Will Morrisey Reviews

Book reviews and articles on political philosophy and literature.

  • Home
  • Reviews
    • American Politics
    • Bible Notes
    • Manners & Morals
    • Nations
    • Philosophers
    • Remembrances
  • Contents
  • About
  • Books

Recent Posts

  • A Sure Thing: Betting on Pascal
  • Pascal Against the Jesuits
  • Medieval “Cures” for Modern Madness
  • Diplomacy as Practiced by ‘Great Powers’: America Under the Nixon Administration
  • Diplomacy as Practiced by ‘Great Powers’: Germany and Britain

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • March 2026
    • February 2026
    • January 2026
    • December 2025
    • November 2025
    • October 2025
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • July 2025
    • June 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • October 2024
    • September 2024
    • August 2024
    • July 2024
    • June 2024
    • May 2024
    • April 2024
    • March 2024
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • October 2023
    • September 2023
    • August 2023
    • July 2023
    • June 2023
    • May 2023
    • April 2023
    • March 2023
    • February 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2022
    • September 2022
    • August 2022
    • July 2022
    • June 2022
    • May 2022
    • April 2022
    • March 2022
    • February 2022
    • January 2022
    • December 2021
    • November 2021
    • October 2021
    • September 2021
    • August 2021
    • July 2021
    • June 2021
    • May 2021
    • April 2021
    • March 2021
    • February 2021
    • January 2021
    • December 2020
    • November 2020
    • October 2020
    • September 2020
    • August 2020
    • July 2020
    • June 2020
    • May 2020
    • April 2020
    • March 2020
    • February 2020
    • January 2020
    • December 2019
    • November 2019
    • October 2019
    • September 2019
    • August 2019
    • July 2019
    • June 2019
    • May 2019
    • April 2019
    • March 2019
    • February 2019
    • January 2019
    • December 2018
    • November 2018
    • October 2018
    • September 2018
    • August 2018
    • July 2018
    • June 2018
    • May 2018
    • April 2018
    • March 2018
    • February 2018
    • January 2018
    • December 2017
    • November 2017
    • September 2017
    • August 2017
    • July 2017
    • June 2017
    • May 2017
    • April 2017
    • March 2017
    • February 2017
    • January 2017
    • December 2016
    • November 2016
    • September 2016
    • August 2016
    • July 2016
    • June 2016
    • April 2016
    • March 2016
    • February 2016
    • January 2016

    Categories

    • American Politics
    • Bible Notes
    • Manners & Morals
    • Nations
    • Philosophers
    • Remembrances
    • Uncategorized

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org

    Powered by Genesis

    Pacifism and Just War

    December 18, 2017 by Will Morrisey

    Jenny Teichman: Pacifism and Just War: A Study in Applied Philosophy. London: Basil Blackwell, Ltd., 1987.

    Originally published in the New York City Tribune, November 25, 1987.

     

    Contemporary British philosophers often believe ethics and politics sub-philosophic. Although philosophy began as an attempt to give a rational account of the whole of nature, these philosophers finally can only throw up their hands at human choices, private or public. Choices, they claim, are ‘subjective,’ a matter of irrational feelings or historically-given conventions. Ultimately, logic is irrelevant to choice. As A. J. Ayer claims in his well-known book Language, Truth, and Logic, we may use reason to clarify secondary issues, so we don’t choose contradictory means to an end. But we cannot reasonably choose the end itself. ‘The Good’ remains beyond (some would say beneath) rational thought. Philosophers can offer no serious help when we ask ‘should’ questions.

    Unfortunately for this view, some people, not all of them philosophically incompetent, in fact persist in trying to think rationally about what is good for them. And if one asks, ‘What’s good for me?’ it’s hard to avoid the question, ‘Who am I?’ From there, the questions ‘What is a human being?’ and ‘What is good for human beings as such?’ are not far behind.

    Jenny Teichman is a British philosophy professor trained in the familiar techniques of analytical logic. Unlike her immediate predecessors, she takes ‘should’ questions seriously. Pacifism and the Just War represents an heir of Ayers’ intelligent effort to come to terms philosophically with the good—and with moral and political life, which aims at the good. She does so without availing herself of the absolutist language of rights—as distinguished from right. She pointedly remarks, “If one tries to reduce all moral questions to matters of rights one ends up in various impasses that were not there when one began.”

    Teichman begins by defining pacifism not merely as opposition to violence (a pacifist might spank his children) but as “anti-war-ism,” “a principled objection to the violence of war.” She fails to define ‘war,’ thereby injuring her argument. To define war, she would need to discuss war’s purpose, instead of merely asserting that it is “victory.” She would need to think politically, to move beyond “applied” philosophy to political philosophy. She would need to think about what pacifism—literally, ‘peace-ism’—is for, not only what it is against. As things stand, “anti-war-ism” is merely the negation of a shadow, and this becomes obvious when she writes, “War without death is logically impossible.” Not so: although war without death has been well-nigh impossible so far, logically it’s easy to conceive of a war in which enemy troops, rulers, populations are incapacitated, political objections gained without any deaths at all.

    Teichman attempts to ground her study in practical reality. She does this by presenting brief, competent histories of pacifist doctrine (“it comes to us from Christianity”) and of conscription. But she doesn’t fully integrate her historical knowledge with her philosophic thought; again, only a political understanding would enable her to do that.

    For example, she rightly says that some advocates of the ‘just war’ theory confuse war with civil punishment. Sovereign states consist in part of a civil authority that sets laws and punishments, but in war, she observes, no overarching authority exists.

    This is right as far as it goes, but it omits two points that Augustine, author of the Christian version of the just war doctrine, would insist upon. First, wars are ordered by civil authorities. Just wars are governed by such authorities, and this distinguishes them from piracy and terrorism. Political life consists neither of world government nor of anarchy. Second, Augustine considers God the overarching ruler, albeit not now here on earth, or at least not simply so. Given the close association of politics and religion throughout most of human history, a philosopher who overlooks the one may well overlook the other.

    Not only Augustine but his decidedly non-Christian predecessor Cicero would take strong exception to Teichman’s contention that “the questions as to who or what is an authority logically capable of initiating and waging a just war rest ultimately on facts about inherited customs and institutions… and on facts about Realpolitik (such as the actions of Palmerston, of Robespierre, and of Lenin); for it is these things that determine the identities of rulers and the boundaries of political units.” A true civil authority, just-war theorists agree, consists not only of conventions and power, but of right. Political justice does not reduce to a set of facts originating in accident and human conventions.

    This mistake accounts for Teichman’s otherwise surprising agreement with Thomas Hobbes, a somewhat less gentle soul, in arguing that one may rightfully resist any attack on one’s life, “whatever the rights and wrongs of the original quarrel.” If so, then Stalin has the right to resist an assassination attempt. But why does he?

    War, “is, of course, evil intrinsically and essentially” because it is “a test of might and is therefore inherently incapable of settling questions of right.” True: But war is capable of defending natural right or justice, as secured (if imperfectly) in existing practices, even if it cannot tell us what justice is. Teichman sees this, more or less, when she disagrees with pacifists, reminding them that although war is evil it is not therefore the worst evil. She sees this with less clarity when she restricts just war to defense against genocide or some equally “dreadful catastrophe.” Prudent statesmen might well reply that small offenses can lead to large ones, and a small war (say, over control of the Rhineland in 1936) might be preferably to a large one (say, the Second World War). that we are left with necessarily imprecise judgments, often made by incompetent men, may be a melancholy fact. It is also an inescapable one, at least so far.

    Teichman wishes to escape it. “We might well say that the point is not to justify war but to abolish it.” The political question remains: On what terms? Philosophically, it also remains to be seen whether and to what extent analytical logic (as distinguished from other kinds of reasoned thought) suffices to illuminate politics. Given Professor Teichman’s intellectual integrity and distaste for cant, she may have some exceptionally interesting things to say on that subject. She will need to think more about politics, and political philosophy, before saying them.

    Filed Under: Philosophers

    Marking the Constitution’s Bicentennial

    December 15, 2017 by Will Morrisey

    Richard B. Bernstein (with Kym S. Rice): Are We to Be a Nation? The Making of the Constitution. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987.

    Originally published in the New York City Tribune, December 16, 1987.

     

    Published by Harvard University Press, underwritten by the New York Public Library, recommended by Henry Steele Commager (“the dean of American historians,” as he is often billed), this handsome coffee-table volume marking the bicentennial anniversary of the United States Constitution can be safely assumed to represent the views of America’s academic establishment. As it does, for better and for worse.

    For better, the establishment no longer subscribes to the crude economic determinism of Charles Beard. Writing in the 1930s, that celebrated ‘progressive’ historian aimed to ‘debunk’ the Constitution by claiming the framers acted in accordance with their own financial interests. His claim fit well with the temper of the American Left at the time, led by a U. S. president who decried ‘economic royalists’ on Wall Street. Professor Forrest McDonald disproved this claim some thirty years ago, carefully researching those interests and contrasting them with the arguments made on the floor of the Constitutional Convention. Insofar as the framers defended economic interests, these were more regional than personal; politics not corruption was their fame, played hard but honorably.

    Bernstein respects the integrity and intelligence of the framers. He calls the Constitution the culmination of the intellectual ferment and political experimentation in the new republic.” As befits a historian, he does better at describing politics than at understanding political philosophy.

    He rightly notices that the Declaration of Independence speaks of the American people, not the people of Massachusetts, Virginia, New York; Thomas Jefferson and his colleagues thereby “nationalized the case against George III.” Bernstein does not adequately connect the principles, as distinguished from the “nationalism,” of the Declaration of the Constitution, despite the Declaration’s clear statement that governments are instituted among men for the purpose of securing their unalienable rights—a point unlikely to have slipped from the minds of the framers. In this oversight too he follows contemporary scholarship.

    Bernstein knows that “In the era of the American Revolution, more than at any other time in our history, ideas dominated our politics.” This fact even leads to a small and amusing design problem: Many of the book’s numerous plates depict nothing more visually striking than old book and pamphlet covers. Unfortunately, Bernstein endorses the regnant historicist or ‘contextualist’ interpretation of those ideas, an interpretation promoted by such scholars as J. G. A. Pocock and Quentin Skinner. This school exaggerates the effect of ‘the times’ on great political thinkers and statesmen, overlooking the fact that such individuals themselves form a large part of what we mean when we look back at ‘the times.’ Too much attention paid to ‘context’ typically causes inadequate attention to ‘texts,’ a failure to read the writings of political thinkers with sufficient care, and therefore to judge the actions of thoughtful statesmen who did read with care.

    Specifically, Bernstein calls Montesquieu’s magisterial The Spirit of the Laws a “disorganized, rambling treatise,” which it demonstrably is not. He fails to see that while the principal framers rejected Montesquieu’s preliminary argument on the impossibility of maintaining a republic in an extensive territory, they accepted his final argument for an extended commercial republic. Following Pocock, Bernstein claims that “at the heart of republican thought was a deep concern with public virtue and an obsession with corruption,” oversimplifying The Federalist‘s argument, wherein civic virtue combines with representative and federal institutions, the extended territory those institutions make possible, and the practical spirit of agriculture and commerce to temper impolitic popular enthusiasms. Published work by Professor Paul Eidelberg, particularly his 1974 book, A Discourse on Statesmanship: The Design and Transformation of the American Polity, provides a subtler and more accurate assessment of the framers’ achievement.

    Bernstein’s failure to see the Constitutional significance of the Declaration of Independence, along with his superficial account of the Constitutional order itself, issue in an inaccurate conclusion: That Hamilton’s preference for commercial life and Madison’s preference for agricultural life, reflected in the dispute between northern and southern states at the Convention, eventuated in the severest crisis the American regime has faced, the Civil War. In fact, the Civil War had little to do with issues between financial men and farmer, and everything to do with slavery. Both Hamilton and Madison opposed slavery, although Madison (himself a slaveholder) could never think of a way to divest himself, or his fellow Virginians, of their ‘property.’

    The dispute between Madison and Hamilton centered on politics, not economics. Madison suspected Hamilton, and the Federalist Party generally, of harboring oligarchic ambitions against republicanism itself. Madison expected and wanted commerce to thrive in the United States, but wanted only such commercial activities as in his judgment fostered virtues of industry and honesty similar to those of the agrarian way of life. Far from simply identifying himself with southern agricultural interests, Madison recognized that chattel slavery made white southern gentry into aristocrats, not good republican citizens. These regime-threatening tensions, not the normal and manageable strains between town and country—characteristic of the extensive, diverse republic Madison himself lauded in the tenth Federalist—led to “the crisis of the house divided.

     

    Filed Under: American Politics

    Where Does Political Life Come From?

    December 15, 2017 by Will Morrisey

    Pierre Clastres: Society Against the State: Essays in Political Anthropology. Robert Hurley and Abe Stein translation. New York: Zone Books, 1987. [Published in France in 1974].

    Review originally published in the New York City Tribune, July 4, 1988.

     

    Generally a tedious lot, anthropologists slog through rain forests trying to understand obscure tribes, returning to academia where they preach ‘cultural relativism’ and accuse one another of ‘ethnocentricity.’ As none but a few of their colleagues can actually observe the phenomena they purport to describe, humbug goes undetected for years—viz. the notorious case of Margaret Mead and her swinging Samoans, hostages to mod-lib ideology.

    These efforts might make some sense if anthropologists worked to uncover human nature. Most prefer the intellectually safer but morally more dangerous course of denying that human nature exists at all, thus dismissing their only conceivably raison d’être. Why read anthropology at all?

    Because, despite the self-imposed blinders, at time anthropologists do glimpse human nature, as in the research of Pierre Clastres, late Director of Studies at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris. Clastres undertook the study of South American tribes, not out of some aimless ‘interest’ but to learn something about the relation of human society to politics. He denies that politics, conceived as the exercise of ‘power,’ exists “in man as a natural being.”  Nonetheless, as a political anthropologist, Clastres sought answers to such perennial questions as, ‘Who rules?’ and ‘What is the end of political life?’ Human beings are political, just not in the way ‘we moderns’ define politics. This insight took him well beyond the conventional relativism of his trade.

    Modern political philosophers—beginning with Machiavelli, subtly, and continuing through Marx and Nietzsche, baldly—define politics as coercion, conquest, command, and obedience. Aside from the Incans, whose political regime somewhat resembled the modern authoritarian state, the South American tribes have yet no such experience in their daily lives. In war, yes—necessarily. In peace, no: “If there is something completely alien to an Indian, it is the idea of giving an order or having to obey.” For an Indian, “the political is determined as a domain beyond coercion and violence, beyond hierarchical subordination.” “It is not evident to me,” Clastres writes, “that coercion and subordination constitute the essence of political power in all times and all places.”

    Each tribe has a chief, to be sure. He acts not as a commander; instead, he moderates disputes, distributes his own (not others’) goods, and orates. He remains entirely dependent upon the group, his public speech ritualistic, not dictatorial. He reaffirms traditional ways, issuing no commands. Political power stays within the society itself, whose members prevent tyranny by simply ignoring any chief so presumptuous as to command them. “Most Indian societies in America are distinguished by their sense of democracy and taste for equality.” They allow a chief to command only in times of war. Clastres pauses to tell the comic-poignant story of Geronimo, the North American chief who wasted much of his life vainly urging the Apache to wage war against Mexico. As a wiser chief told a Spanish explorer (in unknowing contradiction of Machiavelli), “I prefer to be loved and not feared.”

    Indians care “to constantly keep power apart from the institutions of power, command apart from the chief.” Clastres admires this solution to the problem of rulership. He does not overlook its severity. “Primitive society… is a society from which nothing escapes, which lets nothing get outside itself, for all the exits are blocked.” The means of blockage are cruel. Tribes initiate young men not by schooling but by torture. Society literally “imprints its mark on the bodies of the young people,” symbolically “inscribing the text of the law on the surfacing of their bodies.” This ferocious egalitarianism teaches, “You are worth no more than anyone else; you worth no less than anyone else.” Coercion, then, does not disappear from these societies; they ‘front-load’ it, reserve it for childhood or youth, counting on the lessons learned then to carry over for a lifetime. If this “prohibition of inequality that each person will remember” prevents tyranny, it also prevents philosophy. It is a “pedagogy” without dialogue; the initiate silently consents. The Thirty Tyrants could not concur, but neither could Socrates. The public rule of coercive state force and the private rule of wisdom are equally impossible.

    Clastres’ observations confound Marxist pseudo-explanations of ‘History,’ particularly those regarding ‘surplus value.’ Primitive societies were not and are not subsistence economies, awaiting much-needed evolution into more advanced types. They are sedentary, not nomadic, thanks to the richness of the landscapes they inhabit. Indeed, the first Europeans in Brazil fretted at the Indians’ conspicuous leisure: “Obviously, these people were deliberately ignorant of the fact that one must earn his daily bread by the sweat of his brow. It would do, and it didn’t last: the Indians were soon put to work, and they died of it.” Pace, Marx: Work is the opiate of the masses. Or, as Clastres writes, “the economic derives from the political.”

    Feminists will find no more comfort in Clastres’ research than Marxists. Men and women perform separate functions, the men hunting and gathering, the women consuming and tending the household. Men are the humans of the bow, women the humans of the basket—one sex the masters of the forest, the other mistresses of the encampment. Taboos match practice: “A hunter could not bear the shame of carrying a basket, whereas his wife would be afraid to touch his bow.” Women sing of pain, anguish; they give birth and mourn the dead. Men sing of their own glory, each one to himself alone, pouring their (highly elevated) sense of themselves into “the hymn of their freedom,” the one activity in which their individuality is not strictly limited by the social laws etched into their skin. ‘Song of Myself,’ indeed!

    Clastres would explain the transition from statelessness to state rule not by some natural or even historical evolution but by the pressures of population density. Tribes in the tropical forests of America range from between forty and several hundred persons. With more people, a society survives only with recourse to the unifying power of a state. Here Clastres succumbs to his own inadequate conception of human nature, which cannot distinguish between animal and human biology. Because he only conceives of speech in terms of command, or solitary song, or prophetic oratory, but never as a means of rational deliberation, Clastres cannot identify the distinctively human characteristics. He cannot see how government develops out of the tribe, naturally—that is, by human nature’s exercise. For this insight one must still read that earlier and greater political anthropologist, Aristotle.

    A sort of latter-day Rousseau, Clastre does not entirely overcome modern thought any more than Rousseau did. He does correct that thought in telling ways, as Rousseau did. Like Rousseau’s, his work stands as a thorough refutation of the utopian dream which combines this-worldly community with humanitarian tenderness.

    Filed Under: Philosophers

    • « Previous Page
    • 1
    • …
    • 197
    • 198
    • 199
    • 200
    • 201
    • …
    • 238
    • Next Page »