"You
would spare these criminals, for some mysterious reason. I would
hang them higher than Haman, for reasons of quite obvious justice;
still more, still higher, for the sake of historical science."
(Selected
Writings of Lord Acton, J. Rufus Fears ed., Indianapolis,
Liberty Classics, 1985, Volume II, 383384. Hereafter, this
indispensable collection will be cited as "SWLA," followed
by volume and page numbers.)
Thus ends
a long passage of a letter from John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton,
First Lord Acton (18341902) in which appears his famous
aphorism regarding power’s tendency to corrupt its possessor.
In a few words to a fellow historian, who regarded his critic
as the "most learned Englishman now alive," his vast
historical knowledge, passion for justice, and love for his Church
are fused and brought to a fine point. (Roland Hill, Lord
Acton, New Haven, Yale University Press, 2000, 297. Hereafter,
this definitive biography will cited as "Hill.")
What
revolted Acton, what he devoted his life to exposing, was the
rationalization of crime when the criminals are authorities, whether
civil or ecclesiastic. For Acton, the historian’s calling was
that of a "hanging judge," holding the strong and the
weak to the same moral standard. As Acton’s counsel was to "suspect
power more than vice" when studying history, his moralism
may have been intense, but it was never that of the petty vice-cop.
(For criticism of Acton’s moralism, see Herbert Butterfield, The
Whig Interpretation of History, Chapter
6. In the opinion of Butterfield, a subsequent occupant of
the Regius chair at Cambridge, "Creighton could not know
enough to exonerate. Neither . . . did Acton in reality know enough
to condemn [Pope Alexander VI] himself." History
and Human Relations [London 1951], 119, cited in Hill
302.)
When some
years ago I first read Murray Rothbard’s description of Lord Acton
as "the great Catholic libertarian historian," I suspected
overstatement, in spite of the opinion’s source. (The
Ethics of Liberty, New York University Press, 1998, 18;
available online.)
The abuse of "liberal" by twentieth-century statists
cannot justify an anachronism, and (so it once seemed to me) attaching
libertarian to a Victorian aristocrat, who once urged Marx’s
Capital
on England’s Prime Minister, just might be anachronistic.
("[That]
remarkable book . . . the Koran of the new socialists." Hill
411. According to Herbert Butterfield, no man influenced that
prime minister, William Ewart Gladstone, more than did Acton,
who was raised to the peerage at his recommendation. It is therefore
odd that biographer A.N. Wilson could not spare a line for Acton
in his The
Victorians [New York & London, W. W. Norton &
Co., 2003], which devotes so much space to Gladstone.)
The more
I learned from and about Acton, however, the more Rothbard’s categorization
rang true. I would go Rothbard one better and say that Acton was
a libertarian hero. His championing of liberty against
power was the central theme of his intellectual life. It was wide-ranging
and without compromise, even when it cost him.
Acton described
himself as "a man who started in life believing himself a
sincere Catholic and a sincere Liberal; who therefore renounced
everything in Catholicism which was not compatible with Liberty,
and everything in Politics which was not compatible with Catholicity."
(SWLA III 657) As Acton scholar J. Rufus Fears put it,
in "liberty, Acton found more than the key to the unity of
history. He found the key to the unity of his life as a Catholic,
as a Liberal, and as a historian." (SWLA II xxi)
We murder
to dissect, Wordsworth warned, so we cannot understand any one
of those life-vectors apart from its relationship to the other
two without risk of distortion. Within the severe limits of a
short article we shall try to minimize that risk.
Between
his birth in Naples a few years before Victoria’s accession to
the British throne and his death in Bavaria a year after hers,
John Acton led the fullest life possible to a Catholic intellectual
of means in Protestant England. Related to many of Europe’s nobility
(and even royalty) and fluent in its chief languages, he traveled
widely as a young man not only throughout Europe, but also to
America and Russia (on the occasion of Czar Alexander II’s coronation).
He corresponded voluminously with many notables including his
friend, the aforementioned Prime Minister Gladstone, and General
Robert E. Lee.
Religiously
disqualified from attending Cambridge University in 1850, Acton
was apprenticed for seven years to Father Ignatz von Döllinger
of Munich, Europe’s most learned theologian and historian. Under
his tutelage Acton unearthed archives to examine the primary sources
of history. The result was that he gained an education that made
him the peer of those who enjoyed the academic pedigree denied
him as a Catholic. In 1895, however, Cambridge honored him with
an appointment to one of its most prestigious chairs, the Regius
Professorship of Modern History, the first Catholic to be so honored
in three centuries. From it he planned (but never produced) a
history of liberty, living only long enough to organize the Cambridge
Modern History.
If the "one
supreme object of all my thoughts is the good of the Church"
(SWLA III 659), then Lord Acton was a Catholic before (in his
hierarchy of goods as well as chronologically) he was anything
else. Both his intellectual activity and even his libertarianism
were forged within the hull of Peter’s barque. He improved the
reputation of English Catholic intellectuals with his editing
of and impressive contributions to two scholarly journals, The
Rambler and Home and Foreign Review, closing the latter
in advance of almost certain papal censure. His determination,
to the point of nervous collapse, was that of a man in love with
the Church. "I would rather die than having [sic] to
live without the sacraments and to leave the Church" (Hill
472 n. 55)
The reign
of Pope Pius IX was the most unfortunate feature of Acton’s world,
and not just because the specter of absolutism that increasingly
haunted his Church diverted his energies from the writing of books.
This pontiff had once been the hope of liberals, Catholic and
non-Catholic, until Europe’s ascendant nationalist movements boxed
the Vatican in, psychologically and, eventually, territorially
and an illiberal, bunker mentality set in. As the de facto
leader of the Church’s ultimately victorious "ultramontanist"
party, Pius not only dashed any hope that he would reconcile himself
with liberalism, but also went so far as to identify his very
person with Tradition. (Hill 500 n. 56)
Two issues
surfaced for reflective Catholics: freedom for the Church
and freedom within the Church. For Acton they were not
incompatible goals. He doubted, not that the Church has implacable
enemies, but that authoritarian governance helps Her fight them.
If anything, he feared, it throws dry wood on the flames of anti-Catholic
prejudice. Liberal self-governance will fortify the Church, not
weaken Her, as She conducts Her spiritual battles. For
Her "own everlasting foundation," he wrote, is
the words
of Christ, not . . . the gifts of Constantine. More than once
since then . . . she has been stripped of that terrestrial splendor
which had proved such a fatal possession; but she has stood
her ground in the wreck of those political institutions on which
she no longer relied, and alone has saved society. The old position
of things has been reversed; and it has been found that it is
the State which stands in need of the Church, and that the strength
of the Church is her independence. (Acton, Essays
on Church and State, Douglas Woodruff ed. [London, Hollis
& Carter] 1952, 472.)
Acton made
this fight his own, going so far as to wage journalistic guerrilla
warfare in Rome against the foreordained course of the First Vatican
Council. While the Council sat, he would meet with every delegate
he could by day and write up his notes in his rented apartment
on the Via Della Croce by night, the next day availing himself
of a diplomatic pouch to dispatch his reports to Father Döllinger
in Munich. From these reports Acton’s scholarly colleague would,
under the pseudonym "Quirinus," cobble together an article
for the Allgemeine Zeitung. That paper’s Roman subscribers
would eagerly consume it within days to the sound of pounding
fists from inside the papal apartments. For the Pope’s aim in
convening the Council was to satisfy his burning desire to define
papal infallibility as a dogma to be believed by all Christians
on pain of damnation. But he didn’t need the definition to feel,
and assert, infallibility.
(Gertrude
Himmelfarb’s description of the Council’s all-too-human dimension
makes for lively reading. See her Lord
Acton: A Study in Conscience and Politics [The University
of Chicago Press, 1952] 95128. That chapter, "The Vatican
Council," is available
online. Hereafter, this pioneering study will be cited as
"Himmelfarb, Lord Acton.")
Unlike John
Henry Cardinal Newman, the Catholic convert from the Church of
England with whom Acton is sometimes too casually linked, Acton
opposed this proposal, because he thought doing so was not so
much inexpedient as wrong. Infallibility meant that a solemn
papal pronouncement on faith or morals was to be received by Catholics
as true because it enjoyed (in the words of the Council) "the
same infallibility with which the Divine Redeemer thought fit
to endow his Church" and "not in consequence of the
consent of the Church."
(For a perspective
favorable to Newman and critical of Acton, who regarded the former
with "deep aversion" as a "sophist" and "manipulator
of the truth" [SWLA III xviii], see Richard John Neuhaus,
"Lord
Acton, Cardinal Newman, and How To Be Ahead of Your Time,"
First Things, 105, AugSep 2000.)
Acton’s conscience,
extraordinarily well formed as it was historically and theologically,
did not allow him to ratify that affirmation; and just because
he was a Catholic, he could not ignore that conscience’s directives.
His opposition was not a symptom of doubt regarding any doctrine
that had "always been believed, everywhere, by everyone."
Rather, he feared that the ascription to a sinner of a divine
attribute, however circumscribed, would tend to discredit the
Faith and fortify harmful absolutist tendencies within the Church.
He also feared
that were he to reveal his opposition to infallibility he would
be excommunicated. With the zeal of a convert, Henry Edward Cardinal
Manning had worked to contrive such a predicament. The prelate
pressed his interrogation in a letter, asking the historian point
blank whether he ought not to say that he submitted to
the decrees of the Council.
In his reply
of 18 November 1874 a model either of adroit evasion or
of legal self-extrication worthy of a Saint Thomas More
Acton stated that a "misconception" was driving the
Cardinal’s inquisition: "I can only say that I have no private
gloss or favourite interpretation for the Vatican Decrees. The
acts of the Council alone constitute the law which I recognize.
I have not felt it my duty as a layman to pursue the comments
of divines, still less to attempt to supersede them by private
judgments of my own." (Hill 265) (". . . I cannot accept
his [Manning’s] tests and canons of dogmatic development and interpretation
and must decline to give him the only answer that will content
him, as it would, in my lips, be a lie." Acton to John Cardinal
Newman, 4 December 1874. Hill 268.)
In another
reply (16 December 1874), this time to his diocesan bishop, who
had the authority to quiet the whole matter, Acton protested "that
I have given you no foundation for your doubt. . . . I have yielded
obedience to the Apostolic Commission which embodied those decrees,
and I have not transgressed . . . obligations imposed under the
supreme sanction of the Church." That satisfied Acton’s ordinary,
and that was that.
The self-imposed
pressures of his journalistic, scholarly, and political activity,
which often involved foreign travel, put some but not undue strain
on his family life. All his considerable good fortune did not,
however, spare him the sorrow of burying two of his children at
very young ages. Given Cambridge’s previously mentioned denial
to him of the opportunity to study there in 1850, it is a pleasant
irony that his most professionally rewarding, even happiest, years
of his life were the last seven, dating from his acceptance of
the Regius Professorship. He was a popular lecturer who spoke
to standing-room-only crowds, who were sometimes charged admission.
He left behind a library of nearly seventy thousand volumes, many
of them annotated in his hand. They are now preserved at Cambridge,
having been saved from certain dispersal and disintegration by
a check from Andrew Carnegie.
Acton’s understanding
of the Church’s mission was organically related to his libertarian
philosophy of history. The Gospel that transformed individuals
could not help but go on to transform their societies:
The Church
which our Lord came to establish had a two-fold mission to fulfill.
Her system of doctrine, on the one hand, had to be defined and
perpetually maintained. But it was also necessary that it should
prove itself more than a mere matter of theory that it should
pass into practice, and command the will as well as the intellect
of men. It was necessary not only to restore the image of God
in man, but to establish the divine order in the world. (SWLA
III 22)
In summarizing
the contribution of the Stoics to the Christian, i.e., Acton’s,
idea of liberty, he wrote:
They made
it known that there is a will superior to the collective will
of man, and a law that overrules those of Solon and Lycurgus.
. . . That which we must obey, that to which we are bound to
reduce all civil authorities, and to sacrifice every earthly
interest, is that immutable law which is perfect and eternal
as God Himself, which proceeds from His nature, and reigns over
heaven and earth and over all the nations. . . . The liberties
of the ancient nations were crushed beneath a hopeless and inevitable
despotism, and their vitality was spent, when the new power
came forth from Galilee, giving what was wanting to the efficacy
of human knowledge, to redeem societies as well as men. (SWLA
I 2324, 26)
What did
Acton mean by "liberty"? In one place he said it
was "the assurance that every man shall be protected in doing
what he believes his duty, against the influence of authority
and majorities, custom and opinion." (SWLA I 7. For a selection
of quotations of Acton on liberty, see Gary Galles, "Lord
Acton on Liberty and Government," Mises.org, posted November
5, 2002.) In another he grounded his concept of liberty in Catholicism
and contrasted it with modernity’s:
There is
a wide divergence, an irreconcilable disagreement, between the
political notions of the modern world and that which is essentially
the system of the Catholic Church. It manifests itself particularly
in their contradictory views of liberty, and of the functions
of the civil power. The Catholic notion, defining liberty not
as the power of doing what we like, but the right of being able
to do what we ought, denies that general interests can supersede
individual rights. (SWLA III 613)
For Acton,
the principle of liberty always faces the counter-principle of
power, and he linked this tension to the primary moral effort
of the individual to suppress his own libido dominandi, which
is secondarily expressed in institutions. That libido is
the urge to "push people around" with impunity (as Rothbard
would render the Latin). It is, as Acton put it, the insidious
"enemy within." The greater that urge’s potential range
of expression, the greater the danger, be its subject mitered
or crowned: "The passion for power over others can never
cease to threaten mankind and is always sure of finding new and
unforeseen allies in continuing its martyrology." (Acton,
"Beginnings of the Modern State," Essays
in the Liberal Interpretation of History, ed. William
H. McNeill, The University of Chicago Press, 1967, 401. Hereafter,
"Beginnings." As Professor McNeill put it, Acton saw
history as a "tortuous yet persistent advance toward liberty."
xii.)
That passion
varies in intensity from person to person, as does the desire
to cool it. As there can be no permanent moral victories against
it, we cannot reasonably hope to establish a utopia in which liberty
is enjoyed as a permanent victory, a settled attitude, immune
to back-sliding. ("Liberty: Power over oneself. Opposite:
Power over others." Undated note. SWLA III 490.)
Power tends
not only to corrupt, but also to "expand indefinitely, and
will transcend all barriers, abroad and at home, until met by
superior forces." This "law of the modern world . .
. produces the rhythmic movement of History."
The threatened
interests were compelled to unite for the self-government of
nations, the toleration of religions, and the rights of man.
. . . it is by the combined efforts of the weak, made under
compulsion, to resist the reign of force and constant wrong,
that, in the rapid change but slow progress of four hundred
years, liberty has been preserved, and secured, and extended,
and finally understood. ("Beginnings" 419)
Man is therefore
not only a liberty-seeker, but also a power-grabber; his political
maturity will arrive when he becomes a consistent power-checker.
In describing church-state rivalry in pre-modern Europe, Acton
reiterates the theme of countervailing power as the key to liberty’s
progress, referring again to that critical period of four centuries:
The only
influence capable of resisting the feudal hierarchy was the
ecclesiastical hierarchy; and they came into collision, when
the process of feudalism threatened the independence of the
Church by subjecting the prelates severally to that form of
personal dependence on kings which was peculiar to the Teutonic
state. To that conflict of four hundred years we owe the rise
of civil liberty. If the Church had continued to buttress the
thrones of the king whom it anointed, or if the struggle had
terminated speedily in an undivided victory, all Europe would
have sunk down under a Byzantine or Muscovite despotism. For
the aim of both contending parties was absolute authority. But
although liberty was not the end for which they strove, it was
the means by which the temporal and the spiritual power called
the nations to their aid. (SWLA I 3233.)
As Leonard
Liggio confirmed Acton’s point:
[R]eligious
institutions were totally separate from, and often in conflict
with, political institutions only in the Christian West. This
created the space in which free institutions could emerge. The
idea of independent religious institutions is absent even in
Eastern Christianity; their religious institutions are part
of the bureaucracy of the state. In Western Europe, though,
the religious institutions were autonomous among themselves,
and totally independent from and often in opposition to state
power. The result was the creation of a polycentric system.
And whenever this system was threatened by claims of total empire
by the political rulers, Christian philosophy was utilized as
part of its defense. ("Christianity,
Classical Liberalism Are Liberty's Foundations," Interview
with Leonard Liggio, Religion & Liberty, SepOct
1996. My emphasis. ~ AF)
Acton again:
Real liberty
depends not on the separate but on the distinct and appropriate,
but continuous, action and reaction of Church and State. The
defined and regulated influence of the Church in the State protects
a special sphere and germ of political freedom, and supplies
a separate and powerful sanction for law. On the other hand,
the restricted and defined action of the State in ecclesiastical
affairs gives security to canon law, and prevents wanton innovation
and the arbitrary confiscation of rights. (Woodruff 467)
Acton once
wrote that property was the "basis of liberty" (SWLA
III 572), but he was no Lockean theorist of self-ownership; that
is, he did not regrettably in my opinion define
liberty in terms of property rights. It is therefore not
surprising that he deems the "state . . . competent to assign
duties and draw the line between good and evil only in its own
immediate sphere. Beyond the limit of things necessary for its
well-being, it can only give indirect help to fight the battle
of life, by promoting the influences which avail against temptation,
Religion, Education, and the distribution of Wealth."
(SWLA I 7) Acton limited, but did not eliminate, the State. But
more on that problem presently.
The context
of the famous "power dictum" is a letter, dated 5 April
1887, to Anglican Archbishop Mandell Creighton, whose five-volume
history of the medieval papacy Acton had savaged (in a publication
that Creighton edited!) for the double standard that he allegedly
applied to crimes, depending on the social rank of their perpetrators.
The recipient of the letter quoted at the beginning of this essay,
Creighton was a Fellow of Merton College and Dixie Professor of
Ecclesiastical History at Cambridge. He had sought out Acton as
a reviewer because he "wanted to be told my shortcomings
by the one Englishman whom I consider capable of doing so."
As he later hoped Acton would succeed him when he left Cambridge
to take up his see at Peterborough, he was most enthusiastic in
support of Acton’s appointment to that University’s Regius Chair.
(Hill, 296, 297, 368.) Yes, Creighton thought him incomparably
learned, but "he never writes anything," referring to
his notorious underproduction of publications. As an historian
Acton was, nevertheless, according to Gertrude Himmelfarb, "perhaps
the most learned and intellectually ambitious of his generation."
("Lord
Acton: In Pursuit of First Principles," The New Criterion,
18:10, June 2000.)
The power
under review was ecclesiastic. Let us view his epigram in its
surroundings:
I really
don’t know whether you [Creighton] exempt them [from criticism]
because of their rank, or of their success and power, or of
their date. It does not allow of our saying that such a man
did not know right from wrong, unless we are able to say that
he lived before Columbus, before Copernicus, and could not know
right from wrong. It can scarcely apply to the centre of Christendom,
1500 [years] after the birth of our Lord. That would imply that
Christianity is a mere system of metaphysics, which borrowed
some ethics from elsewhere. . . .
Acton continues
to turn the polemical heat up . . .
I cannot
accept your canon that we are to judge Pope and King unlike
other men, with a favourable presumption that they did no wrong.
If there is any presumption it is the other way against holders
of power, increasing as the power increases. Historic responsibility
has to make up for the want of legal responsibility.
Power tends
to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men
are almost always bad men, even when they exercise influence
and not authority: still more when you superadd the tendency
or the certainty of corruption by authority. There is no worse
heresy than that the office sanctifies the holder of it. That
is the point at which the negation of Catholicism and the negation
of Liberalism meet and keep high festival, and the end learns
to justify the means.
. . . and
then boils things down:
You would
hang a man of no position, like [François] Ravaillac
[assassin of Henry IV of France]; but if what one hears it true,
then Elizabeth asked the gaoler to murder Mary, and William
III ordered his Scots minister to extirpate a clan. Here are
the greater names coupled with great crimes. (SWLA II 383384)
Then follow
the words with which this essay began.
Rothbard
stressed the deeply anti-conservative nature of Acton’s thought.
"While natural-law theory has often been used erroneously
in defense of the political status quo, its radical and ‘revolutionary’
implications were brilliantly understood by" Acton:
Acton saw
clearly that the deep flaw in the ancient Greek and their later
followers’ conception of natural law political philosophy was
to identify politics and morals, and then to place the supreme
social moral agent in the State. From Plato and Aristotle, the
State’s proclaimed supremacy was founded in their view that
[as Acton wrote] "morality was distinguished from religion
and politics from morals; and in religion, morality, and politics
there was only one legislator and one authority."
Acton added
that the Stoics developed the correct, non-State principles
of natural law political philosophy, which were then revived
in the modern period by [Hugo] Grotius and his followers. "From
that time" [Acton wrote] "it became possible to make
politics a matter of principle and of conscience." The
reaction of the State to this theoretical development was horror.
(Rothbard cites Acton, Essays
on Freedom and Power [Glencoe, IL: Free Press] 1948,
45; and Himmelfarb, Lord Acton, 135.)
Rothbard
then quotes Acton:
When [theologian
Richard] Cumberland and [jurist Samuel von] Pufendorf unfolded
the true significance of [Grotius’s] doctrine, every settled
authority, every triumphant interest recoiled aghast. . . .
It was manifest that all persons who had learned that political
science is an affair of conscience rather than of might and
expediency, must regard their adversaries as men without principle.
(SWLA I 42)
Here’s what
Acton wrote just before those words:
In a passage
almost literally taken from St. Thomas, he [the philosopher
Pierre Charron] describes our subordination under the law of
nature, to which all legislation must conform; and he ascertains
it not by the light of revealed religion, but by the voice of
universal reason, through which God enlightens the consciences
of men. Upon this foundation Grotius drew the lines of real
political science. In gathering the materials of international
law, he had to go beyond national treaties and denominational
interests, for a principle embracing all mankind. The principles
of law must stand, he said, even if we suppose that there is
no God. By these inaccurate terms he meant that they must be
found independently of Revelation. From that time it became
possible to make politics a matter of principle and of conscience,
so that men and nations differing in all other things could
live in peace together, under the sanctions of a common
law. (My emphasis. A.F.)
If one reads
Acton superficially, it seems as if the State is ever under suspicion,
but never under indictment. That is, he does not seem to regard
the State as such as the enemy of society. But we must take care
not to equivocate. When 19th-century writers referred to "the
State," they did not necessarily mean what anarchocapitalists
mean. They may have meant something more fundamental, such as
the principles according to which people implicitly regulate their
mutual affairs, which principles they more or less accurately
express in a legal code.
Therefore,
if it is true of any possible society that its members’ interactions
are arranged intelligibly, that intelligible arrangement may be
said to be its "state." It refers to the whole of society,
not just that portion of the population arrayed against the rest
by its monopoly of police. It is in the interest of those monopolists
to identify their particular interests (those of "the State"
in the Rothbardian sense) with the general interest (that of "the
state" of the whole society). They have largely been successful
in getting their victims to accept that identification.
So when a
writer like Acton refers to "the divine origin and nature
of authority," the last thing he means is that heaven smiles
upon, or at least winks at, the anti-social gang that taxes, inflates,
conscripts, rewards, punishes within its own turf and occasionally
lays waste to the territories of rival gangs. Rather, Acton is
referring to a dimension of human living that is no more dispensable
than its biological dimension. For example, he once wrote that
the State has
the same
divine origin and the same ends as in the Church, which holds
that it belongs as much to the primitive essence of a nation
as its language, and that it unites men together by a moral,
not, like family and society, by a natural and sensible, bond.
(Woodruff 424)
A society
could, therefore, no more be without a State in that sense than
it could be without families. Given that stipulation, "libertarian
state" would not be an oxymoron, but rather name a society
whose members are fundamentally libertarian in their settled convictions.
To avoid the sin of equivocation we need only announce in advance
which sense of "State" we intend. For Acton "a
State in which the law is powerless to punish a thief ("anarchy"),
or in which a society is unable to restrict the action of the
government ("despotism")" (Woodruff 436) are equally
undesirable, no less so to the anarchocapitalist than to anyone
else.
For example,
in the United States there is (as there wasn’t two centuries ago)
a settled conviction toward chattel slavery as a morally impermissible
relationship. That is, Americans implicitly regard the control
by human being A of human being B’s body against B’s will as intrinsically
criminal. They so regard it no matter what any positive statute
somewhere may say to the contrary. They hold that to seek to exercise
such control is ipso facto to be criminally minded. The
American polity or State, in the sense I am trying to clarify,
is anti-chattel slavery. The libertarian argues for logically
extending the range of that settled conviction to embrace all
of justly held property. In so arguing, he shows his discourse
to be commensurate with that of most non-libertarians. That is,
it recognizes a common objective, namely, how to pursue our innumerable
and diverse projects peacefully, how to cooperate even in the
conduct of our rivalry, and how to deal with violent non-cooperators
"so that men and nations differing in all other things could
live in peace together."
I do not
wish to overstate my case for Acton as a libertarian hero. While
Acton doesn’t believe that the government is the preferred means
of satisfying the "claim on the wealth of the rich"
that the poor allegedly have, neither does he rule it out as a
necessarily objectionable means. He does believe the poor have
a moral claim in "so far as they may be relieved from immoral,
demoralizing effects of poverty." The claim is not that the
poor man somehow owns part of another’s wealth, but rather
that when he "becomes destitute," presumably through
no fault of his own, "it is a moral evil, teeming with consequences
injurious to society and morality." (SWLA III 572) It is
not so much the enforceable right of "the poor" as it
is the moral duty of "the rich."
If there
was one weakness in Acton’s intellectual armory, it lay in his
grasp of economics. To that ignorance I mainly attribute his conflating
of the State in Rothbard’s sense with the State as society’s necessary
political dimension. (For example: "The materialistic socialist
will improve h[istory] for the poor. Their best writer, Engels,
made known the errors and horrors of our factory system."
From a note, c. 190001, for his Regius inaugural lecture.
Hill 399.)
Yet this
conflation, in which he was (and is) not alone, does not detract
from the value of the radical libertarian potential latent in
his thought. For no more than his Savior did Acton specify what,
if anything, belongs to Caesar. Although Rothbard knew that Acton
did not take the anarchist step, he
saw clearly
[Rothbard wrote] that any set of objective moral principles
rooted in the nature of man must inevitably come into conflict
with custom and with positive law. To Acton, such an irrepressible
conflict was an essential attribute of classical liberalism:
"Liberalism wishes for what ought to be [Acton wrote],
irrespective of what is." . . . And so, for Acton, the
individual, armed with natural law moral principles, is then
in a firm position from which to criticize existing regimes
and institutions, to hold them up to the strong and harsh light
of reason. (Rothbard cites Himmelfarb, Lord Acton, 204.)
Not enough,
perhaps, to dub Acton an anarchist, but enough to spawn the conjecture
that anarchism is where his thought leads.
"I never
had any contemporaries," Acton once sighed. (Hill 276) But,
as Professor Himmelfarb noted, he
would
be pleased to know how many he now has. For dissidents today,
he stands as an exemplar of intellectual courage, recalling
us to first principles that are even more unfashionable today
than they were in his time and challenging us to reconsider
how those principles may be incorporated into the practical
realms of ethics and politics. ("Lord
Acton: In Pursuit of First Principles," The New
Criterion, 18:10, June 2000.)
Needlessly
impoverished are those libertarians who fail to embrace him as
one of their own.*