Why I Am Not a Conservative
by
F. A. Hayek
by F. A. Hayek
In The
Constitution of Liberty (Chicago: The University of Chicago
Press, 1960)
"At
all times sincere friends of freedom have been rare, and its triumphs
have been due to minorities, that have prevailed by associating
themselves with auxiliaries whose objects often differed from
their own; and this association, which is always dangerous, has
sometimes been disastrous, by giving to opponents just grounds
of opposition."
~
Lord Acton
1. At a time
when most movements that are thought to be progressive advocate
further encroachments on individual liberty,[1]
those who cherish freedom are likely to expend their energies in
opposition. In this they find themselves much of the time on the
same side as those who habitually resist change. In matters of current
politics today they generally have little choice but to support
the conservative parties. But, though the position I have tried
to define is also often described as "conservative," it
is very different from that to which this name has been traditionally
attached. There is danger in the confused condition which brings
the defenders of liberty and the true conservatives together in
common opposition to developments which threaten their ideals equally.
It is therefore important to distinguish clearly the position taken
here from that which has long been known perhaps more appropriately
as conservatism.
Conservatism
proper is a legitimate, probably necessary, and certainly widespread
attitude of opposition to drastic change. It has, since the French
Revolution, for a century and a half played an important role in
European politics. Until the rise of socialism its opposite was
liberalism. There is nothing corresponding to this conflict in the
history of the United States, because what in Europe was called
"liberalism" was here the common tradition on which the
American polity had been built: thus the defender of the American
tradition was a liberal in the European sense.[2]
This already existing confusion was made worse by the recent attempt
to transplant to America the European type of conservatism, which,
being alien to the American tradition, has acquired a somewhat odd
character. And some time before this, American radicals and socialists
began calling themselves "liberals." I will nevertheless
continue for the moment to describe as liberal the position which
I hold and which I believe differs as much from true conservatism
as from socialism. Let me say at once, however, that I do so with
increasing misgivings, and I shall later have to consider what would
be the appropriate name for the party of liberty. The reason for
this is not only that the term "liberal" in the United
States is the cause of constant misunderstandings today, but also
that in Europe the predominant type of rationalistic liberalism
has long been one of the pacemakers of socialism.
Let me now
state what seems to me the decisive objection to any conservatism
which deserves to be called such. It is that by its very nature
it cannot offer an alternative to the direction in which we are
moving. It may succeed by its resistance to current tendencies in
slowing down undesirable developments, but, since it does not indicate
another direction, it cannot prevent their continuance. It has,
for this reason, invariably been the fate of conservatism to be
dragged along a path not of its own choosing. The tug of war between
conservatives and progressives can only affect the speed, not the
direction, of contemporary developments. But, though there is a
need for a "brake on the vehicle of progress,"[3]
I personally cannot be content with simply helping to apply the
brake. What the liberal must ask, first of all, is not how fast
or how far we should move, but where we should move. In fact, he
differs much more from the collectivist radical of today than does
the conservative. While the last generally holds merely a mild and
moderate version of the prejudices of his time, the liberal today
must more positively oppose some of the basic conceptions which
most conservatives share with the socialists.
2. The picture
generally given of the relative position of the three parties does
more to obscure than to elucidate their true relations. They are
usually represented as different positions on a line, with the socialists
on the left, the conservatives on the right, and the liberals somewhere
in the middle. Nothing could be more misleading. If we want a diagram,
it would be more appropriate to arrange them in a triangle with
the conservatives occupying one corner, with the socialists pulling
toward the second and the liberals toward the third. But, as the
socialists have for a long time been able to pull harder, the conservatives
have tended to follow the socialist rather than the liberal direction
and have adopted at appropriate intervals of time those ideas made
respectable by radical propaganda. It has been regularly the conservatives
who have compromised with socialism and stolen its thunder. Advocates
of the Middle Way[4] with no goal of their own,
conservatives have been guided by the belief that the truth must
lie somewhere between the extremes with the result that they
have shifted their position every time a more extreme movement appeared
on either wing.
The position
which can be rightly described as conservative at any time depends,
therefore, on the direction of existing tendencies. Since the development
during the last decades has been generally in a socialist direction,
it may seem that both conservatives and liberals have been mainly
intent on retarding that movement. But the main point about liberalism
is that it wants to go elsewhere, not to stand still. Though today
the contrary impression may sometimes be caused by the fact that
there was a time when liberalism was more widely accepted and some
of its objectives closer to being achieved, it has never been a
backward-looking doctrine. There has never been a time when liberal
ideals were fully realized and when liberalism did not look forward
to further improvement of institutions. Liberalism is not averse
to evolution and change; and where spontaneous change has been smothered
by government control, it wants a great deal of change of policy.
So far as much of current governmental action is concerned, there
is in the present world very little reason for the liberal to wish
to preserve things as they are. It would seem to the liberal, indeed,
that what is most urgently needed in most parts of the world is
a thorough sweeping away of the obstacles to free growth.
This difference
between liberalism and conservatism must not be obscured by the
fact that in the United States it is still possible to defend individual
liberty by defending long-established institutions. To the liberal
they are valuable not mainly because they are long established or
because they are American but because they correspond to the ideals
which he cherishes.
3. Before
I consider the main points on which the liberal attitude is sharply
opposed to the conservative one, I ought to stress that there is
much that the liberal might with advantage have learned from the
work of some conservative thinkers. To their loving and reverential
study of the value of grown institutions we owe (at least outside
the field of economics) some profound insights which are real contributions
to our understanding of a free society. However reactionary in politics
such figures as Coleridge, Bonald, De Maistre, Justus Möser,
or Donoso Cortès may have been, they did show an understanding
of the meaning of spontaneously grown institutions such as language,
law, morals, and conventions that anticipated modern scientific
approaches and from which the liberals might have profited. But
the admiration of the conservatives for free growth generally applies
only to the past. They typically lack the courage to welcome the
same undesigned change from which new tools of human endeavors will
emerge.
This brings
me to the first point on which the conservative and the liberal
dispositions differ radically. As has often been acknowledged by
conservative writers, one of the fundamental traits of the conservative
attitude is a fear of change, a timid distrust of the new as such,[5]
while the liberal position is based on courage and confidence, on
a preparedness to let change run its course even if we cannot predict
where it will lead. There would not be much to object to if the
conservatives merely disliked too rapid change in institutions and
public policy; here the case for caution and slow process is indeed
strong. But the conservatives are inclined to use the powers of
government to prevent change or to limit its rate to whatever appeals
to the more timid mind. In looking forward, they lack the faith
in the spontaneous forces of adjustment which makes the liberal
accept changes without apprehension, even though he does not know
how the necessary adaptations will be brought about. It is, indeed,
part of the liberal attitude to assume that, especially in the economic
field, the self-regulating forces of the market will somehow bring
about the required adjustments to new conditions, although no one
can foretell how they will do this in a particular instance. There
is perhaps no single factor contributing so much to people's frequent
reluctance to let the market work as their inability to conceive
how some necessary balance, between demand and supply, between exports
and imports, or the like, will be brought about without deliberate
control. The conservative feels safe and content only if he is assured
that some higher wisdom watches and supervises change, only if he
knows that some authority is charged with keeping the change "orderly."
This fear
of trusting uncontrolled social forces is closely related to two
other characteristics of conservatism: its fondness for authority
and its lack of understanding of economic forces. Since it distrusts
both abstract theories and general principles,[6]
it neither understands those spontaneous forces on which a policy
of freedom relies nor possesses a basis for formulating principles
of policy. Order appears to the conservative as the result of the
continuous attention of authority, which, for this purpose, must
be allowed to do what is required by the particular circumstances
and not be tied to rigid rule. A commitment to principles presupposes
an understanding of the general forces by which the efforts of society
are co-ordinated, but it is such a theory of society and especially
of the economic mechanism that conservatism conspicuously lacks.
So unproductive has conservatism been in producing a general conception
of how a social order is maintained that its modern votaries, in
trying to construct a theoretical foundation, invariably find themselves
appealing almost exclusively to authors who regarded themselves
as liberal. Macaulay, Tocqueville, Lord Acton, and Lecky certainly
considered themselves liberals, and with justice; and even Edmund
Burke remained an Old Whig to the end and would have shuddered at
the thought of being regarded as a Tory.
Let me return,
however, to the main point, which is the characteristic complacency
of the conservative toward the action of established authority and
his prime concern that this authority be not weakened, rather than
that its power be kept within bounds. This is difficult to reconcile
with the preservation of liberty. In general, it can probably be
said that the conservative does not object to coercion or arbitrary
power so long as it is used for what he regards as the right purposes.
He believes that if government is in the hands of decent men, it
ought not to be too much restricted by rigid rules. Since he is
essentially opportunist and lacks principles, his main hope must
be that the wise and the good will rule not merely by example,
as we all must wish, but by authority given to them and enforced
by them.[7] Like the socialist, he is less concerned
with the problem of how the powers of government should be limited
than with that of who wields them; and, like the socialist, he regards
himself as entitled to force the value he holds on other people.
When I say
that the conservative lacks principles, I do not mean to suggest
that he lacks moral conviction. The typical conservative is indeed
usually a man of very strong moral convictions. What I mean is that
he has no political principles which enable him to work with people
whose moral values differ from his own for a political order in
which both can obey their convictions. It is the recognition of
such principles that permits the coexistence of different sets of
values that makes it possible to build a peaceful society with a
minimum of force. The acceptance of such principles means that we
agree to tolerate much that we dislike. There are many values of
the conservative which appeal to me more than those of the socialists;
yet for a liberal the importance he personally attaches to specific
goals is no sufficient justification for forcing others to serve
them. I have little doubt that some of my conservative friends will
be shocked by what they will regard as "concessions" to
modern views that I have made in Part III of this book. But, though
I may dislike some of the measures concerned as much as they do
and might vote against them, I know of no general principles to
which I could appeal to persuade those of a different view that
those measures are not permissible in the general kind of society
which we both desire. To live and work successfully with others
requires more than faithfulness to one's concrete aims. It requires
an intellectual commitment to a type of order in which, even on
issues which to one are fundamental, others are allowed to pursue
different ends.
It is for
this reason that to the liberal neither moral nor religious ideals
are proper objects of coercion, while both conservatives and socialists
recognize no such limits. I sometimes feel that the most conspicuous
attribute of liberalism that distinguishes it as much from conservatism
as from socialism is the view that moral beliefs concerning matters
of conduct which do not directly interfere with the protected sphere
of other persons do not justify coercion. This may also explain
why it seems to be so much easier for the repentant socialist to
find a new spiritual home in the conservative fold than in the liberal.
In the last
resort, the conservative position rests on the belief that in any
society there are recognizably superior persons whose inherited
standards and values and position ought to be protected and who
should have a greater influence on public affairs than others. The
liberal, of course, does not deny that there are some superior people
he is not an egalitarian but he denies that anyone
has authority to decide who these superior people are. While the
conservative inclines to defend a particular established hierarchy
and wishes authority to protect the status of those whom he values,
the liberal feels that no respect for established values can justify
the resort to privilege or monopoly or any other coercive power
of the state in order to shelter such people against the forces
of economic change. Though he is fully aware of the important role
that cultural and intellectual elites have played in the evolution
of civilization, he also believes that these elites have to prove
themselves by their capacity to maintain their position under the
same rules that apply to all others.
Closely connected
with this is the usual attitude of the conservative to democracy.
I have made it clear earlier that I do not regard majority rule
as an end but merely as a means, or perhaps even as the least evil
of those forms of government from which we have to choose. But I
believe that the conservatives deceive themselves when they blame
the evils of our time on democracy. The chief evil is unlimited
government, and nobody is qualified to wield unlimited power.[8]
The powers which modern democracy possesses would be even more intolerable
in the hands of some small elite.
Admittedly,
it was only when power came into the hands of the majority that
further limitations of the power of government was thought unnecessary.
In this sense democracy and unlimited government are connected.
But it is not democracy but unlimited government that is objectionable,
and I do not see why the people should not learn to limit the scope
of majority rule as well as that of any other form of government.
At any rate, the advantages of democracy as a method of peaceful
change and of political education seem to be so great compared with
those of any other system that I can have no sympathy with the antidemocratic
strain of conservatism. It is not who governs but what government
is entitled to do that seems to me the essential problem.
That the conservative
opposition to too much government control is not a matter of principle
but is concerned with the particular aims of government is clearly
shown in the economic sphere. Conservatives usually oppose collectivist
and directivist measures in the industrial field, and here the liberals
will often find allies in them. But at the same time conservatives
are usually protectionists and have frequently supported socialist
measures in agriculture. Indeed, though the restrictions which exist
today in industry and commerce are mainly the result of socialist
views, the equally important restrictions in agriculture were usually
introduced by conservatives at an even earlier date. And in their
efforts to discredit free enterprise many conservative leaders have
vied with the socialists.[9]
4. I have
already referred to the differences between conservatism and liberalism
in the purely intellectual field, but I must return to them because
the characteristic conservative attitude here not only is a serious
weakness of conservatism but tends to harm any cause which allies
itself with it. Conservatives feel instinctively that it is new
ideas more than anything else that cause change. But, from its point
of view rightly, conservatism fears new ideas because it has no
distinctive principles of its own to oppose them; and, by its distrust
of theory and its lack of imagination concerning anything except
that which experience has already proved, it deprives itself of
the weapons needed in the struggle of ideas. Unlike liberalism,
with its fundamental belief in the long-range power of ideas, conservatism
is bound by the stock of ideas inherited at a given time. And since
it does not really believe in the power of argument, its last resort
is generally a claim to superior wisdom, based on some self-arrogated
superior quality.
The difference
shows itself most clearly in the different attitudes of the two
traditions to the advance of knowledge. Though the liberal certainly
does not regard all change as progress, he does regard the advance
of knowledge as one of the chief aims of human effort and expects
from it the gradual solution of such problems and difficulties as
we can hope to solve. Without preferring the new merely because
it is new, the liberal is aware that it is of the essence of human
achievement that it produces something new; and he is prepared to
come to terms with new knowledge, whether he likes its immediate
effects or not.
Personally,
I find that the most objectionable feature of the conservative attitude
is its propensity to reject well-substantiated new knowledge because
it dislikes some of the consequences which seem to follow from it
or, to put it bluntly, its obscurantism. I will not deny
that scientists as much as others are given to fads and fashions
and that we have much reason to be cautious in accepting the conclusions
that they draw from their latest theories. But the reasons for our
reluctance must themselves be rational and must be kept separate
from our regret that the new theories upset our cherished beliefs.
I can have little patience with those who oppose, for instance,
the theory of evolution or what are called "mechanistic"
explanations of the phenomena of life because of certain moral consequences
which at first seem to follow from these theories, and still less
with those who regard it as irrelevant or impious to ask certain
questions at all. By refusing to face the facts, the conservative
only weakens his own position. Frequently the conclusions which
rationalist presumption draws from new scientific insights do not
at all follow from them. But only by actively taking part in the
elaboration of the consequences of new discoveries do we learn whether
or not they fit into our world picture and, if so, how. Should our
moral beliefs really prove to be dependent on factual assumptions
shown to be incorrect, it would hardly be moral to defend them by
refusing to acknowledge facts.
Connected
with the conservative distrust if the new and the strange is its
hostility to internationalism and its proneness to a strident nationalism.
Here is another source of its weakness in the struggle of ideas.
It cannot alter the fact that the ideas which are changing our civilization
respect no boundaries. But refusal to acquaint one's self with new
ideas merely deprives one of the power of effectively countering
them when necessary. The growth of ideas is an international process,
and only those who fully take part in the discussion will be able
to exercise a significant influence. It is no real argument to say
that an idea is un-American, or un-German, nor is a mistaken or
vicious ideal better for having been conceived by one of our compatriots.
A great deal
more might be said about the close connection between conservatism
and nationalism, but I shall not dwell on this point because it
might be felt that my personal position makes me unable to sympathize
with any form of nationalism. I will merely add that it is this
nationalistic bias which frequently provides the bridge from conservatism
to collectivism: to think in terms of "our" industry or
resource is only a short step away from demanding that these national
assets be directed in the national interest. But in this respect
the Continental liberalism which derives from the French Revolution
is little better than conservatism. I need hardly say that nationalism
of this sort is something very different from patriotism and that
an aversion to nationalism is fully compatible with a deep attachment
to national traditions. But the fact that I prefer and feel reverence
for some of the traditions of my society need not be the cause of
hostility to what is strange and different.
Only at first
does it seem paradoxical that the anti-internationalism of conservatism
is so frequently associated with imperialism. But the more a person
dislikes the strange and thinks his own ways superior, the more
he tends to regard it as his mission to "civilize" other[10]
not by the voluntary and unhampered intercourse which the
liberal favors, but by bringing them the blessings of efficient
government. It is significant that here again we frequently find
the conservatives joining hands with the socialists against the
liberals not only in England, where the Webbs and their Fabians
were outspoken imperialists, or in Germany, where state socialism
and colonial expansionism went together and found the support of
the same group of "socialists of the chair," but also
in the United States, where even at the time of the first Roosevelt
it could be observed: "the Jingoes and the Social Reformers
have gotten together; and have formed a political party, which threatened
to capture the Government and use it for their program of Caesaristic
paternalism, a danger which now seems to have been averted only
by the other parties having adopted their program in a somewhat
milder degree and form."[11]
5. There is
one respect, however, in which there is justification for saying
that the liberal occupies a position midway between the socialist
and the conservative: he is as far from the crude rationalism of
the socialist, who wants to reconstruct all social institutions
according to a pattern prescribed by his individual reason, as from
the mysticism to which the conservative so frequently has to resort.
What I have described as the liberal position shares with conservatism
a distrust of reason to the extent that the liberal is very much
aware that we do not know all the answers and that he is not sure
that the answers he has are certainly the rights ones or even that
we can find all the answers. He also does not disdain to seek assistance
from whatever non-rational institutions or habits have proved their
worth. The liberal differs from the conservative in his willingness
to face this ignorance and to admit how little we know, without
claiming the authority of supernatural forces of knowledge where
his reason fails him. It has to be admitted that in some respects
the liberal is fundamentally a skeptic[12]
but it seems to require a certain degree of diffidence to let others
seek their happiness in their own fashion and to adhere consistently
to that tolerance which is an essential characteristic of liberalism.
There is no
reason why this need mean an absence of religious belief on the
part of the liberal. Unlike the rationalism of the French Revolution,
true liberalism has no quarrel with religion, and I can only deplore
the militant and essentially illiberal antireligionism which animated
so much of nineteenth-century Continental liberalism. That this
is not essential to liberalism is clearly shown by its English ancestors,
the Old Whigs, who, if anything, were much too closely allied with
a particular religious belief. What distinguishes the liberal from
the conservative here is that, however profound his own spiritual
beliefs, he will never regard himself as entitled to impose them
on others and that for him the spiritual and the temporal are different
sphere which ought not to be confused.
6. What I
have said should suffice to explain why I do not regard myself as
a conservative. Many people will feel, however, that the position
which emerges is hardly what they used to call "liberal."
I must, therefore, now face the question of whether this name is
today the appropriate name for the party of liberty. I have already
indicated that, though I have all my life described myself as a
liberal, I have done so recently with increasing misgivings
not only because in the United States this term constantly gives
rise to misunderstandings, but also because I have become more and
more aware of the great gulf that exists between my position and
the rationalistic Continental liberalism or even the English liberalism
of the utilitarians.
If liberalism
still meant what it meant to an English historian who in 1827 could
speak of the revolution of 1688 as "the triumph of those principles
which in the language of the present day are denominated liberal
or constitutional" [13] or if one could
still, with Lord Acton, speak of Burke, Macaulay, and Gladstone
as the three greatest liberals, or if one could still, with Harold
Laske, regard Tocqueville and Lord Acton as "the essential
liberals of the nineteenth century,"[14]
I should indeed be only too proud to describe myself by that name.
But, much as I am tempted to call their liberalism true liberalism,
I must recognize that the majority of Continental liberals stood
for ideas to which these men were strongly opposed, and that they
were led more by a desire to impose upon the world a preconceived
rational pattern than to provide opportunity for free growth. The
same is largely true of what has called itself Liberalism in England
at least since the time of Lloyd George.
It is thus
necessary to recognize that what I have called "liberalism"
has little to do with any political movement that goes under that
name today. It is also questionable whether the historical associations
which that name carries today are conducive to the success of any
movement. Whether in these circumstances one ought to make an effort
to rescue the term from what one feels is its misuse is a question
on which opinions may well differ. I myself feel more and more that
to use it without long explanations causes too much confusion and
that as a label it has become more of a ballast than a source of
strength.
In the United
States, where it has become almost impossible to use "liberal"
in the sense in which I have used it, the term "libertarian"
has been used instead. It may be the answer; but for my part I find
it singularly unattractive. For my taste it carries too much the
flavor of a manufactured term and of a substitute. What I should
want is a word which describes the party of life, the party that
favors free growth and spontaneous evolution. But I have racked
my brain unsuccessfully to find a descriptive term which commends
itself.
7. We should
remember, however, that when the ideals which I have been trying
to restate first began to spread through the Western world, the
party which represented them had a generally recognized name. It
was the ideals of the English Whigs that inspired what later came
to be known as the liberal movement in the whole of Europe[15]
and that provided the conceptions that the American colonists carried
with them and which guided them in their struggle for independence
and in the establishment of their constitution.[16]
Indeed, until the character of this tradition was altered by the
accretions due to the French Revolution, with its totalitarian democracy
and socialist leanings, "Whig" was the name by which the
party of liberty was generally known.
The name died
in the country of its birth partly because for a time the principles
for which it stood were no longer distinctive of a particular party,
and partly because the men who bore the name did not remain true
to those principles. The Whig parties of the nineteenth century,
in both Britain and the United States, finally brought discredit
to the name among the radicals. But it is still true that, since
liberalism took the place of Whiggism only after the movement for
liberty had absorbed the crude and militant rationalism of the French
Revolution, and since our task must largely be to free that tradition
from the overrationalistic, nationalistic, and socialistic influences
which have intruded into it, Whiggism is historically the correct
name for the ideas in which I believe. The more I learn about the
evolution of ideas, the more I have become aware that I am simply
an unrepentant Old Whig with the stress on the "old."
To confess
one's self as an Old Whig does not mean, of course, that one wants
to go back to where we were at the end of the seventeenth century.
It has been one of the purposes of this book to show that the doctrines
then first stated continued to grow and develop until about seventy
or eighty years ago, even though they were no longer the chief aim
of a distinct party. We have since learned much that should enable
us to restate them in a more satisfactory and effective form. But,
though they require restatement in the light of our present knowledge,
the basic principles are still those of the Old Whigs. True, the
later history of the party that bore that name has made some historians
doubt where there was a distinct body of Whig principles; but I
can but agree with Lord Acton that, though some of "the patriarchs
of the doctrine were the most infamous of men, the notion of a higher
law above municipal codes, with which Whiggism began, is the supreme
achievement of Englishmen and their bequest to the nation"[17]
and, we may add, to the world. It is the doctrine which is
at the basis of the common tradition of the Anglo-Saxon countries.
It is the doctrine from which Continental liberalism took what is
valuable in it. It is the doctrine on which the American system
of government is based. In its pure form it is represented in the
United States, not by the radicalism of Jefferson, nor by the conservatism
of Hamilton or even of John Adams, but by the ideas of James Madison,
the "father of the Constitution."[18]
I do not know
whether to revive that old name is practical politics. That to the
mass of people, both in the Anglo-Saxon world and elsewhere, it
is today probably a term without definite associations is perhaps
more an advantage than a drawback. To those familiar with the history
of ideas it is probably the only name that quite expresses what
the tradition means. That, both for the genuine conservative and
still more for the many socialists turned conservative, Whiggism
is the name for their pet aversion shows a sound instinct on their
part. It has been the name for the only set of ideals that has consistently
opposed all arbitrary power.
8. It may
well be asked whether the name really matters so much. In a country
like the United States, which on the whole has free institutions
and where, therefore, the defense of the existing is often a defense
of freedom, it might not make so much difference if the defenders
of freedom call themselves conservatives, although even here the
association with the conservatives by disposition will often be
embarrassing. Even when men approve of the same arrangements, it
must be asked whether they approve of them because they exist or
because they are desirable in themselves. The common resistance
to the collectivist tide should not be allowed to obscure the fact
that the belief in integral freedom is based on an essentially forward-looking
attitude and not on any nostalgic longing for the past or a romantic
admiration for what has been.
The need for
a clear distinction is absolutely imperative, however, where, as
is true in many parts of Europe, the conservatives have already
accepted a large part of the collectivist creed a creed that
has governed policy for so long that many of its institutions have
come to be accepted as a matter of course and have become a source
of pride to "conservative" parties who created them.[19]
Here the believer in freedom cannot but conflict with the conservative
and take an essentially radical position, directed against popular
prejudices, entrenched positions, and firmly established privileges.
Follies and abuses are no better for having long been established
principles of folly.
Though quieta
non movere may at times be a wise maxim for the statesman it
cannot satisfy the political philosopher. He may wish policy to
proceed gingerly and not before public opinion is prepared to support
it, but he cannot accept arrangements merely because current opinion
sanctions them. In a world where the chief need is once more, as
it was at the beginning of the nineteenth century, to free the process
of spontaneous growth from the obstacles and encumbrances that human
folly has erected, his hopes must rest on persuading and gaining
the support of those who by disposition are "progressives,"
those who, though they may now be seeking change in the wrong direction,
are at least willing to examine critically the existing and to change
it wherever necessary.
I hope I have
not misled the reader by occasionally speaking of "party"
when I was thinking of groups of men defending a set of intellectual
and moral principles. Party politics of any one country has not
been the concern of this book. The question of how the principles
I have tried to reconstruct by piecing together the broken fragments
of a tradition can be translated into a program with mass appeal,
the political philosopher must leave to "that insidious and
crafty animal, vulgarly called a statesman or politician, whose
councils are directed by the momentary fluctuations of affairs."[20]
The task of the political philosopher can only be to influence public
opinion, not to organize people for action. He will do so effectively
only if he is not concerned with what is now politically possible
but consistently defends the "general principles which are
always the same."[21] In this sense I doubt
whether there can be such a thing as a conservative political philosophy.
Conservatism may often be a useful practical maxim, but it does
not give us any guiding principles which can influence long-range
developments.
Notes
The quotation
at the head of the Postscript is taken from Acton, History
of Freedom, p. 1.
- This has
now been true for over a century, and as early as 1855 J. S. Mill
could say (see my John
Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor [London and Chicago, 1951],
p. 216) that "almost all the projects of social reformers
of these days are really liberticide."
- B. Crick,
"The Strange Quest for an American Conservatism," Review
of Politics, XVII (1955), 365, says rightly that "the
normal American who calls himself 'A Conservative' is, in fact,
a liberal." It would appear that the reluctance of these
conservatives to call themselves by the more appropriate name
dates only from its abuse during the New Deal era.
- The expression
is that of R. G. Collingwood, The
New Leviathan (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1942),
p. 209.
- Cf. the
characteristic choice of this title for the programmatic book
by the present British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, The
Middle Way (London, 1938).
- Cf. Lord
Hugh Cecil, Conservatism
("Home University Library" [London, 1912], p. 9: "Natural
Conservatism . . . is a disposition averse from change; and it
springs partly from a distrust of the unknown."
- Cf. the
revealing self-description of a conservative in K. Feiling, Sketches
in Nineteenth Century Biography (London, 1930), p. 174:
"Taken in bulk, the Right have a horror of ideas, for is
not the practical man, in Disraeli's words, 'one who practices
the blunders of his predecessors'? For long tracts of their history
they have indiscriminately resisted improvement, and in claiming
to reverence their ancestors often reduce opinion to aged individual
prejudice. Their position becomes safer, but more complex, when
we add that this Right wing is incessantly overtaking the Left;
that it lives by repeated inoculation of liberal ideas, and thus
suffers from a never-perfected state of compromise."
- I trust
I shall be forgiven for repeating here the words in which on an
earlier occasion I stated an important point: "The main merit
of the individualism which [Adam Smith] and his contemporaries
advocated is that it is a system under which bad men can do least
harm. It is a social system which does not depend for its functioning
on our finding good men for running it, or on all men becoming
better than they now are, but which makes use of men in all their
given variety and complexity, sometimes good and sometimes bad,
sometimes intelligent and more often stupid." (Individualism
and Economic Order [London and Chicago, 1948], p. 11.)
- Cf. Lord
Acton in Letters
of Lord Acton to Mary Gladstone, ed. H. Paul (London,
1913), p. 73: "The danger is not that a particular class
is unfit to govern. Every class is unfit to govern. The law of
liberty tends to abolish the reign of race over race, of faith
over faith, of class over class."
- J. R. Hicks
has rightly spoken in this connection of the "caricature
drawn alike by the young Disraeli, by Marx and by Goebbels"
("The Pursuit of Economic Freedom," What
We Defend, ed. E. F. Jacob [Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1942], p. 96). On the role of the conservatives in this
connection see also my Introduction to Capitalism
and the Historians (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1954), pp. 19 ff.
- Cf. J.
S. Mill, On
Liberty, ed. R. B. McCallum (Oxford, 1946), p. 83: "I
am not aware that any community has a right to force another to
be civilised."
- J. W. Burgess,
The
Reconciliation of Government with Liberty (New York, 1915),
p. 380.
- Cf. Learned
Hand, The
Spirit of Liberty, ed. I. Dilliard (New York, 1952), p.
190: "The Spirit of liberty is the spirit which is not too
sure that it is right." See also Oliver Cromwell's often
quoted statement is his Letter to the Assembly of the Church
of Scotland, August 3, 1650: "I beseech you, in the bowels
of Christ, think it possible you may be mistaken." It is
significant that this should be the probably best-remembered saying
of the only "dictator" in British history!
- H. Hallam,
Constitutional
History (1827) ("Everyman" ed.), III, 90. It
is often suggested that the term "liberal" derives from
the early nineteenth-century Spanish party of the liberales.
I am more inclined to believe that it derives from the use of
that term by Adam Smith in such passages as W.o.N., II,
41: "the liberal system of free exportation and free importation"
and p. 216: "allowing every man to pursue his own interest
his own way, upon the liberal plan of equality, liberty, and justice."
- Lord Acton
in Letters to Mary Gladstone, p. 44. Cf. also his judgment
of Tocqueville in Lectures
on the French Revolution (London, 1910), p. 357:
"Tocqueville was a Liberal of the purest breed a Liberal
and nothing else, deeply suspicious of democracy and its kindred,
equality, centralisation, and utilitarianism." Similarly
in the Nineteenth Century, XXXIII (1892), 885. The statement
by H. J. Laski occurs in "Alexis de Tocqueville and Democracy,"
in The
Social and Political Ideas of Some Representative Thinkers of
the Victorian Age, ed. F. J. C. Hearnshaw (London, 1933),
p. 100, where he says that "a case of unanswerable power
could, I think, be made out for the view that he [Tocqueville]
and Lord Acton were the essential liberals of the nineteenth century."
- As early
as the beginning of the eighteenth century, an English observer
could remark that he "scarce ever knew a foreigner settled
in England, whether of Dutch, German, French, Italian, or Turkish
growth, but became a Whig in a little time after his mixing with
us" (quoted by G. H. Guttridge, English
Whiggism and the American Revolution [Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1942], p. 3).
- In the
United States the nineteenth-century use of the term "Whig"
has unfortunately obliterated the memory of the fact that in the
eighteenth it stood for the principles which guided the revolution,
gained independence, and shaped the Constitution. It was in Whig
societies that the young James Madison and John Adams developed
their political ideals (cf. E. M. Burns, James Madison
[New Brunnswick, N.J.; Rutgers University Press, 1938], p. 4);
it was Whig principles which, as Jefferson tells us, guided all
the lawyers who constituted such a strong majority among the signers
of the Declaration of Independence and among the members of the
Constitutional Convention (see Writings of Thomas Jefferson
["Memorial ed." (Washington, 1905)], XVI, 156). The
profession of Whig principles was carried to such a point that
even Washington's soldiers were clad in the traditional "blue
and buff" colors of the Whigs, which they shared with the
Foxites in the British Parliament and which was preserved down
to our days on the covers of the Edinburgh Review. If a
socialist generation has made Whiggism its favorite target, this
is all the more reason for the opponents of socialism to vindicate
its name. It is today the only name which correctly describes
the beliefs of the Gladstonian liberals, of the men of the generation
of Maitland, Acton, and Bryce, and the last generation for whom
liberty rather than equality or democracy was the main goal.
- Lord Acton,
Lectures
on Modern History (London, 1906), p. 218 (I have slightly
rearranged Acton's clauses to reproduce briefly the sense of his
statement).
- Cf. S.
K. Padover in his Introduction to The
Complete Madison (New York, 1953), p. 10: "In modern
terminology, Madison would be labeled a middle-of-the-road liberal
and Jefferson a radical." This is true and important, though
we must remember what E. S. Corwin ("James Madison: Layman,
Publicist, and Exegete," New York University Law Review,
XXVII [1952], 285) has called Madison's later "surrender
to the overwhelming influence of Jefferson."
- Cf. the
British Conservative party's statement of policy, The Right
Road for Britain (London, 1950), pp. 4142, which claims,
with considerable justification, that "this new conception
[of the social services] was developed [by] the Coalition Government
with a majority of Conservative Ministers and the full approval
of the Conservative majority in the House of Commons . . . [We]
set out the principle for the schemes of pensions, sickness and
unemployment benefit, industrial injustices benefit and a national
health scheme."
- A Smith,
W.o.N., I, 432.
- Ibid.
October
26, 2005
Copyright
1960 by the University of Chicago Press
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