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The Necessity of Choice: Nineteenth Century Political Thought PDF

201 Pages·1990·0.868 MB·English
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First paperback printing 2015 Copyright © 1990 by Transaction Publishers, New Brunswick, New Jersey. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmit- ted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. All inquiries should be addressed to Transaction Publishers, 10 Corporate Place South, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854. www.transactionpub.com This book is printed on acid-free paper that meets the American National Standard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. Library of Congress Catalog Number: 89-28039 ISBN: 978-0-88738-326-7 (cloth); 978-1-4128-5487-0 (paper) Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hartz, Louis, 1919-1986. The necessity of choice : Nineteenth-Century political thought / by Louis Hartz with an introduction and edited by Paul Roazen. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-88738-326-2 1. Political science—History—19th century. I. Roazen, Paul, 1936–. II. Title. JA83.H28 1990 320.5’09’034—dc20 89–28039 CIP Contents Foreword, by Benjamin R. Barber vii Introduction, by Paul Roazen xi Part I: The Revolutionary Background 1 Origins 3 2 The Religious Problem 11 3 The Economic Question 19 4 Culture and Tradition: Condorcet 27 5 Jean-Jacques Rousseau 35 6 Rousseau and Our Constructive Problem 41 Part II: Reaction and Authoritarianism 7 The Setting 51 8 Romanticism 57 9 Edmund Burke 63 10 Joseph de Maistre 71 11 Louis de Bonald 79 12 Auguste Comte 83 13 Georg W. F. Hegel 89 14 A Free Society and Its Relation to the State 95 Part III: Liberalism 15 The Problem of Industrial Society 101 16 Bentham’s Utilitarianism 105 17 John Stuart Mill 111 18 Pierre-Paul Royer-Collard 117 19 Benjamin Constant 123 20 Italy and Mazzini 129 21 Historic Success and Failure 135 Part IV: Socialism 22 Robert Owen 143 23 François Fourier 149 24 Karl Marx 155 Conclusion 161 Index 165 Foreword On January 20, 1986, Louis Hartz, former professor of government at Harvard University, died in Istanbul, Turkey. Despite a career abbrevi- ated by illness (which compelled him to retire in 1974), Hartz had an enormous impact on both American political theory and debates about the nature and consequences of the American experience in his three decades of teaching and research in Cambridge. At Harvard, he was a teacher of such extraordinary talent and energy and brought with him to the classroom a lecture style so charismatic and enduring that students could find themselves initially too over- whelmed to take very much in. I remember with pleasure Hart’s wry if absent-minded blackboard doodlings that were meant to symbolize some subtle point in Benjamin Constant’s liberalism or Frederick Jack- son Turner’s frontier thesis but which seemed finally only to capture the engagingly anarchic vivacity of his fast-moving mind. Nor was he just a man for the classroom or a scholarly denizen of Widener library’s well-furnished stacks. He felt the world deeply, and engaged it no less than its literary surrogates in his work. His books had so powerful an impact in part because one sensed their commitment to and engagement in the real world. After his illness made it impossible for him to teach and difficult for him to do archival research, he took to traveling—traversing random international roads in a disquieting quest for the meaning of world history. He was at work on a manu- script aimed at explaining East and West in terms of a great historical synthesis when he died. The project was of Spencerian ambitions and was clearly beyond the powers left him by his uncertain health, but that he aspired to it suggests something of the nature of his intellectual fortitude in the face of momentous difficulties. Hartz admired the French liberals of the early nineteenth century— Constant, Comte, and above all Tocqueville—and, like Tocqueville, he believed one had to see something of the world to understand any of it. vii The Necessity of Choice When in the early 1960s I hesitantly proposed to him that I spend some time in Switzerland to research a dissertation on the Swiss under- standing of political liberty—he had originally consented to direct a dissertation that had been conceived in purely philosophical terms—he responded without an instant’s doubt: “Yes, yes, yes, of course, you must go—go to the Alps, stay, live there, get a feel for the Grisons, you can write me from time to time, but get over there until you have captured what you see on paper.” His writing demonstrated that he practiced what he preached. His The Liberal Tradition in America, published in 1955 and the winner in 1956 of the Woodrow Wilson Prize of the American Political Sci- ence Association, offered a powerful explanation for the dominion of Lockean consensualism in America, and set the parameters for a historical and philosophical debate that was also profoundly political and that in subsequent years was to be joined by such eminent histori- ans as Bernard Bailyn, J. G. A. Pocock, and John Diggins—thoughtful commentators who debated the nature of the American founding and its impact on how we see ourselves as a nation in terms of problems set by Hartz. Hartz used Tocqueville’s observation that the Americans had “arrived at a state of democracy without having to endure a demo- cratic revolution” as the starting place for an argument focused on the absence of a feudal tradition in the new world, and how that absence explained the prevalence of a form of centralist consensualism that would have been unthinkable in the old world. America’s exceptional- ist experience endowed it with a certain immunity to radicalism in general and socialism in particular, and made it a poor candidate for socioeconomic explanations of the kind that flourished in the setting of postfeudal European ideology. A people born into equality, Hartz suggested, might perceive in peoples who were compelled to win their equality by will and revolution only a profound mystery. What distinguished the American from the European ideology was what was missing in America: a heritage of feudalism. That absent heritage rendered the ideological rhetoric of both feudalism and socialism, class conflict and class hegemony, irrelevant to America. Locke’s American meaning was given less by the empty places (Locke’s vacuis locis) of the new world’s vast territory than by the empty pages of the new world’s missing history. In the 1960s, Bernard Bailyn responded to Hartz by arguing that English dissent ideology had played a more prominent role in the American founding than Hartz’s preoccupation with the absence of viii Foreword feudalism could acknowledge. In the 1970s, J. G. A. Pocock and other students of the Atlantic Republican tradition offered a portrait of America in which classical republican virtue played a larger role than either Lockean consensualism or dissent philosophy. Most recently, John Diggins has refocused attention on Hartz by suggesting that a rather Calvinist version of Locke played a crucial role in the constitu- tional founding if not in the revolution, and that this splintered Lockean inheritance, encompassing both interest and religious passion, can be traced down to Lincoln where, unhappily for America, it begins to dis- appear. The debate today has come full circle then, no longer confined to Lockean consensualism, but its terms still largely defined by Hartz’s brilliant portrait of the liberal tradition. Yet what is perhaps most important about Hartz is not the particular conclusions his analysis led to about the American experience, but his insistence on a comparative method that looked at national experiences in terms of comparative historical genealogy. As the comparison of the American ideology with its European progenitors revealed what was missing in America—the feudal experience—so Hartz supposed that an examination of other “new “societies founded in the shadow of colonial patrimonies might reveal certain secrets of their national heritages. Thus, in a book Hartz edited in 1964 called The Founding of New Societies, he and several colleagues subjected Latin America, Canada, South Africa, and Australia, as well as the United States, to the test of a comparison with the European cultures that spawned them. There the specific thesis about America offered in The Liberal Tradition in America was transformed into a general hypothesis about new societies: When a part of a European nation is detached from the whole of it, and hurled outward onto new soil, it loses the stimulus toward change that the whole provides. It lapses into a kind of immobility . . . the fragments reflect every phase of European revolution, but they evince alike the immobilities of fragmentation . . . their escape has turned out to be an illusion, and they are forced now to transcend the conservatism to which it gave birth. From his early book on economics and democracy in Pennsylvania (Economic Policy and Democratic Thought: Pennsylvania, 1776–1860) Hartz had concerned himself with the interpenetration of old and new cultures, of colonial nations and their elusive offspring, hoping thereby to illuminate and strengthen the democratic experience. In that final ix

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