On Liberty
by John Stuart Mill
1860
Harvard Classics Volume 25
Original Copyright 1909 P.F. Collier & Son
CHAPTER
I
INTRODUCTORY
THE subject of this Essay is
not the so-called Liberty of the Will, so unfortunately opposed to the misnamed
doctrine of Philosophical Necessity; but Civil, or Social Liberty: the nature
and limits of the power which can be legitimately exercised by society over the
individual. A question seldom stated, and hardly ever discussed, in general
terms, but which profoundly influences the practical controversies of the age
by its latent presence, and is likely soon to make itself recognized as the
vital question of the future. It is so far from being new, that, in a certain
sense, it has divided mankind, almost from the remotest ages, but in the stage
of progress into which the more civilized portions of the species have now
entered, it presents itself under new conditions, and requires a different and
more fundamental treatment.
The struggle between Liberty and Authority is the most conspicuous feature
in the portions of history with which we are earliest familiar, particularly in
that of Greece, Rome, and England. But in old times this contest was between
subjects, or some classes of subjects, and the government. By liberty, was
meant protection against the tyranny of the political rulers. The rulers were
conceived (except in some of the popular governments of Greece) as in a
necessarily antagonistic position to the people whom they ruled. They consisted
of a governing One, or a governing tribe or caste, who derived their authority
from inheritance or conquest; who, at all events, did not hold it at the
pleasure of the governed, and whose supremacy men did not venture, perhaps did
not desire, to contest, whatever precautions might be taken against its
oppressive exercise. Their power was regarded as necessary, but also as highly
dangerous; as a weapon which they would attempt to use against their subjects,
no less than against external enemies. To prevent the weaker members of the
community from being preyed upon by innumerable vultures, it was needful that
there should be an animal of prey stronger than the rest, commissioned to keep
them down. But as the king of the vultures would be no less bent upon preying
upon the flock than any of the minor harpies, it was indispensable to be in a
perpetual attitude of defence against his beak and claws. The aim, therefore,
of patriots, was to set limits to the power which the ruler should be suffered
to exercise over the community; and this limitation was what they meant by
liberty. It was attempted in two ways. First, by obtaining a recognition of
certain immunities, called political liberties or rights, which it was to be
regarded as a breach of duty in the ruler to infringe, and which, if he did
infringe, specific resistance, or general rebellion, was held to be
justifiable. A second, and generally a later expedient, was the establishment
of constitutional checks; by which the consent of the community, or of a body
of some sort supposed to represent its interests, was made a necessary
condition to some of the more important acts of the governing power. To the
first of these modes of limitation, the ruling power, in most European
countries, was compelled, more or less, to submit. It was not so with the
second; and to attain this, or when already in some degree possessed, to attain
it more completely, became everywhere the principal object of the lovers of
liberty. And so long as mankind were content to combat one enemy by another,
and to be ruled by a master, on condition of being guaranteed more or less
efficaciously against his tyranny, they did not carry their aspirations beyond
this point.
A time, however, came in the progress of human affairs, when men ceased to
think it a necessity of nature that their governors should be an independent
power, opposed in interest to themselves. It appeared to them much better that
the various magistrates of the State should be their tenants or delegates,
revocable at their pleasure. In that way alone, it seemed, could they have
complete security that the powers of government would never be abused to their
disadvantage. By degrees, this new demand for elective and temporary rulers
became the prominent object of the exertions of the popular party, wherever any
such party existed; and superseded, to a considerable extent, the previous
efforts to limit the power of rulers. As the struggle proceeded for making the
ruling power emanate from the periodical choice of the ruled, some persons
began to think that too much importance had been attached to the limitation of
the power itself. That (it might seem) was a resource against rulers whose
interests were habitually opposed to those of the people. What was now wanted
was, that the rulers should be identified with the people; that their interest
and will should be the interest and will of the nation. The nation did not need
to be protected against its own will. There was no fear of its tyrannizing over
itself. Let the rulers be effectually responsible to it, promptly removable by
it, and it could afford to trust them with power of which it could itself
dictate the use to be made. Their power was but the nation's own power,
concentrated, and in a form convenient for exercise. This mode of thought, or
rather perhaps of feeling, was common among the last generation of European
liberalism, in the Continental section of which, it still apparently
predominates. Those who admit any limit to what a government may do, except in
the case of such governments as they think ought not to exist, stand out as
brilliant exceptions among the political thinkers of the Continent. A similar
tone of sentiment might by this time have been prevalent in our own country, if
the circumstances which for a time encouraged it had continued unaltered.
But, in political and philosophical theories, as well as in persons, success
discloses faults and infirmities which failure might have concealed from
observation. The notion, that the people have no need to limit their power over
themselves, might seem axiomatic, when popular government was a thing only
dreamed about, or read of as having existed at some distant period of the past.
Neither was that notion necessarily disturbed by such temporary aberrations as
those of the French Revolution, the worst of which were the work of an usurping
few, and which, in any case, belonged, not to the permanent working of popular
institutions, but to a sudden and convulsive outbreak against monarchical and
aristocratic despotism. In time, however, a democratic republic came to occupy
a large portion of the earth's surface, and made itself felt as one of the most
powerful members of the community of nations; and elective and responsible
government became subject to the observations and criticisms which wait upon a
great existing fact. It was now perceived that such phrases as
"self-government," and "the power of the people over
themselves," do not express the true state of the case. The
"people" who exercise the power, are not always the same people with
those over whom it is exercised, and the "self-government" spoken of,
is not the government of each by himself, but of each by all the rest. The will
of the people, moreover, practically means, the will of the most numerous or
the most active part of the people; the majority, or those who succeed in
making themselves accepted as the majority; the people, consequently, may
desire to oppress a part of their number; and precautions are as much needed
against this, as against any other abuse of power. The limitation, therefore,
of the power of government over individuals, loses none of its importance when
the holders of power are regularly accountable to the community, that is, to
the strongest party therein. This view of things, recommending itself equally
to the intelligence of thinkers and to the inclination of those important
classes in European society to whose real or supposed interests democracy is
adverse, has had no difficulty in establishing itself; and in political
speculations "the tyranny of the majority" is now generally included
among the evils against which society requires to be on its guard.
Like other tyrannies, the tyranny of the majority was at first, and is still
vulgarly, held in dread, chiefly as operating through the acts of the public
authorities. But reflecting persons perceived that when society is itself the
tyrant society collectively, over the separate individuals who compose
it its means of tyrannizing are not restricted to the acts which it may
do by the hands of its political functionaries. Society can and does execute
its own mandates: and if it issues wrong mandates instead of right, or any
mandates at all in things with which it ought not to meddle, it practises a
social tyranny more formidable than many kinds of political oppression, since,
though not usually upheld by such extreme penalties, it leaves fewer means of
escape, penetrating much more deeply into the details of life, and enslaving
the soul itself. Protection, therefore, against the tyranny of the magistrate
is not enough; there needs protection also against the tyranny of the
prevailing opinion and feeling; against the tendency of society to impose, by
other means than civil penalties, its own ideas and practices as rules of
conduct on those who dissent from them; to fetter the development, and, if
possible, prevent the formation, of any individuality not in harmony with its
ways, and compel all characters to fashion themselves upon the model of its
own. There is a limit to the legitimate interference of collective opinion with
individual independence; and to find that limit, and maintain it against
encroachment, is as indispensable to a good condition of human affairs, as
protection against political despotism.
But though this proposition is not likely to be contested in general terms,
the practical question, where to place the limit how to make the fitting
adjustment between individual independence and social control is a
subject on which nearly everything remains to be done. All that makes existence
valuable to any one, depends on the enforcement of restraints upon the actions
of other people. Some rules of conduct, therefore, must be imposed, by law in
the first place, and by opinion on many things which are not fit subjects for
the operation of law. What these rules should be, is the principal question in
human affairs; but if we except a few of the most obvious cases, it is one of
those which least progress has been made in resolving. No two ages, and
scarcely any two countries, have decided it alike; and the decision of one age
or country is a wonder to another. Yet the people of any given age and country
no more suspect any difficulty in it, than if it were a subject on which
mankind had always been agreed. The rules which obtain among themselves appear
to them self-evident and self-justifying. This all but universal illusion is
one of the examples of the magical influence of custom, which is not only, as
the proverb says a second nature, but is continually mistaken for the first.
The effect of custom, in preventing any misgiving respecting the rules of
conduct which mankind impose on one another, is all the more complete because
the subJect is one on which it is not generally considered necessary that
reasons should be given, either by one person to others, or by each to himself.
People are accustomed to believe and have been encouraged in the belief by some
who aspire to the character of philosophers, that their feelings, on subjects
of this nature, are better than reasons, and render reasons unnecessary. The
practical principle which guides them to their opinions on the regulation of
human conduct, is the feeling in each person's mind that everybody should be
required to act as he, and those with whom he sympathizes, would like them to
act. No one, indeed, acknowledges to himself that his standard of judgment is
his own liking; but an opinion on a point of conduct, not supported by reasons,
can only count as one person's preference; and if the reasons, when given, are
a mere appeal to a similar preference felt by other people, it is still only
many people's liking instead of one. To an ordinary man, however, his own
preference, thus supported, is not only a perfectly satisfactory reason, but
the only one he generally has for any of his notions of morality, taste, or
propriety, which are not expressly written in his religious creed; and his
chief guide in the interpretation even of that. Men's opinions, accordingly, on
what is laudable or blamable, are affected by all the multifarious causes which
influence their wishes in regard to the conduct of others, and which are as
numerous as those which determine their wishes on any other subject. Sometimes
their reason at other times their prejudices or superstitions: often
their social affections, not seldom their anti-social ones, their envy or
jealousy, their arrogance or contemptuousness: but most commonly, their desires
or fears for themselves their legitimate or illegitimate self-interest.
Wherever there is an ascendant class, a large portion of the morality of the
country emanates from its class interests, and its feelings of class
superiority. The morality between Spartans and Helots, between planters and
negroes, between princes and subjects, between nobles and roturiers, between
men and women, has been for the most part the creation of these class interests
and feelings: and the sentiments thus generated, react in turn upon the moral
feelings of the members of the ascendant class, in their relations among
themselves. Where, on the other hand, a class, formerly ascendant, has lost its
ascendency, or where its ascendency is unpopular, the prevailing moral
sentiments frequently bear the impress of an impatient dislike of superiority.
Another grand determining principle of the rules of conduct, both in act and
forbearance which have been enforced by law or opinion, has been the servility
of mankind towards the supposed preferences or aversions of their temporal
masters, or of their gods. This servility though essentially selfish, is not
hypocrisy; it gives rise to perfectly genuine sentiments of abhorrence; it made
men burn magicians and heretics. Among so many baser influences, the general
and obvious interests of society have of course had a share, and a large one,
in the direction of the moral sentiments: less, however, as a matter of reason,
and on their own account, than as a consequence of the sympathies and
antipathies which grew out of them: and sympathies and antipathies which had
little or nothing to do with the interests of society, have made themselves
felt in the establishment of moralities with quite as great force.
The likings and dislikings of society, or of some powerful portion of it,
are thus the main thing which has practically determined the rules laid down
for general observance, under the penalties of law or opinion. And in general,
those who have been in advance of society in thought and feeling, have left
this condition of things unassailed in principle, however they may have come
into conflict with it in some of its details. They have occupied themselves
rather in inquiring what things society ought to like or dislike, than in
questioning whether its likings or dislikings should be a law to individuals.
They preferred endeavouring to alter the feelings of mankind on the particular
points on which they were themselves heretical, rather than make common cause
in defence of freedom, with heretics generally. The only case in which the
higher ground has been taken on principle and maintained with consistency, by
any but an individual here and there, is that of religious belief: a case
instructive in many ways, and not least so as forming a most striking instance
of the fallibility of what is called the moral sense: for the odium
theologicum, in a sincere bigot, is one of the most unequivocal cases of moral
feeling. Those who first broke the yoke of what called itself the Universal
Church, were in general as little willing to permit difference of religious
opinion as that church itself. But when the heat of the conflict was over,
without giving a complete victory to any party, and each church or sect was
reduced to limit its hopes to retaining possession of the ground it already
occupied; minorities, seeing that they had no chance of becoming majorities,
were under the necessity of pleading to those whom they could not convert, for
permission to differ. It is accordingly on this battle-field, almost solely,
that the rights of the individual against society have been asserted on broad
grounds of principle, and the claim of society to exercise authority over
dissentients openly controverted. The great writers to whom the world owes what
religious liberty it possesses, have mostly asserted freedom of conscience as
an indefeasible right, and denied absolutely that a human being is accountable
to others for his religious belief. Yet so natural to mankind is intolerance in
whatever they really care about, that religious freedom has hardly anywhere
been practically realized, except where religious indifference, which dislikes
to have its peace disturbed by theological quarrels, has added its weight to
the scale. In the minds of almost all religious persons, even in the most
tolerant countries, the duty of toleration is admitted with tacit reserves. One
person will bear with dissent in matters of church government, but not of
dogma; another can tolerate everybody, short of a Papist or an Unitarian;
another, every one who believes in revealed religion; a few extend their
charity a little further, but stop at the belief in a God and in a future
state. Wherever the sentiment of the majority is still genuine and intense, it
is found to have abated little of its claim to be obeyed.
In England, from the peculiar circumstances of our political history, though
the yoke of opinion is perhaps heavier, that of law is lighter, than in most
other countries of Europe; and there is considerable jealousy of direct
interference, by the legislative or the executive power with private conduct;
not so much from any just regard for the independence of the individual, as
from the still subsisting habit of looking on the government as representing an
opposite interest to the public. The majority have not yet learnt to feel the
power of the government their power, or its opinions their opinions. When they
do so, individual liberty will probably be as much exposed to invasion from the
government, as it already is from public opinion. But, as yet, there is a
considerable amount of feeling ready to be called forth against any attempt of
the law to control individuals in things in which they have not hitherto been
accustomed to be controlled by it; and this with very little discrimination as
to whether the matter is, or is not, within the legitimate sphere of legal
control; insomuch that the feeling, highly salutary on the whole, is perhaps
quite as often misplaced as well grounded in the particular instances of its
application.
There is, in fact, no recognized principle by which the propriety or
impropriety of government interference is customarily tested. People decide
according to their personal preferences. Some, whenever they see any good to be
done, or evil to be remedied, would willingly instigate the government to
undertake the business; while others prefer to bear almost any amount of social
evil, rather than add one to the departments of human interests amenable to
governmental control. And men range themselves on one or the other side in any
particular case, according to this general direction of their sentiments; or
according to the degree of interest which they feel in the particular thing
which it is proposed that the government should do; or according to the belief
they entertain that the government would, or would not, do it in the manner
they prefer; but very rarely on account of any opinion to which they
consistently adhere, as to what things are fit to be done by a government. And
it seems to me that, in consequence of this absence of rule or principle, one
side is at present as often wrong as the other; the interference of government
is, with about equal frequency, improperly invoked and improperly condemned.
The object of this Essay is to assert one very simple principle, as entitled
to govern absolutely the dealings of society with the individual in the way of
compulsion and control, whether the means used be physical force in the form of
legal penalties, or the moral coercion of public opinion. That principle is,
that the sole end for which mankind are warranted, individually or collectively
in interfering with the liberty of action of any of their number, is
self-protection. That the only purpose for which power can be rightfully
exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to
prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a
sufficient warrant. He cannot rightfully be compelled to do or forbear because
it will be better for him to do so, because it will make him happier, because,
in the opinions of others, to do so would be wise, or even right. These are
good reasons for remonstrating with him, or reasoning with him, or persuading
him, or entreating him, but not for compelling him, or visiting him with any
evil, in case he do otherwise. To justify that, the conduct from which it is
desired to deter him must be calculated to produce evil to some one else. The
only part of the conduct of any one, for which he is amenable to society, is
that which concerns others. In the part which merely concerns himself, his
independence is, of right, absolute. Over himself, over his own body and mind,
the individual is sovereign.
It is, perhaps, hardly necessary to say that this doctrine is meant to apply
only to human beings in the maturity of their faculties. We are not speaking of
children, or of young persons below the age which the law may fix as that of
manhood or womanhood. Those who are still in a state to require being taken
care of by others, must be protected against their own actions as well as
against external injury. For the same reason, we may leave out of consideration
those backward states of society in which the race itself may be considered as
in its nonage. The early difficulties in the way of spontaneous progress are so
great, that there is seldom any choice of means for overcoming them; and a
ruler full of the spirit of improvement is warranted in the use of any
expedients that will attain an end, perhaps otherwise unattainable. Despotism
is a legitimate mode of government in dealing with barbarians, provided the end
be their improvement, and the means justified by actually effecting that end.
Liberty, as a principle, has no application to any state of things anterior to
the time when mankind have become capable of being improved by free and equal
discussion. Until then, there is nothing for them but implicit obedience to an
Akbar or a Charlemagne, if they are so fortunate as to find one. But as soon as
mankind have attained the capacity of being guided to their own improvement by
conviction or persuasion (a period long since reached in all nations with whom
we need here concern ourselves), compulsion, either in the direct form or in
that of pains and penalties for non-compliance, is no longer admissible as a
means to their own good, and justifiable only for the security of others.
It is proper to state that I forego any advantage which could be derived to
my argument from the idea of abstract right as a thing independent of utility.
I regard utility as the ultimate appeal on all ethical questions; but it must
be utility in the largest sense, grounded on the permanent interests of man as
a progressive being. Those interests, I contend, authorize the subjection of
individual spontaneity to external control, only in respect to those actions of
each, which concern the interest of other people. If any one does an act
hurtful to others, there is a prima facie case for punishing him, by law, or,
where legal penalties are not safely applicable, by general disapprobation.
There are also many positive acts for the benefit of others, which he may
rightfully be compelled to perform; such as, to give evidence in a court of
justice; to bear his fair share in the common defence, or in any other joint
work necessary to the interest of the society of which he enjoys the
protection; and to perform certain acts of individual beneficence, such as
saving a fellow-creature's life, or interposing to protect the defenceless
against ill-usage, things which whenever it is obviously a man's duty to do, he
may rightfully be made responsible to society for not doing. A person may cause
evil to others not only by his actions but by his inaction, and in neither case
he is justly accountable to them for the injury. The latter case, it is true,
requires a much more cautious exercise of compulsion than the former. To make
any one answerable for doing evil to others, is the rule; to make him
answerable for not preventing evil, is, comparatively speaking, the exception.
Yet there are many cases clear enough and grave enough to justify that
exception. In all things which regard the external relations of the individual,
he is de jure amenable to those whose interests are concerned, and if need be,
to society as their protector. There are often good reasons for not holding him
to the responsibility; but these reasons must arise from the special
expediencies of the case: either because it is a kind of case in which he is on
the whole likely to act better, when left to his own discretion, than when
controlled in any way in which society have it in their power to control him;
or because the attempt to exercise control would produce other evils, greater
than those which it would prevent. When such reasons as these preclude the
enforcement of responsibility, the conscience of the agent himself should step
into the vacant judgment-seat, and protect those interests of others which have
no external protection; judging himself all the more rigidly, because the case
does not admit of his being made accountable to the judgment of his
fellow-creatures.
But there is a sphere of action in which society, as distinguished from the
individual, has, if any, only an indirect interest; comprehending all that
portion of a person's life and conduct which affects only himself, or, if it
also affects others, only with their free, voluntary, and undeceived consent
and participation. When I say only himself, I mean directly, and in the first
instance: for whatever affects himself, may affect others through himself; and
the objection which may be grounded on this contingency, will receive
consideration in the sequel. This, then, is the appropriate region of human
liberty. It comprises, first, the inward domain of consciousness; demanding
liberty of conscience, in the most comprehensive sense; liberty of thought and
feeling; absolute freedom of opinion and sentiment on all subjects, practical
or speculative, scientific, moral, or theological. The liberty of expressing
and publishing opinions may seem to fall under a different principle, since it
belongs to that part of the conduct of an individual which concerns other
people; but, being almost of as much importance as the liberty of thought
itself, and resting in great part on the same reasons, is practically
inseparable from it. Secondly, the principle requires liberty of tastes and
pursuits; of framing the plan of our life to suit our own character; of doing
as we like, subject to such consequences as may follow; without impediment from
our fellow-creatures, so long as what we do does not harm them even though they
should think our conduct foolish, perverse, or wrong. Thirdly, from this
liberty of each individual, follows the liberty, within the same limits, of
combination among individuals; freedom to unite, for any purpose not involving
harm to others: the persons combining being supposed to be of full age, and not
forced or deceived.
No society in which these liberties are not, on the whole, respected, is
free, whatever may be its form of government; and none is completely free in
which they do not exist absolute and unqualified. The only freedom which
deserves the name, is that of pursuing our own good in our own way, so long as
we do not attempt to deprive others of theirs, or impede their efforts to
obtain it. Each is the proper guardian of his own health, whether bodily, or
mental or spiritual. Mankind are greater gainers by suffering each other to
live as seems good to themselves, than by compelling each to live as seems good
to the rest.
Though this doctrine is anything but new, and, to some persons, may have the
air of a truism, there is no doctrine which stands more directly opposed to the
general tendency of existing opinion and practice. Society has expended fully
as much effort in the attempt (according to its lights) to compel people to
conform to its notions of personal, as of social excellence. The ancient
commonwealths thought themselves entitled to practise, and the ancient
philosophers countenanced, the regulation of every part of private conduct by
public authority, on the ground that the State had a deep interest in the whole
bodily and mental discipline of every one of its citizens, a mode of thinking
which may have been admissible in small republics surrounded by powerful
enemies, in constant peril of being subverted by foreign attack or internal
commotion, and to which even a short interval of relaxed energy and
self-command might so easily be fatal, that they could not afford to wait for
the salutary permanent effects of freedom. In the modern world, the greater
size of political communities, and above all, the separation between the
spiritual and temporal authority (which placed the direction of men's
consciences in other hands than those which controlled their worldly affairs),
prevented so great an interference by law in the details of private life; but
the engines of moral repression have been wielded more strenuously against
divergence from the reigning opinion in self-regarding, than even in social
matters; religion, the most powerful of the elements which have entered into
the formation of moral feeling, having almost always been governed either by
the ambition of a hierarchy, seeking control over every department of human
conduct, or by the spirit of Puritanism. And some of those modern reformers who
have placed themselves in strongest opposition to the religions of the past,
have been noway behind either churches or sects in their assertion of the right
of spiritual domination: M. Comte, in particular, whose social system, as
unfolded in his Traite de Politique Positive, aims at establishing (though by
moral more than by legal appliances) a despotism of society over the
individual, surpassing anything contemplated in the political ideal of the most
rigid disciplinarian among the ancient philosophers.
Apart from the peculiar tenets of individual thinkers, there is also in the
world at large an increasing inclination to stretch unduly the powers of
society over the individual, both by the force of opinion and even by that of
legislation: and as the tendency of all the changes taking place in the world
is to strengthen society, and diminish the power of the individual, this
encroachment is not one of the evils which tend spontaneously to disappear,
but, on the contrary, to grow more and more formidable. The disposition of
mankind, whether as rulers or as fellow-citizens, to impose their own opinions
and inclinations as a rule of conduct on others, is so energetically supported
by some of the best and by some of the worst feelings incident to human nature,
that it is hardly ever kept under restraint by anything but want of power; and
as the power is not declining, but growing, unless a strong barrier of moral
conviction can be raised against the mischief, we must expect, in the present
circumstances of the world, to see it increase.
It will be convenient for the argument, if, instead of at once entering upon
the general thesis, we confine ourselves in the first instance to a single
branch of it, on which the principle here stated is, if not fully, yet to a
certain point, recognized by the current opinions. This one branch is the
Liberty of Thought: from which it is impossible to separate the cognate liberty
of speaking and of writing. Although these liberties, to some considerable
amount, form part of the political morality of all countries which profess
religious toleration and free institutions, the grounds, both philosophical and
practical, on which they rest, are perhaps not so familiar to the general mind,
nor so thoroughly appreciated by many even of the leaders of opinion, as might
have been expected. Those grounds, when rightly understood, are of much wider
application than to only one division of the subject, and a thorough
consideration of this part of the question will be found the best introduction
to the remainder. Those to whom nothing which I am about to say will be new,
may therefore, I hope, excuse me, if on a subject which for now three centuries
has been so often discussed, I venture on one discussion more.
CHAPTER II
OF THE LIBERTY OF THOUGHT AND DISCUSSION
THE time, it is to be hoped, is gone by when any defence would be necessary
of the "liberty of the press" as one of the securities against
corrupt or tyrannical government. No argument, we may suppose, can now be
needed, against permitting a legislature or an executive, not identified in
interest with the people, to prescribe opinions to them, and determine what
doctrines or what arguments they shall be allowed to hear. This aspect of the
question, besides, has been so often and so triumphantly enforced by preceding
writers, that it needs not be specially insisted on in this place. Though the
law of England, on the subject of the press, is as servile to this day as it
was in the time of the Tudors, there is little danger of its being actually put
in force against political discussion, except during some temporary panic, when
fear of insurrection drives ministers and judges from their
propriety;[1] and, speaking generally, it
is not, in constitutional countries, to be apprehended that the government,
whether completely responsible to the people or not, will often attempt to
control the expression of opinion, except when in doing so it makes itself the
organ of the general intolerance of the public. Let us suppose, therefore, that
the government is entirely at one with the people, and never thinks of exerting
any power of coercion unless in agreement with what it conceives to be their
voice. But I deny the right of the people to exercise such coercion, either by
themselves or by their government. The power itself is illegitimate. The best
government has no more title to it than the worst. It is as noxious, or more
noxious, when exerted in accordance with public opinion, than when in
opposition to it. If all mankind minus one, were of one opinion, and only one
person were of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no more justified in
silencing that one person, than he, if he had the power, would be justified in
silencing mankind. Were an opinion a personal possession of no value except to
the owner; if to be obstructed in the enjoyment of it were simply a private
injury, it would make some difference whether the injury was inflicted only on
a few persons or on many. But the peculiar evil of silencing the expression of
an opinion is, that it is robbing the human race; posterity as well as the
existing generation; those who dissent from the opinion, still more than those
who hold it. If the opinion is right, they are deprived of the opportunity of
exchanging error for truth: if wrong, they lose, what is almost as great a
benefit, the clearer perception and livelier impression of truth, produced by
its collision with error.
It is necessary to consider separately these two hypotheses, each of which
has a distinct branch of the argument corresponding to it. We can never be sure
that the opinion we are endeavouring to stifle is a false opinion; and if we
were sure, stifling it would be an evil still.
First the opinion which it is attempted to suppress by authority may
possibly be true. Those who desire to suppress it, of course deny its truth;
but they are not infallible. They have no authority to decide the question for
all mankind, and exclude every other person from the means of judging. To
refuse a hearing to an opinion, because they are sure that it is false, is to
assume that their certainty is the same thing as absolute certainty. All
silencing of discussion is an assumption of infallibility. Its condemnation may
be allowed to rest on this common argument, not the worse for being common.
Unfortunately for the good sense of mankind, the fact of their fallibility
is far from carrying the weight in their practical judgment, which is always
allowed to it in theory; for while every one well knows himself to be fallible,
few think it necessary to take any precautions against their own fallibility,
or admit the supposition that any opinion of which they feel very certain, may
be one of the examples of the error to which they acknowledge themselves to be
liable. Absolute princes, or others who are accustomed to unlimited deference,
usually feel this complete confidence in their own opinions on nearly all
subjects. People more happily situated, who sometimes hear their opinions
disputed, and are not wholly unused to be set right when they are wrong, place
the same unbounded reliance only on such of their opinions as are shared by all
who surround them, or to whom they habitually defer: for in proportion to a
man's want of confidence in his own solitary judgment, does he usually repose,
with implicit trust, on the infallibility of "the world" in general.
And the world, to each individual, means the part of it with which he comes in
contact; his party, his sect, his church, his class of society: the man may be
called, by comparison, almost liberal and large-minded to whom it means
anything so comprehensive as his own country or his own age. Nor is his faith
in this collective authority at all shaken by his being aware that other ages,
countries, sects, churches, classes, and parties have thought, and even now
think, the exact reverse. He devolves upon his own world the responsibility of
being in the right against the dissentient worlds of other people; and it never
troubles him that mere accident has decided which of these numerous worlds is
the object of his reliance, and that the same causes which make him a Churchman
in London, would have made him a Buddhist or a Confucian in Pekin. Yet it is as
evident in itself as any amount of argument can make it, that ages are no more
infallible than individuals; every age having held many opinions which
subsequent ages have deemed not only false but absurd; and it is as certain
that many opinions, now general, will be rejected by future ages, as it is that
many, once general, are rejected by the present.
The objection likely to be made to this argument, would probably take some
such form as the following. There is no greater assumption of infallibility in
forbidding the propagation of error, than in any other thing which is done by
public authority on its own judgment and responsibility. Judgment is given to
men that they may use it. Because it may be used erroneously, are men to be
told that they ought not to use it at all? To prohibit what they think
pernicious, is not claiming exemption from error, but fulfilling the duty
incumbent on them, although fallible, of acting on their conscientious
conviction. If we were never to act on our opinions, because those opinions may
be wrong, we should leave all our interests uncared for, and all our duties
unperformed. An objection which applies to all conduct can be no valid
objection to any conduct in particular.
It is the duty of governments, and of individuals, to form the truest
opinions they can; to form them carefully, and never impose them upon others
unless they are quite sure of being right. But when they are sure (such
reasoners may say), it is not conscientiousness but cowardice to shrink from
acting on their opinions, and allow doctrines which they honestly think
dangerous to the welfare of mankind, either in this life or in another, to be
scattered abroad without restraint, because other people, in less enlightened
times, have persecuted opinions now believed to be true. Let us take care, it
may be said, not to make the same mistake: but governments and nations have
made mistakes in other things, which are not denied to be fit subjects for the
exercise of authority: they have laid on bad taxes, made unjust wars. Ought we
therefore to lay on no taxes, and, under whatever provocation, make no wars?
Men, and governments, must act to the best of their ability. There is no such
thing as absolute certainty, but there is assurance sufficient for the purposes
of human life. We may, and must, assume our opinion to be true for the guidance
of our own conduct: and it is assuming no more when we forbid bad men to
pervert society by the propagation of opinions which we regard as false and
pernicious.
I answer, that it is assuming very much more. There is the greatest
difference between presuming an opinion to be true, because, with every
opportunity for contesting it, it has not been refuted, and assuming its truth
for the purpose of not permitting its refutation. Complete liberty of
contradicting and disproving our opinion, is the very condition which justifies
us in assuming its truth for purposes of action; and on no other terms can a
being with human faculties have any rational assurance of being right.
When we consider either the history of opinion, or the ordinary conduct of
human life, to what is it to be ascribed that the one and the other are no
worse than they are? Not certainly to the inherent force of the human
understanding; for, on any matter not self-evident, there are ninety-nine
persons totally incapable of judging of it, for one who is capable; and the
capacity of the hundredth person is only comparative; for the majority of the
eminent men of every past generation held many opinions now known to be
erroneous, and did or approved numerous things which no one will now justify.
Why is it, then, that there is on the whole a preponderance among mankind of
rational opinions and rational conduct? If there really is this preponderance
which there must be, unless human affairs are, and have always been, in
an almost desperate state it is owing to a quality of the human mind,
the source of everything respectable in man, either as an intellectual or as a
moral being, namely, that his errors are corrigible. He is capable of
rectifying his mistakes by discussion and experience. Not by experience alone.
There must be discussion, to show how experience is to be interpreted. Wrong
opinions and practices gradually yield to fact and argument: but facts and
arguments, to produce any effect on the mind, must be brought before it. Very
few facts are able to tell their own story, without comments to bring out their
meaning. The whole strength and value, then, of human judgment, depending on
the one property, that it can be set right when it is wrong, reliance can be
placed on it only when the means of setting it right are kept constantly at
hand. In the case of any person whose judgment is really deserving of
confidence, how has it become so? Because he has kept his mind open to
criticism of his opinions and conduct. Because it has been his practice to
listen to all that could be said against him; to profit by as much of it as was
just, and expound to himself, and upon occasion to others, the fallacy of what
was fallacious. Because he has felt, that the only way in which a human being
can make some approach to knowing the whole of a subject, is by hearing what
can be said about it by persons of every variety of opinion, and studying all
modes in which it can be looked at by every character of mind. No wise man ever
acquired his wisdom in any mode but this; nor is it in the nature of human
intellect to become wise in any other manner. The steady habit of correcting
and completing his own opinion by collating it with those of others, so far
from causing doubt and hesitation in carrying it into practice, is the only
stable foundation for a just reliance on it: for, being cognizant of all that
can, at least obviously, be said against him, and having taken up his position
against all gainsayers knowing that he has sought for objections and
difficulties, instead of avoiding them, and has shut out no light which can be
thrown upon the subject from any quarter he has a right to think his
judgment better than that of any person, or any multitude, who have not gone
through a similar process.
It is not too much to require that what the wisest of mankind, those who are
best entitled to trust their own judgment, find necessary to warrant their
relying on it, should be submitted to by that miscellaneous collection of a few
wise and many foolish individuals, called the public. The most intolerant of
churches, the Roman Catholic Church, even at the canonization of a saint,
admits, and listens patiently to, a "devil's advocate." The holiest
of men, it appears, cannot be admitted to posthumous honors, until all that the
devil could say against him is known and weighed. If even the Newtonian
philosophy were not permitted to be questioned, mankind could not feel as
complete assurance of its truth as they now do. The beliefs which we have most
warrant for, have no safeguard to rest on, but a standing invitation to the
whole world to prove them unfounded. If the challenge is not accepted, or is
accepted and the attempt fails, we are far enough from certainty still; but we
have done the best that the existing state of human reason admits of; we have
neglected nothing that could give the truth a chance of reaching us: if the
lists are kept open, we may hope that if there be a better truth, it will be
found when the human mind is capable of receiving it; and in the meantime we
may rely on having attained such approach to truth, as is possible in our own
day. This is the amount of certainty attainable by a fallible being, and this
the sole way of attaining it.
Strange it is, that men should admit the validity of the arguments for free
discussion, but object to their being "pushed to an extreme;" not
seeing that unless the reasons are good for an extreme case, they are not good
for any case. Strange that they should imagine that they are not assuming
infallibility when they acknowledge that there should be free discussion on all
subjects which can possibly be doubtful, but think that some particular
principle or doctrine should be forbidden to be questioned because it is so
certain, that is, because they are certain that it is certain. To call any
proposition certain, while there is any one who would deny its certainty if
permitted, but who is not permitted, is to assume that we ourselves, and those
who agree with us, are the judges of certainty, and judges without hearing the
other side.
In the present age which has been described as "destitute of
faith, but terrified at scepticism," in which people feel sure, not
so much that their opinions are true, as that they should not know what to do
without them the claims of an opinion to be protected from public attack
are rested not so much on its truth, as on its importance to society. There
are, it is alleged, certain beliefs, so useful, not to say indispensable to
well-being, that it is as much the duty of governments to uphold those beliefs,
as to protect any other of the interests of society. In a case of such
necessity, and so directly in the line of their duty, something less than
infallibility may, it is maintained, warrant, and even bind, governments, to
act on their own opinion, confirmed by the general opinion of mankind. It is
also often argued, and still oftener thought, that none but bad men would
desire to weaken these salutary beliefs; and there can be nothing wrong, it is
thought, in restraining bad men, and prohibiting what only such men would wish
to practise. This mode of thinking makes the justification of restraints on
discussion not a question of the truth of doctrines, but of their usefulness;
and flatters itself by that means to escape the responsibility of claiming to
be an infallible judge of opinions. But those who thus satisfy themselves, do
not perceive that the assumption of infallibility is merely shifted from one
point to another. The usefulness of an opinion is itself matter of opinion: as
disputable, as open to discussion and requiring discussion as much, as the
opinion itself. There is the same need of an infallible judge of opinions to
decide an opinion to be noxious, as to decide it to be false, unless the
opinion condemned has full opportunity of defending itself. And it will not do
to say that the heretic may be allowed to maintain the utility or harmlessness
of his opinion, though forbidden to maintain its truth. The truth of an opinion
is part of its utility. If we would know whether or not it is desirable that a
proposition should be believed, is it possible to exclude the consideration of
whether or not it is true? In the opinion, not of bad men, but of the best men,
no belief which is contrary to truth can be really useful: and can you prevent
such men from urging that plea, when they are charged with culpability for
denying some doctrine which they are told is useful, but which they believe to
be false? Those who are on the side of received opinions, never fail to take
all possible advantage of this plea; you do not find them handling the question
of utility as if it could be completely abstracted from that of truth: on the
contrary, it is, above all, because their doctrine is "the truth,"
that the knowledge or the belief of it is held to be so indispensable. There
can be no fair discussion of the question of usefulness, when an argument so
vital may be employed on one side, but not on the other. And in point of fact,
when law or public feeling do not permit the truth of an opinion to be
disputed, they are just as little tolerant of a denial of its usefulness. The
utmost they allow is an extenuation of its absolute necessity or of the
positive guilt of rejecting it.
In order more fully to illustrate the mischief of denying a hearing to
opinions because we, in our own judgment, have condemned them, it will be
desirable to fix down the discussion to a concrete case; and I choose, by
preference, the cases which are least favourable to me in which the
argument against freedom of opinion, both on the score of truth and on that of
utility, is considered the strongest. Let the opinions impugned be the belief
in a God and in a future state, or any of the commonly received doctrines of
morality. To fight the battle on such ground, gives a great advantage to an
unfair antagonist; since he will be sure to say (and many who have no desire to
be unfair will say it internally), Are these the doctrines which you do not
deem sufficiently certain to be taken under the protection of law? Is the
belief in a God one of the opinions, to feel sure of which, you hold to be
assuming infallibility? But I must be permitted to observe, that it is not the
feeling sure of a doctrine (be it what it may) which I call an assumption of
infallibility. It is the undertaking to decide that question for others,
without allowing them to hear what can be said on the contrary side. And I
denounce and reprobate this pretension not the less, if put forth on the side
of my most solemn convictions. However positive any one's persuasion may be,
not only of the falsity, but of the pernicious consequences not only of
the pernicious consequences, but (to adopt expressions which I altogether
condemn) the immorality and impiety of an opinion; yet if, in pursuance of that
private judgment, though backed by the public judgment of his country or his
cotemporaries, he prevents the opinion from being heard in its defence, he
assumes infallibility. And so far from the assumption being less objectionable
or less dangerous because the opinion is called immoral or impious, this is the
case of all others in which it is most fatal. These are exactly the occasions
on which the men of one generation commit those dreadful mistakes which excite
the astonishment and horror of posterity. It is among such that we find the
instances memorable in history, when the arm of the law has been employed to
root out the best men and the noblest doctrines; with deplorable success as to
the men, though some of the doctrines have survived to be (as if in mockery)
invoked, in defence of similar conduct towards those who dissent from them, or
from their received interpretation.
Mankind can hardly be too often reminded, that there was once a man named
Socrates, between whom and the legal authorities and public opinion of his
time, there took place a memorable collision. Born in an age and country
abounding in individual greatness, this man has been handed down to us by those
who best knew both him and the age, as the most virtuous man in it; while we
know him as the head and prototype of all subsequent teachers of virtue, the
source equally of the lofty inspiration of Plato and the judicious
utilitarianism of Aristotle, "i maestri di color che sanno," the two
headsprings of ethical as of all other philosophy. This acknowledged master of
all the eminent thinkers who have since lived whose fame, still growing
after more than two thousand years, all but outweighs the whole remainder of
the names which make his native city illustrious was put to death by his
countrymen, after a judicial conviction, for impiety and immorality. Impiety,
in denying the gods recognized by the State; indeed his accuser asserted (see
the "Apologia") that he believed in no gods at all. Immorality, in
being, by his doctrines and instructions, a "corrupter of youth." Of
these charges the tribunal, there is every ground for believing, honestly found
him guilty, and condemned the man who probably of all then born had deserved
best of mankind, to be put to death as a criminal.
To pass from this to the only other instance of judicial iniquity, the
mention of which, after the condemnation of Socrates, would not be an
anti-climax: the event which took place on Calvary rather more than eighteen
hundred years ago. The man who left on the memory of those who witnessed his
life and conversation, such an impression of his moral grandeur, that eighteen
subsequent centuries have done homage to him as the Almighty in person, was
ignominiously put to death, as what? As a blasphemer. Men did not merely
mistake their benefactor; they mistook him for the exact contrary of what he
was, and treated him as that prodigy of impiety, which they themselves are now
held to be, for their treatment of him. The feelings with which mankind now
regard these lamentable transactions, especially the latter of the two, render
them extremely unjust in their judgment of the unhappy actors. These were, to
all appearance, not bad men not worse than men most commonly are, but
rather the contrary; men who possessed in a full, or somewhat more than a full
measure, the religious, moral, and patriotic feelings of their time and people:
the very kind of men who, in all times, our own included, have every chance of
passing through life blameless and respected. The high-priest who rent his
garments when the words were pronounced, which, according to all the ideas of
his country, constituted the blackest guilt, was in all probability quite as
sincere in his horror and indignation, as the generality of respectable and
pious men now are in the religious and moral sentiments they profess; and most
of those who now shudder at his conduct, if they had lived in his time and been
born Jews, would have acted precisely as he did. Orthodox Christians who are
tempted to think that those who stoned to death the first martyrs must have
been worse men than they themselves are, ought to remember that one of those
persecutors was Saint Paul.
Let us add one more example, the most striking of all, if the impressiveness
of an error is measured by the wisdom and virtue of him who falls into it. If
ever any one, possessed of power, had grounds for thinking himself the best and
most enlightened among his cotemporaries, it was the Emperor Marcus Aurelius.
Absolute monarch of the whole civilized world, he preserved through life not
only the most unblemished justice, but what was less to be expected from his
Stoical breeding, the tenderest heart. The few failings which are attributed to
him, were all on the side of indulgence: while his writings, the highest
ethical product of the ancient mind, differ scarcely perceptibly, if they
differ at all, from the most characteristic teachings of Christ. This man, a
better Christian in all but the dogmatic sense of the word, than almost any of
the ostensibly Christian sovereigns who have since reigned, persecuted
Christianity. Placed at the summit of all the previous attainments of humanity,
with an open, unfettered intellect, and a character which led him of himself to
embody in his moral writings the Christian ideal, he yet failed to see that
Christianity was to be a good and not an evil to the world, with his duties to
which he was so deeply penetrated. Existing society he knew to be in a
deplorable state. But such as it was, he saw or thought he saw, that it was
held together and prevented from being worse, by belief and reverence of the
received divinities. As a ruler of mankind, he deemed it his duty not to suffer
society to fall in pieces; and saw not how, if its existing ties were removed,
any others could be formed which could again knit it together. The new religion
openly aimed at dissolving these ties: unless, therefore, it was his duty to
adopt that religion, it seemed to be his duty to put it down. Inasmuch then as
the theology of Christianity did not appear to him true or of divine origin;
inasmuch as this strange history of a crucified God was not credible to him,
and a system which purported to rest entirely upon a foundation to him so
wholly unbelievable, could not be foreseen by him to be that renovating agency
which, after all abatements, it has in fact proved to be; the gentlest and most
amiable of philosophers and rulers, under a solemn sense of duty, authorized
the persecution of Christianity. To my mind this is one of the most tragical
facts in all history. It is a bitter thought, how different a thing the
Christianity of the world might have been, if the Christian faith had been
adopted as the religion of the empire under the auspices of Marcus Aurelius
instead of those of Constantine. But it would be equally unjust to him and
false to truth, to deny, that no one plea which can be urged for punishing
anti-Christian teaching, was wanting to Marcus Aurelius for punishing, as he
did, the propagation of Christianity. No Christian more firmly believes that
Atheism is false, and tends to the dissolution of society, than Marcus Aurelius
believed the same things of Christianity; he who, of all men then living, might
have been thought the most capable of appreciating it. Unless any one who
approves of punishment for the promulgation of opinions, flatters himself that
he is a wiser and better man than Marcus Aurelius more deeply versed in
the wisdom of his time, more elevated in his intellect above it more
earnest in his search for truth, or more single-minded in his devotion to it
when found; let him abstain from that assumption of the joint
infallibility of himself and the multitude, which the great Antoninus made with
so unfortunate a result.
Aware of the impossibility of defending the use of punishment for
restraining irreligious opinions, by any argument which will not justify Marcus
Antoninus, the enemies of religious freedom, when hard pressed, occasionally
accept this consequence, and say, with Dr. Johnson, that the persecutors of
Christianity were in the right; that persecution is an ordeal through which
truth ought to pass, and always passes successfully, legal penalties being, in
the end, powerless against truth, though sometimes beneficially effective
against mischievous errors. This is a form of the argument for religious
intolerance, sufficiently remarkable not to be passed without notice.
A theory which maintains that truth may justifiably be persecuted because
persecution cannot possibly do it any harm, cannot be charged with being
intentionally hostile to the reception of new truths; but we cannot commend the
generosity of its dealing with the persons to whom mankind are indebted for
them. To discover to the world something which deeply concerns it, and of which
it was previously ignorant; to prove to it that it had been mistaken on some
vital point of temporal or spiritual interest, is as important a service as a
human being can render to his fellow-creatures, and in certain cases, as in
those of the early Christians and of the Reformers, those who think with Dr.
Johnson believe it to have been the most precious gift which could be bestowed
on mankind. That the authors of such splendid benefits should be requited by
martyrdom; that their reward should be to be dealt with as the vilest of
criminals, is not, upon this theory, a deplorable error and misfortune, for
which humanity should mourn in sackcloth and ashes, but the normal and
justifiable state of things. The propounder of a new truth, according to this
doctrine, should stand, as stood, in the legislation of the Locrians, the
proposer of a new law, with a halter round his neck, to be instantly tightened
if the public assembly did not, on hearing his reasons, then and there adopt
his proposition. People who defend this mode of treating benefactors, can not
be supposed to set much value on the benefit; and I believe this view of the
subject is mostly confined to the sort of persons who think that new truths may
have been desirable once, but that we have had enough of them now.
But, indeed, the dictum that truth always triumphs over persecution, is one
of those pleasant falsehoods which men repeat after one another till they pass
into commonplaces, but which all experience refutes. History teems with
instances of truth put down by persecution. If not suppressed forever, it may
be thrown back for centuries. To speak only of religious opinions: the
Reformation broke out at least twenty times before Luther, and was put down.
Arnold of Brescia was put down. Fra Dolcino was put down. Savonarola was put
down. The Albigeois were put down. The Vaudois were put down. The Lollards were
put down. The Hussites were put down. Even after the era of Luther, wherever
persecution was persisted in, it was successful. In Spain, Italy, Flanders, the
Austrian empire, Protestantism was rooted out; and, most likely, would have
been so in England, had Queen Mary lived, or Queen Elizabeth died. Persecution
has always succeeded, save where the heretics were too strong a party to be
effectually persecuted. No reasonable person can doubt that Christianity might
have been extirpated in the Roman empire. It spread, and became predominant,
because the persecutions were only occasional, lasting but a short time, and
separated by long intervals of almost undisturbed propagandism. It is a piece
of idle sentimentality that truth, merely as truth, has any inherent power
denied to error, of prevailing against the dungeon and the stake. Men are not
more zealous for truth than they often are for error, and a sufficient
application of legal or even of social penalties will generally succeed in
stopping the propagation of either. The real advantage which truth has,
consists in this, that when an opinion is true, it may be extinguished once,
twice, or many times, but in the course of ages there will generally be found
persons to rediscover it, until some one of its reappearances falls on a time
when from favourable circumstances it escapes persecution until it has made
such head as to withstand all subsequent attempts to suppress it.
It will be said, that we do not now put to death the introducers of new
opinions: we are not like our fathers who slew the prophets, we even build
sepulchres to them. It is true we no longer put heretics to death; and the
amount of penal infliction which modern feeling would probably tolerate, even
against the most obnoxious opinions, is not sufficient to extirpate them. But
let us not flatter ourselves that we are yet free from the stain even of legal
persecution. Penalties for opinion, or at least for its expression, still exist
by law; and their enforcement is not, even in these times, so unexampled as to
make it at all incredible that they may some day be revived in full force. In
the year 1857, at the summer assizes of the county of Cornwall, an unfortunate
man,[2] said to be of unexceptionable
conduct in all relations of life, was sentenced to twenty-one months
imprisonment, for uttering, and writing on a gate, some offensive words
concerning Christianity. Within a month of the same time, at the Old Bailey,
two persons, on two separate occasions,[3] were rejected as jurymen, and one of them
grossly insulted by the judge and one of the counsel, because they honestly
declared that they had no theological belief; and a third, a
foreigner,[4] for the same reason, was
denied justice against a thief. This refusal of redress took place in virtue of
the legal doctrine, that no person can be allowed to give evidence in a court
of justice, who does not profess belief in a God (any god is sufficient) and in
a future state; which is equivalent to declaring such persons to be outlaws,
excluded from the protection of the tribunals; who may not only be robbed or
assaulted with impunity, if no one but themselves, or persons of similar
opinions, be present, but any one else may be robbed or assaulted with
impunity, if the proof of the fact depends on their evidence. The assumption on
which this is grounded, is that the oath is worthless, of a person who does not
believe in a future state; a proposition which betokens much ignorance of
history in those who assent to it (since it is historically true that a large
proportion of infidels in all ages have been persons of distinguished integrity
and honor); and would be maintained by no one who had the smallest conception
how many of the persons in greatest repute with the world, both for virtues and
for attainments, are well known, at least to their intimates, to be
unbelievers. The rule, besides, is suicidal, and cuts away its own foundation.
Under pretence that atheists must be liars, it admits the testimony of all
atheists who are willing to lie, and rejects only those who brave the obloquy
of publicly confessing a detested creed rather than affirm a falsehood. A rule
thus self-convicted of absurdity so far as regards its professed purpose, can
be kept in force only as a badge of hatred, a relic of persecution; a
persecution, too, having the peculiarity that the qualification for undergoing
it is the being clearly proved not to deserve it. The rule, and the theory it
implies, are hardly less insulting to believers than to infidels. For if he who
does not believe in a future state necessarily lies, it follows that they who
do believe are only prevented from lying, if prevented they are, by the fear of
hell. We will not do the authors and abettors of the rule the injury of
supposing, that the conception which they have formed of Christian virtue is
drawn from their own consciousness.
These, indeed, are but rags and remnants of persecution, and may be thought
to be not so much an indication of the wish to persecute, as an example of that
very frequent infirmity of English minds, which makes them take a preposterous
pleasure in the assertion of a bad principle, when they are no longer bad
enough to desire to carry it really into practice. But unhappily there is no
security in the state of the public mind, that the suspension of worse forms of
legal persecution, which has lasted for about the space of a generation, will
continue. In this age the quiet surface of routine is as often ruffled by
attempts to resuscitate past evils, as to introduce new benefits. What is
boasted of at the present time as the revival of religion, is always, in narrow
and uncultivated minds, at least as much the revival of bigotry; and where
there is the strongest permanent leaven of intolerance in the feelings of a
people, which at all times abides in the middle classes of this country, it
needs but little to provoke them into actively persecuting those whom they have
never ceased to think proper objects of persecution.[5] For it is this it is the opinions men
entertain, and the feelings they cherish, respecting those who disown the
beliefs they deem important, which makes this country not a place of mental
freedom. For a long time past, the chief mischief of the legal penalties is
that they strengthen the social stigma. It is that stigma which is really
effective, and so effective is it, that the profession of opinions which are
under the ban of society is much less common in England, than is, in many other
countries, the avowal of those which incur risk of judicial punishment. In
respect to all persons but those whose pecuniary circumstances make them
independent of the good will of other people, opinion, on this subject, is as
efficacious as law; men might as well be imprisoned, as excluded from the means
of earning their bread. Those whose bread is already secured, and who desire no
favors from men in power, or from bodies of men, or from the public, have
nothing to fear from the open avowal of any opinions, but to be ill-thought of
and ill-spoken of, and this it ought not to require a very heroic mould to
enable them to bear. There is no room for any appeal ad misericordiam in behalf
of such persons. But though we do not now inflict so much evil on those who
think differently from us, as it was formerly our custom to do, it may be that
we do ourselves as much evil as ever by our treatment of them. Socrates was put
to death, but the Socratic philosophy rose like the sun in heaven, and spread
its illumination over the whole intellectual firmament. Christians were cast to
the lions, but the Christian Church grew up a stately and spreading tree,
overtopping the older and less vigorous growths, and stifling them by its
shade. Our merely social intolerance, kills no one, roots out no opinions, but
induces men to disguise them, or to abstain from any active effort for their
diffusion. With us, heretical opinions do not perceptibly gain or even lose,
ground in each decade or generation; they never blaze out far and wide, but
continue to smoulder in the narrow circles of thinking and studious persons
among whom they originate, without ever lighting up the general affairs of
mankind with either a true or a deceptive light. And thus is kept up a state of
things very satisfactory to some minds, because, without the unpleasant process
of fining or imprisoning anybody, it maintains all prevailing opinions
outwardly undisturbed, while it does not absolutely interdict the exercise of
reason by dissentients afflicted with the malady of thought. A convenient plan
for having peace in the intellectual world, and keeping all things going on
therein very much as they do already. But the price paid for this sort of
intellectual pacification, is the sacrifice of the entire moral courage of the
human mind. A state of things in which a large portion of the most active and
inquiring intellects find it advisable to keep the genuine principles and
grounds of their convictions within their own breasts, and attempt, in what
they address to the public, to fit as much as they can of their own conclusions
to premises which they have internally renounced, cannot send forth the open,
fearless characters, and logical, consistent intellects who once adorned the
thinking world. The sort of men who can be looked for under it, are either mere
conformers to commonplace, or time-servers for truth whose arguments on all
great subjects are meant for their hearers, and are not those which have
convinced themselves. Those who avoid this alternative, do so by narrowing
their thoughts and interests to things which can be spoken of without venturing
within the region of principles, that is, to small practical matters, which
would come right of themselves, if but the minds of mankind were strengthened
and enlarged, and which will never be made effectually right until then; while
that which would strengthen and enlarge men's minds, free and daring
speculation on the highest subjects, is abandoned.
Those in whose eyes this reticence on the part of heretics is no evil,
should consider in the first place, that in consequence of it there is never
any fair and thorough discussion of heretical opinions; and that such of them
as could not stand such a discussion, though they may be prevented from
spreading, do not disappear. But it is not the minds of heretics that are
deteriorated most, by the ban placed on all inquiry which does not end in the
orthodox conclusions. The greatest harm done is to those who are not heretics,
and whose whole mental development is cramped, and their reason cowed, by the
fear of heresy. Who can compute what the world loses in the multitude of
promising intellects combined with timid characters, who dare not follow out
any bold, vigorous, independent train of thought, lest it should land them in
something which would admit of being considered irreligious or immoral? Among
them we may occasionally see some man of deep conscientiousness, and subtile
and refined understanding, who spends a life in sophisticating with an
intellect which he cannot silence, and exhausts the resources of ingenuity in
attempting to reconcile the promptings of his conscience and reason with
orthodoxy, which yet he does not, perhaps, to the end succeed in doing. No one
can be a great thinker who does not recognize, that as a thinker it is his
first duty to follow his intellect to whatever conclusions it may lead. Truth
gains more even by the errors of one who, with due study and preparation,
thinks for himself, than by the true opinions of those who only hold them
because they do not suffer themselves to think. Not that it is solely, or
chiefly, to form great thinkers, that freedom of thinking is required. On the
contrary, it is as much, and even more indispensable, to enable average human
beings to attain the mental stature which they are capable of. There have been,
and may again be, great individual thinkers, in a general atmosphere of mental
slavery. But there never has been, nor ever will be, in that atmosphere, an
intellectually active people. Where any people has made a temporary approach to
such a character, it has been because the dread of heterodox speculation was
for a time suspended. Where there is a tacit convention that principles are not
to be disputed; where the discussion of the greatest questions which can occupy
humanity is considered to be closed, we cannot hope to find that generally high
scale of mental activity which has made some periods of history so remarkable.
Never when controversy avoided the subjects which are large and important
enough to kindle enthusiasm, was the mind of a people stirred up from its
foundations, and the impulse given which raised even persons of the most
ordinary intellect to something of the dignity of thinking beings. Of such we
have had an example in the condition of Europe during the times immediately
following the Reformation; another, though limited to the Continent and to a
more cultivated class, in the speculative movement of the latter half of the
eighteenth century; and a third, of still briefer duration, in the intellectual
fermentation of Germany during the Goethian and Fichtean period. These periods
differed widely in the particular opinions which they developed; but were alike
in this, that during all three the yoke of authority was broken. In each, an
old mental despotism had been thrown off, and no new one had yet taken its
place. The impulse given at these three periods has made Europe what it now is.
Every single improvement which has taken place either in the human mind or in
institutions, may be traced distinctly to one or other of them. Appearances
have for some time indicated that all three impulses are well-nigh spent; and
we can expect no fresh start, until we again assert our mental freedom.
Let us now pass to the second division of the argument, and dismissing the
Supposition that any of the received opinions may be false, let us assume them
to be true, and examine into the worth of the manner in which they are likely
to be held, when their truth is not freely and openly canvassed. However
unwillingly a person who has a strong opinion may admit the possibility that
his opinion may be false, he ought to be moved by the consideration that
however true it may be, if it is not fully, frequently, and fearlessly
discussed, it will be held as a dead dogma, not a living truth.
There is a class of persons (happily not quite so numerous as formerly) who
think it enough if a person assents undoubtingly to what they think true,
though he has no knowledge whatever of the grounds of the opinion, and could
not make a tenable defence of it against the most superficial objections. Such
persons, if they can once get their creed taught from authority, naturally
think that no good, and some harm, comes of its being allowed to be questioned.
Where their influence prevails, they make it nearly impossible for the received
opinion to be rejected wisely and considerately, though it may still be
rejected rashly and ignorantly; for to shut out discussion entirely is seldom
possible, and when it once gets in, beliefs not grounded on conviction are apt
to give way before the slightest semblance of an argument. Waiving, however,
this possibility assuming that the true opinion abides in the mind, but
abides as a prejudice, a belief independent of, and proof against, argument
this is not the way in which truth ought to be held by a rational being.
This is not knowing the truth. Truth, thus held, is but one superstition the
more, accidentally clinging to the words which enunciate a truth.
If the intellect and judgment of mankind ought to be cultivated, a thing
which Protestants at least do not deny, on what can these faculties be more
appropriately exercised by any one, than on the things which concern him so
much that it is considered necessary for him to hold opinions on them? If the
cultivation of the understanding consists in one thing more than in another, it
is surely in learning the grounds of one's own opinions. Whatever people
believe, on subjects on which it is of the first importance to believe rightly,
they ought to be able to defend against at least the common objections. But,
some one may say, "Let them be taught the grounds of their opinions. It
does not follow that opinions must be merely parroted because they are never
heard controverted. Persons who learn geometry do not simply commit the
theorems to memory, but understand and learn likewise the demonstrations; and
it would be absurd to say that they remain ignorant of the grounds of
geometrical truths, because they never hear any one deny, and attempt to
disprove them." Undoubtedly: and such teaching suffices on a subject like
mathematics, where there is nothing at all to be said on the wrong side of the
question. The peculiarity of the evidence of mathematical truths is, that all
the argument is on one side. There are no objections, and no answers to
objections. But on every subject on which difference of opinion is possible,
the truth depends on a balance to be struck between two sets of conflicting
reasons. Even in natural philosophy, there is always some other explanation
possible of the same facts; some geocentric theory instead of heliocentric,
some phlogiston instead of oxygen; and it has to be shown why that other theory
cannot be the true one: and until this is shown and until we know how it is
shown, we do not understand the grounds of our opinion. But when we turn to
subjects infinitely more complicated, to morals, religion, politics, social
relations, and the business of life, three-fourths of the arguments for every
disputed opinion consist in dispelling the appearances which favor some opinion
different from it. The greatest orator, save one, of antiquity, has left it on
record that he always studied his adversary's case with as great, if not with
still greater, intensity than even his own. What Cicero practised as the means
of forensic success, requires to be imitated by all who study any subject in
order to arrive at the truth. He who knows only his own side of the case, knows
little of that. His reasons may be good, and no one may have been able to
refute them. But if he is equally unable to refute the reasons on the opposite
side; if he does not so much as know what they are, he has no ground for
preferring either opinion. The rational position for him would be suspension of
judgment, and unless he contents himself with that, he is either led by
authority, or adopts, like the generality of the world, the side to which he
feels most inclination. Nor is it enough that he should hear the arguments of
adversaries from his own teachers, presented as they state them, and
accompanied by what they offer as refutations. This is not the way to do
justice to the arguments, or bring them into real contact with his own mind. He
must be able to hear them from persons who actually believe them; who defend
them in earnest, and do their very utmost for them. He must know them in their
most plausible and persuasive form; he must feel the whole force of the
difficulty which the true view of the subject has to encounter and dispose of,
else he will never really possess himself of the portion of truth which meets
and removes that difficulty. Ninety-nine in a hundred of what are called
educated men are in this condition, even of those who can argue fluently for
their opinions. Their conclusion may be true, but it might be false for
anything they know: they have never thrown themselves into the mental position
of those who think differently from them, and considered what such persons may
have to say; and consequently they do not, in any proper sense of the word,
know the doctrine which they themselves profess. They do not know those parts
of it which explain and justify the remainder; the considerations which show
that a fact which seemingly conflicts with another is reconcilable with it, or
that, of two apparently strong reasons, one and not the other ought to be
preferred. All that part of the truth which turns the scale, and decides the
judgment of a completely informed mind, they are strangers to; nor is it ever
really known, but to those who have attended equally and impartially to both
sides, and endeavored to see the reasons of both in the strongest light. So
essential is this discipline to a real understanding of moral and human
subjects, that if opponents of all important truths do not exist, it is
indispensable to imagine them and supply them with the strongest arguments
which the most skilful devil's advocate can conjure up.
To abate the force of these considerations, an enemy of free discussion may
be supposed to say, that there is no necessity for mankind in general to know
and understand all that can be said against or for their opinions by
philosophers and theologians. That it is not needful for common men to be able
to expose all the misstatements or fallacies of an ingenious opponent. That it
is enough if there is always somebody capable of answering them, so that
nothing likely to mislead uninstructed persons remains unrefuted. That simple
minds, having been taught the obvious grounds of the truths inculcated on them,
may trust to authority for the rest, and being aware that they have neither
knowledge nor talent to resolve every difficulty which can be raised, may
repose in the assurance that all those which have been raised have been or can
be answered, by those who are specially trained to the task.
Conceding to this view of the subject the utmost that can be claimed for it
by those most easily satisfied with the amount of understanding of truth which
ought to accompany the belief of it; even so, the argument for free discussion
is no way weakened. For even this doctrine acknowledges that mankind ought to
have a rational assurance that all objections have been satisfactorily
answered; and how are they to be answered if that which requires to be answered
is not spoken? or how can the answer be known to be satisfactory, if the
objectors have no opportunity of showing that it is unsatisfactory? If not the
public, at least the philosophers and theologians who are to resolve the
difficulties, must make themselves familiar with those difficulties in their
most puzzling form; and this cannot be accomplished unless they are freely
stated, and placed in the most advantageous light which they admit of. The
Catholic Church has its own way of dealing with this embarrassing problem. It
makes a broad separation between those who can be permitted to receive its
doctrines on conviction, and those who must accept them on trust. Neither,
indeed, are allowed any choice as to what they will accept; but the clergy,
such at least as can be fully confided in, may admissibly and meritoriously
make themselves acquainted with the arguments of opponents, in order to answer
them, and may, therefore, read heretical books; the laity, not unless by
special permission, hard to be obtained. This discipline recognizes a knowledge
of the enemy's case as beneficial to the teachers, but finds means, consistent
with this, of denying it to the rest of the world: thus giving to the elite
more mental culture, though not more mental freedom, than it allows to the
mass. By this device it succeeds in obtaining the kind of mental superiority
which its purposes require; for though culture without freedom never made a
large and liberal mind, it can make a clever nisi prius advocate of a cause.
But in countries professing Protestantism, this resource is denied; since
Protestants hold, at least in theory, that the responsibility for the choice of
a religion must be borne by each for himself, and cannot be thrown off upon
teachers. Besides, in the present state of the world, it is practically
impossible that writings which are read by the instructed can be kept from the
uninstructed. If the teachers of mankind are to be cognizant of all that they
ought to know, everything must be free to be written and published without
restraint.
If, however, the mischievous operation of the absence of free discussion,
when the received opinions are true, were confined to leaving men ignorant of
the grounds of those opinions, it might be thought that this, if an
intellectual, is no moral evil, and does not affect the worth of the opinions,
regarded in their influence on the character. The fact, however, is, that not
only the grounds of the opinion are forgotten in the absence of discussion, but
too often the meaning of the opinion itself. The words which convey it, cease
to suggest ideas, or suggest only a small portion of those they were originally
employed to communicate. Instead of a vivid conception and a living belief,
there remain only a few phrases retained by rote; or, if any part, the shell
and husk only of the meaning is retained, the finer essence being lost. The
great chapter in human history which this fact occupies and fills, cannot be
too earnestly studied and meditated on.
It is illustrated in the experience of almost all ethical doctrines and
religious creeds. They are all full of meaning and vitality to those who
originate them, and to the direct disciples of the originators. Their meaning
continues to be felt in undiminished strength, and is perhaps brought out into
even fuller consciousness, so long as the struggle lasts to give the doctrine
or creed an ascendency over other creeds. At last it either prevails, and
becomes the general opinion, or its progress stops; it keeps possession of the
ground it has gained, but ceases to spread further. When either of these
results has become apparent, controversy on the subject flags, and gradually
dies away. The doctrine has taken its place, if not as a received opinion, as
one of the admitted sects or divisions of opinion: those who hold it have
generally inherited, not adopted it; and conversion from one of these doctrines
to another, being now an exceptional fact, occupies little place in the
thoughts of their professors. Instead of being, as at first, constantly on the
alert either to defend themselves against the world, or to bring the world over
to them, they have subsided into acquiescence, and neither listen, when they
can help it, to arguments against their creed, nor trouble dissentients (if
there be such) with arguments in its favor. From this time may usually be dated
the decline in the living power of the doctrine. We often hear the teachers of
all creeds lamenting the difficulty of keeping up in the minds of believers a
lively apprehension of the truth which they nominally recognize, so that it may
penetrate the feelings, and acquire a real mastery over the conduct. No such
difficulty is complained of while the creed is still fighting for its
existence: even the weaker combatants then know and feel what they are fighting
for, and the difference between it and other doctrines; and in that period of
every creed's existence, not a few persons may be found, who have realized its
fundamental principles in all the forms of thought, have weighed and considered
them in all their important bearings, and have experienced the full effect on
the character, which belief in that creed ought to produce in a mind thoroughly
imbued with it. But when it has come to be an hereditary creed, and to be
received passively, not actively when the mind is no longer compelled,
in the same degree as at first, to exercise its vital powers on the questions
which its belief presents to it, there is a progressive tendency to forget all
of the belief except the formularies, or to give it a dull and torpid assent,
as if accepting it on trust dispensed with the necessity of realizing it in
consciousness, or testing it by personal experience; until it almost ceases to
connect itself at all with the inner life of the human being. Then are seen the
cases, so frequent in this age of the world as almost to form the majority, in
which the creed remains as it were outside the mind, encrusting and petrifying
it against all other influences addressed to the higher parts of our nature;
manifesting its power by not suffering any fresh and living conviction to get
in, but itself doing nothing for the mind or heart, except standing sentinel
over them to keep them vacant.
To what an extent doctrines intrinsically fitted to make the deepest
impression upon the mind may remain in it as dead beliefs, without being ever
realized in the imagination, the feelings, or the understanding, is exemplified
by the manner in which the majority of believers hold the doctrines of
Christianity. By Christianity I here mean what is accounted such by all
churches and sects the maxims and precepts contained in the New
Testament. These are considered sacred, and accepted as laws, by all professing
Christians. Yet it is scarcely too much to say that not one Christian in a
thousand guides or tests his individual conduct by reference to those laws. The
standard to which he does refer it, is the custom of his nation, his class, or
his religious profession. He has thus, on the one hand, a collection of ethical
maxims, which he believes to have been vouchsafed to him by infallible wisdom
as rules for his government; and on the other, a set of every-day judgments and
practices, which go a certain length with some of those maxims, not so great a
length with others, stand in direct opposition to some, and are, on the whole,
a compromise between the Christian creed and the interests and suggestions of
worldly life. To the first of these standards he gives his homage; to the other
his real allegiance. All Christians believe that the blessed are the poor and
humble, and those who are ill-used by the world; that it is easier for a camel
to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of
heaven; that they should judge not, lest they be judged; that they should swear
not at all; that they should love their neighbor as themselves; that if one
take their cloak, they should give him their coat also; that they should take
no thought for the morrow; that if they would be perfect, they should sell all
that they have and give it to the poor. They are not insincere when they say
that they believe these things. They do believe them, as people believe what
they have always heard lauded and never discussed. But in the sense of that
living belief which regulates conduct, they believe these doctrines just up to
the point to which it is usual to act upon them. The doctrines in their
integrity are serviceable to pelt adversaries with; and it is understood that
they are to be put forward (when possible) as the reasons for whatever people
do that they think laudable. But any one who reminded them that the maxims
require an infinity of things which they never even think of doing would gain
nothing but to be classed among those very unpopular characters who affect to
be better than other people. The doctrines have no hold on ordinary believers
are not a power in their minds. They have an habitual respect for the
sound of them, but no feeling which spreads from the words to the things
signified, and forces the mind to take them in, and make them conform to the
formula. Whenever conduct is concerned, they look round for Mr. A and B to
direct them how far to go in obeying Christ.
Now we may be well assured that the case was not thus, but far otherwise,
with the early Christians. Had it been thus, Christianity never would have
expanded from an obscure sect of the despised Hebrews into the religion of the
Roman empire. When their enemies said, "See how these Christians love one
another" (a remark not likely to be made by anybody now), they assuredly
had a much livelier feeling of the meaning of their creed than they have ever
had since. And to this cause, probably, it is chiefly owing that Christianity
now makes so little progress in extending its domain, and after eighteen
centuries, is still nearly confined to Europeans and the descendants of
Europeans. Even with the strictly religious, who are much in earnest about
their doctrines, and attach a greater amount of meaning to many of them than
people in general, it commonly happens that the part which is thus
comparatively active in their minds is that which was made by Calvin, or Knox,
or some such person much nearer in character to themselves. The sayings of
Christ coexist passively in their minds, producing hardly any effect beyond
what is caused by mere listening to words so amiable and bland. There are many
reasons, doubtless, why doctrines which are the badge of a sect retain more of
their vitality than those common to all recognized sects, and why more pains
are taken by teachers to keep their meaning alive; but one reason certainly is,
that the peculiar doctrines are more questioned, and have to be oftener
defended against open gainsayers. Both teachers and learners go to sleep at
their post, as soon as there is no enemy in the field.
The same thing holds true, generally speaking, of all traditional doctrines
those of prudence and knowledge of life, as well as of morals or
religion. All languages and literatures are full of general observations on
life, both as to what it is, and how to conduct oneself in it; observations
which everybody knows, which everybody repeats, or hears with acquiescence,
which are received as truisms, yet of which most people first truly learn the
meaning, when experience, generally of a painful kind, has made it a reality to
them. How often, when smarting under some unforeseen misfortune or
disappointment, does a person call to mind some proverb or common saying
familiar to him all his life, the meaning of which, if he had ever before felt
it as he does now, would have saved him from the calamity. There are indeed
reasons for this, other than the absence of discussion: there are many truths
of which the full meaning cannot be realized, until personal experience has
brought it home. But much more of the meaning even of these would have been
understood, and what was understood would have been far more deeply impressed
on the mind, if the man had been accustomed to hear it argued pro and con by
people who did understand it. The fatal tendency of mankind to leave off
thinking about a thing when it is no longer doubtful, is the cause of half
their errors. A contemporary author has well spoken of "the deep slumber
of a decided opinion."
But what! (it may be asked) Is the absence of unanimity an indispensable
condition of true knowledge? Is it necessary that some part of mankind should
persist in error, to enable any to realize the truth? Does a belief cease to be
real and vital as soon as it is generally received and is a proposition
never thoroughly understood and felt unless some doubt of it remains? As soon
as mankind have unanimously accepted a truth, does the truth perish within
them? The highest aim and best result of improved intelligence, it has hitherto
been thought, is to unite mankind more and more in the acknowledgment of all
important truths: and does the intelligence only last as long as it has not
achieved its object? Do the fruits of conquest perish by the very completeness
of the victory?
I affirm no such thing. As mankind improve, the number of doctrines which
are no longer disputed or doubted will be constantly on the increase: and the
well-being of mankind may almost be measured by the number and gravity of the
truths which have reached the point of being uncontested. The cessation, on one
question after another, of serious controversy, is one of the necessary
incidents of the consolidation of opinion; a consolidation as salutary in the
case of true opinions, as it is dangerous and noxious when the opinions are
erroneous. But though this gradual narrowing of the bounds of diversity of
opinion is necessary in both senses of the term, being at once inevitable and
indispensable, we are not therefore obliged to conclude that all its
consequences must be beneficial. The loss of so important an aid to the
intelligent and living apprehension of a truth, as is afforded by the necessity
of explaining it to, or defending it against, opponents, though not sufficient
to outweigh, is no trifling drawback from, the benefit of its universal
recognition. Where this advantage can no longer be had, I confess I should like
to see the teachers of mankind endeavoring to provide a substitute for it; some
contrivance for making the difficulties of the question as present to the
learner's consciousness, as if they were pressed upon him by a dissentient
champion, eager for his conversion.
But instead of seeking contrivances for this purpose, they have lost those
they formerly had. The Socratic dialectics, so magnificently exemplified in the
dialogues of Plato, were a contrivance of this description. They were
essentially a negative discussion of the great questions of philosophy and
life, directed with consummate skill to the purpose of convincing any one who
had merely adopted the commonplaces of received opinion, that he did not
understand the subject that he as yet attached no definite meaning to
the doctrines he professed; in order that, becoming aware of his ignorance, he
might be put in the way to attain a stable belief, resting on a clear
apprehension both of the meaning of doctrines and of their evidence. The school
disputations of the Middle Ages had a somewhat similar object. They were
intended to make sure that the pupil understood his own opinion, and (by
necessary correlation) the opinion opposed to it, and could enforce the grounds
of the one and confute those of the other. These last-mentioned contests had
indeed the incurable defect, that the premises appealed to were taken from
authority, not from reason; and, as a discipline to the mind, they were in
every respect inferior to the powerful dialectics which formed the intellects
of the "Socratici viri:" but the modern mind owes far more to both
than it is generally willing to admit, and the present modes of education
contain nothing which in the smallest degree supplies the place either of the
one or of the other. A person who derives all his instruction from teachers or
books, even if he escape the besetting temptation of contenting himself with
cram, is under no compulsion to hear both sides; accordingly it is far from a
frequent accomplishment, even among thinkers, to know both sides; and the
weakest part of what everybody says in defence of his opinion, is what he
intends as a reply to antagonists. It is the fashion of the present time to
disparage negative logic that which points out weaknesses in theory or
errors in practice, without establishing positive truths. Such negative
criticism would indeed be poor enough as an ultimate result; but as a means to
attaining any positive knowledge or conviction worthy the name, it cannot be
valued too highly; and until people are again systematically trained to it,
there will be few great thinkers, and a low general average of intellect, in
any but the mathematical and physical departments of speculation. On any other
subject no one's opinions deserve the name of knowledge, except so far as he
has either had forced upon him by others, or gone through of himself, the same
mental process which would have been required of him in carrying on an active
controversy with opponents. That, therefore, which when absent, it is so
indispensable, but so difficult, to create, how worse than absurd is it to
forego, when spontaneously offering itself! If there are any persons who
contest a received opinion, or who will do so if law or opinion will let them,
let us thank them for it, open our minds to listen to them, and rejoice that
there is some one to do for us what we otherwise ought, if we have any regard
for either the certainty or the vitality of our convictions, to do with much
greater labor for ourselves.
It still remains to speak of one of the principal causes which make
diversity of opinion advantageous, and will continue to do so until mankind
shall have entered a stage of intellectual advancement which at present seems
at an incalculable distance. We have hitherto considered only two
possibilities: that the received opinion may be false, and some other opinion,
consequently, true; or that, the received opinion being true, a conflict with
the opposite error is essential to a clear apprehension and deep feeling of its
truth. But there is a commoner case than either of these; when the conflicting
doctrines, instead of being one true and the other false, share the truth
between them; and the nonconforming opinion is needed to supply the remainder
of the truth, of which the received doctrine embodies only a part. Popular
opinions, on subjects not palpable to sense, are often true, but seldom or
never the whole truth. They are a part of the truth; sometimes a greater,
sometimes a smaller part, but exaggerated, distorted, and disjoined from the
truths by which they ought to be accompanied and limited. Heretical opinions,
on the other hand, are generally some of these suppressed and neglected truths,
bursting the bonds which kept them down, and either seeking reconciliation with
the truth contained in the common opinion, or fronting it as enemies, and
setting themselves up, with similar exclusiveness, as the whole truth. The
latter case is hitherto the most frequent, as, in the human mind, one-sidedness
has always been the rule, and many-sidedness the exception. Hence, even in
revolutions of opinion, one part of the truth usually sets while another rises.
Even progress, which ought to superadd, for the most part only substitutes one
partial and incomplete truth for another; improvement consisting chiefly in
this, that the new fragment of truth is more wanted, more adapted to the needs
of the time, than that which it displaces. Such being the partial character of
prevailing opinions, even when resting on a true foundation; every opinion
which embodies somewhat of the portion of truth which the common opinion omits,
ought to be considered precious, with whatever amount of error and confusion
that truth may be blended. No sober judge of human affairs will feel bound to
be indignant because those who force on our notice truths which we should
otherwise have overlooked, overlook some of those which we see. Rather, he will
think that so long as popular truth is one-sided, it is more desirable than
otherwise that unpopular truth should have one-sided asserters too; such being
usually the most energetic, and the most likely to compel reluctant attention
to the fragment of wisdom which they proclaim as if it were the whole.
Thus, in the eighteenth century, when nearly all the instructed, and all
those of the uninstructed who were led by them, were lost in admiration of what
is called civilization, and of the marvels of modern science, literature, and
philosophy, and while greatly overrating the amount of unlikeness between the
men of modern and those of ancient times, indulged the belief that the whole of
the difference was in their own favor; with what a salutary shock did the
paradoxes of Rousseau explode like bombshells in the midst, dislocating the
compact mass of one-sided opinion, and forcing its elements to recombine in a
better form and with additional ingredients. Not that the current opinions were
on the whole farther from the truth than Rousseau's were; on the contrary, they
were nearer to it; they contained more of positive truth, and very much less of
error. Nevertheless there lay in Rousseau's doctrine, and has floated down the
stream of opinion along with it, a considerable amount of exactly those truths
which the popular opinion wanted; and these are the deposit which was left
behind when the flood subsided. The superior worth of simplicity of life, the
enervating and demoralizing effect of the trammels and hypocrisies of
artificial society, are ideas which have never been entirely absent from
cultivated minds since Rousseau wrote; and they will in time produce their due
effect, though at present needing to be asserted as much as ever, and to be
asserted by deeds, for words, on this subject, have nearly exhausted their
power.
In politics, again, it is almost a commonplace, that a party of order or
stability, and a party of progress or reform, are both necessary elements of a
healthy state of political life; until the one or the other shall have so
enlarged its mental grasp as to be a party equally of order and of progress,
knowing and distinguishing what is fit to be preserved from what ought to be
swept away. Each of these modes of thinking derives its utility from the
deficiencies of the other; but it is in a great measure the opposition of the
other that keeps each within the limits of reason and sanity. Unless opinions
favorable to democracy and to aristocracy, to property and to equality, to
co-operation and to competition, to luxury and to abstinence, to sociality and
individuality, to liberty and discipline, and all the other standing
antagonisms of practical life, are expressed with equal freedom, and enforced
and defended with equal talent and energy, there is no chance of both elements
obtaining their due; one scale is sure to go up, and the other down. Truth, in
the great practical concerns of life, is so much a question of the reconciling
and combining of opposites, that very few have minds sufficiently capacious and
impartial to make the adjustment with an approach to correctness, and it has to
be made by the rough process of a struggle between combatants fighting under
hostile banners. On any of the great open questions just enumerated, if either
of the two opinions has a better claim than the other, not merely to be
tolerated, but to be encouraged and countenanced, it is the one which happens
at the particular time and place to be in a minority. That is the opinion
which, for the time being, represents the neglected interests, the side of
human well-being which is in danger of obtaining less than its share. I am
aware that there is not, in this country, any intolerance of differences of
opinion on most of these topics. They are adduced to show, by admitted and
multiplied examples, the universality of the fact, that only through diversity
of opinion is there, in the existing state of human intellect, a chance of fair
play to all sides of the truth. When there are persons to be found, who form an
exception to the apparent unanimity of the world on any subject, even if the
world is in the right, it is always probable that dissentients have something
worth hearing to say for themselves, and that truth would lose something by
their silence.
It may be objected, "But some received principles, especially on the
highest and most vital subjects, are more than half-truths. The Christian
morality, for instance, is the whole truth on that subject and if any one
teaches a morality which varies from it, he is wholly in error." As this
is of all cases the most important in practice, none can be fitter to test the
general maxim. But before pronouncing what Christian morality is or is not, it
would be desirable to decide what is meant by Christian morality. If it means
the morality of the New Testament, I wonder that any one who derives his
knowledge of this from the book itself, can suppose that it was announced, or
intended, as a complete doctrine of morals. The Gospel always refers to a
preexisting morality, and confines its precepts to the particulars in which
that morality was to be corrected, or superseded by a wider and higher;
expressing itself, moreover, in terms most general, often impossible to be
interpreted literally, and possessing rather the impressiveness of poetry or
eloquence than the precision of legislation. To extract from it a body of
ethical doctrine, has never been possible without eking it out from the Old
Testament, that is, from a system elaborate indeed, but in many respects
barbarous, and intended only for a barbarous people. St. Paul, a declared enemy
to this Judaical mode of interpreting the doctrine and filling up the scheme of
his Master, equally assumes a preexisting morality, namely, that of the Greeks
and Romans; and his advice to Christians is in a great measure a system of
accommodation to that; even to the extent of giving an apparent sanction to
slavery. What is called Christian, but should rather be termed theological,
morality, was not the work of Christ or the Apostles, but is of much later
origin, having been gradually built up by the Catholic Church of the first five
centuries, and though not implicitly adopted by moderns and Protestants, has
been much less modified by them than might have been expected. For the most
part, indeed, they have contented themselves with cutting off the additions
which had been made to it in the Middle Ages, each sect supplying the place by
fresh additions, adapted to its own character and tendencies. That mankind owe
a great debt to this morality, and to its early teachers, I should be the last
person to deny; but I do not scruple to say of it, that it is, in many
important points, incomplete and one-sided, and that unless ideas and feelings,
not sanctioned by it, had contributed to the formation of European life and
character, human affairs would have been in a worse condition than they now
are. Christian morality (so called) has all the characters of a reaction; it
is, in great part, a protest against Paganism. Its ideal is negative rather
than positive; passive rather than active; Innocence rather than Nobleness;
Abstinence from Evil, rather than energetic Pursuit of Good: in its precepts
(as has been well said) "thou shalt not" predominates unduly over
"thou shalt." In its horror of sensuality, it made an idol of
asceticism, which has been gradually compromised away into one of legality. It
holds out the hope of heaven and the threat of hell, as the appointed and
appropriate motives to a virtuous life: in this falling far below the best of
the ancients, and doing what lies in it to give to human morality an
essentially selfish character, by disconnecting each man's feelings of duty
from the interests of his fellow-creatures, except so far as a self-interested
inducement is offered to him for consulting them. It is essentially a doctrine
of passive obedience; it inculcates submission to all authorities found
established; who indeed are not to be actively obeyed when they command what
religion forbids, but who are not to be resisted, far less rebelled against,
for any amount of wrong to ourselves. And while, in the morality of the best
Pagan nations, duty to the State holds even a disproportionate place,
infringing on the just liberty of the individual; in purely Christian ethics
that grand department of duty is scarcely noticed or acknowledged. It is in the
Koran, not the New Testament, that we read the maxim "A ruler who
appoints any man to an office, when there is in his dominions another man
better qualified for it, sins against God and against the State." What
little recognition the idea of obligation to the public obtains in modern
morality, is derived from Greek and Roman sources, not from Christian; as, even
in the morality of private life, whatever exists of magnanimity,
high-mindedness, personal dignity, even the sense of honor, is derived from the
purely human, not the religious part of our education, and never could have
grown out of a standard of ethics in which the only worth, professedly
recognized, is that of obedience.
I am as far as any one from pretending that these defects are necessarily
inherent in the Christian ethics, in every manner in which it can be conceived,
or that the many requisites of a complete moral doctrine which it does not
contain, do not admit of being reconciled with it. Far less would I insinuate
this of the doctrines and precepts of Christ himself. I believe that the
sayings of Christ are all, that I can see any evidence of their having been
intended to be; that they are irreconcilable with nothing which a comprehensive
morality requires; that everything which is excellent in ethics may be brought
within them, with no greater violence to their language than has been done to
it by all who have attempted to deduce from them any practical system of
conduct whatever. But it is quite consistent with this, to believe that they
contain and were meant to contain, only a part of the truth; that many
essential elements of the highest morality are among the things which are not
provided for, nor intended to be provided for, in the recorded deliverances of
the Founder of Christianity, and which have been entirely thrown aside in the
system of ethics erected on the basis of those deliverances by the Christian
Church. And this being so, I think it a great error to persist in attempting to
find in the Christian doctrine that complete rule for our guidance, which its
author intended it to sanction and enforce, but only partially to provide. I
believe, too, that this narrow theory is becoming a grave practical evil,
detracting greatly from the value of the moral training and instruction, which
so many well-meaning persons are now at length exerting themselves to promote.
I much fear that by attempting to form the mind and feelings on an exclusively
religious type, and discarding those secular standards (as for want of a better
name they may be called) which heretofore coexisted with and supplemented the
Christian ethics, receiving some of its spirit, and infusing into it some of
theirs, there will result, and is even now resulting, a low, abject, servile
type of character, which, submit itself as it may to what it deems the Supreme
Will, is incapable of rising to or sympathizing in the conception of Supreme
Goodness. I believe that other ethics than any one which can be evolved from
exclusively Christian sources, must exist side by side with Christian ethics to
produce the moral regeneration of mankind; and that the Christian system is no
exception to the rule that in an imperfect state of the human mind, the
interests of truth require a diversity of opinions. It is not necessary that in
ceasing to ignore the moral truths not contained in Christianity, men should
ignore any of those which it does contain. Such prejudice, or oversight, when
it occurs, is altogether an evil; but it is one from which we cannot hope to be
always exempt, and must be regarded as the price paid for an inestimable good.
The exclusive pretension made by a part of the truth to be the whole, must and
ought to be protested against, and if a reactionary impulse should make the
protestors unjust in their turn, this one-sidedness, like the other, may be
lamented, but must be tolerated. If Christians would teach infidels to be just
to Christianity, they should themselves be just to infidelity. It can do truth
no service to blink the fact, known to all who have the most ordinary
acquaintance with literary history, that a large portion of the noblest and
most valuable moral teaching has been the work, not only of men who did not
know, but of men who knew and rejected, the Christian faith.
I do not pretend that the most unlimited use of the freedom of enunciating
all possible opinions would put an end to the evils of religious or
philosophical sectarianism. Every truth which men of narrow capacity are in
earnest about, is sure to be asserted, inculcated, and in many ways even acted
on, as if no other truth existed in the world, or at all events none that could
limit or qualify the first. I acknowledge that the tendency of all opinions to
become sectarian is not cured by the freest discussion, but is often heightened
and exacerbated thereby; the truth which ought to have been, but was not, seen,
being rejected all the more violently because proclaimed by persons regarded as
opponents. But it is not on the impassioned partisan, it is on the calmer and
more disinterested bystander, that this collision of opinions works its
salutary effect. Not the violent conflict between parts of the truth, but the
quiet suppression of half of it, is the formidable evil: there is always hope
when people are forced to listen to both sides; it is when they attend only to
one that errors harden into prejudices, and truth itself ceases to have the
effect of truth, by being exaggerated into falsehood. And since there are few
mental attributes more rare than that judicial faculty which can sit in
intelligent judgment between two sides of a question, of which only one is
represented by an advocate before it, truth has no chance but in proportion as
every side of it, every opinion which embodies any fraction of the truth, not
only finds advocates, but is so advocated as to be listened to.
We have now recognized the necessity to the mental well-being of mankind (on
which all their other well-being depends) of freedom of opinion, and freedom of
the expression of opinion, on four distinct grounds; which we will now briefly
recapitulate.
First, if any opinion is compelled to silence, that opinion may, for aught
we can certainly know, be true. To deny this is to assume our own
infallibility.
Secondly, though the silenced opinion be an error, it may, and very commonly
does, contain a portion of truth; and since the general or prevailing opinion
on any object is rarely or never the whole truth, it is only by the collision
of adverse opinions that the remainder of the truth has any chance of being
supplied.
Thirdly, even if the received opinion be not only true, but the whole truth;
unless it is suffered to be, and actually is, vigorously and earnestly
contested, it will, by most of those who receive it, be held in the manner of a
prejudice, with little comprehension or feeling of its rational grounds. And
not only this, but, fourthly, the meaning of the doctrine itself will be in
danger of being lost, or enfeebled, and deprived of its vital effect on the
character and conduct: the dogma becoming a mere formal profession,
inefficacious for good, but cumbering the ground, and preventing the growth of
any real and heartfelt conviction, from reason or personal experience.
Before quitting the subject of freedom of opinion, it is fit to take notice
of those who say, that the free expression of all opinions should be permitted,
on condition that the manner be temperate, and do not pass the bounds of fair
discussion. Much might be said on the impossibility of fixing where these
supposed bounds are to be placed; for if the test be offence to those whose
opinion is attacked, I think experience testifies that this offence is given
whenever the attack is telling and powerful, and that every opponent who pushes
them hard, and whom they find it difficult to answer, appears to them, if he
shows any strong feeling on the subject, an intemperate opponent. But this,
though an important consideration in a practical point of view, merges in a
more fundamental objection. Undoubtedly the manner of asserting an opinion,
even though it be a true one, may be very objectionable, and may justly incur
severe censure. But the principal offences of the kind are such as it is mostly
impossible, unless by accidental self-betrayal, to bring home to conviction.
The gravest of them is, to argue sophistically, to suppress facts or arguments,
to misstate the elements of the case, or misrepresent the opposite opinion. But
all this, even to the most aggravated degree, is so continually done in perfect
good faith, by persons who are not considered, and in many other respects may
not deserve to be considered, ignorant or incompetent, that it is rarely
possible on adequate grounds conscientiously to stamp the misrepresentation as
morally culpable; and still less could law presume to interfere with this kind
of controversial misconduct. With regard to what is commonly meant by
intemperate discussion, namely, invective, sarcasm, personality, and the like,
the denunciation of these weapons would deserve more sympathy if it were ever
proposed to interdict them equally to both sides; but it is only desired to
restrain the employment of them against the prevailing opinion: against the
unprevailing they may not only be used without general disapproval, but will be
likely to obtain for him who uses them the praise of honest zeal and righteous
indignation. Yet whatever mischief arises from their use, is greatest when they
are employed against the comparatively defenceless; and whatever unfair
advantage can be derived by any opinion from this mode of asserting it, accrues
almost exclusively to received opinions. The worst offence of this kind which
can be committed by a polemic, is to stigmatize those who hold the contrary
opinion as bad and immoral men. To calumny of this sort, those who hold any
unpopular opinion are peculiarly exposed, because they are in general few and
uninfluential, and nobody but themselves feels much interest in seeing justice
done them; but this weapon is, from the nature of the case, denied to those who
attack a prevailing opinion: they can neither use it with safety to themselves,
nor if they could, would it do anything but recoil on their own cause. In
general, opinions contrary to those commonly received can only obtain a hearing
by studied moderation of language, and the most cautious avoidance of
unnecessary offence, from which they hardly ever deviate even in a slight
degree without losing ground: while unmeasured vituperation employed on the
side of the prevailing opinion, really does deter people from professing
contrary opinions, and from listening to those who profess them. For the
interest, therefore, of truth and justice, it is far more important to restrain
this employment of vituperative language than the other; and, for example, if
it were necessary to choose, there would be much more need to discourage
offensive attacks on infidelity, than on religion. It is, however, obvious that
law and authority have no business with restraining either, while opinion
ought, in every instance, to determine its verdict by the circumstances of the
individual case; condemning every one, on whichever side of the argument he
places himself, in whose mode of advocacy either want of candor, or malignity,
bigotry or intolerance of feeling manifest themselves, but not inferring these
vices from the side which a person takes, though it be the contrary side of the
question to our own; and giving merited honor to every one, whatever opinion he
may hold, who has calmness to see and honesty to state what his opponents and
their opinions really are, exaggerating nothing to their discredit, keeping
nothing back which tells, or can be supposed to tell, in their favor. This is
the real morality of public discussion; and if often violated, I am happy to
think that there are many controversialists who to a great extent observe it,
and a still greater number who conscientiously strive towards it.
[1] These words had scarcely been written, when, as if to
give them an emphatic contradiction, occurred the Government Press Prosecutions
of 1858. That illjudged interference with the liberty of public discussion has
not, however, induced me to alter a single word in the text, nor has it at all
weakened my conviction that, moments of panic excepted, the era of pains and
penalties far political discussion has, in our own country, passed away. For,
in the first place, the prosecutions were not persisted in; and in the second,
they were never, properly speaking, political prosecutions. The offence charged
was not that of criticizing institutions, or the acts or persons of rulers, but
of circulating what was deemed an immoral doctrine, the lawfulness of
Tyrannicide.
If the arguments of the present chapter are of any validity, there ought to
exist the fullest liberty of professing and discussing, as a matter of ethical
conviction, any doctrine, however immoral it may be considered. It would,
therefore, be irrelevant and out of place to examine here, whether the doctrine
of Tyrannicide deserves that title. I shall content myself with saying, that
the subject has been at all times one of the open questions of morals, that the
act of a private citizen in striking down a criminal, who, by raising himself
above the law, has placed himself beyond the reach of legal punishment or
control, has been accounted by whole nations, and by some of the best and
wisest of men, not a crime, but an act of exalted virtue and that, right or
wrong, it is not of the nature of assassination but of civil war. As such, I
hold that the instigation to it, in a specific case, may be a proper subject of
punishment, but only if an overt act has followed, and at least a probable
connection can be established between the act and the instigation. Even then it
is not a foreign government, but the very government assailed, which alone, in
the exercise of self-defence, can legitimately punish attacks directed against
its own existence.
[2] Thomas Pooley, Bodmin Assizes, July 31, 1857. In
December following, he received a free pardon from the Crown.
[3] George Jacob Holyoake, August 17, 1857; Edward
Truelove, July, 1857.
[4] Baron de Gleichen, Marlborough Street Police Court,
August 4, 1857.
[5] Ample warning may be drawn from the large infusion of
the passions of a persecutor, which mingled with the general display of the
worst parts of our national character on the occasion of the Sepoy
insurrection. The ravings of fanatics or charlatans from the pulpit may be
unworthy of notice; but the heads of the Evangelical party have announced as
their principle, for the government of Hindoos and Mahomedans, that no schools
be supported by public money in which the Bible is not taught, and by necessary
consequence that no public employment be given to any but real or pretended
Christians. An Under-Secretary of State, in a speech delivered to his
constituents on the 12th of November, 1857, is reported to have said:
"Toleration of their faith" (the faith of a hundred millions of
British subjects), "the superstition which they called religion, by the
British Government, had had the effect of retarding the ascendency of the
British name, and preventing the salutary growth of Christianity.... Toleration
was the great corner-stone of the religious liberties of this country; but do
not let them abuse that precious word toleration. As he understood it, it meant
the complete liberty to all, freedom of worship, among Christians, who
worshipped upon the same foundation. It meant toleration of all sects and
denominations of Christians who believed in the one mediation." I desire
to call attention to the fact, that a man who has been deemed fit to fill a
high office in the government of this country, under a liberal Ministry,
maintains the doctrine that all who do not believe in the divinity of Christ
are beyond the pale of toleration. Who, after this imbecile display, can
indulge the illusion that religious persecution has passed away, never to
return?
CHAPTER III
ON INDIVIDUALITY, AS ONE OF THE ELEMENTS OF WELLBEING
SUCH being the reasons which make it imperative that human beings should be
free to form opinions, and to express their opinions without reserve; and such
the baneful consequences to the intellectual, and through that to the moral
nature of man, unless this liberty is either conceded, or asserted in spite of
prohibition; let us next examine whether the same reasons do not require that
men should be free to act upon their opinions to carry these out in
their lives, without hindrance, either physical or moral, from their
fellow-men, so long as it is at their own risk and peril. This last proviso is
of course indispensable. No one pretends that actions should be as free as
opinions. On the contrary, even opinions lose their immunity, when the
circumstances in which they are expressed are such as to constitute their
expression a positive instigation to some mischievous act. An opinion that
corn-dealers are starvers of the poor, or that private property is robbery,
ought to be unmolested when simply circulated through the press, but may justly
incur punishment when delivered orally to an excited mob assembled before the
house of a corn-dealer, or when handed about among the same mob in the form of
a placard. Acts of whatever kind, which, without justifiable cause, do harm to
others, may be, and in the more important cases absolutely require to be,
controlled by the unfavorable sentiments, and, when needful, by the active
interference of mankind. The liberty of the individual must be thus far
limited; he must not make himself a nuisance to other people. But if he
refrains from molesting others in what concerns them, and merely acts according
to his own inclination and judgment in things which concern himself, the same
reasons which show that opinion should be free, prove also that he should be
allowed, without molestation, to carry his opinions into practice at his own
cost. That mankind are not infallible; that their truths, for the most part,
are only half-truths; that unity of opinion, unless resulting from the fullest
and freest comparison of opposite opinions, is not desirable, and diversity not
an evil, but a good, until mankind are much more capable than at present of
recognizing all sides of the truth, are principles applicable to men's modes of
action, not less than to their opinions. As it is useful that while mankind are
imperfect there should be different opinions, so is it that there should be
different experiments of living; that free scope should be given to varieties
of character, short of injury to others; and that the worth of different modes
of life should be proved practically, when any one thinks fit to try them. It
is desirable, in short, that in things which do not primarily concern others,
individuality should assert itself. Where, not the person's own character, but
the traditions of customs of other people are the rule of conduct, there is
wanting one of the principal ingredients of human happiness, and quite the
chief ingredient of individual and social progress.
In maintaining this principle, the greatest difficulty to be encountered
does not lie in the appreciation of means towards an acknowledged end, but in
the indifference of persons in general to the end itself. If it were felt that
the free development of individuality is one of the leading essentials of
well-being; that it is not only a coordinate element with all that is
designated by the terms civilization, instruction, education, culture, but is
itself a necessary part and condition of all those things; there would be no
danger that liberty should be undervalued, and the adjustment of the boundaries
between it and social control would present no extraordinary difficulty. But
the evil is, that individual spontaneity is hardly recognized by the common
modes of thinking as having any intrinsic worth, or deserving any regard on its
own account. The majority, being satisfied with the ways of mankind as they now
are (for it is they who make them what they are), cannot comprehend why those
ways should not be good enough for everybody; and what is more, spontaneity
forms no part of the ideal of the majority of moral and social reformers, but
is rather looked on with jealousy, as a troublesome and perhaps rebellious
obstruction to the general acceptance of what these reformers, in their own
judgment, think would be best for mankind. Few persons, out of Germany, even
comprehend the meaning of the doctrine which Wilhelm von Humboldt, so eminent
both as a savant and as a politician, made the text of a treatise that
"the end of man, or that which is prescribed by the eternal or immutable
dictates of reason, and not suggested by vague and transient desires, is the
highest and most harmonious development of his powers to a complete and
consistent whole;" that, therefore, the object "towards which every
human being must ceaselessly direct his efforts, and on which especially those
who design to influence their fellow-men must ever keep their eyes, is the
individuality of power and development;" that for this there are two
requisites, "freedom, and a variety of situations;" and that from the
union of these arise "individual vigor and manifold diversity," which
combine themselves in "originality."[1]
Little, however, as people are accustomed to a doctrine like that of Von
Humboldt, and surprising as it may be to them to find so high a value attached
to individuality, the question, one must nevertheless think, can only be one of
degree. No one's idea of excellence in conduct is that people should do
absolutely nothing but copy one another. No one would assert that people ought
not to put into their mode of life, and into the conduct of their concerns, any
impress whatever of their own judgment, or of their own individual character.
On the other hand, it would be absurd to pretend that people ought to live as
if nothing whatever had been known in the world before they came into it; as if
experience had as yet done nothing towards showing that one mode of existence,
or of conduct, is preferable to another. Nobody denies that people should be so
taught and trained in youth, as to know and benefit by the ascertained results
of human experience. But it is the privilege and proper condition of a human
being, arrived at the maturity of his faculties, to use and interpret
experience in his own way. It is for him to find out what part of recorded
experience is properly applicable to his own circumstances and character. The
traditions and customs of other people are, to a certain extent, evidence of
what their experience has taught them; presumptive evidence, and as such, have
a claim to this deference: but, in the first place, their experience may be too
narrow; or they may not have interpreted it rightly. Secondly, their
interpretation of experience may be correct but unsuitable to him. Customs are
made for customary circumstances, and customary characters: and his
circumstances or his character may be uncustomary. Thirdly, though the customs
be both good as customs, and suitable to him, yet to conform to custom, merely
as custom, does not educate or develop in him any of the qualities which are
the distinctive endowment of a human being. The human faculties of perception,
judgment, discriminative feeling, mental activity, and even moral preference,
are exercised only in making a choice. He who does anything because it is the
custom, makes no choice. He gains no practice either in discerning or in
desiring what is best. The mental and moral, like the muscular powers, are
improved only by being used. The faculties are called into no exercise by doing
a thing merely because others do it, no more than by believing a thing only
because others believe it. If the grounds of an opinion are not conclusive to
the person's own reason, his reason cannot be strengthened, but is likely to be
weakened by his adopting it: and if the inducements to an act are not such as
are consentaneous to his own feelings and character (where affection, or the
rights of others are not concerned), it is so much done towards rendering his
feelings and character inert and torpid, instead of active and energetic.
He who lets the world, or his own portion of it, choose his plan of life for
him, has no need of any other faculty than the ape-like one of imitation. He
who chooses his plan for himself, employs all his faculties. He must use
observation to see, reasoning and judgment to foresee, activity to gather
materials for decision, discrimination to decide, and when he has decided,
firmness and self-control to hold to his deliberate decision. And these
qualities he requires and exercises exactly in proportion as the part of his
conduct which he determines according to his own judgment and feelings is a
large one. It is possible that he might be guided in some good path, and kept
out of harm's way, without any of these things. But what will be his
comparative worth as a human being? It really is of importance, not only what
men do, but also what manner of men they are that do it. Among the works of
man, which human life is rightly employed in perfecting and beautifying, the
first in importance surely is man himself. Supposing it were possible to get
houses built, corn grown, battles fought, causes tried, and even churches
erected and prayers said, by machinery by automatons in human form
it would be a considerable loss to exchange for these automatons even
the men and women who at present inhabit the more civilized parts of the world,
and who assuredly are but starved specimens of what nature can and will
produce. Human nature is not a machine to be built after a model, and set to do
exactly the work prescribed for it, but a tree, which requires to grow and
develop itself on all sides, according to the tendency of the inward forces
which make it a living thing.
It will probably be conceded that it is desirable people should exercise
their understandings, and that an intelligent following of custom, or even
occasionally an intelligent deviation from custom, is better than a blind and
simply mechanical adhesion to it. To a certain extent it is admitted, that our
understanding should be our own: but there is not the same willingness to admit
that our desires and impulses should be our own likewise; or that to possess
impulses of our own, and of any strength, is anything but a peril and a snare.
Yet desires and impulses are as much a part of a perfect human being, as
beliefs and restraints: and strong impulses are only perilous when not properly
balanced; when one set of aims and inclinations is developed into strength,
while others, which ought to coexist with them, remain weak and inactive. It is
not because men's desires are strong that they act ill; it is because their
consciences are weak. There is no natural connection between strong impulses
and a weak conscience. The natural connection is the other way. To say that one
person's desires and feelings are stronger and more various than those of
another, is merely to say that he has more of the raw material of human nature,
and is therefore capable, perhaps of more evil, but certainly of more good.
Strong impulses are but another name for energy. Energy may be turned to bad
uses; but more good may always be made of an energetic nature, than of an
indolent and impassive one. Those who have most natural feeling, are always
those whose cultivated feelings may be made the strongest. The same strong
susceptibilities which make the personal impulses vivid and powerful, are also
the source from whence are generated the most passionate love of virtue, and
the sternest self-control. It is through the cultivation of these, that society
both does its duty and protects its interests: not by rejecting the stuff of
which heroes are made, because it knows not how to make them. A person whose
desires and impulses are his own are the expression of his own nature,
as it has been developed and modified by his own culture is said to have
a character. One whose desires and impulses are not his owN, has no character,
no more than a steam-engine has a character. If, in addition to being his own,
his impulses are strong, and are under the government of a strong will, he has
an energetic character. Whoever thinks that individuality of desires and
impulses should not be encouraged to unfold itself, must maintain that society
has no need of strong natures is not the better for containing many
persons who have much character and that a high general average of
energy is not desirable.
In some early states of society, these forces might be, and were, too much
ahead of the power which society then possessed of disciplining and controlling
them. There has been a time when the element of spontaneity and individuality
was in excess, and the social principle had a hard struggle with it. The
difficulty then was, to induce men of strong bodies or minds to pay obedience
to any rules which required them to control their impulses. To overcome this
difficulty, law and discipline, like the Popes struggling against the Emperors,
asserted a power over the whole man, claiming to control all his life in order
to control his character which society had not found any other
sufficient means of binding. But society has now fairly got the better of
individuality; and the danger which threatens human nature is not the excess,
but the deficiency, of personal impulses and preferences. Things are vastly
changed, since the passions of those who were strong by station or by personal
endowment were in a state of habitual rebellion against laws and ordinances,
and required to be rigorously chained up to enable the persons within their
reach to enjoy any particle of security. In our times, from the highest class
of society down to the lowest every one lives as under the eye of a hostile and
dreaded censorship. Not only in what concerns others, but in what concerns only
themselves, the individual, or the family, do not ask themselves what do
I prefer? or, what would suit my character and disposition? or, what would
allow the best and highest in me to have fair play, and enable it to grow and
thrive? They ask themselves, what is suitable to my position? what is usually
done by persons of my station and pecuniary circumstances? or (worse still)
what is usually done by persons of a station and circumstances superior to
mine? I do not mean that they choose what is customary, in preference to what
suits their own inclination. It does not occur to them to have any inclination,
except for what is customary. Thus the mind itself is bowed to the yoke: even
in what people do for pleasure, conformity is the first thing thought of; they
like in crowds; they exercise choice only among things commonly done:
peculiarity of taste, eccentricity of conduct, are shunned equally with crimes:
until by dint of not following their own nature, they have no nature to follow:
their human capacities are withered and starved: they become incapable of any
strong wishes or native pleasures, and are generally without either opinions or
feelings of home growth, or properly their own. Now is this, or is it not, the
desirable condition of human nature?
It is so, on the Calvinistic theory. According to that, the one great
offence of man is Self-will. All the good of which humanity is capable, is
comprised in Obedience. You have no choice; thus you must do, and no otherwise;
"whatever is not a duty is a sin." Human nature being radically
corrupt, there is no redemption for any one until human nature is killed within
him. To one holding this theory of life, crushing out any of the human
faculties, capacities, and susceptibilities, is no evil: man needs no capacity,
but that of surrendering himself to the will of God: and if he uses any of his
faculties for any other purpose but to do that supposed will more effectually,
he is better without them. That is the theory of Calvinism; and it is held, in
a mitigated form, by many who do not consider themselves Calvinists; the
mitigation consisting in giving a less ascetic interpretation to the alleged
will of God; asserting it to be his will that mankind should gratify some of
their inclinations; of course not in the manner they themselves prefer, but in
the way of obedience, that is, in a way prescribed to them by authority; and,
therefore, by the necessary conditions of the case, the same for all.
In some such insidious form there is at present a strong tendency to this
narrow theory of life, and to the pinched and hidebound type of human character
which it patronizes. Many persons, no doubt, sincerely think that human beings
thus cramped and dwarfed, are as their Maker designed them to be; just as many
have thought that trees are a much finer thing when clipped into pollards, or
cut out into figures of animals, than as nature made them. But if it be any
part of religion to believe that man was made by a good Being, it is more
consistent with that faith to believe, that this Being gave all human faculties
that they might be cultivated and unfolded, not rooted out and consumed, and
that he takes delight in every nearer approach made by his creatures to the
ideal conception embodied in them, every increase in any of their capabilities
of comprehension, of action, or of enjoyment. There is a different type of
human excellence from the Calvinistic; a conception of humanity as having its
nature bestowed on it for other purposes than merely to be abnegated.
"Pagan self-assertion" is one of the elements of human worth, as well
as "Christian self-denial."[2]
There is a Greek ideal of self-development, which the Platonic and Christian
ideal of self-government blends with, but does not supersede. It may be better
to be a John Knox than an Alcibiades, but it is better to be a Pericles than
either; nor would a Pericles, if we had one in these days, be without anything
good which belonged to John Knox.
It is not by wearing down into uniformity all that is individual in
themselves, but by cultivating it and calling it forth, within the limits
imposed by the rights and interests of others, that human beings become a noble
and beautiful object of contemplation; and as the works partake the character
of those who do them, by the same process human life also becomes rich,
diversified, and animating, furnishing more abundant aliment to high thoughts
and elevating feelings, and strengthening the tie which binds every individual
to the race, by making the race infinitely better worth belonging to. In
proportion to the development of his individuality, each person becomes more
valuable to himself, and is therefore capable of being more valuable to others.
There is a greater fulness of life about his own existence, and when there is
more life in the units there is more in the mass which is composed of them. As
much compression as is necessary to prevent the stronger specimens of human
nature from encroaching on the rights of others, cannot be dispensed with; but
for this there is ample compensation even in the point of view of human
development. The means of development which the individual loses by being
prevented from gratifying his inclinations to the injury of others, are chiefly
obtained at the expense of the development of other people. And even to himself
there is a full equivalent in the better development of the social part of his
nature, rendered possible by the restraint put upon the selfish part. To be
held to rigid rules of justice for the sake of others, develops the feelings
and capacities which have the good of others for their object. But to be
restrained in things not affecting their good, by their mere displeasure,
develops nothing valuable, except such force of character as may unfold itself
in resisting the restraint. If acquiesced in, it dulls and blunts the whole
nature. To give any fair play to the nature of each, it is essential that
different persons should be allowed to lead different lives. In proportion as
this latitude has been exercised in any age, has that age been noteworthy to
posterity. Even despotism does not produce its worst effects, so long as
Individuality exists under it; and whatever crushes individuality is despotism,
by whatever name it may be called, and whether it professes to be enforcing the
will of God or the injunctions of men.
Having said that Individuality is the same thing with development, and that
it is only the cultivation of individuality which produces, or can produce,
well-developed human beings, I might here close the argument: for what more or
better can be said of any condition of human affairs, than that it brings human
beings themselves nearer to the best thing they can be? or what worse can be
said of any obstruction to good, than that it prevents this? Doubtless,
however, these considerations will not suffice to convince those who most need
convincing; and it is necessary further to show, that these developed human
beings are of some use to the undeveloped to point out to those who do
not desire liberty, and would not avail themselves of it, that they may be in
some intelligible manner rewarded for allowing other people to make use of it
without hindrance.
In the first place, then, I would suggest that they might possibly learn
something from them. It will not be denied by anybody, that originality is a
valuable element in human affairs. There is always need of persons not only to
discover new truths, and point out when what were once truths are true no
longer, but also to commence new practices, and set the example of more
enlightened conduct, and better taste and sense in human life. This cannot well
be gainsaid by anybody who does not believe that the world has already attained
perfection in all its ways and practices. It is true that this benefit is not
capable of being rendered by everybody alike: there are but few persons, in
comparison with the whole of mankind, whose experiments, if adopted by others,
would be likely to be any improvement on established practice. But these few
are the salt of the earth; without them, human life would become a stagnant
pool. Not only is it they who introduce good things which did not before exist;
it is they who keep the life in those which already existed. If there were
nothing new to be done, would human intellect cease to be necessary? Would it
be a reason why those who do the old things should forget why they are done,
and do them like cattle, not like human beings? There is only too great a
tendency in the best beliefs and practices to degenerate into the mechanical;
and unless there were a succession of persons whose ever-recurring originality
prevents the grounds of those beliefs and practices from becoming merely
traditional, such dead matter would not resist the smallest shock from anything
really alive, and there would be no reason why civilization should not die out,
as in the Byzantine Empire. Persons of genius, it is true, are, and are always
likely to be, a small minority; but in order to have them, it is necessary to
preserve the soil in which they grow. Genius can only breathe freely in an
atmosphere of freedom. Persons of genius are, ex vi termini, more individual
than any other people less capable, consequently, of fitting themselves,
without hurtful compression, into any of the small number of moulds which
society provides in order to save its members the trouble of forming their own
character. If from timidity they consent to be forced into one of these moulds,
and to let all that part of themselves which cannot expand under the pressure
remain unexpanded, society will be little the better for their genius. If they
are of a strong character, and break their fetters they become a mark for the
society which has not succeeded in reducing them to common-place, to point at
with solemn warning as "wild," "erratic," and the like;
much as if one should complain of the Niagara river for not flowing smoothly
between its banks like a Dutch canal.
I insist thus emphatically on the importance of genius, and the necessity of
allowing it to unfold itself freely both in thought and in practice, being well
aware that no one will deny the position in theory, but knowing also that
almost every one, in reality, is totally indifferent to it. People think genius
a fine thing if it enables a man to write an exciting poem, or paint a picture.
But in its true sense, that of originality in thought and action, though no one
says that it is not a thing to be admired, nearly all, at heart, think they can
do very well without it. Unhappily this is too natural to be wondered at.
Originality is the one thing which unoriginal minds cannot feel the use of.
They cannot see what it is to do for them: how should they? If they could see
what it would do for them, it would not be originality. The first service which
originality has to render them, is that of opening their eyes: which being once
fully done, they would have a chance of being themselves original. Meanwhile,
recollecting that nothing was ever yet done which some one was not the first to
do, and that all good things which exist are the fruits of originality, let
them be modest enough to believe that there is something still left for it to
accomplish, and assure themselves that they are more in need of originality,
the less they are conscious of the want.
In sober truth, whatever homage may be professed, or even paid, to real or
supposed mental superiority, the general tendency of things throughout the
world is to render mediocrity the ascendant power among mankind. In ancient
history, in the Middle Ages, and in a diminishing degree through the long
transition from feudality to the present time, the individual was a power in
himself; and If he had either great talents or a high social position, he was a
considerable power. At present individuals are lost in the crowd. In politics
it is almost a triviality to say that public opinion now rules the world. The
only power deserving the name is that of masses, and of governments while they
make themselves the organ of the tendencies and instincts of masses. This is as
true in the moral and social relations of private life as in public
transactions. Those whose opinions go by the name of public opinion, are not
always the same sort of public: in America, they are the whole white
population; in England, chiefly the middle class. But they are always a mass,
that is to say, collective mediocrity. And what is still greater novelty, the
mass do not now take their opinions from dignitaries in Church or State, from
ostensible leaders, or from books. Their thinking is done for them by men much
like themselves, addressing them or speaking in their name, on the spur of the
moment, through the newspapers. I am not complaining of all this. I do not
assert that anything better is compatible, as a general rule, with the present
low state of the human mind. But that does not hinder the government of
mediocrity from being mediocre government. No government by a democracy or a
numerous aristocracy, either in its political acts or in the opinions,
qualities, and tone of mind which it fosters, ever did or could rise above
mediocrity, except in so far as the sovereign Many have let themselves be
guided (which in their best times they always have done) by the counsels and
influence of a more highly gifted and instructed One or Few. The initiation of
all wise or noble things, comes and must come from individuals; generally at
first from some one individual. The honor and glory of the average man is that
he is capable of following that initiative; that he can respond internally to
wise and noble things, and be led to them with his eyes open. I am not
countenancing the sort of "hero-worship" which applauds the strong
man of genius for forcibly seizing on the government of the world and making it
do his bidding in spite of itself. All he can claim is, freedom to point out
the way. The power of compelling others into it, is not only inconsistent with
the freedom and development of all the rest, but corrupting to the strong man
himself. It does seem, however, that when the opinions of masses of merely
average men are everywhere become or becoming the dominant power, the
counterpoise and corrective to that tendency would be, the more and more
pronounced individuality of those who stand on the higher eminences of thought.
It Is in these circumstances most especially, that exceptional individuals,
instead of being deterred, should be encouraged in acting differently from the
mass. In other times there was no advantage in their doing so, unless they
acted not only differently, but better. In this age the mere example of
non-conformity, the mere refusal to bend the knee to custom, is itself a
service. Precisely because the tyranny of opinion is such as to make
eccentricity a reproach, it is desirable, in order to break through that
tyranny, that people should be eccentric. Eccentricity has always abounded when
and where strength of character has abounded; and the amount of eccentricity in
a society has generally been proportional to the amount of genius, mental
vigor, and moral courage which it contained. That so few now dare to be
eccentric, marks the chief danger of the time.
I have said that it is important to give the freest scope possible to
uncustomary things, in order that it may in time appear which of these are fit
to be converted into customs. But independence of action, and disregard of
custom are not solely deserving of encouragement for the chance they afford
that better modes of action, and customs more worthy of general adoption, may
be struck out; nor is it only persons of decided mental superiority who have a
just claim to carry on their lives in their own way. There is no reason that
all human existences should be constructed on some one, or some small number of
patterns. If a person possesses any tolerable amount of common sense and
experience, his own mode of laying out his existence is the best, not because
it is the best in itself, but because it is his own mode. Human beings are not
like sheep; and even sheep are not undistinguishably alike. A man cannot get a
coat or a pair of boots to fit him, unless they are either made to his measure,
or he has a whole warehouseful to choose from: and is it easier to fit him with
a life than with a coat, or are human beings more like one another in their
whole physical and spiritual conformation than in the shape of their feet? If
it were only that people have diversities of taste that is reason enough for
not attempting to shape them all after one model. But different persons also
require different conditions for their spiritual development; and can no more
exist healthily in the same moral, than all the variety of plants can in the
same physical atmosphere and climate. The same things which are helps to one
person towards the cultivation of his higher nature, are hindrances to another.
The same mode of life is a healthy excitement to one, keeping all his faculties
of action and enjoyment in their best order, while to another it is a
distracting burden, which suspends or crushes all internal life. Such are the
differences among human beings in their sources of pleasure, their
susceptibilities of pain, and the operation on them of different physical and
moral agencies, that unless there is a corresponding diversity in their modes
of life, they neither obtain their fair share of happiness, nor grow up to the
mental, moral, and aesthetic stature of which their nature is capable. Why then
should tolerance, as far as the public sentiment is concerned, extend only to
tastes and modes of life which extort acquiescence by the multitude of their
adherents? Nowhere (except in some monastic institutions) is diversity of taste
entirely unrecognized; a person may without blame, either like or dislike
rowing, or smoking, or music, or athletic exercises, or chess, or cards, or
study, because both those who like each of these things, and those who dislike
them, are too numerous to be put down. But the man, and still more the woman,
who can be accused either of doing "what nobody does," or of not
doing "what everybody does," is the subject of as much depreciatory
remark as if he or she had committed some grave moral delinquency. Persons
require to possess a title, or some other badge of rank, or the consideration
of people of rank, to be able to indulge somewhat in the luxury of doing as
they like without detriment to their estimation. To indulge somewhat, I repeat:
for whoever allow themselves much of that in dulgence, incur the risk of
something worse than disparaging speeches they are in peril of a
commission de lunatico, and of having their property taken from them and given
to their relations.[3]
There is one characteristic of the present direction of public opinion,
peculiarly calculated to make it intolerant of any marked demonstration of
individuality. The general average of mankind are not only moderate in
intellect, but also moderate in inclinations: they have no tastes or wishes
strong enough to incline them to do anything unusual, and they consequently do
not understand those who have, and class all such with the wild and intemperate
whom they are accustomed to look down upon. Now, in addition to this fact which
is general, we have only to suppose that a strong movement has set in towards
the improvement of morals, and it is evident what we have to expect. In these
days such a movement has set in; much has actually been effected in the way of
increased regularity of conduct, and discouragement of excesses; and there is a
philanthropic spirit abroad, for the exercise of which there is no more
inviting field than the moral and prudential improvement of our
fellow-creatures. These tendencies of the times cause the public to be more
disposed than at most former periods to prescribe general rules of conduct, and
endeavor to make every one conform to the approved standard. And that standard,
express or tacit, is to desire nothing strongly. Its ideal of character is to
be without any marked character; to maim by compression, like a Chinese lady's
foot, every part of human nature which stands out prominently, and tends to
make the person markedly dissimilar in outline to commonplace humanity.
As is usually the case with ideals which exclude one half of what is
desirable, the present standard of approbation produces only an inferior
imitation of the other half. Instead of great energies guided by vigorous
reason, and strong feelings strongly controlled by a conscientious will, its
result is weak feelings and weak energies, which therefore can be kept in
outward conformity to rule without any strength either of will or of reason.
Already energetic characters on any large scale are becoming merely
traditional. There is now scarcely any outlet for energy in this country except
business. The energy expended in that may still be regarded as considerable.
What little is left from that employment, is expended on some hobby; which may
be a useful, even a philanthropic hobby, but is always some one thing, and
generally a thing of small dimensions. The greatness of England is now all
collective: individually small, we only appear capable of anything great by our
habit of combining; and with this our moral and religious philanthropists are
perfectly contented. But it was men of another stamp than this that made
England what it has been; and men of another stamp will be needed to prevent
its decline.
The despotism of custom is everywhere the standing hindrance to human
advancement, being in unceasing antagonism to that disposition to aim at
something better than customary, which is called, according to circumstances,
the spirit of liberty, or that of progress or improvement. The spirit of
improvement is not always a spirit of liberty, for it may aim at forcing
improvements on an unwilling people; and the spirit of liberty, in so far as it
resists such attempts, may ally itself locally and temporarily with the
opponents of improvement; but the only unfailing and permanent source of
improvement is liberty, since by it there are as many possible independent
centres of improvement as there are individuals. The progressive principle,
however, in either shape, whether as the love of liberty or of improvement, is
antagonistic to the sway of Custom, involving at least emancipation from that
yoke; and the contest between the two constitutes the chief interest of the
history of mankind. The greater part of the world has, properly speaking, no
history, because the despotism of Custom is complete. This is the case over the
whole East. Custom is there, in all things, the final appeal; Justice and right
mean conformity to custom; the argument of custom no one, unless some tyrant
intoxicated with power, thinks of resisting. And we see the result. Those
nations must once have had originality; they did not start out of the ground
populous, lettered, and versed in many of the arts of life; they made
themselves all this, and were then the greatest and most powerful nations in
the world. What are they now? The subjects or dependents of tribes whose
forefathers wandered in the forests when theirs had magnificent palaces and
gorgeous temples, but over whom custom exercised only a divided rule with
liberty and progress. A people, it appears, may be progressive for a certain
length of time, and then stop: when does it stop? When it ceases to possess
individuality. If a similar change should befall the nations of Europe, it will
not be in exactly the same shape: the despotism of custom with which these
nations are threatened is not precisely stationariness. It proscribes
singularity, but it does not preclude change, provided all change together. We
have discarded the fixed costumes of our forefathers; every one must still
dress like other people, but the fashion may change once or twice a year. We
thus take care that when there is change, it shall be for change's sake, and
not from any idea of beauty or convenience; for the same idea of beauty or
convenience would not strike all the world at the same moment, and be
simultaneously thrown aside by all at another moment. But we are progressive as
well as changeable: we continually make new inventions in mechanical things,
and keep them until they are again superseded by better; we are eager for
improvement in politics, in education, even in morals, though in this last our
idea of improvement chiefly consists in persuading or forcing other people to
be as good as ourselves. It is not progress that we object to; on the contrary,
we flatter ourselves that we are the most progressive people who ever lived. It
is individuality that we war against: we should think we had done wonders if we
had made ourselves all alike; forgetting that the unlikeness of one person to
another is generally the first thing which draws the attention of either to the
imperfection of his own type, and the superiority of another, or the
possibility, by combining the advantages of both, of producing something better
than either. We have a warning example in China a nation of much talent,
and, in some respects, even wisdom, owing to the rare good fortune of having
been provided at an early period with a particularly good set of customs, the
work, in some measure, of men to whom even the most enlightened European must
accord, under certain limitations, the title of sages and philosophers. They
are remarkable, too, in the excellence of their apparatus for impressing, as
far as possible, the best wisdom they possess upon every mind in the community,
and securing that those who have appropriated most of it shall occupy the posts
of honor and power. Surely the people who did this have discovered the secret
of human progressiveness, and must have kept themselves steadily at the head of
the movement of the world. On the contrary, they have become stationary
have remained so for thousands of years; and if they are ever to be farther
improved, it must be by foreigners. They have succeeded beyond all hope in what
English philanthropists are so industriously working at in making a
people all alike, all governing their thoughts and conduct by the same maxims
and rules; and these are the fruits. The modern regime of public opinion is, in
an unorganized form, what the Chinese educational and political systems are in
an organized; and unless individuality shall be able successfully to assert
itself against this yoke, Europe, notwithstanding its noble antecedents and its
professed Christianity, will tend to become another China.
What is it that has hitherto preserved Europe from this lot? What has made
the European family of nations an improving, instead of a stationary portion of
mankind? Not any superior excellence in them, which when it exists, exists as
the effect, not as the cause; but their remarkable diversity of character and
culture. Individuals, classes, nations, have been extremely unlike one another:
they have struck out a great variety of paths, each leading to something
valuable; and although at every period those who travelled in different paths
have been intolerant of one another, and each would have thought it an
excellent thing if all the rest could have been compelled to travel his road,
their attempts to thwart each other's development have rarely had any permanent
success, and each has in time endured to receive the good which the others have
offered. Europe is, in my judgment, wholly indebted to this plurality of paths
for its progressive and many-sided development. But it already begins to
possess this benefit in a considerably less degree. It is decidedly advancing
towards the Chinese ideal of making all people alike. M. de Tocqueville, in his
last important work, remarks how much more the Frenchmen of the present day
resemble one another, than did those even of the last generation. The same
remark might be made of Englishmen in a far greater degree. In a passage
already quoted from Wilhelm von Humboldt, he points out two things as necessary
conditions of human development, because necessary to render people unlike one
another; namely, freedom, and variety of situations. The second of these two
conditions is in this country every day diminishing. The circumstances which
surround different classes and individuals, and shape their characters, are
daily becoming more assimilated. Formerly, different ranks, different
neighborhoods, different trades and professions lived in what might be called
different worlds; at present, to a great degree, in the same. Comparatively
speaking, they now read the same things, listen to the same things, see the
same things, go to the same places, have their hopes and fears directed to the
same objects, have the same rights and liberties, and the same means of
asserting them. Great as are the differences of position which remain, they are
nothing to those which have ceased. And the assimilation is still proceeding.
All the political changes of the age promote it, since they all tend to raise
the low and to lower the high. Every extension of education promotes it,
because education brings people under common influences, and gives them access
to the general stock of facts and sentiments. Improvements in the means of
communication promote it, by bringing the inhabitants of distant places into
personal contact, and keeping up a rapid flow of changes of residence between
one place and another. The increase of commerce and manufactures promotes it,
by diffusing more widely the advantages of easy circumstances, and opening all
objects of ambition, even the highest, to general competition, whereby the
desire of rising becomes no longer the character of a particular class, but of
all classes. A more powerful agency than even all these, in bringing about a
general similarity among mankind, is the complete establishment, in this and
other free countries, of the ascendancy of public opinion in the State. As the
various social eminences which enabled persons entrenched on them to disregard
the opinion of the multitude, gradually became levelled; as the very idea of
resisting the will of the public, when it is positively known that they have a
will, disappears more and more from the minds of practical politicians; there
ceases to be any social support for non-conformity any substantive power
in society, which, itself opposed to the ascendancy of numbers, is interested
in taking under its protection opinions and tendencies at variance with those
of the public.
The combination of all these causes forms so great a mass of influences
hostile to Individuality, that it is not easy to see how it can stand its
ground. It will do so with increasing difficulty, unless the intelligent part
of the public can be made to feel its value to see that it is good there
should be differences, even though not for the better, even though, as it may
appear to them, some should be for the worse. If the claims of Individuality
are ever to be asserted, the time is now, while much is still wanting to
complete the enforced assimilation. It is only in the earlier stages that any
stand can be successfully made against the encroachment. The demand that all
other people shall resemble ourselves, grows by what it feeds on. If resistance
waits till life is reduced nearly to one uniform type, all deviations from that
type will come to be considered impious, immoral, even monstrous and contrary
to nature. Mankind speedily become unable to conceive diversity, when they have
been for some time unaccustomed to see it.
[1] The Sphere and Duties of Government, from the German
of Baron Wilhelm von Humboldt, pp. 11-13.
[2] Sterling's Essays.
[3] There is something both contemptible and frightful in
the sort of evidence on which, of late years, any person can be judicially
declared unfit for the management of his affairs; and after his death, his
disposal of his property can be set aside, if there is enough of it to pay the
expenses of litigation which are charged on the property itself. All of
the minute details of his daily life are pried into, and whatever is found
which, seen through the medium of the perceiving and escribing faculties of the
lowest of the low, bears an appearance unlike absolute commonplace, is laid
before the jury as evidence of insanity, and often with success; the jurors
being little, if at all, less vulgar and ignorant than the witnesses; while the
judges, with that extraordinary want of knowledge of human nature and life
which continually astonishes us in English lawyers, often help to mislead them.
These trials speak volumes as to the state of feeling and opinion among the
vulgar with regard to human liberty. So far from setting any value on
individuality so far from respecting the rights of each individual to
act, in things indifferent, as seems good to his own judgment and inclinations,
judges and juries cannot even conceive that a person in a state of sanity can
desire such freedom. In former days, when it was proposed to burn atheists,
charitable people used to suggest putting them in a madhouse instead: it would
be nothing surprising now-a-days were we to see this done, and the doers
applauding themselves, because, instead of persecuting for religion, they had
adopted so humane and Christian a mode of treating these unfortunates, not
without a silent satisfaction at their having thereby obtained their deserts.
CHAPTER IV
OF THE LIMITS TO THE AUTHORITY OF SOCIETY OVER THE INDIVIDUAL
WHAT, then, is the rightful
limit to the sovereignty of the individual over himself? Where does the
authority of society begin? How much of human life should be assigned to
individuality, and how much to society?
Each will receive its proper share, if each has that which more particularly
concerns it. To individuality should belong the part of life in which it is
chiefly the individual that is interested; to society, the part which chiefly
interests society.
Though society is not founded on a contract, and though no good purpose is
answered by inventing a contract in order to deduce social obligations from it,
every one who receives the protection of society owes a return for the benefit,
and the fact of living in society renders it indispensable that each should be
bound to observe a certain line of conduct towards the rest. This conduct
consists, first, in not injuring the interests of one another; or rather
certain interests, which, either by express legal provision or by tacit
understanding, ought to be considered as rights; and secondly, in each person's
bearing his share (to be fixed on some equitable principle) of the labors and
sacrifices incurred for defending the society or its members from injury and
molestation. These conditions society is justified in enforcing, at all costs
to those who endeavor to withhold fulfilment. Nor is this all that society may
do. The acts of an individual may be hurtful to others, or wanting in due
consideration for their welfare, without going the length of violating any of
their constituted rights. The offender may then be justly punished by opinion,
though not by law. As soon as any part of a person's conduct affects
prejudicially the interests of others, society has jurisdiction over it, and
the question whether the general welfare will or will not be promoted by
interfering with it, becomes open to discussion. But there is no room for
entertaining any such question when a person's conduct affects the interests of
no persons besides himself, or needs not affect them unless they like (all the
persons concerned being of full age, and the ordinary amount of understanding).
In all such cases there should be perfect freedom, legal and social, to do the
action and stand the consequences.
It would be a great misunderstanding of this doctrine, to suppose that it is
one of selfish indifference, which pretends that human beings have no business
with each other's conduct in life, and that they should not concern themselves
about the well-doing or well-being of one another, unless their own interest is
involved. Instead of any diminution, there is need of a great increase of
disinterested exertion to promote the good of others. But disinterested
benevolence can find other instruments to persuade people to their good, than
whips and scourges, either of the literal or the metaphorical sort. I am the
last person to undervalue the self-regarding virtues; they are only second in
importance, if even second, to the social. It is equally the business of
education to cultivate both. But even education works by conviction and
persuasion as well as by compulsion, and it is by the former only that, when
the period of education is past, the self-regarding virtues should be
inculcated. Human beings owe to each other help to distinguish the better from
the worse, and encouragement to choose the former and avoid the latter. They
should be forever stimulating each other to increased exercise of their higher
faculties, and increased direction of their feelings and aims towards wise
instead of foolish, elevating instead of degrading, objects and contemplations.
But neither one person, nor any number of persons, is warranted in saying to
another human creature of ripe years, that he shall not do with his life for
his own benefit what he chooses to do with it. He is the person most interested
in his own well-being, the interest which any other person, except in cases of
strong personal attachment, can have in it, is trifling, compared with that
which he himself has; the interest which society has in him individually
(except as to his conduct to others) is fractional, and altogether indirect:
while, with respect to his own feelings and circumstances, the most ordinary
man or woman has means of knowledge immeasurably surpassing those that can be
possessed by any one else. The interference of society to overrule his judgment
and purposes in what only regards himself, must be grounded on general
presumptions; which may be altogether wrong, and even if right, are as likely
as not to be misapplied to individual cases, by persons no better acquainted
with the circumstances of such cases than those are who look at them merely
from without. In this department, therefore, of human affairs, Individuality
has its proper field of action. In the conduct of human beings towards one
another, it is necessary that general rules should for the most part be
observed, in order that people may know what they have to expect; but in each
person's own concerns, his individual spontaneity is entitled to free exercise.
Considerations to aid his judgment, exhortations to strengthen his will, may be
offered to him, even obtruded on him, by others; but he, himself, is the final
judge. All errors which he is likely to commit against advice and warning, are
far outweighed by the evil of allowing others to constrain him to what they
deem his good.
I do not mean that the feelings with which a person is regarded by others,
ought not to be in any way affected by his self-regarding qualities or
deficiencies. This is neither possible nor desirable. If he is eminent in any
of the qualities which conduce to his own good, he is, so far, a proper object
of admiration. He is so much the nearer to the ideal perfection of human
nature. If he is grossly deficient in those qualities, a sentiment the opposite
of admiration will follow. There is a degree of folly, and a degree of what may
be called (though the phrase is not unobjectionable) lowness or depravation of
taste, which, though it cannot justify doing harm to the person who manifests
it, renders him necessarily and properly a subject of distaste, or, in extreme
cases, even of contempt: a person could not have the opposite qualities in due
strength without entertaining these feelings. Though doing no wrong to any one,
a person may so act as to compel us to judge him, and feel to him, as a fool,
or as a being of an inferior order: and since this judgment and feeling are a
fact which he would prefer to avoid, it is doing him a service to warn him of
it beforehand, as of any other disagreeable consequence to which he exposes
himself. It would be well, indeed, if this good office were much more freely
rendered than the common notions of politeness at present permit, and if one
person could honestly point out to another that he thinks him in fault, without
being considered unmannerly or presuming. We have a right, also, in various
ways, to act upon our unfavorable opinion of any one, not to the oppression of
his individuality, but in the exercise of ours. We are not bound, for example,
to seek his society; we have a right to avoid it (though not to parade the
avoidance), for we have a right to choose the society most acceptable to us. We
have a right, and it may be our duty, to caution others against him, if we
think his example or conversation likely to have a pernicious effect on those
with whom he associates. We may give others a preference over him in optional
good offices, except those which tend to his improvement. In these various
modes a person may suffer very severe penalties at the hands of others, for
faults which directly concern only himself; but he suffers these penalties only
in so far as they are the natural, and, as it were, the spontaneous
consequences of the faults themselves, not because they are purposely inflicted
on him for the sake of punishment. A person who shows rashness, obstinacy,
self-conceit who cannot live within moderate means who cannot
restrain himself from hurtful indulgences who pursues animal pleasures
at the expense of those of feeling and intellect must expect to be
lowered in the opinion of others, and to have a less share of their favorable
sentiments, but of this he has no right to complain, unless he has merited
their favor by special excellence in his social relations, and has thus
established a title to their good offices, which is not affected by his
demerits towards himself.
What I contend for is, that the inconveniences which are strictly
inseparable from the unfavorable judgment of others, are the only ones to which
a person should ever be subjected for that portion of his conduct and character
which concerns his own good, but which does not affect the interests of others
in their relations with him. Acts injurious to others require a totally
different treatment. Encroachment on their rights; infliction on them of any
loss or damage not justified by his own rights; falsehood or duplicity in
dealing with them; unfair or ungenerous use of advantages over them; even
selfish abstinence from defending them against injury these are fit
objects of moral reprobation, and, in grave cases, of moral retribution and
punishment. And not only these acts, but the dispositions which lead to them,
are properly immoral, and fit subjects of disapprobation which may rise to
abhorrence. Cruelty of disposition; malice and ill-nature; that most
anti-social and odious of all passions, envy; dissimulation and insincerity,
irascibility on insufficient cause, and resentment disproportioned to the
provocation; the love of domineering over others; the desire to engross more
than one's share of advantages (the [greekword] of the Greeks); the pride which
derives gratification from the abasement of others; the egotism which thinks
self and its concerns more important than everything else, and decides all
doubtful questions in his own favor; these are moral vices, and
constitute a bad and odious moral character: unlike the self-regarding faults
previously mentioned, which are not properly immoralities, and to whatever
pitch they may be carried, do not constitute wickedness. They may be proofs of
any amount of folly, or want of personal dignity and self-respect; but they are
only a subject of moral reprobation when they involve a breach of duty to
others, for whose sake the individual is bound to have care for himself. What
are called duties to ourselves are not socially obligatory, unless
circumstances render them at the same time duties to others. The term duty to
oneself, when it means anything more than prudence, means self-respect or
self-development; and for none of these is any one accountable to his
fellow-creatures, because for none of them is it for the good of mankind that
he be held accountable to them.
The distinction between the loss of consideration which a person may rightly
incur by defect of prudence or of personal dignity, and the reprobation which
is due to him for an offence against the rights of others, is not a merely
nominal distinction. It makes a vast difference both in our feelings and in our
conduct towards him, whether he displeases us in things in which we think we
have a right to control him, or in things in which we know that we have not. If
he displeases us, we may express our distaste, and we may stand aloof from a
person as well as from a thing that displeases us; but we shall not therefore
feel called on to make his life uncomfortable. We shall reflect that he already
bears, or will bear, the whole penalty of his error; if he spoils his life by
mismanagement, we shall not, for that reason, desire to spoil it still further:
instead of wishing to punish him, we shall rather endeavor to alleviate his
punishment, by showing him how he may avoid or cure the evils his conduct tends
to bring upon him. He may be to us an object of pity, perhaps of dislike, but
not of anger or resentment; we shall not treat him like an enemy of society:
the worst we shall think ourselves justified in doing is leaving him to
himself, If we do not interfere benevolently by showing interest or concern for
him. It is far otherwise if he has infringed the rules necessary for the
protection of his fellow-creatures, individually or collectively. The evil
consequences of his acts do not then fall on himself, but on others; and
society, as the protector of all its members, must retaliate on him; must
inflict pain on him for the express purpose of punishment, and must take care
that it be sufficiently severe. In the one case, he is an offender at our bar,
and we are called on not only to sit in judgment on him, but, in one shape or
another, to execute our own sentence: in the other case, it is not our part to
inflict any suffering on him, except what may incidentally follow from our
using the same liberty in the regulation of our own affairs, which we allow to
him in his.
The distinction here pointed out between the part of a person's life which
concerns only himself, and that which concerns others, many persons will refuse
to admit. How (it may be asked) can any part of the conduct of a member of
society be a matter of indifference to the other members? No person is an
entirely isolated being; it is impossible for a person to do anything seriously
or permanently hurtful to himself, without mischief reaching at least to his
near connections, and often far beyond them. If he injures his property, he
does harm to those who directly or indirectly derived support from it, and
usually diminishes, by a greater or less amount, the general resources of the
community. If he deteriorates his bodily or mental faculties, he not only
brings evil upon all who depended on him for any portion of their happiness,
but disqualifies himself for rendering the services which he owes to his
fellow-creatures generally; perhaps becomes a burden on their affection or
benevolence; and if such conduct were very frequent, hardly any offence that is
committed would detract more from the general sum of good. Finally, if by his
vices or follies a person does no direct harm to others, he is nevertheless (it
may be said) injurious by his example; and ought to be compelled to control
himself, for the sake of those whom the sight or knowledge of his conduct might
corrupt or mislead.
And even (it will be added) if the consequences of misconduct could be
confined to the vicious or thoughtless individual, ought society to abandon to
their own guidance those who are manifestly unfit for it? If protection against
themselves is confessedly due to children and persons under age, is not society
equally bound to afford it to persons of mature years who are equally incapable
of self-government? If gambling, or drunkenness, or incontinence, or idleness,
or uncleanliness, are as injurious to happiness, and as great a hindrance to
improvement, as many or most of the acts prohibited by law, why (it may be
asked) should not law, so far as is consistent with practicability and social
convenience, endeavor to repress these also? And as a supplement to the
unavoidable imperfections of law, ought not opinion at least to organize a
powerful police against these vices, and visit rigidly with social penalties
those who are known to practise them? There is no question here (it may be
said) about restricting individuality, or impeding the trial of new and
original experiments in living. The only things it is sought to prevent are
things which have been tried and condemned from the beginning of the world
until now; things which experience has shown not to be useful or suitable to
any person's individuality. There must be some length of time and amount of
experience, after which a moral or prudential truth may be regarded as
established, and it is merely desired to prevent generation after generation
from falling over the same precipice which has been fatal to their
predecessors.
I fully admit that the mischief which a person does to himself, may
seriously affect, both through their sympathies and their interests, those
nearly connected with him, and in a minor degree, society at large. When, by
conduct of this sort, a person is led to violate a distinct and assignable
obligation to any other person or persons, the case is taken out of the
self-regarding class, and becomes amenable to moral disapprobation in the
proper sense of the term. If, for example, a man, through intemperance or
extravagance, becomes unable to pay his debts, or, having undertaken the moral
responsibility of a family, becomes from the same cause incapable of supporting
or educating them, he is deservedly reprobated, and might be justly punished;
but it is for the breach of duty to his family or creditors, not for the
extravagence. If the resources which ought to have been devoted to them, had
been diverted from them for the most prudent investment, the moral culpability
would have been the same. George Barnwell murdered his uncle to get money for
his mistress, but if he had done it to set himself up in business, he would
equally have been hanged. Again, in the frequent case of a man who causes grief
to his family by addiction to bad habits, he deserves reproach for his
unkindness or ingratitude; but so he may for cultivating habits not in
themselves vicious, if they are painful to those with whom he passes his life,
or who from personal ties are dependent on him for their comfort. Whoever fails
in the consideration generally due to the interests and feelings of others, not
being compelled by some more imperative duty, or justified by allowable
self-preference, is a subject of moral disapprobation for that failure, but not
for the cause of it, nor for the errors, merely personal to himself, which may
have remotely led to it. In like manner, when a person disables himself, by
conduct purely self-regarding, from the performance of some definite duty
incumbent on him to the public, he is guilty of a social offence. No person
ought to be punished simply for being drunk; but a soldier or a policeman
should be punished for being drunk on duty. Whenever, in short, there is a
definite damage, or a definite risk of damage, either to an individual or to
the public, the case is taken out of the province of liberty, and placed in
that of morality or law.
But with regard to the merely contingent or, as it may be called,
constructive injury which a person causes to society, by conduct which neither
violates any specific duty to the public, nor occasions perceptible hurt to any
assignable individual except himself; the inconvenience is one which society
can afford to bear, for the sake of the greater good of human freedom. If grown
persons are to be punished for not taking proper care of themselves, I would
rather it were for their own sake, than under pretence of preventing them from
impairing their capacity of rendering to society benefits which society does
not pretend it has a right to exact. But I cannot consent to argue the point as
if society had no means of bringing its weaker members up to its ordinary
standard of rational conduct, except waiting till they do something irrational,
and then punishing them, legally or morally, for it. Society has had absolute
power over them during all the early portion of their existence: it has had the
whole period of childhood and nonage in which to try whether it could make them
capable of rational conduct in life. The existing generation is master both of
the training and the entire circumstances of the generation to come; it cannot
indeed make them perfectly wise and good, because it is itself so lamentably
deficient in goodness and wisdom; and its best efforts are not always, in
individual cases, its most successful ones; but it is perfectly well able to
make the rising generation, as a whole, as good as, and a little better than,
itself. If society lets any considerable number of its members grow up mere
children, incapable of being acted on by rational consideration of distant
motives, society has itself to blame for the consequences. Armed not only with
all the powers of education, but with the ascendency which the authority of a
received opinion always exercises over the minds who are least fitted to judge
for themselves; and aided by the natural penalties which cannot be prevented
from falling on those who incur the distaste or the contempt of those who know
them; let not society pretend that it needs, besides all this, the power to
issue commands and enforce obedience in the personal concerns of individuals,
in which, on all principles of justice and policy, the decision ought to rest
with those who are to abide the consequences. Nor is there anything which tends
more to discredit and frustrate the better means of influencing conduct, than a
resort to the worse. If there be among those whom it is attempted to coerce
into prudence or temperance, any of the material of which vigorous and
independent characters are made, they will infallibly rebel against the yoke.
No such person will ever feel that others have a right to control him in his
concerns, such as they have to prevent him from injuring them in theirs; and it
easily comes to be considered a mark of spirit and courage to fly in the face
of such usurped authority, and do with ostentation the exact opposite of what
it enjoins; as in the fashion of grossness which succeeded, in the time of
Charles II., to the fanatical moral intolerance of the Puritans. With respect
to what is said of the necessity of protecting society from the bad example set
to others by the vicious or the self-indulgent; it is true that bad example may
have a pernicious effect, especially the example of doing wrong to others with
impunity to the wrong-doer. But we are now speaking of conduct which, while it
does no wrong to others, is supposed to do great harm to the agent himself: and
I do not see how those who believe this, can think otherwise than that the
example, on the whole, must be more salutary than hurtful, since, if it
displays the misconduct, it displays also the painful or degrading consequences
which, if the conduct is justly censured, must be supposed to be in all or most
cases attendant on it.
But the strongest of all the arguments against the interference of the
public with purely personal conduct, is that when it does interfere, the odds
are that it interferes wrongly, and in the wrong place. On questions of social
morality, of duty to others, the opinion of the public, that is, of an
overruling majority, though often wrong, is likely to be still oftener right;
because on such questions they are only required to judge of their own
interests; of the manner in which some mode of conduct, if allowed to be
practised, would affect themselves. But the opinion of a similar majority,
imposed as a law on the minority, on questions of self-regarding conduct, is
quite as likely to be wrong as right; for in these cases public opinion means,
at the best, some people's opinion of what is good or bad for other people;
while very often it does not even mean that; the public, with the most perfect
indifference, passing over the pleasure or convenience of those whose conduct
they censure, and considering only their own preference. There are many who
consider as an injury to themselves any conduct which they have a distaste for,
and resent it as an outrage to their feelings; as a religious bigot, when
charged with disregarding the religious feelings of others, has been known to
retort that they disregard his feelings, by persisting in their abominable
worship or creed. But there is no parity between the feeling of a person for
his own opinion, and the feeling of another who is offended at his holding it;
no more than between the desire of a thief to take a purse, and the desire of
the right owner to keep it. And a person's taste is as much his own peculiar
concern as his opinion or his purse. It is easy for any one to imagine an ideal
public, which leaves the freedom and choice of individuals in all uncertain
matters undisturbed, and only requires them to abstain from modes of conduct
which universal experience has condemned. But where has there been seen a
public which set any such limit to its censorship? or when does the public
trouble itself about universal experience. In its interferences with personal
conduct it is seldom thinking of anything but the enormity of acting or feeling
differently from itself; and this standard of judgment, thinly disguised, is
held up to mankind as the dictate of religion and philosophy, by nine tenths of
all moralists and speculative writers. These teach that things are right
because they are right; because we feel them to be so. They tell us to search
in our own minds and hearts for laws of conduct binding on ourselves and on all
others. What can the poor public do but apply these instructions, and make
their own personal feelings of good and evil, if they are tolerably unanimous
in them, obligatory on all the world?
The evil here pointed out is not one which exists only in theory; and it may
perhaps be expected that I should specify the instances in which the public of
this age and country improperly invests its own preferences with the character
of moral laws. I am not writing an essay on the aberrations of existing moral
feeling. That is too weighty a subject to be discussed parenthetically, and by
way of illustration. Yet examples are necessary, to show that the principle I
maintain is of serious and practical moment, and that I am not endeavoring to
erect a barrier against imaginary evils. And it is not difficult to show, by
abundant instances, that to extend the bounds of what may be called moral
police, until it encroaches on the most unquestionably legitimate liberty of
the individual, is one of the most universal of all human propensities.
As a first instance, consider the antipathies which men cherish on no better
grounds than that persons whose religious opinions are different from theirs,
do not practise their religious observances, especially their religious
abstinences. To cite a rather trivial example, nothing in the creed or practice
of Christians does more to envenom the hatred of Mahomedans against them, than
the fact of their eating pork. There are few acts which Christians and
Europeans regard with more unaffected disgust, than Mussulmans regard this
particular mode of satisfying hunger. It is, in the first place, an offence
against their religion; but this circumstance by no means explains either the
degree or the kind of their repugnance; for wine also is forbidden by their
religion, and to partake of it is by all Mussulmans accounted wrong, but not
disgusting. Their aversion to the flesh of the "unclean beast" is, on
the contrary, of that peculiar character, resembling an instinctive antipathy,
which the idea of uncleanness, when once it thoroughly sinks into the feelings,
seems always to excite even in those whose personal habits are anything but
scrupulously cleanly and of which the sentiment of religious impurity, so
intense in the Hindoos, is a remarkable example. Suppose now that in a people,
of whom the majority were Mussulmans, that majority should insist upon not
permitting pork to be eaten within the limits of the country. This would be
nothing new in Mahomedan countries.[1]
Would it be a legitimate exercise of the moral authority of public opinion? and
if not, why not? The practice is really revolting to such a public. They also
sincerely think that it is forbidden and abhorred by the Deity. Neither could
the prohibition be censured as religious persecution. It might be religious in
its origin, but it would not be persecution for religion, since nobody's
religion makes it a duty to eat pork. The only tenable ground of condemnation
would be, that with the personal tastes and self-regarding concerns of
individuals the public has no business to interfere.
To come somewhat nearer home: the majority of Spaniards consider it a gross
impiety, offensive in the highest degree to the Supreme Being, to worship him
in any other manner than the Roman Catholic; and no other public worship is
lawful on Spanish soil. The people of all Southern Europe look upon a married
clergy as not only irreligious, but unchaste, indecent, gross, disgusting. What
do Protestants think of these perfectly sincere feelings, and of the attempt to
enforce them against non-Catholics? Yet, if mankind are justified in
interfering with each other's liberty in things which do not concern the
interests of others, on what principle is it possible consistently to exclude
these cases? or who can blame people for desiring to suppress what they regard
as a scandal in the sight of God and man?
No stronger case can be shown for prohibiting anything which is regarded as
a personal immorality, than is made out for suppressing these practices in the
eyes of those who regard them as impieties; and unless we are willing to adopt
the logic of persecutors, and to say that we may persecute others because we
are right, and that they must not persecute us because they are wrong, we must
beware of admitting a principle of which we should resent as a gross injustice
the application to ourselves.
The preceding instances may be objected to, although unreasonably, as drawn
from contingencies impossible among us: opinion, in this country, not being
likely to enforce abstinence from meats, or to interfere with people for
worshipping, and for either marrying or not marrying, according to their creed
or inclination. The next example, however, shall be taken from an interference
with liberty which we have by no means passed all danger of. Wherever the
Puritans have been sufficiently powerful, as in New England, and in Great
Britain at the time of the Commonwealth, they have endeavored, with
considerable success, to put down all public, and nearly all private,
amusements: especially music, dancing, public games, or other assemblages for
purposes of diversion, and the theatre. There are still in this country large
bodies of persons by whose notions of morality and religion these recreations
are condemned; and those persons belonging chiefly to the middle class, who are
the ascendant power in the present social and political condition of the
kingdom, it is by no means impossible that persons of these sentiments may at
some time or other command a majority in Parliament. How will the remaining
portion of the community like to have the amusements that shall be permitted to
them regulated by the religious and moral sentiments of the stricter Calvinists
and Methodists? Would they not, with considerable peremptoriness, desire these
intrusively pious members of society to mind their own business? This is
precisely what should be said to every government and every public, who have
the pretension that no person shall enjoy any pleasure which they think wrong.
But if the principle of the pretension be admitted, no one can reasonably
object to its being acted on in the sense of the majority, or other
preponderating power in the country; and all persons must be ready to conform
to the idea of a Christian commonwealth, as understood by the early settlers in
New England, if a religious profession similar to theirs should ever succeed in
regaining its lost ground, as religions supposed to be declining have so often
been known to do.
To imagine another contingency, perhaps more likely to be realized than the
one last mentioned. There is confessedly a strong tendency in the modern world
towards a democratic constitution of society, accompanied or not by popular
political institutions. It is affirmed that in the country where this tendency
is most completely realized where both society and the government are
most democratic the United States the feeling of the majority, to
whom any appearance of a more showy or costly style of living than they can
hope to rival is disagreeable, operates as a tolerably effectual sumptuary law,
and that in many parts of the Union it is really difficult for a person
possessing a very large income, to find any mode of spending it, which will not
incur popular disapprobation. Though such statements as these are doubtless
much exaggerated as a representation of existing facts, the state of things
they describe is not only a conceivable and possible, but a probable result of
democratic feeling, combined with the notion that the public has a right to a
veto on the manner in which individuals shall spend their incomes. We have only
further to suppose a considerable diffusion of Socialist opinions, and it may
become infamous in the eyes of the majority to possess more property than some
very small amount, or any income not earned by manual labor. Opinions similar
in principle to these, already prevail widely among the artisan class, and
weigh oppressively on those who are amenable to the opinion chiefly of that
class, namely, its own members. It is known that the bad workmen who form the
majority of the operatives in many branches of industry, are decidedly of
opinion that bad workmen ought to receive the same wages as good, and that no
one ought to be allowed, through piecework or otherwise, to earn by superior
skill or industry more than others can without it. And they employ a moral
police, which occasionally becomes a physical one, to deter skilful workmen
from receiving, and employers from giving, a larger remuneration for a more
useful service. If the public have any jurisdiction over private concerns, I
cannot see that these people are in fault, or that any individual's particular
public can be blamed for asserting the same authority over his individual
conduct, which the general public asserts over people in general.
But, without dwelling upon supposititious cases, there are, in our own day,
gross usurpations upon the liberty of private life actually practised, and
still greater ones threatened with some expectation of success, and opinions
proposed which assert an unlimited right in the public not only to prohibit by
law everything which it thinks wrong, but in order to get at what it thinks
wrong, to prohibit any number of things which it admits to be innocent.
Under the name of preventing intemperance the people of one English colony,
and of nearly half the United States, have been interdicted by law from making
any use whatever of fermented drinks, except for medical purposes: for
prohibition of their sale is in fact, as it is intended to be, prohibition of
their use. And though the impracticability of executing the law has caused its
repeal in several of the States which had adopted it, including the one from
which it derives its name, an attempt has notwithstanding been commenced, and
is prosecuted with considerable zeal by many of the professed philanthropists,
to agitate for a similar law in this country. The association, or
"Alliance" as it terms itself, which has been formed for this
purpose, has acquired some notoriety through the publicity given to a
correspondence between its Secretary and one of the very few English public men
who hold that a politician's opinions ought to be founded on principles. Lord
Stanley's share in this correspondence is calculated to strengthen the hopes
already built on him, by those who know how rare such qualities as are
manifested in some of his public appearances, unhappily are among those who
figure in political life. The organ of the Alliance, who would "deeply
deplore the recognition of any principle which could be wrested to justify
bigotry and persecution," undertakes to point out the "broad and
impassable barrier" which divides such principles from those of the
association. "All matters relating to thought, opinion, conscience, appear
to me," he says, "to be without the sphere of legislation; all
pertaining to social act, habit, relation, subject only to a discretionary
power vested in the State itself, and not in the individual, to be within
it." No mention is made of a third class, different from either of these,
viz., acts and habits which are not social, but individual; although it is to
this class, surely, that the act of drinking fermented liquors belongs. Selling
fermented liquors, however, is trading, and trading is a social act. But the
infringement complained of is not on the liberty of the seller, but on that of
the buyer and consumer; since the State might just as well forbid him to drink
wine, as purposely make it impossible for him to obtain it. The Secretary,
however, says, "I claim, as a citizen, a right to legislate whenever my
social rights are invaded by the social act of another." And now for the
definition of these "social rights." "If anything invades my
social rights, certainly the traffic in strong drink does. It destroys my
primary right of security, by constantly creating and stimulating social
disorder. It invades my right of equality, by deriving a profit from the
creation of a misery, I am taxed to support. It impedes my right to free moral
and intellectual development, by surrounding my path with dangers, and by
weakening and demoralizing society, from which I have a right to claim mutual
aid and intercourse." A theory of "social rights," the like of
which probably never before found its way into distinct language being
nothing short of this that it is the absolute social right of every
individual, that every other individual shall act in every respect exactly as
he ought; that whosoever fails thereof in the smallest particular, violates my
social right, and entitles me to demand from the legislature the removal of the
grievance. So monstrous a principle is far more dangerous than any single
interference with liberty; there is no violation of liberty which it would not
justify; it acknowledges no right to any freedom whatever, except perhaps to
that of holding opinions in secret, without ever disclosing them; for the
moment an opinion which I consider noxious, passes any one's lips, it invades
all the "social rights" attributed to me by the Alliance. The
doctrine ascribes to all mankind a vested interest in each other's moral,
intellectual, and even physical perfection, to be defined by each claimant
according to his own standard.
Another important example of illegitimate interference with the rightful
liberty of the individual, not simply threatened, but long since carried into
triumphant effect, is Sabbatarian legislation. Without doubt, abstinence on one
day in the week, so far as the exigencies of life permit, from the usual daily
occupation, though in no respect religiously binding on any except Jews, is a
highly beneficial custom. And inasmuch as this custom cannot be observed
without a general consent to that effect among the industrious classes,
therefore, in so far as some persons by working may impose the same necessity
on others, it may be allowable and right that the law should guarantee to each,
the observance by others of the custom, by suspending the greater operations of
industry on a particular day. But this justification, grounded on the direct
interest which others have in each individual's observance of the practice,
does not apply to the self-chosen occupations in which a person may think fit
to employ his leisure; nor does it hold good, in the smallest degree, for legal
restrictions on amusements. It is true that the amusement of some is the day's
work of others; but the pleasure, not to say the useful recreation, of many, is
worth the labor of a few, provided the occupation is freely chosen, and can be
freely resigned. The operatives are perfectly right in thinking that if all
worked on Sunday, seven days' work would have to be given for six days' wages:
but so long as the great mass of employments are suspended, the small number
who for the enjoyment of others must still work, obtain a proportional increase
of earnings; and they are not obliged to follow those occupations, if they
prefer leisure to emolument. If a further remedy is sought, it might be found
in the establishment by custom of a holiday on some other day of the week for
those particular classes of persons. The only ground, therefore, on which
restrictions on Sunday amusements can be defended, must be that they are
religiously wrong; a motive of legislation which never can be too earnestly
protested against. "Deorum injuriae Diis curae." It remains to be
proved that society or any of its officers holds a commission from on high to
avenge any supposed offence to Omnipotence, which is not also a wrong to our
fellow-creatures. The notion that it is one man's duty that another should be
religious, was the foundation of all the religious persecutions ever
perpetrated, and if admitted, would fully justify them. Though the feeling
which breaks out in the repeated attempts to stop railway travelling on Sunday,
in the resistance to the opening of Museums, and the like, has not the cruelty
of the old persecutors, the state of mind indicated by it is fundamentally the
same. It IS a determination not to tolerate others in doing what is permitted
by their religion, because it is not permitted by the persecutor's religion. It
is a belief that God not only abominates the act of the misbeliever, but will
not hold us guiltless if we leave him unmolested.
I cannot refrain from adding to these examples of the little account
commonly made of human liberty, the language of downright persecution which
breaks out from the press of this country, whenever it feels called on to
notice the remarkable phenomenon of Mormonism. Much might be said on the
unexpected and instructive fact, that an alleged new revelation, and a
religion, founded on it, the product of palpable imposture, not even supported
by the prestige of extraordinary qualities in its founder, is believed by
hundreds of thousands, and has been made the foundation of a society, in the
age of newspapers, railways, and the electric telegraph. What here concerns us
is, that this religion, like other and better religions, has its martyrs; that
its prophet and founder was, for his teaching, put to death by a mob; that
others of its adherents lost their lives by the same lawless violence; that
they were forcibly expelled, in a body, from the country in which they first
grew up; while, now that they have been chased into a solitary recess in the
midst of a desert, many in this country openly declare that it would be right
(only that it is not convenient) to send an expedition against them, and compel
them by force to conform to the opinions of other people. The article of the
Mormonite doctrine which is the chief provocative to the antipathy which thus
breaks through the ordinary restraints of religious tolerance, is its sanction
of polygamy; which, though permitted to Mahomedans, and Hindoos, and Chinese,
seems to excite unquenchable animosity when practised by persons who speak
English, and profess to be a kind of Christians. No one has a deeper
disapprobation than I have of this Mormon institution; both for other reasons,
and because, far from being in any way countenanced by the principle of
liberty, it is a direct infraction of that principle, being a mere riveting of
the chains of one half of the community, and an emancipation of the other from
reciprocity of obligation towards them. Still, it must be remembered that this
relation is as much voluntary on the part of the women concerned in it, and who
may be deemed the sufferers by it, as is the case with any other form of the
marriage institution; and however surprising this fact may appear, it has its
explanation in the common ideas and customs of the world, which teaching women
to think marriage the one thing needful, make it intelligible that many a woman
should prefer being one of several wives, to not being a wife at all. Other
countries are not asked to recognize such unions, or release any portion of
their inhabitants from their own laws on the score of Mormonite opinions. But
when the dissentients have conceded to the hostile sentiments of others, far
more than could justly be demanded; when they have left the countries to which
their doctrines were unacceptable, and established themselves in a remote
corner of the earth, which they have been the first to render habitable to
human beings; it is difficult to see on what principles but those of tyranny
they can be prevented from living there under what laws they please, provided
they commit no aggression on other nations, and allow perfect freedom of
departure to those who are dissatisfied with their ways. A recent writer, in
some respects of considerable merit, proposes (to use his own words,) not a
crusade, but a civilizade, against this polygamous community, to put an end to
what seems to him a retrograde step in civilization. It also appears so to me,
but I am not aware that any community has a right to force another to be
civilized. So long as the sufferers by the bad law do not invoke assistance
from other communities, I cannot admit that persons entirely unconnected with
them ought to step in and require that a condition of things with which all who
are directly interested appear to be satisfied, should be put an end to because
it is a scandal to persons some thousands of miles distant, who have no part or
concern in it. Let them send missionaries, if they please, to preach against
it; and let them, by any fair means, (of which silencing the teachers is not
one,) oppose the progress of similar doctrines among their own people. If
civilization has got the better of barbarism when barbarism had the world to
itself, it is too much to profess to be afraid lest barbarism, after having
been fairly got under, should revive and conquer civilization. A civilization
that can thus succumb to its vanquished enemy must first have become so
degenerate, that neither its appointed priests and teachers, nor anybody else,
has the capacity, or will take the trouble, to stand up for it. If this be so,
the sooner such a civilization receives notice to quit, the better. It can only
go on from bad to worse, until destroyed and regenerated (like the Western
Empire) by energetic barbarians.
[1] The case of the Bombay Parsees is a curious instance
in point. When this industrious and enterprising tribe, the descendants of the
Persian fire-worshippers, flying from their native country before the Caliphs,
arrived in Western India, they were admitted to toleration by the Hindoo
sovereigns, on condition of not eating beef. When those regions afterwards fell
under the dominion of Mahomedan conquerors, the Parsees obtained from them a
continuance of indulgence, on condition of refraining from pork. What was at
first obedience to authority became a second nature, and the Parsees to this
day abstain both from beef and pork. Though not required by their religion, the
double abstinence has had time to grow into a custom of their tribe; and
custom, in the East, is a religion.
CHAPTER V
APPLICATIONS
THE principles asserted in
these pages must be more generally admitted as the basis for discussion of
details, before a consistent application of them to all the various departments
of government and morals can be attempted with any prospect of advantage. The
few observations I propose to make on questions of detail, are designed to
illustrate the principles, rather than to follow them out to their
consequences. I offer, not so much applications, as specimens of application;
which may serve to bring into greater clearness the meaning and limits of the
two maxims which together form the entire doctrine of this Essay and to assist
the judgment in holding the balance between them, in the cases where it appears
doubtful which of them is applicable to the case.
The maxims are, first, that the individual is not accountable to society for
his actions, in so far as these concern the interests of no person but himself.
Advice, instruction, persuasion, and avoidance by other people, if thought
necessary by them for their own good, are the only measures by which society
can justifiably express its dislike or disapprobation of his conduct. Secondly,
that for such actions as are prejudicial to the interests of others, the
individual is accountable, and may be subjected either to social or to legal
punishments, if society is of opinion that the one or the other is requisite
for its protection.
In the first place, it must by no means be supposed, because damage, or
probability of damage, to the interests of others, can alone justify the
interference of society, that therefore it always does justify such
interference. In many cases, an individual, in pursuing a legitimate object,
necessarily and therefore legitimately causes pain or loss to others, or
intercepts a good which they had a reasonable hope of obtaining. Such
oppositions of interest between individuals often arise from bad social
institutions, but are unavoidable while those institutions last; and some would
be unavoidable under any institutions. Whoever succeeds in an overcrowded
profession, or in a competitive examination; whoever is preferred to another in
any contest for an object which both desire, reaps benefit from the loss of
others, from their wasted exertion and their disappointment. But it is, by
common admission, better for the general interest of mankind, that persons
should pursue their objects undeterred by this sort of consequences. In other
words, society admits no right, either legal or moral, in the disappointed
competitors, to immunity from this kind of suffering; and feels called on to
interfere, only when means of success have been employed which it is contrary
to the general interest to permit namely, fraud or treachery, and force.
Again, trade is a social act. Whoever undertakes to sell any description of
goods to the public, does what affects the interest of other persons, and of
society in general; and thus his conduct, in principle, comes within the
jurisdiction of society: accordingly, it was once held to be the duty of
governments, in all cases which were considered of importance, to fix prices,
and regulate the processes of manufacture. But it is now recognized, though not
till after a long struggle, that both the cheapness and the good quality of
commodities are most effectually provided for by leaving the producers and
sellers perfectly free, under the sole check of equal freedom to the buyers for
supplying themselves elsewhere. This is the so-called doctrine of Free Trade,
which rests on grounds different from, though equally solid with, the principle
of individual liberty asserted in this Essay. Restrictions on trade, or on
production for purposes of trade, are indeed restraints; and all restraint, qua
restraint, is an evil: but the restraints in question affect only that part of
conduct which society is competent to restrain, and are wrong solely because
they do not really produce the results which it is desired to produce by them.
As the principle of individual liberty is not involved in the doctrine of Free
Trade so neither is it in most of the questions which arise respecting the
limits of that doctrine: as for example, what amount of public control is
admissible for the prevention of fraud by adulteration; how far sanitary
precautions, or arrangements to protect work-people employed in dangerous
occupations, should be enforced on employers. Such questions involve
considerations of liberty, only in so far as leaving people to themselves is
always better, caeteris paribus, than controlling them: but that they may be
legitimately controlled for these ends, is in principle undeniable. On the
other hand, there are questions relating to interference with trade which are
essentially questions of liberty; such as the Maine Law, already touched upon;
the prohibition of the importation of opium into China; the restriction of the
sale of poisons; all cases, in short, where the object of the interference is
to make it impossible or difficult to obtain a particular commodity. These
interferences are objectionable, not as infringements on the liberty of the
producer or seller, but on that of the buyer.
One of these examples, that of the sale of poisons, opens a new question;
the proper limits of what may be called the functions of police; how far
liberty may legitimately be invaded for the prevention of crime, or of
accident. It is one of the undisputed functions of government to take
precautions against crime before it has been committed, as well as to detect
and punish it afterwards. The preventive function of government, however, is
far more liable to be abused, to the prejudice of liberty, than the punitory
function; for there is hardly any part of the legitimate freedom of action of a
human being which would not admit of being represented, and fairly too, as
increasing the facilities for some form or other of delinquency. Nevertheless,
if a public authority, or even a private person, sees any one evidently
preparing to commit a crime, they are not bound to look on inactive until the
crime is committed, but may interfere to prevent it. If poisons were never
bought or used for any purpose except the commission of murder, it would be
right to prohibit their manufacture and sale. They may, however, be wanted not
only for innocent but for useful purposes, and restrictions cannot be imposed
in the one case without operating in the other. Again, it is a proper office of
public authority to guard against accidents. If either a public officer or any
one else saw a person attempting to cross a bridge which had been ascertained
to be unsafe, and there were no time to warn him of his danger, they might
seize him and turn him back without any real infringement of his liberty; for
liberty consists in doing what one desires, and he does not desire to fall into
the river. Nevertheless, when there is not a certainty, but only a danger of
mischief, no one but the person himself can judge of the sufficiency of the
motive which may prompt him to incur the risk: in this case, therefore, (unless
he is a child, or delirious, or in some state of excitement or absorption
incompatible with the full use of the reflecting faculty,) he ought, I
conceive, to be only warned of the danger; not forcibly prevented from exposing
himself to it. Similar considerations, applied to such a question as the sale
of poisons, may enable us to decide which among the possible modes of
regulation are or are not contrary to principle. Such a precaution, for
example, as that of labelling the drug with some word expressive of its
dangerous character, may be enforced without violation of liberty: the buyer
cannot wish not to know that the thing he possesses has poisonous qualities.
But to require in all cases the certificate of a medical practitioner, would
make it sometimes impossible, always expensive, to obtain the article for
legitimate uses. The only mode apparent to me, in which difficulties may be
thrown in the way of crime committed through this means, without any
infringement, worth taking into account, Upon the liberty of those who desire
the poisonous substance for other purposes, consists in providing what, in the
apt language of Bentham, is called "preappointed evidence." This
provision is familiar to every one in the case of contracts. It is usual and
right that the law, when a contract is entered into, should require as the
condition of its enforcing performance, that certain formalities should be
observed, such as signatures, attestation of witnesses, and the like, in order
that in case of subsequent dispute, there may be evidence to prove that the
contract was really entered into, and that there was nothing in the
circumstances to render it legally invalid: the effect being, to throw great
obstacles in the way of fictitious contracts, or contracts made in
circumstances which, if known, would destroy their validity. Precautions of a
similar nature might be enforced in the sale of articles adapted to be
instruments of crime. The seller, for example, might be required to enter in a
register the exact time of the transaction, the name and address of the buyer,
the precise quality and quantity sold; to ask the purpose for which it was
wanted, and record the answer he received. When there was no medical
prescription, the presence of some third person might be required, to bring
home the fact to the purchaser, in case there should afterwards be reason to
believe that the article had been applied to criminal purposes. Such
regulations would in general be no material impediment to obtaining the
article, but a very considerable one to making an improper use of it without
detection.
The right inherent in society, to ward off crimes against itself by
antecedent precautions, suggests the obvious limitations to the maxim, that
purely self-regarding misconduct cannot properly be meddled with in the way of
prevention or punishment. Drunkennesses, for example, in ordinary cases, is not
a fit subject for legislative interference; but I should deem it perfectly
legitimate that a person, who had once been convicted of any act of violence to
others under the influence of drink, should be placed under a special legal
restriction, personal to himself; that if he were afterwards found drunk, he
should be liable to a penalty, and that if when in that state he committed
another offence, the punishment to which he would be liable for that other
offence should be increased in severity. The making himself drunk, in a person
whom drunkenness excites to do harm to others, is a crime against others. So,
again, idleness, except in a person receiving support from the public, or
except when it constitutes a breach of contract, cannot without tyranny be made
a subject of legal punishment; but if either from idleness or from any other
avoidable cause, a man fails to perform his legal duties to others, as for
instance to support his children, it is no tyranny to force him to fulfil that
obligation, by compulsory labor, if no other means are available.
Again, there are many acts which, being directly injurious only to the
agents themselves, ought not to be legally interdicted, but which, if done
publicly, are a violation of good manners, and coming thus within the category
of offences against others, may rightfully be prohibited. Of this kind are
offences against decency; on which it is unnecessary to dwell, the rather as
they are only connected indirectly with our subject, the objection to publicity
being equally strong in the case of many actions not in themselves condemnable,
nor supposed to be so.
There is another question to which an answer must be found, consistent with
the principles which have been laid down. In cases of personal conduct supposed
to be blameable, but which respect for liberty precludes society from
preventing or punishing, because the evil directly resulting falls wholly on
the agent; what the agent is free to do, ought other persons to be equally free
to counsel or instigate? This question is not free from difficulty. The case of
a person who solicits another to do an act, is not strictly a case of
self-regarding conduct. To give advice or offer inducements to any one, is a
social act, and may therefore, like actions in general which affect others, be
supposed amenable to social control. But a little reflection corrects the first
impression, by showing that if the case is not strictly within the definition
of individual liberty, yet the reasons on which the principle of individual
liberty is grounded, are applicable to it. If people must be allowed, in
whatever concerns only themselves, to act as seems best to themselves at their
own peril, they must equally be free to consult with one another about what is
fit to be so done; to exchange opinions, and give and receive suggestions.
Whatever it is permitted to do, it must be permitted to advise to do. The
question is doubtful, only when the instigator derives a personal benefit from
his advice; when he makes it his occupation, for subsistence, or pecuniary
gain, to promote what society and the State consider to be an evil. Then,
indeed, a new element of complication is introduced; namely, the existence of
classes of persons with an interest opposed to what is considered as the public
weal, and whose mode of living is grounded on the counteraction of it. Ought
this to be interfered with, or not? Fornication, for example, must be
tolerated, and so must gambling; but should a person be free to be a pimp, or
to keep a gambling-house? The case is one of those which lie on the exact
boundary line between two principles, and it is not at once apparent to which
of the two it properly belongs. There are arguments on both sides. On the side
of toleration it may be said, that the fact of following anything as an
occupation, and living or profiting by the practice of it, cannot make that
criminal which would otherwise be admissible; that the act should either be
consistently permitted or consistently prohibited; that if the principles which
we have hitherto defended are true, society has no business, as society, to
decide anything to be wrong which concerns only the individual; that it cannot
go beyond dissuasion, and that one person should be as free to persuade, as
another to dissuade. In opposition to this it may be contended, that although
the public, or the State, are not warranted in authoritatively deciding, for
purposes of repression or punishment, that such or such conduct affecting only
the interests of the individual is good or bad, they are fully justified in
assuming, if they regard it as bad, that its being so or not is at least a
disputable question: That, this being supposed, they cannot be acting wrongly
in endeavoring to exclude the influence of solicitations which are not
disinterested, of instigators who cannot possibly be impartial who have
a direct personal interest on one side, and that side the one which the State
believes to be wrong, and who confessedly promote it for personal objects only.
There can surely, it may be urged, be nothing lost, no sacrifice of good, by so
ordering matters that persons shall make their election, either wisely or
foolishly, on their own prompting, as free as possible from the arts of persons
who stimulate their inclinations for interested purposes of their own. Thus (it
may be said) though the statutes respecting unlawful games are utterly
indefensible though all persons should be free to gamble in their own or
each other's houses, or in any place of meeting established by their own
subscriptions, and open only to the members and their visitors yet
public gambling-houses should not be permitted. It is true that the prohibition
is never effectual, and that whatever amount of tyrannical power is given to
the police, gambling-houses can always be maintained under other pretences; but
they may be compelled to conduct their operations with a certain degree of
secrecy and mystery, so that nobody knows anything about them but those who
seek them; and more than this society ought not to aim at. There is
considerable force in these arguments. I will not venture to decide whether
they are sufficient to justify the moral anomaly of punishing the accessary,
when the principal is (and must be) allowed to go free; of fining or
imprisoning the procurer, but not the fornicator, the gambling-house keeper,
but not the gambler. Still less ought the common operations of buying and
selling to be interfered with on analogous grounds. Almost every article which
is bought and sold may be used in excess, and the sellers have a pecuniary
interest in encouraging that excess; but no argument can be founded on this, in
favor, for instance, of the Maine Law; because the class of dealers in strong
drinks, though interested in their abuse, are indispensably required for the
sake of their legitimate use. The interest, however, of these dealers in
promoting intemperance is a real evil, and justifies the State in imposing
restrictions and requiring guarantees, which but for that justification would
be infringements of legitimate liberty.
A further question is, whether the State while it permits, should
nevertheless indirectly discourage conduct which it deems contrary to the best
interests of the agent; whether, for example, it should take measures to render
the means of drunkenness more costly, or add to the difficulty of procuring
them, by limiting the number of the places of sale. On this as on most other
practical questions, many distinctions require to be made. To tax stimulants
for the sole purpose of making them more difficult to be obtained, is a measure
differing only in degree from their entire prohibition; and would be
justifiable only if that were justifiable. Every increase of cost is a
prohibition, to those whose means do not come up to the augmented price; and to
those who do, it is a penalty laid on them for gratifying a particular taste.
Their choice of pleasures, and their mode of expending their income, after
satisfying their legal and moral obligations to the State and to individuals,
are their own concern, and must rest with their own judgment. These
considerations may seem at first sight to condemn the selection of stimulants
as special subjects of taxation for purposes of revenue. But it must be
remembered that taxation for fiscal purposes is absolutely inevitable; that in
most countries it is necessary that a considerable part of that taxation should
be indirect; that the State, therefore, cannot help imposing penalties, which
to some persons may be prohibitory, on the use of some articles of consumption.
It is hence the duty of the State to consider, in the imposition of taxes, what
commodities the consumers can best spare; and a fortiori, to select in
preference those of which it deems the use, beyond a very moderate quantity, to
be positively injurious. Taxation, therefore, of stimulants, up to the point
which produces the largest amount of revenue (supposing that the State needs
all the revenue which it yields) is not only admissible, but to be approved of.
The question of making the sale of these commodities a more or less
exclusive privilege, must be answered differently, according to the purposes to
which the restriction is intended to be subservient. All places of public
resort require the restraint of a police, and places of this kind peculiarly,
because offences against society are especially apt to originate there. It is,
therefore, fit to confine the power of selling these commodities (at least for
consumption on the spot) to persons of known or vouched-for respectability of
conduct; to make such regulations respecting hours of opening and closing as
may be requisite for public surveillance, and to withdraw the license if
breaches of the peace repeatedly take place through the connivance or
incapacity of the keeper of the house, or if it becomes a rendezvous for
concocting and preparing offences against the law. Any further restriction I do
not conceive to be, in principle, justifiable. The limitation in number, for
instance, of beer and spirit-houses, for the express purpose of rendering them
more difficult of access, and diminishing the occasions of temptation, not only
exposes all to an inconvenience because there are some by whom the facility
would be abused, but is suited only to a state of society in which the laboring
classes are avowedly treated as children or savages, and placed under an
education of restraint, to fit them for future admission to the privileges of
freedom. This is not the principle on which the laboring classes are
professedly governed in any free country; and no person who sets due value on
freedom will give his adhesion to their being so governed, unless after all
efforts have been exhausted to educate them for freedom and govern them as
freemen, and it has been definitively proved that they can only be governed as
children. The bare statement of the alternative shows the absurdity of
supposing that such efforts have been made in any case which needs be
considered here. It is only because the institutions of this country are a mass
of inconsistencies, that things find admittance into our practice which belong
to the system of despotic, or what is called paternal, government, while the
general freedom of our institutions precludes the exercise of the amount of
control necessary to render the restraint of any real efficacy as a moral
education.
It was pointed out in an early part of this Essay, that the liberty of the
individual, in things wherein the individual is alone concerned, implies a
corresponding liberty in any number of individuals to regulate by mutual
agreement such things as regard them jointly, and regard no persons but
themselves. This question presents no difficulty, so long as the will of all
the persons implicated remains unaltered; but since that will may change, it is
often necessary, even in things in which they alone are concerned, that they
should enter into engagements with one another; and when they do, it is fit, as
a general rule, that those engagements should be kept. Yet in the laws
probably, of every country, this general rule has some exceptions. Not only
persons are not held to engagements which violate the rights of third parties,
but it is sometimes considered a sufficient reason for releasing them from an
engagement, that it is injurious to themselves. In this and most other
civilized countries, for example, an engagement by which a person should sell
himself, or allow himself to be sold, as a slave, would be null and void;
neither enforced by law nor by opinion. The ground for thus limiting his power
of voluntarily disposing of his own lot in life, is apparent, and is very
clearly seen in this extreme case. The reason for not interfering, unless for
the sake of others, with a person's voluntary acts, is consideration for his
liberty. His voluntary choice is evidence that what he so chooses is desirable,
or at the least endurable, to him, and his good is on the whole best provided
for by allowing him to take his own means of pursuing it. But by selling
himself for a slave, he abdicates his liberty; he foregoes any future use of
it, beyond that single act. He therefore defeats, in his own case, the very
purpose which is the justification of allowing him to dispose of himself. He is
no longer free; but is thenceforth in a position which has no longer the
presumption in its favor, that would be afforded by his voluntarily remaining
in it. The principle of freedom cannot require that he should be free not to be
free. It is not freedom, to be allowed to alienate his freedom. These reasons,
the force of which is so conspicuous in this peculiar case, are evidently of
far wider application; yet a limit is everywhere set to them by the necessities
of life, which continually require, not indeed that we should resign our
freedom, but that we should consent to this and the other limitation of it. The
principle, however, which demands uncontrolled freedom of action in all that
concerns only the agents themselves, requires that those who have become bound
to one another, in things which concern no third party, should be able to
release one another from the engagement: and even without such voluntary
release, there are perhaps no contracts or engagements, except those that
relate to money or money's worth, of which one can venture to say that there
ought to be no liberty whatever of retractation. Baron Wilhelm von Humboldt, in
the excellent Essay from which I have already quoted, states it as his
conviction, that engagements which involve personal relations or services,
should never be legally binding beyond a limited duration of time; and that the
most important of these engagements, marriage, having the peculiarity that its
objects are frustrated unless the feelings of both the parties are in harmony
with it, should require nothing more than the declared will of either party to
dissolve it. This subject is too important, and too complicated, to be
discussed in a parenthesis, and I touch on it only so far as is necessary for
purposes of illustration. If the conciseness and generality of Baron Humboldt's
dissertation had not obliged him in this instance to content himself with
enunciating his conclusion without discussing the premises, he would doubtless
have recognized that the question cannot be decided on grounds so simple as
those to which he confines himself. When a person, either by express promise or
by conduct, has encouraged another to rely upon his continuing to act in a
certain way to build expectations and calculations, and stake any part
of his plan of life upon that supposition, a new series of moral obligations
arises on his part towards that person, which may possibly be overruled, but
can not be ignored. And again, if the relation between two contracting parties
has been followed by consequences to others; if it has placed third parties in
any peculiar position, or, as in the case of marriage, has even called third
parties into existence, obligations arise on the part of both the contracting
parties towards those third persons, the fulfilment of which, or at all events,
the mode of fulfilment, must be greatly affected by the continuance or
disruption of the relation between the original parties to the contract. It
does not follow, nor can I admit, that these obligations extend to requiring
the fulfilment of the contract at all costs to the happiness of the reluctant
party; but they are a necessary element in the question; and even if, as Von
Humboldt maintains, they ought to make no difference in the legal freedom of
the parties to release themselves from the engagement (and I also hold that
they ought not to make much difference), they necessarily make a great
difference in the moral freedom. A person is bound to take all these
circumstances into account, before resolving on a step which may affect such
important interests of others; and if he does not allow proper weight to those
interests, he is morally responsible for the wrong. I have made these obvious
remarks for the better illustration of the general principle of liberty, and
not because they are at all needed on the particular question, which, on the
contrary, is usually discussed as if the interest of children was everything,
and that of grown persons nothing.
I have already observed that, owing to the absence of any recognized general
principles, liberty is often granted where it should be withheld, as well as
withheld where it should be granted; and one of the cases in which, in the
modern European world, the sentiment of liberty is the strongest, is a case
where, in my view, it is altogether misplaced. A person should be free to do as
he likes in his own concerns; but he ought not to be free to do as he likes in
acting for another under the pretext that the affairs of another are his own
affairs. The State, while it respects the liberty of each in what specially
regards himself, is bound to maintain a vigilant control over his exercise of
any power which it allows him to possess over others. This obligation is almost
entirely disregarded in the case of the family relations, a case, in its direct
influence on human happiness, more important than all the others taken
together. The almost despotic power of husbands over wives needs not be
enlarged upon here, because nothing more is needed for the complete removal of
the evil, than that wives should have the same rights, and should receive the
protection of law in the same manner, as all other persons; and because, on
this subject, the defenders of established injustice do not avail themselves of
the plea of liberty, but stand forth openly as the champions of power. It is in
the case of children, that misapplied notions of liberty are a real obstacle to
the fulfilment by the State of its duties. One would almost think that a man's
children were supposed to be literally, and not metaphorically, a part of
himself, so jealous is opinion of the smallest interference of law with his
absolute and exclusive control over them; more jealous than of almost any
interference with his own freedom of action: so much less do the generality of
mankind value liberty than power. Consider, for example, the case of education.
Is it not almost a self-evident axiom, that the State should require and compel
the education, up to a certain standard, of every human being who is born its
citizen? Yet who is there that is not afraid to recognize and assert this
truth? Hardly any one indeed will deny that it is one of the most sacred duties
of the parents (or, as law and usage now stand, the father), after summoning a
human being into the world, to give to that being an education fitting him to
perform his part well in life towards others and towards himself. But while
this is unanimously declared to be the father's duty, scarcely anybody, in this
country, will bear to hear of obliging him to perform it. Instead of his being
required to make any exertion or sacrifice for securing education to the child,
it is left to his choice to accept it or not when it is provided gratis! It
still remains unrecognized, that to bring a child into existence without a fair
prospect of being able, not only to provide food for its body, but instruction
and training for its mind, is a moral crime, both against the unfortunate
offspring and against society; and that if the parent does not fulfil this
obligation, the State ought to see it fulfilled, at the charge, as far as
possible, of the parent.
Were the duty of enforcing universal education once admitted, there would be
an end to the difficulties about what the State should teach, and how it should
teach, which now convert the subject into a mere battle-field for sects and
parties, causing the time and labor which should have been spent in educating,
to be wasted in quarrelling about education. If the government would make up
its mind to require for every child a good education, it might save itself the
trouble of providing one. It might leave to parents to obtain the education
where and how they pleased, and content itself with helping to pay the school
fees of the poorer classes of children, and defraying the entire school
expenses of those who have no one else to pay for them. The objections which
are urged with reason against State education, do not apply to the enforcement
of education by the State, but to the State's taking upon itself to direct that
education: which is a totally different thing. That the whole or any large part
of the education of the people should be in State hands, I go as far as any one
in deprecating. All that has been said of the importance of individuality of
character, and diversity in opinions and modes of conduct, involves, as of the
same unspeakable importance, diversity of education. A general State education
is a mere contrivance for moulding people to be exactly like one another: and
as the mould in which it casts them is that which pleases the predominant power
in the government, whether this be a monarch, a priesthood, an aristocracy, or
the majority of the existing generation, in proportion as it is efficient and
successful, it establishes a despotism over the mind, leading by natural
tendency to one over the body. An education established and controlled by the
State, should only exist, if it exist at all, as one among many competing
experiments, carried on for the purpose of example and stimulus, to keep the
others up to a certain standard of excellence. Unless, indeed, when society in
general is in so backward a state that it could not or would not provide for
itself any proper institutions of education, unless the government undertook
the task; then, indeed, the government may, as the less of two great evils,
take upon itself the business of schools and universities, as it may that of
joint-stock companies, when private enterprise, in a shape fitted for
undertaking great works of industry does not exist in the country. But in
general, if the country contains a sufficient number of persons qualified to
provide education under government auspices, the same persons would be able and
willing to give an equally good education on the voluntary principle, under the
assurance of remuneration afforded by a law rendering education compulsory,
combined with State aid to those unable to defray the expense.
The instrument for enforcing the law could be no other than public
examinations, extending to all children, and beginning at an early age. An age
might be fixed at which every child must be examined, to ascertain if he (or
she) is able to read. If a child proves unable, the father, unless he has some
sufficient ground of excuse, might be subjected to a moderate fine, to be
worked out, if necessary, by his labor, and the child might be put to school at
his expense. Once in every year the examination should be renewed, with a
gradually extending range of subjects, so as to make the universal acquisition,
and what is more, retention, of a certain minimum of general knowledge,
virtually compulsory. Beyond that minimum, there should be voluntary
examinations on all subjects, at which all who come up to a certain standard of
proficiency might claim a certificate. To prevent the State from exercising
through these arrangements, an improper influence over opinion, the knowledge
required for passing an examination (beyond the merely instrumental parts of
knowledge, such as languages and their use) should, even in the higher class of
examinations, be confined to facts and positive science exclusively. The
examinations on religion, politics, or other disputed topics, shouLd not turn
on the truth or falsehood of opinions, but on the matter of fact that such and
such an opinion is held, on such grounds, by such authors, or schools, or
churches. Under this system, the rising generation would be no worse off in
regard to all disputed truths, than they are at present; they would be brought
up either churchmen or dissenters as they now are, the State merely taking care
that they should be instructed churchmen, or instructed dissenters. There would
be nothing to hinder them from being taught religion, if their parents chose,
at the same schools where they were taught other things. All attempts by the
State to bias the conclusions of its citizens on disputed subjects, are evil;
but it may very properly offer to ascertain and certify that a person possesses
the knowledge requisite to make his conclusions, on any given subject, worth
attending to. A student of philosophy would be the better for being able to
stand an examination both in Locke and in Kant, whichever of the two he takes
up with, or even if with neither: and there is no reasonable objection to
examining an atheist in the evidences of Christianity, provided he is not
required to profess a belief in them. The examinations, however, in the higher
branches of knowledge should, I conceive, be entirely voluntary. It would be
giving too dangerous a power to governments, were they allowed to exclude any
one from professions, even from the profession of teacher, for alleged
deficiency of qualifications: and I think, with Wilhelm von Humboldt, that
degrees, or other public certificates of scientific or professional
acquirements, should be given to all who present themselves for examination,
and stand the test; but that such certificates should confer no advantage over
competitors, other than the weight which may be attached to their testimony by
public opinion.
It is not in the matter of education only that misplaced notions of liberty
prevent moral obligations on the part of parents from being recognized, and
legal obligations from being imposed, where there are the strongest grounds for
the former always, and in many cases for the latter also. The fact itself, of
causing the existence of a human being, is one of the most responsible actions
in the range of human life. To undertake this responsibility to bestow a
life which may be either a curse or a blessing unless the being on whom
it is to be bestowed will have at least the ordinary chances of a desirable
existence, is a crime against that being. And in a country either over-peopled
or threatened with being so, to produce children, beyond a very small number,
with the effect of reducing the reward of labor by their competition, is a
serious offence against all who live by the remuneration of their labor. The
laws which, in many countries on the Continent, forbid marriage unless the
parties can show that they have the means of supporting a family, do not exceed
the legitimate powers of the State: and whether such laws be expedient or not
(a question mainly dependent on local circumstances and feelings), they are not
objectionable as violations of liberty. Such laws are interferences of the
State to prohibit a mischievous act an act injurious to others, which
ought to be a subject of reprobation, and social stigma, even when it is not
deemed expedient to superadd legal punishment. Yet the current ideas of
liberty, which bend so easily to real infringements of the freedom of the
individual, in things which concern only himself, would repel the attempt to
put any restraint upon his inclinations when the consequence of their
indulgence is a life, or lives, of wretchedness and depravity to the offspring,
with manifold evils to those sufficiently within reach to be in any way
affected by their actions. When we compare the strange respect of mankind for
liberty, with their strange want of respect for it, we might imagine that a man
had an indispensable right to do harm to others, and no right at all to please
himself without giving pain to any one.
I have reserved for the last place a large class of questions respecting the
limits of government interference, which, though closely connected with the
subject of this Essay, do not, in strictness, belong to it. These are cases in
which the reasons against interference do not turn upon the principle of
liberty: the question is not about restraining the actions of individuals, but
about helping them: it is asked whether the government should do, or cause to
be done, something for their benefit, instead of leaving it to be done by
themselves, individually, or in voluntary combination.
The objections to government interference, when it is not such as to involve
infringement of liberty, may be of three kinds.
The first is, when the thing to be done is likely to be better done by
individuals than by the government. Speaking generally, there is no one so fit
to conduct any business, or to determine how or by whom it shall be conducted,
as those who are personally interested in it. This principle condemns the
interferences, once so common, of the legislature, or the officers of
government, with the ordinary processes of industry. But this part of the
subject has been sufficiently enlarged upon by political economists, and is not
particularly related to the principles of this Essay.
The second objection is more nearly allied to our subject. In many cases,
though individuals may not do the particular thing so well, on the average, as
the officers of government, it is nevertheless desirable that it should be done
by them, rather than by the government, as a means to their own mental
education a mode of strengthening their active faculties, exercising
their judgment, and giving them a familiar knowledge of the subjects with which
they are thus left to deal. This is a principal, though not the sole,
recommendation of jury trial (in cases not political); of free and popular
local and municipal institutions; of the conduct of industrial and
philanthropic enterprises by voluntary associations. These are not questions of
liberty, and are connected with that subject only by remote tendencies; but
they are questions of development. It belongs to a different occasion from the
present to dwell on these things as parts of national education; as being, in
truth, the peculiar training of a citizen, the practical part of the political
education of a free people, taking them out of the narrow circle of personal
and family selfishness, and accustoming them to the comprehension of joint
interests, the management of joint concerns habituating them to act from
public or semi-public motives, and guide their conduct by aims which unite
instead of isolating them from one another. Without these habits and powers, a
free constitution can neither be worked nor preserved, as is exemplified by the
too-often transitory nature of political freedom in countries where it does not
rest upon a sufficient basis of local liberties. The management of purely local
business by the localities, and of the great enterprises of industry by the
union of those who voluntarily supply the pecuniary means, is further
recommended by all the advantages which have been set forth in this Essay as
belonging to individuality of development, and diversity of modes of action.
Government operations tend to be everywhere alike. With individuals and
voluntary associations, on the contrary, there are varied experiments, and
endless diversity of experience. What the State can usefully do, is to make
itself a central depository, and active circulator and diffuser, of the
experience resulting from many trials. Its business is to enable each
experimentalist to benefit by the experiments of others, instead of tolerating
no experiments but its own.
The third, and most cogent reason for restricting the interference of
government, is the great evil of adding unnecessarily to its power. Every
function superadded to those already exercised by the government, causes its
influence over hopes and fears to be more widely diffused, and converts, more
and more, the active and ambitious part of the public into hangers-on of the
government, or of some party which aims at becoming the government. If the
roads, the railways, the banks, the insurance offices, the great joint-stock
companies, the universities, and the public charities, were all of them
branches of the government; if, in addition, the municipal corporations and
local boards, with all that now devolves on them, became departments of the
central administration; if the employes of all these different enterprises were
appointed and paid by the government, and looked to the government for every
rise in life; not all the freedom of the press and popular constitution of the
legislature would make this or any other country free otherwise than in name.
And the evil would be greater, the more efficiently and scientifically the
administrative machinery was constructed the more skilful the
arrangements for obtaining the best qualified hands and heads with which to
work it. In England it has of late been proposed that all the members of the
civil service of government should be selected by competitive examination, to
obtain for those employments the most intelligent and instructed persons
procurable; and much has been said and written for and against this proposal.
One of the arguments most insisted on by its opponents is that the occupation
of a permanent official servant of the State does not hold out sufficient
prospects of emolument and importance to attract the highest talents, which
will always be able to find a more inviting career in the professions, or in
the service of companies and other public bodies. One would not have been
surprised if this argument had been used by the friends of the proposition, as
an answer to its principal difficulty. Coming from the opponents it is strange
enough. What is urged as an objection is the safety-valve of the proposed
system. If indeed all the high talent of the country could be drawn into the
service of the government, a proposal tending to bring about that result might
well inspire uneasiness. If every part of the business of society which
required organized concert, or large and comprehensive views, were in the hands
of the government, and if government offices were universally filled by the
ablest men, all the enlarged culture and practised intelligence in the country,
except the purely speculative, would be concentrated in a numerous bureaucracy,
to whom alone the rest of the community would look for all things: the
multitude for direction and dictation in all they had to do; the able and
aspiring for personal advancement. To be admitted into the ranks of this
bureaucracy, and when admitted, to rise therein, would be the sole objects of
ambition. Under this regime, not only is the outside public ill-qualified, for
want of practical experience, to criticize or check the mode of operation of
the bureaucracy, but even if the accidents of despotic or the natural working
of popular institutions occasionally raise to the summit a ruler or rulers of
reforming inclinations, no reform can be effected which is contrary to the
interest of the bureaucracy. Such is the melancholy condition of the Russian
empire, as is shown in the accounts of those who have had sufficient
opportunity of observation. The Czar himself is powerless against the
bureaucratic body: he can send any one of them to Siberia, but he cannot govern
without them, or against their will. On every decree of his they have a tacit
veto, by merely refraining from carrying it into effect. In countries of more
advanced civilization and of a more insurrectionary spirit the public,
accustomed to expect everything to be done for them by the State, or at least
to do nothing for themselves without asking from the State not only leave to do
it, but even how it is to be done, naturally hold the State responsible for all
evil which befalls them, and when the evil exceeds their amount of patience,
they rise against the government and make what is called a revolution;
whereupon somebody else, with or without legitimate authority from the nation,
vaults into the seat, issues his orders to the bureaucracy, and everything goes
on much as it did before; the bureaucracy being unchanged, and nobody else
being capable of taking their place.
A very different spectacle is exhibited among a people accustomed to
transact their own business. In France, a large part of the people having been
engaged in military service, many of whom have held at least the rank of
noncommissioned officers, there are in every popular insurrection several
persons competent to take the lead, and improvise some tolerable plan of
action. What the French are in military affairs, the Americans are in every
kind of civil business; let them be left without a government, every body of
Americans is able to improvise one, and to carry on that or any other public
business with a sufficient amount of intelligence, order and decision. This is
what every free people ought to be: and a people capable of this is certain to
be free; it will never let itself be enslaved by any man or body of men because
these are able to seize and pull the reins of the central administration. No
bureaucracy can hope to make such a people as this do or undergo anything that
they do not like. But where everything is done through the bureaucracy, nothing
to which the bureaucracy is really adverse can be done at all. The constitution
of such countries is an organization of the experience and practical ability of
the nation, into a disciplined body for the purpose of governing the rest; and
the more perfect that organization is in itself, the more successful in drawing
to itself and educating for itself the persons of greatest capacity from all
ranks of the community, the more complete is the bondage of all, the members of
the bureaucracy included. For the governors are as much the slaves of their
organization and discipline, as the governed are of the governors. A Chinese
mandarin is as much the tool and creature of a despotism as the humblest
cultivator. An individual Jesuit is to the utmost degree of abasement the slave
of his order though the order itself exists for the collective power and
importance of its members.
It is not, also, to be forgotten, that the absorption of all the principal
ability of the country into the governing body is fatal, sooner or later, to
the mental activity and progressiveness of the body itself. Banded together as
they are working a system which, like all systems, necessarily proceeds
in a great measure by fixed rules the official body are under the
constant temptation of sinking into indolent routine, or, if they now and then
desert that mill-horse round, of rushing into some half-examined crudity which
has struck the fancy of some leading member of the corps: and the sole check to
these closely allied, though seemingly opposite, tendencies, the only stimulus
which can keep the ability of the body itself up to a high standard, is
liability to the watchful criticism of equal ability outside the body. It is
indispensable, therefore, that the means should exist, independently of the
government, of forming such ability, and furnishing it with the opportunities
and experience necessary for a correct judgment of great practical affairs. If
we would possess permanently a skilful and efficient body of functionaries
above all, a body able to originate and willing to adopt improvements;
if we would not have our bureaucracy degenerate into a pedantocracy, this body
must not engross all the occupations which form and cultivate the faculties
required for the government of mankind.
To determine the point at which evils, so formidable to human freedom and
advancement begin, or rather at which they begin to predominate over the
benefits attending the collective application of the force of society, under
its recognized chiefs, for the removal of the obstacles which stand in the way
of its well-being, to secure as much of the advantages of centralized power and
intelligence, as can be had without turning into governmental channels too
great a proportion of the general activity, is one of the most difficult and
complicated questions in the art of government. It is, in a great measure, a
question of detail, in which many and various considerations must be kept in
view, and no absolute rule can be laid down. But I believe that the practical
principle in which safety resides, the ideal to be kept in view, the standard
by which to test all arrangements intended for overcoming the difficulty, may
be conveyed in these words: the greatest dissemination of power consistent with
efficiency; but the greatest possible centralization of information, and
diffusion of it from the centre. Thus, in municipal administration, there would
be, as in the New England States, a very minute division among separate
officers, chosen by the localities, of all business which is not better left to
the persons directly interested; but besides this, there would be, in each
department of local affairs, a central superintendence, forming a branch of the
general government. The organ of this superintendence would concentrate, as in
a focus, the variety of information and experience derived from the conduct of
that branch of public business in all the localities, from everything analogous
which is done in foreign countries, and from the general principles of
political science. This central organ should have a right to know all that is
done, and its special duty should be that of making the knowledge acquired in
one place available for others. Emancipated from the petty prejudices and
narrow views of a locality by its elevated position and comprehensive sphere of
observation, its advice would naturally carry much authority; but its actual
power, as a permanent institution, should, I conceive, be limited to compelling
the local officers to obey the laws laid down for their guidance. In all things
not provided for by general rules, those officers should be left to their own
judgment, under responsibility to their constituents. For the violation of
rules, they should be responsible to law, and the rules themselves should be
laid down by the legislature; the central administrative authority only
watching over their execution, and if they were not properly carried into
effect, appealing, according to the nature of the case, to the tribunal to
enforce the law, or to the constituencies to dismiss the functionaries who had
not executed it according to its spirit. Such, in its general conception, is
the central superintendence which the Poor Law Board is intended to exercise
over the administrators of the Poor Rate throughout the country. Whatever
powers the Board exercises beyond this limit, were right and necessary in that
peculiar case, for the cure of rooted habits of mal-administration in matters
deeply affecting not the localities merely, but the whole community; since no
locality has a moral right to make itself by mismanagement a nest of pauperism,
necessarily overflowing into other localities, and impairing the moral and
physical condition of the whole laboring community. The powers of
administrative coercion and subordinate legislation possessed by the Poor Law
Board (but which, owing to the state of opinion on the subject, are very
scantily exercised by them), though perfectly justifiable in a case of a
first-rate national interest, would be wholly out of place in the
superintendence of interests purely local. But a central organ of information
and instruction for all the localities, would be equally valuable in all
departments of administration. A government cannot have too much of the kind of
activity which does not impede, but aids and stimulates, individual exertion
and development. The mischief begins when, instead of calling forth the
activity and powers of individuals and bodies, it substitutes its own activity
for theirs; when, instead of informing, advising, and upon occasion denouncing,
it makes them work in fetters or bids them stand aside and does their work
instead of them. The worth of a State, in the long run, is the worth of the
individuals composing it; and a State which postpones the interests of their
mental expansion and elevation, to a little more of administrative skill or
that semblance of it which practice gives, in the details of business; a State,
which dwarfs its men, in order that they may be more docile instruments in its
hands even for beneficial purposes, will find that with small men no great
thing can really be accomplished; and that the perfection of machinery to which
it has sacrificed everything, will in the end avail it nothing, for want of the
vital power which, in order that the machine might work more smoothly, it has
preferred to banish.
-THE END-
Copyright Information: This book is reprinted here based upon public domain texts produced by Project Gutenberg, the Online Book Initiative, and various other sources. Unless otherwise noted, all texts are public domain in the United States.
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