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Statecraft as Soulcraft: What Government Does PDF

185 Pages·1983·8.982 MB·English
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IPmrGMRNMEW DOES $13.95 George F. Will's long-awaited first full-length book is a profound inquiry into our national character and destiny. Its surprising con- clusions are certain to startle and challenge conservatives and liberals alike. Will urges us to reconsidersomeof the most fundamentalbeliefsin ournational history, for heconcludesthattheyhavecontributedtopro- ducing a society that is deeply troubled and in very real danger. Specifically, he examines the belief, which dates back to the foundingofthe nation itself, that "there is no right principleof action but self-interest." He questions the FoundingFathers' faith thatmoralbalanceand national cohesiveness will be supplied by the government'sdoinglittlemore than encourag- ing the free operation of "opposite and rival interests." Two hundred years later, says Will, it just hasn't worked out that way. Instead, we have become a nation ofindividuals and inter- est groups given to habitual self-indulgence in the unchecked pursuitofmaterial acquisitions and private passions, and we have been weak- ened as a civilization to the point that there is some question whether a society so morally and spiritually reduced can longendure. Muchofthe fault, saysWill, maybe traced to our inadequate understanding ofthe shaping and guiding role that government can and should play in determining the moral charac- terofitscitizens. Wehavesettled fortoonarrow a definition of government. Although eco- nomic policy consists of moral choices too, there is much more to government than eco- nomics, says Will. A free-market economy is not, in itself, a sufficient goal for a properly conservative government. The proper goals of statecraft, says Will, arejustice, social cohesion and national strength. Therefore, he urges the (continuedon backflap) Also by George Will The Pursuit of Happiness and Other Sobering Thoughts The Pursuit of Virtue and Other ToryNotions STATECRAFT AS SOULCRAFT WHAT GOVERNMENT DOES GEORGE WILL E SIMON AND SCHUSTER NEW YORK Copyright © 1983 by G.F.W., Inc., A Maryland Corporation Allrightsreserved includingthe rightofreproduction in whole or in part inany form Publishedby Si?non and Schuster A Division of Gulf& Western Corporation Simon & Schuster Building Rockefeller Center 12soAvenue of the Americas New York,New York 10020 Simonand Schusterand colophon areregistered trademarks ofSimon& Schuster Designed by Edith Fowler Manufacturedin the UnitedStates ofAmerica 987654321 10 Library of Congress CataloginginPublicationData Will,George F. Statecraftassoulcraft. Includes bibliographical references andindex. 1. State, The. 2. Conservatism. 3. Welfare state. I. Title. JC251.W53 1983 3203 83-455 ISBN0-671-42733-4 The author is grateful for permission to use excerpts from the followingworks: Daniel PatrickMoynihan in The NewYorker, © 1981. The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln,Roy P. Basler, ed., copyright © 1953 by the Abraham Lincoln Association. Re- printed by permission ofRutgers University Press. The Federalist, by James Madison, copyright © 1961. Re- printedby permission of Wesleyan University Press. Democracy inAmerica, by Alexis de Tocqueville, The Henry Reeve text, rev. by Francis Bowen, PhillipsBradley, ed., copy- © right 1963, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Reprinted by permission. Adams Family Correspondence, L. H. Butterfield and Marc © Friedlaender, eds., copyright 1913, Harvard University Press. Reprinted by permission. The Life & Selected Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Adrienne Koch and William Peden, eds., copyright © 1944, The Mod- ern Library, Random House,Inc. The Shock of the New, by Robert Hughes, copyright © 1981, AlfredA. Knopf,Inc. Reprintedby permission. "Prometheus Unbound" from Shelley's Poetry & Prose, se- lected and edited by Donald H. Reiman and Sharon G. Powers, copyright © 1977, W. W. Norton & Co. The Morality of Law, by Lon Fuller, copyright © 1964 by Yale University Press. Reprintedby permission. Troilus and Cressida, by©William Shakespeare, Jackson J. Campbell, ed., copyright 1959 by Yale University Press. Reprintedby permission. © Poems,&1925-1940, by Louis MacNeice, copyright i960, Faber Faber, London. Reprinted bypermission. uLittle Gidding," in Four Quartets, copyright © 194s by T.S. Eliot; renewed 1971 by Esme ValerieEliot. Reprintedby permission ofHarcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc. History of the United States During the Administrations of Jefferson and Madison, by Henry Adams; George Danger- field and Otey M. Scruggs, eds., copyright © 1963, Prentice- Hall,Inc. Reprinted by permission. To Frederick L. Will Philosopher Contents Preface ii ONE The Care of OurTime i5 TWO The Defect 25 THREE Out of the Wilderness 47 FOUR SecondNature 66 FIVE The Broken Chain 97 SIX Conservative Political Economy 122 SEVEN EternityWarning Time 140 Acknowledgments 167 Notes 169 Index '79 Well, then,a commonwealth isthe property of a people. But a people is not any collec- tion of human beings brought together in any sort of "way, but an assemblage of peo- ple in large numbers associated in an agree- ment with respect to justice and a partner- ship for the common good. The first cause of such an association is not so much the weakness of the individual asa certain social spirit which nature has implanted in man. —Marcus Tullius Cicero Preface On those infrequent occasions when readers want to confer a compliment on a columnist (or at least, on this one) they are apt to praise him for not being "predictable." What they mean is that there is an element of surprise, an unanticipated turn or outcome in what he writes. But a political commentator who really is unpredictable is a writer who is all sail and no rudder, and whose work reflects no discernible philosophy. When a kind reader calls me unpredictable, I am tempted to respond: To anyone sufficiently familiar with the minds of the Oxford Movement, circa 1842, all my conclusions are predictable. However, the most frustrating aspect ofa life ofpublic argu- ment is the assumption by the reading public that the arguer, because he bears a particular political label, must have a par- ticular predictability. This gives a writer a dispiriting sense of being a captive of conventional—but inadequate—categories. It is not unreasonable for people to think that ideas come in clusters, like grapes. They think that if a person holds a certain 11

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