime he had developed a some esteem. Both had shared Meyer’s interest in political theory, against Burnham’s deprecation of ‘mere theory.’ Crucially, both could speak to Buckley as equals, Kendall having been Buckley’s teacher at Yale, Bozell being Buckley’s brother-in-law. Without these allies, and without Meyer’s physical presence at the Manhattan office of the magazine—he and his wife had two sons to homeschool—Burnham came to dominate the publication, second only to the editor-in-chief.

    With NR increasingly “resembl[ing] Burnham’s vision for it,” Meyer’s “most effective work increasingly took place outside” its pages. While the sales of In Defense of Freedom were modest, its influence on conservatism as a movement was outsized. It did indeed become a “conservative credo” for the core activists of fusionist conservatism. The crushing defeat of Goldwater in the 1964 presidential election disappointed Meyer without daunting him. “When we consider that the campaign represented but a few months of the first opportunity on a road national cale to confute thirty years of Liberal indoctrination,” Meyer wrote, “can the gaining of two-fifths of the vote be considered a practical disaster of momentous consequence”? On the contrary: “You can build a pretty good political movement with a base of twenty-seven million people.”

    That is what he set out to do, forming the American Conservative Union as a counterpart to the liberals’ Americans for Democratic Action. The ACU published a study on the Vietnam, criticizing the Kennedy and Johnson administrations for undermining President Ngo Dinh Diem and generally lacking “the will to win” the war, a will that was none too strong among those who set the overall American strategy of containing Communism, worldwide. [3] Meyer also helped to organize the Philadelphia Society, still an organization that brings American conservatives together for semi-annual meetings. It was there that Meyer got into arguments with Harry V. Jaffa over the status of Lincoln and the Confederacy in the American regime, with Meyer denying that Lincoln upheld the principles of the Founding and Jaffa affirming that he did. (Jaffa was right, inasmuch as slavery and liberty don’t mix very well. Moreover, as Jaffa wrote at the time, “If states can declare their right to enslave human person within their borders, what principle is that they appeal to in denouncing arbitrary power in the Federal Government?” Meyer, who saw that any successful conservative political movement would need the support of Southerners, could not afford to answer that.)

    It was precisely as an advocate of liberty that Meyer firmly opposed the so-called ‘drug culture’ of the 1960s. LSD destroys “the intellectual ordering of experience, which is the fruit of millennia of civilization.” As for marijuana, he regarded it as an “Eastern, introspective substance” that killed conversation, unlike “the real Western drug,” alcohol which, if properly consumed, promotes conversation. 

    He became highly critical of what the civil rights movement had become. Likely tracking the statements of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who had moved from arguing from the principles of the Declaration of Independence and American constitutionalism to advocacy of socialism, and also observing the urban riots that contradicted Dr. King’s continued advocacy of non-violence, Meyer demurred. “The movement’s insistence that individuals must cede to government—and to the government most distant,” the federal government—the “novel and great powers” that socialism requires in order “to achieve equality offended his libertarianism”—and, one might add, his commitment to the principle of non-contradiction. He also denounced what he called “the egalitarian myths that anyone who is in any way worse off than anyone else can be so only because of oppression or distortion arising from evil men or evil circumstances.”

    The events of the late 1960s jarred him. “The more authorities rewarded disobedience, disorder, and disregard for law, the more disobedience, disorder, and disregard for law proliferated. The damage from nihilism and a West alienated from itself, he concluded, bore this biter fruit of attempted civilizational suicide”—on that, he concurred with Burnham, who had published Suicide of the West in 1964. He continued to disagree with Burnham about what to do about it, politically. Burnham backed Nixon in 1968, Meyer Reagan. Burnham simply couldn’t take the retired actor seriously. Meyer’s main reservation was that in a way Reagan was a bit too serious—serious, that is, about being a Republican, pledging to support whomever the party nominated in 1968, including Nelson Rockefeller. When Nixon’s nomination put an end to the matter, Meyer offered (solicited) advice to his National Security Advisor, Henry Kissinger. He went part of the way toward endorsing the ‘foreign policy realism’ shared by Kissinger and Burnham: U.S. foreign policy should be “concerned with our national interest”; “the social systems of other nations are no concern of our policy.” But he added, “except insofar as they represent armed power ideologically directed toward our destruction.” That is, our foreign policy should be conducted “within broad moral limits.” “The existence of a dynamic and messianic ideology (with much of the fore of a fanatic religion)” which animates “the long-term policies of the second most powerful state in the world” should induce American policymakers not only to contain the Soviet Union but to aim at it “eventual dissolution” precisely because it is “the only major threat to our fundamental national interest.” Judging from the Nixon Administration’s trademark policy of detente with the Soviets, Kissinger evidently took that advice with a grain of salt, as it were. Reagan didn’t, but that didn’t matter, yet.

    Frank S. Meyer died in 1972, a few months before Nixon’s landslide re-election over the anti-anti-Communist, George McGovern, the Henry Wallace of his day. The rest of the decade was so dreary that America’s first genuinely conservative president (in Meyer’s sense of ‘conservative’) finally won the presidency in 1980. He won, in part, thanks to the coalition of traditionalists and libertarians that Meyer had assembled, as Reagan himself acknowledged. Flynn concludes, “In the 1940s, Frank Meyer changed his mind. By the end of the 1980s, he had changed the world.” That is the final parallel between Meyer and Reagan, who did both of those things.

     

     

    Notes

    1. See “The Conservative Credo of Frank S. Meyer,” on this website under the category, “American Politics.”
    2. See “Communism as a Regime of the Mind,” on this website under the category, “Manners and Morals.” Flynn dismisses it as “inferior” to In Defense of Freedom, claiming that Moulding is “read only as a curio if at all decades later,” which may well be true and quite telling—about contemporary readers, not the book. Much naivete about the phenomenon of the People’s Republic of China and indeed much of the radical-Left political organizing that goes on in Western commercial republics would be dispelled, had it a larger readership today.
    3. The political situation in the Republic of Vietnam was complex and difficult to assess. Diem, a Catholic and an implacable enemy of both Communism and corruption, was accused of persecuting Buddhists, although his policies towards them had been generous for most of his career. However, his favoritism toward public displays of Catholic symbols and concomitant suppression of Buddhist symbols grated, escalating to acts of self-immolation of Buddhist monks in 1963. This outraged public opinion in the United States and elsewhere. At the same time, Diem’s willingness to negotiate with the Communists alarmed the Kennedy Administration, which ordered the C.I.A. to back a coup d’état. 

     

     

    Filed Under: American Politics

    The Conservative Credo of Frank S. Meyer

    November 19, 2025 by Will Morrisey

    Frank S. Meyer: In Defense of Freedom: A Conservative Credo. Chicago: Henry Regnery Company, 1962.

     

    In considering the egalitarian civil societies that were ruining the landed aristocrats of Europe and which already prevailed in the United States, Tocqueville observed that such societies had a political choice. Without aristocrats to resist central power, the regimes most likely to be founded in the future were republics and despotisms. To found and maintain republics, citizens will need to prize liberty, to resist encroachments upon it. “I believe,” he wrote at the beginning of the final chapter of Democracy in America, “that it is easier to establish an absolute and despotic government in a people where conditions are equal than in any other, and I think that if such a government were once established in a people like this, not only would it oppress men, but in the long term it would rob each of them of several of the principal attributes of humanity. Despotism therefore appears to me to be particularly dreaded in democratic ages. I would, I think, have loved freedom in all times, but I feel myself incline to adore it in the time we are in.”

    In the next century, Frank S. Meyer took up Tocqueville’s challenge, putting liberty at the center of his political thought and strategy.

    “My intention in writing this book is to vindicate the freedom of the person as the central and primary end of political society.” By the time he wrote, the term ‘liberalism,’ which names liberty as the central purpose of politics, had been taken over by democratic socialists who “denied the validity of moral ends firmly based on the constitution of being”—that is, on natural rights. They justified this by turning to new philosophic foundation for politics which combined utilitarianism and historicist progressivism. “With this denial of an ultimate sanction for the inviolability of the person, liberalism destroyed the very foundations of its defense of the person as primary in political and social matters,” preferring instead to claim that individuals can truly fulfill their being by subordinating themselves to the democratic-socialist state. If, as the slogan goes, it takes a village to raise a child and, further, if the village in question is the modern state, an entity considerably larger than a village, the child as a person will be melded into an impersonal, administrative structure, in the name of self-enhancement. Meier calls this “collectivist liberalism” and considers that a contradiction in terms.

    The nineteenth-century liberals who argued against natural rights “failed philosophically, deeply misreading the nature of man.” Human beings by their nature make choices. This being so, “acceptance of the moral authority derived from transcendent criteria of truth and good must be voluntary if it is to have meaning”; to coerce acceptance of those standards denies human nature in the very act of attempting to improve it. This is true not only of the ‘Left,’ of socialists democratic and dictatorial alike, but also of the ‘Right,’ fascist and traditionalist alike. As a liberal in the original sense, Meyer pays particular attention to what was then called the “New Conservatism” of Russell Kirk and Peter Viereck, who held that society resembles a living organism, that the individual is rightly subordinate to that organism, and consequently deny “that the freedom of the person is the decisive criterion of a good polity.”

    Meyer takes the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution (along with the arguments made in its defense at the Philadelphia Convention) as the central documents that American conservatives should conserve because they form the foundation of the American regime of “limited government,” the “criterion for a good society, a good polity” in the United States. But the mere historical existence of these documents justifies nothing. We need proof that the principles enunciated in them “are grounded both in the nature of men and in the very constitution of being.” He proceeds to offer such proof.

    He understands that equality is also central to the American regime. But this is not the “equalitarianism which would forbid men the acquisition of unequal good, influence or honor, and the right to pass these ‘inequalities’ on to their heirs if they can”; it is rather “the equal right of all men to be free from coercion exercised against their life, liberty and property.” Nor does he claim that the American regime of “representative democratic institutions combined with constitutional guarantees of freedom” could be implemented everywhere in the world. He does claim that the modern tyrannies of Nazism and Communism (Nazism’s “older brother”) have proved and will continue to prove ruinous wherever they are instituted. There can be “no common ground for theoretical discussion” with Nazis and Communists; “determination and force will decide the issue.” Against these ideologies and the regimes their advocates found, in dialogue with the traditionalist conservatives, Meyer “propose[s] the claims of reason and the claims of the tradition of reason”—claims the Declaration and the Constitution embody.

    He begins with a critique of contemporary political science, which exhibits “a fundamental derangement of our way of thinking about the world” because it attempts to apply the methods of modern empirical and experimental science to human beings and their political societies. Modern political science consists of two parts: “policy science,” animated by the spirit of what the Germans of the nineteenth century called Realpolitik—a stance taken by James Burnham in such books as The Managerial Revolution and The Machiavellians—and “behavioral science”—seen in countless articles and books published by numbers-crunching analysts of polling data, opinion surveys, and other attempts at measuring political action mathematically. Contemporary political science thus “has no relationship to moral or philosophic enquiry,” although it does take “its underlying assumptions from the empirical and naturalistic position of Machiavelli and Hobbes, “reinforced in the past hundred years by the prestige of the natural sciences and their methods.” 

    The problem with this approach—shared in various ways by all of the social sciences—is that “the sphere of natural studies contains no element of consciousness with its innate corollary of freedom and moral responsibility.” The two spheres are not analogous. “Men’s knowledge of themselves is first of all direct: that which they know of their own consciousness from their own consciousnesses.” He who would talk me out of that knowledge may mean me some harm. After all, the social scientist who designs the statistical studies, who frames ‘realist’ policies is a human being. “In view of the non-independent character of the questions” the pollster asks, “the answers can reflect little more than the value system and the judgment of those who constructed them.”

    And “only when it is assumed, in sycophantic imitation of the natural sciences, that there is no valid knowledge except knowledge of that which can be objectively observed, manipulated, and measured, can the study of behavior be substituted for the study of man and glorified as the only possible form of the study of man.” It is “the power to make choices, this innate freedom,” which “lies at the center of the drama of human existence.” “No objective methodology, however strict, can disprove the existence of the autonomous self and validate determinism, as no intuitive outlook based upon the subjective, can disprove the existence of the external world and validate solipsism.”

    Instead of social science, Meyer begins with “man as he exists, a complex whole.” This is not man in the ‘state of nature,’ however conceived. It is man as a choice-making person. That being so, “social and political organization is…a condition, not the end, of the life of the individual person”—not “a determining factor” to “the worthy consummation of each man’s drama,” a drama played out not simply within a political ‘constitution’ or state but within the ‘constitution’ of being itself. “The art of politics at its best is guided by fundamental principle, but operates by judgment, by prudence,” by reasoned choice. “Society and the state were made for individual men, not men for them.” True, human beings are social by nature. But this does not mean they are creatures of humanly constructed social and political institutions. Traditionalist conservatives do not go so far as to make that claim, which they leave to the socialists. But they do claim that “society is an organism” and, if so, “the men who make it up can be no more than cells in the body of society; and society, not they, becomes the criterion by which moral and political matters of judged,” reducing “the moral claims of the person…to nothingness.”

    The extreme, and extremely dangerous, manifestations of these claims usually derive from “the most influential schools of contemporary sociology” and of social psychology, in America typically the province of the Left, not of New Conservatives. The behavioralist determinism of B. F. Skinner, for example, leads to “social engineering,” unscientifically placed at the service of “human welfare” but often masking the libido dominandi of the social scientists and rulers trained under their tutelage. “The New Deal itself which was decisive in the triumph of liberal collectivism in the United States, proceeded without any observable over-all theory,” animated by “a sentimental mystique of welfare and a constant insistence upon the virtue of the pragmatic as over against the traditional.” But this marriage of sentiment and pragmatism does have an underlying “body of dogma”: “relativist, pragmatic, positivist, scornful of absolute criteria, of all strictly theoretical though, of all enquiry not amenable to the methods of the natural sciences.” And this body of scientistic dogma comports poorly with sentimentalism of any kind. “Politically, it attributes virtue in strict proportionality to power,” including but not limited to power over economic transactions. While “it preaches ‘the end of ideology'”—the title of a widely-taught book by the sociologist Daniel Bell, published two years before Meyer’s book—it “admires experts and fears prophets, fears above all commitment to value transcending the fact.” Yet the underlying ‘fact’ of modern science, the mastery of fortune commended by Machiavelli, the mastery of nature commended by Bacon and affirmed by the political science of Hobbes, is libido dominandi. The desire to rule, like all other desires, exists in human beings by nature; it coexists, nonetheless, with the human power to make reasoned choices respecting the limit to that and to other desires. Desires are not self-justifying; the choice to gratify one or more of them requires some criterion of judgment beyond the desires themselves because the desires can collide with one another and ruin the human being who allows himself to be driven by them. What is the human being animated by desires but still free to choose the extent to which he pursues them. 

    The New Conservatives, of whom Russell Kirk is “the most influential,” point to the traditions of Western civilization not only as the criteria for judging the desires but as a ‘better guide than reason.’ “This attitude toward reason…elevates the historical process, the venerable, the established, the prescriptive, as the touchstone of the good and the true.” In this, New Conservatives share the historicism of the not-really-liberal ‘Left,’ while hearkening not to Marx but to Edmund Burke and to a conservative interpretation of Hegel. Unfortunately, “these men are not statesmen like Burke”; their ‘politics of prudence’ is more literary than political or prudential. Burke could depend upon a reliable tradition, the British constitution being its political framework, whereas American New Conservatives are surrounded by “positivist and liberal-collectivist doctrines which are already far advanced in authority over the minds and hearts of men.” An appeal to tradition in contemporary American circumstances puts them “at the mercy of the very forces they are proposing to combat”: “Either the whole historical and social situation in which they find themselves, including the development of collectivism, statism, and intellectual anarchy, is providential,” or “there is a higher sanction than prescription and tradition,” “in which case reason, operating against the background of tradition, is the faculty upon which they must depend in making that judgment.” And if reason is conceived as Hegel conceives it, as the dialectical unfolding of the Absolute Spirit,” that “all that is real is rational,” then they have conceded the main theoretical point to their opponents, who are fully prepared to deny, on the basis of either Marxist or positivist ‘social science,’ that they are vulnerable to the same charge, in reverse. Mayer adds, not without reason, that “Burke himself was too much the hard-headed Englishman to have sought such a solution, had he faced the sort of problem his soi-disant heirs do,” as “his fundamental belief in natural right and in reason” inoculated him against such niaseries.

    To separate one tradition from another, to separate a good element of a tradition from a bad one, “requires recognition of the preeminent role (not, lest I be misunderstood, the sole role) of reason in distinguishing among the possibilities which have been open to men since the serpent tempted Eve, and Adam ate of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.” By refusing to recognize reason’s preeminence “is a central attribute of New Conservative thought.” “The dread of definition, of distinction, of clear rational principle is characteristic of the New Conservative”; unsurprisingly, Kirk and Viereck were literati, one a novelist (even when presenting himself as a historian) and the other a poet. New Conservatives treat God’s Providence as if it were “immanent,” “operating within the flow of historical experience.” As with Hegel, this claim “is always in tension with the concept of God as transcendent, as the Ground and Standard of truth and good.”

    To affirm that preeminence is the central attribute of “the conservatism of principle.” While “it is true that abstract theoretical principles cannot be applied without consideration of circumstances, of the possibilities which in fact exist at a given time,” this “does not mean that prudence can successfully function without the guide of reason”—by which Meyer means theoretical reason, inasmuch as prudence is itself a form of reason, namely, practical reason. Theoretical reason does not foreclose prudential or practical reason. On the contrary, “Only if there exists a real choice between right and wrong, truth and error, a choice which can be made irrespective of the direction in which history and impersonal Fate move, do men possess true freedom.” “Unless [man] can choose his worst, he cannot choose his best”; “no philosophical position that looks to the flow of existence as the sole standard of judgment has any place for true choice.” Hegel’s definition of freedom as “the recognition of necessity” is sophistical, as “this is not freedom” but a claim (quite possibly bogus) about external reality that ignores the ‘internal’ reality of choice; freedom is “the power to choose”. “The human being can say quite simply—and literally: to Hell with it; it is wrong and false, and in my inner being I will have no part of it, whatever may be forced upon me physically.”

    New Conservatives attempt to define their way out of the problem by distinguishing freedom from license, by saying that true freedom aims only at good ends, license at bad ends. Against this, Meyer argues that freedom is “an integral aspect of the highest end” and of the lowest end, “not subordinate to moral and spiritual ends” but “concomitant with them, for without freedom no moral end can be achieved by the particular kind of man is.” That is, the truly achieve what is morally and spiritually good, a human person must choose it, exercise his freedom as a person. “Freedom to choose is the very essence of the pursuit of virtue.” Once human beings know what good and evil are, good and evil become matters of choice. A political regime cannot be good unless it “make[s] possible the greatest exercise of freedom by the individual,” since coerced good behavior is not fully good (because it isn’t chosen). “Freedom is essential to the being of man.”

    Political life—rule, governance, constraints on freedom in recognition of the human inclination to choose evil—rightly supposes that “men can live as men only in some relationship with other men,” some social and political order. But “the key word is ‘some'”—the question of “what kind of order.” What regime. “The task of political theory is to develop the criteria by which differing political orders can be judged in the light of principle.” Political rule, which includes coercion, necessarily restricts freedom of choice. Of that coercion is sometimes necessary and justifiable, what are those ‘times’? In most political theories, “freedom has been subordinated to the eds designated as good by the theorist.” And although Utilitarians reverse this claim, arguing that the exercise of freedom will result in doing right, this “evades rather than faces the contradiction.” The dilemma is that “freedom is essential to the nature of man and neutral to virtue and vice,” while it is also true that “good ends are good ends, and it is the duty of man to pursue them.”

    A dilemma it is, but not a contradiction, an indication of the irrationality of human existence itself. Freedom and the good are rather “axioms true of different though interconnected realms of existence.” Human freedom is embedded in human nature and is indispensable to both the achievement of virtue and the achievement of vice. Good and bad are also embedded in human nature. To incline persons to choose good, to minimize the coercion which denatures virtue, a regime needs “intellectual and moral leaders” who “have the understanding and imagination to maintain the prestige of tradition and reason, and thus to sustain the intellectual and moral order throughout society.” To put it in Aristotelian regime terms, a regime consists not only of its purpose, its telos, which might be good or bad, and of institutional barriers to vice, including laws ‘with teeth in them,’ but more importantly with respect to freedom, in who rules and in the way of life they embody and advocate.

    New Conservatives, by contrast, deny that the rights of individuals are unalienable, asserting that rights “must be subordinated to the performance of duties.” Meyer replies that I have a duty to others only insofar as their “moral claims” must be respected, reciprocally loving my neighbor as myself, under God. To subordinate the person to “society or the state” as if an ‘it’ was a person, betokens confusion. “In such a scheme of things, ‘rights’ would obviously be dependent upon duties performed; but they would not be rights, they would be privileges.” “Duties and rights both derive from the same source, the moral ground of man’s nature.” Coercion, then, derives what moral justification it has because “one man’s freedom can be used to inhibit another man’s freedom,” that “the rights of others have no protection from these predators unless they are restrained by force.” To coerce predators in no way denies “the absolute rights of the person”; it is a prudential adjustment “in actual historical existence,” an adjustment “necessary to reach the closes possible approximation to that ideal for each individual person” in the given circumstances. Rights “are obligations upon the state to respect the inherent nature of individual human beings and to guarantee to them conditions in which they can live as human beings, that is, in which they can exercise the freedom which is their innate essence.” “Freedom remains the criterion, principle the guide; but the application of principle to circumstances demands a prudential act.” One can act “intelligently” without protecting freedom, as Machiavellian statists do; one can act “morally in the political sphere” without regard to prudential reasoning, refusing to think politically, as one sort of Kantian does. Neither stance is good, choice-worthy.

    Hobbes famously calls the modern state ‘Leviathan.’ It is “a definite group of men, distinct and separate from other men, a group of men possessing the monopoly of legal coercive force.” The state is not genuinely impersonal but a ruling body consisting of persons. In the small ancient polis, the rulers and those ruled were more tightly related, especially when ‘the many’ ruled, as in both democratic and ‘mixed’ regimes. This is why Aristotle thinks that a polis is a community “which is the highest of all and which embraces all the rest, aims at good in a higher degree than any other, and at the highest good.” It is true that Aristotle and some of the other Greek philosophers recognized “an immense chasm between a social order blow and a cosmic order above,” between what is and what ought to be. So did the Israelite prophets. However, both “stopped short of the stark confrontation of the individual person with the ultimate source of his being,” regarding the regimes as “the fundamental moral agents whose actions might be judged by transcendent standards.” Exceptions there were: Socrates in Greece, Abraham in Israel. But Socrates is also the Socrates of the Republic, a regime that denies individual freedom. In this, Meyer is insufficiently alert to Socratic irony. He also does not consider that the criticisms philosophers and prophets aim at human communities and not only at individuals make sense insofar as those individuals have chosen to bind themselves into a community. As he himself has remarks, regimes can be good or bad, and if the community organized by consenting individuals is bad, they have committed a wrong both individually and collectively, as a group. 

    This set of claims enables Meyer to distinguish Christianity very sharply not only from ‘Greece,’ including Greek philosophers, but from Israel and most of its prophets. “The Incarnation, and the Christian doctrine of the person that flows from it, breaks finally and forever the unity of cosmos and person” because it instances “the penetration of the Divine into the immanent world” in God’s loving sacrifice, a sacrifice that “made it possible for men to face each his indissoluble identity and accept its responsibilities.” God is not immanent in that world (as Hegel claims); He is transcendent but gracious, lowering Himself to dwell in a human body in order to offer human beings the choice that is the condition of their salvation, the choice to be ruled by Himself. This means that “only the person can be the earthly pole of the discharge between the transcendent and the immanent,” that only persons, not communities, states or associations, “can receive the beatific vision or be redeemed by the divine sacrifice of love.” God’s sacrifice “drained out” the supposed “sanctity of institutions,” and Christians were adjured to render unto Caesar only the things that are Caesar’s and unto God the things that are God’s. To do so is “neither to turn one’s back on the world, nor on the other hand to consider the political institutions that from time to time well or ill serve human needs as in any sense themselves divine.” This argument evidently elides the divine origin of the Mosaic law—which, as Jesus insists, still applies to His Jewish brethren. It also elides the law He gives to the Gentiles: love God and love your neighbor as yourself, which he describes as the summation of the Mosaic law.

    At any rate, Meyer comes on safer ground in maintaining that the potential of Biblical revelation has “not been realized.” The Tower of Babel, the Pharaoh Akhenaton, Neo-Platonism, Gnosticism, Anabaptism, Puritanism, Faust, and such modern philosopher as Bacon and Rousseau, such modern ideologies as Communism, Fascism, socialism and collectivist liberalism have all distorted the Biblical teaching. Those “who conceive that the nature of men can be changed to meet the specifications of a design of earthly perfection, need perforce some mechanism through which to act.” That mechanism is of course the state, which they then seek either to make or to capture, extending force “beyond its natural purposes.” “Against [this] classical political theory is helpless, because classical political theory shares with it an apotheosis of the state,” and “it is upon classical political theory that the New Conservative view of the state” is founded. Meyer again paints “classical political theory” with too broad a brush. According to him, “the collectivist liberal and the New Conservative are agreed”—and in agreement with classical political theory—in “refusing to accept the state as an institution which is the expression of the power of a specific group of men, power which can only be justified in terms of a specific function.” While this may be true of collectivist liberals and New Conservatives, it is not true of classical political philosophers, who clearly identify rulers as a specific group of men whose power can only be justified in terms of a specific function, namely, whether or not they act justly. They do in fact distinguish between rulers and ruled.

    Even if Meyer does not adequately describe the regime theory of the Greeks or the regime of the Bible, he is nonetheless ‘on to something’ when it comes to utopians, and especially when it comes to the modern utopians who intend to develop the means to transform human nature with or without the consent of the governed. The modern state, as distinguished from the ancient polis, is too large for a tight connection between those who occupy its ruling institutions and those who are ruled in ‘civil society.’ Modern states have regimes just as much as ancient poleis did, but their rulers emit commands less knowingly than the rulers of Greek antiquity did because they rule from a greater distance, a distance that precludes personal knowledge of those they rule. And in terms of regimes, “the development of democracy” under conditions of modern statism “has made the critical recognition of the dichotomy between the state and those whom the state governs particularly difficult.” The institution of representative government lessens but does not eliminate this problem because the power to choose who governs isn’t the same as the power to govern. Anarchists address this problem wrongly, ignoring the dangers posed by those who “use their freedom to interfere with the freedom of others,” initiating a war of all against all; they also ignore the need to adjudicate cases in which a “conflict of rights with rights” occurs; and, finally, they ignore the existence of hostile foreign regimes. That is, they ignore the need for an executive branch of government wielding a police power against domestic violence, the legislative power that establishes law and the judicial power that judges cases under the law, and finally the legislative, executive, and judicial powers that all come into play in what we somewhat tepidly call ‘international relations.’

    State power wielded for those purposes can be justified. Any more state power is dangerous. Meyer cites public education, social insurance, and rules on “how men shall live that go beyond the preservation of the essential conditions of a free order” as unjust extensions of state power over persons. Echoing Lord Acton’s famous aphorism, he writes, “There is in power an impulsion to more power, which can only be limited by counter-measures” guided by the theoretical standard he has illuminated. This, he readily warns, is hard to do.

    The major impediment to such counter-measures are the theoretical standards now prevalent. “The dominant motif of political though today is the denial of a principled theory of politics based on philosophical consideration of the nature of man.” Whether it is the neo-Hobbesian political science of Harold D. Lasswell, which reduces political life to a matter of “who gets what, when, how,” or more generally a combination of moral relativism and collectivism, “a peculiar mixture of historical determinism with moral and methodological relativism in the philosophical sphere,” it has been “possible to proclaim that God—and with Him the transcendental foundation of value—is dead” while incoherently deriving value from the facts of the modern regime, which consists of the people, “the state which rules in their name, and the bureaucratic elites which in effect control the state.” The elites resent “independent centers of power in society” and work diligently to subordinate them. 

    Nor are civil associations, those “independent centers of power,” the only or even primary target. Moral relativism attacks “the image of man as an autonomous center of outgoing will.” Under the collectivist dispensation, whether Marxist or ‘democratic,’ “men are atoms and must be organized in the proper pattern,” a pattern to be determined by the elites. The rulers are not confined to the government. To be sure, government bureaucrats wield substantial power, but so do trade-union and corporate bureaucrats, mass-communications bureaucrats (needed for “the engineering of consent”), and academic bureaucrats (replacing the traditional “collegium of scholars”). Political philosophers from Aristotle to some of the earlier modern liberals regarded “an independent and differentiated middle class” as indispensable for “provid[ing] a stable center to the social order,” but the ‘massification’ of politics, first seen in Rousseau’s notion of the “General Will,” has given philosophic excuse for “eliminat[ing] such a middle class without terror or physical liquidation” by means of inheritance taxes and “a steeply graduated progressive income tax.” These “will in the space of a few decades destroy all independence, except that of a few very wealthy families.” The policy amounts to “destroy[ing] the independent” and “spend[ing] to create the dependent” in order to “maintain the power of the bureaucratic elite” in its several sociopolitical perches.

    Meyer emphasizes the role of the academic bureaucracy. The “long history of ideological development…prepared the way for this transformation of the scholar into the bureaucrat,” beginning with Bacon’s dictum, “Knowledge is power.” “If knowledge is no longer conceived as the search for and the acceptance of truth…but as the acquisition of power to control and manipulate nature and man, it logically follows that an attempt will be made to realize that conception in the political sphere.” Well before the New Deal and its “Brains Trust,” American ‘progressives’ “prepar[ed] the way for that revolutionary transformation of the American state”—the new republic, as one of the movement’s flagship publications called itself. Control academia and you will control or at least decisively influence the next generation of persons who involve themselves in government. As of the early 1960s, when Meyer is writing, the scholar has become “the committeeman in a multi-million-dollar, foundation-financed ‘team’ research project, or a cog in a government department,” even as “the artist, the writer, is bound to the feverish pace of the mass-communications industry.” These men and women “have exchanged the independence of thought and action which is the proper activity of a free being for a minute share in the power of an immense machine.” 

    The error Rousseau committed in positing the General Will as the core of authority in the modern state inheres in the fact that “the corporate sense of the Greeks, which made it possible for Aristotle to say that man is a political animal—an animal of the polis —no longer existed in a civilization which regards each individual man, not as an animal whose being rests in the state, but as a person whose being takes meaning from free personal choice of good and evil, a choice dictated by no institution.” That is, the moral anthropology of the Bible replaced the moral anthropology of classical antiquity. Against that, modern philosophers retained the Bible’s focus on the individual but subtracted God, leaving “Western man” a being who “regards himself as the center of his own earthly existence.” Under that rubric, “no corporate earthly deity can be recreated form a vast civilization to play for [man] the ego-absorbing function that the polis did for the Greek spirit.” This is why “Rousseau’s attempted re-creation of the polis in the form of the General Will could not recreate the classical principles of political order which had been destroyed by the attack of Machiavelli and Hobbes.” In the modern state, unlike the tight-knit, traditionalist polis, the General Will lacks “specific moral content” and consequently could be appropriated for the use of the scientistic elites, “first to raise themselves to power, then to destroy their enemies, and finally to gain consent from the governed”—thereby affirming that the elites were following the General Will! Whether in the malicious form of Nazi or Communist rule, or in the milder form of social democracy (as Tocqueville famously anticipated), although internecine struggles among rival elites continue, sometimes to the point of worldwide wars, a new oligarchy consisting of a scientistic bureaucracy suppresses liberty. 

    Meyer regards the New Conservatives as inadequate to meet this problem because they, too, give society “a moral status superior to persons.” Under modern, statist conditions, this can only be accomplished by “the unlimited Leviathan state”—repurposed, to be sure, for decent morality but nonetheless broadly coercive and therefore dangerous to personal freedom and political liberty. “Therefore, resistance to the growing collectivist tyranny of the century requires a theory of society and of the state that has as its first principle the vindication of the person,” not laments over “alienation” and “loss of community” voiced by such writers as Russell Kirk and Robert Nisbet, a lament they share with ‘the young Marx.’ “Putting the individual person at the center of political thought is to them the greatest of political and social evils.” This stance prevents them from effectively “combat[ting] the essential political error of collectivist liberals: its elevation of corporate society, and the state which stands as the enforcing agency of corporate society, to the level of final political ends.” That is why New Conservatives get nervous about the Declaration of Independence, with its affirmation of unalienable rights inherent in “all men” as individuals first, as “a people” second. “The enforcement of virtue” by a centralized modern state overrides human nature by limiting freedom to choose beyond the protection of those rights; because it is contra naturum, it is a “delusion”; because it is at least a temporarily effective means of seizing and maintaining the power of ‘the few,’ it is a “persistent” delusion. It is an Aristotelianism that ignores one of the main ethical teachings of Aristotle: that founders of regimes and the political men who rule within those regimes must take account of the circumstances that prevail when and where they rule, and the character of those whom they rule. And while it is true that freedom “is not the end of men’s existence,” it is “a condition, a decisive and integral condition” of that end, “which is virtue,” which requires the effort only choice can trigger.

    “By recognizing the absolute authority of truth in the intellectual and spiritual realm, while at the same time remaining aware of the contingency of institutions in the social realm and their consequent subordination to the transcendent value of the human person,” the West had, until very recently, flourished, distinguishing “between the fundamental truths that constitute the structure of man’s being as a creature with a supernatural destiny, living in the natural world, and manmade certitudes, where authority can only be tyranny because truth is uncertain.” The West has often if not always distinguished between political rulers and philosophers, scholars, priests, and prophets. The love of truth pursued in the several ways of life led by philosophers, scholars, priests, and prophets requires a substantial degree of freedom from political rule, even as prudently limited political rule serves as an indispensable condition of their pursuits. To be love, love must be free from excessive constraint. 

    Aristotle regards the family as an irreplaceable part of the polis. Meyer accords to parents the rightful power to impose upon their children “the values of their tradition and their culture,” while observing that “it is not the institution of the family as such that inculcates virtue” but “the persons who constitute the family, elders who “decide the issue of the moral and intellectual direction that children take.” “The form of institutions has no power to make bad men good or good men bad”; “at their best, they can create favorable conditions—and that is all. “Ominously, “an increasing majority of parents shrug their shoulders of this responsibility and turn their children over to the state and other institutions for ninety percent of their waking hours”—to schools, ‘after-school activities,’ and clubs. Many of these quasi-parental institutions are themselves creatures of the state, the persons ruling them hirelings of the state who stand apart from the traditions espoused by parents. Public schooling today operates as “the direct consequence of the instrumentalist philosophy of John Dewey.” Instrumentalists regard “virtue as an end of human existence” as “a superstition left over from the Middle Ages.” They define the “right and good and true” as “what serves as an instrument for adjustment to the society around one,” a society held to be in a condition of constant change registering social progress. What in fact happens, “what is happening,” is that the teacher teaches “the current prejudices of his environment,” which “are certain to reflect the prevailing value nihilism and political collectivism.” Such education also impedes intellectual and moral excellence alike, given the expansive notion of equality, the egalitarianism that ‘puts the cookies on the lowest shelf’ or, at best, the middle shelf.

    Libertarians of course take a position against statist collectivism. They fall into a similar error, however. Instead of attributing the power of inculcating virtue to the state, they attribute it to the free market, supposing “that a free economy is itself a guarantee of a good and virtuous life.” It isn’t. Economic freedom does leave the power to determine “what should be and what should not be produced” to individuals, not statist ‘planners,’ and that is good but not sufficient for the development of moral strength. Like political liberty, economic liberty is a condition of virtue.

    At the end of his book, Meyer praises the American regime constituted by the Founders as a regime founded “upon the freedom of the person as its end, and upon firm limitation of the powers of the state as the means to achieve that end.” He deplores the “process of retrogression” that began, first with Andrew Jackson’s “mass democratism,” then “the undermining of the sovereignty of the several states by Abraham Lincoln,” finally by the “collectivist principles and methods [of] Franklin D. Roosevelt.” The inclusion of Lincoln in the list of villains and the exclusion of Woodrow Wilson likely reflects Meyers’ immediate interest in forming a broad-based political coalition of American conservatives, a coalition that would perforce include Southerners, still more than a bit touchy about Lincoln and perhaps a bit ‘defensive’ regarding Wilson, a Virginia boy. Surely the slavery defended by the Confederacy contradicted the unalienable right to liberty the Declaration and the Constitution uphold, the latter admitting it only as a result of a compromise necessary to preserve not the states but their Union. 

    This and other errors respecting the history of political thought withstanding, Meyer rightly insists, “Nothing in history is determined. The decision hangs upon our understanding of the tradition of Western civilization and the American republic, our devotion to freedom and to truth, the strength of our will and of our determination to live as free and virtuous men.”

     

     

     

     

     

    Filed Under: American Politics

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