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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11557 ***
+
+ON COMPROMISE
+
+ _'It makes all the difference in the world whether we put
+ Truth in the first place or in the second place.'_
+
+ WHATLEY
+
+
+
+
+ON COMPROMISE
+
+BY
+
+JOHN MORLEY
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
+
+ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON
+
+1908
+
+_This Edition first printed 1886_
+
+
+
+
+NOTE.
+
+The writer has availed himself of the opportunity of a new edition to
+add three or four additional illustrations in the footnotes. The
+criticisms on the first edition call for no remark, excepting this,
+perhaps, that the present little volume has no pretensions to be
+anything more than an Essay. To judge such it performance as if it
+professed to be an exhaustive Treatise in casuistry, is to subject it to
+tests which it was never designed to bear. Merely to open questions, to
+indicate points, to suggest cases, to sketch outlines,--as an Essay does
+all these things,--may often be a process not without its own modest
+usefulness and interest.
+
+_May 4, 1877._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY.
+
+ Design of this Essay
+ The question stated
+ Suggested by some existing tendencies in England
+ Comparison with other countries
+ Test of this comparison
+ The absent quality specifically defined
+ History and decay of some recent aspirations
+ Illustrations
+ Characteristics of one present mood
+ Analysis of its causes
+ (1) Influence of French examples
+ (2) Influence of the Historic Method
+ (3) Influence of the Newspaper Press
+ (4) Increase of material prosperity
+ (5) Transformation of the spiritual basis of thought
+ (6) Influence of a State Church
+
+
+ CHAPTER II. OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR
+
+ Questions of a dual doctrine lies at the outset of our inquiry
+ This doctrine formulated
+ Marks the triumph of _status quo_
+ Psychological vindication of such a doctrine
+ Answered by assertion of the dogmatic character of popular belief
+ And the pernicious social influence of its priests
+ The root idea of the defenders of a dual doctrine
+ Thesis of the present chapter, against that idea
+ Examination of some of the pleas for error
+ I. That a false opinion may be clothed with good associations
+ II. That all minds are not open to reason
+ III. That a false opinion, considered in relation to the general
+ mental attitude, may be less hurtful than its premature
+ demolition
+ IV. That mere negative truth is not a guide
+ V. That error has been a stepping-stone to truth
+ We cannot tell how much truth has been missed
+ Inevitableness is not utility
+
+
+ CHAPTER III. INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL SPIRIT.
+
+ The modern _disciplina arcani_
+ Hume's immoral advice
+ Evil intellectual effects of immoral compromise
+ Depravation that follows its grosser forms
+ The three provinces of compromise
+ Radical importance of their separation
+ Effects of their confusion in practical politics
+ Economy or management in the Formation of opinion
+ Its lawfulness turns on the claims of majority and minority over one
+ another
+ Thesis of the present chapter
+ Its importance, owing to the supremacy of the political spirit in
+ England
+ Effects of the predominance of this spirit
+ Contrasted with epochs of intellectual responsibility
+ A modern movement against the political spirit
+ An objection considered
+ Importance to character of rationalised conviction, and of ideals
+ The absence of them attenuates conduct
+ Illustrations in modern politics
+ Modern latitudinarianism
+ Illustration in two supreme issues
+ Pascal's remarks upon a state of Doubt
+ Dr. Newman on the same
+ Three ways of dealing with the issues
+ Another illustration of intellectual improbity
+ The Savoyard Vicar
+ Mischievousness of substituting spiritual self-indulgence for reason
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV. RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.
+
+ Compromise in Expression
+ Touches religion rather than politics
+ Hume on non-resistance
+ Reason why rights of free speech do not exactly coincide with rights of
+ free thought
+ Digression into the matter of free speech
+ Dissent no longer railing and vituperative
+ Tendency of modern free thought to assimilate some elements from the
+ old faith
+ A wide breach still remains
+ Heresy, however, no longer traced to depravity
+ Tolerance not necessarily acquiescence in scepticism
+ Object of the foregoing digression
+ The rarity of plain-speaking a reason why it is painful
+ Conformity in the relationship between child and parent
+ Between husband and wife
+ In the education of children
+ The case of an unbelieving priest
+ The case of one who fears to lose his influence
+ Conformity not harmless nor unimportant
+
+
+ CHAPTER V. THE REALISATION OF OPINION.
+
+ The application of opinion to conduct
+ Tempering considerations
+ Not to be pressed too far
+ Our action in realising our opinions depends on our social theory
+ Legitimate and illegitimate compromise in view of that
+ The distinction equally sound on the evolutional theory
+ Condition of progressive change
+ A plea for compromise examined
+ A second plea
+ The allegation of provisional usefulness examined
+ Illustrated in religious institutions
+ In political institutions
+ Burke's commendation of political compromise
+ The saying that small reforms may be the worst enemies of great ones
+ In what sense true
+ Illustration in the Elementary Education Act
+ Wisdom of social patience
+ The considerations which apply to political practice do not apply to
+ our own lives
+ Nor to the publication of social opinions
+ The amount of conscience in a community
+ Evil of attenuating this element
+ Historic illustration
+ New side of the discussion
+ Is earnestness of conviction fatal to concession of liberty to others?
+ Two propositions at the base of an affirmative answer
+ Earnestness of conviction consistent with sense of liability to error
+ Belief in one's own infallibility does not necessarily lead to
+ intolerance
+ The contrary notion due to juristic analogies in social discussion
+ Connection between the doctrine of liberty and social evolution
+ The timid compromisers superfluous apprehension
+ Material limits to the effect of moral speculation
+ Illustration from the history of Slavery
+ Illustration from French history
+ Practical influence of a faith in the self-protecting quality of a
+ society
+ Conclusion
+
+
+ NOTE TO PAGE 242.
+
+ The Doctrine of Liberty
+
+
+
+
+ON COMPROMISE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY.
+
+The design of the following essay is to consider, in a short and direct
+way, some of the limits that are set by sound reason to the practice of
+the various arts of accommodation, economy, management, conformity, or
+compromise. The right of thinking freely and acting independently, of
+using our minds without excessive awe of authority, and shaping our
+lives without unquestioning obedience to custom, is now a finally
+accepted principle in some sense or other with every school of thought
+that has the smallest chance of commanding the future. Under what
+circumstances does the exercise and vindication of the right, thus
+conceded in theory, become a positive duty in practice? If the majority
+are bound to tolerate dissent from the ruling opinions and beliefs,
+under what conditions and within what limitations is the dissentient
+imperatively bound to avail himself of this toleration? How far, and in
+what way, ought respect either for immediate practical convenience, or
+for current prejudices, to weigh against respect for truth? For how much
+is it well that the individual should allow the feelings and convictions
+of the many to count, when he comes to shape, to express, and to act
+upon his own feelings and convictions? Are we only to be permitted to
+defend general principles, on condition that we draw no practical
+inferences from them? Is every other idea to yield precedence and empire
+to existing circumstances, and is the immediate and universal
+workableness of a policy to be the main test of its intrinsic fitness?
+
+To attempt to answer all these questions fully would be nothing less
+than to attempt a compendium of life and duty in all their details, a
+Summa of cases of conscience, a guide to doubters at every point of the
+compass. The aim of the present writer is a comparatively modest one;
+namely, to seek one or two of the most general principles which ought
+to regulate the practice of compliance, and to suggest some of the
+bearings which they may have in their application to certain
+difficulties in modern matters of conduct.
+
+It is pretty plain that an inquiry of this kind needs to be fixed by
+reference to a given set of social circumstances tolerably well
+understood. There are some common rules as to the expediency of
+compromise and conformity, but their application is a matter of endless
+variety and the widest elasticity. The interesting and useful thing is
+to find the relation of these too vague rules to actual conditions; to
+transform them into practical guides and real interpreters of what is
+right and best in thought and conduct, in a special and definite kind of
+emergency. According to the current assumptions of the writer and the
+preacher, the one commanding law is that men should cling to truth and
+right, if the very heavens fall. In principle this is universally
+accepted. To the partisans of authority and tradition it is as much a
+commonplace as to the partisans of the most absolute and unflinching
+rationalism. Yet in practice all schools alike are forced to admit the
+necessity of a measure of accommodation in the very interests of truth
+itself. Fanatic is a name of such ill repute, exactly because one who
+deserves to be called by it injures good causes by refusing timely and
+harmless concession; by irritating prejudices that a wiser way of urging
+his own opinion might have turned aside; by making no allowances,
+respecting no motives, and recognising none of those qualifying
+principles, which are nothing less than necessary to make his own
+principle true and fitting in a given society. The interesting question
+in connection with compromise obviously turns upon the placing of the
+boundary that divides wise suspense in forming opinions, wise reserve in
+expressing them, and wise tardiness in trying to realise them, from
+unavowed disingenuousness and self-illusion, from voluntary
+dissimulation, and from indolence and pusillanimity. These are the three
+departments or provinces of compromise. Our subject is a question of
+boundaries.[1] And this question, being mainly one of time and
+circumstance, may be most satisfactorily discussed in relation to the
+time and the circumstances which we know best, or at least whose
+deficiencies and requirements are most pressingly visible to us.
+
+Though England counts her full share of fearless truth-seekers in most
+departments of inquiry, yet there is on the whole no weakening, but a
+rather marked confirmation, of what has become an inveterate national
+characteristic, and has long been recognised as such; a profound
+distrust, namely, of all general principles; a profound dislike both of
+much reference to them, and of any disposition to invest them with
+practical authority; and a silent but most pertinacious measurement of
+philosophic truths by political tests. 'It is not at all easy, humanly
+speaking,' says one who has tried the experiment, 'to wind an Englishman
+up to the level of dogma.' The difficulty has extended further than the
+dogma of theology. The supposed antagonism between expediency and
+principle has been pressed further and further away from the little
+piece of true meaning that it ever could be rightly allowed to have,
+until it has now come to signify the paramount wisdom of counting the
+narrow, immediate, and personal expediency for everything, and the
+whole, general, ultimate, and completed expediency for nothing.
+Principle is only another name for a proposition stating the terms of
+one of these larger expediencies. When principle is held in contempt, or
+banished to the far dreamland of the philosopher and the student, with
+an affectation of reverence that in a materialist generation is in truth
+the most overweening kind of contempt, this only means that men are
+thinking much of the interests of to-day, and little of the more ample
+interests of the many days to come. It means that the conditions of the
+time are unfriendly to the penetration and the breadth of vision which
+disclose to us the whole range of consequences that follow on certain
+kinds of action or opinion, and unfriendly to the intrepidity and
+disinterestedness which make us willing to sacrifice our own present
+ease or near convenience, in the hope of securing higher advantages for
+others or for ourselves in the future.
+
+Let us take politics, for example. What is the state of the case with
+us, if we look at national life in its broadest aspect? A German has his
+dream of a great fatherland which shall not only be one and
+consolidated, but shall in due season win freedom for itself, and be as
+a sacred hearth whence others may borrow the warmth of freedom and order
+for themselves. A Spaniard has his vision either of militant loyalty to
+God and the saints and the exiled line of his kings, or else of devotion
+to the newly won liberty and to the raising up of his fallen nation. An
+American, in the midst of the political corruption which for the moment
+obscures the great democratic experiment, yet has his imagination
+kindled by the size and resources of his land, and his enthusiasm fired
+by the high destinies which he believes to await its people in the
+centuries to come. A Frenchman, republican or royalist, with all his
+frenzies and 'fool-fury' of red or white, still has his hope and dream
+and aspiration, with which to enlarge his life and lift him on an ample
+pinion out from the circle of a poor egoism. What stirs the hope and
+moves the aspiration of our Englishman? Surely nothing either in the
+heavens above or on the earth beneath. The English are as a people
+little susceptible in the region of the imagination. But they have done
+good work in the world, acquired a splendid historic tradition of stout
+combat for good causes, founded a mighty and beneficent empire; and
+they have done all this notwithstanding their deficiencies of
+imagination. Their lands have been the home of great and forlorn causes,
+though they could not always follow the transcendental flights of their
+foreign allies and champions. If Englishmen were not strong in
+imagination, they were what is better and surer, strong in their hold of
+the great emancipating principles. What great political cause, her own
+or another's, is England befriending to-day? To say that no great cause
+is left, is to tell us that we have reached the final stage of human
+progress, and turned over the last leaf in the volume of human
+improvements. The day when this is said and believed marks the end of a
+nation's life. Is it possible that, after all, our old protestant
+spirit, with its rationality, its austerity, its steady political
+energy, has been struck with something of the mortal fatigue that seizes
+catholic societies after their fits of revolution?
+
+We need not forget either the atrocities or the imbecilities which mark
+the course of modern politics on the Continent. I am as keenly alive as
+any one to the levity of France, and the [Greek: hubris] of Germany. It
+may be true that the ordinary Frenchman is in some respects the victim
+of as poor an egoism as that of the ordinary Englishman; and that the
+American has no advantage over us in certain kinds of magnanimous
+sentiment. What is important is the mind and attitude, not of the
+ordinary man, but of those who should be extraordinary. The decisive
+sign of the elevation of a nation's life is to be sought among those who
+lead or ought to lead. The test of the health of a people is to be found
+in the utterances of those who are its spokesmen, and in the action of
+those whom it accepts or chooses to be its chiefs. We have to look to
+the magnitude of the issues and the height of the interests which engage
+its foremost spirits. What are the best men in a country striving for?
+And is the struggle pursued intrepidly and with a sense of its size and
+amplitude, or with creeping foot and blinking eye? The answer to these
+questions is the answer to the other question, whether the best men in
+the country are small or great. It is a commonplace that the manner of
+doing things is often as important as the things done. And it has been
+pointed out more than once that England's most creditable national
+action constantly shows itself so poor and mean in expression that the
+rest of Europe can discern nothing in it but craft and sinister
+interest. Our public opinion is often rich in wisdom, but we lack the
+courage of our wisdom. We execute noble achievements, and then are best
+pleased to find shabby reasons for them.
+
+There is a certain quality attaching alike to thought and expression and
+action, for which we may borrow the name of grandeur. It has been
+noticed, for instance, that Bacon strikes and impresses us, not merely
+by the substantial merit of what he achieved, but still more by a
+certain greatness of scheme and conception. This quality is not a mere
+idle decoration. It is not a theatrical artifice of mask or buskin, to
+impose upon us unreal impressions of height and dignity. The added
+greatness is real. Height of aim and nobility of expression are true
+forces. They grow to be an obligation upon us. A lofty sense of personal
+worth is one of the surest elements of greatness. That the lion should
+love to masquerade in the ass's skin is not modesty and reserve, but
+imbecility and degradation. And that England should wrap herself in the
+robe of small causes and mean reasons is the more deplorable, because
+there is no nation in the world the substantial elements of whose power
+are so majestic and imperial as our own. Our language is the most widely
+spoken of all tongues, its literature is second to none in variety and
+power. Our people, whether English or American, have long ago superseded
+the barbarous device of dictator and Caesar by the manly arts of
+self-government. We understand that peace and industry are the two most
+indispensable conditions of modern civilisation, and we draw the lines
+of our policy in accordance with such a conviction. We have had imposed
+upon us by the unlucky prowess of our ancestors the task of ruling a
+vast number of millions of alien dependents. We undertake it with a
+disinterestedness, and execute it with a skill of administration, to
+which history supplies no parallel, and which, even if time should show
+that the conditions of the problem were insoluble, will still remain
+for ever admirable. All these are elements of true pre-eminence. They
+are calculated to inspire us with the loftiest consciousness of national
+life. They ought to clothe our voice with authority, to nerve our action
+by generous resolution, and to fill our counsels with weightiness and
+power.
+
+Within the last forty years England has lost one by one each of those
+enthusiasms which may have been illusions,--some of them undoubtedly
+were so,--but which at least testified to the existence among us, in a
+very considerable degree, of a vivid belief in the possibility of
+certain broad general theories being true and right, as well as in the
+obligation of making them lights to practical conduct and desire. People
+a generation ago had eager sympathy with Hungary, with Italy, with
+Poland, because they were deeply impressed by the doctrine of
+nationalities. They had again a generous and energetic hatred of such an
+institution as the negro slavery of America, because justice and
+humanity and religion were too real and potent forces within their
+breasts to allow them to listen to those political considerations by
+which American statesmen used to justify temporising and compromise.
+They had strong feelings about Parliamentary Reform, because they were
+penetrated by the principle that the possession of political power by
+the bulk of a society is the only effective security against sinister
+government; or else by the principle that participation in public
+activity, even in the modest form of an exercise of the elective
+franchise, is an elevating and instructing agency; or perhaps by the
+principle that justice demands that those who are compelled to obey laws
+and pay national taxes should have a voice in making the one and
+imposing the other.
+
+It may be said that the very fate of these aspirations has had a
+blighting effect on public enthusiasm and the capacity of feeling it.
+Not only have most of them now been fulfilled, and so passed from
+aspiration to actuality, but the results of their fulfilment have been
+so disappointing as to make us wonder whether it is really worth while
+to pray, when to have our prayers granted carries the world so very
+slight a way forward. The Austrian is no longer in Italy; the Pope has
+ceased to be master in Rome; the patriots of Hungary are now in
+possession of their rights, and have become friends of their old
+oppressors; the negro slave has been transformed into an American
+citizen. At home, again, the gods have listened to our vows. Parliament
+has been reformed, and the long-desired mechanical security provided for
+the voter's freedom. We no longer aspire after all these things, you may
+say, because our hopes have been realised and our dreams have come true.
+It is possible that the comparatively prosaic results before our eyes at
+the end of all have thrown a chill over our political imagination. What
+seemed so glorious when it was far off, seems perhaps a little poor now
+that it is near; and this has damped the wing of political fancy. The
+old aspirations have vanished, and no new ones have arisen in their
+place. Be the cause what it may, I should express the change in this
+way, that the existing order of facts, whatever it may be, now takes a
+hardly disputed precedence with us over ideas, and that the coarsest
+political standard is undoubtingly and finally applied over the whole
+realm of human thought.
+
+The line taken up by the press and the governing classes of England
+during the American Civil War may serve to illustrate the kind of mood
+which we conceive to be gaining firmer hold than ever of the national
+mind. Those who sympathised with the Southern States listened only to
+political arguments, and very narrow and inefficient political
+arguments, as it happened, when they ought to have seen that here was an
+issue which involved not only political ideas, but moral and religious
+ideas as well. That is to say, the ordinary political tests were not
+enough to reveal the entire significance of the crisis, nor were the
+political standards proper for measuring the whole of the expediencies
+hanging in the balance. The conflict could not be adequately gauged by
+such questions as whether the Slave States had or had not a
+constitutional right to establish an independent government; whether the
+Free States were animated by philanthropy or by love of empire; whether
+it was to the political advantage of England that the American Union
+should be divided and consequently weakened. Such questions were not
+necessarily improper in themselves, and we can imagine circumstances in
+which they might be not only proper but decisive. But, the
+circumstances being what they were, the narrower expediencies of
+ordinary politics were outweighed by one of those supreme and
+indefeasible expediencies which are classified as moral. These are, in
+other words, the higher, wider, more binding, and transcendent part of
+the master art of social wellbeing.
+
+Here was only one illustration of the growing tendency to substitute the
+narrowest political point of view for all the other ways of regarding
+the course of human affairs, and to raise the limitations which
+practical exigencies may happen to set to the application of general
+principles, into the very place of the principles themselves. Nor is the
+process of deteriorating conviction confined to the greater or noisier
+transactions of nations. It is impossible that it should be so. That
+process is due to causes which affect the mental temper an a whole, and
+pour round us an atmosphere that enervates our judgment from end to end,
+not more in politics than in morality, and not more in morality than in
+philosophy, in art, and in religion. Perhaps this tendency never showed
+itself more offensively than when the most important newspaper in the
+country criticised our great naturalist's scientific speculations as to
+the descent of man, from the point of view of property, intelligence,
+and a stake in the country, and severely censured him for revealing his
+particular zoological conclusions to the general public, at a moment
+when the sky of Paris was red with the incendiary flames of the Commune.
+It would be hard to reduce the transformation of all truth into a
+subordinate department of daily politics, to a more gross and unseemly
+absurdity.
+
+The consequences of such a transformation, of putting immediate social
+convenience in the first place, and respect for truth in the second, are
+seen, as we have said, in a distinct and unmistakable lowering of the
+level of national life; a slack and lethargic quality about public
+opinion; a growing predominance of material, temporary, and selfish
+aims, over those which are generous, far-reaching, and spiritual; a
+deadly weakening of intellectual conclusiveness, and clear-shining moral
+illumination, and, lastly, of a certain stoutness of self-respect for
+which England was once especially famous. A plain categorical
+proposition is becoming less and less credible to average minds. Or at
+least the slovenly willingness to hold two directly contradictory
+propositions at one and the same time is becoming more and more common.
+In religion, morals, and politics, the suppression of your true opinion,
+if not the positive profession of what you hold to be a false opinion,
+is hardly ever counted a vice, and not seldom even goes for virtue and
+solid wisdom. One is conjured to respect the beliefs of others, but
+forbidden to claim the same respect for one's own.
+
+This dread of the categorical proposition might be creditable, if it
+sprang from attachment to a very high standard of evidence, or from a
+deep sense of the relative and provisional quality of truth. There might
+even be a plausible defence set up for it, if it sprang from that
+formulated distrust of the energetic rational judgment in comparison
+with the emotional, affective, contemplative parts of man, which
+underlies the various forms of religious mysticism. If you look closely
+into our present mood, it is seen to be the product mainly and above all
+of a shrinking deference to the _status quo_, not merely as having a
+claim not to be lightly dealt with, which every serious man concedes,
+but as being the last word and final test of truth and justice. Physical
+science is allowed to be the sphere of accurate reasoning and distinct
+conclusions, but in morals and politics, instead of admitting that these
+subjects have equally a logic of their own, we silently suspect all
+first principles, and practically deny the strict inferences from
+demonstrated premisses. Faith in the soundness of given general theories
+of right and wrong melts away before the first momentary triumph of
+wrong, or the first passing discouragement in enforcing right.
+
+Our robust political sense, which has discovered so many of the secrets
+of good government, which has given us freedom with order, and popular
+administration without corruption, and unalterable respect for law along
+with indelible respect for individual right, this, which has so long
+been our strong point, is fast becoming our weakness and undoing. For
+the extension of the ways of thinking which are proper in politics, to
+other than political matter, means at the same time the depravation of
+the political sense itself. Not only is social expediency effacing the
+many other points of view that men ought to take of the various facts of
+life and thought: the idea of social expediency itself is becoming a
+dwarfed and pinched idea. Ours is the country where love of constant
+improvement ought to be greater than anywhere else, because fear of
+revolution is less. Yet the art of politics is growing to be as meanly
+conceived as all the rest At elections the national candidate has not
+often a chance against the local candidate, nor the man of a principle
+against the man of a class. In parliament we are admonished on high
+authority that 'the policy of a party is not the carrying out of the
+opinion of any section of it, but the general consensus of the whole,'
+which seems to be a hierophantic manner of saying that the policy of a
+party is one thing, and the principle which makes it a party is another
+thing, and that men who care very strongly about anything are to
+surrender that and the hope of it, for the sake of succeeding in
+something about which they care very little or not at all. This is our
+modern way of giving politicians heart for their voyage, of inspiring
+them with resoluteness and self-respect, with confidence in the worth of
+their cause and enthusiasm for its success. Thoroughness is a mistake,
+and nailing your flag to the mast a bit of delusive heroics. Think
+wholly of to-day, and not at all of to-morrow. Beware of the high and
+hold fast to the safe. Dismiss conviction, and study general consensus.
+No zeal, no faith, no intellectual trenchancy, but as much low-minded
+geniality and trivial complaisance as you please.
+
+Of course, all these characteristics of our own society mark tendencies
+that are common enough in all societies. They often spring from an
+indolence and enervation that besets a certain number of people, however
+invigorating the general mental climate may be. What we are now saying
+is that the general mental climate itself has, outside of the domain of
+physical science, ceased to be invigorating; that, on the contrary, it
+fosters the more inglorious predispositions of men, and encourages a
+native willingness, already so strong, to acquiesce in a lazy
+accommodation with error, an ignoble economy of truth, and a vicious
+compromise of the permanent gains of adhering to a sound general
+principle, for the sake of the temporary gains of departing from it.
+
+
+Without attempting an elaborate analysis of the causes that have brought
+about this debilitation of mental tone, we may shortly remind ourselves
+of one or two facts in the political history, in the intellectual
+history, and in the religious history of this generation, which perhaps
+help us to understand a phenomenon that we have all so keen an interest
+both in understanding and in modifying.
+
+To begin with what lies nearest to the surface. The most obvious agency
+at work in the present exaggeration of the political standard as the
+universal test of truth, is to be found in some contemporary incidents.
+The influence of France upon England since the revolution of 1848 has
+tended wholly to the discredit of abstract theory and general reasoning
+among us, in all that relates to politics, morals, and religion. In
+1848, not in 1789, questions affecting the fundamental structure and
+organic condition of the social union came for the first time into
+formidable prominence. For the first time those questions and the
+answers to them were stated in articulate formulas and distinct
+theories. They were not merely written in books; they so fascinated the
+imagination and inflamed the hopes of the time, that thousands of men
+were willing actually to go down into the streets and to shed their
+blood for the realisation of their generous dream of a renovated
+society. The same sight has been seen since, and even when we do not see
+it, we are perfectly aware that the same temper is smouldering. Those
+were premature attempts to convert a crude aspiration into a political
+reality, and to found a new social order on a number of umcompromising
+deductions from abstract principles of the common weal. They have had
+the natural effect of deepening the English dislike of a general theory,
+even when such a theory did no more than profess to announce a remote
+object of desire, and not the present goal of immediate effort.
+
+It is not only the Socialists who are responsible for the low esteem
+into which a spirit of political generalisation has fallen in other
+countries, in consequence of French experience. Mr. Mill has described
+in a well-known passage the characteristic vice of the leaders of all
+French parties, and not of the democratic party more than any other.
+'The commonplaces of politics in France,' he says, 'are large and
+sweeping practical maxims, from which, as ultimate premisses, men reason
+downwards to particular applications, and this they call being logical
+and consistent. For instance, they are perpetually arguing that such and
+such a measure ought to be adopted, because it is a consequence of the
+principle on which the form of government is founded; of the principle
+of legitimacy, or the principle of the sovereignty of the people. To
+which it may be answered that if these be really practical principles,
+they must rest on speculative grounds; the sovereignty of the people
+(for example) must be a right foundation for government, because a
+government thus constituted tends to produce certain beneficial effects.
+Inasmuch, however, as no government produces all possible beneficial
+effects, but all are attended with more or fewer inconveniences; and
+since these cannot be combated by means drawn from the very causes which
+produce them, it would often be a much stronger recommendation of some
+practical arrangement that it does not follow from what is called the
+general principle of the government, than that it does,'[2]
+
+The English feeling for compromise is on its better side the result of a
+shrewd and practical, though informal, recognition of a truth which the
+writer has here expressed in terms of Method. The disregard which the
+political action of France has repeatedly betrayed of a principle really
+so important has hitherto strengthened our own regard for it, until it
+has not only made us look on its importance as exclusive and final, but
+has extended our respect for the right kind of compromise to wrong and
+injurious kinds.
+
+A minor event, which now looks much less important than it did not many
+years ago, but which still had real influence in deteriorating moral
+judgment, was the career of a late sovereign of France. Some apparent
+advantages followed for a season from a rule which had its origin in a
+violent and perfidious usurpation, and which was upheld by all the arts
+of moral corruption, political enervation, and military repression. The
+advantages lasted long enough to create in this country a steady and
+powerful opinion that Napoleon the Third's early crime was redeemed by
+the seeming prosperity which followed. The shocking prematureness of
+this shallow condonation is now too glaringly visible for any one to
+deny it. Not often in history has the great truth that 'morality is the
+nature of things' received corroboration so prompt and timely. We need
+not commit ourselves to the optimistic or sentimental hypothesis that
+wickedness always fares ill in the world, or on the other hand that
+whoso hearkens diligently to the divine voice, and observes all the
+commandments to do them, shall be blessed in his basket and his store
+and all the work of his hand. The claims of morality to our allegiance,
+so far as its precepts are solidly established, rest on the same
+positive base as our faith in the truth of physical laws. Moral
+principles, when they are true, are at bottom only registered
+generalisations from experience. They record certain uniformities of
+antecedence and consequence in the region of human conduct Want of faith
+in the persistency of these uniformities is only a little less fatuous
+in the moral order than a corresponding want of faith would instantly
+disclose itself to be in the purely physical order. In both orders alike
+there is only too much of this kind of fatuousness, this readiness to
+believe that for once in our favour the stream shall flow up hill, that
+we may live in miasmatic air unpoisoned, that a government may depress
+the energy, the self-reliance, the public spirit of its citizens, and
+yet be able to count on these qualities whenever the government itself
+may have broken down, and left the country to make the best of such
+resources as are left after so severe and prolonged a drain. This is the
+sense in which morality is the nature of things. The system of the
+Second Empire was in the same sense an immoral system. Unless all the
+lessons of human experience were futile, and all the principles of
+political morality mere articles of pedantry, such a system must
+inevitably bring disaster, as we might have seen that it was sowing the
+seeds of disaster. Yet because the catastrophe lingered, opinion in
+England began to admit the possibility of evil being for this once good,
+and to treat any reference to the moral and political principles which
+condemned the imperial system, and all systems like it, beyond hope or
+appeal, as simply the pretext of a mutinous or Utopian impatience.
+
+This, however, is only one of the more superficial influences which have
+helped and fallen in with the working of profounder causes of weakened
+aspiration and impoverished moral energy, and of the substitution of
+latitudinarian acquiescence and faltering conviction for the
+whole-hearted assurance of better times. Of these deeper causes, the
+most important in the intellectual development of the prevailing forms
+of thought and sentiment is the growth of the Historic Method. Let us
+consider very shortly how the abuse of this method, and an unauthorised
+extension and interpretation of its conclusions, are likely to have had
+something to do with the enervation of opinion.
+
+The Historic Method may be described as the comparison of the forms of
+an idea, or a usage, or a belief, at any given time, with the earlier
+forms from which they were evolved, or the later forms into which they
+were developed, and the establishment, from such a comparison, of an
+ascending and descending order among the facts. It consists in the
+explanation of existing parts in the frame of society by connecting them
+with corresponding parts in some earlier frame; in the identification of
+present forms in the past, and past forms in the present. Its main
+process is the detection of corresponding customs, opinions, laws,
+beliefs, among different communities, and a grouping of them into
+general classes with reference to some one common feature. It is a
+certain way of seeking answers to various questions of origin, resting
+on the same general doctrine of evolution, applied to moral and social
+forms, as that which is being applied with so much ingenuity to the
+series of organic matter. The historic conception is a reference of
+every state of society to a particular stage in the evolution of its
+general conditions. Ideas of law, of virtue, of religion, of the
+physical universe, of history, of the social union itself, all march in
+a harmonious and inter-dependent order.
+
+Curiosity with reference to origins is for various reasons the most
+marked element among modern scientific tendencies. It covers the whole
+field, moral, intellectual, and physical, from the smile or the frown on
+a man's face, up to the most complex of the ideas in his mind; from the
+expression of his emotions, to their root and relations with one another
+in his inmost organisation. As an ingenious writer, too soon lost to our
+political literature, has put it:--'If we wanted to describe one of the
+most marked results, perhaps the most marked result, of late thought, we
+should say that by it everything is made _an antiquity_. When in former
+times our ancestors thought of an antiquarian, they described him as
+occupied with coins and medals and Druids' stones. But now there are
+other relics; indeed all matter is become such. Man himself has to the
+eye of science become an antiquity. She tries to read, is beginning to
+read, knows she ought to read, in the frame of each man the result of a
+whole history of all his life, and what he is and what makes him so.'[3]
+Character is considered less with reference to its absolute qualities
+than as an interesting scene strewn with scattered rudiments, survivals,
+inherited predispositions. Opinions are counted rather as phenomena to
+be explained than as matters of truth and falsehood. Of usages, we are
+beginning first of all to think where they came from, and secondarily
+whether they are the most fitting and convenient that men could be got
+to accept. In the last century men asked of a belief or a story, Is it
+true? We now ask, How did men come to take it for true? In short the
+relations among social phenomena which now engage most attention, are
+relations of original source, rather than those of actual consistency in
+theory and actual fitness in practice. The devotees of the current
+method are more concerned with the pedigree and genealogical connections
+of a custom or an idea than with its own proper goodness or badness, its
+strength or its weakness.
+
+Though there is no necessary or truly logical association between
+systematic use of this method rightly limited, and a slack and slipshod
+preference of vague general forms over definite ideas, yet every one can
+see its tendency, if uncorrected, to make men shrink from importing
+anything like absolute quality into their propositions. We can see also,
+what is still worse, its tendency to place individual robustness and
+initiative in the light of superfluities, with which a world that goes
+by evolution can very well dispense. Men easily come to consider
+clearness and positiveness in their opinions, staunchness in holding and
+defending them, and fervour in carrying them into action, as equivocal
+virtues of very doubtful perfection, in a state of things where every
+abuse has after all had a defensible origin; where every error has, we
+must confess, once been true relatively to other parts of belief in
+those who held the error; and where all parts of life are so bound up
+with one another, that it is of no avail to attack one evil, unless you
+attack many more at the same time. This is a caricature of the real
+teaching of the Historic Method, of which we shall have to speak
+presently; but it is one of those caricatures which the natural sloth in
+such matters, and the indigenous intellectual haziness of the majority
+of men, make them very willing to take for the true philosophy of
+things.
+
+
+Then there is the newspaper press, that huge engine for keeping
+discussion on a low level, and making the political test final. To take
+off the taxes on knowledge was to place a heavy tax on broad and
+independent opinion. The multiplication of journals 'delivering brawling
+judgments unashamed on all things all day long,' has done much to deaden
+the small stock of individuality in public verdicts. It has done much to
+make vulgar ways of looking at things and vulgar ways of speaking of
+them stronger and stronger, by formulating and repeating and
+stereotyping them incessantly from morning until afternoon, and from
+year's end to year's end. For a newspaper must live, and to live it must
+please, and its conductors suppose, perhaps not altogether rightly, that
+it can only please by being very cheerful towards prejudices, very
+chilly to general theories, loftily disdainful to the men of a
+principle. Their one cry to an advocate of improvement is some sagacious
+silliness about recognising the limits of the practicable in politics,
+and seeing the necessity of adapting theories to facts. As if the fact
+of taking a broader and wiser view than the common crowd disqualifies a
+man from knowing what the view of the common crowd happens to be, and
+from estimating it at the proper value for practical purposes. Why are
+the men who despair of improvement to be the only persons endowed with
+the gift of discerning the practicable? It is, however, only too easy to
+understand how a journal, existing for a day, should limit its view to
+the possibilities of the day, and how, being most closely affected by
+the particular, it should coldly turn its back upon all that is general.
+And it is easy, too, to understand the reaction of this intellectual
+timorousness upon the minds of ordinary readers, who have too little
+natural force and too little cultivation to be able to resist the
+narrowing and deadly effect of the daily iteration of short-sighted
+commonplaces.
+
+
+Far the most penetrating of all the influences that are impairing the
+moral and intellectual nerve of our generation, remain still to be
+mentioned. The first of these is the immense increase of material
+prosperity, and the second is the immense decline in sincerity of
+spiritual interest. The evil wrought by the one fills up the measure of
+the evil wrought by the other. We have been, in spite of momentary
+declensions, on a flood tide of high profits and a roaring trade, and
+there is nothing like a roaring trade for engendering latitudinarians.
+The effect of many possessions, especially if they be newly acquired, in
+slackening moral vigour, is a proverb. Our new wealth is hardly leavened
+by any tradition of public duty such as lingers among the English
+nobles, nor as yet by any common custom of devotion to public causes,
+such as seems to live and grow in the United States. Under such
+conditions, with new wealth come luxury and love of ease and that fatal
+readiness to believe that God has placed us in the best of possible
+worlds, which so lowers men's aims and unstrings their firmness of
+purpose. Pleasure saps high interests, and the weakening of high
+interests leaves more undisputed room for pleasure. Management and
+compromise appear among the permitted arts, because they tend to
+comfort, and comfort is the end of ends, comprehending all ends. Not
+truth is the standard, but the politic and the reputable. Are we to
+suppose that it is firm persuasion of the greater scripturalness of
+episcopacy that turns the second generation of dissenting manufacturers
+in our busy Lancashire into churchmen? Certainly such conversions do no
+violence to the conscience of the proselyte, for he is intellectually
+indifferent, a spiritual neuter.
+
+That brings us to the root of the matter, the serious side of a
+revolution that in this social consequence is so unspeakably ignoble.
+This root of the matter is the slow transformation now at work of the
+whole spiritual basis of thought. Every age is in some sort an age of
+transition, but our own is characteristically and cardinally an epoch of
+transition in the very foundations of belief and conduct. The old hopes
+have grown pale, the old fears dim; strong sanctions are become weak,
+and once vivid faiths very numb. Religion, whatever destinies may be in
+store for it, is at least for the present hardly any longer an organic
+power. It is not that supreme, penetrating, controlling, decisive part
+of a man's life, which it has been, and will be again. The work of
+destruction is all the more perturbing to timorous spirits, and more
+harassing even to doughtier spirits, for being done impalpably,
+indirectly, almost silently and as if by unseen hands. Those who dwell
+in the tower of ancient faiths look about them in constant
+apprehension, misgiving, and wonder, with the hurried uneasy mien of
+people living amid earthquakes. The air seems to their alarms to be full
+of missiles, and all is doubt, hesitation, and shivering expectancy.
+Hence a decisive reluctance to commit one's self. Conscience has lost
+its strong and on-pressing energy, and the sense of personal
+responsibility lacks sharpness of edge. The native hue of spiritual
+resolution is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of distracted, wavering,
+confused thought. The souls of men have become void. Into the void have
+entered in triumph the seven devils of Secularity.
+
+And all this hesitancy, this tampering with conviction for fear of its
+consequences, this want of faithful dealing in the highest matters, is
+being intensified, aggravated, driven inwards like a fatal disorder
+toward the vital parts, by the existence of a State Church. While
+thought stirs and knowledge extends, she remains fast moored by ancient
+formularies. While the spirit of man expands in search after new light,
+and feels energetically for new truth, the spirit of the Church is
+eternally entombed within the four corners of acts of parliament. Her
+ministers vow almost before they have crossed the threshold of manhood
+that they will search no more. They virtually swear that they will to
+the end of their days believe what they believe then, before they have
+had time either to think or to know the thoughts of others. They take
+oath, in other words, to lead mutilated lives. If they cannot keep this
+solemn promise, they have at least every inducement that ordinary human
+motives can supply, to conceal their breach of it. The same system which
+begins by making mental indolence a virtue and intellectual narrowness a
+part of sanctity, ends by putting a premium on something too like
+hypocrisy. Consider the seriousness of fastening up in these bonds some
+thousands of the most instructed and intelligent classes in the country,
+the very men who would otherwise be best fitted from position and
+opportunities for aiding a little in the long, difficult, and plainly
+inevitable work of transforming opinion. Consider the waste of
+intelligence, and what is assuredly not less grave, the positive
+dead-weight and thick obstruction, by which an official hierarchy so
+organised must paralyse mental independence in a community.
+
+We know the kind of man whom this system delights to honour. He was
+described for us five and thirty years ago by a master hand. 'Mistiness
+is the mother of wisdom. A man who can set down half a dozen general
+propositions which escape from destroying one another only by being
+diluted into truisms; who can hold the balance between opposites so
+skilfully as to do without fulcrum or beam; who never enunciates a truth
+without guarding himself against being supposed to exclude the
+contradictory,--who holds that scripture is the only authority, yet that
+the Church is to be deferred to, that faith only justifies, yet that it
+does not justify without works, that grace does not depend upon the
+sacraments, yet is not given without them, that bishops are a divine
+ordinance, yet that those who have them not are in the same religious
+condition as those who have,--this is your safe man and the hope of the
+Church; this is what the Church is said to want, not party men, but
+sensible, temperate, sober, well-judging persons, to guide it through
+the channel of no meaning, between the Scylla and Charybdis of Aye and
+No.'[4] The writer then thought that such a type could not endure, and
+that the Church must become more real. On the contrary, her reality is
+more phantom-like now than it was then. She is the sovereign pattern and
+exemplar of management, of the triumph of the political method in
+spiritual things, and of the subordination of ideas to the _status quo_.
+
+It is true that all other organised priesthoods are also bodies which
+move within formularies even more inelastic than those of the
+Establishment. But then they have not the same immense social power, nor
+the same temptations to make all sacrifices to preserve it. They affect
+the intellectual temper of large numbers of people, but the people whom
+they affect are not so strongly identified with the greater organs of
+the national life. The State Church is bound up in the minds of the most
+powerful classes with a given ordering of social arrangements, and the
+consequence of this is that the teachers of the Church have reflected
+back upon thorn a sense of responsibility for these arrangements, which
+obscures their spirituality, clogs their intellectual energy and mental
+openness, and turns them into a political army of obstruction to new
+ideas. They feel themselves to a certain extent discharged from the
+necessity of recognising the tremendous conflict in the region of belief
+that goes on around them, just as if they were purely civil
+administrators, concerned only with the maintenance of the present
+order. None of this is true of the private Churches. Their teachers and
+members regard belief as something wholly independent of the civil
+ordering of things. However little enlightened in some respects, however
+hostile to certain of the ideas by which it is sought to replace their
+own, they are at least representatives of the momentous principle of our
+individual responsibility for the truth of our opinions. They may bring
+their judgments to conclusions that are less in accord with modern
+tendencies than those of one or two schools that still see their way to
+subscribing Anglican articles and administering Anglican rites. At any
+rate, they admit that the use of his judgment is a duty incumbent on the
+individual, and a duty to be discharged without reference to any
+external considerations whatever, political or otherwise. This is an
+elevating, an exhilarating principle, however deficiencies of culture
+may have narrowed the sphere of its operations. It is because a State
+Church is by its very conception hostile to such a principle, that we
+are justified in counting it apart from the private Churches with all
+their faults, and placing it among the agencies that weaken the vigour
+of a national conscience and check the free play and access of
+intellectual light.
+
+Here we may leave the conditions that have made an inquiry as to some of
+the limits of compromise, which must always be an interesting and
+important subject, one of especial interest and importance to ourselves
+at present. Is any renovation of the sacredness of principle a possible
+remedy for some of these elements of national deterioration? They will
+not disappear until the world has grown into possession of a new
+doctrine. When that comes, all other good things will follow. What we
+have to remember is that the new doctrine itself will never come, except
+to spirits predisposed to their own liberation. Our day of small
+calculations and petty utilities must first pass away; our vision of the
+true expediencies must reach further and deeper; our resolution to
+search for the highest verities, to give up all and follow them, must
+first become the supreme part of ourselves.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: See below, ch. iii.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _System of Logic_, bk. vi. ch. xi.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Bagehot.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Dr. J.H. Newman's _Essays Critical and Historical_, vol. i.
+p. 301.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR.
+
+ _Das Wahre fördert; aus dem Irrthum entwickelt
+ sich nichts, er verwickeltuns nur.--_
+ GOETHE.
+
+At the outset of an inquiry how far existing facts ought to be allowed
+to overrule ideas and principles that are at variance with them, a
+preliminary question lies in our way, about which it may be well to say
+something. This is the question of a dual doctrine. In plainer words,
+the question whether it is expedient that the more enlightened classes
+in a community should upon system not only possess their light in
+silence, but whether they should openly encourage a doctrine for the
+less enlightened classes which they do not believe to be true for
+themselves, while they regard it as indispensably useful in the case of
+less fortunate people. An eminent teacher tells us how after he had
+once succeeded in presenting the principle of Necessity to his own mind
+in a shape which seemed to bring with it all the advantages of the
+principle of Free Will, he 'no longer suffered under the burden so heavy
+to one who aims at being a reformer in opinions, of thinking one
+doctrine true, and the contrary doctrine morally beneficial.'[5] The
+discrepancy which this writer thought a heavy burden has struck others
+as the basis of a satisfactory solution.
+
+ Nil dulcius est bene quam munita tenere
+ Edita doctrina sapientum templa serena,
+ Despicere unde queas alios passimque videre
+ Errare atque viam palantes quaerere vitae.
+
+The learned are to hold the true doctrine; the unlearned are to be
+taught its morally beneficial contrary. 'Let the Church,' it has been
+said, 'admit two descriptions of believers, those who are for the
+letter, and those who hold by the spirit. At a certain point in rational
+culture, belief in the supernatural becomes for many an impossibility;
+do not force such persons to wear a cowl of lead. Do not you meddle with
+what we teach or write, and then we will not dispute the common people
+with you; do not contest our place in the school and the academy, and
+then we will surrender to your hands the country school.'[6] This is
+only a very courageous and definite way of saying what a great many less
+accomplished persons than M. Renan have silently in their hearts, and in
+England quite as extensively as in France. They do not believe in hell,
+for instance, but they think hell a useful fiction for the lower
+classes. They would deeply regret any change in the spirit or the
+machinery of public instruction which would release the lower classes
+from so wholesome an error. And as with hell, so with other articles of
+the supernatural system; the existence of a Being who will distribute
+rewards and penalties in a future state, the permanent sentience of each
+human personality, the vigilant supervision of our conduct, as well as
+our inmost thoughts and desires, by the heavenly powers; and so forth.
+
+Let us discuss this matter impersonally, without reference to our own
+opinions and without reference to the evidence for or against their
+truth. I am not speaking now of those who hold all these ideas to be
+certainly true, or highly probable, and who at the same time
+incidentally insist on the great usefulness of such ideas in confirming
+morality and producing virtuous types of character. With such persons,
+of course, there is no question of a dual doctrine. They entertain
+certain convictions themselves, and naturally desire to have their
+influence extended over others. The proposition which we have to
+consider is of another kind. It expresses the notions of those who--to
+take the most important kind of illustration--think untrue the popular
+ideas of supernatural interference in our obscure human affairs; who
+think untrue the notion of the prolongation of our existence after death
+to fulfil the purpose of the supernatural powers; or at least who think
+them so extremely improbable that no reasonable man or woman, once
+awakened to a conviction of this improbability, would thenceforth be
+capable of receiving effective check or guidance from beliefs, that
+would have sunk slowly down to the level of doubtful guesses. We have
+now to deal with those who while taking this view of certain doctrines,
+still declare them to be indispensable for restraining from anti-social
+conduct all who are not acute or instructed enough to see through them.
+In other words, they think error useful, and that it may be the best
+thing for society that masses of men should cheat and deceive themselves
+in their most fervent aspirations and their deepest assurances. This is
+the furthest extreme to which the empire of existing facts over
+principles can well be imagined to go. It lies at the root of every
+discussion upon the limits which separate lawful compromise or
+accommodation from palpable hypocrisy.
+
+It will probably be said that according to the theory of the school of
+which M. Renan is the most eloquent representative, the common people
+are not really cheating themselves or being cheated. Indeed M. Renan
+himself has expatiated on the charm of seeing figures of the ideal in
+the cottages of the poor, images representing no reality, and so forth.
+'What a delight,' he cries, 'for the man who is borne down by six days
+of toil to come on the seventh to rest upon his knees, to contemplate
+the tall columns, a vault, arches, an altar; to listen to the chanting,
+to hear moral and consoling words!'[7] The dogmas which criticism
+attacks are not for these poor people 'the object of an explicit
+affirmation,' and therefore there is no harm in them; 'it is the
+privilege of pure sentiment to be invulnerable, and to play with poison
+without being hurt by it.' In other words, the dogmas are false, but the
+liturgy, as a performance stirring the senses of awe, reverence,
+susceptibility to beauty of various kinds, appeals to and satisfies a
+sentiment that is both true and indispensable in the human mind. More
+than this, in the two or three supreme moments of life to which men look
+forward and on which they look back,--at birth, at the passing of the
+threshold into fulness of life, at marriage, at death,--the Church is
+present to invest the hour with a certain solemn and dignified charm.
+That is the way in which the instructed are to look at the services of a
+Church, after they have themselves ceased to believe its faith, us a
+true account of various matters which it professes to account for
+truly.
+
+It will be perceived that this is not exactly the ground of those who
+think a number of what they confess to be untruths, wholesome for the
+common people for reasons of police, and who would maintain churches on
+the same principle on which they maintain the county constabulary. It is
+a psychological, not a political ground. It is on the whole a more true,
+as well as a far more exalted position. The human soul, they say, has
+these lovely and elevating aspirations; not to satisfy them is to leave
+man a dwarfed creature. Why quarrel with a system that leaves you to
+satisfy them in the true way, and does much to satisfy thorn in a false
+but not very harmful way among those who unfortunately have to sit in
+the darkness of the outer court?
+
+This is not a proper occasion for saying anything about the adequateness
+of the catholic, or any other special manner of fostering and solacing
+the religious impulses of men. We have to assume that the instructed
+class believe the catholic dogmas to be untrue, and yet wishes the
+uninstructed to be handed over to a system that reposes on the theory
+that these dogmas are superlatively true. What then is to be said of the
+tenableness of such a position? To the plain man it looks like a
+deliberate connivance at a plan for the propagation of error--assuming,
+as I say, for the moment, that these articles of belief are erroneous
+and contrary to fact and evidence. Ah, but, we are told, the people make
+no explicit affirmation of dogma; that does nothing for them; they are
+indifferent to it. A great variety of things might be said to this
+statement. We might ask, for instance, whether the people ever made an
+explicit affirmation of dogma in the past, or whether it was always the
+hazy indifferent matter which it is supposed to be now. If so, whether
+we shall not have to re-cast our most fundamental notions of the way in
+which Christian civilisation has been evolved. If not, and if people did
+once explicitly affirm dogma, when exactly was it that they ceased to do
+so?
+
+The answers to these questions would all go to show that at the time
+when religion was the great controlling and organising force in conduct,
+the prime elemental dogmas were accepted with the most vivid conviction
+of reality. I do not pretend that the common people followed all the
+inferences which the intellectual subtlety of the master-spirits of
+theology drew so industriously from the simple premisses of scripture
+and tradition. But assuredly dogma was at the foundation of the whole
+structure. When did it cease to be so? How was the structure supported,
+after you had altered this condition of things?
+
+Apart from this historic issue, the main question one would like to put
+to the upholder of duality of religion on this plea, is the simple one,
+whether the power of the ceremonial which charms him so much is not
+actually at this moment drawn wholly from dogma and the tradition of
+dogma; whether its truth is not explicitly affirmed to the unlettered
+man, and whether the inseparable connection between the dogma and the
+ceremonial is not constantly impressed upon him by the spiritual
+teachers to whom the dual system hands him and his order over for all
+time? If any one of those philosophic critics will take the trouble to
+listen to a few courses of sermons at the present day, and the remark
+applies not less to protestant than to catholic churches, he will find
+that instead of that '_parole morale et consolante_' which is so
+soothing to think of, the pulpit is now the home of fervid controversy
+and often exacerbated declamation in favour of ancient dogma against
+modern science. We do not say whether this is or is not the wisest line
+for the clergy to follow. We only press the fact against those who wish
+us to believe that dogma counts for nothing in the popular faith, and
+that therefore we need not be uneasy as to its effects.
+
+Next, one would say to those who think that all will go well if you
+divide the community into two classes, one privileged to use its own
+mind, the other privileged to have its mind used by a priesthood, that
+they overlook the momentous circumstance of these professional upholders
+of dogmatic systems being also possessed of a vast social influence in
+questions that naturally belong to another sphere. There is hardly a
+single great controversy in modern politics, where the statesman does
+not find himself in immediate contact with the real or supposed
+interests, and with the active or passive sentiment, of one of these
+religious systems. Therefore if the instructed or intellectually
+privileged class cheerfully leave the field open to men who, _ex
+hypothesi_, are presumed to be less instructed, narrower, more
+impenetrable by reason, and the partisans of the letter against the
+spirit, then this result follows. They are deliberately strengthening
+the hands of the persons least fitted by judgment, experience, and
+temper, for using such power rightly. And they are strengthening them
+not merely in dealing with religious matters, but, what is of more
+importance, in dealing with an endless variety of the gravest social and
+political matters. It is impossible to map out the exact dimensions of
+the field in which a man shall exercise his influence, and to which he
+is to be rigorously confined. Give men influence in one matter,
+especially if that be such a matter as religious belief and ceremonial,
+and it is simply impossible that this influence shall not extend with
+more or less effect over as much of the whole sphere of conduct as they
+may choose surrendering the common people without dispute or effort to
+organised priesthoods for religious purposes, you would be inevitably
+including a vast number of other purposes in the self-same destination.
+This does not in the least prejudice practical ways of dealing with
+certain existing circumstances, such as the propriety or justice of
+allowing a catholic people to have a catholic university. It is only an
+argument against erecting into a complete and definite formula the
+division of a society into two great castes, the one with a religion of
+the spirit, the other with a creed of the letter.
+
+Again, supposing that the enlightened caste were to consent to abandon
+the common people to what are assumed to be lower and narrower forms of
+truth,--which is after all little more than a fine phrase for forms of
+falsehood,--what can be more futile than to suppose that such a
+compromise will be listened to for a single moment by a caste whose
+first principle is that they are the possessors and ministers, not of an
+inferior or superior form of truth, but of the very truth itself,
+absolute, final, complete, divinely sent, infallibly interpreted? The
+disciples of the relative may afford to compromise. The disciples of the
+absolute, never.
+
+We shall see other objections as we go on to this state of things, in
+which a minority holds true opinions and abandons the majority to false
+ones. At the bottom of the advocacy of a dual doctrine slumbers the idea
+that there is no harm in men being mistaken, or at least only so little
+harm as is more than compensated for by the marked tranquillity in which
+their mistake may wrap them. This is not an idea merely that
+intellectual error is a pathological necessity of the mind, no more to
+be escaped than the pathological necessities which afflict and finally
+dissolve the body. That is historically true. It is an idea that error
+somehow in certain stages, where there is enough of it, actually does
+good, like vaccination. Well, the thesis of the present chapter is that
+erroneous opinion or belief, in itself and as such, can never be useful.
+This may seem a truism which everybody is willing to accept without
+demur. But it is one of those truisms which persons habitually forget
+and repudiate in practice, just because they have never made it real to
+themselves by considering and answering the objections that may be
+brought against it. We see this repudiation before our eyes every day.
+Thus for instance, parents theoretically take it for granted that error
+cannot be useful, while they are teaching or allowing others to teach
+their children what they, the parents, believe to be untrue. Thus
+husbands who think the common theology baseless and unmeaning, are found
+to prefer that their wives shall not question this theology nor neglect
+its rites. These are only two out of a hundred examples of the daily
+admission that error may be very useful to other people. I need hardly
+say that to deny this, as the commonplace to which this chapter is
+devoted denies it, is a different thing from denying the expediency of
+letting errors alone at a given time. That is another question, to be
+discussed afterwards. You may have a thoroughly vicious and dangerous
+enemy, and yet it may be expedient to choose your own hour and occasion
+for attacking him. 'The passage from error to truth,' in the words of
+Condorcet, 'may be accompanied by certain evils. Every great change
+necessarily brings some of these in its train; and though they may be
+always far below the evil you are for destroying, yet it ought to do
+what is possible to diminish them. It is not enough to do good; one must
+do it in a good way. No doubt we should destroy all errors, but as it is
+impossible to destroy them all in an instant, we should imitate a
+prudent architect who, when obliged to destroy a building, and knowing
+how its parts are united together, sets about its demolition in such a
+way as to prevent its fall from being dangerous.'[8]
+
+Those, let us note by the way, who are accustomed to think the moral
+tone of the eighteenth century low and gross compared with that of the
+nineteenth, may usefully contrast these just and prudent word? of
+caution in extirpating error, with M. Renan's invitation to men whom he
+considers wrong in their interpretation of religion, to plant their
+error as widely and deeply as they can; and who are moreover themselves
+supposed to be demoralised, or else they would not be likely to
+acquiesce in a previous surrender of the universities to men whom they
+think in mortal error. Apart however from M. Renan, Condorcet's words
+merely assert the duty of setting to work to help on the change from
+false to true opinions with prudence, and this every sensible man
+admits. Our position is that in estimating the situation, in counting up
+and balancing the expediencies of an attack upon error at this or that
+point, nothing is to be set to the credit of error as such, nor is there
+anything in its own operations or effects to entitle it to a moment's
+respite. Every one would admit this at once in the case of physical
+truths, though there are those who say that some of the time spent in
+the investigation of physical truths might be more advantageously
+devoted to social problems. But in the case of moral and religious
+truths or errors, people, if they admit that nothing is to be set to the
+credit of error as such, still constantly have a subtle and practically
+mischievous confusion in their minds between the possible usefulness of
+error, and the possible expediency of leaving it temporarily
+undisturbed. What happens in consequence of such a confusion is this.
+Men leave error undisturbed, because they accept in a loose way the
+proposition that a belief may be 'morally useful without being
+intellectually sustainable,' They disguise their own dissent from
+popular opinions, because they regard such opinions as useful to other
+people. We are not now discussing the case of those who embrace a creed
+for themselves, on the ground that, though they cannot demonstrate its
+truth to the understanding, yet they find it pregnant with moralising
+and elevating characteristics. We are thinking of a very different
+attitude--that, namely, of persons who believe a creed to be not more
+morally useful than it is intellectually sustainable, so far as they
+themselves are concerned. To them it is pure and uncompensated error.
+Yet from a vague and general idea that what is useless error to them may
+be useful to others, they insist on doing their best to perpetuate the
+system which spreads and consecrates the error. And how do they settle
+the question? They reckon up the advantages, and forget the drawbacks.
+They detect and dwell on one or two elements of utility in the false
+belief or the worn-out institution, and leave out of all account the
+elements that make in the other direction.
+
+Considering how much influence this vague persuasion has in encouraging
+a well-meaning hypocrisy in individuals, and a profound stagnation in
+societies, it may be well to examine the matter somewhat generally. Let
+us try to measure the force of some of the most usual pleas for error.
+
+I. A false opinion, it may be said, is frequently found to have
+clustering around it a multitude of excellent associations, which do far
+more good than the false opinion that supports them, does harm. In the
+middle ages, for instance, there was a belief that a holy man had the
+gift of routing demons, of healing the sick, and of working divers other
+miracles. Supposing that this belief was untrue, supposing that it was
+an error to attribute the sudden death of an incredible multitude of
+troublesome flies in a church to the fact of Saint Bernard having
+excommunicated them, what then? The mistaken opinion was still
+associated with a deep reverence for virtue and sanctity, and this was
+more valuable, than the error of the explanation of the death of the
+flies was noxious or degrading.
+
+The answer to this seems to be as follows. First, in making false
+notions the proofs or close associates of true ones, you are exposing
+the latter to the ruin which awaits the former. For example, if you have
+in the minds of children or servants associated honesty, industry,
+truthfulness, with the fear of hell-fire, then supposing this fear to
+become extinct in their minds,--which, being unfounded in truth, it is
+in constant risk of doing--the virtues associated with it are likely to
+be weakened exactly in proportion as that association was strong.
+
+Second, for all good habits in thought or conduct there are good and
+real reasons in the nature of things. To leave such habits attached to
+false opinions is to lessen the weight of these natural or spontaneous
+reasons, and so to do more harm in the long run than effacement of them
+seems for a time to do good. Most excellences in human character have a
+spontaneous root in our nature. Moreover if they had not, and where they
+have not, there is always a valid and real external defence for them.
+The unreal defence must be weaker than the real one, and the
+substitution of a weak for a strong defence, where both are to be had,
+is not useful but the very opposite.
+
+II. It is true, the objector would probably continue, that there is a
+rational defence for all excellences of conduct, as there is for all
+that is worthy and fitting in institutions. But the force of a rational
+defence lies in the rationality of the man to whom it is proffered. The
+arguments which persuade one trained in scientific habits of thought,
+only touch persons of the same kind. Character is not all pure reason.
+That fitness of things which you pronounce to be the foundation of good
+habits, may be borne in upon men, and may speak to them, through other
+channels than the syllogism. You assume a community of highly-trained
+wranglers and proficient sophisters. The plain fact is that, for the
+mass of men, use and wont, rude or gracious symbols, blind custom,
+prejudices, superstitions,--however erroneous in themselves, however
+inadequate to the conveyance of the best truth,--are the only safe
+guardians of the common virtues. In this sense, then, error may have its
+usefulness.
+
+A hundred years ago this apology for error was met by those high-minded
+and interesting men, the French believers in human perfectibility, with
+their characteristic dogma,--of which Rousseau was the ardent
+expounder,--that man is born with a clear and unsophisticated spirit,
+perfectly able to discern all the simple truths necessary for common
+conduct by its own unaided light. His motives are all pure and unselfish
+and his intelligence is unclouded, until priests and tyrants mutilate
+the one and corrupt the other. We who have the benefit of the historic
+method, and have to take into account the medium that surrounds a human
+creature the moment it comes into the world, to say nothing of all the
+inheritance from the past which it brings within it into the world at
+the same moment, cannot take up this ground. We cannot maintain that
+everybody is born with light enough to see the rational defences of
+things for himself, without the education of institutions. What we do
+maintain is--and this is the answer to the plea for error at present
+under consideration--that whatever impairs the brightness of such light
+as a man has, is not useful but hurtful. Our reply to those who contend
+for the usefulness of error on the ground of the comparative impotence
+of rationality over ordinary minds, is something of this kind.
+Superstition, blind obedience to custom, and the other substitutes for a
+right and independent use of the mind, may accidentally and in some few
+respects impress good ideas upon persons who are too darkened to accept
+those ideas on their real merits. But then superstition itself is the
+main cause of this very darkness. To hold error is in so far to foster
+erroneous ways of thinking on all subjects; is to make the intelligence
+less and less ready to receive truth in all matters whatever. Men are
+made incapable of perceiving the rational defences, and of feeling
+rational motives, for good habits,--so far as they are thus
+incapable,--by the very errors which we are asked silently to
+countenance as useful substitutes for right reason. 'Erroneous motives,'
+as Condorcet has expressed this matter, 'have an additional drawback
+attached to them, the habit which they strengthen of reasoning ill. The
+more important the subject on which you reason ill, and the more you
+busy yourself about it, by so much the more dangerous do the influences
+of such a habit become. It is especially on subjects analogous to that
+on which you reason wrongly, or which you connect with it by habit, that
+such a defect extends most powerfully and most rapidly. Hence it is
+extremely hard for the man who believes himself obliged to conform in
+his conduct to what he considers truths useful to men, but who
+attributes the obligation to erroneous motives, to reason very correctly
+on the truths themselves; the more attention he pays to such motives,
+and the more importance he comes to attach to them, the more likely he
+will be to go wrong.'[9] So, in short, superstition does an immense harm
+by enfeebling rational ways of thinking; it does a little good by
+accidentally endorsing rational conclusions in one or two matters. And
+yet, though the evil which it is said to repair is a trifle beside the
+evil which it is admitted to inflict, the balance of expediencies is
+after all declared to be such as to warrant us in calling errors useful!
+
+III. A third objection now presents itself to me, which I wish to state
+as strongly as possible. 'Even if a false opinion cannot in itself be
+more useful than a true one, whatever good habits may seem to be
+connected with it, yet,' it may be contended, 'relatively to the general
+mental attitude of a set of men, to their other notions and maxims, the
+false opinion may entail less harm than would be wrought by its mere
+demolition. There are false opinions so intimately bound up with the
+whole way of thinking and feeling, that to introduce one or two detached
+true opinions in their stead, would, even if it were possible, only
+serve to break up that coherency of character and conduct which it is
+one of the chief objects of moralists and the great art of living to
+produce. For a true opinion does not necessarily bring in its train all
+the other true opinions that are logically connected with it. On the
+contrary, it is only too notorious a fact in the history of belief, that
+not merely individuals but whole societies are capable of holding at one
+and the same time contradictory opinions and mutually destructive
+principles. On the other hand, neither does a false opinion involve
+practically all the evil consequences deducible from it. For the results
+of human inconsistency are not all unhappy, and if we do not always act
+up to virtuous principle, no more do we always work out to its remotest
+inference every vicious principle. Not insincerity, but inconsistency,
+has constantly turned the adherents of persecuting precepts into friends
+of tolerant practice.'
+
+'It is a comparatively small thing to persuade a superstitious person to
+abandon this or that article of his superstition. You have no security
+that the rejection of the one article which you have displaced will lead
+to the rejection of any other, and it is quite possible that it may lead
+to all the more fervid an adhesion to what remains behind. Error,
+therefore, in view of such considerations may surely be allowed to have
+at least a provisional utility.'
+
+Now undoubtedly the repudiation of error is not at all the same thing
+as embracing truth. People are often able to see the force of arguments
+that destroy a given opinion, without being able to see the force of
+arguments for the positive opinion that ought to replace it. They can
+only be quite sure of seeing both, when they have acquired not merely a
+conviction that one notion is false and another true, but have
+furthermore exchanged a generally erroneous way of thinking for a
+generally correct way. Hence the truly important object with every one
+who holds opinions which he deems it of the highest moment that others
+should accept, must obviously be to reach people's general ways of
+thinking; to stir their love of truth; to penetrate them with a sense of
+the difference in the quality of evidence; to make them willing to
+listen to criticism and new opinion; and perhaps above all to teach them
+to take ungrudging and daily trouble to clear up in their minds the
+exact sense of the terms they use.
+
+If this be so, a false opinion, like an erroneous motive, can hardly
+have even a provisional usefulness. For how can you attack an erroneous
+way of thinking except in detail, that is to say through the sides of
+this or that single wrong opinion? Each of these wrong opinions is an
+illustration and type, as it is a standing support and abettor, of some
+kind of wrong reasoning, though they are not all on the same scale nor
+all of them equally instructive. It is precisely by this method of
+gradual displacement of error step by step, that the few stages of
+progress which the race has yet traversed, have been actually achieved.
+Even if the place of the erroneous idea is not immediately taken by the
+corresponding true one, or by the idea which is at least one or two
+degrees nearer to the true one, still the removal of error in this
+purely negative way amounts to a positive gain. Why? For the excellent
+reason that it is the removal of a bad element which otherwise tends to
+propagate itself, or even if it fails to do that, tends at the best to
+make the surrounding mass of error more inveterate. All error is what
+physiologists term fissiparous, and in exterminating one false opinion
+you may be hindering the growth of an uncounted brood of false opinions.
+
+Then as to the maintenance of that coherency, interdependence, and
+systematisation of opinions and motives, which is said to make character
+organic, and is therefore so highly prized by some schools of thought.
+No doubt the loosening of this or that part of the fabric of
+heterogeneous origin, which constitutes the character of a man or woman,
+tends to loosen the whole. But do not let us feed ourselves upon
+phrases. This organic coherency, what does it come to? It signifies in a
+general way, to describe it briefly, a harmony between the intellectual,
+the moral, and the practical parts of human nature; an undisturbed
+cooperation between reason, affection, and will; the reason prescribing
+nothing against which the affections revolt, and proscribing nothing
+which they crave; and the will obeying the joint impulses of these two
+directing forces, without liability to capricious or extravagant
+disturbance of their direction. Well, if the reason were perfect in
+information and method, and the affections faultless in their impulse,
+then organic unity of character would be the final consummation of all
+human improvement, and it would be criminal, even if it were possible,
+to undermine a structure of such priceless value. But short of this
+there can be no value in coherency and harmonious consistency as such.
+So long as error is an element in it, then for so long the whole product
+is vitiated. Undeniably and most fortunately, social virtues are found
+side by side with speculative mistakes and the gravest intellectual
+imperfections. We may apply to humanity the idea which, as Hebrew
+students tell us, is imputed in the Talmud to the Supreme Being. _God
+prays_, the Talmud says; and his prayer is this,--'Be it my will that my
+mercy overpower my justice.' And so with men, with or without their
+will, their mercifulness overpowers their logic. And not their
+mercifulness only, but all their good impulses overpower their logic. To
+repeat the words which I have put into the objector's mouth, we do not
+always work out every vicious principle to its remotest inference. What,
+however, is this but to say that in such cases character is saved, not
+by its coherency, but by the opposite; to say not that error is useful,
+but what is a very different thing, that its mischievousness is
+sometimes capable of being averted or minimised?
+
+The apologist may retort that he did not mean answer to the argument
+from coherency of conduct. In measuring utility you have to take into
+account not merely the service rendered to the objects of the present
+hour, but the contribution to growth, progress, and the future. From
+this point of view most of the talk about unity of character is not much
+more than a glorifying of stagnation. It leaves out of sight the
+conditions necessary for the continuance of the unending task of human
+improvement. Now whatever ease may be given to an individual or a
+generation by social or religious error, such error at any rate can
+conduce nothing to further advancement That, at least, is not one of its
+possible utilities.
+
+This is also one of the answers to the following plea. 'Though the
+knowledge of every positive truth is an useful acquisition, this
+doctrine cannot without reservation he applied to negative truth. When
+the only truth ascertainable is that nothing can be known, we do not, by
+this knowledge, gain any new fact by which to guide ourselves.'[10] But
+logical coherency, but a kind of practical everyday coherency, which
+may be open to a thousand abstract objections, yet which still secures
+both to the individual and to society a number of advantages that might
+be endangered by any disturbance of opinion or motive. No doubt, and the
+method and season of chasing erroneous opinions and motives out of the
+mind must always be a matter of much careful and far-seeing
+consideration. Only in the course of such consideration, let us not
+admit the notion in any form that error can have even provisional
+utility. For it is not the error which confers the advantages that we
+desire to preserve, but some true opinion or just motive or high or
+honest sentiment, which exists and thrives and operates in spite of the
+error and in face of it, springing from man's spontaneous and
+unformulated recognition of the real relations of things. This
+recognition is very faint in the beginnings of society. It grows clearer
+and firmer with each step forward. And in a tolerably civilised age it
+has become a force on which you can fairly lean with a considerable
+degree of assurance.
+
+And this leads to the central point of the the negative truth that
+nothing can be known is in fact a truth that guides us. [Transcriber's
+note: sic.] It leads us away from sterile and irreclaimable tracts
+of thought and emotion, and so inevitably compels the energies which
+would otherwise have been wasted, to feel after a more profitable
+direction. By leaving the old guide-marks undisturbed, you may give
+ease to an existing generation, but the present ease is purchased at
+the cost of future growth. To have been deprived of the faith of the
+old dispensation, is the first condition of strenuous endeavour after
+the new.
+
+No doubt history abounds with cases in which a false opinion on moral or
+religious subjects, or an erroneous motive in conduct, has seemed to be
+a stepping-stone to truth. But this is in no sense a demonstration of
+the utility of error. For in all such cases the erroneous opinion or
+motive was far from being wholly erroneous, or wholly without elements
+of truth and reality. If it helped to quicken the speed or mend the
+direction of progress, that must have been by virtue of some such
+elements within it. All that was error in it was pure waste, or worse
+than waste. It is true that the religious sentiment has clothed itself
+in a great number of unworthy, inadequate, depressing, and otherwise
+misleading shapes, dogmatic and liturgic. Yet on the whole the religious
+sentiment has conferred enormous benefits on civilisation. This is no
+proof of the utility of the mistaken direction which these dogmatic or
+liturgic shapes imposed upon it. On the contrary, the effect of the
+false dogmas and enervating liturgies is so much that has to be deducted
+from the advantages conferred by a sentiment in itself valuable and of
+priceless capability.[11]
+
+Yes, it will be urged, but from the historic conditions of the time,
+truth could only be conveyed in erroneous forms, and motives of
+permanent price for humanity could only be secured in these mistaken
+expressions. Here I would again press the point of this necessity for
+erroneous forms and mistaken expressions being, in a great many of the
+most important instances, itself derivative, one among other ill
+consequences of previous moral and religious error. 'It was gravely
+said,' Bacon tells us, 'by some of the prelates in the Council of Trent,
+where the doctrines of the Schoolmen have great sway; that the schoolmen
+were like Astronomers, which did faigne Eccentricks and Epicycles and
+Engines of Orbs to save the Phenomena; though they know there were no
+such Things; and in like manner that the Schoolmen had framed a number
+of subtile and intricate Axioms and Theorems, to save the practice of
+the Church.' This is true of much else besides scholastic axioms and
+theorems. Subordinate error was made necessary and invented, by reason
+of some pro-existent main stock of error, and to save the practice of
+the Church. Thus we are often referred to the consolation which this or
+that doctrine has brought to the human spirit. But what if the same
+system had produced the terror which made absence of consolation
+intolerable? How much of the necessity for expressing the enlarged
+humanity of the Church in the doctrine of purgatory, arose from the
+existence of the older unsoftened doctrine of eternal hell?
+
+Again, how much of this alleged necessity of error, as alloy for the too
+pure metal of sterling truth, is to be explained by the interest which
+powerful castes or corporations have had in preserving the erroneous
+forms, even when they could not resist, or did not wish to resist, their
+impregnation by newer and better doctrine? This interest was not
+deliberately sinister or malignant. It may be more correctly as well as
+more charitably explained by that infirmity of human nature, which makes
+us very ready to believe what it is on other grounds convenient to us to
+believe. Nobody attributes to pure malevolence the heartiness with which
+the great corporation of lawyers, for example, resist the removal of
+superfluous and obstructive forms in their practice; they have come to
+look on such forms as indispensable safeguards. Hence powerful teachers
+and preachers of all kinds have been spontaneously inclined to suppose
+a necessity, which had no real existence, of preserving as much as was
+possible of what we know to be error, even while introducing wholesome
+modification of it. This is the honest, though mischievous, conservatism
+of the human mind. We have no right to condemn our foregoers; far less
+to lavish on them the evil names of impostor, charlatan, and brigand,
+which the zealous unhistoric school of the last century used so
+profusely. But we have a right to say of them, as we say of those who
+imitate their policy now, that their conservatism is no additional proof
+of the utility of error. Least of all is it any justification for those
+who wish to have impressed upon the people a complete system of
+religious opinion which men of culture have avowedly put away. And,
+moreover, the very priests must, I should think, be supposed to have put
+it away also. Else they would hardly be invited deliberately to abdicate
+their teaching functions in the very seats where teaching is of the
+weightiest and most far-spreading influence.
+
+Meanwhile our point is that the reforms in opinion which have been
+effected on the plan of pouring the new wine of truth into the old
+bottles of superstition--though not dishonourable to the sincerity of
+the reformers--are no testimony to even the temporary usefulness of
+error. Those who think otherwise do not look far enough in front of the
+event. They forget the evil wrought by the prolonged duration of the
+error, to which the added particle of truth may have given new vitality.
+They overlook the ultimate enervation that is so often the price paid
+for the temporary exaltation.
+
+Nor, finally, can they know the truths which the error thus prolonged
+has hindered from coming to the birth. A strenuous disputant has
+recently asserted against me that 'the region of the _might have been_
+lies beyond the limits of sane speculation.'[12] It in surely extending
+optimism too far to insist on carrying it back right through the ages.
+To me at any rate the history of mankind is a huge _pis-aller_, just as
+our present society is; a prodigious wasteful experiment, from which a
+certain number of precious results have been extracted, but which is
+not now, nor ever has been at any other time, a final measure of all the
+possibilities of the time. This is not inconsistent with the scientific
+conception of history; it is not to deny the great law that society has
+a certain order of progress; but only to urge that within that, the only
+possible order, there is always room for all kinds and degrees of
+invention, improvement, and happy or unhappy accident. There is no
+discoverable law fixing precisely the more or the less of these; nor how
+much of each of them a community shall meet with, nor exactly when it
+shall meet with them. We have to distinguish between possibility and
+necessity. Only certain steps in advance are possible at a given time;
+but it is not inevitable that those potential advances should all be
+realised. Does anybody suppose that humanity has had the profit of all
+the inventive and improving capacity born into the world? That Turgot,
+for example, was the only man that ever lived who might have done more
+for society than he was allowed to do, and spared society a cataclysm?
+No,--history is a _pis-aller_. It has assuredly not moved without the
+relation of cause and effect; it is a record of social growth and its
+conditions; but it is also a record of interruption and misadventure and
+perturbation. You trace the long chain which has made us what we are in
+this aspect and that. But where are the dropped links that might have
+made all the difference? _Ubi sunt eorum tabulae qui post vota nuncupate
+perierunt_? Where is the fruit of those multitudinous gifts which came
+into the world in untimely seasons? We accept the past for the same
+reason that we accept the laws of the solar system, though, as Comte
+says, 'we can easily conceive them improved in certain respects.' The
+past, like the solar system, is beyond reach of modification at our
+hands, and we cannot help it. But it is surely the mere midsummer
+madness of philosophic complacency to think that we have come by the
+shortest and easiest of all imaginable routes to our present point in
+the march; to suppose that we have wasted nothing, lost nothing, cruelly
+destroyed nothing, on the road. What we have lost is all in the region
+of the 'might have been,' and we are justified in taking this into
+account, and thinking much of it, and in trying to find causes for the
+loss. One of them has been want of liberty for the human intelligence;
+and another, to return to our proper subject, has been the prolonged
+existence of superstition, of false opinions, and of attachment to gross
+symbols, beyond the time when they might have been successfully
+attacked, and would have fallen into decay but for the mistaken
+political notion of their utility. In making a just estimate of this
+utility, if we see reason to believe that these false opinions, narrow
+superstitions, gross symbols, have been an impediment to the free
+exercise of the intelligence and a worthier culture of the emotions,
+then we are justified in placing the unknown loss as a real and most
+weighty item in the account against them.
+
+In short, then, the utmost that can be said on behalf of errors in
+opinion and motive, is that they are inevitable elements in human
+growth. But the inevitable does not coincide with the useful. Pain can
+be avoided by none of the sons of men, yet the horrible and
+uncompensated subtraction which it makes from the value and usefulness
+of human life, is one of the most formidable obstacles to the smoother
+progress of the world. And as with pain, so with error. The moral of our
+contention has reference to the temper in which practically we ought to
+regard false doctrine and ill-directed motive. It goes to show that if
+we have satisfied ourselves on good grounds that the doctrine is false,
+or the motive ill directed, then the only question that we need ask
+ourselves turns solely upon the possibility of breaking it up and
+dispersing it, by methods compatible with the doctrine of liberty. Any
+embarrassment in dealing with it, due to a semi-latent notion that it
+may be useful to some one else is a weakness that hinders social
+progress.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 5: Mill's _Autobiography_ p. 170.]
+
+[Footnote 6: M. Renan's _Réforme Intellectuelle et Morale de la France_,
+p. 98.]
+
+[Footnote 7: _Etudes d'Histoire Religieuse_, Preface, p. xvi.]
+
+[Footnote 8: In 1779 the Academy of Prussia announced this as the
+question for their annual prize essay:--'_S'il est utile au peuple
+d'être trompé_.' They received thirty-three essays; twenty showing that
+it is not useful, thirteen showing that it is. The Academy, with an
+impartiality that caused much amusement in Paris and Berlin, awarded two
+prizes, one to the best proof of the negative answer, another to the
+best proof of the affirmative. See Bartholmess, _Hist. Philosophique de
+l'Académie de Prusse_, i. 281, and ii. 278. Condorcet did not actually
+compete for the prize, but he wrote a very acute piece, suggested by the
+theme, which was printed in 1790. _Oeuv._ v. 343.
+
+To illustrate the common fact of certain currents of thought being in
+the air at given times, we may mention that in 1770 was published the
+posthumous work of another Frenchman, Chesneau du Marsais (1676-1756)
+entitled:--'_Essai sur les Préjugés; ou de l'influence des Opinions sur
+les Moeurs et sur le Bonheur des Hommes_.' The principal prejudices to
+which he refers are classed under Antiquity--Ancestry--Native
+Country--Religion--Respect for Wealth. Some of the reasoning is almost
+verbally identical with Condorcet's. For an account of Du Marsais, see
+D'Alembert, _Oeuv._ iii 481.]
+
+[Footnote 9: _Oeuv._ v. 354.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Mill's _Three Essays on Religion_, p.73. I have offered
+some criticisms on the whole passage in _Critical Miscellanies, Second
+Series_, pp. 300-304.]
+
+[Footnote 11: 'Enfin, supposons pour un instant que le dogme de l'autre
+vie soit de quelqu'utilité, et qu'il retienne vraiment un petit nombre
+d'individus, qu'est-ce que ces foibles avantages comparés à la foule de
+maux que l'on en voir découler? Contre un homme timide que cette idée
+contient, il en est des millions qu'elle ne peut contenir; il en des
+millions qu'elle rend insensés, farouches, fanatiques, inutiles et
+méchants; il en est des millions qu'elle détourne de leurs devoirs
+envers la société; il en est une infinité qu'elle afflige et qu'elle
+trouble, sans aucun bien réel pour leurs associés.--_Système de la
+Nature_, i. xiii.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Sir J.F. Stephen's _Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity_,
+2d. ed., p. 19, _note_.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL SPIRIT.
+
+We have been considering the position of those who would fain divide the
+community into two great castes; the one of thoughtful and instructed
+persons using their minds freely, but guarding their conclusions in
+strict reserve; the other of the illiterate or unreflecting, who should
+have certain opinions and practices taught them, not because they are
+true or are really what their votaries are made to believe them to be,
+but because the intellectual superiors of the community think the
+inculcation of such a belief useful in all cases save their own. Nor is
+this a mere theory. On the contrary, it is a fair description of an
+existing state of things. We have the old _disciplina arcani_ among us
+in as full force as in the primitive church, but with an all-important
+difference. The Christian fathers practised reserve for the sake of
+leading the acolyte the more surely to the fulness of truth. The modern
+economiser keeps back his opinions, or dissembles the grounds of them,
+for the sake of leaving his neighbours the more at their ease in the
+peaceful sloughs of prejudice and superstition and low ideals. We quote
+Saint Paul when he talked of making himself all things to all men, and
+of becoming to the Jews a Jew, and as without the Law to the heathen.
+But then we do so with a view to justifying ourselves for leaving the
+Jew to remain a Jew, and the heathen to remain heathen. We imitate the
+same apostle in accepting old time-worn altars dedicated to the Unknown
+God. We forget that he made the ancient symbol the starting-point of a
+revolutionised doctrine. There is, as anybody can see, a whole world of
+difference between the reserve of sagacious apostleship, on the one
+hand, dealing tenderly with scruple and tearfulness and fine sensibility
+of conscience, and the reserve of intellectual cowardice on the other
+hand, dealing hypocritically with narrow minds in the supposed interests
+of social peace and quietness. The old _disciplina arcani_ signified
+the disclosure of a little light with a view to the disclosure of more.
+The new means the dissimulation of truth with a view to the perpetuation
+of error. Consider the difference between these two fashions of
+compromise, in their effects upon the mind and character of the person
+compromising. The one is fully compatible with fervour and hopefulness
+and devotion to great causes. The other stamps a man with artifice, and
+hinders the free eagerness of his vision, and wraps him about with
+mediocrity,--not always of understanding, but that still worse thing,
+mediocrity of aspiration and purpose.
+
+The coarsest and most revolting shape which the doctrine of conformity
+can assume, and its degrading consequences to the character of the
+conformer, may be conveniently illustrated by a passage in the life of
+Hume. He looked at things in a more practical manner than would find
+favour with the sentimental champions of compromise in nearer times.
+There is a well-known letter of Hume's, in which he recommends a young
+man to become a clergyman, on the ground that it was very hard to got
+any tolerable civil employment, and that as Lord Bute was then all
+powerful, his friend would be certain of preferment. In answer to the
+young man's scruples as to the Articles and the rest, Hume says:--
+
+'It is putting too great a respect on the vulgar and their superstitions
+to pique one's self on sincerity with regard to them. If the thing were
+worthy of being treated gravely, I should tell him [the young man] that
+the Pythian oracle with the approbation of Xenophon advised every one to
+worship the gods--[Greek: nhomô pholeôs]. I wish it were still in my
+power to be a hypocrite in this particular. The common duties of society
+usually require it; and the ecclesiastical profession only adds a little
+more to an innocent dissimulation, or rather simulation, without which
+it is impossible to pass through the world.'[13]
+
+This is a singularly straightforward way of stating a view which
+silently influences a much greater number of men than it is pleasant to
+think of. They would shrink from throwing their conduct into so gross a
+formula. They will lift up their hands at this quotation, so strangely
+blind are we to the hiding-places of our own hearts, even when others
+flash upon them the terrible illumination that comes of calling conduct
+and motives by plain names. Now it is not merely the moral improbity of
+these cases which revolts us--the improbity of making in solemn form a
+number of false statements for the sake of earning a livelihood; of
+saying in order to get money or social position that you accept a number
+of propositions which in fact you utterly reject; of declaring expressly
+that you trust you are inwardly moved to take upon you this office and
+ministration by the Holy Ghost, when the real motive is a desire not to
+miss the chance of making something out of the Earl of Bute. This side
+of such dissimulation is shocking enough. And it is not any more
+shocking to the most devout believer than it is to people who doubt
+whether there be any Holy Ghost or not. Those who no longer place their
+highest faith in powers above and beyond men, are for that very reason
+more deeply interested than others in cherishing the integrity and
+worthiness of man himself. Apart, however, from the immorality of such
+reasoned hypocrisy, which no man with a particle of honesty will
+attempt to blink, there is the intellectual improbity which it brings in
+its train, the infidelity to truth, the disloyalty to one's own
+intelligence. Gifts of understanding are numbed and enfeebled in a man,
+who has once played such a trick with his own conscience as to persuade
+himself that, because the vulgar are superstitious, it is right for the
+learned to earn money by turning themselves into the ministers and
+accomplices of superstition. If he is clever enough to see through the
+vulgar and their beliefs, he is tolerably sure to be clever enough from
+time to time and in his better moments to see through himself. He begins
+to suspect himself of being an impostor. That suspicion gradually unmans
+him when he comes to use his mind in the sphere of his own
+enlightenment. One of really superior power cannot escape these better
+moments and the remorse that they bring. As he advances in life, as his
+powers ought to be coming to fuller maturity and his intellectual
+productiveness to its prime, just in the same degree the increasing
+seriousness of life multiplies such moments and deepens their remorse,
+and so the light of intellectual promise slowly goes out in impotent
+endeavour, or else in taking comfort that much goods are laid up, or,
+what is deadliest of all, in a soulless cynicism.
+
+We do not find out until it is too late that the intellect too, at least
+where it is capable of being exercised on the higher objects, has its
+sensitiveness. It loses its colour and potency and finer fragrance in an
+atmosphere of mean purpose and low conception of the sacredness of fact
+and reality. Who has not observed inferior original power achieving
+greater results even in the intellectual field itself, where the
+superior understanding happens to have been unequally yoked with a
+self-seeking character, over scenting the expedient? If Hume had been in
+the early productive part of his life the hypocrite which he wished it
+were in his power to show himself in its latter part, we may be
+tolerably sure that European philosophy would have missed one of its
+foremost figures. It has been often said that he who begins life by
+stifling his convictions is in a fair way for ending it without any
+convictions to stifle. We may, perhaps, add that he who sets out with
+the notion that the difference between truth and falsehood is a thing of
+no concern to the vulgar, is very likely sooner or later to come to the
+kindred notion that it is not a thing of any supreme concern to himself.
+
+Let thus much have been said as to those who deliberately and knowingly
+sell their intellectual birthright for a mess of pottage, making a
+brazen compromise with what they hold despicable, lest they should have
+to win their bread honourably. Men need to expend no declamatory
+indignation upon them. They have a hell of their own; words can add no
+bitterness to it. It is no light thing to have secured a livelihood on
+condition of going through life masked and gagged. To be compelled, week
+after week, and year after year, to recite the symbols of ancient faith
+and lift up his voice in the echoes of old hopes, with the blighting
+thought in his soul that the faith is a lie, and the hope no more than
+the folly of the crowd; to read hundreds of times in a twelvemonth with
+solemn unction as the inspired word of the Supreme what to him are
+meaningless as the Abracadabras of the conjuror in a booth; to go on to
+the end of his days administering to simple folk holy rites of
+commemoration and solace, when he has in his mind at each phrase what
+dupes are those simple folk and how wearisomely counterfeit their rites:
+and to know through all that this is really to be the one business of
+his prostituted life, that so dreary and hateful a piece of play-acting
+will make the desperate retrospect of his last hours--of a truth here is
+the very [Greek: bdhelygma tês erêmhôseôs], the abomination of
+desolation of the human spirit indeed.
+
+No one will suppose that this is designed for the normal type of priest.
+But it is well to study tendencies in their extreme catastrophe. This is
+only the catastrophe, in one of its many shapes, of the fatal doctrine
+that money, position, power, philanthropy, or any of the thousand
+seductive masks of the pseudo-expedient, may carry a man away from love
+of truth and yet leave him internally unharmed. The depravation that
+follows the trucking for money of intellectual freedom and self-respect,
+attends in its degree each other departure from disinterested following
+of truth, and each other substitution of convenience, whether public or
+private, in its place. And both parties to such a compromise are losers.
+The world which offers gifts and tacitly undertakes to ask no questions
+as to the real state of the timeserver's inner mind, loses no less than
+the timeserver himself who receives the gifts and promises to hold his
+peace. It is as though a society placed penalties on mechanical
+inventions and the exploration of new material resources, and offered
+bounties for the steadiest adherence to all ancient processes in culture
+and production. The injury to wealth in the one case would not be any
+deeper than the injury to morality is in the other.
+
+
+To pass on to less sinister forms of this abnegation of intellectual
+responsibility. In the opening sentences of the first chapter we spoke
+of a wise suspense in forming opinions, a wise reserve in expressing
+them, and a wise tardiness in trying to realise them. Thus we meant to
+mark out the three independent provinces of compromise, each of them
+being the subject of considerations that either do not apply at all to
+the other two, or else apply in a different degree. Disingenuousness or
+self-illusion, arising from a depressing deference to the existing state
+of things, or to what is immediately practicable, or to what other
+people would think of us if they knew our thoughts, is the result of
+compromising truth in the matter of forming and holding opinions.
+Secondly, positive simulation is what comes of an unlawful willingness
+to compromise in the matter of avowing and publishing them. Finally,
+pusillanimity or want of faith is the vice that belongs to unlawful
+compromise in the department of action and realisation. This is not
+merely a division arranged for convenience of discussion. It goes to the
+root of conduct and character, and is the key to the present mood of our
+society. It is always a hardy thing to attempt to throw a complex matter
+into very simple form, but we should say that the want of energy and
+definiteness in contemporary opinions, of which we first complained, is
+due mainly to the following notion; that if a subject is not ripe for
+practical treatment, you and I are therefore entirely relieved from the
+duty of having clear ideas about it. If the majority cling to an
+opinion, why should we ask whether that is the sound and right opinion
+or the reverse? Now this notion, which springs from a confusion of the
+three fields of compromise with one another, quietly reigns almost
+without dispute. The devotion to the practical aspect of truth is in
+such excess, as to make people habitually deny that it can be worth
+while to form an opinion, when it happens at the moment to be incapable
+of realisation, for the reason that there is no direct prospect of
+inducing a sufficient number of persons to share it. 'We are quite
+willing to think that your view is the right one, and would produce all
+the improvements for which you hope; but then there is not the smallest
+chance of persuading the only persons able to carry out such a view; why
+therefore discuss it?' No talk is more familiar to us than this. As if
+the mere possibility of the view being a right one did not obviously
+entitle it to discussion; discussion being the only process by which
+people are likely to be induced to accept it, or else to find good
+grounds for finally dismissing it.
+
+It is precisely because we believe that opinion, and nothing but
+opinion, can effect great permanent changes, that we ought to be
+careful to keep this most potent force honest, wholesome, fearless, and
+independent. Take the political field. Politicians and newspapers almost
+systematically refuse to talk about a new idea, which is not capable of
+being at once embodied in a bill, and receiving the royal assent before
+the following August. There is something rather contemptible, seen from
+the ordinary standards of intellectual integrity, in the position of a
+minister who waits to make up his mind whether a given measure, say the
+disestablishment of the Irish Church, is in itself and on the merits
+desirable, until the official who runs diligently up and down the
+backstairs of the party, tells him that the measure is practicable and
+required in the interests of the band. On the one hand, a leader is
+lavishly panegyrised for his highmindedness, in suffering himself to be
+driven into his convictions by his party. On the other, a party is
+extolled for its political tact, in suffering itself to be forced out of
+its convictions by its leader. It is hard to decide which is the more
+discreditable and demoralising sight. The education of chiefs by
+followers, and of followers by chiefs, into the abandonment in a month
+of the traditions of centuries or the principles of a lifetime may
+conduce to the rapid and easy working of the machine. It certainly marks
+a triumph of the political spirit which the author of _The Prince_ might
+have admired. It is assuredly mortal to habits of intellectual
+self-respect in the society which allows itself to be amused by the
+cajolery and legerdemain and self-sophistication of its rulers.
+
+Of course there are excellent reasons why a statesman immersed in the
+actual conduct of affairs, should confine his attention to the work
+which his hands find to do. But the fact that leading statesmen are of
+necessity so absorbed in the tasks of the hour furnishes all the better
+reason why as many other people as possible should busy themselves in
+helping to prepare opinion for the practical application of unfamiliar
+but weighty and promising suggestions, by constant and ready discussion
+of them upon their merits. As a matter of fact it is not the men most
+occupied who are usually most deaf to new ideas. It is the loungers of
+politics, the quidnuncs, gossips, bustling idlers, who are most
+industrious in stifling discussion by protests against the waste of
+time and the loss of force involved in talking about proposals which are
+not exactly ready to be voted on. As it is, everybody knows that
+questions are inadequately discussed, or often not discussed at all, on
+the ground that the time is not yet come for their solution. Then when
+some unforeseen perturbation, or the natural course of things, forces on
+the time for their resolution, they are settled in a slovenly,
+imperfect, and often downright vicious manner, from the fact that
+opinion has not been prepared for solving them in an efficient and
+perfect manner. The so-called settlement of the question of national
+education is the most recent and most deplorable illustration of what
+comes of refusing to examine ideas alleged to be impracticable. Perhaps
+we may venture to prophesy that the disendowment of the national church
+will supply the next illustration on an imposing scale. Gratuitous
+primary instruction, and the redistribution of electoral power, are
+other matters of signal importance, which comparatively few men will
+consent to discuss seriously and patiently, and for our indifference to
+which we shall one day surely smart. A judicious and cool writer has
+said that 'an opinion gravely professed by a man of sense and education
+demands always respectful consideration--demands and actually receives
+it from those whose own sense and education give them a correlative
+right; and whoever offends against this sort of courtesy may fairly be
+deemed to have forfeited the privileges it secures.'[14] That is the
+least part of the matter. The serious mischief is the eventual
+miscarriage and loss and prodigal waste of good ideas.
+
+The evil of which we have been speaking comes of not seeing the great
+truth, that it is worth while to take pains to find out the best way of
+doing a given task, even if you have strong grounds for suspecting that
+it will ultimately be done in a worse way. And so also in spheres of
+thought away from the political sphere, it is worth while 'to scorn
+delights and live laborious days' in order to make as sure as we can of
+having the best opinion, even if we know that this opinion has an
+infinitely small chance of being speedily or ever accepted by the
+majority, or by anybody but ourselves. Truth and wisdom have to bide
+their time, and then take their chance after all. The most that the
+individual can do is to seek them for himself, even if he seek alone.
+And if it is the most, it is also the least. Yet in our present mood we
+seem not to feel this. We misunderstand the considerations which should
+rightly lead us in practice to surrender some of what we desire, in
+order to secure the rest; and rightly make us acquiesce in a second-best
+course of action, in order to avoid stagnation or retrogression. We
+misunderstand all this, and go on to suppose that there are the same
+grounds why we should in our own minds acquiesce in second-best
+opinions; why we should mix a little alloy of conventional expression
+with the too fine ore of conviction; why we should adopt beliefs that we
+suspect in our hearts to be of more than equivocal authenticity, but
+into whose antecedents we do not greatly care to inquire, because they
+stand so well with the general public. This is compromise or economy or
+management of the first of the three kinds of which we are talking. It
+is economy applied to the formation of opinion; compromise or management
+in making up one's mind.
+
+The lawfulness or expediency of it turns mainly, as with the other two
+kinds of compromise, upon the relative rights of the majority and the
+minority, and upon the respect which is owing from the latter to the
+former. It is a very easy thing for people endowed with the fanatical
+temperament, or demoralised by the habit of looking at society
+exclusively from the juridical point of view, to insist that no respect
+at all, except the respect that arises from being too weak to have your
+own way, is due from either to the other. This shallow and mischievous
+notion rests either on a misinterpretation of the experience of
+civilised societies, or else on nothing more creditable than an
+arbitrary and unreflecting temper. Those who have thought most carefully
+and disinterestedly about the matter, are agreed that in advanced
+societies the expedient course is that no portion of the community
+should insist on imposing its own will upon any other portion, except in
+matters which are vitally connected with the maintenance of the social
+union. The question where this vital connection begins is open to much
+discussion. The line defining the sphere of legitimate interference may
+be drawn variously, whether at self-regarding acts, or in some other
+condition and element of conduct. Wherever this line may be best taken,
+not only abstract speculation, but the practical and spontaneous tact of
+the world, has decided that there are limits, alike in the interest of
+majority and minority, to the rights of either to disturb the other. In
+other words, it is expedient in certain affairs that the will of the
+majority should be absolutely binding, while in affairs of a different
+order it should count for nothing, or as nearly nothing, as the sociable
+dependence of a man on his fellows will permit.
+
+Our thesis is this. In the positive endeavour to realise an opinion, to
+convert a theory into practice, it may be, and very often is, highly
+expedient to defer to the prejudices of the majority, to move very
+slowly, to bow to the conditions of the _status quo_, to practise the
+very utmost sobriety, self-restraint, and conciliatoriness. The mere
+expression of opinion, in the next place, the avowal of dissent from
+received notions, the refusal to conform to language which implies the
+acceptance of such notions,--this rests on a different footing. Here
+the reasons for respecting the wishes and sentiments of the majority are
+far less strong, though, as we shall presently see, such reasons
+certainly exist, and will weigh with all well-considering men. Finally,
+in the formation of an opinion as to the abstract preferableness of one
+course of action over another, or as to the truth or falsehood or right
+significance of a proposition, the fact that the majority of one's
+contemporaries lean in the other direction is naught, and no more than
+dust in the balance. In making up our minds as to what would be the
+wisest line of policy if it were practicable, we have nothing to do with
+the circumstance that it is not practicable. And in settling with
+ourselves whether propositions purporting to state matters of fact are
+trim or not, we have to consider how far they are conformable to the
+evidence. We have nothing to do with the comfort and solace which they
+would be likely to bring to others or ourselves, if they were taken as
+true.
+
+A nominal assent to this truth will be instantly given even by those who
+in practice systematically disregard it. The difficulty of transforming
+that nominal assent into a reality is enormous in such a community as
+ours. Of all societies since the Roman Republic, and not even excepting
+the Roman Republic, England has been the most emphatically and
+essentially political. She has passed through military phases and
+through religious phases, but they have been transitory, and the great
+central stream of national life has flowed in political channels. The
+political life has been stronger than any other, deeper, wider, more
+persistent, more successful. The wars which built up our far-spreading
+empire were not waged with designs of military conquest; they were
+mostly wars for a market. The great spiritual emancipation of the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries figures in our history partly as an
+accident, partly as an intrigue, partly as a raid of nobles in search of
+spoil. It was hardly until the reformed doctrine became associated with
+analogous ideas and corresponding precepts in government, that people
+felt at home with it, and became really interested in it.
+
+One great tap-root of our national increase has been the growth of
+self-government, or government by deliberative bodies, representing
+opposed principles and conflicting interests. With the system of
+self-government has grown the habit--not of tolerance precisely, for
+Englishmen when in earnest are as little in love with tolerance as
+Frenchmen or any other people, but--of giving way to the will of the
+majority, so long as they remain a majority. This has come to pass for
+the simple reason that, on any other terms, the participation of large
+numbers of people in the control and arrangement of public affairs
+immediately becomes unworkable. The gradual concentration of power in
+the hands of a supreme deliberative body, the active share of so many
+thousands of persons in choosing and controlling its members, the close
+attention with which the proceedings of parliament are followed and
+watched, the kind of dignity that has been lent to parliamentary methods
+by the great importance of the transactions, have all tended in the same
+direction. They have all helped both to fix our strongest and most
+constant interests upon politics, and to ingrain the mental habits
+proper to politics, far more deeply than any other, into our general
+constitution and inmost character.
+
+Thus the political spirit has grown to be the strongest element in our
+national life; the dominant force, extending its influence over all our
+ways of thinking in matters that have least to do with politics, or even
+nothing at all to do with them. There has thus been engendered among us
+the real sense of political responsibility. In a corresponding degree
+has been discouraged, what it is the object of the present chapter to
+urge, the sense of intellectual responsibility. If it were inevitable
+that one of these two should always enfeeble or exclude the other, if
+the price of the mental alacrity and open-mindedness of the age of
+Pericles must always be paid in the political incompetence of the age of
+Demosthenes, it would be hard to settle which quality ought to be most
+eagerly encouraged by those who have most to do with the spiritual
+direction of a community. No doubt the tone of a long-enduring and
+imperial society, such as Rome was, must be conservative, drastic,
+positive, hostile to the death to every speculative novelty. But then,
+after all, the permanence of Roman power was only valuable to mankind
+because it ensured the spread of certain civilising ideas. And these
+ideas had originated among people so characteristically devoid of the
+sovereign faculty of political coherency as were the Greeks and the
+Jews. In the Greeks, it is true, we find not only ideas of the highest
+speculative fertility, but actual political institutions. Still we
+should hardly point to Greek history for the most favourable examples of
+their stable working. Practically and as a matter of history, a society
+is seldom at the same time successfully energetic both in temporals and
+spirituals; seldom prosperous alike in seeking abstract truth and
+nursing the political spirit. There is a decisive preponderance in one
+direction or the other, and the equal balance between free and active
+thinking, and coherent practical energy in a community, seems too hard
+to sustain. The vast military and political strength of Germany, for
+instance, did not exist, and was scarcely anticipated in men's minds,
+during the time of her most strenuous passion for abstract truth and
+deeper learning and new criticism. In France never was political and
+national interest so debilitated, so extinct, as it was during the reign
+of Lewis the Fifteenth: her intellectual interest was never so vivid,
+so fruitful, or so widely felt.
+
+Yet it is at least well, and more than that, it is an indispensable
+condition of social wellbeing, that the divorce between political
+responsibility and intellectual responsibility, between respect for what
+is instantly practicable and search after what is only important in
+thought, should not be too complete and universal. Even if there were no
+other objection, the undisputed predominance of the political spirit has
+a plain tendency to limit the subjects in which the men animated by it
+can take a real interest. All matters fall out of sight, or at least
+fall into a secondary place, which do not bear more or less directly and
+patently upon the material and structural welfare of the community. In
+this way the members of the community miss the most bracing, widening,
+and elevated of the whole range of influences that create great
+characters. First, they lose sincere concern about the larger questions
+which the human mind has raised up for itself. Second, they lose a
+fearless desire to reach the true answers to them, or if no certain
+answers should prove to be within reach, then at any rate to be
+satisfied on good grounds that this is so. Such questions are not
+immediately discerned by commonplace minds to be of social import.
+Consequently they, and all else that is not obviously connected with the
+machinery of society, give way in the public consideration to what is so
+connected with it, in a manner that cannot be mistaken.
+
+Again, even minds that are not commonplace are affected for the worse by
+the same spirit. They are aware of the existence of the great
+speculative subjects and of their importance, but the pressure of the
+political spirit on such men makes them afraid of the conclusions to
+which free inquiry might bring them. Accordingly they abstain from
+inquiry, and dread nothing so much as making up their minds. They see
+reasons for thinking that, if they applied themselves seriously to the
+formation of true opinions in this or that department, they would come
+to conclusions which, though likely to make their way in the course of
+some centuries, are wholly unpopular now, and which might ruin the
+influence of anybody suspected of accepting, or even of so much as
+leaning towards, them. Life, they reflect, is short; missionaries do
+not pass for a very agreeable class, nor martyrs for a very sensible
+class; one can only do a trifling amount of good in the world, at best;
+it is moral suicide to throw away any chance of achieving even that
+trifle; and therefore it is best not only not to express, but not to
+take the trouble to acquire, right views in this quarter or that, and to
+draw clear away from such or such a region of thought, for the sake of
+keeping peace on earth and superficial good will among men.
+
+It would be too harsh to stigmatise such a train of thought as
+self-seeking and hypocritical. It is the natural product of the
+political spirit, which is incessantly thinking of present consequences
+and the immediately feasible. There is nothing in the mere dread of
+losing it, to hinder influence from being well employed, so far as it
+goes. But one can hardly overrate the ill consequences of this
+particular kind of management, this unspoken bargaining with the little
+circle of his fellows which constitutes the world of a man. If he may
+retain his place among them as preacher or teacher, he is willing to
+forego his birthright of free explanation; he consents to be blind to
+the duty which attaches to every intelligent man of having some clear
+ideas, even though only provisional ones, upon the greatest subjects of
+human interest, and of deliberately preferring these, whatever they may
+be, to their opposites. Either an individual or a community is fatally
+dwarfed by any such limitation of the field in which one is free to use
+his mind. For it is a limitation, not prescribed by absorption in one
+set of subjects rather than another, nor by insufficient preparation for
+the discussion of certain subjects, nor by indolence nor incuriousness,
+but solely by apprehension of the conclusions to which such use of the
+mind might bring the too courageous seeker. If there were no other ill
+effect, this kind of limitation would at least have the radical
+disadvantage of dulling the edge of responsibility, of deadening the
+sharp sense of personal answerableness either to a God, or to society,
+or to a man's own conscience and intellectual self-respect.
+
+How momentous a disadvantage this is, we can best know by contemplating
+the characters which have sometimes lighted up the old times. Men were
+then devoutly persuaded that their eternal salvation depended on their
+having true beliefs. Any slackness in finding out which beliefs are the
+true ones would have to be answered for before the throne of Almighty
+God, at the sure risk and peril of everlasting damnation. To what
+quarter in the large historic firmament can we turn our eyes with such
+certainty of being stirred and elevated, of thinking better of human
+life and the worth of those who have been most deeply penetrated by its
+seriousness, as to the annals of the intrepid spirits whom the
+protestant doctrine of indefeasible personal responsibility brought to
+the front in Germany in the sixteenth century, and in England and
+Scotland in the seventeenth? It is not their fanaticism, still less is
+it their theology, which makes the great Puritan chiefs of England and
+the stern Covenanters of Scotland so heroic in our sight. It is the fact
+that they sought truth and ensued it, not thinking of the practicable
+nor cautiously counting majorities and minorities, but each man
+pondering and searching so 'as ever in the great Taskmaster's eye.'
+
+It is no adequate answer to urge that this awful consciousness of a
+divine presence and supervision has ceased to be the living fact it once
+was. That partly explains, but it certainly does not justify, our
+present lassitude. For the ever-wakeful eye of celestial power is not
+the only conceivable stimulus to responsibility. To pass from those grim
+heroes of protestantism to the French philosophers of the last century
+is a wide leap in a hundred respects, yet they too were pricked by the
+oestrus of intellectual responsibility. Their doctrine was dismally
+insufficient, and sometimes, as the present writer has often pointed
+out, it was directly vicious. Their daily lives were surrounded by much
+shabbiness and many meannesses. But, after all, no temptation and no
+menace, no pains or penalties for thinking about certain subjects, and
+no rewards for turning to think about something else, could divert such
+men as Voltaire and Diderot from their alert and strenuous search after
+such truth as could be vouchsafed to their imperfect lights. A
+catastrophe followed, it is true, but the misfortunes which attended it
+were due more to the champions of tradition and authority than to the
+soldiers of emancipation. Even in the case of the latter, they were due
+to an inadequate doctrine, and not at all either to their sense of the
+necessity of free speculation and inquiry, or to the intrepidity with
+which they obeyed the promptings of that ennobling sense.
+
+Perhaps the latest attempt of a considerable kind to suppress the
+political spirit in non-political concerns was the famous movement which
+had its birth a generation ago among the gray quadrangles and ancient
+gardens of Oxford, 'the sweet city with her dreaming spires,' where
+there has ever been so much detachment from the world, alongside of the
+coarsest and fiercest hunt after the grosser prizes of the world. No one
+has much less sympathy with the direction of the tractarian revival than
+the present writer, in whose Oxford days the star of Newman had set, and
+the sun of Mill had risen in its stead. And it is needful to distinguish
+the fervid and strong spirits with whom the revival began from the
+mimics of our later day. No doubt the mere occasion of tractarianism was
+political. Its leaders were alarmed at the designs imputed to the newly
+reformed parliament of disestablishing the Anglican Church. They asked
+themselves the question, which I will put in their own words (_Tract_
+i.)--'Should the government of the country so far forget their God as to
+cut off the Church, to deprive it of its temporal honours and substance,
+on what will you rest the claims to respect and attention which you make
+upon your flock? In answering this question they speedily found
+themselves, as might have been expected, at the opposite pole of thought
+from things political. The whole strength of their appeal to members of
+the Church lay in men's weariness of the high and dry optimism, which
+presents the existing order of things as the noblest possible, and the
+undisturbed way of the majority as the way of salvation. Apostolical
+succession and Sacramentalism may not have been in themselves
+progressive ideas. The spirit which welcomed them had at least the
+virtue of taking away from Caesar the things that are not Caesar's.
+
+Glaring as were the intellectual faults of the Oxford movement, it was
+at any rate a recognition in a very forcible way of the doctrine that
+spiritual matters are not to be settled by the dicta of a political
+council. It acknowledged that a man is answerable at his own peril for
+having found or lost the truth. It was a warning that he must reckon
+with a judge who will not account the _status quo_, nor the convenience
+of a cabinet, a good plea for indolent acquiescence in theological
+error. It ended, in the case of its most vigorous champions, in a final
+and deliberate putting out of the eyes of the understanding. The last
+act of assertion of personal responsibility was a headlong acceptance of
+the responsibility of tradition and the Church. This was deplorable
+enough. But apart from other advantages incidental to the tractarian
+movement, such as the attention which it was the means of drawing to
+history and the organic connection between present and past, it had, we
+repeat, the merit of being an effective protest against what may be
+called the House of Commons' view of human life--a view excellent in its
+place, but most blighting and dwarfing out of it. It was, what every
+sincere uprising of the better spirit in men and women must always be,
+an effective protest against the leaden tyranny of the man of the world
+and the so-called practical person. The man of the world despises
+catholics for taking their religious opinions on trust and being the
+slaves of tradition. As if he had himself formed his own most important
+opinions either in religion or anything else. He laughs at them for
+their superstitious awe of the Church. As if his own inward awe of the
+Greater Number were one whit less of a superstition. He mocks their
+deference for the past. As if his own absorbing deference to the present
+were one tittle better bottomed or a jot more respectable. The modern
+emancipation will profit us very little if the _status quo_ is to be
+fastened round our necks with the despotic authority of a heavenly
+dispensation, and if in the stead of ancient Scriptures we are to accept
+the plenary inspiration of Majorities.
+
+
+It may be urged that if, as it is the object of the present chapter to
+state, there are opinions which a man should form for himself, and which
+it may yet be expedient that he should not only be slow to attempt to
+realise in practical life, but sometimes even slow to express,--then we
+are demanding from him the performance of a troublesome duty, while we
+are taking from him the only motives which could really induce him to
+perform it. If, it may be asked, I am not to carry my notions into
+practice, nor try to induce others to accept them, nor even boldly
+publish them, why in the name of all economy of force should I take so
+much pains in forming opinions which are, after all, on these conditions
+so very likely to come to naught? The answer to this is that opinions do
+not come to naught, even if the man who holds them should never think
+fit to publish them. For one thing, as we shall see in our next
+division, the conditions which make against frank declaration of our
+convictions are of rare occurrence. And, apart from this, convictions
+may well exert a most decisive influence over our conduct, even if
+reasons exist, or seem to exist, for not pressing them on others. Though
+themselves invisible to the outer world, they may yet operate with
+magnetic force both upon other parts of our belief which the outer world
+does see, and upon the whole of our dealings with it. Whether we are
+good or bad, it is only a broken and incoherent fragment of our whole
+personality that even those who are intimate with us, much less the
+common world, can ever come into contact with. The important thing is
+that the personality itself should be as little as possible broken,
+incoherent, and fragmentary; that reasoned and consistent opinions
+should back a firm will, and independent convictions inspire the
+intellectual self-respect and strenuous self-possession which the
+clamour of majorities and the silent yet ever-pressing force of the
+_status quo_ are equally powerless to shake.
+
+Character is doubtless of far more importance than mere intellectual
+opinion. We only too often see highly rationalised convictions in
+persons of weak purpose or low motives. But while fully recognising
+this, and the sort of possible reality which lies at the root of such a
+phrase as 'godless intellect' or 'intellectual devils'--though the
+phrase has no reality when it is used by self-seeking politicians or
+prelates--yet it is well to remember the very obvious truth that
+opinions are at least an extremely important part of character. As it is
+sometimes put, what we think has a prodigiously close connection with
+what we are. The consciousness of having reflected seriously and
+conclusively on important questions, whether social or spiritual,
+augments dignity while it does not lessen humility. In this sense,
+taking thought can and does add a cubit to our stature. Opinions which
+we may not feel bound or even permitted to press on other people, are
+not the less forces for being latent. They shape ideals, and it is
+ideals that inspire conduct. They do this, though from afar, and though
+he who possesses them may not presume to take the world into his
+confidence. Finally, unless a man follows out ideas to their full
+conclusion without fear what the conclusion may be, whether he thinks it
+expedient to make his thought and its goal fully known or not, it is
+impossible that he should acquire a commanding grasp of principles. And
+a commanding grasp of principles, whether they are public or not, is at
+the very root of coherency of character. It raises mediocrity near to a
+level with the highest talents, if those talents are in company with a
+disposition that allows the little prudences of the hour incessantly to
+obscure the persistent laws of things. These persistencies, if a man
+has once satisfied himself of their direction and mastered their
+bearings and application, are just as cogent and valuable a guide to
+conduct, whether he publishes them _ad urbem et orbem_, or esteems them
+too strong meat for people who have, through indurated use and wont,
+lost the courage of facing unexpected truths.
+
+One conspicuous result of the failure to see that our opinions have
+roots to them, independently of the feelings which either majorities or
+other portions of the people around us may entertain about them, is that
+neither political matters nor any other serious branches of opinion,
+engage us in their loftiest or most deep-reaching forms. The advocate of
+a given theory of government or society is so misled by a wrong
+understanding of the practice of just and wise compromise in applying
+it, as to forget the noblest and most inspiring shape which his theory
+can be made to assume. It is the worst of political blunders to insist
+on carrying an ideal set of principles into execution, where others have
+rights of dissent, and those others persons whose assent is as
+indispensable to success, as it is impossible to attain. But to be
+afraid or ashamed of holding such an ideal set of principles in one's
+mind in their highest and most abstract expression, does more than any
+one other cause to stunt or petrify those elements in character to which
+life should owe most of its savour.
+
+If a man happens to be a Conservative, for instance, it is pitiful that
+he should think so much more of what other people on his side or the
+other think, than of the widest and highest of the ideas on which a
+conservative philosophy of life and human society reposes. Such ideas
+are these,--that the social union is the express creation and ordering
+of the Deity: that its movements follow his mysterious and fixed
+dispensation: that the church and the state are convertible terms, and
+each citizen of the latter is an incorporated member of the former: that
+conscience, if perversely and misguidedly self-asserting, has no rights
+against the decrees of the conscience of the nation: that it is the most
+detestable of crimes to perturb the pacific order of society either by
+active agitation or speculative restlessness; that descent from a long
+line of ancestors in great station adds an element of dignity to life,
+and imposes many high obligations. We do not say that these and the
+rest of the propositions which make up the true theoretic basis of a
+conservative creed, are proper for the hustings, or expedient in an
+election address or a speech in parliament. We do say that if these high
+and not unintelligible principles, which alone can give to reactionary
+professions any worth or significance, were present in the minds of men
+who speak reactionary language, the country would be spared the ignominy
+of seeing certain real truths of society degraded at the hands of
+aristocratic adventurers and plutocratic parasites into some miserable
+process of 'dishing Whigs.'
+
+This impoverishment of aims and depravation of principles by the triumph
+of the political spirit outside of its proper sphere, cannot
+unfortunately be restricted to any one set of people in the state. It is
+something in the very atmosphere, which no sanitary cordon can limit.
+Liberalism, too, would be something more generous, more attractive--yes,
+and more practically effective, if its professors and champions could
+allow their sense of what is feasible to be refreshed and widened by a
+more free recognition, however private and undemonstrative, of the
+theoretic ideas which give their social creed whatever life and
+consistency it may have. Such ideas are these: That the conditions of
+the social union are not a mystery, only to be touched by miracle, but
+the results of explicable causes, and susceptible of constant
+modification: that the thoughts of wise and patriotic men should be
+perpetually turned towards the improvement of these conditions in every
+direction: that contented acquiescence in the ordering that has come
+down to us from the past is selfish and anti-social, because amid the
+ceaseless change that is inevitable in a growing organism, the
+institutions of the past demand progressive re-adaptations: that such
+improvements are most likely to be secured in the greatest abundance by
+limiting the sphere of authority, extending that of free individuality,
+and steadily striving after the bestowal, so far as the nature of things
+will ever permit it, of equality of opportunity: that while there is
+dignity in ancestry, a modern society is only safe in proportion as it
+summons capacity to its public counsels and enterprises; that such a
+society to endure must progress: that progress on its political side
+means more than anything else the substitution of Justice as a governing
+idea, instead of Privilege, and that the best guarantee for justice in
+public dealings is the participation in their own government of the
+people most likely to suffer from injustice. This is not an exhaustive
+account of the progressive doctrine, and we have here nothing to say as
+to its soundness. We only submit that if those who use the watchwords of
+Liberalism were to return upon its principles, instead of dwelling
+exclusively on practical compromises, the tone of public life would be
+immeasurably raised. The cause of social improvement would be less
+systematically balked of the victories that are best worth gaining.
+Progress would mean something more than mere entrances and exits on the
+theatre of office. We should not see in the mass of parliamentary
+candidates--and they are important people, because nearly every
+Englishman with any ambition is a parliamentary candidate, actual or
+potential--that grave anxiety, that sober rigour, that immense caution,
+which are all so really laughable, because so many of those men are only
+anxious lest they should make a mistake in finding out what the
+majority of their constituents would like them to think; only rigorous
+against those who are indiscreet enough to press a principle against the
+beck of a whip or a wire-puller; and only very cautious not so much lest
+their opinion should be wrong, as lest it should not pay.
+
+
+Indolence and timidity have united to popularise among us a flaccid
+latitudinarianism, which thinks itself a benign tolerance for the
+opinions of others. It is in truth only a pretentious form of being
+without settled opinions of our own, and without any desire to settle
+them. No one can complain of the want of speculative activity at the
+present time in a certain way. The air, at a certain social elevation,
+is as full as it has ever been of ideas, theories, problems, possible
+solutions, suggested questions, and proffered answers. But then they are
+at large, without cohesion, and very apt to be the objects even in the
+more instructed minds of not much more than dilettante interest. We see
+in solution an immense number of notions, which people think it quite
+unnecessary to precipitate in the form of convictions. We constantly
+hear the age lauded for its tolerance, for its candour, for its openness
+of mind, for the readiness with which a hearing is given to ideas that
+forty years ago, or even less than that, would have excluded persons
+suspected of holding them from decent society, and in fact did so
+exclude them. Before, however, we congratulate ourselves too warmly on
+this, let us be quite sure that we are not mistaking for tolerance what
+is really nothing more creditable than indifference. These two attitudes
+of mind, which are so vitally unlike in their real quality, are so hard
+to distinguish in their outer seeming.
+
+One is led to suspect that carelessness is the right name for what looks
+like reasoned toleration, by such a line of consideration as the
+following. It is justly said that at the bottom of all the great
+discussions of modern society lie the two momentous questions, first
+whether there is a God, and second whether the soul is immortal. In
+other words, whether our fellow-creatures are the highest beings who
+take an interest in us, or in whom we need take an interest; and, then,
+whether life in this world is the only life of which we shall ever be
+conscious. It is true of most people that when they are talking of
+evolution, and the origin of species, and the experiential or
+intuitional source of ideas, and the utilitarian or transcendental basis
+of moral obligation, these are the questions which they really have in
+their minds. Now, in spite of the scientific activity of the day, nobody
+is likely to contend that men are pressed keenly in their souls by any
+poignant stress of spiritual tribulation in the face of the two supreme
+enigmas. Nobody will say that there is much of that striving and
+wrestling and bitter agonising, which whole societies of men have felt
+before now on questions of far less tremendous import. Ours, as has been
+truly said, is 'a time of loud disputes and weak convictions,' In a
+generation deeply impressed by a sense of intellectual responsibility
+this could not be. As it is, even superior men are better pleased to
+play about the height of these great arguments, to fly in busy
+intellectual sport from side to side, from aspect to aspect, than they
+are intent on resolving what it is, after all, that the discussion comes
+to and to which solution, when everything has been said and heard, the
+balance of truth really to incline. There are too many giggling
+epigrams; people are too willing to look on collections of mutually
+hostile opinions with the same kind of curiosity which they bestow on a
+collection of mutually hostile beasts in a menagerie. They have very
+faint predilections for one rather than another. If they were truly
+alive to the duty of conclusiveness, or to the inexpressible magnitude
+of the subjects which nominally occupy their minds, but really only
+exercise their tongues, this elegant Pyrrhonism would be impossible, and
+this light-hearted neutrality most unendurable.
+
+Well has the illustrious Pascal said with reference to one of the two
+great issues of the modern controversy:--'The immortality of the soul is
+a thing that concerns us so closely and touches us so profoundly, that
+one must have lost all feeling to be indifferent as to knowing how the
+matter is. All our actions and all our thoughts must follow such
+different paths, according as there are eternal goods to hope for or are
+not, that it is impossible to take a step with sense and judgment,
+without regulating it in view of this point, which ought to be our first
+object.... I can have nothing but compassion for those who groan and
+travail in this doubt with all sincerity, who look on it as the worst of
+misfortunes, and who, sparing no pains to escape from it, make of this
+search their chief and most serious employment.... But he who doubts and
+searches not is at the same time a grievous wrongdoer, and a grievously
+unfortunate man. If along with this he is tranquil and self-satisfied,
+if he publishes his contentment to the world and plumes himself upon it,
+and if it is this very state of doubt which he makes the subject of his
+joy and vanity--I have no terms in which to describe so extravagant a
+creature.'[15] Who, except a member of the school of extravagant
+creatures themselves, would deny that Pascal's irritation is most
+wholesome and righteous?
+
+Perhaps in reply to this, we may be confronted by our own doctrine of
+intellectual responsibility interpreted in a directly opposite sense. We
+may be reminded of the long array of difficulties that interfere between
+us and knowledge in that tremendous matter, and of objections that rise
+in such perplexing force to an answer either one way or the other. And
+finally we may be despatched with a eulogy of caution and a censure of
+too great heat after certainty. The answer is that there is a kind of
+Doubt not without search, but after and at the end of search, which is
+not open to Pascal's just reproaches against the more ignoble and
+frivolous kind. And this too has been described for us by a subtle
+doctor of Pascal's communion. 'Are there pleasures of Doubt, as well as
+of Inference and Assent? In one sense there are. Not indeed if doubt
+means ignorance, uncertainty, or hopeless suspense; but there is a
+certain grave acquiescence in ignorance, a recognition of our impotence
+to solve momentous and urgent questions, which has a satisfaction of its
+own. After high aspirations, after renewed endeavours, after bootless
+toil, after long wanderings, after hope, effort, weariness, failure,
+painfully alternating and recurring, it is an immense relief to the
+exhausted mind to be able to say, "At length I know that I can know
+nothing about anything." ... Ignorance remains the evil which it ever
+was, but something of the peace of certitude is gained in knowing the
+worst, and in having reconciled the mind to the endurance of it.'[16]
+Precisely, and what one would say of our own age is that it will not
+deliberately face this knowledge of the worst. So it misses the peace of
+certitude, and not only its peace, but the strength and coherency that
+follow strict acceptance of the worst, when the worst is after all the
+best within reach.
+
+Those who are in earnest when they blame too great haste after
+certainty, do in reality mean us to embrace certainty, but in favour of
+the vulgar opinions. They only see the prodigious difficulties of the
+controversy when you do not incline to their own side in it. They only
+panegyrise caution and the strictly provisional when they suspect that
+intrepidity and love of the conclusive would lead them to unwelcome
+shores. These persons, however, whether fortunately or unfortunately,
+have no longer much influence over the most active part of the national
+intelligence. Whether permanently or not, resolute orthodoxy, however
+prosperous it may seem among many of the uncultivated rich, has lost its
+hold upon thought. For thought has become dispersive, and the
+centrifugal forces of the human mind, among those who think seriously,
+have for the time become dominant and supreme. No one, I suppose,
+imagines that the singular ecclesiastical revival which is now going on,
+is accompanied by any revival of real and reasoned belief; or that the
+opulent manufacturers who subscribe so generously for restored cathedral
+fabrics and the like, have been moved by the apologetics of _Aids to
+Faith_ and the Christian Evidence Society.
+
+Obviously only three ways of dealing with the great problems of which we
+have spoken are compatible with a strong and well-bottomed character. We
+may affirm that there is a deity with definable attributes; and that
+there is a conscious state and continued personality after the
+dissolution of the body. Or we may deny. Or we may assure ourselves that
+we have no faculties enabling us on good evidence either to deny or
+affirm. Intellectual self-respect and all the qualities that are derived
+from that, may well go with any one of these three courses, decisively
+followed and consistently applied in framing a rule of life and a
+settled scheme of its aims and motives. Why do we say that intellectual
+self-respect is not vigorous, nor the sense of intellectual
+responsibility and truthfulness and coherency quick and wakeful among
+us? Because so many people, even among those who might be expected to
+know better, insist on the futile attempt to reconcile all those
+courses, instead of fixing on one and steadily abiding in it. They speak
+as if they affirmed, and they act as if they denied, and in their hearts
+they cherish a slovenly sort of suspicion that we can neither deny nor
+affirm. It may be said that this comes to much the same thing as if they
+had formally decided in the last or neutral sense. It is not so. This
+illegitimate union of three contradictories fritters character away,
+breaks it up into discordant parts, and dissolves into mercurial
+fluidity that leavening sincerity and free and cheerful boldness, which
+come of harmonious principles of faith and action, and without which men
+can never walk as confident lovers of justice and truth.
+
+
+Ambrose's famous saying, that 'it hath not pleased the Lord to give his
+people salvation in dialectic,' has a profound meaning far beyond its
+application to theology. It is deeply true that our ruling convictions
+are less the product of ratiocination than of sympathy, imagination,
+usage, tradition. But from this it does not follow that the reasoning
+faculties are to be further discouraged. On the contrary, just because
+the other elements are so strong that they can be trusted to take care
+of themselves, it is expedient to give special countenance to the
+intellectual habits, which alone can check and rectify the constantly
+aberrating tendencies of sentiment on the one side, and custom on the
+other. This remark brings us to another type, of whom it is not
+irrelevant to speak shortly in this place. The consequences of the
+strength of the political spirit are not all direct, nor does its
+strength by any means spring solely from its indulgence to the less
+respectable elements of character, such as languor, extreme pliableness,
+superficiality. On the contrary, it has an indirect influence in
+removing the only effective restraint on the excesses of some qualities
+which, when duly directed and limited, are among the most precious parts
+of our mental constitution. The political spirit is the great force in
+throwing love of truth and accurate reasoning into a secondary place.
+The evil does not stop here. This achievement has indirectly
+countenanced the postponement of intellectual methods, and the
+diminution of the sense of intellectual responsibility, by a school that
+is anything rather than political.
+
+Theology has borrowed, and coloured for her own use, the principles
+which were first brought into vogue in politics. If in the one field it
+is the fashion to consider convenience first and truth second, in the
+other there is a corresponding fashion of placing truth second and
+emotional comfort first. If there are some who compromise their real
+opinions, or the chance of reaching truth, for the sake of gain, there
+are far more who shrink from giving their intelligence free play, for
+the sake of keeping undisturbed certain luxurious spiritual
+sensibilities. This choice of emotional gratification before truth and
+upright dealing with one's own understanding, creates a character that
+is certainly far less unlovely than those who sacrifice their
+intellectual integrity to more material convenience. The moral flaw is
+less palpable and less gross. Yet here too there is the stain of
+intellectual improbity, and it is perhaps all the more mischievous for
+being partly hidden under the mien of spiritual exaltation.
+
+There is in literature no more seductive illustration of this seductive
+type than Rousseau's renowned character of the Savoyard
+Vicar--penetrated with scepticism as to the attributes of the deity, the
+meaning of the holy rites, the authenticity of the sacred documents; yet
+full of reverence, and ever respecting in silence what he could neither
+reject nor understand. 'The essential worship,' he says, 'is the worship
+of the heart. God never rejects this homage, under whatever form it be
+offered to him. In old days I used to say mass with the levity which in
+time infects even the gravest things when we do them too often. Since
+acquiring my new principles [of reverential scepticism] I celebrate it
+with more veneration: I am overcome by the majesty of the Supreme Being,
+by his presence, by the insufficiency of the human mind, which conceives
+so ill what pertains to its author. When I approach the moment of
+consecration, I collect myself for performing the act with all the
+feelings required by the church and the majesty of the sacrament. I
+strive to annihilate my reason before the Supreme Intelligence, saying,
+Who art thou that thou shouldst measure infinite power?'[17]
+
+The Savoyard Vicar is not imaginary. The acquiescence in indefinite
+ideas for the sake of comforted emotions, and the abnegation of strong
+convictions in order to make room for free and plenteous effusion, have
+for us all the marks of a too familiar reality. Such a doctrine is an
+everyday plea for self-deception, and a current justification for
+illusion even among some of the finer spirits. They have persuaded
+themselves not only that the life of the religious emotions is the
+highest life, but that it is independent of the intellectual forms with
+which history happens to have associated it. And so they refine and
+sophisticate and make havoc with plain and honest interpretation, in
+order to preserve a soft serenity of soul unperturbed.
+
+Now, we are not at all concerned to dispute such positions as that
+Feeling is the right starting-point of moral education; that in forming
+character appeal should be to the heart rather than to the
+understanding; that the only basis on which our faculties can be
+harmoniously ordered is the preponderance of affection over reason.
+These propositions open much grave and complex discussion, and they are
+not to our present purpose. We only desire to state the evil of the
+notion that a man is warranted in comforting himself with dogmas and
+formularies, which he has first to empty of all definite, precise, and
+clearly determinable significance, before he can get them out of the way
+of his religious sensibilities. Whether Reason or Affection is to have
+the empire in the society of the future, when Reason may possibly have
+no more to discover for us in the region of morals and religion, and so
+will have become _emeritus_ and taken a lower place, as of a tutor whose
+services the human family, being now grown up, no longer
+requires,--however this may be, it is at least certain that in the
+meantime the spiritual life of man needs direction quite as much as it
+needs impulse, and light quite as much as force. This direction and
+light can only be safely procured by the free and vigorous use of the
+intelligence. But the intelligence is not free in the presence of a
+mortal fear lest its conclusions should trouble soft tranquillity of
+spirit. There is always hope of a man so long as he dwells in the region
+of the direct categorical proposition and the unambiguous term; so long
+as he does not deny the rightly drawn conclusion after accepting the
+major and minor premisses. This may seem a scanty virtue and very easy
+grace. Yet experience shows it to be too hard of attainment for those
+who tamper with disinterestedness of conviction, for the sake of
+luxuriating in the softness of spiritual transport without interruption
+from a syllogism. It is true that there are now and then in life as in
+history noble and fair natures, that by the silent teaching and
+unconscious example of their inborn purity, star-like constancy, and
+great devotion, do carry the world about them to further heights of
+living than can be attained by ratiocination. But these, the blameless
+and loved saints of the earth, rise too rarely on our dull horizons to
+make a rule for the world. The law of things is that they who tamper
+with veracity, from whatever motive, are tampering with the vital force
+of human progress. Our comfort and the delight of the religious
+imagination are no better than forms of self-indulgence, when they are
+secured at the cost of that love of truth on which, more than on
+anything else, the increase of light and happiness among men must
+depend. We have to fight and do lifelong battle against the forces of
+darkness, and anything that turns the edge of reason blunts the surest
+and most potent of our weapons.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 13: Burton's _Lift of Hume,_ ii. 186-188]
+
+[Footnote 14: Isaac Taylor's _Natural History of Enthusiasm_, p. 226.]
+
+[Footnote 15: _Pensées_, II. Art ii.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Dr. Newman's _Grammar of Assent_, p. 201.]
+
+[Footnote 17: _Emile_, bk. iv.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.
+
+The main field of discussion touching Compromise in expression and
+avowal lies in the region of religious belief. In politics no one
+seriously contends that respect for the feelings and prejudices of other
+people requires us to be silent about our opinions. A republican, for
+instance, is at perfect liberty to declare himself so. Nobody will say
+that he is not within his rights if he should think it worth while to
+practise this liberty, though of course he will have to face the obloquy
+which attends all opinion that is not shared by the more demonstrative
+and vocal portions of the public. It is true that in every stable
+society a general conviction prevails of the extreme undesirableness of
+constantly laying bare the foundations of government. Incessant
+discussion of the theoretical bases of the social union is naturally
+considered worse than idle. It is felt by many wise men that the chief
+business of the political thinker is to interest himself in
+generalisations of such a sort as leads with tolerable straightness to
+practical improvements of a far-reaching and durable kind. Even among
+those, however, who thus feel it not to be worth while to be for ever
+handling the abstract principles which are, after all, only clumsy
+expressions of the real conditions that bring and keep men together in
+society, yet nobody of any consideration pretends to silence or limit
+the free discussion of these principles. Although a man is not likely to
+be thanked who calls attention to the vast discrepancies between the
+theory and practice of the constitution, yet nobody now would
+countenance the notion of an inner doctrine in politics. We smile at the
+line that Hume took in speaking of the doctrine of non-resistance. He
+did not deny that the right of resistance to a tyrannical sovereign does
+actually belong to a nation. But, he said, 'if ever on any occasion it
+were laudable to conceal truth from the populace, it must be confessed
+that the doctrine of resistance affords such an example; and that all
+speculative reasoners ought to observe with regard to this principle
+the same cautious silence which the laws, in every species of
+government, have ever prescribed to themselves.' As if the cautious
+silence of the political writer could prevent a populace from feeling
+the heaviness of an oppressor's hand, and striving to find relief from
+unjust burdens. As if any nation endowed with enough of the spirit of
+independence to assent to the right of resistance when offered to them
+as a speculative theorem, would not infallibly be led by the same spirit
+to assert the right without the speculative theorem. That so acute a
+head as Hume's should have failed to perceive these very plain
+considerations, and that he should moreover have perpetrated the
+absurdity of declaring the right of resistance, in the same breath in
+which he declares the laudableness of keeping it a secret, only allows
+how carefully a man need steer after he has once involved himself in the
+labyrinths of Economy.[18]
+
+In religion the unreasonableness of imposing a similar cautious silence
+is not yet fully established, nor the vicious effects of practising it
+clearly recognised. In these high matters an amount of economy and
+management is held praiseworthy, which in any other subject would be
+universally condemned as cowardly and ignoble. Indeed the preliminary
+stage has scarcely been reached--the stage in which public opinion
+grants to every one the unrestricted right of shaping his own beliefs,
+independently of those of the people who surround him. Any woman, for
+instance, suspected of having cast behind her the Bible and all
+practices of devotion and the elementary articles of the common creed,
+would be distrustfully regarded even by those who wink at the same kind
+of mental boldness in men. Nay, she would be so regarded even by some of
+the very men who have themselves discarded as superstition what they
+still wish women to retain for law and gospel. So long as any class of
+adults are effectually discouraged in the free use of their minds upon
+the most important subjects, we are warranted in saying that the era of
+free thought, which naturally precedes the era of free speech, is still
+imperfectly developed.
+
+The duties and rights of free speech are by no means identical with
+those of independent thought. One general reason for this is tolerably
+plain. The expression of opinion directly affects other people, while
+its mere formation directly affects no one but ourselves. Therefore the
+limits of compromise in expression are less widely and freely placed,
+because the rights and interests of all who may be made listeners to our
+spoken or written words are immediately concerned. In forming opinions,
+a man or woman owes no consideration to any person or persons whatever.
+Truth is the single object. It is truth that in the forum of conscience
+claims an undivided allegiance. The publication of opinion stands on
+another footing. That is an external act, with possible consequences,
+like all other external acts, both to the doer and to every one within
+the sphere of his influence. And, besides these, it has possible
+consequences to the prosperity of the opinion itself.[19]
+
+A hundred questions of fitness, of seasonableness, of conflicting
+expediencies, present themselves in this connection, and nothing gives
+more anxiety to a sensible man who holds notions opposed to the current
+prejudices, than to hit the right mark where intellectual integrity and
+prudence, firmness and wise reserve, are in exact accord. When we come
+to declaring opinions that are, however foolishly and unreasonably,
+associated with pain and even a kind of turpitude in the minds of those
+who strongly object to them, then some of our most powerful sympathies
+are naturally engaged. We wonder whether duty to truth can possibly
+require us to inflict keen distress on those to whom we are bound by the
+tenderest and most consecrated ties. This is so wholly honourable a
+sentiment, that no one who has not made himself drunk with the thin sour
+wine of a crude and absolute logic will refuse to consider it. Before,
+however, attempting to illustrate cases of conscience in this order, we
+venture to make a short digression into the region of the matter, as
+distinct from the manner of free speech. One or two changes of great
+importance in the way in which men think about religion, bear directly
+upon the conditions on which they may permit themselves and others to
+speak about it.
+
+
+The peculiar character of all the best kinds of dissent from the nominal
+creed of the time, makes it rather less difficult for us to try to
+reconcile unflinching honesty with a just and becoming regard for the
+feelings of those who have claims upon our forbearance, than would have
+been the case a hundred years ago. 'It is not now with a polite sneer,'
+as a high ecclesiastical authority lately admitted, 'still less with a
+rude buffet or coarse words, that Christianity is assailed.' Before
+churchmen congratulate themselves too warmly on this improvement in the
+nature of the attack, perhaps they ought to ask themselves how far it is
+due to the change in the position of the defending party. The truth is
+that the coarse and realistic criticism of which Voltaire was the
+consummate master, has done its work. It has driven the defenders of the
+old faith into the milder and more genial climate of non-natural
+interpretations, and the historic sense, and a certain elastic
+relativity of dogma. The old criticism was victorious, but after victory
+it vanished. One reason of this was that the coarse and realistic forms
+of belief had either vanished before it, or else they forsook their
+ancient pretensions and clothed themselves in more modest robes. The
+consequence of this, and of other causes which might be named, is that
+the modern attack, while fully as serious and much more radical, has a
+certain gravity, decorum, and worthiness of form. No one of any sense or
+knowledge now thinks the Christian religion had its origin in
+deliberate imposture. The modern freethinker does not attack it; he
+explains it. And what is more, he explains it by referring its growth to
+the better, and not to the worse part of human nature. He traces it to
+men's cravings for a higher morality. He finds its source in their
+aspirations after nobler expression of that feeling for the
+incommensurable things, which is in truth under so many varieties of
+inwoven pattern the common universal web of religious faith.
+
+The result of this way of looking at a creed which a man no longer
+accepts, is that he is able to speak of it with patience and historic
+respect. He can openly mark his dissent from it, without exacerbating
+the orthodox sentiment by galling pleasantries or bitter animadversion
+upon details. We are now awake to the all-important truth that belief in
+this or that detail of superstition is the result of an irrational state
+of mind, and flows logically from superstitious premisses. We see that
+it is to begin at the wrong end, to assail the deductions as impossible,
+instead of sedulously building up a state of mind in which their
+impossibility would become spontaneously visible.
+
+Besides the great change which such a point of view makes in men's way
+of speaking of a religion, whose dogmas and documents they reject, there
+is this further consideration leaning in the same direction. The
+tendency of modern free thought is more and more visibly towards the
+extraction of the first and more permanent elements of the old faith, to
+make the purified material of the new. When Dr. Congreve met the famous
+epigram about Comte's system being Catholicism minus Christianity, by
+the reply that it is Catholicism plus Science, he gave an ingenious
+expression to the direction which is almost necessarily taken by all who
+attempt, in however informal a manner, to construct for themselves some
+working system of faith, in place of the faith which science and
+criticism have sapped. In what ultimate form, acceptable to great
+multitudes of men, these attempts will at last issue, no one can now
+tell. For we, like the Hebrews of old, shall all have to live and die in
+faith, 'not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off,
+and being persuaded of them, and embracing them, and confessing that we
+are strangers and pilgrims on the earth.' Meanwhile, after the first
+great glow and passion of the just and necessary revolt of reason
+against superstition have slowly lost the exciting splendour of the
+dawn, and become diffused in the colourless space of a rather bleak
+noonday, the mind gradually collects again some of the ideas of the old
+religion of the West, and willingly, or even joyfully, suffers itself to
+be once more breathed upon by something of its spirit. Christianity was
+the last great religious synthesis. It is the one nearest to us. Nothing
+is more natural than that those who cannot rest content with
+intellectual analysis, while awaiting the advent of the Saint Paul of
+the humanitarian faith of the future, should gather up provisionally
+such fragmentary illustrations of this new faith as are to be found in
+the records of the old. Whatever form may be ultimately imposed on our
+vague religious aspirations by some prophet to come, who shall unite
+sublime depth of feeling and lofty purity of life with strong
+intellectual grasp and the gift of a noble eloquence, we may at least be
+sure of this, that it will stand as closely related to Christianity as
+Christianity stood closely related to the old Judaic dispensation. It is
+commonly assumed that the rejecters of the popular religion stand in
+face of it, as the Christians stood in face of the pagan belief and
+pagan rites in the Empire. The analogy is inexact. The modern denier, if
+he is anything better than that, or entertains hopes of a creed to come,
+is nearer to the position of the Christianising Jew.[20] Science, when
+she has accomplished all her triumphs in her own order, will still have
+to go back, when the time comes, to assist in the building up of a new
+creed by which men can live. The builders will have to seek material in
+the purified and sublimated ideas, of which the confessions and rites of
+the Christian churches have been the grosser expression. Just as what
+was once the new dispensation was preached _a Judaeos ad Judaeos apud
+Judaeos_, so must the new, that is to be, find a Christian teacher and
+Christian hearers. It can hardly be other than an expansion, a
+development, a readaptation, of all the moral and spiritual truth that
+lay hidden under the worn-out forms. It must be such a harmonising of
+the truth with our intellectual conceptions as shall fit it to be an
+active guide to conduct. In a world '_where men sit and hear each other
+groan, where but to think is to be full of sorrow_,' it is hard to
+imagine a time when we shall be indifferent to that sovereign legend of
+Pity. We have to incorporate it in some wider gospel of Justice and
+Progress.
+
+I shall not, I hope, be suspected of any desire to prophesy too smooth
+things. It is no object of ours to bridge over the gulf between belief
+in the vulgar theology and disbelief. Nor for a single moment do we
+pretend that, when all the points of contact between virtuous belief and
+virtuous disbelief are made the most of that good faith will allow,
+there will not still and after all remain a terrible controversy between
+those who cling passionately to all the consolations, mysteries,
+personalities, of the orthodox faith, and us who have made up our minds
+to face the worst, and to shape, as best we can, a life in which the
+cardinal verities of the common creed shall have no place. The future
+faith, like the faith of the past, brings not peace but a sword. It is a
+tale not of concord, but of households divided against themselves. Those
+who are incessantly striving to make the old bottles hold the new wine,
+to reconcile the irreconcilable, to bring the Bible and the dogmas of
+the churches to be good friends with history and criticism, are prompted
+by the humanest intention.[21] One sympathises with this amiable anxiety
+to soften shocks, and break the rudeness of a vital transition. In this
+essay, at any rate, there is no such attempt. We know that it is the son
+against the father, and the mother-in-law against the daughter-in-law.
+No softness of speech will disguise the portentous differences between
+those who admit a supernatural revelation and those who deny it. No
+charity nor goodwill can narrow the intellectual breach between those
+who declare that a world without an ever-present Creator with
+intelligible attributes would be to them empty and void, and those who
+insist that none of the attributes of a Creator can ever be grasped by
+the finite intelligence of men.[22] Our object in urging the historic,
+semi-conservative, and almost sympathetic quality, which distinguishes
+the unbelief of to-day from the unbelief of a hundred years ago, is only
+to show that the most strenuous and upright of plain-speakers is less
+likely to shock and wound the lawful sensibilities of devout persons
+than he would have been so long as unbelief went no further than bitter
+attack on small details. In short, all save the purely negative and
+purely destructive school of freethinkers, are now able to deal with
+the beliefs from which they dissent, in a way which makes patient and
+disinterested controversy not wholly impossible.
+
+One more point of much importance ought to be mentioned. The belief that
+heresy is the result of wilful depravity is fast dying out. People no
+longer seriously think that speculative error is bound up with moral
+iniquity, or that mistaken thinking is either the result or the cause of
+wicked living. Even the official mouthpieces of established beliefs now
+usually represent a bad heart as only one among other possible causes of
+unbelief. It divides the curse with ignorance, intellectual shallowness,
+the unfortunate influence of plausible heresiarchs, and other
+alternative roots of evil. They thus leave a way of escape, by which the
+person who does not share their own convictions may still be credited
+with a good moral character. Some persons, it is true, 'cannot see how a
+man who deliberately rejects the Roman Catholic religion can, in the
+eyes of those who earnestly believe it, be other than a rebel against
+God.' They assure us that, 'as opinions become better marked and more
+distinctly connected with action, the truth that decided dissent from
+them implies more or less of a reproach upon those who hold them
+decidedly, becomes so obvious that every one perceives it.' No doubt a
+protestant or a sceptic regards the beliefs of a catholic as a reproach
+upon the believer's understanding. So the man whose whole faith rests on
+the miraculous and on acts of special intervention, regards the strictly
+positive and scientific thinker as the dupe of a crude and narrow logic.
+But this now carries with it no implication of moral obliquity. De
+Maistre's rather grotesque conviction that infidels always die of
+horrible diseases with special names, could now only be held among the
+very dregs of the ecclesiastical world.
+
+Nor is it correct to say that 'when religious differences come to be,
+and are regarded as, mere differences of opinion, it is because the
+controversy is really decided in the sceptical sense.' Those who agree
+with the present writer, for example, are not sceptics. They positively,
+absolutely, and without reserve, reject as false the whole system of
+objective propositions which make up the popular belief of the day, in
+one and all of its theological expressions. They look upon that system
+as mischievous in its consequences to society, for many reasons,--among
+others because it tends to divert and misdirect the most energetic
+faculties of human nature. This, however, does not make them suspect the
+motives or the habitual morality of those who remain in the creed in
+which they were nurtured. The difference is a difference of opinion, as
+purely as if we refused to accept the undulatory theory of light; and we
+treat it as such. Then reverse this. Why is it any more impossible for
+those who remain in the theological stage, who are not in the smallest
+degree sceptical, who in their heart of hearts embrace without a shadow
+of misgiving all the mysteries of the faith, why is it any more
+impossible for them than for us, whose convictions are as strong as
+theirs, to treat the most radical dissidence as that and nothing other
+or worse? Logically, it perhaps might not be hard to convict them of
+inconsistency, but then, as has been so often said, inconsistency is a
+totally different thing from insincerity, or doubting adherence, or
+silent scepticism. The beliefs of an ordinary man are a complex
+structure of very subtle materials, all compacted into a whole, not by
+logic, but by lack of logic; not by syllogism or sorites, but by the
+vague.
+
+As a plain matter of fact and observation, we may all perceive that
+dissent from religious opinion less and less implies reproach in any
+serious sense. We all of us know in the flesh liberal catholics and
+latitudinarian protestants, who hold the very considerable number of
+beliefs that remain to them, quite as firmly and undoubtingly as
+believers who are neither liberal nor latitudinarian. The compatibility
+of error in faith with virtue in conduct is to them only a mystery the
+more, a branch of the insoluble problem of Evil, permitted by a Being at
+once all-powerful and all-benevolent. Stringent logic may make short
+work of either fact,--a benevolent author of evil, or a virtuous
+despiser of divine truth. But in an atmosphere of mystery, logical
+contradictions melt away. Faith gives a sanction to that tolerant and
+charitable judgment of the character of heretics, which has its real
+springs partly in common human sympathy whereby we are all bound to one
+another, and partly in experience, which teaches us that practical
+righteousness and speculative orthodoxy do not always have their roots
+in the same soil. The world is every day growing larger. The range of
+the facts of the human race is being enormously extended by naturalists,
+by historians, by philologists, by travellers, by critics. The manifold
+past experiences of humanity are daily opening out to us in vaster and
+at the same time more ordered proportions. And so even those who hold
+fast to Christianity as the noblest, strongest, and only final
+conclusion of these experiences, are yet constrained to admit that it is
+no more than a single term in a very long and intricate series.
+
+
+The object of the foregoing digression is to show some cause for
+thinking that dissent from the current beliefs is less and less likely
+to inflict upon those who retain them any very intolerable kind or
+degree of mental pain. Therefore it is in so far all the plainer, as
+well as easier, a duty not to conceal such dissent. What we have been
+saying comes to this. If a believer finds that his son, for instance,
+has ceased to believe, he no longer has this disbelief thrust upon him
+in gross and irreverent forms. Nor does he any longer suppose that the
+unbelieving son must necessarily be a profligate. And moreover, in
+ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, he no longer supposes that infidels,
+of his own family or acquaintance at any rate, will consume for eternal
+ages in lakes of burning marl.
+
+Let us add another consideration. One reason why so many persons are
+really shocked and pained by the avowal of heretical opinions is the
+very fact that such avowal is uncommon. If unbelievers and doubters were
+more courageous, believers would be less timorous. It is because they
+live in an enervating fool's paradise of seeming assent and conformity,
+that the breath of an honest and outspoken word strikes so eager and
+nipping on their sensibilities. If they were not encouraged to suppose
+that all the world is of their own mind, if they were forced out of that
+atmosphere of self-indulgent silences and hypocritical reserves, which
+is systematically poured round them, they would acquire a robuster
+mental habit. They would learn to take dissents for what they are worth.
+They would be led either to strengthen or to discard their own
+opinions, if the dissents happened to be weighty or instructive; either
+to refute or neglect such dissents as should be ill-founded or
+insignificant. They will remain valetudinarians, so long as a curtain of
+compromise shelters them from the real belief of those of their
+neighbours who have ventured to use their minds with some measure of
+independence. A very brief contact with people who, when the occasion
+comes, do not shrink from saying what they think, is enough to modify
+that excessive liability to be shocked at truth-speaking, which is only
+so common because truth-speaking itself is so unfamiliar.
+
+Now, however great the pain inflicted by the avowal of unbelief, it
+seems to the present writer that one relationship in life, and one only,
+justifies us in being silent where otherwise it would be right to speak.
+This relationship is that between child and parents. Those parents are
+wisest who train their sons and daughters in the utmost liberty both of
+thought and speech; who do not instill dogmas into them, but inculcate
+upon them the sovereign importance of correct ways of forming opinions;
+who, while never dissembling the great fact that if one opinion is
+true, its contradictory cannot be true also, but must be a lie and must
+partake of all the evil qualities of a lie, yet always set them the
+example of listening to unwelcome opinions with patience and candour.
+Still all parents are not wise. They cannot all endure to hear of any
+religious opinions except their own. Where it would give them sincere
+and deep pain to hear a son or daughter avow disbelief in the
+inspiration of the Bible and so forth, then it seems that the younger
+person is warranted in refraining from saying that he or she does not
+accept such and such doctrines. This, of course, only where the son or
+daughter feels a tender and genuine attachment to the parent. Where the
+parent has not earned this attachment, has been selfish, indifferent, or
+cruel, the title to the special kind of forbearance of which we are
+speaking can hardly exist. In an ordinary way, however, a parent has a
+claim on us which no other person in the world can have, and a man's
+self-respect ought scarcely to be injured if he finds himself shrinking
+from playing the apostle to his own father and mother.
+
+One can indeed imagine circumstances where this would not be true. If
+you are persuaded that you have had revealed to you a glorious gospel of
+light and blessedness, it is impossible not to thirst to impart such
+tidings most eagerly to those who are closest about your heart. We are
+not in that position. We have as yet no magnificent vision, so definite,
+so touching, so 'clothed with the beauty of a thousand stars,' as to
+make us eager, for the sake of it, to murder all the sweetnesses of
+filial piety in an aggressive eristic. This much one concedes. Yet let
+us ever remember that those elders are of nobler type who have kept
+their minds in a generous freedom, and have made themselves strong with
+that magnanimous confidence in truth, which the Hebrew expressed in old
+phrase, that if counsel or work be of men it will come to nought, but if
+it be of God ye cannot overthrow it.
+
+Even in the case of parents, and even though our new creed is but
+rudimentary, there can be no good reason why we should go further in the
+way of economy than mere silence. Neither they nor any other human being
+can possibly have a right to expect us, not merely to abstain from the
+open expression of dissents, but positively to profess unreal and
+feigned assents. No fear of giving pain, no wish to soothe the alarms of
+those to whom we owe much, no respect for the natural clinging of the
+old to the faith which has accompanied them through honourable lives,
+can warrant us in saying that we believe to be true what we are
+convinced is false. The most lax moralist counts a lie wrong, even when
+the motive is unselfish, and springs from the desire to give pleasure to
+those whom it is our duty to please. A deliberate lie avowedly does not
+cease to be one because it concerns spiritual things. Nor is it the less
+wrong because it is uttered by one to whom all spiritual things have
+become indifferent. Filial affection is a motive which would, if any
+motive could, remove some of the taint of meanness with which pious
+lying, like every other kind of lying, tends to infect character. The
+motive may no doubt ennoble the act, though the act remains in the
+category of forbidden things. But the motive of these complaisant
+assents and false affirmations, taken at their very best, is still
+comparatively a poor motive. No real elevation of spirit is possible for
+a man who is willing to subordinate his convictions to his domestic
+affections, and to bring himself to a habit of viewing falsehood
+lightly, lest the truth should shock the illegitimate and over-exacting
+sensibilities either of his parents or any one else. We may understand
+what is meant by the logic of the feelings, and accept it as the proper
+corrective for a too intense egoism. But when the logic of the feelings
+is invoked to substitute the egoism of the family for the slightly
+narrower egoism of the individual, it can hardly be more than a fine
+name for self-indulgence and a callous indifference to all the largest
+human interests.
+
+
+This brings us to consider the case of another no less momentous
+relationship, and the kind of compromise in the matter of religious
+conformity which it justifies or imposes. It constantly happens that the
+husband has wholly ceased to believe the religion to which his wife
+clings with unshaken faith. We need not enter into the causes why women
+remain in bondage to opinions which so many cultivated men either reject
+or else hold in a transcendental and non-natural sense. The only
+question with which we are concerned is the amount of free assertion of
+his own convictions which a man should claim and practise, when he knows
+that such convictions are distasteful to his wife. Is it lawful, as it
+seems to be in dealing with parents, to hold his conviction silently? Is
+it lawful either positively or by implication to lead his wife to
+suppose that he shares her opinions, when in truth he rejects them?
+
+If it were not for the maxims and practice in daily use among men
+otherwise honourable, one would not suppose it possible that two answers
+could be given to these questions by any one with the smallest pretence
+of principle or self-respect. As it is, we all of us know men who
+deliberately reject the entire Christian system, and still think it
+compatible with uprightness to summon their whole establishments round
+them at morning and evening, and on their knees to offer up elaborately
+formulated prayers, which have just as much meaning to them as the
+entrails of the sacrificial victim had to an infidel haruspex. We see
+the same men diligently attending religious services; uttering assents
+to confessions of which they really reject every syllable; kneeling,
+rising, bowing, with deceptive solemnity; even partaking of the
+sacrament with a consummate devoutness that is very edifying to all who
+are not in the secret, and who do not know that they are acting a part,
+and making a mock both of their own reason and their own probity, merely
+to please persons whose delusions they pity and despise from the bottom
+of their hearts.
+
+On the surface there is certainly nothing to distinguish this kind of
+conduct from the grossest hypocrisy. Is there anything under the surface
+to relieve it from this complexion? Is there any weight in the sort of
+answer which such men make to the accusation that their conformity is a
+very degrading form of deceit, and a singularly mischievous kind of
+treachery? Is the plea of a wish to spare mental discomfort to others an
+admissible and valid plea? It seems to us to be none of these things,
+and for the following among other reasons.
+
+If a man drew his wife by lot, or by any other method over which neither
+he nor she has any control, as in the case of parents, perhaps he might
+with some plausibleness contend that he owed her certain limited
+deferences and reserves, just as we admit that he may owe them to his
+parents. But this is not the case. Marriage, in this country at least,
+is the result of mutual choice. If men and women do as a matter of fact
+usually make this choice hastily and on wofully imperfect information of
+one another's characters, that is no warrant for a resort to unlawful
+expedients to remedy the blunder. If a woman cares ardently enough about
+religion to feel keen distress at the idea of dissent from it on the
+part of those closely connected with her, she surely may be expected to
+take reasonable pains to ascertain beforehand the religious attitude of
+one with whom she is about to unite herself for life. On the other hand,
+if a man sets any value on his own opinions, if they are in any real
+sense a part of himself, he must be guilty of something like deliberate
+and systematic duplicity during the acquaintance preceding marriage, if
+his dissent has remained unsuspected. Certainly if men go through
+society before marriage under false colours, and feign beliefs which
+they do not hold, they have only themselves to thank for the degradation
+of having to keep up the imposture afterwards. Suppose a protestant
+were to pass himself off for a catholic because he happened to meet a
+catholic lady whom he desired to marry. Everybody would agree in calling
+such a man by a very harsh name. It is hard to see why a freethinker,
+who by reticence and conformity passes himself off for a believer,
+should be more leniently judged. The differences between a catholic and
+a protestant are assuredly not any greater than those between a believer
+and an unbeliever. We all admit the baseness of dissimulation in the
+former case. Why is it any less base in the latter?
+
+Marriages, however, are often made in haste, or heedlessly, or early in
+life, before either man or woman has come to feel very deeply about
+religion either one way or another. The woman does not know how much she
+will need religion, nor what comfort it may bring to her. The man does
+not know all the objections to it which may disclose themselves to his
+understanding as the years ripen. There is always at work that most
+unfortunate maxim, tacitly held and acted upon in ninety-nine marriages
+out of a hundred, that money is of importance, and social position is of
+importance, and good connections are of importance, and health and
+manners and comely looks, and that the only thing which is of no
+importance whatever is opinion and intellectual quality and temper. Now
+granting that both man and woman are indifferent at the time of their
+union, is that any reason why upon either of them acquiring serious
+convictions, the other should be expected, out of mere complaisance, to
+make a false and hypocritical pretence of sharing them? To see how
+flimsy is this plea of fearing to give pain to the religious
+sensitiveness of women, we have only to imagine one or two cases which
+go beyond the common experience, yet which ought not to strain the plea,
+if it be valid.
+
+Thus, if my wife turns catholic, am I to pretend to turn catholic too,
+to save her the horrible distress of thinking that I am doomed to
+eternal perdition? Or if she chooses to embrace the doctrine of direct
+illumination from heaven, and to hear voices bidding her to go or come,
+to do or abstain from doing, am I too to shape my conduct after these
+fancied monitions? Or if it comes into her mind to serve tables, and to
+listen in all faith to the miracles of spiritualism, am I, lest I
+should pain her, to feign a surrender of all my notions of evidence, to
+pretend a transformation of all my ideas of worthiness in life and
+beyond life, and to go to séances with the same regularity and
+seriousness with which you go to church? Of course in each of these
+cases everybody who does not happen to share the given peculiarity of
+belief, will agree that however severely a husband's dissent might pain
+the wife, whatever distress and discomfort it might inflict upon her,
+yet he would be bound to let her suffer, rather than sacrifice his
+veracity and self-respect. Why then is it any less discreditable to
+practise an insincere conformity in more ordinary circumstances? If the
+principle of such conformity is good for anything at all, it ought to
+cover these less usual cases as completely as the others which are more
+usual. Indeed there would be more to be said on behalf of conformity for
+politeness' sake, where the woman had gone through some great process of
+change, for then one might suppose that her heart was deeply set on the
+matter. Even then the plea would be worthless, but it is more
+indisputably worthless still where the sentiment which we are bidden to
+respect at the cost of our own freedom of speech is nothing more
+laudable than a fear of moving out of the common groove of religious
+opinion, or an intolerant and unreasoned bigotry, or mere stupidity and
+silliness of the vulgarest type.[23]
+
+Ah, it is said, you forget that women cannot live without religion. The
+present writer is equally of this opinion that women cannot be happy
+without a religion, nor men either. That is not the question. It does
+not follow because a woman cannot be happy without a religion, that
+therefore she cannot be happy unless her husband is of the same
+religion. Still less, that she would be made happy by his insincerely
+pretending to be of the same religion. And least of all is it true, if
+both these propositions were credible, that even then for the sake of
+her happiness he is bound not merely to live a life of imposture, but in
+so doing to augment the general forces of imposture in the world, and to
+make the chances of truth, light, and human improvement more and more
+unfavourable. Women are at present far less likely than men to possess a
+sound intelligence and a habit of correct judgment. They will remain so,
+while they have less ready access than men to the best kinds of literary
+and scientific training, and--what is far more important--while social
+arrangements exclude them from all those kinds of public activity, which
+are such powerful agents both in fitting men to judge soundly, and in
+forming in them the sense of responsibility for their judgments being
+sound.
+
+It may be contended that this alleged stronger religiosity of women,
+however coarse and poor in its formulae, is yet of constant value as a
+protest in favour of the maintenance of the religious element in human
+character and life, and that this is a far more important thing for us
+all than the greater or less truth of the dogmas with which such
+religiosity happens to be associated. In reply to this, without
+tediously labouring the argument, I venture to make the following
+observations. In the first place, it is an untenable idea that
+religiosity or devoutness of spirit is valuable in itself, without
+reference to the goodness or badness of the dogmatic forms and the
+practices in which it clothes itself. A fakir would hardly be an
+estimable figure in our society, merely because his way of living
+happens to be a manifestation of the religious spirit. If the religious
+spirit leads to a worthy and beautiful life, if it shows itself in
+cheerfulness, in pity, in charity and tolerance, in forgiveness, in a
+sense of the largeness and the mystery of things, in a lifting up of the
+soul in gratitude and awe to some supreme power and sovereign force,
+then whatever drawback there may be in the way of superstitious dogma,
+still such a spirit is on the whole a good thing. If not, not. It would
+be better without the superstition: even with the superstition it is
+good. But if the religious spirit is only a fine name for narrowness of
+understanding, for stubborn intolerance, for mere social formality, for
+a dread of losing that poor respectability which means thinking and
+doing exactly as the people around us think and do, then the religious
+spirit is not a good thing, but a thoroughly bad and hateful thing. To
+that we owe no management of any kind. Any one who suppresses his real
+opinions, and feigns others, out of deference to such a spirit as this
+in his household, ought to say plainly both to himself and to us that he
+cares more for his own ease and undisturbed comfort than he cares for
+truth and uprightness. For it is that, and not any tenderness for holy
+things, which is the real ground of his hypocrisy.
+
+Now with reference to the religious spirit in its nobler form, it is
+difficult to believe that any one genuinely animated by it would be
+soothed by the knowledge that her dearest companion is going through
+life with a mask on, quietly playing a part, uttering untrue
+professions, doing his best to cheat her and the rest of the world by a
+monstrous spiritual make-believe. One would suppose that instead of
+having her religious feeling gratified by conformity on these terms,
+nothing could wound it so bitterly nor outrage it so unpardonably. To
+know that her sensibility is destroying the entireness of the man's
+nature, its loyalty alike to herself and to truth, its freedom and
+singleness and courage--surely this can hardly be less distressing to a
+fine spirit than the suspicion that his heresies may bring him to the
+pit, or than the void of going through life without even the semblance
+of religious sympathy between them. If it be urged that the woman would
+never discover the piety of the man to be a counterfeit, we reply that
+unless her own piety were of the merely formal kind, she would be sure
+to make the discovery. The congregation in the old story were untouched
+by the disguised devil's eloquence on behalf of religion: it lacked
+unction. The verbal conformity of the unbeliever lacks unction, and its
+hollowness is speedily revealed to the quick apprehension of true
+faith.[24]
+
+Let us not be supposed to be arguing in favour of incessant battle of
+high dialectic in the household. Nothing could be more destructive of
+the gracious composure and mental harmony, of which household life ought
+to be, but perhaps seldom is, the great organ and instrument. Still less
+are we pleading for the freethinker's right at every hour of day or
+night to mock, sneer, and gibe at the sincere beliefs and
+conscientiously performed rites of those, whether men or women, whether
+strangers or kinsfolk, from whose religion he disagrees. 'It is not
+ancient impressions only,' said Pascal, 'which are capable of abusing
+us. The charm of novelty has the same power.' The prate of new-born
+scepticism may be as tiresome and as odious as the cant of gray
+orthodoxy. Religious discussion is not to be foisted upon us at every
+turn either by defenders or assailants. All we plead for is that when
+the opportunity meets the freethinker full in front, he is called upon
+to speak as freely as he thinks. Not more than this. A plain man has no
+trouble in acquiring this tact of reasonableness. We may all write what
+we please, because it is in the discretion of the rest of the world
+whether they will hearken or not. But in the family this is not so. If a
+man systematically intrudes disrespectful and unwelcome criticism upon a
+woman who retains the ancient belief, he is only showing that
+freethinker may be no more than bigot differently writ. It ought to be
+essential to no one's self-respect that he cannot consent to live with
+people who do not think as he thinks. We may be sure that there is
+something shallow and convulsive about the beliefs of a man who cannot
+allow his house-mates to possess their own beliefs in peace.
+
+On the other hand, it is essential to the self-respect of every one
+with the least love of truth that he should be free to express his
+opinions on every occasion, where silence would be taken for an assent
+which he does not really give. Still more unquestionably, he should be
+free from any obligation to forswear himself either directly, as by
+false professions, or by implication, as when he attend services, public
+or private, which are to him the symbol of superstition and mere
+spiritual phantasmagoria. The vindication of this simple right of living
+one's life honestly can hardly demand any heroic virtue. A little of the
+straightforwardness which men are accustomed to call manly, is the only
+quality that is needed; a little of that frank courage and determination
+in spiritual things, which men are usually so ready to practise towards
+their wives in temporal things. It must be a keen delight to a cynic to
+see a man who owns that he cannot bear to pain his wife by not going to
+church and saying prayers, yet insisting on having his own way,
+fearlessly thwarting her wishes, and contradicting her opinions, in
+every other detail, small and great, of the domestic economy.
+
+The truth of the matter is that the painful element in companionship is
+not difference of opinion, but discord of temperament. The important
+thing is not that two people should be inspired by the same convictions,
+but rather that each of them should hold his and her own convictions in
+a high and worthy spirit. Harmony of aim, not identity of conclusion, is
+the secret of the sympathetic life; to stand on the same moral plane,
+and that, if possible, a high one; to find satisfaction in different
+explanations of the purpose and significance of life and the universe,
+and yet the same satisfaction. It is certainly not less possible to
+disbelieve religiously than to believe religiously. This accord of mind,
+this emulation in freedom and loftiness of soul, this kindred sense of
+the awful depth of the enigma which the one believes to be answered, and
+the other suspects to be for ever unanswerable--here, and not in a
+degrading and hypocritical conformity, is the true gratification of
+those spiritual sensibilities which are alleged to be so much higher in
+women than in men. Where such an accord exists, there may still be
+solicitude left in the mind of either at the superstition or the
+incredulity of the other, but it will be solicitude of that magnanimous
+sort which is in some shape or other the inevitable and not unfruitful
+portion of every better nature.
+
+If there are women who petulantly or sourly insist on more than this
+kind of harmony, it is probable that their system of divinity is little
+better than a special manifestation of shrewishness. The man is as much
+bound to resist that, as he is bound to resist extravagance in spending
+money, or any other vice of character. If he does not resist it, if he
+suppresses his opinions, and practices a hypocritical conformity, it
+must be from weakness of will and principle. Against this we have
+nothing to say. A considerable proportion of people, men no less than
+women, are born invertebrate, and they must got on as they best can. But
+let us at least bargain that they shall not erect the maxims of their
+own feebleness into a rule for those who are braver and of stronger
+principle than themselves. And do not let the accidental exigencies of a
+personal mistake be made the foundation of a general doctrine. It is a
+poor saying, that the world is to become void of spiritual sincerity,
+because Xanthippe has a turn for respectable theology.
+
+
+One or two words should perhaps be said in this place as to conformity
+to common religious belief in the education of children. Where the
+parents differ, the one being an unbeliever, the other a believer, it is
+almost impossible for anybody to lay down a general rule. The present
+writer certainly has no ambition to attempt the thorny task of compiling
+a manual for mixed marriages. It is perhaps enough to say that all would
+depend upon the nature of the beliefs which the religious person wished
+to inculcate. Considering that the woman has an absolutely equal moral
+right with the man to decide in what faith the child shall be brought
+up, and considering how important it is that the mother should take an
+active part in the development of the child's affections and impulses,
+the most resolute of deniers may perhaps think that the advantages of
+leaving the matter to her, outweigh the disadvantages of having a
+superstitious bias given to the young mind. In these complex cases an
+honest and fair-minded man's own instincts are more likely to lead him
+right than any hard and fast rule. Two reserves in assenting to the
+wife's control of early teaching will probably suggest themselves to
+everybody who is in earnest about religion. First, if the theology which
+the woman desires to instill contains any of those wicked and depraving
+doctrines which neither Catholicism nor Calvinism is without, in the
+hands of some professors, the husband is as much justified in pressing
+his legal rights over the child to the uttermost, as he would be if the
+proposed religion demanded physical mutilation. Secondly, he will not
+himself take part in baptismal or other ceremonies which are to him no
+better than mere mummeries, nor will he ever do anything to lead his
+children at any age to suppose that he believes what he does not
+believe. Such limitations as these are commanded by all considerations
+alike of morality and good sense.
+
+To turn to the more normal case where either the man has had the wise
+forethought not to yoke himself unequally with a person of ardent belief
+which he does not share, or where both parents dissent from the popular
+creed. Here, whatever difficulties may attend its application, the
+principle is surely as clear as the sun at noonday. There can be no good
+plea for the deliberate and formal inculcation upon the young of a
+number of propositions which you believe to be false. To do this is to
+sow tares not in your enemy's field, but in the very ground which is
+most precious of all others to you and most full of hope for the future.
+To allow it to be done merely that children may grow up in the
+stereotyped mould, is simply to perpetuate in new generations the
+present thick-sighted and dead-heavy state of our spirits. It is to do
+one's best to keep society for an indefinite time sapped by hollow and
+void professions, instead of being nourished by sincerity and
+whole-heartedness.[25]
+
+Nor here, more than elsewhere in this chapter, are we trying to turn
+the family into a field of ceaseless polemic. No one who knows the stuff
+of which life is made, the pressure of material cares, the play of
+passion, the busy energising of the affections, the anxieties of health,
+and all the other solicitudes, generous or ignoble, which naturally
+absorb the days of the common multitude of men--is likely to think such
+an ideal either desirable or attainable. Least of all is it desirable
+to give character a strong set in this polemical direction in its most
+plastic days. The controversial and denying humour is a different thing
+from the habit of being careful to know what we mean by the words we
+use, and what evidence there is for the beliefs we hold. It is possible
+to foster the latter habit without creating the former. And it is
+possible to bring up the young in dissent from the common beliefs around
+them, or in indifference to them, without engendering any of that pride
+in eccentricity for its own sake, which is so little likeable a quality
+in either young or old. There is, however, little risk of an excess in
+this direction. The young tremble even more than the old at the
+penalties of nonconformity. There is more excuse for them in this. Such
+penalties in their case usually come closer and in more stringent forms.
+Neither have they had time to find out, as their elders have or ought to
+have found out, what a very moderate degree of fortitude enables us to
+bear up against social disapproval, when we know that it is nothing more
+than the common form of convention.
+
+The great object is to keep the minds of the young as open as possible
+in the matter of religion; to breed in them a certain simplicity and
+freedom from self-consciousness, in finding themselves without the
+religious beliefs and customs of those around them; to make them regard
+differences in these respects as very natural and ordinary matters,
+susceptible of an easy explanation. It is of course inevitable, unless
+they are brought up in cloistered seclusion, that they should hear much
+of the various articles of belief which we are anxious that they should
+not share. They will ask you whether the story of the creation of the
+universe is true; whether such and such miracles really happened;
+whether this person or that actually lived, and actually did all that he
+is said to have done. Plainly the right course is to tell them, without
+any agitation or excess or vehemence or too much elaboration, the simple
+truth in such matters exactly as it appears to one's own mind. There is
+no reason why they should not know the best parts of the Bible as well
+as they know the Iliad or Herodotus. There are many reasons why they
+should know them better. But one most important condition of this is
+constantly overlooked by people, who like to satisfy their intellectual
+vanity by scepticism, and at the same time to make their comfort safe by
+external conformity. If the Bible is to be taught only because it is a
+noble and most majestic monument of literature, it should be taught as
+that and no more. That a man who regards it solely us supreme
+literature, should impress it upon the young as the supernaturally
+inspired word of God and the accurate record of objective occurrences,
+is a piece of the plainest and most shocking dishonesty. Let a youth be
+trained in simple and straightforward recognition of the truth that we
+can know, and can conjecture, nothing with any assurance as to the
+ultimate mysteries of things. Let his imagination and his sense of awe
+be fed from those springs, which are none the less bounteous because
+they flow in natural rather than supernatural channels. Let him be
+taught the historic place and source of the religions which he is not
+bound to accept, unless the evidence for their authority by and by
+brings him to another mind. A boy or girl trained in this way has an
+infinitely better chance of growing up with the true spirit and
+leanings of religion implanted in the character, than if they had been
+educated in formulae which they could not understand, by people who do
+not believe them.
+
+The most common illustration of a personal mistake being made the base
+of a general doctrine, is found in the case of those who, after
+committing themselves for life to the profession of a given creed, awake
+to the shocking discovery that the creed has ceased to be true for them.
+The action of a popular modern story, Mrs. Gaskell's _North and South_,
+turns upon the case of a clergyman whoso faith is overthrown, and who in
+consequence abandons his calling, to his own serious material detriment
+and under circumstances of severe suffering to his family. I am afraid
+that current opinion, especially among the cultivated class, would
+condemn such a sacrifice as a piece of misplaced scrupulosity. No man,
+it would be said, is called upon to proclaim his opinions, when to do so
+will cost him the means of subsistence. This will depend upon the value
+which he sets upon the opinions that be has to proclaim. If such a
+proposition is true, the world must efface its habit of admiration for
+the martyrs and heroes of the past, who embraced violent death rather
+than defile themselves by a lying confession. Or is present heroism
+ridiculous, and only past heroism admirable? However, nobody has a right
+to demand the heroic from all the world; and if to publish his dissent
+from the opinions which he nominally holds would reduce a man to
+beggary, human charity bids us say as little as may be. We may leave
+such men to their unfortunate destiny, hoping that they will make what
+good use of it may be possible. _Non ragioniam di lor_. These cases only
+show the essential and profound immorality of the priestly
+profession--in all its forms, and no matter in connection with what
+church or what dogma--which makes a man's living depend on his
+abstaining from using his mind, or concealing the conclusions to which
+use of his mind has brought him. The time will come when society will
+look back on the doctrine, that they who serve the altar should live by
+the altar, as a doctrine of barbarism and degradation.
+
+But if one, by refusing to offer a pinch of incense to the elder gods,
+should thus strip himself of a marked opportunity of exerting an
+undoubtedly useful influence over public opinion, or over a certain
+section of society, is he not justified in compromising to the extent
+necessary to preserve this influence? Instead of answering this
+directly, we would make the following remarks. First, it can seldom be
+clear in times like our own that religious heterodoxy must involve the
+loss of influence in other than religious spheres. The apprehension that
+it will do so is due rather to timorousness and a desire to find a fair
+reason for the comforts of silence and reserve. If a teacher has
+anything to tell the world in science, philosophy, history, the world
+will not be deterred from listening to him by knowing that he does not
+walk in the paths of conventional theology. Second, what influence can a
+man exert, that should seem to him more useful than that of a protester
+against what he counts false opinions, in the most decisive and
+important of all regions of thought? Surely if any one is persuaded,
+whether rightly or wrongly, that his fellows are expending the best part
+of their imaginations and feelings on a dream and a delusion, and that
+by so doing moreover they are retarding to an indefinite degree the
+wider spread of light and happiness, then nothing that he can tell them
+about chemistry or psychology or history can in his eyes be comparable
+in importance to the duty of telling them this. There is no advantage
+nor honest delight in influence, if it is only to be exerted in the
+sphere of secondary objects, and at the cost of the objects which ought
+to be foremost in the eyes of serious people. In truth the men who have
+done most for the world have taken very little heed of influence. They
+have sought light, and left their influence to fare as it might list.
+Can we not imagine the mingled mystification and disdain with which a
+Spinosa or a Descartes, a Luther or a Pascal, would have listened to an
+exhortation in our persuasive modern manner on the niceties of the
+politic and the social obligation of pious fraud? It is not given to
+many to perform the achievements of such giants as these, but every one
+may help to keep the standard of intellectual honesty at a lofty pitch,
+and what better service can a man render than to furnish the world with
+an example of faithful dealing with his own conscience and with his
+fellows? This at least is the one talent that is placed in the hands of
+the obscurest of us all.[26]
+
+And what is this smile of the world, to win which we are bidden to
+sacrifice our moral manhood; this frown of the world, whose terrors are
+more awful than the withering up of truth and the slow going out of
+light within the souls of us? Consider the triviality of life and
+conversation and purpose, in the bulk of those whose approval is held
+out for our prize and the mark of our high calling. Measure, if you can,
+the empire over them of prejudice unadulterated by a single element of
+rationality, and weigh, if you can, the huge burden of custom,
+unrelieved by a single leavening particle of fresh thought. Ponder the
+share which selfishness and love of ease have in the vitality and the
+maintenance of the opinions that we are forbidden to dispute. Then how
+pitiful a thing seems the approval or disapproval of these creatures of
+the conventions of the hour, as one figures the merciless vastness of
+the universe of matter sweeping us headlong through viewless space; as
+one hears the wail of misery that is for ever ascending to the deaf
+gods; as one counts the little tale of the years that separate us from
+eternal silence. In the light of these things, a man should surely dare
+to live his small span of life with little heed of the common speech
+upon him or his life, only caring that his days may be full of reality,
+and his conversation of truth-speaking and wholeness.
+
+Those who think conformity in the matters of which we have been
+speaking harmless and unimportant, must do so either from indifference
+or else from despair. It is difficult to convince any one who is
+possessed by either one or other of these two evil spirits. Men who have
+once accepted them, do not easily relinquish philosophies that relieve
+their professors from disagreeable obligations of courage and endeavour.
+To the indifferent person one can say nothing. We can only acquiesce in
+that deep and terrible scripture, 'He that is filthy, let him be filthy
+still.' To those who despair of human improvement or the spread of light
+in the face of the huge mass of brute prejudice, we can only urge that
+the enormous weight and the firm hold of baseless prejudice and false
+commonplace are the very reasons which make it so important that those
+who are not of the night nor of the darkness should the more strenuously
+insist on living their own lives in the daylight. To those, finally, who
+do not despair, but think that the new faith will come so slowly that it
+is not worth while for the poor mortal of a day to make himself a
+martyr, we may suggest that the new faith when it comes will be of
+little worth, unless it has been shaped by generations of honest and
+fearless men, and unless it finds in those who are to receive it an
+honest and fearless temper. Our plea is not for a life of perverse
+disputings or busy proselytising, but only that we should learn to look
+at one another with a clear and steadfast eye, and march forward along
+the paths we choose with firm step and erect front. The first advance
+towards either the renovation of one faith or the growth of another,
+must be the abandonment of those habits of hypocritical conformity and
+compliance which have filled the air of the England of to-day with gross
+and obscuring mists.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 18: It may be said that Hume meant no more than this: that of
+two equally oppressed nations, the one which had been taught to assent
+to the doctrine of resistance would be more likely to practise 'the
+sacred duty of insurrection' than the other, from whom the doctrine had
+been concealed. Or, in other words, that the first would rise against
+oppression, when the oppression had reached a pitch which to the second
+would still seem bearable. The answer to Hume's proposition, interpreted
+in this way, would be that if the doctrine of resistance be presented to
+the populace in its true shape,--if it be 'truth,' as he admits,--then
+the application of it in practice should be as little likely to prove
+mischievous as that of any other truth. If the gist of the remark be
+that this is a truth which the populace is especially likely to apply
+wrongly, in consequence of its ignorance, passion, and heedlessness, we
+may answer by appealing to history, which is rather a record of
+excessive patience in the various nations of the earth than of excessive
+petulance.]
+
+[Footnote 19: There is another ground for the distinction between the
+conditions of holding and those of expressing opinion. This depends upon
+the psychological proposition that belief is independent of the will.
+Though this or any other state of the understanding may be involuntary,
+the manifestation of such a state is not so, but is a voluntary act,
+and, 'being neutral in itself, may be commendable or reprehensible
+according to the circumstances in which it takes place.' (Bailey's
+_Essay on Formation of Opinion_, § 7).]
+
+[Footnote 20: The following words, illustrating the continuity between
+the Christian and Jewish churches, are not without instruction to those
+who meditate on the possible continuity between the Christian church and
+that which is one day to grow into the place of it:--'Not only do forms
+and ordinances remain under the Gospel equally as before; but, what was
+in use before is not so much superseded by the Gospel ordinances as
+changed into them. What took place under the Law is a pattern, what was
+commanded is a rule, under the Gospel. The substance remains, the use,
+the meaning, the circumstances, the benefit is changed; grace is added,
+life is infused: "the body is of Christ;" but it is in great measure
+that same body which was in being before He came. The Gospel has not put
+aside, it has incorporated into itself the revelation which went before
+it. It avails itself of the Old Testament, as a great gift to Christian
+as well as to Jew. It does not dispense with it, but it dispenses it.
+Persons sometimes urge that there is no code of duty in the New
+Testament, no ceremonial, no rules for Church polity. Certainly not;
+they are unnecessary; they are already given in the Old. Why should the
+Old Testament remain in the Christian church but to be used? _There_ we
+are to look for our forms, our rites, our polity; only illustrated,
+tempered, spiritualised by the Gospel. The preempts remain, the
+observance of them is changed,'--Dr. J.H. Newman; _Sermon on Subjects of
+the Day_, p. 205.]
+
+[Footnote 21: There is a set of most acute and searching criticisms on
+this matter in Mr. Leslie Stephen's _Essays on Free-Thinking and
+Plain-Speaking_ (Longmans, 1873). The last essay in the volume, _An
+Apology for Plain-Speaking_, is a decisive and remarkable exposition of
+the treacherous playing with words, which underlies even the most
+vigorous efforts to make the phrases and formula of the old creed hold
+the reality of new faith.]
+
+[Footnote 22: Upon this sentence the following criticism has been
+made:--'Surely both of these so-called contradictions are deliberately
+affirmed by the vast majority of all thinkers upon the subject. What
+orthodox asserter of the omnipresence of a "Creator with intelligible
+attributes" ever maintained that these attributes could be "grasped by
+men"?'--The orthodox asserter, no doubt, _says_ that he does not
+maintain that the divine attributes can be grasped by men; but his
+habitual treatment of them as intelligible, and as the subjects of
+propositions made in languages that is designed to be intelligible,
+shows that his first reservation is merely nominal, as it is certainly
+inconsistent with his general position. Religious people who warn you
+most solemnly that man who is a worm and the son of a worm cannot
+possibly compass in his puny understanding the attributes of the Divine
+Being, will yet--as an eminent divine not in holy orders has truly
+said--tell you all about him, as if he were the man who lives in the
+next street.]
+
+[Footnote 23: That able man, the late J.E. Cairnes, suggested the
+following objection to this paragraph. When two persons marry, there is
+a reasonable expectation, almost amounting to an understanding, that
+they will both of them adhere to their religion, just as both of them
+tacitly agree to follow the ways of the world in the host of minor
+social matters. If, therefore, either of them turns to some other creed,
+the person so turning has, so to speak, broken the contract. The utmost
+he or she can contend for is forbearance. If a woman embraces
+catholicism, she may seek tolerance, but she has no right to exact
+conformity. If the man becomes an unbeliever, he in like manner breaks
+the bargain, and may be justly asked not to flaunt his misdemeanour.
+
+My answer to this would turn upon the absolute inexpediency of such
+silent bargains being assumed by public opinion. In the present state of
+opinion, where the whole air is alive with the spirit of change, nobody
+who takes his life or her life seriously, could allow an assumption
+which means reduction of one of the most important parts of character,
+the love of truth, to a nullity.]
+
+[Footnote 24: The reader remembers how Wolmar, the atheistic husband of
+Julie in Rousseau's _New Heloïsa_, is distressed by the chagrin which
+his unbelief inflicts on the piety of his wife. 'He told me that he had
+been frequently tempted to make a feint of yielding to her arguments,
+and to pretend, for the sake of calming her sentiments that he did not
+really hold. But such baseness of soul is too far from him. Without for
+a moment imposing on Julie, such dissimulation would only have been a
+new torment to her. The good faith, the frankness, the union of heart,
+that console for so many troubles, would have been eclipsed between
+them. Was it by lessening his wife's esteem for him that he could
+reassure her? Instead of using any disguise, he tells her sincerely what
+he thinks, but he says it in so simple a tone, etc.--V. v. 126.]
+
+[Footnote 25: The common reason alleged by freethinkers for having their
+children brought up in the orthodox ways is that, if they were not so
+brought up, they would be looked on as contaminating agents whom other
+parents would take care to keep away from the companionship of their
+children. This excuse may have had some force at another time. At the
+present day, when belief is so weak, we doubt whether the young would be
+excluded from the companionship of their equals in age, merely because
+they had not been trained in some of the conventional shibboleths. Even
+if it were so, there are certainly some ways of compensating for the
+disadvantages of exclusion from orthodox circles.
+
+I have heard of a more interesting reason; namely, that the historic
+position of the young, relatively to the time in which they are placed,
+is in some sort falsified, unless they have gone through a training in
+the current beliefs of their age: unless they have undergone that, they
+miss, as it were, some of the normal antecedents. I do not think this
+plea will hold good. However desirable it may be that the young should
+know all sorts of erroneous beliefs and opinions as products of the
+past, it can hardly be in any degree desirable that they should take
+them for truths. If there were no other objection, there would be this,
+that the disturbance and waste of force involved in shaking off in their
+riper years the erroneous opinions which had been instilled into them
+in childhood, would more than counter-balance any advantages, whatever
+their precise nature may be, to be derived from having shared in their
+own proper persons the ungrounded notions of others.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Miss Martineau has an excellent protest against 'the
+dereliction of principle shown in supposing that any "Cause" can be of
+so much importance as fidelity to truth, or can be important at all
+otherwise than in its relation to truth which wants vindicating. It
+reminds me of an incident which happened when I was in America, at the
+time of the severest trials of the Abolitionists. A pastor from the
+southern States lamented to a brother clergyman in the North the
+introduction of the Anti-slavery question, because the views of their
+sect were "getting on so well before!" "Getting on!" cried the northern
+minister. "What is the use of getting your vessel on when you have
+thrown both captain and cargo overboard?" Thus, what signifies the
+pursuit of any one reform, like those specified,--Anti-slavery and the
+Woman question,--when the freedom which is the very soul of the
+controversy, the very principle of the movement,--is mourned over in any
+other of its many manifestations? The only effectual advocates of such
+reforms as those are people who follow truth wherever it
+leads.'--_Autobiography_, ii. 442.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+THE REALISATION OF OPINION.
+
+A person who takes the trouble to form his own opinions and beliefs will
+feel that he owes no responsibility to the majority for his conclusions.
+If he is a genuine lover of truth, if he is inspired by the divine
+passion for seeing things as they are, and a divine abhorrence of
+holding ideas which do not conform to the facts, he will be wholly
+independent of the approval or assent of the persons around him. When he
+proceeds to apply his beliefs in the practical conduct of life, the
+position is different. There are now good reasons why his attitude
+should be in some ways less inflexible. The society in which he is
+placed is a very ancient and composite growth. The people from whom he
+dissents have not come by their opinions, customs, and institutions by a
+process of mere haphazard. These opinions and customs all had their
+origin in a certain real or supposed fitness. They have a certain depth
+of root in the lives of a proportion of the existing generation. Their
+fitness for satisfying human needs may have vanished, and their
+congruity with one another may have come to an end. That is only one
+side of the truth. The most zealous propagandism cannot penetrate to
+them. The quality of bearing to be transplanted from one kind of soil
+and climate to another is not very common, and it is far from being
+inexhaustible even where it exists.
+
+In common language we speak of a generation as something possessed of a
+kind of exact unity, with all its parts and members one and homogeneous.
+Yet very plainly it is not this. It is a whole, but a whole in a state
+of constant flux. Its factors and elements are eternally shifting. It is
+not one, but many generations. Each of the seven ages of man is
+neighbour to all the rest. The column of the veterans is already
+staggering over into the last abyss, while the column of the newest
+recruits is forming with all its nameless and uncounted hopes. To each
+its tradition, its tendency, its possibilities. Only a proportion of
+each in one society can have nerve enough to grasp the banner of a new
+truth, and endurance enough to bear it along rugged and untrodden ways.
+
+And then, as we have said, one must remember the stuff of which life is
+made. One must consider what an overwhelming preponderance of the most
+tenacious energies and most concentrated interests of a society must be
+absorbed between material cares and the solicitude of the affections. It
+is obviously unreasonable to lose patience and quarrel with one's time,
+because it is tardy in throwing off its institutions and beliefs, and
+slow to achieve the transformation which is the problem in front of it.
+Men and women have to live. The task for most of them is arduous enough
+to make them well pleased with even such imperfect shelter as they find
+in the use and wont of daily existence. To insist on a whole community
+being made at once to submit to the reign of new practices and new
+ideas, which have just begun to commend themselves to the most advanced
+speculative intelligence of the time,--this, even if it were a possible
+process, would do much to make life impracticable and to hurry on social
+dissolution.
+
+'It cannot be too emphatically asserted,' as has been said by one of
+the most influential of modern thinkers, 'that this policy of
+compromise, alike in institutions, in actions, and in beliefs, which
+especially characterises English life, is a policy essential to a
+society going through the transitions caused by continued growth and
+development. Ideas and institutions proper to a past social state, but
+incongruous with the new social state that has grown out of it,
+surviving into this new social state they have made possible, and
+disappearing only as this new social state establishes its own ideas and
+institutions, are necessarily, during their survival, in conflict with
+these new ideas and institutions--necessarily furnish elements of
+contradiction in men's thoughts and deeds. And yet, as for the carrying
+on of social life, the old must continue so long as the new is not
+ready, this perpetual compromise is an indispensable accompaniment of a
+normal development.'[27]
+
+Yet we must not press this argument, and the state of feeling that
+belongs to it, further than they may be fairly made to go. The danger in
+most natures lies on this side, for on this side our love of ease
+works, and our prejudices. The writer in the passage we have just quoted
+is describing compromise as a natural state of things, the resultant of
+divergent forces. He is not professing to define its conditions or
+limits as a practical duty. Nor is there anything in his words, or in
+the doctrine of social evolution of which he is the most elaborate and
+systematic expounder, to favour that deliberate sacrifice of truth,
+either in search or in expression, against which our two previous
+chapters were meant to protest.[28] When Mr. Spencer talks of a new
+social state establishing its own ideas, of course he means, and can
+only mean, that men and women establish their own ideas, and to do that,
+it is obvious that they must at one time or another have conceived them
+without any special friendliness of reference to the old ideas, which
+they were in the fulness of time to supersede. Still less, of course,
+can a new social state ever establish its ideas, unless the persons who
+hold them confess them openly, and give to them an honest and effective
+adherence.
+
+Every discussion of the more fundamental principles of conduct must
+contain, expressly or by implication, some general theory of the nature
+and constitution of the social union. Let us state in a few words that
+which seems to command the greatest amount both of direct and analogical
+evidence in our time. It is perhaps all the more important to discuss
+our subject with immediate and express reference to this theory, because
+it has become in some minds a plea for a kind of philosophic
+indifference towards any policy of Thorough, as well as an excuse for
+systematic abstention from vigorous and downright courses of action.
+
+A progressive society is now constantly and justly compared to a growing
+organism. Its vitality in this aspect consists of a series of changes in
+ideas and institutions. These changes arise spontaneously from the
+operation of the whole body of social conditions, external and
+internal. The understanding and the affections and desires are always
+acting on the domestic, political, and economic ordering. They influence
+the religious sentiment. They touch relations with societies outside. In
+turn they are constantly being acted on by all these elements. In a
+society progressing in a normal and uninterrupted course, this play and
+interaction is the sign and essence of life. It is, as we are so often
+told, a long process of new adaptations and re-adaptations; of the
+modification of tradition and usage by truer ideas and improved
+institutions. There may be, and there are, epochs of rest, when this
+modification in its active and demonstrative shape slackens or ceases to
+be visible. But even then the modifying forces are only latent. Further
+progress depends on the revival of their energy, before there has been
+time for the social structure to become ossified and inelastic. The
+history of civilisation is the history of the displacement of old
+conceptions by new ones more conformable to the facts. It is the record
+of the removal of old institutions and ways of living, in favour of
+others of greater convenience and ampler capacity, at once multiplying
+and satisfying human requirements.
+
+Now compromise, in view of the foregoing theory of social advance, may
+be of two kinds, and of these two kinds one is legitimate and the other
+not. It may stand for two distinct attitudes of mind, one of them
+obstructive and the other not. It may mean the deliberate suppression or
+mutilation of an idea, in order to make it congruous with the
+traditional idea or the current prejudice on the given subject, whatever
+that may be. Or else it may mean a rational acquiescence in the fact
+that the bulk of your contemporaries are not yet prepared either to
+embrace the new idea, or to change their ways of living in conformity to
+it. In the one case, the compromiser rejects the highest truth, or
+dissembles his own acceptance of it. In the other, he holds it
+courageously for his ensign and device, but neither forces nor expects
+the whole world straightway to follow. The first prolongs the duration
+of the empire of prejudice, and retards the arrival of improvement. The
+second does his best to abbreviate the one, and to hasten and make
+definite the other, yet he does not insist on hurrying changes which,
+to be effective, would require the active support of numbers of persons
+not yet ripe for them. It is legitimate compromise to say:--'I do not
+expect you to execute this improvement, or to surrender that prejudice,
+in my time. But at any rate it shall not be my fault if the improvement
+remains unknown or rejected. There shall be one man at least who has
+surrendered the prejudice, and who does not hide that fact.' It is
+illegitimate compromise to say:--'I cannot persuade you to accept my
+truth; therefore I will pretend to accept your falsehood.'
+
+That this distinction is as sound on the evolutional theory of society
+as on any other is quite evident. It would be odd if the theory which
+makes progress depend on modification forbade us to attempt to modify.
+When it is said that the various successive changes in thought and
+institution present and consummate themselves spontaneously, no one
+means by spontaneity that they come to pass independently of human
+effort and volition. On the contrary, this energy of the members of the
+society is one of the spontaneous elements. It is quite as
+indispensable as any other of them, if indeed it be not more so.
+Progress depends upon tendencies and forces in a community. But of these
+tendencies and forces, the organs and representatives must plainly be
+found among the men and women of the community, and cannot possibly be
+found anywhere else. Progress is not automatic, in the sense that if we
+were all to be cast into a deep slumber for the space of a generation,
+we should awake to find ourselves in a greatly improved social state.
+The world only grows better, even in the moderate degree in which it
+does grow better, because people wish that it should, and take the right
+steps to make it better. Evolution is not a force, but a process; not a
+cause, but a law. It explains the source, and marks the immovable
+limitations, of social energy. But social energy itself can never be
+superseded either by evolution or by anything else.
+
+The reproach of being impracticable and artificial attaches by rights
+not to those who insist on resolute, persistent, and uncompromising
+efforts to remove abuses, but to a very different class--to those,
+namely, who are credulous enough to suppose that abuses and bad customs
+and wasteful ways of doing things will remove themselves. This
+credulity, which is a cloak for indolence or ignorance or stupidity,
+overlooks the fact that there are bodies of men, more or less numerous,
+attached by every selfish interest they have to the maintenance of these
+abusive customs. 'A plan,' says Bentham, 'may be said to be too good to
+be practicable, where, without adequate inducement in the shape of
+personal interest, it requires for its accomplishment that some
+individual or class of individuals shall have made a sacrifice of his or
+their personal interest to the interest of the whole. When it is on the
+part of a body of men or a multitude of individuals taken at random that
+any such sacrifice is reckoned upon, then it is that in speaking of the
+plan the term _Utopian_ may without impropriety be applied.' And this is
+the very kind of sacrifice which must be anticipated by those who so
+misunderstand the doctrine of evolution as to believe that the world is
+improved by some mystic and self-acting social discipline, which
+dispenses with the necessity of pertinacious attack upon institutions
+that have outlived their time, and interests that have lost their
+justification.
+
+We are thus brought to the position--to which, indeed, bare observation
+of actual occurrences might well bring us, if it were not for the
+clouding disturbances of selfishness, or of a true philosophy of society
+wrongly applied--that a society can only pursue its normal course by
+means of a certain progression of changes, and that these changes can
+only be initiated by individuals or very small groups of individuals.
+The progressive tendency can only be a tendency, it can only work its
+way through the inevitable obstructions around it, by means of persons
+who are possessed by the special progressive idea. Such ideas do not
+spring up uncaused and unconditioned in vacant space. They have had a
+definite origin and ordered antecedents. They are in direct relation
+with the past. They present themselves to one person or little group of
+persons rather than to another, because circumstances, or the accident
+of a superior faculty of penetration, have placed the person or group in
+the way of such ideas. In matters of social improvement the most common
+reason why one hits upon a point of progress and not another, is that
+the one happens to be more directly touched than the other by the
+unimproved practice. Or he is one of those rare intelligences, active,
+alert, inventive, which by constitution or training find their chief
+happiness in thinking in a disciplined and serious manner how things can
+be better done. In all cases the possession of a new idea, whether
+practical or speculative, only raises into definite speech what others
+have needed without being able to make their need articulate. This is
+the principle on which experience shows us that fame and popularity are
+distributed. A man does not become celebrated in proportion to his
+general capacity, but because he does or says something which happened
+to need doing or saying at the moment.
+
+This brings us directly to our immediate subject. For such a man is the
+holder of a trust It is upon him and those who are like him that the
+advance of a community depends. If he is silent, then repair is checked,
+and the hurtful elements of worn-out beliefs and waste institutions
+remain to enfeeble the society, just as the retention of waste products
+enfeebles or poisons the body. If in a spirit of modesty which is often
+genuine, though it is often only a veil for love of ease, he asks why he
+rather than another should speak, why he before others should refuse
+compliance and abstain from conformity, the answer is that though the
+many are ultimately moved, it is always one who is first to leave the
+old encampment. If the maxim of the compromiser were sound, it ought to
+be capable of universal application. Nobody has a right to make an
+apology for himself in this matter, which he will not allow to be valid
+for others. If one has a right to conceal his true opinions, and to
+practice equivocal conformities, then all have a right. One plea for
+exemption is in this case as good as another, and no better. That he has
+married a wife, that he has bought a yoke of oxen and must prove them,
+that he has bidden guests to a feast--one excuse lies on the same level
+as the rest. All are equally worthless as answers to the generous
+solicitation of enlightened conscience. Suppose, then, that each man on
+whom in turn the new ideas dawned wore to borrow the compromiser's plea
+and imitate his example. We know what would happen. The exploit in
+which no one will consent to go first, remains unachieved. You wait
+until there are persons enough agreeing with you to form an effective
+party? But how are the members of the band to know one another, if all
+are to keep their dissent from the old, and their adherence to the new,
+rigorously private? And how many members constitute the innovating band
+an effective force! When one-half of the attendants at a church are
+unbelievers, will that warrant us in ceasing to attend, or shall we
+tarry until the dissemblers number two-thirds? Conceive the additions
+which your caution has made to the moral integrity of the community in
+the meantime. Measure the enormous hindrances that will have been placed
+in the way of truth and improvement, when the day at last arrives on
+which you and your two-thirds take heart to say that falsehood and abuse
+have now reached their final term, and must at length be swept away into
+the outer darkness. Consider how much more terrible the shock of change
+will be when it does come, and how much less able will men be to meet
+it, and to emerge successfully from it.
+
+Perhaps the compromiser shrinks, not because he fears to march alone,
+but because he thinks that the time has not yet come for the progressive
+idea which he has made his own, and for whose triumph one day he
+confidently hopes. This plea may mean two wholly different states of the
+case. The time has not yet come for what? For making those positive
+changes in life or institution, which the change in idea must ultimately
+involve? That is one thing. Or for propagating, elaborating, enforcing
+the new idea, and strenuously doing all that one can to bring as many
+people as possible to a state of theory, which will at last permit the
+requisite change in practice to be made with safety and success? This is
+another and entirely different thing. The time may not have come for the
+first of these two courses. The season may not be advanced enough for us
+to push on to active conquest. But the time has always come, and the
+season is never unripe, for the announcement of the fruitful idea.
+
+We must go further than that. In so far as it can be done by one man
+without harming his neighbours, the time has always come for the
+realisation of an idea. When the change in way of living or in
+institution is one which requires the assent and co-operation of numbers
+of people, it may clearly be a matter for question whether men enough
+are ready to yield assent and co-operation. But the expression of the
+necessity of the change and the grounds of it, though it may not always
+be appropriate, can never be premature, and for these reasons. The fact
+of a new idea having come to one man is a sign that it is in the air.
+The innovator is as much the son of his generation as the conservative.
+Heretics have as direct a relation to antecedent conditions as the
+orthodox. Truth, said Bacon, has been rightly named the daughter of
+Time. The new idea does not spring up uncaused and by miracle. If it has
+come to me, there must be others to whom it has only just missed coming.
+If I have found my way to the light, there must be others groping after
+it very close in my neighbourhood. My discovery is their goal. They are
+prepared to receive the new truth, which they were not prepared to find
+for themselves. The fact that the mass are not yet ready to receive, any
+more than to find, is no reason why the possessor of the new truth
+should run to hide under a bushel the candle which has been lighted for
+him. If the time has not come for them, at least it has come for him. No
+man can ever know whether his neighbours are ready for change or not. He
+has all the following certainties, at least:--that he himself is ready
+for the change; that he believes it would be a good and beneficent one;
+that unless some one begins the work of preparation, assuredly there
+will be no consummation; and that if he declines to take a part in the
+matter, there can be no reason why every one else in turn should not
+decline in like manner, and so the work remain for ever unperformed. The
+compromiser who blinds himself to all those points, and acts just as if
+the truth were not in him, does for ideas with which he agrees, the very
+thing which the acute persecutor does for ideas which he dislikes--he
+extinguishes beginnings and kills the germs.
+
+
+The consideration on which so many persons rely, that an existing
+institution, though destined to be replaced by a better, performs useful
+functions provisionally, is really not to the point. It is an excellent
+reason why the institution should not be removed or fundamentally
+modified, until public opinion is ripe for the given piece of
+improvement. But it is no reason at all why those who are anxious for
+the improvement, should speak and act just as they would do if they
+thought the change perfectly needless and undesirable. It is no reason
+why those who allow the provisional utility of a belief or an
+institution or a custom of living, should think solely of the utility
+and forget the equally important element of its provisionalness. For the
+fact of its being provisional is the very ground why every one who
+perceives this element, should set himself to act accordingly. It is the
+ground why he should set himself, in other words, to draw opinion in
+every way open to him--by speech, by voting, by manner of life and
+conduct--in the direction of new truth and the better practice. Let us
+not, because we deem a thing to be useful for the hour, act as if it
+were to be useful for ever. The people who selfishly seek to enjoy as
+much comfort and ease as they can in an existing state of things, with
+the desperate maxim, 'After us, the deluge,' are not any worse than
+those who cherish present comfort and case and take the world as it
+comes, in the fatuous and self-deluding hope, 'After us, the
+millennium.' Those who make no sacrifice to avert the deluge, and those
+who make none to hasten their millennium, are on the same moral level.
+And the former have at least the quality of being no worse than their
+avowed principle, while the latter nullify their pretended hopes by
+conformities which are only proper either to profound social
+contentment, or to profound social despair. Nay, they seem to think that
+there is some merit in this merely speculative hopefulness. They act as
+if they supposed that to be very sanguine about the general improvement
+of mankind, is a virtue that relieves them from taking trouble about any
+improvement in particular.
+
+If those who defend a given institution are doing their work well, that
+furnishes the better reason why those who disapprove of it and
+disbelieve in its enduring efficacy, should do their work well also.
+Take the Christian churches, for instance. Assume, if you will, that
+they are serving a variety of useful functions. If that were all, it
+would be a reason for conforming. But we are speaking of those for whom
+the matter does not end here. If you are convinced that the dogma is not
+true; that a steadily increasing number of persons are becoming aware
+that it is not true; that its efficacy as a basis of spiritual life is
+being lowered in the same degree as its credibility; that both dogma and
+church must be slowly replaced by higher forms of faith, if not also by
+more effective organisations; then, all who hold such views as these
+have as distinctly a function in the community as the ministers and
+upholders of the churches, and the zeal of the latter is simply the most
+monstrously untenable apology that could be invented for dereliction of
+duty by the former.
+
+If the orthodox to some extent satisfy certain of the necessities of the
+present, there are other necessities of the future which can only be
+satisfied by those who now pass for heretical. The plea which we are
+examining, if it is good for the purpose for which it is urged, would
+have to be expressed in this way:--The institution is working as
+perfectly as it can be made to do, or as any other in its place would be
+likely to do, and therefore I will do nothing by word or deed towards
+meddling with it. Those who think this, and act accordingly, are the
+consistent conservatives of the community. If a man takes up any
+position short of this, his conformity, acquiescence, and inertia at
+once become inconsistent and culpable. For unless the institution or
+belief is entirely adequate, it must be the duty of all who have
+satisfied themselves that it is not so, to recognise its deficiences,
+and at least to call attention to them, even if they lack opportunity or
+capacity to suggest remedies. Now we are dealing with persons who, from
+the hypothesis, do not admit that this or that factor in an existing
+social state secures all the advantages which might be secured if
+instead of that factor there were some other. We are speaking of all the
+various kinds of dissidents, who think that the current theology, or an
+established church, or a monarchy, or an oligarchic republic, is a bad
+thing and a lower form, even at the moment while they attribute
+provisional merit to it. They can mean nothing by classing each of
+these as bad things, except that they either bring with them certain
+serious drawbacks, or exclude certain valuable advantages. The fact that
+they perform their functions well, such as they are, leaves the
+fundamental vice or defect of these functions just where it was. If any
+one really thinks that the current theology involves depraved notions of
+the supreme impersonation of good, restricts and narrows the
+intelligence, misdirects the religious imagination, and has become
+powerless to guide conduct, then how does the circumstance that it
+happens not to be wholly and unredeemedly bad in its influence, relieve
+our dissident from all care or anxiety as to the points in which, as we
+have seen, he does count it inadequate and mischievous? Even if he
+thinks it does more good than harm--a position which must be very
+difficult for one who believes the common supernatural conception of it
+to be entirely false--even then, how is he discharged from the duty of
+stigmatising the harm which he admits that it does?
+
+Again, take the case of the English monarchy. Grant, if you will, that
+this institution has a certain function, and that by the present chief
+magistrate this function is estimably performed. Yet if we are of those
+who believe that in the stage of civilisation which England has reached
+in other matters, the monarchy must be either obstructive and injurious,
+or else merely decorative; and that a merely decorative monarchy tends
+in divers ways to engender habits of abasement, to nourish lower social
+ideals, to lessen a high civil self-respect in the community; then it
+must surely be our duty not to lose any opportunity of pressing these
+convictions. To do this is not necessarily to act as if one were anxious
+for the immediate removal of the throne and the crown into the museum of
+political antiquities. We may have no urgent practical solicitude in
+this direction, on the intelligible principle that a free people always
+gets as good a kind of government as it deserves. Our conviction is not,
+on the present hypothesis, that monarchy ought to be swept away in
+England, but that monarchy produces certain mischievous consequences to
+the public spirit of the community. And so what we are bound to do is to
+take care not to conceal this conviction; to abstain scrupulously from
+all kinds of action and observance, public or private, which tend ever
+so remotely to foster the ignoble and degrading elements that exist in a
+court and spread from it outwards; and to use all the influence we have,
+however slight it may be, in loading public opinion to a right attitude
+of contempt and dislike for these ignoble and degrading elements, and
+the conduct engendered by them. A policy like this does not interfere
+with the advantages of the monarchy, such as they are asserted to be,
+and it has the effect of making what are supposed to be its
+disadvantages as little noxious as possible. The question whether we can
+get others to agree with us is not relevant. If we were eager for
+instant overthrow, it would be the most relevant of all questions. But
+we are in the preliminary stage, the stage for acting on opinion. The
+fact that others do not yet share our opinion, is the very reason for
+our action. We can only bring them to agree with us, if it be possible
+on any terms, by persistency in our principles. This persistency, in all
+but either very timid or very vulgar natures, always has been and
+always will be independent of external assent or co-operation. The
+history of success, as we can never too often repeat to ourselves, is
+the history of minorities. And what is more, it is for the most part the
+history of insurrection exactly against what the worldly spirits of the
+time, whenever it may have been, deemed mere trifles and accidents, with
+which sensible men should on no account dream of taking the trouble to
+quarrel.
+
+'Halifax,' says Macaulay, 'was in speculation a strong republican and
+did not conceal it. He often made hereditary monarchy and aristocracy
+the subjects of his keen pleasantry, while he was fighting the battles
+of the court and obtaining for himself step after step in the peerage.'
+We are perfectly familiar with this type, both in men who have, and men
+who have not, such brilliant parts as Halifax. Such men profess to
+nourish high ideals of life, of character, of social institutions. Yet
+they never think of these ideals, when they are deciding what is
+practically attainable. One would like to ask them what purpose is
+served by an ideal, if it is not to make a guide for practice and a
+landmark in dealing with the real. A man's loftiest and most ideal
+notions must be of a singularly ethereal and, shall we not say,
+senseless kind, if he can never see how to take a single step that may
+tend in the slightest degree towards making them more real. If an ideal
+has no point of contact with what exists, it is probably not much more
+than the vapid outcome of intellectual or spiritual self-indulgence. If
+it has such a point of contact, then there is sure to be something which
+a man can do towards the fulfilment of his hopes. He cannot substitute a
+new national religion for the old, but he can at least do something to
+prevent people from supposing that the adherents of the old are more
+numerous than they really are, and something to show them that good
+ideas are not all exhausted by the ancient forms. He cannot transform a
+monarchy into a republic, but he can make sure that one citizen at least
+shall aim at republican virtues, and abstain from the debasing
+complaisance of the crowd.
+
+
+'It is a very great mistake, said Burke, many years before the French
+Revolution is alleged, and most unreasonably alleged, to have alienated
+him from liberalism: 'it is a very great mistake to imagine that
+mankind follow up practically any speculative principle, either of
+government or of freedom, as far as it will go in argument and logical
+illation. All government, indeed every human benefit and enjoyment,
+every virtue, and every prudent act, is founded on compromise and
+barter. We balance inconveniences; we give and take;--we remit some
+rights that we may enjoy others.... Man acts from motives relative to
+his interests; and not on metaphysical speculations.[29] These are the
+words of wisdom and truth, if we can be sure that men will interpret
+them in all the fulness of their meaning, and not be content to take
+only that part of the meaning which falls in with the dictates of their
+own love of ease. In France such words ought to be printed in capitals
+on the front of every newspaper, and written up in letters of burnished
+gold over each faction of the Assembly, and on the door of every bureau
+in the Administration. In England they need a commentary which shall
+bring out the very simple truth, that compromise and barter do not mean
+the undisputed triumph of one set of principles. Nor, on the other hand,
+do they mean the mutilation of both sets of principles, with a view to
+producing a _tertium quid_ that shall involve the disadvantages of each,
+without securing the advantages of either. What Burke means is that we
+ought never to press our ideas up to their remotest logical issues,
+without reference to the conditions in which we are applying them. In
+politics we have an art. Success in politics, as in every other art,
+obviously before all else implies both knowledge of the material with
+which we have to deal, and also such concession as is necessary to the
+qualities of the material. Above all, in politics we have an art in
+which development depends upon small modifications. That is the true
+side of the conservative theory. To hurry on after logical perfection is
+to show one's self ignorant of the material of that social structure
+with which the politician has to deal. To disdain anything short of an
+organic change in thought or institution in infatuation. To be willing
+to make such changes too frequently, even when they are possible, is
+foolhardiness. That fatal French saying about small reforms being the
+worst enemies of great reforms is, in the sense in which it is commonly
+used, a formula of social ruin.
+
+On the other hand, let us not forget that there is a sense in which this
+very saying is profoundly true. A small and temporary improvement may
+really be the worst enemy of a great and permanent improvement, unless
+the first is made on the lines and in the direction of the second. And
+so it may, if it be successfully palmed off upon a society as actually
+being the second. In such a case as this, and our legislation presents
+instances of the kind, the small reform, if it be not made with
+reference to some large progressive principle and with a view to further
+extension of its scope, makes it all the more difficult to return to the
+right line and direction when improvement is again demanded. To take an
+example which is now very familiar to us all. The Education Act of 1870
+was of the nature of a small reform. No one pretends that it is anything
+approaching to a final solution of a complex problem. But the government
+insisted, whether rightly or wrongly, that their Act was as large a
+measure as public opinion was at that moment ready to support. At the
+same time it was clearly agreed among the government and the whole of
+the party at their backs, that at some time or other, near or remote, if
+public instruction was to be made genuinely effective, the private,
+voluntary, or denominational system would have to be replaced by a
+national system. To prepare for this ultimate replacement was one of the
+points to be most steadily borne in mind, however slowly and tentatively
+the process might be conducted. Instead of that, the authors of the Act
+deliberately introduced provisions for extending and strengthening the
+very system which will have eventually to be superseded. They thus by
+their small reform made the future great reform the more difficult of
+achievement. Assuredly this is not the compromise and barter, the give
+and take, which Burke intended. What Burke means by compromise, and what
+every true statesman understands by it, is that it may be most
+inexpedient to meddle with an institution merely because it does not
+harmonise with 'argument and logical illation.' This is a very different
+thing from giving new comfort and strength with one hand, to an
+institution whose death-warrant you pretend to be signing with the
+other.
+
+In a different way the second possible evil of a small reform may be
+equally mischievous--where the small reform is represented as settling
+the question. The mischief here is not that it takes us out of the
+progressive course, as in the case we have just been considering, but
+that it sets men's minds in a posture of contentment, which is not
+justified by the amount of what has been done, and which makes it all
+the harder to arouse them to new effort when the inevitable time
+arrives.
+
+In these ways, then, compromise may mean, not acquiescence in an
+instalment, on the ground that the time is not ripe to yield us more
+than an instalment, but either the acceptance of the instalment as
+final, followed by the virtual abandonment of hope and effort; or else
+it may mean a mistaken reversal of direction, which augments the
+distance that has ultimately to be traversed. In either of these senses,
+the small reform may become the enemy of the great one. But a right
+conception of political method, based on a rightly interpreted
+experience of the conditions on which societies unite progress with
+order, leads the wise conservative to accept the small change, lest a
+worse thing befall him, and the wise innovator to seize the chance of a
+small improvement, while incessantly working in the direction of great
+ones. The important thing is that throughout the process neither of them
+should lose sight of his ultimate ideal; nor fail to look at the detail
+from the point of view of the whole; nor allow the near particular to
+bulk so unduly large as to obscure the general and distant.
+
+If the process seems intolerably slow, we may correct our impatience by
+looking back upon the past. People seldom realise the enormous period of
+time which each change in men's ideas requires for its full
+accomplishment. We speak of these changes with a peremptory kind of
+definiteness, as if they had covered no more than the space of a few
+years. Thus we talk of the time of the Reformation, as we might talk of
+the Reform Bill or the Repeal of the Corn Duties. Yet the Reformation is
+the name for a movement of the mind of northern Europe, which went on
+for three centuries. Then if we turn to that still more momentous set
+of events, the rise and establishment of Christianity, one might suppose
+from current speech that we could fix that within a space of half a
+century or so. Yet it was at least four hundred years before all the
+foundations of that great superstructure of doctrine and organisation
+were completely laid. Again, to descend to less imposing occurrences,
+the transition in the Eastern Empire from the old Roman system of
+national organisation to that other system to which we give the specific
+name of Byzantine,--this transition, so infinitely less important as it
+was than either of the two other movements, yet occupied no less than a
+couple of hundred years. The conditions of speech make it indispensable
+for us to use definite and compendious names for movements that were
+both tardy and complex. We are forced to name a long series of events as
+if they were a single event. But we lose the reality of history, we fail
+to recognise one of the most striking aspects of human affairs, and
+above all we miss that most invaluable practical lesson, the lesson of
+patience, unless we remember that the great changes of history took up
+long periods of time which, when measured by the little life of a man,
+are almost colossal, like the vast changes of geology. We know how long
+it takes before a species of plant or animal disappears in face of a
+better adapted species. Ideas and customs, beliefs and institutions,
+have always lingered just as long in face of their successors, and the
+competition is not less keen nor less prolonged, because it is for one
+or other inevitably destined to be hopeless. History, like geology,
+demands the use of the imagination, and in proportion as the exercise of
+the historic imagination is vigorously performed in thinking of the
+past, will be the breadth of our conception of the changes which the
+future has in store for us, as well as of the length of time and the
+magnitude of effort required for their perfect achievement[30].
+
+This much, concerning moderation in political practice. No such
+considerations present themselves in the matters which concern the
+shaping of our own lives, or the publications of our social opinions. In
+this region we are not imposing charges upon others, either by law or
+otherwise. We therefore owe nothing to the prejudices or habits of
+others. If any one sets serious value upon the point of difference
+between his own ideal and that which is current, if he thinks that his
+'experiment in living' has promise of real worth, and that if more
+persons could be induced to imitate it, some portion of mankind would be
+thus put in possession of a better kind of happiness, then it is selling
+a birthright for a mess of pottage to abandon hopes so rich and
+generous, merely in order to avoid the passing and casual penalties of
+social disapproval. And there is a double evil in this kind of flinching
+from obedience to the voice of our better selves, whether it takes the
+form of absolute suppression of what we think and hope, or only of
+timorous and mutilated presentation. We lose not only the possible
+advantage of the given change. Besides that, we lose also the certain
+advantage of maintaining or increasing the amount of conscientiousness
+in the world. And everybody can perceive the loss incurred in a society
+where diminution of the latter sort takes place. The advance of the
+community depends not merely on the improvement and elevation of its
+moral maxima, but also on the quickening of moral sensibility. The
+latter work has mostly been effected, when it has been effected on a
+large scale, by teachers of a certain singular personal quality. They do
+nothing to improve the theory of conduct, but they have the art of
+stimulating men to a more enthusiastic willingness to rise in daily
+practice to the requirements of whatever theory they may accept. The
+love of virtue, of duty, of holiness, or by whatever name we call this
+powerful sentiment, exists in the majority of men, where it exists at
+all, independently of argument. It is a matter of affection, sympathy,
+association, aspiration. Hence, even while, in quality, sense of duty is
+a stationary factor, it is constantly changing in quantity. The amount
+of conscience in different communities, or in the same community at
+different times, varies infinitely. The immediate cause of the decline
+of a society in the order of morals is a decline in the quantity of its
+conscience, a deadening of its moral sensitiveness, and not a
+depravation of its theoretical ethics. The Greeks became corrupt and
+enfeebled, not for lack of ethical science, but through the decay in the
+numbers of those who were actually alive to the reality and force of
+ethical obligations. Mahometans triumphed over Christians in the East
+and in Spain--if we may for a moment isolate moral conditions from the
+rest of the total circumstances--not because their scheme of duty was
+more elevated or comprehensive, but because their respect for duty was
+more strenuous and fervid.
+
+The great importance of leaving this priceless element in a community
+as free, as keen, and as active as possible, is overlooked by the
+thinkers who uphold coercion against liberty, as a saving social
+principle. Every act of coercion directed against an opinion or a way of
+living is in so far calculated to lessen the quantity of conscience in
+the society where such acts are practised. Of course, where ways of
+living interfere with the lawful rights of others, where they are not
+strictly self-regarding in all their details, it is necessary to force
+the dissidents, however strong may be their conscientious sentiment. The
+evil of attenuating that sentiment is smaller than the evil of allowing
+one set of persons to realise their own notions of happiness, at the
+expense of all the rest of the world. But where these notions can be
+realised without unlawful interference of that kind, then the forcible
+hindrance of such realisation is a direct weakening of the force and
+amount of conscience on which the community may count. There is one
+memorable historic case to illustrate this. Lewis XIV., in revoking the
+Edict of Nantes, and the author of the still more cruel law of 1724, not
+only violently drove out multitudes of the most scrupulous part of the
+French nation; they virtually offered the most tremendous bribes to
+those of less stern resolution, to feign conversion to the orthodox
+faith. This was to treat conscience as a thing of mean value. It was to
+scatter to the wind with both hands the moral resources of the
+community. And who can fail to see the strength which would have been
+given to France in her hour of storm, a hundred years after the
+revocation of the Edict of Nantes, if her protestant sons, fortified by
+the training in the habits of individual responsibility which
+protestantism involves, had only been there to aid?
+
+
+This consideration brings us to a new side of the discussion. We may
+seem to have been unconsciously arguing as strongly in favour of a
+vigorous social conservatism as of a self-asserting spirit of social
+improvement. All that we have been saying may appear to cut both ways.
+If the innovator should decline to practise silence or reserve, why
+should the possessor of power be less uncompromising, and why should he
+not impose silence by force? If the heretic ought to be uncompromising
+in expressing his opinions, and in acting upon them, in the fulness of
+his conviction that they are right, why should not the orthodox be
+equally uncompromising in his resolution to stamp out the heretical
+notions and unusual ways of living, in the fulness of his conviction
+that they are thoroughly wrong? To this question the answer is that the
+hollow kinds of compromise are as bad in the orthodox as in the
+heretical. Truth has as much to gain from sincerity and thoroughness in
+one as in the other. But the issue between the partisans of the two
+opposed schools turns upon the sense which we design to give to the
+process of stamping out. Those who cling to the tenets of liberty limit
+the action of the majority, as of the minority, strictly to persuasion.
+Those who dislike liberty, insist that earnestness of conviction
+justifies either a majority or a minority in using not persuasion only,
+but force. I do not propose here to enter into the great question which
+Mr. Mill pressed anew upon the minds of this generation. His arguments
+are familiar to every reader, and the conclusion at which he arrived is
+almost taken for a postulate in the present essay.[31] The object of
+these chapters is to reiterate the importance of self-assertion,
+tenacity, and positiveness of principle. The partisan of coercion will
+argue that this thesis is on one side of it a justification of
+persecution, and other modes of interfering with new opinions and new
+ways of living by force, and the strong arm of the law, and whatever
+other energetic means of repression may be at command. If the minority
+are to be uncompromising alike in seeking and realising what they take
+for truth, why not the majority? Now this implies two propositions. It
+is the same as to say, first, that earnestness of conviction is not to
+be distinguished from a belief in our own infallibility; second, that
+faith in our infallibility is necessarily bound up with intolerance.
+
+Neither of these propositions is true. Let us take them in turn.
+Earnestness of conviction is perfectly compatible with a sense of
+liability to error. This has been so excellently put by a former writer
+that we need not attempt to better his exposition. 'Every one must, of
+course, think his own opinions right; for if he thought them wrong, they
+would no longer be his opinions: but there is a wide difference between
+regarding ourselves as infallible, and being firmly convinced of the
+truth of our creed. When a man reflects on any particular doctrine, he
+may be impressed with a thorough conviction of the improbability or even
+impossibility of its being false: and so he may feel with regard to all
+his other opinions, when he makes them objects of separate
+contemplation. And yet when he views them in the aggregate, when he
+reflects that not a single being on the earth holds collectively the
+same, when he looks at the past history and present state of mankind,
+and observes the various creeds of different ages and nations, the
+peculiar modes of thinking of sects and bodies and individuals, the
+notions once firmly held, which have been exploded, the prejudices once
+universally prevalent, which have been removed, and the endless
+controversies which have distracted those who have made it the business
+of their lives to arrive at the truth; and when he further dwells on
+the consideration that many of these, his fellow-creatures, have had a
+conviction of the justness of their respective sentiments equal to his
+own, he cannot help the obvious inference, that in his own opinion it is
+next to impossible that there is not an admixture of error; that there
+is an infinitely greater probability of his being wrong in some than
+right in all.'[32]
+
+Of course this is not an account of the actual frame of mind of ordinary
+men. They never do think of their opinions in the aggregate in
+comparison with the collective opinions of others, nor ever draw the
+conclusions which such reflections would suggest. But such a frame of
+mind is perfectly attainable, and has often been attained, by persons of
+far lower than first-rate capacity. And if this is so, there is no
+reason why it should not be held up for the admiration and imitation of
+all those classes of society which profess to have opinions. It would
+thus become an established element in the temper of the age. Nor need we
+fear that the result of this would be any flaccidity of conviction, or
+lethargy in act. A man would still be penetrated with the rightness of
+his own opinion on a given issue, and would still do all that he could
+to make it prevail in practice. But among the things which he would no
+longer permit himself to do, would be the forcible repression in others
+of any opinions, however hostile to his own, or of any kind of conduct,
+however widely it diverged from his own, and provided that it concerned
+themselves only. This widening of his tolerance would be the natural
+result of a rational and realised consciousness of his own general
+fallibility.
+
+Next, even belief in one's own infallibility does not necessarily lead
+to intolerance. For it may be said that though no man in his senses
+would claim to be incapable of error, yet in every given case he is
+quite sure that he is not in error, and therefore this assurance in
+particular is tantamount by process of cumulation to a sense of
+infallibility in general. Now even if this were so, it would not of
+necessity either produce or justify intolerance. The certainty of the
+truth of your own opinions is independent of any special idea as to the
+means by which others may best be brought to share them. The question
+between persuasion and force remains apart--unless, indeed, we may say
+that in societies where habits of free discussion have once begun to
+take root, those who are least really sure about their opinions, are
+often most unwilling to trust to persuasion to bring them converts, and
+most disposed to grasp the rude implements of coercion, whether legal or
+merely social. The cry, 'Be my brother, or I slay thee,' was the sign of
+a very weak, though very fiery, faith in the worth of fraternity. He
+whose faith is most assured, has the best reason for relying on
+persuasion, and the strongest motive to thrust from him all temptations
+to use angry force. The substitution of force for persuasion, among its
+other disadvantages, has this further drawback, from our present point
+of view, that it lessens the conscience of a society and breeds
+hypocrisy. You have not converted a man, because you have silenced him.
+Opinion and force belong to different elements. To think that you are
+able by social disapproval or other coercive means to crush a man's
+opinion, is as one who should fire a blunderbuss to put out a star. The
+acquiescence in current notions which is secured by law or by petulant
+social disapproval, is as worthless and as essentially hypocritical, as
+the conversion of an Irish pauper to protestantism by means of
+soup-tickets, or that of a savage to Christianity by the gift of a
+string of beads. Here is the radical fallacy of those who urge that
+people must use promises and threats in order to encourage opinions,
+thoughts, and feelings which they think good, and to prevent others
+which they think bad. Promises and threats can influence acts. Opinions
+and thoughts on morals, politics, and the rest, after they have once
+grown in a man's mind, can no more be influenced by promises and threats
+than can my knowledge that snow is white or that ice is cold. You may
+impose penalties on me by statute for saying that snow is white, or
+acting as if I thought ice cold, and the penalties may affect my
+conduct. They will not, because they cannot, modify my beliefs in the
+matter by a single iota. One result therefore of intolerance is to make
+hypocrites. On this, as on the rest of the grounds which vindicate the
+doctrine of liberty, a man who thought himself infallible either in
+particular or in general, from the Pope of Rome down to the editor of
+the daily newspaper, might still be inclined to abstain from any form of
+compulsion. The only reason to the contrary is that a man who is so
+silly as to think himself incapable of going wrong, is very likely to be
+too silly to perceive that coercion may be one way of going wrong.
+
+The currency of the notion that earnest sincerity about one's opinions
+and ideals of conduct is inseparably connected with intolerance, is
+indirectly due to the predominance of legal or juristic analogies in
+social discussion. For one thing, the lawyer has to deal mainly with
+acts, and to deal with them by way of repression. His attention is
+primarily fixed on the deed, and only secondarily on the mind of the
+doer. And so a habit of thought is created, which treats opinion as
+something equally in the sphere of coercion with actions. At the same
+time it favours coercive ways of affecting opinion. Then, what is still
+more important, the jurist's conception of society has its root in the
+relation between sovereign and subject, between lawmaker and those whom
+law restrains. Exertion of power on one hand, and compliance on the
+other--this is his type of the conditions of the social union. The
+fertility and advance of discussion on social issues depends on the
+substitution of the evolutional for the legal conception. The lawyer's
+type of proposition is absolute. It is also, for various reasons which
+need not be given here, inspired by involuntary reference to the lower,
+rather than to the more highly developed, social states. In the lower
+states law, penalties, coercion, compulsion, the strong hand, a sternly
+repressive public opinion, were the conditions on which the community
+was united and held together. But the line of thought which these
+analogies suggest, becomes less and less generally appropriate in social
+discussion, in proportion as the community becomes more complex, more
+various in resource, more special in its organisation, in a word, more
+elaborately civilised. The evolutionist's idea of society concedes to
+law its historic place and its actual part. But then this idea leads
+directly to a way of looking at society, which makes the replacement of
+law by liberty a condition of reaching the higher stages of social
+development.
+
+The doctrine of liberty belongs to the subject of this chapter, because
+it is only another way of expressing the want of connection between
+earnestness in realising our opinions, and anything like coercion in
+their favour. If it were true that aversion from compromise, in carrying
+out our ideas, implied the rightfulness of using all the means in our
+power to hinder others from carrying out ideas hostile to them, then we
+should have been preaching in a spirit unfavourable to the principle of
+liberty. Our main text has been that men should refuse to sacrifice
+their opinions and ways of living (in the self-regarding sphere) out of
+regard to the _status quo_, or the prejudices of others. And this, as a
+matter of course, excludes the right of forcing or wishing any one else
+to make such a sacrifice to us. Well, the first foundation-stone for the
+doctrine of liberty is to be sought in the conception of society as a
+growing and developing organism. This is its true base, apart from the
+numerous minor expediencies which may be adduced to complete the
+structure of the argument. It is fundamentally advantageous that in
+societies which have reached our degree of complex and intricate
+organisation, unfettered liberty should be conceded to ideas and, within
+the self-regarding sphere, to conduct also. The reasons for this are of
+some such kind as the following. New ideas and new 'experiments in
+living' would not arise, if there were not a certain inadequateness in
+existing ideas and ways of living. They may not point to the right mode
+of meeting inadequateness, but they do point to the existence and
+consciousness of it. They originate in the social capability of growth.
+Society can only develop itself on condition that all such novelties
+(within the limit laid down, for good and valid reasons, at self
+regarding conduct) are allowed to present themselves. First, because
+neither the legislature nor any one else can ever know for certain what
+novelties will prove of enduring value. Second, because even if we did
+know for certain that given novelties were pathological growths and not
+normal developments, and that they never would be of any value, still
+the repression necessary to extirpate them would involve too serious a
+risk both of keeping back social growth at some other point, and of
+giving the direction of that growth an irreparable warp. And let us
+repeat once more, in proportion as a community grows more complex in its
+classes, divisions, and subdivisions, more intricate in its productive,
+commercial, or material arrangements, so does this risk very obviously
+wax more grave.
+
+In the sense in which we are speaking of it, liberty is not a positive
+force, any more than the smoothness of a railroad is a positive
+force.[33] It is a condition. As a force, there is a sense in which it
+is true to call liberty a negation. As a condition, though it may still
+be a negation, yet it may be indispensable for the production of certain
+positive results. The vacuity of an exhausted receiver is not a force,
+but it is the indispensable condition of certain positive operations.
+Liberty as a force may be as impotent as its opponents allege. This does
+not affect its value as a preliminary or accompanying condition. The
+absence of a strait-waistcoat is a negation; but it is a useful
+condition for the activity of sane men. No doubt there must be a
+definite limit to this absence of external interference with conduct,
+and that limit will be fixed at various points by different thinkers. We
+are now only urging that it cannot be wisely fixed for the more complex
+societies by any one who has not grasped this fundamental preconception,
+that liberty, or the absence of coercion, or the leaving people to
+think, speak, and act as they please, is in itself a good thing. It is
+the object of a favourable presumption. The burden of proving it
+inexpedient always lies, and wholly lies, on those who wish to abridge
+it by coercion, whether direct or indirect.
+
+One reason why this truth is so reluctantly admitted, is men's
+irrational want of faith in the self-protective quality of a highly
+developed and healthy community. The timid compromiser on the one hand,
+and the advocate of coercive restriction on the other, are equally the
+victims of a superfluous apprehension. The one fears to use his liberty
+for the same reason that makes the other fearful of permitting liberty.
+This common reason is the want of a sensible confidence that, in a free
+western community, which has reached our stage of development,
+religious, moral, and social novelties--provided they are tainted by no
+element of compulsion or interference with the just rights of others,
+may be trusted to find their own level. Moral and intellectual
+conditions are not the only motive forces in a community, nor are they
+even the most decisive. Political and material conditions fix the limits
+at which speculation can do either good or harm. Let us take an
+illustration of the impotence of moral ideas to override material
+circumstances; and we shall venture to place this illustration somewhat
+fully before the reader.
+
+There is no more important distinction between modern civilised
+communities and the ancient communities than the fact that the latter
+rested on Slavery, while the former have abolished it. Hence there can
+hardly be a more interesting question than this--by what agencies so
+prodigious a transformation of one of the fundamental conditions of
+society was brought about. The popular answer is of a very ready kind,
+and it passes quite satisfactorily. This answer is that the first great
+step towards free labour, the transformation of personal slavery into
+serfdom, was the result of the spiritual change which was wrought in
+men's minds by the teaching of the Church. It is unquestionable that the
+influence of the Church tended to mitigate the evils of slavery, to
+humanise the relations between master and slave, between the lord and
+the serf. But this is a very different thing from the radical
+transformation of those relations. If we think of society as an
+organism we instantly understand that so immense a change as this could
+not possibly have been effected without the co-operation of the other
+great parts of the social system, any more than a critical evolution
+could take place in the nutritive apparatus of an animal, without a
+change in the whole series of its organs. Thus in order that serfage
+should be evolved from slavery, and free labour again from serfage, it
+could not be enough that an alteration should have been wrought in men's
+ideas as to their common brotherhood, and the connected ideas as to the
+lawfulness or unlawfulness of certain human relations. There must have
+been an alteration also of the economic and material conditions. History
+confirms the expectations which we should thus have been led to
+entertain. The impotence of spiritual and moral agencies alone in
+bringing about this great metamorphosis, is shown by such facts as
+these. For centuries after the new faith had consolidated itself,
+slavery was regarded without a particle of that deep abhorrence which
+the possession of man by man excites in us now. In the ninth and tenth
+centuries the slave trade was the most profitable branch of the
+commerce that was carried on in the Mediterranean. The historian tells
+us that, even so late as this, slaves were the principal article of
+European export to Africa, Syria, and Egypt, in payment for the produce
+of the East which was brought from those countries. It was the crumbling
+of the old social system which, by reducing the population, lessening
+the wealth, and lowering the standard of living among the free masters,
+tended to extinguish slavery, by diminishing the differences between the
+masters and their bondsmen. Again, it was certain laws enacted by the
+Roman government for the benefit of the imperial fisc, which first
+conferred rights on the slave. The same laws brought the free farmer,
+whose position was less satisfactory for the purposes of the revenue,
+down nearer and nearer to a servile condition. Again, in the ninth and
+tenth centuries, pestilence and famine accelerated the extinction of
+predial slavery by weakening the numbers of the free population.
+'History,' we are told by that thoroughly competent authority, Mr.
+Finlay, 'affords its testimony that neither the doctrines of
+Christianity, nor the sentiments of humanity, have ever yet succeeded
+in extinguishing slavery, where the soil could be cultivated with profit
+by slave labour. No Christian community of slave-holders has yet
+voluntarily abolished slavery. In no country where it prevailed has
+rural slavery ceased, until the price of productions raised by slave
+labour has fallen so low as to leave no profit to the slave-owner.'
+
+The moral of all this is the tolerably obvious truth, that the
+prosperity of an abstract idea depends as much on the medium into which
+it is launched, as upon any quality of its own. Stable societies are
+amply furnished with force enough to resist all effort in a destructive
+direction. There is seldom much fear, and in our own country there is
+hardly any fear at all, of hasty reformers making too much way against
+the spontaneous conservatism which belongs to a healthy and
+well-organised community. If dissolvent ideas do make their way, it is
+because the society was already ripe for dissolution. New ideas, however
+ardently preached, will dissolve no society which was not already in a
+condition of profound disorganisation. We may be allowed just to point
+to two memorable instances, by way of illustration, though a long and
+elaborate discussion would be needed to bring out their full force. It
+has often been thought since, as it was thought by timorous
+reactionaries at the time, that Christianity in various ways sapped the
+strength of the Roman Empire, and opened the way for the barbarians. In
+truth, the most careful and competent students know now that the Empire
+slowly fell to pieces, partly because the political arrangements were
+vicious and inadequate, but mainly because the fiscal and economic
+system impoverished and depopulated one district of the vast empire
+after another. It was the break-up of the Empire that gave the Church
+its chance; not the Church that broke up the Empire. It is a mistake of
+the same kind to suppose that the destructive criticism of the French
+philosophers a hundred years ago was the great operative cause of the
+catastrophe which befel the old social régime. If Voltaire, Diderot,
+Rousseau, had never lived, or if their works had all been suppressed as
+soon as they were printed, their absence would have given no new life to
+agriculture, would not have stimulated trade, nor replenished the
+bankrupt fisc, nor incorporated the privileged classes with the bulk of
+the nation, nor done anything else to repair an organisation of which
+every single part had become incompetent for its proper function. It was
+the material misery and the political despair engendered by the reigning
+system, which brought willing listeners to the feet of the teachers who
+framed beneficent governments on the simple principles of reason and the
+natural law. And these teachers only busied themselves with abstract
+politics, because the real situation was desperate. They had no
+alternative but to evolve social improvements out of their own
+consciousness. There was not a single sound organ in the body politic,
+which they could have made the starting-point of a reconstitution of a
+society on the base of its actual or historic structure. The mischiefs
+which resulted from their method are patent and undeniable. But the
+method was made inevitable by the curse of the old régime.[34]
+
+Nor is there any instance in history of mere opinion making a breach in
+the essential constitution of a community, so long as the political
+conditions were stable and the economic or nutritive conditions sound.
+If some absolute monarch were to be seized by a philanthropic resolution
+to transform the ordering of a society which seemed to be at his
+disposal, he might possibly, by the perseverance of a lifetime, succeed
+in throwing the community into permanent confusion. Joseph II. perhaps
+did as much as a modern sovereign can do in this direction. Yet little
+came of his efforts, either for good or harm. But a man without the
+whole political machinery in his power need hardly labour under any
+apprehension that he may, by the mere force of speculative opinion,
+involuntarily work a corresponding mischief. If it is true that the most
+fervent apostles of progress usually do very little of the good on which
+they congratulate themselves, they ought surely on the same ground to be
+acquitted of much of the harm for which they are sometimes reviled. In a
+country of unchecked and abundant discussion, a new idea is not at all
+likely to make much way against the objection of its novelty, unless it
+is really commended by some quality of temporary or permanent value. So
+far therefore as the mere publication of new principles is concerned,
+and so far also as merely self-regarding action goes, one who has the
+keenest sense of social responsibility, and is most scrupulously afraid
+of doing anything to slacken or perturb the process of social growth,
+may still consistently give to the world whatever ideas he has gravely
+embraced. He may safely trust, if the society be in a normal condition,
+to its justice of assimilation and rejection. There are a few
+individuals for whom newness is a recommendation. But what are these
+few among the many to whom newness is a stumbling-block? Old ideas may
+survive merely because they are old. A new one will certainly not, among
+a considerable body of men in a healthy social state, gain any
+acceptance worth speaking of, merely because it is new.
+
+The recognition of the self-protecting quality of society is something
+more than a point of speculative importance. It has a direct practical
+influence. For it would add to the courage and intrepidity of the men
+who are most attached to the reigning order of things. If such men could
+only divest themselves of a futile and nervous apprehension, that things
+as they are have no root in their essential fitness and harmony, and
+that order consequently is ever hanging on a trembling and doubtful
+balance, they would not only gain by the self-respect which would be
+added to them and the rest of the community, but all discussion would
+become more robust and real. If they had a larger faith in the stability
+for which they profess so great an anxiety, they would be more free
+alike in understanding and temper to deal generously, honestly, and
+effectively with those whom they count imprudent innovators. There is
+nothing more amusing or more instructive than to turn to the debates in
+parliament or the press upon some innovating proposal, after an interval
+since the proposal was accepted by the legislature. The flaming hopes of
+its friends, the wild and desperate prophecies of its antagonists, are
+found to be each as ill-founded as the other. The measure which was to
+do such vast good according to the one, such portentous evil according
+to the other, has done only a part of the promised good, and has done
+none of the threatened evil. The true lesson from this is one of
+perseverance and thoroughness for the improver, and one of faith in the
+self-protectiveness of a healthy society for the conservative. The
+master error of the latter is to suppose that men are moved mainly by
+their passions rather than their interests, that all their passions are
+presumably selfish and destructive, and that their own interests can
+seldom be adequately understood by the persons most directly concerned.
+How many fallacies are involved in this group of propositions, the
+reader may well be left to judge for himself.
+
+We have in this chapter considered some of the limitations which are
+set by the conditions of society on the duty of trying to realise our
+principles in action. The general conclusion is in perfect harmony with
+that of the previous chapters. A principle, if it be sound, represents
+one of the larger expediencies. To abandon that for the sake of some
+seeming expediency of the hour, is to sacrifice the greater good for the
+less, on no more creditable ground than that the less is nearer. It is
+better to wait, and to defer the realisation of our ideas until we can
+realise them fully, than to defraud the future by truncating them, if
+truncate them we must, in order to secure a partial triumph for them in
+the immediate present. It is better to bear the burden of
+impracticableness, than to stifle conviction and to pare away principle
+until it becomes more hollowness and triviality. What is the sense, and
+what is the morality, of postponing the wider utility to the narrower?
+Nothing is so sure to impoverish an epoch, to deprive conduct of
+nobleness, and character of elevation.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 27: _The Study of Sociology_, p. 396.]
+
+[Footnote 28: No one, for instance, has given more forcible or decisive
+expression than Mr. Spencer has done to the duty of not passively
+accepting the current theology. See his _First Principles_, pt. i. ch.
+vi, § 34; paragraph beginning,--'Whoever hesitates to utter that which
+he thinks the highest truth, lest it should be too much in advance of
+the time, may reassure himself by looking at his acts from an impersonal
+point of view,' etc.]
+
+[Footnote 29: _Speech on Conciliation with America_.]
+
+[Footnote 30: 'Toute énormité dans les esprits d'un certain ordre n'est
+souvent qu'une grande vue prise hors du temps et du lieu, et ne gardant
+aucun rapport réel avec les objets environnants. Le propre de certaines
+prunelles ardentes est de franchir du regard les intervalles et de les
+supprimer. Tantôt c'est une idée qui retarde de plusieurs siècles, et
+que ces vigoureux esprits se figurent encore présente et vivante; tantôt
+c'est une idée qui avance, et qu'ils croient incontinent réalisable. M.
+de Couaën était ainsi; il voyait 1814 dès 1804, et de là une
+supériorité; mais il jugeait 1814 possible dès 1804 ou 1805, et de là
+tout un chimérique entassement.--Voilà un point blanc à l'horizon,
+chacun jurerait que c'est un nuage. "C'est une montagne," dit le
+voyageur à l'oeil d'aigle; mais s'il ajoute: "Nous y arriverons ce soir,
+dans deux heures;" si, à chaque heure de marche, il crie avec
+emportement: "Nous y sommes," et le veut démontrer, il choque les
+voisins avec sa poutre, et donne l'avantage aux yeux moins perçants et
+plus habitués à la plaine.'--Ste. Beuve's _Volupté_, p. 262]
+
+[Footnote 31: It is sometimes convenient to set familiar arguments down
+once more; so I venture to reprint in a note at the end of the chapter a
+short exposition of the doctrine of liberty, which I had occasion to
+make in considering Sir J.F. Stephen's vigorous attack on that
+doctrine.]
+
+[Footnote 32: Mr. Samuel Bailey's _Essays on the Formation and
+Publication of Opinions_, etc., p. 138, (1826.)]
+
+[Footnote 33: There is a sense, and a most important sense, in which
+liberty is a positive force. It is its robust and bracing influence on
+character, which makes wise men prize freedom and strive for the
+enlargement of its province. As Mr. Mill expressed this:--'It is of
+importance not only what men do, but what manner of men they are that do
+it,' Milton pointed to the positive effect of liberty on character in
+the following passage:--'They are not skilful considerers of human
+things who imagine to remove sin by removing the matter of sin. Though
+ye take from a covetous man his treasure, he has yet one jewel left; ye
+cannot bereave him of his covetousness. Banish all objects of lust, shut
+up all youth into the severest discipline that can be exercised in any
+hermitage, ye cannot make them chaste that came not thither so. Suppose
+we could expel sin by this means; look how much we thus expel of sin, so
+much we expel of virtue. And were I the chooser, a dram of well-doing
+should be preferred before many times as much the forcible hindrance of
+evil-doing. For God sure esteems the growth and completing of one
+virtuous person, more than the restraint of ten vicious.']
+
+[Footnote 34: There is, I think, nothing in this paragraph really
+inconsistent with De Tocqueville's well-known and striking chapter,
+'Comment les hommes de lettres devinrent les principaux hommes
+politiques du pays, et des effets qui en résultèrent.' (_Ancien Régime_,
+iii. i.) Thus Sénac de Meilhan writes in 1795;--'C'est quand la
+Révolution a été entamée qu'on a cherché dans Mably, dans Rousseau, des
+armes pour sustenter le système vers lequel entrainait l'effervescence
+de quelques esprits hardis. Mais ce ne sont point les auteurs que j'ai
+cités qui ont enflamme les têtes; M. Necker seul a produit cet effet, et
+déterminé l'explosion,' ... 'Les écrits de Voltaire ont certainement nui
+à la religion, et ébranlé la croyance dans un assez grand nombre; mais
+ils n'ont aucun rapport avec les affaires du gouvernement, et sont plus
+favorables que contraires à la monarchie....' Of Rousseau's _Social
+Contract_:--'Ce livre profond et abstrait était peu lu, et etendu de
+bien peu de gens.' Mably--'avait peu de vogue.' _De Gouvernment, etc.,
+en France_, p. 129, etc.]
+
+
+
+
+NOTE TO PAGE 242.
+
+
+THE DOCTRINE OF LIBERTY.
+
+Mr. Mill's memorable plea for social liberty was little more than an
+enlargement, though a very important enlargement, of the principles of
+the still more famous Speech for Liberty of Unlicensed Printing with
+which Milton ennobled English literature two centuries before. Milton
+contended for free publication of opinion mainly on these grounds:
+First, that the opposite system implied the 'grace of infallibility and
+incorruptibleness' in the licensers. Second, that the prohibition of
+bold books led to mental indolence and stagnant formalism both in
+teachers and congregations, producing the 'laziness of a licensing
+church.' Third, that it 'hinders and retards the importation of our
+richest merchandise, truth;' for the commission of the licenser enjoins
+him to let nothing pass which is not vulgarly received already, and 'if
+it come to prohibiting, there is not aught more likely to be prohibited
+than truth itself, whose first appearance to our eyes, bleared and
+dimmed with prejudice and custom, is more unsightly and unplausible
+than many errors, even as the person is of many a great man slight and
+contemptible to see to.' Fourth, that freedom is in itself an ingredient
+of true virtue, and 'they are not skilful considerers of human things
+who imagine to remove sin by removing the matter of sin; that virtue
+therefore, which is but a youngling in the contemplation of evil, and
+knows not the utmost that vice promises to her followers, and rejects
+it, is but a blank virtue, not a pure; her virtue is but an excremental
+virtue, which was the reason why our sage and serious poet Spenser, whom
+I dare be known to think a better teacher than Scotus or Aquinas,
+describing true temperance under the form of Guion, brings him in with
+his palmer through the cave of Mammon and the tower of earthly bliss,
+that he might see and know and yet abstain.'
+
+The four grounds on which Mr. Mill contends for the necessity of freedom
+in the expression of opinion to the mental wellbeing of mankind, are
+virtually contained in these. His four grounds are, (1) that the
+silenced opinion may be true; (2) it may contain a portion of truth,
+essential to supplement the prevailing opinion; (3) vigorous contesting
+of opinions that are even wholly true, is the only way of preventing
+them from sinking to the level of uncomprehended prejudices; (4) without
+such contesting, the doctrine will lose its vital effect on character
+and conduct.
+
+But Milton drew the line of liberty at what he calls 'neighbouring
+differences, or rather indifferences.' The Arminian controversy had
+loosened the bonds with which the newly liberated churches of the
+Reformation, had made haste to bind themselves again, and weakened that
+authority of confessions, which had replaced the older but not more
+intolerant authority of the universal church. Other controversies which
+raged during the first half of the seventeenth century,--those between
+catholics and protestants, between prelatists and presbyterians, between
+socinians and trinitarians, between latitudinarians, puritans, and
+sacramentalists,--all tended to weaken theological exclusiveness. This
+slackening, however, was no more than partial. Roger Williams, indeed,
+the Welsh founder of Rhode Island, preached, as early as 1631, the
+principles of an unlimited toleration, extending to catholics, Jews, and
+even infidels. Milton stopped a long way short of this. He did not mean
+'tolerated popery and open superstition, which, as it extirpates all
+religious and civil supremacies, so itself should be extirpate, provided
+first that all charitable and compassionate means be used to win and
+regain the weak and the misled: that also which is impious or evil
+absolutely either against faith or manners no law can possibly permit
+that intends not to unlaw itself.'
+
+
+Locke, writing five-and-forty years later, somewhat widened these
+limitations. His question was not merely whether there should be free
+expression of opinion, but whether there should furthermore be freedom
+of worship and of religious union. He answered both questions
+affirmatively,--not on the semi-sceptical ground of Jeremy Taylor, which
+is also one of the grounds taken by Mr. Mill, that we cannot be sure
+that our own opinion is the true one,--but on the strength of his
+definition of the province of the civil magistrate. Locke held that the
+magistrate's whole jurisdiction reached only to civil concernments, and
+that 'all civil power, right, and dominion is bounded to that only care
+of promoting these things; and that it neither can nor ought in any
+manner to be extended to the saving of souls. This chiefly because the
+power of the civil magistrate consists only in outward force, while true
+and saving religion consists in the inward persuasion of the mind,
+without which nothing can be acceptable to God, and such is the nature
+of the understanding that it cannot he compelled to the belief of
+anything by outward force.... It is only light and evidence that can
+work a change in men's opinions; and that light can in no manner proceed
+from corporal sufferings, or any other outward penalties.' 'I may grow
+rich by an art that I take not delight in; I may be cured of some
+disease by remedies that I have not faith in; but I cannot be saved by a
+religion that at I distrust and a ritual that I abhor.' (_First Letter
+concerning Toleration_.) And much more in the same excellent vein. But
+Locke fixed limits to toleration. 1. No opinions contrary to human
+society, or to those moral rules which are necessary to the preservation
+of civil society, are to be tolerated by the magistrate. Thus, to take
+examples from our own day, a conservative minister would think himself
+right on this principle in suppressing the Land and Labour League; a
+catholic minister in dissolving the Education League; and any minister
+in making mere membership of the Mormon sect a penal offence. 2. No
+tolerance ought to be extended to 'those who attribute unto the
+faithful, religious, and orthodox, that is in plain terms unto
+themselves, any peculiar privilege or power above other mortals, in
+civil concernments; or who, upon pretence of religion, do challenge any
+manner of authority over such as are not associated with them in their
+ecclesiastical communion.' As I have seldom heard of any sect, except
+the Friends, who did not challenge as much authority as it could
+possibly get over persons not associated with it, this would amount to a
+universal proscription of religion; but Locke's principle might at any
+rate be invoked against Ultra-montanism in some circumstances. 3. Those
+are not at all to be tolerated who deny the being of God. The taking
+away of God, _though but even in thought_, dissolves all society; and
+promises, covenants, and oaths, which are the bonds of human society,
+have no hold on such. Thus the police ought to close Mr. Bradlaugh's
+Hall of Science, and perhaps on some occasions the Positivist School.
+
+Locke's principles depended on a distinction between civil concernments,
+which he tries to define, and all other concernments. Warburton's
+arguments on the alliance between church and state turned on the same
+point, as did the once-famous Bangorian controversy. This distinction
+would fit into Mr. Mill's cardinal position, which consists in a
+distinction between the things that only affect the doer or thinker of
+them, and the things that affect other persons as well. Locke's attempt
+to divide civil affairs from affairs of salvation, was satisfactory
+enough for the comparatively narrow object with which he opened his
+discussion. Mr. Mill's account of civil affairs is both wider and more
+definite; naturally so, as he had to maintain the cause of tolerance in
+a much more complex set of social conditions, and amid a far greater
+diversity of speculative energy, than any one dreamed of in Locke's
+time. Mr. Mill limits the province of the civil magistrate to the
+repression of acts that directly and immediately injure others than the
+doer of them. So long as acts, including the expression of opinions, are
+purely self-regarding, it seems to him expedient in the long run that
+they should not be interfered with by the magistrate. He goes much
+further than this. Self-regarding acts should not be interfered with by
+the magistrate. Not only self-regarding acts, but all opinions
+whatever, should, moreover, be as little interfered with as possible by
+public opinion, except in the way of vigorous argumentation and earnest
+persuasion in a contrary direction; the silent but most impressive
+solicitation of virtuous example; the wise and careful upbringing of the
+young, so that when they enter life they may be most nobly fitted to
+choose the right opinions and obey the right motives.
+
+The consideration by which he supports this rigorous confinement of
+external interference on the part of government, or the unorganised
+members of the community whose opinion is called public opinion, to
+cases of self-protection, are these, some of which have been already
+stated:--
+
+1. By interfering to suppress opinions or experiments in living, you may
+resist truths and improvements in a greater or less degree.
+
+2. Constant discussion is the only certain means of preserving the
+freshness of truth in men's minds, and the vitality of its influence
+upon their conduct and motives.
+
+3. Individuality is one of the most valuable elements of wellbeing, and
+you can only be sure of making the most of individuality, if you have an
+atmosphere of freedom, encouraging free development and expansion.
+
+4. Habitual resort to repressive means of influencing conduct tends more
+than anything else to discredit and frustrate the better means, such as
+education, good example, and the like. (_Liberty_, 148.)
+
+The principle which he deduces from these considerations 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; the only purpose for which power can be rightfully
+exercised over any member of a civilised community, is to prevent harm
+to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient
+warrant. He cannot be rightfully compelled to do or forbear because it
+will make him happier, because in the opinion 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 others.' (_Liberty_,
+22.)
+
+
+Two disputable points in the above doctrine are likely at once to reveal
+themselves to the least critical eye. First, that doctrine would seem to
+check the free expression of disapproval; one of the most wholesome and
+indispensable duties which anybody with interest in serious questions
+has to perform, and the non-performance of which would remove the most
+proper and natural penalty from frivolous or perverse opinions and
+obnoxious conduct. Mr. Mill deals with this difficulty as follows:--'We
+have a right in various ways to act upon our unfavourable 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.' (_Liberty_,
+139.) This appears to be a satisfactory way of meeting the objection.
+For though the penalties of disapproval may be just the same, whether
+deliberately inflicted, or naturally and spontaneously falling on the
+object of such disapproval, yet there is a very intelligible difference
+between the two processes in their effect on the two parties concerned.
+A person imbued with Mr. Mill's principle would feel the responsibility
+of censorship much more seriously; would reflect more carefully and
+candidly about the conduct or opinion of which he thought ill; would be
+more on his guard against pharisaic censoriousness, and that desire to
+be ever judging one another, which Milton well called the stronghold of
+our hypocrisy. The disapproval of such a person would have an austere
+colour, a gravity, a self-respecting reserve, which could never belong
+to an equal degree of disapproval in a person who had started from the
+officious principle, that if we are sure we are right, it is straightway
+our business to make the person whom we think wrong smart for his error.
+And in the same way such disapproval would be much more impressive to
+the person whom it affected. If it was justified, he would be like a
+froward child who is always less effectively reformed--if reformable at
+all--by angry chidings and passionate punishments than by the sight of a
+cool and austere displeasure which lets him persist in his frowardness
+if he chooses.
+
+
+The second weak point in the doctrine lies in the extreme vagueness of
+the terms, protective and self-regarding. The practical difficulty
+begins with the definition of these terms. Can any opinion, or any
+serious part of conduct, be looked upon as truly and exclusively
+self-regarding? This central ingredient in the discussion seems
+insufficiently laboured in the essay on Liberty. Yet it is here more
+than anywhere else that controversy is needed to clear up what is in
+just as much need of elucidation, whatever view we may take of the
+inherent virtue of freedom--whether we look on freedom as a mere
+negation, or as one of the most powerful positive conditions of
+attaining the highest kind of human excellence.
+
+To some persons the analysis of conduct, on which the whole doctrine of
+liberty rests, seems metaphysical and arbitrary. They are reluctant to
+admit there are any self-regarding acts at all. This reluctance implies
+a perfectly tenable proposition, a proposition which has been maintained
+by nearly all religious bodies in the world's history in their
+non-latitudinarian stages. To distinguish the self-regarding from the
+other parts of conduct, strikes them not only as unscientific, but as
+morally and socially mischievous. They insist that there is a social as
+well as a personal element in every human act, though in very different
+proportions. There is no gain, they contend, and there may be much harm,
+in trying to mark off actions, in which the personal element decisively
+preponderates, from actions of another sort. Mr. Mill did so distinguish
+actions, nor was his distinction either metaphysical or arbitrary in its
+source. As a matter of observation, and for the practical purposes of
+morality, there are kinds of action whose consequences do not go beyond
+the doer of them. No doubt, you may say that by engaging in these kinds
+in any given moment, the doer is neglecting the actions in which the
+social element preponderates, and therefore even acts that seem purely
+self-regarding have indirect and negative consequences to the rest of
+the world. But to allow considerations of this sort to prevent us from
+using a common-sense classification of acts by the proportion of the
+personal element in them, is as unreasonable as if we allowed the
+doctrine of the conservation of physical force, or the evolution of one
+mode of force into another, to prevent us from classifying the
+affections of matter independently, as light, heat, motion, and the
+rest. There is one objection obviously to be made to most of the
+illustrations which are designed to show the public element in all
+private conduct. The connection between the act and its influence on
+others is so remote (using the word in a legal sense), though quite
+certain, distinct, and traceable, that you can only take the act out of
+the self-regarding category, by a process which virtually denies the
+existence of any such category. You must set a limit to this 'indirect
+and at-a-distance argument,' as Locke called a similar plea, and the
+setting of this limit is the natural supplement to Mr. Mill's 'simple
+principle.'
+
+The division between self-regarding acts and others then, rests on
+observation of their actual consequences. And why was Mr. Mill so
+anxious to erect self-regarding acts into a distinct and important
+class, so important as to be carefully and diligently secured by a
+special principle of liberty? Because observation of the recorded
+experience of mankind teaches us, that the recognition of this
+independent provision is essential to the richest expansion of human
+faculty. To narrow or to repudiate such a province, and to insist
+exclusively on the social bearing of each part of conduct, is to limit
+the play of motives, and to thwart the doctrine that 'mankind obtain a
+greater sum of happiness when each pursues his own, under the rules and
+conditions required by the rest, than when each makes the good of the
+rest his only object.' To narrow or to repudiate such a province is to
+tighten the power of the majority over the minority, and to augment the
+authority of whatever sacerdotal or legislative body may represent the
+majority. Whether the lawmakers be laymen in parliament, or priests of
+humanity exercising the spiritual power, it matters not.
+
+
+We may best estimate the worth and the significance of the doctrine of
+Liberty by considering the line of thought and observation which led to
+it. To begin with, it is in Mr. Mill's hands something quite different
+from the same doctrine as preached by the French revolutionary school;
+indeed one might even call it reactionary, in respect of the French
+theory of a hundred years back. It reposes on no principle of abstract
+right, but, like the rest of its author's opinions, on principles of
+utility and experience. Dr. Arnold used to divide reformers into two
+classes, popular and liberal. The first he defined as seekers of
+liberty, the second as seekers of improvement; the first were the goats,
+and the second were the sheep. Mr. Mill's doctrine denied the mutual
+exclusiveness of the two parts of this classification, for it made
+improvement the end and the test, while it proclaimed liberty to be the
+means. Every thinker now perceives that the strongest and most durable
+influences in every western society lead in the direction of democracy,
+and tend with more or less rapidity to throw the control of social
+organisation into the hands of numerical majorities. There are many
+people who believe that if you only make the ruling body big enough, it
+is sure to be either very wise itself, or very eager to choose wise
+leaders. Mr. Mill, as any one who is familiar with his writings is well
+aware, did not hold this opinion. He had no more partiality for mob rule
+than De Maistre or Goethe or Mr. Carlyle. He saw its evils more clearly
+than any of these eminent men, because he had a more scientific eye, and
+because he had had the invaluable training of a political administrator
+on a large scale, and in a very responsible post. But he did not content
+himself with seeing these evils, and he wasted no energy in passionate
+denunciation of them, which he knew must prove futile. Guizot said of De
+Tocqueville, that he was an aristocrat who accepted his defeat. Mr. Mill
+was too penetrated by popular sympathies to be an aristocrat in De
+Tocqueville's sense, but he likewise was full of ideas and hopes which
+the unchecked or undirected course of democracy would defeat without
+chance of reparation. This fact he accepted, and from this he started.
+Mr. Carlyle, and one or two rhetorical imitators, poured malediction on
+the many-headed populace, and with a rather pitiful impatience insisted
+that the only hope for men lay in their finding and obeying a strong
+man, a king, a hero, a dictator. How he was to be found, neither the
+master nor his still angrier and more impatient mimics could ever tell
+us.
+
+Now Mr. Mill's doctrine laid down the main condition of finding your
+hero; namely, that all ways should be left open to him, because no man,
+nor majority of men, could possibly tell by which of these ways their
+deliverers were from time to time destined to present themselves. Wits
+have caricatured all this, by asking us whether by encouraging the tares
+to grow, you give the wheat a better chance. This is as misleading as
+such metaphors usually are. The doctrine of liberty rests on a faith
+drawn from the observation of human progress, that though we know wheat
+to be serviceable and tares to be worthless, yet there are in the great
+seed-plot of human nature a thousand rudimentary germs, not wheat and
+not tares, of whose properties we have not had a fair opportunity of
+assuring ourselves. If you are too eager to pluck up the tares, you are
+very likely to pluck up with them these untried possibilities of human
+excellence, and you are, moreover, very likely to injure the growing
+wheat as well. The demonstration of this lies in the recorded experience
+of mankind.
+
+
+Nor is this all. Mr. Mill's doctrine does not lend the least countenance
+to the cardinal opinion of some writers in the last century, that the
+only need of human character and of social institutions is to be let
+alone. He never said that we were to leave the ground uncultivated, to
+bring up whatever might chance to grow. On the contrary, the ground was
+to be cultivated with the utmost care and knowledge, with a view to
+prevent the growth of tares--but cultivated in a certain manner. You may
+take the method of the Inquisition, of the more cruel of the Puritans,
+of De Maistre, of Mr. Carlyle; or you may take Mr. Mill's method of
+cultivation. According to the doctrine of Liberty, we are to devote
+ourselves to prevention, as the surest and most wholesome mode of
+extirpation. Persuade; argue; cherish virtuous example; bring up the
+young in habits of right opinion and right motive; shape your social
+arrangements so as to stimulate the best parts of character. By these
+means you will gain all the advantages that could possibly have come of
+heroes and legislative dragooning, as well as a great many more which
+neither heroes nor legislative dragooning could ever have secured.
+
+It is well with men, Mr. Mill said, moreover, in proportion as they
+respect truth. Now they at once prove and strengthen their respect for
+truth, by having an open mind to all its possibilities, while at the
+same time they hold firmly to their own proved convictions, until they
+hear better evidence to the contrary. There is no anarchy, nor
+uncertainty, nor paralysing air of provisionalness in such a frame of
+mind. So far is it from being fatal to loyalty or reverence, that it is
+an indispensable part of the groundwork of the only loyalty that a wise
+ruler or teacher would care to inspire--the loyalty springing from a
+rational conviction that, in a field open to all comers, he is the best
+man they can find. Only on condition of liberty without limit is the
+ablest and most helpful of 'heroes' sure to be found; and only on
+condition of liberty without limit are his followers sure to be worthy
+of him. You must have authority, and yet must have obedience. The
+noblest and deepest and most beneficent kind of authority is that which
+rests on an obedience that is rational and spontaneous.
+
+
+The same futile impatience which animates the political utterances of
+Mr. Carlyle and his more weak-voiced imitators, takes another form in
+men of a different training or temperament. They insist that if the
+majority has the means of preventing vice by law, it is folly and
+weakness not to resort to those means. The superficial attractiveness
+of such a doctrine is obvious. The doctrine of liberty implies a broader
+and a more patient view. It says:--Even if you could be sure that what
+you take for vice is so--and the history of persecution shows how
+careful you should be in this preliminary point--even then it is an
+undoubted and, indeed, a necessary tendency of this facile repressive
+legislation, to make those who resort to it neglect the more effective,
+humane, and durable kinds of preventive legislation. You pass a law (if
+you can) putting down drunkenness; there is a neatness in such a method
+very attractive to fervid and impatient natures. Would you not have done
+better to leave that law unpassed, and apply yourselves sedulously
+instead to the improvement of the dwellings of the more drunken class,
+to the provision of amusements that might compete with the ale-house, to
+the extension and elevation of instruction, and so on? You may say that
+this should be done, and yet the other should not be left undone; but,
+as matter of fact and history, the doing of the one has always gone with
+the neglect of the other, and ascetic law-making in the interests of
+virtue has never been accompanied either by law-making or any other
+kinds of activity for making virtue easier or more attractive. It is the
+recognition how little punishment can do, that leaves men free to see
+how much social prevention can do. I believe, then, that what seems to
+the criminal lawyers and passionate philanthropists self-evident, is in
+truth an illusion, springing from a very shallow kind of impatience,
+heated in some of them by the addition of a cynical contempt for human
+nature and the worth of human existence.
+
+If people believe that the book of social or moral knowledge is now
+completed, that we have turned over the last page and heard the last
+word, much of the foundation of Mr. Mill's doctrine would disappear. But
+those who hold this can hardly have much to congratulate themselves
+upon. If it were so, and if governments were to accept the principle
+that the only limits to the enforcement of the moral standard of the
+majority are the narrow expediencies of each special case, without
+reference to any deep and comprehensive principle covering all the
+largest considerations, why, then, the society to which we ought to look
+with most admiration and envy, is the Eastern Empire during the ninth
+and tenth centuries, when the Byzantine system of a thorough
+subordination of the spiritual power had fully consolidated itself!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of On Compromise, by John Morley
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11557 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11557 ***</div>
+
+ <h1>ON COMPROMISE</h1><span style="margin-left: 8em;"><i>'It
+ makes all the difference in the world whether we
+ put</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;"><i>Truth in the first place or in
+ the second place.'</i></span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 22em;">WHATLEY</span><br>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2>ON COMPROMISE</h2>
+
+ <h3>BY</h3>
+
+ <h2>JOHN MORLEY</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ 1908
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ <i>This Edition first printed 1886</i>
+ </center>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="NOTE"></a>
+
+ <h2>NOTE.</h2>
+
+ <p>The writer has availed himself of the opportunity of a new
+ edition to add three or four additional illustrations in the
+ footnotes. The criticisms on the first edition call for no
+ remark, excepting this, perhaps, that the present little volume
+ has no pretensions to be anything more than an Essay. To judge
+ such it performance as if it professed to be an exhaustive
+ Treatise in casuistry, is to subject it to tests which it was
+ never designed to bear. Merely to open questions, to indicate
+ points, to suggest cases, to sketch outlines,&mdash;as an Essay
+ does all these things,&mdash;may often be a process not without
+ its own modest usefulness and interest.</p>
+
+ <p><i>May 4, 1877.</i></p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CONTENTS"></a>
+
+ <h2>CONTENTS.</h2><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.
+ INTRODUCTORY.</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Design of this Essay</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The question stated</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Suggested by some existing
+ tendencies in England</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Comparison with other
+ countries</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Test of this
+ comparison</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The absent quality specifically
+ defined</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">History and decay of some recent
+ aspirations</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustrations</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Characteristics of one present
+ mood</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Analysis of its causes</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(1) Influence of French
+ examples</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(2) Influence of the Historic
+ Method</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(3) Influence of the Newspaper
+ Press</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(4) Increase of material
+ prosperity</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(5) Transformation of the
+ spiritual basis of thought</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(6) Influence of a State
+ Church</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.
+ OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Questions of a dual doctrine lies
+ at the outset of our inquiry</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">This doctrine
+ formulated</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Marks the triumph of <i>status
+ quo</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Psychological vindication of such
+ a doctrine</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Answered by assertion of the
+ dogmatic character of popular belief</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the pernicious social
+ influence of its priests</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The root idea of the defenders of
+ a dual doctrine</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thesis of the present chapter,
+ against that idea</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Examination of some of the pleas
+ for error</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">I. That a false opinion may be
+ clothed with good associations</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">II. That all minds are not open
+ to reason</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">III. That a false opinion,
+ considered in relation to the general</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">mental attitude, may be less
+ hurtful than its premature demolition</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">IV. That mere negative truth is
+ not a guide</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">V. That error has been a
+ stepping-stone to truth</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">We cannot tell how much truth has
+ been missed</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Inevitableness is not
+ utility</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER
+ III. INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL
+ SPIRIT.</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The modern <i>disciplina
+ arcani</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hume's immoral advice</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Evil intellectual effects of
+ immoral compromise</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Depravation that follows its
+ grosser forms</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The three provinces of
+ compromise</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Radical importance of their
+ separation</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Effects of their confusion in
+ practical politics</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Economy or management in the
+ Formation of opinion</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Its lawfulness turns on the
+ claims of majority and minority over one another</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thesis of the present
+ chapter</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Its importance, owing to the
+ supremacy of the political spirit in England</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Effects of the predominance of
+ this spirit</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Contrasted with epochs of
+ intellectual responsibility</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A modern movement against the
+ political spirit</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">An objection
+ considered</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Importance to character of
+ rationalised conviction, and of ideals</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The absence of them attenuates
+ conduct</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustrations in modern
+ politics</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Modern
+ latitudinarianism</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustration in two supreme
+ issues</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pascal's remarks upon a state of
+ Doubt</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dr. Newman on the same</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Three ways of dealing with the
+ issues</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Another illustration of
+ intellectual improbity</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The Savoyard Vicar</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mischievousness of substituting
+ spiritual self-indulgence for reason</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.
+ RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Compromise in
+ Expression</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Touches religion rather than
+ politics</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hume on non-resistance</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Reason why rights of free speech
+ do not exactly coincide with rights of free thought</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Digression into the matter of
+ free speech</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dissent no longer railing and
+ vituperative</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tendency of modern free thought
+ to assimilate some elements from the old faith</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A wide breach still
+ remains</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Heresy, however, no longer traced
+ to depravity</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tolerance not necessarily
+ acquiescence in scepticism</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Object of the foregoing
+ digression</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The rarity of plain-speaking a
+ reason why it is painful</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Conformity in the relationship
+ between child and parent</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Between husband and
+ wife</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">In the education of
+ children</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The case of an unbelieving
+ priest</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The case of one who fears to lose
+ his influence</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Conformity not harmless nor
+ unimportant</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.
+ THE REALISATION OF OPINION.</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The application of opinion to
+ conduct</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tempering
+ considerations</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Not to be pressed too
+ far</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Our action in realising our
+ opinions depends on our social theory</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Legitimate and illegitimate
+ compromise in view of that</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The distinction equally sound on
+ the evolutional theory</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Condition of progressive
+ change</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A plea for compromise
+ examined</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A second plea</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The allegation of provisional
+ usefulness examined</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustrated in religious
+ institutions</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">In political
+ institutions</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Burke's commendation of political
+ compromise</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The saying that small reforms may
+ be the worst enemies of great ones</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">In what sense true</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustration in the Elementary
+ Education Act</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Wisdom of social
+ patience</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The considerations which apply to
+ political practice do not apply to our own lives</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nor to the publication of social
+ opinions</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The amount of conscience in a
+ community</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Evil of attenuating this
+ element</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Historic illustration</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">New side of the
+ discussion</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Is earnestness of conviction
+ fatal to concession of liberty to others?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Two propositions at the base of
+ an affirmative answer</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Earnestness of conviction
+ consistent with sense of liability to error</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Belief in one's own infallibility
+ does not necessarily lead to intolerance</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The contrary notion due to
+ juristic analogies in social discussion</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Connection between the doctrine
+ of liberty and social evolution</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The timid compromisers
+ superfluous apprehension</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Material limits to the effect of
+ moral speculation</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustration from the history of
+ Slavery</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustration from French
+ history</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Practical influence of a faith in
+ the self-protecting quality of a society</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Conclusion</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#NOTE_TO_PAGE_242">NOTE
+ TO PAGE 242.</a></span><br>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2>ON COMPROMISE.</h2>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_I"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER I.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ INTRODUCTORY.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>The design of the following essay is to consider, in a short
+ and direct way, some of the limits that are set by sound reason
+ to the practice of the various arts of accommodation, economy,
+ management, conformity, or compromise. The right of thinking
+ freely and acting independently, of using our minds without
+ excessive awe of authority, and shaping our lives without
+ unquestioning obedience to custom, is now a finally accepted
+ principle in some sense or other with every school of thought
+ that has the smallest chance of commanding the future. Under what
+ circumstances does the exercise and vindication of the right,
+ thus conceded in theory, become a positive duty in practice? If
+ the majority are bound to tolerate dissent from the ruling
+ opinions and beliefs, under what conditions and within what
+ limitations is the dissentient imperatively bound to avail
+ himself of this toleration? How far, and in what way, ought
+ respect either for immediate practical convenience, or for
+ current prejudices, to weigh against respect for truth? For how
+ much is it well that the individual should allow the feelings and
+ convictions of the many to count, when he comes to shape, to
+ express, and to act upon his own feelings and convictions? Are we
+ only to be permitted to defend general principles, on condition
+ that we draw no practical inferences from them? Is every other
+ idea to yield precedence and empire to existing circumstances,
+ and is the immediate and universal workableness of a policy to be
+ the main test of its intrinsic fitness?</p>
+
+ <p>To attempt to answer all these questions fully would be
+ nothing less than to attempt a compendium of life and duty in all
+ their details, a Summa of cases of conscience, a guide to
+ doubters at every point of the compass. The aim of the present
+ writer is a comparatively modest one; namely, to seek one or two
+ of the most general principles which ought to regulate the
+ practice of compliance, and to suggest some of the bearings which
+ they may have in their application to certain difficulties in
+ modern matters of conduct.</p>
+
+ <p>It is pretty plain that an inquiry of this kind needs to be
+ fixed by reference to a given set of social circumstances
+ tolerably well understood. There are some common rules as to the
+ expediency of compromise and conformity, but their application is
+ a matter of endless variety and the widest elasticity. The
+ interesting and useful thing is to find the relation of these too
+ vague rules to actual conditions; to transform them into
+ practical guides and real interpreters of what is right and best
+ in thought and conduct, in a special and definite kind of
+ emergency. According to the current assumptions of the writer and
+ the preacher, the one commanding law is that men should cling to
+ truth and right, if the very heavens fall. In principle this is
+ universally accepted. To the partisans of authority and tradition
+ it is as much a commonplace as to the partisans of the most
+ absolute and unflinching rationalism. Yet in practice all schools
+ alike are forced to admit the necessity of a measure of
+ accommodation in the very interests of truth itself. Fanatic is a
+ name of such ill repute, exactly because one who deserves to be
+ called by it injures good causes by refusing timely and harmless
+ concession; by irritating prejudices that a wiser way of urging
+ his own opinion might have turned aside; by making no allowances,
+ respecting no motives, and recognising none of those qualifying
+ principles, which are nothing less than necessary to make his own
+ principle true and fitting in a given society. The interesting
+ question in connection with compromise obviously turns upon the
+ placing of the boundary that divides wise suspense in forming
+ opinions, wise reserve in expressing them, and wise tardiness in
+ trying to realise them, from unavowed disingenuousness and
+ self-illusion, from voluntary dissimulation, and from indolence
+ and pusillanimity. These are the three departments or provinces
+ of compromise. Our subject is a question of boundaries.<a name=
+ "FNanchor1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1"><sup>[1]</sup></a> And this
+ question, being mainly one of time and circumstance, may be most
+ satisfactorily discussed in relation to the time and the
+ circumstances which we know best, or at least whose deficiencies
+ and requirements are most pressingly visible to us.</p>
+
+ <p>Though England counts her full share of fearless truth-seekers
+ in most departments of inquiry, yet there is on the whole no
+ weakening, but a rather marked confirmation, of what has become
+ an inveterate national characteristic, and has long been
+ recognised as such; a profound distrust, namely, of all general
+ principles; a profound dislike both of much reference to them,
+ and of any disposition to invest them with practical authority;
+ and a silent but most pertinacious measurement of philosophic
+ truths by political tests. 'It is not at all easy, humanly
+ speaking,' says one who has tried the experiment, 'to wind an
+ Englishman up to the level of dogma.' The difficulty has extended
+ further than the dogma of theology. The supposed antagonism
+ between expediency and principle has been pressed further and
+ further away from the little piece of true meaning that it ever
+ could be rightly allowed to have, until it has now come to
+ signify the paramount wisdom of counting the narrow, immediate,
+ and personal expediency for everything, and the whole, general,
+ ultimate, and completed expediency for nothing. Principle is only
+ another name for a proposition stating the terms of one of these
+ larger expediencies. When principle is held in contempt, or
+ banished to the far dreamland of the philosopher and the student,
+ with an affectation of reverence that in a materialist generation
+ is in truth the most overweening kind of contempt, this only
+ means that men are thinking much of the interests of to-day, and
+ little of the more ample interests of the many days to come. It
+ means that the conditions of the time are unfriendly to the
+ penetration and the breadth of vision which disclose to us the
+ whole range of consequences that follow on certain kinds of
+ action or opinion, and unfriendly to the intrepidity and
+ disinterestedness which make us willing to sacrifice our own
+ present ease or near convenience, in the hope of securing higher
+ advantages for others or for ourselves in the future.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us take politics, for example. What is the state of the
+ case with us, if we look at national life in its broadest aspect?
+ A German has his dream of a great fatherland which shall not only
+ be one and consolidated, but shall in due season win freedom for
+ itself, and be as a sacred hearth whence others may borrow the
+ warmth of freedom and order for themselves. A Spaniard has his
+ vision either of militant loyalty to God and the saints and the
+ exiled line of his kings, or else of devotion to the newly won
+ liberty and to the raising up of his fallen nation. An American,
+ in the midst of the political corruption which for the moment
+ obscures the great democratic experiment, yet has his imagination
+ kindled by the size and resources of his land, and his enthusiasm
+ fired by the high destinies which he believes to await its people
+ in the centuries to come. A Frenchman, republican or royalist,
+ with all his frenzies and 'fool-fury' of red or white, still has
+ his hope and dream and aspiration, with which to enlarge his life
+ and lift him on an ample pinion out from the circle of a poor
+ egoism. What stirs the hope and moves the aspiration of our
+ Englishman? Surely nothing either in the heavens above or on the
+ earth beneath. The English are as a people little susceptible in
+ the region of the imagination. But they have done good work in
+ the world, acquired a splendid historic tradition of stout combat
+ for good causes, founded a mighty and beneficent empire; and they
+ have done all this notwithstanding their deficiencies of
+ imagination. Their lands have been the home of great and forlorn
+ causes, though they could not always follow the transcendental
+ flights of their foreign allies and champions. If Englishmen were
+ not strong in imagination, they were what is better and surer,
+ strong in their hold of the great emancipating principles. What
+ great political cause, her own or another's, is England
+ befriending to-day? To say that no great cause is left, is to
+ tell us that we have reached the final stage of human progress,
+ and turned over the last leaf in the volume of human
+ improvements. The day when this is said and believed marks the
+ end of a nation's life. Is it possible that, after all, our old
+ protestant spirit, with its rationality, its austerity, its
+ steady political energy, has been struck with something of the
+ mortal fatigue that seizes catholic societies after their fits of
+ revolution?</p>
+
+ <p>We need not forget either the atrocities or the imbecilities
+ which mark the course of modern politics on the Continent. I am
+ as keenly alive as any one to the levity of France, and the
+ [Greek: hubris] of Germany. It may be true that the ordinary
+ Frenchman is in some respects the victim of as poor an egoism as
+ that of the ordinary Englishman; and that the American has no
+ advantage over us in certain kinds of magnanimous sentiment. What
+ is important is the mind and attitude, not of the ordinary man,
+ but of those who should be extraordinary. The decisive sign of
+ the elevation of a nation's life is to be sought among those who
+ lead or ought to lead. The test of the health of a people is to
+ be found in the utterances of those who are its spokesmen, and in
+ the action of those whom it accepts or chooses to be its chiefs.
+ We have to look to the magnitude of the issues and the height of
+ the interests which engage its foremost spirits. What are the
+ best men in a country striving for? And is the struggle pursued
+ intrepidly and with a sense of its size and amplitude, or with
+ creeping foot and blinking eye? The answer to these questions is
+ the answer to the other question, whether the best men in the
+ country are small or great. It is a commonplace that the manner
+ of doing things is often as important as the things done. And it
+ has been pointed out more than once that England's most
+ creditable national action constantly shows itself so poor and
+ mean in expression that the rest of Europe can discern nothing in
+ it but craft and sinister interest. Our public opinion is often
+ rich in wisdom, but we lack the courage of our wisdom. We execute
+ noble achievements, and then are best pleased to find shabby
+ reasons for them.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a certain quality attaching alike to thought and
+ expression and action, for which we may borrow the name of
+ grandeur. It has been noticed, for instance, that Bacon strikes
+ and impresses us, not merely by the substantial merit of what he
+ achieved, but still more by a certain greatness of scheme and
+ conception. This quality is not a mere idle decoration. It is not
+ a theatrical artifice of mask or buskin, to impose upon us unreal
+ impressions of height and dignity. The added greatness is real.
+ Height of aim and nobility of expression are true forces. They
+ grow to be an obligation upon us. A lofty sense of personal worth
+ is one of the surest elements of greatness. That the lion should
+ love to masquerade in the ass's skin is not modesty and reserve,
+ but imbecility and degradation. And that England should wrap
+ herself in the robe of small causes and mean reasons is the more
+ deplorable, because there is no nation in the world the
+ substantial elements of whose power are so majestic and imperial
+ as our own. Our language is the most widely spoken of all
+ tongues, its literature is second to none in variety and power.
+ Our people, whether English or American, have long ago superseded
+ the barbarous device of dictator and Caesar by the manly arts of
+ self-government. We understand that peace and industry are the
+ two most indispensable conditions of modern civilisation, and we
+ draw the lines of our policy in accordance with such a
+ conviction. We have had imposed upon us by the unlucky prowess of
+ our ancestors the task of ruling a vast number of millions of
+ alien dependents. We undertake it with a disinterestedness, and
+ execute it with a skill of administration, to which history
+ supplies no parallel, and which, even if time should show that
+ the conditions of the problem were insoluble, will still remain
+ for ever admirable. All these are elements of true pre-eminence.
+ They are calculated to inspire us with the loftiest consciousness
+ of national life. They ought to clothe our voice with authority,
+ to nerve our action by generous resolution, and to fill our
+ counsels with weightiness and power.</p>
+
+ <p>Within the last forty years England has lost one by one each
+ of those enthusiasms which may have been illusions,&mdash;some of
+ them undoubtedly were so,&mdash;but which at least testified to
+ the existence among us, in a very considerable degree, of a vivid
+ belief in the possibility of certain broad general theories being
+ true and right, as well as in the obligation of making them
+ lights to practical conduct and desire. People a generation ago
+ had eager sympathy with Hungary, with Italy, with Poland, because
+ they were deeply impressed by the doctrine of nationalities. They
+ had again a generous and energetic hatred of such an institution
+ as the negro slavery of America, because justice and humanity and
+ religion were too real and potent forces within their breasts to
+ allow them to listen to those political considerations by which
+ American statesmen used to justify temporising and compromise.
+ They had strong feelings about Parliamentary Reform, because they
+ were penetrated by the principle that the possession of political
+ power by the bulk of a society is the only effective security
+ against sinister government; or else by the principle that
+ participation in public activity, even in the modest form of an
+ exercise of the elective franchise, is an elevating and
+ instructing agency; or perhaps by the principle that justice
+ demands that those who are compelled to obey laws and pay
+ national taxes should have a voice in making the one and imposing
+ the other.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be said that the very fate of these aspirations has had
+ a blighting effect on public enthusiasm and the capacity of
+ feeling it. Not only have most of them now been fulfilled, and so
+ passed from aspiration to actuality, but the results of their
+ fulfilment have been so disappointing as to make us wonder
+ whether it is really worth while to pray, when to have our
+ prayers granted carries the world so very slight a way forward.
+ The Austrian is no longer in Italy; the Pope has ceased to be
+ master in Rome; the patriots of Hungary are now in possession of
+ their rights, and have become friends of their old oppressors;
+ the negro slave has been transformed into an American citizen. At
+ home, again, the gods have listened to our vows. Parliament has
+ been reformed, and the long-desired mechanical security provided
+ for the voter's freedom. We no longer aspire after all these
+ things, you may say, because our hopes have been realised and our
+ dreams have come true. It is possible that the comparatively
+ prosaic results before our eyes at the end of all have thrown a
+ chill over our political imagination. What seemed so glorious
+ when it was far off, seems perhaps a little poor now that it is
+ near; and this has damped the wing of political fancy. The old
+ aspirations have vanished, and no new ones have arisen in their
+ place. Be the cause what it may, I should express the change in
+ this way, that the existing order of facts, whatever it may be,
+ now takes a hardly disputed precedence with us over ideas, and
+ that the coarsest political standard is undoubtingly and finally
+ applied over the whole realm of human thought.</p>
+
+ <p>The line taken up by the press and the governing classes of
+ England during the American Civil War may serve to illustrate the
+ kind of mood which we conceive to be gaining firmer hold than
+ ever of the national mind. Those who sympathised with the
+ Southern States listened only to political arguments, and very
+ narrow and inefficient political arguments, as it happened, when
+ they ought to have seen that here was an issue which involved not
+ only political ideas, but moral and religious ideas as well. That
+ is to say, the ordinary political tests were not enough to reveal
+ the entire significance of the crisis, nor were the political
+ standards proper for measuring the whole of the expediencies
+ hanging in the balance. The conflict could not be adequately
+ gauged by such questions as whether the Slave States had or had
+ not a constitutional right to establish an independent
+ government; whether the Free States were animated by philanthropy
+ or by love of empire; whether it was to the political advantage
+ of England that the American Union should be divided and
+ consequently weakened. Such questions were not necessarily
+ improper in themselves, and we can imagine circumstances in which
+ they might be not only proper but decisive. But, the
+ circumstances being what they were, the narrower expediencies of
+ ordinary politics were outweighed by one of those supreme and
+ indefeasible expediencies which are classified as moral. These
+ are, in other words, the higher, wider, more binding, and
+ transcendent part of the master art of social wellbeing.</p>
+
+ <p>Here was only one illustration of the growing tendency to
+ substitute the narrowest political point of view for all the
+ other ways of regarding the course of human affairs, and to raise
+ the limitations which practical exigencies may happen to set to
+ the application of general principles, into the very place of the
+ principles themselves. Nor is the process of deteriorating
+ conviction confined to the greater or noisier transactions of
+ nations. It is impossible that it should be so. That process is
+ due to causes which affect the mental temper an a whole, and pour
+ round us an atmosphere that enervates our judgment from end to
+ end, not more in politics than in morality, and not more in
+ morality than in philosophy, in art, and in religion. Perhaps
+ this tendency never showed itself more offensively than when the
+ most important newspaper in the country criticised our great
+ naturalist's scientific speculations as to the descent of man,
+ from the point of view of property, intelligence, and a stake in
+ the country, and severely censured him for revealing his
+ particular zoological conclusions to the general public, at a
+ moment when the sky of Paris was red with the incendiary flames
+ of the Commune. It would be hard to reduce the transformation of
+ all truth into a subordinate department of daily politics, to a
+ more gross and unseemly absurdity.</p>
+
+ <p>The consequences of such a transformation, of putting
+ immediate social convenience in the first place, and respect for
+ truth in the second, are seen, as we have said, in a distinct and
+ unmistakable lowering of the level of national life; a slack and
+ lethargic quality about public opinion; a growing predominance of
+ material, temporary, and selfish aims, over those which are
+ generous, far-reaching, and spiritual; a deadly weakening of
+ intellectual conclusiveness, and clear-shining moral
+ illumination, and, lastly, of a certain stoutness of self-respect
+ for which England was once especially famous. A plain categorical
+ proposition is becoming less and less credible to average minds.
+ Or at least the slovenly willingness to hold two directly
+ contradictory propositions at one and the same time is becoming
+ more and more common. In religion, morals, and politics, the
+ suppression of your true opinion, if not the positive profession
+ of what you hold to be a false opinion, is hardly ever counted a
+ vice, and not seldom even goes for virtue and solid wisdom. One
+ is conjured to respect the beliefs of others, but forbidden to
+ claim the same respect for one's own.</p>
+
+ <p>This dread of the categorical proposition might be creditable,
+ if it sprang from attachment to a very high standard of evidence,
+ or from a deep sense of the relative and provisional quality of
+ truth. There might even be a plausible defence set up for it, if
+ it sprang from that formulated distrust of the energetic rational
+ judgment in comparison with the emotional, affective,
+ contemplative parts of man, which underlies the various forms of
+ religious mysticism. If you look closely into our present mood,
+ it is seen to be the product mainly and above all of a shrinking
+ deference to the <i>status quo</i>, not merely as having a claim
+ not to be lightly dealt with, which every serious man concedes,
+ but as being the last word and final test of truth and justice.
+ Physical science is allowed to be the sphere of accurate
+ reasoning and distinct conclusions, but in morals and politics,
+ instead of admitting that these subjects have equally a logic of
+ their own, we silently suspect all first principles, and
+ practically deny the strict inferences from demonstrated
+ premisses. Faith in the soundness of given general theories of
+ right and wrong melts away before the first momentary triumph of
+ wrong, or the first passing discouragement in enforcing
+ right.</p>
+
+ <p>Our robust political sense, which has discovered so many of
+ the secrets of good government, which has given us freedom with
+ order, and popular administration without corruption, and
+ unalterable respect for law along with indelible respect for
+ individual right, this, which has so long been our strong point,
+ is fast becoming our weakness and undoing. For the extension of
+ the ways of thinking which are proper in politics, to other than
+ political matter, means at the same time the depravation of the
+ political sense itself. Not only is social expediency effacing
+ the many other points of view that men ought to take of the
+ various facts of life and thought: the idea of social expediency
+ itself is becoming a dwarfed and pinched idea. Ours is the
+ country where love of constant improvement ought to be greater
+ than anywhere else, because fear of revolution is less. Yet the
+ art of politics is growing to be as meanly conceived as all the
+ rest At elections the national candidate has not often a chance
+ against the local candidate, nor the man of a principle against
+ the man of a class. In parliament we are admonished on high
+ authority that 'the policy of a party is not the carrying out of
+ the opinion of any section of it, but the general consensus of
+ the whole,' which seems to be a hierophantic manner of saying
+ that the policy of a party is one thing, and the principle which
+ makes it a party is another thing, and that men who care very
+ strongly about anything are to surrender that and the hope of it,
+ for the sake of succeeding in something about which they care
+ very little or not at all. This is our modern way of giving
+ politicians heart for their voyage, of inspiring them with
+ resoluteness and self-respect, with confidence in the worth of
+ their cause and enthusiasm for its success. Thoroughness is a
+ mistake, and nailing your flag to the mast a bit of delusive
+ heroics. Think wholly of to-day, and not at all of to-morrow.
+ Beware of the high and hold fast to the safe. Dismiss conviction,
+ and study general consensus. No zeal, no faith, no intellectual
+ trenchancy, but as much low-minded geniality and trivial
+ complaisance as you please.</p>
+
+ <p>Of course, all these characteristics of our own society mark
+ tendencies that are common enough in all societies. They often
+ spring from an indolence and enervation that besets a certain
+ number of people, however invigorating the general mental climate
+ may be. What we are now saying is that the general mental climate
+ itself has, outside of the domain of physical science, ceased to
+ be invigorating; that, on the contrary, it fosters the more
+ inglorious predispositions of men, and encourages a native
+ willingness, already so strong, to acquiesce in a lazy
+ accommodation with error, an ignoble economy of truth, and a
+ vicious compromise of the permanent gains of adhering to a sound
+ general principle, for the sake of the temporary gains of
+ departing from it.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Without attempting an elaborate analysis of the causes that
+ have brought about this debilitation of mental tone, we may
+ shortly remind ourselves of one or two facts in the political
+ history, in the intellectual history, and in the religious
+ history of this generation, which perhaps help us to understand a
+ phenomenon that we have all so keen an interest both in
+ understanding and in modifying.</p>
+
+ <p>To begin with what lies nearest to the surface. The most
+ obvious agency at work in the present exaggeration of the
+ political standard as the universal test of truth, is to be found
+ in some contemporary incidents. The influence of France upon
+ England since the revolution of 1848 has tended wholly to the
+ discredit of abstract theory and general reasoning among us, in
+ all that relates to politics, morals, and religion. In 1848, not
+ in 1789, questions affecting the fundamental structure and
+ organic condition of the social union came for the first time
+ into formidable prominence. For the first time those questions
+ and the answers to them were stated in articulate formulas and
+ distinct theories. They were not merely written in books; they so
+ fascinated the imagination and inflamed the hopes of the time,
+ that thousands of men were willing actually to go down into the
+ streets and to shed their blood for the realisation of their
+ generous dream of a renovated society. The same sight has been
+ seen since, and even when we do not see it, we are perfectly
+ aware that the same temper is smouldering. Those were premature
+ attempts to convert a crude aspiration into a political reality,
+ and to found a new social order on a number of umcompromising
+ deductions from abstract principles of the common weal. They have
+ had the natural effect of deepening the English dislike of a
+ general theory, even when such a theory did no more than profess
+ to announce a remote object of desire, and not the present goal
+ of immediate effort.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not only the Socialists who are responsible for the low
+ esteem into which a spirit of political generalisation has fallen
+ in other countries, in consequence of French experience. Mr. Mill
+ has described in a well-known passage the characteristic vice of
+ the leaders of all French parties, and not of the democratic
+ party more than any other. 'The commonplaces of politics in
+ France,' he says, 'are large and sweeping practical maxims, from
+ which, as ultimate premisses, men reason downwards to particular
+ applications, and this they call being logical and consistent.
+ For instance, they are perpetually arguing that such and such a
+ measure ought to be adopted, because it is a consequence of the
+ principle on which the form of government is founded; of the
+ principle of legitimacy, or the principle of the sovereignty of
+ the people. To which it may be answered that if these be really
+ practical principles, they must rest on speculative grounds; the
+ sovereignty of the people (for example) must be a right
+ foundation for government, because a government thus constituted
+ tends to produce certain beneficial effects. Inasmuch, however,
+ as no government produces all possible beneficial effects, but
+ all are attended with more or fewer inconveniences; and since
+ these cannot be combated by means drawn from the very causes
+ which produce them, it would often be a much stronger
+ recommendation of some practical arrangement that it does not
+ follow from what is called the general principle of the
+ government, than that it does,'<a name="FNanchor2"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_2"><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The English feeling for compromise is on its better side the
+ result of a shrewd and practical, though informal, recognition of
+ a truth which the writer has here expressed in terms of Method.
+ The disregard which the political action of France has repeatedly
+ betrayed of a principle really so important has hitherto
+ strengthened our own regard for it, until it has not only made us
+ look on its importance as exclusive and final, but has extended
+ our respect for the right kind of compromise to wrong and
+ injurious kinds.</p>
+
+ <p>A minor event, which now looks much less important than it did
+ not many years ago, but which still had real influence in
+ deteriorating moral judgment, was the career of a late sovereign
+ of France. Some apparent advantages followed for a season from a
+ rule which had its origin in a violent and perfidious usurpation,
+ and which was upheld by all the arts of moral corruption,
+ political enervation, and military repression. The advantages
+ lasted long enough to create in this country a steady and
+ powerful opinion that Napoleon the Third's early crime was
+ redeemed by the seeming prosperity which followed. The shocking
+ prematureness of this shallow condonation is now too glaringly
+ visible for any one to deny it. Not often in history has the
+ great truth that 'morality is the nature of things' received
+ corroboration so prompt and timely. We need not commit ourselves
+ to the optimistic or sentimental hypothesis that wickedness
+ always fares ill in the world, or on the other hand that whoso
+ hearkens diligently to the divine voice, and observes all the
+ commandments to do them, shall be blessed in his basket and his
+ store and all the work of his hand. The claims of morality to our
+ allegiance, so far as its precepts are solidly established, rest
+ on the same positive base as our faith in the truth of physical
+ laws. Moral principles, when they are true, are at bottom only
+ registered generalisations from experience. They record certain
+ uniformities of antecedence and consequence in the region of
+ human conduct Want of faith in the persistency of these
+ uniformities is only a little less fatuous in the moral order
+ than a corresponding want of faith would instantly disclose
+ itself to be in the purely physical order. In both orders alike
+ there is only too much of this kind of fatuousness, this
+ readiness to believe that for once in our favour the stream shall
+ flow up hill, that we may live in miasmatic air unpoisoned, that
+ a government may depress the energy, the self-reliance, the
+ public spirit of its citizens, and yet be able to count on these
+ qualities whenever the government itself may have broken down,
+ and left the country to make the best of such resources as are
+ left after so severe and prolonged a drain. This is the sense in
+ which morality is the nature of things. The system of the Second
+ Empire was in the same sense an immoral system. Unless all the
+ lessons of human experience were futile, and all the principles
+ of political morality mere articles of pedantry, such a system
+ must inevitably bring disaster, as we might have seen that it was
+ sowing the seeds of disaster. Yet because the catastrophe
+ lingered, opinion in England began to admit the possibility of
+ evil being for this once good, and to treat any reference to the
+ moral and political principles which condemned the imperial
+ system, and all systems like it, beyond hope or appeal, as simply
+ the pretext of a mutinous or Utopian impatience.</p>
+
+ <p>This, however, is only one of the more superficial influences
+ which have helped and fallen in with the working of profounder
+ causes of weakened aspiration and impoverished moral energy, and
+ of the substitution of latitudinarian acquiescence and faltering
+ conviction for the whole-hearted assurance of better times. Of
+ these deeper causes, the most important in the intellectual
+ development of the prevailing forms of thought and sentiment is
+ the growth of the Historic Method. Let us consider very shortly
+ how the abuse of this method, and an unauthorised extension and
+ interpretation of its conclusions, are likely to have had
+ something to do with the enervation of opinion.</p>
+
+ <p>The Historic Method may be described as the comparison of the
+ forms of an idea, or a usage, or a belief, at any given time,
+ with the earlier forms from which they were evolved, or the later
+ forms into which they were developed, and the establishment, from
+ such a comparison, of an ascending and descending order among the
+ facts. It consists in the explanation of existing parts in the
+ frame of society by connecting them with corresponding parts in
+ some earlier frame; in the identification of present forms in the
+ past, and past forms in the present. Its main process is the
+ detection of corresponding customs, opinions, laws, beliefs,
+ among different communities, and a grouping of them into general
+ classes with reference to some one common feature. It is a
+ certain way of seeking answers to various questions of origin,
+ resting on the same general doctrine of evolution, applied to
+ moral and social forms, as that which is being applied with so
+ much ingenuity to the series of organic matter. The historic
+ conception is a reference of every state of society to a
+ particular stage in the evolution of its general conditions.
+ Ideas of law, of virtue, of religion, of the physical universe,
+ of history, of the social union itself, all march in a harmonious
+ and inter-dependent order.</p>
+
+ <p>Curiosity with reference to origins is for various reasons the
+ most marked element among modern scientific tendencies. It covers
+ the whole field, moral, intellectual, and physical, from the
+ smile or the frown on a man's face, up to the most complex of the
+ ideas in his mind; from the expression of his emotions, to their
+ root and relations with one another in his inmost organisation.
+ As an ingenious writer, too soon lost to our political
+ literature, has put it:&mdash;'If we wanted to describe one of
+ the most marked results, perhaps the most marked result, of late
+ thought, we should say that by it everything is made <i>an
+ antiquity</i>. When in former times our ancestors thought of an
+ antiquarian, they described him as occupied with coins and medals
+ and Druids' stones. But now there are other relics; indeed all
+ matter is become such. Man himself has to the eye of science
+ become an antiquity. She tries to read, is beginning to read,
+ knows she ought to read, in the frame of each man the result of a
+ whole history of all his life, and what he is and what makes him
+ so.'<a name="FNanchor3"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_3"><sup>[3]</sup></a> Character is considered less
+ with reference to its absolute qualities than as an interesting
+ scene strewn with scattered rudiments, survivals, inherited
+ predispositions. Opinions are counted rather as phenomena to be
+ explained than as matters of truth and falsehood. Of usages, we
+ are beginning first of all to think where they came from, and
+ secondarily whether they are the most fitting and convenient that
+ men could be got to accept. In the last century men asked of a
+ belief or a story, Is it true? We now ask, How did men come to
+ take it for true? In short the relations among social phenomena
+ which now engage most attention, are relations of original
+ source, rather than those of actual consistency in theory and
+ actual fitness in practice. The devotees of the current method
+ are more concerned with the pedigree and genealogical connections
+ of a custom or an idea than with its own proper goodness or
+ badness, its strength or its weakness.</p>
+
+ <p>Though there is no necessary or truly logical association
+ between systematic use of this method rightly limited, and a
+ slack and slipshod preference of vague general forms over
+ definite ideas, yet every one can see its tendency, if
+ uncorrected, to make men shrink from importing anything like
+ absolute quality into their propositions. We can see also, what
+ is still worse, its tendency to place individual robustness and
+ initiative in the light of superfluities, with which a world that
+ goes by evolution can very well dispense. Men easily come to
+ consider clearness and positiveness in their opinions,
+ staunchness in holding and defending them, and fervour in
+ carrying them into action, as equivocal virtues of very doubtful
+ perfection, in a state of things where every abuse has after all
+ had a defensible origin; where every error has, we must confess,
+ once been true relatively to other parts of belief in those who
+ held the error; and where all parts of life are so bound up with
+ one another, that it is of no avail to attack one evil, unless
+ you attack many more at the same time. This is a caricature of
+ the real teaching of the Historic Method, of which we shall have
+ to speak presently; but it is one of those caricatures which the
+ natural sloth in such matters, and the indigenous intellectual
+ haziness of the majority of men, make them very willing to take
+ for the true philosophy of things.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Then there is the newspaper press, that huge engine for
+ keeping discussion on a low level, and making the political test
+ final. To take off the taxes on knowledge was to place a heavy
+ tax on broad and independent opinion. The multiplication of
+ journals 'delivering brawling judgments unashamed on all things
+ all day long,' has done much to deaden the small stock of
+ individuality in public verdicts. It has done much to make vulgar
+ ways of looking at things and vulgar ways of speaking of them
+ stronger and stronger, by formulating and repeating and
+ stereotyping them incessantly from morning until afternoon, and
+ from year's end to year's end. For a newspaper must live, and to
+ live it must please, and its conductors suppose, perhaps not
+ altogether rightly, that it can only please by being very
+ cheerful towards prejudices, very chilly to general theories,
+ loftily disdainful to the men of a principle. Their one cry to an
+ advocate of improvement is some sagacious silliness about
+ recognising the limits of the practicable in politics, and seeing
+ the necessity of adapting theories to facts. As if the fact of
+ taking a broader and wiser view than the common crowd
+ disqualifies a man from knowing what the view of the common crowd
+ happens to be, and from estimating it at the proper value for
+ practical purposes. Why are the men who despair of improvement to
+ be the only persons endowed with the gift of discerning the
+ practicable? It is, however, only too easy to understand how a
+ journal, existing for a day, should limit its view to the
+ possibilities of the day, and how, being most closely affected by
+ the particular, it should coldly turn its back upon all that is
+ general. And it is easy, too, to understand the reaction of this
+ intellectual timorousness upon the minds of ordinary readers, who
+ have too little natural force and too little cultivation to be
+ able to resist the narrowing and deadly effect of the daily
+ iteration of short-sighted commonplaces.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Far the most penetrating of all the influences that are
+ impairing the moral and intellectual nerve of our generation,
+ remain still to be mentioned. The first of these is the immense
+ increase of material prosperity, and the second is the immense
+ decline in sincerity of spiritual interest. The evil wrought by
+ the one fills up the measure of the evil wrought by the other. We
+ have been, in spite of momentary declensions, on a flood tide of
+ high profits and a roaring trade, and there is nothing like a
+ roaring trade for engendering latitudinarians. The effect of many
+ possessions, especially if they be newly acquired, in slackening
+ moral vigour, is a proverb. Our new wealth is hardly leavened by
+ any tradition of public duty such as lingers among the English
+ nobles, nor as yet by any common custom of devotion to public
+ causes, such as seems to live and grow in the United States.
+ Under such conditions, with new wealth come luxury and love of
+ ease and that fatal readiness to believe that God has placed us
+ in the best of possible worlds, which so lowers men's aims and
+ unstrings their firmness of purpose. Pleasure saps high
+ interests, and the weakening of high interests leaves more
+ undisputed room for pleasure. Management and compromise appear
+ among the permitted arts, because they tend to comfort, and
+ comfort is the end of ends, comprehending all ends. Not truth is
+ the standard, but the politic and the reputable. Are we to
+ suppose that it is firm persuasion of the greater scripturalness
+ of episcopacy that turns the second generation of dissenting
+ manufacturers in our busy Lancashire into churchmen? Certainly
+ such conversions do no violence to the conscience of the
+ proselyte, for he is intellectually indifferent, a spiritual
+ neuter.</p>
+
+ <p>That brings us to the root of the matter, the serious side of
+ a revolution that in this social consequence is so unspeakably
+ ignoble. This root of the matter is the slow transformation now
+ at work of the whole spiritual basis of thought. Every age is in
+ some sort an age of transition, but our own is characteristically
+ and cardinally an epoch of transition in the very foundations of
+ belief and conduct. The old hopes have grown pale, the old fears
+ dim; strong sanctions are become weak, and once vivid faiths very
+ numb. Religion, whatever destinies may be in store for it, is at
+ least for the present hardly any longer an organic power. It is
+ not that supreme, penetrating, controlling, decisive part of a
+ man's life, which it has been, and will be again. The work of
+ destruction is all the more perturbing to timorous spirits, and
+ more harassing even to doughtier spirits, for being done
+ impalpably, indirectly, almost silently and as if by unseen
+ hands. Those who dwell in the tower of ancient faiths look about
+ them in constant apprehension, misgiving, and wonder, with the
+ hurried uneasy mien of people living amid earthquakes. The air
+ seems to their alarms to be full of missiles, and all is doubt,
+ hesitation, and shivering expectancy. Hence a decisive reluctance
+ to commit one's self. Conscience has lost its strong and
+ on-pressing energy, and the sense of personal responsibility
+ lacks sharpness of edge. The native hue of spiritual resolution
+ is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of distracted, wavering,
+ confused thought. The souls of men have become void. Into the
+ void have entered in triumph the seven devils of Secularity.</p>
+
+ <p>And all this hesitancy, this tampering with conviction for
+ fear of its consequences, this want of faithful dealing in the
+ highest matters, is being intensified, aggravated, driven inwards
+ like a fatal disorder toward the vital parts, by the existence of
+ a State Church. While thought stirs and knowledge extends, she
+ remains fast moored by ancient formularies. While the spirit of
+ man expands in search after new light, and feels energetically
+ for new truth, the spirit of the Church is eternally entombed
+ within the four corners of acts of parliament. Her ministers vow
+ almost before they have crossed the threshold of manhood that
+ they will search no more. They virtually swear that they will to
+ the end of their days believe what they believe then, before they
+ have had time either to think or to know the thoughts of others.
+ They take oath, in other words, to lead mutilated lives. If they
+ cannot keep this solemn promise, they have at least every
+ inducement that ordinary human motives can supply, to conceal
+ their breach of it. The same system which begins by making mental
+ indolence a virtue and intellectual narrowness a part of
+ sanctity, ends by putting a premium on something too like
+ hypocrisy. Consider the seriousness of fastening up in these
+ bonds some thousands of the most instructed and intelligent
+ classes in the country, the very men who would otherwise be best
+ fitted from position and opportunities for aiding a little in the
+ long, difficult, and plainly inevitable work of transforming
+ opinion. Consider the waste of intelligence, and what is
+ assuredly not less grave, the positive dead-weight and thick
+ obstruction, by which an official hierarchy so organised must
+ paralyse mental independence in a community.</p>
+
+ <p>We know the kind of man whom this system delights to honour.
+ He was described for us five and thirty years ago by a master
+ hand. 'Mistiness is the mother of wisdom. A man who can set down
+ half a dozen general propositions which escape from destroying
+ one another only by being diluted into truisms; who can hold the
+ balance between opposites so skilfully as to do without fulcrum
+ or beam; who never enunciates a truth without guarding himself
+ against being supposed to exclude the contradictory,&mdash;who
+ holds that scripture is the only authority, yet that the Church
+ is to be deferred to, that faith only justifies, yet that it does
+ not justify without works, that grace does not depend upon the
+ sacraments, yet is not given without them, that bishops are a
+ divine ordinance, yet that those who have them not are in the
+ same religious condition as those who have,&mdash;this is your
+ safe man and the hope of the Church; this is what the Church is
+ said to want, not party men, but sensible, temperate, sober,
+ well-judging persons, to guide it through the channel of no
+ meaning, between the Scylla and Charybdis of Aye and No.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4"><sup>[4]</sup></a> The
+ writer then thought that such a type could not endure, and that
+ the Church must become more real. On the contrary, her reality is
+ more phantom-like now than it was then. She is the sovereign
+ pattern and exemplar of management, of the triumph of the
+ political method in spiritual things, and of the subordination of
+ ideas to the <i>status quo</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that all other organised priesthoods are also
+ bodies which move within formularies even more inelastic than
+ those of the Establishment. But then they have not the same
+ immense social power, nor the same temptations to make all
+ sacrifices to preserve it. They affect the intellectual temper of
+ large numbers of people, but the people whom they affect are not
+ so strongly identified with the greater organs of the national
+ life. The State Church is bound up in the minds of the most
+ powerful classes with a given ordering of social arrangements,
+ and the consequence of this is that the teachers of the Church
+ have reflected back upon thorn a sense of responsibility for
+ these arrangements, which obscures their spirituality, clogs
+ their intellectual energy and mental openness, and turns them
+ into a political army of obstruction to new ideas. They feel
+ themselves to a certain extent discharged from the necessity of
+ recognising the tremendous conflict in the region of belief that
+ goes on around them, just as if they were purely civil
+ administrators, concerned only with the maintenance of the
+ present order. None of this is true of the private Churches.
+ Their teachers and members regard belief as something wholly
+ independent of the civil ordering of things. However little
+ enlightened in some respects, however hostile to certain of the
+ ideas by which it is sought to replace their own, they are at
+ least representatives of the momentous principle of our
+ individual responsibility for the truth of our opinions. They may
+ bring their judgments to conclusions that are less in accord with
+ modern tendencies than those of one or two schools that still see
+ their way to subscribing Anglican articles and administering
+ Anglican rites. At any rate, they admit that the use of his
+ judgment is a duty incumbent on the individual, and a duty to be
+ discharged without reference to any external considerations
+ whatever, political or otherwise. This is an elevating, an
+ exhilarating principle, however deficiencies of culture may have
+ narrowed the sphere of its operations. It is because a State
+ Church is by its very conception hostile to such a principle,
+ that we are justified in counting it apart from the private
+ Churches with all their faults, and placing it among the agencies
+ that weaken the vigour of a national conscience and check the
+ free play and access of intellectual light.</p>
+
+ <p>Here we may leave the conditions that have made an inquiry as
+ to some of the limits of compromise, which must always be an
+ interesting and important subject, one of especial interest and
+ importance to ourselves at present. Is any renovation of the
+ sacredness of principle a possible remedy for some of these
+ elements of national deterioration? They will not disappear until
+ the world has grown into possession of a new doctrine. When that
+ comes, all other good things will follow. What we have to
+ remember is that the new doctrine itself will never come, except
+ to spirits predisposed to their own liberation. Our day of small
+ calculations and petty utilities must first pass away; our vision
+ of the true expediencies must reach further and deeper; our
+ resolution to search for the highest verities, to give up all and
+ follow them, must first become the supreme part of ourselves.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_1"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor1">[1]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>See below, ch. iii.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor2">[2]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>System of Logic</i>, bk. vi. ch. xi.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor3">[3]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Bagehot.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor4">[4]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Dr. J.H. Newman's <i>Essays Critical and Historical</i>,
+ vol. i. p. 301.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_II"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER II.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR.
+ </center><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Das Wahre f&ouml;rdert; aus
+ dem Irrthum entwickelt</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;"><i>sich nichts, er verwickeltuns
+ nur.&mdash;</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">GOETHE.</span><br>
+
+ <p>At the outset of an inquiry how far existing facts ought to be
+ allowed to overrule ideas and principles that are at variance
+ with them, a preliminary question lies in our way, about which it
+ may be well to say something. This is the question of a dual
+ doctrine. In plainer words, the question whether it is expedient
+ that the more enlightened classes in a community should upon
+ system not only possess their light in silence, but whether they
+ should openly encourage a doctrine for the less enlightened
+ classes which they do not believe to be true for themselves,
+ while they regard it as indispensably useful in the case of less
+ fortunate people. An eminent teacher tells us how after he had
+ once succeeded in presenting the principle of Necessity to his
+ own mind in a shape which seemed to bring with it all the
+ advantages of the principle of Free Will, he 'no longer suffered
+ under the burden so heavy to one who aims at being a reformer in
+ opinions, of thinking one doctrine true, and the contrary
+ doctrine morally beneficial.'<a name="FNanchor5"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_5"><sup>[5]</sup></a> The discrepancy which this
+ writer thought a heavy burden has struck others as the basis of a
+ satisfactory solution.</p><span style="margin-left: 3em;">Nil
+ dulcius est bene quam munita tenere</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Edita doctrina sapientum templa
+ serena,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Despicere unde queas alios
+ passimque videre</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Errare atque viam palantes
+ quaerere vitae.</span><br>
+
+ <p>The learned are to hold the true doctrine; the unlearned are
+ to be taught its morally beneficial contrary. 'Let the Church,'
+ it has been said, 'admit two descriptions of believers, those who
+ are for the letter, and those who hold by the spirit. At a
+ certain point in rational culture, belief in the supernatural
+ becomes for many an impossibility; do not force such persons to
+ wear a cowl of lead. Do not you meddle with what we teach or
+ write, and then we will not dispute the common people with you;
+ do not contest our place in the school and the academy, and then
+ we will surrender to your hands the country school.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6"><sup>[6]</sup></a> This is
+ only a very courageous and definite way of saying what a great
+ many less accomplished persons than M. Renan have silently in
+ their hearts, and in England quite as extensively as in France.
+ They do not believe in hell, for instance, but they think hell a
+ useful fiction for the lower classes. They would deeply regret
+ any change in the spirit or the machinery of public instruction
+ which would release the lower classes from so wholesome an error.
+ And as with hell, so with other articles of the supernatural
+ system; the existence of a Being who will distribute rewards and
+ penalties in a future state, the permanent sentience of each
+ human personality, the vigilant supervision of our conduct, as
+ well as our inmost thoughts and desires, by the heavenly powers;
+ and so forth.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us discuss this matter impersonally, without reference to
+ our own opinions and without reference to the evidence for or
+ against their truth. I am not speaking now of those who hold all
+ these ideas to be certainly true, or highly probable, and who at
+ the same time incidentally insist on the great usefulness of such
+ ideas in confirming morality and producing virtuous types of
+ character. With such persons, of course, there is no question of
+ a dual doctrine. They entertain certain convictions themselves,
+ and naturally desire to have their influence extended over
+ others. The proposition which we have to consider is of another
+ kind. It expresses the notions of those who&mdash;to take the
+ most important kind of illustration&mdash;think untrue the
+ popular ideas of supernatural interference in our obscure human
+ affairs; who think untrue the notion of the prolongation of our
+ existence after death to fulfil the purpose of the supernatural
+ powers; or at least who think them so extremely improbable that
+ no reasonable man or woman, once awakened to a conviction of this
+ improbability, would thenceforth be capable of receiving
+ effective check or guidance from beliefs, that would have sunk
+ slowly down to the level of doubtful guesses. We have now to deal
+ with those who while taking this view of certain doctrines, still
+ declare them to be indispensable for restraining from anti-social
+ conduct all who are not acute or instructed enough to see through
+ them. In other words, they think error useful, and that it may be
+ the best thing for society that masses of men should cheat and
+ deceive themselves in their most fervent aspirations and their
+ deepest assurances. This is the furthest extreme to which the
+ empire of existing facts over principles can well be imagined to
+ go. It lies at the root of every discussion upon the limits which
+ separate lawful compromise or accommodation from palpable
+ hypocrisy.</p>
+
+ <p>It will probably be said that according to the theory of the
+ school of which M. Renan is the most eloquent representative, the
+ common people are not really cheating themselves or being
+ cheated. Indeed M. Renan himself has expatiated on the charm of
+ seeing figures of the ideal in the cottages of the poor, images
+ representing no reality, and so forth. 'What a delight,' he
+ cries, 'for the man who is borne down by six days of toil to come
+ on the seventh to rest upon his knees, to contemplate the tall
+ columns, a vault, arches, an altar; to listen to the chanting, to
+ hear moral and consoling words!'<a name="FNanchor7"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_7"><sup>[7]</sup></a> The dogmas which criticism
+ attacks are not for these poor people 'the object of an explicit
+ affirmation,' and therefore there is no harm in them; 'it is the
+ privilege of pure sentiment to be invulnerable, and to play with
+ poison without being hurt by it.' In other words, the dogmas are
+ false, but the liturgy, as a performance stirring the senses of
+ awe, reverence, susceptibility to beauty of various kinds,
+ appeals to and satisfies a sentiment that is both true and
+ indispensable in the human mind. More than this, in the two or
+ three supreme moments of life to which men look forward and on
+ which they look back,&mdash;at birth, at the passing of the
+ threshold into fulness of life, at marriage, at death,&mdash;the
+ Church is present to invest the hour with a certain solemn and
+ dignified charm. That is the way in which the instructed are to
+ look at the services of a Church, after they have themselves
+ ceased to believe its faith, us a true account of various matters
+ which it professes to account for truly.</p>
+
+ <p>It will be perceived that this is not exactly the ground of
+ those who think a number of what they confess to be untruths,
+ wholesome for the common people for reasons of police, and who
+ would maintain churches on the same principle on which they
+ maintain the county constabulary. It is a psychological, not a
+ political ground. It is on the whole a more true, as well as a
+ far more exalted position. The human soul, they say, has these
+ lovely and elevating aspirations; not to satisfy them is to leave
+ man a dwarfed creature. Why quarrel with a system that leaves you
+ to satisfy them in the true way, and does much to satisfy thorn
+ in a false but not very harmful way among those who unfortunately
+ have to sit in the darkness of the outer court?</p>
+
+ <p>This is not a proper occasion for saying anything about the
+ adequateness of the catholic, or any other special manner of
+ fostering and solacing the religious impulses of men. We have to
+ assume that the instructed class believe the catholic dogmas to
+ be untrue, and yet wishes the uninstructed to be handed over to a
+ system that reposes on the theory that these dogmas are
+ superlatively true. What then is to be said of the tenableness of
+ such a position? To the plain man it looks like a deliberate
+ connivance at a plan for the propagation of error&mdash;assuming,
+ as I say, for the moment, that these articles of belief are
+ erroneous and contrary to fact and evidence. Ah, but, we are
+ told, the people make no explicit affirmation of dogma; that does
+ nothing for them; they are indifferent to it. A great variety of
+ things might be said to this statement. We might ask, for
+ instance, whether the people ever made an explicit affirmation of
+ dogma in the past, or whether it was always the hazy indifferent
+ matter which it is supposed to be now. If so, whether we shall
+ not have to re-cast our most fundamental notions of the way in
+ which Christian civilisation has been evolved. If not, and if
+ people did once explicitly affirm dogma, when exactly was it that
+ they ceased to do so?</p>
+
+ <p>The answers to these questions would all go to show that at
+ the time when religion was the great controlling and organising
+ force in conduct, the prime elemental dogmas were accepted with
+ the most vivid conviction of reality. I do not pretend that the
+ common people followed all the inferences which the intellectual
+ subtlety of the master-spirits of theology drew so industriously
+ from the simple premisses of scripture and tradition. But
+ assuredly dogma was at the foundation of the whole structure.
+ When did it cease to be so? How was the structure supported,
+ after you had altered this condition of things?</p>
+
+ <p>Apart from this historic issue, the main question one would
+ like to put to the upholder of duality of religion on this plea,
+ is the simple one, whether the power of the ceremonial which
+ charms him so much is not actually at this moment drawn wholly
+ from dogma and the tradition of dogma; whether its truth is not
+ explicitly affirmed to the unlettered man, and whether the
+ inseparable connection between the dogma and the ceremonial is
+ not constantly impressed upon him by the spiritual teachers to
+ whom the dual system hands him and his order over for all time?
+ If any one of those philosophic critics will take the trouble to
+ listen to a few courses of sermons at the present day, and the
+ remark applies not less to protestant than to catholic churches,
+ he will find that instead of that '<i>parole morale et
+ consolante</i>' which is so soothing to think of, the pulpit is
+ now the home of fervid controversy and often exacerbated
+ declamation in favour of ancient dogma against modern science. We
+ do not say whether this is or is not the wisest line for the
+ clergy to follow. We only press the fact against those who wish
+ us to believe that dogma counts for nothing in the popular faith,
+ and that therefore we need not be uneasy as to its effects.</p>
+
+ <p>Next, one would say to those who think that all will go well
+ if you divide the community into two classes, one privileged to
+ use its own mind, the other privileged to have its mind used by a
+ priesthood, that they overlook the momentous circumstance of
+ these professional upholders of dogmatic systems being also
+ possessed of a vast social influence in questions that naturally
+ belong to another sphere. There is hardly a single great
+ controversy in modern politics, where the statesman does not find
+ himself in immediate contact with the real or supposed interests,
+ and with the active or passive sentiment, of one of these
+ religious systems. Therefore if the instructed or intellectually
+ privileged class cheerfully leave the field open to men who,
+ <i>ex hypothesi</i>, are presumed to be less instructed,
+ narrower, more impenetrable by reason, and the partisans of the
+ letter against the spirit, then this result follows. They are
+ deliberately strengthening the hands of the persons least fitted
+ by judgment, experience, and temper, for using such power
+ rightly. And they are strengthening them not merely in dealing
+ with religious matters, but, what is of more importance, in
+ dealing with an endless variety of the gravest social and
+ political matters. It is impossible to map out the exact
+ dimensions of the field in which a man shall exercise his
+ influence, and to which he is to be rigorously confined. Give men
+ influence in one matter, especially if that be such a matter as
+ religious belief and ceremonial, and it is simply impossible that
+ this influence shall not extend with more or less effect over as
+ much of the whole sphere of conduct as they may choose
+ surrendering the common people without dispute or effort to
+ organised priesthoods for religious purposes, you would be
+ inevitably including a vast number of other purposes in the
+ self-same destination. This does not in the least prejudice
+ practical ways of dealing with certain existing circumstances,
+ such as the propriety or justice of allowing a catholic people to
+ have a catholic university. It is only an argument against
+ erecting into a complete and definite formula the division of a
+ society into two great castes, the one with a religion of the
+ spirit, the other with a creed of the letter.</p>
+
+ <p>Again, supposing that the enlightened caste were to consent to
+ abandon the common people to what are assumed to be lower and
+ narrower forms of truth,&mdash;which is after all little more
+ than a fine phrase for forms of falsehood,&mdash;what can be more
+ futile than to suppose that such a compromise will be listened to
+ for a single moment by a caste whose first principle is that they
+ are the possessors and ministers, not of an inferior or superior
+ form of truth, but of the very truth itself, absolute, final,
+ complete, divinely sent, infallibly interpreted? The disciples of
+ the relative may afford to compromise. The disciples of the
+ absolute, never.</p>
+
+ <p>We shall see other objections as we go on to this state of
+ things, in which a minority holds true opinions and abandons the
+ majority to false ones. At the bottom of the advocacy of a dual
+ doctrine slumbers the idea that there is no harm in men being
+ mistaken, or at least only so little harm as is more than
+ compensated for by the marked tranquillity in which their mistake
+ may wrap them. This is not an idea merely that intellectual error
+ is a pathological necessity of the mind, no more to be escaped
+ than the pathological necessities which afflict and finally
+ dissolve the body. That is historically true. It is an idea that
+ error somehow in certain stages, where there is enough of it,
+ actually does good, like vaccination. Well, the thesis of the
+ present chapter is that erroneous opinion or belief, in itself
+ and as such, can never be useful. This may seem a truism which
+ everybody is willing to accept without demur. But it is one of
+ those truisms which persons habitually forget and repudiate in
+ practice, just because they have never made it real to themselves
+ by considering and answering the objections that may be brought
+ against it. We see this repudiation before our eyes every day.
+ Thus for instance, parents theoretically take it for granted that
+ error cannot be useful, while they are teaching or allowing
+ others to teach their children what they, the parents, believe to
+ be untrue. Thus husbands who think the common theology baseless
+ and unmeaning, are found to prefer that their wives shall not
+ question this theology nor neglect its rites. These are only two
+ out of a hundred examples of the daily admission that error may
+ be very useful to other people. I need hardly say that to deny
+ this, as the commonplace to which this chapter is devoted denies
+ it, is a different thing from denying the expediency of letting
+ errors alone at a given time. That is another question, to be
+ discussed afterwards. You may have a thoroughly vicious and
+ dangerous enemy, and yet it may be expedient to choose your own
+ hour and occasion for attacking him. 'The passage from error to
+ truth,' in the words of Condorcet, 'may be accompanied by certain
+ evils. Every great change necessarily brings some of these in its
+ train; and though they may be always far below the evil you are
+ for destroying, yet it ought to do what is possible to diminish
+ them. It is not enough to do good; one must do it in a good way.
+ No doubt we should destroy all errors, but as it is impossible to
+ destroy them all in an instant, we should imitate a prudent
+ architect who, when obliged to destroy a building, and knowing
+ how its parts are united together, sets about its demolition in
+ such a way as to prevent its fall from being dangerous.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8"><sup>[8]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Those, let us note by the way, who are accustomed to think the
+ moral tone of the eighteenth century low and gross compared with
+ that of the nineteenth, may usefully contrast these just and
+ prudent word? of caution in extirpating error, with M. Renan's
+ invitation to men whom he considers wrong in their interpretation
+ of religion, to plant their error as widely and deeply as they
+ can; and who are moreover themselves supposed to be demoralised,
+ or else they would not be likely to acquiesce in a previous
+ surrender of the universities to men whom they think in mortal
+ error. Apart however from M. Renan, Condorcet's words merely
+ assert the duty of setting to work to help on the change from
+ false to true opinions with prudence, and this every sensible man
+ admits. Our position is that in estimating the situation, in
+ counting up and balancing the expediencies of an attack upon
+ error at this or that point, nothing is to be set to the credit
+ of error as such, nor is there anything in its own operations or
+ effects to entitle it to a moment's respite. Every one would
+ admit this at once in the case of physical truths, though there
+ are those who say that some of the time spent in the
+ investigation of physical truths might be more advantageously
+ devoted to social problems. But in the case of moral and
+ religious truths or errors, people, if they admit that nothing is
+ to be set to the credit of error as such, still constantly have a
+ subtle and practically mischievous confusion in their minds
+ between the possible usefulness of error, and the possible
+ expediency of leaving it temporarily undisturbed. What happens in
+ consequence of such a confusion is this. Men leave error
+ undisturbed, because they accept in a loose way the proposition
+ that a belief may be 'morally useful without being intellectually
+ sustainable,' They disguise their own dissent from popular
+ opinions, because they regard such opinions as useful to other
+ people. We are not now discussing the case of those who embrace a
+ creed for themselves, on the ground that, though they cannot
+ demonstrate its truth to the understanding, yet they find it
+ pregnant with moralising and elevating characteristics. We are
+ thinking of a very different attitude&mdash;that, namely, of
+ persons who believe a creed to be not more morally useful than it
+ is intellectually sustainable, so far as they themselves are
+ concerned. To them it is pure and uncompensated error. Yet from a
+ vague and general idea that what is useless error to them may be
+ useful to others, they insist on doing their best to perpetuate
+ the system which spreads and consecrates the error. And how do
+ they settle the question? They reckon up the advantages, and
+ forget the drawbacks. They detect and dwell on one or two
+ elements of utility in the false belief or the worn-out
+ institution, and leave out of all account the elements that make
+ in the other direction.</p>
+
+ <p>Considering how much influence this vague persuasion has in
+ encouraging a well-meaning hypocrisy in individuals, and a
+ profound stagnation in societies, it may be well to examine the
+ matter somewhat generally. Let us try to measure the force of
+ some of the most usual pleas for error.</p>
+
+ <p>I. A false opinion, it may be said, is frequently found to
+ have clustering around it a multitude of excellent associations,
+ which do far more good than the false opinion that supports them,
+ does harm. In the middle ages, for instance, there was a belief
+ that a holy man had the gift of routing demons, of healing the
+ sick, and of working divers other miracles. Supposing that this
+ belief was untrue, supposing that it was an error to attribute
+ the sudden death of an incredible multitude of troublesome flies
+ in a church to the fact of Saint Bernard having excommunicated
+ them, what then? The mistaken opinion was still associated with a
+ deep reverence for virtue and sanctity, and this was more
+ valuable, than the error of the explanation of the death of the
+ flies was noxious or degrading.</p>
+
+ <p>The answer to this seems to be as follows. First, in making
+ false notions the proofs or close associates of true ones, you
+ are exposing the latter to the ruin which awaits the former. For
+ example, if you have in the minds of children or servants
+ associated honesty, industry, truthfulness, with the fear of
+ hell-fire, then supposing this fear to become extinct in their
+ minds,&mdash;which, being unfounded in truth, it is in constant
+ risk of doing&mdash;the virtues associated with it are likely to
+ be weakened exactly in proportion as that association was
+ strong.</p>
+
+ <p>Second, for all good habits in thought or conduct there are
+ good and real reasons in the nature of things. To leave such
+ habits attached to false opinions is to lessen the weight of
+ these natural or spontaneous reasons, and so to do more harm in
+ the long run than effacement of them seems for a time to do good.
+ Most excellences in human character have a spontaneous root in
+ our nature. Moreover if they had not, and where they have not,
+ there is always a valid and real external defence for them. The
+ unreal defence must be weaker than the real one, and the
+ substitution of a weak for a strong defence, where both are to be
+ had, is not useful but the very opposite.</p>
+
+ <p>II. It is true, the objector would probably continue, that
+ there is a rational defence for all excellences of conduct, as
+ there is for all that is worthy and fitting in institutions. But
+ the force of a rational defence lies in the rationality of the
+ man to whom it is proffered. The arguments which persuade one
+ trained in scientific habits of thought, only touch persons of
+ the same kind. Character is not all pure reason. That fitness of
+ things which you pronounce to be the foundation of good habits,
+ may be borne in upon men, and may speak to them, through other
+ channels than the syllogism. You assume a community of
+ highly-trained wranglers and proficient sophisters. The plain
+ fact is that, for the mass of men, use and wont, rude or gracious
+ symbols, blind custom, prejudices, superstitions,&mdash;however
+ erroneous in themselves, however inadequate to the conveyance of
+ the best truth,&mdash;are the only safe guardians of the common
+ virtues. In this sense, then, error may have its usefulness.</p>
+
+ <p>A hundred years ago this apology for error was met by those
+ high-minded and interesting men, the French believers in human
+ perfectibility, with their characteristic dogma,&mdash;of which
+ Rousseau was the ardent expounder,&mdash;that man is born with a
+ clear and unsophisticated spirit, perfectly able to discern all
+ the simple truths necessary for common conduct by its own unaided
+ light. His motives are all pure and unselfish and his
+ intelligence is unclouded, until priests and tyrants mutilate the
+ one and corrupt the other. We who have the benefit of the
+ historic method, and have to take into account the medium that
+ surrounds a human creature the moment it comes into the world, to
+ say nothing of all the inheritance from the past which it brings
+ within it into the world at the same moment, cannot take up this
+ ground. We cannot maintain that everybody is born with light
+ enough to see the rational defences of things for himself,
+ without the education of institutions. What we do maintain
+ is&mdash;and this is the answer to the plea for error at present
+ under consideration&mdash;that whatever impairs the brightness of
+ such light as a man has, is not useful but hurtful. Our reply to
+ those who contend for the usefulness of error on the ground of
+ the comparative impotence of rationality over ordinary minds, is
+ something of this kind. Superstition, blind obedience to custom,
+ and the other substitutes for a right and independent use of the
+ mind, may accidentally and in some few respects impress good
+ ideas upon persons who are too darkened to accept those ideas on
+ their real merits. But then superstition itself is the main cause
+ of this very darkness. To hold error is in so far to foster
+ erroneous ways of thinking on all subjects; is to make the
+ intelligence less and less ready to receive truth in all matters
+ whatever. Men are made incapable of perceiving the rational
+ defences, and of feeling rational motives, for good
+ habits,&mdash;so far as they are thus incapable,&mdash;by the
+ very errors which we are asked silently to countenance as useful
+ substitutes for right reason. 'Erroneous motives,' as Condorcet
+ has expressed this matter, 'have an additional drawback attached
+ to them, the habit which they strengthen of reasoning ill. The
+ more important the subject on which you reason ill, and the more
+ you busy yourself about it, by so much the more dangerous do the
+ influences of such a habit become. It is especially on subjects
+ analogous to that on which you reason wrongly, or which you
+ connect with it by habit, that such a defect extends most
+ powerfully and most rapidly. Hence it is extremely hard for the
+ man who believes himself obliged to conform in his conduct to
+ what he considers truths useful to men, but who attributes the
+ obligation to erroneous motives, to reason very correctly on the
+ truths themselves; the more attention he pays to such motives,
+ and the more importance he comes to attach to them, the more
+ likely he will be to go wrong.'<a name="FNanchor9"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_9"><sup>[9]</sup></a> So, in short, superstition does
+ an immense harm by enfeebling rational ways of thinking; it does
+ a little good by accidentally endorsing rational conclusions in
+ one or two matters. And yet, though the evil which it is said to
+ repair is a trifle beside the evil which it is admitted to
+ inflict, the balance of expediencies is after all declared to be
+ such as to warrant us in calling errors useful!</p>
+
+ <p>III. A third objection now presents itself to me, which I wish
+ to state as strongly as possible. 'Even if a false opinion cannot
+ in itself be more useful than a true one, whatever good habits
+ may seem to be connected with it, yet,' it may be contended,
+ 'relatively to the general mental attitude of a set of men, to
+ their other notions and maxims, the false opinion may entail less
+ harm than would be wrought by its mere demolition. There are
+ false opinions so intimately bound up with the whole way of
+ thinking and feeling, that to introduce one or two detached true
+ opinions in their stead, would, even if it were possible, only
+ serve to break up that coherency of character and conduct which
+ it is one of the chief objects of moralists and the great art of
+ living to produce. For a true opinion does not necessarily bring
+ in its train all the other true opinions that are logically
+ connected with it. On the contrary, it is only too notorious a
+ fact in the history of belief, that not merely individuals but
+ whole societies are capable of holding at one and the same time
+ contradictory opinions and mutually destructive principles. On
+ the other hand, neither does a false opinion involve practically
+ all the evil consequences deducible from it. For the results of
+ human inconsistency are not all unhappy, and if we do not always
+ act up to virtuous principle, no more do we always work out to
+ its remotest inference every vicious principle. Not insincerity,
+ but inconsistency, has constantly turned the adherents of
+ persecuting precepts into friends of tolerant practice.'</p>
+
+ <p>'It is a comparatively small thing to persuade a superstitious
+ person to abandon this or that article of his superstition. You
+ have no security that the rejection of the one article which you
+ have displaced will lead to the rejection of any other, and it is
+ quite possible that it may lead to all the more fervid an
+ adhesion to what remains behind. Error, therefore, in view of
+ such considerations may surely be allowed to have at least a
+ provisional utility.'</p>
+
+ <p>Now undoubtedly the repudiation of error is not at all the
+ same thing as embracing truth. People are often able to see the
+ force of arguments that destroy a given opinion, without being
+ able to see the force of arguments for the positive opinion that
+ ought to replace it. They can only be quite sure of seeing both,
+ when they have acquired not merely a conviction that one notion
+ is false and another true, but have furthermore exchanged a
+ generally erroneous way of thinking for a generally correct way.
+ Hence the truly important object with every one who holds
+ opinions which he deems it of the highest moment that others
+ should accept, must obviously be to reach people's general ways
+ of thinking; to stir their love of truth; to penetrate them with
+ a sense of the difference in the quality of evidence; to make
+ them willing to listen to criticism and new opinion; and perhaps
+ above all to teach them to take ungrudging and daily trouble to
+ clear up in their minds the exact sense of the terms they
+ use.</p>
+
+ <p>If this be so, a false opinion, like an erroneous motive, can
+ hardly have even a provisional usefulness. For how can you attack
+ an erroneous way of thinking except in detail, that is to say
+ through the sides of this or that single wrong opinion? Each of
+ these wrong opinions is an illustration and type, as it is a
+ standing support and abettor, of some kind of wrong reasoning,
+ though they are not all on the same scale nor all of them equally
+ instructive. It is precisely by this method of gradual
+ displacement of error step by step, that the few stages of
+ progress which the race has yet traversed, have been actually
+ achieved. Even if the place of the erroneous idea is not
+ immediately taken by the corresponding true one, or by the idea
+ which is at least one or two degrees nearer to the true one,
+ still the removal of error in this purely negative way amounts to
+ a positive gain. Why? For the excellent reason that it is the
+ removal of a bad element which otherwise tends to propagate
+ itself, or even if it fails to do that, tends at the best to make
+ the surrounding mass of error more inveterate. All error is what
+ physiologists term fissiparous, and in exterminating one false
+ opinion you may be hindering the growth of an uncounted brood of
+ false opinions.</p>
+
+ <p>Then as to the maintenance of that coherency, interdependence,
+ and systematisation of opinions and motives, which is said to
+ make character organic, and is therefore so highly prized by some
+ schools of thought. No doubt the loosening of this or that part
+ of the fabric of heterogeneous origin, which constitutes the
+ character of a man or woman, tends to loosen the whole. But do
+ not let us feed ourselves upon phrases. This organic coherency,
+ what does it come to? It signifies in a general way, to describe
+ it briefly, a harmony between the intellectual, the moral, and
+ the practical parts of human nature; an undisturbed cooperation
+ between reason, affection, and will; the reason prescribing
+ nothing against which the affections revolt, and proscribing
+ nothing which they crave; and the will obeying the joint impulses
+ of these two directing forces, without liability to capricious or
+ extravagant disturbance of their direction. Well, if the reason
+ were perfect in information and method, and the affections
+ faultless in their impulse, then organic unity of character would
+ be the final consummation of all human improvement, and it would
+ be criminal, even if it were possible, to undermine a structure
+ of such priceless value. But short of this there can be no value
+ in coherency and harmonious consistency as such. So long as error
+ is an element in it, then for so long the whole product is
+ vitiated. Undeniably and most fortunately, social virtues are
+ found side by side with speculative mistakes and the gravest
+ intellectual imperfections. We may apply to humanity the idea
+ which, as Hebrew students tell us, is imputed in the Talmud to
+ the Supreme Being. <i>God prays</i>, the Talmud says; and his
+ prayer is this,&mdash;'Be it my will that my mercy overpower my
+ justice.' And so with men, with or without their will, their
+ mercifulness overpowers their logic. And not their mercifulness
+ only, but all their good impulses overpower their logic. To
+ repeat the words which I have put into the objector's mouth, we
+ do not always work out every vicious principle to its remotest
+ inference. What, however, is this but to say that in such cases
+ character is saved, not by its coherency, but by the opposite; to
+ say not that error is useful, but what is a very different thing,
+ that its mischievousness is sometimes capable of being averted or
+ minimised?</p>
+
+ <p>The apologist may retort that he did not mean answer to the
+ argument from coherency of conduct. In measuring utility you have
+ to take into account not merely the service rendered to the
+ objects of the present hour, but the contribution to growth,
+ progress, and the future. From this point of view most of the
+ talk about unity of character is not much more than a glorifying
+ of stagnation. It leaves out of sight the conditions necessary
+ for the continuance of the unending task of human improvement.
+ Now whatever ease may be given to an individual or a generation
+ by social or religious error, such error at any rate can conduce
+ nothing to further advancement That, at least, is not one of its
+ possible utilities.</p>
+
+ <p>This is also one of the answers to the following plea. 'Though
+ the knowledge of every positive truth is an useful acquisition,
+ this doctrine cannot without reservation he applied to negative
+ truth. When the only truth ascertainable is that nothing can be
+ known, we do not, by this knowledge, gain any new fact by which
+ to guide ourselves.'<a name="FNanchor10"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_10"><sup>[10]</sup></a> But logical coherency, but a
+ kind of practical everyday coherency, which may be open to a
+ thousand abstract objections, yet which still secures both to the
+ individual and to society a number of advantages that might be
+ endangered by any disturbance of opinion or motive. No doubt, and
+ the method and season of chasing erroneous opinions and motives
+ out of the mind must always be a matter of much careful and
+ far-seeing consideration. Only in the course of such
+ consideration, let us not admit the notion in any form that error
+ can have even provisional utility. For it is not the error which
+ confers the advantages that we desire to preserve, but some true
+ opinion or just motive or high or honest sentiment, which exists
+ and thrives and operates in spite of the error and in face of it,
+ springing from man's spontaneous and unformulated recognition of
+ the real relations of things. This recognition is very faint in
+ the beginnings of society. It grows clearer and firmer with each
+ step forward. And in a tolerably civilised age it has become a
+ force on which you can fairly lean with a considerable degree of
+ assurance.</p>
+
+ <p>And this leads to the central point of the the negative truth
+ that nothing can be known is in fact a truth that guides us.
+ [Transcriber's note: sic.]
+ It
+ leads us away from sterile and irreclaimable tracts of thought
+ and emotion, and so inevitably compels the energies which would
+ otherwise have been wasted, to feel after a more profitable
+ direction. By leaving the old guide-marks undisturbed, you may
+ give ease to an existing generation, but the present ease is
+ purchased at the cost of future growth. To have been deprived of
+ the faith of the old dispensation, is the first condition of
+ strenuous endeavour after the new.</p>
+
+ <p>No doubt history abounds with cases in which a false opinion
+ on moral or religious subjects, or an erroneous motive in
+ conduct, has seemed to be a stepping-stone to truth. But this is
+ in no sense a demonstration of the utility of error. For in all
+ such cases the erroneous opinion or motive was far from being
+ wholly erroneous, or wholly without elements of truth and
+ reality. If it helped to quicken the speed or mend the direction
+ of progress, that must have been by virtue of some such elements
+ within it. All that was error in it was pure waste, or worse than
+ waste. It is true that the religious sentiment has clothed itself
+ in a great number of unworthy, inadequate, depressing, and
+ otherwise misleading shapes, dogmatic and liturgic. Yet on the
+ whole the religious sentiment has conferred enormous benefits on
+ civilisation. This is no proof of the utility of the mistaken
+ direction which these dogmatic or liturgic shapes imposed upon
+ it. On the contrary, the effect of the false dogmas and
+ enervating liturgies is so much that has to be deducted from the
+ advantages conferred by a sentiment in itself valuable and of
+ priceless capability.<a name="FNanchor11"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_11"><sup>[11]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Yes, it will be urged, but from the historic conditions of the
+ time, truth could only be conveyed in erroneous forms, and
+ motives of permanent price for humanity could only be secured in
+ these mistaken expressions. Here I would again press the point of
+ this necessity for erroneous forms and mistaken expressions
+ being, in a great many of the most important instances, itself
+ derivative, one among other ill consequences of previous moral
+ and religious error. 'It was gravely said,' Bacon tells us, 'by
+ some of the prelates in the Council of Trent, where the doctrines
+ of the Schoolmen have great sway; that the schoolmen were like
+ Astronomers, which did faigne Eccentricks and Epicycles and
+ Engines of Orbs to save the Phenomena; though they know there
+ were no such Things; and in like manner that the Schoolmen had
+ framed a number of subtile and intricate Axioms and Theorems, to
+ save the practice of the Church.' This is true of much else
+ besides scholastic axioms and theorems. Subordinate error was
+ made necessary and invented, by reason of some pro-existent main
+ stock of error, and to save the practice of the Church. Thus we
+ are often referred to the consolation which this or that doctrine
+ has brought to the human spirit. But what if the same system had
+ produced the terror which made absence of consolation
+ intolerable? How much of the necessity for expressing the
+ enlarged humanity of the Church in the doctrine of purgatory,
+ arose from the existence of the older unsoftened doctrine of
+ eternal hell?</p>
+
+ <p>Again, how much of this alleged necessity of error, as alloy
+ for the too pure metal of sterling truth, is to be explained by
+ the interest which powerful castes or corporations have had in
+ preserving the erroneous forms, even when they could not resist,
+ or did not wish to resist, their impregnation by newer and better
+ doctrine? This interest was not deliberately sinister or
+ malignant. It may be more correctly as well as more charitably
+ explained by that infirmity of human nature, which makes us very
+ ready to believe what it is on other grounds convenient to us to
+ believe. Nobody attributes to pure malevolence the heartiness
+ with which the great corporation of lawyers, for example, resist
+ the removal of superfluous and obstructive forms in their
+ practice; they have come to look on such forms as indispensable
+ safeguards. Hence powerful teachers and preachers of all kinds
+ have been spontaneously inclined to suppose a necessity, which
+ had no real existence, of preserving as much as was possible of
+ what we know to be error, even while introducing wholesome
+ modification of it. This is the honest, though mischievous,
+ conservatism of the human mind. We have no right to condemn our
+ foregoers; far less to lavish on them the evil names of impostor,
+ charlatan, and brigand, which the zealous unhistoric school of
+ the last century used so profusely. But we have a right to say of
+ them, as we say of those who imitate their policy now, that their
+ conservatism is no additional proof of the utility of error.
+ Least of all is it any justification for those who wish to have
+ impressed upon the people a complete system of religious opinion
+ which men of culture have avowedly put away. And, moreover, the
+ very priests must, I should think, be supposed to have put it
+ away also. Else they would hardly be invited deliberately to
+ abdicate their teaching functions in the very seats where
+ teaching is of the weightiest and most far-spreading
+ influence.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile our point is that the reforms in opinion which have
+ been effected on the plan of pouring the new wine of truth into
+ the old bottles of superstition&mdash;though not dishonourable to
+ the sincerity of the reformers&mdash;are no testimony to even the
+ temporary usefulness of error. Those who think otherwise do not
+ look far enough in front of the event. They forget the evil
+ wrought by the prolonged duration of the error, to which the
+ added particle of truth may have given new vitality. They
+ overlook the ultimate enervation that is so often the price paid
+ for the temporary exaltation.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor, finally, can they know the truths which the error thus
+ prolonged has hindered from coming to the birth. A strenuous
+ disputant has recently asserted against me that 'the region of
+ the <i>might have been</i> lies beyond the limits of sane
+ speculation.'<a name="FNanchor12"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_12"><sup>[12]</sup></a> It in surely extending
+ optimism too far to insist on carrying it back right through the
+ ages. To me at any rate the history of mankind is a huge
+ <i>pis-aller</i>, just as our present society is; a prodigious
+ wasteful experiment, from which a certain number of precious
+ results have been extracted, but which is not now, nor ever has
+ been at any other time, a final measure of all the possibilities
+ of the time. This is not inconsistent with the scientific
+ conception of history; it is not to deny the great law that
+ society has a certain order of progress; but only to urge that
+ within that, the only possible order, there is always room for
+ all kinds and degrees of invention, improvement, and happy or
+ unhappy accident. There is no discoverable law fixing precisely
+ the more or the less of these; nor how much of each of them a
+ community shall meet with, nor exactly when it shall meet with
+ them. We have to distinguish between possibility and necessity.
+ Only certain steps in advance are possible at a given time; but
+ it is not inevitable that those potential advances should all be
+ realised. Does anybody suppose that humanity has had the profit
+ of all the inventive and improving capacity born into the world?
+ That Turgot, for example, was the only man that ever lived who
+ might have done more for society than he was allowed to do, and
+ spared society a cataclysm? No,&mdash;history is a
+ <i>pis-aller</i>. It has assuredly not moved without the relation
+ of cause and effect; it is a record of social growth and its
+ conditions; but it is also a record of interruption and
+ misadventure and perturbation. You trace the long chain which has
+ made us what we are in this aspect and that. But where are the
+ dropped links that might have made all the difference? <i>Ubi
+ sunt eorum tabulae qui post vota nuncupate perierunt</i>? Where
+ is the fruit of those multitudinous gifts which came into the
+ world in untimely seasons? We accept the past for the same reason
+ that we accept the laws of the solar system, though, as Comte
+ says, 'we can easily conceive them improved in certain respects.'
+ The past, like the solar system, is beyond reach of modification
+ at our hands, and we cannot help it. But it is surely the mere
+ midsummer madness of philosophic complacency to think that we
+ have come by the shortest and easiest of all imaginable routes to
+ our present point in the march; to suppose that we have wasted
+ nothing, lost nothing, cruelly destroyed nothing, on the road.
+ What we have lost is all in the region of the 'might have been,'
+ and we are justified in taking this into account, and thinking
+ much of it, and in trying to find causes for the loss. One of
+ them has been want of liberty for the human intelligence; and
+ another, to return to our proper subject, has been the prolonged
+ existence of superstition, of false opinions, and of attachment
+ to gross symbols, beyond the time when they might have been
+ successfully attacked, and would have fallen into decay but for
+ the mistaken political notion of their utility. In making a just
+ estimate of this utility, if we see reason to believe that these
+ false opinions, narrow superstitions, gross symbols, have been an
+ impediment to the free exercise of the intelligence and a
+ worthier culture of the emotions, then we are justified in
+ placing the unknown loss as a real and most weighty item in the
+ account against them.</p>
+
+ <p>In short, then, the utmost that can be said on behalf of
+ errors in opinion and motive, is that they are inevitable
+ elements in human growth. But the inevitable does not coincide
+ with the useful. Pain can be avoided by none of the sons of men,
+ yet the horrible and uncompensated subtraction which it makes
+ from the value and usefulness of human life, is one of the most
+ formidable obstacles to the smoother progress of the world. And
+ as with pain, so with error. The moral of our contention has
+ reference to the temper in which practically we ought to regard
+ false doctrine and ill-directed motive. It goes to show that if
+ we have satisfied ourselves on good grounds that the doctrine is
+ false, or the motive ill directed, then the only question that we
+ need ask ourselves turns solely upon the possibility of breaking
+ it up and dispersing it, by methods compatible with the doctrine
+ of liberty. Any embarrassment in dealing with it, due to a
+ semi-latent notion that it may be useful to some one else is a
+ weakness that hinders social progress.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_5"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor5">[5]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Mill's <i>Autobiography</i> p. 170.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor6">[6]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>M. Renan's <i>R&eacute;forme Intellectuelle et Morale de la
+ France</i>, p. 98.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor7">[7]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Etudes d'Histoire Religieuse</i>, Preface, p. xvi.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor8">[8]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>In 1779 the Academy of Prussia announced this as the
+ question for their annual prize essay:&mdash;'<i>S'il est utile
+ au peuple d'&ecirc;tre tromp&eacute;</i>.' They received
+ thirty-three essays; twenty showing that it is not useful,
+ thirteen showing that it is. The Academy, with an impartiality
+ that caused much amusement in Paris and Berlin, awarded two
+ prizes, one to the best proof of the negative answer, another
+ to the best proof of the affirmative. See Bartholmess, <i>Hist.
+ Philosophique de l'Acad&eacute;mie de Prusse</i>, i. 281, and
+ ii. 278. Condorcet did not actually compete for the prize, but
+ he wrote a very acute piece, suggested by the theme, which was
+ printed in 1790. <i>Oeuv.</i> v. 343.</p>
+
+ <p>To illustrate the common fact of certain currents of thought
+ being in the air at given times, we may mention that in 1770
+ was published the posthumous work of another Frenchman,
+ Chesneau du Marsais (1676-1756) entitled:&mdash;'<i>Essai sur
+ les Pr&eacute;jug&eacute;s; ou de l'influence des Opinions sur
+ les Moeurs et sur le Bonheur des Hommes</i>.' The principal
+ prejudices to which he refers are classed under
+ Antiquity&mdash;Ancestry&mdash;Native
+ Country&mdash;Religion&mdash;Respect for Wealth. Some of the
+ reasoning is almost verbally identical with Condorcet's. For an
+ account of Du Marsais, see D'Alembert, <i>Oeuv.</i> iii 481.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor9">[9]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Oeuv.</i> v. 354.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor10">[10]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Mill's <i>Three Essays on Religion</i>, p.73. I have offered
+ some criticisms on the whole passage in <i>Critical
+ Miscellanies, Second Series</i>, pp. 300-304.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor11">[11]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>'Enfin, supposons pour un instant que le dogme de l'autre
+ vie soit de quelqu'utilit&eacute;, et qu'il retienne vraiment
+ un petit nombre d'individus, qu'est-ce que ces foibles
+ avantages compar&eacute;s &agrave; la foule de maux que l'on en
+ voir d&eacute;couler? Contre un homme timide que cette
+ id&eacute;e contient, il en est des millions qu'elle ne peut
+ contenir; il en des millions qu'elle rend insens&eacute;s,
+ farouches, fanatiques, inutiles et m&eacute;chants; il en est
+ des millions qu'elle d&eacute;tourne de leurs devoirs envers la
+ soci&eacute;t&eacute;; il en est une infinit&eacute; qu'elle
+ afflige et qu'elle trouble, sans aucun bien r&eacute;el pour
+ leurs associ&eacute;s.&mdash;<i>Syst&egrave;me de la
+ Nature</i>, i. xiii.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor12">[12]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Sir J.F. Stephen's <i>Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity</i>,
+ 2d. ed., p. 19, <i>note</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_III"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER III.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL SPIRIT.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>We have been considering the position of those who would fain
+ divide the community into two great castes; the one of thoughtful
+ and instructed persons using their minds freely, but guarding
+ their conclusions in strict reserve; the other of the illiterate
+ or unreflecting, who should have certain opinions and practices
+ taught them, not because they are true or are really what their
+ votaries are made to believe them to be, but because the
+ intellectual superiors of the community think the inculcation of
+ such a belief useful in all cases save their own. Nor is this a
+ mere theory. On the contrary, it is a fair description of an
+ existing state of things. We have the old <i>disciplina
+ arcani</i> among us in as full force as in the primitive church,
+ but with an all-important difference. The Christian fathers
+ practised reserve for the sake of leading the acolyte the more
+ surely to the fulness of truth. The modern economiser keeps back
+ his opinions, or dissembles the grounds of them, for the sake of
+ leaving his neighbours the more at their ease in the peaceful
+ sloughs of prejudice and superstition and low ideals. We quote
+ Saint Paul when he talked of making himself all things to all
+ men, and of becoming to the Jews a Jew, and as without the Law to
+ the heathen. But then we do so with a view to justifying
+ ourselves for leaving the Jew to remain a Jew, and the heathen to
+ remain heathen. We imitate the same apostle in accepting old
+ time-worn altars dedicated to the Unknown God. We forget that he
+ made the ancient symbol the starting-point of a revolutionised
+ doctrine. There is, as anybody can see, a whole world of
+ difference between the reserve of sagacious apostleship, on the
+ one hand, dealing tenderly with scruple and tearfulness and fine
+ sensibility of conscience, and the reserve of intellectual
+ cowardice on the other hand, dealing hypocritically with narrow
+ minds in the supposed interests of social peace and quietness.
+ The old <i>disciplina arcani</i> signified the disclosure of a
+ little light with a view to the disclosure of more. The new means
+ the dissimulation of truth with a view to the perpetuation of
+ error. Consider the difference between these two fashions of
+ compromise, in their effects upon the mind and character of the
+ person compromising. The one is fully compatible with fervour and
+ hopefulness and devotion to great causes. The other stamps a man
+ with artifice, and hinders the free eagerness of his vision, and
+ wraps him about with mediocrity,&mdash;not always of
+ understanding, but that still worse thing, mediocrity of
+ aspiration and purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>The coarsest and most revolting shape which the doctrine of
+ conformity can assume, and its degrading consequences to the
+ character of the conformer, may be conveniently illustrated by a
+ passage in the life of Hume. He looked at things in a more
+ practical manner than would find favour with the sentimental
+ champions of compromise in nearer times. There is a well-known
+ letter of Hume's, in which he recommends a young man to become a
+ clergyman, on the ground that it was very hard to got any
+ tolerable civil employment, and that as Lord Bute was then all
+ powerful, his friend would be certain of preferment. In answer to
+ the young man's scruples as to the Articles and the rest, Hume
+ says:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>'It is putting too great a respect on the vulgar and their
+ superstitions to pique one's self on sincerity with regard to
+ them. If the thing were worthy of being treated gravely, I should
+ tell him [the young man] that the Pythian oracle with the
+ approbation of Xenophon advised every one to worship the
+ gods&mdash;[Greek: nhom&ocirc; phole&ocirc;s]. I wish it were
+ still in my power to be a hypocrite in this particular. The
+ common duties of society usually require it; and the
+ ecclesiastical profession only adds a little more to an innocent
+ dissimulation, or rather simulation, without which it is
+ impossible to pass through the world.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13"><sup>[13]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>This is a singularly straightforward way of stating a view
+ which silently influences a much greater number of men than it is
+ pleasant to think of. They would shrink from throwing their
+ conduct into so gross a formula. They will lift up their hands at
+ this quotation, so strangely blind are we to the hiding-places of
+ our own hearts, even when others flash upon them the terrible
+ illumination that comes of calling conduct and motives by plain
+ names. Now it is not merely the moral improbity of these cases
+ which revolts us&mdash;the improbity of making in solemn form a
+ number of false statements for the sake of earning a livelihood;
+ of saying in order to get money or social position that you
+ accept a number of propositions which in fact you utterly reject;
+ of declaring expressly that you trust you are inwardly moved to
+ take upon you this office and ministration by the Holy Ghost,
+ when the real motive is a desire not to miss the chance of making
+ something out of the Earl of Bute. This side of such
+ dissimulation is shocking enough. And it is not any more shocking
+ to the most devout believer than it is to people who doubt
+ whether there be any Holy Ghost or not. Those who no longer place
+ their highest faith in powers above and beyond men, are for that
+ very reason more deeply interested than others in cherishing the
+ integrity and worthiness of man himself. Apart, however, from the
+ immorality of such reasoned hypocrisy, which no man with a
+ particle of honesty will attempt to blink, there is the
+ intellectual improbity which it brings in its train, the
+ infidelity to truth, the disloyalty to one's own intelligence.
+ Gifts of understanding are numbed and enfeebled in a man, who has
+ once played such a trick with his own conscience as to persuade
+ himself that, because the vulgar are superstitious, it is right
+ for the learned to earn money by turning themselves into the
+ ministers and accomplices of superstition. If he is clever enough
+ to see through the vulgar and their beliefs, he is tolerably sure
+ to be clever enough from time to time and in his better moments
+ to see through himself. He begins to suspect himself of being an
+ impostor. That suspicion gradually unmans him when he comes to
+ use his mind in the sphere of his own enlightenment. One of
+ really superior power cannot escape these better moments and the
+ remorse that they bring. As he advances in life, as his powers
+ ought to be coming to fuller maturity and his intellectual
+ productiveness to its prime, just in the same degree the
+ increasing seriousness of life multiplies such moments and
+ deepens their remorse, and so the light of intellectual promise
+ slowly goes out in impotent endeavour, or else in taking comfort
+ that much goods are laid up, or, what is deadliest of all, in a
+ soulless cynicism.</p>
+
+ <p>We do not find out until it is too late that the intellect
+ too, at least where it is capable of being exercised on the
+ higher objects, has its sensitiveness. It loses its colour and
+ potency and finer fragrance in an atmosphere of mean purpose and
+ low conception of the sacredness of fact and reality. Who has not
+ observed inferior original power achieving greater results even
+ in the intellectual field itself, where the superior
+ understanding happens to have been unequally yoked with a
+ self-seeking character, over scenting the expedient? If Hume had
+ been in the early productive part of his life the hypocrite which
+ he wished it were in his power to show himself in its latter
+ part, we may be tolerably sure that European philosophy would
+ have missed one of its foremost figures. It has been often said
+ that he who begins life by stifling his convictions is in a fair
+ way for ending it without any convictions to stifle. We may,
+ perhaps, add that he who sets out with the notion that the
+ difference between truth and falsehood is a thing of no concern
+ to the vulgar, is very likely sooner or later to come to the
+ kindred notion that it is not a thing of any supreme concern to
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p>Let thus much have been said as to those who deliberately and
+ knowingly sell their intellectual birthright for a mess of
+ pottage, making a brazen compromise with what they hold
+ despicable, lest they should have to win their bread honourably.
+ Men need to expend no declamatory indignation upon them. They
+ have a hell of their own; words can add no bitterness to it. It
+ is no light thing to have secured a livelihood on condition of
+ going through life masked and gagged. To be compelled, week after
+ week, and year after year, to recite the symbols of ancient faith
+ and lift up his voice in the echoes of old hopes, with the
+ blighting thought in his soul that the faith is a lie, and the
+ hope no more than the folly of the crowd; to read hundreds of
+ times in a twelvemonth with solemn unction as the inspired word
+ of the Supreme what to him are meaningless as the Abracadabras of
+ the conjuror in a booth; to go on to the end of his days
+ administering to simple folk holy rites of commemoration and
+ solace, when he has in his mind at each phrase what dupes are
+ those simple folk and how wearisomely counterfeit their rites:
+ and to know through all that this is really to be the one
+ business of his prostituted life, that so dreary and hateful a
+ piece of play-acting will make the desperate retrospect of his
+ last hours&mdash;of a truth here is the very [Greek: bdhelygma
+ t&ecirc;s er&ecirc;mh&ocirc;se&ocirc;s], the abomination of
+ desolation of the human spirit indeed.</p>
+
+ <p>No one will suppose that this is designed for the normal type
+ of priest. But it is well to study tendencies in their extreme
+ catastrophe. This is only the catastrophe, in one of its many
+ shapes, of the fatal doctrine that money, position, power,
+ philanthropy, or any of the thousand seductive masks of the
+ pseudo-expedient, may carry a man away from love of truth and yet
+ leave him internally unharmed. The depravation that follows the
+ trucking for money of intellectual freedom and self-respect,
+ attends in its degree each other departure from disinterested
+ following of truth, and each other substitution of convenience,
+ whether public or private, in its place. And both parties to such
+ a compromise are losers. The world which offers gifts and tacitly
+ undertakes to ask no questions as to the real state of the
+ timeserver's inner mind, loses no less than the timeserver
+ himself who receives the gifts and promises to hold his peace. It
+ is as though a society placed penalties on mechanical inventions
+ and the exploration of new material resources, and offered
+ bounties for the steadiest adherence to all ancient processes in
+ culture and production. The injury to wealth in the one case
+ would not be any deeper than the injury to morality is in the
+ other.</p><br>
+
+ <p>To pass on to less sinister forms of this abnegation of
+ intellectual responsibility. In the opening sentences of the
+ first chapter we spoke of a wise suspense in forming opinions, a
+ wise reserve in expressing them, and a wise tardiness in trying
+ to realise them. Thus we meant to mark out the three independent
+ provinces of compromise, each of them being the subject of
+ considerations that either do not apply at all to the other two,
+ or else apply in a different degree. Disingenuousness or
+ self-illusion, arising from a depressing deference to the
+ existing state of things, or to what is immediately practicable,
+ or to what other people would think of us if they knew our
+ thoughts, is the result of compromising truth in the matter of
+ forming and holding opinions. Secondly, positive simulation is
+ what comes of an unlawful willingness to compromise in the matter
+ of avowing and publishing them. Finally, pusillanimity or want of
+ faith is the vice that belongs to unlawful compromise in the
+ department of action and realisation. This is not merely a
+ division arranged for convenience of discussion. It goes to the
+ root of conduct and character, and is the key to the present mood
+ of our society. It is always a hardy thing to attempt to throw a
+ complex matter into very simple form, but we should say that the
+ want of energy and definiteness in contemporary opinions, of
+ which we first complained, is due mainly to the following notion;
+ that if a subject is not ripe for practical treatment, you and I
+ are therefore entirely relieved from the duty of having clear
+ ideas about it. If the majority cling to an opinion, why should
+ we ask whether that is the sound and right opinion or the
+ reverse? Now this notion, which springs from a confusion of the
+ three fields of compromise with one another, quietly reigns
+ almost without dispute. The devotion to the practical aspect of
+ truth is in such excess, as to make people habitually deny that
+ it can be worth while to form an opinion, when it happens at the
+ moment to be incapable of realisation, for the reason that there
+ is no direct prospect of inducing a sufficient number of persons
+ to share it. 'We are quite willing to think that your view is the
+ right one, and would produce all the improvements for which you
+ hope; but then there is not the smallest chance of persuading the
+ only persons able to carry out such a view; why therefore discuss
+ it?' No talk is more familiar to us than this. As if the mere
+ possibility of the view being a right one did not obviously
+ entitle it to discussion; discussion being the only process by
+ which people are likely to be induced to accept it, or else to
+ find good grounds for finally dismissing it.</p>
+
+ <p>It is precisely because we believe that opinion, and nothing
+ but opinion, can effect great permanent changes, that we ought to
+ be careful to keep this most potent force honest, wholesome,
+ fearless, and independent. Take the political field. Politicians
+ and newspapers almost systematically refuse to talk about a new
+ idea, which is not capable of being at once embodied in a bill,
+ and receiving the royal assent before the following August. There
+ is something rather contemptible, seen from the ordinary
+ standards of intellectual integrity, in the position of a
+ minister who waits to make up his mind whether a given measure,
+ say the disestablishment of the Irish Church, is in itself and on
+ the merits desirable, until the official who runs diligently up
+ and down the backstairs of the party, tells him that the measure
+ is practicable and required in the interests of the band. On the
+ one hand, a leader is lavishly panegyrised for his
+ highmindedness, in suffering himself to be driven into his
+ convictions by his party. On the other, a party is extolled for
+ its political tact, in suffering itself to be forced out of its
+ convictions by its leader. It is hard to decide which is the more
+ discreditable and demoralising sight. The education of chiefs by
+ followers, and of followers by chiefs, into the abandonment in a
+ month of the traditions of centuries or the principles of a
+ lifetime may conduce to the rapid and easy working of the
+ machine. It certainly marks a triumph of the political spirit
+ which the author of <i>The Prince</i> might have admired. It is
+ assuredly mortal to habits of intellectual self-respect in the
+ society which allows itself to be amused by the cajolery and
+ legerdemain and self-sophistication of its rulers.</p>
+
+ <p>Of course there are excellent reasons why a statesman immersed
+ in the actual conduct of affairs, should confine his attention to
+ the work which his hands find to do. But the fact that leading
+ statesmen are of necessity so absorbed in the tasks of the hour
+ furnishes all the better reason why as many other people as
+ possible should busy themselves in helping to prepare opinion for
+ the practical application of unfamiliar but weighty and promising
+ suggestions, by constant and ready discussion of them upon their
+ merits. As a matter of fact it is not the men most occupied who
+ are usually most deaf to new ideas. It is the loungers of
+ politics, the quidnuncs, gossips, bustling idlers, who are most
+ industrious in stifling discussion by protests against the waste
+ of time and the loss of force involved in talking about proposals
+ which are not exactly ready to be voted on. As it is, everybody
+ knows that questions are inadequately discussed, or often not
+ discussed at all, on the ground that the time is not yet come for
+ their solution. Then when some unforeseen perturbation, or the
+ natural course of things, forces on the time for their
+ resolution, they are settled in a slovenly, imperfect, and often
+ downright vicious manner, from the fact that opinion has not been
+ prepared for solving them in an efficient and perfect manner. The
+ so-called settlement of the question of national education is the
+ most recent and most deplorable illustration of what comes of
+ refusing to examine ideas alleged to be impracticable. Perhaps we
+ may venture to prophesy that the disendowment of the national
+ church will supply the next illustration on an imposing scale.
+ Gratuitous primary instruction, and the redistribution of
+ electoral power, are other matters of signal importance, which
+ comparatively few men will consent to discuss seriously and
+ patiently, and for our indifference to which we shall one day
+ surely smart. A judicious and cool writer has said that 'an
+ opinion gravely professed by a man of sense and education demands
+ always respectful consideration&mdash;demands and actually
+ receives it from those whose own sense and education give them a
+ correlative right; and whoever offends against this sort of
+ courtesy may fairly be deemed to have forfeited the privileges it
+ secures.'<a name="FNanchor14"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_14"><sup>[14]</sup></a> That is the least part of the
+ matter. The serious mischief is the eventual miscarriage and loss
+ and prodigal waste of good ideas.</p>
+
+ <p>The evil of which we have been speaking comes of not seeing
+ the great truth, that it is worth while to take pains to find out
+ the best way of doing a given task, even if you have strong
+ grounds for suspecting that it will ultimately be done in a worse
+ way. And so also in spheres of thought away from the political
+ sphere, it is worth while 'to scorn delights and live laborious
+ days' in order to make as sure as we can of having the best
+ opinion, even if we know that this opinion has an infinitely
+ small chance of being speedily or ever accepted by the majority,
+ or by anybody but ourselves. Truth and wisdom have to bide their
+ time, and then take their chance after all. The most that the
+ individual can do is to seek them for himself, even if he seek
+ alone. And if it is the most, it is also the least. Yet in our
+ present mood we seem not to feel this. We misunderstand the
+ considerations which should rightly lead us in practice to
+ surrender some of what we desire, in order to secure the rest;
+ and rightly make us acquiesce in a second-best course of action,
+ in order to avoid stagnation or retrogression. We misunderstand
+ all this, and go on to suppose that there are the same grounds
+ why we should in our own minds acquiesce in second-best opinions;
+ why we should mix a little alloy of conventional expression with
+ the too fine ore of conviction; why we should adopt beliefs that
+ we suspect in our hearts to be of more than equivocal
+ authenticity, but into whose antecedents we do not greatly care
+ to inquire, because they stand so well with the general public.
+ This is compromise or economy or management of the first of the
+ three kinds of which we are talking. It is economy applied to the
+ formation of opinion; compromise or management in making up one's
+ mind.</p>
+
+ <p>The lawfulness or expediency of it turns mainly, as with the
+ other two kinds of compromise, upon the relative rights of the
+ majority and the minority, and upon the respect which is owing
+ from the latter to the former. It is a very easy thing for people
+ endowed with the fanatical temperament, or demoralised by the
+ habit of looking at society exclusively from the juridical point
+ of view, to insist that no respect at all, except the respect
+ that arises from being too weak to have your own way, is due from
+ either to the other. This shallow and mischievous notion rests
+ either on a misinterpretation of the experience of civilised
+ societies, or else on nothing more creditable than an arbitrary
+ and unreflecting temper. Those who have thought most carefully
+ and disinterestedly about the matter, are agreed that in advanced
+ societies the expedient course is that no portion of the
+ community should insist on imposing its own will upon any other
+ portion, except in matters which are vitally connected with the
+ maintenance of the social union. The question where this vital
+ connection begins is open to much discussion. The line defining
+ the sphere of legitimate interference may be drawn variously,
+ whether at self-regarding acts, or in some other condition and
+ element of conduct. Wherever this line may be best taken, not
+ only abstract speculation, but the practical and spontaneous tact
+ of the world, has decided that there are limits, alike in the
+ interest of majority and minority, to the rights of either to
+ disturb the other. In other words, it is expedient in certain
+ affairs that the will of the majority should be absolutely
+ binding, while in affairs of a different order it should count
+ for nothing, or as nearly nothing, as the sociable dependence of
+ a man on his fellows will permit.</p>
+
+ <p>Our thesis is this. In the positive endeavour to realise an
+ opinion, to convert a theory into practice, it may be, and very
+ often is, highly expedient to defer to the prejudices of the
+ majority, to move very slowly, to bow to the conditions of the
+ <i>status quo</i>, to practise the very utmost sobriety,
+ self-restraint, and conciliatoriness. The mere expression of
+ opinion, in the next place, the avowal of dissent from received
+ notions, the refusal to conform to language which implies the
+ acceptance of such notions,&mdash;this rests on a different
+ footing. Here the reasons for respecting the wishes and
+ sentiments of the majority are far less strong, though, as we
+ shall presently see, such reasons certainly exist, and will weigh
+ with all well-considering men. Finally, in the formation of an
+ opinion as to the abstract preferableness of one course of action
+ over another, or as to the truth or falsehood or right
+ significance of a proposition, the fact that the majority of
+ one's contemporaries lean in the other direction is naught, and
+ no more than dust in the balance. In making up our minds as to
+ what would be the wisest line of policy if it were practicable,
+ we have nothing to do with the circumstance that it is not
+ practicable. And in settling with ourselves whether propositions
+ purporting to state matters of fact are trim or not, we have to
+ consider how far they are conformable to the evidence. We have
+ nothing to do with the comfort and solace which they would be
+ likely to bring to others or ourselves, if they were taken as
+ true.</p>
+
+ <p>A nominal assent to this truth will be instantly given even by
+ those who in practice systematically disregard it. The difficulty
+ of transforming that nominal assent into a reality is enormous in
+ such a community as ours. Of all societies since the Roman
+ Republic, and not even excepting the Roman Republic, England has
+ been the most emphatically and essentially political. She has
+ passed through military phases and through religious phases, but
+ they have been transitory, and the great central stream of
+ national life has flowed in political channels. The political
+ life has been stronger than any other, deeper, wider, more
+ persistent, more successful. The wars which built up our
+ far-spreading empire were not waged with designs of military
+ conquest; they were mostly wars for a market. The great spiritual
+ emancipation of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries figures
+ in our history partly as an accident, partly as an intrigue,
+ partly as a raid of nobles in search of spoil. It was hardly
+ until the reformed doctrine became associated with analogous
+ ideas and corresponding precepts in government, that people felt
+ at home with it, and became really interested in it.</p>
+
+ <p>One great tap-root of our national increase has been the
+ growth of self-government, or government by deliberative bodies,
+ representing opposed principles and conflicting interests. With
+ the system of self-government has grown the habit&mdash;not of
+ tolerance precisely, for Englishmen when in earnest are as little
+ in love with tolerance as Frenchmen or any other people,
+ but&mdash;of giving way to the will of the majority, so long as
+ they remain a majority. This has come to pass for the simple
+ reason that, on any other terms, the participation of large
+ numbers of people in the control and arrangement of public
+ affairs immediately becomes unworkable. The gradual concentration
+ of power in the hands of a supreme deliberative body, the active
+ share of so many thousands of persons in choosing and controlling
+ its members, the close attention with which the proceedings of
+ parliament are followed and watched, the kind of dignity that has
+ been lent to parliamentary methods by the great importance of the
+ transactions, have all tended in the same direction. They have
+ all helped both to fix our strongest and most constant interests
+ upon politics, and to ingrain the mental habits proper to
+ politics, far more deeply than any other, into our general
+ constitution and inmost character.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus the political spirit has grown to be the strongest
+ element in our national life; the dominant force, extending its
+ influence over all our ways of thinking in matters that have
+ least to do with politics, or even nothing at all to do with
+ them. There has thus been engendered among us the real sense of
+ political responsibility. In a corresponding degree has been
+ discouraged, what it is the object of the present chapter to
+ urge, the sense of intellectual responsibility. If it were
+ inevitable that one of these two should always enfeeble or
+ exclude the other, if the price of the mental alacrity and
+ open-mindedness of the age of Pericles must always be paid in the
+ political incompetence of the age of Demosthenes, it would be
+ hard to settle which quality ought to be most eagerly encouraged
+ by those who have most to do with the spiritual direction of a
+ community. No doubt the tone of a long-enduring and imperial
+ society, such as Rome was, must be conservative, drastic,
+ positive, hostile to the death to every speculative novelty. But
+ then, after all, the permanence of Roman power was only valuable
+ to mankind because it ensured the spread of certain civilising
+ ideas. And these ideas had originated among people so
+ characteristically devoid of the sovereign faculty of political
+ coherency as were the Greeks and the Jews. In the Greeks, it is
+ true, we find not only ideas of the highest speculative
+ fertility, but actual political institutions. Still we should
+ hardly point to Greek history for the most favourable examples of
+ their stable working. Practically and as a matter of history, a
+ society is seldom at the same time successfully energetic both in
+ temporals and spirituals; seldom prosperous alike in seeking
+ abstract truth and nursing the political spirit. There is a
+ decisive preponderance in one direction or the other, and the
+ equal balance between free and active thinking, and coherent
+ practical energy in a community, seems too hard to sustain. The
+ vast military and political strength of Germany, for instance,
+ did not exist, and was scarcely anticipated in men's minds,
+ during the time of her most strenuous passion for abstract truth
+ and deeper learning and new criticism. In France never was
+ political and national interest so debilitated, so extinct, as it
+ was during the reign of Lewis the Fifteenth: her intellectual
+ interest was never so vivid, so fruitful, or so widely felt.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet it is at least well, and more than that, it is an
+ indispensable condition of social wellbeing, that the divorce
+ between political responsibility and intellectual responsibility,
+ between respect for what is instantly practicable and search
+ after what is only important in thought, should not be too
+ complete and universal. Even if there were no other objection,
+ the undisputed predominance of the political spirit has a plain
+ tendency to limit the subjects in which the men animated by it
+ can take a real interest. All matters fall out of sight, or at
+ least fall into a secondary place, which do not bear more or less
+ directly and patently upon the material and structural welfare of
+ the community. In this way the members of the community miss the
+ most bracing, widening, and elevated of the whole range of
+ influences that create great characters. First, they lose sincere
+ concern about the larger questions which the human mind has
+ raised up for itself. Second, they lose a fearless desire to
+ reach the true answers to them, or if no certain answers should
+ prove to be within reach, then at any rate to be satisfied on
+ good grounds that this is so. Such questions are not immediately
+ discerned by commonplace minds to be of social import.
+ Consequently they, and all else that is not obviously connected
+ with the machinery of society, give way in the public
+ consideration to what is so connected with it, in a manner that
+ cannot be mistaken.</p>
+
+ <p>Again, even minds that are not commonplace are affected for
+ the worse by the same spirit. They are aware of the existence of
+ the great speculative subjects and of their importance, but the
+ pressure of the political spirit on such men makes them afraid of
+ the conclusions to which free inquiry might bring them.
+ Accordingly they abstain from inquiry, and dread nothing so much
+ as making up their minds. They see reasons for thinking that, if
+ they applied themselves seriously to the formation of true
+ opinions in this or that department, they would come to
+ conclusions which, though likely to make their way in the course
+ of some centuries, are wholly unpopular now, and which might ruin
+ the influence of anybody suspected of accepting, or even of so
+ much as leaning towards, them. Life, they reflect, is short;
+ missionaries do not pass for a very agreeable class, nor martyrs
+ for a very sensible class; one can only do a trifling amount of
+ good in the world, at best; it is moral suicide to throw away any
+ chance of achieving even that trifle; and therefore it is best
+ not only not to express, but not to take the trouble to acquire,
+ right views in this quarter or that, and to draw clear away from
+ such or such a region of thought, for the sake of keeping peace
+ on earth and superficial good will among men.</p>
+
+ <p>It would be too harsh to stigmatise such a train of thought as
+ self-seeking and hypocritical. It is the natural product of the
+ political spirit, which is incessantly thinking of present
+ consequences and the immediately feasible. There is nothing in
+ the mere dread of losing it, to hinder influence from being well
+ employed, so far as it goes. But one can hardly overrate the ill
+ consequences of this particular kind of management, this unspoken
+ bargaining with the little circle of his fellows which
+ constitutes the world of a man. If he may retain his place among
+ them as preacher or teacher, he is willing to forego his
+ birthright of free explanation; he consents to be blind to the
+ duty which attaches to every intelligent man of having some clear
+ ideas, even though only provisional ones, upon the greatest
+ subjects of human interest, and of deliberately preferring these,
+ whatever they may be, to their opposites. Either an individual or
+ a community is fatally dwarfed by any such limitation of the
+ field in which one is free to use his mind. For it is a
+ limitation, not prescribed by absorption in one set of subjects
+ rather than another, nor by insufficient preparation for the
+ discussion of certain subjects, nor by indolence nor
+ incuriousness, but solely by apprehension of the conclusions to
+ which such use of the mind might bring the too courageous seeker.
+ If there were no other ill effect, this kind of limitation would
+ at least have the radical disadvantage of dulling the edge of
+ responsibility, of deadening the sharp sense of personal
+ answerableness either to a God, or to society, or to a man's own
+ conscience and intellectual self-respect.</p>
+
+ <p>How momentous a disadvantage this is, we can best know by
+ contemplating the characters which have sometimes lighted up the
+ old times. Men were then devoutly persuaded that their eternal
+ salvation depended on their having true beliefs. Any slackness in
+ finding out which beliefs are the true ones would have to be
+ answered for before the throne of Almighty God, at the sure risk
+ and peril of everlasting damnation. To what quarter in the large
+ historic firmament can we turn our eyes with such certainty of
+ being stirred and elevated, of thinking better of human life and
+ the worth of those who have been most deeply penetrated by its
+ seriousness, as to the annals of the intrepid spirits whom the
+ protestant doctrine of indefeasible personal responsibility
+ brought to the front in Germany in the sixteenth century, and in
+ England and Scotland in the seventeenth? It is not their
+ fanaticism, still less is it their theology, which makes the
+ great Puritan chiefs of England and the stern Covenanters of
+ Scotland so heroic in our sight. It is the fact that they sought
+ truth and ensued it, not thinking of the practicable nor
+ cautiously counting majorities and minorities, but each man
+ pondering and searching so 'as ever in the great Taskmaster's
+ eye.'</p>
+
+ <p>It is no adequate answer to urge that this awful consciousness
+ of a divine presence and supervision has ceased to be the living
+ fact it once was. That partly explains, but it certainly does not
+ justify, our present lassitude. For the ever-wakeful eye of
+ celestial power is not the only conceivable stimulus to
+ responsibility. To pass from those grim heroes of protestantism
+ to the French philosophers of the last century is a wide leap in
+ a hundred respects, yet they too were pricked by the oestrus of
+ intellectual responsibility. Their doctrine was dismally
+ insufficient, and sometimes, as the present writer has often
+ pointed out, it was directly vicious. Their daily lives were
+ surrounded by much shabbiness and many meannesses. But, after
+ all, no temptation and no menace, no pains or penalties for
+ thinking about certain subjects, and no rewards for turning to
+ think about something else, could divert such men as Voltaire and
+ Diderot from their alert and strenuous search after such truth as
+ could be vouchsafed to their imperfect lights. A catastrophe
+ followed, it is true, but the misfortunes which attended it were
+ due more to the champions of tradition and authority than to the
+ soldiers of emancipation. Even in the case of the latter, they
+ were due to an inadequate doctrine, and not at all either to
+ their sense of the necessity of free speculation and inquiry, or
+ to the intrepidity with which they obeyed the promptings of that
+ ennobling sense.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the latest attempt of a considerable kind to suppress
+ the political spirit in non-political concerns was the famous
+ movement which had its birth a generation ago among the gray
+ quadrangles and ancient gardens of Oxford, 'the sweet city with
+ her dreaming spires,' where there has ever been so much
+ detachment from the world, alongside of the coarsest and fiercest
+ hunt after the grosser prizes of the world. No one has much less
+ sympathy with the direction of the tractarian revival than the
+ present writer, in whose Oxford days the star of Newman had set,
+ and the sun of Mill had risen in its stead. And it is needful to
+ distinguish the fervid and strong spirits with whom the revival
+ began from the mimics of our later day. No doubt the mere
+ occasion of tractarianism was political. Its leaders were alarmed
+ at the designs imputed to the newly reformed parliament of
+ disestablishing the Anglican Church. They asked themselves the
+ question, which I will put in their own words (<i>Tract</i>
+ i.)&mdash;'Should the government of the country so far forget
+ their God as to cut off the Church, to deprive it of its temporal
+ honours and substance, on what will you rest the claims to
+ respect and attention which you make upon your flock? In
+ answering this question they speedily found themselves, as might
+ have been expected, at the opposite pole of thought from things
+ political. The whole strength of their appeal to members of the
+ Church lay in men's weariness of the high and dry optimism, which
+ presents the existing order of things as the noblest possible,
+ and the undisturbed way of the majority as the way of salvation.
+ Apostolical succession and Sacramentalism may not have been in
+ themselves progressive ideas. The spirit which welcomed them had
+ at least the virtue of taking away from Caesar the things that
+ are not Caesar's.</p>
+
+ <p>Glaring as were the intellectual faults of the Oxford
+ movement, it was at any rate a recognition in a very forcible way
+ of the doctrine that spiritual matters are not to be settled by
+ the dicta of a political council. It acknowledged that a man is
+ answerable at his own peril for having found or lost the truth.
+ It was a warning that he must reckon with a judge who will not
+ account the <i>status quo</i>, nor the convenience of a cabinet,
+ a good plea for indolent acquiescence in theological error. It
+ ended, in the case of its most vigorous champions, in a final and
+ deliberate putting out of the eyes of the understanding. The last
+ act of assertion of personal responsibility was a headlong
+ acceptance of the responsibility of tradition and the Church.
+ This was deplorable enough. But apart from other advantages
+ incidental to the tractarian movement, such as the attention
+ which it was the means of drawing to history and the organic
+ connection between present and past, it had, we repeat, the merit
+ of being an effective protest against what may be called the
+ House of Commons' view of human life&mdash;a view excellent in
+ its place, but most blighting and dwarfing out of it. It was,
+ what every sincere uprising of the better spirit in men and women
+ must always be, an effective protest against the leaden tyranny
+ of the man of the world and the so-called practical person. The
+ man of the world despises catholics for taking their religious
+ opinions on trust and being the slaves of tradition. As if he had
+ himself formed his own most important opinions either in religion
+ or anything else. He laughs at them for their superstitious awe
+ of the Church. As if his own inward awe of the Greater Number
+ were one whit less of a superstition. He mocks their deference
+ for the past. As if his own absorbing deference to the present
+ were one tittle better bottomed or a jot more respectable. The
+ modern emancipation will profit us very little if the <i>status
+ quo</i> is to be fastened round our necks with the despotic
+ authority of a heavenly dispensation, and if in the stead of
+ ancient Scriptures we are to accept the plenary inspiration of
+ Majorities.</p><br>
+
+ <p>It may be urged that if, as it is the object of the present
+ chapter to state, there are opinions which a man should form for
+ himself, and which it may yet be expedient that he should not
+ only be slow to attempt to realise in practical life, but
+ sometimes even slow to express,&mdash;then we are demanding from
+ him the performance of a troublesome duty, while we are taking
+ from him the only motives which could really induce him to
+ perform it. If, it may be asked, I am not to carry my notions
+ into practice, nor try to induce others to accept them, nor even
+ boldly publish them, why in the name of all economy of force
+ should I take so much pains in forming opinions which are, after
+ all, on these conditions so very likely to come to naught? The
+ answer to this is that opinions do not come to naught, even if
+ the man who holds them should never think fit to publish them.
+ For one thing, as we shall see in our next division, the
+ conditions which make against frank declaration of our
+ convictions are of rare occurrence. And, apart from this,
+ convictions may well exert a most decisive influence over our
+ conduct, even if reasons exist, or seem to exist, for not
+ pressing them on others. Though themselves invisible to the outer
+ world, they may yet operate with magnetic force both upon other
+ parts of our belief which the outer world does see, and upon the
+ whole of our dealings with it. Whether we are good or bad, it is
+ only a broken and incoherent fragment of our whole personality
+ that even those who are intimate with us, much less the common
+ world, can ever come into contact with. The important thing is
+ that the personality itself should be as little as possible
+ broken, incoherent, and fragmentary; that reasoned and consistent
+ opinions should back a firm will, and independent convictions
+ inspire the intellectual self-respect and strenuous
+ self-possession which the clamour of majorities and the silent
+ yet ever-pressing force of the <i>status quo</i> are equally
+ powerless to shake.</p>
+
+ <p>Character is doubtless of far more importance than mere
+ intellectual opinion. We only too often see highly rationalised
+ convictions in persons of weak purpose or low motives. But while
+ fully recognising this, and the sort of possible reality which
+ lies at the root of such a phrase as 'godless intellect' or
+ 'intellectual devils'&mdash;though the phrase has no reality when
+ it is used by self-seeking politicians or prelates&mdash;yet it
+ is well to remember the very obvious truth that opinions are at
+ least an extremely important part of character. As it is
+ sometimes put, what we think has a prodigiously close connection
+ with what we are. The consciousness of having reflected seriously
+ and conclusively on important questions, whether social or
+ spiritual, augments dignity while it does not lessen humility. In
+ this sense, taking thought can and does add a cubit to our
+ stature. Opinions which we may not feel bound or even permitted
+ to press on other people, are not the less forces for being
+ latent. They shape ideals, and it is ideals that inspire conduct.
+ They do this, though from afar, and though he who possesses them
+ may not presume to take the world into his confidence. Finally,
+ unless a man follows out ideas to their full conclusion without
+ fear what the conclusion may be, whether he thinks it expedient
+ to make his thought and its goal fully known or not, it is
+ impossible that he should acquire a commanding grasp of
+ principles. And a commanding grasp of principles, whether they
+ are public or not, is at the very root of coherency of character.
+ It raises mediocrity near to a level with the highest talents, if
+ those talents are in company with a disposition that allows the
+ little prudences of the hour incessantly to obscure the
+ persistent laws of things. These persistencies, if a man has once
+ satisfied himself of their direction and mastered their bearings
+ and application, are just as cogent and valuable a guide to
+ conduct, whether he publishes them <i>ad urbem et orbem</i>, or
+ esteems them too strong meat for people who have, through
+ indurated use and wont, lost the courage of facing unexpected
+ truths.</p>
+
+ <p>One conspicuous result of the failure to see that our opinions
+ have roots to them, independently of the feelings which either
+ majorities or other portions of the people around us may
+ entertain about them, is that neither political matters nor any
+ other serious branches of opinion, engage us in their loftiest or
+ most deep-reaching forms. The advocate of a given theory of
+ government or society is so misled by a wrong understanding of
+ the practice of just and wise compromise in applying it, as to
+ forget the noblest and most inspiring shape which his theory can
+ be made to assume. It is the worst of political blunders to
+ insist on carrying an ideal set of principles into execution,
+ where others have rights of dissent, and those others persons
+ whose assent is as indispensable to success, as it is impossible
+ to attain. But to be afraid or ashamed of holding such an ideal
+ set of principles in one's mind in their highest and most
+ abstract expression, does more than any one other cause to stunt
+ or petrify those elements in character to which life should owe
+ most of its savour.</p>
+
+ <p>If a man happens to be a Conservative, for instance, it is
+ pitiful that he should think so much more of what other people on
+ his side or the other think, than of the widest and highest of
+ the ideas on which a conservative philosophy of life and human
+ society reposes. Such ideas are these,&mdash;that the social
+ union is the express creation and ordering of the Deity: that its
+ movements follow his mysterious and fixed dispensation: that the
+ church and the state are convertible terms, and each citizen of
+ the latter is an incorporated member of the former: that
+ conscience, if perversely and misguidedly self-asserting, has no
+ rights against the decrees of the conscience of the nation: that
+ it is the most detestable of crimes to perturb the pacific order
+ of society either by active agitation or speculative
+ restlessness; that descent from a long line of ancestors in great
+ station adds an element of dignity to life, and imposes many high
+ obligations. We do not say that these and the rest of the
+ propositions which make up the true theoretic basis of a
+ conservative creed, are proper for the hustings, or expedient in
+ an election address or a speech in parliament. We do say that if
+ these high and not unintelligible principles, which alone can
+ give to reactionary professions any worth or significance, were
+ present in the minds of men who speak reactionary language, the
+ country would be spared the ignominy of seeing certain real
+ truths of society degraded at the hands of aristocratic
+ adventurers and plutocratic parasites into some miserable process
+ of 'dishing Whigs.'</p>
+
+ <p>This impoverishment of aims and depravation of principles by
+ the triumph of the political spirit outside of its proper sphere,
+ cannot unfortunately be restricted to any one set of people in
+ the state. It is something in the very atmosphere, which no
+ sanitary cordon can limit. Liberalism, too, would be something
+ more generous, more attractive&mdash;yes, and more practically
+ effective, if its professors and champions could allow their
+ sense of what is feasible to be refreshed and widened by a more
+ free recognition, however private and undemonstrative, of the
+ theoretic ideas which give their social creed whatever life and
+ consistency it may have. Such ideas are these: That the
+ conditions of the social union are not a mystery, only to be
+ touched by miracle, but the results of explicable causes, and
+ susceptible of constant modification: that the thoughts of wise
+ and patriotic men should be perpetually turned towards the
+ improvement of these conditions in every direction: that
+ contented acquiescence in the ordering that has come down to us
+ from the past is selfish and anti-social, because amid the
+ ceaseless change that is inevitable in a growing organism, the
+ institutions of the past demand progressive re-adaptations: that
+ such improvements are most likely to be secured in the greatest
+ abundance by limiting the sphere of authority, extending that of
+ free individuality, and steadily striving after the bestowal, so
+ far as the nature of things will ever permit it, of equality of
+ opportunity: that while there is dignity in ancestry, a modern
+ society is only safe in proportion as it summons capacity to its
+ public counsels and enterprises; that such a society to endure
+ must progress: that progress on its political side means more
+ than anything else the substitution of Justice as a governing
+ idea, instead of Privilege, and that the best guarantee for
+ justice in public dealings is the participation in their own
+ government of the people most likely to suffer from injustice.
+ This is not an exhaustive account of the progressive doctrine,
+ and we have here nothing to say as to its soundness. We only
+ submit that if those who use the watchwords of Liberalism were to
+ return upon its principles, instead of dwelling exclusively on
+ practical compromises, the tone of public life would be
+ immeasurably raised. The cause of social improvement would be
+ less systematically balked of the victories that are best worth
+ gaining. Progress would mean something more than mere entrances
+ and exits on the theatre of office. We should not see in the mass
+ of parliamentary candidates&mdash;and they are important people,
+ because nearly every Englishman with any ambition is a
+ parliamentary candidate, actual or potential&mdash;that grave
+ anxiety, that sober rigour, that immense caution, which are all
+ so really laughable, because so many of those men are only
+ anxious lest they should make a mistake in finding out what the
+ majority of their constituents would like them to think; only
+ rigorous against those who are indiscreet enough to press a
+ principle against the beck of a whip or a wire-puller; and only
+ very cautious not so much lest their opinion should be wrong, as
+ lest it should not pay.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Indolence and timidity have united to popularise among us a
+ flaccid latitudinarianism, which thinks itself a benign tolerance
+ for the opinions of others. It is in truth only a pretentious
+ form of being without settled opinions of our own, and without
+ any desire to settle them. No one can complain of the want of
+ speculative activity at the present time in a certain way. The
+ air, at a certain social elevation, is as full as it has ever
+ been of ideas, theories, problems, possible solutions, suggested
+ questions, and proffered answers. But then they are at large,
+ without cohesion, and very apt to be the objects even in the more
+ instructed minds of not much more than dilettante interest. We
+ see in solution an immense number of notions, which people think
+ it quite unnecessary to precipitate in the form of convictions.
+ We constantly hear the age lauded for its tolerance, for its
+ candour, for its openness of mind, for the readiness with which a
+ hearing is given to ideas that forty years ago, or even less than
+ that, would have excluded persons suspected of holding them from
+ decent society, and in fact did so exclude them. Before, however,
+ we congratulate ourselves too warmly on this, let us be quite
+ sure that we are not mistaking for tolerance what is really
+ nothing more creditable than indifference. These two attitudes of
+ mind, which are so vitally unlike in their real quality, are so
+ hard to distinguish in their outer seeming.</p>
+
+ <p>One is led to suspect that carelessness is the right name for
+ what looks like reasoned toleration, by such a line of
+ consideration as the following. It is justly said that at the
+ bottom of all the great discussions of modern society lie the two
+ momentous questions, first whether there is a God, and second
+ whether the soul is immortal. In other words, whether our
+ fellow-creatures are the highest beings who take an interest in
+ us, or in whom we need take an interest; and, then, whether life
+ in this world is the only life of which we shall ever be
+ conscious. It is true of most people that when they are talking
+ of evolution, and the origin of species, and the experiential or
+ intuitional source of ideas, and the utilitarian or
+ transcendental basis of moral obligation, these are the questions
+ which they really have in their minds. Now, in spite of the
+ scientific activity of the day, nobody is likely to contend that
+ men are pressed keenly in their souls by any poignant stress of
+ spiritual tribulation in the face of the two supreme enigmas.
+ Nobody will say that there is much of that striving and wrestling
+ and bitter agonising, which whole societies of men have felt
+ before now on questions of far less tremendous import. Ours, as
+ has been truly said, is 'a time of loud disputes and weak
+ convictions,' In a generation deeply impressed by a sense of
+ intellectual responsibility this could not be. As it is, even
+ superior men are better pleased to play about the height of these
+ great arguments, to fly in busy intellectual sport from side to
+ side, from aspect to aspect, than they are intent on resolving
+ what it is, after all, that the discussion comes to and to which
+ solution, when everything has been said and heard, the balance of
+ truth really to incline. There are too many giggling epigrams;
+ people are too willing to look on collections of mutually hostile
+ opinions with the same kind of curiosity which they bestow on a
+ collection of mutually hostile beasts in a menagerie. They have
+ very faint predilections for one rather than another. If they
+ were truly alive to the duty of conclusiveness, or to the
+ inexpressible magnitude of the subjects which nominally occupy
+ their minds, but really only exercise their tongues, this elegant
+ Pyrrhonism would be impossible, and this light-hearted neutrality
+ most unendurable.</p>
+
+ <p>Well has the illustrious Pascal said with reference to one of
+ the two great issues of the modern controversy:&mdash;'The
+ immortality of the soul is a thing that concerns us so closely
+ and touches us so profoundly, that one must have lost all feeling
+ to be indifferent as to knowing how the matter is. All our
+ actions and all our thoughts must follow such different paths,
+ according as there are eternal goods to hope for or are not, that
+ it is impossible to take a step with sense and judgment, without
+ regulating it in view of this point, which ought to be our first
+ object.... I can have nothing but compassion for those who groan
+ and travail in this doubt with all sincerity, who look on it as
+ the worst of misfortunes, and who, sparing no pains to escape
+ from it, make of this search their chief and most serious
+ employment.... But he who doubts and searches not is at the same
+ time a grievous wrongdoer, and a grievously unfortunate man. If
+ along with this he is tranquil and self-satisfied, if he
+ publishes his contentment to the world and plumes himself upon
+ it, and if it is this very state of doubt which he makes the
+ subject of his joy and vanity&mdash;I have no terms in which to
+ describe so extravagant a creature.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15"><sup>[15]</sup></a> Who,
+ except a member of the school of extravagant creatures
+ themselves, would deny that Pascal's irritation is most wholesome
+ and righteous?</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps in reply to this, we may be confronted by our own
+ doctrine of intellectual responsibility interpreted in a directly
+ opposite sense. We may be reminded of the long array of
+ difficulties that interfere between us and knowledge in that
+ tremendous matter, and of objections that rise in such perplexing
+ force to an answer either one way or the other. And finally we
+ may be despatched with a eulogy of caution and a censure of too
+ great heat after certainty. The answer is that there is a kind of
+ Doubt not without search, but after and at the end of search,
+ which is not open to Pascal's just reproaches against the more
+ ignoble and frivolous kind. And this too has been described for
+ us by a subtle doctor of Pascal's communion. 'Are there pleasures
+ of Doubt, as well as of Inference and Assent? In one sense there
+ are. Not indeed if doubt means ignorance, uncertainty, or
+ hopeless suspense; but there is a certain grave acquiescence in
+ ignorance, a recognition of our impotence to solve momentous and
+ urgent questions, which has a satisfaction of its own. After high
+ aspirations, after renewed endeavours, after bootless toil, after
+ long wanderings, after hope, effort, weariness, failure,
+ painfully alternating and recurring, it is an immense relief to
+ the exhausted mind to be able to say, "At length I know that I
+ can know nothing about anything." ... Ignorance remains the evil
+ which it ever was, but something of the peace of certitude is
+ gained in knowing the worst, and in having reconciled the mind to
+ the endurance of it.'<a name="FNanchor16"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_16"><sup>[16]</sup></a> Precisely, and what one would
+ say of our own age is that it will not deliberately face this
+ knowledge of the worst. So it misses the peace of certitude, and
+ not only its peace, but the strength and coherency that follow
+ strict acceptance of the worst, when the worst is after all the
+ best within reach.</p>
+
+ <p>Those who are in earnest when they blame too great haste after
+ certainty, do in reality mean us to embrace certainty, but in
+ favour of the vulgar opinions. They only see the prodigious
+ difficulties of the controversy when you do not incline to their
+ own side in it. They only panegyrise caution and the strictly
+ provisional when they suspect that intrepidity and love of the
+ conclusive would lead them to unwelcome shores. These persons,
+ however, whether fortunately or unfortunately, have no longer
+ much influence over the most active part of the national
+ intelligence. Whether permanently or not, resolute orthodoxy,
+ however prosperous it may seem among many of the uncultivated
+ rich, has lost its hold upon thought. For thought has become
+ dispersive, and the centrifugal forces of the human mind, among
+ those who think seriously, have for the time become dominant and
+ supreme. No one, I suppose, imagines that the singular
+ ecclesiastical revival which is now going on, is accompanied by
+ any revival of real and reasoned belief; or that the opulent
+ manufacturers who subscribe so generously for restored cathedral
+ fabrics and the like, have been moved by the apologetics of
+ <i>Aids to Faith</i> and the Christian Evidence Society.</p>
+
+ <p>Obviously only three ways of dealing with the great problems
+ of which we have spoken are compatible with a strong and
+ well-bottomed character. We may affirm that there is a deity with
+ definable attributes; and that there is a conscious state and
+ continued personality after the dissolution of the body. Or we
+ may deny. Or we may assure ourselves that we have no faculties
+ enabling us on good evidence either to deny or affirm.
+ Intellectual self-respect and all the qualities that are derived
+ from that, may well go with any one of these three courses,
+ decisively followed and consistently applied in framing a rule of
+ life and a settled scheme of its aims and motives. Why do we say
+ that intellectual self-respect is not vigorous, nor the sense of
+ intellectual responsibility and truthfulness and coherency quick
+ and wakeful among us? Because so many people, even among those
+ who might be expected to know better, insist on the futile
+ attempt to reconcile all those courses, instead of fixing on one
+ and steadily abiding in it. They speak as if they affirmed, and
+ they act as if they denied, and in their hearts they cherish a
+ slovenly sort of suspicion that we can neither deny nor affirm.
+ It may be said that this comes to much the same thing as if they
+ had formally decided in the last or neutral sense. It is not so.
+ This illegitimate union of three contradictories fritters
+ character away, breaks it up into discordant parts, and dissolves
+ into mercurial fluidity that leavening sincerity and free and
+ cheerful boldness, which come of harmonious principles of faith
+ and action, and without which men can never walk as confident
+ lovers of justice and truth.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Ambrose's famous saying, that 'it hath not pleased the Lord to
+ give his people salvation in dialectic,' has a profound meaning
+ far beyond its application to theology. It is deeply true that
+ our ruling convictions are less the product of ratiocination than
+ of sympathy, imagination, usage, tradition. But from this it does
+ not follow that the reasoning faculties are to be further
+ discouraged. On the contrary, just because the other elements are
+ so strong that they can be trusted to take care of themselves, it
+ is expedient to give special countenance to the intellectual
+ habits, which alone can check and rectify the constantly
+ aberrating tendencies of sentiment on the one side, and custom on
+ the other. This remark brings us to another type, of whom it is
+ not irrelevant to speak shortly in this place. The consequences
+ of the strength of the political spirit are not all direct, nor
+ does its strength by any means spring solely from its indulgence
+ to the less respectable elements of character, such as languor,
+ extreme pliableness, superficiality. On the contrary, it has an
+ indirect influence in removing the only effective restraint on
+ the excesses of some qualities which, when duly directed and
+ limited, are among the most precious parts of our mental
+ constitution. The political spirit is the great force in throwing
+ love of truth and accurate reasoning into a secondary place. The
+ evil does not stop here. This achievement has indirectly
+ countenanced the postponement of intellectual methods, and the
+ diminution of the sense of intellectual responsibility, by a
+ school that is anything rather than political.</p>
+
+ <p>Theology has borrowed, and coloured for her own use, the
+ principles which were first brought into vogue in politics. If in
+ the one field it is the fashion to consider convenience first and
+ truth second, in the other there is a corresponding fashion of
+ placing truth second and emotional comfort first. If there are
+ some who compromise their real opinions, or the chance of
+ reaching truth, for the sake of gain, there are far more who
+ shrink from giving their intelligence free play, for the sake of
+ keeping undisturbed certain luxurious spiritual sensibilities.
+ This choice of emotional gratification before truth and upright
+ dealing with one's own understanding, creates a character that is
+ certainly far less unlovely than those who sacrifice their
+ intellectual integrity to more material convenience. The moral
+ flaw is less palpable and less gross. Yet here too there is the
+ stain of intellectual improbity, and it is perhaps all the more
+ mischievous for being partly hidden under the mien of spiritual
+ exaltation.</p>
+
+ <p>There is in literature no more seductive illustration of this
+ seductive type than Rousseau's renowned character of the Savoyard
+ Vicar&mdash;penetrated with scepticism as to the attributes of
+ the deity, the meaning of the holy rites, the authenticity of the
+ sacred documents; yet full of reverence, and ever respecting in
+ silence what he could neither reject nor understand. 'The
+ essential worship,' he says, 'is the worship of the heart. God
+ never rejects this homage, under whatever form it be offered to
+ him. In old days I used to say mass with the levity which in time
+ infects even the gravest things when we do them too often. Since
+ acquiring my new principles [of reverential scepticism] I
+ celebrate it with more veneration: I am overcome by the majesty
+ of the Supreme Being, by his presence, by the insufficiency of
+ the human mind, which conceives so ill what pertains to its
+ author. When I approach the moment of consecration, I collect
+ myself for performing the act with all the feelings required by
+ the church and the majesty of the sacrament. I strive to
+ annihilate my reason before the Supreme Intelligence, saying, Who
+ art thou that thou shouldst measure infinite power?'<a name=
+ "FNanchor17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17"><sup>[17]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The Savoyard Vicar is not imaginary. The acquiescence in
+ indefinite ideas for the sake of comforted emotions, and the
+ abnegation of strong convictions in order to make room for free
+ and plenteous effusion, have for us all the marks of a too
+ familiar reality. Such a doctrine is an everyday plea for
+ self-deception, and a current justification for illusion even
+ among some of the finer spirits. They have persuaded themselves
+ not only that the life of the religious emotions is the highest
+ life, but that it is independent of the intellectual forms with
+ which history happens to have associated it. And so they refine
+ and sophisticate and make havoc with plain and honest
+ interpretation, in order to preserve a soft serenity of soul
+ unperturbed.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, we are not at all concerned to dispute such positions as
+ that Feeling is the right starting-point of moral education; that
+ in forming character appeal should be to the heart rather than to
+ the understanding; that the only basis on which our faculties can
+ be harmoniously ordered is the preponderance of affection over
+ reason. These propositions open much grave and complex
+ discussion, and they are not to our present purpose. We only
+ desire to state the evil of the notion that a man is warranted in
+ comforting himself with dogmas and formularies, which he has
+ first to empty of all definite, precise, and clearly determinable
+ significance, before he can get them out of the way of his
+ religious sensibilities. Whether Reason or Affection is to have
+ the empire in the society of the future, when Reason may possibly
+ have no more to discover for us in the region of morals and
+ religion, and so will have become <i>emeritus</i> and taken a
+ lower place, as of a tutor whose services the human family, being
+ now grown up, no longer requires,&mdash;however this may be, it
+ is at least certain that in the meantime the spiritual life of
+ man needs direction quite as much as it needs impulse, and light
+ quite as much as force. This direction and light can only be
+ safely procured by the free and vigorous use of the intelligence.
+ But the intelligence is not free in the presence of a mortal fear
+ lest its conclusions should trouble soft tranquillity of spirit.
+ There is always hope of a man so long as he dwells in the region
+ of the direct categorical proposition and the unambiguous term;
+ so long as he does not deny the rightly drawn conclusion after
+ accepting the major and minor premisses. This may seem a scanty
+ virtue and very easy grace. Yet experience shows it to be too
+ hard of attainment for those who tamper with disinterestedness of
+ conviction, for the sake of luxuriating in the softness of
+ spiritual transport without interruption from a syllogism. It is
+ true that there are now and then in life as in history noble and
+ fair natures, that by the silent teaching and unconscious example
+ of their inborn purity, star-like constancy, and great devotion,
+ do carry the world about them to further heights of living than
+ can be attained by ratiocination. But these, the blameless and
+ loved saints of the earth, rise too rarely on our dull horizons
+ to make a rule for the world. The law of things is that they who
+ tamper with veracity, from whatever motive, are tampering with
+ the vital force of human progress. Our comfort and the delight of
+ the religious imagination are no better than forms of
+ self-indulgence, when they are secured at the cost of that love
+ of truth on which, more than on anything else, the increase of
+ light and happiness among men must depend. We have to fight and
+ do lifelong battle against the forces of darkness, and anything
+ that turns the edge of reason blunts the surest and most potent
+ of our weapons.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_13"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor13">[13]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Burton's <i>Lift of Hume,</i> ii. 186-188</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor14">[14]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Isaac Taylor's <i>Natural History of Enthusiasm</i>, p.
+ 226.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor15">[15]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Pens&eacute;es</i>, II. Art ii.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor16">[16]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Dr. Newman's <i>Grammar of Assent</i>, p. 201.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor17">[17]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Emile</i>, bk. iv.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_IV"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>The main field of discussion touching Compromise in expression
+ and avowal lies in the region of religious belief. In politics no
+ one seriously contends that respect for the feelings and
+ prejudices of other people requires us to be silent about our
+ opinions. A republican, for instance, is at perfect liberty to
+ declare himself so. Nobody will say that he is not within his
+ rights if he should think it worth while to practise this
+ liberty, though of course he will have to face the obloquy which
+ attends all opinion that is not shared by the more demonstrative
+ and vocal portions of the public. It is true that in every stable
+ society a general conviction prevails of the extreme
+ undesirableness of constantly laying bare the foundations of
+ government. Incessant discussion of the theoretical bases of the
+ social union is naturally considered worse than idle. It is felt
+ by many wise men that the chief business of the political thinker
+ is to interest himself in generalisations of such a sort as leads
+ with tolerable straightness to practical improvements of a
+ far-reaching and durable kind. Even among those, however, who
+ thus feel it not to be worth while to be for ever handling the
+ abstract principles which are, after all, only clumsy expressions
+ of the real conditions that bring and keep men together in
+ society, yet nobody of any consideration pretends to silence or
+ limit the free discussion of these principles. Although a man is
+ not likely to be thanked who calls attention to the vast
+ discrepancies between the theory and practice of the
+ constitution, yet nobody now would countenance the notion of an
+ inner doctrine in politics. We smile at the line that Hume took
+ in speaking of the doctrine of non-resistance. He did not deny
+ that the right of resistance to a tyrannical sovereign does
+ actually belong to a nation. But, he said, 'if ever on any
+ occasion it were laudable to conceal truth from the populace, it
+ must be confessed that the doctrine of resistance affords such an
+ example; and that all speculative reasoners ought to observe with
+ regard to this principle the same cautious silence which the
+ laws, in every species of government, have ever prescribed to
+ themselves.' As if the cautious silence of the political writer
+ could prevent a populace from feeling the heaviness of an
+ oppressor's hand, and striving to find relief from unjust
+ burdens. As if any nation endowed with enough of the spirit of
+ independence to assent to the right of resistance when offered to
+ them as a speculative theorem, would not infallibly be led by the
+ same spirit to assert the right without the speculative theorem.
+ That so acute a head as Hume's should have failed to perceive
+ these very plain considerations, and that he should moreover have
+ perpetrated the absurdity of declaring the right of resistance,
+ in the same breath in which he declares the laudableness of
+ keeping it a secret, only allows how carefully a man need steer
+ after he has once involved himself in the labyrinths of
+ Economy.<a name="FNanchor18"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_18"><sup>[18]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>In religion the unreasonableness of imposing a similar
+ cautious silence is not yet fully established, nor the vicious
+ effects of practising it clearly recognised. In these high
+ matters an amount of economy and management is held praiseworthy,
+ which in any other subject would be universally condemned as
+ cowardly and ignoble. Indeed the preliminary stage has scarcely
+ been reached&mdash;the stage in which public opinion grants to
+ every one the unrestricted right of shaping his own beliefs,
+ independently of those of the people who surround him. Any woman,
+ for instance, suspected of having cast behind her the Bible and
+ all practices of devotion and the elementary articles of the
+ common creed, would be distrustfully regarded even by those who
+ wink at the same kind of mental boldness in men. Nay, she would
+ be so regarded even by some of the very men who have themselves
+ discarded as superstition what they still wish women to retain
+ for law and gospel. So long as any class of adults are
+ effectually discouraged in the free use of their minds upon the
+ most important subjects, we are warranted in saying that the era
+ of free thought, which naturally precedes the era of free speech,
+ is still imperfectly developed.</p>
+
+ <p>The duties and rights of free speech are by no means identical
+ with those of independent thought. One general reason for this is
+ tolerably plain. The expression of opinion directly affects other
+ people, while its mere formation directly affects no one but
+ ourselves. Therefore the limits of compromise in expression are
+ less widely and freely placed, because the rights and interests
+ of all who may be made listeners to our spoken or written words
+ are immediately concerned. In forming opinions, a man or woman
+ owes no consideration to any person or persons whatever. Truth is
+ the single object. It is truth that in the forum of conscience
+ claims an undivided allegiance. The publication of opinion stands
+ on another footing. That is an external act, with possible
+ consequences, like all other external acts, both to the doer and
+ to every one within the sphere of his influence. And, besides
+ these, it has possible consequences to the prosperity of the
+ opinion itself.<a name="FNanchor19"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_19"><sup>[19]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>A hundred questions of fitness, of seasonableness, of
+ conflicting expediencies, present themselves in this connection,
+ and nothing gives more anxiety to a sensible man who holds
+ notions opposed to the current prejudices, than to hit the right
+ mark where intellectual integrity and prudence, firmness and wise
+ reserve, are in exact accord. When we come to declaring opinions
+ that are, however foolishly and unreasonably, associated with
+ pain and even a kind of turpitude in the minds of those who
+ strongly object to them, then some of our most powerful
+ sympathies are naturally engaged. We wonder whether duty to truth
+ can possibly require us to inflict keen distress on those to whom
+ we are bound by the tenderest and most consecrated ties. This is
+ so wholly honourable a sentiment, that no one who has not made
+ himself drunk with the thin sour wine of a crude and absolute
+ logic will refuse to consider it. Before, however, attempting to
+ illustrate cases of conscience in this order, we venture to make
+ a short digression into the region of the matter, as distinct
+ from the manner of free speech. One or two changes of great
+ importance in the way in which men think about religion, bear
+ directly upon the conditions on which they may permit themselves
+ and others to speak about it.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The peculiar character of all the best kinds of dissent from
+ the nominal creed of the time, makes it rather less difficult for
+ us to try to reconcile unflinching honesty with a just and
+ becoming regard for the feelings of those who have claims upon
+ our forbearance, than would have been the case a hundred years
+ ago. 'It is not now with a polite sneer,' as a high
+ ecclesiastical authority lately admitted, 'still less with a rude
+ buffet or coarse words, that Christianity is assailed.' Before
+ churchmen congratulate themselves too warmly on this improvement
+ in the nature of the attack, perhaps they ought to ask themselves
+ how far it is due to the change in the position of the defending
+ party. The truth is that the coarse and realistic criticism of
+ which Voltaire was the consummate master, has done its work. It
+ has driven the defenders of the old faith into the milder and
+ more genial climate of non-natural interpretations, and the
+ historic sense, and a certain elastic relativity of dogma. The
+ old criticism was victorious, but after victory it vanished. One
+ reason of this was that the coarse and realistic forms of belief
+ had either vanished before it, or else they forsook their ancient
+ pretensions and clothed themselves in more modest robes. The
+ consequence of this, and of other causes which might be named, is
+ that the modern attack, while fully as serious and much more
+ radical, has a certain gravity, decorum, and worthiness of form.
+ No one of any sense or knowledge now thinks the Christian
+ religion had its origin in deliberate imposture. The modern
+ freethinker does not attack it; he explains it. And what is more,
+ he explains it by referring its growth to the better, and not to
+ the worse part of human nature. He traces it to men's cravings
+ for a higher morality. He finds its source in their aspirations
+ after nobler expression of that feeling for the incommensurable
+ things, which is in truth under so many varieties of inwoven
+ pattern the common universal web of religious faith.</p>
+
+ <p>The result of this way of looking at a creed which a man no
+ longer accepts, is that he is able to speak of it with patience
+ and historic respect. He can openly mark his dissent from it,
+ without exacerbating the orthodox sentiment by galling
+ pleasantries or bitter animadversion upon details. We are now
+ awake to the all-important truth that belief in this or that
+ detail of superstition is the result of an irrational state of
+ mind, and flows logically from superstitious premisses. We see
+ that it is to begin at the wrong end, to assail the deductions as
+ impossible, instead of sedulously building up a state of mind in
+ which their impossibility would become spontaneously visible.</p>
+
+ <p>Besides the great change which such a point of view makes in
+ men's way of speaking of a religion, whose dogmas and documents
+ they reject, there is this further consideration leaning in the
+ same direction. The tendency of modern free thought is more and
+ more visibly towards the extraction of the first and more
+ permanent elements of the old faith, to make the purified
+ material of the new. When Dr. Congreve met the famous epigram
+ about Comte's system being Catholicism minus Christianity, by the
+ reply that it is Catholicism plus Science, he gave an ingenious
+ expression to the direction which is almost necessarily taken by
+ all who attempt, in however informal a manner, to construct for
+ themselves some working system of faith, in place of the faith
+ which science and criticism have sapped. In what ultimate form,
+ acceptable to great multitudes of men, these attempts will at
+ last issue, no one can now tell. For we, like the Hebrews of old,
+ shall all have to live and die in faith, 'not having received the
+ promises, but having seen them afar off, and being persuaded of
+ them, and embracing them, and confessing that we are strangers
+ and pilgrims on the earth.' Meanwhile, after the first great glow
+ and passion of the just and necessary revolt of reason against
+ superstition have slowly lost the exciting splendour of the dawn,
+ and become diffused in the colourless space of a rather bleak
+ noonday, the mind gradually collects again some of the ideas of
+ the old religion of the West, and willingly, or even joyfully,
+ suffers itself to be once more breathed upon by something of its
+ spirit. Christianity was the last great religious synthesis. It
+ is the one nearest to us. Nothing is more natural than that those
+ who cannot rest content with intellectual analysis, while
+ awaiting the advent of the Saint Paul of the humanitarian faith
+ of the future, should gather up provisionally such fragmentary
+ illustrations of this new faith as are to be found in the records
+ of the old. Whatever form may be ultimately imposed on our vague
+ religious aspirations by some prophet to come, who shall unite
+ sublime depth of feeling and lofty purity of life with strong
+ intellectual grasp and the gift of a noble eloquence, we may at
+ least be sure of this, that it will stand as closely related to
+ Christianity as Christianity stood closely related to the old
+ Judaic dispensation. It is commonly assumed that the rejecters of
+ the popular religion stand in face of it, as the Christians stood
+ in face of the pagan belief and pagan rites in the Empire. The
+ analogy is inexact. The modern denier, if he is anything better
+ than that, or entertains hopes of a creed to come, is nearer to
+ the position of the Christianising Jew.<a name=
+ "FNanchor20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20"><sup>[20]</sup></a>
+ Science, when she has accomplished all her triumphs in her own
+ order, will still have to go back, when the time comes, to assist
+ in the building up of a new creed by which men can live. The
+ builders will have to seek material in the purified and
+ sublimated ideas, of which the confessions and rites of the
+ Christian churches have been the grosser expression. Just as what
+ was once the new dispensation was preached <i>a Judaeos ad
+ Judaeos apud Judaeos</i>, so must the new, that is to be, find a
+ Christian teacher and Christian hearers. It can hardly be other
+ than an expansion, a development, a readaptation, of all the
+ moral and spiritual truth that lay hidden under the worn-out
+ forms. It must be such a harmonising of the truth with our
+ intellectual conceptions as shall fit it to be an active guide to
+ conduct. In a world '<i>where men sit and hear each other groan,
+ where but to think is to be full of sorrow</i>,' it is hard to
+ imagine a time when we shall be indifferent to that sovereign
+ legend of Pity. We have to incorporate it in some wider gospel of
+ Justice and Progress.</p>
+
+ <p>I shall not, I hope, be suspected of any desire to prophesy
+ too smooth things. It is no object of ours to bridge over the
+ gulf between belief in the vulgar theology and disbelief. Nor for
+ a single moment do we pretend that, when all the points of
+ contact between virtuous belief and virtuous disbelief are made
+ the most of that good faith will allow, there will not still and
+ after all remain a terrible controversy between those who cling
+ passionately to all the consolations, mysteries, personalities,
+ of the orthodox faith, and us who have made up our minds to face
+ the worst, and to shape, as best we can, a life in which the
+ cardinal verities of the common creed shall have no place. The
+ future faith, like the faith of the past, brings not peace but a
+ sword. It is a tale not of concord, but of households divided
+ against themselves. Those who are incessantly striving to make
+ the old bottles hold the new wine, to reconcile the
+ irreconcilable, to bring the Bible and the dogmas of the churches
+ to be good friends with history and criticism, are prompted by
+ the humanest intention.<a name="FNanchor21"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_21"><sup>[21]</sup></a> One sympathises with this
+ amiable anxiety to soften shocks, and break the rudeness of a
+ vital transition. In this essay, at any rate, there is no such
+ attempt. We know that it is the son against the father, and the
+ mother-in-law against the daughter-in-law. No softness of speech
+ will disguise the portentous differences between those who admit
+ a supernatural revelation and those who deny it. No charity nor
+ goodwill can narrow the intellectual breach between those who
+ declare that a world without an ever-present Creator with
+ intelligible attributes would be to them empty and void, and
+ those who insist that none of the attributes of a Creator can
+ ever be grasped by the finite intelligence of men.<a name=
+ "FNanchor22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22"><sup>[22]</sup></a> Our
+ object in urging the historic, semi-conservative, and almost
+ sympathetic quality, which distinguishes the unbelief of to-day
+ from the unbelief of a hundred years ago, is only to show that
+ the most strenuous and upright of plain-speakers is less likely
+ to shock and wound the lawful sensibilities of devout persons
+ than he would have been so long as unbelief went no further than
+ bitter attack on small details. In short, all save the purely
+ negative and purely destructive school of freethinkers, are now
+ able to deal with the beliefs from which they dissent, in a way
+ which makes patient and disinterested controversy not wholly
+ impossible.</p>
+
+ <p>One more point of much importance ought to be mentioned. The
+ belief that heresy is the result of wilful depravity is fast
+ dying out. People no longer seriously think that speculative
+ error is bound up with moral iniquity, or that mistaken thinking
+ is either the result or the cause of wicked living. Even the
+ official mouthpieces of established beliefs now usually represent
+ a bad heart as only one among other possible causes of unbelief.
+ It divides the curse with ignorance, intellectual shallowness,
+ the unfortunate influence of plausible heresiarchs, and other
+ alternative roots of evil. They thus leave a way of escape, by
+ which the person who does not share their own convictions may
+ still be credited with a good moral character. Some persons, it
+ is true, 'cannot see how a man who deliberately rejects the Roman
+ Catholic religion can, in the eyes of those who earnestly believe
+ it, be other than a rebel against God.' They assure us that, 'as
+ opinions become better marked and more distinctly connected with
+ action, the truth that decided dissent from them implies more or
+ less of a reproach upon those who hold them decidedly, becomes so
+ obvious that every one perceives it.' No doubt a protestant or a
+ sceptic regards the beliefs of a catholic as a reproach upon the
+ believer's understanding. So the man whose whole faith rests on
+ the miraculous and on acts of special intervention, regards the
+ strictly positive and scientific thinker as the dupe of a crude
+ and narrow logic. But this now carries with it no implication of
+ moral obliquity. De Maistre's rather grotesque conviction that
+ infidels always die of horrible diseases with special names,
+ could now only be held among the very dregs of the ecclesiastical
+ world.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor is it correct to say that 'when religious differences come
+ to be, and are regarded as, mere differences of opinion, it is
+ because the controversy is really decided in the sceptical
+ sense.' Those who agree with the present writer, for example, are
+ not sceptics. They positively, absolutely, and without reserve,
+ reject as false the whole system of objective propositions which
+ make up the popular belief of the day, in one and all of its
+ theological expressions. They look upon that system as
+ mischievous in its consequences to society, for many
+ reasons,&mdash;among others because it tends to divert and
+ misdirect the most energetic faculties of human nature. This,
+ however, does not make them suspect the motives or the habitual
+ morality of those who remain in the creed in which they were
+ nurtured. The difference is a difference of opinion, as purely as
+ if we refused to accept the undulatory theory of light; and we
+ treat it as such. Then reverse this. Why is it any more
+ impossible for those who remain in the theological stage, who are
+ not in the smallest degree sceptical, who in their heart of
+ hearts embrace without a shadow of misgiving all the mysteries of
+ the faith, why is it any more impossible for them than for us,
+ whose convictions are as strong as theirs, to treat the most
+ radical dissidence as that and nothing other or worse? Logically,
+ it perhaps might not be hard to convict them of inconsistency,
+ but then, as has been so often said, inconsistency is a totally
+ different thing from insincerity, or doubting adherence, or
+ silent scepticism. The beliefs of an ordinary man are a complex
+ structure of very subtle materials, all compacted into a whole,
+ not by logic, but by lack of logic; not by syllogism or sorites,
+ but by the vague.</p>
+
+ <p>As a plain matter of fact and observation, we may all perceive
+ that dissent from religious opinion less and less implies
+ reproach in any serious sense. We all of us know in the flesh
+ liberal catholics and latitudinarian protestants, who hold the
+ very considerable number of beliefs that remain to them, quite as
+ firmly and undoubtingly as believers who are neither liberal nor
+ latitudinarian. The compatibility of error in faith with virtue
+ in conduct is to them only a mystery the more, a branch of the
+ insoluble problem of Evil, permitted by a Being at once
+ all-powerful and all-benevolent. Stringent logic may make short
+ work of either fact,&mdash;a benevolent author of evil, or a
+ virtuous despiser of divine truth. But in an atmosphere of
+ mystery, logical contradictions melt away. Faith gives a sanction
+ to that tolerant and charitable judgment of the character of
+ heretics, which has its real springs partly in common human
+ sympathy whereby we are all bound to one another, and partly in
+ experience, which teaches us that practical righteousness and
+ speculative orthodoxy do not always have their roots in the same
+ soil. The world is every day growing larger. The range of the
+ facts of the human race is being enormously extended by
+ naturalists, by historians, by philologists, by travellers, by
+ critics. The manifold past experiences of humanity are daily
+ opening out to us in vaster and at the same time more ordered
+ proportions. And so even those who hold fast to Christianity as
+ the noblest, strongest, and only final conclusion of these
+ experiences, are yet constrained to admit that it is no more than
+ a single term in a very long and intricate series.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The object of the foregoing digression is to show some cause
+ for thinking that dissent from the current beliefs is less and
+ less likely to inflict upon those who retain them any very
+ intolerable kind or degree of mental pain. Therefore it is in so
+ far all the plainer, as well as easier, a duty not to conceal
+ such dissent. What we have been saying comes to this. If a
+ believer finds that his son, for instance, has ceased to believe,
+ he no longer has this disbelief thrust upon him in gross and
+ irreverent forms. Nor does he any longer suppose that the
+ unbelieving son must necessarily be a profligate. And moreover,
+ in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, he no longer supposes that
+ infidels, of his own family or acquaintance at any rate, will
+ consume for eternal ages in lakes of burning marl.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us add another consideration. One reason why so many
+ persons are really shocked and pained by the avowal of heretical
+ opinions is the very fact that such avowal is uncommon. If
+ unbelievers and doubters were more courageous, believers would be
+ less timorous. It is because they live in an enervating fool's
+ paradise of seeming assent and conformity, that the breath of an
+ honest and outspoken word strikes so eager and nipping on their
+ sensibilities. If they were not encouraged to suppose that all
+ the world is of their own mind, if they were forced out of that
+ atmosphere of self-indulgent silences and hypocritical reserves,
+ which is systematically poured round them, they would acquire a
+ robuster mental habit. They would learn to take dissents for what
+ they are worth. They would be led either to strengthen or to
+ discard their own opinions, if the dissents happened to be
+ weighty or instructive; either to refute or neglect such dissents
+ as should be ill-founded or insignificant. They will remain
+ valetudinarians, so long as a curtain of compromise shelters them
+ from the real belief of those of their neighbours who have
+ ventured to use their minds with some measure of independence. A
+ very brief contact with people who, when the occasion comes, do
+ not shrink from saying what they think, is enough to modify that
+ excessive liability to be shocked at truth-speaking, which is
+ only so common because truth-speaking itself is so
+ unfamiliar.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, however great the pain inflicted by the avowal of
+ unbelief, it seems to the present writer that one relationship in
+ life, and one only, justifies us in being silent where otherwise
+ it would be right to speak. This relationship is that between
+ child and parents. Those parents are wisest who train their sons
+ and daughters in the utmost liberty both of thought and speech;
+ who do not instill dogmas into them, but inculcate upon them the
+ sovereign importance of correct ways of forming opinions; who,
+ while never dissembling the great fact that if one opinion is
+ true, its contradictory cannot be true also, but must be a lie
+ and must partake of all the evil qualities of a lie, yet always
+ set them the example of listening to unwelcome opinions with
+ patience and candour. Still all parents are not wise. They cannot
+ all endure to hear of any religious opinions except their own.
+ Where it would give them sincere and deep pain to hear a son or
+ daughter avow disbelief in the inspiration of the Bible and so
+ forth, then it seems that the younger person is warranted in
+ refraining from saying that he or she does not accept such and
+ such doctrines. This, of course, only where the son or daughter
+ feels a tender and genuine attachment to the parent. Where the
+ parent has not earned this attachment, has been selfish,
+ indifferent, or cruel, the title to the special kind of
+ forbearance of which we are speaking can hardly exist. In an
+ ordinary way, however, a parent has a claim on us which no other
+ person in the world can have, and a man's self-respect ought
+ scarcely to be injured if he finds himself shrinking from playing
+ the apostle to his own father and mother.</p>
+
+ <p>One can indeed imagine circumstances where this would not be
+ true. If you are persuaded that you have had revealed to you a
+ glorious gospel of light and blessedness, it is impossible not to
+ thirst to impart such tidings most eagerly to those who are
+ closest about your heart. We are not in that position. We have as
+ yet no magnificent vision, so definite, so touching, so 'clothed
+ with the beauty of a thousand stars,' as to make us eager, for
+ the sake of it, to murder all the sweetnesses of filial piety in
+ an aggressive eristic. This much one concedes. Yet let us ever
+ remember that those elders are of nobler type who have kept their
+ minds in a generous freedom, and have made themselves strong with
+ that magnanimous confidence in truth, which the Hebrew expressed
+ in old phrase, that if counsel or work be of men it will come to
+ nought, but if it be of God ye cannot overthrow it.</p>
+
+ <p>Even in the case of parents, and even though our new creed is
+ but rudimentary, there can be no good reason why we should go
+ further in the way of economy than mere silence. Neither they nor
+ any other human being can possibly have a right to expect us, not
+ merely to abstain from the open expression of dissents, but
+ positively to profess unreal and feigned assents. No fear of
+ giving pain, no wish to soothe the alarms of those to whom we owe
+ much, no respect for the natural clinging of the old to the faith
+ which has accompanied them through honourable lives, can warrant
+ us in saying that we believe to be true what we are convinced is
+ false. The most lax moralist counts a lie wrong, even when the
+ motive is unselfish, and springs from the desire to give pleasure
+ to those whom it is our duty to please. A deliberate lie avowedly
+ does not cease to be one because it concerns spiritual things.
+ Nor is it the less wrong because it is uttered by one to whom all
+ spiritual things have become indifferent. Filial affection is a
+ motive which would, if any motive could, remove some of the taint
+ of meanness with which pious lying, like every other kind of
+ lying, tends to infect character. The motive may no doubt ennoble
+ the act, though the act remains in the category of forbidden
+ things. But the motive of these complaisant assents and false
+ affirmations, taken at their very best, is still comparatively a
+ poor motive. No real elevation of spirit is possible for a man
+ who is willing to subordinate his convictions to his domestic
+ affections, and to bring himself to a habit of viewing falsehood
+ lightly, lest the truth should shock the illegitimate and
+ over-exacting sensibilities either of his parents or any one
+ else. We may understand what is meant by the logic of the
+ feelings, and accept it as the proper corrective for a too
+ intense egoism. But when the logic of the feelings is invoked to
+ substitute the egoism of the family for the slightly narrower
+ egoism of the individual, it can hardly be more than a fine name
+ for self-indulgence and a callous indifference to all the largest
+ human interests.</p><br>
+
+ <p>This brings us to consider the case of another no less
+ momentous relationship, and the kind of compromise in the matter
+ of religious conformity which it justifies or imposes. It
+ constantly happens that the husband has wholly ceased to believe
+ the religion to which his wife clings with unshaken faith. We
+ need not enter into the causes why women remain in bondage to
+ opinions which so many cultivated men either reject or else hold
+ in a transcendental and non-natural sense. The only question with
+ which we are concerned is the amount of free assertion of his own
+ convictions which a man should claim and practise, when he knows
+ that such convictions are distasteful to his wife. Is it lawful,
+ as it seems to be in dealing with parents, to hold his conviction
+ silently? Is it lawful either positively or by implication to
+ lead his wife to suppose that he shares her opinions, when in
+ truth he rejects them?</p>
+
+ <p>If it were not for the maxims and practice in daily use among
+ men otherwise honourable, one would not suppose it possible that
+ two answers could be given to these questions by any one with the
+ smallest pretence of principle or self-respect. As it is, we all
+ of us know men who deliberately reject the entire Christian
+ system, and still think it compatible with uprightness to summon
+ their whole establishments round them at morning and evening, and
+ on their knees to offer up elaborately formulated prayers, which
+ have just as much meaning to them as the entrails of the
+ sacrificial victim had to an infidel haruspex. We see the same
+ men diligently attending religious services; uttering assents to
+ confessions of which they really reject every syllable; kneeling,
+ rising, bowing, with deceptive solemnity; even partaking of the
+ sacrament with a consummate devoutness that is very edifying to
+ all who are not in the secret, and who do not know that they are
+ acting a part, and making a mock both of their own reason and
+ their own probity, merely to please persons whose delusions they
+ pity and despise from the bottom of their hearts.</p>
+
+ <p>On the surface there is certainly nothing to distinguish this
+ kind of conduct from the grossest hypocrisy. Is there anything
+ under the surface to relieve it from this complexion? Is there
+ any weight in the sort of answer which such men make to the
+ accusation that their conformity is a very degrading form of
+ deceit, and a singularly mischievous kind of treachery? Is the
+ plea of a wish to spare mental discomfort to others an admissible
+ and valid plea? It seems to us to be none of these things, and
+ for the following among other reasons.</p>
+
+ <p>If a man drew his wife by lot, or by any other method over
+ which neither he nor she has any control, as in the case of
+ parents, perhaps he might with some plausibleness contend that he
+ owed her certain limited deferences and reserves, just as we
+ admit that he may owe them to his parents. But this is not the
+ case. Marriage, in this country at least, is the result of mutual
+ choice. If men and women do as a matter of fact usually make this
+ choice hastily and on wofully imperfect information of one
+ another's characters, that is no warrant for a resort to unlawful
+ expedients to remedy the blunder. If a woman cares ardently
+ enough about religion to feel keen distress at the idea of
+ dissent from it on the part of those closely connected with her,
+ she surely may be expected to take reasonable pains to ascertain
+ beforehand the religious attitude of one with whom she is about
+ to unite herself for life. On the other hand, if a man sets any
+ value on his own opinions, if they are in any real sense a part
+ of himself, he must be guilty of something like deliberate and
+ systematic duplicity during the acquaintance preceding marriage,
+ if his dissent has remained unsuspected. Certainly if men go
+ through society before marriage under false colours, and feign
+ beliefs which they do not hold, they have only themselves to
+ thank for the degradation of having to keep up the imposture
+ afterwards. Suppose a protestant were to pass himself off for a
+ catholic because he happened to meet a catholic lady whom he
+ desired to marry. Everybody would agree in calling such a man by
+ a very harsh name. It is hard to see why a freethinker, who by
+ reticence and conformity passes himself off for a believer,
+ should be more leniently judged. The differences between a
+ catholic and a protestant are assuredly not any greater than
+ those between a believer and an unbeliever. We all admit the
+ baseness of dissimulation in the former case. Why is it any less
+ base in the latter?</p>
+
+ <p>Marriages, however, are often made in haste, or heedlessly, or
+ early in life, before either man or woman has come to feel very
+ deeply about religion either one way or another. The woman does
+ not know how much she will need religion, nor what comfort it may
+ bring to her. The man does not know all the objections to it
+ which may disclose themselves to his understanding as the years
+ ripen. There is always at work that most unfortunate maxim,
+ tacitly held and acted upon in ninety-nine marriages out of a
+ hundred, that money is of importance, and social position is of
+ importance, and good connections are of importance, and health
+ and manners and comely looks, and that the only thing which is of
+ no importance whatever is opinion and intellectual quality and
+ temper. Now granting that both man and woman are indifferent at
+ the time of their union, is that any reason why upon either of
+ them acquiring serious convictions, the other should be expected,
+ out of mere complaisance, to make a false and hypocritical
+ pretence of sharing them? To see how flimsy is this plea of
+ fearing to give pain to the religious sensitiveness of women, we
+ have only to imagine one or two cases which go beyond the common
+ experience, yet which ought not to strain the plea, if it be
+ valid.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus, if my wife turns catholic, am I to pretend to turn
+ catholic too, to save her the horrible distress of thinking that
+ I am doomed to eternal perdition? Or if she chooses to embrace
+ the doctrine of direct illumination from heaven, and to hear
+ voices bidding her to go or come, to do or abstain from doing, am
+ I too to shape my conduct after these fancied monitions? Or if it
+ comes into her mind to serve tables, and to listen in all faith
+ to the miracles of spiritualism, am I, lest I should pain her, to
+ feign a surrender of all my notions of evidence, to pretend a
+ transformation of all my ideas of worthiness in life and beyond
+ life, and to go to s&eacute;ances with the same regularity and
+ seriousness with which you go to church? Of course in each of
+ these cases everybody who does not happen to share the given
+ peculiarity of belief, will agree that however severely a
+ husband's dissent might pain the wife, whatever distress and
+ discomfort it might inflict upon her, yet he would be bound to
+ let her suffer, rather than sacrifice his veracity and
+ self-respect. Why then is it any less discreditable to practise
+ an insincere conformity in more ordinary circumstances? If the
+ principle of such conformity is good for anything at all, it
+ ought to cover these less usual cases as completely as the others
+ which are more usual. Indeed there would be more to be said on
+ behalf of conformity for politeness' sake, where the woman had
+ gone through some great process of change, for then one might
+ suppose that her heart was deeply set on the matter. Even then
+ the plea would be worthless, but it is more indisputably
+ worthless still where the sentiment which we are bidden to
+ respect at the cost of our own freedom of speech is nothing more
+ laudable than a fear of moving out of the common groove of
+ religious opinion, or an intolerant and unreasoned bigotry, or
+ mere stupidity and silliness of the vulgarest type.<a name=
+ "FNanchor23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23"><sup>[23]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Ah, it is said, you forget that women cannot live without
+ religion. The present writer is equally of this opinion that
+ women cannot be happy without a religion, nor men either. That is
+ not the question. It does not follow because a woman cannot be
+ happy without a religion, that therefore she cannot be happy
+ unless her husband is of the same religion. Still less, that she
+ would be made happy by his insincerely pretending to be of the
+ same religion. And least of all is it true, if both these
+ propositions were credible, that even then for the sake of her
+ happiness he is bound not merely to live a life of imposture, but
+ in so doing to augment the general forces of imposture in the
+ world, and to make the chances of truth, light, and human
+ improvement more and more unfavourable. Women are at present far
+ less likely than men to possess a sound intelligence and a habit
+ of correct judgment. They will remain so, while they have less
+ ready access than men to the best kinds of literary and
+ scientific training, and&mdash;what is far more
+ important&mdash;while social arrangements exclude them from all
+ those kinds of public activity, which are such powerful agents
+ both in fitting men to judge soundly, and in forming in them the
+ sense of responsibility for their judgments being sound.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be contended that this alleged stronger religiosity of
+ women, however coarse and poor in its formulae, is yet of
+ constant value as a protest in favour of the maintenance of the
+ religious element in human character and life, and that this is a
+ far more important thing for us all than the greater or less
+ truth of the dogmas with which such religiosity happens to be
+ associated. In reply to this, without tediously labouring the
+ argument, I venture to make the following observations. In the
+ first place, it is an untenable idea that religiosity or
+ devoutness of spirit is valuable in itself, without reference to
+ the goodness or badness of the dogmatic forms and the practices
+ in which it clothes itself. A fakir would hardly be an estimable
+ figure in our society, merely because his way of living happens
+ to be a manifestation of the religious spirit. If the religious
+ spirit leads to a worthy and beautiful life, if it shows itself
+ in cheerfulness, in pity, in charity and tolerance, in
+ forgiveness, in a sense of the largeness and the mystery of
+ things, in a lifting up of the soul in gratitude and awe to some
+ supreme power and sovereign force, then whatever drawback there
+ may be in the way of superstitious dogma, still such a spirit is
+ on the whole a good thing. If not, not. It would be better
+ without the superstition: even with the superstition it is good.
+ But if the religious spirit is only a fine name for narrowness of
+ understanding, for stubborn intolerance, for mere social
+ formality, for a dread of losing that poor respectability which
+ means thinking and doing exactly as the people around us think
+ and do, then the religious spirit is not a good thing, but a
+ thoroughly bad and hateful thing. To that we owe no management of
+ any kind. Any one who suppresses his real opinions, and feigns
+ others, out of deference to such a spirit as this in his
+ household, ought to say plainly both to himself and to us that he
+ cares more for his own ease and undisturbed comfort than he cares
+ for truth and uprightness. For it is that, and not any tenderness
+ for holy things, which is the real ground of his hypocrisy.</p>
+
+ <p>Now with reference to the religious spirit in its nobler form,
+ it is difficult to believe that any one genuinely animated by it
+ would be soothed by the knowledge that her dearest companion is
+ going through life with a mask on, quietly playing a part,
+ uttering untrue professions, doing his best to cheat her and the
+ rest of the world by a monstrous spiritual make-believe. One
+ would suppose that instead of having her religious feeling
+ gratified by conformity on these terms, nothing could wound it so
+ bitterly nor outrage it so unpardonably. To know that her
+ sensibility is destroying the entireness of the man's nature, its
+ loyalty alike to herself and to truth, its freedom and singleness
+ and courage&mdash;surely this can hardly be less distressing to a
+ fine spirit than the suspicion that his heresies may bring him to
+ the pit, or than the void of going through life without even the
+ semblance of religious sympathy between them. If it be urged that
+ the woman would never discover the piety of the man to be a
+ counterfeit, we reply that unless her own piety were of the
+ merely formal kind, she would be sure to make the discovery. The
+ congregation in the old story were untouched by the disguised
+ devil's eloquence on behalf of religion: it lacked unction. The
+ verbal conformity of the unbeliever lacks unction, and its
+ hollowness is speedily revealed to the quick apprehension of true
+ faith.<a name="FNanchor24"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_24"><sup>[24]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Let us not be supposed to be arguing in favour of incessant
+ battle of high dialectic in the household. Nothing could be more
+ destructive of the gracious composure and mental harmony, of
+ which household life ought to be, but perhaps seldom is, the
+ great organ and instrument. Still less are we pleading for the
+ freethinker's right at every hour of day or night to mock, sneer,
+ and gibe at the sincere beliefs and conscientiously performed
+ rites of those, whether men or women, whether strangers or
+ kinsfolk, from whose religion he disagrees. 'It is not ancient
+ impressions only,' said Pascal, 'which are capable of abusing us.
+ The charm of novelty has the same power.' The prate of new-born
+ scepticism may be as tiresome and as odious as the cant of gray
+ orthodoxy. Religious discussion is not to be foisted upon us at
+ every turn either by defenders or assailants. All we plead for is
+ that when the opportunity meets the freethinker full in front, he
+ is called upon to speak as freely as he thinks. Not more than
+ this. A plain man has no trouble in acquiring this tact of
+ reasonableness. We may all write what we please, because it is in
+ the discretion of the rest of the world whether they will hearken
+ or not. But in the family this is not so. If a man systematically
+ intrudes disrespectful and unwelcome criticism upon a woman who
+ retains the ancient belief, he is only showing that freethinker
+ may be no more than bigot differently writ. It ought to be
+ essential to no one's self-respect that he cannot consent to live
+ with people who do not think as he thinks. We may be sure that
+ there is something shallow and convulsive about the beliefs of a
+ man who cannot allow his house-mates to possess their own beliefs
+ in peace.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, it is essential to the self-respect of
+ every one with the least love of truth that he should be free to
+ express his opinions on every occasion, where silence would be
+ taken for an assent which he does not really give. Still more
+ unquestionably, he should be free from any obligation to forswear
+ himself either directly, as by false professions, or by
+ implication, as when he attend services, public or private, which
+ are to him the symbol of superstition and mere spiritual
+ phantasmagoria. The vindication of this simple right of living
+ one's life honestly can hardly demand any heroic virtue. A little
+ of the straightforwardness which men are accustomed to call
+ manly, is the only quality that is needed; a little of that frank
+ courage and determination in spiritual things, which men are
+ usually so ready to practise towards their wives in temporal
+ things. It must be a keen delight to a cynic to see a man who
+ owns that he cannot bear to pain his wife by not going to church
+ and saying prayers, yet insisting on having his own way,
+ fearlessly thwarting her wishes, and contradicting her opinions,
+ in every other detail, small and great, of the domestic
+ economy.</p>
+
+ <p>The truth of the matter is that the painful element in
+ companionship is not difference of opinion, but discord of
+ temperament. The important thing is not that two people should be
+ inspired by the same convictions, but rather that each of them
+ should hold his and her own convictions in a high and worthy
+ spirit. Harmony of aim, not identity of conclusion, is the secret
+ of the sympathetic life; to stand on the same moral plane, and
+ that, if possible, a high one; to find satisfaction in different
+ explanations of the purpose and significance of life and the
+ universe, and yet the same satisfaction. It is certainly not less
+ possible to disbelieve religiously than to believe religiously.
+ This accord of mind, this emulation in freedom and loftiness of
+ soul, this kindred sense of the awful depth of the enigma which
+ the one believes to be answered, and the other suspects to be for
+ ever unanswerable&mdash;here, and not in a degrading and
+ hypocritical conformity, is the true gratification of those
+ spiritual sensibilities which are alleged to be so much higher in
+ women than in men. Where such an accord exists, there may still
+ be solicitude left in the mind of either at the superstition or
+ the incredulity of the other, but it will be solicitude of that
+ magnanimous sort which is in some shape or other the inevitable
+ and not unfruitful portion of every better nature.</p>
+
+ <p>If there are women who petulantly or sourly insist on more
+ than this kind of harmony, it is probable that their system of
+ divinity is little better than a special manifestation of
+ shrewishness. The man is as much bound to resist that, as he is
+ bound to resist extravagance in spending money, or any other vice
+ of character. If he does not resist it, if he suppresses his
+ opinions, and practices a hypocritical conformity, it must be
+ from weakness of will and principle. Against this we have nothing
+ to say. A considerable proportion of people, men no less than
+ women, are born invertebrate, and they must got on as they best
+ can. But let us at least bargain that they shall not erect the
+ maxims of their own feebleness into a rule for those who are
+ braver and of stronger principle than themselves. And do not let
+ the accidental exigencies of a personal mistake be made the
+ foundation of a general doctrine. It is a poor saying, that the
+ world is to become void of spiritual sincerity, because Xanthippe
+ has a turn for respectable theology.</p><br>
+
+ <p>One or two words should perhaps be said in this place as to
+ conformity to common religious belief in the education of
+ children. Where the parents differ, the one being an unbeliever,
+ the other a believer, it is almost impossible for anybody to lay
+ down a general rule. The present writer certainly has no ambition
+ to attempt the thorny task of compiling a manual for mixed
+ marriages. It is perhaps enough to say that all would depend upon
+ the nature of the beliefs which the religious person wished to
+ inculcate. Considering that the woman has an absolutely equal
+ moral right with the man to decide in what faith the child shall
+ be brought up, and considering how important it is that the
+ mother should take an active part in the development of the
+ child's affections and impulses, the most resolute of deniers may
+ perhaps think that the advantages of leaving the matter to her,
+ outweigh the disadvantages of having a superstitious bias given
+ to the young mind. In these complex cases an honest and
+ fair-minded man's own instincts are more likely to lead him right
+ than any hard and fast rule. Two reserves in assenting to the
+ wife's control of early teaching will probably suggest themselves
+ to everybody who is in earnest about religion. First, if the
+ theology which the woman desires to instill contains any of those
+ wicked and depraving doctrines which neither Catholicism nor
+ Calvinism is without, in the hands of some professors, the
+ husband is as much justified in pressing his legal rights over
+ the child to the uttermost, as he would be if the proposed
+ religion demanded physical mutilation. Secondly, he will not
+ himself take part in baptismal or other ceremonies which are to
+ him no better than mere mummeries, nor will he ever do anything
+ to lead his children at any age to suppose that he believes what
+ he does not believe. Such limitations as these are commanded by
+ all considerations alike of morality and good sense.</p>
+
+ <p>To turn to the more normal case where either the man has had
+ the wise forethought not to yoke himself unequally with a person
+ of ardent belief which he does not share, or where both parents
+ dissent from the popular creed. Here, whatever difficulties may
+ attend its application, the principle is surely as clear as the
+ sun at noonday. There can be no good plea for the deliberate and
+ formal inculcation upon the young of a number of propositions
+ which you believe to be false. To do this is to sow tares not in
+ your enemy's field, but in the very ground which is most precious
+ of all others to you and most full of hope for the future. To
+ allow it to be done merely that children may grow up in the
+ stereotyped mould, is simply to perpetuate in new generations the
+ present thick-sighted and dead-heavy state of our spirits. It is
+ to do one's best to keep society for an indefinite time sapped by
+ hollow and void professions, instead of being nourished by
+ sincerity and whole-heartedness.<a name="FNanchor25"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_25"><sup>[25]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Nor here, more than elsewhere in this chapter, are we trying
+ to turn the family into a field of ceaseless polemic. No one who
+ knows the stuff of which life is made, the pressure of material
+ cares, the play of passion, the busy energising of the
+ affections, the anxieties of health, and all the other
+ solicitudes, generous or ignoble, which naturally absorb the days
+ of the common multitude of men&mdash;is likely to think such an
+ ideal either desirable or attainable. Least of all is it
+ desirable to give character a strong set in this polemical
+ direction in its most plastic days. The controversial and denying
+ humour is a different thing from the habit of being careful to
+ know what we mean by the words we use, and what evidence there is
+ for the beliefs we hold. It is possible to foster the latter
+ habit without creating the former. And it is possible to bring up
+ the young in dissent from the common beliefs around them, or in
+ indifference to them, without engendering any of that pride in
+ eccentricity for its own sake, which is so little likeable a
+ quality in either young or old. There is, however, little risk of
+ an excess in this direction. The young tremble even more than the
+ old at the penalties of nonconformity. There is more excuse for
+ them in this. Such penalties in their case usually come closer
+ and in more stringent forms. Neither have they had time to find
+ out, as their elders have or ought to have found out, what a very
+ moderate degree of fortitude enables us to bear up against social
+ disapproval, when we know that it is nothing more than the common
+ form of convention.</p>
+
+ <p>The great object is to keep the minds of the young as open as
+ possible in the matter of religion; to breed in them a certain
+ simplicity and freedom from self-consciousness, in finding
+ themselves without the religious beliefs and customs of those
+ around them; to make them regard differences in these respects as
+ very natural and ordinary matters, susceptible of an easy
+ explanation. It is of course inevitable, unless they are brought
+ up in cloistered seclusion, that they should hear much of the
+ various articles of belief which we are anxious that they should
+ not share. They will ask you whether the story of the creation of
+ the universe is true; whether such and such miracles really
+ happened; whether this person or that actually lived, and
+ actually did all that he is said to have done. Plainly the right
+ course is to tell them, without any agitation or excess or
+ vehemence or too much elaboration, the simple truth in such
+ matters exactly as it appears to one's own mind. There is no
+ reason why they should not know the best parts of the Bible as
+ well as they know the Iliad or Herodotus. There are many reasons
+ why they should know them better. But one most important
+ condition of this is constantly overlooked by people, who like to
+ satisfy their intellectual vanity by scepticism, and at the same
+ time to make their comfort safe by external conformity. If the
+ Bible is to be taught only because it is a noble and most
+ majestic monument of literature, it should be taught as that and
+ no more. That a man who regards it solely us supreme literature,
+ should impress it upon the young as the supernaturally inspired
+ word of God and the accurate record of objective occurrences, is
+ a piece of the plainest and most shocking dishonesty. Let a youth
+ be trained in simple and straightforward recognition of the truth
+ that we can know, and can conjecture, nothing with any assurance
+ as to the ultimate mysteries of things. Let his imagination and
+ his sense of awe be fed from those springs, which are none the
+ less bounteous because they flow in natural rather than
+ supernatural channels. Let him be taught the historic place and
+ source of the religions which he is not bound to accept, unless
+ the evidence for their authority by and by brings him to another
+ mind. A boy or girl trained in this way has an infinitely better
+ chance of growing up with the true spirit and leanings of
+ religion implanted in the character, than if they had been
+ educated in formulae which they could not understand, by people
+ who do not believe them.</p>
+
+ <p>The most common illustration of a personal mistake being made
+ the base of a general doctrine, is found in the case of those
+ who, after committing themselves for life to the profession of a
+ given creed, awake to the shocking discovery that the creed has
+ ceased to be true for them. The action of a popular modern story,
+ Mrs. Gaskell's <i>North and South</i>, turns upon the case of a
+ clergyman whoso faith is overthrown, and who in consequence
+ abandons his calling, to his own serious material detriment and
+ under circumstances of severe suffering to his family. I am
+ afraid that current opinion, especially among the cultivated
+ class, would condemn such a sacrifice as a piece of misplaced
+ scrupulosity. No man, it would be said, is called upon to
+ proclaim his opinions, when to do so will cost him the means of
+ subsistence. This will depend upon the value which he sets upon
+ the opinions that be has to proclaim. If such a proposition is
+ true, the world must efface its habit of admiration for the
+ martyrs and heroes of the past, who embraced violent death rather
+ than defile themselves by a lying confession. Or is present
+ heroism ridiculous, and only past heroism admirable? However,
+ nobody has a right to demand the heroic from all the world; and
+ if to publish his dissent from the opinions which he nominally
+ holds would reduce a man to beggary, human charity bids us say as
+ little as may be. We may leave such men to their unfortunate
+ destiny, hoping that they will make what good use of it may be
+ possible. <i>Non ragioniam di lor</i>. These cases only show the
+ essential and profound immorality of the priestly
+ profession&mdash;in all its forms, and no matter in connection
+ with what church or what dogma&mdash;which makes a man's living
+ depend on his abstaining from using his mind, or concealing the
+ conclusions to which use of his mind has brought him. The time
+ will come when society will look back on the doctrine, that they
+ who serve the altar should live by the altar, as a doctrine of
+ barbarism and degradation.</p>
+
+ <p>But if one, by refusing to offer a pinch of incense to the
+ elder gods, should thus strip himself of a marked opportunity of
+ exerting an undoubtedly useful influence over public opinion, or
+ over a certain section of society, is he not justified in
+ compromising to the extent necessary to preserve this influence?
+ Instead of answering this directly, we would make the following
+ remarks. First, it can seldom be clear in times like our own that
+ religious heterodoxy must involve the loss of influence in other
+ than religious spheres. The apprehension that it will do so is
+ due rather to timorousness and a desire to find a fair reason for
+ the comforts of silence and reserve. If a teacher has anything to
+ tell the world in science, philosophy, history, the world will
+ not be deterred from listening to him by knowing that he does not
+ walk in the paths of conventional theology. Second, what
+ influence can a man exert, that should seem to him more useful
+ than that of a protester against what he counts false opinions,
+ in the most decisive and important of all regions of thought?
+ Surely if any one is persuaded, whether rightly or wrongly, that
+ his fellows are expending the best part of their imaginations and
+ feelings on a dream and a delusion, and that by so doing moreover
+ they are retarding to an indefinite degree the wider spread of
+ light and happiness, then nothing that he can tell them about
+ chemistry or psychology or history can in his eyes be comparable
+ in importance to the duty of telling them this. There is no
+ advantage nor honest delight in influence, if it is only to be
+ exerted in the sphere of secondary objects, and at the cost of
+ the objects which ought to be foremost in the eyes of serious
+ people. In truth the men who have done most for the world have
+ taken very little heed of influence. They have sought light, and
+ left their influence to fare as it might list. Can we not imagine
+ the mingled mystification and disdain with which a Spinosa or a
+ Descartes, a Luther or a Pascal, would have listened to an
+ exhortation in our persuasive modern manner on the niceties of
+ the politic and the social obligation of pious fraud? It is not
+ given to many to perform the achievements of such giants as
+ these, but every one may help to keep the standard of
+ intellectual honesty at a lofty pitch, and what better service
+ can a man render than to furnish the world with an example of
+ faithful dealing with his own conscience and with his fellows?
+ This at least is the one talent that is placed in the hands of
+ the obscurest of us all.<a name="FNanchor26"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_26"><sup>[26]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>And what is this smile of the world, to win which we are
+ bidden to sacrifice our moral manhood; this frown of the world,
+ whose terrors are more awful than the withering up of truth and
+ the slow going out of light within the souls of us? Consider the
+ triviality of life and conversation and purpose, in the bulk of
+ those whose approval is held out for our prize and the mark of
+ our high calling. Measure, if you can, the empire over them of
+ prejudice unadulterated by a single element of rationality, and
+ weigh, if you can, the huge burden of custom, unrelieved by a
+ single leavening particle of fresh thought. Ponder the share
+ which selfishness and love of ease have in the vitality and the
+ maintenance of the opinions that we are forbidden to dispute.
+ Then how pitiful a thing seems the approval or disapproval of
+ these creatures of the conventions of the hour, as one figures
+ the merciless vastness of the universe of matter sweeping us
+ headlong through viewless space; as one hears the wail of misery
+ that is for ever ascending to the deaf gods; as one counts the
+ little tale of the years that separate us from eternal silence.
+ In the light of these things, a man should surely dare to live
+ his small span of life with little heed of the common speech upon
+ him or his life, only caring that his days may be full of
+ reality, and his conversation of truth-speaking and
+ wholeness.</p>
+
+ <p>Those who think conformity in the matters of which we have
+ been speaking harmless and unimportant, must do so either from
+ indifference or else from despair. It is difficult to convince
+ any one who is possessed by either one or other of these two evil
+ spirits. Men who have once accepted them, do not easily
+ relinquish philosophies that relieve their professors from
+ disagreeable obligations of courage and endeavour. To the
+ indifferent person one can say nothing. We can only acquiesce in
+ that deep and terrible scripture, 'He that is filthy, let him be
+ filthy still.' To those who despair of human improvement or the
+ spread of light in the face of the huge mass of brute prejudice,
+ we can only urge that the enormous weight and the firm hold of
+ baseless prejudice and false commonplace are the very reasons
+ which make it so important that those who are not of the night
+ nor of the darkness should the more strenuously insist on living
+ their own lives in the daylight. To those, finally, who do not
+ despair, but think that the new faith will come so slowly that it
+ is not worth while for the poor mortal of a day to make himself a
+ martyr, we may suggest that the new faith when it comes will be
+ of little worth, unless it has been shaped by generations of
+ honest and fearless men, and unless it finds in those who are to
+ receive it an honest and fearless temper. Our plea is not for a
+ life of perverse disputings or busy proselytising, but only that
+ we should learn to look at one another with a clear and steadfast
+ eye, and march forward along the paths we choose with firm step
+ and erect front. The first advance towards either the renovation
+ of one faith or the growth of another, must be the abandonment of
+ those habits of hypocritical conformity and compliance which have
+ filled the air of the England of to-day with gross and obscuring
+ mists.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_18"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor18">[18]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>It may be said that Hume meant no more than this: that of
+ two equally oppressed nations, the one which had been taught to
+ assent to the doctrine of resistance would be more likely to
+ practise 'the sacred duty of insurrection' than the other, from
+ whom the doctrine had been concealed. Or, in other words, that
+ the first would rise against oppression, when the oppression
+ had reached a pitch which to the second would still seem
+ bearable. The answer to Hume's proposition, interpreted in this
+ way, would be that if the doctrine of resistance be presented
+ to the populace in its true shape,&mdash;if it be 'truth,' as
+ he admits,&mdash;then the application of it in practice should
+ be as little likely to prove mischievous as that of any other
+ truth. If the gist of the remark be that this is a truth which
+ the populace is especially likely to apply wrongly, in
+ consequence of its ignorance, passion, and heedlessness, we may
+ answer by appealing to history, which is rather a record of
+ excessive patience in the various nations of the earth than of
+ excessive petulance.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor19">[19]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>There is another ground for the distinction between the
+ conditions of holding and those of expressing opinion. This
+ depends upon the psychological proposition that belief is
+ independent of the will. Though this or any other state of the
+ understanding may be involuntary, the manifestation of such a
+ state is not so, but is a voluntary act, and, 'being neutral in
+ itself, may be commendable or reprehensible according to the
+ circumstances in which it takes place.' (Bailey's <i>Essay on
+ Formation of Opinion</i>, &sect; 7).</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor20">[20]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>The following words, illustrating the continuity between the
+ Christian and Jewish churches, are not without instruction to
+ those who meditate on the possible continuity between the
+ Christian church and that which is one day to grow into the
+ place of it:&mdash;'Not only do forms and ordinances remain
+ under the Gospel equally as before; but, what was in use before
+ is not so much superseded by the Gospel ordinances as changed
+ into them. What took place under the Law is a pattern, what was
+ commanded is a rule, under the Gospel. The substance remains,
+ the use, the meaning, the circumstances, the benefit is
+ changed; grace is added, life is infused: "the body is of
+ Christ;" but it is in great measure that same body which was in
+ being before He came. The Gospel has not put aside, it has
+ incorporated into itself the revelation which went before it.
+ It avails itself of the Old Testament, as a great gift to
+ Christian as well as to Jew. It does not dispense with it, but
+ it dispenses it. Persons sometimes urge that there is no code
+ of duty in the New Testament, no ceremonial, no rules for
+ Church polity. Certainly not; they are unnecessary; they are
+ already given in the Old. Why should the Old Testament remain
+ in the Christian church but to be used? <i>There</i> we are to
+ look for our forms, our rites, our polity; only illustrated,
+ tempered, spiritualised by the Gospel. The preempts remain, the
+ observance of them is changed,'&mdash;Dr. J.H. Newman;
+ <i>Sermon on Subjects of the Day</i>, p. 205.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor21">[21]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>There is a set of most acute and searching criticisms on
+ this matter in Mr. Leslie Stephen's <i>Essays on Free-Thinking
+ and Plain-Speaking</i> (Longmans, 1873). The last essay in the
+ volume, <i>An Apology for Plain-Speaking</i>, is a decisive and
+ remarkable exposition of the treacherous playing with words,
+ which underlies even the most vigorous efforts to make the
+ phrases and formula of the old creed hold the reality of new
+ faith.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor22">[22]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Upon this sentence the following criticism has been
+ made:&mdash;'Surely both of these so-called contradictions are
+ deliberately affirmed by the vast majority of all thinkers upon
+ the subject. What orthodox asserter of the omnipresence of a
+ "Creator with intelligible attributes" ever maintained that
+ these attributes could be "grasped by men"?'&mdash;The orthodox
+ asserter, no doubt, <i>says</i> that he does not maintain that
+ the divine attributes can be grasped by men; but his habitual
+ treatment of them as intelligible, and as the subjects of
+ propositions made in languages that is designed to be
+ intelligible, shows that his first reservation is merely
+ nominal, as it is certainly inconsistent with his general
+ position. Religious people who warn you most solemnly that man
+ who is a worm and the son of a worm cannot possibly compass in
+ his puny understanding the attributes of the Divine Being, will
+ yet&mdash;as an eminent divine not in holy orders has truly
+ said&mdash;tell you all about him, as if he were the man who
+ lives in the next street.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor23">[23]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>That able man, the late J.E. Cairnes, suggested the
+ following objection to this paragraph. When two persons marry,
+ there is a reasonable expectation, almost amounting to an
+ understanding, that they will both of them adhere to their
+ religion, just as both of them tacitly agree to follow the ways
+ of the world in the host of minor social matters. If,
+ therefore, either of them turns to some other creed, the person
+ so turning has, so to speak, broken the contract. The utmost he
+ or she can contend for is forbearance. If a woman embraces
+ catholicism, she may seek tolerance, but she has no right to
+ exact conformity. If the man becomes an unbeliever, he in like
+ manner breaks the bargain, and may be justly asked not to
+ flaunt his misdemeanour.</p>
+
+ <p>My answer to this would turn upon the absolute inexpediency
+ of such silent bargains being assumed by public opinion. In the
+ present state of opinion, where the whole air is alive with the
+ spirit of change, nobody who takes his life or her life
+ seriously, could allow an assumption which means reduction of
+ one of the most important parts of character, the love of
+ truth, to a nullity.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor24">[24]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>The reader remembers how Wolmar, the atheistic husband of
+ Julie in Rousseau's <i>New Helo&iuml;sa</i>, is distressed by
+ the chagrin which his unbelief inflicts on the piety of his
+ wife. 'He told me that he had been frequently tempted to make a
+ feint of yielding to her arguments, and to pretend, for the
+ sake of calming her sentiments that he did not really hold. But
+ such baseness of soul is too far from him. Without for a moment
+ imposing on Julie, such dissimulation would only have been a
+ new torment to her. The good faith, the frankness, the union of
+ heart, that console for so many troubles, would have been
+ eclipsed between them. Was it by lessening his wife's esteem
+ for him that he could reassure her? Instead of using any
+ disguise, he tells her sincerely what he thinks, but he says it
+ in so simple a tone, etc.&mdash;V. v. 126.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor25">[25]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>The common reason alleged by freethinkers for having their
+ children brought up in the orthodox ways is that, if they were
+ not so brought up, they would be looked on as contaminating
+ agents whom other parents would take care to keep away from the
+ companionship of their children. This excuse may have had some
+ force at another time. At the present day, when belief is so
+ weak, we doubt whether the young would be excluded from the
+ companionship of their equals in age, merely because they had
+ not been trained in some of the conventional shibboleths. Even
+ if it were so, there are certainly some ways of compensating
+ for the disadvantages of exclusion from orthodox circles.</p>
+
+ <p>I have heard of a more interesting reason; namely, that the
+ historic position of the young, relatively to the time in which
+ they are placed, is in some sort falsified, unless they have
+ gone through a training in the current beliefs of their age:
+ unless they have undergone that, they miss, as it were, some of
+ the normal antecedents. I do not think this plea will hold
+ good. However desirable it may be that the young should know
+ all sorts of erroneous beliefs and opinions as products of the
+ past, it can hardly be in any degree desirable that they should
+ take them for truths. If there were no other objection, there
+ would be this, that the disturbance and waste of force involved
+ in shaking off in their riper years the erroneous opinions
+ which had been instilled into them in childhood, would more
+ than counter-balance any advantages, whatever their precise
+ nature may be, to be derived from having shared in their own
+ proper persons the ungrounded notions of others.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor26">[26]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Miss Martineau has an excellent protest against 'the
+ dereliction of principle shown in supposing that any "Cause"
+ can be of so much importance as fidelity to truth, or can be
+ important at all otherwise than in its relation to truth which
+ wants vindicating. It reminds me of an incident which happened
+ when I was in America, at the time of the severest trials of
+ the Abolitionists. A pastor from the southern States lamented
+ to a brother clergyman in the North the introduction of the
+ Anti-slavery question, because the views of their sect were
+ "getting on so well before!" "Getting on!" cried the northern
+ minister. "What is the use of getting your vessel on when you
+ have thrown both captain and cargo overboard?" Thus, what
+ signifies the pursuit of any one reform, like those
+ specified,&mdash;Anti-slavery and the Woman
+ question,&mdash;when the freedom which is the very soul of the
+ controversy, the very principle of the movement,&mdash;is
+ mourned over in any other of its many manifestations? The only
+ effectual advocates of such reforms as those are people who
+ follow truth wherever it leads.'&mdash;<i>Autobiography</i>,
+ ii. 442.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_V"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER V.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ THE REALISATION OF OPINION.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>A person who takes the trouble to form his own opinions and
+ beliefs will feel that he owes no responsibility to the majority
+ for his conclusions. If he is a genuine lover of truth, if he is
+ inspired by the divine passion for seeing things as they are, and
+ a divine abhorrence of holding ideas which do not conform to the
+ facts, he will be wholly independent of the approval or assent of
+ the persons around him. When he proceeds to apply his beliefs in
+ the practical conduct of life, the position is different. There
+ are now good reasons why his attitude should be in some ways less
+ inflexible. The society in which he is placed is a very ancient
+ and composite growth. The people from whom he dissents have not
+ come by their opinions, customs, and institutions by a process of
+ mere haphazard. These opinions and customs all had their origin
+ in a certain real or supposed fitness. They have a certain depth
+ of root in the lives of a proportion of the existing generation.
+ Their fitness for satisfying human needs may have vanished, and
+ their congruity with one another may have come to an end. That is
+ only one side of the truth. The most zealous propagandism cannot
+ penetrate to them. The quality of bearing to be transplanted from
+ one kind of soil and climate to another is not very common, and
+ it is far from being inexhaustible even where it exists.</p>
+
+ <p>In common language we speak of a generation as something
+ possessed of a kind of exact unity, with all its parts and
+ members one and homogeneous. Yet very plainly it is not this. It
+ is a whole, but a whole in a state of constant flux. Its factors
+ and elements are eternally shifting. It is not one, but many
+ generations. Each of the seven ages of man is neighbour to all
+ the rest. The column of the veterans is already staggering over
+ into the last abyss, while the column of the newest recruits is
+ forming with all its nameless and uncounted hopes. To each its
+ tradition, its tendency, its possibilities. Only a proportion of
+ each in one society can have nerve enough to grasp the banner of
+ a new truth, and endurance enough to bear it along rugged and
+ untrodden ways.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, as we have said, one must remember the stuff of
+ which life is made. One must consider what an overwhelming
+ preponderance of the most tenacious energies and most
+ concentrated interests of a society must be absorbed between
+ material cares and the solicitude of the affections. It is
+ obviously unreasonable to lose patience and quarrel with one's
+ time, because it is tardy in throwing off its institutions and
+ beliefs, and slow to achieve the transformation which is the
+ problem in front of it. Men and women have to live. The task for
+ most of them is arduous enough to make them well pleased with
+ even such imperfect shelter as they find in the use and wont of
+ daily existence. To insist on a whole community being made at
+ once to submit to the reign of new practices and new ideas, which
+ have just begun to commend themselves to the most advanced
+ speculative intelligence of the time,&mdash;this, even if it were
+ a possible process, would do much to make life impracticable and
+ to hurry on social dissolution.</p>
+
+ <p>'It cannot be too emphatically asserted,' as has been said by
+ one of the most influential of modern thinkers, 'that this policy
+ of compromise, alike in institutions, in actions, and in beliefs,
+ which especially characterises English life, is a policy
+ essential to a society going through the transitions caused by
+ continued growth and development. Ideas and institutions proper
+ to a past social state, but incongruous with the new social state
+ that has grown out of it, surviving into this new social state
+ they have made possible, and disappearing only as this new social
+ state establishes its own ideas and institutions, are
+ necessarily, during their survival, in conflict with these new
+ ideas and institutions&mdash;necessarily furnish elements of
+ contradiction in men's thoughts and deeds. And yet, as for the
+ carrying on of social life, the old must continue so long as the
+ new is not ready, this perpetual compromise is an indispensable
+ accompaniment of a normal development.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27"><sup>[27]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Yet we must not press this argument, and the state of feeling
+ that belongs to it, further than they may be fairly made to go.
+ The danger in most natures lies on this side, for on this side
+ our love of ease works, and our prejudices. The writer in the
+ passage we have just quoted is describing compromise as a natural
+ state of things, the resultant of divergent forces. He is not
+ professing to define its conditions or limits as a practical
+ duty. Nor is there anything in his words, or in the doctrine of
+ social evolution of which he is the most elaborate and systematic
+ expounder, to favour that deliberate sacrifice of truth, either
+ in search or in expression, against which our two previous
+ chapters were meant to protest.<a name="FNanchor28"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_28"><sup>[28]</sup></a> When Mr. Spencer talks of a
+ new social state establishing its own ideas, of course he means,
+ and can only mean, that men and women establish their own ideas,
+ and to do that, it is obvious that they must at one time or
+ another have conceived them without any special friendliness of
+ reference to the old ideas, which they were in the fulness of
+ time to supersede. Still less, of course, can a new social state
+ ever establish its ideas, unless the persons who hold them
+ confess them openly, and give to them an honest and effective
+ adherence.</p>
+
+ <p>Every discussion of the more fundamental principles of conduct
+ must contain, expressly or by implication, some general theory of
+ the nature and constitution of the social union. Let us state in
+ a few words that which seems to command the greatest amount both
+ of direct and analogical evidence in our time. It is perhaps all
+ the more important to discuss our subject with immediate and
+ express reference to this theory, because it has become in some
+ minds a plea for a kind of philosophic indifference towards any
+ policy of Thorough, as well as an excuse for systematic
+ abstention from vigorous and downright courses of action.</p>
+
+ <p>A progressive society is now constantly and justly compared to
+ a growing organism. Its vitality in this aspect consists of a
+ series of changes in ideas and institutions. These changes arise
+ spontaneously from the operation of the whole body of social
+ conditions, external and internal. The understanding and the
+ affections and desires are always acting on the domestic,
+ political, and economic ordering. They influence the religious
+ sentiment. They touch relations with societies outside. In turn
+ they are constantly being acted on by all these elements. In a
+ society progressing in a normal and uninterrupted course, this
+ play and interaction is the sign and essence of life. It is, as
+ we are so often told, a long process of new adaptations and
+ re-adaptations; of the modification of tradition and usage by
+ truer ideas and improved institutions. There may be, and there
+ are, epochs of rest, when this modification in its active and
+ demonstrative shape slackens or ceases to be visible. But even
+ then the modifying forces are only latent. Further progress
+ depends on the revival of their energy, before there has been
+ time for the social structure to become ossified and inelastic.
+ The history of civilisation is the history of the displacement of
+ old conceptions by new ones more conformable to the facts. It is
+ the record of the removal of old institutions and ways of living,
+ in favour of others of greater convenience and ampler capacity,
+ at once multiplying and satisfying human requirements.</p>
+
+ <p>Now compromise, in view of the foregoing theory of social
+ advance, may be of two kinds, and of these two kinds one is
+ legitimate and the other not. It may stand for two distinct
+ attitudes of mind, one of them obstructive and the other not. It
+ may mean the deliberate suppression or mutilation of an idea, in
+ order to make it congruous with the traditional idea or the
+ current prejudice on the given subject, whatever that may be. Or
+ else it may mean a rational acquiescence in the fact that the
+ bulk of your contemporaries are not yet prepared either to
+ embrace the new idea, or to change their ways of living in
+ conformity to it. In the one case, the compromiser rejects the
+ highest truth, or dissembles his own acceptance of it. In the
+ other, he holds it courageously for his ensign and device, but
+ neither forces nor expects the whole world straightway to follow.
+ The first prolongs the duration of the empire of prejudice, and
+ retards the arrival of improvement. The second does his best to
+ abbreviate the one, and to hasten and make definite the other,
+ yet he does not insist on hurrying changes which, to be
+ effective, would require the active support of numbers of persons
+ not yet ripe for them. It is legitimate compromise to
+ say:&mdash;'I do not expect you to execute this improvement, or
+ to surrender that prejudice, in my time. But at any rate it shall
+ not be my fault if the improvement remains unknown or rejected.
+ There shall be one man at least who has surrendered the
+ prejudice, and who does not hide that fact.' It is illegitimate
+ compromise to say:&mdash;'I cannot persuade you to accept my
+ truth; therefore I will pretend to accept your falsehood.'</p>
+
+ <p>That this distinction is as sound on the evolutional theory of
+ society as on any other is quite evident. It would be odd if the
+ theory which makes progress depend on modification forbade us to
+ attempt to modify. When it is said that the various successive
+ changes in thought and institution present and consummate
+ themselves spontaneously, no one means by spontaneity that they
+ come to pass independently of human effort and volition. On the
+ contrary, this energy of the members of the society is one of the
+ spontaneous elements. It is quite as indispensable as any other
+ of them, if indeed it be not more so. Progress depends upon
+ tendencies and forces in a community. But of these tendencies and
+ forces, the organs and representatives must plainly be found
+ among the men and women of the community, and cannot possibly be
+ found anywhere else. Progress is not automatic, in the sense that
+ if we were all to be cast into a deep slumber for the space of a
+ generation, we should awake to find ourselves in a greatly
+ improved social state. The world only grows better, even in the
+ moderate degree in which it does grow better, because people wish
+ that it should, and take the right steps to make it better.
+ Evolution is not a force, but a process; not a cause, but a law.
+ It explains the source, and marks the immovable limitations, of
+ social energy. But social energy itself can never be superseded
+ either by evolution or by anything else.</p>
+
+ <p>The reproach of being impracticable and artificial attaches by
+ rights not to those who insist on resolute, persistent, and
+ uncompromising efforts to remove abuses, but to a very different
+ class&mdash;to those, namely, who are credulous enough to suppose
+ that abuses and bad customs and wasteful ways of doing things
+ will remove themselves. This credulity, which is a cloak for
+ indolence or ignorance or stupidity, overlooks the fact that
+ there are bodies of men, more or less numerous, attached by every
+ selfish interest they have to the maintenance of these abusive
+ customs. 'A plan,' says Bentham, 'may be said to be too good to
+ be practicable, where, without adequate inducement in the shape
+ of personal interest, it requires for its accomplishment that
+ some individual or class of individuals shall have made a
+ sacrifice of his or their personal interest to the interest of
+ the whole. When it is on the part of a body of men or a multitude
+ of individuals taken at random that any such sacrifice is
+ reckoned upon, then it is that in speaking of the plan the term
+ <i>Utopian</i> may without impropriety be applied.' And this is
+ the very kind of sacrifice which must be anticipated by those who
+ so misunderstand the doctrine of evolution as to believe that the
+ world is improved by some mystic and self-acting social
+ discipline, which dispenses with the necessity of pertinacious
+ attack upon institutions that have outlived their time, and
+ interests that have lost their justification.</p>
+
+ <p>We are thus brought to the position&mdash;to which, indeed,
+ bare observation of actual occurrences might well bring us, if it
+ were not for the clouding disturbances of selfishness, or of a
+ true philosophy of society wrongly applied&mdash;that a society
+ can only pursue its normal course by means of a certain
+ progression of changes, and that these changes can only be
+ initiated by individuals or very small groups of individuals. The
+ progressive tendency can only be a tendency, it can only work its
+ way through the inevitable obstructions around it, by means of
+ persons who are possessed by the special progressive idea. Such
+ ideas do not spring up uncaused and unconditioned in vacant
+ space. They have had a definite origin and ordered antecedents.
+ They are in direct relation with the past. They present
+ themselves to one person or little group of persons rather than
+ to another, because circumstances, or the accident of a superior
+ faculty of penetration, have placed the person or group in the
+ way of such ideas. In matters of social improvement the most
+ common reason why one hits upon a point of progress and not
+ another, is that the one happens to be more directly touched than
+ the other by the unimproved practice. Or he is one of those rare
+ intelligences, active, alert, inventive, which by constitution or
+ training find their chief happiness in thinking in a disciplined
+ and serious manner how things can be better done. In all cases
+ the possession of a new idea, whether practical or speculative,
+ only raises into definite speech what others have needed without
+ being able to make their need articulate. This is the principle
+ on which experience shows us that fame and popularity are
+ distributed. A man does not become celebrated in proportion to
+ his general capacity, but because he does or says something which
+ happened to need doing or saying at the moment.</p>
+
+ <p>This brings us directly to our immediate subject. For such a
+ man is the holder of a trust It is upon him and those who are
+ like him that the advance of a community depends. If he is
+ silent, then repair is checked, and the hurtful elements of
+ worn-out beliefs and waste institutions remain to enfeeble the
+ society, just as the retention of waste products enfeebles or
+ poisons the body. If in a spirit of modesty which is often
+ genuine, though it is often only a veil for love of ease, he asks
+ why he rather than another should speak, why he before others
+ should refuse compliance and abstain from conformity, the answer
+ is that though the many are ultimately moved, it is always one
+ who is first to leave the old encampment. If the maxim of the
+ compromiser were sound, it ought to be capable of universal
+ application. Nobody has a right to make an apology for himself in
+ this matter, which he will not allow to be valid for others. If
+ one has a right to conceal his true opinions, and to practice
+ equivocal conformities, then all have a right. One plea for
+ exemption is in this case as good as another, and no better. That
+ he has married a wife, that he has bought a yoke of oxen and must
+ prove them, that he has bidden guests to a feast&mdash;one excuse
+ lies on the same level as the rest. All are equally worthless as
+ answers to the generous solicitation of enlightened conscience.
+ Suppose, then, that each man on whom in turn the new ideas dawned
+ wore to borrow the compromiser's plea and imitate his example. We
+ know what would happen. The exploit in which no one will consent
+ to go first, remains unachieved. You wait until there are persons
+ enough agreeing with you to form an effective party? But how are
+ the members of the band to know one another, if all are to keep
+ their dissent from the old, and their adherence to the new,
+ rigorously private? And how many members constitute the
+ innovating band an effective force! When one-half of the
+ attendants at a church are unbelievers, will that warrant us in
+ ceasing to attend, or shall we tarry until the dissemblers number
+ two-thirds? Conceive the additions which your caution has made to
+ the moral integrity of the community in the meantime. Measure the
+ enormous hindrances that will have been placed in the way of
+ truth and improvement, when the day at last arrives on which you
+ and your two-thirds take heart to say that falsehood and abuse
+ have now reached their final term, and must at length be swept
+ away into the outer darkness. Consider how much more terrible the
+ shock of change will be when it does come, and how much less able
+ will men be to meet it, and to emerge successfully from it.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the compromiser shrinks, not because he fears to march
+ alone, but because he thinks that the time has not yet come for
+ the progressive idea which he has made his own, and for whose
+ triumph one day he confidently hopes. This plea may mean two
+ wholly different states of the case. The time has not yet come
+ for what? For making those positive changes in life or
+ institution, which the change in idea must ultimately involve?
+ That is one thing. Or for propagating, elaborating, enforcing the
+ new idea, and strenuously doing all that one can to bring as many
+ people as possible to a state of theory, which will at last
+ permit the requisite change in practice to be made with safety
+ and success? This is another and entirely different thing. The
+ time may not have come for the first of these two courses. The
+ season may not be advanced enough for us to push on to active
+ conquest. But the time has always come, and the season is never
+ unripe, for the announcement of the fruitful idea.</p>
+
+ <p>We must go further than that. In so far as it can be done by
+ one man without harming his neighbours, the time has always come
+ for the realisation of an idea. When the change in way of living
+ or in institution is one which requires the assent and
+ co-operation of numbers of people, it may clearly be a matter for
+ question whether men enough are ready to yield assent and
+ co-operation. But the expression of the necessity of the change
+ and the grounds of it, though it may not always be appropriate,
+ can never be premature, and for these reasons. The fact of a new
+ idea having come to one man is a sign that it is in the air. The
+ innovator is as much the son of his generation as the
+ conservative. Heretics have as direct a relation to antecedent
+ conditions as the orthodox. Truth, said Bacon, has been rightly
+ named the daughter of Time. The new idea does not spring up
+ uncaused and by miracle. If it has come to me, there must be
+ others to whom it has only just missed coming. If I have found my
+ way to the light, there must be others groping after it very
+ close in my neighbourhood. My discovery is their goal. They are
+ prepared to receive the new truth, which they were not prepared
+ to find for themselves. The fact that the mass are not yet ready
+ to receive, any more than to find, is no reason why the possessor
+ of the new truth should run to hide under a bushel the candle
+ which has been lighted for him. If the time has not come for
+ them, at least it has come for him. No man can ever know whether
+ his neighbours are ready for change or not. He has all the
+ following certainties, at least:&mdash;that he himself is ready
+ for the change; that he believes it would be a good and
+ beneficent one; that unless some one begins the work of
+ preparation, assuredly there will be no consummation; and that if
+ he declines to take a part in the matter, there can be no reason
+ why every one else in turn should not decline in like manner, and
+ so the work remain for ever unperformed. The compromiser who
+ blinds himself to all those points, and acts just as if the truth
+ were not in him, does for ideas with which he agrees, the very
+ thing which the acute persecutor does for ideas which he
+ dislikes&mdash;he extinguishes beginnings and kills the
+ germs.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The consideration on which so many persons rely, that an
+ existing institution, though destined to be replaced by a better,
+ performs useful functions provisionally, is really not to the
+ point. It is an excellent reason why the institution should not
+ be removed or fundamentally modified, until public opinion is
+ ripe for the given piece of improvement. But it is no reason at
+ all why those who are anxious for the improvement, should speak
+ and act just as they would do if they thought the change
+ perfectly needless and undesirable. It is no reason why those who
+ allow the provisional utility of a belief or an institution or a
+ custom of living, should think solely of the utility and forget
+ the equally important element of its provisionalness. For the
+ fact of its being provisional is the very ground why every one
+ who perceives this element, should set himself to act
+ accordingly. It is the ground why he should set himself, in other
+ words, to draw opinion in every way open to him&mdash;by speech,
+ by voting, by manner of life and conduct&mdash;in the direction
+ of new truth and the better practice. Let us not, because we deem
+ a thing to be useful for the hour, act as if it were to be useful
+ for ever. The people who selfishly seek to enjoy as much comfort
+ and ease as they can in an existing state of things, with the
+ desperate maxim, 'After us, the deluge,' are not any worse than
+ those who cherish present comfort and case and take the world as
+ it comes, in the fatuous and self-deluding hope, 'After us, the
+ millennium.' Those who make no sacrifice to avert the deluge, and
+ those who make none to hasten their millennium, are on the same
+ moral level. And the former have at least the quality of being no
+ worse than their avowed principle, while the latter nullify their
+ pretended hopes by conformities which are only proper either to
+ profound social contentment, or to profound social despair. Nay,
+ they seem to think that there is some merit in this merely
+ speculative hopefulness. They act as if they supposed that to be
+ very sanguine about the general improvement of mankind, is a
+ virtue that relieves them from taking trouble about any
+ improvement in particular.</p>
+
+ <p>If those who defend a given institution are doing their work
+ well, that furnishes the better reason why those who disapprove
+ of it and disbelieve in its enduring efficacy, should do their
+ work well also. Take the Christian churches, for instance.
+ Assume, if you will, that they are serving a variety of useful
+ functions. If that were all, it would be a reason for conforming.
+ But we are speaking of those for whom the matter does not end
+ here. If you are convinced that the dogma is not true; that a
+ steadily increasing number of persons are becoming aware that it
+ is not true; that its efficacy as a basis of spiritual life is
+ being lowered in the same degree as its credibility; that both
+ dogma and church must be slowly replaced by higher forms of
+ faith, if not also by more effective organisations; then, all who
+ hold such views as these have as distinctly a function in the
+ community as the ministers and upholders of the churches, and the
+ zeal of the latter is simply the most monstrously untenable
+ apology that could be invented for dereliction of duty by the
+ former.</p>
+
+ <p>If the orthodox to some extent satisfy certain of the
+ necessities of the present, there are other necessities of the
+ future which can only be satisfied by those who now pass for
+ heretical. The plea which we are examining, if it is good for the
+ purpose for which it is urged, would have to be expressed in this
+ way:&mdash;The institution is working as perfectly as it can be
+ made to do, or as any other in its place would be likely to do,
+ and therefore I will do nothing by word or deed towards meddling
+ with it. Those who think this, and act accordingly, are the
+ consistent conservatives of the community. If a man takes up any
+ position short of this, his conformity, acquiescence, and inertia
+ at once become inconsistent and culpable. For unless the
+ institution or belief is entirely adequate, it must be the duty
+ of all who have satisfied themselves that it is not so, to
+ recognise its deficiences, and at least to call attention to
+ them, even if they lack opportunity or capacity to suggest
+ remedies. Now we are dealing with persons who, from the
+ hypothesis, do not admit that this or that factor in an existing
+ social state secures all the advantages which might be secured if
+ instead of that factor there were some other. We are speaking of
+ all the various kinds of dissidents, who think that the current
+ theology, or an established church, or a monarchy, or an
+ oligarchic republic, is a bad thing and a lower form, even at the
+ moment while they attribute provisional merit to it. They can
+ mean nothing by classing each of these as bad things, except that
+ they either bring with them certain serious drawbacks, or exclude
+ certain valuable advantages. The fact that they perform their
+ functions well, such as they are, leaves the fundamental vice or
+ defect of these functions just where it was. If any one really
+ thinks that the current theology involves depraved notions of the
+ supreme impersonation of good, restricts and narrows the
+ intelligence, misdirects the religious imagination, and has
+ become powerless to guide conduct, then how does the circumstance
+ that it happens not to be wholly and unredeemedly bad in its
+ influence, relieve our dissident from all care or anxiety as to
+ the points in which, as we have seen, he does count it inadequate
+ and mischievous? Even if he thinks it does more good than
+ harm&mdash;a position which must be very difficult for one who
+ believes the common supernatural conception of it to be entirely
+ false&mdash;even then, how is he discharged from the duty of
+ stigmatising the harm which he admits that it does?</p>
+
+ <p>Again, take the case of the English monarchy. Grant, if you
+ will, that this institution has a certain function, and that by
+ the present chief magistrate this function is estimably
+ performed. Yet if we are of those who believe that in the stage
+ of civilisation which England has reached in other matters, the
+ monarchy must be either obstructive and injurious, or else merely
+ decorative; and that a merely decorative monarchy tends in divers
+ ways to engender habits of abasement, to nourish lower social
+ ideals, to lessen a high civil self-respect in the community;
+ then it must surely be our duty not to lose any opportunity of
+ pressing these convictions. To do this is not necessarily to act
+ as if one were anxious for the immediate removal of the throne
+ and the crown into the museum of political antiquities. We may
+ have no urgent practical solicitude in this direction, on the
+ intelligible principle that a free people always gets as good a
+ kind of government as it deserves. Our conviction is not, on the
+ present hypothesis, that monarchy ought to be swept away in
+ England, but that monarchy produces certain mischievous
+ consequences to the public spirit of the community. And so what
+ we are bound to do is to take care not to conceal this
+ conviction; to abstain scrupulously from all kinds of action and
+ observance, public or private, which tend ever so remotely to
+ foster the ignoble and degrading elements that exist in a court
+ and spread from it outwards; and to use all the influence we
+ have, however slight it may be, in loading public opinion to a
+ right attitude of contempt and dislike for these ignoble and
+ degrading elements, and the conduct engendered by them. A policy
+ like this does not interfere with the advantages of the monarchy,
+ such as they are asserted to be, and it has the effect of making
+ what are supposed to be its disadvantages as little noxious as
+ possible. The question whether we can get others to agree with us
+ is not relevant. If we were eager for instant overthrow, it would
+ be the most relevant of all questions. But we are in the
+ preliminary stage, the stage for acting on opinion. The fact that
+ others do not yet share our opinion, is the very reason for our
+ action. We can only bring them to agree with us, if it be
+ possible on any terms, by persistency in our principles. This
+ persistency, in all but either very timid or very vulgar natures,
+ always has been and always will be independent of external assent
+ or co-operation. The history of success, as we can never too
+ often repeat to ourselves, is the history of minorities. And what
+ is more, it is for the most part the history of insurrection
+ exactly against what the worldly spirits of the time, whenever it
+ may have been, deemed mere trifles and accidents, with which
+ sensible men should on no account dream of taking the trouble to
+ quarrel.</p>
+
+ <p>'Halifax,' says Macaulay, 'was in speculation a strong
+ republican and did not conceal it. He often made hereditary
+ monarchy and aristocracy the subjects of his keen pleasantry,
+ while he was fighting the battles of the court and obtaining for
+ himself step after step in the peerage.' We are perfectly
+ familiar with this type, both in men who have, and men who have
+ not, such brilliant parts as Halifax. Such men profess to nourish
+ high ideals of life, of character, of social institutions. Yet
+ they never think of these ideals, when they are deciding what is
+ practically attainable. One would like to ask them what purpose
+ is served by an ideal, if it is not to make a guide for practice
+ and a landmark in dealing with the real. A man's loftiest and
+ most ideal notions must be of a singularly ethereal and, shall we
+ not say, senseless kind, if he can never see how to take a single
+ step that may tend in the slightest degree towards making them
+ more real. If an ideal has no point of contact with what exists,
+ it is probably not much more than the vapid outcome of
+ intellectual or spiritual self-indulgence. If it has such a point
+ of contact, then there is sure to be something which a man can do
+ towards the fulfilment of his hopes. He cannot substitute a new
+ national religion for the old, but he can at least do something
+ to prevent people from supposing that the adherents of the old
+ are more numerous than they really are, and something to show
+ them that good ideas are not all exhausted by the ancient forms.
+ He cannot transform a monarchy into a republic, but he can make
+ sure that one citizen at least shall aim at republican virtues,
+ and abstain from the debasing complaisance of the crowd.</p><br>
+
+ <p>'It is a very great mistake, said Burke, many years before the
+ French Revolution is alleged, and most unreasonably alleged, to
+ have alienated him from liberalism: 'it is a very great mistake
+ to imagine that mankind follow up practically any speculative
+ principle, either of government or of freedom, as far as it will
+ go in argument and logical illation. All government, indeed every
+ human benefit and enjoyment, every virtue, and every prudent act,
+ is founded on compromise and barter. We balance inconveniences;
+ we give and take;&mdash;we remit some rights that we may enjoy
+ others.... Man acts from motives relative to his interests; and
+ not on metaphysical speculations.<a name=
+ "FNanchor29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29"><sup>[29]</sup></a> These
+ are the words of wisdom and truth, if we can be sure that men
+ will interpret them in all the fulness of their meaning, and not
+ be content to take only that part of the meaning which falls in
+ with the dictates of their own love of ease. In France such words
+ ought to be printed in capitals on the front of every newspaper,
+ and written up in letters of burnished gold over each faction of
+ the Assembly, and on the door of every bureau in the
+ Administration. In England they need a commentary which shall
+ bring out the very simple truth, that compromise and barter do
+ not mean the undisputed triumph of one set of principles. Nor, on
+ the other hand, do they mean the mutilation of both sets of
+ principles, with a view to producing a <i>tertium quid</i> that
+ shall involve the disadvantages of each, without securing the
+ advantages of either. What Burke means is that we ought never to
+ press our ideas up to their remotest logical issues, without
+ reference to the conditions in which we are applying them. In
+ politics we have an art. Success in politics, as in every other
+ art, obviously before all else implies both knowledge of the
+ material with which we have to deal, and also such concession as
+ is necessary to the qualities of the material. Above all, in
+ politics we have an art in which development depends upon small
+ modifications. That is the true side of the conservative theory.
+ To hurry on after logical perfection is to show one's self
+ ignorant of the material of that social structure with which the
+ politician has to deal. To disdain anything short of an organic
+ change in thought or institution in infatuation. To be willing to
+ make such changes too frequently, even when they are possible, is
+ foolhardiness. That fatal French saying about small reforms being
+ the worst enemies of great reforms is, in the sense in which it
+ is commonly used, a formula of social ruin.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, let us not forget that there is a sense in
+ which this very saying is profoundly true. A small and temporary
+ improvement may really be the worst enemy of a great and
+ permanent improvement, unless the first is made on the lines and
+ in the direction of the second. And so it may, if it be
+ successfully palmed off upon a society as actually being the
+ second. In such a case as this, and our legislation presents
+ instances of the kind, the small reform, if it be not made with
+ reference to some large progressive principle and with a view to
+ further extension of its scope, makes it all the more difficult
+ to return to the right line and direction when improvement is
+ again demanded. To take an example which is now very familiar to
+ us all. The Education Act of 1870 was of the nature of a small
+ reform. No one pretends that it is anything approaching to a
+ final solution of a complex problem. But the government insisted,
+ whether rightly or wrongly, that their Act was as large a measure
+ as public opinion was at that moment ready to support. At the
+ same time it was clearly agreed among the government and the
+ whole of the party at their backs, that at some time or other,
+ near or remote, if public instruction was to be made genuinely
+ effective, the private, voluntary, or denominational system would
+ have to be replaced by a national system. To prepare for this
+ ultimate replacement was one of the points to be most steadily
+ borne in mind, however slowly and tentatively the process might
+ be conducted. Instead of that, the authors of the Act
+ deliberately introduced provisions for extending and
+ strengthening the very system which will have eventually to be
+ superseded. They thus by their small reform made the future great
+ reform the more difficult of achievement. Assuredly this is not
+ the compromise and barter, the give and take, which Burke
+ intended. What Burke means by compromise, and what every true
+ statesman understands by it, is that it may be most inexpedient
+ to meddle with an institution merely because it does not
+ harmonise with 'argument and logical illation.' This is a very
+ different thing from giving new comfort and strength with one
+ hand, to an institution whose death-warrant you pretend to be
+ signing with the other.</p>
+
+ <p>In a different way the second possible evil of a small reform
+ may be equally mischievous&mdash;where the small reform is
+ represented as settling the question. The mischief here is not
+ that it takes us out of the progressive course, as in the case we
+ have just been considering, but that it sets men's minds in a
+ posture of contentment, which is not justified by the amount of
+ what has been done, and which makes it all the harder to arouse
+ them to new effort when the inevitable time arrives.</p>
+
+ <p>In these ways, then, compromise may mean, not acquiescence in
+ an instalment, on the ground that the time is not ripe to yield
+ us more than an instalment, but either the acceptance of the
+ instalment as final, followed by the virtual abandonment of hope
+ and effort; or else it may mean a mistaken reversal of direction,
+ which augments the distance that has ultimately to be traversed.
+ In either of these senses, the small reform may become the enemy
+ of the great one. But a right conception of political method,
+ based on a rightly interpreted experience of the conditions on
+ which societies unite progress with order, leads the wise
+ conservative to accept the small change, lest a worse thing
+ befall him, and the wise innovator to seize the chance of a small
+ improvement, while incessantly working in the direction of great
+ ones. The important thing is that throughout the process neither
+ of them should lose sight of his ultimate ideal; nor fail to look
+ at the detail from the point of view of the whole; nor allow the
+ near particular to bulk so unduly large as to obscure the general
+ and distant.</p>
+
+ <p>If the process seems intolerably slow, we may correct our
+ impatience by looking back upon the past. People seldom realise
+ the enormous period of time which each change in men's ideas
+ requires for its full accomplishment. We speak of these changes
+ with a peremptory kind of definiteness, as if they had covered no
+ more than the space of a few years. Thus we talk of the time of
+ the Reformation, as we might talk of the Reform Bill or the
+ Repeal of the Corn Duties. Yet the Reformation is the name for a
+ movement of the mind of northern Europe, which went on for three
+ centuries. Then if we turn to that still more momentous set of
+ events, the rise and establishment of Christianity, one might
+ suppose from current speech that we could fix that within a space
+ of half a century or so. Yet it was at least four hundred years
+ before all the foundations of that great superstructure of
+ doctrine and organisation were completely laid. Again, to descend
+ to less imposing occurrences, the transition in the Eastern
+ Empire from the old Roman system of national organisation to that
+ other system to which we give the specific name of
+ Byzantine,&mdash;this transition, so infinitely less important as
+ it was than either of the two other movements, yet occupied no
+ less than a couple of hundred years. The conditions of speech
+ make it indispensable for us to use definite and compendious
+ names for movements that were both tardy and complex. We are
+ forced to name a long series of events as if they were a single
+ event. But we lose the reality of history, we fail to recognise
+ one of the most striking aspects of human affairs, and above all
+ we miss that most invaluable practical lesson, the lesson of
+ patience, unless we remember that the great changes of history
+ took up long periods of time which, when measured by the little
+ life of a man, are almost colossal, like the vast changes of
+ geology. We know how long it takes before a species of plant or
+ animal disappears in face of a better adapted species. Ideas and
+ customs, beliefs and institutions, have always lingered just as
+ long in face of their successors, and the competition is not less
+ keen nor less prolonged, because it is for one or other
+ inevitably destined to be hopeless. History, like geology,
+ demands the use of the imagination, and in proportion as the
+ exercise of the historic imagination is vigorously performed in
+ thinking of the past, will be the breadth of our conception of
+ the changes which the future has in store for us, as well as of
+ the length of time and the magnitude of effort required for their
+ perfect achievement<a name="FNanchor30"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_30"><sup>[30]</sup></a>.</p>
+
+ <p>This much, concerning moderation in political practice. No
+ such considerations present themselves in the matters which
+ concern the shaping of our own lives, or the publications of our
+ social opinions. In this region we are not imposing charges upon
+ others, either by law or otherwise. We therefore owe nothing to
+ the prejudices or habits of others. If any one sets serious value
+ upon the point of difference between his own ideal and that which
+ is current, if he thinks that his 'experiment in living' has
+ promise of real worth, and that if more persons could be induced
+ to imitate it, some portion of mankind would be thus put in
+ possession of a better kind of happiness, then it is selling a
+ birthright for a mess of pottage to abandon hopes so rich and
+ generous, merely in order to avoid the passing and casual
+ penalties of social disapproval. And there is a double evil in
+ this kind of flinching from obedience to the voice of our better
+ selves, whether it takes the form of absolute suppression of what
+ we think and hope, or only of timorous and mutilated
+ presentation. We lose not only the possible advantage of the
+ given change. Besides that, we lose also the certain advantage of
+ maintaining or increasing the amount of conscientiousness in the
+ world. And everybody can perceive the loss incurred in a society
+ where diminution of the latter sort takes place. The advance of
+ the community depends not merely on the improvement and elevation
+ of its moral maxima, but also on the quickening of moral
+ sensibility. The latter work has mostly been effected, when it
+ has been effected on a large scale, by teachers of a certain
+ singular personal quality. They do nothing to improve the theory
+ of conduct, but they have the art of stimulating men to a more
+ enthusiastic willingness to rise in daily practice to the
+ requirements of whatever theory they may accept. The love of
+ virtue, of duty, of holiness, or by whatever name we call this
+ powerful sentiment, exists in the majority of men, where it
+ exists at all, independently of argument. It is a matter of
+ affection, sympathy, association, aspiration. Hence, even while,
+ in quality, sense of duty is a stationary factor, it is
+ constantly changing in quantity. The amount of conscience in
+ different communities, or in the same community at different
+ times, varies infinitely. The immediate cause of the decline of a
+ society in the order of morals is a decline in the quantity of
+ its conscience, a deadening of its moral sensitiveness, and not a
+ depravation of its theoretical ethics. The Greeks became corrupt
+ and enfeebled, not for lack of ethical science, but through the
+ decay in the numbers of those who were actually alive to the
+ reality and force of ethical obligations. Mahometans triumphed
+ over Christians in the East and in Spain&mdash;if we may for a
+ moment isolate moral conditions from the rest of the total
+ circumstances&mdash;not because their scheme of duty was more
+ elevated or comprehensive, but because their respect for duty was
+ more strenuous and fervid.</p>
+
+ <p>The great importance of leaving this priceless element in a
+ community as free, as keen, and as active as possible, is
+ overlooked by the thinkers who uphold coercion against liberty,
+ as a saving social principle. Every act of coercion directed
+ against an opinion or a way of living is in so far calculated to
+ lessen the quantity of conscience in the society where such acts
+ are practised. Of course, where ways of living interfere with the
+ lawful rights of others, where they are not strictly
+ self-regarding in all their details, it is necessary to force the
+ dissidents, however strong may be their conscientious sentiment.
+ The evil of attenuating that sentiment is smaller than the evil
+ of allowing one set of persons to realise their own notions of
+ happiness, at the expense of all the rest of the world. But where
+ these notions can be realised without unlawful interference of
+ that kind, then the forcible hindrance of such realisation is a
+ direct weakening of the force and amount of conscience on which
+ the community may count. There is one memorable historic case to
+ illustrate this. Lewis XIV., in revoking the Edict of Nantes, and
+ the author of the still more cruel law of 1724, not only
+ violently drove out multitudes of the most scrupulous part of the
+ French nation; they virtually offered the most tremendous bribes
+ to those of less stern resolution, to feign conversion to the
+ orthodox faith. This was to treat conscience as a thing of mean
+ value. It was to scatter to the wind with both hands the moral
+ resources of the community. And who can fail to see the strength
+ which would have been given to France in her hour of storm, a
+ hundred years after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, if her
+ protestant sons, fortified by the training in the habits of
+ individual responsibility which protestantism involves, had only
+ been there to aid?</p><br>
+ <a name="p242"></a>
+
+ <p>This consideration brings us to a new side of the discussion.
+ We may seem to have been unconsciously arguing as strongly in
+ favour of a vigorous social conservatism as of a self-asserting
+ spirit of social improvement. All that we have been saying may
+ appear to cut both ways. If the innovator should decline to
+ practise silence or reserve, why should the possessor of power be
+ less uncompromising, and why should he not impose silence by
+ force? If the heretic ought to be uncompromising in expressing
+ his opinions, and in acting upon them, in the fulness of his
+ conviction that they are right, why should not the orthodox be
+ equally uncompromising in his resolution to stamp out the
+ heretical notions and unusual ways of living, in the fulness of
+ his conviction that they are thoroughly wrong? To this question
+ the answer is that the hollow kinds of compromise are as bad in
+ the orthodox as in the heretical. Truth has as much to gain from
+ sincerity and thoroughness in one as in the other. But the issue
+ between the partisans of the two opposed schools turns upon the
+ sense which we design to give to the process of stamping out.
+ Those who cling to the tenets of liberty limit the action of the
+ majority, as of the minority, strictly to persuasion. Those who
+ dislike liberty, insist that earnestness of conviction justifies
+ either a majority or a minority in using not persuasion only, but
+ force. I do not propose here to enter into the great question
+ which Mr. Mill pressed anew upon the minds of this generation.
+ His arguments are familiar to every reader, and the conclusion at
+ which he arrived is almost taken for a postulate in the present
+ essay.<a name="FNanchor31"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_31"><sup>[31]</sup></a> The object of these chapters
+ is to reiterate the importance of self-assertion, tenacity, and
+ positiveness of principlesan of coercion will argue that this
+ thesis is on one side of it a justification of persecution, and
+ other modes of interfering with new opinions and new ways of
+ living by force, and the strong arm of the law, and whatever
+ other energetic means of repression may be at command. If the
+ minority are to be uncompromising alike in seeking and realising
+ what they take for truth, why not the majority? Now this implies
+ two propositions. It is the same as to say, first, that
+ earnestness of conviction is not to be distinguished from a
+ belief in our own infallibility; second, that faith in our
+ infallibility is necessarily bound up with intolerance.</p>
+
+ <p>Neither of these propositions is true. Let us take them in
+ turn. Earnestness of conviction is perfectly compatible with a
+ sense of liability to error. This has been so excellently put by
+ a former writer that we need not attempt to better his
+ exposition. 'Every one must, of course, think his own opinions
+ right; for if he thought them wrong, they would no longer be his
+ opinions: but there is a wide difference between regarding
+ ourselves as infallible, and being firmly convinced of the truth
+ of our creed. When a man reflects on any particular doctrine, he
+ may be impressed with a thorough conviction of the improbability
+ or even impossibility of its being false: and so he may feel with
+ regard to all his other opinions, when he makes them objects of
+ separate contemplation. And yet when he views them in the
+ aggregate, when he reflects that not a single being on the earth
+ holds collectively the same, when he looks at the past history
+ and present state of mankind, and observes the various creeds of
+ different ages and nations, the peculiar modes of thinking of
+ sects and bodies and individuals, the notions once firmly held,
+ which have been exploded, the prejudices once universally
+ prevalent, which have been removed, and the endless controversies
+ which have distracted those who have made it the business of
+ their lives to arrive at the truth; and when he further dwells on
+ the consideration that many of these, his fellow-creatures, have
+ had a conviction of the justness of their respective sentiments
+ equal to his own, he cannot help the obvious inference, that in
+ his own opinion it is next to impossible that there is not an
+ admixture of error; that there is an infinitely greater
+ probability of his being wrong in some than right in
+ all.'<a name="FNanchor32"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_32"><sup>[32]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Of course this is not an account of the actual frame of mind
+ of ordinary men. They never do think of their opinions in the
+ aggregate in comparison with the collective opinions of others,
+ nor ever draw the conclusions which such reflections would
+ suggest. But such a frame of mind is perfectly attainable, and
+ has often been attained, by persons of far lower than first-rate
+ capacity. And if this is so, there is no reason why it should not
+ be held up for the admiration and imitation of all those classes
+ of society which profess to have opinions. It would thus become
+ an established element in the temper of the age. Nor need we fear
+ that the result of this would be any flaccidity of conviction, or
+ lethargy in act. A man would still be penetrated with the
+ rightness of his own opinion on a given issue, and would still do
+ all that he could to make it prevail in practice. But among the
+ things which he would no longer permit himself to do, would be
+ the forcible repression in others of any opinions, however
+ hostile to his own, or of any kind of conduct, however widely it
+ diverged from his own, and provided that it concerned themselves
+ only. This widening of his tolerance would be the natural result
+ of a rational and realised consciousness of his own general
+ fallibility.</p>
+
+ <p>Next, even belief in one's own infallibility does not
+ necessarily lead to intolerance. For it may be said that though
+ no man in his senses would claim to be incapable of error, yet in
+ every given case he is quite sure that he is not in error, and
+ therefore this assurance in particular is tantamount by process
+ of cumulation to a sense of infallibility in general. Now even if
+ this were so, it would not of necessity either produce or justify
+ intolerance. The certainty of the truth of your own opinions is
+ independent of any special idea as to the means by which others
+ may best be brought to share them. The question between
+ persuasion and force remains apart&mdash;unless, indeed, we may
+ say that in societies where habits of free discussion have once
+ begun to take root, those who are least really sure about their
+ opinions, are often most unwilling to trust to persuasion to
+ bring them converts, and most disposed to grasp the rude
+ implements of coercion, whether legal or merely social. The cry,
+ 'Be my brother, or I slay thee,' was the sign of a very weak,
+ though very fiery, faith in the worth of fraternity. He whose
+ faith is most assured, has the best reason for relying on
+ persuasion, and the strongest motive to thrust from him all
+ temptations to use angry force. The substitution of force for
+ persuasion, among its other disadvantages, has this further
+ drawback, from our present point of view, that it lessens the
+ conscience of a society and breeds hypocrisy. You have not
+ converted a man, because you have silenced him. Opinion and force
+ belong to different elements. To think that you are able by
+ social disapproval or other coercive means to crush a man's
+ opinion, is as one who should fire a blunderbuss to put out a
+ star. The acquiescence in current notions which is secured by law
+ or by petulant social disapproval, is as worthless and as
+ essentially hypocritical, as the conversion of an Irish pauper to
+ protestantism by means of soup-tickets, or that of a savage to
+ Christianity by the gift of a string of beads. Here is the
+ radical fallacy of those who urge that people must use promises
+ and threats in order to encourage opinions, thoughts, and
+ feelings which they think good, and to prevent others which they
+ think bad. Promises and threats can influence acts. Opinions and
+ thoughts on morals, politics, and the rest, after they have once
+ grown in a man's mind, can no more be influenced by promises and
+ threats than can my knowledge that snow is white or that ice is
+ cold. You may impose penalties on me by statute for saying that
+ snow is white, or acting as if I thought ice cold, and the
+ penalties may affect my conduct. They will not, because they
+ cannot, modify my beliefs in the matter by a single iota. One
+ result therefore of intolerance is to make hypocrites. On this,
+ as on the rest of the grounds which vindicate the doctrine of
+ liberty, a man who thought himself infallible either in
+ particular or in general, from the Pope of Rome down to the
+ editor of the daily newspaper, might still be inclined to abstain
+ from any form of compulsion. The only reason to the contrary is
+ that a man who is so silly as to think himself incapable of going
+ wrong, is very likely to be too silly to perceive that coercion
+ may be one way of going wrong.</p>
+
+ <p>The currency of the notion that earnest sincerity about one's
+ opinions and ideals of conduct is inseparably connected with
+ intolerance, is indirectly due to the predominance of legal or
+ juristic analogies in social discussion. For one thing, the
+ lawyer has to deal mainly with acts, and to deal with them by way
+ of repression. His attention is primarily fixed on the deed, and
+ only secondarily on the mind of the doer. And so a habit of
+ thought is created, which treats opinion as something equally in
+ the sphere of coercion with actions. At the same time it favours
+ coercive ways of affecting opinion. Then, what is still more
+ important, the jurist's conception of society has its root in the
+ relation between sovereign and subject, between lawmaker and
+ those whom law restrains. Exertion of power on one hand, and
+ compliance on the other&mdash;this is his type of the conditions
+ of the social union. The fertility and advance of discussion on
+ social issues depends on the substitution of the evolutional for
+ the legal conception. The lawyer's type of proposition is
+ absolute. It is also, for various reasons which need not be given
+ here, inspired by involuntary reference to the lower, rather than
+ to the more highly developed, social states. In the lower states
+ law, penalties, coercion, compulsion, the strong hand, a sternly
+ repressive public opinion, were the conditions on which the
+ community was united and held together. But the line of thought
+ which these analogies suggest, becomes less and less generally
+ appropriate in social discussion, in proportion as the community
+ becomes more complex, more various in resource, more special in
+ its organisation, in a word, more elaborately civilised. The
+ evolutionist's idea of society concedes to law its historic place
+ and its actual part. But then this idea leads directly to a way
+ of looking at society, which makes the replacement of law by
+ liberty a condition of reaching the higher stages of social
+ development.</p>
+
+ <p>The doctrine of liberty belongs to the subject of this
+ chapter, because it is only another way of expressing the want of
+ connection between earnestness in realising our opinions, and
+ anything like coercion in their favour. If it were true that
+ aversion from compromise, in carrying out our ideas, implied the
+ rightfulness of using all the means in our power to hinder others
+ from carrying out ideas hostile to them, then we should have been
+ preaching in a spirit unfavourable to the principle of liberty.
+ Our main text has been that men should refuse to sacrifice their
+ opinions and ways of living (in the self-regarding sphere) out of
+ regard to the <i>status quo</i>, or the prejudices of others. And
+ this, as a matter of course, excludes the right of forcing or
+ wishing any one else to make such a sacrifice to us. Well, the
+ first foundation-stone for the doctrine of liberty is to be
+ sought in the conception of society as a growing and developing
+ organism. This is its true base, apart from the numerous minor
+ expediencies which may be adduced to complete the structure of
+ the argument. It is fundamentally advantageous that in societies
+ which have reached our degree of complex and intricate
+ organisation, unfettered liberty should be conceded to ideas and,
+ within the self-regarding sphere, to conduct also. The reasons
+ for this are of some such kind as the following. New ideas and
+ new 'experiments in living' would not arise, if there were not a
+ certain inadequateness in existing ideas and ways of living. They
+ may not point to the right mode of meeting inadequateness, but
+ they do point to the existence and consciousness of it. They
+ originate in the social capability of growth. Society can only
+ develop itself on condition that all such novelties (within the
+ limit laid down, for good and valid reasons, at self regarding
+ conduct) are allowed to present themselves. First, because
+ neither the legislature nor any one else can ever know for
+ certain what novelties will prove of enduring value. Second,
+ because even if we did know for certain that given novelties were
+ pathological growths and not normal developments, and that they
+ never would be of any value, still the repression necessary to
+ extirpate them would involve too serious a risk both of keeping
+ back social growth at some other point, and of giving the
+ direction of that growth an irreparable warp. And let us repeat
+ once more, in proportion as a community grows more complex in its
+ classes, divisions, and subdivisions, more intricate in its
+ productive, commercial, or material arrangements, so does this
+ risk very obviously wax more grave.</p>
+
+ <p>In the sense in which we are speaking of it, liberty is not a
+ positive force, any more than the smoothness of a railroad is a
+ positive force.<a name="FNanchor33"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_33"><sup>[33]</sup></a> It is a condition. As a force,
+ there is a sense in which it is true to call liberty a negation.
+ As a condition, though it may still be a negation, yet it may be
+ indispensable for the production of certain positive results. The
+ vacuity of an exhausted receiver is not a force, but it is the
+ indispensable condition of certain positive operations. Liberty
+ as a force may be as impotent as its opponents allege. This does
+ not affect its value as a preliminary or accompanying condition.
+ The absence of a strait-waistcoat is a negation; but it is a
+ useful condition for the activity of sane men. No doubt there
+ must be a definite limit to this absence of external interference
+ with conduct, and that limit will be fixed at various points by
+ different thinkers. We are now only urging that it cannot be
+ wisely fixed for the more complex societies by any one who has
+ not grasped this fundamental preconception, that liberty, or the
+ absence of coercion, or the leaving people to think, speak, and
+ act as they please, is in itself a good thing. It is the object
+ of a favourable presumption. The burden of proving it inexpedient
+ always lies, and wholly lies, on those who wish to abridge it by
+ coercion, whether direct or indirect.</p>
+
+ <p>One reason why this truth is so reluctantly admitted, is men's
+ irrational want of faith in the self-protective quality of a
+ highly developed and healthy community. The timid compromiser on
+ the one hand, and the advocate of coercive restriction on the
+ other, are equally the victims of a superfluous apprehension. The
+ one fears to use his liberty for the same reason that makes the
+ other fearful of permitting liberty. This common reason is the
+ want of a sensible confidence that, in a free western community,
+ which has reached our stage of development, religious, moral, and
+ social novelties&mdash;provided they are tainted by no element of
+ compulsion or interference with the just rights of others, may be
+ trusted to find their own level. Moral and intellectual
+ conditions are not the only motive forces in a community, nor are
+ they even the most decisive. Political and material conditions
+ fix the limits at which speculation can do either good or harm.
+ Let us take an illustration of the impotence of moral ideas to
+ override material circumstances; and we shall venture to place
+ this illustration somewhat fully before the reader.</p>
+
+ <p>There is no more important distinction between modern
+ civilised communities and the ancient communities than the fact
+ that the latter rested on Slavery, while the former have
+ abolished it. Hence there can hardly be a more interesting
+ question than this&mdash;by what agencies so prodigious a
+ transformation of one of the fundamental conditions of society
+ was brought about. The popular answer is of a very ready kind,
+ and it passes quite satisfactorily. This answer is that the first
+ great step towards free labour, the transformation of personal
+ slavery into serfdom, was the result of the spiritual change
+ which was wrought in men's minds by the teaching of the Church.
+ It is unquestionable that the influence of the Church tended to
+ mitigate the evils of slavery, to humanise the relations between
+ master and slave, between the lord and the serf. But this is a
+ very different thing from the radical transformation of those
+ relations. If we think of society as an organism we instantly
+ understand that so immense a change as this could not possibly
+ have been effected without the co-operation of the other great
+ parts of the social system, any more than a critical evolution
+ could take place in the nutritive apparatus of an animal, without
+ a change in the whole series of its organs. Thus in order that
+ serfage should be evolved from slavery, and free labour again
+ from serfage, it could not be enough that an alteration should
+ have been wrought in men's ideas as to their common brotherhood,
+ and the connected ideas as to the lawfulness or unlawfulness of
+ certain human relations. There must have been an alteration also
+ of the economic and material conditions. History confirms the
+ expectations which we should thus have been led to entertain. The
+ impotence of spiritual and moral agencies alone in bringing about
+ this great metamorphosis, is shown by such facts as these. For
+ centuries after the new faith had consolidated itself, slavery
+ was regarded without a particle of that deep abhorrence which the
+ possession of man by man excites in us now. In the ninth and
+ tenth centuries the slave trade was the most profitable branch of
+ the commerce that was carried on in the Mediterranean. The
+ historian tells us that, even so late as this, slaves were the
+ principal article of European export to Africa, Syria, and Egypt,
+ in payment for the produce of the East which was brought from
+ those countries. It was the crumbling of the old social system
+ which, by reducing the population, lessening the wealth, and
+ lowering the standard of living among the free masters, tended to
+ extinguish slavery, by diminishing the differences between the
+ masters and their bondsmen. Again, it was certain laws enacted by
+ the Roman government for the benefit of the imperial fisc, which
+ first conferred rights on the slave. The same laws brought the
+ free farmer, whose position was less satisfactory for the
+ purposes of the revenue, down nearer and nearer to a servile
+ condition. Again, in the ninth and tenth centuries, pestilence
+ and famine accelerated the extinction of predial slavery by
+ weakening the numbers of the free population. 'History,' we are
+ told by that thoroughly competent authority, Mr. Finlay, 'affords
+ its testimony that neither the doctrines of Christianity, nor the
+ sentiments of humanity, have ever yet succeeded in extinguishing
+ slavery, where the soil could be cultivated with profit by slave
+ labour. No Christian community of slave-holders has yet
+ voluntarily abolished slavery. In no country where it prevailed
+ has rural slavery ceased, until the price of productions raised
+ by slave labour has fallen so low as to leave no profit to the
+ slave-owner.'</p>
+
+ <p>The moral of all this is the tolerably obvious truth, that the
+ prosperity of an abstract idea depends as much on the medium into
+ which it is launched, as upon any quality of its own. Stable
+ societies are amply furnished with force enough to resist all
+ effort in a destructive direction. There is seldom much fear, and
+ in our own country there is hardly any fear at all, of hasty
+ reformers making too much way against the spontaneous
+ conservatism which belongs to a healthy and well-organised
+ community. If dissolvent ideas do make their way, it is because
+ the society was already ripe for dissolution. New ideas, however
+ ardently preached, will dissolve no society which was not already
+ in a condition of profound disorganisation. We may be allowed
+ just to point to two memorable instances, by way of illustration,
+ though a long and elaborate discussion would be needed to bring
+ out their full force. It has often been thought since, as it was
+ thought by timorous reactionaries at the time, that Christianity
+ in various ways sapped the strength of the Roman Empire, and
+ opened the way for the barbarians. In truth, the most careful and
+ competent students know now that the Empire slowly fell to
+ pieces, partly because the political arrangements were vicious
+ and inadequate, but mainly because the fiscal and economic system
+ impoverished and depopulated one district of the vast empire
+ after another. It was the break-up of the Empire that gave the
+ Church its chance; not the Church that broke up the Empire. It is
+ a mistake of the same kind to suppose that the destructive
+ criticism of the French philosophers a hundred years ago was the
+ great operative cause of the catastrophe which befel the old
+ social r&eacute;gime. If Voltaire, Diderot, Rousseau, had never
+ lived, or if their works had all been suppressed as soon as they
+ were printed, their absence would have given no new life to
+ agriculture, would not have stimulated trade, nor replenished the
+ bankrupt fisc, nor incorporated the privileged classes with the
+ bulk of the nation, nor done anything else to repair an
+ organisation of which every single part had become incompetent
+ for its proper function. It was the material misery and the
+ political despair engendered by the reigning system, which
+ brought willing listeners to the feet of the teachers who framed
+ beneficent governments on the simple principles of reason and the
+ natural law. And these teachers only busied themselves with
+ abstract politics, because the real situation was desperate. They
+ had no alternative but to evolve social improvements out of their
+ own consciousness. There was not a single sound organ in the body
+ politic, which they could have made the starting-point of a
+ reconstitution of a society on the base of its actual or historic
+ structure. The mischiefs which resulted from their method are
+ patent and undeniable. But the method was made inevitable by the
+ curse of the old r&eacute;gime.<a name="FNanchor34"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_34"><sup>[34]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Nor is there any instance in history of mere opinion making a
+ breach in the essential constitution of a community, so long as
+ the political conditions were stable and the economic or
+ nutritive conditions sound. If some absolute monarch were to be
+ seized by a philanthropic resolution to transform the ordering of
+ a society which seemed to be at his disposal, he might possibly,
+ by the perseverance of a lifetime, succeed in throwing the
+ community into permanent confusion. Joseph II. perhaps did as
+ much as a modern sovereign can do in this direction. Yet little
+ came of his efforts, either for good or harm. But a man without
+ the whole political machinery in his power need hardly labour
+ under any apprehension that he may, by the mere force of
+ speculative opinion, involuntarily work a corresponding mischief.
+ If it is true that the most fervent apostles of progress usually
+ do very little of the good on which they congratulate themselves,
+ they ought surely on the same ground to be acquitted of much of
+ the harm for which they are sometimes reviled. In a country of
+ unchecked and abundant discussion, a new idea is not at all
+ likely to make much way against the objection of its novelty,
+ unless it is really commended by some quality of temporary or
+ permanent value. So far therefore as the mere publication of new
+ principles is concerned, and so far also as merely self-regarding
+ action goes, one who has the keenest sense of social
+ responsibility, and is most scrupulously afraid of doing anything
+ to slacken or perturb the process of social growth, may still
+ consistently give to the world whatever ideas he has gravely
+ embraced. He may safely trust, if the society be in a normal
+ condition, to its justice of assimilation and rejection. There
+ are a few individuals for whom newness is a recommendation. But
+ what are these few among the many to whom newness is a
+ stumbling-block? Old ideas may survive merely because they are
+ old. A new one will certainly not, among a considerable body of
+ men in a healthy social state, gain any acceptance worth speaking
+ of, merely because it is new.</p>
+
+ <p>The recognition of the self-protecting quality of society is
+ something more than a point of speculative importance. It has a
+ direct practical influence. For it would add to the courage and
+ intrepidity of the men who are most attached to the reigning
+ order of things. If such men could only divest themselves of a
+ futile and nervous apprehension, that things as they are have no
+ root in their essential fitness and harmony, and that order
+ consequently is ever hanging on a trembling and doubtful balance,
+ they would not only gain by the self-respect which would be added
+ to them and the rest of the community, but all discussion would
+ become more robust and real. If they had a larger faith in the
+ stability for which they profess so great an anxiety, they would
+ be more free alike in understanding and temper to deal
+ generously, honestly, and effectively with those whom they count
+ imprudent innovators. There is nothing more amusing or more
+ instructive than to turn to the debates in parliament or the
+ press upon some innovating proposal, after an interval since the
+ proposal was accepted by the legislature. The flaming hopes of
+ its friends, the wild and desperate prophecies of its
+ antagonists, are found to be each as ill-founded as the other.
+ The measure which was to do such vast good according to the one,
+ such portentous evil according to the other, has done only a part
+ of the promised good, and has done none of the threatened evil.
+ The true lesson from this is one of perseverance and thoroughness
+ for the improver, and one of faith in the self-protectiveness of
+ a healthy society for the conservative. The master error of the
+ latter is to suppose that men are moved mainly by their passions
+ rather than their interests, that all their passions are
+ presumably selfish and destructive, and that their own interests
+ can seldom be adequately understood by the persons most directly
+ concerned. How many fallacies are involved in this group of
+ propositions, the reader may well be left to judge for
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p>We have in this chapter considered some of the limitations
+ which are set by the conditions of society on the duty of trying
+ to realise our principles in action. The general conclusion is in
+ perfect harmony with that of the previous chapters. A principle,
+ if it be sound, represents one of the larger expediencies. To
+ abandon that for the sake of some seeming expediency of the hour,
+ is to sacrifice the greater good for the less, on no more
+ creditable ground than that the less is nearer. It is better to
+ wait, and to defer the realisation of our ideas until we can
+ realise them fully, than to defraud the future by truncating
+ them, if truncate them we must, in order to secure a partial
+ triumph for them in the immediate present. It is better to bear
+ the burden of impracticableness, than to stifle conviction and to
+ pare away principle until it becomes more hollowness and
+ triviality. What is the sense, and what is the morality, of
+ postponing the wider utility to the narrower? Nothing is so sure
+ to impoverish an epoch, to deprive conduct of nobleness, and
+ character of elevation.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_27"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor27">[27]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>The Study of Sociology</i>, p. 396.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor28">[28]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>No one, for instance, has given more forcible or decisive
+ expression than Mr. Spencer has done to the duty of not
+ passively accepting the current theology. See his <i>First
+ Principles</i>, pt. i. ch. vi, &sect; 34; paragraph
+ beginning,&mdash;'Whoever hesitates to utter that which he
+ thinks the highest truth, lest it should be too much in advance
+ of the time, may reassure himself by looking at his acts from
+ an impersonal point of view,' etc.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor29">[29]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Speech on Conciliation with America</i>.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor30">[30]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>'Toute &eacute;normit&eacute; dans les esprits d'un certain
+ ordre n'est souvent qu'une grande vue prise hors du temps et du
+ lieu, et ne gardant aucun rapport r&eacute;el avec les objets
+ environnants. Le propre de certaines prunelles ardentes est de
+ franchir du regard les intervalles et de les supprimer.
+ Tant&ocirc;t c'est une id&eacute;e qui retarde de plusieurs
+ si&egrave;cles, et que ces vigoureux esprits se figurent encore
+ pr&eacute;sente et vivante; tant&ocirc;t c'est une id&eacute;e
+ qui avance, et qu'ils croient incontinent r&eacute;alisable. M.
+ de Coua&euml;n &eacute;tait ainsi; il voyait 1814 d&egrave;s
+ 1804, et de l&agrave; une sup&eacute;riorit&eacute;; mais il
+ jugeait 1814 possible d&egrave;s 1804 ou 1805, et de l&agrave;
+ tout un chim&eacute;rique entassement.&mdash;Voil&agrave; un
+ point blanc &agrave; l'horizon, chacun jurerait que c'est un
+ nuage. "C'est une montagne," dit le voyageur &agrave; l'oeil
+ d'aigle; mais s'il ajoute: "Nous y arriverons ce soir, dans
+ deux heures;" si, &agrave; chaque heure de marche, il crie avec
+ emportement: "Nous y sommes," et le veut d&eacute;montrer, il
+ choque les voisins avec sa poutre, et donne l'avantage aux yeux
+ moins per&ccedil;ants et plus habitu&eacute;s &agrave; la
+ plaine.'&mdash;Ste. Beuve's <i>Volupt&eacute;</i>, p. 262</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor31">[31]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>It is sometimes convenient to set familiar arguments down
+ once more; so I venture to reprint in a note at the end of the
+ chapter a short exposition of the doctrine of liberty, which I
+ had occasion to make in considering Sir J.F. Stephen's vigorous
+ attack on that doctrine.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor32">[32]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Mr. Samuel Bailey's <i>Essays on the Formation and
+ Publication of Opinions</i>, etc., p. 138, (1826.)</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor33">[33]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>There is a sense, and a most important sense, in which
+ liberty is a positive force. It is its robust and bracing
+ influence on character, which makes wise men prize freedom and
+ strive for the enlargement of its province. As Mr. Mill
+ expressed this:&mdash;'It is of importance not only what men
+ do, but what manner of men they are that do it,' Milton pointed
+ to the positive effect of liberty on character in the following
+ passage:&mdash;'They are not skilful considerers of human
+ things who imagine to remove sin by removing the matter of sin.
+ Though ye take from a covetous man his treasure, he has yet one
+ jewel left; ye cannot bereave him of his covetousness. Banish
+ all objects of lust, shut up all youth into the severest
+ discipline that can be exercised in any hermitage, ye cannot
+ make them chaste that came not thither so. Suppose we could
+ expel sin by this means; look how much we thus expel of sin, so
+ much we expel of virtue. And were I the chooser, a dram of
+ well-doing should be preferred before many times as much the
+ forcible hindrance of evil-doing. For God sure esteems the
+ growth and completing of one virtuous person, more than the
+ restraint of ten vicious.'</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor34">[34]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>There is, I think, nothing in this paragraph really
+ inconsistent with De Tocqueville's well-known and striking
+ chapter, 'Comment les hommes de lettres devinrent les
+ principaux hommes politiques du pays, et des effets qui en
+ r&eacute;sult&egrave;rent.' (<i>Ancien R&eacute;gime</i>, iii.
+ i.) Thus S&eacute;nac de Meilhan writes in 1795;&mdash;'C'est
+ quand la R&eacute;volution a &eacute;t&eacute; entam&eacute;e
+ qu'on a cherch&eacute; dans Mably, dans Rousseau, des armes
+ pour sustenter le syst&egrave;me vers lequel entrainait
+ l'effervescence de quelques esprits hardis. Mais ce ne sont
+ point les auteurs que j'ai cit&eacute;s qui ont enflamme les
+ t&ecirc;tes; M. Necker seul a produit cet effet, et
+ d&eacute;termin&eacute; l'explosion,' ... 'Les &eacute;crits de
+ Voltaire ont certainement nui &agrave; la religion, et
+ &eacute;branl&eacute; la croyance dans un assez grand nombre;
+ mais ils n'ont aucun rapport avec les affaires du gouvernement,
+ et sont plus favorables que contraires &agrave; la
+ monarchie....' Of Rousseau's <i>Social Contract</i>:&mdash;'Ce
+ livre profond et abstrait &eacute;tait peu lu, et etendu de
+ bien peu de gens.' Mably&mdash;'avait peu de vogue.' <i>De
+ Gouvernment, etc., en France</i>, p. 129, etc.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="NOTE_TO_PAGE_242"></a>
+
+ <h2>NOTE TO <a href="#p242">PAGE 242</a>.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ THE DOCTRINE OF LIBERTY.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Mr. Mill's memorable plea for social liberty was little more
+ than an enlargement, though a very important enlargement, of the
+ principles of the still more famous Speech for Liberty of
+ Unlicensed Printing with which Milton ennobled English literature
+ two centuries before. Milton contended for free publication of
+ opinion mainly on these grounds: First, that the opposite system
+ implied the 'grace of infallibility and incorruptibleness' in the
+ licensers. Second, that the prohibition of bold books led to
+ mental indolence and stagnant formalism both in teachers and
+ congregations, producing the 'laziness of a licensing church.'
+ Third, that it 'hinders and retards the importation of our
+ richest merchandise, truth;' for the commission of the licenser
+ enjoins him to let nothing pass which is not vulgarly received
+ already, and 'if it come to prohibiting, there is not aught more
+ likely to be prohibited than truth itself, whose first appearance
+ to our eyes, bleared and dimmed with prejudice and custom, is
+ more unsightly and unplausible than many errors, even as the
+ person is of many a great man slight and contemptible to see to.'
+ Fourth, that freedom is in itself an ingredient of true virtue,
+ and 'they are not skilful considerers of human things who imagine
+ to remove sin by removing the matter of sin; that virtue
+ therefore, which is but a youngling in the contemplation of evil,
+ and knows not the utmost that vice promises to her followers, and
+ rejects it, is but a blank virtue, not a pure; her virtue is but
+ an excremental virtue, which was the reason why our sage and
+ serious poet Spenser, whom I dare be known to think a better
+ teacher than Scotus or Aquinas, describing true temperance under
+ the form of Guion, brings him in with his palmer through the cave
+ of Mammon and the tower of earthly bliss, that he might see and
+ know and yet abstain.'</p>
+
+ <p>The four grounds on which Mr. Mill contends for the necessity
+ of freedom in the expression of opinion to the mental wellbeing
+ of mankind, are virtually contained in these. His four grounds
+ are, (1) that the silenced opinion may be true; (2) it may
+ contain a portion of truth, essential to supplement the
+ prevailing opinion; (3) vigorous contesting of opinions that are
+ even wholly true, is the only way of preventing them from sinking
+ to the level of uncomprehended prejudices; (4) without such
+ contesting, the doctrine will lose its vital effect on character
+ and conduct.</p>
+
+ <p>But Milton drew the line of liberty at what he calls
+ 'neighbouring differences, or rather indifferences.' The Arminian
+ controversy had loosened the bonds with which the newly liberated
+ churches of the Reformation, had made haste to bind themselves
+ again, and weakened that authority of confessions, which had
+ replaced the older but not more intolerant authority of the
+ universal church. Other controversies which raged during the
+ first half of the seventeenth century,&mdash;those between
+ catholics and protestants, between prelatists and presbyterians,
+ between socinians and trinitarians, between latitudinarians,
+ puritans, and sacramentalists,&mdash;all tended to weaken
+ theological exclusiveness. This slackening, however, was no more
+ than partial. Roger Williams, indeed, the Welsh founder of Rhode
+ Island, preached, as early as 1631, the principles of an
+ unlimited toleration, extending to catholics, Jews, and even
+ infidels. Milton stopped a long way short of this. He did not
+ mean 'tolerated popery and open superstition, which, as it
+ extirpates all religious and civil supremacies, so itself should
+ be extirpate, provided first that all charitable and
+ compassionate means be used to win and regain the weak and the
+ misled: that also which is impious or evil absolutely either
+ against faith or manners no law can possibly permit that intends
+ not to unlaw itself.'</p><br>
+
+ <p>Locke, writing five-and-forty years later, somewhat widened
+ these limitations. His question was not merely whether there
+ should be free expression of opinion, but whether there should
+ furthermore be freedom of worship and of religious union. He
+ answered both questions affirmatively,&mdash;not on the
+ semi-sceptical ground of Jeremy Taylor, which is also one of the
+ grounds taken by Mr. Mill, that we cannot be sure that our own
+ opinion is the true one,&mdash;but on the strength of his
+ definition of the province of the civil magistrate. Locke held
+ that the magistrate's whole jurisdiction reached only to civil
+ concernments, and that 'all civil power, right, and dominion is
+ bounded to that only care of promoting these things; and that it
+ neither can nor ought in any manner to be extended to the saving
+ of souls. This chiefly because the power of the civil magistrate
+ consists only in outward force, while true and saving religion
+ consists in the inward persuasion of the mind, without which
+ nothing can be acceptable to God, and such is the nature of the
+ understanding that it cannot he compelled to the belief of
+ anything by outward force.... It is only light and evidence that
+ can work a change in men's opinions; and that light can in no
+ manner proceed from corporal sufferings, or any other outward
+ penalties.' 'I may grow rich by an art that I take not delight
+ in; I may be cured of some disease by remedies that I have not
+ faith in; but I cannot be saved by a religion that at I distrust
+ and a ritual that I abhor.' (<i>First Letter concerning
+ Toleration</i>.) And much more in the same excellent vein. But
+ Locke fixed limits to toleration. 1. No opinions contrary to
+ human society, or to those moral rules which are necessary to the
+ preservation of civil society, are to be tolerated by the
+ magistrate. Thus, to take examples from our own day, a
+ conservative minister would think himself right on this principle
+ in suppressing the Land and Labour League; a catholic minister in
+ dissolving the Education League; and any minister in making mere
+ membership of the Mormon sect a penal offence. 2. No tolerance
+ ought to be extended to 'those who attribute unto the faithful,
+ religious, and orthodox, that is in plain terms unto themselves,
+ any peculiar privilege or power above other mortals, in civil
+ concernments; or who, upon pretence of religion, do challenge any
+ manner of authority over such as are not associated with them in
+ their ecclesiastical communion.' As I have seldom heard of any
+ sect, except the Friends, who did not challenge as much authority
+ as it could possibly get over persons not associated with it,
+ this would amount to a universal proscription of religion; but
+ Locke's principle might at any rate be invoked against
+ Ultra-montanism in some circumstances. 3. Those are not at all to
+ be tolerated who deny the being of God. The taking away of God,
+ <i>though but even in thought</i>, dissolves all society; and
+ promises, covenants, and oaths, which are the bonds of human
+ society, have no hold on such. Thus the police ought to close Mr.
+ Bradlaugh's Hall of Science, and perhaps on some occasions the
+ Positivist School.</p>
+
+ <p>Locke's principles depended on a distinction between civil
+ concernments, which he tries to define, and all other
+ concernments. Warburton's arguments on the alliance between
+ church and state turned on the same point, as did the once-famous
+ Bangorian controversy. This distinction would fit into Mr. Mill's
+ cardinal position, which consists in a distinction between the
+ things that only affect the doer or thinker of them, and the
+ things that affect other persons as well. Locke's attempt to
+ divide civil affairs from affairs of salvation, was satisfactory
+ enough for the comparatively narrow object with which he opened
+ his discussion. Mr. Mill's account of civil affairs is both wider
+ and more definite; naturally so, as he had to maintain the cause
+ of tolerance in a much more complex set of social conditions, and
+ amid a far greater diversity of speculative energy, than any one
+ dreamed of in Locke's time. Mr. Mill limits the province of the
+ civil magistrate to the repression of acts that directly and
+ immediately injure others than the doer of them. So long as acts,
+ including the expression of opinions, are purely self-regarding,
+ it seems to him expedient in the long run that they should not be
+ interfered with by the magistrate. He goes much further than
+ this. Self-regarding acts should not be interfered with by the
+ magistrate. Not only self-regarding acts, but all opinions
+ whatever, should, moreover, be as little interfered with as
+ possible by public opinion, except in the way of vigorous
+ argumentation and earnest persuasion in a contrary direction; the
+ silent but most impressive solicitation of virtuous example; the
+ wise and careful upbringing of the young, so that when they enter
+ life they may be most nobly fitted to choose the right opinions
+ and obey the right motives.</p>
+
+ <p>The consideration by which he supports this rigorous
+ confinement of external interference on the part of government,
+ or the unorganised members of the community whose opinion is
+ called public opinion, to cases of self-protection, are these,
+ some of which have been already stated:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>1. By interfering to suppress opinions or experiments in
+ living, you may resist truths and improvements in a greater or
+ less degree.</p>
+
+ <p>2. Constant discussion is the only certain means of preserving
+ the freshness of truth in men's minds, and the vitality of its
+ influence upon their conduct and motives.</p>
+
+ <p>3. Individuality is one of the most valuable elements of
+ wellbeing, and you can only be sure of making the most of
+ individuality, if you have an atmosphere of freedom, encouraging
+ free development and expansion.</p>
+
+ <p>4. Habitual resort to repressive means of influencing conduct
+ tends more than anything else to discredit and frustrate the
+ better means, such as education, good example, and the like.
+ (<i>Liberty</i>, 148.)</p>
+
+ <p>The principle which he deduces from these considerations
+ is&mdash;'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; the only
+ purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any
+ member of a civilised community, is to prevent harm to others.
+ His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient
+ warrant. He cannot be rightfully compelled to do or forbear
+ because it will make him happier, because in the opinion 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 others.' (<i>Liberty</i>,
+ 22.)</p><br>
+
+ <p>Two disputable points in the above doctrine are likely at once
+ to reveal themselves to the least critical eye. First, that
+ doctrine would seem to check the free expression of disapproval;
+ one of the most wholesome and indispensable duties which anybody
+ with interest in serious questions has to perform, and the
+ non-performance of which would remove the most proper and natural
+ penalty from frivolous or perverse opinions and obnoxious
+ conduct. Mr. Mill deals with this difficulty as
+ follows:&mdash;'We have a right in various ways to act upon our
+ unfavourable 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.'
+ (<i>Liberty</i>, 139.) This appears to be a satisfactory way of
+ meeting the objection. For though the penalties of disapproval
+ may be just the same, whether deliberately inflicted, or
+ naturally and spontaneously falling on the object of such
+ disapproval, yet there is a very intelligible difference between
+ the two processes in their effect on the two parties concerned. A
+ person imbued with Mr. Mill's principle would feel the
+ responsibility of censorship much more seriously; would reflect
+ more carefully and candidly about the conduct or opinion of which
+ he thought ill; would be more on his guard against pharisaic
+ censoriousness, and that desire to be ever judging one another,
+ which Milton well called the stronghold of our hypocrisy. The
+ disapproval of such a person would have an austere colour, a
+ gravity, a self-respecting reserve, which could never belong to
+ an equal degree of disapproval in a person who had started from
+ the officious principle, that if we are sure we are right, it is
+ straightway our business to make the person whom we think wrong
+ smart for his error. And in the same way such disapproval would
+ be much more impressive to the person whom it affected. If it was
+ justified, he would be like a froward child who is always less
+ effectively reformed&mdash;if reformable at all&mdash;by angry
+ chidings and passionate punishments than by the sight of a cool
+ and austere displeasure which lets him persist in his frowardness
+ if he chooses.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The second weak point in the doctrine lies in the extreme
+ vagueness of the terms, protective and self-regarding. The
+ practical difficulty begins with the definition of these terms.
+ Can any opinion, or any serious part of conduct, be looked upon
+ as truly and exclusively self-regarding? This central ingredient
+ in the discussion seems insufficiently laboured in the essay on
+ Liberty. Yet it is here more than anywhere else that controversy
+ is needed to clear up what is in just as much need of
+ elucidation, whatever view we may take of the inherent virtue of
+ freedom&mdash;whether we look on freedom as a mere negation, or
+ as one of the most powerful positive conditions of attaining the
+ highest kind of human excellence.</p>
+
+ <p>To some persons the analysis of conduct, on which the whole
+ doctrine of liberty rests, seems metaphysical and arbitrary. They
+ are reluctant to admit there are any self-regarding acts at all.
+ This reluctance implies a perfectly tenable proposition, a
+ proposition which has been maintained by nearly all religious
+ bodies in the world's history in their non-latitudinarian stages.
+ To distinguish the self-regarding from the other parts of
+ conduct, strikes them not only as unscientific, but as morally
+ and socially mischievous. They insist that there is a social as
+ well as a personal element in every human act, though in very
+ different proportions. There is no gain, they contend, and there
+ may be much harm, in trying to mark off actions, in which the
+ personal element decisively preponderates, from actions of
+ another sort. Mr. Mill did so distinguish actions, nor was his
+ distinction either metaphysical or arbitrary in its source. As a
+ matter of observation, and for the practical purposes of
+ morality, there are kinds of action whose consequences do not go
+ beyond the doer of them. No doubt, you may say that by engaging
+ in these kinds in any given moment, the doer is neglecting the
+ actions in which the social element preponderates, and therefore
+ even acts that seem purely self-regarding have indirect and
+ negative consequences to the rest of the world. But to allow
+ considerations of this sort to prevent us from using a
+ common-sense classification of acts by the proportion of the
+ personal element in them, is as unreasonable as if we allowed the
+ doctrine of the conservation of physical force, or the evolution
+ of one mode of force into another, to prevent us from classifying
+ the affections of matter independently, as light, heat, motion,
+ and the rest. There is one objection obviously to be made to most
+ of the illustrations which are designed to show the public
+ element in all private conduct. The connection between the act
+ and its influence on others is so remote (using the word in a
+ legal sense), though quite certain, distinct, and traceable, that
+ you can only take the act out of the self-regarding category, by
+ a process which virtually denies the existence of any such
+ category. You must set a limit to this 'indirect and
+ at-a-distance argument,' as Locke called a similar plea, and the
+ setting of this limit is the natural supplement to Mr. Mill's
+ 'simple principle.'</p>
+
+ <p>The division between self-regarding acts and others then,
+ rests on observation of their actual consequences. And why was
+ Mr. Mill so anxious to erect self-regarding acts into a distinct
+ and important class, so important as to be carefully and
+ diligently secured by a special principle of liberty? Because
+ observation of the recorded experience of mankind teaches us,
+ that the recognition of this independent provision is essential
+ to the richest expansion of human faculty. To narrow or to
+ repudiate such a province, and to insist exclusively on the
+ social bearing of each part of conduct, is to limit the play of
+ motives, and to thwart the doctrine that 'mankind obtain a
+ greater sum of happiness when each pursues his own, under the
+ rules and conditions required by the rest, than when each makes
+ the good of the rest his only object.' To narrow or to repudiate
+ such a province is to tighten the power of the majority over the
+ minority, and to augment the authority of whatever sacerdotal or
+ legislative body may represent the majority. Whether the
+ lawmakers be laymen in parliament, or priests of humanity
+ exercising the spiritual power, it matters not.</p><br>
+
+ <p>We may best estimate the worth and the significance of the
+ doctrine of Liberty by considering the line of thought and
+ observation which led to it. To begin with, it is in Mr. Mill's
+ hands something quite different from the same doctrine as
+ preached by the French revolutionary school; indeed one might
+ even call it reactionary, in respect of the French theory of a
+ hundred years back. It reposes on no principle of abstract right,
+ but, like the rest of its author's opinions, on principles of
+ utility and experience. Dr. Arnold used to divide reformers into
+ two classes, popular and liberal. The first he defined as seekers
+ of liberty, the second as seekers of improvement; the first were
+ the goats, and the second were the sheep. Mr. Mill's doctrine
+ denied the mutual exclusiveness of the two parts of this
+ classification, for it made improvement the end and the test,
+ while it proclaimed liberty to be the means. Every thinker now
+ perceives that the strongest and most durable influences in every
+ western society lead in the direction of democracy, and tend with
+ more or less rapidity to throw the control of social organisation
+ into the hands of numerical majorities. There are many people who
+ believe that if you only make the ruling body big enough, it is
+ sure to be either very wise itself, or very eager to choose wise
+ leaders. Mr. Mill, as any one who is familiar with his writings
+ is well aware, did not hold this opinion. He had no more
+ partiality for mob rule than De Maistre or Goethe or Mr. Carlyle.
+ He saw its evils more clearly than any of these eminent men,
+ because he had a more scientific eye, and because he had had the
+ invaluable training of a political administrator on a large
+ scale, and in a very responsible post. But he did not content
+ himself with seeing these evils, and he wasted no energy in
+ passionate denunciation of them, which he knew must prove futile.
+ Guizot said of De Tocqueville, that he was an aristocrat who
+ accepted his defeat. Mr. Mill was too penetrated by popular
+ sympathies to be an aristocrat in De Tocqueville's sense, but he
+ likewise was full of ideas and hopes which the unchecked or
+ undirected course of democracy would defeat without chance of
+ reparation. This fact he accepted, and from this he started. Mr.
+ Carlyle, and one or two rhetorical imitators, poured malediction
+ on the many-headed populace, and with a rather pitiful impatience
+ insisted that the only hope for men lay in their finding and
+ obeying a strong man, a king, a hero, a dictator. How he was to
+ be found, neither the master nor his still angrier and more
+ impatient mimics could ever tell us.</p>
+
+ <p>Now Mr. Mill's doctrine laid down the main condition of
+ finding your hero; namely, that all ways should be left open to
+ him, because no man, nor majority of men, could possibly tell by
+ which of these ways their deliverers were from time to time
+ destined to present themselves. Wits have caricatured all this,
+ by asking us whether by encouraging the tares to grow, you give
+ the wheat a better chance. This is as misleading as such
+ metaphors usually are. The doctrine of liberty rests on a faith
+ drawn from the observation of human progress, that though we know
+ wheat to be serviceable and tares to be worthless, yet there are
+ in the great seed-plot of human nature a thousand rudimentary
+ germs, not wheat and not tares, of whose properties we have not
+ had a fair opportunity of assuring ourselves. If you are too
+ eager to pluck up the tares, you are very likely to pluck up with
+ them these untried possibilities of human excellence, and you
+ are, moreover, very likely to injure the growing wheat as well.
+ The demonstration of this lies in the recorded experience of
+ mankind.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Nor is this all. Mr. Mill's doctrine does not lend the least
+ countenance to the cardinal opinion of some writers in the last
+ century, that the only need of human character and of social
+ institutions is to be let alone. He never said that we were to
+ leave the ground uncultivated, to bring up whatever might chance
+ to grow. On the contrary, the ground was to be cultivated with
+ the utmost care and knowledge, with a view to prevent the growth
+ of tares&mdash;but cultivated in a certain manner. You may take
+ the method of the Inquisition, of the more cruel of the Puritans,
+ of De Maistre, of Mr. Carlyle; or you may take Mr. Mill's method
+ of cultivation. According to the doctrine of Liberty, we are to
+ devote ourselves to prevention, as the surest and most wholesome
+ mode of extirpation. Persuade; argue; cherish virtuous example;
+ bring up the young in habits of right opinion and right motive;
+ shape your social arrangements so as to stimulate the best parts
+ of character. By these means you will gain all the advantages
+ that could possibly have come of heroes and legislative
+ dragooning, as well as a great many more which neither heroes nor
+ legislative dragooning could ever have secured.</p>
+
+ <p>It is well with men, Mr. Mill said, moreover, in proportion as
+ they respect truth. Now they at once prove and strengthen their
+ respect for truth, by having an open mind to all its
+ possibilities, while at the same time they hold firmly to their
+ own proved convictions, until they hear better evidence to the
+ contrary. There is no anarchy, nor uncertainty, nor paralysing
+ air of provisionalness in such a frame of mind. So far is it from
+ being fatal to loyalty or reverence, that it is an indispensable
+ part of the groundwork of the only loyalty that a wise ruler or
+ teacher would care to inspire&mdash;the loyalty springing from a
+ rational conviction that, in a field open to all comers, he is
+ the best man they can find. Only on condition of liberty without
+ limit is the ablest and most helpful of 'heroes' sure to be
+ found; and only on condition of liberty without limit are his
+ followers sure to be worthy of him. You must have authority, and
+ yet must have obedience. The noblest and deepest and most
+ beneficent kind of authority is that which rests on an obedience
+ that is rational and spontaneous.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The same futile impatience which animates the political
+ utterances of Mr. Carlyle and his more weak-voiced imitators,
+ takes another form in men of a different training or temperament.
+ They insist that if the majority has the means of preventing vice
+ by law, it is folly and weakness not to resort to those means.
+ The superficial attractiveness of such a doctrine is obvious. The
+ doctrine of liberty implies a broader and a more patient view. It
+ says:&mdash;Even if you could be sure that what you take for vice
+ is so&mdash;and the history of persecution shows how careful you
+ should be in this preliminary point&mdash;even then it is an
+ undoubted and, indeed, a necessary tendency of this facile
+ repressive legislation, to make those who resort to it neglect
+ the more effective, humane, and durable kinds of preventive
+ legislation. You pass a law (if you can) putting down
+ drunkenness; there is a neatness in such a method very attractive
+ to fervid and impatient natures. Would you not have done better
+ to leave that law unpassed, and apply yourselves sedulously
+ instead to the improvement of the dwellings of the more drunken
+ class, to the provision of amusements that might compete with the
+ ale-house, to the extension and elevation of instruction, and so
+ on? You may say that this should be done, and yet the other
+ should not be left undone; but, as matter of fact and history,
+ the doing of the one has always gone with the neglect of the
+ other, and ascetic law-making in the interests of virtue has
+ never been accompanied either by law-making or any other kinds of
+ activity for making virtue easier or more attractive. It is the
+ recognition how little punishment can do, that leaves men free to
+ see how much social prevention can do. I believe, then, that what
+ seems to the criminal lawyers and passionate philanthropists
+ self-evident, is in truth an illusion, springing from a very
+ shallow kind of impatience, heated in some of them by the
+ addition of a cynical contempt for human nature and the worth of
+ human existence.</p>
+
+ <p>If people believe that the book of social or moral knowledge
+ is now completed, that we have turned over the last page and
+ heard the last word, much of the foundation of Mr. Mill's
+ doctrine would disappear. But those who hold this can hardly have
+ much to congratulate themselves upon. If it were so, and if
+ governments were to accept the principle that the only limits to
+ the enforcement of the moral standard of the majority are the
+ narrow expediencies of each special case, without reference to
+ any deep and comprehensive principle covering all the largest
+ considerations, why, then, the society to which we ought to look
+ with most admiration and envy, is the Eastern Empire during the
+ ninth and tenth centuries, when the Byzantine system of a
+ thorough subordination of the spiritual power had fully
+ consolidated itself!</p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11557 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #11557 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11557)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of On Compromise, by John Morley
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: On Compromise
+
+Author: John Morley
+
+Release Date: March 13, 2004 [EBook #11557]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ON COMPROMISE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Garrett Alley and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ON COMPROMISE
+
+ _'It makes all the difference in the world whether we put
+ Truth in the first place or in the second place.'_
+
+ WHATLEY
+
+
+
+
+ON COMPROMISE
+
+BY
+
+JOHN MORLEY
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
+
+ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON
+
+1908
+
+_This Edition first printed 1886_
+
+
+
+
+NOTE.
+
+The writer has availed himself of the opportunity of a new edition to
+add three or four additional illustrations in the footnotes. The
+criticisms on the first edition call for no remark, excepting this,
+perhaps, that the present little volume has no pretensions to be
+anything more than an Essay. To judge such it performance as if it
+professed to be an exhaustive Treatise in casuistry, is to subject it to
+tests which it was never designed to bear. Merely to open questions, to
+indicate points, to suggest cases, to sketch outlines,--as an Essay does
+all these things,--may often be a process not without its own modest
+usefulness and interest.
+
+_May 4, 1877._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY.
+
+ Design of this Essay
+ The question stated
+ Suggested by some existing tendencies in England
+ Comparison with other countries
+ Test of this comparison
+ The absent quality specifically defined
+ History and decay of some recent aspirations
+ Illustrations
+ Characteristics of one present mood
+ Analysis of its causes
+ (1) Influence of French examples
+ (2) Influence of the Historic Method
+ (3) Influence of the Newspaper Press
+ (4) Increase of material prosperity
+ (5) Transformation of the spiritual basis of thought
+ (6) Influence of a State Church
+
+
+ CHAPTER II. OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR
+
+ Questions of a dual doctrine lies at the outset of our inquiry
+ This doctrine formulated
+ Marks the triumph of _status quo_
+ Psychological vindication of such a doctrine
+ Answered by assertion of the dogmatic character of popular belief
+ And the pernicious social influence of its priests
+ The root idea of the defenders of a dual doctrine
+ Thesis of the present chapter, against that idea
+ Examination of some of the pleas for error
+ I. That a false opinion may be clothed with good associations
+ II. That all minds are not open to reason
+ III. That a false opinion, considered in relation to the general
+ mental attitude, may be less hurtful than its premature
+ demolition
+ IV. That mere negative truth is not a guide
+ V. That error has been a stepping-stone to truth
+ We cannot tell how much truth has been missed
+ Inevitableness is not utility
+
+
+ CHAPTER III. INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL SPIRIT.
+
+ The modern _disciplina arcani_
+ Hume's immoral advice
+ Evil intellectual effects of immoral compromise
+ Depravation that follows its grosser forms
+ The three provinces of compromise
+ Radical importance of their separation
+ Effects of their confusion in practical politics
+ Economy or management in the Formation of opinion
+ Its lawfulness turns on the claims of majority and minority over one
+ another
+ Thesis of the present chapter
+ Its importance, owing to the supremacy of the political spirit in
+ England
+ Effects of the predominance of this spirit
+ Contrasted with epochs of intellectual responsibility
+ A modern movement against the political spirit
+ An objection considered
+ Importance to character of rationalised conviction, and of ideals
+ The absence of them attenuates conduct
+ Illustrations in modern politics
+ Modern latitudinarianism
+ Illustration in two supreme issues
+ Pascal's remarks upon a state of Doubt
+ Dr. Newman on the same
+ Three ways of dealing with the issues
+ Another illustration of intellectual improbity
+ The Savoyard Vicar
+ Mischievousness of substituting spiritual self-indulgence for reason
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV. RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.
+
+ Compromise in Expression
+ Touches religion rather than politics
+ Hume on non-resistance
+ Reason why rights of free speech do not exactly coincide with rights of
+ free thought
+ Digression into the matter of free speech
+ Dissent no longer railing and vituperative
+ Tendency of modern free thought to assimilate some elements from the
+ old faith
+ A wide breach still remains
+ Heresy, however, no longer traced to depravity
+ Tolerance not necessarily acquiescence in scepticism
+ Object of the foregoing digression
+ The rarity of plain-speaking a reason why it is painful
+ Conformity in the relationship between child and parent
+ Between husband and wife
+ In the education of children
+ The case of an unbelieving priest
+ The case of one who fears to lose his influence
+ Conformity not harmless nor unimportant
+
+
+ CHAPTER V. THE REALISATION OF OPINION.
+
+ The application of opinion to conduct
+ Tempering considerations
+ Not to be pressed too far
+ Our action in realising our opinions depends on our social theory
+ Legitimate and illegitimate compromise in view of that
+ The distinction equally sound on the evolutional theory
+ Condition of progressive change
+ A plea for compromise examined
+ A second plea
+ The allegation of provisional usefulness examined
+ Illustrated in religious institutions
+ In political institutions
+ Burke's commendation of political compromise
+ The saying that small reforms may be the worst enemies of great ones
+ In what sense true
+ Illustration in the Elementary Education Act
+ Wisdom of social patience
+ The considerations which apply to political practice do not apply to
+ our own lives
+ Nor to the publication of social opinions
+ The amount of conscience in a community
+ Evil of attenuating this element
+ Historic illustration
+ New side of the discussion
+ Is earnestness of conviction fatal to concession of liberty to others?
+ Two propositions at the base of an affirmative answer
+ Earnestness of conviction consistent with sense of liability to error
+ Belief in one's own infallibility does not necessarily lead to
+ intolerance
+ The contrary notion due to juristic analogies in social discussion
+ Connection between the doctrine of liberty and social evolution
+ The timid compromisers superfluous apprehension
+ Material limits to the effect of moral speculation
+ Illustration from the history of Slavery
+ Illustration from French history
+ Practical influence of a faith in the self-protecting quality of a
+ society
+ Conclusion
+
+
+ NOTE TO PAGE 242.
+
+ The Doctrine of Liberty
+
+
+
+
+ON COMPROMISE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY.
+
+The design of the following essay is to consider, in a short and direct
+way, some of the limits that are set by sound reason to the practice of
+the various arts of accommodation, economy, management, conformity, or
+compromise. The right of thinking freely and acting independently, of
+using our minds without excessive awe of authority, and shaping our
+lives without unquestioning obedience to custom, is now a finally
+accepted principle in some sense or other with every school of thought
+that has the smallest chance of commanding the future. Under what
+circumstances does the exercise and vindication of the right, thus
+conceded in theory, become a positive duty in practice? If the majority
+are bound to tolerate dissent from the ruling opinions and beliefs,
+under what conditions and within what limitations is the dissentient
+imperatively bound to avail himself of this toleration? How far, and in
+what way, ought respect either for immediate practical convenience, or
+for current prejudices, to weigh against respect for truth? For how much
+is it well that the individual should allow the feelings and convictions
+of the many to count, when he comes to shape, to express, and to act
+upon his own feelings and convictions? Are we only to be permitted to
+defend general principles, on condition that we draw no practical
+inferences from them? Is every other idea to yield precedence and empire
+to existing circumstances, and is the immediate and universal
+workableness of a policy to be the main test of its intrinsic fitness?
+
+To attempt to answer all these questions fully would be nothing less
+than to attempt a compendium of life and duty in all their details, a
+Summa of cases of conscience, a guide to doubters at every point of the
+compass. The aim of the present writer is a comparatively modest one;
+namely, to seek one or two of the most general principles which ought
+to regulate the practice of compliance, and to suggest some of the
+bearings which they may have in their application to certain
+difficulties in modern matters of conduct.
+
+It is pretty plain that an inquiry of this kind needs to be fixed by
+reference to a given set of social circumstances tolerably well
+understood. There are some common rules as to the expediency of
+compromise and conformity, but their application is a matter of endless
+variety and the widest elasticity. The interesting and useful thing is
+to find the relation of these too vague rules to actual conditions; to
+transform them into practical guides and real interpreters of what is
+right and best in thought and conduct, in a special and definite kind of
+emergency. According to the current assumptions of the writer and the
+preacher, the one commanding law is that men should cling to truth and
+right, if the very heavens fall. In principle this is universally
+accepted. To the partisans of authority and tradition it is as much a
+commonplace as to the partisans of the most absolute and unflinching
+rationalism. Yet in practice all schools alike are forced to admit the
+necessity of a measure of accommodation in the very interests of truth
+itself. Fanatic is a name of such ill repute, exactly because one who
+deserves to be called by it injures good causes by refusing timely and
+harmless concession; by irritating prejudices that a wiser way of urging
+his own opinion might have turned aside; by making no allowances,
+respecting no motives, and recognising none of those qualifying
+principles, which are nothing less than necessary to make his own
+principle true and fitting in a given society. The interesting question
+in connection with compromise obviously turns upon the placing of the
+boundary that divides wise suspense in forming opinions, wise reserve in
+expressing them, and wise tardiness in trying to realise them, from
+unavowed disingenuousness and self-illusion, from voluntary
+dissimulation, and from indolence and pusillanimity. These are the three
+departments or provinces of compromise. Our subject is a question of
+boundaries.[1] And this question, being mainly one of time and
+circumstance, may be most satisfactorily discussed in relation to the
+time and the circumstances which we know best, or at least whose
+deficiencies and requirements are most pressingly visible to us.
+
+Though England counts her full share of fearless truth-seekers in most
+departments of inquiry, yet there is on the whole no weakening, but a
+rather marked confirmation, of what has become an inveterate national
+characteristic, and has long been recognised as such; a profound
+distrust, namely, of all general principles; a profound dislike both of
+much reference to them, and of any disposition to invest them with
+practical authority; and a silent but most pertinacious measurement of
+philosophic truths by political tests. 'It is not at all easy, humanly
+speaking,' says one who has tried the experiment, 'to wind an Englishman
+up to the level of dogma.' The difficulty has extended further than the
+dogma of theology. The supposed antagonism between expediency and
+principle has been pressed further and further away from the little
+piece of true meaning that it ever could be rightly allowed to have,
+until it has now come to signify the paramount wisdom of counting the
+narrow, immediate, and personal expediency for everything, and the
+whole, general, ultimate, and completed expediency for nothing.
+Principle is only another name for a proposition stating the terms of
+one of these larger expediencies. When principle is held in contempt, or
+banished to the far dreamland of the philosopher and the student, with
+an affectation of reverence that in a materialist generation is in truth
+the most overweening kind of contempt, this only means that men are
+thinking much of the interests of to-day, and little of the more ample
+interests of the many days to come. It means that the conditions of the
+time are unfriendly to the penetration and the breadth of vision which
+disclose to us the whole range of consequences that follow on certain
+kinds of action or opinion, and unfriendly to the intrepidity and
+disinterestedness which make us willing to sacrifice our own present
+ease or near convenience, in the hope of securing higher advantages for
+others or for ourselves in the future.
+
+Let us take politics, for example. What is the state of the case with
+us, if we look at national life in its broadest aspect? A German has his
+dream of a great fatherland which shall not only be one and
+consolidated, but shall in due season win freedom for itself, and be as
+a sacred hearth whence others may borrow the warmth of freedom and order
+for themselves. A Spaniard has his vision either of militant loyalty to
+God and the saints and the exiled line of his kings, or else of devotion
+to the newly won liberty and to the raising up of his fallen nation. An
+American, in the midst of the political corruption which for the moment
+obscures the great democratic experiment, yet has his imagination
+kindled by the size and resources of his land, and his enthusiasm fired
+by the high destinies which he believes to await its people in the
+centuries to come. A Frenchman, republican or royalist, with all his
+frenzies and 'fool-fury' of red or white, still has his hope and dream
+and aspiration, with which to enlarge his life and lift him on an ample
+pinion out from the circle of a poor egoism. What stirs the hope and
+moves the aspiration of our Englishman? Surely nothing either in the
+heavens above or on the earth beneath. The English are as a people
+little susceptible in the region of the imagination. But they have done
+good work in the world, acquired a splendid historic tradition of stout
+combat for good causes, founded a mighty and beneficent empire; and
+they have done all this notwithstanding their deficiencies of
+imagination. Their lands have been the home of great and forlorn causes,
+though they could not always follow the transcendental flights of their
+foreign allies and champions. If Englishmen were not strong in
+imagination, they were what is better and surer, strong in their hold of
+the great emancipating principles. What great political cause, her own
+or another's, is England befriending to-day? To say that no great cause
+is left, is to tell us that we have reached the final stage of human
+progress, and turned over the last leaf in the volume of human
+improvements. The day when this is said and believed marks the end of a
+nation's life. Is it possible that, after all, our old protestant
+spirit, with its rationality, its austerity, its steady political
+energy, has been struck with something of the mortal fatigue that seizes
+catholic societies after their fits of revolution?
+
+We need not forget either the atrocities or the imbecilities which mark
+the course of modern politics on the Continent. I am as keenly alive as
+any one to the levity of France, and the [Greek: hubris] of Germany. It
+may be true that the ordinary Frenchman is in some respects the victim
+of as poor an egoism as that of the ordinary Englishman; and that the
+American has no advantage over us in certain kinds of magnanimous
+sentiment. What is important is the mind and attitude, not of the
+ordinary man, but of those who should be extraordinary. The decisive
+sign of the elevation of a nation's life is to be sought among those who
+lead or ought to lead. The test of the health of a people is to be found
+in the utterances of those who are its spokesmen, and in the action of
+those whom it accepts or chooses to be its chiefs. We have to look to
+the magnitude of the issues and the height of the interests which engage
+its foremost spirits. What are the best men in a country striving for?
+And is the struggle pursued intrepidly and with a sense of its size and
+amplitude, or with creeping foot and blinking eye? The answer to these
+questions is the answer to the other question, whether the best men in
+the country are small or great. It is a commonplace that the manner of
+doing things is often as important as the things done. And it has been
+pointed out more than once that England's most creditable national
+action constantly shows itself so poor and mean in expression that the
+rest of Europe can discern nothing in it but craft and sinister
+interest. Our public opinion is often rich in wisdom, but we lack the
+courage of our wisdom. We execute noble achievements, and then are best
+pleased to find shabby reasons for them.
+
+There is a certain quality attaching alike to thought and expression and
+action, for which we may borrow the name of grandeur. It has been
+noticed, for instance, that Bacon strikes and impresses us, not merely
+by the substantial merit of what he achieved, but still more by a
+certain greatness of scheme and conception. This quality is not a mere
+idle decoration. It is not a theatrical artifice of mask or buskin, to
+impose upon us unreal impressions of height and dignity. The added
+greatness is real. Height of aim and nobility of expression are true
+forces. They grow to be an obligation upon us. A lofty sense of personal
+worth is one of the surest elements of greatness. That the lion should
+love to masquerade in the ass's skin is not modesty and reserve, but
+imbecility and degradation. And that England should wrap herself in the
+robe of small causes and mean reasons is the more deplorable, because
+there is no nation in the world the substantial elements of whose power
+are so majestic and imperial as our own. Our language is the most widely
+spoken of all tongues, its literature is second to none in variety and
+power. Our people, whether English or American, have long ago superseded
+the barbarous device of dictator and Caesar by the manly arts of
+self-government. We understand that peace and industry are the two most
+indispensable conditions of modern civilisation, and we draw the lines
+of our policy in accordance with such a conviction. We have had imposed
+upon us by the unlucky prowess of our ancestors the task of ruling a
+vast number of millions of alien dependents. We undertake it with a
+disinterestedness, and execute it with a skill of administration, to
+which history supplies no parallel, and which, even if time should show
+that the conditions of the problem were insoluble, will still remain
+for ever admirable. All these are elements of true pre-eminence. They
+are calculated to inspire us with the loftiest consciousness of national
+life. They ought to clothe our voice with authority, to nerve our action
+by generous resolution, and to fill our counsels with weightiness and
+power.
+
+Within the last forty years England has lost one by one each of those
+enthusiasms which may have been illusions,--some of them undoubtedly
+were so,--but which at least testified to the existence among us, in a
+very considerable degree, of a vivid belief in the possibility of
+certain broad general theories being true and right, as well as in the
+obligation of making them lights to practical conduct and desire. People
+a generation ago had eager sympathy with Hungary, with Italy, with
+Poland, because they were deeply impressed by the doctrine of
+nationalities. They had again a generous and energetic hatred of such an
+institution as the negro slavery of America, because justice and
+humanity and religion were too real and potent forces within their
+breasts to allow them to listen to those political considerations by
+which American statesmen used to justify temporising and compromise.
+They had strong feelings about Parliamentary Reform, because they were
+penetrated by the principle that the possession of political power by
+the bulk of a society is the only effective security against sinister
+government; or else by the principle that participation in public
+activity, even in the modest form of an exercise of the elective
+franchise, is an elevating and instructing agency; or perhaps by the
+principle that justice demands that those who are compelled to obey laws
+and pay national taxes should have a voice in making the one and
+imposing the other.
+
+It may be said that the very fate of these aspirations has had a
+blighting effect on public enthusiasm and the capacity of feeling it.
+Not only have most of them now been fulfilled, and so passed from
+aspiration to actuality, but the results of their fulfilment have been
+so disappointing as to make us wonder whether it is really worth while
+to pray, when to have our prayers granted carries the world so very
+slight a way forward. The Austrian is no longer in Italy; the Pope has
+ceased to be master in Rome; the patriots of Hungary are now in
+possession of their rights, and have become friends of their old
+oppressors; the negro slave has been transformed into an American
+citizen. At home, again, the gods have listened to our vows. Parliament
+has been reformed, and the long-desired mechanical security provided for
+the voter's freedom. We no longer aspire after all these things, you may
+say, because our hopes have been realised and our dreams have come true.
+It is possible that the comparatively prosaic results before our eyes at
+the end of all have thrown a chill over our political imagination. What
+seemed so glorious when it was far off, seems perhaps a little poor now
+that it is near; and this has damped the wing of political fancy. The
+old aspirations have vanished, and no new ones have arisen in their
+place. Be the cause what it may, I should express the change in this
+way, that the existing order of facts, whatever it may be, now takes a
+hardly disputed precedence with us over ideas, and that the coarsest
+political standard is undoubtingly and finally applied over the whole
+realm of human thought.
+
+The line taken up by the press and the governing classes of England
+during the American Civil War may serve to illustrate the kind of mood
+which we conceive to be gaining firmer hold than ever of the national
+mind. Those who sympathised with the Southern States listened only to
+political arguments, and very narrow and inefficient political
+arguments, as it happened, when they ought to have seen that here was an
+issue which involved not only political ideas, but moral and religious
+ideas as well. That is to say, the ordinary political tests were not
+enough to reveal the entire significance of the crisis, nor were the
+political standards proper for measuring the whole of the expediencies
+hanging in the balance. The conflict could not be adequately gauged by
+such questions as whether the Slave States had or had not a
+constitutional right to establish an independent government; whether the
+Free States were animated by philanthropy or by love of empire; whether
+it was to the political advantage of England that the American Union
+should be divided and consequently weakened. Such questions were not
+necessarily improper in themselves, and we can imagine circumstances in
+which they might be not only proper but decisive. But, the
+circumstances being what they were, the narrower expediencies of
+ordinary politics were outweighed by one of those supreme and
+indefeasible expediencies which are classified as moral. These are, in
+other words, the higher, wider, more binding, and transcendent part of
+the master art of social wellbeing.
+
+Here was only one illustration of the growing tendency to substitute the
+narrowest political point of view for all the other ways of regarding
+the course of human affairs, and to raise the limitations which
+practical exigencies may happen to set to the application of general
+principles, into the very place of the principles themselves. Nor is the
+process of deteriorating conviction confined to the greater or noisier
+transactions of nations. It is impossible that it should be so. That
+process is due to causes which affect the mental temper an a whole, and
+pour round us an atmosphere that enervates our judgment from end to end,
+not more in politics than in morality, and not more in morality than in
+philosophy, in art, and in religion. Perhaps this tendency never showed
+itself more offensively than when the most important newspaper in the
+country criticised our great naturalist's scientific speculations as to
+the descent of man, from the point of view of property, intelligence,
+and a stake in the country, and severely censured him for revealing his
+particular zoological conclusions to the general public, at a moment
+when the sky of Paris was red with the incendiary flames of the Commune.
+It would be hard to reduce the transformation of all truth into a
+subordinate department of daily politics, to a more gross and unseemly
+absurdity.
+
+The consequences of such a transformation, of putting immediate social
+convenience in the first place, and respect for truth in the second, are
+seen, as we have said, in a distinct and unmistakable lowering of the
+level of national life; a slack and lethargic quality about public
+opinion; a growing predominance of material, temporary, and selfish
+aims, over those which are generous, far-reaching, and spiritual; a
+deadly weakening of intellectual conclusiveness, and clear-shining moral
+illumination, and, lastly, of a certain stoutness of self-respect for
+which England was once especially famous. A plain categorical
+proposition is becoming less and less credible to average minds. Or at
+least the slovenly willingness to hold two directly contradictory
+propositions at one and the same time is becoming more and more common.
+In religion, morals, and politics, the suppression of your true opinion,
+if not the positive profession of what you hold to be a false opinion,
+is hardly ever counted a vice, and not seldom even goes for virtue and
+solid wisdom. One is conjured to respect the beliefs of others, but
+forbidden to claim the same respect for one's own.
+
+This dread of the categorical proposition might be creditable, if it
+sprang from attachment to a very high standard of evidence, or from a
+deep sense of the relative and provisional quality of truth. There might
+even be a plausible defence set up for it, if it sprang from that
+formulated distrust of the energetic rational judgment in comparison
+with the emotional, affective, contemplative parts of man, which
+underlies the various forms of religious mysticism. If you look closely
+into our present mood, it is seen to be the product mainly and above all
+of a shrinking deference to the _status quo_, not merely as having a
+claim not to be lightly dealt with, which every serious man concedes,
+but as being the last word and final test of truth and justice. Physical
+science is allowed to be the sphere of accurate reasoning and distinct
+conclusions, but in morals and politics, instead of admitting that these
+subjects have equally a logic of their own, we silently suspect all
+first principles, and practically deny the strict inferences from
+demonstrated premisses. Faith in the soundness of given general theories
+of right and wrong melts away before the first momentary triumph of
+wrong, or the first passing discouragement in enforcing right.
+
+Our robust political sense, which has discovered so many of the secrets
+of good government, which has given us freedom with order, and popular
+administration without corruption, and unalterable respect for law along
+with indelible respect for individual right, this, which has so long
+been our strong point, is fast becoming our weakness and undoing. For
+the extension of the ways of thinking which are proper in politics, to
+other than political matter, means at the same time the depravation of
+the political sense itself. Not only is social expediency effacing the
+many other points of view that men ought to take of the various facts of
+life and thought: the idea of social expediency itself is becoming a
+dwarfed and pinched idea. Ours is the country where love of constant
+improvement ought to be greater than anywhere else, because fear of
+revolution is less. Yet the art of politics is growing to be as meanly
+conceived as all the rest At elections the national candidate has not
+often a chance against the local candidate, nor the man of a principle
+against the man of a class. In parliament we are admonished on high
+authority that 'the policy of a party is not the carrying out of the
+opinion of any section of it, but the general consensus of the whole,'
+which seems to be a hierophantic manner of saying that the policy of a
+party is one thing, and the principle which makes it a party is another
+thing, and that men who care very strongly about anything are to
+surrender that and the hope of it, for the sake of succeeding in
+something about which they care very little or not at all. This is our
+modern way of giving politicians heart for their voyage, of inspiring
+them with resoluteness and self-respect, with confidence in the worth of
+their cause and enthusiasm for its success. Thoroughness is a mistake,
+and nailing your flag to the mast a bit of delusive heroics. Think
+wholly of to-day, and not at all of to-morrow. Beware of the high and
+hold fast to the safe. Dismiss conviction, and study general consensus.
+No zeal, no faith, no intellectual trenchancy, but as much low-minded
+geniality and trivial complaisance as you please.
+
+Of course, all these characteristics of our own society mark tendencies
+that are common enough in all societies. They often spring from an
+indolence and enervation that besets a certain number of people, however
+invigorating the general mental climate may be. What we are now saying
+is that the general mental climate itself has, outside of the domain of
+physical science, ceased to be invigorating; that, on the contrary, it
+fosters the more inglorious predispositions of men, and encourages a
+native willingness, already so strong, to acquiesce in a lazy
+accommodation with error, an ignoble economy of truth, and a vicious
+compromise of the permanent gains of adhering to a sound general
+principle, for the sake of the temporary gains of departing from it.
+
+
+Without attempting an elaborate analysis of the causes that have brought
+about this debilitation of mental tone, we may shortly remind ourselves
+of one or two facts in the political history, in the intellectual
+history, and in the religious history of this generation, which perhaps
+help us to understand a phenomenon that we have all so keen an interest
+both in understanding and in modifying.
+
+To begin with what lies nearest to the surface. The most obvious agency
+at work in the present exaggeration of the political standard as the
+universal test of truth, is to be found in some contemporary incidents.
+The influence of France upon England since the revolution of 1848 has
+tended wholly to the discredit of abstract theory and general reasoning
+among us, in all that relates to politics, morals, and religion. In
+1848, not in 1789, questions affecting the fundamental structure and
+organic condition of the social union came for the first time into
+formidable prominence. For the first time those questions and the
+answers to them were stated in articulate formulas and distinct
+theories. They were not merely written in books; they so fascinated the
+imagination and inflamed the hopes of the time, that thousands of men
+were willing actually to go down into the streets and to shed their
+blood for the realisation of their generous dream of a renovated
+society. The same sight has been seen since, and even when we do not see
+it, we are perfectly aware that the same temper is smouldering. Those
+were premature attempts to convert a crude aspiration into a political
+reality, and to found a new social order on a number of umcompromising
+deductions from abstract principles of the common weal. They have had
+the natural effect of deepening the English dislike of a general theory,
+even when such a theory did no more than profess to announce a remote
+object of desire, and not the present goal of immediate effort.
+
+It is not only the Socialists who are responsible for the low esteem
+into which a spirit of political generalisation has fallen in other
+countries, in consequence of French experience. Mr. Mill has described
+in a well-known passage the characteristic vice of the leaders of all
+French parties, and not of the democratic party more than any other.
+'The commonplaces of politics in France,' he says, 'are large and
+sweeping practical maxims, from which, as ultimate premisses, men reason
+downwards to particular applications, and this they call being logical
+and consistent. For instance, they are perpetually arguing that such and
+such a measure ought to be adopted, because it is a consequence of the
+principle on which the form of government is founded; of the principle
+of legitimacy, or the principle of the sovereignty of the people. To
+which it may be answered that if these be really practical principles,
+they must rest on speculative grounds; the sovereignty of the people
+(for example) must be a right foundation for government, because a
+government thus constituted tends to produce certain beneficial effects.
+Inasmuch, however, as no government produces all possible beneficial
+effects, but all are attended with more or fewer inconveniences; and
+since these cannot be combated by means drawn from the very causes which
+produce them, it would often be a much stronger recommendation of some
+practical arrangement that it does not follow from what is called the
+general principle of the government, than that it does,'[2]
+
+The English feeling for compromise is on its better side the result of a
+shrewd and practical, though informal, recognition of a truth which the
+writer has here expressed in terms of Method. The disregard which the
+political action of France has repeatedly betrayed of a principle really
+so important has hitherto strengthened our own regard for it, until it
+has not only made us look on its importance as exclusive and final, but
+has extended our respect for the right kind of compromise to wrong and
+injurious kinds.
+
+A minor event, which now looks much less important than it did not many
+years ago, but which still had real influence in deteriorating moral
+judgment, was the career of a late sovereign of France. Some apparent
+advantages followed for a season from a rule which had its origin in a
+violent and perfidious usurpation, and which was upheld by all the arts
+of moral corruption, political enervation, and military repression. The
+advantages lasted long enough to create in this country a steady and
+powerful opinion that Napoleon the Third's early crime was redeemed by
+the seeming prosperity which followed. The shocking prematureness of
+this shallow condonation is now too glaringly visible for any one to
+deny it. Not often in history has the great truth that 'morality is the
+nature of things' received corroboration so prompt and timely. We need
+not commit ourselves to the optimistic or sentimental hypothesis that
+wickedness always fares ill in the world, or on the other hand that
+whoso hearkens diligently to the divine voice, and observes all the
+commandments to do them, shall be blessed in his basket and his store
+and all the work of his hand. The claims of morality to our allegiance,
+so far as its precepts are solidly established, rest on the same
+positive base as our faith in the truth of physical laws. Moral
+principles, when they are true, are at bottom only registered
+generalisations from experience. They record certain uniformities of
+antecedence and consequence in the region of human conduct Want of faith
+in the persistency of these uniformities is only a little less fatuous
+in the moral order than a corresponding want of faith would instantly
+disclose itself to be in the purely physical order. In both orders alike
+there is only too much of this kind of fatuousness, this readiness to
+believe that for once in our favour the stream shall flow up hill, that
+we may live in miasmatic air unpoisoned, that a government may depress
+the energy, the self-reliance, the public spirit of its citizens, and
+yet be able to count on these qualities whenever the government itself
+may have broken down, and left the country to make the best of such
+resources as are left after so severe and prolonged a drain. This is the
+sense in which morality is the nature of things. The system of the
+Second Empire was in the same sense an immoral system. Unless all the
+lessons of human experience were futile, and all the principles of
+political morality mere articles of pedantry, such a system must
+inevitably bring disaster, as we might have seen that it was sowing the
+seeds of disaster. Yet because the catastrophe lingered, opinion in
+England began to admit the possibility of evil being for this once good,
+and to treat any reference to the moral and political principles which
+condemned the imperial system, and all systems like it, beyond hope or
+appeal, as simply the pretext of a mutinous or Utopian impatience.
+
+This, however, is only one of the more superficial influences which have
+helped and fallen in with the working of profounder causes of weakened
+aspiration and impoverished moral energy, and of the substitution of
+latitudinarian acquiescence and faltering conviction for the
+whole-hearted assurance of better times. Of these deeper causes, the
+most important in the intellectual development of the prevailing forms
+of thought and sentiment is the growth of the Historic Method. Let us
+consider very shortly how the abuse of this method, and an unauthorised
+extension and interpretation of its conclusions, are likely to have had
+something to do with the enervation of opinion.
+
+The Historic Method may be described as the comparison of the forms of
+an idea, or a usage, or a belief, at any given time, with the earlier
+forms from which they were evolved, or the later forms into which they
+were developed, and the establishment, from such a comparison, of an
+ascending and descending order among the facts. It consists in the
+explanation of existing parts in the frame of society by connecting them
+with corresponding parts in some earlier frame; in the identification of
+present forms in the past, and past forms in the present. Its main
+process is the detection of corresponding customs, opinions, laws,
+beliefs, among different communities, and a grouping of them into
+general classes with reference to some one common feature. It is a
+certain way of seeking answers to various questions of origin, resting
+on the same general doctrine of evolution, applied to moral and social
+forms, as that which is being applied with so much ingenuity to the
+series of organic matter. The historic conception is a reference of
+every state of society to a particular stage in the evolution of its
+general conditions. Ideas of law, of virtue, of religion, of the
+physical universe, of history, of the social union itself, all march in
+a harmonious and inter-dependent order.
+
+Curiosity with reference to origins is for various reasons the most
+marked element among modern scientific tendencies. It covers the whole
+field, moral, intellectual, and physical, from the smile or the frown on
+a man's face, up to the most complex of the ideas in his mind; from the
+expression of his emotions, to their root and relations with one another
+in his inmost organisation. As an ingenious writer, too soon lost to our
+political literature, has put it:--'If we wanted to describe one of the
+most marked results, perhaps the most marked result, of late thought, we
+should say that by it everything is made _an antiquity_. When in former
+times our ancestors thought of an antiquarian, they described him as
+occupied with coins and medals and Druids' stones. But now there are
+other relics; indeed all matter is become such. Man himself has to the
+eye of science become an antiquity. She tries to read, is beginning to
+read, knows she ought to read, in the frame of each man the result of a
+whole history of all his life, and what he is and what makes him so.'[3]
+Character is considered less with reference to its absolute qualities
+than as an interesting scene strewn with scattered rudiments, survivals,
+inherited predispositions. Opinions are counted rather as phenomena to
+be explained than as matters of truth and falsehood. Of usages, we are
+beginning first of all to think where they came from, and secondarily
+whether they are the most fitting and convenient that men could be got
+to accept. In the last century men asked of a belief or a story, Is it
+true? We now ask, How did men come to take it for true? In short the
+relations among social phenomena which now engage most attention, are
+relations of original source, rather than those of actual consistency in
+theory and actual fitness in practice. The devotees of the current
+method are more concerned with the pedigree and genealogical connections
+of a custom or an idea than with its own proper goodness or badness, its
+strength or its weakness.
+
+Though there is no necessary or truly logical association between
+systematic use of this method rightly limited, and a slack and slipshod
+preference of vague general forms over definite ideas, yet every one can
+see its tendency, if uncorrected, to make men shrink from importing
+anything like absolute quality into their propositions. We can see also,
+what is still worse, its tendency to place individual robustness and
+initiative in the light of superfluities, with which a world that goes
+by evolution can very well dispense. Men easily come to consider
+clearness and positiveness in their opinions, staunchness in holding and
+defending them, and fervour in carrying them into action, as equivocal
+virtues of very doubtful perfection, in a state of things where every
+abuse has after all had a defensible origin; where every error has, we
+must confess, once been true relatively to other parts of belief in
+those who held the error; and where all parts of life are so bound up
+with one another, that it is of no avail to attack one evil, unless you
+attack many more at the same time. This is a caricature of the real
+teaching of the Historic Method, of which we shall have to speak
+presently; but it is one of those caricatures which the natural sloth in
+such matters, and the indigenous intellectual haziness of the majority
+of men, make them very willing to take for the true philosophy of
+things.
+
+
+Then there is the newspaper press, that huge engine for keeping
+discussion on a low level, and making the political test final. To take
+off the taxes on knowledge was to place a heavy tax on broad and
+independent opinion. The multiplication of journals 'delivering brawling
+judgments unashamed on all things all day long,' has done much to deaden
+the small stock of individuality in public verdicts. It has done much to
+make vulgar ways of looking at things and vulgar ways of speaking of
+them stronger and stronger, by formulating and repeating and
+stereotyping them incessantly from morning until afternoon, and from
+year's end to year's end. For a newspaper must live, and to live it must
+please, and its conductors suppose, perhaps not altogether rightly, that
+it can only please by being very cheerful towards prejudices, very
+chilly to general theories, loftily disdainful to the men of a
+principle. Their one cry to an advocate of improvement is some sagacious
+silliness about recognising the limits of the practicable in politics,
+and seeing the necessity of adapting theories to facts. As if the fact
+of taking a broader and wiser view than the common crowd disqualifies a
+man from knowing what the view of the common crowd happens to be, and
+from estimating it at the proper value for practical purposes. Why are
+the men who despair of improvement to be the only persons endowed with
+the gift of discerning the practicable? It is, however, only too easy to
+understand how a journal, existing for a day, should limit its view to
+the possibilities of the day, and how, being most closely affected by
+the particular, it should coldly turn its back upon all that is general.
+And it is easy, too, to understand the reaction of this intellectual
+timorousness upon the minds of ordinary readers, who have too little
+natural force and too little cultivation to be able to resist the
+narrowing and deadly effect of the daily iteration of short-sighted
+commonplaces.
+
+
+Far the most penetrating of all the influences that are impairing the
+moral and intellectual nerve of our generation, remain still to be
+mentioned. The first of these is the immense increase of material
+prosperity, and the second is the immense decline in sincerity of
+spiritual interest. The evil wrought by the one fills up the measure of
+the evil wrought by the other. We have been, in spite of momentary
+declensions, on a flood tide of high profits and a roaring trade, and
+there is nothing like a roaring trade for engendering latitudinarians.
+The effect of many possessions, especially if they be newly acquired, in
+slackening moral vigour, is a proverb. Our new wealth is hardly leavened
+by any tradition of public duty such as lingers among the English
+nobles, nor as yet by any common custom of devotion to public causes,
+such as seems to live and grow in the United States. Under such
+conditions, with new wealth come luxury and love of ease and that fatal
+readiness to believe that God has placed us in the best of possible
+worlds, which so lowers men's aims and unstrings their firmness of
+purpose. Pleasure saps high interests, and the weakening of high
+interests leaves more undisputed room for pleasure. Management and
+compromise appear among the permitted arts, because they tend to
+comfort, and comfort is the end of ends, comprehending all ends. Not
+truth is the standard, but the politic and the reputable. Are we to
+suppose that it is firm persuasion of the greater scripturalness of
+episcopacy that turns the second generation of dissenting manufacturers
+in our busy Lancashire into churchmen? Certainly such conversions do no
+violence to the conscience of the proselyte, for he is intellectually
+indifferent, a spiritual neuter.
+
+That brings us to the root of the matter, the serious side of a
+revolution that in this social consequence is so unspeakably ignoble.
+This root of the matter is the slow transformation now at work of the
+whole spiritual basis of thought. Every age is in some sort an age of
+transition, but our own is characteristically and cardinally an epoch of
+transition in the very foundations of belief and conduct. The old hopes
+have grown pale, the old fears dim; strong sanctions are become weak,
+and once vivid faiths very numb. Religion, whatever destinies may be in
+store for it, is at least for the present hardly any longer an organic
+power. It is not that supreme, penetrating, controlling, decisive part
+of a man's life, which it has been, and will be again. The work of
+destruction is all the more perturbing to timorous spirits, and more
+harassing even to doughtier spirits, for being done impalpably,
+indirectly, almost silently and as if by unseen hands. Those who dwell
+in the tower of ancient faiths look about them in constant
+apprehension, misgiving, and wonder, with the hurried uneasy mien of
+people living amid earthquakes. The air seems to their alarms to be full
+of missiles, and all is doubt, hesitation, and shivering expectancy.
+Hence a decisive reluctance to commit one's self. Conscience has lost
+its strong and on-pressing energy, and the sense of personal
+responsibility lacks sharpness of edge. The native hue of spiritual
+resolution is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of distracted, wavering,
+confused thought. The souls of men have become void. Into the void have
+entered in triumph the seven devils of Secularity.
+
+And all this hesitancy, this tampering with conviction for fear of its
+consequences, this want of faithful dealing in the highest matters, is
+being intensified, aggravated, driven inwards like a fatal disorder
+toward the vital parts, by the existence of a State Church. While
+thought stirs and knowledge extends, she remains fast moored by ancient
+formularies. While the spirit of man expands in search after new light,
+and feels energetically for new truth, the spirit of the Church is
+eternally entombed within the four corners of acts of parliament. Her
+ministers vow almost before they have crossed the threshold of manhood
+that they will search no more. They virtually swear that they will to
+the end of their days believe what they believe then, before they have
+had time either to think or to know the thoughts of others. They take
+oath, in other words, to lead mutilated lives. If they cannot keep this
+solemn promise, they have at least every inducement that ordinary human
+motives can supply, to conceal their breach of it. The same system which
+begins by making mental indolence a virtue and intellectual narrowness a
+part of sanctity, ends by putting a premium on something too like
+hypocrisy. Consider the seriousness of fastening up in these bonds some
+thousands of the most instructed and intelligent classes in the country,
+the very men who would otherwise be best fitted from position and
+opportunities for aiding a little in the long, difficult, and plainly
+inevitable work of transforming opinion. Consider the waste of
+intelligence, and what is assuredly not less grave, the positive
+dead-weight and thick obstruction, by which an official hierarchy so
+organised must paralyse mental independence in a community.
+
+We know the kind of man whom this system delights to honour. He was
+described for us five and thirty years ago by a master hand. 'Mistiness
+is the mother of wisdom. A man who can set down half a dozen general
+propositions which escape from destroying one another only by being
+diluted into truisms; who can hold the balance between opposites so
+skilfully as to do without fulcrum or beam; who never enunciates a truth
+without guarding himself against being supposed to exclude the
+contradictory,--who holds that scripture is the only authority, yet that
+the Church is to be deferred to, that faith only justifies, yet that it
+does not justify without works, that grace does not depend upon the
+sacraments, yet is not given without them, that bishops are a divine
+ordinance, yet that those who have them not are in the same religious
+condition as those who have,--this is your safe man and the hope of the
+Church; this is what the Church is said to want, not party men, but
+sensible, temperate, sober, well-judging persons, to guide it through
+the channel of no meaning, between the Scylla and Charybdis of Aye and
+No.'[4] The writer then thought that such a type could not endure, and
+that the Church must become more real. On the contrary, her reality is
+more phantom-like now than it was then. She is the sovereign pattern and
+exemplar of management, of the triumph of the political method in
+spiritual things, and of the subordination of ideas to the _status quo_.
+
+It is true that all other organised priesthoods are also bodies which
+move within formularies even more inelastic than those of the
+Establishment. But then they have not the same immense social power, nor
+the same temptations to make all sacrifices to preserve it. They affect
+the intellectual temper of large numbers of people, but the people whom
+they affect are not so strongly identified with the greater organs of
+the national life. The State Church is bound up in the minds of the most
+powerful classes with a given ordering of social arrangements, and the
+consequence of this is that the teachers of the Church have reflected
+back upon thorn a sense of responsibility for these arrangements, which
+obscures their spirituality, clogs their intellectual energy and mental
+openness, and turns them into a political army of obstruction to new
+ideas. They feel themselves to a certain extent discharged from the
+necessity of recognising the tremendous conflict in the region of belief
+that goes on around them, just as if they were purely civil
+administrators, concerned only with the maintenance of the present
+order. None of this is true of the private Churches. Their teachers and
+members regard belief as something wholly independent of the civil
+ordering of things. However little enlightened in some respects, however
+hostile to certain of the ideas by which it is sought to replace their
+own, they are at least representatives of the momentous principle of our
+individual responsibility for the truth of our opinions. They may bring
+their judgments to conclusions that are less in accord with modern
+tendencies than those of one or two schools that still see their way to
+subscribing Anglican articles and administering Anglican rites. At any
+rate, they admit that the use of his judgment is a duty incumbent on the
+individual, and a duty to be discharged without reference to any
+external considerations whatever, political or otherwise. This is an
+elevating, an exhilarating principle, however deficiencies of culture
+may have narrowed the sphere of its operations. It is because a State
+Church is by its very conception hostile to such a principle, that we
+are justified in counting it apart from the private Churches with all
+their faults, and placing it among the agencies that weaken the vigour
+of a national conscience and check the free play and access of
+intellectual light.
+
+Here we may leave the conditions that have made an inquiry as to some of
+the limits of compromise, which must always be an interesting and
+important subject, one of especial interest and importance to ourselves
+at present. Is any renovation of the sacredness of principle a possible
+remedy for some of these elements of national deterioration? They will
+not disappear until the world has grown into possession of a new
+doctrine. When that comes, all other good things will follow. What we
+have to remember is that the new doctrine itself will never come, except
+to spirits predisposed to their own liberation. Our day of small
+calculations and petty utilities must first pass away; our vision of the
+true expediencies must reach further and deeper; our resolution to
+search for the highest verities, to give up all and follow them, must
+first become the supreme part of ourselves.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: See below, ch. iii.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _System of Logic_, bk. vi. ch. xi.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Bagehot.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Dr. J.H. Newman's _Essays Critical and Historical_, vol. i.
+p. 301.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR.
+
+ _Das Wahre fördert; aus dem Irrthum entwickelt
+ sich nichts, er verwickeltuns nur.--_
+ GOETHE.
+
+At the outset of an inquiry how far existing facts ought to be allowed
+to overrule ideas and principles that are at variance with them, a
+preliminary question lies in our way, about which it may be well to say
+something. This is the question of a dual doctrine. In plainer words,
+the question whether it is expedient that the more enlightened classes
+in a community should upon system not only possess their light in
+silence, but whether they should openly encourage a doctrine for the
+less enlightened classes which they do not believe to be true for
+themselves, while they regard it as indispensably useful in the case of
+less fortunate people. An eminent teacher tells us how after he had
+once succeeded in presenting the principle of Necessity to his own mind
+in a shape which seemed to bring with it all the advantages of the
+principle of Free Will, he 'no longer suffered under the burden so heavy
+to one who aims at being a reformer in opinions, of thinking one
+doctrine true, and the contrary doctrine morally beneficial.'[5] The
+discrepancy which this writer thought a heavy burden has struck others
+as the basis of a satisfactory solution.
+
+ Nil dulcius est bene quam munita tenere
+ Edita doctrina sapientum templa serena,
+ Despicere unde queas alios passimque videre
+ Errare atque viam palantes quaerere vitae.
+
+The learned are to hold the true doctrine; the unlearned are to be
+taught its morally beneficial contrary. 'Let the Church,' it has been
+said, 'admit two descriptions of believers, those who are for the
+letter, and those who hold by the spirit. At a certain point in rational
+culture, belief in the supernatural becomes for many an impossibility;
+do not force such persons to wear a cowl of lead. Do not you meddle with
+what we teach or write, and then we will not dispute the common people
+with you; do not contest our place in the school and the academy, and
+then we will surrender to your hands the country school.'[6] This is
+only a very courageous and definite way of saying what a great many less
+accomplished persons than M. Renan have silently in their hearts, and in
+England quite as extensively as in France. They do not believe in hell,
+for instance, but they think hell a useful fiction for the lower
+classes. They would deeply regret any change in the spirit or the
+machinery of public instruction which would release the lower classes
+from so wholesome an error. And as with hell, so with other articles of
+the supernatural system; the existence of a Being who will distribute
+rewards and penalties in a future state, the permanent sentience of each
+human personality, the vigilant supervision of our conduct, as well as
+our inmost thoughts and desires, by the heavenly powers; and so forth.
+
+Let us discuss this matter impersonally, without reference to our own
+opinions and without reference to the evidence for or against their
+truth. I am not speaking now of those who hold all these ideas to be
+certainly true, or highly probable, and who at the same time
+incidentally insist on the great usefulness of such ideas in confirming
+morality and producing virtuous types of character. With such persons,
+of course, there is no question of a dual doctrine. They entertain
+certain convictions themselves, and naturally desire to have their
+influence extended over others. The proposition which we have to
+consider is of another kind. It expresses the notions of those who--to
+take the most important kind of illustration--think untrue the popular
+ideas of supernatural interference in our obscure human affairs; who
+think untrue the notion of the prolongation of our existence after death
+to fulfil the purpose of the supernatural powers; or at least who think
+them so extremely improbable that no reasonable man or woman, once
+awakened to a conviction of this improbability, would thenceforth be
+capable of receiving effective check or guidance from beliefs, that
+would have sunk slowly down to the level of doubtful guesses. We have
+now to deal with those who while taking this view of certain doctrines,
+still declare them to be indispensable for restraining from anti-social
+conduct all who are not acute or instructed enough to see through them.
+In other words, they think error useful, and that it may be the best
+thing for society that masses of men should cheat and deceive themselves
+in their most fervent aspirations and their deepest assurances. This is
+the furthest extreme to which the empire of existing facts over
+principles can well be imagined to go. It lies at the root of every
+discussion upon the limits which separate lawful compromise or
+accommodation from palpable hypocrisy.
+
+It will probably be said that according to the theory of the school of
+which M. Renan is the most eloquent representative, the common people
+are not really cheating themselves or being cheated. Indeed M. Renan
+himself has expatiated on the charm of seeing figures of the ideal in
+the cottages of the poor, images representing no reality, and so forth.
+'What a delight,' he cries, 'for the man who is borne down by six days
+of toil to come on the seventh to rest upon his knees, to contemplate
+the tall columns, a vault, arches, an altar; to listen to the chanting,
+to hear moral and consoling words!'[7] The dogmas which criticism
+attacks are not for these poor people 'the object of an explicit
+affirmation,' and therefore there is no harm in them; 'it is the
+privilege of pure sentiment to be invulnerable, and to play with poison
+without being hurt by it.' In other words, the dogmas are false, but the
+liturgy, as a performance stirring the senses of awe, reverence,
+susceptibility to beauty of various kinds, appeals to and satisfies a
+sentiment that is both true and indispensable in the human mind. More
+than this, in the two or three supreme moments of life to which men look
+forward and on which they look back,--at birth, at the passing of the
+threshold into fulness of life, at marriage, at death,--the Church is
+present to invest the hour with a certain solemn and dignified charm.
+That is the way in which the instructed are to look at the services of a
+Church, after they have themselves ceased to believe its faith, us a
+true account of various matters which it professes to account for
+truly.
+
+It will be perceived that this is not exactly the ground of those who
+think a number of what they confess to be untruths, wholesome for the
+common people for reasons of police, and who would maintain churches on
+the same principle on which they maintain the county constabulary. It is
+a psychological, not a political ground. It is on the whole a more true,
+as well as a far more exalted position. The human soul, they say, has
+these lovely and elevating aspirations; not to satisfy them is to leave
+man a dwarfed creature. Why quarrel with a system that leaves you to
+satisfy them in the true way, and does much to satisfy thorn in a false
+but not very harmful way among those who unfortunately have to sit in
+the darkness of the outer court?
+
+This is not a proper occasion for saying anything about the adequateness
+of the catholic, or any other special manner of fostering and solacing
+the religious impulses of men. We have to assume that the instructed
+class believe the catholic dogmas to be untrue, and yet wishes the
+uninstructed to be handed over to a system that reposes on the theory
+that these dogmas are superlatively true. What then is to be said of the
+tenableness of such a position? To the plain man it looks like a
+deliberate connivance at a plan for the propagation of error--assuming,
+as I say, for the moment, that these articles of belief are erroneous
+and contrary to fact and evidence. Ah, but, we are told, the people make
+no explicit affirmation of dogma; that does nothing for them; they are
+indifferent to it. A great variety of things might be said to this
+statement. We might ask, for instance, whether the people ever made an
+explicit affirmation of dogma in the past, or whether it was always the
+hazy indifferent matter which it is supposed to be now. If so, whether
+we shall not have to re-cast our most fundamental notions of the way in
+which Christian civilisation has been evolved. If not, and if people did
+once explicitly affirm dogma, when exactly was it that they ceased to do
+so?
+
+The answers to these questions would all go to show that at the time
+when religion was the great controlling and organising force in conduct,
+the prime elemental dogmas were accepted with the most vivid conviction
+of reality. I do not pretend that the common people followed all the
+inferences which the intellectual subtlety of the master-spirits of
+theology drew so industriously from the simple premisses of scripture
+and tradition. But assuredly dogma was at the foundation of the whole
+structure. When did it cease to be so? How was the structure supported,
+after you had altered this condition of things?
+
+Apart from this historic issue, the main question one would like to put
+to the upholder of duality of religion on this plea, is the simple one,
+whether the power of the ceremonial which charms him so much is not
+actually at this moment drawn wholly from dogma and the tradition of
+dogma; whether its truth is not explicitly affirmed to the unlettered
+man, and whether the inseparable connection between the dogma and the
+ceremonial is not constantly impressed upon him by the spiritual
+teachers to whom the dual system hands him and his order over for all
+time? If any one of those philosophic critics will take the trouble to
+listen to a few courses of sermons at the present day, and the remark
+applies not less to protestant than to catholic churches, he will find
+that instead of that '_parole morale et consolante_' which is so
+soothing to think of, the pulpit is now the home of fervid controversy
+and often exacerbated declamation in favour of ancient dogma against
+modern science. We do not say whether this is or is not the wisest line
+for the clergy to follow. We only press the fact against those who wish
+us to believe that dogma counts for nothing in the popular faith, and
+that therefore we need not be uneasy as to its effects.
+
+Next, one would say to those who think that all will go well if you
+divide the community into two classes, one privileged to use its own
+mind, the other privileged to have its mind used by a priesthood, that
+they overlook the momentous circumstance of these professional upholders
+of dogmatic systems being also possessed of a vast social influence in
+questions that naturally belong to another sphere. There is hardly a
+single great controversy in modern politics, where the statesman does
+not find himself in immediate contact with the real or supposed
+interests, and with the active or passive sentiment, of one of these
+religious systems. Therefore if the instructed or intellectually
+privileged class cheerfully leave the field open to men who, _ex
+hypothesi_, are presumed to be less instructed, narrower, more
+impenetrable by reason, and the partisans of the letter against the
+spirit, then this result follows. They are deliberately strengthening
+the hands of the persons least fitted by judgment, experience, and
+temper, for using such power rightly. And they are strengthening them
+not merely in dealing with religious matters, but, what is of more
+importance, in dealing with an endless variety of the gravest social and
+political matters. It is impossible to map out the exact dimensions of
+the field in which a man shall exercise his influence, and to which he
+is to be rigorously confined. Give men influence in one matter,
+especially if that be such a matter as religious belief and ceremonial,
+and it is simply impossible that this influence shall not extend with
+more or less effect over as much of the whole sphere of conduct as they
+may choose surrendering the common people without dispute or effort to
+organised priesthoods for religious purposes, you would be inevitably
+including a vast number of other purposes in the self-same destination.
+This does not in the least prejudice practical ways of dealing with
+certain existing circumstances, such as the propriety or justice of
+allowing a catholic people to have a catholic university. It is only an
+argument against erecting into a complete and definite formula the
+division of a society into two great castes, the one with a religion of
+the spirit, the other with a creed of the letter.
+
+Again, supposing that the enlightened caste were to consent to abandon
+the common people to what are assumed to be lower and narrower forms of
+truth,--which is after all little more than a fine phrase for forms of
+falsehood,--what can be more futile than to suppose that such a
+compromise will be listened to for a single moment by a caste whose
+first principle is that they are the possessors and ministers, not of an
+inferior or superior form of truth, but of the very truth itself,
+absolute, final, complete, divinely sent, infallibly interpreted? The
+disciples of the relative may afford to compromise. The disciples of the
+absolute, never.
+
+We shall see other objections as we go on to this state of things, in
+which a minority holds true opinions and abandons the majority to false
+ones. At the bottom of the advocacy of a dual doctrine slumbers the idea
+that there is no harm in men being mistaken, or at least only so little
+harm as is more than compensated for by the marked tranquillity in which
+their mistake may wrap them. This is not an idea merely that
+intellectual error is a pathological necessity of the mind, no more to
+be escaped than the pathological necessities which afflict and finally
+dissolve the body. That is historically true. It is an idea that error
+somehow in certain stages, where there is enough of it, actually does
+good, like vaccination. Well, the thesis of the present chapter is that
+erroneous opinion or belief, in itself and as such, can never be useful.
+This may seem a truism which everybody is willing to accept without
+demur. But it is one of those truisms which persons habitually forget
+and repudiate in practice, just because they have never made it real to
+themselves by considering and answering the objections that may be
+brought against it. We see this repudiation before our eyes every day.
+Thus for instance, parents theoretically take it for granted that error
+cannot be useful, while they are teaching or allowing others to teach
+their children what they, the parents, believe to be untrue. Thus
+husbands who think the common theology baseless and unmeaning, are found
+to prefer that their wives shall not question this theology nor neglect
+its rites. These are only two out of a hundred examples of the daily
+admission that error may be very useful to other people. I need hardly
+say that to deny this, as the commonplace to which this chapter is
+devoted denies it, is a different thing from denying the expediency of
+letting errors alone at a given time. That is another question, to be
+discussed afterwards. You may have a thoroughly vicious and dangerous
+enemy, and yet it may be expedient to choose your own hour and occasion
+for attacking him. 'The passage from error to truth,' in the words of
+Condorcet, 'may be accompanied by certain evils. Every great change
+necessarily brings some of these in its train; and though they may be
+always far below the evil you are for destroying, yet it ought to do
+what is possible to diminish them. It is not enough to do good; one must
+do it in a good way. No doubt we should destroy all errors, but as it is
+impossible to destroy them all in an instant, we should imitate a
+prudent architect who, when obliged to destroy a building, and knowing
+how its parts are united together, sets about its demolition in such a
+way as to prevent its fall from being dangerous.'[8]
+
+Those, let us note by the way, who are accustomed to think the moral
+tone of the eighteenth century low and gross compared with that of the
+nineteenth, may usefully contrast these just and prudent word? of
+caution in extirpating error, with M. Renan's invitation to men whom he
+considers wrong in their interpretation of religion, to plant their
+error as widely and deeply as they can; and who are moreover themselves
+supposed to be demoralised, or else they would not be likely to
+acquiesce in a previous surrender of the universities to men whom they
+think in mortal error. Apart however from M. Renan, Condorcet's words
+merely assert the duty of setting to work to help on the change from
+false to true opinions with prudence, and this every sensible man
+admits. Our position is that in estimating the situation, in counting up
+and balancing the expediencies of an attack upon error at this or that
+point, nothing is to be set to the credit of error as such, nor is there
+anything in its own operations or effects to entitle it to a moment's
+respite. Every one would admit this at once in the case of physical
+truths, though there are those who say that some of the time spent in
+the investigation of physical truths might be more advantageously
+devoted to social problems. But in the case of moral and religious
+truths or errors, people, if they admit that nothing is to be set to the
+credit of error as such, still constantly have a subtle and practically
+mischievous confusion in their minds between the possible usefulness of
+error, and the possible expediency of leaving it temporarily
+undisturbed. What happens in consequence of such a confusion is this.
+Men leave error undisturbed, because they accept in a loose way the
+proposition that a belief may be 'morally useful without being
+intellectually sustainable,' They disguise their own dissent from
+popular opinions, because they regard such opinions as useful to other
+people. We are not now discussing the case of those who embrace a creed
+for themselves, on the ground that, though they cannot demonstrate its
+truth to the understanding, yet they find it pregnant with moralising
+and elevating characteristics. We are thinking of a very different
+attitude--that, namely, of persons who believe a creed to be not more
+morally useful than it is intellectually sustainable, so far as they
+themselves are concerned. To them it is pure and uncompensated error.
+Yet from a vague and general idea that what is useless error to them may
+be useful to others, they insist on doing their best to perpetuate the
+system which spreads and consecrates the error. And how do they settle
+the question? They reckon up the advantages, and forget the drawbacks.
+They detect and dwell on one or two elements of utility in the false
+belief or the worn-out institution, and leave out of all account the
+elements that make in the other direction.
+
+Considering how much influence this vague persuasion has in encouraging
+a well-meaning hypocrisy in individuals, and a profound stagnation in
+societies, it may be well to examine the matter somewhat generally. Let
+us try to measure the force of some of the most usual pleas for error.
+
+I. A false opinion, it may be said, is frequently found to have
+clustering around it a multitude of excellent associations, which do far
+more good than the false opinion that supports them, does harm. In the
+middle ages, for instance, there was a belief that a holy man had the
+gift of routing demons, of healing the sick, and of working divers other
+miracles. Supposing that this belief was untrue, supposing that it was
+an error to attribute the sudden death of an incredible multitude of
+troublesome flies in a church to the fact of Saint Bernard having
+excommunicated them, what then? The mistaken opinion was still
+associated with a deep reverence for virtue and sanctity, and this was
+more valuable, than the error of the explanation of the death of the
+flies was noxious or degrading.
+
+The answer to this seems to be as follows. First, in making false
+notions the proofs or close associates of true ones, you are exposing
+the latter to the ruin which awaits the former. For example, if you have
+in the minds of children or servants associated honesty, industry,
+truthfulness, with the fear of hell-fire, then supposing this fear to
+become extinct in their minds,--which, being unfounded in truth, it is
+in constant risk of doing--the virtues associated with it are likely to
+be weakened exactly in proportion as that association was strong.
+
+Second, for all good habits in thought or conduct there are good and
+real reasons in the nature of things. To leave such habits attached to
+false opinions is to lessen the weight of these natural or spontaneous
+reasons, and so to do more harm in the long run than effacement of them
+seems for a time to do good. Most excellences in human character have a
+spontaneous root in our nature. Moreover if they had not, and where they
+have not, there is always a valid and real external defence for them.
+The unreal defence must be weaker than the real one, and the
+substitution of a weak for a strong defence, where both are to be had,
+is not useful but the very opposite.
+
+II. It is true, the objector would probably continue, that there is a
+rational defence for all excellences of conduct, as there is for all
+that is worthy and fitting in institutions. But the force of a rational
+defence lies in the rationality of the man to whom it is proffered. The
+arguments which persuade one trained in scientific habits of thought,
+only touch persons of the same kind. Character is not all pure reason.
+That fitness of things which you pronounce to be the foundation of good
+habits, may be borne in upon men, and may speak to them, through other
+channels than the syllogism. You assume a community of highly-trained
+wranglers and proficient sophisters. The plain fact is that, for the
+mass of men, use and wont, rude or gracious symbols, blind custom,
+prejudices, superstitions,--however erroneous in themselves, however
+inadequate to the conveyance of the best truth,--are the only safe
+guardians of the common virtues. In this sense, then, error may have its
+usefulness.
+
+A hundred years ago this apology for error was met by those high-minded
+and interesting men, the French believers in human perfectibility, with
+their characteristic dogma,--of which Rousseau was the ardent
+expounder,--that man is born with a clear and unsophisticated spirit,
+perfectly able to discern all the simple truths necessary for common
+conduct by its own unaided light. His motives are all pure and unselfish
+and his intelligence is unclouded, until priests and tyrants mutilate
+the one and corrupt the other. We who have the benefit of the historic
+method, and have to take into account the medium that surrounds a human
+creature the moment it comes into the world, to say nothing of all the
+inheritance from the past which it brings within it into the world at
+the same moment, cannot take up this ground. We cannot maintain that
+everybody is born with light enough to see the rational defences of
+things for himself, without the education of institutions. What we do
+maintain is--and this is the answer to the plea for error at present
+under consideration--that whatever impairs the brightness of such light
+as a man has, is not useful but hurtful. Our reply to those who contend
+for the usefulness of error on the ground of the comparative impotence
+of rationality over ordinary minds, is something of this kind.
+Superstition, blind obedience to custom, and the other substitutes for a
+right and independent use of the mind, may accidentally and in some few
+respects impress good ideas upon persons who are too darkened to accept
+those ideas on their real merits. But then superstition itself is the
+main cause of this very darkness. To hold error is in so far to foster
+erroneous ways of thinking on all subjects; is to make the intelligence
+less and less ready to receive truth in all matters whatever. Men are
+made incapable of perceiving the rational defences, and of feeling
+rational motives, for good habits,--so far as they are thus
+incapable,--by the very errors which we are asked silently to
+countenance as useful substitutes for right reason. 'Erroneous motives,'
+as Condorcet has expressed this matter, 'have an additional drawback
+attached to them, the habit which they strengthen of reasoning ill. The
+more important the subject on which you reason ill, and the more you
+busy yourself about it, by so much the more dangerous do the influences
+of such a habit become. It is especially on subjects analogous to that
+on which you reason wrongly, or which you connect with it by habit, that
+such a defect extends most powerfully and most rapidly. Hence it is
+extremely hard for the man who believes himself obliged to conform in
+his conduct to what he considers truths useful to men, but who
+attributes the obligation to erroneous motives, to reason very correctly
+on the truths themselves; the more attention he pays to such motives,
+and the more importance he comes to attach to them, the more likely he
+will be to go wrong.'[9] So, in short, superstition does an immense harm
+by enfeebling rational ways of thinking; it does a little good by
+accidentally endorsing rational conclusions in one or two matters. And
+yet, though the evil which it is said to repair is a trifle beside the
+evil which it is admitted to inflict, the balance of expediencies is
+after all declared to be such as to warrant us in calling errors useful!
+
+III. A third objection now presents itself to me, which I wish to state
+as strongly as possible. 'Even if a false opinion cannot in itself be
+more useful than a true one, whatever good habits may seem to be
+connected with it, yet,' it may be contended, 'relatively to the general
+mental attitude of a set of men, to their other notions and maxims, the
+false opinion may entail less harm than would be wrought by its mere
+demolition. There are false opinions so intimately bound up with the
+whole way of thinking and feeling, that to introduce one or two detached
+true opinions in their stead, would, even if it were possible, only
+serve to break up that coherency of character and conduct which it is
+one of the chief objects of moralists and the great art of living to
+produce. For a true opinion does not necessarily bring in its train all
+the other true opinions that are logically connected with it. On the
+contrary, it is only too notorious a fact in the history of belief, that
+not merely individuals but whole societies are capable of holding at one
+and the same time contradictory opinions and mutually destructive
+principles. On the other hand, neither does a false opinion involve
+practically all the evil consequences deducible from it. For the results
+of human inconsistency are not all unhappy, and if we do not always act
+up to virtuous principle, no more do we always work out to its remotest
+inference every vicious principle. Not insincerity, but inconsistency,
+has constantly turned the adherents of persecuting precepts into friends
+of tolerant practice.'
+
+'It is a comparatively small thing to persuade a superstitious person to
+abandon this or that article of his superstition. You have no security
+that the rejection of the one article which you have displaced will lead
+to the rejection of any other, and it is quite possible that it may lead
+to all the more fervid an adhesion to what remains behind. Error,
+therefore, in view of such considerations may surely be allowed to have
+at least a provisional utility.'
+
+Now undoubtedly the repudiation of error is not at all the same thing
+as embracing truth. People are often able to see the force of arguments
+that destroy a given opinion, without being able to see the force of
+arguments for the positive opinion that ought to replace it. They can
+only be quite sure of seeing both, when they have acquired not merely a
+conviction that one notion is false and another true, but have
+furthermore exchanged a generally erroneous way of thinking for a
+generally correct way. Hence the truly important object with every one
+who holds opinions which he deems it of the highest moment that others
+should accept, must obviously be to reach people's general ways of
+thinking; to stir their love of truth; to penetrate them with a sense of
+the difference in the quality of evidence; to make them willing to
+listen to criticism and new opinion; and perhaps above all to teach them
+to take ungrudging and daily trouble to clear up in their minds the
+exact sense of the terms they use.
+
+If this be so, a false opinion, like an erroneous motive, can hardly
+have even a provisional usefulness. For how can you attack an erroneous
+way of thinking except in detail, that is to say through the sides of
+this or that single wrong opinion? Each of these wrong opinions is an
+illustration and type, as it is a standing support and abettor, of some
+kind of wrong reasoning, though they are not all on the same scale nor
+all of them equally instructive. It is precisely by this method of
+gradual displacement of error step by step, that the few stages of
+progress which the race has yet traversed, have been actually achieved.
+Even if the place of the erroneous idea is not immediately taken by the
+corresponding true one, or by the idea which is at least one or two
+degrees nearer to the true one, still the removal of error in this
+purely negative way amounts to a positive gain. Why? For the excellent
+reason that it is the removal of a bad element which otherwise tends to
+propagate itself, or even if it fails to do that, tends at the best to
+make the surrounding mass of error more inveterate. All error is what
+physiologists term fissiparous, and in exterminating one false opinion
+you may be hindering the growth of an uncounted brood of false opinions.
+
+Then as to the maintenance of that coherency, interdependence, and
+systematisation of opinions and motives, which is said to make character
+organic, and is therefore so highly prized by some schools of thought.
+No doubt the loosening of this or that part of the fabric of
+heterogeneous origin, which constitutes the character of a man or woman,
+tends to loosen the whole. But do not let us feed ourselves upon
+phrases. This organic coherency, what does it come to? It signifies in a
+general way, to describe it briefly, a harmony between the intellectual,
+the moral, and the practical parts of human nature; an undisturbed
+cooperation between reason, affection, and will; the reason prescribing
+nothing against which the affections revolt, and proscribing nothing
+which they crave; and the will obeying the joint impulses of these two
+directing forces, without liability to capricious or extravagant
+disturbance of their direction. Well, if the reason were perfect in
+information and method, and the affections faultless in their impulse,
+then organic unity of character would be the final consummation of all
+human improvement, and it would be criminal, even if it were possible,
+to undermine a structure of such priceless value. But short of this
+there can be no value in coherency and harmonious consistency as such.
+So long as error is an element in it, then for so long the whole product
+is vitiated. Undeniably and most fortunately, social virtues are found
+side by side with speculative mistakes and the gravest intellectual
+imperfections. We may apply to humanity the idea which, as Hebrew
+students tell us, is imputed in the Talmud to the Supreme Being. _God
+prays_, the Talmud says; and his prayer is this,--'Be it my will that my
+mercy overpower my justice.' And so with men, with or without their
+will, their mercifulness overpowers their logic. And not their
+mercifulness only, but all their good impulses overpower their logic. To
+repeat the words which I have put into the objector's mouth, we do not
+always work out every vicious principle to its remotest inference. What,
+however, is this but to say that in such cases character is saved, not
+by its coherency, but by the opposite; to say not that error is useful,
+but what is a very different thing, that its mischievousness is
+sometimes capable of being averted or minimised?
+
+The apologist may retort that he did not mean answer to the argument
+from coherency of conduct. In measuring utility you have to take into
+account not merely the service rendered to the objects of the present
+hour, but the contribution to growth, progress, and the future. From
+this point of view most of the talk about unity of character is not much
+more than a glorifying of stagnation. It leaves out of sight the
+conditions necessary for the continuance of the unending task of human
+improvement. Now whatever ease may be given to an individual or a
+generation by social or religious error, such error at any rate can
+conduce nothing to further advancement That, at least, is not one of its
+possible utilities.
+
+This is also one of the answers to the following plea. 'Though the
+knowledge of every positive truth is an useful acquisition, this
+doctrine cannot without reservation he applied to negative truth. When
+the only truth ascertainable is that nothing can be known, we do not, by
+this knowledge, gain any new fact by which to guide ourselves.'[10] But
+logical coherency, but a kind of practical everyday coherency, which
+may be open to a thousand abstract objections, yet which still secures
+both to the individual and to society a number of advantages that might
+be endangered by any disturbance of opinion or motive. No doubt, and the
+method and season of chasing erroneous opinions and motives out of the
+mind must always be a matter of much careful and far-seeing
+consideration. Only in the course of such consideration, let us not
+admit the notion in any form that error can have even provisional
+utility. For it is not the error which confers the advantages that we
+desire to preserve, but some true opinion or just motive or high or
+honest sentiment, which exists and thrives and operates in spite of the
+error and in face of it, springing from man's spontaneous and
+unformulated recognition of the real relations of things. This
+recognition is very faint in the beginnings of society. It grows clearer
+and firmer with each step forward. And in a tolerably civilised age it
+has become a force on which you can fairly lean with a considerable
+degree of assurance.
+
+And this leads to the central point of the the negative truth that
+nothing can be known is in fact a truth that guides us. [Transcriber's
+note: sic.] It leads us away from sterile and irreclaimable tracts
+of thought and emotion, and so inevitably compels the energies which
+would otherwise have been wasted, to feel after a more profitable
+direction. By leaving the old guide-marks undisturbed, you may give
+ease to an existing generation, but the present ease is purchased at
+the cost of future growth. To have been deprived of the faith of the
+old dispensation, is the first condition of strenuous endeavour after
+the new.
+
+No doubt history abounds with cases in which a false opinion on moral or
+religious subjects, or an erroneous motive in conduct, has seemed to be
+a stepping-stone to truth. But this is in no sense a demonstration of
+the utility of error. For in all such cases the erroneous opinion or
+motive was far from being wholly erroneous, or wholly without elements
+of truth and reality. If it helped to quicken the speed or mend the
+direction of progress, that must have been by virtue of some such
+elements within it. All that was error in it was pure waste, or worse
+than waste. It is true that the religious sentiment has clothed itself
+in a great number of unworthy, inadequate, depressing, and otherwise
+misleading shapes, dogmatic and liturgic. Yet on the whole the religious
+sentiment has conferred enormous benefits on civilisation. This is no
+proof of the utility of the mistaken direction which these dogmatic or
+liturgic shapes imposed upon it. On the contrary, the effect of the
+false dogmas and enervating liturgies is so much that has to be deducted
+from the advantages conferred by a sentiment in itself valuable and of
+priceless capability.[11]
+
+Yes, it will be urged, but from the historic conditions of the time,
+truth could only be conveyed in erroneous forms, and motives of
+permanent price for humanity could only be secured in these mistaken
+expressions. Here I would again press the point of this necessity for
+erroneous forms and mistaken expressions being, in a great many of the
+most important instances, itself derivative, one among other ill
+consequences of previous moral and religious error. 'It was gravely
+said,' Bacon tells us, 'by some of the prelates in the Council of Trent,
+where the doctrines of the Schoolmen have great sway; that the schoolmen
+were like Astronomers, which did faigne Eccentricks and Epicycles and
+Engines of Orbs to save the Phenomena; though they know there were no
+such Things; and in like manner that the Schoolmen had framed a number
+of subtile and intricate Axioms and Theorems, to save the practice of
+the Church.' This is true of much else besides scholastic axioms and
+theorems. Subordinate error was made necessary and invented, by reason
+of some pro-existent main stock of error, and to save the practice of
+the Church. Thus we are often referred to the consolation which this or
+that doctrine has brought to the human spirit. But what if the same
+system had produced the terror which made absence of consolation
+intolerable? How much of the necessity for expressing the enlarged
+humanity of the Church in the doctrine of purgatory, arose from the
+existence of the older unsoftened doctrine of eternal hell?
+
+Again, how much of this alleged necessity of error, as alloy for the too
+pure metal of sterling truth, is to be explained by the interest which
+powerful castes or corporations have had in preserving the erroneous
+forms, even when they could not resist, or did not wish to resist, their
+impregnation by newer and better doctrine? This interest was not
+deliberately sinister or malignant. It may be more correctly as well as
+more charitably explained by that infirmity of human nature, which makes
+us very ready to believe what it is on other grounds convenient to us to
+believe. Nobody attributes to pure malevolence the heartiness with which
+the great corporation of lawyers, for example, resist the removal of
+superfluous and obstructive forms in their practice; they have come to
+look on such forms as indispensable safeguards. Hence powerful teachers
+and preachers of all kinds have been spontaneously inclined to suppose
+a necessity, which had no real existence, of preserving as much as was
+possible of what we know to be error, even while introducing wholesome
+modification of it. This is the honest, though mischievous, conservatism
+of the human mind. We have no right to condemn our foregoers; far less
+to lavish on them the evil names of impostor, charlatan, and brigand,
+which the zealous unhistoric school of the last century used so
+profusely. But we have a right to say of them, as we say of those who
+imitate their policy now, that their conservatism is no additional proof
+of the utility of error. Least of all is it any justification for those
+who wish to have impressed upon the people a complete system of
+religious opinion which men of culture have avowedly put away. And,
+moreover, the very priests must, I should think, be supposed to have put
+it away also. Else they would hardly be invited deliberately to abdicate
+their teaching functions in the very seats where teaching is of the
+weightiest and most far-spreading influence.
+
+Meanwhile our point is that the reforms in opinion which have been
+effected on the plan of pouring the new wine of truth into the old
+bottles of superstition--though not dishonourable to the sincerity of
+the reformers--are no testimony to even the temporary usefulness of
+error. Those who think otherwise do not look far enough in front of the
+event. They forget the evil wrought by the prolonged duration of the
+error, to which the added particle of truth may have given new vitality.
+They overlook the ultimate enervation that is so often the price paid
+for the temporary exaltation.
+
+Nor, finally, can they know the truths which the error thus prolonged
+has hindered from coming to the birth. A strenuous disputant has
+recently asserted against me that 'the region of the _might have been_
+lies beyond the limits of sane speculation.'[12] It in surely extending
+optimism too far to insist on carrying it back right through the ages.
+To me at any rate the history of mankind is a huge _pis-aller_, just as
+our present society is; a prodigious wasteful experiment, from which a
+certain number of precious results have been extracted, but which is
+not now, nor ever has been at any other time, a final measure of all the
+possibilities of the time. This is not inconsistent with the scientific
+conception of history; it is not to deny the great law that society has
+a certain order of progress; but only to urge that within that, the only
+possible order, there is always room for all kinds and degrees of
+invention, improvement, and happy or unhappy accident. There is no
+discoverable law fixing precisely the more or the less of these; nor how
+much of each of them a community shall meet with, nor exactly when it
+shall meet with them. We have to distinguish between possibility and
+necessity. Only certain steps in advance are possible at a given time;
+but it is not inevitable that those potential advances should all be
+realised. Does anybody suppose that humanity has had the profit of all
+the inventive and improving capacity born into the world? That Turgot,
+for example, was the only man that ever lived who might have done more
+for society than he was allowed to do, and spared society a cataclysm?
+No,--history is a _pis-aller_. It has assuredly not moved without the
+relation of cause and effect; it is a record of social growth and its
+conditions; but it is also a record of interruption and misadventure and
+perturbation. You trace the long chain which has made us what we are in
+this aspect and that. But where are the dropped links that might have
+made all the difference? _Ubi sunt eorum tabulae qui post vota nuncupate
+perierunt_? Where is the fruit of those multitudinous gifts which came
+into the world in untimely seasons? We accept the past for the same
+reason that we accept the laws of the solar system, though, as Comte
+says, 'we can easily conceive them improved in certain respects.' The
+past, like the solar system, is beyond reach of modification at our
+hands, and we cannot help it. But it is surely the mere midsummer
+madness of philosophic complacency to think that we have come by the
+shortest and easiest of all imaginable routes to our present point in
+the march; to suppose that we have wasted nothing, lost nothing, cruelly
+destroyed nothing, on the road. What we have lost is all in the region
+of the 'might have been,' and we are justified in taking this into
+account, and thinking much of it, and in trying to find causes for the
+loss. One of them has been want of liberty for the human intelligence;
+and another, to return to our proper subject, has been the prolonged
+existence of superstition, of false opinions, and of attachment to gross
+symbols, beyond the time when they might have been successfully
+attacked, and would have fallen into decay but for the mistaken
+political notion of their utility. In making a just estimate of this
+utility, if we see reason to believe that these false opinions, narrow
+superstitions, gross symbols, have been an impediment to the free
+exercise of the intelligence and a worthier culture of the emotions,
+then we are justified in placing the unknown loss as a real and most
+weighty item in the account against them.
+
+In short, then, the utmost that can be said on behalf of errors in
+opinion and motive, is that they are inevitable elements in human
+growth. But the inevitable does not coincide with the useful. Pain can
+be avoided by none of the sons of men, yet the horrible and
+uncompensated subtraction which it makes from the value and usefulness
+of human life, is one of the most formidable obstacles to the smoother
+progress of the world. And as with pain, so with error. The moral of our
+contention has reference to the temper in which practically we ought to
+regard false doctrine and ill-directed motive. It goes to show that if
+we have satisfied ourselves on good grounds that the doctrine is false,
+or the motive ill directed, then the only question that we need ask
+ourselves turns solely upon the possibility of breaking it up and
+dispersing it, by methods compatible with the doctrine of liberty. Any
+embarrassment in dealing with it, due to a semi-latent notion that it
+may be useful to some one else is a weakness that hinders social
+progress.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 5: Mill's _Autobiography_ p. 170.]
+
+[Footnote 6: M. Renan's _Réforme Intellectuelle et Morale de la France_,
+p. 98.]
+
+[Footnote 7: _Etudes d'Histoire Religieuse_, Preface, p. xvi.]
+
+[Footnote 8: In 1779 the Academy of Prussia announced this as the
+question for their annual prize essay:--'_S'il est utile au peuple
+d'être trompé_.' They received thirty-three essays; twenty showing that
+it is not useful, thirteen showing that it is. The Academy, with an
+impartiality that caused much amusement in Paris and Berlin, awarded two
+prizes, one to the best proof of the negative answer, another to the
+best proof of the affirmative. See Bartholmess, _Hist. Philosophique de
+l'Académie de Prusse_, i. 281, and ii. 278. Condorcet did not actually
+compete for the prize, but he wrote a very acute piece, suggested by the
+theme, which was printed in 1790. _Oeuv._ v. 343.
+
+To illustrate the common fact of certain currents of thought being in
+the air at given times, we may mention that in 1770 was published the
+posthumous work of another Frenchman, Chesneau du Marsais (1676-1756)
+entitled:--'_Essai sur les Préjugés; ou de l'influence des Opinions sur
+les Moeurs et sur le Bonheur des Hommes_.' The principal prejudices to
+which he refers are classed under Antiquity--Ancestry--Native
+Country--Religion--Respect for Wealth. Some of the reasoning is almost
+verbally identical with Condorcet's. For an account of Du Marsais, see
+D'Alembert, _Oeuv._ iii 481.]
+
+[Footnote 9: _Oeuv._ v. 354.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Mill's _Three Essays on Religion_, p.73. I have offered
+some criticisms on the whole passage in _Critical Miscellanies, Second
+Series_, pp. 300-304.]
+
+[Footnote 11: 'Enfin, supposons pour un instant que le dogme de l'autre
+vie soit de quelqu'utilité, et qu'il retienne vraiment un petit nombre
+d'individus, qu'est-ce que ces foibles avantages comparés à la foule de
+maux que l'on en voir découler? Contre un homme timide que cette idée
+contient, il en est des millions qu'elle ne peut contenir; il en des
+millions qu'elle rend insensés, farouches, fanatiques, inutiles et
+méchants; il en est des millions qu'elle détourne de leurs devoirs
+envers la société; il en est une infinité qu'elle afflige et qu'elle
+trouble, sans aucun bien réel pour leurs associés.--_Système de la
+Nature_, i. xiii.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Sir J.F. Stephen's _Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity_,
+2d. ed., p. 19, _note_.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL SPIRIT.
+
+We have been considering the position of those who would fain divide the
+community into two great castes; the one of thoughtful and instructed
+persons using their minds freely, but guarding their conclusions in
+strict reserve; the other of the illiterate or unreflecting, who should
+have certain opinions and practices taught them, not because they are
+true or are really what their votaries are made to believe them to be,
+but because the intellectual superiors of the community think the
+inculcation of such a belief useful in all cases save their own. Nor is
+this a mere theory. On the contrary, it is a fair description of an
+existing state of things. We have the old _disciplina arcani_ among us
+in as full force as in the primitive church, but with an all-important
+difference. The Christian fathers practised reserve for the sake of
+leading the acolyte the more surely to the fulness of truth. The modern
+economiser keeps back his opinions, or dissembles the grounds of them,
+for the sake of leaving his neighbours the more at their ease in the
+peaceful sloughs of prejudice and superstition and low ideals. We quote
+Saint Paul when he talked of making himself all things to all men, and
+of becoming to the Jews a Jew, and as without the Law to the heathen.
+But then we do so with a view to justifying ourselves for leaving the
+Jew to remain a Jew, and the heathen to remain heathen. We imitate the
+same apostle in accepting old time-worn altars dedicated to the Unknown
+God. We forget that he made the ancient symbol the starting-point of a
+revolutionised doctrine. There is, as anybody can see, a whole world of
+difference between the reserve of sagacious apostleship, on the one
+hand, dealing tenderly with scruple and tearfulness and fine sensibility
+of conscience, and the reserve of intellectual cowardice on the other
+hand, dealing hypocritically with narrow minds in the supposed interests
+of social peace and quietness. The old _disciplina arcani_ signified
+the disclosure of a little light with a view to the disclosure of more.
+The new means the dissimulation of truth with a view to the perpetuation
+of error. Consider the difference between these two fashions of
+compromise, in their effects upon the mind and character of the person
+compromising. The one is fully compatible with fervour and hopefulness
+and devotion to great causes. The other stamps a man with artifice, and
+hinders the free eagerness of his vision, and wraps him about with
+mediocrity,--not always of understanding, but that still worse thing,
+mediocrity of aspiration and purpose.
+
+The coarsest and most revolting shape which the doctrine of conformity
+can assume, and its degrading consequences to the character of the
+conformer, may be conveniently illustrated by a passage in the life of
+Hume. He looked at things in a more practical manner than would find
+favour with the sentimental champions of compromise in nearer times.
+There is a well-known letter of Hume's, in which he recommends a young
+man to become a clergyman, on the ground that it was very hard to got
+any tolerable civil employment, and that as Lord Bute was then all
+powerful, his friend would be certain of preferment. In answer to the
+young man's scruples as to the Articles and the rest, Hume says:--
+
+'It is putting too great a respect on the vulgar and their superstitions
+to pique one's self on sincerity with regard to them. If the thing were
+worthy of being treated gravely, I should tell him [the young man] that
+the Pythian oracle with the approbation of Xenophon advised every one to
+worship the gods--[Greek: nhomô pholeôs]. I wish it were still in my
+power to be a hypocrite in this particular. The common duties of society
+usually require it; and the ecclesiastical profession only adds a little
+more to an innocent dissimulation, or rather simulation, without which
+it is impossible to pass through the world.'[13]
+
+This is a singularly straightforward way of stating a view which
+silently influences a much greater number of men than it is pleasant to
+think of. They would shrink from throwing their conduct into so gross a
+formula. They will lift up their hands at this quotation, so strangely
+blind are we to the hiding-places of our own hearts, even when others
+flash upon them the terrible illumination that comes of calling conduct
+and motives by plain names. Now it is not merely the moral improbity of
+these cases which revolts us--the improbity of making in solemn form a
+number of false statements for the sake of earning a livelihood; of
+saying in order to get money or social position that you accept a number
+of propositions which in fact you utterly reject; of declaring expressly
+that you trust you are inwardly moved to take upon you this office and
+ministration by the Holy Ghost, when the real motive is a desire not to
+miss the chance of making something out of the Earl of Bute. This side
+of such dissimulation is shocking enough. And it is not any more
+shocking to the most devout believer than it is to people who doubt
+whether there be any Holy Ghost or not. Those who no longer place their
+highest faith in powers above and beyond men, are for that very reason
+more deeply interested than others in cherishing the integrity and
+worthiness of man himself. Apart, however, from the immorality of such
+reasoned hypocrisy, which no man with a particle of honesty will
+attempt to blink, there is the intellectual improbity which it brings in
+its train, the infidelity to truth, the disloyalty to one's own
+intelligence. Gifts of understanding are numbed and enfeebled in a man,
+who has once played such a trick with his own conscience as to persuade
+himself that, because the vulgar are superstitious, it is right for the
+learned to earn money by turning themselves into the ministers and
+accomplices of superstition. If he is clever enough to see through the
+vulgar and their beliefs, he is tolerably sure to be clever enough from
+time to time and in his better moments to see through himself. He begins
+to suspect himself of being an impostor. That suspicion gradually unmans
+him when he comes to use his mind in the sphere of his own
+enlightenment. One of really superior power cannot escape these better
+moments and the remorse that they bring. As he advances in life, as his
+powers ought to be coming to fuller maturity and his intellectual
+productiveness to its prime, just in the same degree the increasing
+seriousness of life multiplies such moments and deepens their remorse,
+and so the light of intellectual promise slowly goes out in impotent
+endeavour, or else in taking comfort that much goods are laid up, or,
+what is deadliest of all, in a soulless cynicism.
+
+We do not find out until it is too late that the intellect too, at least
+where it is capable of being exercised on the higher objects, has its
+sensitiveness. It loses its colour and potency and finer fragrance in an
+atmosphere of mean purpose and low conception of the sacredness of fact
+and reality. Who has not observed inferior original power achieving
+greater results even in the intellectual field itself, where the
+superior understanding happens to have been unequally yoked with a
+self-seeking character, over scenting the expedient? If Hume had been in
+the early productive part of his life the hypocrite which he wished it
+were in his power to show himself in its latter part, we may be
+tolerably sure that European philosophy would have missed one of its
+foremost figures. It has been often said that he who begins life by
+stifling his convictions is in a fair way for ending it without any
+convictions to stifle. We may, perhaps, add that he who sets out with
+the notion that the difference between truth and falsehood is a thing of
+no concern to the vulgar, is very likely sooner or later to come to the
+kindred notion that it is not a thing of any supreme concern to himself.
+
+Let thus much have been said as to those who deliberately and knowingly
+sell their intellectual birthright for a mess of pottage, making a
+brazen compromise with what they hold despicable, lest they should have
+to win their bread honourably. Men need to expend no declamatory
+indignation upon them. They have a hell of their own; words can add no
+bitterness to it. It is no light thing to have secured a livelihood on
+condition of going through life masked and gagged. To be compelled, week
+after week, and year after year, to recite the symbols of ancient faith
+and lift up his voice in the echoes of old hopes, with the blighting
+thought in his soul that the faith is a lie, and the hope no more than
+the folly of the crowd; to read hundreds of times in a twelvemonth with
+solemn unction as the inspired word of the Supreme what to him are
+meaningless as the Abracadabras of the conjuror in a booth; to go on to
+the end of his days administering to simple folk holy rites of
+commemoration and solace, when he has in his mind at each phrase what
+dupes are those simple folk and how wearisomely counterfeit their rites:
+and to know through all that this is really to be the one business of
+his prostituted life, that so dreary and hateful a piece of play-acting
+will make the desperate retrospect of his last hours--of a truth here is
+the very [Greek: bdhelygma tês erêmhôseôs], the abomination of
+desolation of the human spirit indeed.
+
+No one will suppose that this is designed for the normal type of priest.
+But it is well to study tendencies in their extreme catastrophe. This is
+only the catastrophe, in one of its many shapes, of the fatal doctrine
+that money, position, power, philanthropy, or any of the thousand
+seductive masks of the pseudo-expedient, may carry a man away from love
+of truth and yet leave him internally unharmed. The depravation that
+follows the trucking for money of intellectual freedom and self-respect,
+attends in its degree each other departure from disinterested following
+of truth, and each other substitution of convenience, whether public or
+private, in its place. And both parties to such a compromise are losers.
+The world which offers gifts and tacitly undertakes to ask no questions
+as to the real state of the timeserver's inner mind, loses no less than
+the timeserver himself who receives the gifts and promises to hold his
+peace. It is as though a society placed penalties on mechanical
+inventions and the exploration of new material resources, and offered
+bounties for the steadiest adherence to all ancient processes in culture
+and production. The injury to wealth in the one case would not be any
+deeper than the injury to morality is in the other.
+
+
+To pass on to less sinister forms of this abnegation of intellectual
+responsibility. In the opening sentences of the first chapter we spoke
+of a wise suspense in forming opinions, a wise reserve in expressing
+them, and a wise tardiness in trying to realise them. Thus we meant to
+mark out the three independent provinces of compromise, each of them
+being the subject of considerations that either do not apply at all to
+the other two, or else apply in a different degree. Disingenuousness or
+self-illusion, arising from a depressing deference to the existing state
+of things, or to what is immediately practicable, or to what other
+people would think of us if they knew our thoughts, is the result of
+compromising truth in the matter of forming and holding opinions.
+Secondly, positive simulation is what comes of an unlawful willingness
+to compromise in the matter of avowing and publishing them. Finally,
+pusillanimity or want of faith is the vice that belongs to unlawful
+compromise in the department of action and realisation. This is not
+merely a division arranged for convenience of discussion. It goes to the
+root of conduct and character, and is the key to the present mood of our
+society. It is always a hardy thing to attempt to throw a complex matter
+into very simple form, but we should say that the want of energy and
+definiteness in contemporary opinions, of which we first complained, is
+due mainly to the following notion; that if a subject is not ripe for
+practical treatment, you and I are therefore entirely relieved from the
+duty of having clear ideas about it. If the majority cling to an
+opinion, why should we ask whether that is the sound and right opinion
+or the reverse? Now this notion, which springs from a confusion of the
+three fields of compromise with one another, quietly reigns almost
+without dispute. The devotion to the practical aspect of truth is in
+such excess, as to make people habitually deny that it can be worth
+while to form an opinion, when it happens at the moment to be incapable
+of realisation, for the reason that there is no direct prospect of
+inducing a sufficient number of persons to share it. 'We are quite
+willing to think that your view is the right one, and would produce all
+the improvements for which you hope; but then there is not the smallest
+chance of persuading the only persons able to carry out such a view; why
+therefore discuss it?' No talk is more familiar to us than this. As if
+the mere possibility of the view being a right one did not obviously
+entitle it to discussion; discussion being the only process by which
+people are likely to be induced to accept it, or else to find good
+grounds for finally dismissing it.
+
+It is precisely because we believe that opinion, and nothing but
+opinion, can effect great permanent changes, that we ought to be
+careful to keep this most potent force honest, wholesome, fearless, and
+independent. Take the political field. Politicians and newspapers almost
+systematically refuse to talk about a new idea, which is not capable of
+being at once embodied in a bill, and receiving the royal assent before
+the following August. There is something rather contemptible, seen from
+the ordinary standards of intellectual integrity, in the position of a
+minister who waits to make up his mind whether a given measure, say the
+disestablishment of the Irish Church, is in itself and on the merits
+desirable, until the official who runs diligently up and down the
+backstairs of the party, tells him that the measure is practicable and
+required in the interests of the band. On the one hand, a leader is
+lavishly panegyrised for his highmindedness, in suffering himself to be
+driven into his convictions by his party. On the other, a party is
+extolled for its political tact, in suffering itself to be forced out of
+its convictions by its leader. It is hard to decide which is the more
+discreditable and demoralising sight. The education of chiefs by
+followers, and of followers by chiefs, into the abandonment in a month
+of the traditions of centuries or the principles of a lifetime may
+conduce to the rapid and easy working of the machine. It certainly marks
+a triumph of the political spirit which the author of _The Prince_ might
+have admired. It is assuredly mortal to habits of intellectual
+self-respect in the society which allows itself to be amused by the
+cajolery and legerdemain and self-sophistication of its rulers.
+
+Of course there are excellent reasons why a statesman immersed in the
+actual conduct of affairs, should confine his attention to the work
+which his hands find to do. But the fact that leading statesmen are of
+necessity so absorbed in the tasks of the hour furnishes all the better
+reason why as many other people as possible should busy themselves in
+helping to prepare opinion for the practical application of unfamiliar
+but weighty and promising suggestions, by constant and ready discussion
+of them upon their merits. As a matter of fact it is not the men most
+occupied who are usually most deaf to new ideas. It is the loungers of
+politics, the quidnuncs, gossips, bustling idlers, who are most
+industrious in stifling discussion by protests against the waste of
+time and the loss of force involved in talking about proposals which are
+not exactly ready to be voted on. As it is, everybody knows that
+questions are inadequately discussed, or often not discussed at all, on
+the ground that the time is not yet come for their solution. Then when
+some unforeseen perturbation, or the natural course of things, forces on
+the time for their resolution, they are settled in a slovenly,
+imperfect, and often downright vicious manner, from the fact that
+opinion has not been prepared for solving them in an efficient and
+perfect manner. The so-called settlement of the question of national
+education is the most recent and most deplorable illustration of what
+comes of refusing to examine ideas alleged to be impracticable. Perhaps
+we may venture to prophesy that the disendowment of the national church
+will supply the next illustration on an imposing scale. Gratuitous
+primary instruction, and the redistribution of electoral power, are
+other matters of signal importance, which comparatively few men will
+consent to discuss seriously and patiently, and for our indifference to
+which we shall one day surely smart. A judicious and cool writer has
+said that 'an opinion gravely professed by a man of sense and education
+demands always respectful consideration--demands and actually receives
+it from those whose own sense and education give them a correlative
+right; and whoever offends against this sort of courtesy may fairly be
+deemed to have forfeited the privileges it secures.'[14] That is the
+least part of the matter. The serious mischief is the eventual
+miscarriage and loss and prodigal waste of good ideas.
+
+The evil of which we have been speaking comes of not seeing the great
+truth, that it is worth while to take pains to find out the best way of
+doing a given task, even if you have strong grounds for suspecting that
+it will ultimately be done in a worse way. And so also in spheres of
+thought away from the political sphere, it is worth while 'to scorn
+delights and live laborious days' in order to make as sure as we can of
+having the best opinion, even if we know that this opinion has an
+infinitely small chance of being speedily or ever accepted by the
+majority, or by anybody but ourselves. Truth and wisdom have to bide
+their time, and then take their chance after all. The most that the
+individual can do is to seek them for himself, even if he seek alone.
+And if it is the most, it is also the least. Yet in our present mood we
+seem not to feel this. We misunderstand the considerations which should
+rightly lead us in practice to surrender some of what we desire, in
+order to secure the rest; and rightly make us acquiesce in a second-best
+course of action, in order to avoid stagnation or retrogression. We
+misunderstand all this, and go on to suppose that there are the same
+grounds why we should in our own minds acquiesce in second-best
+opinions; why we should mix a little alloy of conventional expression
+with the too fine ore of conviction; why we should adopt beliefs that we
+suspect in our hearts to be of more than equivocal authenticity, but
+into whose antecedents we do not greatly care to inquire, because they
+stand so well with the general public. This is compromise or economy or
+management of the first of the three kinds of which we are talking. It
+is economy applied to the formation of opinion; compromise or management
+in making up one's mind.
+
+The lawfulness or expediency of it turns mainly, as with the other two
+kinds of compromise, upon the relative rights of the majority and the
+minority, and upon the respect which is owing from the latter to the
+former. It is a very easy thing for people endowed with the fanatical
+temperament, or demoralised by the habit of looking at society
+exclusively from the juridical point of view, to insist that no respect
+at all, except the respect that arises from being too weak to have your
+own way, is due from either to the other. This shallow and mischievous
+notion rests either on a misinterpretation of the experience of
+civilised societies, or else on nothing more creditable than an
+arbitrary and unreflecting temper. Those who have thought most carefully
+and disinterestedly about the matter, are agreed that in advanced
+societies the expedient course is that no portion of the community
+should insist on imposing its own will upon any other portion, except in
+matters which are vitally connected with the maintenance of the social
+union. The question where this vital connection begins is open to much
+discussion. The line defining the sphere of legitimate interference may
+be drawn variously, whether at self-regarding acts, or in some other
+condition and element of conduct. Wherever this line may be best taken,
+not only abstract speculation, but the practical and spontaneous tact of
+the world, has decided that there are limits, alike in the interest of
+majority and minority, to the rights of either to disturb the other. In
+other words, it is expedient in certain affairs that the will of the
+majority should be absolutely binding, while in affairs of a different
+order it should count for nothing, or as nearly nothing, as the sociable
+dependence of a man on his fellows will permit.
+
+Our thesis is this. In the positive endeavour to realise an opinion, to
+convert a theory into practice, it may be, and very often is, highly
+expedient to defer to the prejudices of the majority, to move very
+slowly, to bow to the conditions of the _status quo_, to practise the
+very utmost sobriety, self-restraint, and conciliatoriness. The mere
+expression of opinion, in the next place, the avowal of dissent from
+received notions, the refusal to conform to language which implies the
+acceptance of such notions,--this rests on a different footing. Here
+the reasons for respecting the wishes and sentiments of the majority are
+far less strong, though, as we shall presently see, such reasons
+certainly exist, and will weigh with all well-considering men. Finally,
+in the formation of an opinion as to the abstract preferableness of one
+course of action over another, or as to the truth or falsehood or right
+significance of a proposition, the fact that the majority of one's
+contemporaries lean in the other direction is naught, and no more than
+dust in the balance. In making up our minds as to what would be the
+wisest line of policy if it were practicable, we have nothing to do with
+the circumstance that it is not practicable. And in settling with
+ourselves whether propositions purporting to state matters of fact are
+trim or not, we have to consider how far they are conformable to the
+evidence. We have nothing to do with the comfort and solace which they
+would be likely to bring to others or ourselves, if they were taken as
+true.
+
+A nominal assent to this truth will be instantly given even by those who
+in practice systematically disregard it. The difficulty of transforming
+that nominal assent into a reality is enormous in such a community as
+ours. Of all societies since the Roman Republic, and not even excepting
+the Roman Republic, England has been the most emphatically and
+essentially political. She has passed through military phases and
+through religious phases, but they have been transitory, and the great
+central stream of national life has flowed in political channels. The
+political life has been stronger than any other, deeper, wider, more
+persistent, more successful. The wars which built up our far-spreading
+empire were not waged with designs of military conquest; they were
+mostly wars for a market. The great spiritual emancipation of the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries figures in our history partly as an
+accident, partly as an intrigue, partly as a raid of nobles in search of
+spoil. It was hardly until the reformed doctrine became associated with
+analogous ideas and corresponding precepts in government, that people
+felt at home with it, and became really interested in it.
+
+One great tap-root of our national increase has been the growth of
+self-government, or government by deliberative bodies, representing
+opposed principles and conflicting interests. With the system of
+self-government has grown the habit--not of tolerance precisely, for
+Englishmen when in earnest are as little in love with tolerance as
+Frenchmen or any other people, but--of giving way to the will of the
+majority, so long as they remain a majority. This has come to pass for
+the simple reason that, on any other terms, the participation of large
+numbers of people in the control and arrangement of public affairs
+immediately becomes unworkable. The gradual concentration of power in
+the hands of a supreme deliberative body, the active share of so many
+thousands of persons in choosing and controlling its members, the close
+attention with which the proceedings of parliament are followed and
+watched, the kind of dignity that has been lent to parliamentary methods
+by the great importance of the transactions, have all tended in the same
+direction. They have all helped both to fix our strongest and most
+constant interests upon politics, and to ingrain the mental habits
+proper to politics, far more deeply than any other, into our general
+constitution and inmost character.
+
+Thus the political spirit has grown to be the strongest element in our
+national life; the dominant force, extending its influence over all our
+ways of thinking in matters that have least to do with politics, or even
+nothing at all to do with them. There has thus been engendered among us
+the real sense of political responsibility. In a corresponding degree
+has been discouraged, what it is the object of the present chapter to
+urge, the sense of intellectual responsibility. If it were inevitable
+that one of these two should always enfeeble or exclude the other, if
+the price of the mental alacrity and open-mindedness of the age of
+Pericles must always be paid in the political incompetence of the age of
+Demosthenes, it would be hard to settle which quality ought to be most
+eagerly encouraged by those who have most to do with the spiritual
+direction of a community. No doubt the tone of a long-enduring and
+imperial society, such as Rome was, must be conservative, drastic,
+positive, hostile to the death to every speculative novelty. But then,
+after all, the permanence of Roman power was only valuable to mankind
+because it ensured the spread of certain civilising ideas. And these
+ideas had originated among people so characteristically devoid of the
+sovereign faculty of political coherency as were the Greeks and the
+Jews. In the Greeks, it is true, we find not only ideas of the highest
+speculative fertility, but actual political institutions. Still we
+should hardly point to Greek history for the most favourable examples of
+their stable working. Practically and as a matter of history, a society
+is seldom at the same time successfully energetic both in temporals and
+spirituals; seldom prosperous alike in seeking abstract truth and
+nursing the political spirit. There is a decisive preponderance in one
+direction or the other, and the equal balance between free and active
+thinking, and coherent practical energy in a community, seems too hard
+to sustain. The vast military and political strength of Germany, for
+instance, did not exist, and was scarcely anticipated in men's minds,
+during the time of her most strenuous passion for abstract truth and
+deeper learning and new criticism. In France never was political and
+national interest so debilitated, so extinct, as it was during the reign
+of Lewis the Fifteenth: her intellectual interest was never so vivid,
+so fruitful, or so widely felt.
+
+Yet it is at least well, and more than that, it is an indispensable
+condition of social wellbeing, that the divorce between political
+responsibility and intellectual responsibility, between respect for what
+is instantly practicable and search after what is only important in
+thought, should not be too complete and universal. Even if there were no
+other objection, the undisputed predominance of the political spirit has
+a plain tendency to limit the subjects in which the men animated by it
+can take a real interest. All matters fall out of sight, or at least
+fall into a secondary place, which do not bear more or less directly and
+patently upon the material and structural welfare of the community. In
+this way the members of the community miss the most bracing, widening,
+and elevated of the whole range of influences that create great
+characters. First, they lose sincere concern about the larger questions
+which the human mind has raised up for itself. Second, they lose a
+fearless desire to reach the true answers to them, or if no certain
+answers should prove to be within reach, then at any rate to be
+satisfied on good grounds that this is so. Such questions are not
+immediately discerned by commonplace minds to be of social import.
+Consequently they, and all else that is not obviously connected with the
+machinery of society, give way in the public consideration to what is so
+connected with it, in a manner that cannot be mistaken.
+
+Again, even minds that are not commonplace are affected for the worse by
+the same spirit. They are aware of the existence of the great
+speculative subjects and of their importance, but the pressure of the
+political spirit on such men makes them afraid of the conclusions to
+which free inquiry might bring them. Accordingly they abstain from
+inquiry, and dread nothing so much as making up their minds. They see
+reasons for thinking that, if they applied themselves seriously to the
+formation of true opinions in this or that department, they would come
+to conclusions which, though likely to make their way in the course of
+some centuries, are wholly unpopular now, and which might ruin the
+influence of anybody suspected of accepting, or even of so much as
+leaning towards, them. Life, they reflect, is short; missionaries do
+not pass for a very agreeable class, nor martyrs for a very sensible
+class; one can only do a trifling amount of good in the world, at best;
+it is moral suicide to throw away any chance of achieving even that
+trifle; and therefore it is best not only not to express, but not to
+take the trouble to acquire, right views in this quarter or that, and to
+draw clear away from such or such a region of thought, for the sake of
+keeping peace on earth and superficial good will among men.
+
+It would be too harsh to stigmatise such a train of thought as
+self-seeking and hypocritical. It is the natural product of the
+political spirit, which is incessantly thinking of present consequences
+and the immediately feasible. There is nothing in the mere dread of
+losing it, to hinder influence from being well employed, so far as it
+goes. But one can hardly overrate the ill consequences of this
+particular kind of management, this unspoken bargaining with the little
+circle of his fellows which constitutes the world of a man. If he may
+retain his place among them as preacher or teacher, he is willing to
+forego his birthright of free explanation; he consents to be blind to
+the duty which attaches to every intelligent man of having some clear
+ideas, even though only provisional ones, upon the greatest subjects of
+human interest, and of deliberately preferring these, whatever they may
+be, to their opposites. Either an individual or a community is fatally
+dwarfed by any such limitation of the field in which one is free to use
+his mind. For it is a limitation, not prescribed by absorption in one
+set of subjects rather than another, nor by insufficient preparation for
+the discussion of certain subjects, nor by indolence nor incuriousness,
+but solely by apprehension of the conclusions to which such use of the
+mind might bring the too courageous seeker. If there were no other ill
+effect, this kind of limitation would at least have the radical
+disadvantage of dulling the edge of responsibility, of deadening the
+sharp sense of personal answerableness either to a God, or to society,
+or to a man's own conscience and intellectual self-respect.
+
+How momentous a disadvantage this is, we can best know by contemplating
+the characters which have sometimes lighted up the old times. Men were
+then devoutly persuaded that their eternal salvation depended on their
+having true beliefs. Any slackness in finding out which beliefs are the
+true ones would have to be answered for before the throne of Almighty
+God, at the sure risk and peril of everlasting damnation. To what
+quarter in the large historic firmament can we turn our eyes with such
+certainty of being stirred and elevated, of thinking better of human
+life and the worth of those who have been most deeply penetrated by its
+seriousness, as to the annals of the intrepid spirits whom the
+protestant doctrine of indefeasible personal responsibility brought to
+the front in Germany in the sixteenth century, and in England and
+Scotland in the seventeenth? It is not their fanaticism, still less is
+it their theology, which makes the great Puritan chiefs of England and
+the stern Covenanters of Scotland so heroic in our sight. It is the fact
+that they sought truth and ensued it, not thinking of the practicable
+nor cautiously counting majorities and minorities, but each man
+pondering and searching so 'as ever in the great Taskmaster's eye.'
+
+It is no adequate answer to urge that this awful consciousness of a
+divine presence and supervision has ceased to be the living fact it once
+was. That partly explains, but it certainly does not justify, our
+present lassitude. For the ever-wakeful eye of celestial power is not
+the only conceivable stimulus to responsibility. To pass from those grim
+heroes of protestantism to the French philosophers of the last century
+is a wide leap in a hundred respects, yet they too were pricked by the
+oestrus of intellectual responsibility. Their doctrine was dismally
+insufficient, and sometimes, as the present writer has often pointed
+out, it was directly vicious. Their daily lives were surrounded by much
+shabbiness and many meannesses. But, after all, no temptation and no
+menace, no pains or penalties for thinking about certain subjects, and
+no rewards for turning to think about something else, could divert such
+men as Voltaire and Diderot from their alert and strenuous search after
+such truth as could be vouchsafed to their imperfect lights. A
+catastrophe followed, it is true, but the misfortunes which attended it
+were due more to the champions of tradition and authority than to the
+soldiers of emancipation. Even in the case of the latter, they were due
+to an inadequate doctrine, and not at all either to their sense of the
+necessity of free speculation and inquiry, or to the intrepidity with
+which they obeyed the promptings of that ennobling sense.
+
+Perhaps the latest attempt of a considerable kind to suppress the
+political spirit in non-political concerns was the famous movement which
+had its birth a generation ago among the gray quadrangles and ancient
+gardens of Oxford, 'the sweet city with her dreaming spires,' where
+there has ever been so much detachment from the world, alongside of the
+coarsest and fiercest hunt after the grosser prizes of the world. No one
+has much less sympathy with the direction of the tractarian revival than
+the present writer, in whose Oxford days the star of Newman had set, and
+the sun of Mill had risen in its stead. And it is needful to distinguish
+the fervid and strong spirits with whom the revival began from the
+mimics of our later day. No doubt the mere occasion of tractarianism was
+political. Its leaders were alarmed at the designs imputed to the newly
+reformed parliament of disestablishing the Anglican Church. They asked
+themselves the question, which I will put in their own words (_Tract_
+i.)--'Should the government of the country so far forget their God as to
+cut off the Church, to deprive it of its temporal honours and substance,
+on what will you rest the claims to respect and attention which you make
+upon your flock? In answering this question they speedily found
+themselves, as might have been expected, at the opposite pole of thought
+from things political. The whole strength of their appeal to members of
+the Church lay in men's weariness of the high and dry optimism, which
+presents the existing order of things as the noblest possible, and the
+undisturbed way of the majority as the way of salvation. Apostolical
+succession and Sacramentalism may not have been in themselves
+progressive ideas. The spirit which welcomed them had at least the
+virtue of taking away from Caesar the things that are not Caesar's.
+
+Glaring as were the intellectual faults of the Oxford movement, it was
+at any rate a recognition in a very forcible way of the doctrine that
+spiritual matters are not to be settled by the dicta of a political
+council. It acknowledged that a man is answerable at his own peril for
+having found or lost the truth. It was a warning that he must reckon
+with a judge who will not account the _status quo_, nor the convenience
+of a cabinet, a good plea for indolent acquiescence in theological
+error. It ended, in the case of its most vigorous champions, in a final
+and deliberate putting out of the eyes of the understanding. The last
+act of assertion of personal responsibility was a headlong acceptance of
+the responsibility of tradition and the Church. This was deplorable
+enough. But apart from other advantages incidental to the tractarian
+movement, such as the attention which it was the means of drawing to
+history and the organic connection between present and past, it had, we
+repeat, the merit of being an effective protest against what may be
+called the House of Commons' view of human life--a view excellent in its
+place, but most blighting and dwarfing out of it. It was, what every
+sincere uprising of the better spirit in men and women must always be,
+an effective protest against the leaden tyranny of the man of the world
+and the so-called practical person. The man of the world despises
+catholics for taking their religious opinions on trust and being the
+slaves of tradition. As if he had himself formed his own most important
+opinions either in religion or anything else. He laughs at them for
+their superstitious awe of the Church. As if his own inward awe of the
+Greater Number were one whit less of a superstition. He mocks their
+deference for the past. As if his own absorbing deference to the present
+were one tittle better bottomed or a jot more respectable. The modern
+emancipation will profit us very little if the _status quo_ is to be
+fastened round our necks with the despotic authority of a heavenly
+dispensation, and if in the stead of ancient Scriptures we are to accept
+the plenary inspiration of Majorities.
+
+
+It may be urged that if, as it is the object of the present chapter to
+state, there are opinions which a man should form for himself, and which
+it may yet be expedient that he should not only be slow to attempt to
+realise in practical life, but sometimes even slow to express,--then we
+are demanding from him the performance of a troublesome duty, while we
+are taking from him the only motives which could really induce him to
+perform it. If, it may be asked, I am not to carry my notions into
+practice, nor try to induce others to accept them, nor even boldly
+publish them, why in the name of all economy of force should I take so
+much pains in forming opinions which are, after all, on these conditions
+so very likely to come to naught? The answer to this is that opinions do
+not come to naught, even if the man who holds them should never think
+fit to publish them. For one thing, as we shall see in our next
+division, the conditions which make against frank declaration of our
+convictions are of rare occurrence. And, apart from this, convictions
+may well exert a most decisive influence over our conduct, even if
+reasons exist, or seem to exist, for not pressing them on others. Though
+themselves invisible to the outer world, they may yet operate with
+magnetic force both upon other parts of our belief which the outer world
+does see, and upon the whole of our dealings with it. Whether we are
+good or bad, it is only a broken and incoherent fragment of our whole
+personality that even those who are intimate with us, much less the
+common world, can ever come into contact with. The important thing is
+that the personality itself should be as little as possible broken,
+incoherent, and fragmentary; that reasoned and consistent opinions
+should back a firm will, and independent convictions inspire the
+intellectual self-respect and strenuous self-possession which the
+clamour of majorities and the silent yet ever-pressing force of the
+_status quo_ are equally powerless to shake.
+
+Character is doubtless of far more importance than mere intellectual
+opinion. We only too often see highly rationalised convictions in
+persons of weak purpose or low motives. But while fully recognising
+this, and the sort of possible reality which lies at the root of such a
+phrase as 'godless intellect' or 'intellectual devils'--though the
+phrase has no reality when it is used by self-seeking politicians or
+prelates--yet it is well to remember the very obvious truth that
+opinions are at least an extremely important part of character. As it is
+sometimes put, what we think has a prodigiously close connection with
+what we are. The consciousness of having reflected seriously and
+conclusively on important questions, whether social or spiritual,
+augments dignity while it does not lessen humility. In this sense,
+taking thought can and does add a cubit to our stature. Opinions which
+we may not feel bound or even permitted to press on other people, are
+not the less forces for being latent. They shape ideals, and it is
+ideals that inspire conduct. They do this, though from afar, and though
+he who possesses them may not presume to take the world into his
+confidence. Finally, unless a man follows out ideas to their full
+conclusion without fear what the conclusion may be, whether he thinks it
+expedient to make his thought and its goal fully known or not, it is
+impossible that he should acquire a commanding grasp of principles. And
+a commanding grasp of principles, whether they are public or not, is at
+the very root of coherency of character. It raises mediocrity near to a
+level with the highest talents, if those talents are in company with a
+disposition that allows the little prudences of the hour incessantly to
+obscure the persistent laws of things. These persistencies, if a man
+has once satisfied himself of their direction and mastered their
+bearings and application, are just as cogent and valuable a guide to
+conduct, whether he publishes them _ad urbem et orbem_, or esteems them
+too strong meat for people who have, through indurated use and wont,
+lost the courage of facing unexpected truths.
+
+One conspicuous result of the failure to see that our opinions have
+roots to them, independently of the feelings which either majorities or
+other portions of the people around us may entertain about them, is that
+neither political matters nor any other serious branches of opinion,
+engage us in their loftiest or most deep-reaching forms. The advocate of
+a given theory of government or society is so misled by a wrong
+understanding of the practice of just and wise compromise in applying
+it, as to forget the noblest and most inspiring shape which his theory
+can be made to assume. It is the worst of political blunders to insist
+on carrying an ideal set of principles into execution, where others have
+rights of dissent, and those others persons whose assent is as
+indispensable to success, as it is impossible to attain. But to be
+afraid or ashamed of holding such an ideal set of principles in one's
+mind in their highest and most abstract expression, does more than any
+one other cause to stunt or petrify those elements in character to which
+life should owe most of its savour.
+
+If a man happens to be a Conservative, for instance, it is pitiful that
+he should think so much more of what other people on his side or the
+other think, than of the widest and highest of the ideas on which a
+conservative philosophy of life and human society reposes. Such ideas
+are these,--that the social union is the express creation and ordering
+of the Deity: that its movements follow his mysterious and fixed
+dispensation: that the church and the state are convertible terms, and
+each citizen of the latter is an incorporated member of the former: that
+conscience, if perversely and misguidedly self-asserting, has no rights
+against the decrees of the conscience of the nation: that it is the most
+detestable of crimes to perturb the pacific order of society either by
+active agitation or speculative restlessness; that descent from a long
+line of ancestors in great station adds an element of dignity to life,
+and imposes many high obligations. We do not say that these and the
+rest of the propositions which make up the true theoretic basis of a
+conservative creed, are proper for the hustings, or expedient in an
+election address or a speech in parliament. We do say that if these high
+and not unintelligible principles, which alone can give to reactionary
+professions any worth or significance, were present in the minds of men
+who speak reactionary language, the country would be spared the ignominy
+of seeing certain real truths of society degraded at the hands of
+aristocratic adventurers and plutocratic parasites into some miserable
+process of 'dishing Whigs.'
+
+This impoverishment of aims and depravation of principles by the triumph
+of the political spirit outside of its proper sphere, cannot
+unfortunately be restricted to any one set of people in the state. It is
+something in the very atmosphere, which no sanitary cordon can limit.
+Liberalism, too, would be something more generous, more attractive--yes,
+and more practically effective, if its professors and champions could
+allow their sense of what is feasible to be refreshed and widened by a
+more free recognition, however private and undemonstrative, of the
+theoretic ideas which give their social creed whatever life and
+consistency it may have. Such ideas are these: That the conditions of
+the social union are not a mystery, only to be touched by miracle, but
+the results of explicable causes, and susceptible of constant
+modification: that the thoughts of wise and patriotic men should be
+perpetually turned towards the improvement of these conditions in every
+direction: that contented acquiescence in the ordering that has come
+down to us from the past is selfish and anti-social, because amid the
+ceaseless change that is inevitable in a growing organism, the
+institutions of the past demand progressive re-adaptations: that such
+improvements are most likely to be secured in the greatest abundance by
+limiting the sphere of authority, extending that of free individuality,
+and steadily striving after the bestowal, so far as the nature of things
+will ever permit it, of equality of opportunity: that while there is
+dignity in ancestry, a modern society is only safe in proportion as it
+summons capacity to its public counsels and enterprises; that such a
+society to endure must progress: that progress on its political side
+means more than anything else the substitution of Justice as a governing
+idea, instead of Privilege, and that the best guarantee for justice in
+public dealings is the participation in their own government of the
+people most likely to suffer from injustice. This is not an exhaustive
+account of the progressive doctrine, and we have here nothing to say as
+to its soundness. We only submit that if those who use the watchwords of
+Liberalism were to return upon its principles, instead of dwelling
+exclusively on practical compromises, the tone of public life would be
+immeasurably raised. The cause of social improvement would be less
+systematically balked of the victories that are best worth gaining.
+Progress would mean something more than mere entrances and exits on the
+theatre of office. We should not see in the mass of parliamentary
+candidates--and they are important people, because nearly every
+Englishman with any ambition is a parliamentary candidate, actual or
+potential--that grave anxiety, that sober rigour, that immense caution,
+which are all so really laughable, because so many of those men are only
+anxious lest they should make a mistake in finding out what the
+majority of their constituents would like them to think; only rigorous
+against those who are indiscreet enough to press a principle against the
+beck of a whip or a wire-puller; and only very cautious not so much lest
+their opinion should be wrong, as lest it should not pay.
+
+
+Indolence and timidity have united to popularise among us a flaccid
+latitudinarianism, which thinks itself a benign tolerance for the
+opinions of others. It is in truth only a pretentious form of being
+without settled opinions of our own, and without any desire to settle
+them. No one can complain of the want of speculative activity at the
+present time in a certain way. The air, at a certain social elevation,
+is as full as it has ever been of ideas, theories, problems, possible
+solutions, suggested questions, and proffered answers. But then they are
+at large, without cohesion, and very apt to be the objects even in the
+more instructed minds of not much more than dilettante interest. We see
+in solution an immense number of notions, which people think it quite
+unnecessary to precipitate in the form of convictions. We constantly
+hear the age lauded for its tolerance, for its candour, for its openness
+of mind, for the readiness with which a hearing is given to ideas that
+forty years ago, or even less than that, would have excluded persons
+suspected of holding them from decent society, and in fact did so
+exclude them. Before, however, we congratulate ourselves too warmly on
+this, let us be quite sure that we are not mistaking for tolerance what
+is really nothing more creditable than indifference. These two attitudes
+of mind, which are so vitally unlike in their real quality, are so hard
+to distinguish in their outer seeming.
+
+One is led to suspect that carelessness is the right name for what looks
+like reasoned toleration, by such a line of consideration as the
+following. It is justly said that at the bottom of all the great
+discussions of modern society lie the two momentous questions, first
+whether there is a God, and second whether the soul is immortal. In
+other words, whether our fellow-creatures are the highest beings who
+take an interest in us, or in whom we need take an interest; and, then,
+whether life in this world is the only life of which we shall ever be
+conscious. It is true of most people that when they are talking of
+evolution, and the origin of species, and the experiential or
+intuitional source of ideas, and the utilitarian or transcendental basis
+of moral obligation, these are the questions which they really have in
+their minds. Now, in spite of the scientific activity of the day, nobody
+is likely to contend that men are pressed keenly in their souls by any
+poignant stress of spiritual tribulation in the face of the two supreme
+enigmas. Nobody will say that there is much of that striving and
+wrestling and bitter agonising, which whole societies of men have felt
+before now on questions of far less tremendous import. Ours, as has been
+truly said, is 'a time of loud disputes and weak convictions,' In a
+generation deeply impressed by a sense of intellectual responsibility
+this could not be. As it is, even superior men are better pleased to
+play about the height of these great arguments, to fly in busy
+intellectual sport from side to side, from aspect to aspect, than they
+are intent on resolving what it is, after all, that the discussion comes
+to and to which solution, when everything has been said and heard, the
+balance of truth really to incline. There are too many giggling
+epigrams; people are too willing to look on collections of mutually
+hostile opinions with the same kind of curiosity which they bestow on a
+collection of mutually hostile beasts in a menagerie. They have very
+faint predilections for one rather than another. If they were truly
+alive to the duty of conclusiveness, or to the inexpressible magnitude
+of the subjects which nominally occupy their minds, but really only
+exercise their tongues, this elegant Pyrrhonism would be impossible, and
+this light-hearted neutrality most unendurable.
+
+Well has the illustrious Pascal said with reference to one of the two
+great issues of the modern controversy:--'The immortality of the soul is
+a thing that concerns us so closely and touches us so profoundly, that
+one must have lost all feeling to be indifferent as to knowing how the
+matter is. All our actions and all our thoughts must follow such
+different paths, according as there are eternal goods to hope for or are
+not, that it is impossible to take a step with sense and judgment,
+without regulating it in view of this point, which ought to be our first
+object.... I can have nothing but compassion for those who groan and
+travail in this doubt with all sincerity, who look on it as the worst of
+misfortunes, and who, sparing no pains to escape from it, make of this
+search their chief and most serious employment.... But he who doubts and
+searches not is at the same time a grievous wrongdoer, and a grievously
+unfortunate man. If along with this he is tranquil and self-satisfied,
+if he publishes his contentment to the world and plumes himself upon it,
+and if it is this very state of doubt which he makes the subject of his
+joy and vanity--I have no terms in which to describe so extravagant a
+creature.'[15] Who, except a member of the school of extravagant
+creatures themselves, would deny that Pascal's irritation is most
+wholesome and righteous?
+
+Perhaps in reply to this, we may be confronted by our own doctrine of
+intellectual responsibility interpreted in a directly opposite sense. We
+may be reminded of the long array of difficulties that interfere between
+us and knowledge in that tremendous matter, and of objections that rise
+in such perplexing force to an answer either one way or the other. And
+finally we may be despatched with a eulogy of caution and a censure of
+too great heat after certainty. The answer is that there is a kind of
+Doubt not without search, but after and at the end of search, which is
+not open to Pascal's just reproaches against the more ignoble and
+frivolous kind. And this too has been described for us by a subtle
+doctor of Pascal's communion. 'Are there pleasures of Doubt, as well as
+of Inference and Assent? In one sense there are. Not indeed if doubt
+means ignorance, uncertainty, or hopeless suspense; but there is a
+certain grave acquiescence in ignorance, a recognition of our impotence
+to solve momentous and urgent questions, which has a satisfaction of its
+own. After high aspirations, after renewed endeavours, after bootless
+toil, after long wanderings, after hope, effort, weariness, failure,
+painfully alternating and recurring, it is an immense relief to the
+exhausted mind to be able to say, "At length I know that I can know
+nothing about anything." ... Ignorance remains the evil which it ever
+was, but something of the peace of certitude is gained in knowing the
+worst, and in having reconciled the mind to the endurance of it.'[16]
+Precisely, and what one would say of our own age is that it will not
+deliberately face this knowledge of the worst. So it misses the peace of
+certitude, and not only its peace, but the strength and coherency that
+follow strict acceptance of the worst, when the worst is after all the
+best within reach.
+
+Those who are in earnest when they blame too great haste after
+certainty, do in reality mean us to embrace certainty, but in favour of
+the vulgar opinions. They only see the prodigious difficulties of the
+controversy when you do not incline to their own side in it. They only
+panegyrise caution and the strictly provisional when they suspect that
+intrepidity and love of the conclusive would lead them to unwelcome
+shores. These persons, however, whether fortunately or unfortunately,
+have no longer much influence over the most active part of the national
+intelligence. Whether permanently or not, resolute orthodoxy, however
+prosperous it may seem among many of the uncultivated rich, has lost its
+hold upon thought. For thought has become dispersive, and the
+centrifugal forces of the human mind, among those who think seriously,
+have for the time become dominant and supreme. No one, I suppose,
+imagines that the singular ecclesiastical revival which is now going on,
+is accompanied by any revival of real and reasoned belief; or that the
+opulent manufacturers who subscribe so generously for restored cathedral
+fabrics and the like, have been moved by the apologetics of _Aids to
+Faith_ and the Christian Evidence Society.
+
+Obviously only three ways of dealing with the great problems of which we
+have spoken are compatible with a strong and well-bottomed character. We
+may affirm that there is a deity with definable attributes; and that
+there is a conscious state and continued personality after the
+dissolution of the body. Or we may deny. Or we may assure ourselves that
+we have no faculties enabling us on good evidence either to deny or
+affirm. Intellectual self-respect and all the qualities that are derived
+from that, may well go with any one of these three courses, decisively
+followed and consistently applied in framing a rule of life and a
+settled scheme of its aims and motives. Why do we say that intellectual
+self-respect is not vigorous, nor the sense of intellectual
+responsibility and truthfulness and coherency quick and wakeful among
+us? Because so many people, even among those who might be expected to
+know better, insist on the futile attempt to reconcile all those
+courses, instead of fixing on one and steadily abiding in it. They speak
+as if they affirmed, and they act as if they denied, and in their hearts
+they cherish a slovenly sort of suspicion that we can neither deny nor
+affirm. It may be said that this comes to much the same thing as if they
+had formally decided in the last or neutral sense. It is not so. This
+illegitimate union of three contradictories fritters character away,
+breaks it up into discordant parts, and dissolves into mercurial
+fluidity that leavening sincerity and free and cheerful boldness, which
+come of harmonious principles of faith and action, and without which men
+can never walk as confident lovers of justice and truth.
+
+
+Ambrose's famous saying, that 'it hath not pleased the Lord to give his
+people salvation in dialectic,' has a profound meaning far beyond its
+application to theology. It is deeply true that our ruling convictions
+are less the product of ratiocination than of sympathy, imagination,
+usage, tradition. But from this it does not follow that the reasoning
+faculties are to be further discouraged. On the contrary, just because
+the other elements are so strong that they can be trusted to take care
+of themselves, it is expedient to give special countenance to the
+intellectual habits, which alone can check and rectify the constantly
+aberrating tendencies of sentiment on the one side, and custom on the
+other. This remark brings us to another type, of whom it is not
+irrelevant to speak shortly in this place. The consequences of the
+strength of the political spirit are not all direct, nor does its
+strength by any means spring solely from its indulgence to the less
+respectable elements of character, such as languor, extreme pliableness,
+superficiality. On the contrary, it has an indirect influence in
+removing the only effective restraint on the excesses of some qualities
+which, when duly directed and limited, are among the most precious parts
+of our mental constitution. The political spirit is the great force in
+throwing love of truth and accurate reasoning into a secondary place.
+The evil does not stop here. This achievement has indirectly
+countenanced the postponement of intellectual methods, and the
+diminution of the sense of intellectual responsibility, by a school that
+is anything rather than political.
+
+Theology has borrowed, and coloured for her own use, the principles
+which were first brought into vogue in politics. If in the one field it
+is the fashion to consider convenience first and truth second, in the
+other there is a corresponding fashion of placing truth second and
+emotional comfort first. If there are some who compromise their real
+opinions, or the chance of reaching truth, for the sake of gain, there
+are far more who shrink from giving their intelligence free play, for
+the sake of keeping undisturbed certain luxurious spiritual
+sensibilities. This choice of emotional gratification before truth and
+upright dealing with one's own understanding, creates a character that
+is certainly far less unlovely than those who sacrifice their
+intellectual integrity to more material convenience. The moral flaw is
+less palpable and less gross. Yet here too there is the stain of
+intellectual improbity, and it is perhaps all the more mischievous for
+being partly hidden under the mien of spiritual exaltation.
+
+There is in literature no more seductive illustration of this seductive
+type than Rousseau's renowned character of the Savoyard
+Vicar--penetrated with scepticism as to the attributes of the deity, the
+meaning of the holy rites, the authenticity of the sacred documents; yet
+full of reverence, and ever respecting in silence what he could neither
+reject nor understand. 'The essential worship,' he says, 'is the worship
+of the heart. God never rejects this homage, under whatever form it be
+offered to him. In old days I used to say mass with the levity which in
+time infects even the gravest things when we do them too often. Since
+acquiring my new principles [of reverential scepticism] I celebrate it
+with more veneration: I am overcome by the majesty of the Supreme Being,
+by his presence, by the insufficiency of the human mind, which conceives
+so ill what pertains to its author. When I approach the moment of
+consecration, I collect myself for performing the act with all the
+feelings required by the church and the majesty of the sacrament. I
+strive to annihilate my reason before the Supreme Intelligence, saying,
+Who art thou that thou shouldst measure infinite power?'[17]
+
+The Savoyard Vicar is not imaginary. The acquiescence in indefinite
+ideas for the sake of comforted emotions, and the abnegation of strong
+convictions in order to make room for free and plenteous effusion, have
+for us all the marks of a too familiar reality. Such a doctrine is an
+everyday plea for self-deception, and a current justification for
+illusion even among some of the finer spirits. They have persuaded
+themselves not only that the life of the religious emotions is the
+highest life, but that it is independent of the intellectual forms with
+which history happens to have associated it. And so they refine and
+sophisticate and make havoc with plain and honest interpretation, in
+order to preserve a soft serenity of soul unperturbed.
+
+Now, we are not at all concerned to dispute such positions as that
+Feeling is the right starting-point of moral education; that in forming
+character appeal should be to the heart rather than to the
+understanding; that the only basis on which our faculties can be
+harmoniously ordered is the preponderance of affection over reason.
+These propositions open much grave and complex discussion, and they are
+not to our present purpose. We only desire to state the evil of the
+notion that a man is warranted in comforting himself with dogmas and
+formularies, which he has first to empty of all definite, precise, and
+clearly determinable significance, before he can get them out of the way
+of his religious sensibilities. Whether Reason or Affection is to have
+the empire in the society of the future, when Reason may possibly have
+no more to discover for us in the region of morals and religion, and so
+will have become _emeritus_ and taken a lower place, as of a tutor whose
+services the human family, being now grown up, no longer
+requires,--however this may be, it is at least certain that in the
+meantime the spiritual life of man needs direction quite as much as it
+needs impulse, and light quite as much as force. This direction and
+light can only be safely procured by the free and vigorous use of the
+intelligence. But the intelligence is not free in the presence of a
+mortal fear lest its conclusions should trouble soft tranquillity of
+spirit. There is always hope of a man so long as he dwells in the region
+of the direct categorical proposition and the unambiguous term; so long
+as he does not deny the rightly drawn conclusion after accepting the
+major and minor premisses. This may seem a scanty virtue and very easy
+grace. Yet experience shows it to be too hard of attainment for those
+who tamper with disinterestedness of conviction, for the sake of
+luxuriating in the softness of spiritual transport without interruption
+from a syllogism. It is true that there are now and then in life as in
+history noble and fair natures, that by the silent teaching and
+unconscious example of their inborn purity, star-like constancy, and
+great devotion, do carry the world about them to further heights of
+living than can be attained by ratiocination. But these, the blameless
+and loved saints of the earth, rise too rarely on our dull horizons to
+make a rule for the world. The law of things is that they who tamper
+with veracity, from whatever motive, are tampering with the vital force
+of human progress. Our comfort and the delight of the religious
+imagination are no better than forms of self-indulgence, when they are
+secured at the cost of that love of truth on which, more than on
+anything else, the increase of light and happiness among men must
+depend. We have to fight and do lifelong battle against the forces of
+darkness, and anything that turns the edge of reason blunts the surest
+and most potent of our weapons.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 13: Burton's _Lift of Hume,_ ii. 186-188]
+
+[Footnote 14: Isaac Taylor's _Natural History of Enthusiasm_, p. 226.]
+
+[Footnote 15: _Pensées_, II. Art ii.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Dr. Newman's _Grammar of Assent_, p. 201.]
+
+[Footnote 17: _Emile_, bk. iv.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.
+
+The main field of discussion touching Compromise in expression and
+avowal lies in the region of religious belief. In politics no one
+seriously contends that respect for the feelings and prejudices of other
+people requires us to be silent about our opinions. A republican, for
+instance, is at perfect liberty to declare himself so. Nobody will say
+that he is not within his rights if he should think it worth while to
+practise this liberty, though of course he will have to face the obloquy
+which attends all opinion that is not shared by the more demonstrative
+and vocal portions of the public. It is true that in every stable
+society a general conviction prevails of the extreme undesirableness of
+constantly laying bare the foundations of government. Incessant
+discussion of the theoretical bases of the social union is naturally
+considered worse than idle. It is felt by many wise men that the chief
+business of the political thinker is to interest himself in
+generalisations of such a sort as leads with tolerable straightness to
+practical improvements of a far-reaching and durable kind. Even among
+those, however, who thus feel it not to be worth while to be for ever
+handling the abstract principles which are, after all, only clumsy
+expressions of the real conditions that bring and keep men together in
+society, yet nobody of any consideration pretends to silence or limit
+the free discussion of these principles. Although a man is not likely to
+be thanked who calls attention to the vast discrepancies between the
+theory and practice of the constitution, yet nobody now would
+countenance the notion of an inner doctrine in politics. We smile at the
+line that Hume took in speaking of the doctrine of non-resistance. He
+did not deny that the right of resistance to a tyrannical sovereign does
+actually belong to a nation. But, he said, 'if ever on any occasion it
+were laudable to conceal truth from the populace, it must be confessed
+that the doctrine of resistance affords such an example; and that all
+speculative reasoners ought to observe with regard to this principle
+the same cautious silence which the laws, in every species of
+government, have ever prescribed to themselves.' As if the cautious
+silence of the political writer could prevent a populace from feeling
+the heaviness of an oppressor's hand, and striving to find relief from
+unjust burdens. As if any nation endowed with enough of the spirit of
+independence to assent to the right of resistance when offered to them
+as a speculative theorem, would not infallibly be led by the same spirit
+to assert the right without the speculative theorem. That so acute a
+head as Hume's should have failed to perceive these very plain
+considerations, and that he should moreover have perpetrated the
+absurdity of declaring the right of resistance, in the same breath in
+which he declares the laudableness of keeping it a secret, only allows
+how carefully a man need steer after he has once involved himself in the
+labyrinths of Economy.[18]
+
+In religion the unreasonableness of imposing a similar cautious silence
+is not yet fully established, nor the vicious effects of practising it
+clearly recognised. In these high matters an amount of economy and
+management is held praiseworthy, which in any other subject would be
+universally condemned as cowardly and ignoble. Indeed the preliminary
+stage has scarcely been reached--the stage in which public opinion
+grants to every one the unrestricted right of shaping his own beliefs,
+independently of those of the people who surround him. Any woman, for
+instance, suspected of having cast behind her the Bible and all
+practices of devotion and the elementary articles of the common creed,
+would be distrustfully regarded even by those who wink at the same kind
+of mental boldness in men. Nay, she would be so regarded even by some of
+the very men who have themselves discarded as superstition what they
+still wish women to retain for law and gospel. So long as any class of
+adults are effectually discouraged in the free use of their minds upon
+the most important subjects, we are warranted in saying that the era of
+free thought, which naturally precedes the era of free speech, is still
+imperfectly developed.
+
+The duties and rights of free speech are by no means identical with
+those of independent thought. One general reason for this is tolerably
+plain. The expression of opinion directly affects other people, while
+its mere formation directly affects no one but ourselves. Therefore the
+limits of compromise in expression are less widely and freely placed,
+because the rights and interests of all who may be made listeners to our
+spoken or written words are immediately concerned. In forming opinions,
+a man or woman owes no consideration to any person or persons whatever.
+Truth is the single object. It is truth that in the forum of conscience
+claims an undivided allegiance. The publication of opinion stands on
+another footing. That is an external act, with possible consequences,
+like all other external acts, both to the doer and to every one within
+the sphere of his influence. And, besides these, it has possible
+consequences to the prosperity of the opinion itself.[19]
+
+A hundred questions of fitness, of seasonableness, of conflicting
+expediencies, present themselves in this connection, and nothing gives
+more anxiety to a sensible man who holds notions opposed to the current
+prejudices, than to hit the right mark where intellectual integrity and
+prudence, firmness and wise reserve, are in exact accord. When we come
+to declaring opinions that are, however foolishly and unreasonably,
+associated with pain and even a kind of turpitude in the minds of those
+who strongly object to them, then some of our most powerful sympathies
+are naturally engaged. We wonder whether duty to truth can possibly
+require us to inflict keen distress on those to whom we are bound by the
+tenderest and most consecrated ties. This is so wholly honourable a
+sentiment, that no one who has not made himself drunk with the thin sour
+wine of a crude and absolute logic will refuse to consider it. Before,
+however, attempting to illustrate cases of conscience in this order, we
+venture to make a short digression into the region of the matter, as
+distinct from the manner of free speech. One or two changes of great
+importance in the way in which men think about religion, bear directly
+upon the conditions on which they may permit themselves and others to
+speak about it.
+
+
+The peculiar character of all the best kinds of dissent from the nominal
+creed of the time, makes it rather less difficult for us to try to
+reconcile unflinching honesty with a just and becoming regard for the
+feelings of those who have claims upon our forbearance, than would have
+been the case a hundred years ago. 'It is not now with a polite sneer,'
+as a high ecclesiastical authority lately admitted, 'still less with a
+rude buffet or coarse words, that Christianity is assailed.' Before
+churchmen congratulate themselves too warmly on this improvement in the
+nature of the attack, perhaps they ought to ask themselves how far it is
+due to the change in the position of the defending party. The truth is
+that the coarse and realistic criticism of which Voltaire was the
+consummate master, has done its work. It has driven the defenders of the
+old faith into the milder and more genial climate of non-natural
+interpretations, and the historic sense, and a certain elastic
+relativity of dogma. The old criticism was victorious, but after victory
+it vanished. One reason of this was that the coarse and realistic forms
+of belief had either vanished before it, or else they forsook their
+ancient pretensions and clothed themselves in more modest robes. The
+consequence of this, and of other causes which might be named, is that
+the modern attack, while fully as serious and much more radical, has a
+certain gravity, decorum, and worthiness of form. No one of any sense or
+knowledge now thinks the Christian religion had its origin in
+deliberate imposture. The modern freethinker does not attack it; he
+explains it. And what is more, he explains it by referring its growth to
+the better, and not to the worse part of human nature. He traces it to
+men's cravings for a higher morality. He finds its source in their
+aspirations after nobler expression of that feeling for the
+incommensurable things, which is in truth under so many varieties of
+inwoven pattern the common universal web of religious faith.
+
+The result of this way of looking at a creed which a man no longer
+accepts, is that he is able to speak of it with patience and historic
+respect. He can openly mark his dissent from it, without exacerbating
+the orthodox sentiment by galling pleasantries or bitter animadversion
+upon details. We are now awake to the all-important truth that belief in
+this or that detail of superstition is the result of an irrational state
+of mind, and flows logically from superstitious premisses. We see that
+it is to begin at the wrong end, to assail the deductions as impossible,
+instead of sedulously building up a state of mind in which their
+impossibility would become spontaneously visible.
+
+Besides the great change which such a point of view makes in men's way
+of speaking of a religion, whose dogmas and documents they reject, there
+is this further consideration leaning in the same direction. The
+tendency of modern free thought is more and more visibly towards the
+extraction of the first and more permanent elements of the old faith, to
+make the purified material of the new. When Dr. Congreve met the famous
+epigram about Comte's system being Catholicism minus Christianity, by
+the reply that it is Catholicism plus Science, he gave an ingenious
+expression to the direction which is almost necessarily taken by all who
+attempt, in however informal a manner, to construct for themselves some
+working system of faith, in place of the faith which science and
+criticism have sapped. In what ultimate form, acceptable to great
+multitudes of men, these attempts will at last issue, no one can now
+tell. For we, like the Hebrews of old, shall all have to live and die in
+faith, 'not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off,
+and being persuaded of them, and embracing them, and confessing that we
+are strangers and pilgrims on the earth.' Meanwhile, after the first
+great glow and passion of the just and necessary revolt of reason
+against superstition have slowly lost the exciting splendour of the
+dawn, and become diffused in the colourless space of a rather bleak
+noonday, the mind gradually collects again some of the ideas of the old
+religion of the West, and willingly, or even joyfully, suffers itself to
+be once more breathed upon by something of its spirit. Christianity was
+the last great religious synthesis. It is the one nearest to us. Nothing
+is more natural than that those who cannot rest content with
+intellectual analysis, while awaiting the advent of the Saint Paul of
+the humanitarian faith of the future, should gather up provisionally
+such fragmentary illustrations of this new faith as are to be found in
+the records of the old. Whatever form may be ultimately imposed on our
+vague religious aspirations by some prophet to come, who shall unite
+sublime depth of feeling and lofty purity of life with strong
+intellectual grasp and the gift of a noble eloquence, we may at least be
+sure of this, that it will stand as closely related to Christianity as
+Christianity stood closely related to the old Judaic dispensation. It is
+commonly assumed that the rejecters of the popular religion stand in
+face of it, as the Christians stood in face of the pagan belief and
+pagan rites in the Empire. The analogy is inexact. The modern denier, if
+he is anything better than that, or entertains hopes of a creed to come,
+is nearer to the position of the Christianising Jew.[20] Science, when
+she has accomplished all her triumphs in her own order, will still have
+to go back, when the time comes, to assist in the building up of a new
+creed by which men can live. The builders will have to seek material in
+the purified and sublimated ideas, of which the confessions and rites of
+the Christian churches have been the grosser expression. Just as what
+was once the new dispensation was preached _a Judaeos ad Judaeos apud
+Judaeos_, so must the new, that is to be, find a Christian teacher and
+Christian hearers. It can hardly be other than an expansion, a
+development, a readaptation, of all the moral and spiritual truth that
+lay hidden under the worn-out forms. It must be such a harmonising of
+the truth with our intellectual conceptions as shall fit it to be an
+active guide to conduct. In a world '_where men sit and hear each other
+groan, where but to think is to be full of sorrow_,' it is hard to
+imagine a time when we shall be indifferent to that sovereign legend of
+Pity. We have to incorporate it in some wider gospel of Justice and
+Progress.
+
+I shall not, I hope, be suspected of any desire to prophesy too smooth
+things. It is no object of ours to bridge over the gulf between belief
+in the vulgar theology and disbelief. Nor for a single moment do we
+pretend that, when all the points of contact between virtuous belief and
+virtuous disbelief are made the most of that good faith will allow,
+there will not still and after all remain a terrible controversy between
+those who cling passionately to all the consolations, mysteries,
+personalities, of the orthodox faith, and us who have made up our minds
+to face the worst, and to shape, as best we can, a life in which the
+cardinal verities of the common creed shall have no place. The future
+faith, like the faith of the past, brings not peace but a sword. It is a
+tale not of concord, but of households divided against themselves. Those
+who are incessantly striving to make the old bottles hold the new wine,
+to reconcile the irreconcilable, to bring the Bible and the dogmas of
+the churches to be good friends with history and criticism, are prompted
+by the humanest intention.[21] One sympathises with this amiable anxiety
+to soften shocks, and break the rudeness of a vital transition. In this
+essay, at any rate, there is no such attempt. We know that it is the son
+against the father, and the mother-in-law against the daughter-in-law.
+No softness of speech will disguise the portentous differences between
+those who admit a supernatural revelation and those who deny it. No
+charity nor goodwill can narrow the intellectual breach between those
+who declare that a world without an ever-present Creator with
+intelligible attributes would be to them empty and void, and those who
+insist that none of the attributes of a Creator can ever be grasped by
+the finite intelligence of men.[22] Our object in urging the historic,
+semi-conservative, and almost sympathetic quality, which distinguishes
+the unbelief of to-day from the unbelief of a hundred years ago, is only
+to show that the most strenuous and upright of plain-speakers is less
+likely to shock and wound the lawful sensibilities of devout persons
+than he would have been so long as unbelief went no further than bitter
+attack on small details. In short, all save the purely negative and
+purely destructive school of freethinkers, are now able to deal with
+the beliefs from which they dissent, in a way which makes patient and
+disinterested controversy not wholly impossible.
+
+One more point of much importance ought to be mentioned. The belief that
+heresy is the result of wilful depravity is fast dying out. People no
+longer seriously think that speculative error is bound up with moral
+iniquity, or that mistaken thinking is either the result or the cause of
+wicked living. Even the official mouthpieces of established beliefs now
+usually represent a bad heart as only one among other possible causes of
+unbelief. It divides the curse with ignorance, intellectual shallowness,
+the unfortunate influence of plausible heresiarchs, and other
+alternative roots of evil. They thus leave a way of escape, by which the
+person who does not share their own convictions may still be credited
+with a good moral character. Some persons, it is true, 'cannot see how a
+man who deliberately rejects the Roman Catholic religion can, in the
+eyes of those who earnestly believe it, be other than a rebel against
+God.' They assure us that, 'as opinions become better marked and more
+distinctly connected with action, the truth that decided dissent from
+them implies more or less of a reproach upon those who hold them
+decidedly, becomes so obvious that every one perceives it.' No doubt a
+protestant or a sceptic regards the beliefs of a catholic as a reproach
+upon the believer's understanding. So the man whose whole faith rests on
+the miraculous and on acts of special intervention, regards the strictly
+positive and scientific thinker as the dupe of a crude and narrow logic.
+But this now carries with it no implication of moral obliquity. De
+Maistre's rather grotesque conviction that infidels always die of
+horrible diseases with special names, could now only be held among the
+very dregs of the ecclesiastical world.
+
+Nor is it correct to say that 'when religious differences come to be,
+and are regarded as, mere differences of opinion, it is because the
+controversy is really decided in the sceptical sense.' Those who agree
+with the present writer, for example, are not sceptics. They positively,
+absolutely, and without reserve, reject as false the whole system of
+objective propositions which make up the popular belief of the day, in
+one and all of its theological expressions. They look upon that system
+as mischievous in its consequences to society, for many reasons,--among
+others because it tends to divert and misdirect the most energetic
+faculties of human nature. This, however, does not make them suspect the
+motives or the habitual morality of those who remain in the creed in
+which they were nurtured. The difference is a difference of opinion, as
+purely as if we refused to accept the undulatory theory of light; and we
+treat it as such. Then reverse this. Why is it any more impossible for
+those who remain in the theological stage, who are not in the smallest
+degree sceptical, who in their heart of hearts embrace without a shadow
+of misgiving all the mysteries of the faith, why is it any more
+impossible for them than for us, whose convictions are as strong as
+theirs, to treat the most radical dissidence as that and nothing other
+or worse? Logically, it perhaps might not be hard to convict them of
+inconsistency, but then, as has been so often said, inconsistency is a
+totally different thing from insincerity, or doubting adherence, or
+silent scepticism. The beliefs of an ordinary man are a complex
+structure of very subtle materials, all compacted into a whole, not by
+logic, but by lack of logic; not by syllogism or sorites, but by the
+vague.
+
+As a plain matter of fact and observation, we may all perceive that
+dissent from religious opinion less and less implies reproach in any
+serious sense. We all of us know in the flesh liberal catholics and
+latitudinarian protestants, who hold the very considerable number of
+beliefs that remain to them, quite as firmly and undoubtingly as
+believers who are neither liberal nor latitudinarian. The compatibility
+of error in faith with virtue in conduct is to them only a mystery the
+more, a branch of the insoluble problem of Evil, permitted by a Being at
+once all-powerful and all-benevolent. Stringent logic may make short
+work of either fact,--a benevolent author of evil, or a virtuous
+despiser of divine truth. But in an atmosphere of mystery, logical
+contradictions melt away. Faith gives a sanction to that tolerant and
+charitable judgment of the character of heretics, which has its real
+springs partly in common human sympathy whereby we are all bound to one
+another, and partly in experience, which teaches us that practical
+righteousness and speculative orthodoxy do not always have their roots
+in the same soil. The world is every day growing larger. The range of
+the facts of the human race is being enormously extended by naturalists,
+by historians, by philologists, by travellers, by critics. The manifold
+past experiences of humanity are daily opening out to us in vaster and
+at the same time more ordered proportions. And so even those who hold
+fast to Christianity as the noblest, strongest, and only final
+conclusion of these experiences, are yet constrained to admit that it is
+no more than a single term in a very long and intricate series.
+
+
+The object of the foregoing digression is to show some cause for
+thinking that dissent from the current beliefs is less and less likely
+to inflict upon those who retain them any very intolerable kind or
+degree of mental pain. Therefore it is in so far all the plainer, as
+well as easier, a duty not to conceal such dissent. What we have been
+saying comes to this. If a believer finds that his son, for instance,
+has ceased to believe, he no longer has this disbelief thrust upon him
+in gross and irreverent forms. Nor does he any longer suppose that the
+unbelieving son must necessarily be a profligate. And moreover, in
+ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, he no longer supposes that infidels,
+of his own family or acquaintance at any rate, will consume for eternal
+ages in lakes of burning marl.
+
+Let us add another consideration. One reason why so many persons are
+really shocked and pained by the avowal of heretical opinions is the
+very fact that such avowal is uncommon. If unbelievers and doubters were
+more courageous, believers would be less timorous. It is because they
+live in an enervating fool's paradise of seeming assent and conformity,
+that the breath of an honest and outspoken word strikes so eager and
+nipping on their sensibilities. If they were not encouraged to suppose
+that all the world is of their own mind, if they were forced out of that
+atmosphere of self-indulgent silences and hypocritical reserves, which
+is systematically poured round them, they would acquire a robuster
+mental habit. They would learn to take dissents for what they are worth.
+They would be led either to strengthen or to discard their own
+opinions, if the dissents happened to be weighty or instructive; either
+to refute or neglect such dissents as should be ill-founded or
+insignificant. They will remain valetudinarians, so long as a curtain of
+compromise shelters them from the real belief of those of their
+neighbours who have ventured to use their minds with some measure of
+independence. A very brief contact with people who, when the occasion
+comes, do not shrink from saying what they think, is enough to modify
+that excessive liability to be shocked at truth-speaking, which is only
+so common because truth-speaking itself is so unfamiliar.
+
+Now, however great the pain inflicted by the avowal of unbelief, it
+seems to the present writer that one relationship in life, and one only,
+justifies us in being silent where otherwise it would be right to speak.
+This relationship is that between child and parents. Those parents are
+wisest who train their sons and daughters in the utmost liberty both of
+thought and speech; who do not instill dogmas into them, but inculcate
+upon them the sovereign importance of correct ways of forming opinions;
+who, while never dissembling the great fact that if one opinion is
+true, its contradictory cannot be true also, but must be a lie and must
+partake of all the evil qualities of a lie, yet always set them the
+example of listening to unwelcome opinions with patience and candour.
+Still all parents are not wise. They cannot all endure to hear of any
+religious opinions except their own. Where it would give them sincere
+and deep pain to hear a son or daughter avow disbelief in the
+inspiration of the Bible and so forth, then it seems that the younger
+person is warranted in refraining from saying that he or she does not
+accept such and such doctrines. This, of course, only where the son or
+daughter feels a tender and genuine attachment to the parent. Where the
+parent has not earned this attachment, has been selfish, indifferent, or
+cruel, the title to the special kind of forbearance of which we are
+speaking can hardly exist. In an ordinary way, however, a parent has a
+claim on us which no other person in the world can have, and a man's
+self-respect ought scarcely to be injured if he finds himself shrinking
+from playing the apostle to his own father and mother.
+
+One can indeed imagine circumstances where this would not be true. If
+you are persuaded that you have had revealed to you a glorious gospel of
+light and blessedness, it is impossible not to thirst to impart such
+tidings most eagerly to those who are closest about your heart. We are
+not in that position. We have as yet no magnificent vision, so definite,
+so touching, so 'clothed with the beauty of a thousand stars,' as to
+make us eager, for the sake of it, to murder all the sweetnesses of
+filial piety in an aggressive eristic. This much one concedes. Yet let
+us ever remember that those elders are of nobler type who have kept
+their minds in a generous freedom, and have made themselves strong with
+that magnanimous confidence in truth, which the Hebrew expressed in old
+phrase, that if counsel or work be of men it will come to nought, but if
+it be of God ye cannot overthrow it.
+
+Even in the case of parents, and even though our new creed is but
+rudimentary, there can be no good reason why we should go further in the
+way of economy than mere silence. Neither they nor any other human being
+can possibly have a right to expect us, not merely to abstain from the
+open expression of dissents, but positively to profess unreal and
+feigned assents. No fear of giving pain, no wish to soothe the alarms of
+those to whom we owe much, no respect for the natural clinging of the
+old to the faith which has accompanied them through honourable lives,
+can warrant us in saying that we believe to be true what we are
+convinced is false. The most lax moralist counts a lie wrong, even when
+the motive is unselfish, and springs from the desire to give pleasure to
+those whom it is our duty to please. A deliberate lie avowedly does not
+cease to be one because it concerns spiritual things. Nor is it the less
+wrong because it is uttered by one to whom all spiritual things have
+become indifferent. Filial affection is a motive which would, if any
+motive could, remove some of the taint of meanness with which pious
+lying, like every other kind of lying, tends to infect character. The
+motive may no doubt ennoble the act, though the act remains in the
+category of forbidden things. But the motive of these complaisant
+assents and false affirmations, taken at their very best, is still
+comparatively a poor motive. No real elevation of spirit is possible for
+a man who is willing to subordinate his convictions to his domestic
+affections, and to bring himself to a habit of viewing falsehood
+lightly, lest the truth should shock the illegitimate and over-exacting
+sensibilities either of his parents or any one else. We may understand
+what is meant by the logic of the feelings, and accept it as the proper
+corrective for a too intense egoism. But when the logic of the feelings
+is invoked to substitute the egoism of the family for the slightly
+narrower egoism of the individual, it can hardly be more than a fine
+name for self-indulgence and a callous indifference to all the largest
+human interests.
+
+
+This brings us to consider the case of another no less momentous
+relationship, and the kind of compromise in the matter of religious
+conformity which it justifies or imposes. It constantly happens that the
+husband has wholly ceased to believe the religion to which his wife
+clings with unshaken faith. We need not enter into the causes why women
+remain in bondage to opinions which so many cultivated men either reject
+or else hold in a transcendental and non-natural sense. The only
+question with which we are concerned is the amount of free assertion of
+his own convictions which a man should claim and practise, when he knows
+that such convictions are distasteful to his wife. Is it lawful, as it
+seems to be in dealing with parents, to hold his conviction silently? Is
+it lawful either positively or by implication to lead his wife to
+suppose that he shares her opinions, when in truth he rejects them?
+
+If it were not for the maxims and practice in daily use among men
+otherwise honourable, one would not suppose it possible that two answers
+could be given to these questions by any one with the smallest pretence
+of principle or self-respect. As it is, we all of us know men who
+deliberately reject the entire Christian system, and still think it
+compatible with uprightness to summon their whole establishments round
+them at morning and evening, and on their knees to offer up elaborately
+formulated prayers, which have just as much meaning to them as the
+entrails of the sacrificial victim had to an infidel haruspex. We see
+the same men diligently attending religious services; uttering assents
+to confessions of which they really reject every syllable; kneeling,
+rising, bowing, with deceptive solemnity; even partaking of the
+sacrament with a consummate devoutness that is very edifying to all who
+are not in the secret, and who do not know that they are acting a part,
+and making a mock both of their own reason and their own probity, merely
+to please persons whose delusions they pity and despise from the bottom
+of their hearts.
+
+On the surface there is certainly nothing to distinguish this kind of
+conduct from the grossest hypocrisy. Is there anything under the surface
+to relieve it from this complexion? Is there any weight in the sort of
+answer which such men make to the accusation that their conformity is a
+very degrading form of deceit, and a singularly mischievous kind of
+treachery? Is the plea of a wish to spare mental discomfort to others an
+admissible and valid plea? It seems to us to be none of these things,
+and for the following among other reasons.
+
+If a man drew his wife by lot, or by any other method over which neither
+he nor she has any control, as in the case of parents, perhaps he might
+with some plausibleness contend that he owed her certain limited
+deferences and reserves, just as we admit that he may owe them to his
+parents. But this is not the case. Marriage, in this country at least,
+is the result of mutual choice. If men and women do as a matter of fact
+usually make this choice hastily and on wofully imperfect information of
+one another's characters, that is no warrant for a resort to unlawful
+expedients to remedy the blunder. If a woman cares ardently enough about
+religion to feel keen distress at the idea of dissent from it on the
+part of those closely connected with her, she surely may be expected to
+take reasonable pains to ascertain beforehand the religious attitude of
+one with whom she is about to unite herself for life. On the other hand,
+if a man sets any value on his own opinions, if they are in any real
+sense a part of himself, he must be guilty of something like deliberate
+and systematic duplicity during the acquaintance preceding marriage, if
+his dissent has remained unsuspected. Certainly if men go through
+society before marriage under false colours, and feign beliefs which
+they do not hold, they have only themselves to thank for the degradation
+of having to keep up the imposture afterwards. Suppose a protestant
+were to pass himself off for a catholic because he happened to meet a
+catholic lady whom he desired to marry. Everybody would agree in calling
+such a man by a very harsh name. It is hard to see why a freethinker,
+who by reticence and conformity passes himself off for a believer,
+should be more leniently judged. The differences between a catholic and
+a protestant are assuredly not any greater than those between a believer
+and an unbeliever. We all admit the baseness of dissimulation in the
+former case. Why is it any less base in the latter?
+
+Marriages, however, are often made in haste, or heedlessly, or early in
+life, before either man or woman has come to feel very deeply about
+religion either one way or another. The woman does not know how much she
+will need religion, nor what comfort it may bring to her. The man does
+not know all the objections to it which may disclose themselves to his
+understanding as the years ripen. There is always at work that most
+unfortunate maxim, tacitly held and acted upon in ninety-nine marriages
+out of a hundred, that money is of importance, and social position is of
+importance, and good connections are of importance, and health and
+manners and comely looks, and that the only thing which is of no
+importance whatever is opinion and intellectual quality and temper. Now
+granting that both man and woman are indifferent at the time of their
+union, is that any reason why upon either of them acquiring serious
+convictions, the other should be expected, out of mere complaisance, to
+make a false and hypocritical pretence of sharing them? To see how
+flimsy is this plea of fearing to give pain to the religious
+sensitiveness of women, we have only to imagine one or two cases which
+go beyond the common experience, yet which ought not to strain the plea,
+if it be valid.
+
+Thus, if my wife turns catholic, am I to pretend to turn catholic too,
+to save her the horrible distress of thinking that I am doomed to
+eternal perdition? Or if she chooses to embrace the doctrine of direct
+illumination from heaven, and to hear voices bidding her to go or come,
+to do or abstain from doing, am I too to shape my conduct after these
+fancied monitions? Or if it comes into her mind to serve tables, and to
+listen in all faith to the miracles of spiritualism, am I, lest I
+should pain her, to feign a surrender of all my notions of evidence, to
+pretend a transformation of all my ideas of worthiness in life and
+beyond life, and to go to séances with the same regularity and
+seriousness with which you go to church? Of course in each of these
+cases everybody who does not happen to share the given peculiarity of
+belief, will agree that however severely a husband's dissent might pain
+the wife, whatever distress and discomfort it might inflict upon her,
+yet he would be bound to let her suffer, rather than sacrifice his
+veracity and self-respect. Why then is it any less discreditable to
+practise an insincere conformity in more ordinary circumstances? If the
+principle of such conformity is good for anything at all, it ought to
+cover these less usual cases as completely as the others which are more
+usual. Indeed there would be more to be said on behalf of conformity for
+politeness' sake, where the woman had gone through some great process of
+change, for then one might suppose that her heart was deeply set on the
+matter. Even then the plea would be worthless, but it is more
+indisputably worthless still where the sentiment which we are bidden to
+respect at the cost of our own freedom of speech is nothing more
+laudable than a fear of moving out of the common groove of religious
+opinion, or an intolerant and unreasoned bigotry, or mere stupidity and
+silliness of the vulgarest type.[23]
+
+Ah, it is said, you forget that women cannot live without religion. The
+present writer is equally of this opinion that women cannot be happy
+without a religion, nor men either. That is not the question. It does
+not follow because a woman cannot be happy without a religion, that
+therefore she cannot be happy unless her husband is of the same
+religion. Still less, that she would be made happy by his insincerely
+pretending to be of the same religion. And least of all is it true, if
+both these propositions were credible, that even then for the sake of
+her happiness he is bound not merely to live a life of imposture, but in
+so doing to augment the general forces of imposture in the world, and to
+make the chances of truth, light, and human improvement more and more
+unfavourable. Women are at present far less likely than men to possess a
+sound intelligence and a habit of correct judgment. They will remain so,
+while they have less ready access than men to the best kinds of literary
+and scientific training, and--what is far more important--while social
+arrangements exclude them from all those kinds of public activity, which
+are such powerful agents both in fitting men to judge soundly, and in
+forming in them the sense of responsibility for their judgments being
+sound.
+
+It may be contended that this alleged stronger religiosity of women,
+however coarse and poor in its formulae, is yet of constant value as a
+protest in favour of the maintenance of the religious element in human
+character and life, and that this is a far more important thing for us
+all than the greater or less truth of the dogmas with which such
+religiosity happens to be associated. In reply to this, without
+tediously labouring the argument, I venture to make the following
+observations. In the first place, it is an untenable idea that
+religiosity or devoutness of spirit is valuable in itself, without
+reference to the goodness or badness of the dogmatic forms and the
+practices in which it clothes itself. A fakir would hardly be an
+estimable figure in our society, merely because his way of living
+happens to be a manifestation of the religious spirit. If the religious
+spirit leads to a worthy and beautiful life, if it shows itself in
+cheerfulness, in pity, in charity and tolerance, in forgiveness, in a
+sense of the largeness and the mystery of things, in a lifting up of the
+soul in gratitude and awe to some supreme power and sovereign force,
+then whatever drawback there may be in the way of superstitious dogma,
+still such a spirit is on the whole a good thing. If not, not. It would
+be better without the superstition: even with the superstition it is
+good. But if the religious spirit is only a fine name for narrowness of
+understanding, for stubborn intolerance, for mere social formality, for
+a dread of losing that poor respectability which means thinking and
+doing exactly as the people around us think and do, then the religious
+spirit is not a good thing, but a thoroughly bad and hateful thing. To
+that we owe no management of any kind. Any one who suppresses his real
+opinions, and feigns others, out of deference to such a spirit as this
+in his household, ought to say plainly both to himself and to us that he
+cares more for his own ease and undisturbed comfort than he cares for
+truth and uprightness. For it is that, and not any tenderness for holy
+things, which is the real ground of his hypocrisy.
+
+Now with reference to the religious spirit in its nobler form, it is
+difficult to believe that any one genuinely animated by it would be
+soothed by the knowledge that her dearest companion is going through
+life with a mask on, quietly playing a part, uttering untrue
+professions, doing his best to cheat her and the rest of the world by a
+monstrous spiritual make-believe. One would suppose that instead of
+having her religious feeling gratified by conformity on these terms,
+nothing could wound it so bitterly nor outrage it so unpardonably. To
+know that her sensibility is destroying the entireness of the man's
+nature, its loyalty alike to herself and to truth, its freedom and
+singleness and courage--surely this can hardly be less distressing to a
+fine spirit than the suspicion that his heresies may bring him to the
+pit, or than the void of going through life without even the semblance
+of religious sympathy between them. If it be urged that the woman would
+never discover the piety of the man to be a counterfeit, we reply that
+unless her own piety were of the merely formal kind, she would be sure
+to make the discovery. The congregation in the old story were untouched
+by the disguised devil's eloquence on behalf of religion: it lacked
+unction. The verbal conformity of the unbeliever lacks unction, and its
+hollowness is speedily revealed to the quick apprehension of true
+faith.[24]
+
+Let us not be supposed to be arguing in favour of incessant battle of
+high dialectic in the household. Nothing could be more destructive of
+the gracious composure and mental harmony, of which household life ought
+to be, but perhaps seldom is, the great organ and instrument. Still less
+are we pleading for the freethinker's right at every hour of day or
+night to mock, sneer, and gibe at the sincere beliefs and
+conscientiously performed rites of those, whether men or women, whether
+strangers or kinsfolk, from whose religion he disagrees. 'It is not
+ancient impressions only,' said Pascal, 'which are capable of abusing
+us. The charm of novelty has the same power.' The prate of new-born
+scepticism may be as tiresome and as odious as the cant of gray
+orthodoxy. Religious discussion is not to be foisted upon us at every
+turn either by defenders or assailants. All we plead for is that when
+the opportunity meets the freethinker full in front, he is called upon
+to speak as freely as he thinks. Not more than this. A plain man has no
+trouble in acquiring this tact of reasonableness. We may all write what
+we please, because it is in the discretion of the rest of the world
+whether they will hearken or not. But in the family this is not so. If a
+man systematically intrudes disrespectful and unwelcome criticism upon a
+woman who retains the ancient belief, he is only showing that
+freethinker may be no more than bigot differently writ. It ought to be
+essential to no one's self-respect that he cannot consent to live with
+people who do not think as he thinks. We may be sure that there is
+something shallow and convulsive about the beliefs of a man who cannot
+allow his house-mates to possess their own beliefs in peace.
+
+On the other hand, it is essential to the self-respect of every one
+with the least love of truth that he should be free to express his
+opinions on every occasion, where silence would be taken for an assent
+which he does not really give. Still more unquestionably, he should be
+free from any obligation to forswear himself either directly, as by
+false professions, or by implication, as when he attend services, public
+or private, which are to him the symbol of superstition and mere
+spiritual phantasmagoria. The vindication of this simple right of living
+one's life honestly can hardly demand any heroic virtue. A little of the
+straightforwardness which men are accustomed to call manly, is the only
+quality that is needed; a little of that frank courage and determination
+in spiritual things, which men are usually so ready to practise towards
+their wives in temporal things. It must be a keen delight to a cynic to
+see a man who owns that he cannot bear to pain his wife by not going to
+church and saying prayers, yet insisting on having his own way,
+fearlessly thwarting her wishes, and contradicting her opinions, in
+every other detail, small and great, of the domestic economy.
+
+The truth of the matter is that the painful element in companionship is
+not difference of opinion, but discord of temperament. The important
+thing is not that two people should be inspired by the same convictions,
+but rather that each of them should hold his and her own convictions in
+a high and worthy spirit. Harmony of aim, not identity of conclusion, is
+the secret of the sympathetic life; to stand on the same moral plane,
+and that, if possible, a high one; to find satisfaction in different
+explanations of the purpose and significance of life and the universe,
+and yet the same satisfaction. It is certainly not less possible to
+disbelieve religiously than to believe religiously. This accord of mind,
+this emulation in freedom and loftiness of soul, this kindred sense of
+the awful depth of the enigma which the one believes to be answered, and
+the other suspects to be for ever unanswerable--here, and not in a
+degrading and hypocritical conformity, is the true gratification of
+those spiritual sensibilities which are alleged to be so much higher in
+women than in men. Where such an accord exists, there may still be
+solicitude left in the mind of either at the superstition or the
+incredulity of the other, but it will be solicitude of that magnanimous
+sort which is in some shape or other the inevitable and not unfruitful
+portion of every better nature.
+
+If there are women who petulantly or sourly insist on more than this
+kind of harmony, it is probable that their system of divinity is little
+better than a special manifestation of shrewishness. The man is as much
+bound to resist that, as he is bound to resist extravagance in spending
+money, or any other vice of character. If he does not resist it, if he
+suppresses his opinions, and practices a hypocritical conformity, it
+must be from weakness of will and principle. Against this we have
+nothing to say. A considerable proportion of people, men no less than
+women, are born invertebrate, and they must got on as they best can. But
+let us at least bargain that they shall not erect the maxims of their
+own feebleness into a rule for those who are braver and of stronger
+principle than themselves. And do not let the accidental exigencies of a
+personal mistake be made the foundation of a general doctrine. It is a
+poor saying, that the world is to become void of spiritual sincerity,
+because Xanthippe has a turn for respectable theology.
+
+
+One or two words should perhaps be said in this place as to conformity
+to common religious belief in the education of children. Where the
+parents differ, the one being an unbeliever, the other a believer, it is
+almost impossible for anybody to lay down a general rule. The present
+writer certainly has no ambition to attempt the thorny task of compiling
+a manual for mixed marriages. It is perhaps enough to say that all would
+depend upon the nature of the beliefs which the religious person wished
+to inculcate. Considering that the woman has an absolutely equal moral
+right with the man to decide in what faith the child shall be brought
+up, and considering how important it is that the mother should take an
+active part in the development of the child's affections and impulses,
+the most resolute of deniers may perhaps think that the advantages of
+leaving the matter to her, outweigh the disadvantages of having a
+superstitious bias given to the young mind. In these complex cases an
+honest and fair-minded man's own instincts are more likely to lead him
+right than any hard and fast rule. Two reserves in assenting to the
+wife's control of early teaching will probably suggest themselves to
+everybody who is in earnest about religion. First, if the theology which
+the woman desires to instill contains any of those wicked and depraving
+doctrines which neither Catholicism nor Calvinism is without, in the
+hands of some professors, the husband is as much justified in pressing
+his legal rights over the child to the uttermost, as he would be if the
+proposed religion demanded physical mutilation. Secondly, he will not
+himself take part in baptismal or other ceremonies which are to him no
+better than mere mummeries, nor will he ever do anything to lead his
+children at any age to suppose that he believes what he does not
+believe. Such limitations as these are commanded by all considerations
+alike of morality and good sense.
+
+To turn to the more normal case where either the man has had the wise
+forethought not to yoke himself unequally with a person of ardent belief
+which he does not share, or where both parents dissent from the popular
+creed. Here, whatever difficulties may attend its application, the
+principle is surely as clear as the sun at noonday. There can be no good
+plea for the deliberate and formal inculcation upon the young of a
+number of propositions which you believe to be false. To do this is to
+sow tares not in your enemy's field, but in the very ground which is
+most precious of all others to you and most full of hope for the future.
+To allow it to be done merely that children may grow up in the
+stereotyped mould, is simply to perpetuate in new generations the
+present thick-sighted and dead-heavy state of our spirits. It is to do
+one's best to keep society for an indefinite time sapped by hollow and
+void professions, instead of being nourished by sincerity and
+whole-heartedness.[25]
+
+Nor here, more than elsewhere in this chapter, are we trying to turn
+the family into a field of ceaseless polemic. No one who knows the stuff
+of which life is made, the pressure of material cares, the play of
+passion, the busy energising of the affections, the anxieties of health,
+and all the other solicitudes, generous or ignoble, which naturally
+absorb the days of the common multitude of men--is likely to think such
+an ideal either desirable or attainable. Least of all is it desirable
+to give character a strong set in this polemical direction in its most
+plastic days. The controversial and denying humour is a different thing
+from the habit of being careful to know what we mean by the words we
+use, and what evidence there is for the beliefs we hold. It is possible
+to foster the latter habit without creating the former. And it is
+possible to bring up the young in dissent from the common beliefs around
+them, or in indifference to them, without engendering any of that pride
+in eccentricity for its own sake, which is so little likeable a quality
+in either young or old. There is, however, little risk of an excess in
+this direction. The young tremble even more than the old at the
+penalties of nonconformity. There is more excuse for them in this. Such
+penalties in their case usually come closer and in more stringent forms.
+Neither have they had time to find out, as their elders have or ought to
+have found out, what a very moderate degree of fortitude enables us to
+bear up against social disapproval, when we know that it is nothing more
+than the common form of convention.
+
+The great object is to keep the minds of the young as open as possible
+in the matter of religion; to breed in them a certain simplicity and
+freedom from self-consciousness, in finding themselves without the
+religious beliefs and customs of those around them; to make them regard
+differences in these respects as very natural and ordinary matters,
+susceptible of an easy explanation. It is of course inevitable, unless
+they are brought up in cloistered seclusion, that they should hear much
+of the various articles of belief which we are anxious that they should
+not share. They will ask you whether the story of the creation of the
+universe is true; whether such and such miracles really happened;
+whether this person or that actually lived, and actually did all that he
+is said to have done. Plainly the right course is to tell them, without
+any agitation or excess or vehemence or too much elaboration, the simple
+truth in such matters exactly as it appears to one's own mind. There is
+no reason why they should not know the best parts of the Bible as well
+as they know the Iliad or Herodotus. There are many reasons why they
+should know them better. But one most important condition of this is
+constantly overlooked by people, who like to satisfy their intellectual
+vanity by scepticism, and at the same time to make their comfort safe by
+external conformity. If the Bible is to be taught only because it is a
+noble and most majestic monument of literature, it should be taught as
+that and no more. That a man who regards it solely us supreme
+literature, should impress it upon the young as the supernaturally
+inspired word of God and the accurate record of objective occurrences,
+is a piece of the plainest and most shocking dishonesty. Let a youth be
+trained in simple and straightforward recognition of the truth that we
+can know, and can conjecture, nothing with any assurance as to the
+ultimate mysteries of things. Let his imagination and his sense of awe
+be fed from those springs, which are none the less bounteous because
+they flow in natural rather than supernatural channels. Let him be
+taught the historic place and source of the religions which he is not
+bound to accept, unless the evidence for their authority by and by
+brings him to another mind. A boy or girl trained in this way has an
+infinitely better chance of growing up with the true spirit and
+leanings of religion implanted in the character, than if they had been
+educated in formulae which they could not understand, by people who do
+not believe them.
+
+The most common illustration of a personal mistake being made the base
+of a general doctrine, is found in the case of those who, after
+committing themselves for life to the profession of a given creed, awake
+to the shocking discovery that the creed has ceased to be true for them.
+The action of a popular modern story, Mrs. Gaskell's _North and South_,
+turns upon the case of a clergyman whoso faith is overthrown, and who in
+consequence abandons his calling, to his own serious material detriment
+and under circumstances of severe suffering to his family. I am afraid
+that current opinion, especially among the cultivated class, would
+condemn such a sacrifice as a piece of misplaced scrupulosity. No man,
+it would be said, is called upon to proclaim his opinions, when to do so
+will cost him the means of subsistence. This will depend upon the value
+which he sets upon the opinions that be has to proclaim. If such a
+proposition is true, the world must efface its habit of admiration for
+the martyrs and heroes of the past, who embraced violent death rather
+than defile themselves by a lying confession. Or is present heroism
+ridiculous, and only past heroism admirable? However, nobody has a right
+to demand the heroic from all the world; and if to publish his dissent
+from the opinions which he nominally holds would reduce a man to
+beggary, human charity bids us say as little as may be. We may leave
+such men to their unfortunate destiny, hoping that they will make what
+good use of it may be possible. _Non ragioniam di lor_. These cases only
+show the essential and profound immorality of the priestly
+profession--in all its forms, and no matter in connection with what
+church or what dogma--which makes a man's living depend on his
+abstaining from using his mind, or concealing the conclusions to which
+use of his mind has brought him. The time will come when society will
+look back on the doctrine, that they who serve the altar should live by
+the altar, as a doctrine of barbarism and degradation.
+
+But if one, by refusing to offer a pinch of incense to the elder gods,
+should thus strip himself of a marked opportunity of exerting an
+undoubtedly useful influence over public opinion, or over a certain
+section of society, is he not justified in compromising to the extent
+necessary to preserve this influence? Instead of answering this
+directly, we would make the following remarks. First, it can seldom be
+clear in times like our own that religious heterodoxy must involve the
+loss of influence in other than religious spheres. The apprehension that
+it will do so is due rather to timorousness and a desire to find a fair
+reason for the comforts of silence and reserve. If a teacher has
+anything to tell the world in science, philosophy, history, the world
+will not be deterred from listening to him by knowing that he does not
+walk in the paths of conventional theology. Second, what influence can a
+man exert, that should seem to him more useful than that of a protester
+against what he counts false opinions, in the most decisive and
+important of all regions of thought? Surely if any one is persuaded,
+whether rightly or wrongly, that his fellows are expending the best part
+of their imaginations and feelings on a dream and a delusion, and that
+by so doing moreover they are retarding to an indefinite degree the
+wider spread of light and happiness, then nothing that he can tell them
+about chemistry or psychology or history can in his eyes be comparable
+in importance to the duty of telling them this. There is no advantage
+nor honest delight in influence, if it is only to be exerted in the
+sphere of secondary objects, and at the cost of the objects which ought
+to be foremost in the eyes of serious people. In truth the men who have
+done most for the world have taken very little heed of influence. They
+have sought light, and left their influence to fare as it might list.
+Can we not imagine the mingled mystification and disdain with which a
+Spinosa or a Descartes, a Luther or a Pascal, would have listened to an
+exhortation in our persuasive modern manner on the niceties of the
+politic and the social obligation of pious fraud? It is not given to
+many to perform the achievements of such giants as these, but every one
+may help to keep the standard of intellectual honesty at a lofty pitch,
+and what better service can a man render than to furnish the world with
+an example of faithful dealing with his own conscience and with his
+fellows? This at least is the one talent that is placed in the hands of
+the obscurest of us all.[26]
+
+And what is this smile of the world, to win which we are bidden to
+sacrifice our moral manhood; this frown of the world, whose terrors are
+more awful than the withering up of truth and the slow going out of
+light within the souls of us? Consider the triviality of life and
+conversation and purpose, in the bulk of those whose approval is held
+out for our prize and the mark of our high calling. Measure, if you can,
+the empire over them of prejudice unadulterated by a single element of
+rationality, and weigh, if you can, the huge burden of custom,
+unrelieved by a single leavening particle of fresh thought. Ponder the
+share which selfishness and love of ease have in the vitality and the
+maintenance of the opinions that we are forbidden to dispute. Then how
+pitiful a thing seems the approval or disapproval of these creatures of
+the conventions of the hour, as one figures the merciless vastness of
+the universe of matter sweeping us headlong through viewless space; as
+one hears the wail of misery that is for ever ascending to the deaf
+gods; as one counts the little tale of the years that separate us from
+eternal silence. In the light of these things, a man should surely dare
+to live his small span of life with little heed of the common speech
+upon him or his life, only caring that his days may be full of reality,
+and his conversation of truth-speaking and wholeness.
+
+Those who think conformity in the matters of which we have been
+speaking harmless and unimportant, must do so either from indifference
+or else from despair. It is difficult to convince any one who is
+possessed by either one or other of these two evil spirits. Men who have
+once accepted them, do not easily relinquish philosophies that relieve
+their professors from disagreeable obligations of courage and endeavour.
+To the indifferent person one can say nothing. We can only acquiesce in
+that deep and terrible scripture, 'He that is filthy, let him be filthy
+still.' To those who despair of human improvement or the spread of light
+in the face of the huge mass of brute prejudice, we can only urge that
+the enormous weight and the firm hold of baseless prejudice and false
+commonplace are the very reasons which make it so important that those
+who are not of the night nor of the darkness should the more strenuously
+insist on living their own lives in the daylight. To those, finally, who
+do not despair, but think that the new faith will come so slowly that it
+is not worth while for the poor mortal of a day to make himself a
+martyr, we may suggest that the new faith when it comes will be of
+little worth, unless it has been shaped by generations of honest and
+fearless men, and unless it finds in those who are to receive it an
+honest and fearless temper. Our plea is not for a life of perverse
+disputings or busy proselytising, but only that we should learn to look
+at one another with a clear and steadfast eye, and march forward along
+the paths we choose with firm step and erect front. The first advance
+towards either the renovation of one faith or the growth of another,
+must be the abandonment of those habits of hypocritical conformity and
+compliance which have filled the air of the England of to-day with gross
+and obscuring mists.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 18: It may be said that Hume meant no more than this: that of
+two equally oppressed nations, the one which had been taught to assent
+to the doctrine of resistance would be more likely to practise 'the
+sacred duty of insurrection' than the other, from whom the doctrine had
+been concealed. Or, in other words, that the first would rise against
+oppression, when the oppression had reached a pitch which to the second
+would still seem bearable. The answer to Hume's proposition, interpreted
+in this way, would be that if the doctrine of resistance be presented to
+the populace in its true shape,--if it be 'truth,' as he admits,--then
+the application of it in practice should be as little likely to prove
+mischievous as that of any other truth. If the gist of the remark be
+that this is a truth which the populace is especially likely to apply
+wrongly, in consequence of its ignorance, passion, and heedlessness, we
+may answer by appealing to history, which is rather a record of
+excessive patience in the various nations of the earth than of excessive
+petulance.]
+
+[Footnote 19: There is another ground for the distinction between the
+conditions of holding and those of expressing opinion. This depends upon
+the psychological proposition that belief is independent of the will.
+Though this or any other state of the understanding may be involuntary,
+the manifestation of such a state is not so, but is a voluntary act,
+and, 'being neutral in itself, may be commendable or reprehensible
+according to the circumstances in which it takes place.' (Bailey's
+_Essay on Formation of Opinion_, § 7).]
+
+[Footnote 20: The following words, illustrating the continuity between
+the Christian and Jewish churches, are not without instruction to those
+who meditate on the possible continuity between the Christian church and
+that which is one day to grow into the place of it:--'Not only do forms
+and ordinances remain under the Gospel equally as before; but, what was
+in use before is not so much superseded by the Gospel ordinances as
+changed into them. What took place under the Law is a pattern, what was
+commanded is a rule, under the Gospel. The substance remains, the use,
+the meaning, the circumstances, the benefit is changed; grace is added,
+life is infused: "the body is of Christ;" but it is in great measure
+that same body which was in being before He came. The Gospel has not put
+aside, it has incorporated into itself the revelation which went before
+it. It avails itself of the Old Testament, as a great gift to Christian
+as well as to Jew. It does not dispense with it, but it dispenses it.
+Persons sometimes urge that there is no code of duty in the New
+Testament, no ceremonial, no rules for Church polity. Certainly not;
+they are unnecessary; they are already given in the Old. Why should the
+Old Testament remain in the Christian church but to be used? _There_ we
+are to look for our forms, our rites, our polity; only illustrated,
+tempered, spiritualised by the Gospel. The preempts remain, the
+observance of them is changed,'--Dr. J.H. Newman; _Sermon on Subjects of
+the Day_, p. 205.]
+
+[Footnote 21: There is a set of most acute and searching criticisms on
+this matter in Mr. Leslie Stephen's _Essays on Free-Thinking and
+Plain-Speaking_ (Longmans, 1873). The last essay in the volume, _An
+Apology for Plain-Speaking_, is a decisive and remarkable exposition of
+the treacherous playing with words, which underlies even the most
+vigorous efforts to make the phrases and formula of the old creed hold
+the reality of new faith.]
+
+[Footnote 22: Upon this sentence the following criticism has been
+made:--'Surely both of these so-called contradictions are deliberately
+affirmed by the vast majority of all thinkers upon the subject. What
+orthodox asserter of the omnipresence of a "Creator with intelligible
+attributes" ever maintained that these attributes could be "grasped by
+men"?'--The orthodox asserter, no doubt, _says_ that he does not
+maintain that the divine attributes can be grasped by men; but his
+habitual treatment of them as intelligible, and as the subjects of
+propositions made in languages that is designed to be intelligible,
+shows that his first reservation is merely nominal, as it is certainly
+inconsistent with his general position. Religious people who warn you
+most solemnly that man who is a worm and the son of a worm cannot
+possibly compass in his puny understanding the attributes of the Divine
+Being, will yet--as an eminent divine not in holy orders has truly
+said--tell you all about him, as if he were the man who lives in the
+next street.]
+
+[Footnote 23: That able man, the late J.E. Cairnes, suggested the
+following objection to this paragraph. When two persons marry, there is
+a reasonable expectation, almost amounting to an understanding, that
+they will both of them adhere to their religion, just as both of them
+tacitly agree to follow the ways of the world in the host of minor
+social matters. If, therefore, either of them turns to some other creed,
+the person so turning has, so to speak, broken the contract. The utmost
+he or she can contend for is forbearance. If a woman embraces
+catholicism, she may seek tolerance, but she has no right to exact
+conformity. If the man becomes an unbeliever, he in like manner breaks
+the bargain, and may be justly asked not to flaunt his misdemeanour.
+
+My answer to this would turn upon the absolute inexpediency of such
+silent bargains being assumed by public opinion. In the present state of
+opinion, where the whole air is alive with the spirit of change, nobody
+who takes his life or her life seriously, could allow an assumption
+which means reduction of one of the most important parts of character,
+the love of truth, to a nullity.]
+
+[Footnote 24: The reader remembers how Wolmar, the atheistic husband of
+Julie in Rousseau's _New Heloïsa_, is distressed by the chagrin which
+his unbelief inflicts on the piety of his wife. 'He told me that he had
+been frequently tempted to make a feint of yielding to her arguments,
+and to pretend, for the sake of calming her sentiments that he did not
+really hold. But such baseness of soul is too far from him. Without for
+a moment imposing on Julie, such dissimulation would only have been a
+new torment to her. The good faith, the frankness, the union of heart,
+that console for so many troubles, would have been eclipsed between
+them. Was it by lessening his wife's esteem for him that he could
+reassure her? Instead of using any disguise, he tells her sincerely what
+he thinks, but he says it in so simple a tone, etc.--V. v. 126.]
+
+[Footnote 25: The common reason alleged by freethinkers for having their
+children brought up in the orthodox ways is that, if they were not so
+brought up, they would be looked on as contaminating agents whom other
+parents would take care to keep away from the companionship of their
+children. This excuse may have had some force at another time. At the
+present day, when belief is so weak, we doubt whether the young would be
+excluded from the companionship of their equals in age, merely because
+they had not been trained in some of the conventional shibboleths. Even
+if it were so, there are certainly some ways of compensating for the
+disadvantages of exclusion from orthodox circles.
+
+I have heard of a more interesting reason; namely, that the historic
+position of the young, relatively to the time in which they are placed,
+is in some sort falsified, unless they have gone through a training in
+the current beliefs of their age: unless they have undergone that, they
+miss, as it were, some of the normal antecedents. I do not think this
+plea will hold good. However desirable it may be that the young should
+know all sorts of erroneous beliefs and opinions as products of the
+past, it can hardly be in any degree desirable that they should take
+them for truths. If there were no other objection, there would be this,
+that the disturbance and waste of force involved in shaking off in their
+riper years the erroneous opinions which had been instilled into them
+in childhood, would more than counter-balance any advantages, whatever
+their precise nature may be, to be derived from having shared in their
+own proper persons the ungrounded notions of others.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Miss Martineau has an excellent protest against 'the
+dereliction of principle shown in supposing that any "Cause" can be of
+so much importance as fidelity to truth, or can be important at all
+otherwise than in its relation to truth which wants vindicating. It
+reminds me of an incident which happened when I was in America, at the
+time of the severest trials of the Abolitionists. A pastor from the
+southern States lamented to a brother clergyman in the North the
+introduction of the Anti-slavery question, because the views of their
+sect were "getting on so well before!" "Getting on!" cried the northern
+minister. "What is the use of getting your vessel on when you have
+thrown both captain and cargo overboard?" Thus, what signifies the
+pursuit of any one reform, like those specified,--Anti-slavery and the
+Woman question,--when the freedom which is the very soul of the
+controversy, the very principle of the movement,--is mourned over in any
+other of its many manifestations? The only effectual advocates of such
+reforms as those are people who follow truth wherever it
+leads.'--_Autobiography_, ii. 442.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+THE REALISATION OF OPINION.
+
+A person who takes the trouble to form his own opinions and beliefs will
+feel that he owes no responsibility to the majority for his conclusions.
+If he is a genuine lover of truth, if he is inspired by the divine
+passion for seeing things as they are, and a divine abhorrence of
+holding ideas which do not conform to the facts, he will be wholly
+independent of the approval or assent of the persons around him. When he
+proceeds to apply his beliefs in the practical conduct of life, the
+position is different. There are now good reasons why his attitude
+should be in some ways less inflexible. The society in which he is
+placed is a very ancient and composite growth. The people from whom he
+dissents have not come by their opinions, customs, and institutions by a
+process of mere haphazard. These opinions and customs all had their
+origin in a certain real or supposed fitness. They have a certain depth
+of root in the lives of a proportion of the existing generation. Their
+fitness for satisfying human needs may have vanished, and their
+congruity with one another may have come to an end. That is only one
+side of the truth. The most zealous propagandism cannot penetrate to
+them. The quality of bearing to be transplanted from one kind of soil
+and climate to another is not very common, and it is far from being
+inexhaustible even where it exists.
+
+In common language we speak of a generation as something possessed of a
+kind of exact unity, with all its parts and members one and homogeneous.
+Yet very plainly it is not this. It is a whole, but a whole in a state
+of constant flux. Its factors and elements are eternally shifting. It is
+not one, but many generations. Each of the seven ages of man is
+neighbour to all the rest. The column of the veterans is already
+staggering over into the last abyss, while the column of the newest
+recruits is forming with all its nameless and uncounted hopes. To each
+its tradition, its tendency, its possibilities. Only a proportion of
+each in one society can have nerve enough to grasp the banner of a new
+truth, and endurance enough to bear it along rugged and untrodden ways.
+
+And then, as we have said, one must remember the stuff of which life is
+made. One must consider what an overwhelming preponderance of the most
+tenacious energies and most concentrated interests of a society must be
+absorbed between material cares and the solicitude of the affections. It
+is obviously unreasonable to lose patience and quarrel with one's time,
+because it is tardy in throwing off its institutions and beliefs, and
+slow to achieve the transformation which is the problem in front of it.
+Men and women have to live. The task for most of them is arduous enough
+to make them well pleased with even such imperfect shelter as they find
+in the use and wont of daily existence. To insist on a whole community
+being made at once to submit to the reign of new practices and new
+ideas, which have just begun to commend themselves to the most advanced
+speculative intelligence of the time,--this, even if it were a possible
+process, would do much to make life impracticable and to hurry on social
+dissolution.
+
+'It cannot be too emphatically asserted,' as has been said by one of
+the most influential of modern thinkers, 'that this policy of
+compromise, alike in institutions, in actions, and in beliefs, which
+especially characterises English life, is a policy essential to a
+society going through the transitions caused by continued growth and
+development. Ideas and institutions proper to a past social state, but
+incongruous with the new social state that has grown out of it,
+surviving into this new social state they have made possible, and
+disappearing only as this new social state establishes its own ideas and
+institutions, are necessarily, during their survival, in conflict with
+these new ideas and institutions--necessarily furnish elements of
+contradiction in men's thoughts and deeds. And yet, as for the carrying
+on of social life, the old must continue so long as the new is not
+ready, this perpetual compromise is an indispensable accompaniment of a
+normal development.'[27]
+
+Yet we must not press this argument, and the state of feeling that
+belongs to it, further than they may be fairly made to go. The danger in
+most natures lies on this side, for on this side our love of ease
+works, and our prejudices. The writer in the passage we have just quoted
+is describing compromise as a natural state of things, the resultant of
+divergent forces. He is not professing to define its conditions or
+limits as a practical duty. Nor is there anything in his words, or in
+the doctrine of social evolution of which he is the most elaborate and
+systematic expounder, to favour that deliberate sacrifice of truth,
+either in search or in expression, against which our two previous
+chapters were meant to protest.[28] When Mr. Spencer talks of a new
+social state establishing its own ideas, of course he means, and can
+only mean, that men and women establish their own ideas, and to do that,
+it is obvious that they must at one time or another have conceived them
+without any special friendliness of reference to the old ideas, which
+they were in the fulness of time to supersede. Still less, of course,
+can a new social state ever establish its ideas, unless the persons who
+hold them confess them openly, and give to them an honest and effective
+adherence.
+
+Every discussion of the more fundamental principles of conduct must
+contain, expressly or by implication, some general theory of the nature
+and constitution of the social union. Let us state in a few words that
+which seems to command the greatest amount both of direct and analogical
+evidence in our time. It is perhaps all the more important to discuss
+our subject with immediate and express reference to this theory, because
+it has become in some minds a plea for a kind of philosophic
+indifference towards any policy of Thorough, as well as an excuse for
+systematic abstention from vigorous and downright courses of action.
+
+A progressive society is now constantly and justly compared to a growing
+organism. Its vitality in this aspect consists of a series of changes in
+ideas and institutions. These changes arise spontaneously from the
+operation of the whole body of social conditions, external and
+internal. The understanding and the affections and desires are always
+acting on the domestic, political, and economic ordering. They influence
+the religious sentiment. They touch relations with societies outside. In
+turn they are constantly being acted on by all these elements. In a
+society progressing in a normal and uninterrupted course, this play and
+interaction is the sign and essence of life. It is, as we are so often
+told, a long process of new adaptations and re-adaptations; of the
+modification of tradition and usage by truer ideas and improved
+institutions. There may be, and there are, epochs of rest, when this
+modification in its active and demonstrative shape slackens or ceases to
+be visible. But even then the modifying forces are only latent. Further
+progress depends on the revival of their energy, before there has been
+time for the social structure to become ossified and inelastic. The
+history of civilisation is the history of the displacement of old
+conceptions by new ones more conformable to the facts. It is the record
+of the removal of old institutions and ways of living, in favour of
+others of greater convenience and ampler capacity, at once multiplying
+and satisfying human requirements.
+
+Now compromise, in view of the foregoing theory of social advance, may
+be of two kinds, and of these two kinds one is legitimate and the other
+not. It may stand for two distinct attitudes of mind, one of them
+obstructive and the other not. It may mean the deliberate suppression or
+mutilation of an idea, in order to make it congruous with the
+traditional idea or the current prejudice on the given subject, whatever
+that may be. Or else it may mean a rational acquiescence in the fact
+that the bulk of your contemporaries are not yet prepared either to
+embrace the new idea, or to change their ways of living in conformity to
+it. In the one case, the compromiser rejects the highest truth, or
+dissembles his own acceptance of it. In the other, he holds it
+courageously for his ensign and device, but neither forces nor expects
+the whole world straightway to follow. The first prolongs the duration
+of the empire of prejudice, and retards the arrival of improvement. The
+second does his best to abbreviate the one, and to hasten and make
+definite the other, yet he does not insist on hurrying changes which,
+to be effective, would require the active support of numbers of persons
+not yet ripe for them. It is legitimate compromise to say:--'I do not
+expect you to execute this improvement, or to surrender that prejudice,
+in my time. But at any rate it shall not be my fault if the improvement
+remains unknown or rejected. There shall be one man at least who has
+surrendered the prejudice, and who does not hide that fact.' It is
+illegitimate compromise to say:--'I cannot persuade you to accept my
+truth; therefore I will pretend to accept your falsehood.'
+
+That this distinction is as sound on the evolutional theory of society
+as on any other is quite evident. It would be odd if the theory which
+makes progress depend on modification forbade us to attempt to modify.
+When it is said that the various successive changes in thought and
+institution present and consummate themselves spontaneously, no one
+means by spontaneity that they come to pass independently of human
+effort and volition. On the contrary, this energy of the members of the
+society is one of the spontaneous elements. It is quite as
+indispensable as any other of them, if indeed it be not more so.
+Progress depends upon tendencies and forces in a community. But of these
+tendencies and forces, the organs and representatives must plainly be
+found among the men and women of the community, and cannot possibly be
+found anywhere else. Progress is not automatic, in the sense that if we
+were all to be cast into a deep slumber for the space of a generation,
+we should awake to find ourselves in a greatly improved social state.
+The world only grows better, even in the moderate degree in which it
+does grow better, because people wish that it should, and take the right
+steps to make it better. Evolution is not a force, but a process; not a
+cause, but a law. It explains the source, and marks the immovable
+limitations, of social energy. But social energy itself can never be
+superseded either by evolution or by anything else.
+
+The reproach of being impracticable and artificial attaches by rights
+not to those who insist on resolute, persistent, and uncompromising
+efforts to remove abuses, but to a very different class--to those,
+namely, who are credulous enough to suppose that abuses and bad customs
+and wasteful ways of doing things will remove themselves. This
+credulity, which is a cloak for indolence or ignorance or stupidity,
+overlooks the fact that there are bodies of men, more or less numerous,
+attached by every selfish interest they have to the maintenance of these
+abusive customs. 'A plan,' says Bentham, 'may be said to be too good to
+be practicable, where, without adequate inducement in the shape of
+personal interest, it requires for its accomplishment that some
+individual or class of individuals shall have made a sacrifice of his or
+their personal interest to the interest of the whole. When it is on the
+part of a body of men or a multitude of individuals taken at random that
+any such sacrifice is reckoned upon, then it is that in speaking of the
+plan the term _Utopian_ may without impropriety be applied.' And this is
+the very kind of sacrifice which must be anticipated by those who so
+misunderstand the doctrine of evolution as to believe that the world is
+improved by some mystic and self-acting social discipline, which
+dispenses with the necessity of pertinacious attack upon institutions
+that have outlived their time, and interests that have lost their
+justification.
+
+We are thus brought to the position--to which, indeed, bare observation
+of actual occurrences might well bring us, if it were not for the
+clouding disturbances of selfishness, or of a true philosophy of society
+wrongly applied--that a society can only pursue its normal course by
+means of a certain progression of changes, and that these changes can
+only be initiated by individuals or very small groups of individuals.
+The progressive tendency can only be a tendency, it can only work its
+way through the inevitable obstructions around it, by means of persons
+who are possessed by the special progressive idea. Such ideas do not
+spring up uncaused and unconditioned in vacant space. They have had a
+definite origin and ordered antecedents. They are in direct relation
+with the past. They present themselves to one person or little group of
+persons rather than to another, because circumstances, or the accident
+of a superior faculty of penetration, have placed the person or group in
+the way of such ideas. In matters of social improvement the most common
+reason why one hits upon a point of progress and not another, is that
+the one happens to be more directly touched than the other by the
+unimproved practice. Or he is one of those rare intelligences, active,
+alert, inventive, which by constitution or training find their chief
+happiness in thinking in a disciplined and serious manner how things can
+be better done. In all cases the possession of a new idea, whether
+practical or speculative, only raises into definite speech what others
+have needed without being able to make their need articulate. This is
+the principle on which experience shows us that fame and popularity are
+distributed. A man does not become celebrated in proportion to his
+general capacity, but because he does or says something which happened
+to need doing or saying at the moment.
+
+This brings us directly to our immediate subject. For such a man is the
+holder of a trust It is upon him and those who are like him that the
+advance of a community depends. If he is silent, then repair is checked,
+and the hurtful elements of worn-out beliefs and waste institutions
+remain to enfeeble the society, just as the retention of waste products
+enfeebles or poisons the body. If in a spirit of modesty which is often
+genuine, though it is often only a veil for love of ease, he asks why he
+rather than another should speak, why he before others should refuse
+compliance and abstain from conformity, the answer is that though the
+many are ultimately moved, it is always one who is first to leave the
+old encampment. If the maxim of the compromiser were sound, it ought to
+be capable of universal application. Nobody has a right to make an
+apology for himself in this matter, which he will not allow to be valid
+for others. If one has a right to conceal his true opinions, and to
+practice equivocal conformities, then all have a right. One plea for
+exemption is in this case as good as another, and no better. That he has
+married a wife, that he has bought a yoke of oxen and must prove them,
+that he has bidden guests to a feast--one excuse lies on the same level
+as the rest. All are equally worthless as answers to the generous
+solicitation of enlightened conscience. Suppose, then, that each man on
+whom in turn the new ideas dawned wore to borrow the compromiser's plea
+and imitate his example. We know what would happen. The exploit in
+which no one will consent to go first, remains unachieved. You wait
+until there are persons enough agreeing with you to form an effective
+party? But how are the members of the band to know one another, if all
+are to keep their dissent from the old, and their adherence to the new,
+rigorously private? And how many members constitute the innovating band
+an effective force! When one-half of the attendants at a church are
+unbelievers, will that warrant us in ceasing to attend, or shall we
+tarry until the dissemblers number two-thirds? Conceive the additions
+which your caution has made to the moral integrity of the community in
+the meantime. Measure the enormous hindrances that will have been placed
+in the way of truth and improvement, when the day at last arrives on
+which you and your two-thirds take heart to say that falsehood and abuse
+have now reached their final term, and must at length be swept away into
+the outer darkness. Consider how much more terrible the shock of change
+will be when it does come, and how much less able will men be to meet
+it, and to emerge successfully from it.
+
+Perhaps the compromiser shrinks, not because he fears to march alone,
+but because he thinks that the time has not yet come for the progressive
+idea which he has made his own, and for whose triumph one day he
+confidently hopes. This plea may mean two wholly different states of the
+case. The time has not yet come for what? For making those positive
+changes in life or institution, which the change in idea must ultimately
+involve? That is one thing. Or for propagating, elaborating, enforcing
+the new idea, and strenuously doing all that one can to bring as many
+people as possible to a state of theory, which will at last permit the
+requisite change in practice to be made with safety and success? This is
+another and entirely different thing. The time may not have come for the
+first of these two courses. The season may not be advanced enough for us
+to push on to active conquest. But the time has always come, and the
+season is never unripe, for the announcement of the fruitful idea.
+
+We must go further than that. In so far as it can be done by one man
+without harming his neighbours, the time has always come for the
+realisation of an idea. When the change in way of living or in
+institution is one which requires the assent and co-operation of numbers
+of people, it may clearly be a matter for question whether men enough
+are ready to yield assent and co-operation. But the expression of the
+necessity of the change and the grounds of it, though it may not always
+be appropriate, can never be premature, and for these reasons. The fact
+of a new idea having come to one man is a sign that it is in the air.
+The innovator is as much the son of his generation as the conservative.
+Heretics have as direct a relation to antecedent conditions as the
+orthodox. Truth, said Bacon, has been rightly named the daughter of
+Time. The new idea does not spring up uncaused and by miracle. If it has
+come to me, there must be others to whom it has only just missed coming.
+If I have found my way to the light, there must be others groping after
+it very close in my neighbourhood. My discovery is their goal. They are
+prepared to receive the new truth, which they were not prepared to find
+for themselves. The fact that the mass are not yet ready to receive, any
+more than to find, is no reason why the possessor of the new truth
+should run to hide under a bushel the candle which has been lighted for
+him. If the time has not come for them, at least it has come for him. No
+man can ever know whether his neighbours are ready for change or not. He
+has all the following certainties, at least:--that he himself is ready
+for the change; that he believes it would be a good and beneficent one;
+that unless some one begins the work of preparation, assuredly there
+will be no consummation; and that if he declines to take a part in the
+matter, there can be no reason why every one else in turn should not
+decline in like manner, and so the work remain for ever unperformed. The
+compromiser who blinds himself to all those points, and acts just as if
+the truth were not in him, does for ideas with which he agrees, the very
+thing which the acute persecutor does for ideas which he dislikes--he
+extinguishes beginnings and kills the germs.
+
+
+The consideration on which so many persons rely, that an existing
+institution, though destined to be replaced by a better, performs useful
+functions provisionally, is really not to the point. It is an excellent
+reason why the institution should not be removed or fundamentally
+modified, until public opinion is ripe for the given piece of
+improvement. But it is no reason at all why those who are anxious for
+the improvement, should speak and act just as they would do if they
+thought the change perfectly needless and undesirable. It is no reason
+why those who allow the provisional utility of a belief or an
+institution or a custom of living, should think solely of the utility
+and forget the equally important element of its provisionalness. For the
+fact of its being provisional is the very ground why every one who
+perceives this element, should set himself to act accordingly. It is the
+ground why he should set himself, in other words, to draw opinion in
+every way open to him--by speech, by voting, by manner of life and
+conduct--in the direction of new truth and the better practice. Let us
+not, because we deem a thing to be useful for the hour, act as if it
+were to be useful for ever. The people who selfishly seek to enjoy as
+much comfort and ease as they can in an existing state of things, with
+the desperate maxim, 'After us, the deluge,' are not any worse than
+those who cherish present comfort and case and take the world as it
+comes, in the fatuous and self-deluding hope, 'After us, the
+millennium.' Those who make no sacrifice to avert the deluge, and those
+who make none to hasten their millennium, are on the same moral level.
+And the former have at least the quality of being no worse than their
+avowed principle, while the latter nullify their pretended hopes by
+conformities which are only proper either to profound social
+contentment, or to profound social despair. Nay, they seem to think that
+there is some merit in this merely speculative hopefulness. They act as
+if they supposed that to be very sanguine about the general improvement
+of mankind, is a virtue that relieves them from taking trouble about any
+improvement in particular.
+
+If those who defend a given institution are doing their work well, that
+furnishes the better reason why those who disapprove of it and
+disbelieve in its enduring efficacy, should do their work well also.
+Take the Christian churches, for instance. Assume, if you will, that
+they are serving a variety of useful functions. If that were all, it
+would be a reason for conforming. But we are speaking of those for whom
+the matter does not end here. If you are convinced that the dogma is not
+true; that a steadily increasing number of persons are becoming aware
+that it is not true; that its efficacy as a basis of spiritual life is
+being lowered in the same degree as its credibility; that both dogma and
+church must be slowly replaced by higher forms of faith, if not also by
+more effective organisations; then, all who hold such views as these
+have as distinctly a function in the community as the ministers and
+upholders of the churches, and the zeal of the latter is simply the most
+monstrously untenable apology that could be invented for dereliction of
+duty by the former.
+
+If the orthodox to some extent satisfy certain of the necessities of the
+present, there are other necessities of the future which can only be
+satisfied by those who now pass for heretical. The plea which we are
+examining, if it is good for the purpose for which it is urged, would
+have to be expressed in this way:--The institution is working as
+perfectly as it can be made to do, or as any other in its place would be
+likely to do, and therefore I will do nothing by word or deed towards
+meddling with it. Those who think this, and act accordingly, are the
+consistent conservatives of the community. If a man takes up any
+position short of this, his conformity, acquiescence, and inertia at
+once become inconsistent and culpable. For unless the institution or
+belief is entirely adequate, it must be the duty of all who have
+satisfied themselves that it is not so, to recognise its deficiences,
+and at least to call attention to them, even if they lack opportunity or
+capacity to suggest remedies. Now we are dealing with persons who, from
+the hypothesis, do not admit that this or that factor in an existing
+social state secures all the advantages which might be secured if
+instead of that factor there were some other. We are speaking of all the
+various kinds of dissidents, who think that the current theology, or an
+established church, or a monarchy, or an oligarchic republic, is a bad
+thing and a lower form, even at the moment while they attribute
+provisional merit to it. They can mean nothing by classing each of
+these as bad things, except that they either bring with them certain
+serious drawbacks, or exclude certain valuable advantages. The fact that
+they perform their functions well, such as they are, leaves the
+fundamental vice or defect of these functions just where it was. If any
+one really thinks that the current theology involves depraved notions of
+the supreme impersonation of good, restricts and narrows the
+intelligence, misdirects the religious imagination, and has become
+powerless to guide conduct, then how does the circumstance that it
+happens not to be wholly and unredeemedly bad in its influence, relieve
+our dissident from all care or anxiety as to the points in which, as we
+have seen, he does count it inadequate and mischievous? Even if he
+thinks it does more good than harm--a position which must be very
+difficult for one who believes the common supernatural conception of it
+to be entirely false--even then, how is he discharged from the duty of
+stigmatising the harm which he admits that it does?
+
+Again, take the case of the English monarchy. Grant, if you will, that
+this institution has a certain function, and that by the present chief
+magistrate this function is estimably performed. Yet if we are of those
+who believe that in the stage of civilisation which England has reached
+in other matters, the monarchy must be either obstructive and injurious,
+or else merely decorative; and that a merely decorative monarchy tends
+in divers ways to engender habits of abasement, to nourish lower social
+ideals, to lessen a high civil self-respect in the community; then it
+must surely be our duty not to lose any opportunity of pressing these
+convictions. To do this is not necessarily to act as if one were anxious
+for the immediate removal of the throne and the crown into the museum of
+political antiquities. We may have no urgent practical solicitude in
+this direction, on the intelligible principle that a free people always
+gets as good a kind of government as it deserves. Our conviction is not,
+on the present hypothesis, that monarchy ought to be swept away in
+England, but that monarchy produces certain mischievous consequences to
+the public spirit of the community. And so what we are bound to do is to
+take care not to conceal this conviction; to abstain scrupulously from
+all kinds of action and observance, public or private, which tend ever
+so remotely to foster the ignoble and degrading elements that exist in a
+court and spread from it outwards; and to use all the influence we have,
+however slight it may be, in loading public opinion to a right attitude
+of contempt and dislike for these ignoble and degrading elements, and
+the conduct engendered by them. A policy like this does not interfere
+with the advantages of the monarchy, such as they are asserted to be,
+and it has the effect of making what are supposed to be its
+disadvantages as little noxious as possible. The question whether we can
+get others to agree with us is not relevant. If we were eager for
+instant overthrow, it would be the most relevant of all questions. But
+we are in the preliminary stage, the stage for acting on opinion. The
+fact that others do not yet share our opinion, is the very reason for
+our action. We can only bring them to agree with us, if it be possible
+on any terms, by persistency in our principles. This persistency, in all
+but either very timid or very vulgar natures, always has been and
+always will be independent of external assent or co-operation. The
+history of success, as we can never too often repeat to ourselves, is
+the history of minorities. And what is more, it is for the most part the
+history of insurrection exactly against what the worldly spirits of the
+time, whenever it may have been, deemed mere trifles and accidents, with
+which sensible men should on no account dream of taking the trouble to
+quarrel.
+
+'Halifax,' says Macaulay, 'was in speculation a strong republican and
+did not conceal it. He often made hereditary monarchy and aristocracy
+the subjects of his keen pleasantry, while he was fighting the battles
+of the court and obtaining for himself step after step in the peerage.'
+We are perfectly familiar with this type, both in men who have, and men
+who have not, such brilliant parts as Halifax. Such men profess to
+nourish high ideals of life, of character, of social institutions. Yet
+they never think of these ideals, when they are deciding what is
+practically attainable. One would like to ask them what purpose is
+served by an ideal, if it is not to make a guide for practice and a
+landmark in dealing with the real. A man's loftiest and most ideal
+notions must be of a singularly ethereal and, shall we not say,
+senseless kind, if he can never see how to take a single step that may
+tend in the slightest degree towards making them more real. If an ideal
+has no point of contact with what exists, it is probably not much more
+than the vapid outcome of intellectual or spiritual self-indulgence. If
+it has such a point of contact, then there is sure to be something which
+a man can do towards the fulfilment of his hopes. He cannot substitute a
+new national religion for the old, but he can at least do something to
+prevent people from supposing that the adherents of the old are more
+numerous than they really are, and something to show them that good
+ideas are not all exhausted by the ancient forms. He cannot transform a
+monarchy into a republic, but he can make sure that one citizen at least
+shall aim at republican virtues, and abstain from the debasing
+complaisance of the crowd.
+
+
+'It is a very great mistake, said Burke, many years before the French
+Revolution is alleged, and most unreasonably alleged, to have alienated
+him from liberalism: 'it is a very great mistake to imagine that
+mankind follow up practically any speculative principle, either of
+government or of freedom, as far as it will go in argument and logical
+illation. All government, indeed every human benefit and enjoyment,
+every virtue, and every prudent act, is founded on compromise and
+barter. We balance inconveniences; we give and take;--we remit some
+rights that we may enjoy others.... Man acts from motives relative to
+his interests; and not on metaphysical speculations.[29] These are the
+words of wisdom and truth, if we can be sure that men will interpret
+them in all the fulness of their meaning, and not be content to take
+only that part of the meaning which falls in with the dictates of their
+own love of ease. In France such words ought to be printed in capitals
+on the front of every newspaper, and written up in letters of burnished
+gold over each faction of the Assembly, and on the door of every bureau
+in the Administration. In England they need a commentary which shall
+bring out the very simple truth, that compromise and barter do not mean
+the undisputed triumph of one set of principles. Nor, on the other hand,
+do they mean the mutilation of both sets of principles, with a view to
+producing a _tertium quid_ that shall involve the disadvantages of each,
+without securing the advantages of either. What Burke means is that we
+ought never to press our ideas up to their remotest logical issues,
+without reference to the conditions in which we are applying them. In
+politics we have an art. Success in politics, as in every other art,
+obviously before all else implies both knowledge of the material with
+which we have to deal, and also such concession as is necessary to the
+qualities of the material. Above all, in politics we have an art in
+which development depends upon small modifications. That is the true
+side of the conservative theory. To hurry on after logical perfection is
+to show one's self ignorant of the material of that social structure
+with which the politician has to deal. To disdain anything short of an
+organic change in thought or institution in infatuation. To be willing
+to make such changes too frequently, even when they are possible, is
+foolhardiness. That fatal French saying about small reforms being the
+worst enemies of great reforms is, in the sense in which it is commonly
+used, a formula of social ruin.
+
+On the other hand, let us not forget that there is a sense in which this
+very saying is profoundly true. A small and temporary improvement may
+really be the worst enemy of a great and permanent improvement, unless
+the first is made on the lines and in the direction of the second. And
+so it may, if it be successfully palmed off upon a society as actually
+being the second. In such a case as this, and our legislation presents
+instances of the kind, the small reform, if it be not made with
+reference to some large progressive principle and with a view to further
+extension of its scope, makes it all the more difficult to return to the
+right line and direction when improvement is again demanded. To take an
+example which is now very familiar to us all. The Education Act of 1870
+was of the nature of a small reform. No one pretends that it is anything
+approaching to a final solution of a complex problem. But the government
+insisted, whether rightly or wrongly, that their Act was as large a
+measure as public opinion was at that moment ready to support. At the
+same time it was clearly agreed among the government and the whole of
+the party at their backs, that at some time or other, near or remote, if
+public instruction was to be made genuinely effective, the private,
+voluntary, or denominational system would have to be replaced by a
+national system. To prepare for this ultimate replacement was one of the
+points to be most steadily borne in mind, however slowly and tentatively
+the process might be conducted. Instead of that, the authors of the Act
+deliberately introduced provisions for extending and strengthening the
+very system which will have eventually to be superseded. They thus by
+their small reform made the future great reform the more difficult of
+achievement. Assuredly this is not the compromise and barter, the give
+and take, which Burke intended. What Burke means by compromise, and what
+every true statesman understands by it, is that it may be most
+inexpedient to meddle with an institution merely because it does not
+harmonise with 'argument and logical illation.' This is a very different
+thing from giving new comfort and strength with one hand, to an
+institution whose death-warrant you pretend to be signing with the
+other.
+
+In a different way the second possible evil of a small reform may be
+equally mischievous--where the small reform is represented as settling
+the question. The mischief here is not that it takes us out of the
+progressive course, as in the case we have just been considering, but
+that it sets men's minds in a posture of contentment, which is not
+justified by the amount of what has been done, and which makes it all
+the harder to arouse them to new effort when the inevitable time
+arrives.
+
+In these ways, then, compromise may mean, not acquiescence in an
+instalment, on the ground that the time is not ripe to yield us more
+than an instalment, but either the acceptance of the instalment as
+final, followed by the virtual abandonment of hope and effort; or else
+it may mean a mistaken reversal of direction, which augments the
+distance that has ultimately to be traversed. In either of these senses,
+the small reform may become the enemy of the great one. But a right
+conception of political method, based on a rightly interpreted
+experience of the conditions on which societies unite progress with
+order, leads the wise conservative to accept the small change, lest a
+worse thing befall him, and the wise innovator to seize the chance of a
+small improvement, while incessantly working in the direction of great
+ones. The important thing is that throughout the process neither of them
+should lose sight of his ultimate ideal; nor fail to look at the detail
+from the point of view of the whole; nor allow the near particular to
+bulk so unduly large as to obscure the general and distant.
+
+If the process seems intolerably slow, we may correct our impatience by
+looking back upon the past. People seldom realise the enormous period of
+time which each change in men's ideas requires for its full
+accomplishment. We speak of these changes with a peremptory kind of
+definiteness, as if they had covered no more than the space of a few
+years. Thus we talk of the time of the Reformation, as we might talk of
+the Reform Bill or the Repeal of the Corn Duties. Yet the Reformation is
+the name for a movement of the mind of northern Europe, which went on
+for three centuries. Then if we turn to that still more momentous set
+of events, the rise and establishment of Christianity, one might suppose
+from current speech that we could fix that within a space of half a
+century or so. Yet it was at least four hundred years before all the
+foundations of that great superstructure of doctrine and organisation
+were completely laid. Again, to descend to less imposing occurrences,
+the transition in the Eastern Empire from the old Roman system of
+national organisation to that other system to which we give the specific
+name of Byzantine,--this transition, so infinitely less important as it
+was than either of the two other movements, yet occupied no less than a
+couple of hundred years. The conditions of speech make it indispensable
+for us to use definite and compendious names for movements that were
+both tardy and complex. We are forced to name a long series of events as
+if they were a single event. But we lose the reality of history, we fail
+to recognise one of the most striking aspects of human affairs, and
+above all we miss that most invaluable practical lesson, the lesson of
+patience, unless we remember that the great changes of history took up
+long periods of time which, when measured by the little life of a man,
+are almost colossal, like the vast changes of geology. We know how long
+it takes before a species of plant or animal disappears in face of a
+better adapted species. Ideas and customs, beliefs and institutions,
+have always lingered just as long in face of their successors, and the
+competition is not less keen nor less prolonged, because it is for one
+or other inevitably destined to be hopeless. History, like geology,
+demands the use of the imagination, and in proportion as the exercise of
+the historic imagination is vigorously performed in thinking of the
+past, will be the breadth of our conception of the changes which the
+future has in store for us, as well as of the length of time and the
+magnitude of effort required for their perfect achievement[30].
+
+This much, concerning moderation in political practice. No such
+considerations present themselves in the matters which concern the
+shaping of our own lives, or the publications of our social opinions. In
+this region we are not imposing charges upon others, either by law or
+otherwise. We therefore owe nothing to the prejudices or habits of
+others. If any one sets serious value upon the point of difference
+between his own ideal and that which is current, if he thinks that his
+'experiment in living' has promise of real worth, and that if more
+persons could be induced to imitate it, some portion of mankind would be
+thus put in possession of a better kind of happiness, then it is selling
+a birthright for a mess of pottage to abandon hopes so rich and
+generous, merely in order to avoid the passing and casual penalties of
+social disapproval. And there is a double evil in this kind of flinching
+from obedience to the voice of our better selves, whether it takes the
+form of absolute suppression of what we think and hope, or only of
+timorous and mutilated presentation. We lose not only the possible
+advantage of the given change. Besides that, we lose also the certain
+advantage of maintaining or increasing the amount of conscientiousness
+in the world. And everybody can perceive the loss incurred in a society
+where diminution of the latter sort takes place. The advance of the
+community depends not merely on the improvement and elevation of its
+moral maxima, but also on the quickening of moral sensibility. The
+latter work has mostly been effected, when it has been effected on a
+large scale, by teachers of a certain singular personal quality. They do
+nothing to improve the theory of conduct, but they have the art of
+stimulating men to a more enthusiastic willingness to rise in daily
+practice to the requirements of whatever theory they may accept. The
+love of virtue, of duty, of holiness, or by whatever name we call this
+powerful sentiment, exists in the majority of men, where it exists at
+all, independently of argument. It is a matter of affection, sympathy,
+association, aspiration. Hence, even while, in quality, sense of duty is
+a stationary factor, it is constantly changing in quantity. The amount
+of conscience in different communities, or in the same community at
+different times, varies infinitely. The immediate cause of the decline
+of a society in the order of morals is a decline in the quantity of its
+conscience, a deadening of its moral sensitiveness, and not a
+depravation of its theoretical ethics. The Greeks became corrupt and
+enfeebled, not for lack of ethical science, but through the decay in the
+numbers of those who were actually alive to the reality and force of
+ethical obligations. Mahometans triumphed over Christians in the East
+and in Spain--if we may for a moment isolate moral conditions from the
+rest of the total circumstances--not because their scheme of duty was
+more elevated or comprehensive, but because their respect for duty was
+more strenuous and fervid.
+
+The great importance of leaving this priceless element in a community
+as free, as keen, and as active as possible, is overlooked by the
+thinkers who uphold coercion against liberty, as a saving social
+principle. Every act of coercion directed against an opinion or a way of
+living is in so far calculated to lessen the quantity of conscience in
+the society where such acts are practised. Of course, where ways of
+living interfere with the lawful rights of others, where they are not
+strictly self-regarding in all their details, it is necessary to force
+the dissidents, however strong may be their conscientious sentiment. The
+evil of attenuating that sentiment is smaller than the evil of allowing
+one set of persons to realise their own notions of happiness, at the
+expense of all the rest of the world. But where these notions can be
+realised without unlawful interference of that kind, then the forcible
+hindrance of such realisation is a direct weakening of the force and
+amount of conscience on which the community may count. There is one
+memorable historic case to illustrate this. Lewis XIV., in revoking the
+Edict of Nantes, and the author of the still more cruel law of 1724, not
+only violently drove out multitudes of the most scrupulous part of the
+French nation; they virtually offered the most tremendous bribes to
+those of less stern resolution, to feign conversion to the orthodox
+faith. This was to treat conscience as a thing of mean value. It was to
+scatter to the wind with both hands the moral resources of the
+community. And who can fail to see the strength which would have been
+given to France in her hour of storm, a hundred years after the
+revocation of the Edict of Nantes, if her protestant sons, fortified by
+the training in the habits of individual responsibility which
+protestantism involves, had only been there to aid?
+
+
+This consideration brings us to a new side of the discussion. We may
+seem to have been unconsciously arguing as strongly in favour of a
+vigorous social conservatism as of a self-asserting spirit of social
+improvement. All that we have been saying may appear to cut both ways.
+If the innovator should decline to practise silence or reserve, why
+should the possessor of power be less uncompromising, and why should he
+not impose silence by force? If the heretic ought to be uncompromising
+in expressing his opinions, and in acting upon them, in the fulness of
+his conviction that they are right, why should not the orthodox be
+equally uncompromising in his resolution to stamp out the heretical
+notions and unusual ways of living, in the fulness of his conviction
+that they are thoroughly wrong? To this question the answer is that the
+hollow kinds of compromise are as bad in the orthodox as in the
+heretical. Truth has as much to gain from sincerity and thoroughness in
+one as in the other. But the issue between the partisans of the two
+opposed schools turns upon the sense which we design to give to the
+process of stamping out. Those who cling to the tenets of liberty limit
+the action of the majority, as of the minority, strictly to persuasion.
+Those who dislike liberty, insist that earnestness of conviction
+justifies either a majority or a minority in using not persuasion only,
+but force. I do not propose here to enter into the great question which
+Mr. Mill pressed anew upon the minds of this generation. His arguments
+are familiar to every reader, and the conclusion at which he arrived is
+almost taken for a postulate in the present essay.[31] The object of
+these chapters is to reiterate the importance of self-assertion,
+tenacity, and positiveness of principle. The partisan of coercion will
+argue that this thesis is on one side of it a justification of
+persecution, and other modes of interfering with new opinions and new
+ways of living by force, and the strong arm of the law, and whatever
+other energetic means of repression may be at command. If the minority
+are to be uncompromising alike in seeking and realising what they take
+for truth, why not the majority? Now this implies two propositions. It
+is the same as to say, first, that earnestness of conviction is not to
+be distinguished from a belief in our own infallibility; second, that
+faith in our infallibility is necessarily bound up with intolerance.
+
+Neither of these propositions is true. Let us take them in turn.
+Earnestness of conviction is perfectly compatible with a sense of
+liability to error. This has been so excellently put by a former writer
+that we need not attempt to better his exposition. 'Every one must, of
+course, think his own opinions right; for if he thought them wrong, they
+would no longer be his opinions: but there is a wide difference between
+regarding ourselves as infallible, and being firmly convinced of the
+truth of our creed. When a man reflects on any particular doctrine, he
+may be impressed with a thorough conviction of the improbability or even
+impossibility of its being false: and so he may feel with regard to all
+his other opinions, when he makes them objects of separate
+contemplation. And yet when he views them in the aggregate, when he
+reflects that not a single being on the earth holds collectively the
+same, when he looks at the past history and present state of mankind,
+and observes the various creeds of different ages and nations, the
+peculiar modes of thinking of sects and bodies and individuals, the
+notions once firmly held, which have been exploded, the prejudices once
+universally prevalent, which have been removed, and the endless
+controversies which have distracted those who have made it the business
+of their lives to arrive at the truth; and when he further dwells on
+the consideration that many of these, his fellow-creatures, have had a
+conviction of the justness of their respective sentiments equal to his
+own, he cannot help the obvious inference, that in his own opinion it is
+next to impossible that there is not an admixture of error; that there
+is an infinitely greater probability of his being wrong in some than
+right in all.'[32]
+
+Of course this is not an account of the actual frame of mind of ordinary
+men. They never do think of their opinions in the aggregate in
+comparison with the collective opinions of others, nor ever draw the
+conclusions which such reflections would suggest. But such a frame of
+mind is perfectly attainable, and has often been attained, by persons of
+far lower than first-rate capacity. And if this is so, there is no
+reason why it should not be held up for the admiration and imitation of
+all those classes of society which profess to have opinions. It would
+thus become an established element in the temper of the age. Nor need we
+fear that the result of this would be any flaccidity of conviction, or
+lethargy in act. A man would still be penetrated with the rightness of
+his own opinion on a given issue, and would still do all that he could
+to make it prevail in practice. But among the things which he would no
+longer permit himself to do, would be the forcible repression in others
+of any opinions, however hostile to his own, or of any kind of conduct,
+however widely it diverged from his own, and provided that it concerned
+themselves only. This widening of his tolerance would be the natural
+result of a rational and realised consciousness of his own general
+fallibility.
+
+Next, even belief in one's own infallibility does not necessarily lead
+to intolerance. For it may be said that though no man in his senses
+would claim to be incapable of error, yet in every given case he is
+quite sure that he is not in error, and therefore this assurance in
+particular is tantamount by process of cumulation to a sense of
+infallibility in general. Now even if this were so, it would not of
+necessity either produce or justify intolerance. The certainty of the
+truth of your own opinions is independent of any special idea as to the
+means by which others may best be brought to share them. The question
+between persuasion and force remains apart--unless, indeed, we may say
+that in societies where habits of free discussion have once begun to
+take root, those who are least really sure about their opinions, are
+often most unwilling to trust to persuasion to bring them converts, and
+most disposed to grasp the rude implements of coercion, whether legal or
+merely social. The cry, 'Be my brother, or I slay thee,' was the sign of
+a very weak, though very fiery, faith in the worth of fraternity. He
+whose faith is most assured, has the best reason for relying on
+persuasion, and the strongest motive to thrust from him all temptations
+to use angry force. The substitution of force for persuasion, among its
+other disadvantages, has this further drawback, from our present point
+of view, that it lessens the conscience of a society and breeds
+hypocrisy. You have not converted a man, because you have silenced him.
+Opinion and force belong to different elements. To think that you are
+able by social disapproval or other coercive means to crush a man's
+opinion, is as one who should fire a blunderbuss to put out a star. The
+acquiescence in current notions which is secured by law or by petulant
+social disapproval, is as worthless and as essentially hypocritical, as
+the conversion of an Irish pauper to protestantism by means of
+soup-tickets, or that of a savage to Christianity by the gift of a
+string of beads. Here is the radical fallacy of those who urge that
+people must use promises and threats in order to encourage opinions,
+thoughts, and feelings which they think good, and to prevent others
+which they think bad. Promises and threats can influence acts. Opinions
+and thoughts on morals, politics, and the rest, after they have once
+grown in a man's mind, can no more be influenced by promises and threats
+than can my knowledge that snow is white or that ice is cold. You may
+impose penalties on me by statute for saying that snow is white, or
+acting as if I thought ice cold, and the penalties may affect my
+conduct. They will not, because they cannot, modify my beliefs in the
+matter by a single iota. One result therefore of intolerance is to make
+hypocrites. On this, as on the rest of the grounds which vindicate the
+doctrine of liberty, a man who thought himself infallible either in
+particular or in general, from the Pope of Rome down to the editor of
+the daily newspaper, might still be inclined to abstain from any form of
+compulsion. The only reason to the contrary is that a man who is so
+silly as to think himself incapable of going wrong, is very likely to be
+too silly to perceive that coercion may be one way of going wrong.
+
+The currency of the notion that earnest sincerity about one's opinions
+and ideals of conduct is inseparably connected with intolerance, is
+indirectly due to the predominance of legal or juristic analogies in
+social discussion. For one thing, the lawyer has to deal mainly with
+acts, and to deal with them by way of repression. His attention is
+primarily fixed on the deed, and only secondarily on the mind of the
+doer. And so a habit of thought is created, which treats opinion as
+something equally in the sphere of coercion with actions. At the same
+time it favours coercive ways of affecting opinion. Then, what is still
+more important, the jurist's conception of society has its root in the
+relation between sovereign and subject, between lawmaker and those whom
+law restrains. Exertion of power on one hand, and compliance on the
+other--this is his type of the conditions of the social union. The
+fertility and advance of discussion on social issues depends on the
+substitution of the evolutional for the legal conception. The lawyer's
+type of proposition is absolute. It is also, for various reasons which
+need not be given here, inspired by involuntary reference to the lower,
+rather than to the more highly developed, social states. In the lower
+states law, penalties, coercion, compulsion, the strong hand, a sternly
+repressive public opinion, were the conditions on which the community
+was united and held together. But the line of thought which these
+analogies suggest, becomes less and less generally appropriate in social
+discussion, in proportion as the community becomes more complex, more
+various in resource, more special in its organisation, in a word, more
+elaborately civilised. The evolutionist's idea of society concedes to
+law its historic place and its actual part. But then this idea leads
+directly to a way of looking at society, which makes the replacement of
+law by liberty a condition of reaching the higher stages of social
+development.
+
+The doctrine of liberty belongs to the subject of this chapter, because
+it is only another way of expressing the want of connection between
+earnestness in realising our opinions, and anything like coercion in
+their favour. If it were true that aversion from compromise, in carrying
+out our ideas, implied the rightfulness of using all the means in our
+power to hinder others from carrying out ideas hostile to them, then we
+should have been preaching in a spirit unfavourable to the principle of
+liberty. Our main text has been that men should refuse to sacrifice
+their opinions and ways of living (in the self-regarding sphere) out of
+regard to the _status quo_, or the prejudices of others. And this, as a
+matter of course, excludes the right of forcing or wishing any one else
+to make such a sacrifice to us. Well, the first foundation-stone for the
+doctrine of liberty is to be sought in the conception of society as a
+growing and developing organism. This is its true base, apart from the
+numerous minor expediencies which may be adduced to complete the
+structure of the argument. It is fundamentally advantageous that in
+societies which have reached our degree of complex and intricate
+organisation, unfettered liberty should be conceded to ideas and, within
+the self-regarding sphere, to conduct also. The reasons for this are of
+some such kind as the following. New ideas and new 'experiments in
+living' would not arise, if there were not a certain inadequateness in
+existing ideas and ways of living. They may not point to the right mode
+of meeting inadequateness, but they do point to the existence and
+consciousness of it. They originate in the social capability of growth.
+Society can only develop itself on condition that all such novelties
+(within the limit laid down, for good and valid reasons, at self
+regarding conduct) are allowed to present themselves. First, because
+neither the legislature nor any one else can ever know for certain what
+novelties will prove of enduring value. Second, because even if we did
+know for certain that given novelties were pathological growths and not
+normal developments, and that they never would be of any value, still
+the repression necessary to extirpate them would involve too serious a
+risk both of keeping back social growth at some other point, and of
+giving the direction of that growth an irreparable warp. And let us
+repeat once more, in proportion as a community grows more complex in its
+classes, divisions, and subdivisions, more intricate in its productive,
+commercial, or material arrangements, so does this risk very obviously
+wax more grave.
+
+In the sense in which we are speaking of it, liberty is not a positive
+force, any more than the smoothness of a railroad is a positive
+force.[33] It is a condition. As a force, there is a sense in which it
+is true to call liberty a negation. As a condition, though it may still
+be a negation, yet it may be indispensable for the production of certain
+positive results. The vacuity of an exhausted receiver is not a force,
+but it is the indispensable condition of certain positive operations.
+Liberty as a force may be as impotent as its opponents allege. This does
+not affect its value as a preliminary or accompanying condition. The
+absence of a strait-waistcoat is a negation; but it is a useful
+condition for the activity of sane men. No doubt there must be a
+definite limit to this absence of external interference with conduct,
+and that limit will be fixed at various points by different thinkers. We
+are now only urging that it cannot be wisely fixed for the more complex
+societies by any one who has not grasped this fundamental preconception,
+that liberty, or the absence of coercion, or the leaving people to
+think, speak, and act as they please, is in itself a good thing. It is
+the object of a favourable presumption. The burden of proving it
+inexpedient always lies, and wholly lies, on those who wish to abridge
+it by coercion, whether direct or indirect.
+
+One reason why this truth is so reluctantly admitted, is men's
+irrational want of faith in the self-protective quality of a highly
+developed and healthy community. The timid compromiser on the one hand,
+and the advocate of coercive restriction on the other, are equally the
+victims of a superfluous apprehension. The one fears to use his liberty
+for the same reason that makes the other fearful of permitting liberty.
+This common reason is the want of a sensible confidence that, in a free
+western community, which has reached our stage of development,
+religious, moral, and social novelties--provided they are tainted by no
+element of compulsion or interference with the just rights of others,
+may be trusted to find their own level. Moral and intellectual
+conditions are not the only motive forces in a community, nor are they
+even the most decisive. Political and material conditions fix the limits
+at which speculation can do either good or harm. Let us take an
+illustration of the impotence of moral ideas to override material
+circumstances; and we shall venture to place this illustration somewhat
+fully before the reader.
+
+There is no more important distinction between modern civilised
+communities and the ancient communities than the fact that the latter
+rested on Slavery, while the former have abolished it. Hence there can
+hardly be a more interesting question than this--by what agencies so
+prodigious a transformation of one of the fundamental conditions of
+society was brought about. The popular answer is of a very ready kind,
+and it passes quite satisfactorily. This answer is that the first great
+step towards free labour, the transformation of personal slavery into
+serfdom, was the result of the spiritual change which was wrought in
+men's minds by the teaching of the Church. It is unquestionable that the
+influence of the Church tended to mitigate the evils of slavery, to
+humanise the relations between master and slave, between the lord and
+the serf. But this is a very different thing from the radical
+transformation of those relations. If we think of society as an
+organism we instantly understand that so immense a change as this could
+not possibly have been effected without the co-operation of the other
+great parts of the social system, any more than a critical evolution
+could take place in the nutritive apparatus of an animal, without a
+change in the whole series of its organs. Thus in order that serfage
+should be evolved from slavery, and free labour again from serfage, it
+could not be enough that an alteration should have been wrought in men's
+ideas as to their common brotherhood, and the connected ideas as to the
+lawfulness or unlawfulness of certain human relations. There must have
+been an alteration also of the economic and material conditions. History
+confirms the expectations which we should thus have been led to
+entertain. The impotence of spiritual and moral agencies alone in
+bringing about this great metamorphosis, is shown by such facts as
+these. For centuries after the new faith had consolidated itself,
+slavery was regarded without a particle of that deep abhorrence which
+the possession of man by man excites in us now. In the ninth and tenth
+centuries the slave trade was the most profitable branch of the
+commerce that was carried on in the Mediterranean. The historian tells
+us that, even so late as this, slaves were the principal article of
+European export to Africa, Syria, and Egypt, in payment for the produce
+of the East which was brought from those countries. It was the crumbling
+of the old social system which, by reducing the population, lessening
+the wealth, and lowering the standard of living among the free masters,
+tended to extinguish slavery, by diminishing the differences between the
+masters and their bondsmen. Again, it was certain laws enacted by the
+Roman government for the benefit of the imperial fisc, which first
+conferred rights on the slave. The same laws brought the free farmer,
+whose position was less satisfactory for the purposes of the revenue,
+down nearer and nearer to a servile condition. Again, in the ninth and
+tenth centuries, pestilence and famine accelerated the extinction of
+predial slavery by weakening the numbers of the free population.
+'History,' we are told by that thoroughly competent authority, Mr.
+Finlay, 'affords its testimony that neither the doctrines of
+Christianity, nor the sentiments of humanity, have ever yet succeeded
+in extinguishing slavery, where the soil could be cultivated with profit
+by slave labour. No Christian community of slave-holders has yet
+voluntarily abolished slavery. In no country where it prevailed has
+rural slavery ceased, until the price of productions raised by slave
+labour has fallen so low as to leave no profit to the slave-owner.'
+
+The moral of all this is the tolerably obvious truth, that the
+prosperity of an abstract idea depends as much on the medium into which
+it is launched, as upon any quality of its own. Stable societies are
+amply furnished with force enough to resist all effort in a destructive
+direction. There is seldom much fear, and in our own country there is
+hardly any fear at all, of hasty reformers making too much way against
+the spontaneous conservatism which belongs to a healthy and
+well-organised community. If dissolvent ideas do make their way, it is
+because the society was already ripe for dissolution. New ideas, however
+ardently preached, will dissolve no society which was not already in a
+condition of profound disorganisation. We may be allowed just to point
+to two memorable instances, by way of illustration, though a long and
+elaborate discussion would be needed to bring out their full force. It
+has often been thought since, as it was thought by timorous
+reactionaries at the time, that Christianity in various ways sapped the
+strength of the Roman Empire, and opened the way for the barbarians. In
+truth, the most careful and competent students know now that the Empire
+slowly fell to pieces, partly because the political arrangements were
+vicious and inadequate, but mainly because the fiscal and economic
+system impoverished and depopulated one district of the vast empire
+after another. It was the break-up of the Empire that gave the Church
+its chance; not the Church that broke up the Empire. It is a mistake of
+the same kind to suppose that the destructive criticism of the French
+philosophers a hundred years ago was the great operative cause of the
+catastrophe which befel the old social régime. If Voltaire, Diderot,
+Rousseau, had never lived, or if their works had all been suppressed as
+soon as they were printed, their absence would have given no new life to
+agriculture, would not have stimulated trade, nor replenished the
+bankrupt fisc, nor incorporated the privileged classes with the bulk of
+the nation, nor done anything else to repair an organisation of which
+every single part had become incompetent for its proper function. It was
+the material misery and the political despair engendered by the reigning
+system, which brought willing listeners to the feet of the teachers who
+framed beneficent governments on the simple principles of reason and the
+natural law. And these teachers only busied themselves with abstract
+politics, because the real situation was desperate. They had no
+alternative but to evolve social improvements out of their own
+consciousness. There was not a single sound organ in the body politic,
+which they could have made the starting-point of a reconstitution of a
+society on the base of its actual or historic structure. The mischiefs
+which resulted from their method are patent and undeniable. But the
+method was made inevitable by the curse of the old régime.[34]
+
+Nor is there any instance in history of mere opinion making a breach in
+the essential constitution of a community, so long as the political
+conditions were stable and the economic or nutritive conditions sound.
+If some absolute monarch were to be seized by a philanthropic resolution
+to transform the ordering of a society which seemed to be at his
+disposal, he might possibly, by the perseverance of a lifetime, succeed
+in throwing the community into permanent confusion. Joseph II. perhaps
+did as much as a modern sovereign can do in this direction. Yet little
+came of his efforts, either for good or harm. But a man without the
+whole political machinery in his power need hardly labour under any
+apprehension that he may, by the mere force of speculative opinion,
+involuntarily work a corresponding mischief. If it is true that the most
+fervent apostles of progress usually do very little of the good on which
+they congratulate themselves, they ought surely on the same ground to be
+acquitted of much of the harm for which they are sometimes reviled. In a
+country of unchecked and abundant discussion, a new idea is not at all
+likely to make much way against the objection of its novelty, unless it
+is really commended by some quality of temporary or permanent value. So
+far therefore as the mere publication of new principles is concerned,
+and so far also as merely self-regarding action goes, one who has the
+keenest sense of social responsibility, and is most scrupulously afraid
+of doing anything to slacken or perturb the process of social growth,
+may still consistently give to the world whatever ideas he has gravely
+embraced. He may safely trust, if the society be in a normal condition,
+to its justice of assimilation and rejection. There are a few
+individuals for whom newness is a recommendation. But what are these
+few among the many to whom newness is a stumbling-block? Old ideas may
+survive merely because they are old. A new one will certainly not, among
+a considerable body of men in a healthy social state, gain any
+acceptance worth speaking of, merely because it is new.
+
+The recognition of the self-protecting quality of society is something
+more than a point of speculative importance. It has a direct practical
+influence. For it would add to the courage and intrepidity of the men
+who are most attached to the reigning order of things. If such men could
+only divest themselves of a futile and nervous apprehension, that things
+as they are have no root in their essential fitness and harmony, and
+that order consequently is ever hanging on a trembling and doubtful
+balance, they would not only gain by the self-respect which would be
+added to them and the rest of the community, but all discussion would
+become more robust and real. If they had a larger faith in the stability
+for which they profess so great an anxiety, they would be more free
+alike in understanding and temper to deal generously, honestly, and
+effectively with those whom they count imprudent innovators. There is
+nothing more amusing or more instructive than to turn to the debates in
+parliament or the press upon some innovating proposal, after an interval
+since the proposal was accepted by the legislature. The flaming hopes of
+its friends, the wild and desperate prophecies of its antagonists, are
+found to be each as ill-founded as the other. The measure which was to
+do such vast good according to the one, such portentous evil according
+to the other, has done only a part of the promised good, and has done
+none of the threatened evil. The true lesson from this is one of
+perseverance and thoroughness for the improver, and one of faith in the
+self-protectiveness of a healthy society for the conservative. The
+master error of the latter is to suppose that men are moved mainly by
+their passions rather than their interests, that all their passions are
+presumably selfish and destructive, and that their own interests can
+seldom be adequately understood by the persons most directly concerned.
+How many fallacies are involved in this group of propositions, the
+reader may well be left to judge for himself.
+
+We have in this chapter considered some of the limitations which are
+set by the conditions of society on the duty of trying to realise our
+principles in action. The general conclusion is in perfect harmony with
+that of the previous chapters. A principle, if it be sound, represents
+one of the larger expediencies. To abandon that for the sake of some
+seeming expediency of the hour, is to sacrifice the greater good for the
+less, on no more creditable ground than that the less is nearer. It is
+better to wait, and to defer the realisation of our ideas until we can
+realise them fully, than to defraud the future by truncating them, if
+truncate them we must, in order to secure a partial triumph for them in
+the immediate present. It is better to bear the burden of
+impracticableness, than to stifle conviction and to pare away principle
+until it becomes more hollowness and triviality. What is the sense, and
+what is the morality, of postponing the wider utility to the narrower?
+Nothing is so sure to impoverish an epoch, to deprive conduct of
+nobleness, and character of elevation.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 27: _The Study of Sociology_, p. 396.]
+
+[Footnote 28: No one, for instance, has given more forcible or decisive
+expression than Mr. Spencer has done to the duty of not passively
+accepting the current theology. See his _First Principles_, pt. i. ch.
+vi, § 34; paragraph beginning,--'Whoever hesitates to utter that which
+he thinks the highest truth, lest it should be too much in advance of
+the time, may reassure himself by looking at his acts from an impersonal
+point of view,' etc.]
+
+[Footnote 29: _Speech on Conciliation with America_.]
+
+[Footnote 30: 'Toute énormité dans les esprits d'un certain ordre n'est
+souvent qu'une grande vue prise hors du temps et du lieu, et ne gardant
+aucun rapport réel avec les objets environnants. Le propre de certaines
+prunelles ardentes est de franchir du regard les intervalles et de les
+supprimer. Tantôt c'est une idée qui retarde de plusieurs siècles, et
+que ces vigoureux esprits se figurent encore présente et vivante; tantôt
+c'est une idée qui avance, et qu'ils croient incontinent réalisable. M.
+de Couaën était ainsi; il voyait 1814 dès 1804, et de là une
+supériorité; mais il jugeait 1814 possible dès 1804 ou 1805, et de là
+tout un chimérique entassement.--Voilà un point blanc à l'horizon,
+chacun jurerait que c'est un nuage. "C'est une montagne," dit le
+voyageur à l'oeil d'aigle; mais s'il ajoute: "Nous y arriverons ce soir,
+dans deux heures;" si, à chaque heure de marche, il crie avec
+emportement: "Nous y sommes," et le veut démontrer, il choque les
+voisins avec sa poutre, et donne l'avantage aux yeux moins perçants et
+plus habitués à la plaine.'--Ste. Beuve's _Volupté_, p. 262]
+
+[Footnote 31: It is sometimes convenient to set familiar arguments down
+once more; so I venture to reprint in a note at the end of the chapter a
+short exposition of the doctrine of liberty, which I had occasion to
+make in considering Sir J.F. Stephen's vigorous attack on that
+doctrine.]
+
+[Footnote 32: Mr. Samuel Bailey's _Essays on the Formation and
+Publication of Opinions_, etc., p. 138, (1826.)]
+
+[Footnote 33: There is a sense, and a most important sense, in which
+liberty is a positive force. It is its robust and bracing influence on
+character, which makes wise men prize freedom and strive for the
+enlargement of its province. As Mr. Mill expressed this:--'It is of
+importance not only what men do, but what manner of men they are that do
+it,' Milton pointed to the positive effect of liberty on character in
+the following passage:--'They are not skilful considerers of human
+things who imagine to remove sin by removing the matter of sin. Though
+ye take from a covetous man his treasure, he has yet one jewel left; ye
+cannot bereave him of his covetousness. Banish all objects of lust, shut
+up all youth into the severest discipline that can be exercised in any
+hermitage, ye cannot make them chaste that came not thither so. Suppose
+we could expel sin by this means; look how much we thus expel of sin, so
+much we expel of virtue. And were I the chooser, a dram of well-doing
+should be preferred before many times as much the forcible hindrance of
+evil-doing. For God sure esteems the growth and completing of one
+virtuous person, more than the restraint of ten vicious.']
+
+[Footnote 34: There is, I think, nothing in this paragraph really
+inconsistent with De Tocqueville's well-known and striking chapter,
+'Comment les hommes de lettres devinrent les principaux hommes
+politiques du pays, et des effets qui en résultèrent.' (_Ancien Régime_,
+iii. i.) Thus Sénac de Meilhan writes in 1795;--'C'est quand la
+Révolution a été entamée qu'on a cherché dans Mably, dans Rousseau, des
+armes pour sustenter le système vers lequel entrainait l'effervescence
+de quelques esprits hardis. Mais ce ne sont point les auteurs que j'ai
+cités qui ont enflamme les têtes; M. Necker seul a produit cet effet, et
+déterminé l'explosion,' ... 'Les écrits de Voltaire ont certainement nui
+à la religion, et ébranlé la croyance dans un assez grand nombre; mais
+ils n'ont aucun rapport avec les affaires du gouvernement, et sont plus
+favorables que contraires à la monarchie....' Of Rousseau's _Social
+Contract_:--'Ce livre profond et abstrait était peu lu, et etendu de
+bien peu de gens.' Mably--'avait peu de vogue.' _De Gouvernment, etc.,
+en France_, p. 129, etc.]
+
+
+
+
+NOTE TO PAGE 242.
+
+
+THE DOCTRINE OF LIBERTY.
+
+Mr. Mill's memorable plea for social liberty was little more than an
+enlargement, though a very important enlargement, of the principles of
+the still more famous Speech for Liberty of Unlicensed Printing with
+which Milton ennobled English literature two centuries before. Milton
+contended for free publication of opinion mainly on these grounds:
+First, that the opposite system implied the 'grace of infallibility and
+incorruptibleness' in the licensers. Second, that the prohibition of
+bold books led to mental indolence and stagnant formalism both in
+teachers and congregations, producing the 'laziness of a licensing
+church.' Third, that it 'hinders and retards the importation of our
+richest merchandise, truth;' for the commission of the licenser enjoins
+him to let nothing pass which is not vulgarly received already, and 'if
+it come to prohibiting, there is not aught more likely to be prohibited
+than truth itself, whose first appearance to our eyes, bleared and
+dimmed with prejudice and custom, is more unsightly and unplausible
+than many errors, even as the person is of many a great man slight and
+contemptible to see to.' Fourth, that freedom is in itself an ingredient
+of true virtue, and 'they are not skilful considerers of human things
+who imagine to remove sin by removing the matter of sin; that virtue
+therefore, which is but a youngling in the contemplation of evil, and
+knows not the utmost that vice promises to her followers, and rejects
+it, is but a blank virtue, not a pure; her virtue is but an excremental
+virtue, which was the reason why our sage and serious poet Spenser, whom
+I dare be known to think a better teacher than Scotus or Aquinas,
+describing true temperance under the form of Guion, brings him in with
+his palmer through the cave of Mammon and the tower of earthly bliss,
+that he might see and know and yet abstain.'
+
+The four grounds on which Mr. Mill contends for the necessity of freedom
+in the expression of opinion to the mental wellbeing of mankind, are
+virtually contained in these. His four grounds are, (1) that the
+silenced opinion may be true; (2) it may contain a portion of truth,
+essential to supplement the prevailing opinion; (3) vigorous contesting
+of opinions that are even wholly true, is the only way of preventing
+them from sinking to the level of uncomprehended prejudices; (4) without
+such contesting, the doctrine will lose its vital effect on character
+and conduct.
+
+But Milton drew the line of liberty at what he calls 'neighbouring
+differences, or rather indifferences.' The Arminian controversy had
+loosened the bonds with which the newly liberated churches of the
+Reformation, had made haste to bind themselves again, and weakened that
+authority of confessions, which had replaced the older but not more
+intolerant authority of the universal church. Other controversies which
+raged during the first half of the seventeenth century,--those between
+catholics and protestants, between prelatists and presbyterians, between
+socinians and trinitarians, between latitudinarians, puritans, and
+sacramentalists,--all tended to weaken theological exclusiveness. This
+slackening, however, was no more than partial. Roger Williams, indeed,
+the Welsh founder of Rhode Island, preached, as early as 1631, the
+principles of an unlimited toleration, extending to catholics, Jews, and
+even infidels. Milton stopped a long way short of this. He did not mean
+'tolerated popery and open superstition, which, as it extirpates all
+religious and civil supremacies, so itself should be extirpate, provided
+first that all charitable and compassionate means be used to win and
+regain the weak and the misled: that also which is impious or evil
+absolutely either against faith or manners no law can possibly permit
+that intends not to unlaw itself.'
+
+
+Locke, writing five-and-forty years later, somewhat widened these
+limitations. His question was not merely whether there should be free
+expression of opinion, but whether there should furthermore be freedom
+of worship and of religious union. He answered both questions
+affirmatively,--not on the semi-sceptical ground of Jeremy Taylor, which
+is also one of the grounds taken by Mr. Mill, that we cannot be sure
+that our own opinion is the true one,--but on the strength of his
+definition of the province of the civil magistrate. Locke held that the
+magistrate's whole jurisdiction reached only to civil concernments, and
+that 'all civil power, right, and dominion is bounded to that only care
+of promoting these things; and that it neither can nor ought in any
+manner to be extended to the saving of souls. This chiefly because the
+power of the civil magistrate consists only in outward force, while true
+and saving religion consists in the inward persuasion of the mind,
+without which nothing can be acceptable to God, and such is the nature
+of the understanding that it cannot he compelled to the belief of
+anything by outward force.... It is only light and evidence that can
+work a change in men's opinions; and that light can in no manner proceed
+from corporal sufferings, or any other outward penalties.' 'I may grow
+rich by an art that I take not delight in; I may be cured of some
+disease by remedies that I have not faith in; but I cannot be saved by a
+religion that at I distrust and a ritual that I abhor.' (_First Letter
+concerning Toleration_.) And much more in the same excellent vein. But
+Locke fixed limits to toleration. 1. No opinions contrary to human
+society, or to those moral rules which are necessary to the preservation
+of civil society, are to be tolerated by the magistrate. Thus, to take
+examples from our own day, a conservative minister would think himself
+right on this principle in suppressing the Land and Labour League; a
+catholic minister in dissolving the Education League; and any minister
+in making mere membership of the Mormon sect a penal offence. 2. No
+tolerance ought to be extended to 'those who attribute unto the
+faithful, religious, and orthodox, that is in plain terms unto
+themselves, any peculiar privilege or power above other mortals, in
+civil concernments; or who, upon pretence of religion, do challenge any
+manner of authority over such as are not associated with them in their
+ecclesiastical communion.' As I have seldom heard of any sect, except
+the Friends, who did not challenge as much authority as it could
+possibly get over persons not associated with it, this would amount to a
+universal proscription of religion; but Locke's principle might at any
+rate be invoked against Ultra-montanism in some circumstances. 3. Those
+are not at all to be tolerated who deny the being of God. The taking
+away of God, _though but even in thought_, dissolves all society; and
+promises, covenants, and oaths, which are the bonds of human society,
+have no hold on such. Thus the police ought to close Mr. Bradlaugh's
+Hall of Science, and perhaps on some occasions the Positivist School.
+
+Locke's principles depended on a distinction between civil concernments,
+which he tries to define, and all other concernments. Warburton's
+arguments on the alliance between church and state turned on the same
+point, as did the once-famous Bangorian controversy. This distinction
+would fit into Mr. Mill's cardinal position, which consists in a
+distinction between the things that only affect the doer or thinker of
+them, and the things that affect other persons as well. Locke's attempt
+to divide civil affairs from affairs of salvation, was satisfactory
+enough for the comparatively narrow object with which he opened his
+discussion. Mr. Mill's account of civil affairs is both wider and more
+definite; naturally so, as he had to maintain the cause of tolerance in
+a much more complex set of social conditions, and amid a far greater
+diversity of speculative energy, than any one dreamed of in Locke's
+time. Mr. Mill limits the province of the civil magistrate to the
+repression of acts that directly and immediately injure others than the
+doer of them. So long as acts, including the expression of opinions, are
+purely self-regarding, it seems to him expedient in the long run that
+they should not be interfered with by the magistrate. He goes much
+further than this. Self-regarding acts should not be interfered with by
+the magistrate. Not only self-regarding acts, but all opinions
+whatever, should, moreover, be as little interfered with as possible by
+public opinion, except in the way of vigorous argumentation and earnest
+persuasion in a contrary direction; the silent but most impressive
+solicitation of virtuous example; the wise and careful upbringing of the
+young, so that when they enter life they may be most nobly fitted to
+choose the right opinions and obey the right motives.
+
+The consideration by which he supports this rigorous confinement of
+external interference on the part of government, or the unorganised
+members of the community whose opinion is called public opinion, to
+cases of self-protection, are these, some of which have been already
+stated:--
+
+1. By interfering to suppress opinions or experiments in living, you may
+resist truths and improvements in a greater or less degree.
+
+2. Constant discussion is the only certain means of preserving the
+freshness of truth in men's minds, and the vitality of its influence
+upon their conduct and motives.
+
+3. Individuality is one of the most valuable elements of wellbeing, and
+you can only be sure of making the most of individuality, if you have an
+atmosphere of freedom, encouraging free development and expansion.
+
+4. Habitual resort to repressive means of influencing conduct tends more
+than anything else to discredit and frustrate the better means, such as
+education, good example, and the like. (_Liberty_, 148.)
+
+The principle which he deduces from these considerations 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; the only purpose for which power can be rightfully
+exercised over any member of a civilised community, is to prevent harm
+to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient
+warrant. He cannot be rightfully compelled to do or forbear because it
+will make him happier, because in the opinion 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 others.' (_Liberty_,
+22.)
+
+
+Two disputable points in the above doctrine are likely at once to reveal
+themselves to the least critical eye. First, that doctrine would seem to
+check the free expression of disapproval; one of the most wholesome and
+indispensable duties which anybody with interest in serious questions
+has to perform, and the non-performance of which would remove the most
+proper and natural penalty from frivolous or perverse opinions and
+obnoxious conduct. Mr. Mill deals with this difficulty as follows:--'We
+have a right in various ways to act upon our unfavourable 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.' (_Liberty_,
+139.) This appears to be a satisfactory way of meeting the objection.
+For though the penalties of disapproval may be just the same, whether
+deliberately inflicted, or naturally and spontaneously falling on the
+object of such disapproval, yet there is a very intelligible difference
+between the two processes in their effect on the two parties concerned.
+A person imbued with Mr. Mill's principle would feel the responsibility
+of censorship much more seriously; would reflect more carefully and
+candidly about the conduct or opinion of which he thought ill; would be
+more on his guard against pharisaic censoriousness, and that desire to
+be ever judging one another, which Milton well called the stronghold of
+our hypocrisy. The disapproval of such a person would have an austere
+colour, a gravity, a self-respecting reserve, which could never belong
+to an equal degree of disapproval in a person who had started from the
+officious principle, that if we are sure we are right, it is straightway
+our business to make the person whom we think wrong smart for his error.
+And in the same way such disapproval would be much more impressive to
+the person whom it affected. If it was justified, he would be like a
+froward child who is always less effectively reformed--if reformable at
+all--by angry chidings and passionate punishments than by the sight of a
+cool and austere displeasure which lets him persist in his frowardness
+if he chooses.
+
+
+The second weak point in the doctrine lies in the extreme vagueness of
+the terms, protective and self-regarding. The practical difficulty
+begins with the definition of these terms. Can any opinion, or any
+serious part of conduct, be looked upon as truly and exclusively
+self-regarding? This central ingredient in the discussion seems
+insufficiently laboured in the essay on Liberty. Yet it is here more
+than anywhere else that controversy is needed to clear up what is in
+just as much need of elucidation, whatever view we may take of the
+inherent virtue of freedom--whether we look on freedom as a mere
+negation, or as one of the most powerful positive conditions of
+attaining the highest kind of human excellence.
+
+To some persons the analysis of conduct, on which the whole doctrine of
+liberty rests, seems metaphysical and arbitrary. They are reluctant to
+admit there are any self-regarding acts at all. This reluctance implies
+a perfectly tenable proposition, a proposition which has been maintained
+by nearly all religious bodies in the world's history in their
+non-latitudinarian stages. To distinguish the self-regarding from the
+other parts of conduct, strikes them not only as unscientific, but as
+morally and socially mischievous. They insist that there is a social as
+well as a personal element in every human act, though in very different
+proportions. There is no gain, they contend, and there may be much harm,
+in trying to mark off actions, in which the personal element decisively
+preponderates, from actions of another sort. Mr. Mill did so distinguish
+actions, nor was his distinction either metaphysical or arbitrary in its
+source. As a matter of observation, and for the practical purposes of
+morality, there are kinds of action whose consequences do not go beyond
+the doer of them. No doubt, you may say that by engaging in these kinds
+in any given moment, the doer is neglecting the actions in which the
+social element preponderates, and therefore even acts that seem purely
+self-regarding have indirect and negative consequences to the rest of
+the world. But to allow considerations of this sort to prevent us from
+using a common-sense classification of acts by the proportion of the
+personal element in them, is as unreasonable as if we allowed the
+doctrine of the conservation of physical force, or the evolution of one
+mode of force into another, to prevent us from classifying the
+affections of matter independently, as light, heat, motion, and the
+rest. There is one objection obviously to be made to most of the
+illustrations which are designed to show the public element in all
+private conduct. The connection between the act and its influence on
+others is so remote (using the word in a legal sense), though quite
+certain, distinct, and traceable, that you can only take the act out of
+the self-regarding category, by a process which virtually denies the
+existence of any such category. You must set a limit to this 'indirect
+and at-a-distance argument,' as Locke called a similar plea, and the
+setting of this limit is the natural supplement to Mr. Mill's 'simple
+principle.'
+
+The division between self-regarding acts and others then, rests on
+observation of their actual consequences. And why was Mr. Mill so
+anxious to erect self-regarding acts into a distinct and important
+class, so important as to be carefully and diligently secured by a
+special principle of liberty? Because observation of the recorded
+experience of mankind teaches us, that the recognition of this
+independent provision is essential to the richest expansion of human
+faculty. To narrow or to repudiate such a province, and to insist
+exclusively on the social bearing of each part of conduct, is to limit
+the play of motives, and to thwart the doctrine that 'mankind obtain a
+greater sum of happiness when each pursues his own, under the rules and
+conditions required by the rest, than when each makes the good of the
+rest his only object.' To narrow or to repudiate such a province is to
+tighten the power of the majority over the minority, and to augment the
+authority of whatever sacerdotal or legislative body may represent the
+majority. Whether the lawmakers be laymen in parliament, or priests of
+humanity exercising the spiritual power, it matters not.
+
+
+We may best estimate the worth and the significance of the doctrine of
+Liberty by considering the line of thought and observation which led to
+it. To begin with, it is in Mr. Mill's hands something quite different
+from the same doctrine as preached by the French revolutionary school;
+indeed one might even call it reactionary, in respect of the French
+theory of a hundred years back. It reposes on no principle of abstract
+right, but, like the rest of its author's opinions, on principles of
+utility and experience. Dr. Arnold used to divide reformers into two
+classes, popular and liberal. The first he defined as seekers of
+liberty, the second as seekers of improvement; the first were the goats,
+and the second were the sheep. Mr. Mill's doctrine denied the mutual
+exclusiveness of the two parts of this classification, for it made
+improvement the end and the test, while it proclaimed liberty to be the
+means. Every thinker now perceives that the strongest and most durable
+influences in every western society lead in the direction of democracy,
+and tend with more or less rapidity to throw the control of social
+organisation into the hands of numerical majorities. There are many
+people who believe that if you only make the ruling body big enough, it
+is sure to be either very wise itself, or very eager to choose wise
+leaders. Mr. Mill, as any one who is familiar with his writings is well
+aware, did not hold this opinion. He had no more partiality for mob rule
+than De Maistre or Goethe or Mr. Carlyle. He saw its evils more clearly
+than any of these eminent men, because he had a more scientific eye, and
+because he had had the invaluable training of a political administrator
+on a large scale, and in a very responsible post. But he did not content
+himself with seeing these evils, and he wasted no energy in passionate
+denunciation of them, which he knew must prove futile. Guizot said of De
+Tocqueville, that he was an aristocrat who accepted his defeat. Mr. Mill
+was too penetrated by popular sympathies to be an aristocrat in De
+Tocqueville's sense, but he likewise was full of ideas and hopes which
+the unchecked or undirected course of democracy would defeat without
+chance of reparation. This fact he accepted, and from this he started.
+Mr. Carlyle, and one or two rhetorical imitators, poured malediction on
+the many-headed populace, and with a rather pitiful impatience insisted
+that the only hope for men lay in their finding and obeying a strong
+man, a king, a hero, a dictator. How he was to be found, neither the
+master nor his still angrier and more impatient mimics could ever tell
+us.
+
+Now Mr. Mill's doctrine laid down the main condition of finding your
+hero; namely, that all ways should be left open to him, because no man,
+nor majority of men, could possibly tell by which of these ways their
+deliverers were from time to time destined to present themselves. Wits
+have caricatured all this, by asking us whether by encouraging the tares
+to grow, you give the wheat a better chance. This is as misleading as
+such metaphors usually are. The doctrine of liberty rests on a faith
+drawn from the observation of human progress, that though we know wheat
+to be serviceable and tares to be worthless, yet there are in the great
+seed-plot of human nature a thousand rudimentary germs, not wheat and
+not tares, of whose properties we have not had a fair opportunity of
+assuring ourselves. If you are too eager to pluck up the tares, you are
+very likely to pluck up with them these untried possibilities of human
+excellence, and you are, moreover, very likely to injure the growing
+wheat as well. The demonstration of this lies in the recorded experience
+of mankind.
+
+
+Nor is this all. Mr. Mill's doctrine does not lend the least countenance
+to the cardinal opinion of some writers in the last century, that the
+only need of human character and of social institutions is to be let
+alone. He never said that we were to leave the ground uncultivated, to
+bring up whatever might chance to grow. On the contrary, the ground was
+to be cultivated with the utmost care and knowledge, with a view to
+prevent the growth of tares--but cultivated in a certain manner. You may
+take the method of the Inquisition, of the more cruel of the Puritans,
+of De Maistre, of Mr. Carlyle; or you may take Mr. Mill's method of
+cultivation. According to the doctrine of Liberty, we are to devote
+ourselves to prevention, as the surest and most wholesome mode of
+extirpation. Persuade; argue; cherish virtuous example; bring up the
+young in habits of right opinion and right motive; shape your social
+arrangements so as to stimulate the best parts of character. By these
+means you will gain all the advantages that could possibly have come of
+heroes and legislative dragooning, as well as a great many more which
+neither heroes nor legislative dragooning could ever have secured.
+
+It is well with men, Mr. Mill said, moreover, in proportion as they
+respect truth. Now they at once prove and strengthen their respect for
+truth, by having an open mind to all its possibilities, while at the
+same time they hold firmly to their own proved convictions, until they
+hear better evidence to the contrary. There is no anarchy, nor
+uncertainty, nor paralysing air of provisionalness in such a frame of
+mind. So far is it from being fatal to loyalty or reverence, that it is
+an indispensable part of the groundwork of the only loyalty that a wise
+ruler or teacher would care to inspire--the loyalty springing from a
+rational conviction that, in a field open to all comers, he is the best
+man they can find. Only on condition of liberty without limit is the
+ablest and most helpful of 'heroes' sure to be found; and only on
+condition of liberty without limit are his followers sure to be worthy
+of him. You must have authority, and yet must have obedience. The
+noblest and deepest and most beneficent kind of authority is that which
+rests on an obedience that is rational and spontaneous.
+
+
+The same futile impatience which animates the political utterances of
+Mr. Carlyle and his more weak-voiced imitators, takes another form in
+men of a different training or temperament. They insist that if the
+majority has the means of preventing vice by law, it is folly and
+weakness not to resort to those means. The superficial attractiveness
+of such a doctrine is obvious. The doctrine of liberty implies a broader
+and a more patient view. It says:--Even if you could be sure that what
+you take for vice is so--and the history of persecution shows how
+careful you should be in this preliminary point--even then it is an
+undoubted and, indeed, a necessary tendency of this facile repressive
+legislation, to make those who resort to it neglect the more effective,
+humane, and durable kinds of preventive legislation. You pass a law (if
+you can) putting down drunkenness; there is a neatness in such a method
+very attractive to fervid and impatient natures. Would you not have done
+better to leave that law unpassed, and apply yourselves sedulously
+instead to the improvement of the dwellings of the more drunken class,
+to the provision of amusements that might compete with the ale-house, to
+the extension and elevation of instruction, and so on? You may say that
+this should be done, and yet the other should not be left undone; but,
+as matter of fact and history, the doing of the one has always gone with
+the neglect of the other, and ascetic law-making in the interests of
+virtue has never been accompanied either by law-making or any other
+kinds of activity for making virtue easier or more attractive. It is the
+recognition how little punishment can do, that leaves men free to see
+how much social prevention can do. I believe, then, that what seems to
+the criminal lawyers and passionate philanthropists self-evident, is in
+truth an illusion, springing from a very shallow kind of impatience,
+heated in some of them by the addition of a cynical contempt for human
+nature and the worth of human existence.
+
+If people believe that the book of social or moral knowledge is now
+completed, that we have turned over the last page and heard the last
+word, much of the foundation of Mr. Mill's doctrine would disappear. But
+those who hold this can hardly have much to congratulate themselves
+upon. If it were so, and if governments were to accept the principle
+that the only limits to the enforcement of the moral standard of the
+majority are the narrow expediencies of each special case, without
+reference to any deep and comprehensive principle covering all the
+largest considerations, why, then, the society to which we ought to look
+with most admiration and envy, is the Eastern Empire during the ninth
+and tenth centuries, when the Byzantine system of a thorough
+subordination of the spiritual power had fully consolidated itself!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of On Compromise, by John Morley
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: On Compromise
+
+Author: John Morley
+
+Release Date: March 13, 2004 [EBook #11557]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ON COMPROMISE ***
+
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+Produced by Garrett Alley and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
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+</pre>
+
+ <h1>ON COMPROMISE</h1><span style="margin-left: 8em;"><i>'It
+ makes all the difference in the world whether we
+ put</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em;"><i>Truth in the first place or in
+ the second place.'</i></span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 22em;">WHATLEY</span><br>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2>ON COMPROMISE</h2>
+
+ <h3>BY</h3>
+
+ <h2>JOHN MORLEY</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ 1908
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ <i>This Edition first printed 1886</i>
+ </center>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="NOTE"></a>
+
+ <h2>NOTE.</h2>
+
+ <p>The writer has availed himself of the opportunity of a new
+ edition to add three or four additional illustrations in the
+ footnotes. The criticisms on the first edition call for no
+ remark, excepting this, perhaps, that the present little volume
+ has no pretensions to be anything more than an Essay. To judge
+ such it performance as if it professed to be an exhaustive
+ Treatise in casuistry, is to subject it to tests which it was
+ never designed to bear. Merely to open questions, to indicate
+ points, to suggest cases, to sketch outlines,&mdash;as an Essay
+ does all these things,&mdash;may often be a process not without
+ its own modest usefulness and interest.</p>
+
+ <p><i>May 4, 1877.</i></p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CONTENTS"></a>
+
+ <h2>CONTENTS.</h2><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.
+ INTRODUCTORY.</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Design of this Essay</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The question stated</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Suggested by some existing
+ tendencies in England</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Comparison with other
+ countries</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Test of this
+ comparison</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The absent quality specifically
+ defined</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">History and decay of some recent
+ aspirations</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustrations</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Characteristics of one present
+ mood</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Analysis of its causes</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(1) Influence of French
+ examples</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(2) Influence of the Historic
+ Method</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(3) Influence of the Newspaper
+ Press</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(4) Increase of material
+ prosperity</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(5) Transformation of the
+ spiritual basis of thought</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">(6) Influence of a State
+ Church</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.
+ OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Questions of a dual doctrine lies
+ at the outset of our inquiry</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">This doctrine
+ formulated</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Marks the triumph of <i>status
+ quo</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Psychological vindication of such
+ a doctrine</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Answered by assertion of the
+ dogmatic character of popular belief</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the pernicious social
+ influence of its priests</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The root idea of the defenders of
+ a dual doctrine</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thesis of the present chapter,
+ against that idea</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Examination of some of the pleas
+ for error</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">I. That a false opinion may be
+ clothed with good associations</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">II. That all minds are not open
+ to reason</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">III. That a false opinion,
+ considered in relation to the general</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4.5em;">mental attitude, may be less
+ hurtful than its premature demolition</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">IV. That mere negative truth is
+ not a guide</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">V. That error has been a
+ stepping-stone to truth</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">We cannot tell how much truth has
+ been missed</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Inevitableness is not
+ utility</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER
+ III. INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL
+ SPIRIT.</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The modern <i>disciplina
+ arcani</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hume's immoral advice</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Evil intellectual effects of
+ immoral compromise</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Depravation that follows its
+ grosser forms</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The three provinces of
+ compromise</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Radical importance of their
+ separation</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Effects of their confusion in
+ practical politics</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Economy or management in the
+ Formation of opinion</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Its lawfulness turns on the
+ claims of majority and minority over one another</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thesis of the present
+ chapter</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Its importance, owing to the
+ supremacy of the political spirit in England</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Effects of the predominance of
+ this spirit</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Contrasted with epochs of
+ intellectual responsibility</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A modern movement against the
+ political spirit</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">An objection
+ considered</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Importance to character of
+ rationalised conviction, and of ideals</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The absence of them attenuates
+ conduct</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustrations in modern
+ politics</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Modern
+ latitudinarianism</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustration in two supreme
+ issues</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pascal's remarks upon a state of
+ Doubt</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dr. Newman on the same</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Three ways of dealing with the
+ issues</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Another illustration of
+ intellectual improbity</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The Savoyard Vicar</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mischievousness of substituting
+ spiritual self-indulgence for reason</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.
+ RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Compromise in
+ Expression</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Touches religion rather than
+ politics</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hume on non-resistance</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Reason why rights of free speech
+ do not exactly coincide with rights of free thought</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Digression into the matter of
+ free speech</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dissent no longer railing and
+ vituperative</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tendency of modern free thought
+ to assimilate some elements from the old faith</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A wide breach still
+ remains</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Heresy, however, no longer traced
+ to depravity</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tolerance not necessarily
+ acquiescence in scepticism</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Object of the foregoing
+ digression</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The rarity of plain-speaking a
+ reason why it is painful</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Conformity in the relationship
+ between child and parent</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Between husband and
+ wife</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">In the education of
+ children</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The case of an unbelieving
+ priest</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The case of one who fears to lose
+ his influence</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Conformity not harmless nor
+ unimportant</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.
+ THE REALISATION OF OPINION.</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The application of opinion to
+ conduct</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tempering
+ considerations</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Not to be pressed too
+ far</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Our action in realising our
+ opinions depends on our social theory</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Legitimate and illegitimate
+ compromise in view of that</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The distinction equally sound on
+ the evolutional theory</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Condition of progressive
+ change</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A plea for compromise
+ examined</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A second plea</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The allegation of provisional
+ usefulness examined</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustrated in religious
+ institutions</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">In political
+ institutions</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Burke's commendation of political
+ compromise</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The saying that small reforms may
+ be the worst enemies of great ones</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">In what sense true</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustration in the Elementary
+ Education Act</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Wisdom of social
+ patience</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The considerations which apply to
+ political practice do not apply to our own lives</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nor to the publication of social
+ opinions</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The amount of conscience in a
+ community</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Evil of attenuating this
+ element</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Historic illustration</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">New side of the
+ discussion</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Is earnestness of conviction
+ fatal to concession of liberty to others?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Two propositions at the base of
+ an affirmative answer</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Earnestness of conviction
+ consistent with sense of liability to error</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Belief in one's own infallibility
+ does not necessarily lead to intolerance</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The contrary notion due to
+ juristic analogies in social discussion</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Connection between the doctrine
+ of liberty and social evolution</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The timid compromisers
+ superfluous apprehension</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Material limits to the effect of
+ moral speculation</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustration from the history of
+ Slavery</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Illustration from French
+ history</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Practical influence of a faith in
+ the self-protecting quality of a society</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Conclusion</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#NOTE_TO_PAGE_242">NOTE
+ TO PAGE 242.</a></span><br>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+
+ <h2>ON COMPROMISE.</h2>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_I"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER I.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ INTRODUCTORY.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>The design of the following essay is to consider, in a short
+ and direct way, some of the limits that are set by sound reason
+ to the practice of the various arts of accommodation, economy,
+ management, conformity, or compromise. The right of thinking
+ freely and acting independently, of using our minds without
+ excessive awe of authority, and shaping our lives without
+ unquestioning obedience to custom, is now a finally accepted
+ principle in some sense or other with every school of thought
+ that has the smallest chance of commanding the future. Under what
+ circumstances does the exercise and vindication of the right,
+ thus conceded in theory, become a positive duty in practice? If
+ the majority are bound to tolerate dissent from the ruling
+ opinions and beliefs, under what conditions and within what
+ limitations is the dissentient imperatively bound to avail
+ himself of this toleration? How far, and in what way, ought
+ respect either for immediate practical convenience, or for
+ current prejudices, to weigh against respect for truth? For how
+ much is it well that the individual should allow the feelings and
+ convictions of the many to count, when he comes to shape, to
+ express, and to act upon his own feelings and convictions? Are we
+ only to be permitted to defend general principles, on condition
+ that we draw no practical inferences from them? Is every other
+ idea to yield precedence and empire to existing circumstances,
+ and is the immediate and universal workableness of a policy to be
+ the main test of its intrinsic fitness?</p>
+
+ <p>To attempt to answer all these questions fully would be
+ nothing less than to attempt a compendium of life and duty in all
+ their details, a Summa of cases of conscience, a guide to
+ doubters at every point of the compass. The aim of the present
+ writer is a comparatively modest one; namely, to seek one or two
+ of the most general principles which ought to regulate the
+ practice of compliance, and to suggest some of the bearings which
+ they may have in their application to certain difficulties in
+ modern matters of conduct.</p>
+
+ <p>It is pretty plain that an inquiry of this kind needs to be
+ fixed by reference to a given set of social circumstances
+ tolerably well understood. There are some common rules as to the
+ expediency of compromise and conformity, but their application is
+ a matter of endless variety and the widest elasticity. The
+ interesting and useful thing is to find the relation of these too
+ vague rules to actual conditions; to transform them into
+ practical guides and real interpreters of what is right and best
+ in thought and conduct, in a special and definite kind of
+ emergency. According to the current assumptions of the writer and
+ the preacher, the one commanding law is that men should cling to
+ truth and right, if the very heavens fall. In principle this is
+ universally accepted. To the partisans of authority and tradition
+ it is as much a commonplace as to the partisans of the most
+ absolute and unflinching rationalism. Yet in practice all schools
+ alike are forced to admit the necessity of a measure of
+ accommodation in the very interests of truth itself. Fanatic is a
+ name of such ill repute, exactly because one who deserves to be
+ called by it injures good causes by refusing timely and harmless
+ concession; by irritating prejudices that a wiser way of urging
+ his own opinion might have turned aside; by making no allowances,
+ respecting no motives, and recognising none of those qualifying
+ principles, which are nothing less than necessary to make his own
+ principle true and fitting in a given society. The interesting
+ question in connection with compromise obviously turns upon the
+ placing of the boundary that divides wise suspense in forming
+ opinions, wise reserve in expressing them, and wise tardiness in
+ trying to realise them, from unavowed disingenuousness and
+ self-illusion, from voluntary dissimulation, and from indolence
+ and pusillanimity. These are the three departments or provinces
+ of compromise. Our subject is a question of boundaries.<a name=
+ "FNanchor1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1"><sup>[1]</sup></a> And this
+ question, being mainly one of time and circumstance, may be most
+ satisfactorily discussed in relation to the time and the
+ circumstances which we know best, or at least whose deficiencies
+ and requirements are most pressingly visible to us.</p>
+
+ <p>Though England counts her full share of fearless truth-seekers
+ in most departments of inquiry, yet there is on the whole no
+ weakening, but a rather marked confirmation, of what has become
+ an inveterate national characteristic, and has long been
+ recognised as such; a profound distrust, namely, of all general
+ principles; a profound dislike both of much reference to them,
+ and of any disposition to invest them with practical authority;
+ and a silent but most pertinacious measurement of philosophic
+ truths by political tests. 'It is not at all easy, humanly
+ speaking,' says one who has tried the experiment, 'to wind an
+ Englishman up to the level of dogma.' The difficulty has extended
+ further than the dogma of theology. The supposed antagonism
+ between expediency and principle has been pressed further and
+ further away from the little piece of true meaning that it ever
+ could be rightly allowed to have, until it has now come to
+ signify the paramount wisdom of counting the narrow, immediate,
+ and personal expediency for everything, and the whole, general,
+ ultimate, and completed expediency for nothing. Principle is only
+ another name for a proposition stating the terms of one of these
+ larger expediencies. When principle is held in contempt, or
+ banished to the far dreamland of the philosopher and the student,
+ with an affectation of reverence that in a materialist generation
+ is in truth the most overweening kind of contempt, this only
+ means that men are thinking much of the interests of to-day, and
+ little of the more ample interests of the many days to come. It
+ means that the conditions of the time are unfriendly to the
+ penetration and the breadth of vision which disclose to us the
+ whole range of consequences that follow on certain kinds of
+ action or opinion, and unfriendly to the intrepidity and
+ disinterestedness which make us willing to sacrifice our own
+ present ease or near convenience, in the hope of securing higher
+ advantages for others or for ourselves in the future.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us take politics, for example. What is the state of the
+ case with us, if we look at national life in its broadest aspect?
+ A German has his dream of a great fatherland which shall not only
+ be one and consolidated, but shall in due season win freedom for
+ itself, and be as a sacred hearth whence others may borrow the
+ warmth of freedom and order for themselves. A Spaniard has his
+ vision either of militant loyalty to God and the saints and the
+ exiled line of his kings, or else of devotion to the newly won
+ liberty and to the raising up of his fallen nation. An American,
+ in the midst of the political corruption which for the moment
+ obscures the great democratic experiment, yet has his imagination
+ kindled by the size and resources of his land, and his enthusiasm
+ fired by the high destinies which he believes to await its people
+ in the centuries to come. A Frenchman, republican or royalist,
+ with all his frenzies and 'fool-fury' of red or white, still has
+ his hope and dream and aspiration, with which to enlarge his life
+ and lift him on an ample pinion out from the circle of a poor
+ egoism. What stirs the hope and moves the aspiration of our
+ Englishman? Surely nothing either in the heavens above or on the
+ earth beneath. The English are as a people little susceptible in
+ the region of the imagination. But they have done good work in
+ the world, acquired a splendid historic tradition of stout combat
+ for good causes, founded a mighty and beneficent empire; and they
+ have done all this notwithstanding their deficiencies of
+ imagination. Their lands have been the home of great and forlorn
+ causes, though they could not always follow the transcendental
+ flights of their foreign allies and champions. If Englishmen were
+ not strong in imagination, they were what is better and surer,
+ strong in their hold of the great emancipating principles. What
+ great political cause, her own or another's, is England
+ befriending to-day? To say that no great cause is left, is to
+ tell us that we have reached the final stage of human progress,
+ and turned over the last leaf in the volume of human
+ improvements. The day when this is said and believed marks the
+ end of a nation's life. Is it possible that, after all, our old
+ protestant spirit, with its rationality, its austerity, its
+ steady political energy, has been struck with something of the
+ mortal fatigue that seizes catholic societies after their fits of
+ revolution?</p>
+
+ <p>We need not forget either the atrocities or the imbecilities
+ which mark the course of modern politics on the Continent. I am
+ as keenly alive as any one to the levity of France, and the
+ [Greek: hubris] of Germany. It may be true that the ordinary
+ Frenchman is in some respects the victim of as poor an egoism as
+ that of the ordinary Englishman; and that the American has no
+ advantage over us in certain kinds of magnanimous sentiment. What
+ is important is the mind and attitude, not of the ordinary man,
+ but of those who should be extraordinary. The decisive sign of
+ the elevation of a nation's life is to be sought among those who
+ lead or ought to lead. The test of the health of a people is to
+ be found in the utterances of those who are its spokesmen, and in
+ the action of those whom it accepts or chooses to be its chiefs.
+ We have to look to the magnitude of the issues and the height of
+ the interests which engage its foremost spirits. What are the
+ best men in a country striving for? And is the struggle pursued
+ intrepidly and with a sense of its size and amplitude, or with
+ creeping foot and blinking eye? The answer to these questions is
+ the answer to the other question, whether the best men in the
+ country are small or great. It is a commonplace that the manner
+ of doing things is often as important as the things done. And it
+ has been pointed out more than once that England's most
+ creditable national action constantly shows itself so poor and
+ mean in expression that the rest of Europe can discern nothing in
+ it but craft and sinister interest. Our public opinion is often
+ rich in wisdom, but we lack the courage of our wisdom. We execute
+ noble achievements, and then are best pleased to find shabby
+ reasons for them.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a certain quality attaching alike to thought and
+ expression and action, for which we may borrow the name of
+ grandeur. It has been noticed, for instance, that Bacon strikes
+ and impresses us, not merely by the substantial merit of what he
+ achieved, but still more by a certain greatness of scheme and
+ conception. This quality is not a mere idle decoration. It is not
+ a theatrical artifice of mask or buskin, to impose upon us unreal
+ impressions of height and dignity. The added greatness is real.
+ Height of aim and nobility of expression are true forces. They
+ grow to be an obligation upon us. A lofty sense of personal worth
+ is one of the surest elements of greatness. That the lion should
+ love to masquerade in the ass's skin is not modesty and reserve,
+ but imbecility and degradation. And that England should wrap
+ herself in the robe of small causes and mean reasons is the more
+ deplorable, because there is no nation in the world the
+ substantial elements of whose power are so majestic and imperial
+ as our own. Our language is the most widely spoken of all
+ tongues, its literature is second to none in variety and power.
+ Our people, whether English or American, have long ago superseded
+ the barbarous device of dictator and Caesar by the manly arts of
+ self-government. We understand that peace and industry are the
+ two most indispensable conditions of modern civilisation, and we
+ draw the lines of our policy in accordance with such a
+ conviction. We have had imposed upon us by the unlucky prowess of
+ our ancestors the task of ruling a vast number of millions of
+ alien dependents. We undertake it with a disinterestedness, and
+ execute it with a skill of administration, to which history
+ supplies no parallel, and which, even if time should show that
+ the conditions of the problem were insoluble, will still remain
+ for ever admirable. All these are elements of true pre-eminence.
+ They are calculated to inspire us with the loftiest consciousness
+ of national life. They ought to clothe our voice with authority,
+ to nerve our action by generous resolution, and to fill our
+ counsels with weightiness and power.</p>
+
+ <p>Within the last forty years England has lost one by one each
+ of those enthusiasms which may have been illusions,&mdash;some of
+ them undoubtedly were so,&mdash;but which at least testified to
+ the existence among us, in a very considerable degree, of a vivid
+ belief in the possibility of certain broad general theories being
+ true and right, as well as in the obligation of making them
+ lights to practical conduct and desire. People a generation ago
+ had eager sympathy with Hungary, with Italy, with Poland, because
+ they were deeply impressed by the doctrine of nationalities. They
+ had again a generous and energetic hatred of such an institution
+ as the negro slavery of America, because justice and humanity and
+ religion were too real and potent forces within their breasts to
+ allow them to listen to those political considerations by which
+ American statesmen used to justify temporising and compromise.
+ They had strong feelings about Parliamentary Reform, because they
+ were penetrated by the principle that the possession of political
+ power by the bulk of a society is the only effective security
+ against sinister government; or else by the principle that
+ participation in public activity, even in the modest form of an
+ exercise of the elective franchise, is an elevating and
+ instructing agency; or perhaps by the principle that justice
+ demands that those who are compelled to obey laws and pay
+ national taxes should have a voice in making the one and imposing
+ the other.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be said that the very fate of these aspirations has had
+ a blighting effect on public enthusiasm and the capacity of
+ feeling it. Not only have most of them now been fulfilled, and so
+ passed from aspiration to actuality, but the results of their
+ fulfilment have been so disappointing as to make us wonder
+ whether it is really worth while to pray, when to have our
+ prayers granted carries the world so very slight a way forward.
+ The Austrian is no longer in Italy; the Pope has ceased to be
+ master in Rome; the patriots of Hungary are now in possession of
+ their rights, and have become friends of their old oppressors;
+ the negro slave has been transformed into an American citizen. At
+ home, again, the gods have listened to our vows. Parliament has
+ been reformed, and the long-desired mechanical security provided
+ for the voter's freedom. We no longer aspire after all these
+ things, you may say, because our hopes have been realised and our
+ dreams have come true. It is possible that the comparatively
+ prosaic results before our eyes at the end of all have thrown a
+ chill over our political imagination. What seemed so glorious
+ when it was far off, seems perhaps a little poor now that it is
+ near; and this has damped the wing of political fancy. The old
+ aspirations have vanished, and no new ones have arisen in their
+ place. Be the cause what it may, I should express the change in
+ this way, that the existing order of facts, whatever it may be,
+ now takes a hardly disputed precedence with us over ideas, and
+ that the coarsest political standard is undoubtingly and finally
+ applied over the whole realm of human thought.</p>
+
+ <p>The line taken up by the press and the governing classes of
+ England during the American Civil War may serve to illustrate the
+ kind of mood which we conceive to be gaining firmer hold than
+ ever of the national mind. Those who sympathised with the
+ Southern States listened only to political arguments, and very
+ narrow and inefficient political arguments, as it happened, when
+ they ought to have seen that here was an issue which involved not
+ only political ideas, but moral and religious ideas as well. That
+ is to say, the ordinary political tests were not enough to reveal
+ the entire significance of the crisis, nor were the political
+ standards proper for measuring the whole of the expediencies
+ hanging in the balance. The conflict could not be adequately
+ gauged by such questions as whether the Slave States had or had
+ not a constitutional right to establish an independent
+ government; whether the Free States were animated by philanthropy
+ or by love of empire; whether it was to the political advantage
+ of England that the American Union should be divided and
+ consequently weakened. Such questions were not necessarily
+ improper in themselves, and we can imagine circumstances in which
+ they might be not only proper but decisive. But, the
+ circumstances being what they were, the narrower expediencies of
+ ordinary politics were outweighed by one of those supreme and
+ indefeasible expediencies which are classified as moral. These
+ are, in other words, the higher, wider, more binding, and
+ transcendent part of the master art of social wellbeing.</p>
+
+ <p>Here was only one illustration of the growing tendency to
+ substitute the narrowest political point of view for all the
+ other ways of regarding the course of human affairs, and to raise
+ the limitations which practical exigencies may happen to set to
+ the application of general principles, into the very place of the
+ principles themselves. Nor is the process of deteriorating
+ conviction confined to the greater or noisier transactions of
+ nations. It is impossible that it should be so. That process is
+ due to causes which affect the mental temper an a whole, and pour
+ round us an atmosphere that enervates our judgment from end to
+ end, not more in politics than in morality, and not more in
+ morality than in philosophy, in art, and in religion. Perhaps
+ this tendency never showed itself more offensively than when the
+ most important newspaper in the country criticised our great
+ naturalist's scientific speculations as to the descent of man,
+ from the point of view of property, intelligence, and a stake in
+ the country, and severely censured him for revealing his
+ particular zoological conclusions to the general public, at a
+ moment when the sky of Paris was red with the incendiary flames
+ of the Commune. It would be hard to reduce the transformation of
+ all truth into a subordinate department of daily politics, to a
+ more gross and unseemly absurdity.</p>
+
+ <p>The consequences of such a transformation, of putting
+ immediate social convenience in the first place, and respect for
+ truth in the second, are seen, as we have said, in a distinct and
+ unmistakable lowering of the level of national life; a slack and
+ lethargic quality about public opinion; a growing predominance of
+ material, temporary, and selfish aims, over those which are
+ generous, far-reaching, and spiritual; a deadly weakening of
+ intellectual conclusiveness, and clear-shining moral
+ illumination, and, lastly, of a certain stoutness of self-respect
+ for which England was once especially famous. A plain categorical
+ proposition is becoming less and less credible to average minds.
+ Or at least the slovenly willingness to hold two directly
+ contradictory propositions at one and the same time is becoming
+ more and more common. In religion, morals, and politics, the
+ suppression of your true opinion, if not the positive profession
+ of what you hold to be a false opinion, is hardly ever counted a
+ vice, and not seldom even goes for virtue and solid wisdom. One
+ is conjured to respect the beliefs of others, but forbidden to
+ claim the same respect for one's own.</p>
+
+ <p>This dread of the categorical proposition might be creditable,
+ if it sprang from attachment to a very high standard of evidence,
+ or from a deep sense of the relative and provisional quality of
+ truth. There might even be a plausible defence set up for it, if
+ it sprang from that formulated distrust of the energetic rational
+ judgment in comparison with the emotional, affective,
+ contemplative parts of man, which underlies the various forms of
+ religious mysticism. If you look closely into our present mood,
+ it is seen to be the product mainly and above all of a shrinking
+ deference to the <i>status quo</i>, not merely as having a claim
+ not to be lightly dealt with, which every serious man concedes,
+ but as being the last word and final test of truth and justice.
+ Physical science is allowed to be the sphere of accurate
+ reasoning and distinct conclusions, but in morals and politics,
+ instead of admitting that these subjects have equally a logic of
+ their own, we silently suspect all first principles, and
+ practically deny the strict inferences from demonstrated
+ premisses. Faith in the soundness of given general theories of
+ right and wrong melts away before the first momentary triumph of
+ wrong, or the first passing discouragement in enforcing
+ right.</p>
+
+ <p>Our robust political sense, which has discovered so many of
+ the secrets of good government, which has given us freedom with
+ order, and popular administration without corruption, and
+ unalterable respect for law along with indelible respect for
+ individual right, this, which has so long been our strong point,
+ is fast becoming our weakness and undoing. For the extension of
+ the ways of thinking which are proper in politics, to other than
+ political matter, means at the same time the depravation of the
+ political sense itself. Not only is social expediency effacing
+ the many other points of view that men ought to take of the
+ various facts of life and thought: the idea of social expediency
+ itself is becoming a dwarfed and pinched idea. Ours is the
+ country where love of constant improvement ought to be greater
+ than anywhere else, because fear of revolution is less. Yet the
+ art of politics is growing to be as meanly conceived as all the
+ rest At elections the national candidate has not often a chance
+ against the local candidate, nor the man of a principle against
+ the man of a class. In parliament we are admonished on high
+ authority that 'the policy of a party is not the carrying out of
+ the opinion of any section of it, but the general consensus of
+ the whole,' which seems to be a hierophantic manner of saying
+ that the policy of a party is one thing, and the principle which
+ makes it a party is another thing, and that men who care very
+ strongly about anything are to surrender that and the hope of it,
+ for the sake of succeeding in something about which they care
+ very little or not at all. This is our modern way of giving
+ politicians heart for their voyage, of inspiring them with
+ resoluteness and self-respect, with confidence in the worth of
+ their cause and enthusiasm for its success. Thoroughness is a
+ mistake, and nailing your flag to the mast a bit of delusive
+ heroics. Think wholly of to-day, and not at all of to-morrow.
+ Beware of the high and hold fast to the safe. Dismiss conviction,
+ and study general consensus. No zeal, no faith, no intellectual
+ trenchancy, but as much low-minded geniality and trivial
+ complaisance as you please.</p>
+
+ <p>Of course, all these characteristics of our own society mark
+ tendencies that are common enough in all societies. They often
+ spring from an indolence and enervation that besets a certain
+ number of people, however invigorating the general mental climate
+ may be. What we are now saying is that the general mental climate
+ itself has, outside of the domain of physical science, ceased to
+ be invigorating; that, on the contrary, it fosters the more
+ inglorious predispositions of men, and encourages a native
+ willingness, already so strong, to acquiesce in a lazy
+ accommodation with error, an ignoble economy of truth, and a
+ vicious compromise of the permanent gains of adhering to a sound
+ general principle, for the sake of the temporary gains of
+ departing from it.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Without attempting an elaborate analysis of the causes that
+ have brought about this debilitation of mental tone, we may
+ shortly remind ourselves of one or two facts in the political
+ history, in the intellectual history, and in the religious
+ history of this generation, which perhaps help us to understand a
+ phenomenon that we have all so keen an interest both in
+ understanding and in modifying.</p>
+
+ <p>To begin with what lies nearest to the surface. The most
+ obvious agency at work in the present exaggeration of the
+ political standard as the universal test of truth, is to be found
+ in some contemporary incidents. The influence of France upon
+ England since the revolution of 1848 has tended wholly to the
+ discredit of abstract theory and general reasoning among us, in
+ all that relates to politics, morals, and religion. In 1848, not
+ in 1789, questions affecting the fundamental structure and
+ organic condition of the social union came for the first time
+ into formidable prominence. For the first time those questions
+ and the answers to them were stated in articulate formulas and
+ distinct theories. They were not merely written in books; they so
+ fascinated the imagination and inflamed the hopes of the time,
+ that thousands of men were willing actually to go down into the
+ streets and to shed their blood for the realisation of their
+ generous dream of a renovated society. The same sight has been
+ seen since, and even when we do not see it, we are perfectly
+ aware that the same temper is smouldering. Those were premature
+ attempts to convert a crude aspiration into a political reality,
+ and to found a new social order on a number of umcompromising
+ deductions from abstract principles of the common weal. They have
+ had the natural effect of deepening the English dislike of a
+ general theory, even when such a theory did no more than profess
+ to announce a remote object of desire, and not the present goal
+ of immediate effort.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not only the Socialists who are responsible for the low
+ esteem into which a spirit of political generalisation has fallen
+ in other countries, in consequence of French experience. Mr. Mill
+ has described in a well-known passage the characteristic vice of
+ the leaders of all French parties, and not of the democratic
+ party more than any other. 'The commonplaces of politics in
+ France,' he says, 'are large and sweeping practical maxims, from
+ which, as ultimate premisses, men reason downwards to particular
+ applications, and this they call being logical and consistent.
+ For instance, they are perpetually arguing that such and such a
+ measure ought to be adopted, because it is a consequence of the
+ principle on which the form of government is founded; of the
+ principle of legitimacy, or the principle of the sovereignty of
+ the people. To which it may be answered that if these be really
+ practical principles, they must rest on speculative grounds; the
+ sovereignty of the people (for example) must be a right
+ foundation for government, because a government thus constituted
+ tends to produce certain beneficial effects. Inasmuch, however,
+ as no government produces all possible beneficial effects, but
+ all are attended with more or fewer inconveniences; and since
+ these cannot be combated by means drawn from the very causes
+ which produce them, it would often be a much stronger
+ recommendation of some practical arrangement that it does not
+ follow from what is called the general principle of the
+ government, than that it does,'<a name="FNanchor2"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_2"><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The English feeling for compromise is on its better side the
+ result of a shrewd and practical, though informal, recognition of
+ a truth which the writer has here expressed in terms of Method.
+ The disregard which the political action of France has repeatedly
+ betrayed of a principle really so important has hitherto
+ strengthened our own regard for it, until it has not only made us
+ look on its importance as exclusive and final, but has extended
+ our respect for the right kind of compromise to wrong and
+ injurious kinds.</p>
+
+ <p>A minor event, which now looks much less important than it did
+ not many years ago, but which still had real influence in
+ deteriorating moral judgment, was the career of a late sovereign
+ of France. Some apparent advantages followed for a season from a
+ rule which had its origin in a violent and perfidious usurpation,
+ and which was upheld by all the arts of moral corruption,
+ political enervation, and military repression. The advantages
+ lasted long enough to create in this country a steady and
+ powerful opinion that Napoleon the Third's early crime was
+ redeemed by the seeming prosperity which followed. The shocking
+ prematureness of this shallow condonation is now too glaringly
+ visible for any one to deny it. Not often in history has the
+ great truth that 'morality is the nature of things' received
+ corroboration so prompt and timely. We need not commit ourselves
+ to the optimistic or sentimental hypothesis that wickedness
+ always fares ill in the world, or on the other hand that whoso
+ hearkens diligently to the divine voice, and observes all the
+ commandments to do them, shall be blessed in his basket and his
+ store and all the work of his hand. The claims of morality to our
+ allegiance, so far as its precepts are solidly established, rest
+ on the same positive base as our faith in the truth of physical
+ laws. Moral principles, when they are true, are at bottom only
+ registered generalisations from experience. They record certain
+ uniformities of antecedence and consequence in the region of
+ human conduct Want of faith in the persistency of these
+ uniformities is only a little less fatuous in the moral order
+ than a corresponding want of faith would instantly disclose
+ itself to be in the purely physical order. In both orders alike
+ there is only too much of this kind of fatuousness, this
+ readiness to believe that for once in our favour the stream shall
+ flow up hill, that we may live in miasmatic air unpoisoned, that
+ a government may depress the energy, the self-reliance, the
+ public spirit of its citizens, and yet be able to count on these
+ qualities whenever the government itself may have broken down,
+ and left the country to make the best of such resources as are
+ left after so severe and prolonged a drain. This is the sense in
+ which morality is the nature of things. The system of the Second
+ Empire was in the same sense an immoral system. Unless all the
+ lessons of human experience were futile, and all the principles
+ of political morality mere articles of pedantry, such a system
+ must inevitably bring disaster, as we might have seen that it was
+ sowing the seeds of disaster. Yet because the catastrophe
+ lingered, opinion in England began to admit the possibility of
+ evil being for this once good, and to treat any reference to the
+ moral and political principles which condemned the imperial
+ system, and all systems like it, beyond hope or appeal, as simply
+ the pretext of a mutinous or Utopian impatience.</p>
+
+ <p>This, however, is only one of the more superficial influences
+ which have helped and fallen in with the working of profounder
+ causes of weakened aspiration and impoverished moral energy, and
+ of the substitution of latitudinarian acquiescence and faltering
+ conviction for the whole-hearted assurance of better times. Of
+ these deeper causes, the most important in the intellectual
+ development of the prevailing forms of thought and sentiment is
+ the growth of the Historic Method. Let us consider very shortly
+ how the abuse of this method, and an unauthorised extension and
+ interpretation of its conclusions, are likely to have had
+ something to do with the enervation of opinion.</p>
+
+ <p>The Historic Method may be described as the comparison of the
+ forms of an idea, or a usage, or a belief, at any given time,
+ with the earlier forms from which they were evolved, or the later
+ forms into which they were developed, and the establishment, from
+ such a comparison, of an ascending and descending order among the
+ facts. It consists in the explanation of existing parts in the
+ frame of society by connecting them with corresponding parts in
+ some earlier frame; in the identification of present forms in the
+ past, and past forms in the present. Its main process is the
+ detection of corresponding customs, opinions, laws, beliefs,
+ among different communities, and a grouping of them into general
+ classes with reference to some one common feature. It is a
+ certain way of seeking answers to various questions of origin,
+ resting on the same general doctrine of evolution, applied to
+ moral and social forms, as that which is being applied with so
+ much ingenuity to the series of organic matter. The historic
+ conception is a reference of every state of society to a
+ particular stage in the evolution of its general conditions.
+ Ideas of law, of virtue, of religion, of the physical universe,
+ of history, of the social union itself, all march in a harmonious
+ and inter-dependent order.</p>
+
+ <p>Curiosity with reference to origins is for various reasons the
+ most marked element among modern scientific tendencies. It covers
+ the whole field, moral, intellectual, and physical, from the
+ smile or the frown on a man's face, up to the most complex of the
+ ideas in his mind; from the expression of his emotions, to their
+ root and relations with one another in his inmost organisation.
+ As an ingenious writer, too soon lost to our political
+ literature, has put it:&mdash;'If we wanted to describe one of
+ the most marked results, perhaps the most marked result, of late
+ thought, we should say that by it everything is made <i>an
+ antiquity</i>. When in former times our ancestors thought of an
+ antiquarian, they described him as occupied with coins and medals
+ and Druids' stones. But now there are other relics; indeed all
+ matter is become such. Man himself has to the eye of science
+ become an antiquity. She tries to read, is beginning to read,
+ knows she ought to read, in the frame of each man the result of a
+ whole history of all his life, and what he is and what makes him
+ so.'<a name="FNanchor3"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_3"><sup>[3]</sup></a> Character is considered less
+ with reference to its absolute qualities than as an interesting
+ scene strewn with scattered rudiments, survivals, inherited
+ predispositions. Opinions are counted rather as phenomena to be
+ explained than as matters of truth and falsehood. Of usages, we
+ are beginning first of all to think where they came from, and
+ secondarily whether they are the most fitting and convenient that
+ men could be got to accept. In the last century men asked of a
+ belief or a story, Is it true? We now ask, How did men come to
+ take it for true? In short the relations among social phenomena
+ which now engage most attention, are relations of original
+ source, rather than those of actual consistency in theory and
+ actual fitness in practice. The devotees of the current method
+ are more concerned with the pedigree and genealogical connections
+ of a custom or an idea than with its own proper goodness or
+ badness, its strength or its weakness.</p>
+
+ <p>Though there is no necessary or truly logical association
+ between systematic use of this method rightly limited, and a
+ slack and slipshod preference of vague general forms over
+ definite ideas, yet every one can see its tendency, if
+ uncorrected, to make men shrink from importing anything like
+ absolute quality into their propositions. We can see also, what
+ is still worse, its tendency to place individual robustness and
+ initiative in the light of superfluities, with which a world that
+ goes by evolution can very well dispense. Men easily come to
+ consider clearness and positiveness in their opinions,
+ staunchness in holding and defending them, and fervour in
+ carrying them into action, as equivocal virtues of very doubtful
+ perfection, in a state of things where every abuse has after all
+ had a defensible origin; where every error has, we must confess,
+ once been true relatively to other parts of belief in those who
+ held the error; and where all parts of life are so bound up with
+ one another, that it is of no avail to attack one evil, unless
+ you attack many more at the same time. This is a caricature of
+ the real teaching of the Historic Method, of which we shall have
+ to speak presently; but it is one of those caricatures which the
+ natural sloth in such matters, and the indigenous intellectual
+ haziness of the majority of men, make them very willing to take
+ for the true philosophy of things.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Then there is the newspaper press, that huge engine for
+ keeping discussion on a low level, and making the political test
+ final. To take off the taxes on knowledge was to place a heavy
+ tax on broad and independent opinion. The multiplication of
+ journals 'delivering brawling judgments unashamed on all things
+ all day long,' has done much to deaden the small stock of
+ individuality in public verdicts. It has done much to make vulgar
+ ways of looking at things and vulgar ways of speaking of them
+ stronger and stronger, by formulating and repeating and
+ stereotyping them incessantly from morning until afternoon, and
+ from year's end to year's end. For a newspaper must live, and to
+ live it must please, and its conductors suppose, perhaps not
+ altogether rightly, that it can only please by being very
+ cheerful towards prejudices, very chilly to general theories,
+ loftily disdainful to the men of a principle. Their one cry to an
+ advocate of improvement is some sagacious silliness about
+ recognising the limits of the practicable in politics, and seeing
+ the necessity of adapting theories to facts. As if the fact of
+ taking a broader and wiser view than the common crowd
+ disqualifies a man from knowing what the view of the common crowd
+ happens to be, and from estimating it at the proper value for
+ practical purposes. Why are the men who despair of improvement to
+ be the only persons endowed with the gift of discerning the
+ practicable? It is, however, only too easy to understand how a
+ journal, existing for a day, should limit its view to the
+ possibilities of the day, and how, being most closely affected by
+ the particular, it should coldly turn its back upon all that is
+ general. And it is easy, too, to understand the reaction of this
+ intellectual timorousness upon the minds of ordinary readers, who
+ have too little natural force and too little cultivation to be
+ able to resist the narrowing and deadly effect of the daily
+ iteration of short-sighted commonplaces.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Far the most penetrating of all the influences that are
+ impairing the moral and intellectual nerve of our generation,
+ remain still to be mentioned. The first of these is the immense
+ increase of material prosperity, and the second is the immense
+ decline in sincerity of spiritual interest. The evil wrought by
+ the one fills up the measure of the evil wrought by the other. We
+ have been, in spite of momentary declensions, on a flood tide of
+ high profits and a roaring trade, and there is nothing like a
+ roaring trade for engendering latitudinarians. The effect of many
+ possessions, especially if they be newly acquired, in slackening
+ moral vigour, is a proverb. Our new wealth is hardly leavened by
+ any tradition of public duty such as lingers among the English
+ nobles, nor as yet by any common custom of devotion to public
+ causes, such as seems to live and grow in the United States.
+ Under such conditions, with new wealth come luxury and love of
+ ease and that fatal readiness to believe that God has placed us
+ in the best of possible worlds, which so lowers men's aims and
+ unstrings their firmness of purpose. Pleasure saps high
+ interests, and the weakening of high interests leaves more
+ undisputed room for pleasure. Management and compromise appear
+ among the permitted arts, because they tend to comfort, and
+ comfort is the end of ends, comprehending all ends. Not truth is
+ the standard, but the politic and the reputable. Are we to
+ suppose that it is firm persuasion of the greater scripturalness
+ of episcopacy that turns the second generation of dissenting
+ manufacturers in our busy Lancashire into churchmen? Certainly
+ such conversions do no violence to the conscience of the
+ proselyte, for he is intellectually indifferent, a spiritual
+ neuter.</p>
+
+ <p>That brings us to the root of the matter, the serious side of
+ a revolution that in this social consequence is so unspeakably
+ ignoble. This root of the matter is the slow transformation now
+ at work of the whole spiritual basis of thought. Every age is in
+ some sort an age of transition, but our own is characteristically
+ and cardinally an epoch of transition in the very foundations of
+ belief and conduct. The old hopes have grown pale, the old fears
+ dim; strong sanctions are become weak, and once vivid faiths very
+ numb. Religion, whatever destinies may be in store for it, is at
+ least for the present hardly any longer an organic power. It is
+ not that supreme, penetrating, controlling, decisive part of a
+ man's life, which it has been, and will be again. The work of
+ destruction is all the more perturbing to timorous spirits, and
+ more harassing even to doughtier spirits, for being done
+ impalpably, indirectly, almost silently and as if by unseen
+ hands. Those who dwell in the tower of ancient faiths look about
+ them in constant apprehension, misgiving, and wonder, with the
+ hurried uneasy mien of people living amid earthquakes. The air
+ seems to their alarms to be full of missiles, and all is doubt,
+ hesitation, and shivering expectancy. Hence a decisive reluctance
+ to commit one's self. Conscience has lost its strong and
+ on-pressing energy, and the sense of personal responsibility
+ lacks sharpness of edge. The native hue of spiritual resolution
+ is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of distracted, wavering,
+ confused thought. The souls of men have become void. Into the
+ void have entered in triumph the seven devils of Secularity.</p>
+
+ <p>And all this hesitancy, this tampering with conviction for
+ fear of its consequences, this want of faithful dealing in the
+ highest matters, is being intensified, aggravated, driven inwards
+ like a fatal disorder toward the vital parts, by the existence of
+ a State Church. While thought stirs and knowledge extends, she
+ remains fast moored by ancient formularies. While the spirit of
+ man expands in search after new light, and feels energetically
+ for new truth, the spirit of the Church is eternally entombed
+ within the four corners of acts of parliament. Her ministers vow
+ almost before they have crossed the threshold of manhood that
+ they will search no more. They virtually swear that they will to
+ the end of their days believe what they believe then, before they
+ have had time either to think or to know the thoughts of others.
+ They take oath, in other words, to lead mutilated lives. If they
+ cannot keep this solemn promise, they have at least every
+ inducement that ordinary human motives can supply, to conceal
+ their breach of it. The same system which begins by making mental
+ indolence a virtue and intellectual narrowness a part of
+ sanctity, ends by putting a premium on something too like
+ hypocrisy. Consider the seriousness of fastening up in these
+ bonds some thousands of the most instructed and intelligent
+ classes in the country, the very men who would otherwise be best
+ fitted from position and opportunities for aiding a little in the
+ long, difficult, and plainly inevitable work of transforming
+ opinion. Consider the waste of intelligence, and what is
+ assuredly not less grave, the positive dead-weight and thick
+ obstruction, by which an official hierarchy so organised must
+ paralyse mental independence in a community.</p>
+
+ <p>We know the kind of man whom this system delights to honour.
+ He was described for us five and thirty years ago by a master
+ hand. 'Mistiness is the mother of wisdom. A man who can set down
+ half a dozen general propositions which escape from destroying
+ one another only by being diluted into truisms; who can hold the
+ balance between opposites so skilfully as to do without fulcrum
+ or beam; who never enunciates a truth without guarding himself
+ against being supposed to exclude the contradictory,&mdash;who
+ holds that scripture is the only authority, yet that the Church
+ is to be deferred to, that faith only justifies, yet that it does
+ not justify without works, that grace does not depend upon the
+ sacraments, yet is not given without them, that bishops are a
+ divine ordinance, yet that those who have them not are in the
+ same religious condition as those who have,&mdash;this is your
+ safe man and the hope of the Church; this is what the Church is
+ said to want, not party men, but sensible, temperate, sober,
+ well-judging persons, to guide it through the channel of no
+ meaning, between the Scylla and Charybdis of Aye and No.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4"><sup>[4]</sup></a> The
+ writer then thought that such a type could not endure, and that
+ the Church must become more real. On the contrary, her reality is
+ more phantom-like now than it was then. She is the sovereign
+ pattern and exemplar of management, of the triumph of the
+ political method in spiritual things, and of the subordination of
+ ideas to the <i>status quo</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that all other organised priesthoods are also
+ bodies which move within formularies even more inelastic than
+ those of the Establishment. But then they have not the same
+ immense social power, nor the same temptations to make all
+ sacrifices to preserve it. They affect the intellectual temper of
+ large numbers of people, but the people whom they affect are not
+ so strongly identified with the greater organs of the national
+ life. The State Church is bound up in the minds of the most
+ powerful classes with a given ordering of social arrangements,
+ and the consequence of this is that the teachers of the Church
+ have reflected back upon thorn a sense of responsibility for
+ these arrangements, which obscures their spirituality, clogs
+ their intellectual energy and mental openness, and turns them
+ into a political army of obstruction to new ideas. They feel
+ themselves to a certain extent discharged from the necessity of
+ recognising the tremendous conflict in the region of belief that
+ goes on around them, just as if they were purely civil
+ administrators, concerned only with the maintenance of the
+ present order. None of this is true of the private Churches.
+ Their teachers and members regard belief as something wholly
+ independent of the civil ordering of things. However little
+ enlightened in some respects, however hostile to certain of the
+ ideas by which it is sought to replace their own, they are at
+ least representatives of the momentous principle of our
+ individual responsibility for the truth of our opinions. They may
+ bring their judgments to conclusions that are less in accord with
+ modern tendencies than those of one or two schools that still see
+ their way to subscribing Anglican articles and administering
+ Anglican rites. At any rate, they admit that the use of his
+ judgment is a duty incumbent on the individual, and a duty to be
+ discharged without reference to any external considerations
+ whatever, political or otherwise. This is an elevating, an
+ exhilarating principle, however deficiencies of culture may have
+ narrowed the sphere of its operations. It is because a State
+ Church is by its very conception hostile to such a principle,
+ that we are justified in counting it apart from the private
+ Churches with all their faults, and placing it among the agencies
+ that weaken the vigour of a national conscience and check the
+ free play and access of intellectual light.</p>
+
+ <p>Here we may leave the conditions that have made an inquiry as
+ to some of the limits of compromise, which must always be an
+ interesting and important subject, one of especial interest and
+ importance to ourselves at present. Is any renovation of the
+ sacredness of principle a possible remedy for some of these
+ elements of national deterioration? They will not disappear until
+ the world has grown into possession of a new doctrine. When that
+ comes, all other good things will follow. What we have to
+ remember is that the new doctrine itself will never come, except
+ to spirits predisposed to their own liberation. Our day of small
+ calculations and petty utilities must first pass away; our vision
+ of the true expediencies must reach further and deeper; our
+ resolution to search for the highest verities, to give up all and
+ follow them, must first become the supreme part of ourselves.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_1"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor1">[1]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>See below, ch. iii.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor2">[2]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>System of Logic</i>, bk. vi. ch. xi.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor3">[3]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Bagehot.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor4">[4]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Dr. J.H. Newman's <i>Essays Critical and Historical</i>,
+ vol. i. p. 301.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_II"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER II.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR.
+ </center><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Das Wahre f&ouml;rdert; aus
+ dem Irrthum entwickelt</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;"><i>sich nichts, er verwickeltuns
+ nur.&mdash;</i></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">GOETHE.</span><br>
+
+ <p>At the outset of an inquiry how far existing facts ought to be
+ allowed to overrule ideas and principles that are at variance
+ with them, a preliminary question lies in our way, about which it
+ may be well to say something. This is the question of a dual
+ doctrine. In plainer words, the question whether it is expedient
+ that the more enlightened classes in a community should upon
+ system not only possess their light in silence, but whether they
+ should openly encourage a doctrine for the less enlightened
+ classes which they do not believe to be true for themselves,
+ while they regard it as indispensably useful in the case of less
+ fortunate people. An eminent teacher tells us how after he had
+ once succeeded in presenting the principle of Necessity to his
+ own mind in a shape which seemed to bring with it all the
+ advantages of the principle of Free Will, he 'no longer suffered
+ under the burden so heavy to one who aims at being a reformer in
+ opinions, of thinking one doctrine true, and the contrary
+ doctrine morally beneficial.'<a name="FNanchor5"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_5"><sup>[5]</sup></a> The discrepancy which this
+ writer thought a heavy burden has struck others as the basis of a
+ satisfactory solution.</p><span style="margin-left: 3em;">Nil
+ dulcius est bene quam munita tenere</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Edita doctrina sapientum templa
+ serena,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Despicere unde queas alios
+ passimque videre</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Errare atque viam palantes
+ quaerere vitae.</span><br>
+
+ <p>The learned are to hold the true doctrine; the unlearned are
+ to be taught its morally beneficial contrary. 'Let the Church,'
+ it has been said, 'admit two descriptions of believers, those who
+ are for the letter, and those who hold by the spirit. At a
+ certain point in rational culture, belief in the supernatural
+ becomes for many an impossibility; do not force such persons to
+ wear a cowl of lead. Do not you meddle with what we teach or
+ write, and then we will not dispute the common people with you;
+ do not contest our place in the school and the academy, and then
+ we will surrender to your hands the country school.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6"><sup>[6]</sup></a> This is
+ only a very courageous and definite way of saying what a great
+ many less accomplished persons than M. Renan have silently in
+ their hearts, and in England quite as extensively as in France.
+ They do not believe in hell, for instance, but they think hell a
+ useful fiction for the lower classes. They would deeply regret
+ any change in the spirit or the machinery of public instruction
+ which would release the lower classes from so wholesome an error.
+ And as with hell, so with other articles of the supernatural
+ system; the existence of a Being who will distribute rewards and
+ penalties in a future state, the permanent sentience of each
+ human personality, the vigilant supervision of our conduct, as
+ well as our inmost thoughts and desires, by the heavenly powers;
+ and so forth.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us discuss this matter impersonally, without reference to
+ our own opinions and without reference to the evidence for or
+ against their truth. I am not speaking now of those who hold all
+ these ideas to be certainly true, or highly probable, and who at
+ the same time incidentally insist on the great usefulness of such
+ ideas in confirming morality and producing virtuous types of
+ character. With such persons, of course, there is no question of
+ a dual doctrine. They entertain certain convictions themselves,
+ and naturally desire to have their influence extended over
+ others. The proposition which we have to consider is of another
+ kind. It expresses the notions of those who&mdash;to take the
+ most important kind of illustration&mdash;think untrue the
+ popular ideas of supernatural interference in our obscure human
+ affairs; who think untrue the notion of the prolongation of our
+ existence after death to fulfil the purpose of the supernatural
+ powers; or at least who think them so extremely improbable that
+ no reasonable man or woman, once awakened to a conviction of this
+ improbability, would thenceforth be capable of receiving
+ effective check or guidance from beliefs, that would have sunk
+ slowly down to the level of doubtful guesses. We have now to deal
+ with those who while taking this view of certain doctrines, still
+ declare them to be indispensable for restraining from anti-social
+ conduct all who are not acute or instructed enough to see through
+ them. In other words, they think error useful, and that it may be
+ the best thing for society that masses of men should cheat and
+ deceive themselves in their most fervent aspirations and their
+ deepest assurances. This is the furthest extreme to which the
+ empire of existing facts over principles can well be imagined to
+ go. It lies at the root of every discussion upon the limits which
+ separate lawful compromise or accommodation from palpable
+ hypocrisy.</p>
+
+ <p>It will probably be said that according to the theory of the
+ school of which M. Renan is the most eloquent representative, the
+ common people are not really cheating themselves or being
+ cheated. Indeed M. Renan himself has expatiated on the charm of
+ seeing figures of the ideal in the cottages of the poor, images
+ representing no reality, and so forth. 'What a delight,' he
+ cries, 'for the man who is borne down by six days of toil to come
+ on the seventh to rest upon his knees, to contemplate the tall
+ columns, a vault, arches, an altar; to listen to the chanting, to
+ hear moral and consoling words!'<a name="FNanchor7"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_7"><sup>[7]</sup></a> The dogmas which criticism
+ attacks are not for these poor people 'the object of an explicit
+ affirmation,' and therefore there is no harm in them; 'it is the
+ privilege of pure sentiment to be invulnerable, and to play with
+ poison without being hurt by it.' In other words, the dogmas are
+ false, but the liturgy, as a performance stirring the senses of
+ awe, reverence, susceptibility to beauty of various kinds,
+ appeals to and satisfies a sentiment that is both true and
+ indispensable in the human mind. More than this, in the two or
+ three supreme moments of life to which men look forward and on
+ which they look back,&mdash;at birth, at the passing of the
+ threshold into fulness of life, at marriage, at death,&mdash;the
+ Church is present to invest the hour with a certain solemn and
+ dignified charm. That is the way in which the instructed are to
+ look at the services of a Church, after they have themselves
+ ceased to believe its faith, us a true account of various matters
+ which it professes to account for truly.</p>
+
+ <p>It will be perceived that this is not exactly the ground of
+ those who think a number of what they confess to be untruths,
+ wholesome for the common people for reasons of police, and who
+ would maintain churches on the same principle on which they
+ maintain the county constabulary. It is a psychological, not a
+ political ground. It is on the whole a more true, as well as a
+ far more exalted position. The human soul, they say, has these
+ lovely and elevating aspirations; not to satisfy them is to leave
+ man a dwarfed creature. Why quarrel with a system that leaves you
+ to satisfy them in the true way, and does much to satisfy thorn
+ in a false but not very harmful way among those who unfortunately
+ have to sit in the darkness of the outer court?</p>
+
+ <p>This is not a proper occasion for saying anything about the
+ adequateness of the catholic, or any other special manner of
+ fostering and solacing the religious impulses of men. We have to
+ assume that the instructed class believe the catholic dogmas to
+ be untrue, and yet wishes the uninstructed to be handed over to a
+ system that reposes on the theory that these dogmas are
+ superlatively true. What then is to be said of the tenableness of
+ such a position? To the plain man it looks like a deliberate
+ connivance at a plan for the propagation of error&mdash;assuming,
+ as I say, for the moment, that these articles of belief are
+ erroneous and contrary to fact and evidence. Ah, but, we are
+ told, the people make no explicit affirmation of dogma; that does
+ nothing for them; they are indifferent to it. A great variety of
+ things might be said to this statement. We might ask, for
+ instance, whether the people ever made an explicit affirmation of
+ dogma in the past, or whether it was always the hazy indifferent
+ matter which it is supposed to be now. If so, whether we shall
+ not have to re-cast our most fundamental notions of the way in
+ which Christian civilisation has been evolved. If not, and if
+ people did once explicitly affirm dogma, when exactly was it that
+ they ceased to do so?</p>
+
+ <p>The answers to these questions would all go to show that at
+ the time when religion was the great controlling and organising
+ force in conduct, the prime elemental dogmas were accepted with
+ the most vivid conviction of reality. I do not pretend that the
+ common people followed all the inferences which the intellectual
+ subtlety of the master-spirits of theology drew so industriously
+ from the simple premisses of scripture and tradition. But
+ assuredly dogma was at the foundation of the whole structure.
+ When did it cease to be so? How was the structure supported,
+ after you had altered this condition of things?</p>
+
+ <p>Apart from this historic issue, the main question one would
+ like to put to the upholder of duality of religion on this plea,
+ is the simple one, whether the power of the ceremonial which
+ charms him so much is not actually at this moment drawn wholly
+ from dogma and the tradition of dogma; whether its truth is not
+ explicitly affirmed to the unlettered man, and whether the
+ inseparable connection between the dogma and the ceremonial is
+ not constantly impressed upon him by the spiritual teachers to
+ whom the dual system hands him and his order over for all time?
+ If any one of those philosophic critics will take the trouble to
+ listen to a few courses of sermons at the present day, and the
+ remark applies not less to protestant than to catholic churches,
+ he will find that instead of that '<i>parole morale et
+ consolante</i>' which is so soothing to think of, the pulpit is
+ now the home of fervid controversy and often exacerbated
+ declamation in favour of ancient dogma against modern science. We
+ do not say whether this is or is not the wisest line for the
+ clergy to follow. We only press the fact against those who wish
+ us to believe that dogma counts for nothing in the popular faith,
+ and that therefore we need not be uneasy as to its effects.</p>
+
+ <p>Next, one would say to those who think that all will go well
+ if you divide the community into two classes, one privileged to
+ use its own mind, the other privileged to have its mind used by a
+ priesthood, that they overlook the momentous circumstance of
+ these professional upholders of dogmatic systems being also
+ possessed of a vast social influence in questions that naturally
+ belong to another sphere. There is hardly a single great
+ controversy in modern politics, where the statesman does not find
+ himself in immediate contact with the real or supposed interests,
+ and with the active or passive sentiment, of one of these
+ religious systems. Therefore if the instructed or intellectually
+ privileged class cheerfully leave the field open to men who,
+ <i>ex hypothesi</i>, are presumed to be less instructed,
+ narrower, more impenetrable by reason, and the partisans of the
+ letter against the spirit, then this result follows. They are
+ deliberately strengthening the hands of the persons least fitted
+ by judgment, experience, and temper, for using such power
+ rightly. And they are strengthening them not merely in dealing
+ with religious matters, but, what is of more importance, in
+ dealing with an endless variety of the gravest social and
+ political matters. It is impossible to map out the exact
+ dimensions of the field in which a man shall exercise his
+ influence, and to which he is to be rigorously confined. Give men
+ influence in one matter, especially if that be such a matter as
+ religious belief and ceremonial, and it is simply impossible that
+ this influence shall not extend with more or less effect over as
+ much of the whole sphere of conduct as they may choose
+ surrendering the common people without dispute or effort to
+ organised priesthoods for religious purposes, you would be
+ inevitably including a vast number of other purposes in the
+ self-same destination. This does not in the least prejudice
+ practical ways of dealing with certain existing circumstances,
+ such as the propriety or justice of allowing a catholic people to
+ have a catholic university. It is only an argument against
+ erecting into a complete and definite formula the division of a
+ society into two great castes, the one with a religion of the
+ spirit, the other with a creed of the letter.</p>
+
+ <p>Again, supposing that the enlightened caste were to consent to
+ abandon the common people to what are assumed to be lower and
+ narrower forms of truth,&mdash;which is after all little more
+ than a fine phrase for forms of falsehood,&mdash;what can be more
+ futile than to suppose that such a compromise will be listened to
+ for a single moment by a caste whose first principle is that they
+ are the possessors and ministers, not of an inferior or superior
+ form of truth, but of the very truth itself, absolute, final,
+ complete, divinely sent, infallibly interpreted? The disciples of
+ the relative may afford to compromise. The disciples of the
+ absolute, never.</p>
+
+ <p>We shall see other objections as we go on to this state of
+ things, in which a minority holds true opinions and abandons the
+ majority to false ones. At the bottom of the advocacy of a dual
+ doctrine slumbers the idea that there is no harm in men being
+ mistaken, or at least only so little harm as is more than
+ compensated for by the marked tranquillity in which their mistake
+ may wrap them. This is not an idea merely that intellectual error
+ is a pathological necessity of the mind, no more to be escaped
+ than the pathological necessities which afflict and finally
+ dissolve the body. That is historically true. It is an idea that
+ error somehow in certain stages, where there is enough of it,
+ actually does good, like vaccination. Well, the thesis of the
+ present chapter is that erroneous opinion or belief, in itself
+ and as such, can never be useful. This may seem a truism which
+ everybody is willing to accept without demur. But it is one of
+ those truisms which persons habitually forget and repudiate in
+ practice, just because they have never made it real to themselves
+ by considering and answering the objections that may be brought
+ against it. We see this repudiation before our eyes every day.
+ Thus for instance, parents theoretically take it for granted that
+ error cannot be useful, while they are teaching or allowing
+ others to teach their children what they, the parents, believe to
+ be untrue. Thus husbands who think the common theology baseless
+ and unmeaning, are found to prefer that their wives shall not
+ question this theology nor neglect its rites. These are only two
+ out of a hundred examples of the daily admission that error may
+ be very useful to other people. I need hardly say that to deny
+ this, as the commonplace to which this chapter is devoted denies
+ it, is a different thing from denying the expediency of letting
+ errors alone at a given time. That is another question, to be
+ discussed afterwards. You may have a thoroughly vicious and
+ dangerous enemy, and yet it may be expedient to choose your own
+ hour and occasion for attacking him. 'The passage from error to
+ truth,' in the words of Condorcet, 'may be accompanied by certain
+ evils. Every great change necessarily brings some of these in its
+ train; and though they may be always far below the evil you are
+ for destroying, yet it ought to do what is possible to diminish
+ them. It is not enough to do good; one must do it in a good way.
+ No doubt we should destroy all errors, but as it is impossible to
+ destroy them all in an instant, we should imitate a prudent
+ architect who, when obliged to destroy a building, and knowing
+ how its parts are united together, sets about its demolition in
+ such a way as to prevent its fall from being dangerous.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8"><sup>[8]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Those, let us note by the way, who are accustomed to think the
+ moral tone of the eighteenth century low and gross compared with
+ that of the nineteenth, may usefully contrast these just and
+ prudent word? of caution in extirpating error, with M. Renan's
+ invitation to men whom he considers wrong in their interpretation
+ of religion, to plant their error as widely and deeply as they
+ can; and who are moreover themselves supposed to be demoralised,
+ or else they would not be likely to acquiesce in a previous
+ surrender of the universities to men whom they think in mortal
+ error. Apart however from M. Renan, Condorcet's words merely
+ assert the duty of setting to work to help on the change from
+ false to true opinions with prudence, and this every sensible man
+ admits. Our position is that in estimating the situation, in
+ counting up and balancing the expediencies of an attack upon
+ error at this or that point, nothing is to be set to the credit
+ of error as such, nor is there anything in its own operations or
+ effects to entitle it to a moment's respite. Every one would
+ admit this at once in the case of physical truths, though there
+ are those who say that some of the time spent in the
+ investigation of physical truths might be more advantageously
+ devoted to social problems. But in the case of moral and
+ religious truths or errors, people, if they admit that nothing is
+ to be set to the credit of error as such, still constantly have a
+ subtle and practically mischievous confusion in their minds
+ between the possible usefulness of error, and the possible
+ expediency of leaving it temporarily undisturbed. What happens in
+ consequence of such a confusion is this. Men leave error
+ undisturbed, because they accept in a loose way the proposition
+ that a belief may be 'morally useful without being intellectually
+ sustainable,' They disguise their own dissent from popular
+ opinions, because they regard such opinions as useful to other
+ people. We are not now discussing the case of those who embrace a
+ creed for themselves, on the ground that, though they cannot
+ demonstrate its truth to the understanding, yet they find it
+ pregnant with moralising and elevating characteristics. We are
+ thinking of a very different attitude&mdash;that, namely, of
+ persons who believe a creed to be not more morally useful than it
+ is intellectually sustainable, so far as they themselves are
+ concerned. To them it is pure and uncompensated error. Yet from a
+ vague and general idea that what is useless error to them may be
+ useful to others, they insist on doing their best to perpetuate
+ the system which spreads and consecrates the error. And how do
+ they settle the question? They reckon up the advantages, and
+ forget the drawbacks. They detect and dwell on one or two
+ elements of utility in the false belief or the worn-out
+ institution, and leave out of all account the elements that make
+ in the other direction.</p>
+
+ <p>Considering how much influence this vague persuasion has in
+ encouraging a well-meaning hypocrisy in individuals, and a
+ profound stagnation in societies, it may be well to examine the
+ matter somewhat generally. Let us try to measure the force of
+ some of the most usual pleas for error.</p>
+
+ <p>I. A false opinion, it may be said, is frequently found to
+ have clustering around it a multitude of excellent associations,
+ which do far more good than the false opinion that supports them,
+ does harm. In the middle ages, for instance, there was a belief
+ that a holy man had the gift of routing demons, of healing the
+ sick, and of working divers other miracles. Supposing that this
+ belief was untrue, supposing that it was an error to attribute
+ the sudden death of an incredible multitude of troublesome flies
+ in a church to the fact of Saint Bernard having excommunicated
+ them, what then? The mistaken opinion was still associated with a
+ deep reverence for virtue and sanctity, and this was more
+ valuable, than the error of the explanation of the death of the
+ flies was noxious or degrading.</p>
+
+ <p>The answer to this seems to be as follows. First, in making
+ false notions the proofs or close associates of true ones, you
+ are exposing the latter to the ruin which awaits the former. For
+ example, if you have in the minds of children or servants
+ associated honesty, industry, truthfulness, with the fear of
+ hell-fire, then supposing this fear to become extinct in their
+ minds,&mdash;which, being unfounded in truth, it is in constant
+ risk of doing&mdash;the virtues associated with it are likely to
+ be weakened exactly in proportion as that association was
+ strong.</p>
+
+ <p>Second, for all good habits in thought or conduct there are
+ good and real reasons in the nature of things. To leave such
+ habits attached to false opinions is to lessen the weight of
+ these natural or spontaneous reasons, and so to do more harm in
+ the long run than effacement of them seems for a time to do good.
+ Most excellences in human character have a spontaneous root in
+ our nature. Moreover if they had not, and where they have not,
+ there is always a valid and real external defence for them. The
+ unreal defence must be weaker than the real one, and the
+ substitution of a weak for a strong defence, where both are to be
+ had, is not useful but the very opposite.</p>
+
+ <p>II. It is true, the objector would probably continue, that
+ there is a rational defence for all excellences of conduct, as
+ there is for all that is worthy and fitting in institutions. But
+ the force of a rational defence lies in the rationality of the
+ man to whom it is proffered. The arguments which persuade one
+ trained in scientific habits of thought, only touch persons of
+ the same kind. Character is not all pure reason. That fitness of
+ things which you pronounce to be the foundation of good habits,
+ may be borne in upon men, and may speak to them, through other
+ channels than the syllogism. You assume a community of
+ highly-trained wranglers and proficient sophisters. The plain
+ fact is that, for the mass of men, use and wont, rude or gracious
+ symbols, blind custom, prejudices, superstitions,&mdash;however
+ erroneous in themselves, however inadequate to the conveyance of
+ the best truth,&mdash;are the only safe guardians of the common
+ virtues. In this sense, then, error may have its usefulness.</p>
+
+ <p>A hundred years ago this apology for error was met by those
+ high-minded and interesting men, the French believers in human
+ perfectibility, with their characteristic dogma,&mdash;of which
+ Rousseau was the ardent expounder,&mdash;that man is born with a
+ clear and unsophisticated spirit, perfectly able to discern all
+ the simple truths necessary for common conduct by its own unaided
+ light. His motives are all pure and unselfish and his
+ intelligence is unclouded, until priests and tyrants mutilate the
+ one and corrupt the other. We who have the benefit of the
+ historic method, and have to take into account the medium that
+ surrounds a human creature the moment it comes into the world, to
+ say nothing of all the inheritance from the past which it brings
+ within it into the world at the same moment, cannot take up this
+ ground. We cannot maintain that everybody is born with light
+ enough to see the rational defences of things for himself,
+ without the education of institutions. What we do maintain
+ is&mdash;and this is the answer to the plea for error at present
+ under consideration&mdash;that whatever impairs the brightness of
+ such light as a man has, is not useful but hurtful. Our reply to
+ those who contend for the usefulness of error on the ground of
+ the comparative impotence of rationality over ordinary minds, is
+ something of this kind. Superstition, blind obedience to custom,
+ and the other substitutes for a right and independent use of the
+ mind, may accidentally and in some few respects impress good
+ ideas upon persons who are too darkened to accept those ideas on
+ their real merits. But then superstition itself is the main cause
+ of this very darkness. To hold error is in so far to foster
+ erroneous ways of thinking on all subjects; is to make the
+ intelligence less and less ready to receive truth in all matters
+ whatever. Men are made incapable of perceiving the rational
+ defences, and of feeling rational motives, for good
+ habits,&mdash;so far as they are thus incapable,&mdash;by the
+ very errors which we are asked silently to countenance as useful
+ substitutes for right reason. 'Erroneous motives,' as Condorcet
+ has expressed this matter, 'have an additional drawback attached
+ to them, the habit which they strengthen of reasoning ill. The
+ more important the subject on which you reason ill, and the more
+ you busy yourself about it, by so much the more dangerous do the
+ influences of such a habit become. It is especially on subjects
+ analogous to that on which you reason wrongly, or which you
+ connect with it by habit, that such a defect extends most
+ powerfully and most rapidly. Hence it is extremely hard for the
+ man who believes himself obliged to conform in his conduct to
+ what he considers truths useful to men, but who attributes the
+ obligation to erroneous motives, to reason very correctly on the
+ truths themselves; the more attention he pays to such motives,
+ and the more importance he comes to attach to them, the more
+ likely he will be to go wrong.'<a name="FNanchor9"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_9"><sup>[9]</sup></a> So, in short, superstition does
+ an immense harm by enfeebling rational ways of thinking; it does
+ a little good by accidentally endorsing rational conclusions in
+ one or two matters. And yet, though the evil which it is said to
+ repair is a trifle beside the evil which it is admitted to
+ inflict, the balance of expediencies is after all declared to be
+ such as to warrant us in calling errors useful!</p>
+
+ <p>III. A third objection now presents itself to me, which I wish
+ to state as strongly as possible. 'Even if a false opinion cannot
+ in itself be more useful than a true one, whatever good habits
+ may seem to be connected with it, yet,' it may be contended,
+ 'relatively to the general mental attitude of a set of men, to
+ their other notions and maxims, the false opinion may entail less
+ harm than would be wrought by its mere demolition. There are
+ false opinions so intimately bound up with the whole way of
+ thinking and feeling, that to introduce one or two detached true
+ opinions in their stead, would, even if it were possible, only
+ serve to break up that coherency of character and conduct which
+ it is one of the chief objects of moralists and the great art of
+ living to produce. For a true opinion does not necessarily bring
+ in its train all the other true opinions that are logically
+ connected with it. On the contrary, it is only too notorious a
+ fact in the history of belief, that not merely individuals but
+ whole societies are capable of holding at one and the same time
+ contradictory opinions and mutually destructive principles. On
+ the other hand, neither does a false opinion involve practically
+ all the evil consequences deducible from it. For the results of
+ human inconsistency are not all unhappy, and if we do not always
+ act up to virtuous principle, no more do we always work out to
+ its remotest inference every vicious principle. Not insincerity,
+ but inconsistency, has constantly turned the adherents of
+ persecuting precepts into friends of tolerant practice.'</p>
+
+ <p>'It is a comparatively small thing to persuade a superstitious
+ person to abandon this or that article of his superstition. You
+ have no security that the rejection of the one article which you
+ have displaced will lead to the rejection of any other, and it is
+ quite possible that it may lead to all the more fervid an
+ adhesion to what remains behind. Error, therefore, in view of
+ such considerations may surely be allowed to have at least a
+ provisional utility.'</p>
+
+ <p>Now undoubtedly the repudiation of error is not at all the
+ same thing as embracing truth. People are often able to see the
+ force of arguments that destroy a given opinion, without being
+ able to see the force of arguments for the positive opinion that
+ ought to replace it. They can only be quite sure of seeing both,
+ when they have acquired not merely a conviction that one notion
+ is false and another true, but have furthermore exchanged a
+ generally erroneous way of thinking for a generally correct way.
+ Hence the truly important object with every one who holds
+ opinions which he deems it of the highest moment that others
+ should accept, must obviously be to reach people's general ways
+ of thinking; to stir their love of truth; to penetrate them with
+ a sense of the difference in the quality of evidence; to make
+ them willing to listen to criticism and new opinion; and perhaps
+ above all to teach them to take ungrudging and daily trouble to
+ clear up in their minds the exact sense of the terms they
+ use.</p>
+
+ <p>If this be so, a false opinion, like an erroneous motive, can
+ hardly have even a provisional usefulness. For how can you attack
+ an erroneous way of thinking except in detail, that is to say
+ through the sides of this or that single wrong opinion? Each of
+ these wrong opinions is an illustration and type, as it is a
+ standing support and abettor, of some kind of wrong reasoning,
+ though they are not all on the same scale nor all of them equally
+ instructive. It is precisely by this method of gradual
+ displacement of error step by step, that the few stages of
+ progress which the race has yet traversed, have been actually
+ achieved. Even if the place of the erroneous idea is not
+ immediately taken by the corresponding true one, or by the idea
+ which is at least one or two degrees nearer to the true one,
+ still the removal of error in this purely negative way amounts to
+ a positive gain. Why? For the excellent reason that it is the
+ removal of a bad element which otherwise tends to propagate
+ itself, or even if it fails to do that, tends at the best to make
+ the surrounding mass of error more inveterate. All error is what
+ physiologists term fissiparous, and in exterminating one false
+ opinion you may be hindering the growth of an uncounted brood of
+ false opinions.</p>
+
+ <p>Then as to the maintenance of that coherency, interdependence,
+ and systematisation of opinions and motives, which is said to
+ make character organic, and is therefore so highly prized by some
+ schools of thought. No doubt the loosening of this or that part
+ of the fabric of heterogeneous origin, which constitutes the
+ character of a man or woman, tends to loosen the whole. But do
+ not let us feed ourselves upon phrases. This organic coherency,
+ what does it come to? It signifies in a general way, to describe
+ it briefly, a harmony between the intellectual, the moral, and
+ the practical parts of human nature; an undisturbed cooperation
+ between reason, affection, and will; the reason prescribing
+ nothing against which the affections revolt, and proscribing
+ nothing which they crave; and the will obeying the joint impulses
+ of these two directing forces, without liability to capricious or
+ extravagant disturbance of their direction. Well, if the reason
+ were perfect in information and method, and the affections
+ faultless in their impulse, then organic unity of character would
+ be the final consummation of all human improvement, and it would
+ be criminal, even if it were possible, to undermine a structure
+ of such priceless value. But short of this there can be no value
+ in coherency and harmonious consistency as such. So long as error
+ is an element in it, then for so long the whole product is
+ vitiated. Undeniably and most fortunately, social virtues are
+ found side by side with speculative mistakes and the gravest
+ intellectual imperfections. We may apply to humanity the idea
+ which, as Hebrew students tell us, is imputed in the Talmud to
+ the Supreme Being. <i>God prays</i>, the Talmud says; and his
+ prayer is this,&mdash;'Be it my will that my mercy overpower my
+ justice.' And so with men, with or without their will, their
+ mercifulness overpowers their logic. And not their mercifulness
+ only, but all their good impulses overpower their logic. To
+ repeat the words which I have put into the objector's mouth, we
+ do not always work out every vicious principle to its remotest
+ inference. What, however, is this but to say that in such cases
+ character is saved, not by its coherency, but by the opposite; to
+ say not that error is useful, but what is a very different thing,
+ that its mischievousness is sometimes capable of being averted or
+ minimised?</p>
+
+ <p>The apologist may retort that he did not mean answer to the
+ argument from coherency of conduct. In measuring utility you have
+ to take into account not merely the service rendered to the
+ objects of the present hour, but the contribution to growth,
+ progress, and the future. From this point of view most of the
+ talk about unity of character is not much more than a glorifying
+ of stagnation. It leaves out of sight the conditions necessary
+ for the continuance of the unending task of human improvement.
+ Now whatever ease may be given to an individual or a generation
+ by social or religious error, such error at any rate can conduce
+ nothing to further advancement That, at least, is not one of its
+ possible utilities.</p>
+
+ <p>This is also one of the answers to the following plea. 'Though
+ the knowledge of every positive truth is an useful acquisition,
+ this doctrine cannot without reservation he applied to negative
+ truth. When the only truth ascertainable is that nothing can be
+ known, we do not, by this knowledge, gain any new fact by which
+ to guide ourselves.'<a name="FNanchor10"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_10"><sup>[10]</sup></a> But logical coherency, but a
+ kind of practical everyday coherency, which may be open to a
+ thousand abstract objections, yet which still secures both to the
+ individual and to society a number of advantages that might be
+ endangered by any disturbance of opinion or motive. No doubt, and
+ the method and season of chasing erroneous opinions and motives
+ out of the mind must always be a matter of much careful and
+ far-seeing consideration. Only in the course of such
+ consideration, let us not admit the notion in any form that error
+ can have even provisional utility. For it is not the error which
+ confers the advantages that we desire to preserve, but some true
+ opinion or just motive or high or honest sentiment, which exists
+ and thrives and operates in spite of the error and in face of it,
+ springing from man's spontaneous and unformulated recognition of
+ the real relations of things. This recognition is very faint in
+ the beginnings of society. It grows clearer and firmer with each
+ step forward. And in a tolerably civilised age it has become a
+ force on which you can fairly lean with a considerable degree of
+ assurance.</p>
+
+ <p>And this leads to the central point of the the negative truth
+ that nothing can be known is in fact a truth that guides us.
+ [Transcriber's note: sic.]
+ It
+ leads us away from sterile and irreclaimable tracts of thought
+ and emotion, and so inevitably compels the energies which would
+ otherwise have been wasted, to feel after a more profitable
+ direction. By leaving the old guide-marks undisturbed, you may
+ give ease to an existing generation, but the present ease is
+ purchased at the cost of future growth. To have been deprived of
+ the faith of the old dispensation, is the first condition of
+ strenuous endeavour after the new.</p>
+
+ <p>No doubt history abounds with cases in which a false opinion
+ on moral or religious subjects, or an erroneous motive in
+ conduct, has seemed to be a stepping-stone to truth. But this is
+ in no sense a demonstration of the utility of error. For in all
+ such cases the erroneous opinion or motive was far from being
+ wholly erroneous, or wholly without elements of truth and
+ reality. If it helped to quicken the speed or mend the direction
+ of progress, that must have been by virtue of some such elements
+ within it. All that was error in it was pure waste, or worse than
+ waste. It is true that the religious sentiment has clothed itself
+ in a great number of unworthy, inadequate, depressing, and
+ otherwise misleading shapes, dogmatic and liturgic. Yet on the
+ whole the religious sentiment has conferred enormous benefits on
+ civilisation. This is no proof of the utility of the mistaken
+ direction which these dogmatic or liturgic shapes imposed upon
+ it. On the contrary, the effect of the false dogmas and
+ enervating liturgies is so much that has to be deducted from the
+ advantages conferred by a sentiment in itself valuable and of
+ priceless capability.<a name="FNanchor11"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_11"><sup>[11]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Yes, it will be urged, but from the historic conditions of the
+ time, truth could only be conveyed in erroneous forms, and
+ motives of permanent price for humanity could only be secured in
+ these mistaken expressions. Here I would again press the point of
+ this necessity for erroneous forms and mistaken expressions
+ being, in a great many of the most important instances, itself
+ derivative, one among other ill consequences of previous moral
+ and religious error. 'It was gravely said,' Bacon tells us, 'by
+ some of the prelates in the Council of Trent, where the doctrines
+ of the Schoolmen have great sway; that the schoolmen were like
+ Astronomers, which did faigne Eccentricks and Epicycles and
+ Engines of Orbs to save the Phenomena; though they know there
+ were no such Things; and in like manner that the Schoolmen had
+ framed a number of subtile and intricate Axioms and Theorems, to
+ save the practice of the Church.' This is true of much else
+ besides scholastic axioms and theorems. Subordinate error was
+ made necessary and invented, by reason of some pro-existent main
+ stock of error, and to save the practice of the Church. Thus we
+ are often referred to the consolation which this or that doctrine
+ has brought to the human spirit. But what if the same system had
+ produced the terror which made absence of consolation
+ intolerable? How much of the necessity for expressing the
+ enlarged humanity of the Church in the doctrine of purgatory,
+ arose from the existence of the older unsoftened doctrine of
+ eternal hell?</p>
+
+ <p>Again, how much of this alleged necessity of error, as alloy
+ for the too pure metal of sterling truth, is to be explained by
+ the interest which powerful castes or corporations have had in
+ preserving the erroneous forms, even when they could not resist,
+ or did not wish to resist, their impregnation by newer and better
+ doctrine? This interest was not deliberately sinister or
+ malignant. It may be more correctly as well as more charitably
+ explained by that infirmity of human nature, which makes us very
+ ready to believe what it is on other grounds convenient to us to
+ believe. Nobody attributes to pure malevolence the heartiness
+ with which the great corporation of lawyers, for example, resist
+ the removal of superfluous and obstructive forms in their
+ practice; they have come to look on such forms as indispensable
+ safeguards. Hence powerful teachers and preachers of all kinds
+ have been spontaneously inclined to suppose a necessity, which
+ had no real existence, of preserving as much as was possible of
+ what we know to be error, even while introducing wholesome
+ modification of it. This is the honest, though mischievous,
+ conservatism of the human mind. We have no right to condemn our
+ foregoers; far less to lavish on them the evil names of impostor,
+ charlatan, and brigand, which the zealous unhistoric school of
+ the last century used so profusely. But we have a right to say of
+ them, as we say of those who imitate their policy now, that their
+ conservatism is no additional proof of the utility of error.
+ Least of all is it any justification for those who wish to have
+ impressed upon the people a complete system of religious opinion
+ which men of culture have avowedly put away. And, moreover, the
+ very priests must, I should think, be supposed to have put it
+ away also. Else they would hardly be invited deliberately to
+ abdicate their teaching functions in the very seats where
+ teaching is of the weightiest and most far-spreading
+ influence.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile our point is that the reforms in opinion which have
+ been effected on the plan of pouring the new wine of truth into
+ the old bottles of superstition&mdash;though not dishonourable to
+ the sincerity of the reformers&mdash;are no testimony to even the
+ temporary usefulness of error. Those who think otherwise do not
+ look far enough in front of the event. They forget the evil
+ wrought by the prolonged duration of the error, to which the
+ added particle of truth may have given new vitality. They
+ overlook the ultimate enervation that is so often the price paid
+ for the temporary exaltation.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor, finally, can they know the truths which the error thus
+ prolonged has hindered from coming to the birth. A strenuous
+ disputant has recently asserted against me that 'the region of
+ the <i>might have been</i> lies beyond the limits of sane
+ speculation.'<a name="FNanchor12"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_12"><sup>[12]</sup></a> It in surely extending
+ optimism too far to insist on carrying it back right through the
+ ages. To me at any rate the history of mankind is a huge
+ <i>pis-aller</i>, just as our present society is; a prodigious
+ wasteful experiment, from which a certain number of precious
+ results have been extracted, but which is not now, nor ever has
+ been at any other time, a final measure of all the possibilities
+ of the time. This is not inconsistent with the scientific
+ conception of history; it is not to deny the great law that
+ society has a certain order of progress; but only to urge that
+ within that, the only possible order, there is always room for
+ all kinds and degrees of invention, improvement, and happy or
+ unhappy accident. There is no discoverable law fixing precisely
+ the more or the less of these; nor how much of each of them a
+ community shall meet with, nor exactly when it shall meet with
+ them. We have to distinguish between possibility and necessity.
+ Only certain steps in advance are possible at a given time; but
+ it is not inevitable that those potential advances should all be
+ realised. Does anybody suppose that humanity has had the profit
+ of all the inventive and improving capacity born into the world?
+ That Turgot, for example, was the only man that ever lived who
+ might have done more for society than he was allowed to do, and
+ spared society a cataclysm? No,&mdash;history is a
+ <i>pis-aller</i>. It has assuredly not moved without the relation
+ of cause and effect; it is a record of social growth and its
+ conditions; but it is also a record of interruption and
+ misadventure and perturbation. You trace the long chain which has
+ made us what we are in this aspect and that. But where are the
+ dropped links that might have made all the difference? <i>Ubi
+ sunt eorum tabulae qui post vota nuncupate perierunt</i>? Where
+ is the fruit of those multitudinous gifts which came into the
+ world in untimely seasons? We accept the past for the same reason
+ that we accept the laws of the solar system, though, as Comte
+ says, 'we can easily conceive them improved in certain respects.'
+ The past, like the solar system, is beyond reach of modification
+ at our hands, and we cannot help it. But it is surely the mere
+ midsummer madness of philosophic complacency to think that we
+ have come by the shortest and easiest of all imaginable routes to
+ our present point in the march; to suppose that we have wasted
+ nothing, lost nothing, cruelly destroyed nothing, on the road.
+ What we have lost is all in the region of the 'might have been,'
+ and we are justified in taking this into account, and thinking
+ much of it, and in trying to find causes for the loss. One of
+ them has been want of liberty for the human intelligence; and
+ another, to return to our proper subject, has been the prolonged
+ existence of superstition, of false opinions, and of attachment
+ to gross symbols, beyond the time when they might have been
+ successfully attacked, and would have fallen into decay but for
+ the mistaken political notion of their utility. In making a just
+ estimate of this utility, if we see reason to believe that these
+ false opinions, narrow superstitions, gross symbols, have been an
+ impediment to the free exercise of the intelligence and a
+ worthier culture of the emotions, then we are justified in
+ placing the unknown loss as a real and most weighty item in the
+ account against them.</p>
+
+ <p>In short, then, the utmost that can be said on behalf of
+ errors in opinion and motive, is that they are inevitable
+ elements in human growth. But the inevitable does not coincide
+ with the useful. Pain can be avoided by none of the sons of men,
+ yet the horrible and uncompensated subtraction which it makes
+ from the value and usefulness of human life, is one of the most
+ formidable obstacles to the smoother progress of the world. And
+ as with pain, so with error. The moral of our contention has
+ reference to the temper in which practically we ought to regard
+ false doctrine and ill-directed motive. It goes to show that if
+ we have satisfied ourselves on good grounds that the doctrine is
+ false, or the motive ill directed, then the only question that we
+ need ask ourselves turns solely upon the possibility of breaking
+ it up and dispersing it, by methods compatible with the doctrine
+ of liberty. Any embarrassment in dealing with it, due to a
+ semi-latent notion that it may be useful to some one else is a
+ weakness that hinders social progress.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_5"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor5">[5]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Mill's <i>Autobiography</i> p. 170.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor6">[6]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>M. Renan's <i>R&eacute;forme Intellectuelle et Morale de la
+ France</i>, p. 98.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor7">[7]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Etudes d'Histoire Religieuse</i>, Preface, p. xvi.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor8">[8]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>In 1779 the Academy of Prussia announced this as the
+ question for their annual prize essay:&mdash;'<i>S'il est utile
+ au peuple d'&ecirc;tre tromp&eacute;</i>.' They received
+ thirty-three essays; twenty showing that it is not useful,
+ thirteen showing that it is. The Academy, with an impartiality
+ that caused much amusement in Paris and Berlin, awarded two
+ prizes, one to the best proof of the negative answer, another
+ to the best proof of the affirmative. See Bartholmess, <i>Hist.
+ Philosophique de l'Acad&eacute;mie de Prusse</i>, i. 281, and
+ ii. 278. Condorcet did not actually compete for the prize, but
+ he wrote a very acute piece, suggested by the theme, which was
+ printed in 1790. <i>Oeuv.</i> v. 343.</p>
+
+ <p>To illustrate the common fact of certain currents of thought
+ being in the air at given times, we may mention that in 1770
+ was published the posthumous work of another Frenchman,
+ Chesneau du Marsais (1676-1756) entitled:&mdash;'<i>Essai sur
+ les Pr&eacute;jug&eacute;s; ou de l'influence des Opinions sur
+ les Moeurs et sur le Bonheur des Hommes</i>.' The principal
+ prejudices to which he refers are classed under
+ Antiquity&mdash;Ancestry&mdash;Native
+ Country&mdash;Religion&mdash;Respect for Wealth. Some of the
+ reasoning is almost verbally identical with Condorcet's. For an
+ account of Du Marsais, see D'Alembert, <i>Oeuv.</i> iii 481.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor9">[9]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Oeuv.</i> v. 354.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor10">[10]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Mill's <i>Three Essays on Religion</i>, p.73. I have offered
+ some criticisms on the whole passage in <i>Critical
+ Miscellanies, Second Series</i>, pp. 300-304.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor11">[11]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>'Enfin, supposons pour un instant que le dogme de l'autre
+ vie soit de quelqu'utilit&eacute;, et qu'il retienne vraiment
+ un petit nombre d'individus, qu'est-ce que ces foibles
+ avantages compar&eacute;s &agrave; la foule de maux que l'on en
+ voir d&eacute;couler? Contre un homme timide que cette
+ id&eacute;e contient, il en est des millions qu'elle ne peut
+ contenir; il en des millions qu'elle rend insens&eacute;s,
+ farouches, fanatiques, inutiles et m&eacute;chants; il en est
+ des millions qu'elle d&eacute;tourne de leurs devoirs envers la
+ soci&eacute;t&eacute;; il en est une infinit&eacute; qu'elle
+ afflige et qu'elle trouble, sans aucun bien r&eacute;el pour
+ leurs associ&eacute;s.&mdash;<i>Syst&egrave;me de la
+ Nature</i>, i. xiii.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor12">[12]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Sir J.F. Stephen's <i>Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity</i>,
+ 2d. ed., p. 19, <i>note</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_III"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER III.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL SPIRIT.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>We have been considering the position of those who would fain
+ divide the community into two great castes; the one of thoughtful
+ and instructed persons using their minds freely, but guarding
+ their conclusions in strict reserve; the other of the illiterate
+ or unreflecting, who should have certain opinions and practices
+ taught them, not because they are true or are really what their
+ votaries are made to believe them to be, but because the
+ intellectual superiors of the community think the inculcation of
+ such a belief useful in all cases save their own. Nor is this a
+ mere theory. On the contrary, it is a fair description of an
+ existing state of things. We have the old <i>disciplina
+ arcani</i> among us in as full force as in the primitive church,
+ but with an all-important difference. The Christian fathers
+ practised reserve for the sake of leading the acolyte the more
+ surely to the fulness of truth. The modern economiser keeps back
+ his opinions, or dissembles the grounds of them, for the sake of
+ leaving his neighbours the more at their ease in the peaceful
+ sloughs of prejudice and superstition and low ideals. We quote
+ Saint Paul when he talked of making himself all things to all
+ men, and of becoming to the Jews a Jew, and as without the Law to
+ the heathen. But then we do so with a view to justifying
+ ourselves for leaving the Jew to remain a Jew, and the heathen to
+ remain heathen. We imitate the same apostle in accepting old
+ time-worn altars dedicated to the Unknown God. We forget that he
+ made the ancient symbol the starting-point of a revolutionised
+ doctrine. There is, as anybody can see, a whole world of
+ difference between the reserve of sagacious apostleship, on the
+ one hand, dealing tenderly with scruple and tearfulness and fine
+ sensibility of conscience, and the reserve of intellectual
+ cowardice on the other hand, dealing hypocritically with narrow
+ minds in the supposed interests of social peace and quietness.
+ The old <i>disciplina arcani</i> signified the disclosure of a
+ little light with a view to the disclosure of more. The new means
+ the dissimulation of truth with a view to the perpetuation of
+ error. Consider the difference between these two fashions of
+ compromise, in their effects upon the mind and character of the
+ person compromising. The one is fully compatible with fervour and
+ hopefulness and devotion to great causes. The other stamps a man
+ with artifice, and hinders the free eagerness of his vision, and
+ wraps him about with mediocrity,&mdash;not always of
+ understanding, but that still worse thing, mediocrity of
+ aspiration and purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>The coarsest and most revolting shape which the doctrine of
+ conformity can assume, and its degrading consequences to the
+ character of the conformer, may be conveniently illustrated by a
+ passage in the life of Hume. He looked at things in a more
+ practical manner than would find favour with the sentimental
+ champions of compromise in nearer times. There is a well-known
+ letter of Hume's, in which he recommends a young man to become a
+ clergyman, on the ground that it was very hard to got any
+ tolerable civil employment, and that as Lord Bute was then all
+ powerful, his friend would be certain of preferment. In answer to
+ the young man's scruples as to the Articles and the rest, Hume
+ says:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>'It is putting too great a respect on the vulgar and their
+ superstitions to pique one's self on sincerity with regard to
+ them. If the thing were worthy of being treated gravely, I should
+ tell him [the young man] that the Pythian oracle with the
+ approbation of Xenophon advised every one to worship the
+ gods&mdash;[Greek: nhom&ocirc; phole&ocirc;s]. I wish it were
+ still in my power to be a hypocrite in this particular. The
+ common duties of society usually require it; and the
+ ecclesiastical profession only adds a little more to an innocent
+ dissimulation, or rather simulation, without which it is
+ impossible to pass through the world.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13"><sup>[13]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>This is a singularly straightforward way of stating a view
+ which silently influences a much greater number of men than it is
+ pleasant to think of. They would shrink from throwing their
+ conduct into so gross a formula. They will lift up their hands at
+ this quotation, so strangely blind are we to the hiding-places of
+ our own hearts, even when others flash upon them the terrible
+ illumination that comes of calling conduct and motives by plain
+ names. Now it is not merely the moral improbity of these cases
+ which revolts us&mdash;the improbity of making in solemn form a
+ number of false statements for the sake of earning a livelihood;
+ of saying in order to get money or social position that you
+ accept a number of propositions which in fact you utterly reject;
+ of declaring expressly that you trust you are inwardly moved to
+ take upon you this office and ministration by the Holy Ghost,
+ when the real motive is a desire not to miss the chance of making
+ something out of the Earl of Bute. This side of such
+ dissimulation is shocking enough. And it is not any more shocking
+ to the most devout believer than it is to people who doubt
+ whether there be any Holy Ghost or not. Those who no longer place
+ their highest faith in powers above and beyond men, are for that
+ very reason more deeply interested than others in cherishing the
+ integrity and worthiness of man himself. Apart, however, from the
+ immorality of such reasoned hypocrisy, which no man with a
+ particle of honesty will attempt to blink, there is the
+ intellectual improbity which it brings in its train, the
+ infidelity to truth, the disloyalty to one's own intelligence.
+ Gifts of understanding are numbed and enfeebled in a man, who has
+ once played such a trick with his own conscience as to persuade
+ himself that, because the vulgar are superstitious, it is right
+ for the learned to earn money by turning themselves into the
+ ministers and accomplices of superstition. If he is clever enough
+ to see through the vulgar and their beliefs, he is tolerably sure
+ to be clever enough from time to time and in his better moments
+ to see through himself. He begins to suspect himself of being an
+ impostor. That suspicion gradually unmans him when he comes to
+ use his mind in the sphere of his own enlightenment. One of
+ really superior power cannot escape these better moments and the
+ remorse that they bring. As he advances in life, as his powers
+ ought to be coming to fuller maturity and his intellectual
+ productiveness to its prime, just in the same degree the
+ increasing seriousness of life multiplies such moments and
+ deepens their remorse, and so the light of intellectual promise
+ slowly goes out in impotent endeavour, or else in taking comfort
+ that much goods are laid up, or, what is deadliest of all, in a
+ soulless cynicism.</p>
+
+ <p>We do not find out until it is too late that the intellect
+ too, at least where it is capable of being exercised on the
+ higher objects, has its sensitiveness. It loses its colour and
+ potency and finer fragrance in an atmosphere of mean purpose and
+ low conception of the sacredness of fact and reality. Who has not
+ observed inferior original power achieving greater results even
+ in the intellectual field itself, where the superior
+ understanding happens to have been unequally yoked with a
+ self-seeking character, over scenting the expedient? If Hume had
+ been in the early productive part of his life the hypocrite which
+ he wished it were in his power to show himself in its latter
+ part, we may be tolerably sure that European philosophy would
+ have missed one of its foremost figures. It has been often said
+ that he who begins life by stifling his convictions is in a fair
+ way for ending it without any convictions to stifle. We may,
+ perhaps, add that he who sets out with the notion that the
+ difference between truth and falsehood is a thing of no concern
+ to the vulgar, is very likely sooner or later to come to the
+ kindred notion that it is not a thing of any supreme concern to
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p>Let thus much have been said as to those who deliberately and
+ knowingly sell their intellectual birthright for a mess of
+ pottage, making a brazen compromise with what they hold
+ despicable, lest they should have to win their bread honourably.
+ Men need to expend no declamatory indignation upon them. They
+ have a hell of their own; words can add no bitterness to it. It
+ is no light thing to have secured a livelihood on condition of
+ going through life masked and gagged. To be compelled, week after
+ week, and year after year, to recite the symbols of ancient faith
+ and lift up his voice in the echoes of old hopes, with the
+ blighting thought in his soul that the faith is a lie, and the
+ hope no more than the folly of the crowd; to read hundreds of
+ times in a twelvemonth with solemn unction as the inspired word
+ of the Supreme what to him are meaningless as the Abracadabras of
+ the conjuror in a booth; to go on to the end of his days
+ administering to simple folk holy rites of commemoration and
+ solace, when he has in his mind at each phrase what dupes are
+ those simple folk and how wearisomely counterfeit their rites:
+ and to know through all that this is really to be the one
+ business of his prostituted life, that so dreary and hateful a
+ piece of play-acting will make the desperate retrospect of his
+ last hours&mdash;of a truth here is the very [Greek: bdhelygma
+ t&ecirc;s er&ecirc;mh&ocirc;se&ocirc;s], the abomination of
+ desolation of the human spirit indeed.</p>
+
+ <p>No one will suppose that this is designed for the normal type
+ of priest. But it is well to study tendencies in their extreme
+ catastrophe. This is only the catastrophe, in one of its many
+ shapes, of the fatal doctrine that money, position, power,
+ philanthropy, or any of the thousand seductive masks of the
+ pseudo-expedient, may carry a man away from love of truth and yet
+ leave him internally unharmed. The depravation that follows the
+ trucking for money of intellectual freedom and self-respect,
+ attends in its degree each other departure from disinterested
+ following of truth, and each other substitution of convenience,
+ whether public or private, in its place. And both parties to such
+ a compromise are losers. The world which offers gifts and tacitly
+ undertakes to ask no questions as to the real state of the
+ timeserver's inner mind, loses no less than the timeserver
+ himself who receives the gifts and promises to hold his peace. It
+ is as though a society placed penalties on mechanical inventions
+ and the exploration of new material resources, and offered
+ bounties for the steadiest adherence to all ancient processes in
+ culture and production. The injury to wealth in the one case
+ would not be any deeper than the injury to morality is in the
+ other.</p><br>
+
+ <p>To pass on to less sinister forms of this abnegation of
+ intellectual responsibility. In the opening sentences of the
+ first chapter we spoke of a wise suspense in forming opinions, a
+ wise reserve in expressing them, and a wise tardiness in trying
+ to realise them. Thus we meant to mark out the three independent
+ provinces of compromise, each of them being the subject of
+ considerations that either do not apply at all to the other two,
+ or else apply in a different degree. Disingenuousness or
+ self-illusion, arising from a depressing deference to the
+ existing state of things, or to what is immediately practicable,
+ or to what other people would think of us if they knew our
+ thoughts, is the result of compromising truth in the matter of
+ forming and holding opinions. Secondly, positive simulation is
+ what comes of an unlawful willingness to compromise in the matter
+ of avowing and publishing them. Finally, pusillanimity or want of
+ faith is the vice that belongs to unlawful compromise in the
+ department of action and realisation. This is not merely a
+ division arranged for convenience of discussion. It goes to the
+ root of conduct and character, and is the key to the present mood
+ of our society. It is always a hardy thing to attempt to throw a
+ complex matter into very simple form, but we should say that the
+ want of energy and definiteness in contemporary opinions, of
+ which we first complained, is due mainly to the following notion;
+ that if a subject is not ripe for practical treatment, you and I
+ are therefore entirely relieved from the duty of having clear
+ ideas about it. If the majority cling to an opinion, why should
+ we ask whether that is the sound and right opinion or the
+ reverse? Now this notion, which springs from a confusion of the
+ three fields of compromise with one another, quietly reigns
+ almost without dispute. The devotion to the practical aspect of
+ truth is in such excess, as to make people habitually deny that
+ it can be worth while to form an opinion, when it happens at the
+ moment to be incapable of realisation, for the reason that there
+ is no direct prospect of inducing a sufficient number of persons
+ to share it. 'We are quite willing to think that your view is the
+ right one, and would produce all the improvements for which you
+ hope; but then there is not the smallest chance of persuading the
+ only persons able to carry out such a view; why therefore discuss
+ it?' No talk is more familiar to us than this. As if the mere
+ possibility of the view being a right one did not obviously
+ entitle it to discussion; discussion being the only process by
+ which people are likely to be induced to accept it, or else to
+ find good grounds for finally dismissing it.</p>
+
+ <p>It is precisely because we believe that opinion, and nothing
+ but opinion, can effect great permanent changes, that we ought to
+ be careful to keep this most potent force honest, wholesome,
+ fearless, and independent. Take the political field. Politicians
+ and newspapers almost systematically refuse to talk about a new
+ idea, which is not capable of being at once embodied in a bill,
+ and receiving the royal assent before the following August. There
+ is something rather contemptible, seen from the ordinary
+ standards of intellectual integrity, in the position of a
+ minister who waits to make up his mind whether a given measure,
+ say the disestablishment of the Irish Church, is in itself and on
+ the merits desirable, until the official who runs diligently up
+ and down the backstairs of the party, tells him that the measure
+ is practicable and required in the interests of the band. On the
+ one hand, a leader is lavishly panegyrised for his
+ highmindedness, in suffering himself to be driven into his
+ convictions by his party. On the other, a party is extolled for
+ its political tact, in suffering itself to be forced out of its
+ convictions by its leader. It is hard to decide which is the more
+ discreditable and demoralising sight. The education of chiefs by
+ followers, and of followers by chiefs, into the abandonment in a
+ month of the traditions of centuries or the principles of a
+ lifetime may conduce to the rapid and easy working of the
+ machine. It certainly marks a triumph of the political spirit
+ which the author of <i>The Prince</i> might have admired. It is
+ assuredly mortal to habits of intellectual self-respect in the
+ society which allows itself to be amused by the cajolery and
+ legerdemain and self-sophistication of its rulers.</p>
+
+ <p>Of course there are excellent reasons why a statesman immersed
+ in the actual conduct of affairs, should confine his attention to
+ the work which his hands find to do. But the fact that leading
+ statesmen are of necessity so absorbed in the tasks of the hour
+ furnishes all the better reason why as many other people as
+ possible should busy themselves in helping to prepare opinion for
+ the practical application of unfamiliar but weighty and promising
+ suggestions, by constant and ready discussion of them upon their
+ merits. As a matter of fact it is not the men most occupied who
+ are usually most deaf to new ideas. It is the loungers of
+ politics, the quidnuncs, gossips, bustling idlers, who are most
+ industrious in stifling discussion by protests against the waste
+ of time and the loss of force involved in talking about proposals
+ which are not exactly ready to be voted on. As it is, everybody
+ knows that questions are inadequately discussed, or often not
+ discussed at all, on the ground that the time is not yet come for
+ their solution. Then when some unforeseen perturbation, or the
+ natural course of things, forces on the time for their
+ resolution, they are settled in a slovenly, imperfect, and often
+ downright vicious manner, from the fact that opinion has not been
+ prepared for solving them in an efficient and perfect manner. The
+ so-called settlement of the question of national education is the
+ most recent and most deplorable illustration of what comes of
+ refusing to examine ideas alleged to be impracticable. Perhaps we
+ may venture to prophesy that the disendowment of the national
+ church will supply the next illustration on an imposing scale.
+ Gratuitous primary instruction, and the redistribution of
+ electoral power, are other matters of signal importance, which
+ comparatively few men will consent to discuss seriously and
+ patiently, and for our indifference to which we shall one day
+ surely smart. A judicious and cool writer has said that 'an
+ opinion gravely professed by a man of sense and education demands
+ always respectful consideration&mdash;demands and actually
+ receives it from those whose own sense and education give them a
+ correlative right; and whoever offends against this sort of
+ courtesy may fairly be deemed to have forfeited the privileges it
+ secures.'<a name="FNanchor14"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_14"><sup>[14]</sup></a> That is the least part of the
+ matter. The serious mischief is the eventual miscarriage and loss
+ and prodigal waste of good ideas.</p>
+
+ <p>The evil of which we have been speaking comes of not seeing
+ the great truth, that it is worth while to take pains to find out
+ the best way of doing a given task, even if you have strong
+ grounds for suspecting that it will ultimately be done in a worse
+ way. And so also in spheres of thought away from the political
+ sphere, it is worth while 'to scorn delights and live laborious
+ days' in order to make as sure as we can of having the best
+ opinion, even if we know that this opinion has an infinitely
+ small chance of being speedily or ever accepted by the majority,
+ or by anybody but ourselves. Truth and wisdom have to bide their
+ time, and then take their chance after all. The most that the
+ individual can do is to seek them for himself, even if he seek
+ alone. And if it is the most, it is also the least. Yet in our
+ present mood we seem not to feel this. We misunderstand the
+ considerations which should rightly lead us in practice to
+ surrender some of what we desire, in order to secure the rest;
+ and rightly make us acquiesce in a second-best course of action,
+ in order to avoid stagnation or retrogression. We misunderstand
+ all this, and go on to suppose that there are the same grounds
+ why we should in our own minds acquiesce in second-best opinions;
+ why we should mix a little alloy of conventional expression with
+ the too fine ore of conviction; why we should adopt beliefs that
+ we suspect in our hearts to be of more than equivocal
+ authenticity, but into whose antecedents we do not greatly care
+ to inquire, because they stand so well with the general public.
+ This is compromise or economy or management of the first of the
+ three kinds of which we are talking. It is economy applied to the
+ formation of opinion; compromise or management in making up one's
+ mind.</p>
+
+ <p>The lawfulness or expediency of it turns mainly, as with the
+ other two kinds of compromise, upon the relative rights of the
+ majority and the minority, and upon the respect which is owing
+ from the latter to the former. It is a very easy thing for people
+ endowed with the fanatical temperament, or demoralised by the
+ habit of looking at society exclusively from the juridical point
+ of view, to insist that no respect at all, except the respect
+ that arises from being too weak to have your own way, is due from
+ either to the other. This shallow and mischievous notion rests
+ either on a misinterpretation of the experience of civilised
+ societies, or else on nothing more creditable than an arbitrary
+ and unreflecting temper. Those who have thought most carefully
+ and disinterestedly about the matter, are agreed that in advanced
+ societies the expedient course is that no portion of the
+ community should insist on imposing its own will upon any other
+ portion, except in matters which are vitally connected with the
+ maintenance of the social union. The question where this vital
+ connection begins is open to much discussion. The line defining
+ the sphere of legitimate interference may be drawn variously,
+ whether at self-regarding acts, or in some other condition and
+ element of conduct. Wherever this line may be best taken, not
+ only abstract speculation, but the practical and spontaneous tact
+ of the world, has decided that there are limits, alike in the
+ interest of majority and minority, to the rights of either to
+ disturb the other. In other words, it is expedient in certain
+ affairs that the will of the majority should be absolutely
+ binding, while in affairs of a different order it should count
+ for nothing, or as nearly nothing, as the sociable dependence of
+ a man on his fellows will permit.</p>
+
+ <p>Our thesis is this. In the positive endeavour to realise an
+ opinion, to convert a theory into practice, it may be, and very
+ often is, highly expedient to defer to the prejudices of the
+ majority, to move very slowly, to bow to the conditions of the
+ <i>status quo</i>, to practise the very utmost sobriety,
+ self-restraint, and conciliatoriness. The mere expression of
+ opinion, in the next place, the avowal of dissent from received
+ notions, the refusal to conform to language which implies the
+ acceptance of such notions,&mdash;this rests on a different
+ footing. Here the reasons for respecting the wishes and
+ sentiments of the majority are far less strong, though, as we
+ shall presently see, such reasons certainly exist, and will weigh
+ with all well-considering men. Finally, in the formation of an
+ opinion as to the abstract preferableness of one course of action
+ over another, or as to the truth or falsehood or right
+ significance of a proposition, the fact that the majority of
+ one's contemporaries lean in the other direction is naught, and
+ no more than dust in the balance. In making up our minds as to
+ what would be the wisest line of policy if it were practicable,
+ we have nothing to do with the circumstance that it is not
+ practicable. And in settling with ourselves whether propositions
+ purporting to state matters of fact are trim or not, we have to
+ consider how far they are conformable to the evidence. We have
+ nothing to do with the comfort and solace which they would be
+ likely to bring to others or ourselves, if they were taken as
+ true.</p>
+
+ <p>A nominal assent to this truth will be instantly given even by
+ those who in practice systematically disregard it. The difficulty
+ of transforming that nominal assent into a reality is enormous in
+ such a community as ours. Of all societies since the Roman
+ Republic, and not even excepting the Roman Republic, England has
+ been the most emphatically and essentially political. She has
+ passed through military phases and through religious phases, but
+ they have been transitory, and the great central stream of
+ national life has flowed in political channels. The political
+ life has been stronger than any other, deeper, wider, more
+ persistent, more successful. The wars which built up our
+ far-spreading empire were not waged with designs of military
+ conquest; they were mostly wars for a market. The great spiritual
+ emancipation of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries figures
+ in our history partly as an accident, partly as an intrigue,
+ partly as a raid of nobles in search of spoil. It was hardly
+ until the reformed doctrine became associated with analogous
+ ideas and corresponding precepts in government, that people felt
+ at home with it, and became really interested in it.</p>
+
+ <p>One great tap-root of our national increase has been the
+ growth of self-government, or government by deliberative bodies,
+ representing opposed principles and conflicting interests. With
+ the system of self-government has grown the habit&mdash;not of
+ tolerance precisely, for Englishmen when in earnest are as little
+ in love with tolerance as Frenchmen or any other people,
+ but&mdash;of giving way to the will of the majority, so long as
+ they remain a majority. This has come to pass for the simple
+ reason that, on any other terms, the participation of large
+ numbers of people in the control and arrangement of public
+ affairs immediately becomes unworkable. The gradual concentration
+ of power in the hands of a supreme deliberative body, the active
+ share of so many thousands of persons in choosing and controlling
+ its members, the close attention with which the proceedings of
+ parliament are followed and watched, the kind of dignity that has
+ been lent to parliamentary methods by the great importance of the
+ transactions, have all tended in the same direction. They have
+ all helped both to fix our strongest and most constant interests
+ upon politics, and to ingrain the mental habits proper to
+ politics, far more deeply than any other, into our general
+ constitution and inmost character.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus the political spirit has grown to be the strongest
+ element in our national life; the dominant force, extending its
+ influence over all our ways of thinking in matters that have
+ least to do with politics, or even nothing at all to do with
+ them. There has thus been engendered among us the real sense of
+ political responsibility. In a corresponding degree has been
+ discouraged, what it is the object of the present chapter to
+ urge, the sense of intellectual responsibility. If it were
+ inevitable that one of these two should always enfeeble or
+ exclude the other, if the price of the mental alacrity and
+ open-mindedness of the age of Pericles must always be paid in the
+ political incompetence of the age of Demosthenes, it would be
+ hard to settle which quality ought to be most eagerly encouraged
+ by those who have most to do with the spiritual direction of a
+ community. No doubt the tone of a long-enduring and imperial
+ society, such as Rome was, must be conservative, drastic,
+ positive, hostile to the death to every speculative novelty. But
+ then, after all, the permanence of Roman power was only valuable
+ to mankind because it ensured the spread of certain civilising
+ ideas. And these ideas had originated among people so
+ characteristically devoid of the sovereign faculty of political
+ coherency as were the Greeks and the Jews. In the Greeks, it is
+ true, we find not only ideas of the highest speculative
+ fertility, but actual political institutions. Still we should
+ hardly point to Greek history for the most favourable examples of
+ their stable working. Practically and as a matter of history, a
+ society is seldom at the same time successfully energetic both in
+ temporals and spirituals; seldom prosperous alike in seeking
+ abstract truth and nursing the political spirit. There is a
+ decisive preponderance in one direction or the other, and the
+ equal balance between free and active thinking, and coherent
+ practical energy in a community, seems too hard to sustain. The
+ vast military and political strength of Germany, for instance,
+ did not exist, and was scarcely anticipated in men's minds,
+ during the time of her most strenuous passion for abstract truth
+ and deeper learning and new criticism. In France never was
+ political and national interest so debilitated, so extinct, as it
+ was during the reign of Lewis the Fifteenth: her intellectual
+ interest was never so vivid, so fruitful, or so widely felt.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet it is at least well, and more than that, it is an
+ indispensable condition of social wellbeing, that the divorce
+ between political responsibility and intellectual responsibility,
+ between respect for what is instantly practicable and search
+ after what is only important in thought, should not be too
+ complete and universal. Even if there were no other objection,
+ the undisputed predominance of the political spirit has a plain
+ tendency to limit the subjects in which the men animated by it
+ can take a real interest. All matters fall out of sight, or at
+ least fall into a secondary place, which do not bear more or less
+ directly and patently upon the material and structural welfare of
+ the community. In this way the members of the community miss the
+ most bracing, widening, and elevated of the whole range of
+ influences that create great characters. First, they lose sincere
+ concern about the larger questions which the human mind has
+ raised up for itself. Second, they lose a fearless desire to
+ reach the true answers to them, or if no certain answers should
+ prove to be within reach, then at any rate to be satisfied on
+ good grounds that this is so. Such questions are not immediately
+ discerned by commonplace minds to be of social import.
+ Consequently they, and all else that is not obviously connected
+ with the machinery of society, give way in the public
+ consideration to what is so connected with it, in a manner that
+ cannot be mistaken.</p>
+
+ <p>Again, even minds that are not commonplace are affected for
+ the worse by the same spirit. They are aware of the existence of
+ the great speculative subjects and of their importance, but the
+ pressure of the political spirit on such men makes them afraid of
+ the conclusions to which free inquiry might bring them.
+ Accordingly they abstain from inquiry, and dread nothing so much
+ as making up their minds. They see reasons for thinking that, if
+ they applied themselves seriously to the formation of true
+ opinions in this or that department, they would come to
+ conclusions which, though likely to make their way in the course
+ of some centuries, are wholly unpopular now, and which might ruin
+ the influence of anybody suspected of accepting, or even of so
+ much as leaning towards, them. Life, they reflect, is short;
+ missionaries do not pass for a very agreeable class, nor martyrs
+ for a very sensible class; one can only do a trifling amount of
+ good in the world, at best; it is moral suicide to throw away any
+ chance of achieving even that trifle; and therefore it is best
+ not only not to express, but not to take the trouble to acquire,
+ right views in this quarter or that, and to draw clear away from
+ such or such a region of thought, for the sake of keeping peace
+ on earth and superficial good will among men.</p>
+
+ <p>It would be too harsh to stigmatise such a train of thought as
+ self-seeking and hypocritical. It is the natural product of the
+ political spirit, which is incessantly thinking of present
+ consequences and the immediately feasible. There is nothing in
+ the mere dread of losing it, to hinder influence from being well
+ employed, so far as it goes. But one can hardly overrate the ill
+ consequences of this particular kind of management, this unspoken
+ bargaining with the little circle of his fellows which
+ constitutes the world of a man. If he may retain his place among
+ them as preacher or teacher, he is willing to forego his
+ birthright of free explanation; he consents to be blind to the
+ duty which attaches to every intelligent man of having some clear
+ ideas, even though only provisional ones, upon the greatest
+ subjects of human interest, and of deliberately preferring these,
+ whatever they may be, to their opposites. Either an individual or
+ a community is fatally dwarfed by any such limitation of the
+ field in which one is free to use his mind. For it is a
+ limitation, not prescribed by absorption in one set of subjects
+ rather than another, nor by insufficient preparation for the
+ discussion of certain subjects, nor by indolence nor
+ incuriousness, but solely by apprehension of the conclusions to
+ which such use of the mind might bring the too courageous seeker.
+ If there were no other ill effect, this kind of limitation would
+ at least have the radical disadvantage of dulling the edge of
+ responsibility, of deadening the sharp sense of personal
+ answerableness either to a God, or to society, or to a man's own
+ conscience and intellectual self-respect.</p>
+
+ <p>How momentous a disadvantage this is, we can best know by
+ contemplating the characters which have sometimes lighted up the
+ old times. Men were then devoutly persuaded that their eternal
+ salvation depended on their having true beliefs. Any slackness in
+ finding out which beliefs are the true ones would have to be
+ answered for before the throne of Almighty God, at the sure risk
+ and peril of everlasting damnation. To what quarter in the large
+ historic firmament can we turn our eyes with such certainty of
+ being stirred and elevated, of thinking better of human life and
+ the worth of those who have been most deeply penetrated by its
+ seriousness, as to the annals of the intrepid spirits whom the
+ protestant doctrine of indefeasible personal responsibility
+ brought to the front in Germany in the sixteenth century, and in
+ England and Scotland in the seventeenth? It is not their
+ fanaticism, still less is it their theology, which makes the
+ great Puritan chiefs of England and the stern Covenanters of
+ Scotland so heroic in our sight. It is the fact that they sought
+ truth and ensued it, not thinking of the practicable nor
+ cautiously counting majorities and minorities, but each man
+ pondering and searching so 'as ever in the great Taskmaster's
+ eye.'</p>
+
+ <p>It is no adequate answer to urge that this awful consciousness
+ of a divine presence and supervision has ceased to be the living
+ fact it once was. That partly explains, but it certainly does not
+ justify, our present lassitude. For the ever-wakeful eye of
+ celestial power is not the only conceivable stimulus to
+ responsibility. To pass from those grim heroes of protestantism
+ to the French philosophers of the last century is a wide leap in
+ a hundred respects, yet they too were pricked by the oestrus of
+ intellectual responsibility. Their doctrine was dismally
+ insufficient, and sometimes, as the present writer has often
+ pointed out, it was directly vicious. Their daily lives were
+ surrounded by much shabbiness and many meannesses. But, after
+ all, no temptation and no menace, no pains or penalties for
+ thinking about certain subjects, and no rewards for turning to
+ think about something else, could divert such men as Voltaire and
+ Diderot from their alert and strenuous search after such truth as
+ could be vouchsafed to their imperfect lights. A catastrophe
+ followed, it is true, but the misfortunes which attended it were
+ due more to the champions of tradition and authority than to the
+ soldiers of emancipation. Even in the case of the latter, they
+ were due to an inadequate doctrine, and not at all either to
+ their sense of the necessity of free speculation and inquiry, or
+ to the intrepidity with which they obeyed the promptings of that
+ ennobling sense.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the latest attempt of a considerable kind to suppress
+ the political spirit in non-political concerns was the famous
+ movement which had its birth a generation ago among the gray
+ quadrangles and ancient gardens of Oxford, 'the sweet city with
+ her dreaming spires,' where there has ever been so much
+ detachment from the world, alongside of the coarsest and fiercest
+ hunt after the grosser prizes of the world. No one has much less
+ sympathy with the direction of the tractarian revival than the
+ present writer, in whose Oxford days the star of Newman had set,
+ and the sun of Mill had risen in its stead. And it is needful to
+ distinguish the fervid and strong spirits with whom the revival
+ began from the mimics of our later day. No doubt the mere
+ occasion of tractarianism was political. Its leaders were alarmed
+ at the designs imputed to the newly reformed parliament of
+ disestablishing the Anglican Church. They asked themselves the
+ question, which I will put in their own words (<i>Tract</i>
+ i.)&mdash;'Should the government of the country so far forget
+ their God as to cut off the Church, to deprive it of its temporal
+ honours and substance, on what will you rest the claims to
+ respect and attention which you make upon your flock? In
+ answering this question they speedily found themselves, as might
+ have been expected, at the opposite pole of thought from things
+ political. The whole strength of their appeal to members of the
+ Church lay in men's weariness of the high and dry optimism, which
+ presents the existing order of things as the noblest possible,
+ and the undisturbed way of the majority as the way of salvation.
+ Apostolical succession and Sacramentalism may not have been in
+ themselves progressive ideas. The spirit which welcomed them had
+ at least the virtue of taking away from Caesar the things that
+ are not Caesar's.</p>
+
+ <p>Glaring as were the intellectual faults of the Oxford
+ movement, it was at any rate a recognition in a very forcible way
+ of the doctrine that spiritual matters are not to be settled by
+ the dicta of a political council. It acknowledged that a man is
+ answerable at his own peril for having found or lost the truth.
+ It was a warning that he must reckon with a judge who will not
+ account the <i>status quo</i>, nor the convenience of a cabinet,
+ a good plea for indolent acquiescence in theological error. It
+ ended, in the case of its most vigorous champions, in a final and
+ deliberate putting out of the eyes of the understanding. The last
+ act of assertion of personal responsibility was a headlong
+ acceptance of the responsibility of tradition and the Church.
+ This was deplorable enough. But apart from other advantages
+ incidental to the tractarian movement, such as the attention
+ which it was the means of drawing to history and the organic
+ connection between present and past, it had, we repeat, the merit
+ of being an effective protest against what may be called the
+ House of Commons' view of human life&mdash;a view excellent in
+ its place, but most blighting and dwarfing out of it. It was,
+ what every sincere uprising of the better spirit in men and women
+ must always be, an effective protest against the leaden tyranny
+ of the man of the world and the so-called practical person. The
+ man of the world despises catholics for taking their religious
+ opinions on trust and being the slaves of tradition. As if he had
+ himself formed his own most important opinions either in religion
+ or anything else. He laughs at them for their superstitious awe
+ of the Church. As if his own inward awe of the Greater Number
+ were one whit less of a superstition. He mocks their deference
+ for the past. As if his own absorbing deference to the present
+ were one tittle better bottomed or a jot more respectable. The
+ modern emancipation will profit us very little if the <i>status
+ quo</i> is to be fastened round our necks with the despotic
+ authority of a heavenly dispensation, and if in the stead of
+ ancient Scriptures we are to accept the plenary inspiration of
+ Majorities.</p><br>
+
+ <p>It may be urged that if, as it is the object of the present
+ chapter to state, there are opinions which a man should form for
+ himself, and which it may yet be expedient that he should not
+ only be slow to attempt to realise in practical life, but
+ sometimes even slow to express,&mdash;then we are demanding from
+ him the performance of a troublesome duty, while we are taking
+ from him the only motives which could really induce him to
+ perform it. If, it may be asked, I am not to carry my notions
+ into practice, nor try to induce others to accept them, nor even
+ boldly publish them, why in the name of all economy of force
+ should I take so much pains in forming opinions which are, after
+ all, on these conditions so very likely to come to naught? The
+ answer to this is that opinions do not come to naught, even if
+ the man who holds them should never think fit to publish them.
+ For one thing, as we shall see in our next division, the
+ conditions which make against frank declaration of our
+ convictions are of rare occurrence. And, apart from this,
+ convictions may well exert a most decisive influence over our
+ conduct, even if reasons exist, or seem to exist, for not
+ pressing them on others. Though themselves invisible to the outer
+ world, they may yet operate with magnetic force both upon other
+ parts of our belief which the outer world does see, and upon the
+ whole of our dealings with it. Whether we are good or bad, it is
+ only a broken and incoherent fragment of our whole personality
+ that even those who are intimate with us, much less the common
+ world, can ever come into contact with. The important thing is
+ that the personality itself should be as little as possible
+ broken, incoherent, and fragmentary; that reasoned and consistent
+ opinions should back a firm will, and independent convictions
+ inspire the intellectual self-respect and strenuous
+ self-possession which the clamour of majorities and the silent
+ yet ever-pressing force of the <i>status quo</i> are equally
+ powerless to shake.</p>
+
+ <p>Character is doubtless of far more importance than mere
+ intellectual opinion. We only too often see highly rationalised
+ convictions in persons of weak purpose or low motives. But while
+ fully recognising this, and the sort of possible reality which
+ lies at the root of such a phrase as 'godless intellect' or
+ 'intellectual devils'&mdash;though the phrase has no reality when
+ it is used by self-seeking politicians or prelates&mdash;yet it
+ is well to remember the very obvious truth that opinions are at
+ least an extremely important part of character. As it is
+ sometimes put, what we think has a prodigiously close connection
+ with what we are. The consciousness of having reflected seriously
+ and conclusively on important questions, whether social or
+ spiritual, augments dignity while it does not lessen humility. In
+ this sense, taking thought can and does add a cubit to our
+ stature. Opinions which we may not feel bound or even permitted
+ to press on other people, are not the less forces for being
+ latent. They shape ideals, and it is ideals that inspire conduct.
+ They do this, though from afar, and though he who possesses them
+ may not presume to take the world into his confidence. Finally,
+ unless a man follows out ideas to their full conclusion without
+ fear what the conclusion may be, whether he thinks it expedient
+ to make his thought and its goal fully known or not, it is
+ impossible that he should acquire a commanding grasp of
+ principles. And a commanding grasp of principles, whether they
+ are public or not, is at the very root of coherency of character.
+ It raises mediocrity near to a level with the highest talents, if
+ those talents are in company with a disposition that allows the
+ little prudences of the hour incessantly to obscure the
+ persistent laws of things. These persistencies, if a man has once
+ satisfied himself of their direction and mastered their bearings
+ and application, are just as cogent and valuable a guide to
+ conduct, whether he publishes them <i>ad urbem et orbem</i>, or
+ esteems them too strong meat for people who have, through
+ indurated use and wont, lost the courage of facing unexpected
+ truths.</p>
+
+ <p>One conspicuous result of the failure to see that our opinions
+ have roots to them, independently of the feelings which either
+ majorities or other portions of the people around us may
+ entertain about them, is that neither political matters nor any
+ other serious branches of opinion, engage us in their loftiest or
+ most deep-reaching forms. The advocate of a given theory of
+ government or society is so misled by a wrong understanding of
+ the practice of just and wise compromise in applying it, as to
+ forget the noblest and most inspiring shape which his theory can
+ be made to assume. It is the worst of political blunders to
+ insist on carrying an ideal set of principles into execution,
+ where others have rights of dissent, and those others persons
+ whose assent is as indispensable to success, as it is impossible
+ to attain. But to be afraid or ashamed of holding such an ideal
+ set of principles in one's mind in their highest and most
+ abstract expression, does more than any one other cause to stunt
+ or petrify those elements in character to which life should owe
+ most of its savour.</p>
+
+ <p>If a man happens to be a Conservative, for instance, it is
+ pitiful that he should think so much more of what other people on
+ his side or the other think, than of the widest and highest of
+ the ideas on which a conservative philosophy of life and human
+ society reposes. Such ideas are these,&mdash;that the social
+ union is the express creation and ordering of the Deity: that its
+ movements follow his mysterious and fixed dispensation: that the
+ church and the state are convertible terms, and each citizen of
+ the latter is an incorporated member of the former: that
+ conscience, if perversely and misguidedly self-asserting, has no
+ rights against the decrees of the conscience of the nation: that
+ it is the most detestable of crimes to perturb the pacific order
+ of society either by active agitation or speculative
+ restlessness; that descent from a long line of ancestors in great
+ station adds an element of dignity to life, and imposes many high
+ obligations. We do not say that these and the rest of the
+ propositions which make up the true theoretic basis of a
+ conservative creed, are proper for the hustings, or expedient in
+ an election address or a speech in parliament. We do say that if
+ these high and not unintelligible principles, which alone can
+ give to reactionary professions any worth or significance, were
+ present in the minds of men who speak reactionary language, the
+ country would be spared the ignominy of seeing certain real
+ truths of society degraded at the hands of aristocratic
+ adventurers and plutocratic parasites into some miserable process
+ of 'dishing Whigs.'</p>
+
+ <p>This impoverishment of aims and depravation of principles by
+ the triumph of the political spirit outside of its proper sphere,
+ cannot unfortunately be restricted to any one set of people in
+ the state. It is something in the very atmosphere, which no
+ sanitary cordon can limit. Liberalism, too, would be something
+ more generous, more attractive&mdash;yes, and more practically
+ effective, if its professors and champions could allow their
+ sense of what is feasible to be refreshed and widened by a more
+ free recognition, however private and undemonstrative, of the
+ theoretic ideas which give their social creed whatever life and
+ consistency it may have. Such ideas are these: That the
+ conditions of the social union are not a mystery, only to be
+ touched by miracle, but the results of explicable causes, and
+ susceptible of constant modification: that the thoughts of wise
+ and patriotic men should be perpetually turned towards the
+ improvement of these conditions in every direction: that
+ contented acquiescence in the ordering that has come down to us
+ from the past is selfish and anti-social, because amid the
+ ceaseless change that is inevitable in a growing organism, the
+ institutions of the past demand progressive re-adaptations: that
+ such improvements are most likely to be secured in the greatest
+ abundance by limiting the sphere of authority, extending that of
+ free individuality, and steadily striving after the bestowal, so
+ far as the nature of things will ever permit it, of equality of
+ opportunity: that while there is dignity in ancestry, a modern
+ society is only safe in proportion as it summons capacity to its
+ public counsels and enterprises; that such a society to endure
+ must progress: that progress on its political side means more
+ than anything else the substitution of Justice as a governing
+ idea, instead of Privilege, and that the best guarantee for
+ justice in public dealings is the participation in their own
+ government of the people most likely to suffer from injustice.
+ This is not an exhaustive account of the progressive doctrine,
+ and we have here nothing to say as to its soundness. We only
+ submit that if those who use the watchwords of Liberalism were to
+ return upon its principles, instead of dwelling exclusively on
+ practical compromises, the tone of public life would be
+ immeasurably raised. The cause of social improvement would be
+ less systematically balked of the victories that are best worth
+ gaining. Progress would mean something more than mere entrances
+ and exits on the theatre of office. We should not see in the mass
+ of parliamentary candidates&mdash;and they are important people,
+ because nearly every Englishman with any ambition is a
+ parliamentary candidate, actual or potential&mdash;that grave
+ anxiety, that sober rigour, that immense caution, which are all
+ so really laughable, because so many of those men are only
+ anxious lest they should make a mistake in finding out what the
+ majority of their constituents would like them to think; only
+ rigorous against those who are indiscreet enough to press a
+ principle against the beck of a whip or a wire-puller; and only
+ very cautious not so much lest their opinion should be wrong, as
+ lest it should not pay.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Indolence and timidity have united to popularise among us a
+ flaccid latitudinarianism, which thinks itself a benign tolerance
+ for the opinions of others. It is in truth only a pretentious
+ form of being without settled opinions of our own, and without
+ any desire to settle them. No one can complain of the want of
+ speculative activity at the present time in a certain way. The
+ air, at a certain social elevation, is as full as it has ever
+ been of ideas, theories, problems, possible solutions, suggested
+ questions, and proffered answers. But then they are at large,
+ without cohesion, and very apt to be the objects even in the more
+ instructed minds of not much more than dilettante interest. We
+ see in solution an immense number of notions, which people think
+ it quite unnecessary to precipitate in the form of convictions.
+ We constantly hear the age lauded for its tolerance, for its
+ candour, for its openness of mind, for the readiness with which a
+ hearing is given to ideas that forty years ago, or even less than
+ that, would have excluded persons suspected of holding them from
+ decent society, and in fact did so exclude them. Before, however,
+ we congratulate ourselves too warmly on this, let us be quite
+ sure that we are not mistaking for tolerance what is really
+ nothing more creditable than indifference. These two attitudes of
+ mind, which are so vitally unlike in their real quality, are so
+ hard to distinguish in their outer seeming.</p>
+
+ <p>One is led to suspect that carelessness is the right name for
+ what looks like reasoned toleration, by such a line of
+ consideration as the following. It is justly said that at the
+ bottom of all the great discussions of modern society lie the two
+ momentous questions, first whether there is a God, and second
+ whether the soul is immortal. In other words, whether our
+ fellow-creatures are the highest beings who take an interest in
+ us, or in whom we need take an interest; and, then, whether life
+ in this world is the only life of which we shall ever be
+ conscious. It is true of most people that when they are talking
+ of evolution, and the origin of species, and the experiential or
+ intuitional source of ideas, and the utilitarian or
+ transcendental basis of moral obligation, these are the questions
+ which they really have in their minds. Now, in spite of the
+ scientific activity of the day, nobody is likely to contend that
+ men are pressed keenly in their souls by any poignant stress of
+ spiritual tribulation in the face of the two supreme enigmas.
+ Nobody will say that there is much of that striving and wrestling
+ and bitter agonising, which whole societies of men have felt
+ before now on questions of far less tremendous import. Ours, as
+ has been truly said, is 'a time of loud disputes and weak
+ convictions,' In a generation deeply impressed by a sense of
+ intellectual responsibility this could not be. As it is, even
+ superior men are better pleased to play about the height of these
+ great arguments, to fly in busy intellectual sport from side to
+ side, from aspect to aspect, than they are intent on resolving
+ what it is, after all, that the discussion comes to and to which
+ solution, when everything has been said and heard, the balance of
+ truth really to incline. There are too many giggling epigrams;
+ people are too willing to look on collections of mutually hostile
+ opinions with the same kind of curiosity which they bestow on a
+ collection of mutually hostile beasts in a menagerie. They have
+ very faint predilections for one rather than another. If they
+ were truly alive to the duty of conclusiveness, or to the
+ inexpressible magnitude of the subjects which nominally occupy
+ their minds, but really only exercise their tongues, this elegant
+ Pyrrhonism would be impossible, and this light-hearted neutrality
+ most unendurable.</p>
+
+ <p>Well has the illustrious Pascal said with reference to one of
+ the two great issues of the modern controversy:&mdash;'The
+ immortality of the soul is a thing that concerns us so closely
+ and touches us so profoundly, that one must have lost all feeling
+ to be indifferent as to knowing how the matter is. All our
+ actions and all our thoughts must follow such different paths,
+ according as there are eternal goods to hope for or are not, that
+ it is impossible to take a step with sense and judgment, without
+ regulating it in view of this point, which ought to be our first
+ object.... I can have nothing but compassion for those who groan
+ and travail in this doubt with all sincerity, who look on it as
+ the worst of misfortunes, and who, sparing no pains to escape
+ from it, make of this search their chief and most serious
+ employment.... But he who doubts and searches not is at the same
+ time a grievous wrongdoer, and a grievously unfortunate man. If
+ along with this he is tranquil and self-satisfied, if he
+ publishes his contentment to the world and plumes himself upon
+ it, and if it is this very state of doubt which he makes the
+ subject of his joy and vanity&mdash;I have no terms in which to
+ describe so extravagant a creature.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15"><sup>[15]</sup></a> Who,
+ except a member of the school of extravagant creatures
+ themselves, would deny that Pascal's irritation is most wholesome
+ and righteous?</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps in reply to this, we may be confronted by our own
+ doctrine of intellectual responsibility interpreted in a directly
+ opposite sense. We may be reminded of the long array of
+ difficulties that interfere between us and knowledge in that
+ tremendous matter, and of objections that rise in such perplexing
+ force to an answer either one way or the other. And finally we
+ may be despatched with a eulogy of caution and a censure of too
+ great heat after certainty. The answer is that there is a kind of
+ Doubt not without search, but after and at the end of search,
+ which is not open to Pascal's just reproaches against the more
+ ignoble and frivolous kind. And this too has been described for
+ us by a subtle doctor of Pascal's communion. 'Are there pleasures
+ of Doubt, as well as of Inference and Assent? In one sense there
+ are. Not indeed if doubt means ignorance, uncertainty, or
+ hopeless suspense; but there is a certain grave acquiescence in
+ ignorance, a recognition of our impotence to solve momentous and
+ urgent questions, which has a satisfaction of its own. After high
+ aspirations, after renewed endeavours, after bootless toil, after
+ long wanderings, after hope, effort, weariness, failure,
+ painfully alternating and recurring, it is an immense relief to
+ the exhausted mind to be able to say, "At length I know that I
+ can know nothing about anything." ... Ignorance remains the evil
+ which it ever was, but something of the peace of certitude is
+ gained in knowing the worst, and in having reconciled the mind to
+ the endurance of it.'<a name="FNanchor16"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_16"><sup>[16]</sup></a> Precisely, and what one would
+ say of our own age is that it will not deliberately face this
+ knowledge of the worst. So it misses the peace of certitude, and
+ not only its peace, but the strength and coherency that follow
+ strict acceptance of the worst, when the worst is after all the
+ best within reach.</p>
+
+ <p>Those who are in earnest when they blame too great haste after
+ certainty, do in reality mean us to embrace certainty, but in
+ favour of the vulgar opinions. They only see the prodigious
+ difficulties of the controversy when you do not incline to their
+ own side in it. They only panegyrise caution and the strictly
+ provisional when they suspect that intrepidity and love of the
+ conclusive would lead them to unwelcome shores. These persons,
+ however, whether fortunately or unfortunately, have no longer
+ much influence over the most active part of the national
+ intelligence. Whether permanently or not, resolute orthodoxy,
+ however prosperous it may seem among many of the uncultivated
+ rich, has lost its hold upon thought. For thought has become
+ dispersive, and the centrifugal forces of the human mind, among
+ those who think seriously, have for the time become dominant and
+ supreme. No one, I suppose, imagines that the singular
+ ecclesiastical revival which is now going on, is accompanied by
+ any revival of real and reasoned belief; or that the opulent
+ manufacturers who subscribe so generously for restored cathedral
+ fabrics and the like, have been moved by the apologetics of
+ <i>Aids to Faith</i> and the Christian Evidence Society.</p>
+
+ <p>Obviously only three ways of dealing with the great problems
+ of which we have spoken are compatible with a strong and
+ well-bottomed character. We may affirm that there is a deity with
+ definable attributes; and that there is a conscious state and
+ continued personality after the dissolution of the body. Or we
+ may deny. Or we may assure ourselves that we have no faculties
+ enabling us on good evidence either to deny or affirm.
+ Intellectual self-respect and all the qualities that are derived
+ from that, may well go with any one of these three courses,
+ decisively followed and consistently applied in framing a rule of
+ life and a settled scheme of its aims and motives. Why do we say
+ that intellectual self-respect is not vigorous, nor the sense of
+ intellectual responsibility and truthfulness and coherency quick
+ and wakeful among us? Because so many people, even among those
+ who might be expected to know better, insist on the futile
+ attempt to reconcile all those courses, instead of fixing on one
+ and steadily abiding in it. They speak as if they affirmed, and
+ they act as if they denied, and in their hearts they cherish a
+ slovenly sort of suspicion that we can neither deny nor affirm.
+ It may be said that this comes to much the same thing as if they
+ had formally decided in the last or neutral sense. It is not so.
+ This illegitimate union of three contradictories fritters
+ character away, breaks it up into discordant parts, and dissolves
+ into mercurial fluidity that leavening sincerity and free and
+ cheerful boldness, which come of harmonious principles of faith
+ and action, and without which men can never walk as confident
+ lovers of justice and truth.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Ambrose's famous saying, that 'it hath not pleased the Lord to
+ give his people salvation in dialectic,' has a profound meaning
+ far beyond its application to theology. It is deeply true that
+ our ruling convictions are less the product of ratiocination than
+ of sympathy, imagination, usage, tradition. But from this it does
+ not follow that the reasoning faculties are to be further
+ discouraged. On the contrary, just because the other elements are
+ so strong that they can be trusted to take care of themselves, it
+ is expedient to give special countenance to the intellectual
+ habits, which alone can check and rectify the constantly
+ aberrating tendencies of sentiment on the one side, and custom on
+ the other. This remark brings us to another type, of whom it is
+ not irrelevant to speak shortly in this place. The consequences
+ of the strength of the political spirit are not all direct, nor
+ does its strength by any means spring solely from its indulgence
+ to the less respectable elements of character, such as languor,
+ extreme pliableness, superficiality. On the contrary, it has an
+ indirect influence in removing the only effective restraint on
+ the excesses of some qualities which, when duly directed and
+ limited, are among the most precious parts of our mental
+ constitution. The political spirit is the great force in throwing
+ love of truth and accurate reasoning into a secondary place. The
+ evil does not stop here. This achievement has indirectly
+ countenanced the postponement of intellectual methods, and the
+ diminution of the sense of intellectual responsibility, by a
+ school that is anything rather than political.</p>
+
+ <p>Theology has borrowed, and coloured for her own use, the
+ principles which were first brought into vogue in politics. If in
+ the one field it is the fashion to consider convenience first and
+ truth second, in the other there is a corresponding fashion of
+ placing truth second and emotional comfort first. If there are
+ some who compromise their real opinions, or the chance of
+ reaching truth, for the sake of gain, there are far more who
+ shrink from giving their intelligence free play, for the sake of
+ keeping undisturbed certain luxurious spiritual sensibilities.
+ This choice of emotional gratification before truth and upright
+ dealing with one's own understanding, creates a character that is
+ certainly far less unlovely than those who sacrifice their
+ intellectual integrity to more material convenience. The moral
+ flaw is less palpable and less gross. Yet here too there is the
+ stain of intellectual improbity, and it is perhaps all the more
+ mischievous for being partly hidden under the mien of spiritual
+ exaltation.</p>
+
+ <p>There is in literature no more seductive illustration of this
+ seductive type than Rousseau's renowned character of the Savoyard
+ Vicar&mdash;penetrated with scepticism as to the attributes of
+ the deity, the meaning of the holy rites, the authenticity of the
+ sacred documents; yet full of reverence, and ever respecting in
+ silence what he could neither reject nor understand. 'The
+ essential worship,' he says, 'is the worship of the heart. God
+ never rejects this homage, under whatever form it be offered to
+ him. In old days I used to say mass with the levity which in time
+ infects even the gravest things when we do them too often. Since
+ acquiring my new principles [of reverential scepticism] I
+ celebrate it with more veneration: I am overcome by the majesty
+ of the Supreme Being, by his presence, by the insufficiency of
+ the human mind, which conceives so ill what pertains to its
+ author. When I approach the moment of consecration, I collect
+ myself for performing the act with all the feelings required by
+ the church and the majesty of the sacrament. I strive to
+ annihilate my reason before the Supreme Intelligence, saying, Who
+ art thou that thou shouldst measure infinite power?'<a name=
+ "FNanchor17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17"><sup>[17]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The Savoyard Vicar is not imaginary. The acquiescence in
+ indefinite ideas for the sake of comforted emotions, and the
+ abnegation of strong convictions in order to make room for free
+ and plenteous effusion, have for us all the marks of a too
+ familiar reality. Such a doctrine is an everyday plea for
+ self-deception, and a current justification for illusion even
+ among some of the finer spirits. They have persuaded themselves
+ not only that the life of the religious emotions is the highest
+ life, but that it is independent of the intellectual forms with
+ which history happens to have associated it. And so they refine
+ and sophisticate and make havoc with plain and honest
+ interpretation, in order to preserve a soft serenity of soul
+ unperturbed.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, we are not at all concerned to dispute such positions as
+ that Feeling is the right starting-point of moral education; that
+ in forming character appeal should be to the heart rather than to
+ the understanding; that the only basis on which our faculties can
+ be harmoniously ordered is the preponderance of affection over
+ reason. These propositions open much grave and complex
+ discussion, and they are not to our present purpose. We only
+ desire to state the evil of the notion that a man is warranted in
+ comforting himself with dogmas and formularies, which he has
+ first to empty of all definite, precise, and clearly determinable
+ significance, before he can get them out of the way of his
+ religious sensibilities. Whether Reason or Affection is to have
+ the empire in the society of the future, when Reason may possibly
+ have no more to discover for us in the region of morals and
+ religion, and so will have become <i>emeritus</i> and taken a
+ lower place, as of a tutor whose services the human family, being
+ now grown up, no longer requires,&mdash;however this may be, it
+ is at least certain that in the meantime the spiritual life of
+ man needs direction quite as much as it needs impulse, and light
+ quite as much as force. This direction and light can only be
+ safely procured by the free and vigorous use of the intelligence.
+ But the intelligence is not free in the presence of a mortal fear
+ lest its conclusions should trouble soft tranquillity of spirit.
+ There is always hope of a man so long as he dwells in the region
+ of the direct categorical proposition and the unambiguous term;
+ so long as he does not deny the rightly drawn conclusion after
+ accepting the major and minor premisses. This may seem a scanty
+ virtue and very easy grace. Yet experience shows it to be too
+ hard of attainment for those who tamper with disinterestedness of
+ conviction, for the sake of luxuriating in the softness of
+ spiritual transport without interruption from a syllogism. It is
+ true that there are now and then in life as in history noble and
+ fair natures, that by the silent teaching and unconscious example
+ of their inborn purity, star-like constancy, and great devotion,
+ do carry the world about them to further heights of living than
+ can be attained by ratiocination. But these, the blameless and
+ loved saints of the earth, rise too rarely on our dull horizons
+ to make a rule for the world. The law of things is that they who
+ tamper with veracity, from whatever motive, are tampering with
+ the vital force of human progress. Our comfort and the delight of
+ the religious imagination are no better than forms of
+ self-indulgence, when they are secured at the cost of that love
+ of truth on which, more than on anything else, the increase of
+ light and happiness among men must depend. We have to fight and
+ do lifelong battle against the forces of darkness, and anything
+ that turns the edge of reason blunts the surest and most potent
+ of our weapons.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_13"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor13">[13]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Burton's <i>Lift of Hume,</i> ii. 186-188</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor14">[14]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Isaac Taylor's <i>Natural History of Enthusiasm</i>, p.
+ 226.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor15">[15]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Pens&eacute;es</i>, II. Art ii.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor16">[16]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Dr. Newman's <i>Grammar of Assent</i>, p. 201.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor17">[17]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Emile</i>, bk. iv.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_IV"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>The main field of discussion touching Compromise in expression
+ and avowal lies in the region of religious belief. In politics no
+ one seriously contends that respect for the feelings and
+ prejudices of other people requires us to be silent about our
+ opinions. A republican, for instance, is at perfect liberty to
+ declare himself so. Nobody will say that he is not within his
+ rights if he should think it worth while to practise this
+ liberty, though of course he will have to face the obloquy which
+ attends all opinion that is not shared by the more demonstrative
+ and vocal portions of the public. It is true that in every stable
+ society a general conviction prevails of the extreme
+ undesirableness of constantly laying bare the foundations of
+ government. Incessant discussion of the theoretical bases of the
+ social union is naturally considered worse than idle. It is felt
+ by many wise men that the chief business of the political thinker
+ is to interest himself in generalisations of such a sort as leads
+ with tolerable straightness to practical improvements of a
+ far-reaching and durable kind. Even among those, however, who
+ thus feel it not to be worth while to be for ever handling the
+ abstract principles which are, after all, only clumsy expressions
+ of the real conditions that bring and keep men together in
+ society, yet nobody of any consideration pretends to silence or
+ limit the free discussion of these principles. Although a man is
+ not likely to be thanked who calls attention to the vast
+ discrepancies between the theory and practice of the
+ constitution, yet nobody now would countenance the notion of an
+ inner doctrine in politics. We smile at the line that Hume took
+ in speaking of the doctrine of non-resistance. He did not deny
+ that the right of resistance to a tyrannical sovereign does
+ actually belong to a nation. But, he said, 'if ever on any
+ occasion it were laudable to conceal truth from the populace, it
+ must be confessed that the doctrine of resistance affords such an
+ example; and that all speculative reasoners ought to observe with
+ regard to this principle the same cautious silence which the
+ laws, in every species of government, have ever prescribed to
+ themselves.' As if the cautious silence of the political writer
+ could prevent a populace from feeling the heaviness of an
+ oppressor's hand, and striving to find relief from unjust
+ burdens. As if any nation endowed with enough of the spirit of
+ independence to assent to the right of resistance when offered to
+ them as a speculative theorem, would not infallibly be led by the
+ same spirit to assert the right without the speculative theorem.
+ That so acute a head as Hume's should have failed to perceive
+ these very plain considerations, and that he should moreover have
+ perpetrated the absurdity of declaring the right of resistance,
+ in the same breath in which he declares the laudableness of
+ keeping it a secret, only allows how carefully a man need steer
+ after he has once involved himself in the labyrinths of
+ Economy.<a name="FNanchor18"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_18"><sup>[18]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>In religion the unreasonableness of imposing a similar
+ cautious silence is not yet fully established, nor the vicious
+ effects of practising it clearly recognised. In these high
+ matters an amount of economy and management is held praiseworthy,
+ which in any other subject would be universally condemned as
+ cowardly and ignoble. Indeed the preliminary stage has scarcely
+ been reached&mdash;the stage in which public opinion grants to
+ every one the unrestricted right of shaping his own beliefs,
+ independently of those of the people who surround him. Any woman,
+ for instance, suspected of having cast behind her the Bible and
+ all practices of devotion and the elementary articles of the
+ common creed, would be distrustfully regarded even by those who
+ wink at the same kind of mental boldness in men. Nay, she would
+ be so regarded even by some of the very men who have themselves
+ discarded as superstition what they still wish women to retain
+ for law and gospel. So long as any class of adults are
+ effectually discouraged in the free use of their minds upon the
+ most important subjects, we are warranted in saying that the era
+ of free thought, which naturally precedes the era of free speech,
+ is still imperfectly developed.</p>
+
+ <p>The duties and rights of free speech are by no means identical
+ with those of independent thought. One general reason for this is
+ tolerably plain. The expression of opinion directly affects other
+ people, while its mere formation directly affects no one but
+ ourselves. Therefore the limits of compromise in expression are
+ less widely and freely placed, because the rights and interests
+ of all who may be made listeners to our spoken or written words
+ are immediately concerned. In forming opinions, a man or woman
+ owes no consideration to any person or persons whatever. Truth is
+ the single object. It is truth that in the forum of conscience
+ claims an undivided allegiance. The publication of opinion stands
+ on another footing. That is an external act, with possible
+ consequences, like all other external acts, both to the doer and
+ to every one within the sphere of his influence. And, besides
+ these, it has possible consequences to the prosperity of the
+ opinion itself.<a name="FNanchor19"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_19"><sup>[19]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>A hundred questions of fitness, of seasonableness, of
+ conflicting expediencies, present themselves in this connection,
+ and nothing gives more anxiety to a sensible man who holds
+ notions opposed to the current prejudices, than to hit the right
+ mark where intellectual integrity and prudence, firmness and wise
+ reserve, are in exact accord. When we come to declaring opinions
+ that are, however foolishly and unreasonably, associated with
+ pain and even a kind of turpitude in the minds of those who
+ strongly object to them, then some of our most powerful
+ sympathies are naturally engaged. We wonder whether duty to truth
+ can possibly require us to inflict keen distress on those to whom
+ we are bound by the tenderest and most consecrated ties. This is
+ so wholly honourable a sentiment, that no one who has not made
+ himself drunk with the thin sour wine of a crude and absolute
+ logic will refuse to consider it. Before, however, attempting to
+ illustrate cases of conscience in this order, we venture to make
+ a short digression into the region of the matter, as distinct
+ from the manner of free speech. One or two changes of great
+ importance in the way in which men think about religion, bear
+ directly upon the conditions on which they may permit themselves
+ and others to speak about it.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The peculiar character of all the best kinds of dissent from
+ the nominal creed of the time, makes it rather less difficult for
+ us to try to reconcile unflinching honesty with a just and
+ becoming regard for the feelings of those who have claims upon
+ our forbearance, than would have been the case a hundred years
+ ago. 'It is not now with a polite sneer,' as a high
+ ecclesiastical authority lately admitted, 'still less with a rude
+ buffet or coarse words, that Christianity is assailed.' Before
+ churchmen congratulate themselves too warmly on this improvement
+ in the nature of the attack, perhaps they ought to ask themselves
+ how far it is due to the change in the position of the defending
+ party. The truth is that the coarse and realistic criticism of
+ which Voltaire was the consummate master, has done its work. It
+ has driven the defenders of the old faith into the milder and
+ more genial climate of non-natural interpretations, and the
+ historic sense, and a certain elastic relativity of dogma. The
+ old criticism was victorious, but after victory it vanished. One
+ reason of this was that the coarse and realistic forms of belief
+ had either vanished before it, or else they forsook their ancient
+ pretensions and clothed themselves in more modest robes. The
+ consequence of this, and of other causes which might be named, is
+ that the modern attack, while fully as serious and much more
+ radical, has a certain gravity, decorum, and worthiness of form.
+ No one of any sense or knowledge now thinks the Christian
+ religion had its origin in deliberate imposture. The modern
+ freethinker does not attack it; he explains it. And what is more,
+ he explains it by referring its growth to the better, and not to
+ the worse part of human nature. He traces it to men's cravings
+ for a higher morality. He finds its source in their aspirations
+ after nobler expression of that feeling for the incommensurable
+ things, which is in truth under so many varieties of inwoven
+ pattern the common universal web of religious faith.</p>
+
+ <p>The result of this way of looking at a creed which a man no
+ longer accepts, is that he is able to speak of it with patience
+ and historic respect. He can openly mark his dissent from it,
+ without exacerbating the orthodox sentiment by galling
+ pleasantries or bitter animadversion upon details. We are now
+ awake to the all-important truth that belief in this or that
+ detail of superstition is the result of an irrational state of
+ mind, and flows logically from superstitious premisses. We see
+ that it is to begin at the wrong end, to assail the deductions as
+ impossible, instead of sedulously building up a state of mind in
+ which their impossibility would become spontaneously visible.</p>
+
+ <p>Besides the great change which such a point of view makes in
+ men's way of speaking of a religion, whose dogmas and documents
+ they reject, there is this further consideration leaning in the
+ same direction. The tendency of modern free thought is more and
+ more visibly towards the extraction of the first and more
+ permanent elements of the old faith, to make the purified
+ material of the new. When Dr. Congreve met the famous epigram
+ about Comte's system being Catholicism minus Christianity, by the
+ reply that it is Catholicism plus Science, he gave an ingenious
+ expression to the direction which is almost necessarily taken by
+ all who attempt, in however informal a manner, to construct for
+ themselves some working system of faith, in place of the faith
+ which science and criticism have sapped. In what ultimate form,
+ acceptable to great multitudes of men, these attempts will at
+ last issue, no one can now tell. For we, like the Hebrews of old,
+ shall all have to live and die in faith, 'not having received the
+ promises, but having seen them afar off, and being persuaded of
+ them, and embracing them, and confessing that we are strangers
+ and pilgrims on the earth.' Meanwhile, after the first great glow
+ and passion of the just and necessary revolt of reason against
+ superstition have slowly lost the exciting splendour of the dawn,
+ and become diffused in the colourless space of a rather bleak
+ noonday, the mind gradually collects again some of the ideas of
+ the old religion of the West, and willingly, or even joyfully,
+ suffers itself to be once more breathed upon by something of its
+ spirit. Christianity was the last great religious synthesis. It
+ is the one nearest to us. Nothing is more natural than that those
+ who cannot rest content with intellectual analysis, while
+ awaiting the advent of the Saint Paul of the humanitarian faith
+ of the future, should gather up provisionally such fragmentary
+ illustrations of this new faith as are to be found in the records
+ of the old. Whatever form may be ultimately imposed on our vague
+ religious aspirations by some prophet to come, who shall unite
+ sublime depth of feeling and lofty purity of life with strong
+ intellectual grasp and the gift of a noble eloquence, we may at
+ least be sure of this, that it will stand as closely related to
+ Christianity as Christianity stood closely related to the old
+ Judaic dispensation. It is commonly assumed that the rejecters of
+ the popular religion stand in face of it, as the Christians stood
+ in face of the pagan belief and pagan rites in the Empire. The
+ analogy is inexact. The modern denier, if he is anything better
+ than that, or entertains hopes of a creed to come, is nearer to
+ the position of the Christianising Jew.<a name=
+ "FNanchor20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20"><sup>[20]</sup></a>
+ Science, when she has accomplished all her triumphs in her own
+ order, will still have to go back, when the time comes, to assist
+ in the building up of a new creed by which men can live. The
+ builders will have to seek material in the purified and
+ sublimated ideas, of which the confessions and rites of the
+ Christian churches have been the grosser expression. Just as what
+ was once the new dispensation was preached <i>a Judaeos ad
+ Judaeos apud Judaeos</i>, so must the new, that is to be, find a
+ Christian teacher and Christian hearers. It can hardly be other
+ than an expansion, a development, a readaptation, of all the
+ moral and spiritual truth that lay hidden under the worn-out
+ forms. It must be such a harmonising of the truth with our
+ intellectual conceptions as shall fit it to be an active guide to
+ conduct. In a world '<i>where men sit and hear each other groan,
+ where but to think is to be full of sorrow</i>,' it is hard to
+ imagine a time when we shall be indifferent to that sovereign
+ legend of Pity. We have to incorporate it in some wider gospel of
+ Justice and Progress.</p>
+
+ <p>I shall not, I hope, be suspected of any desire to prophesy
+ too smooth things. It is no object of ours to bridge over the
+ gulf between belief in the vulgar theology and disbelief. Nor for
+ a single moment do we pretend that, when all the points of
+ contact between virtuous belief and virtuous disbelief are made
+ the most of that good faith will allow, there will not still and
+ after all remain a terrible controversy between those who cling
+ passionately to all the consolations, mysteries, personalities,
+ of the orthodox faith, and us who have made up our minds to face
+ the worst, and to shape, as best we can, a life in which the
+ cardinal verities of the common creed shall have no place. The
+ future faith, like the faith of the past, brings not peace but a
+ sword. It is a tale not of concord, but of households divided
+ against themselves. Those who are incessantly striving to make
+ the old bottles hold the new wine, to reconcile the
+ irreconcilable, to bring the Bible and the dogmas of the churches
+ to be good friends with history and criticism, are prompted by
+ the humanest intention.<a name="FNanchor21"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_21"><sup>[21]</sup></a> One sympathises with this
+ amiable anxiety to soften shocks, and break the rudeness of a
+ vital transition. In this essay, at any rate, there is no such
+ attempt. We know that it is the son against the father, and the
+ mother-in-law against the daughter-in-law. No softness of speech
+ will disguise the portentous differences between those who admit
+ a supernatural revelation and those who deny it. No charity nor
+ goodwill can narrow the intellectual breach between those who
+ declare that a world without an ever-present Creator with
+ intelligible attributes would be to them empty and void, and
+ those who insist that none of the attributes of a Creator can
+ ever be grasped by the finite intelligence of men.<a name=
+ "FNanchor22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22"><sup>[22]</sup></a> Our
+ object in urging the historic, semi-conservative, and almost
+ sympathetic quality, which distinguishes the unbelief of to-day
+ from the unbelief of a hundred years ago, is only to show that
+ the most strenuous and upright of plain-speakers is less likely
+ to shock and wound the lawful sensibilities of devout persons
+ than he would have been so long as unbelief went no further than
+ bitter attack on small details. In short, all save the purely
+ negative and purely destructive school of freethinkers, are now
+ able to deal with the beliefs from which they dissent, in a way
+ which makes patient and disinterested controversy not wholly
+ impossible.</p>
+
+ <p>One more point of much importance ought to be mentioned. The
+ belief that heresy is the result of wilful depravity is fast
+ dying out. People no longer seriously think that speculative
+ error is bound up with moral iniquity, or that mistaken thinking
+ is either the result or the cause of wicked living. Even the
+ official mouthpieces of established beliefs now usually represent
+ a bad heart as only one among other possible causes of unbelief.
+ It divides the curse with ignorance, intellectual shallowness,
+ the unfortunate influence of plausible heresiarchs, and other
+ alternative roots of evil. They thus leave a way of escape, by
+ which the person who does not share their own convictions may
+ still be credited with a good moral character. Some persons, it
+ is true, 'cannot see how a man who deliberately rejects the Roman
+ Catholic religion can, in the eyes of those who earnestly believe
+ it, be other than a rebel against God.' They assure us that, 'as
+ opinions become better marked and more distinctly connected with
+ action, the truth that decided dissent from them implies more or
+ less of a reproach upon those who hold them decidedly, becomes so
+ obvious that every one perceives it.' No doubt a protestant or a
+ sceptic regards the beliefs of a catholic as a reproach upon the
+ believer's understanding. So the man whose whole faith rests on
+ the miraculous and on acts of special intervention, regards the
+ strictly positive and scientific thinker as the dupe of a crude
+ and narrow logic. But this now carries with it no implication of
+ moral obliquity. De Maistre's rather grotesque conviction that
+ infidels always die of horrible diseases with special names,
+ could now only be held among the very dregs of the ecclesiastical
+ world.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor is it correct to say that 'when religious differences come
+ to be, and are regarded as, mere differences of opinion, it is
+ because the controversy is really decided in the sceptical
+ sense.' Those who agree with the present writer, for example, are
+ not sceptics. They positively, absolutely, and without reserve,
+ reject as false the whole system of objective propositions which
+ make up the popular belief of the day, in one and all of its
+ theological expressions. They look upon that system as
+ mischievous in its consequences to society, for many
+ reasons,&mdash;among others because it tends to divert and
+ misdirect the most energetic faculties of human nature. This,
+ however, does not make them suspect the motives or the habitual
+ morality of those who remain in the creed in which they were
+ nurtured. The difference is a difference of opinion, as purely as
+ if we refused to accept the undulatory theory of light; and we
+ treat it as such. Then reverse this. Why is it any more
+ impossible for those who remain in the theological stage, who are
+ not in the smallest degree sceptical, who in their heart of
+ hearts embrace without a shadow of misgiving all the mysteries of
+ the faith, why is it any more impossible for them than for us,
+ whose convictions are as strong as theirs, to treat the most
+ radical dissidence as that and nothing other or worse? Logically,
+ it perhaps might not be hard to convict them of inconsistency,
+ but then, as has been so often said, inconsistency is a totally
+ different thing from insincerity, or doubting adherence, or
+ silent scepticism. The beliefs of an ordinary man are a complex
+ structure of very subtle materials, all compacted into a whole,
+ not by logic, but by lack of logic; not by syllogism or sorites,
+ but by the vague.</p>
+
+ <p>As a plain matter of fact and observation, we may all perceive
+ that dissent from religious opinion less and less implies
+ reproach in any serious sense. We all of us know in the flesh
+ liberal catholics and latitudinarian protestants, who hold the
+ very considerable number of beliefs that remain to them, quite as
+ firmly and undoubtingly as believers who are neither liberal nor
+ latitudinarian. The compatibility of error in faith with virtue
+ in conduct is to them only a mystery the more, a branch of the
+ insoluble problem of Evil, permitted by a Being at once
+ all-powerful and all-benevolent. Stringent logic may make short
+ work of either fact,&mdash;a benevolent author of evil, or a
+ virtuous despiser of divine truth. But in an atmosphere of
+ mystery, logical contradictions melt away. Faith gives a sanction
+ to that tolerant and charitable judgment of the character of
+ heretics, which has its real springs partly in common human
+ sympathy whereby we are all bound to one another, and partly in
+ experience, which teaches us that practical righteousness and
+ speculative orthodoxy do not always have their roots in the same
+ soil. The world is every day growing larger. The range of the
+ facts of the human race is being enormously extended by
+ naturalists, by historians, by philologists, by travellers, by
+ critics. The manifold past experiences of humanity are daily
+ opening out to us in vaster and at the same time more ordered
+ proportions. And so even those who hold fast to Christianity as
+ the noblest, strongest, and only final conclusion of these
+ experiences, are yet constrained to admit that it is no more than
+ a single term in a very long and intricate series.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The object of the foregoing digression is to show some cause
+ for thinking that dissent from the current beliefs is less and
+ less likely to inflict upon those who retain them any very
+ intolerable kind or degree of mental pain. Therefore it is in so
+ far all the plainer, as well as easier, a duty not to conceal
+ such dissent. What we have been saying comes to this. If a
+ believer finds that his son, for instance, has ceased to believe,
+ he no longer has this disbelief thrust upon him in gross and
+ irreverent forms. Nor does he any longer suppose that the
+ unbelieving son must necessarily be a profligate. And moreover,
+ in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, he no longer supposes that
+ infidels, of his own family or acquaintance at any rate, will
+ consume for eternal ages in lakes of burning marl.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us add another consideration. One reason why so many
+ persons are really shocked and pained by the avowal of heretical
+ opinions is the very fact that such avowal is uncommon. If
+ unbelievers and doubters were more courageous, believers would be
+ less timorous. It is because they live in an enervating fool's
+ paradise of seeming assent and conformity, that the breath of an
+ honest and outspoken word strikes so eager and nipping on their
+ sensibilities. If they were not encouraged to suppose that all
+ the world is of their own mind, if they were forced out of that
+ atmosphere of self-indulgent silences and hypocritical reserves,
+ which is systematically poured round them, they would acquire a
+ robuster mental habit. They would learn to take dissents for what
+ they are worth. They would be led either to strengthen or to
+ discard their own opinions, if the dissents happened to be
+ weighty or instructive; either to refute or neglect such dissents
+ as should be ill-founded or insignificant. They will remain
+ valetudinarians, so long as a curtain of compromise shelters them
+ from the real belief of those of their neighbours who have
+ ventured to use their minds with some measure of independence. A
+ very brief contact with people who, when the occasion comes, do
+ not shrink from saying what they think, is enough to modify that
+ excessive liability to be shocked at truth-speaking, which is
+ only so common because truth-speaking itself is so
+ unfamiliar.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, however great the pain inflicted by the avowal of
+ unbelief, it seems to the present writer that one relationship in
+ life, and one only, justifies us in being silent where otherwise
+ it would be right to speak. This relationship is that between
+ child and parents. Those parents are wisest who train their sons
+ and daughters in the utmost liberty both of thought and speech;
+ who do not instill dogmas into them, but inculcate upon them the
+ sovereign importance of correct ways of forming opinions; who,
+ while never dissembling the great fact that if one opinion is
+ true, its contradictory cannot be true also, but must be a lie
+ and must partake of all the evil qualities of a lie, yet always
+ set them the example of listening to unwelcome opinions with
+ patience and candour. Still all parents are not wise. They cannot
+ all endure to hear of any religious opinions except their own.
+ Where it would give them sincere and deep pain to hear a son or
+ daughter avow disbelief in the inspiration of the Bible and so
+ forth, then it seems that the younger person is warranted in
+ refraining from saying that he or she does not accept such and
+ such doctrines. This, of course, only where the son or daughter
+ feels a tender and genuine attachment to the parent. Where the
+ parent has not earned this attachment, has been selfish,
+ indifferent, or cruel, the title to the special kind of
+ forbearance of which we are speaking can hardly exist. In an
+ ordinary way, however, a parent has a claim on us which no other
+ person in the world can have, and a man's self-respect ought
+ scarcely to be injured if he finds himself shrinking from playing
+ the apostle to his own father and mother.</p>
+
+ <p>One can indeed imagine circumstances where this would not be
+ true. If you are persuaded that you have had revealed to you a
+ glorious gospel of light and blessedness, it is impossible not to
+ thirst to impart such tidings most eagerly to those who are
+ closest about your heart. We are not in that position. We have as
+ yet no magnificent vision, so definite, so touching, so 'clothed
+ with the beauty of a thousand stars,' as to make us eager, for
+ the sake of it, to murder all the sweetnesses of filial piety in
+ an aggressive eristic. This much one concedes. Yet let us ever
+ remember that those elders are of nobler type who have kept their
+ minds in a generous freedom, and have made themselves strong with
+ that magnanimous confidence in truth, which the Hebrew expressed
+ in old phrase, that if counsel or work be of men it will come to
+ nought, but if it be of God ye cannot overthrow it.</p>
+
+ <p>Even in the case of parents, and even though our new creed is
+ but rudimentary, there can be no good reason why we should go
+ further in the way of economy than mere silence. Neither they nor
+ any other human being can possibly have a right to expect us, not
+ merely to abstain from the open expression of dissents, but
+ positively to profess unreal and feigned assents. No fear of
+ giving pain, no wish to soothe the alarms of those to whom we owe
+ much, no respect for the natural clinging of the old to the faith
+ which has accompanied them through honourable lives, can warrant
+ us in saying that we believe to be true what we are convinced is
+ false. The most lax moralist counts a lie wrong, even when the
+ motive is unselfish, and springs from the desire to give pleasure
+ to those whom it is our duty to please. A deliberate lie avowedly
+ does not cease to be one because it concerns spiritual things.
+ Nor is it the less wrong because it is uttered by one to whom all
+ spiritual things have become indifferent. Filial affection is a
+ motive which would, if any motive could, remove some of the taint
+ of meanness with which pious lying, like every other kind of
+ lying, tends to infect character. The motive may no doubt ennoble
+ the act, though the act remains in the category of forbidden
+ things. But the motive of these complaisant assents and false
+ affirmations, taken at their very best, is still comparatively a
+ poor motive. No real elevation of spirit is possible for a man
+ who is willing to subordinate his convictions to his domestic
+ affections, and to bring himself to a habit of viewing falsehood
+ lightly, lest the truth should shock the illegitimate and
+ over-exacting sensibilities either of his parents or any one
+ else. We may understand what is meant by the logic of the
+ feelings, and accept it as the proper corrective for a too
+ intense egoism. But when the logic of the feelings is invoked to
+ substitute the egoism of the family for the slightly narrower
+ egoism of the individual, it can hardly be more than a fine name
+ for self-indulgence and a callous indifference to all the largest
+ human interests.</p><br>
+
+ <p>This brings us to consider the case of another no less
+ momentous relationship, and the kind of compromise in the matter
+ of religious conformity which it justifies or imposes. It
+ constantly happens that the husband has wholly ceased to believe
+ the religion to which his wife clings with unshaken faith. We
+ need not enter into the causes why women remain in bondage to
+ opinions which so many cultivated men either reject or else hold
+ in a transcendental and non-natural sense. The only question with
+ which we are concerned is the amount of free assertion of his own
+ convictions which a man should claim and practise, when he knows
+ that such convictions are distasteful to his wife. Is it lawful,
+ as it seems to be in dealing with parents, to hold his conviction
+ silently? Is it lawful either positively or by implication to
+ lead his wife to suppose that he shares her opinions, when in
+ truth he rejects them?</p>
+
+ <p>If it were not for the maxims and practice in daily use among
+ men otherwise honourable, one would not suppose it possible that
+ two answers could be given to these questions by any one with the
+ smallest pretence of principle or self-respect. As it is, we all
+ of us know men who deliberately reject the entire Christian
+ system, and still think it compatible with uprightness to summon
+ their whole establishments round them at morning and evening, and
+ on their knees to offer up elaborately formulated prayers, which
+ have just as much meaning to them as the entrails of the
+ sacrificial victim had to an infidel haruspex. We see the same
+ men diligently attending religious services; uttering assents to
+ confessions of which they really reject every syllable; kneeling,
+ rising, bowing, with deceptive solemnity; even partaking of the
+ sacrament with a consummate devoutness that is very edifying to
+ all who are not in the secret, and who do not know that they are
+ acting a part, and making a mock both of their own reason and
+ their own probity, merely to please persons whose delusions they
+ pity and despise from the bottom of their hearts.</p>
+
+ <p>On the surface there is certainly nothing to distinguish this
+ kind of conduct from the grossest hypocrisy. Is there anything
+ under the surface to relieve it from this complexion? Is there
+ any weight in the sort of answer which such men make to the
+ accusation that their conformity is a very degrading form of
+ deceit, and a singularly mischievous kind of treachery? Is the
+ plea of a wish to spare mental discomfort to others an admissible
+ and valid plea? It seems to us to be none of these things, and
+ for the following among other reasons.</p>
+
+ <p>If a man drew his wife by lot, or by any other method over
+ which neither he nor she has any control, as in the case of
+ parents, perhaps he might with some plausibleness contend that he
+ owed her certain limited deferences and reserves, just as we
+ admit that he may owe them to his parents. But this is not the
+ case. Marriage, in this country at least, is the result of mutual
+ choice. If men and women do as a matter of fact usually make this
+ choice hastily and on wofully imperfect information of one
+ another's characters, that is no warrant for a resort to unlawful
+ expedients to remedy the blunder. If a woman cares ardently
+ enough about religion to feel keen distress at the idea of
+ dissent from it on the part of those closely connected with her,
+ she surely may be expected to take reasonable pains to ascertain
+ beforehand the religious attitude of one with whom she is about
+ to unite herself for life. On the other hand, if a man sets any
+ value on his own opinions, if they are in any real sense a part
+ of himself, he must be guilty of something like deliberate and
+ systematic duplicity during the acquaintance preceding marriage,
+ if his dissent has remained unsuspected. Certainly if men go
+ through society before marriage under false colours, and feign
+ beliefs which they do not hold, they have only themselves to
+ thank for the degradation of having to keep up the imposture
+ afterwards. Suppose a protestant were to pass himself off for a
+ catholic because he happened to meet a catholic lady whom he
+ desired to marry. Everybody would agree in calling such a man by
+ a very harsh name. It is hard to see why a freethinker, who by
+ reticence and conformity passes himself off for a believer,
+ should be more leniently judged. The differences between a
+ catholic and a protestant are assuredly not any greater than
+ those between a believer and an unbeliever. We all admit the
+ baseness of dissimulation in the former case. Why is it any less
+ base in the latter?</p>
+
+ <p>Marriages, however, are often made in haste, or heedlessly, or
+ early in life, before either man or woman has come to feel very
+ deeply about religion either one way or another. The woman does
+ not know how much she will need religion, nor what comfort it may
+ bring to her. The man does not know all the objections to it
+ which may disclose themselves to his understanding as the years
+ ripen. There is always at work that most unfortunate maxim,
+ tacitly held and acted upon in ninety-nine marriages out of a
+ hundred, that money is of importance, and social position is of
+ importance, and good connections are of importance, and health
+ and manners and comely looks, and that the only thing which is of
+ no importance whatever is opinion and intellectual quality and
+ temper. Now granting that both man and woman are indifferent at
+ the time of their union, is that any reason why upon either of
+ them acquiring serious convictions, the other should be expected,
+ out of mere complaisance, to make a false and hypocritical
+ pretence of sharing them? To see how flimsy is this plea of
+ fearing to give pain to the religious sensitiveness of women, we
+ have only to imagine one or two cases which go beyond the common
+ experience, yet which ought not to strain the plea, if it be
+ valid.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus, if my wife turns catholic, am I to pretend to turn
+ catholic too, to save her the horrible distress of thinking that
+ I am doomed to eternal perdition? Or if she chooses to embrace
+ the doctrine of direct illumination from heaven, and to hear
+ voices bidding her to go or come, to do or abstain from doing, am
+ I too to shape my conduct after these fancied monitions? Or if it
+ comes into her mind to serve tables, and to listen in all faith
+ to the miracles of spiritualism, am I, lest I should pain her, to
+ feign a surrender of all my notions of evidence, to pretend a
+ transformation of all my ideas of worthiness in life and beyond
+ life, and to go to s&eacute;ances with the same regularity and
+ seriousness with which you go to church? Of course in each of
+ these cases everybody who does not happen to share the given
+ peculiarity of belief, will agree that however severely a
+ husband's dissent might pain the wife, whatever distress and
+ discomfort it might inflict upon her, yet he would be bound to
+ let her suffer, rather than sacrifice his veracity and
+ self-respect. Why then is it any less discreditable to practise
+ an insincere conformity in more ordinary circumstances? If the
+ principle of such conformity is good for anything at all, it
+ ought to cover these less usual cases as completely as the others
+ which are more usual. Indeed there would be more to be said on
+ behalf of conformity for politeness' sake, where the woman had
+ gone through some great process of change, for then one might
+ suppose that her heart was deeply set on the matter. Even then
+ the plea would be worthless, but it is more indisputably
+ worthless still where the sentiment which we are bidden to
+ respect at the cost of our own freedom of speech is nothing more
+ laudable than a fear of moving out of the common groove of
+ religious opinion, or an intolerant and unreasoned bigotry, or
+ mere stupidity and silliness of the vulgarest type.<a name=
+ "FNanchor23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23"><sup>[23]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Ah, it is said, you forget that women cannot live without
+ religion. The present writer is equally of this opinion that
+ women cannot be happy without a religion, nor men either. That is
+ not the question. It does not follow because a woman cannot be
+ happy without a religion, that therefore she cannot be happy
+ unless her husband is of the same religion. Still less, that she
+ would be made happy by his insincerely pretending to be of the
+ same religion. And least of all is it true, if both these
+ propositions were credible, that even then for the sake of her
+ happiness he is bound not merely to live a life of imposture, but
+ in so doing to augment the general forces of imposture in the
+ world, and to make the chances of truth, light, and human
+ improvement more and more unfavourable. Women are at present far
+ less likely than men to possess a sound intelligence and a habit
+ of correct judgment. They will remain so, while they have less
+ ready access than men to the best kinds of literary and
+ scientific training, and&mdash;what is far more
+ important&mdash;while social arrangements exclude them from all
+ those kinds of public activity, which are such powerful agents
+ both in fitting men to judge soundly, and in forming in them the
+ sense of responsibility for their judgments being sound.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be contended that this alleged stronger religiosity of
+ women, however coarse and poor in its formulae, is yet of
+ constant value as a protest in favour of the maintenance of the
+ religious element in human character and life, and that this is a
+ far more important thing for us all than the greater or less
+ truth of the dogmas with which such religiosity happens to be
+ associated. In reply to this, without tediously labouring the
+ argument, I venture to make the following observations. In the
+ first place, it is an untenable idea that religiosity or
+ devoutness of spirit is valuable in itself, without reference to
+ the goodness or badness of the dogmatic forms and the practices
+ in which it clothes itself. A fakir would hardly be an estimable
+ figure in our society, merely because his way of living happens
+ to be a manifestation of the religious spirit. If the religious
+ spirit leads to a worthy and beautiful life, if it shows itself
+ in cheerfulness, in pity, in charity and tolerance, in
+ forgiveness, in a sense of the largeness and the mystery of
+ things, in a lifting up of the soul in gratitude and awe to some
+ supreme power and sovereign force, then whatever drawback there
+ may be in the way of superstitious dogma, still such a spirit is
+ on the whole a good thing. If not, not. It would be better
+ without the superstition: even with the superstition it is good.
+ But if the religious spirit is only a fine name for narrowness of
+ understanding, for stubborn intolerance, for mere social
+ formality, for a dread of losing that poor respectability which
+ means thinking and doing exactly as the people around us think
+ and do, then the religious spirit is not a good thing, but a
+ thoroughly bad and hateful thing. To that we owe no management of
+ any kind. Any one who suppresses his real opinions, and feigns
+ others, out of deference to such a spirit as this in his
+ household, ought to say plainly both to himself and to us that he
+ cares more for his own ease and undisturbed comfort than he cares
+ for truth and uprightness. For it is that, and not any tenderness
+ for holy things, which is the real ground of his hypocrisy.</p>
+
+ <p>Now with reference to the religious spirit in its nobler form,
+ it is difficult to believe that any one genuinely animated by it
+ would be soothed by the knowledge that her dearest companion is
+ going through life with a mask on, quietly playing a part,
+ uttering untrue professions, doing his best to cheat her and the
+ rest of the world by a monstrous spiritual make-believe. One
+ would suppose that instead of having her religious feeling
+ gratified by conformity on these terms, nothing could wound it so
+ bitterly nor outrage it so unpardonably. To know that her
+ sensibility is destroying the entireness of the man's nature, its
+ loyalty alike to herself and to truth, its freedom and singleness
+ and courage&mdash;surely this can hardly be less distressing to a
+ fine spirit than the suspicion that his heresies may bring him to
+ the pit, or than the void of going through life without even the
+ semblance of religious sympathy between them. If it be urged that
+ the woman would never discover the piety of the man to be a
+ counterfeit, we reply that unless her own piety were of the
+ merely formal kind, she would be sure to make the discovery. The
+ congregation in the old story were untouched by the disguised
+ devil's eloquence on behalf of religion: it lacked unction. The
+ verbal conformity of the unbeliever lacks unction, and its
+ hollowness is speedily revealed to the quick apprehension of true
+ faith.<a name="FNanchor24"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_24"><sup>[24]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Let us not be supposed to be arguing in favour of incessant
+ battle of high dialectic in the household. Nothing could be more
+ destructive of the gracious composure and mental harmony, of
+ which household life ought to be, but perhaps seldom is, the
+ great organ and instrument. Still less are we pleading for the
+ freethinker's right at every hour of day or night to mock, sneer,
+ and gibe at the sincere beliefs and conscientiously performed
+ rites of those, whether men or women, whether strangers or
+ kinsfolk, from whose religion he disagrees. 'It is not ancient
+ impressions only,' said Pascal, 'which are capable of abusing us.
+ The charm of novelty has the same power.' The prate of new-born
+ scepticism may be as tiresome and as odious as the cant of gray
+ orthodoxy. Religious discussion is not to be foisted upon us at
+ every turn either by defenders or assailants. All we plead for is
+ that when the opportunity meets the freethinker full in front, he
+ is called upon to speak as freely as he thinks. Not more than
+ this. A plain man has no trouble in acquiring this tact of
+ reasonableness. We may all write what we please, because it is in
+ the discretion of the rest of the world whether they will hearken
+ or not. But in the family this is not so. If a man systematically
+ intrudes disrespectful and unwelcome criticism upon a woman who
+ retains the ancient belief, he is only showing that freethinker
+ may be no more than bigot differently writ. It ought to be
+ essential to no one's self-respect that he cannot consent to live
+ with people who do not think as he thinks. We may be sure that
+ there is something shallow and convulsive about the beliefs of a
+ man who cannot allow his house-mates to possess their own beliefs
+ in peace.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, it is essential to the self-respect of
+ every one with the least love of truth that he should be free to
+ express his opinions on every occasion, where silence would be
+ taken for an assent which he does not really give. Still more
+ unquestionably, he should be free from any obligation to forswear
+ himself either directly, as by false professions, or by
+ implication, as when he attend services, public or private, which
+ are to him the symbol of superstition and mere spiritual
+ phantasmagoria. The vindication of this simple right of living
+ one's life honestly can hardly demand any heroic virtue. A little
+ of the straightforwardness which men are accustomed to call
+ manly, is the only quality that is needed; a little of that frank
+ courage and determination in spiritual things, which men are
+ usually so ready to practise towards their wives in temporal
+ things. It must be a keen delight to a cynic to see a man who
+ owns that he cannot bear to pain his wife by not going to church
+ and saying prayers, yet insisting on having his own way,
+ fearlessly thwarting her wishes, and contradicting her opinions,
+ in every other detail, small and great, of the domestic
+ economy.</p>
+
+ <p>The truth of the matter is that the painful element in
+ companionship is not difference of opinion, but discord of
+ temperament. The important thing is not that two people should be
+ inspired by the same convictions, but rather that each of them
+ should hold his and her own convictions in a high and worthy
+ spirit. Harmony of aim, not identity of conclusion, is the secret
+ of the sympathetic life; to stand on the same moral plane, and
+ that, if possible, a high one; to find satisfaction in different
+ explanations of the purpose and significance of life and the
+ universe, and yet the same satisfaction. It is certainly not less
+ possible to disbelieve religiously than to believe religiously.
+ This accord of mind, this emulation in freedom and loftiness of
+ soul, this kindred sense of the awful depth of the enigma which
+ the one believes to be answered, and the other suspects to be for
+ ever unanswerable&mdash;here, and not in a degrading and
+ hypocritical conformity, is the true gratification of those
+ spiritual sensibilities which are alleged to be so much higher in
+ women than in men. Where such an accord exists, there may still
+ be solicitude left in the mind of either at the superstition or
+ the incredulity of the other, but it will be solicitude of that
+ magnanimous sort which is in some shape or other the inevitable
+ and not unfruitful portion of every better nature.</p>
+
+ <p>If there are women who petulantly or sourly insist on more
+ than this kind of harmony, it is probable that their system of
+ divinity is little better than a special manifestation of
+ shrewishness. The man is as much bound to resist that, as he is
+ bound to resist extravagance in spending money, or any other vice
+ of character. If he does not resist it, if he suppresses his
+ opinions, and practices a hypocritical conformity, it must be
+ from weakness of will and principle. Against this we have nothing
+ to say. A considerable proportion of people, men no less than
+ women, are born invertebrate, and they must got on as they best
+ can. But let us at least bargain that they shall not erect the
+ maxims of their own feebleness into a rule for those who are
+ braver and of stronger principle than themselves. And do not let
+ the accidental exigencies of a personal mistake be made the
+ foundation of a general doctrine. It is a poor saying, that the
+ world is to become void of spiritual sincerity, because Xanthippe
+ has a turn for respectable theology.</p><br>
+
+ <p>One or two words should perhaps be said in this place as to
+ conformity to common religious belief in the education of
+ children. Where the parents differ, the one being an unbeliever,
+ the other a believer, it is almost impossible for anybody to lay
+ down a general rule. The present writer certainly has no ambition
+ to attempt the thorny task of compiling a manual for mixed
+ marriages. It is perhaps enough to say that all would depend upon
+ the nature of the beliefs which the religious person wished to
+ inculcate. Considering that the woman has an absolutely equal
+ moral right with the man to decide in what faith the child shall
+ be brought up, and considering how important it is that the
+ mother should take an active part in the development of the
+ child's affections and impulses, the most resolute of deniers may
+ perhaps think that the advantages of leaving the matter to her,
+ outweigh the disadvantages of having a superstitious bias given
+ to the young mind. In these complex cases an honest and
+ fair-minded man's own instincts are more likely to lead him right
+ than any hard and fast rule. Two reserves in assenting to the
+ wife's control of early teaching will probably suggest themselves
+ to everybody who is in earnest about religion. First, if the
+ theology which the woman desires to instill contains any of those
+ wicked and depraving doctrines which neither Catholicism nor
+ Calvinism is without, in the hands of some professors, the
+ husband is as much justified in pressing his legal rights over
+ the child to the uttermost, as he would be if the proposed
+ religion demanded physical mutilation. Secondly, he will not
+ himself take part in baptismal or other ceremonies which are to
+ him no better than mere mummeries, nor will he ever do anything
+ to lead his children at any age to suppose that he believes what
+ he does not believe. Such limitations as these are commanded by
+ all considerations alike of morality and good sense.</p>
+
+ <p>To turn to the more normal case where either the man has had
+ the wise forethought not to yoke himself unequally with a person
+ of ardent belief which he does not share, or where both parents
+ dissent from the popular creed. Here, whatever difficulties may
+ attend its application, the principle is surely as clear as the
+ sun at noonday. There can be no good plea for the deliberate and
+ formal inculcation upon the young of a number of propositions
+ which you believe to be false. To do this is to sow tares not in
+ your enemy's field, but in the very ground which is most precious
+ of all others to you and most full of hope for the future. To
+ allow it to be done merely that children may grow up in the
+ stereotyped mould, is simply to perpetuate in new generations the
+ present thick-sighted and dead-heavy state of our spirits. It is
+ to do one's best to keep society for an indefinite time sapped by
+ hollow and void professions, instead of being nourished by
+ sincerity and whole-heartedness.<a name="FNanchor25"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_25"><sup>[25]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Nor here, more than elsewhere in this chapter, are we trying
+ to turn the family into a field of ceaseless polemic. No one who
+ knows the stuff of which life is made, the pressure of material
+ cares, the play of passion, the busy energising of the
+ affections, the anxieties of health, and all the other
+ solicitudes, generous or ignoble, which naturally absorb the days
+ of the common multitude of men&mdash;is likely to think such an
+ ideal either desirable or attainable. Least of all is it
+ desirable to give character a strong set in this polemical
+ direction in its most plastic days. The controversial and denying
+ humour is a different thing from the habit of being careful to
+ know what we mean by the words we use, and what evidence there is
+ for the beliefs we hold. It is possible to foster the latter
+ habit without creating the former. And it is possible to bring up
+ the young in dissent from the common beliefs around them, or in
+ indifference to them, without engendering any of that pride in
+ eccentricity for its own sake, which is so little likeable a
+ quality in either young or old. There is, however, little risk of
+ an excess in this direction. The young tremble even more than the
+ old at the penalties of nonconformity. There is more excuse for
+ them in this. Such penalties in their case usually come closer
+ and in more stringent forms. Neither have they had time to find
+ out, as their elders have or ought to have found out, what a very
+ moderate degree of fortitude enables us to bear up against social
+ disapproval, when we know that it is nothing more than the common
+ form of convention.</p>
+
+ <p>The great object is to keep the minds of the young as open as
+ possible in the matter of religion; to breed in them a certain
+ simplicity and freedom from self-consciousness, in finding
+ themselves without the religious beliefs and customs of those
+ around them; to make them regard differences in these respects as
+ very natural and ordinary matters, susceptible of an easy
+ explanation. It is of course inevitable, unless they are brought
+ up in cloistered seclusion, that they should hear much of the
+ various articles of belief which we are anxious that they should
+ not share. They will ask you whether the story of the creation of
+ the universe is true; whether such and such miracles really
+ happened; whether this person or that actually lived, and
+ actually did all that he is said to have done. Plainly the right
+ course is to tell them, without any agitation or excess or
+ vehemence or too much elaboration, the simple truth in such
+ matters exactly as it appears to one's own mind. There is no
+ reason why they should not know the best parts of the Bible as
+ well as they know the Iliad or Herodotus. There are many reasons
+ why they should know them better. But one most important
+ condition of this is constantly overlooked by people, who like to
+ satisfy their intellectual vanity by scepticism, and at the same
+ time to make their comfort safe by external conformity. If the
+ Bible is to be taught only because it is a noble and most
+ majestic monument of literature, it should be taught as that and
+ no more. That a man who regards it solely us supreme literature,
+ should impress it upon the young as the supernaturally inspired
+ word of God and the accurate record of objective occurrences, is
+ a piece of the plainest and most shocking dishonesty. Let a youth
+ be trained in simple and straightforward recognition of the truth
+ that we can know, and can conjecture, nothing with any assurance
+ as to the ultimate mysteries of things. Let his imagination and
+ his sense of awe be fed from those springs, which are none the
+ less bounteous because they flow in natural rather than
+ supernatural channels. Let him be taught the historic place and
+ source of the religions which he is not bound to accept, unless
+ the evidence for their authority by and by brings him to another
+ mind. A boy or girl trained in this way has an infinitely better
+ chance of growing up with the true spirit and leanings of
+ religion implanted in the character, than if they had been
+ educated in formulae which they could not understand, by people
+ who do not believe them.</p>
+
+ <p>The most common illustration of a personal mistake being made
+ the base of a general doctrine, is found in the case of those
+ who, after committing themselves for life to the profession of a
+ given creed, awake to the shocking discovery that the creed has
+ ceased to be true for them. The action of a popular modern story,
+ Mrs. Gaskell's <i>North and South</i>, turns upon the case of a
+ clergyman whoso faith is overthrown, and who in consequence
+ abandons his calling, to his own serious material detriment and
+ under circumstances of severe suffering to his family. I am
+ afraid that current opinion, especially among the cultivated
+ class, would condemn such a sacrifice as a piece of misplaced
+ scrupulosity. No man, it would be said, is called upon to
+ proclaim his opinions, when to do so will cost him the means of
+ subsistence. This will depend upon the value which he sets upon
+ the opinions that be has to proclaim. If such a proposition is
+ true, the world must efface its habit of admiration for the
+ martyrs and heroes of the past, who embraced violent death rather
+ than defile themselves by a lying confession. Or is present
+ heroism ridiculous, and only past heroism admirable? However,
+ nobody has a right to demand the heroic from all the world; and
+ if to publish his dissent from the opinions which he nominally
+ holds would reduce a man to beggary, human charity bids us say as
+ little as may be. We may leave such men to their unfortunate
+ destiny, hoping that they will make what good use of it may be
+ possible. <i>Non ragioniam di lor</i>. These cases only show the
+ essential and profound immorality of the priestly
+ profession&mdash;in all its forms, and no matter in connection
+ with what church or what dogma&mdash;which makes a man's living
+ depend on his abstaining from using his mind, or concealing the
+ conclusions to which use of his mind has brought him. The time
+ will come when society will look back on the doctrine, that they
+ who serve the altar should live by the altar, as a doctrine of
+ barbarism and degradation.</p>
+
+ <p>But if one, by refusing to offer a pinch of incense to the
+ elder gods, should thus strip himself of a marked opportunity of
+ exerting an undoubtedly useful influence over public opinion, or
+ over a certain section of society, is he not justified in
+ compromising to the extent necessary to preserve this influence?
+ Instead of answering this directly, we would make the following
+ remarks. First, it can seldom be clear in times like our own that
+ religious heterodoxy must involve the loss of influence in other
+ than religious spheres. The apprehension that it will do so is
+ due rather to timorousness and a desire to find a fair reason for
+ the comforts of silence and reserve. If a teacher has anything to
+ tell the world in science, philosophy, history, the world will
+ not be deterred from listening to him by knowing that he does not
+ walk in the paths of conventional theology. Second, what
+ influence can a man exert, that should seem to him more useful
+ than that of a protester against what he counts false opinions,
+ in the most decisive and important of all regions of thought?
+ Surely if any one is persuaded, whether rightly or wrongly, that
+ his fellows are expending the best part of their imaginations and
+ feelings on a dream and a delusion, and that by so doing moreover
+ they are retarding to an indefinite degree the wider spread of
+ light and happiness, then nothing that he can tell them about
+ chemistry or psychology or history can in his eyes be comparable
+ in importance to the duty of telling them this. There is no
+ advantage nor honest delight in influence, if it is only to be
+ exerted in the sphere of secondary objects, and at the cost of
+ the objects which ought to be foremost in the eyes of serious
+ people. In truth the men who have done most for the world have
+ taken very little heed of influence. They have sought light, and
+ left their influence to fare as it might list. Can we not imagine
+ the mingled mystification and disdain with which a Spinosa or a
+ Descartes, a Luther or a Pascal, would have listened to an
+ exhortation in our persuasive modern manner on the niceties of
+ the politic and the social obligation of pious fraud? It is not
+ given to many to perform the achievements of such giants as
+ these, but every one may help to keep the standard of
+ intellectual honesty at a lofty pitch, and what better service
+ can a man render than to furnish the world with an example of
+ faithful dealing with his own conscience and with his fellows?
+ This at least is the one talent that is placed in the hands of
+ the obscurest of us all.<a name="FNanchor26"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_26"><sup>[26]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>And what is this smile of the world, to win which we are
+ bidden to sacrifice our moral manhood; this frown of the world,
+ whose terrors are more awful than the withering up of truth and
+ the slow going out of light within the souls of us? Consider the
+ triviality of life and conversation and purpose, in the bulk of
+ those whose approval is held out for our prize and the mark of
+ our high calling. Measure, if you can, the empire over them of
+ prejudice unadulterated by a single element of rationality, and
+ weigh, if you can, the huge burden of custom, unrelieved by a
+ single leavening particle of fresh thought. Ponder the share
+ which selfishness and love of ease have in the vitality and the
+ maintenance of the opinions that we are forbidden to dispute.
+ Then how pitiful a thing seems the approval or disapproval of
+ these creatures of the conventions of the hour, as one figures
+ the merciless vastness of the universe of matter sweeping us
+ headlong through viewless space; as one hears the wail of misery
+ that is for ever ascending to the deaf gods; as one counts the
+ little tale of the years that separate us from eternal silence.
+ In the light of these things, a man should surely dare to live
+ his small span of life with little heed of the common speech upon
+ him or his life, only caring that his days may be full of
+ reality, and his conversation of truth-speaking and
+ wholeness.</p>
+
+ <p>Those who think conformity in the matters of which we have
+ been speaking harmless and unimportant, must do so either from
+ indifference or else from despair. It is difficult to convince
+ any one who is possessed by either one or other of these two evil
+ spirits. Men who have once accepted them, do not easily
+ relinquish philosophies that relieve their professors from
+ disagreeable obligations of courage and endeavour. To the
+ indifferent person one can say nothing. We can only acquiesce in
+ that deep and terrible scripture, 'He that is filthy, let him be
+ filthy still.' To those who despair of human improvement or the
+ spread of light in the face of the huge mass of brute prejudice,
+ we can only urge that the enormous weight and the firm hold of
+ baseless prejudice and false commonplace are the very reasons
+ which make it so important that those who are not of the night
+ nor of the darkness should the more strenuously insist on living
+ their own lives in the daylight. To those, finally, who do not
+ despair, but think that the new faith will come so slowly that it
+ is not worth while for the poor mortal of a day to make himself a
+ martyr, we may suggest that the new faith when it comes will be
+ of little worth, unless it has been shaped by generations of
+ honest and fearless men, and unless it finds in those who are to
+ receive it an honest and fearless temper. Our plea is not for a
+ life of perverse disputings or busy proselytising, but only that
+ we should learn to look at one another with a clear and steadfast
+ eye, and march forward along the paths we choose with firm step
+ and erect front. The first advance towards either the renovation
+ of one faith or the growth of another, must be the abandonment of
+ those habits of hypocritical conformity and compliance which have
+ filled the air of the England of to-day with gross and obscuring
+ mists.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_18"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor18">[18]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>It may be said that Hume meant no more than this: that of
+ two equally oppressed nations, the one which had been taught to
+ assent to the doctrine of resistance would be more likely to
+ practise 'the sacred duty of insurrection' than the other, from
+ whom the doctrine had been concealed. Or, in other words, that
+ the first would rise against oppression, when the oppression
+ had reached a pitch which to the second would still seem
+ bearable. The answer to Hume's proposition, interpreted in this
+ way, would be that if the doctrine of resistance be presented
+ to the populace in its true shape,&mdash;if it be 'truth,' as
+ he admits,&mdash;then the application of it in practice should
+ be as little likely to prove mischievous as that of any other
+ truth. If the gist of the remark be that this is a truth which
+ the populace is especially likely to apply wrongly, in
+ consequence of its ignorance, passion, and heedlessness, we may
+ answer by appealing to history, which is rather a record of
+ excessive patience in the various nations of the earth than of
+ excessive petulance.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor19">[19]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>There is another ground for the distinction between the
+ conditions of holding and those of expressing opinion. This
+ depends upon the psychological proposition that belief is
+ independent of the will. Though this or any other state of the
+ understanding may be involuntary, the manifestation of such a
+ state is not so, but is a voluntary act, and, 'being neutral in
+ itself, may be commendable or reprehensible according to the
+ circumstances in which it takes place.' (Bailey's <i>Essay on
+ Formation of Opinion</i>, &sect; 7).</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor20">[20]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>The following words, illustrating the continuity between the
+ Christian and Jewish churches, are not without instruction to
+ those who meditate on the possible continuity between the
+ Christian church and that which is one day to grow into the
+ place of it:&mdash;'Not only do forms and ordinances remain
+ under the Gospel equally as before; but, what was in use before
+ is not so much superseded by the Gospel ordinances as changed
+ into them. What took place under the Law is a pattern, what was
+ commanded is a rule, under the Gospel. The substance remains,
+ the use, the meaning, the circumstances, the benefit is
+ changed; grace is added, life is infused: "the body is of
+ Christ;" but it is in great measure that same body which was in
+ being before He came. The Gospel has not put aside, it has
+ incorporated into itself the revelation which went before it.
+ It avails itself of the Old Testament, as a great gift to
+ Christian as well as to Jew. It does not dispense with it, but
+ it dispenses it. Persons sometimes urge that there is no code
+ of duty in the New Testament, no ceremonial, no rules for
+ Church polity. Certainly not; they are unnecessary; they are
+ already given in the Old. Why should the Old Testament remain
+ in the Christian church but to be used? <i>There</i> we are to
+ look for our forms, our rites, our polity; only illustrated,
+ tempered, spiritualised by the Gospel. The preempts remain, the
+ observance of them is changed,'&mdash;Dr. J.H. Newman;
+ <i>Sermon on Subjects of the Day</i>, p. 205.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor21">[21]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>There is a set of most acute and searching criticisms on
+ this matter in Mr. Leslie Stephen's <i>Essays on Free-Thinking
+ and Plain-Speaking</i> (Longmans, 1873). The last essay in the
+ volume, <i>An Apology for Plain-Speaking</i>, is a decisive and
+ remarkable exposition of the treacherous playing with words,
+ which underlies even the most vigorous efforts to make the
+ phrases and formula of the old creed hold the reality of new
+ faith.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor22">[22]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Upon this sentence the following criticism has been
+ made:&mdash;'Surely both of these so-called contradictions are
+ deliberately affirmed by the vast majority of all thinkers upon
+ the subject. What orthodox asserter of the omnipresence of a
+ "Creator with intelligible attributes" ever maintained that
+ these attributes could be "grasped by men"?'&mdash;The orthodox
+ asserter, no doubt, <i>says</i> that he does not maintain that
+ the divine attributes can be grasped by men; but his habitual
+ treatment of them as intelligible, and as the subjects of
+ propositions made in languages that is designed to be
+ intelligible, shows that his first reservation is merely
+ nominal, as it is certainly inconsistent with his general
+ position. Religious people who warn you most solemnly that man
+ who is a worm and the son of a worm cannot possibly compass in
+ his puny understanding the attributes of the Divine Being, will
+ yet&mdash;as an eminent divine not in holy orders has truly
+ said&mdash;tell you all about him, as if he were the man who
+ lives in the next street.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor23">[23]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>That able man, the late J.E. Cairnes, suggested the
+ following objection to this paragraph. When two persons marry,
+ there is a reasonable expectation, almost amounting to an
+ understanding, that they will both of them adhere to their
+ religion, just as both of them tacitly agree to follow the ways
+ of the world in the host of minor social matters. If,
+ therefore, either of them turns to some other creed, the person
+ so turning has, so to speak, broken the contract. The utmost he
+ or she can contend for is forbearance. If a woman embraces
+ catholicism, she may seek tolerance, but she has no right to
+ exact conformity. If the man becomes an unbeliever, he in like
+ manner breaks the bargain, and may be justly asked not to
+ flaunt his misdemeanour.</p>
+
+ <p>My answer to this would turn upon the absolute inexpediency
+ of such silent bargains being assumed by public opinion. In the
+ present state of opinion, where the whole air is alive with the
+ spirit of change, nobody who takes his life or her life
+ seriously, could allow an assumption which means reduction of
+ one of the most important parts of character, the love of
+ truth, to a nullity.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor24">[24]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>The reader remembers how Wolmar, the atheistic husband of
+ Julie in Rousseau's <i>New Helo&iuml;sa</i>, is distressed by
+ the chagrin which his unbelief inflicts on the piety of his
+ wife. 'He told me that he had been frequently tempted to make a
+ feint of yielding to her arguments, and to pretend, for the
+ sake of calming her sentiments that he did not really hold. But
+ such baseness of soul is too far from him. Without for a moment
+ imposing on Julie, such dissimulation would only have been a
+ new torment to her. The good faith, the frankness, the union of
+ heart, that console for so many troubles, would have been
+ eclipsed between them. Was it by lessening his wife's esteem
+ for him that he could reassure her? Instead of using any
+ disguise, he tells her sincerely what he thinks, but he says it
+ in so simple a tone, etc.&mdash;V. v. 126.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor25">[25]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>The common reason alleged by freethinkers for having their
+ children brought up in the orthodox ways is that, if they were
+ not so brought up, they would be looked on as contaminating
+ agents whom other parents would take care to keep away from the
+ companionship of their children. This excuse may have had some
+ force at another time. At the present day, when belief is so
+ weak, we doubt whether the young would be excluded from the
+ companionship of their equals in age, merely because they had
+ not been trained in some of the conventional shibboleths. Even
+ if it were so, there are certainly some ways of compensating
+ for the disadvantages of exclusion from orthodox circles.</p>
+
+ <p>I have heard of a more interesting reason; namely, that the
+ historic position of the young, relatively to the time in which
+ they are placed, is in some sort falsified, unless they have
+ gone through a training in the current beliefs of their age:
+ unless they have undergone that, they miss, as it were, some of
+ the normal antecedents. I do not think this plea will hold
+ good. However desirable it may be that the young should know
+ all sorts of erroneous beliefs and opinions as products of the
+ past, it can hardly be in any degree desirable that they should
+ take them for truths. If there were no other objection, there
+ would be this, that the disturbance and waste of force involved
+ in shaking off in their riper years the erroneous opinions
+ which had been instilled into them in childhood, would more
+ than counter-balance any advantages, whatever their precise
+ nature may be, to be derived from having shared in their own
+ proper persons the ungrounded notions of others.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor26">[26]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Miss Martineau has an excellent protest against 'the
+ dereliction of principle shown in supposing that any "Cause"
+ can be of so much importance as fidelity to truth, or can be
+ important at all otherwise than in its relation to truth which
+ wants vindicating. It reminds me of an incident which happened
+ when I was in America, at the time of the severest trials of
+ the Abolitionists. A pastor from the southern States lamented
+ to a brother clergyman in the North the introduction of the
+ Anti-slavery question, because the views of their sect were
+ "getting on so well before!" "Getting on!" cried the northern
+ minister. "What is the use of getting your vessel on when you
+ have thrown both captain and cargo overboard?" Thus, what
+ signifies the pursuit of any one reform, like those
+ specified,&mdash;Anti-slavery and the Woman
+ question,&mdash;when the freedom which is the very soul of the
+ controversy, the very principle of the movement,&mdash;is
+ mourned over in any other of its many manifestations? The only
+ effectual advocates of such reforms as those are people who
+ follow truth wherever it leads.'&mdash;<i>Autobiography</i>,
+ ii. 442.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="CHAPTER_V"></a>
+
+ <h2>CHAPTER V.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ THE REALISATION OF OPINION.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>A person who takes the trouble to form his own opinions and
+ beliefs will feel that he owes no responsibility to the majority
+ for his conclusions. If he is a genuine lover of truth, if he is
+ inspired by the divine passion for seeing things as they are, and
+ a divine abhorrence of holding ideas which do not conform to the
+ facts, he will be wholly independent of the approval or assent of
+ the persons around him. When he proceeds to apply his beliefs in
+ the practical conduct of life, the position is different. There
+ are now good reasons why his attitude should be in some ways less
+ inflexible. The society in which he is placed is a very ancient
+ and composite growth. The people from whom he dissents have not
+ come by their opinions, customs, and institutions by a process of
+ mere haphazard. These opinions and customs all had their origin
+ in a certain real or supposed fitness. They have a certain depth
+ of root in the lives of a proportion of the existing generation.
+ Their fitness for satisfying human needs may have vanished, and
+ their congruity with one another may have come to an end. That is
+ only one side of the truth. The most zealous propagandism cannot
+ penetrate to them. The quality of bearing to be transplanted from
+ one kind of soil and climate to another is not very common, and
+ it is far from being inexhaustible even where it exists.</p>
+
+ <p>In common language we speak of a generation as something
+ possessed of a kind of exact unity, with all its parts and
+ members one and homogeneous. Yet very plainly it is not this. It
+ is a whole, but a whole in a state of constant flux. Its factors
+ and elements are eternally shifting. It is not one, but many
+ generations. Each of the seven ages of man is neighbour to all
+ the rest. The column of the veterans is already staggering over
+ into the last abyss, while the column of the newest recruits is
+ forming with all its nameless and uncounted hopes. To each its
+ tradition, its tendency, its possibilities. Only a proportion of
+ each in one society can have nerve enough to grasp the banner of
+ a new truth, and endurance enough to bear it along rugged and
+ untrodden ways.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, as we have said, one must remember the stuff of
+ which life is made. One must consider what an overwhelming
+ preponderance of the most tenacious energies and most
+ concentrated interests of a society must be absorbed between
+ material cares and the solicitude of the affections. It is
+ obviously unreasonable to lose patience and quarrel with one's
+ time, because it is tardy in throwing off its institutions and
+ beliefs, and slow to achieve the transformation which is the
+ problem in front of it. Men and women have to live. The task for
+ most of them is arduous enough to make them well pleased with
+ even such imperfect shelter as they find in the use and wont of
+ daily existence. To insist on a whole community being made at
+ once to submit to the reign of new practices and new ideas, which
+ have just begun to commend themselves to the most advanced
+ speculative intelligence of the time,&mdash;this, even if it were
+ a possible process, would do much to make life impracticable and
+ to hurry on social dissolution.</p>
+
+ <p>'It cannot be too emphatically asserted,' as has been said by
+ one of the most influential of modern thinkers, 'that this policy
+ of compromise, alike in institutions, in actions, and in beliefs,
+ which especially characterises English life, is a policy
+ essential to a society going through the transitions caused by
+ continued growth and development. Ideas and institutions proper
+ to a past social state, but incongruous with the new social state
+ that has grown out of it, surviving into this new social state
+ they have made possible, and disappearing only as this new social
+ state establishes its own ideas and institutions, are
+ necessarily, during their survival, in conflict with these new
+ ideas and institutions&mdash;necessarily furnish elements of
+ contradiction in men's thoughts and deeds. And yet, as for the
+ carrying on of social life, the old must continue so long as the
+ new is not ready, this perpetual compromise is an indispensable
+ accompaniment of a normal development.'<a name=
+ "FNanchor27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27"><sup>[27]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Yet we must not press this argument, and the state of feeling
+ that belongs to it, further than they may be fairly made to go.
+ The danger in most natures lies on this side, for on this side
+ our love of ease works, and our prejudices. The writer in the
+ passage we have just quoted is describing compromise as a natural
+ state of things, the resultant of divergent forces. He is not
+ professing to define its conditions or limits as a practical
+ duty. Nor is there anything in his words, or in the doctrine of
+ social evolution of which he is the most elaborate and systematic
+ expounder, to favour that deliberate sacrifice of truth, either
+ in search or in expression, against which our two previous
+ chapters were meant to protest.<a name="FNanchor28"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_28"><sup>[28]</sup></a> When Mr. Spencer talks of a
+ new social state establishing its own ideas, of course he means,
+ and can only mean, that men and women establish their own ideas,
+ and to do that, it is obvious that they must at one time or
+ another have conceived them without any special friendliness of
+ reference to the old ideas, which they were in the fulness of
+ time to supersede. Still less, of course, can a new social state
+ ever establish its ideas, unless the persons who hold them
+ confess them openly, and give to them an honest and effective
+ adherence.</p>
+
+ <p>Every discussion of the more fundamental principles of conduct
+ must contain, expressly or by implication, some general theory of
+ the nature and constitution of the social union. Let us state in
+ a few words that which seems to command the greatest amount both
+ of direct and analogical evidence in our time. It is perhaps all
+ the more important to discuss our subject with immediate and
+ express reference to this theory, because it has become in some
+ minds a plea for a kind of philosophic indifference towards any
+ policy of Thorough, as well as an excuse for systematic
+ abstention from vigorous and downright courses of action.</p>
+
+ <p>A progressive society is now constantly and justly compared to
+ a growing organism. Its vitality in this aspect consists of a
+ series of changes in ideas and institutions. These changes arise
+ spontaneously from the operation of the whole body of social
+ conditions, external and internal. The understanding and the
+ affections and desires are always acting on the domestic,
+ political, and economic ordering. They influence the religious
+ sentiment. They touch relations with societies outside. In turn
+ they are constantly being acted on by all these elements. In a
+ society progressing in a normal and uninterrupted course, this
+ play and interaction is the sign and essence of life. It is, as
+ we are so often told, a long process of new adaptations and
+ re-adaptations; of the modification of tradition and usage by
+ truer ideas and improved institutions. There may be, and there
+ are, epochs of rest, when this modification in its active and
+ demonstrative shape slackens or ceases to be visible. But even
+ then the modifying forces are only latent. Further progress
+ depends on the revival of their energy, before there has been
+ time for the social structure to become ossified and inelastic.
+ The history of civilisation is the history of the displacement of
+ old conceptions by new ones more conformable to the facts. It is
+ the record of the removal of old institutions and ways of living,
+ in favour of others of greater convenience and ampler capacity,
+ at once multiplying and satisfying human requirements.</p>
+
+ <p>Now compromise, in view of the foregoing theory of social
+ advance, may be of two kinds, and of these two kinds one is
+ legitimate and the other not. It may stand for two distinct
+ attitudes of mind, one of them obstructive and the other not. It
+ may mean the deliberate suppression or mutilation of an idea, in
+ order to make it congruous with the traditional idea or the
+ current prejudice on the given subject, whatever that may be. Or
+ else it may mean a rational acquiescence in the fact that the
+ bulk of your contemporaries are not yet prepared either to
+ embrace the new idea, or to change their ways of living in
+ conformity to it. In the one case, the compromiser rejects the
+ highest truth, or dissembles his own acceptance of it. In the
+ other, he holds it courageously for his ensign and device, but
+ neither forces nor expects the whole world straightway to follow.
+ The first prolongs the duration of the empire of prejudice, and
+ retards the arrival of improvement. The second does his best to
+ abbreviate the one, and to hasten and make definite the other,
+ yet he does not insist on hurrying changes which, to be
+ effective, would require the active support of numbers of persons
+ not yet ripe for them. It is legitimate compromise to
+ say:&mdash;'I do not expect you to execute this improvement, or
+ to surrender that prejudice, in my time. But at any rate it shall
+ not be my fault if the improvement remains unknown or rejected.
+ There shall be one man at least who has surrendered the
+ prejudice, and who does not hide that fact.' It is illegitimate
+ compromise to say:&mdash;'I cannot persuade you to accept my
+ truth; therefore I will pretend to accept your falsehood.'</p>
+
+ <p>That this distinction is as sound on the evolutional theory of
+ society as on any other is quite evident. It would be odd if the
+ theory which makes progress depend on modification forbade us to
+ attempt to modify. When it is said that the various successive
+ changes in thought and institution present and consummate
+ themselves spontaneously, no one means by spontaneity that they
+ come to pass independently of human effort and volition. On the
+ contrary, this energy of the members of the society is one of the
+ spontaneous elements. It is quite as indispensable as any other
+ of them, if indeed it be not more so. Progress depends upon
+ tendencies and forces in a community. But of these tendencies and
+ forces, the organs and representatives must plainly be found
+ among the men and women of the community, and cannot possibly be
+ found anywhere else. Progress is not automatic, in the sense that
+ if we were all to be cast into a deep slumber for the space of a
+ generation, we should awake to find ourselves in a greatly
+ improved social state. The world only grows better, even in the
+ moderate degree in which it does grow better, because people wish
+ that it should, and take the right steps to make it better.
+ Evolution is not a force, but a process; not a cause, but a law.
+ It explains the source, and marks the immovable limitations, of
+ social energy. But social energy itself can never be superseded
+ either by evolution or by anything else.</p>
+
+ <p>The reproach of being impracticable and artificial attaches by
+ rights not to those who insist on resolute, persistent, and
+ uncompromising efforts to remove abuses, but to a very different
+ class&mdash;to those, namely, who are credulous enough to suppose
+ that abuses and bad customs and wasteful ways of doing things
+ will remove themselves. This credulity, which is a cloak for
+ indolence or ignorance or stupidity, overlooks the fact that
+ there are bodies of men, more or less numerous, attached by every
+ selfish interest they have to the maintenance of these abusive
+ customs. 'A plan,' says Bentham, 'may be said to be too good to
+ be practicable, where, without adequate inducement in the shape
+ of personal interest, it requires for its accomplishment that
+ some individual or class of individuals shall have made a
+ sacrifice of his or their personal interest to the interest of
+ the whole. When it is on the part of a body of men or a multitude
+ of individuals taken at random that any such sacrifice is
+ reckoned upon, then it is that in speaking of the plan the term
+ <i>Utopian</i> may without impropriety be applied.' And this is
+ the very kind of sacrifice which must be anticipated by those who
+ so misunderstand the doctrine of evolution as to believe that the
+ world is improved by some mystic and self-acting social
+ discipline, which dispenses with the necessity of pertinacious
+ attack upon institutions that have outlived their time, and
+ interests that have lost their justification.</p>
+
+ <p>We are thus brought to the position&mdash;to which, indeed,
+ bare observation of actual occurrences might well bring us, if it
+ were not for the clouding disturbances of selfishness, or of a
+ true philosophy of society wrongly applied&mdash;that a society
+ can only pursue its normal course by means of a certain
+ progression of changes, and that these changes can only be
+ initiated by individuals or very small groups of individuals. The
+ progressive tendency can only be a tendency, it can only work its
+ way through the inevitable obstructions around it, by means of
+ persons who are possessed by the special progressive idea. Such
+ ideas do not spring up uncaused and unconditioned in vacant
+ space. They have had a definite origin and ordered antecedents.
+ They are in direct relation with the past. They present
+ themselves to one person or little group of persons rather than
+ to another, because circumstances, or the accident of a superior
+ faculty of penetration, have placed the person or group in the
+ way of such ideas. In matters of social improvement the most
+ common reason why one hits upon a point of progress and not
+ another, is that the one happens to be more directly touched than
+ the other by the unimproved practice. Or he is one of those rare
+ intelligences, active, alert, inventive, which by constitution or
+ training find their chief happiness in thinking in a disciplined
+ and serious manner how things can be better done. In all cases
+ the possession of a new idea, whether practical or speculative,
+ only raises into definite speech what others have needed without
+ being able to make their need articulate. This is the principle
+ on which experience shows us that fame and popularity are
+ distributed. A man does not become celebrated in proportion to
+ his general capacity, but because he does or says something which
+ happened to need doing or saying at the moment.</p>
+
+ <p>This brings us directly to our immediate subject. For such a
+ man is the holder of a trust It is upon him and those who are
+ like him that the advance of a community depends. If he is
+ silent, then repair is checked, and the hurtful elements of
+ worn-out beliefs and waste institutions remain to enfeeble the
+ society, just as the retention of waste products enfeebles or
+ poisons the body. If in a spirit of modesty which is often
+ genuine, though it is often only a veil for love of ease, he asks
+ why he rather than another should speak, why he before others
+ should refuse compliance and abstain from conformity, the answer
+ is that though the many are ultimately moved, it is always one
+ who is first to leave the old encampment. If the maxim of the
+ compromiser were sound, it ought to be capable of universal
+ application. Nobody has a right to make an apology for himself in
+ this matter, which he will not allow to be valid for others. If
+ one has a right to conceal his true opinions, and to practice
+ equivocal conformities, then all have a right. One plea for
+ exemption is in this case as good as another, and no better. That
+ he has married a wife, that he has bought a yoke of oxen and must
+ prove them, that he has bidden guests to a feast&mdash;one excuse
+ lies on the same level as the rest. All are equally worthless as
+ answers to the generous solicitation of enlightened conscience.
+ Suppose, then, that each man on whom in turn the new ideas dawned
+ wore to borrow the compromiser's plea and imitate his example. We
+ know what would happen. The exploit in which no one will consent
+ to go first, remains unachieved. You wait until there are persons
+ enough agreeing with you to form an effective party? But how are
+ the members of the band to know one another, if all are to keep
+ their dissent from the old, and their adherence to the new,
+ rigorously private? And how many members constitute the
+ innovating band an effective force! When one-half of the
+ attendants at a church are unbelievers, will that warrant us in
+ ceasing to attend, or shall we tarry until the dissemblers number
+ two-thirds? Conceive the additions which your caution has made to
+ the moral integrity of the community in the meantime. Measure the
+ enormous hindrances that will have been placed in the way of
+ truth and improvement, when the day at last arrives on which you
+ and your two-thirds take heart to say that falsehood and abuse
+ have now reached their final term, and must at length be swept
+ away into the outer darkness. Consider how much more terrible the
+ shock of change will be when it does come, and how much less able
+ will men be to meet it, and to emerge successfully from it.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the compromiser shrinks, not because he fears to march
+ alone, but because he thinks that the time has not yet come for
+ the progressive idea which he has made his own, and for whose
+ triumph one day he confidently hopes. This plea may mean two
+ wholly different states of the case. The time has not yet come
+ for what? For making those positive changes in life or
+ institution, which the change in idea must ultimately involve?
+ That is one thing. Or for propagating, elaborating, enforcing the
+ new idea, and strenuously doing all that one can to bring as many
+ people as possible to a state of theory, which will at last
+ permit the requisite change in practice to be made with safety
+ and success? This is another and entirely different thing. The
+ time may not have come for the first of these two courses. The
+ season may not be advanced enough for us to push on to active
+ conquest. But the time has always come, and the season is never
+ unripe, for the announcement of the fruitful idea.</p>
+
+ <p>We must go further than that. In so far as it can be done by
+ one man without harming his neighbours, the time has always come
+ for the realisation of an idea. When the change in way of living
+ or in institution is one which requires the assent and
+ co-operation of numbers of people, it may clearly be a matter for
+ question whether men enough are ready to yield assent and
+ co-operation. But the expression of the necessity of the change
+ and the grounds of it, though it may not always be appropriate,
+ can never be premature, and for these reasons. The fact of a new
+ idea having come to one man is a sign that it is in the air. The
+ innovator is as much the son of his generation as the
+ conservative. Heretics have as direct a relation to antecedent
+ conditions as the orthodox. Truth, said Bacon, has been rightly
+ named the daughter of Time. The new idea does not spring up
+ uncaused and by miracle. If it has come to me, there must be
+ others to whom it has only just missed coming. If I have found my
+ way to the light, there must be others groping after it very
+ close in my neighbourhood. My discovery is their goal. They are
+ prepared to receive the new truth, which they were not prepared
+ to find for themselves. The fact that the mass are not yet ready
+ to receive, any more than to find, is no reason why the possessor
+ of the new truth should run to hide under a bushel the candle
+ which has been lighted for him. If the time has not come for
+ them, at least it has come for him. No man can ever know whether
+ his neighbours are ready for change or not. He has all the
+ following certainties, at least:&mdash;that he himself is ready
+ for the change; that he believes it would be a good and
+ beneficent one; that unless some one begins the work of
+ preparation, assuredly there will be no consummation; and that if
+ he declines to take a part in the matter, there can be no reason
+ why every one else in turn should not decline in like manner, and
+ so the work remain for ever unperformed. The compromiser who
+ blinds himself to all those points, and acts just as if the truth
+ were not in him, does for ideas with which he agrees, the very
+ thing which the acute persecutor does for ideas which he
+ dislikes&mdash;he extinguishes beginnings and kills the
+ germs.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The consideration on which so many persons rely, that an
+ existing institution, though destined to be replaced by a better,
+ performs useful functions provisionally, is really not to the
+ point. It is an excellent reason why the institution should not
+ be removed or fundamentally modified, until public opinion is
+ ripe for the given piece of improvement. But it is no reason at
+ all why those who are anxious for the improvement, should speak
+ and act just as they would do if they thought the change
+ perfectly needless and undesirable. It is no reason why those who
+ allow the provisional utility of a belief or an institution or a
+ custom of living, should think solely of the utility and forget
+ the equally important element of its provisionalness. For the
+ fact of its being provisional is the very ground why every one
+ who perceives this element, should set himself to act
+ accordingly. It is the ground why he should set himself, in other
+ words, to draw opinion in every way open to him&mdash;by speech,
+ by voting, by manner of life and conduct&mdash;in the direction
+ of new truth and the better practice. Let us not, because we deem
+ a thing to be useful for the hour, act as if it were to be useful
+ for ever. The people who selfishly seek to enjoy as much comfort
+ and ease as they can in an existing state of things, with the
+ desperate maxim, 'After us, the deluge,' are not any worse than
+ those who cherish present comfort and case and take the world as
+ it comes, in the fatuous and self-deluding hope, 'After us, the
+ millennium.' Those who make no sacrifice to avert the deluge, and
+ those who make none to hasten their millennium, are on the same
+ moral level. And the former have at least the quality of being no
+ worse than their avowed principle, while the latter nullify their
+ pretended hopes by conformities which are only proper either to
+ profound social contentment, or to profound social despair. Nay,
+ they seem to think that there is some merit in this merely
+ speculative hopefulness. They act as if they supposed that to be
+ very sanguine about the general improvement of mankind, is a
+ virtue that relieves them from taking trouble about any
+ improvement in particular.</p>
+
+ <p>If those who defend a given institution are doing their work
+ well, that furnishes the better reason why those who disapprove
+ of it and disbelieve in its enduring efficacy, should do their
+ work well also. Take the Christian churches, for instance.
+ Assume, if you will, that they are serving a variety of useful
+ functions. If that were all, it would be a reason for conforming.
+ But we are speaking of those for whom the matter does not end
+ here. If you are convinced that the dogma is not true; that a
+ steadily increasing number of persons are becoming aware that it
+ is not true; that its efficacy as a basis of spiritual life is
+ being lowered in the same degree as its credibility; that both
+ dogma and church must be slowly replaced by higher forms of
+ faith, if not also by more effective organisations; then, all who
+ hold such views as these have as distinctly a function in the
+ community as the ministers and upholders of the churches, and the
+ zeal of the latter is simply the most monstrously untenable
+ apology that could be invented for dereliction of duty by the
+ former.</p>
+
+ <p>If the orthodox to some extent satisfy certain of the
+ necessities of the present, there are other necessities of the
+ future which can only be satisfied by those who now pass for
+ heretical. The plea which we are examining, if it is good for the
+ purpose for which it is urged, would have to be expressed in this
+ way:&mdash;The institution is working as perfectly as it can be
+ made to do, or as any other in its place would be likely to do,
+ and therefore I will do nothing by word or deed towards meddling
+ with it. Those who think this, and act accordingly, are the
+ consistent conservatives of the community. If a man takes up any
+ position short of this, his conformity, acquiescence, and inertia
+ at once become inconsistent and culpable. For unless the
+ institution or belief is entirely adequate, it must be the duty
+ of all who have satisfied themselves that it is not so, to
+ recognise its deficiences, and at least to call attention to
+ them, even if they lack opportunity or capacity to suggest
+ remedies. Now we are dealing with persons who, from the
+ hypothesis, do not admit that this or that factor in an existing
+ social state secures all the advantages which might be secured if
+ instead of that factor there were some other. We are speaking of
+ all the various kinds of dissidents, who think that the current
+ theology, or an established church, or a monarchy, or an
+ oligarchic republic, is a bad thing and a lower form, even at the
+ moment while they attribute provisional merit to it. They can
+ mean nothing by classing each of these as bad things, except that
+ they either bring with them certain serious drawbacks, or exclude
+ certain valuable advantages. The fact that they perform their
+ functions well, such as they are, leaves the fundamental vice or
+ defect of these functions just where it was. If any one really
+ thinks that the current theology involves depraved notions of the
+ supreme impersonation of good, restricts and narrows the
+ intelligence, misdirects the religious imagination, and has
+ become powerless to guide conduct, then how does the circumstance
+ that it happens not to be wholly and unredeemedly bad in its
+ influence, relieve our dissident from all care or anxiety as to
+ the points in which, as we have seen, he does count it inadequate
+ and mischievous? Even if he thinks it does more good than
+ harm&mdash;a position which must be very difficult for one who
+ believes the common supernatural conception of it to be entirely
+ false&mdash;even then, how is he discharged from the duty of
+ stigmatising the harm which he admits that it does?</p>
+
+ <p>Again, take the case of the English monarchy. Grant, if you
+ will, that this institution has a certain function, and that by
+ the present chief magistrate this function is estimably
+ performed. Yet if we are of those who believe that in the stage
+ of civilisation which England has reached in other matters, the
+ monarchy must be either obstructive and injurious, or else merely
+ decorative; and that a merely decorative monarchy tends in divers
+ ways to engender habits of abasement, to nourish lower social
+ ideals, to lessen a high civil self-respect in the community;
+ then it must surely be our duty not to lose any opportunity of
+ pressing these convictions. To do this is not necessarily to act
+ as if one were anxious for the immediate removal of the throne
+ and the crown into the museum of political antiquities. We may
+ have no urgent practical solicitude in this direction, on the
+ intelligible principle that a free people always gets as good a
+ kind of government as it deserves. Our conviction is not, on the
+ present hypothesis, that monarchy ought to be swept away in
+ England, but that monarchy produces certain mischievous
+ consequences to the public spirit of the community. And so what
+ we are bound to do is to take care not to conceal this
+ conviction; to abstain scrupulously from all kinds of action and
+ observance, public or private, which tend ever so remotely to
+ foster the ignoble and degrading elements that exist in a court
+ and spread from it outwards; and to use all the influence we
+ have, however slight it may be, in loading public opinion to a
+ right attitude of contempt and dislike for these ignoble and
+ degrading elements, and the conduct engendered by them. A policy
+ like this does not interfere with the advantages of the monarchy,
+ such as they are asserted to be, and it has the effect of making
+ what are supposed to be its disadvantages as little noxious as
+ possible. The question whether we can get others to agree with us
+ is not relevant. If we were eager for instant overthrow, it would
+ be the most relevant of all questions. But we are in the
+ preliminary stage, the stage for acting on opinion. The fact that
+ others do not yet share our opinion, is the very reason for our
+ action. We can only bring them to agree with us, if it be
+ possible on any terms, by persistency in our principles. This
+ persistency, in all but either very timid or very vulgar natures,
+ always has been and always will be independent of external assent
+ or co-operation. The history of success, as we can never too
+ often repeat to ourselves, is the history of minorities. And what
+ is more, it is for the most part the history of insurrection
+ exactly against what the worldly spirits of the time, whenever it
+ may have been, deemed mere trifles and accidents, with which
+ sensible men should on no account dream of taking the trouble to
+ quarrel.</p>
+
+ <p>'Halifax,' says Macaulay, 'was in speculation a strong
+ republican and did not conceal it. He often made hereditary
+ monarchy and aristocracy the subjects of his keen pleasantry,
+ while he was fighting the battles of the court and obtaining for
+ himself step after step in the peerage.' We are perfectly
+ familiar with this type, both in men who have, and men who have
+ not, such brilliant parts as Halifax. Such men profess to nourish
+ high ideals of life, of character, of social institutions. Yet
+ they never think of these ideals, when they are deciding what is
+ practically attainable. One would like to ask them what purpose
+ is served by an ideal, if it is not to make a guide for practice
+ and a landmark in dealing with the real. A man's loftiest and
+ most ideal notions must be of a singularly ethereal and, shall we
+ not say, senseless kind, if he can never see how to take a single
+ step that may tend in the slightest degree towards making them
+ more real. If an ideal has no point of contact with what exists,
+ it is probably not much more than the vapid outcome of
+ intellectual or spiritual self-indulgence. If it has such a point
+ of contact, then there is sure to be something which a man can do
+ towards the fulfilment of his hopes. He cannot substitute a new
+ national religion for the old, but he can at least do something
+ to prevent people from supposing that the adherents of the old
+ are more numerous than they really are, and something to show
+ them that good ideas are not all exhausted by the ancient forms.
+ He cannot transform a monarchy into a republic, but he can make
+ sure that one citizen at least shall aim at republican virtues,
+ and abstain from the debasing complaisance of the crowd.</p><br>
+
+ <p>'It is a very great mistake, said Burke, many years before the
+ French Revolution is alleged, and most unreasonably alleged, to
+ have alienated him from liberalism: 'it is a very great mistake
+ to imagine that mankind follow up practically any speculative
+ principle, either of government or of freedom, as far as it will
+ go in argument and logical illation. All government, indeed every
+ human benefit and enjoyment, every virtue, and every prudent act,
+ is founded on compromise and barter. We balance inconveniences;
+ we give and take;&mdash;we remit some rights that we may enjoy
+ others.... Man acts from motives relative to his interests; and
+ not on metaphysical speculations.<a name=
+ "FNanchor29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29"><sup>[29]</sup></a> These
+ are the words of wisdom and truth, if we can be sure that men
+ will interpret them in all the fulness of their meaning, and not
+ be content to take only that part of the meaning which falls in
+ with the dictates of their own love of ease. In France such words
+ ought to be printed in capitals on the front of every newspaper,
+ and written up in letters of burnished gold over each faction of
+ the Assembly, and on the door of every bureau in the
+ Administration. In England they need a commentary which shall
+ bring out the very simple truth, that compromise and barter do
+ not mean the undisputed triumph of one set of principles. Nor, on
+ the other hand, do they mean the mutilation of both sets of
+ principles, with a view to producing a <i>tertium quid</i> that
+ shall involve the disadvantages of each, without securing the
+ advantages of either. What Burke means is that we ought never to
+ press our ideas up to their remotest logical issues, without
+ reference to the conditions in which we are applying them. In
+ politics we have an art. Success in politics, as in every other
+ art, obviously before all else implies both knowledge of the
+ material with which we have to deal, and also such concession as
+ is necessary to the qualities of the material. Above all, in
+ politics we have an art in which development depends upon small
+ modifications. That is the true side of the conservative theory.
+ To hurry on after logical perfection is to show one's self
+ ignorant of the material of that social structure with which the
+ politician has to deal. To disdain anything short of an organic
+ change in thought or institution in infatuation. To be willing to
+ make such changes too frequently, even when they are possible, is
+ foolhardiness. That fatal French saying about small reforms being
+ the worst enemies of great reforms is, in the sense in which it
+ is commonly used, a formula of social ruin.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, let us not forget that there is a sense in
+ which this very saying is profoundly true. A small and temporary
+ improvement may really be the worst enemy of a great and
+ permanent improvement, unless the first is made on the lines and
+ in the direction of the second. And so it may, if it be
+ successfully palmed off upon a society as actually being the
+ second. In such a case as this, and our legislation presents
+ instances of the kind, the small reform, if it be not made with
+ reference to some large progressive principle and with a view to
+ further extension of its scope, makes it all the more difficult
+ to return to the right line and direction when improvement is
+ again demanded. To take an example which is now very familiar to
+ us all. The Education Act of 1870 was of the nature of a small
+ reform. No one pretends that it is anything approaching to a
+ final solution of a complex problem. But the government insisted,
+ whether rightly or wrongly, that their Act was as large a measure
+ as public opinion was at that moment ready to support. At the
+ same time it was clearly agreed among the government and the
+ whole of the party at their backs, that at some time or other,
+ near or remote, if public instruction was to be made genuinely
+ effective, the private, voluntary, or denominational system would
+ have to be replaced by a national system. To prepare for this
+ ultimate replacement was one of the points to be most steadily
+ borne in mind, however slowly and tentatively the process might
+ be conducted. Instead of that, the authors of the Act
+ deliberately introduced provisions for extending and
+ strengthening the very system which will have eventually to be
+ superseded. They thus by their small reform made the future great
+ reform the more difficult of achievement. Assuredly this is not
+ the compromise and barter, the give and take, which Burke
+ intended. What Burke means by compromise, and what every true
+ statesman understands by it, is that it may be most inexpedient
+ to meddle with an institution merely because it does not
+ harmonise with 'argument and logical illation.' This is a very
+ different thing from giving new comfort and strength with one
+ hand, to an institution whose death-warrant you pretend to be
+ signing with the other.</p>
+
+ <p>In a different way the second possible evil of a small reform
+ may be equally mischievous&mdash;where the small reform is
+ represented as settling the question. The mischief here is not
+ that it takes us out of the progressive course, as in the case we
+ have just been considering, but that it sets men's minds in a
+ posture of contentment, which is not justified by the amount of
+ what has been done, and which makes it all the harder to arouse
+ them to new effort when the inevitable time arrives.</p>
+
+ <p>In these ways, then, compromise may mean, not acquiescence in
+ an instalment, on the ground that the time is not ripe to yield
+ us more than an instalment, but either the acceptance of the
+ instalment as final, followed by the virtual abandonment of hope
+ and effort; or else it may mean a mistaken reversal of direction,
+ which augments the distance that has ultimately to be traversed.
+ In either of these senses, the small reform may become the enemy
+ of the great one. But a right conception of political method,
+ based on a rightly interpreted experience of the conditions on
+ which societies unite progress with order, leads the wise
+ conservative to accept the small change, lest a worse thing
+ befall him, and the wise innovator to seize the chance of a small
+ improvement, while incessantly working in the direction of great
+ ones. The important thing is that throughout the process neither
+ of them should lose sight of his ultimate ideal; nor fail to look
+ at the detail from the point of view of the whole; nor allow the
+ near particular to bulk so unduly large as to obscure the general
+ and distant.</p>
+
+ <p>If the process seems intolerably slow, we may correct our
+ impatience by looking back upon the past. People seldom realise
+ the enormous period of time which each change in men's ideas
+ requires for its full accomplishment. We speak of these changes
+ with a peremptory kind of definiteness, as if they had covered no
+ more than the space of a few years. Thus we talk of the time of
+ the Reformation, as we might talk of the Reform Bill or the
+ Repeal of the Corn Duties. Yet the Reformation is the name for a
+ movement of the mind of northern Europe, which went on for three
+ centuries. Then if we turn to that still more momentous set of
+ events, the rise and establishment of Christianity, one might
+ suppose from current speech that we could fix that within a space
+ of half a century or so. Yet it was at least four hundred years
+ before all the foundations of that great superstructure of
+ doctrine and organisation were completely laid. Again, to descend
+ to less imposing occurrences, the transition in the Eastern
+ Empire from the old Roman system of national organisation to that
+ other system to which we give the specific name of
+ Byzantine,&mdash;this transition, so infinitely less important as
+ it was than either of the two other movements, yet occupied no
+ less than a couple of hundred years. The conditions of speech
+ make it indispensable for us to use definite and compendious
+ names for movements that were both tardy and complex. We are
+ forced to name a long series of events as if they were a single
+ event. But we lose the reality of history, we fail to recognise
+ one of the most striking aspects of human affairs, and above all
+ we miss that most invaluable practical lesson, the lesson of
+ patience, unless we remember that the great changes of history
+ took up long periods of time which, when measured by the little
+ life of a man, are almost colossal, like the vast changes of
+ geology. We know how long it takes before a species of plant or
+ animal disappears in face of a better adapted species. Ideas and
+ customs, beliefs and institutions, have always lingered just as
+ long in face of their successors, and the competition is not less
+ keen nor less prolonged, because it is for one or other
+ inevitably destined to be hopeless. History, like geology,
+ demands the use of the imagination, and in proportion as the
+ exercise of the historic imagination is vigorously performed in
+ thinking of the past, will be the breadth of our conception of
+ the changes which the future has in store for us, as well as of
+ the length of time and the magnitude of effort required for their
+ perfect achievement<a name="FNanchor30"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_30"><sup>[30]</sup></a>.</p>
+
+ <p>This much, concerning moderation in political practice. No
+ such considerations present themselves in the matters which
+ concern the shaping of our own lives, or the publications of our
+ social opinions. In this region we are not imposing charges upon
+ others, either by law or otherwise. We therefore owe nothing to
+ the prejudices or habits of others. If any one sets serious value
+ upon the point of difference between his own ideal and that which
+ is current, if he thinks that his 'experiment in living' has
+ promise of real worth, and that if more persons could be induced
+ to imitate it, some portion of mankind would be thus put in
+ possession of a better kind of happiness, then it is selling a
+ birthright for a mess of pottage to abandon hopes so rich and
+ generous, merely in order to avoid the passing and casual
+ penalties of social disapproval. And there is a double evil in
+ this kind of flinching from obedience to the voice of our better
+ selves, whether it takes the form of absolute suppression of what
+ we think and hope, or only of timorous and mutilated
+ presentation. We lose not only the possible advantage of the
+ given change. Besides that, we lose also the certain advantage of
+ maintaining or increasing the amount of conscientiousness in the
+ world. And everybody can perceive the loss incurred in a society
+ where diminution of the latter sort takes place. The advance of
+ the community depends not merely on the improvement and elevation
+ of its moral maxima, but also on the quickening of moral
+ sensibility. The latter work has mostly been effected, when it
+ has been effected on a large scale, by teachers of a certain
+ singular personal quality. They do nothing to improve the theory
+ of conduct, but they have the art of stimulating men to a more
+ enthusiastic willingness to rise in daily practice to the
+ requirements of whatever theory they may accept. The love of
+ virtue, of duty, of holiness, or by whatever name we call this
+ powerful sentiment, exists in the majority of men, where it
+ exists at all, independently of argument. It is a matter of
+ affection, sympathy, association, aspiration. Hence, even while,
+ in quality, sense of duty is a stationary factor, it is
+ constantly changing in quantity. The amount of conscience in
+ different communities, or in the same community at different
+ times, varies infinitely. The immediate cause of the decline of a
+ society in the order of morals is a decline in the quantity of
+ its conscience, a deadening of its moral sensitiveness, and not a
+ depravation of its theoretical ethics. The Greeks became corrupt
+ and enfeebled, not for lack of ethical science, but through the
+ decay in the numbers of those who were actually alive to the
+ reality and force of ethical obligations. Mahometans triumphed
+ over Christians in the East and in Spain&mdash;if we may for a
+ moment isolate moral conditions from the rest of the total
+ circumstances&mdash;not because their scheme of duty was more
+ elevated or comprehensive, but because their respect for duty was
+ more strenuous and fervid.</p>
+
+ <p>The great importance of leaving this priceless element in a
+ community as free, as keen, and as active as possible, is
+ overlooked by the thinkers who uphold coercion against liberty,
+ as a saving social principle. Every act of coercion directed
+ against an opinion or a way of living is in so far calculated to
+ lessen the quantity of conscience in the society where such acts
+ are practised. Of course, where ways of living interfere with the
+ lawful rights of others, where they are not strictly
+ self-regarding in all their details, it is necessary to force the
+ dissidents, however strong may be their conscientious sentiment.
+ The evil of attenuating that sentiment is smaller than the evil
+ of allowing one set of persons to realise their own notions of
+ happiness, at the expense of all the rest of the world. But where
+ these notions can be realised without unlawful interference of
+ that kind, then the forcible hindrance of such realisation is a
+ direct weakening of the force and amount of conscience on which
+ the community may count. There is one memorable historic case to
+ illustrate this. Lewis XIV., in revoking the Edict of Nantes, and
+ the author of the still more cruel law of 1724, not only
+ violently drove out multitudes of the most scrupulous part of the
+ French nation; they virtually offered the most tremendous bribes
+ to those of less stern resolution, to feign conversion to the
+ orthodox faith. This was to treat conscience as a thing of mean
+ value. It was to scatter to the wind with both hands the moral
+ resources of the community. And who can fail to see the strength
+ which would have been given to France in her hour of storm, a
+ hundred years after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, if her
+ protestant sons, fortified by the training in the habits of
+ individual responsibility which protestantism involves, had only
+ been there to aid?</p><br>
+ <a name="p242"></a>
+
+ <p>This consideration brings us to a new side of the discussion.
+ We may seem to have been unconsciously arguing as strongly in
+ favour of a vigorous social conservatism as of a self-asserting
+ spirit of social improvement. All that we have been saying may
+ appear to cut both ways. If the innovator should decline to
+ practise silence or reserve, why should the possessor of power be
+ less uncompromising, and why should he not impose silence by
+ force? If the heretic ought to be uncompromising in expressing
+ his opinions, and in acting upon them, in the fulness of his
+ conviction that they are right, why should not the orthodox be
+ equally uncompromising in his resolution to stamp out the
+ heretical notions and unusual ways of living, in the fulness of
+ his conviction that they are thoroughly wrong? To this question
+ the answer is that the hollow kinds of compromise are as bad in
+ the orthodox as in the heretical. Truth has as much to gain from
+ sincerity and thoroughness in one as in the other. But the issue
+ between the partisans of the two opposed schools turns upon the
+ sense which we design to give to the process of stamping out.
+ Those who cling to the tenets of liberty limit the action of the
+ majority, as of the minority, strictly to persuasion. Those who
+ dislike liberty, insist that earnestness of conviction justifies
+ either a majority or a minority in using not persuasion only, but
+ force. I do not propose here to enter into the great question
+ which Mr. Mill pressed anew upon the minds of this generation.
+ His arguments are familiar to every reader, and the conclusion at
+ which he arrived is almost taken for a postulate in the present
+ essay.<a name="FNanchor31"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_31"><sup>[31]</sup></a> The object of these chapters
+ is to reiterate the importance of self-assertion, tenacity, and
+ positiveness of principlesan of coercion will argue that this
+ thesis is on one side of it a justification of persecution, and
+ other modes of interfering with new opinions and new ways of
+ living by force, and the strong arm of the law, and whatever
+ other energetic means of repression may be at command. If the
+ minority are to be uncompromising alike in seeking and realising
+ what they take for truth, why not the majority? Now this implies
+ two propositions. It is the same as to say, first, that
+ earnestness of conviction is not to be distinguished from a
+ belief in our own infallibility; second, that faith in our
+ infallibility is necessarily bound up with intolerance.</p>
+
+ <p>Neither of these propositions is true. Let us take them in
+ turn. Earnestness of conviction is perfectly compatible with a
+ sense of liability to error. This has been so excellently put by
+ a former writer that we need not attempt to better his
+ exposition. 'Every one must, of course, think his own opinions
+ right; for if he thought them wrong, they would no longer be his
+ opinions: but there is a wide difference between regarding
+ ourselves as infallible, and being firmly convinced of the truth
+ of our creed. When a man reflects on any particular doctrine, he
+ may be impressed with a thorough conviction of the improbability
+ or even impossibility of its being false: and so he may feel with
+ regard to all his other opinions, when he makes them objects of
+ separate contemplation. And yet when he views them in the
+ aggregate, when he reflects that not a single being on the earth
+ holds collectively the same, when he looks at the past history
+ and present state of mankind, and observes the various creeds of
+ different ages and nations, the peculiar modes of thinking of
+ sects and bodies and individuals, the notions once firmly held,
+ which have been exploded, the prejudices once universally
+ prevalent, which have been removed, and the endless controversies
+ which have distracted those who have made it the business of
+ their lives to arrive at the truth; and when he further dwells on
+ the consideration that many of these, his fellow-creatures, have
+ had a conviction of the justness of their respective sentiments
+ equal to his own, he cannot help the obvious inference, that in
+ his own opinion it is next to impossible that there is not an
+ admixture of error; that there is an infinitely greater
+ probability of his being wrong in some than right in
+ all.'<a name="FNanchor32"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_32"><sup>[32]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Of course this is not an account of the actual frame of mind
+ of ordinary men. They never do think of their opinions in the
+ aggregate in comparison with the collective opinions of others,
+ nor ever draw the conclusions which such reflections would
+ suggest. But such a frame of mind is perfectly attainable, and
+ has often been attained, by persons of far lower than first-rate
+ capacity. And if this is so, there is no reason why it should not
+ be held up for the admiration and imitation of all those classes
+ of society which profess to have opinions. It would thus become
+ an established element in the temper of the age. Nor need we fear
+ that the result of this would be any flaccidity of conviction, or
+ lethargy in act. A man would still be penetrated with the
+ rightness of his own opinion on a given issue, and would still do
+ all that he could to make it prevail in practice. But among the
+ things which he would no longer permit himself to do, would be
+ the forcible repression in others of any opinions, however
+ hostile to his own, or of any kind of conduct, however widely it
+ diverged from his own, and provided that it concerned themselves
+ only. This widening of his tolerance would be the natural result
+ of a rational and realised consciousness of his own general
+ fallibility.</p>
+
+ <p>Next, even belief in one's own infallibility does not
+ necessarily lead to intolerance. For it may be said that though
+ no man in his senses would claim to be incapable of error, yet in
+ every given case he is quite sure that he is not in error, and
+ therefore this assurance in particular is tantamount by process
+ of cumulation to a sense of infallibility in general. Now even if
+ this were so, it would not of necessity either produce or justify
+ intolerance. The certainty of the truth of your own opinions is
+ independent of any special idea as to the means by which others
+ may best be brought to share them. The question between
+ persuasion and force remains apart&mdash;unless, indeed, we may
+ say that in societies where habits of free discussion have once
+ begun to take root, those who are least really sure about their
+ opinions, are often most unwilling to trust to persuasion to
+ bring them converts, and most disposed to grasp the rude
+ implements of coercion, whether legal or merely social. The cry,
+ 'Be my brother, or I slay thee,' was the sign of a very weak,
+ though very fiery, faith in the worth of fraternity. He whose
+ faith is most assured, has the best reason for relying on
+ persuasion, and the strongest motive to thrust from him all
+ temptations to use angry force. The substitution of force for
+ persuasion, among its other disadvantages, has this further
+ drawback, from our present point of view, that it lessens the
+ conscience of a society and breeds hypocrisy. You have not
+ converted a man, because you have silenced him. Opinion and force
+ belong to different elements. To think that you are able by
+ social disapproval or other coercive means to crush a man's
+ opinion, is as one who should fire a blunderbuss to put out a
+ star. The acquiescence in current notions which is secured by law
+ or by petulant social disapproval, is as worthless and as
+ essentially hypocritical, as the conversion of an Irish pauper to
+ protestantism by means of soup-tickets, or that of a savage to
+ Christianity by the gift of a string of beads. Here is the
+ radical fallacy of those who urge that people must use promises
+ and threats in order to encourage opinions, thoughts, and
+ feelings which they think good, and to prevent others which they
+ think bad. Promises and threats can influence acts. Opinions and
+ thoughts on morals, politics, and the rest, after they have once
+ grown in a man's mind, can no more be influenced by promises and
+ threats than can my knowledge that snow is white or that ice is
+ cold. You may impose penalties on me by statute for saying that
+ snow is white, or acting as if I thought ice cold, and the
+ penalties may affect my conduct. They will not, because they
+ cannot, modify my beliefs in the matter by a single iota. One
+ result therefore of intolerance is to make hypocrites. On this,
+ as on the rest of the grounds which vindicate the doctrine of
+ liberty, a man who thought himself infallible either in
+ particular or in general, from the Pope of Rome down to the
+ editor of the daily newspaper, might still be inclined to abstain
+ from any form of compulsion. The only reason to the contrary is
+ that a man who is so silly as to think himself incapable of going
+ wrong, is very likely to be too silly to perceive that coercion
+ may be one way of going wrong.</p>
+
+ <p>The currency of the notion that earnest sincerity about one's
+ opinions and ideals of conduct is inseparably connected with
+ intolerance, is indirectly due to the predominance of legal or
+ juristic analogies in social discussion. For one thing, the
+ lawyer has to deal mainly with acts, and to deal with them by way
+ of repression. His attention is primarily fixed on the deed, and
+ only secondarily on the mind of the doer. And so a habit of
+ thought is created, which treats opinion as something equally in
+ the sphere of coercion with actions. At the same time it favours
+ coercive ways of affecting opinion. Then, what is still more
+ important, the jurist's conception of society has its root in the
+ relation between sovereign and subject, between lawmaker and
+ those whom law restrains. Exertion of power on one hand, and
+ compliance on the other&mdash;this is his type of the conditions
+ of the social union. The fertility and advance of discussion on
+ social issues depends on the substitution of the evolutional for
+ the legal conception. The lawyer's type of proposition is
+ absolute. It is also, for various reasons which need not be given
+ here, inspired by involuntary reference to the lower, rather than
+ to the more highly developed, social states. In the lower states
+ law, penalties, coercion, compulsion, the strong hand, a sternly
+ repressive public opinion, were the conditions on which the
+ community was united and held together. But the line of thought
+ which these analogies suggest, becomes less and less generally
+ appropriate in social discussion, in proportion as the community
+ becomes more complex, more various in resource, more special in
+ its organisation, in a word, more elaborately civilised. The
+ evolutionist's idea of society concedes to law its historic place
+ and its actual part. But then this idea leads directly to a way
+ of looking at society, which makes the replacement of law by
+ liberty a condition of reaching the higher stages of social
+ development.</p>
+
+ <p>The doctrine of liberty belongs to the subject of this
+ chapter, because it is only another way of expressing the want of
+ connection between earnestness in realising our opinions, and
+ anything like coercion in their favour. If it were true that
+ aversion from compromise, in carrying out our ideas, implied the
+ rightfulness of using all the means in our power to hinder others
+ from carrying out ideas hostile to them, then we should have been
+ preaching in a spirit unfavourable to the principle of liberty.
+ Our main text has been that men should refuse to sacrifice their
+ opinions and ways of living (in the self-regarding sphere) out of
+ regard to the <i>status quo</i>, or the prejudices of others. And
+ this, as a matter of course, excludes the right of forcing or
+ wishing any one else to make such a sacrifice to us. Well, the
+ first foundation-stone for the doctrine of liberty is to be
+ sought in the conception of society as a growing and developing
+ organism. This is its true base, apart from the numerous minor
+ expediencies which may be adduced to complete the structure of
+ the argument. It is fundamentally advantageous that in societies
+ which have reached our degree of complex and intricate
+ organisation, unfettered liberty should be conceded to ideas and,
+ within the self-regarding sphere, to conduct also. The reasons
+ for this are of some such kind as the following. New ideas and
+ new 'experiments in living' would not arise, if there were not a
+ certain inadequateness in existing ideas and ways of living. They
+ may not point to the right mode of meeting inadequateness, but
+ they do point to the existence and consciousness of it. They
+ originate in the social capability of growth. Society can only
+ develop itself on condition that all such novelties (within the
+ limit laid down, for good and valid reasons, at self regarding
+ conduct) are allowed to present themselves. First, because
+ neither the legislature nor any one else can ever know for
+ certain what novelties will prove of enduring value. Second,
+ because even if we did know for certain that given novelties were
+ pathological growths and not normal developments, and that they
+ never would be of any value, still the repression necessary to
+ extirpate them would involve too serious a risk both of keeping
+ back social growth at some other point, and of giving the
+ direction of that growth an irreparable warp. And let us repeat
+ once more, in proportion as a community grows more complex in its
+ classes, divisions, and subdivisions, more intricate in its
+ productive, commercial, or material arrangements, so does this
+ risk very obviously wax more grave.</p>
+
+ <p>In the sense in which we are speaking of it, liberty is not a
+ positive force, any more than the smoothness of a railroad is a
+ positive force.<a name="FNanchor33"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_33"><sup>[33]</sup></a> It is a condition. As a force,
+ there is a sense in which it is true to call liberty a negation.
+ As a condition, though it may still be a negation, yet it may be
+ indispensable for the production of certain positive results. The
+ vacuity of an exhausted receiver is not a force, but it is the
+ indispensable condition of certain positive operations. Liberty
+ as a force may be as impotent as its opponents allege. This does
+ not affect its value as a preliminary or accompanying condition.
+ The absence of a strait-waistcoat is a negation; but it is a
+ useful condition for the activity of sane men. No doubt there
+ must be a definite limit to this absence of external interference
+ with conduct, and that limit will be fixed at various points by
+ different thinkers. We are now only urging that it cannot be
+ wisely fixed for the more complex societies by any one who has
+ not grasped this fundamental preconception, that liberty, or the
+ absence of coercion, or the leaving people to think, speak, and
+ act as they please, is in itself a good thing. It is the object
+ of a favourable presumption. The burden of proving it inexpedient
+ always lies, and wholly lies, on those who wish to abridge it by
+ coercion, whether direct or indirect.</p>
+
+ <p>One reason why this truth is so reluctantly admitted, is men's
+ irrational want of faith in the self-protective quality of a
+ highly developed and healthy community. The timid compromiser on
+ the one hand, and the advocate of coercive restriction on the
+ other, are equally the victims of a superfluous apprehension. The
+ one fears to use his liberty for the same reason that makes the
+ other fearful of permitting liberty. This common reason is the
+ want of a sensible confidence that, in a free western community,
+ which has reached our stage of development, religious, moral, and
+ social novelties&mdash;provided they are tainted by no element of
+ compulsion or interference with the just rights of others, may be
+ trusted to find their own level. Moral and intellectual
+ conditions are not the only motive forces in a community, nor are
+ they even the most decisive. Political and material conditions
+ fix the limits at which speculation can do either good or harm.
+ Let us take an illustration of the impotence of moral ideas to
+ override material circumstances; and we shall venture to place
+ this illustration somewhat fully before the reader.</p>
+
+ <p>There is no more important distinction between modern
+ civilised communities and the ancient communities than the fact
+ that the latter rested on Slavery, while the former have
+ abolished it. Hence there can hardly be a more interesting
+ question than this&mdash;by what agencies so prodigious a
+ transformation of one of the fundamental conditions of society
+ was brought about. The popular answer is of a very ready kind,
+ and it passes quite satisfactorily. This answer is that the first
+ great step towards free labour, the transformation of personal
+ slavery into serfdom, was the result of the spiritual change
+ which was wrought in men's minds by the teaching of the Church.
+ It is unquestionable that the influence of the Church tended to
+ mitigate the evils of slavery, to humanise the relations between
+ master and slave, between the lord and the serf. But this is a
+ very different thing from the radical transformation of those
+ relations. If we think of society as an organism we instantly
+ understand that so immense a change as this could not possibly
+ have been effected without the co-operation of the other great
+ parts of the social system, any more than a critical evolution
+ could take place in the nutritive apparatus of an animal, without
+ a change in the whole series of its organs. Thus in order that
+ serfage should be evolved from slavery, and free labour again
+ from serfage, it could not be enough that an alteration should
+ have been wrought in men's ideas as to their common brotherhood,
+ and the connected ideas as to the lawfulness or unlawfulness of
+ certain human relations. There must have been an alteration also
+ of the economic and material conditions. History confirms the
+ expectations which we should thus have been led to entertain. The
+ impotence of spiritual and moral agencies alone in bringing about
+ this great metamorphosis, is shown by such facts as these. For
+ centuries after the new faith had consolidated itself, slavery
+ was regarded without a particle of that deep abhorrence which the
+ possession of man by man excites in us now. In the ninth and
+ tenth centuries the slave trade was the most profitable branch of
+ the commerce that was carried on in the Mediterranean. The
+ historian tells us that, even so late as this, slaves were the
+ principal article of European export to Africa, Syria, and Egypt,
+ in payment for the produce of the East which was brought from
+ those countries. It was the crumbling of the old social system
+ which, by reducing the population, lessening the wealth, and
+ lowering the standard of living among the free masters, tended to
+ extinguish slavery, by diminishing the differences between the
+ masters and their bondsmen. Again, it was certain laws enacted by
+ the Roman government for the benefit of the imperial fisc, which
+ first conferred rights on the slave. The same laws brought the
+ free farmer, whose position was less satisfactory for the
+ purposes of the revenue, down nearer and nearer to a servile
+ condition. Again, in the ninth and tenth centuries, pestilence
+ and famine accelerated the extinction of predial slavery by
+ weakening the numbers of the free population. 'History,' we are
+ told by that thoroughly competent authority, Mr. Finlay, 'affords
+ its testimony that neither the doctrines of Christianity, nor the
+ sentiments of humanity, have ever yet succeeded in extinguishing
+ slavery, where the soil could be cultivated with profit by slave
+ labour. No Christian community of slave-holders has yet
+ voluntarily abolished slavery. In no country where it prevailed
+ has rural slavery ceased, until the price of productions raised
+ by slave labour has fallen so low as to leave no profit to the
+ slave-owner.'</p>
+
+ <p>The moral of all this is the tolerably obvious truth, that the
+ prosperity of an abstract idea depends as much on the medium into
+ which it is launched, as upon any quality of its own. Stable
+ societies are amply furnished with force enough to resist all
+ effort in a destructive direction. There is seldom much fear, and
+ in our own country there is hardly any fear at all, of hasty
+ reformers making too much way against the spontaneous
+ conservatism which belongs to a healthy and well-organised
+ community. If dissolvent ideas do make their way, it is because
+ the society was already ripe for dissolution. New ideas, however
+ ardently preached, will dissolve no society which was not already
+ in a condition of profound disorganisation. We may be allowed
+ just to point to two memorable instances, by way of illustration,
+ though a long and elaborate discussion would be needed to bring
+ out their full force. It has often been thought since, as it was
+ thought by timorous reactionaries at the time, that Christianity
+ in various ways sapped the strength of the Roman Empire, and
+ opened the way for the barbarians. In truth, the most careful and
+ competent students know now that the Empire slowly fell to
+ pieces, partly because the political arrangements were vicious
+ and inadequate, but mainly because the fiscal and economic system
+ impoverished and depopulated one district of the vast empire
+ after another. It was the break-up of the Empire that gave the
+ Church its chance; not the Church that broke up the Empire. It is
+ a mistake of the same kind to suppose that the destructive
+ criticism of the French philosophers a hundred years ago was the
+ great operative cause of the catastrophe which befel the old
+ social r&eacute;gime. If Voltaire, Diderot, Rousseau, had never
+ lived, or if their works had all been suppressed as soon as they
+ were printed, their absence would have given no new life to
+ agriculture, would not have stimulated trade, nor replenished the
+ bankrupt fisc, nor incorporated the privileged classes with the
+ bulk of the nation, nor done anything else to repair an
+ organisation of which every single part had become incompetent
+ for its proper function. It was the material misery and the
+ political despair engendered by the reigning system, which
+ brought willing listeners to the feet of the teachers who framed
+ beneficent governments on the simple principles of reason and the
+ natural law. And these teachers only busied themselves with
+ abstract politics, because the real situation was desperate. They
+ had no alternative but to evolve social improvements out of their
+ own consciousness. There was not a single sound organ in the body
+ politic, which they could have made the starting-point of a
+ reconstitution of a society on the base of its actual or historic
+ structure. The mischiefs which resulted from their method are
+ patent and undeniable. But the method was made inevitable by the
+ curse of the old r&eacute;gime.<a name="FNanchor34"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_34"><sup>[34]</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Nor is there any instance in history of mere opinion making a
+ breach in the essential constitution of a community, so long as
+ the political conditions were stable and the economic or
+ nutritive conditions sound. If some absolute monarch were to be
+ seized by a philanthropic resolution to transform the ordering of
+ a society which seemed to be at his disposal, he might possibly,
+ by the perseverance of a lifetime, succeed in throwing the
+ community into permanent confusion. Joseph II. perhaps did as
+ much as a modern sovereign can do in this direction. Yet little
+ came of his efforts, either for good or harm. But a man without
+ the whole political machinery in his power need hardly labour
+ under any apprehension that he may, by the mere force of
+ speculative opinion, involuntarily work a corresponding mischief.
+ If it is true that the most fervent apostles of progress usually
+ do very little of the good on which they congratulate themselves,
+ they ought surely on the same ground to be acquitted of much of
+ the harm for which they are sometimes reviled. In a country of
+ unchecked and abundant discussion, a new idea is not at all
+ likely to make much way against the objection of its novelty,
+ unless it is really commended by some quality of temporary or
+ permanent value. So far therefore as the mere publication of new
+ principles is concerned, and so far also as merely self-regarding
+ action goes, one who has the keenest sense of social
+ responsibility, and is most scrupulously afraid of doing anything
+ to slacken or perturb the process of social growth, may still
+ consistently give to the world whatever ideas he has gravely
+ embraced. He may safely trust, if the society be in a normal
+ condition, to its justice of assimilation and rejection. There
+ are a few individuals for whom newness is a recommendation. But
+ what are these few among the many to whom newness is a
+ stumbling-block? Old ideas may survive merely because they are
+ old. A new one will certainly not, among a considerable body of
+ men in a healthy social state, gain any acceptance worth speaking
+ of, merely because it is new.</p>
+
+ <p>The recognition of the self-protecting quality of society is
+ something more than a point of speculative importance. It has a
+ direct practical influence. For it would add to the courage and
+ intrepidity of the men who are most attached to the reigning
+ order of things. If such men could only divest themselves of a
+ futile and nervous apprehension, that things as they are have no
+ root in their essential fitness and harmony, and that order
+ consequently is ever hanging on a trembling and doubtful balance,
+ they would not only gain by the self-respect which would be added
+ to them and the rest of the community, but all discussion would
+ become more robust and real. If they had a larger faith in the
+ stability for which they profess so great an anxiety, they would
+ be more free alike in understanding and temper to deal
+ generously, honestly, and effectively with those whom they count
+ imprudent innovators. There is nothing more amusing or more
+ instructive than to turn to the debates in parliament or the
+ press upon some innovating proposal, after an interval since the
+ proposal was accepted by the legislature. The flaming hopes of
+ its friends, the wild and desperate prophecies of its
+ antagonists, are found to be each as ill-founded as the other.
+ The measure which was to do such vast good according to the one,
+ such portentous evil according to the other, has done only a part
+ of the promised good, and has done none of the threatened evil.
+ The true lesson from this is one of perseverance and thoroughness
+ for the improver, and one of faith in the self-protectiveness of
+ a healthy society for the conservative. The master error of the
+ latter is to suppose that men are moved mainly by their passions
+ rather than their interests, that all their passions are
+ presumably selfish and destructive, and that their own interests
+ can seldom be adequately understood by the persons most directly
+ concerned. How many fallacies are involved in this group of
+ propositions, the reader may well be left to judge for
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p>We have in this chapter considered some of the limitations
+ which are set by the conditions of society on the duty of trying
+ to realise our principles in action. The general conclusion is in
+ perfect harmony with that of the previous chapters. A principle,
+ if it be sound, represents one of the larger expediencies. To
+ abandon that for the sake of some seeming expediency of the hour,
+ is to sacrifice the greater good for the less, on no more
+ creditable ground than that the less is nearer. It is better to
+ wait, and to defer the realisation of our ideas until we can
+ realise them fully, than to defraud the future by truncating
+ them, if truncate them we must, in order to secure a partial
+ triumph for them in the immediate present. It is better to bear
+ the burden of impracticableness, than to stifle conviction and to
+ pare away principle until it becomes more hollowness and
+ triviality. What is the sense, and what is the morality, of
+ postponing the wider utility to the narrower? Nothing is so sure
+ to impoverish an epoch, to deprive conduct of nobleness, and
+ character of elevation.</p>
+
+ <p>FOOTNOTES:</p><a name="Footnote_27"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor27">[27]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>The Study of Sociology</i>, p. 396.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor28">[28]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>No one, for instance, has given more forcible or decisive
+ expression than Mr. Spencer has done to the duty of not
+ passively accepting the current theology. See his <i>First
+ Principles</i>, pt. i. ch. vi, &sect; 34; paragraph
+ beginning,&mdash;'Whoever hesitates to utter that which he
+ thinks the highest truth, lest it should be too much in advance
+ of the time, may reassure himself by looking at his acts from
+ an impersonal point of view,' etc.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor29">[29]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p><i>Speech on Conciliation with America</i>.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor30">[30]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>'Toute &eacute;normit&eacute; dans les esprits d'un certain
+ ordre n'est souvent qu'une grande vue prise hors du temps et du
+ lieu, et ne gardant aucun rapport r&eacute;el avec les objets
+ environnants. Le propre de certaines prunelles ardentes est de
+ franchir du regard les intervalles et de les supprimer.
+ Tant&ocirc;t c'est une id&eacute;e qui retarde de plusieurs
+ si&egrave;cles, et que ces vigoureux esprits se figurent encore
+ pr&eacute;sente et vivante; tant&ocirc;t c'est une id&eacute;e
+ qui avance, et qu'ils croient incontinent r&eacute;alisable. M.
+ de Coua&euml;n &eacute;tait ainsi; il voyait 1814 d&egrave;s
+ 1804, et de l&agrave; une sup&eacute;riorit&eacute;; mais il
+ jugeait 1814 possible d&egrave;s 1804 ou 1805, et de l&agrave;
+ tout un chim&eacute;rique entassement.&mdash;Voil&agrave; un
+ point blanc &agrave; l'horizon, chacun jurerait que c'est un
+ nuage. "C'est une montagne," dit le voyageur &agrave; l'oeil
+ d'aigle; mais s'il ajoute: "Nous y arriverons ce soir, dans
+ deux heures;" si, &agrave; chaque heure de marche, il crie avec
+ emportement: "Nous y sommes," et le veut d&eacute;montrer, il
+ choque les voisins avec sa poutre, et donne l'avantage aux yeux
+ moins per&ccedil;ants et plus habitu&eacute;s &agrave; la
+ plaine.'&mdash;Ste. Beuve's <i>Volupt&eacute;</i>, p. 262</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor31">[31]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>It is sometimes convenient to set familiar arguments down
+ once more; so I venture to reprint in a note at the end of the
+ chapter a short exposition of the doctrine of liberty, which I
+ had occasion to make in considering Sir J.F. Stephen's vigorous
+ attack on that doctrine.</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor32">[32]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>Mr. Samuel Bailey's <i>Essays on the Formation and
+ Publication of Opinions</i>, etc., p. 138, (1826.)</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor33">[33]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>There is a sense, and a most important sense, in which
+ liberty is a positive force. It is its robust and bracing
+ influence on character, which makes wise men prize freedom and
+ strive for the enlargement of its province. As Mr. Mill
+ expressed this:&mdash;'It is of importance not only what men
+ do, but what manner of men they are that do it,' Milton pointed
+ to the positive effect of liberty on character in the following
+ passage:&mdash;'They are not skilful considerers of human
+ things who imagine to remove sin by removing the matter of sin.
+ Though ye take from a covetous man his treasure, he has yet one
+ jewel left; ye cannot bereave him of his covetousness. Banish
+ all objects of lust, shut up all youth into the severest
+ discipline that can be exercised in any hermitage, ye cannot
+ make them chaste that came not thither so. Suppose we could
+ expel sin by this means; look how much we thus expel of sin, so
+ much we expel of virtue. And were I the chooser, a dram of
+ well-doing should be preferred before many times as much the
+ forcible hindrance of evil-doing. For God sure esteems the
+ growth and completing of one virtuous person, more than the
+ restraint of ten vicious.'</p>
+ </div><a name="Footnote_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor34">[34]</a>
+
+ <div class="note">
+ <p>There is, I think, nothing in this paragraph really
+ inconsistent with De Tocqueville's well-known and striking
+ chapter, 'Comment les hommes de lettres devinrent les
+ principaux hommes politiques du pays, et des effets qui en
+ r&eacute;sult&egrave;rent.' (<i>Ancien R&eacute;gime</i>, iii.
+ i.) Thus S&eacute;nac de Meilhan writes in 1795;&mdash;'C'est
+ quand la R&eacute;volution a &eacute;t&eacute; entam&eacute;e
+ qu'on a cherch&eacute; dans Mably, dans Rousseau, des armes
+ pour sustenter le syst&egrave;me vers lequel entrainait
+ l'effervescence de quelques esprits hardis. Mais ce ne sont
+ point les auteurs que j'ai cit&eacute;s qui ont enflamme les
+ t&ecirc;tes; M. Necker seul a produit cet effet, et
+ d&eacute;termin&eacute; l'explosion,' ... 'Les &eacute;crits de
+ Voltaire ont certainement nui &agrave; la religion, et
+ &eacute;branl&eacute; la croyance dans un assez grand nombre;
+ mais ils n'ont aucun rapport avec les affaires du gouvernement,
+ et sont plus favorables que contraires &agrave; la
+ monarchie....' Of Rousseau's <i>Social Contract</i>:&mdash;'Ce
+ livre profond et abstrait &eacute;tait peu lu, et etendu de
+ bien peu de gens.' Mably&mdash;'avait peu de vogue.' <i>De
+ Gouvernment, etc., en France</i>, p. 129, etc.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;">
+ <a name="NOTE_TO_PAGE_242"></a>
+
+ <h2>NOTE TO <a href="#p242">PAGE 242</a>.</h2><br>
+
+ <center>
+ THE DOCTRINE OF LIBERTY.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Mr. Mill's memorable plea for social liberty was little more
+ than an enlargement, though a very important enlargement, of the
+ principles of the still more famous Speech for Liberty of
+ Unlicensed Printing with which Milton ennobled English literature
+ two centuries before. Milton contended for free publication of
+ opinion mainly on these grounds: First, that the opposite system
+ implied the 'grace of infallibility and incorruptibleness' in the
+ licensers. Second, that the prohibition of bold books led to
+ mental indolence and stagnant formalism both in teachers and
+ congregations, producing the 'laziness of a licensing church.'
+ Third, that it 'hinders and retards the importation of our
+ richest merchandise, truth;' for the commission of the licenser
+ enjoins him to let nothing pass which is not vulgarly received
+ already, and 'if it come to prohibiting, there is not aught more
+ likely to be prohibited than truth itself, whose first appearance
+ to our eyes, bleared and dimmed with prejudice and custom, is
+ more unsightly and unplausible than many errors, even as the
+ person is of many a great man slight and contemptible to see to.'
+ Fourth, that freedom is in itself an ingredient of true virtue,
+ and 'they are not skilful considerers of human things who imagine
+ to remove sin by removing the matter of sin; that virtue
+ therefore, which is but a youngling in the contemplation of evil,
+ and knows not the utmost that vice promises to her followers, and
+ rejects it, is but a blank virtue, not a pure; her virtue is but
+ an excremental virtue, which was the reason why our sage and
+ serious poet Spenser, whom I dare be known to think a better
+ teacher than Scotus or Aquinas, describing true temperance under
+ the form of Guion, brings him in with his palmer through the cave
+ of Mammon and the tower of earthly bliss, that he might see and
+ know and yet abstain.'</p>
+
+ <p>The four grounds on which Mr. Mill contends for the necessity
+ of freedom in the expression of opinion to the mental wellbeing
+ of mankind, are virtually contained in these. His four grounds
+ are, (1) that the silenced opinion may be true; (2) it may
+ contain a portion of truth, essential to supplement the
+ prevailing opinion; (3) vigorous contesting of opinions that are
+ even wholly true, is the only way of preventing them from sinking
+ to the level of uncomprehended prejudices; (4) without such
+ contesting, the doctrine will lose its vital effect on character
+ and conduct.</p>
+
+ <p>But Milton drew the line of liberty at what he calls
+ 'neighbouring differences, or rather indifferences.' The Arminian
+ controversy had loosened the bonds with which the newly liberated
+ churches of the Reformation, had made haste to bind themselves
+ again, and weakened that authority of confessions, which had
+ replaced the older but not more intolerant authority of the
+ universal church. Other controversies which raged during the
+ first half of the seventeenth century,&mdash;those between
+ catholics and protestants, between prelatists and presbyterians,
+ between socinians and trinitarians, between latitudinarians,
+ puritans, and sacramentalists,&mdash;all tended to weaken
+ theological exclusiveness. This slackening, however, was no more
+ than partial. Roger Williams, indeed, the Welsh founder of Rhode
+ Island, preached, as early as 1631, the principles of an
+ unlimited toleration, extending to catholics, Jews, and even
+ infidels. Milton stopped a long way short of this. He did not
+ mean 'tolerated popery and open superstition, which, as it
+ extirpates all religious and civil supremacies, so itself should
+ be extirpate, provided first that all charitable and
+ compassionate means be used to win and regain the weak and the
+ misled: that also which is impious or evil absolutely either
+ against faith or manners no law can possibly permit that intends
+ not to unlaw itself.'</p><br>
+
+ <p>Locke, writing five-and-forty years later, somewhat widened
+ these limitations. His question was not merely whether there
+ should be free expression of opinion, but whether there should
+ furthermore be freedom of worship and of religious union. He
+ answered both questions affirmatively,&mdash;not on the
+ semi-sceptical ground of Jeremy Taylor, which is also one of the
+ grounds taken by Mr. Mill, that we cannot be sure that our own
+ opinion is the true one,&mdash;but on the strength of his
+ definition of the province of the civil magistrate. Locke held
+ that the magistrate's whole jurisdiction reached only to civil
+ concernments, and that 'all civil power, right, and dominion is
+ bounded to that only care of promoting these things; and that it
+ neither can nor ought in any manner to be extended to the saving
+ of souls. This chiefly because the power of the civil magistrate
+ consists only in outward force, while true and saving religion
+ consists in the inward persuasion of the mind, without which
+ nothing can be acceptable to God, and such is the nature of the
+ understanding that it cannot he compelled to the belief of
+ anything by outward force.... It is only light and evidence that
+ can work a change in men's opinions; and that light can in no
+ manner proceed from corporal sufferings, or any other outward
+ penalties.' 'I may grow rich by an art that I take not delight
+ in; I may be cured of some disease by remedies that I have not
+ faith in; but I cannot be saved by a religion that at I distrust
+ and a ritual that I abhor.' (<i>First Letter concerning
+ Toleration</i>.) And much more in the same excellent vein. But
+ Locke fixed limits to toleration. 1. No opinions contrary to
+ human society, or to those moral rules which are necessary to the
+ preservation of civil society, are to be tolerated by the
+ magistrate. Thus, to take examples from our own day, a
+ conservative minister would think himself right on this principle
+ in suppressing the Land and Labour League; a catholic minister in
+ dissolving the Education League; and any minister in making mere
+ membership of the Mormon sect a penal offence. 2. No tolerance
+ ought to be extended to 'those who attribute unto the faithful,
+ religious, and orthodox, that is in plain terms unto themselves,
+ any peculiar privilege or power above other mortals, in civil
+ concernments; or who, upon pretence of religion, do challenge any
+ manner of authority over such as are not associated with them in
+ their ecclesiastical communion.' As I have seldom heard of any
+ sect, except the Friends, who did not challenge as much authority
+ as it could possibly get over persons not associated with it,
+ this would amount to a universal proscription of religion; but
+ Locke's principle might at any rate be invoked against
+ Ultra-montanism in some circumstances. 3. Those are not at all to
+ be tolerated who deny the being of God. The taking away of God,
+ <i>though but even in thought</i>, dissolves all society; and
+ promises, covenants, and oaths, which are the bonds of human
+ society, have no hold on such. Thus the police ought to close Mr.
+ Bradlaugh's Hall of Science, and perhaps on some occasions the
+ Positivist School.</p>
+
+ <p>Locke's principles depended on a distinction between civil
+ concernments, which he tries to define, and all other
+ concernments. Warburton's arguments on the alliance between
+ church and state turned on the same point, as did the once-famous
+ Bangorian controversy. This distinction would fit into Mr. Mill's
+ cardinal position, which consists in a distinction between the
+ things that only affect the doer or thinker of them, and the
+ things that affect other persons as well. Locke's attempt to
+ divide civil affairs from affairs of salvation, was satisfactory
+ enough for the comparatively narrow object with which he opened
+ his discussion. Mr. Mill's account of civil affairs is both wider
+ and more definite; naturally so, as he had to maintain the cause
+ of tolerance in a much more complex set of social conditions, and
+ amid a far greater diversity of speculative energy, than any one
+ dreamed of in Locke's time. Mr. Mill limits the province of the
+ civil magistrate to the repression of acts that directly and
+ immediately injure others than the doer of them. So long as acts,
+ including the expression of opinions, are purely self-regarding,
+ it seems to him expedient in the long run that they should not be
+ interfered with by the magistrate. He goes much further than
+ this. Self-regarding acts should not be interfered with by the
+ magistrate. Not only self-regarding acts, but all opinions
+ whatever, should, moreover, be as little interfered with as
+ possible by public opinion, except in the way of vigorous
+ argumentation and earnest persuasion in a contrary direction; the
+ silent but most impressive solicitation of virtuous example; the
+ wise and careful upbringing of the young, so that when they enter
+ life they may be most nobly fitted to choose the right opinions
+ and obey the right motives.</p>
+
+ <p>The consideration by which he supports this rigorous
+ confinement of external interference on the part of government,
+ or the unorganised members of the community whose opinion is
+ called public opinion, to cases of self-protection, are these,
+ some of which have been already stated:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>1. By interfering to suppress opinions or experiments in
+ living, you may resist truths and improvements in a greater or
+ less degree.</p>
+
+ <p>2. Constant discussion is the only certain means of preserving
+ the freshness of truth in men's minds, and the vitality of its
+ influence upon their conduct and motives.</p>
+
+ <p>3. Individuality is one of the most valuable elements of
+ wellbeing, and you can only be sure of making the most of
+ individuality, if you have an atmosphere of freedom, encouraging
+ free development and expansion.</p>
+
+ <p>4. Habitual resort to repressive means of influencing conduct
+ tends more than anything else to discredit and frustrate the
+ better means, such as education, good example, and the like.
+ (<i>Liberty</i>, 148.)</p>
+
+ <p>The principle which he deduces from these considerations
+ is&mdash;'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; the only
+ purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any
+ member of a civilised community, is to prevent harm to others.
+ His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient
+ warrant. He cannot be rightfully compelled to do or forbear
+ because it will make him happier, because in the opinion 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 others.' (<i>Liberty</i>,
+ 22.)</p><br>
+
+ <p>Two disputable points in the above doctrine are likely at once
+ to reveal themselves to the least critical eye. First, that
+ doctrine would seem to check the free expression of disapproval;
+ one of the most wholesome and indispensable duties which anybody
+ with interest in serious questions has to perform, and the
+ non-performance of which would remove the most proper and natural
+ penalty from frivolous or perverse opinions and obnoxious
+ conduct. Mr. Mill deals with this difficulty as
+ follows:&mdash;'We have a right in various ways to act upon our
+ unfavourable 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.'
+ (<i>Liberty</i>, 139.) This appears to be a satisfactory way of
+ meeting the objection. For though the penalties of disapproval
+ may be just the same, whether deliberately inflicted, or
+ naturally and spontaneously falling on the object of such
+ disapproval, yet there is a very intelligible difference between
+ the two processes in their effect on the two parties concerned. A
+ person imbued with Mr. Mill's principle would feel the
+ responsibility of censorship much more seriously; would reflect
+ more carefully and candidly about the conduct or opinion of which
+ he thought ill; would be more on his guard against pharisaic
+ censoriousness, and that desire to be ever judging one another,
+ which Milton well called the stronghold of our hypocrisy. The
+ disapproval of such a person would have an austere colour, a
+ gravity, a self-respecting reserve, which could never belong to
+ an equal degree of disapproval in a person who had started from
+ the officious principle, that if we are sure we are right, it is
+ straightway our business to make the person whom we think wrong
+ smart for his error. And in the same way such disapproval would
+ be much more impressive to the person whom it affected. If it was
+ justified, he would be like a froward child who is always less
+ effectively reformed&mdash;if reformable at all&mdash;by angry
+ chidings and passionate punishments than by the sight of a cool
+ and austere displeasure which lets him persist in his frowardness
+ if he chooses.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The second weak point in the doctrine lies in the extreme
+ vagueness of the terms, protective and self-regarding. The
+ practical difficulty begins with the definition of these terms.
+ Can any opinion, or any serious part of conduct, be looked upon
+ as truly and exclusively self-regarding? This central ingredient
+ in the discussion seems insufficiently laboured in the essay on
+ Liberty. Yet it is here more than anywhere else that controversy
+ is needed to clear up what is in just as much need of
+ elucidation, whatever view we may take of the inherent virtue of
+ freedom&mdash;whether we look on freedom as a mere negation, or
+ as one of the most powerful positive conditions of attaining the
+ highest kind of human excellence.</p>
+
+ <p>To some persons the analysis of conduct, on which the whole
+ doctrine of liberty rests, seems metaphysical and arbitrary. They
+ are reluctant to admit there are any self-regarding acts at all.
+ This reluctance implies a perfectly tenable proposition, a
+ proposition which has been maintained by nearly all religious
+ bodies in the world's history in their non-latitudinarian stages.
+ To distinguish the self-regarding from the other parts of
+ conduct, strikes them not only as unscientific, but as morally
+ and socially mischievous. They insist that there is a social as
+ well as a personal element in every human act, though in very
+ different proportions. There is no gain, they contend, and there
+ may be much harm, in trying to mark off actions, in which the
+ personal element decisively preponderates, from actions of
+ another sort. Mr. Mill did so distinguish actions, nor was his
+ distinction either metaphysical or arbitrary in its source. As a
+ matter of observation, and for the practical purposes of
+ morality, there are kinds of action whose consequences do not go
+ beyond the doer of them. No doubt, you may say that by engaging
+ in these kinds in any given moment, the doer is neglecting the
+ actions in which the social element preponderates, and therefore
+ even acts that seem purely self-regarding have indirect and
+ negative consequences to the rest of the world. But to allow
+ considerations of this sort to prevent us from using a
+ common-sense classification of acts by the proportion of the
+ personal element in them, is as unreasonable as if we allowed the
+ doctrine of the conservation of physical force, or the evolution
+ of one mode of force into another, to prevent us from classifying
+ the affections of matter independently, as light, heat, motion,
+ and the rest. There is one objection obviously to be made to most
+ of the illustrations which are designed to show the public
+ element in all private conduct. The connection between the act
+ and its influence on others is so remote (using the word in a
+ legal sense), though quite certain, distinct, and traceable, that
+ you can only take the act out of the self-regarding category, by
+ a process which virtually denies the existence of any such
+ category. You must set a limit to this 'indirect and
+ at-a-distance argument,' as Locke called a similar plea, and the
+ setting of this limit is the natural supplement to Mr. Mill's
+ 'simple principle.'</p>
+
+ <p>The division between self-regarding acts and others then,
+ rests on observation of their actual consequences. And why was
+ Mr. Mill so anxious to erect self-regarding acts into a distinct
+ and important class, so important as to be carefully and
+ diligently secured by a special principle of liberty? Because
+ observation of the recorded experience of mankind teaches us,
+ that the recognition of this independent provision is essential
+ to the richest expansion of human faculty. To narrow or to
+ repudiate such a province, and to insist exclusively on the
+ social bearing of each part of conduct, is to limit the play of
+ motives, and to thwart the doctrine that 'mankind obtain a
+ greater sum of happiness when each pursues his own, under the
+ rules and conditions required by the rest, than when each makes
+ the good of the rest his only object.' To narrow or to repudiate
+ such a province is to tighten the power of the majority over the
+ minority, and to augment the authority of whatever sacerdotal or
+ legislative body may represent the majority. Whether the
+ lawmakers be laymen in parliament, or priests of humanity
+ exercising the spiritual power, it matters not.</p><br>
+
+ <p>We may best estimate the worth and the significance of the
+ doctrine of Liberty by considering the line of thought and
+ observation which led to it. To begin with, it is in Mr. Mill's
+ hands something quite different from the same doctrine as
+ preached by the French revolutionary school; indeed one might
+ even call it reactionary, in respect of the French theory of a
+ hundred years back. It reposes on no principle of abstract right,
+ but, like the rest of its author's opinions, on principles of
+ utility and experience. Dr. Arnold used to divide reformers into
+ two classes, popular and liberal. The first he defined as seekers
+ of liberty, the second as seekers of improvement; the first were
+ the goats, and the second were the sheep. Mr. Mill's doctrine
+ denied the mutual exclusiveness of the two parts of this
+ classification, for it made improvement the end and the test,
+ while it proclaimed liberty to be the means. Every thinker now
+ perceives that the strongest and most durable influences in every
+ western society lead in the direction of democracy, and tend with
+ more or less rapidity to throw the control of social organisation
+ into the hands of numerical majorities. There are many people who
+ believe that if you only make the ruling body big enough, it is
+ sure to be either very wise itself, or very eager to choose wise
+ leaders. Mr. Mill, as any one who is familiar with his writings
+ is well aware, did not hold this opinion. He had no more
+ partiality for mob rule than De Maistre or Goethe or Mr. Carlyle.
+ He saw its evils more clearly than any of these eminent men,
+ because he had a more scientific eye, and because he had had the
+ invaluable training of a political administrator on a large
+ scale, and in a very responsible post. But he did not content
+ himself with seeing these evils, and he wasted no energy in
+ passionate denunciation of them, which he knew must prove futile.
+ Guizot said of De Tocqueville, that he was an aristocrat who
+ accepted his defeat. Mr. Mill was too penetrated by popular
+ sympathies to be an aristocrat in De Tocqueville's sense, but he
+ likewise was full of ideas and hopes which the unchecked or
+ undirected course of democracy would defeat without chance of
+ reparation. This fact he accepted, and from this he started. Mr.
+ Carlyle, and one or two rhetorical imitators, poured malediction
+ on the many-headed populace, and with a rather pitiful impatience
+ insisted that the only hope for men lay in their finding and
+ obeying a strong man, a king, a hero, a dictator. How he was to
+ be found, neither the master nor his still angrier and more
+ impatient mimics could ever tell us.</p>
+
+ <p>Now Mr. Mill's doctrine laid down the main condition of
+ finding your hero; namely, that all ways should be left open to
+ him, because no man, nor majority of men, could possibly tell by
+ which of these ways their deliverers were from time to time
+ destined to present themselves. Wits have caricatured all this,
+ by asking us whether by encouraging the tares to grow, you give
+ the wheat a better chance. This is as misleading as such
+ metaphors usually are. The doctrine of liberty rests on a faith
+ drawn from the observation of human progress, that though we know
+ wheat to be serviceable and tares to be worthless, yet there are
+ in the great seed-plot of human nature a thousand rudimentary
+ germs, not wheat and not tares, of whose properties we have not
+ had a fair opportunity of assuring ourselves. If you are too
+ eager to pluck up the tares, you are very likely to pluck up with
+ them these untried possibilities of human excellence, and you
+ are, moreover, very likely to injure the growing wheat as well.
+ The demonstration of this lies in the recorded experience of
+ mankind.</p><br>
+
+ <p>Nor is this all. Mr. Mill's doctrine does not lend the least
+ countenance to the cardinal opinion of some writers in the last
+ century, that the only need of human character and of social
+ institutions is to be let alone. He never said that we were to
+ leave the ground uncultivated, to bring up whatever might chance
+ to grow. On the contrary, the ground was to be cultivated with
+ the utmost care and knowledge, with a view to prevent the growth
+ of tares&mdash;but cultivated in a certain manner. You may take
+ the method of the Inquisition, of the more cruel of the Puritans,
+ of De Maistre, of Mr. Carlyle; or you may take Mr. Mill's method
+ of cultivation. According to the doctrine of Liberty, we are to
+ devote ourselves to prevention, as the surest and most wholesome
+ mode of extirpation. Persuade; argue; cherish virtuous example;
+ bring up the young in habits of right opinion and right motive;
+ shape your social arrangements so as to stimulate the best parts
+ of character. By these means you will gain all the advantages
+ that could possibly have come of heroes and legislative
+ dragooning, as well as a great many more which neither heroes nor
+ legislative dragooning could ever have secured.</p>
+
+ <p>It is well with men, Mr. Mill said, moreover, in proportion as
+ they respect truth. Now they at once prove and strengthen their
+ respect for truth, by having an open mind to all its
+ possibilities, while at the same time they hold firmly to their
+ own proved convictions, until they hear better evidence to the
+ contrary. There is no anarchy, nor uncertainty, nor paralysing
+ air of provisionalness in such a frame of mind. So far is it from
+ being fatal to loyalty or reverence, that it is an indispensable
+ part of the groundwork of the only loyalty that a wise ruler or
+ teacher would care to inspire&mdash;the loyalty springing from a
+ rational conviction that, in a field open to all comers, he is
+ the best man they can find. Only on condition of liberty without
+ limit is the ablest and most helpful of 'heroes' sure to be
+ found; and only on condition of liberty without limit are his
+ followers sure to be worthy of him. You must have authority, and
+ yet must have obedience. The noblest and deepest and most
+ beneficent kind of authority is that which rests on an obedience
+ that is rational and spontaneous.</p><br>
+
+ <p>The same futile impatience which animates the political
+ utterances of Mr. Carlyle and his more weak-voiced imitators,
+ takes another form in men of a different training or temperament.
+ They insist that if the majority has the means of preventing vice
+ by law, it is folly and weakness not to resort to those means.
+ The superficial attractiveness of such a doctrine is obvious. The
+ doctrine of liberty implies a broader and a more patient view. It
+ says:&mdash;Even if you could be sure that what you take for vice
+ is so&mdash;and the history of persecution shows how careful you
+ should be in this preliminary point&mdash;even then it is an
+ undoubted and, indeed, a necessary tendency of this facile
+ repressive legislation, to make those who resort to it neglect
+ the more effective, humane, and durable kinds of preventive
+ legislation. You pass a law (if you can) putting down
+ drunkenness; there is a neatness in such a method very attractive
+ to fervid and impatient natures. Would you not have done better
+ to leave that law unpassed, and apply yourselves sedulously
+ instead to the improvement of the dwellings of the more drunken
+ class, to the provision of amusements that might compete with the
+ ale-house, to the extension and elevation of instruction, and so
+ on? You may say that this should be done, and yet the other
+ should not be left undone; but, as matter of fact and history,
+ the doing of the one has always gone with the neglect of the
+ other, and ascetic law-making in the interests of virtue has
+ never been accompanied either by law-making or any other kinds of
+ activity for making virtue easier or more attractive. It is the
+ recognition how little punishment can do, that leaves men free to
+ see how much social prevention can do. I believe, then, that what
+ seems to the criminal lawyers and passionate philanthropists
+ self-evident, is in truth an illusion, springing from a very
+ shallow kind of impatience, heated in some of them by the
+ addition of a cynical contempt for human nature and the worth of
+ human existence.</p>
+
+ <p>If people believe that the book of social or moral knowledge
+ is now completed, that we have turned over the last page and
+ heard the last word, much of the foundation of Mr. Mill's
+ doctrine would disappear. But those who hold this can hardly have
+ much to congratulate themselves upon. If it were so, and if
+ governments were to accept the principle that the only limits to
+ the enforcement of the moral standard of the majority are the
+ narrow expediencies of each special case, without reference to
+ any deep and comprehensive principle covering all the largest
+ considerations, why, then, the society to which we ought to look
+ with most admiration and envy, is the Eastern Empire during the
+ ninth and tenth centuries, when the Byzantine system of a
+ thorough subordination of the spiritual power had fully
+ consolidated itself!</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of On Compromise, by John Morley
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: On Compromise
+
+Author: John Morley
+
+Release Date: March 13, 2004 [EBook #11557]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ON COMPROMISE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Garrett Alley and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ON COMPROMISE
+
+ _'It makes all the difference in the world whether we put
+ Truth in the first place or in the second place.'_
+
+ WHATLEY
+
+
+
+
+ON COMPROMISE
+
+BY
+
+JOHN MORLEY
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
+
+ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON
+
+1908
+
+_This Edition first printed 1886_
+
+
+
+
+NOTE.
+
+The writer has availed himself of the opportunity of a new edition to
+add three or four additional illustrations in the footnotes. The
+criticisms on the first edition call for no remark, excepting this,
+perhaps, that the present little volume has no pretensions to be
+anything more than an Essay. To judge such it performance as if it
+professed to be an exhaustive Treatise in casuistry, is to subject it to
+tests which it was never designed to bear. Merely to open questions, to
+indicate points, to suggest cases, to sketch outlines,--as an Essay does
+all these things,--may often be a process not without its own modest
+usefulness and interest.
+
+_May 4, 1877._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY.
+
+ Design of this Essay
+ The question stated
+ Suggested by some existing tendencies in England
+ Comparison with other countries
+ Test of this comparison
+ The absent quality specifically defined
+ History and decay of some recent aspirations
+ Illustrations
+ Characteristics of one present mood
+ Analysis of its causes
+ (1) Influence of French examples
+ (2) Influence of the Historic Method
+ (3) Influence of the Newspaper Press
+ (4) Increase of material prosperity
+ (5) Transformation of the spiritual basis of thought
+ (6) Influence of a State Church
+
+
+ CHAPTER II. OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR
+
+ Questions of a dual doctrine lies at the outset of our inquiry
+ This doctrine formulated
+ Marks the triumph of _status quo_
+ Psychological vindication of such a doctrine
+ Answered by assertion of the dogmatic character of popular belief
+ And the pernicious social influence of its priests
+ The root idea of the defenders of a dual doctrine
+ Thesis of the present chapter, against that idea
+ Examination of some of the pleas for error
+ I. That a false opinion may be clothed with good associations
+ II. That all minds are not open to reason
+ III. That a false opinion, considered in relation to the general
+ mental attitude, may be less hurtful than its premature
+ demolition
+ IV. That mere negative truth is not a guide
+ V. That error has been a stepping-stone to truth
+ We cannot tell how much truth has been missed
+ Inevitableness is not utility
+
+
+ CHAPTER III. INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL SPIRIT.
+
+ The modern _disciplina arcani_
+ Hume's immoral advice
+ Evil intellectual effects of immoral compromise
+ Depravation that follows its grosser forms
+ The three provinces of compromise
+ Radical importance of their separation
+ Effects of their confusion in practical politics
+ Economy or management in the Formation of opinion
+ Its lawfulness turns on the claims of majority and minority over one
+ another
+ Thesis of the present chapter
+ Its importance, owing to the supremacy of the political spirit in
+ England
+ Effects of the predominance of this spirit
+ Contrasted with epochs of intellectual responsibility
+ A modern movement against the political spirit
+ An objection considered
+ Importance to character of rationalised conviction, and of ideals
+ The absence of them attenuates conduct
+ Illustrations in modern politics
+ Modern latitudinarianism
+ Illustration in two supreme issues
+ Pascal's remarks upon a state of Doubt
+ Dr. Newman on the same
+ Three ways of dealing with the issues
+ Another illustration of intellectual improbity
+ The Savoyard Vicar
+ Mischievousness of substituting spiritual self-indulgence for reason
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV. RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.
+
+ Compromise in Expression
+ Touches religion rather than politics
+ Hume on non-resistance
+ Reason why rights of free speech do not exactly coincide with rights of
+ free thought
+ Digression into the matter of free speech
+ Dissent no longer railing and vituperative
+ Tendency of modern free thought to assimilate some elements from the
+ old faith
+ A wide breach still remains
+ Heresy, however, no longer traced to depravity
+ Tolerance not necessarily acquiescence in scepticism
+ Object of the foregoing digression
+ The rarity of plain-speaking a reason why it is painful
+ Conformity in the relationship between child and parent
+ Between husband and wife
+ In the education of children
+ The case of an unbelieving priest
+ The case of one who fears to lose his influence
+ Conformity not harmless nor unimportant
+
+
+ CHAPTER V. THE REALISATION OF OPINION.
+
+ The application of opinion to conduct
+ Tempering considerations
+ Not to be pressed too far
+ Our action in realising our opinions depends on our social theory
+ Legitimate and illegitimate compromise in view of that
+ The distinction equally sound on the evolutional theory
+ Condition of progressive change
+ A plea for compromise examined
+ A second plea
+ The allegation of provisional usefulness examined
+ Illustrated in religious institutions
+ In political institutions
+ Burke's commendation of political compromise
+ The saying that small reforms may be the worst enemies of great ones
+ In what sense true
+ Illustration in the Elementary Education Act
+ Wisdom of social patience
+ The considerations which apply to political practice do not apply to
+ our own lives
+ Nor to the publication of social opinions
+ The amount of conscience in a community
+ Evil of attenuating this element
+ Historic illustration
+ New side of the discussion
+ Is earnestness of conviction fatal to concession of liberty to others?
+ Two propositions at the base of an affirmative answer
+ Earnestness of conviction consistent with sense of liability to error
+ Belief in one's own infallibility does not necessarily lead to
+ intolerance
+ The contrary notion due to juristic analogies in social discussion
+ Connection between the doctrine of liberty and social evolution
+ The timid compromisers superfluous apprehension
+ Material limits to the effect of moral speculation
+ Illustration from the history of Slavery
+ Illustration from French history
+ Practical influence of a faith in the self-protecting quality of a
+ society
+ Conclusion
+
+
+ NOTE TO PAGE 242.
+
+ The Doctrine of Liberty
+
+
+
+
+ON COMPROMISE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY.
+
+The design of the following essay is to consider, in a short and direct
+way, some of the limits that are set by sound reason to the practice of
+the various arts of accommodation, economy, management, conformity, or
+compromise. The right of thinking freely and acting independently, of
+using our minds without excessive awe of authority, and shaping our
+lives without unquestioning obedience to custom, is now a finally
+accepted principle in some sense or other with every school of thought
+that has the smallest chance of commanding the future. Under what
+circumstances does the exercise and vindication of the right, thus
+conceded in theory, become a positive duty in practice? If the majority
+are bound to tolerate dissent from the ruling opinions and beliefs,
+under what conditions and within what limitations is the dissentient
+imperatively bound to avail himself of this toleration? How far, and in
+what way, ought respect either for immediate practical convenience, or
+for current prejudices, to weigh against respect for truth? For how much
+is it well that the individual should allow the feelings and convictions
+of the many to count, when he comes to shape, to express, and to act
+upon his own feelings and convictions? Are we only to be permitted to
+defend general principles, on condition that we draw no practical
+inferences from them? Is every other idea to yield precedence and empire
+to existing circumstances, and is the immediate and universal
+workableness of a policy to be the main test of its intrinsic fitness?
+
+To attempt to answer all these questions fully would be nothing less
+than to attempt a compendium of life and duty in all their details, a
+Summa of cases of conscience, a guide to doubters at every point of the
+compass. The aim of the present writer is a comparatively modest one;
+namely, to seek one or two of the most general principles which ought
+to regulate the practice of compliance, and to suggest some of the
+bearings which they may have in their application to certain
+difficulties in modern matters of conduct.
+
+It is pretty plain that an inquiry of this kind needs to be fixed by
+reference to a given set of social circumstances tolerably well
+understood. There are some common rules as to the expediency of
+compromise and conformity, but their application is a matter of endless
+variety and the widest elasticity. The interesting and useful thing is
+to find the relation of these too vague rules to actual conditions; to
+transform them into practical guides and real interpreters of what is
+right and best in thought and conduct, in a special and definite kind of
+emergency. According to the current assumptions of the writer and the
+preacher, the one commanding law is that men should cling to truth and
+right, if the very heavens fall. In principle this is universally
+accepted. To the partisans of authority and tradition it is as much a
+commonplace as to the partisans of the most absolute and unflinching
+rationalism. Yet in practice all schools alike are forced to admit the
+necessity of a measure of accommodation in the very interests of truth
+itself. Fanatic is a name of such ill repute, exactly because one who
+deserves to be called by it injures good causes by refusing timely and
+harmless concession; by irritating prejudices that a wiser way of urging
+his own opinion might have turned aside; by making no allowances,
+respecting no motives, and recognising none of those qualifying
+principles, which are nothing less than necessary to make his own
+principle true and fitting in a given society. The interesting question
+in connection with compromise obviously turns upon the placing of the
+boundary that divides wise suspense in forming opinions, wise reserve in
+expressing them, and wise tardiness in trying to realise them, from
+unavowed disingenuousness and self-illusion, from voluntary
+dissimulation, and from indolence and pusillanimity. These are the three
+departments or provinces of compromise. Our subject is a question of
+boundaries.[1] And this question, being mainly one of time and
+circumstance, may be most satisfactorily discussed in relation to the
+time and the circumstances which we know best, or at least whose
+deficiencies and requirements are most pressingly visible to us.
+
+Though England counts her full share of fearless truth-seekers in most
+departments of inquiry, yet there is on the whole no weakening, but a
+rather marked confirmation, of what has become an inveterate national
+characteristic, and has long been recognised as such; a profound
+distrust, namely, of all general principles; a profound dislike both of
+much reference to them, and of any disposition to invest them with
+practical authority; and a silent but most pertinacious measurement of
+philosophic truths by political tests. 'It is not at all easy, humanly
+speaking,' says one who has tried the experiment, 'to wind an Englishman
+up to the level of dogma.' The difficulty has extended further than the
+dogma of theology. The supposed antagonism between expediency and
+principle has been pressed further and further away from the little
+piece of true meaning that it ever could be rightly allowed to have,
+until it has now come to signify the paramount wisdom of counting the
+narrow, immediate, and personal expediency for everything, and the
+whole, general, ultimate, and completed expediency for nothing.
+Principle is only another name for a proposition stating the terms of
+one of these larger expediencies. When principle is held in contempt, or
+banished to the far dreamland of the philosopher and the student, with
+an affectation of reverence that in a materialist generation is in truth
+the most overweening kind of contempt, this only means that men are
+thinking much of the interests of to-day, and little of the more ample
+interests of the many days to come. It means that the conditions of the
+time are unfriendly to the penetration and the breadth of vision which
+disclose to us the whole range of consequences that follow on certain
+kinds of action or opinion, and unfriendly to the intrepidity and
+disinterestedness which make us willing to sacrifice our own present
+ease or near convenience, in the hope of securing higher advantages for
+others or for ourselves in the future.
+
+Let us take politics, for example. What is the state of the case with
+us, if we look at national life in its broadest aspect? A German has his
+dream of a great fatherland which shall not only be one and
+consolidated, but shall in due season win freedom for itself, and be as
+a sacred hearth whence others may borrow the warmth of freedom and order
+for themselves. A Spaniard has his vision either of militant loyalty to
+God and the saints and the exiled line of his kings, or else of devotion
+to the newly won liberty and to the raising up of his fallen nation. An
+American, in the midst of the political corruption which for the moment
+obscures the great democratic experiment, yet has his imagination
+kindled by the size and resources of his land, and his enthusiasm fired
+by the high destinies which he believes to await its people in the
+centuries to come. A Frenchman, republican or royalist, with all his
+frenzies and 'fool-fury' of red or white, still has his hope and dream
+and aspiration, with which to enlarge his life and lift him on an ample
+pinion out from the circle of a poor egoism. What stirs the hope and
+moves the aspiration of our Englishman? Surely nothing either in the
+heavens above or on the earth beneath. The English are as a people
+little susceptible in the region of the imagination. But they have done
+good work in the world, acquired a splendid historic tradition of stout
+combat for good causes, founded a mighty and beneficent empire; and
+they have done all this notwithstanding their deficiencies of
+imagination. Their lands have been the home of great and forlorn causes,
+though they could not always follow the transcendental flights of their
+foreign allies and champions. If Englishmen were not strong in
+imagination, they were what is better and surer, strong in their hold of
+the great emancipating principles. What great political cause, her own
+or another's, is England befriending to-day? To say that no great cause
+is left, is to tell us that we have reached the final stage of human
+progress, and turned over the last leaf in the volume of human
+improvements. The day when this is said and believed marks the end of a
+nation's life. Is it possible that, after all, our old protestant
+spirit, with its rationality, its austerity, its steady political
+energy, has been struck with something of the mortal fatigue that seizes
+catholic societies after their fits of revolution?
+
+We need not forget either the atrocities or the imbecilities which mark
+the course of modern politics on the Continent. I am as keenly alive as
+any one to the levity of France, and the [Greek: hubris] of Germany. It
+may be true that the ordinary Frenchman is in some respects the victim
+of as poor an egoism as that of the ordinary Englishman; and that the
+American has no advantage over us in certain kinds of magnanimous
+sentiment. What is important is the mind and attitude, not of the
+ordinary man, but of those who should be extraordinary. The decisive
+sign of the elevation of a nation's life is to be sought among those who
+lead or ought to lead. The test of the health of a people is to be found
+in the utterances of those who are its spokesmen, and in the action of
+those whom it accepts or chooses to be its chiefs. We have to look to
+the magnitude of the issues and the height of the interests which engage
+its foremost spirits. What are the best men in a country striving for?
+And is the struggle pursued intrepidly and with a sense of its size and
+amplitude, or with creeping foot and blinking eye? The answer to these
+questions is the answer to the other question, whether the best men in
+the country are small or great. It is a commonplace that the manner of
+doing things is often as important as the things done. And it has been
+pointed out more than once that England's most creditable national
+action constantly shows itself so poor and mean in expression that the
+rest of Europe can discern nothing in it but craft and sinister
+interest. Our public opinion is often rich in wisdom, but we lack the
+courage of our wisdom. We execute noble achievements, and then are best
+pleased to find shabby reasons for them.
+
+There is a certain quality attaching alike to thought and expression and
+action, for which we may borrow the name of grandeur. It has been
+noticed, for instance, that Bacon strikes and impresses us, not merely
+by the substantial merit of what he achieved, but still more by a
+certain greatness of scheme and conception. This quality is not a mere
+idle decoration. It is not a theatrical artifice of mask or buskin, to
+impose upon us unreal impressions of height and dignity. The added
+greatness is real. Height of aim and nobility of expression are true
+forces. They grow to be an obligation upon us. A lofty sense of personal
+worth is one of the surest elements of greatness. That the lion should
+love to masquerade in the ass's skin is not modesty and reserve, but
+imbecility and degradation. And that England should wrap herself in the
+robe of small causes and mean reasons is the more deplorable, because
+there is no nation in the world the substantial elements of whose power
+are so majestic and imperial as our own. Our language is the most widely
+spoken of all tongues, its literature is second to none in variety and
+power. Our people, whether English or American, have long ago superseded
+the barbarous device of dictator and Caesar by the manly arts of
+self-government. We understand that peace and industry are the two most
+indispensable conditions of modern civilisation, and we draw the lines
+of our policy in accordance with such a conviction. We have had imposed
+upon us by the unlucky prowess of our ancestors the task of ruling a
+vast number of millions of alien dependents. We undertake it with a
+disinterestedness, and execute it with a skill of administration, to
+which history supplies no parallel, and which, even if time should show
+that the conditions of the problem were insoluble, will still remain
+for ever admirable. All these are elements of true pre-eminence. They
+are calculated to inspire us with the loftiest consciousness of national
+life. They ought to clothe our voice with authority, to nerve our action
+by generous resolution, and to fill our counsels with weightiness and
+power.
+
+Within the last forty years England has lost one by one each of those
+enthusiasms which may have been illusions,--some of them undoubtedly
+were so,--but which at least testified to the existence among us, in a
+very considerable degree, of a vivid belief in the possibility of
+certain broad general theories being true and right, as well as in the
+obligation of making them lights to practical conduct and desire. People
+a generation ago had eager sympathy with Hungary, with Italy, with
+Poland, because they were deeply impressed by the doctrine of
+nationalities. They had again a generous and energetic hatred of such an
+institution as the negro slavery of America, because justice and
+humanity and religion were too real and potent forces within their
+breasts to allow them to listen to those political considerations by
+which American statesmen used to justify temporising and compromise.
+They had strong feelings about Parliamentary Reform, because they were
+penetrated by the principle that the possession of political power by
+the bulk of a society is the only effective security against sinister
+government; or else by the principle that participation in public
+activity, even in the modest form of an exercise of the elective
+franchise, is an elevating and instructing agency; or perhaps by the
+principle that justice demands that those who are compelled to obey laws
+and pay national taxes should have a voice in making the one and
+imposing the other.
+
+It may be said that the very fate of these aspirations has had a
+blighting effect on public enthusiasm and the capacity of feeling it.
+Not only have most of them now been fulfilled, and so passed from
+aspiration to actuality, but the results of their fulfilment have been
+so disappointing as to make us wonder whether it is really worth while
+to pray, when to have our prayers granted carries the world so very
+slight a way forward. The Austrian is no longer in Italy; the Pope has
+ceased to be master in Rome; the patriots of Hungary are now in
+possession of their rights, and have become friends of their old
+oppressors; the negro slave has been transformed into an American
+citizen. At home, again, the gods have listened to our vows. Parliament
+has been reformed, and the long-desired mechanical security provided for
+the voter's freedom. We no longer aspire after all these things, you may
+say, because our hopes have been realised and our dreams have come true.
+It is possible that the comparatively prosaic results before our eyes at
+the end of all have thrown a chill over our political imagination. What
+seemed so glorious when it was far off, seems perhaps a little poor now
+that it is near; and this has damped the wing of political fancy. The
+old aspirations have vanished, and no new ones have arisen in their
+place. Be the cause what it may, I should express the change in this
+way, that the existing order of facts, whatever it may be, now takes a
+hardly disputed precedence with us over ideas, and that the coarsest
+political standard is undoubtingly and finally applied over the whole
+realm of human thought.
+
+The line taken up by the press and the governing classes of England
+during the American Civil War may serve to illustrate the kind of mood
+which we conceive to be gaining firmer hold than ever of the national
+mind. Those who sympathised with the Southern States listened only to
+political arguments, and very narrow and inefficient political
+arguments, as it happened, when they ought to have seen that here was an
+issue which involved not only political ideas, but moral and religious
+ideas as well. That is to say, the ordinary political tests were not
+enough to reveal the entire significance of the crisis, nor were the
+political standards proper for measuring the whole of the expediencies
+hanging in the balance. The conflict could not be adequately gauged by
+such questions as whether the Slave States had or had not a
+constitutional right to establish an independent government; whether the
+Free States were animated by philanthropy or by love of empire; whether
+it was to the political advantage of England that the American Union
+should be divided and consequently weakened. Such questions were not
+necessarily improper in themselves, and we can imagine circumstances in
+which they might be not only proper but decisive. But, the
+circumstances being what they were, the narrower expediencies of
+ordinary politics were outweighed by one of those supreme and
+indefeasible expediencies which are classified as moral. These are, in
+other words, the higher, wider, more binding, and transcendent part of
+the master art of social wellbeing.
+
+Here was only one illustration of the growing tendency to substitute the
+narrowest political point of view for all the other ways of regarding
+the course of human affairs, and to raise the limitations which
+practical exigencies may happen to set to the application of general
+principles, into the very place of the principles themselves. Nor is the
+process of deteriorating conviction confined to the greater or noisier
+transactions of nations. It is impossible that it should be so. That
+process is due to causes which affect the mental temper an a whole, and
+pour round us an atmosphere that enervates our judgment from end to end,
+not more in politics than in morality, and not more in morality than in
+philosophy, in art, and in religion. Perhaps this tendency never showed
+itself more offensively than when the most important newspaper in the
+country criticised our great naturalist's scientific speculations as to
+the descent of man, from the point of view of property, intelligence,
+and a stake in the country, and severely censured him for revealing his
+particular zoological conclusions to the general public, at a moment
+when the sky of Paris was red with the incendiary flames of the Commune.
+It would be hard to reduce the transformation of all truth into a
+subordinate department of daily politics, to a more gross and unseemly
+absurdity.
+
+The consequences of such a transformation, of putting immediate social
+convenience in the first place, and respect for truth in the second, are
+seen, as we have said, in a distinct and unmistakable lowering of the
+level of national life; a slack and lethargic quality about public
+opinion; a growing predominance of material, temporary, and selfish
+aims, over those which are generous, far-reaching, and spiritual; a
+deadly weakening of intellectual conclusiveness, and clear-shining moral
+illumination, and, lastly, of a certain stoutness of self-respect for
+which England was once especially famous. A plain categorical
+proposition is becoming less and less credible to average minds. Or at
+least the slovenly willingness to hold two directly contradictory
+propositions at one and the same time is becoming more and more common.
+In religion, morals, and politics, the suppression of your true opinion,
+if not the positive profession of what you hold to be a false opinion,
+is hardly ever counted a vice, and not seldom even goes for virtue and
+solid wisdom. One is conjured to respect the beliefs of others, but
+forbidden to claim the same respect for one's own.
+
+This dread of the categorical proposition might be creditable, if it
+sprang from attachment to a very high standard of evidence, or from a
+deep sense of the relative and provisional quality of truth. There might
+even be a plausible defence set up for it, if it sprang from that
+formulated distrust of the energetic rational judgment in comparison
+with the emotional, affective, contemplative parts of man, which
+underlies the various forms of religious mysticism. If you look closely
+into our present mood, it is seen to be the product mainly and above all
+of a shrinking deference to the _status quo_, not merely as having a
+claim not to be lightly dealt with, which every serious man concedes,
+but as being the last word and final test of truth and justice. Physical
+science is allowed to be the sphere of accurate reasoning and distinct
+conclusions, but in morals and politics, instead of admitting that these
+subjects have equally a logic of their own, we silently suspect all
+first principles, and practically deny the strict inferences from
+demonstrated premisses. Faith in the soundness of given general theories
+of right and wrong melts away before the first momentary triumph of
+wrong, or the first passing discouragement in enforcing right.
+
+Our robust political sense, which has discovered so many of the secrets
+of good government, which has given us freedom with order, and popular
+administration without corruption, and unalterable respect for law along
+with indelible respect for individual right, this, which has so long
+been our strong point, is fast becoming our weakness and undoing. For
+the extension of the ways of thinking which are proper in politics, to
+other than political matter, means at the same time the depravation of
+the political sense itself. Not only is social expediency effacing the
+many other points of view that men ought to take of the various facts of
+life and thought: the idea of social expediency itself is becoming a
+dwarfed and pinched idea. Ours is the country where love of constant
+improvement ought to be greater than anywhere else, because fear of
+revolution is less. Yet the art of politics is growing to be as meanly
+conceived as all the rest At elections the national candidate has not
+often a chance against the local candidate, nor the man of a principle
+against the man of a class. In parliament we are admonished on high
+authority that 'the policy of a party is not the carrying out of the
+opinion of any section of it, but the general consensus of the whole,'
+which seems to be a hierophantic manner of saying that the policy of a
+party is one thing, and the principle which makes it a party is another
+thing, and that men who care very strongly about anything are to
+surrender that and the hope of it, for the sake of succeeding in
+something about which they care very little or not at all. This is our
+modern way of giving politicians heart for their voyage, of inspiring
+them with resoluteness and self-respect, with confidence in the worth of
+their cause and enthusiasm for its success. Thoroughness is a mistake,
+and nailing your flag to the mast a bit of delusive heroics. Think
+wholly of to-day, and not at all of to-morrow. Beware of the high and
+hold fast to the safe. Dismiss conviction, and study general consensus.
+No zeal, no faith, no intellectual trenchancy, but as much low-minded
+geniality and trivial complaisance as you please.
+
+Of course, all these characteristics of our own society mark tendencies
+that are common enough in all societies. They often spring from an
+indolence and enervation that besets a certain number of people, however
+invigorating the general mental climate may be. What we are now saying
+is that the general mental climate itself has, outside of the domain of
+physical science, ceased to be invigorating; that, on the contrary, it
+fosters the more inglorious predispositions of men, and encourages a
+native willingness, already so strong, to acquiesce in a lazy
+accommodation with error, an ignoble economy of truth, and a vicious
+compromise of the permanent gains of adhering to a sound general
+principle, for the sake of the temporary gains of departing from it.
+
+
+Without attempting an elaborate analysis of the causes that have brought
+about this debilitation of mental tone, we may shortly remind ourselves
+of one or two facts in the political history, in the intellectual
+history, and in the religious history of this generation, which perhaps
+help us to understand a phenomenon that we have all so keen an interest
+both in understanding and in modifying.
+
+To begin with what lies nearest to the surface. The most obvious agency
+at work in the present exaggeration of the political standard as the
+universal test of truth, is to be found in some contemporary incidents.
+The influence of France upon England since the revolution of 1848 has
+tended wholly to the discredit of abstract theory and general reasoning
+among us, in all that relates to politics, morals, and religion. In
+1848, not in 1789, questions affecting the fundamental structure and
+organic condition of the social union came for the first time into
+formidable prominence. For the first time those questions and the
+answers to them were stated in articulate formulas and distinct
+theories. They were not merely written in books; they so fascinated the
+imagination and inflamed the hopes of the time, that thousands of men
+were willing actually to go down into the streets and to shed their
+blood for the realisation of their generous dream of a renovated
+society. The same sight has been seen since, and even when we do not see
+it, we are perfectly aware that the same temper is smouldering. Those
+were premature attempts to convert a crude aspiration into a political
+reality, and to found a new social order on a number of umcompromising
+deductions from abstract principles of the common weal. They have had
+the natural effect of deepening the English dislike of a general theory,
+even when such a theory did no more than profess to announce a remote
+object of desire, and not the present goal of immediate effort.
+
+It is not only the Socialists who are responsible for the low esteem
+into which a spirit of political generalisation has fallen in other
+countries, in consequence of French experience. Mr. Mill has described
+in a well-known passage the characteristic vice of the leaders of all
+French parties, and not of the democratic party more than any other.
+'The commonplaces of politics in France,' he says, 'are large and
+sweeping practical maxims, from which, as ultimate premisses, men reason
+downwards to particular applications, and this they call being logical
+and consistent. For instance, they are perpetually arguing that such and
+such a measure ought to be adopted, because it is a consequence of the
+principle on which the form of government is founded; of the principle
+of legitimacy, or the principle of the sovereignty of the people. To
+which it may be answered that if these be really practical principles,
+they must rest on speculative grounds; the sovereignty of the people
+(for example) must be a right foundation for government, because a
+government thus constituted tends to produce certain beneficial effects.
+Inasmuch, however, as no government produces all possible beneficial
+effects, but all are attended with more or fewer inconveniences; and
+since these cannot be combated by means drawn from the very causes which
+produce them, it would often be a much stronger recommendation of some
+practical arrangement that it does not follow from what is called the
+general principle of the government, than that it does,'[2]
+
+The English feeling for compromise is on its better side the result of a
+shrewd and practical, though informal, recognition of a truth which the
+writer has here expressed in terms of Method. The disregard which the
+political action of France has repeatedly betrayed of a principle really
+so important has hitherto strengthened our own regard for it, until it
+has not only made us look on its importance as exclusive and final, but
+has extended our respect for the right kind of compromise to wrong and
+injurious kinds.
+
+A minor event, which now looks much less important than it did not many
+years ago, but which still had real influence in deteriorating moral
+judgment, was the career of a late sovereign of France. Some apparent
+advantages followed for a season from a rule which had its origin in a
+violent and perfidious usurpation, and which was upheld by all the arts
+of moral corruption, political enervation, and military repression. The
+advantages lasted long enough to create in this country a steady and
+powerful opinion that Napoleon the Third's early crime was redeemed by
+the seeming prosperity which followed. The shocking prematureness of
+this shallow condonation is now too glaringly visible for any one to
+deny it. Not often in history has the great truth that 'morality is the
+nature of things' received corroboration so prompt and timely. We need
+not commit ourselves to the optimistic or sentimental hypothesis that
+wickedness always fares ill in the world, or on the other hand that
+whoso hearkens diligently to the divine voice, and observes all the
+commandments to do them, shall be blessed in his basket and his store
+and all the work of his hand. The claims of morality to our allegiance,
+so far as its precepts are solidly established, rest on the same
+positive base as our faith in the truth of physical laws. Moral
+principles, when they are true, are at bottom only registered
+generalisations from experience. They record certain uniformities of
+antecedence and consequence in the region of human conduct Want of faith
+in the persistency of these uniformities is only a little less fatuous
+in the moral order than a corresponding want of faith would instantly
+disclose itself to be in the purely physical order. In both orders alike
+there is only too much of this kind of fatuousness, this readiness to
+believe that for once in our favour the stream shall flow up hill, that
+we may live in miasmatic air unpoisoned, that a government may depress
+the energy, the self-reliance, the public spirit of its citizens, and
+yet be able to count on these qualities whenever the government itself
+may have broken down, and left the country to make the best of such
+resources as are left after so severe and prolonged a drain. This is the
+sense in which morality is the nature of things. The system of the
+Second Empire was in the same sense an immoral system. Unless all the
+lessons of human experience were futile, and all the principles of
+political morality mere articles of pedantry, such a system must
+inevitably bring disaster, as we might have seen that it was sowing the
+seeds of disaster. Yet because the catastrophe lingered, opinion in
+England began to admit the possibility of evil being for this once good,
+and to treat any reference to the moral and political principles which
+condemned the imperial system, and all systems like it, beyond hope or
+appeal, as simply the pretext of a mutinous or Utopian impatience.
+
+This, however, is only one of the more superficial influences which have
+helped and fallen in with the working of profounder causes of weakened
+aspiration and impoverished moral energy, and of the substitution of
+latitudinarian acquiescence and faltering conviction for the
+whole-hearted assurance of better times. Of these deeper causes, the
+most important in the intellectual development of the prevailing forms
+of thought and sentiment is the growth of the Historic Method. Let us
+consider very shortly how the abuse of this method, and an unauthorised
+extension and interpretation of its conclusions, are likely to have had
+something to do with the enervation of opinion.
+
+The Historic Method may be described as the comparison of the forms of
+an idea, or a usage, or a belief, at any given time, with the earlier
+forms from which they were evolved, or the later forms into which they
+were developed, and the establishment, from such a comparison, of an
+ascending and descending order among the facts. It consists in the
+explanation of existing parts in the frame of society by connecting them
+with corresponding parts in some earlier frame; in the identification of
+present forms in the past, and past forms in the present. Its main
+process is the detection of corresponding customs, opinions, laws,
+beliefs, among different communities, and a grouping of them into
+general classes with reference to some one common feature. It is a
+certain way of seeking answers to various questions of origin, resting
+on the same general doctrine of evolution, applied to moral and social
+forms, as that which is being applied with so much ingenuity to the
+series of organic matter. The historic conception is a reference of
+every state of society to a particular stage in the evolution of its
+general conditions. Ideas of law, of virtue, of religion, of the
+physical universe, of history, of the social union itself, all march in
+a harmonious and inter-dependent order.
+
+Curiosity with reference to origins is for various reasons the most
+marked element among modern scientific tendencies. It covers the whole
+field, moral, intellectual, and physical, from the smile or the frown on
+a man's face, up to the most complex of the ideas in his mind; from the
+expression of his emotions, to their root and relations with one another
+in his inmost organisation. As an ingenious writer, too soon lost to our
+political literature, has put it:--'If we wanted to describe one of the
+most marked results, perhaps the most marked result, of late thought, we
+should say that by it everything is made _an antiquity_. When in former
+times our ancestors thought of an antiquarian, they described him as
+occupied with coins and medals and Druids' stones. But now there are
+other relics; indeed all matter is become such. Man himself has to the
+eye of science become an antiquity. She tries to read, is beginning to
+read, knows she ought to read, in the frame of each man the result of a
+whole history of all his life, and what he is and what makes him so.'[3]
+Character is considered less with reference to its absolute qualities
+than as an interesting scene strewn with scattered rudiments, survivals,
+inherited predispositions. Opinions are counted rather as phenomena to
+be explained than as matters of truth and falsehood. Of usages, we are
+beginning first of all to think where they came from, and secondarily
+whether they are the most fitting and convenient that men could be got
+to accept. In the last century men asked of a belief or a story, Is it
+true? We now ask, How did men come to take it for true? In short the
+relations among social phenomena which now engage most attention, are
+relations of original source, rather than those of actual consistency in
+theory and actual fitness in practice. The devotees of the current
+method are more concerned with the pedigree and genealogical connections
+of a custom or an idea than with its own proper goodness or badness, its
+strength or its weakness.
+
+Though there is no necessary or truly logical association between
+systematic use of this method rightly limited, and a slack and slipshod
+preference of vague general forms over definite ideas, yet every one can
+see its tendency, if uncorrected, to make men shrink from importing
+anything like absolute quality into their propositions. We can see also,
+what is still worse, its tendency to place individual robustness and
+initiative in the light of superfluities, with which a world that goes
+by evolution can very well dispense. Men easily come to consider
+clearness and positiveness in their opinions, staunchness in holding and
+defending them, and fervour in carrying them into action, as equivocal
+virtues of very doubtful perfection, in a state of things where every
+abuse has after all had a defensible origin; where every error has, we
+must confess, once been true relatively to other parts of belief in
+those who held the error; and where all parts of life are so bound up
+with one another, that it is of no avail to attack one evil, unless you
+attack many more at the same time. This is a caricature of the real
+teaching of the Historic Method, of which we shall have to speak
+presently; but it is one of those caricatures which the natural sloth in
+such matters, and the indigenous intellectual haziness of the majority
+of men, make them very willing to take for the true philosophy of
+things.
+
+
+Then there is the newspaper press, that huge engine for keeping
+discussion on a low level, and making the political test final. To take
+off the taxes on knowledge was to place a heavy tax on broad and
+independent opinion. The multiplication of journals 'delivering brawling
+judgments unashamed on all things all day long,' has done much to deaden
+the small stock of individuality in public verdicts. It has done much to
+make vulgar ways of looking at things and vulgar ways of speaking of
+them stronger and stronger, by formulating and repeating and
+stereotyping them incessantly from morning until afternoon, and from
+year's end to year's end. For a newspaper must live, and to live it must
+please, and its conductors suppose, perhaps not altogether rightly, that
+it can only please by being very cheerful towards prejudices, very
+chilly to general theories, loftily disdainful to the men of a
+principle. Their one cry to an advocate of improvement is some sagacious
+silliness about recognising the limits of the practicable in politics,
+and seeing the necessity of adapting theories to facts. As if the fact
+of taking a broader and wiser view than the common crowd disqualifies a
+man from knowing what the view of the common crowd happens to be, and
+from estimating it at the proper value for practical purposes. Why are
+the men who despair of improvement to be the only persons endowed with
+the gift of discerning the practicable? It is, however, only too easy to
+understand how a journal, existing for a day, should limit its view to
+the possibilities of the day, and how, being most closely affected by
+the particular, it should coldly turn its back upon all that is general.
+And it is easy, too, to understand the reaction of this intellectual
+timorousness upon the minds of ordinary readers, who have too little
+natural force and too little cultivation to be able to resist the
+narrowing and deadly effect of the daily iteration of short-sighted
+commonplaces.
+
+
+Far the most penetrating of all the influences that are impairing the
+moral and intellectual nerve of our generation, remain still to be
+mentioned. The first of these is the immense increase of material
+prosperity, and the second is the immense decline in sincerity of
+spiritual interest. The evil wrought by the one fills up the measure of
+the evil wrought by the other. We have been, in spite of momentary
+declensions, on a flood tide of high profits and a roaring trade, and
+there is nothing like a roaring trade for engendering latitudinarians.
+The effect of many possessions, especially if they be newly acquired, in
+slackening moral vigour, is a proverb. Our new wealth is hardly leavened
+by any tradition of public duty such as lingers among the English
+nobles, nor as yet by any common custom of devotion to public causes,
+such as seems to live and grow in the United States. Under such
+conditions, with new wealth come luxury and love of ease and that fatal
+readiness to believe that God has placed us in the best of possible
+worlds, which so lowers men's aims and unstrings their firmness of
+purpose. Pleasure saps high interests, and the weakening of high
+interests leaves more undisputed room for pleasure. Management and
+compromise appear among the permitted arts, because they tend to
+comfort, and comfort is the end of ends, comprehending all ends. Not
+truth is the standard, but the politic and the reputable. Are we to
+suppose that it is firm persuasion of the greater scripturalness of
+episcopacy that turns the second generation of dissenting manufacturers
+in our busy Lancashire into churchmen? Certainly such conversions do no
+violence to the conscience of the proselyte, for he is intellectually
+indifferent, a spiritual neuter.
+
+That brings us to the root of the matter, the serious side of a
+revolution that in this social consequence is so unspeakably ignoble.
+This root of the matter is the slow transformation now at work of the
+whole spiritual basis of thought. Every age is in some sort an age of
+transition, but our own is characteristically and cardinally an epoch of
+transition in the very foundations of belief and conduct. The old hopes
+have grown pale, the old fears dim; strong sanctions are become weak,
+and once vivid faiths very numb. Religion, whatever destinies may be in
+store for it, is at least for the present hardly any longer an organic
+power. It is not that supreme, penetrating, controlling, decisive part
+of a man's life, which it has been, and will be again. The work of
+destruction is all the more perturbing to timorous spirits, and more
+harassing even to doughtier spirits, for being done impalpably,
+indirectly, almost silently and as if by unseen hands. Those who dwell
+in the tower of ancient faiths look about them in constant
+apprehension, misgiving, and wonder, with the hurried uneasy mien of
+people living amid earthquakes. The air seems to their alarms to be full
+of missiles, and all is doubt, hesitation, and shivering expectancy.
+Hence a decisive reluctance to commit one's self. Conscience has lost
+its strong and on-pressing energy, and the sense of personal
+responsibility lacks sharpness of edge. The native hue of spiritual
+resolution is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of distracted, wavering,
+confused thought. The souls of men have become void. Into the void have
+entered in triumph the seven devils of Secularity.
+
+And all this hesitancy, this tampering with conviction for fear of its
+consequences, this want of faithful dealing in the highest matters, is
+being intensified, aggravated, driven inwards like a fatal disorder
+toward the vital parts, by the existence of a State Church. While
+thought stirs and knowledge extends, she remains fast moored by ancient
+formularies. While the spirit of man expands in search after new light,
+and feels energetically for new truth, the spirit of the Church is
+eternally entombed within the four corners of acts of parliament. Her
+ministers vow almost before they have crossed the threshold of manhood
+that they will search no more. They virtually swear that they will to
+the end of their days believe what they believe then, before they have
+had time either to think or to know the thoughts of others. They take
+oath, in other words, to lead mutilated lives. If they cannot keep this
+solemn promise, they have at least every inducement that ordinary human
+motives can supply, to conceal their breach of it. The same system which
+begins by making mental indolence a virtue and intellectual narrowness a
+part of sanctity, ends by putting a premium on something too like
+hypocrisy. Consider the seriousness of fastening up in these bonds some
+thousands of the most instructed and intelligent classes in the country,
+the very men who would otherwise be best fitted from position and
+opportunities for aiding a little in the long, difficult, and plainly
+inevitable work of transforming opinion. Consider the waste of
+intelligence, and what is assuredly not less grave, the positive
+dead-weight and thick obstruction, by which an official hierarchy so
+organised must paralyse mental independence in a community.
+
+We know the kind of man whom this system delights to honour. He was
+described for us five and thirty years ago by a master hand. 'Mistiness
+is the mother of wisdom. A man who can set down half a dozen general
+propositions which escape from destroying one another only by being
+diluted into truisms; who can hold the balance between opposites so
+skilfully as to do without fulcrum or beam; who never enunciates a truth
+without guarding himself against being supposed to exclude the
+contradictory,--who holds that scripture is the only authority, yet that
+the Church is to be deferred to, that faith only justifies, yet that it
+does not justify without works, that grace does not depend upon the
+sacraments, yet is not given without them, that bishops are a divine
+ordinance, yet that those who have them not are in the same religious
+condition as those who have,--this is your safe man and the hope of the
+Church; this is what the Church is said to want, not party men, but
+sensible, temperate, sober, well-judging persons, to guide it through
+the channel of no meaning, between the Scylla and Charybdis of Aye and
+No.'[4] The writer then thought that such a type could not endure, and
+that the Church must become more real. On the contrary, her reality is
+more phantom-like now than it was then. She is the sovereign pattern and
+exemplar of management, of the triumph of the political method in
+spiritual things, and of the subordination of ideas to the _status quo_.
+
+It is true that all other organised priesthoods are also bodies which
+move within formularies even more inelastic than those of the
+Establishment. But then they have not the same immense social power, nor
+the same temptations to make all sacrifices to preserve it. They affect
+the intellectual temper of large numbers of people, but the people whom
+they affect are not so strongly identified with the greater organs of
+the national life. The State Church is bound up in the minds of the most
+powerful classes with a given ordering of social arrangements, and the
+consequence of this is that the teachers of the Church have reflected
+back upon thorn a sense of responsibility for these arrangements, which
+obscures their spirituality, clogs their intellectual energy and mental
+openness, and turns them into a political army of obstruction to new
+ideas. They feel themselves to a certain extent discharged from the
+necessity of recognising the tremendous conflict in the region of belief
+that goes on around them, just as if they were purely civil
+administrators, concerned only with the maintenance of the present
+order. None of this is true of the private Churches. Their teachers and
+members regard belief as something wholly independent of the civil
+ordering of things. However little enlightened in some respects, however
+hostile to certain of the ideas by which it is sought to replace their
+own, they are at least representatives of the momentous principle of our
+individual responsibility for the truth of our opinions. They may bring
+their judgments to conclusions that are less in accord with modern
+tendencies than those of one or two schools that still see their way to
+subscribing Anglican articles and administering Anglican rites. At any
+rate, they admit that the use of his judgment is a duty incumbent on the
+individual, and a duty to be discharged without reference to any
+external considerations whatever, political or otherwise. This is an
+elevating, an exhilarating principle, however deficiencies of culture
+may have narrowed the sphere of its operations. It is because a State
+Church is by its very conception hostile to such a principle, that we
+are justified in counting it apart from the private Churches with all
+their faults, and placing it among the agencies that weaken the vigour
+of a national conscience and check the free play and access of
+intellectual light.
+
+Here we may leave the conditions that have made an inquiry as to some of
+the limits of compromise, which must always be an interesting and
+important subject, one of especial interest and importance to ourselves
+at present. Is any renovation of the sacredness of principle a possible
+remedy for some of these elements of national deterioration? They will
+not disappear until the world has grown into possession of a new
+doctrine. When that comes, all other good things will follow. What we
+have to remember is that the new doctrine itself will never come, except
+to spirits predisposed to their own liberation. Our day of small
+calculations and petty utilities must first pass away; our vision of the
+true expediencies must reach further and deeper; our resolution to
+search for the highest verities, to give up all and follow them, must
+first become the supreme part of ourselves.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: See below, ch. iii.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _System of Logic_, bk. vi. ch. xi.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Bagehot.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Dr. J.H. Newman's _Essays Critical and Historical_, vol. i.
+p. 301.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+OF THE POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ERROR.
+
+ _Das Wahre foerdert; aus dem Irrthum entwickelt
+ sich nichts, er verwickeltuns nur.--_
+ GOETHE.
+
+At the outset of an inquiry how far existing facts ought to be allowed
+to overrule ideas and principles that are at variance with them, a
+preliminary question lies in our way, about which it may be well to say
+something. This is the question of a dual doctrine. In plainer words,
+the question whether it is expedient that the more enlightened classes
+in a community should upon system not only possess their light in
+silence, but whether they should openly encourage a doctrine for the
+less enlightened classes which they do not believe to be true for
+themselves, while they regard it as indispensably useful in the case of
+less fortunate people. An eminent teacher tells us how after he had
+once succeeded in presenting the principle of Necessity to his own mind
+in a shape which seemed to bring with it all the advantages of the
+principle of Free Will, he 'no longer suffered under the burden so heavy
+to one who aims at being a reformer in opinions, of thinking one
+doctrine true, and the contrary doctrine morally beneficial.'[5] The
+discrepancy which this writer thought a heavy burden has struck others
+as the basis of a satisfactory solution.
+
+ Nil dulcius est bene quam munita tenere
+ Edita doctrina sapientum templa serena,
+ Despicere unde queas alios passimque videre
+ Errare atque viam palantes quaerere vitae.
+
+The learned are to hold the true doctrine; the unlearned are to be
+taught its morally beneficial contrary. 'Let the Church,' it has been
+said, 'admit two descriptions of believers, those who are for the
+letter, and those who hold by the spirit. At a certain point in rational
+culture, belief in the supernatural becomes for many an impossibility;
+do not force such persons to wear a cowl of lead. Do not you meddle with
+what we teach or write, and then we will not dispute the common people
+with you; do not contest our place in the school and the academy, and
+then we will surrender to your hands the country school.'[6] This is
+only a very courageous and definite way of saying what a great many less
+accomplished persons than M. Renan have silently in their hearts, and in
+England quite as extensively as in France. They do not believe in hell,
+for instance, but they think hell a useful fiction for the lower
+classes. They would deeply regret any change in the spirit or the
+machinery of public instruction which would release the lower classes
+from so wholesome an error. And as with hell, so with other articles of
+the supernatural system; the existence of a Being who will distribute
+rewards and penalties in a future state, the permanent sentience of each
+human personality, the vigilant supervision of our conduct, as well as
+our inmost thoughts and desires, by the heavenly powers; and so forth.
+
+Let us discuss this matter impersonally, without reference to our own
+opinions and without reference to the evidence for or against their
+truth. I am not speaking now of those who hold all these ideas to be
+certainly true, or highly probable, and who at the same time
+incidentally insist on the great usefulness of such ideas in confirming
+morality and producing virtuous types of character. With such persons,
+of course, there is no question of a dual doctrine. They entertain
+certain convictions themselves, and naturally desire to have their
+influence extended over others. The proposition which we have to
+consider is of another kind. It expresses the notions of those who--to
+take the most important kind of illustration--think untrue the popular
+ideas of supernatural interference in our obscure human affairs; who
+think untrue the notion of the prolongation of our existence after death
+to fulfil the purpose of the supernatural powers; or at least who think
+them so extremely improbable that no reasonable man or woman, once
+awakened to a conviction of this improbability, would thenceforth be
+capable of receiving effective check or guidance from beliefs, that
+would have sunk slowly down to the level of doubtful guesses. We have
+now to deal with those who while taking this view of certain doctrines,
+still declare them to be indispensable for restraining from anti-social
+conduct all who are not acute or instructed enough to see through them.
+In other words, they think error useful, and that it may be the best
+thing for society that masses of men should cheat and deceive themselves
+in their most fervent aspirations and their deepest assurances. This is
+the furthest extreme to which the empire of existing facts over
+principles can well be imagined to go. It lies at the root of every
+discussion upon the limits which separate lawful compromise or
+accommodation from palpable hypocrisy.
+
+It will probably be said that according to the theory of the school of
+which M. Renan is the most eloquent representative, the common people
+are not really cheating themselves or being cheated. Indeed M. Renan
+himself has expatiated on the charm of seeing figures of the ideal in
+the cottages of the poor, images representing no reality, and so forth.
+'What a delight,' he cries, 'for the man who is borne down by six days
+of toil to come on the seventh to rest upon his knees, to contemplate
+the tall columns, a vault, arches, an altar; to listen to the chanting,
+to hear moral and consoling words!'[7] The dogmas which criticism
+attacks are not for these poor people 'the object of an explicit
+affirmation,' and therefore there is no harm in them; 'it is the
+privilege of pure sentiment to be invulnerable, and to play with poison
+without being hurt by it.' In other words, the dogmas are false, but the
+liturgy, as a performance stirring the senses of awe, reverence,
+susceptibility to beauty of various kinds, appeals to and satisfies a
+sentiment that is both true and indispensable in the human mind. More
+than this, in the two or three supreme moments of life to which men look
+forward and on which they look back,--at birth, at the passing of the
+threshold into fulness of life, at marriage, at death,--the Church is
+present to invest the hour with a certain solemn and dignified charm.
+That is the way in which the instructed are to look at the services of a
+Church, after they have themselves ceased to believe its faith, us a
+true account of various matters which it professes to account for
+truly.
+
+It will be perceived that this is not exactly the ground of those who
+think a number of what they confess to be untruths, wholesome for the
+common people for reasons of police, and who would maintain churches on
+the same principle on which they maintain the county constabulary. It is
+a psychological, not a political ground. It is on the whole a more true,
+as well as a far more exalted position. The human soul, they say, has
+these lovely and elevating aspirations; not to satisfy them is to leave
+man a dwarfed creature. Why quarrel with a system that leaves you to
+satisfy them in the true way, and does much to satisfy thorn in a false
+but not very harmful way among those who unfortunately have to sit in
+the darkness of the outer court?
+
+This is not a proper occasion for saying anything about the adequateness
+of the catholic, or any other special manner of fostering and solacing
+the religious impulses of men. We have to assume that the instructed
+class believe the catholic dogmas to be untrue, and yet wishes the
+uninstructed to be handed over to a system that reposes on the theory
+that these dogmas are superlatively true. What then is to be said of the
+tenableness of such a position? To the plain man it looks like a
+deliberate connivance at a plan for the propagation of error--assuming,
+as I say, for the moment, that these articles of belief are erroneous
+and contrary to fact and evidence. Ah, but, we are told, the people make
+no explicit affirmation of dogma; that does nothing for them; they are
+indifferent to it. A great variety of things might be said to this
+statement. We might ask, for instance, whether the people ever made an
+explicit affirmation of dogma in the past, or whether it was always the
+hazy indifferent matter which it is supposed to be now. If so, whether
+we shall not have to re-cast our most fundamental notions of the way in
+which Christian civilisation has been evolved. If not, and if people did
+once explicitly affirm dogma, when exactly was it that they ceased to do
+so?
+
+The answers to these questions would all go to show that at the time
+when religion was the great controlling and organising force in conduct,
+the prime elemental dogmas were accepted with the most vivid conviction
+of reality. I do not pretend that the common people followed all the
+inferences which the intellectual subtlety of the master-spirits of
+theology drew so industriously from the simple premisses of scripture
+and tradition. But assuredly dogma was at the foundation of the whole
+structure. When did it cease to be so? How was the structure supported,
+after you had altered this condition of things?
+
+Apart from this historic issue, the main question one would like to put
+to the upholder of duality of religion on this plea, is the simple one,
+whether the power of the ceremonial which charms him so much is not
+actually at this moment drawn wholly from dogma and the tradition of
+dogma; whether its truth is not explicitly affirmed to the unlettered
+man, and whether the inseparable connection between the dogma and the
+ceremonial is not constantly impressed upon him by the spiritual
+teachers to whom the dual system hands him and his order over for all
+time? If any one of those philosophic critics will take the trouble to
+listen to a few courses of sermons at the present day, and the remark
+applies not less to protestant than to catholic churches, he will find
+that instead of that '_parole morale et consolante_' which is so
+soothing to think of, the pulpit is now the home of fervid controversy
+and often exacerbated declamation in favour of ancient dogma against
+modern science. We do not say whether this is or is not the wisest line
+for the clergy to follow. We only press the fact against those who wish
+us to believe that dogma counts for nothing in the popular faith, and
+that therefore we need not be uneasy as to its effects.
+
+Next, one would say to those who think that all will go well if you
+divide the community into two classes, one privileged to use its own
+mind, the other privileged to have its mind used by a priesthood, that
+they overlook the momentous circumstance of these professional upholders
+of dogmatic systems being also possessed of a vast social influence in
+questions that naturally belong to another sphere. There is hardly a
+single great controversy in modern politics, where the statesman does
+not find himself in immediate contact with the real or supposed
+interests, and with the active or passive sentiment, of one of these
+religious systems. Therefore if the instructed or intellectually
+privileged class cheerfully leave the field open to men who, _ex
+hypothesi_, are presumed to be less instructed, narrower, more
+impenetrable by reason, and the partisans of the letter against the
+spirit, then this result follows. They are deliberately strengthening
+the hands of the persons least fitted by judgment, experience, and
+temper, for using such power rightly. And they are strengthening them
+not merely in dealing with religious matters, but, what is of more
+importance, in dealing with an endless variety of the gravest social and
+political matters. It is impossible to map out the exact dimensions of
+the field in which a man shall exercise his influence, and to which he
+is to be rigorously confined. Give men influence in one matter,
+especially if that be such a matter as religious belief and ceremonial,
+and it is simply impossible that this influence shall not extend with
+more or less effect over as much of the whole sphere of conduct as they
+may choose surrendering the common people without dispute or effort to
+organised priesthoods for religious purposes, you would be inevitably
+including a vast number of other purposes in the self-same destination.
+This does not in the least prejudice practical ways of dealing with
+certain existing circumstances, such as the propriety or justice of
+allowing a catholic people to have a catholic university. It is only an
+argument against erecting into a complete and definite formula the
+division of a society into two great castes, the one with a religion of
+the spirit, the other with a creed of the letter.
+
+Again, supposing that the enlightened caste were to consent to abandon
+the common people to what are assumed to be lower and narrower forms of
+truth,--which is after all little more than a fine phrase for forms of
+falsehood,--what can be more futile than to suppose that such a
+compromise will be listened to for a single moment by a caste whose
+first principle is that they are the possessors and ministers, not of an
+inferior or superior form of truth, but of the very truth itself,
+absolute, final, complete, divinely sent, infallibly interpreted? The
+disciples of the relative may afford to compromise. The disciples of the
+absolute, never.
+
+We shall see other objections as we go on to this state of things, in
+which a minority holds true opinions and abandons the majority to false
+ones. At the bottom of the advocacy of a dual doctrine slumbers the idea
+that there is no harm in men being mistaken, or at least only so little
+harm as is more than compensated for by the marked tranquillity in which
+their mistake may wrap them. This is not an idea merely that
+intellectual error is a pathological necessity of the mind, no more to
+be escaped than the pathological necessities which afflict and finally
+dissolve the body. That is historically true. It is an idea that error
+somehow in certain stages, where there is enough of it, actually does
+good, like vaccination. Well, the thesis of the present chapter is that
+erroneous opinion or belief, in itself and as such, can never be useful.
+This may seem a truism which everybody is willing to accept without
+demur. But it is one of those truisms which persons habitually forget
+and repudiate in practice, just because they have never made it real to
+themselves by considering and answering the objections that may be
+brought against it. We see this repudiation before our eyes every day.
+Thus for instance, parents theoretically take it for granted that error
+cannot be useful, while they are teaching or allowing others to teach
+their children what they, the parents, believe to be untrue. Thus
+husbands who think the common theology baseless and unmeaning, are found
+to prefer that their wives shall not question this theology nor neglect
+its rites. These are only two out of a hundred examples of the daily
+admission that error may be very useful to other people. I need hardly
+say that to deny this, as the commonplace to which this chapter is
+devoted denies it, is a different thing from denying the expediency of
+letting errors alone at a given time. That is another question, to be
+discussed afterwards. You may have a thoroughly vicious and dangerous
+enemy, and yet it may be expedient to choose your own hour and occasion
+for attacking him. 'The passage from error to truth,' in the words of
+Condorcet, 'may be accompanied by certain evils. Every great change
+necessarily brings some of these in its train; and though they may be
+always far below the evil you are for destroying, yet it ought to do
+what is possible to diminish them. It is not enough to do good; one must
+do it in a good way. No doubt we should destroy all errors, but as it is
+impossible to destroy them all in an instant, we should imitate a
+prudent architect who, when obliged to destroy a building, and knowing
+how its parts are united together, sets about its demolition in such a
+way as to prevent its fall from being dangerous.'[8]
+
+Those, let us note by the way, who are accustomed to think the moral
+tone of the eighteenth century low and gross compared with that of the
+nineteenth, may usefully contrast these just and prudent word? of
+caution in extirpating error, with M. Renan's invitation to men whom he
+considers wrong in their interpretation of religion, to plant their
+error as widely and deeply as they can; and who are moreover themselves
+supposed to be demoralised, or else they would not be likely to
+acquiesce in a previous surrender of the universities to men whom they
+think in mortal error. Apart however from M. Renan, Condorcet's words
+merely assert the duty of setting to work to help on the change from
+false to true opinions with prudence, and this every sensible man
+admits. Our position is that in estimating the situation, in counting up
+and balancing the expediencies of an attack upon error at this or that
+point, nothing is to be set to the credit of error as such, nor is there
+anything in its own operations or effects to entitle it to a moment's
+respite. Every one would admit this at once in the case of physical
+truths, though there are those who say that some of the time spent in
+the investigation of physical truths might be more advantageously
+devoted to social problems. But in the case of moral and religious
+truths or errors, people, if they admit that nothing is to be set to the
+credit of error as such, still constantly have a subtle and practically
+mischievous confusion in their minds between the possible usefulness of
+error, and the possible expediency of leaving it temporarily
+undisturbed. What happens in consequence of such a confusion is this.
+Men leave error undisturbed, because they accept in a loose way the
+proposition that a belief may be 'morally useful without being
+intellectually sustainable,' They disguise their own dissent from
+popular opinions, because they regard such opinions as useful to other
+people. We are not now discussing the case of those who embrace a creed
+for themselves, on the ground that, though they cannot demonstrate its
+truth to the understanding, yet they find it pregnant with moralising
+and elevating characteristics. We are thinking of a very different
+attitude--that, namely, of persons who believe a creed to be not more
+morally useful than it is intellectually sustainable, so far as they
+themselves are concerned. To them it is pure and uncompensated error.
+Yet from a vague and general idea that what is useless error to them may
+be useful to others, they insist on doing their best to perpetuate the
+system which spreads and consecrates the error. And how do they settle
+the question? They reckon up the advantages, and forget the drawbacks.
+They detect and dwell on one or two elements of utility in the false
+belief or the worn-out institution, and leave out of all account the
+elements that make in the other direction.
+
+Considering how much influence this vague persuasion has in encouraging
+a well-meaning hypocrisy in individuals, and a profound stagnation in
+societies, it may be well to examine the matter somewhat generally. Let
+us try to measure the force of some of the most usual pleas for error.
+
+I. A false opinion, it may be said, is frequently found to have
+clustering around it a multitude of excellent associations, which do far
+more good than the false opinion that supports them, does harm. In the
+middle ages, for instance, there was a belief that a holy man had the
+gift of routing demons, of healing the sick, and of working divers other
+miracles. Supposing that this belief was untrue, supposing that it was
+an error to attribute the sudden death of an incredible multitude of
+troublesome flies in a church to the fact of Saint Bernard having
+excommunicated them, what then? The mistaken opinion was still
+associated with a deep reverence for virtue and sanctity, and this was
+more valuable, than the error of the explanation of the death of the
+flies was noxious or degrading.
+
+The answer to this seems to be as follows. First, in making false
+notions the proofs or close associates of true ones, you are exposing
+the latter to the ruin which awaits the former. For example, if you have
+in the minds of children or servants associated honesty, industry,
+truthfulness, with the fear of hell-fire, then supposing this fear to
+become extinct in their minds,--which, being unfounded in truth, it is
+in constant risk of doing--the virtues associated with it are likely to
+be weakened exactly in proportion as that association was strong.
+
+Second, for all good habits in thought or conduct there are good and
+real reasons in the nature of things. To leave such habits attached to
+false opinions is to lessen the weight of these natural or spontaneous
+reasons, and so to do more harm in the long run than effacement of them
+seems for a time to do good. Most excellences in human character have a
+spontaneous root in our nature. Moreover if they had not, and where they
+have not, there is always a valid and real external defence for them.
+The unreal defence must be weaker than the real one, and the
+substitution of a weak for a strong defence, where both are to be had,
+is not useful but the very opposite.
+
+II. It is true, the objector would probably continue, that there is a
+rational defence for all excellences of conduct, as there is for all
+that is worthy and fitting in institutions. But the force of a rational
+defence lies in the rationality of the man to whom it is proffered. The
+arguments which persuade one trained in scientific habits of thought,
+only touch persons of the same kind. Character is not all pure reason.
+That fitness of things which you pronounce to be the foundation of good
+habits, may be borne in upon men, and may speak to them, through other
+channels than the syllogism. You assume a community of highly-trained
+wranglers and proficient sophisters. The plain fact is that, for the
+mass of men, use and wont, rude or gracious symbols, blind custom,
+prejudices, superstitions,--however erroneous in themselves, however
+inadequate to the conveyance of the best truth,--are the only safe
+guardians of the common virtues. In this sense, then, error may have its
+usefulness.
+
+A hundred years ago this apology for error was met by those high-minded
+and interesting men, the French believers in human perfectibility, with
+their characteristic dogma,--of which Rousseau was the ardent
+expounder,--that man is born with a clear and unsophisticated spirit,
+perfectly able to discern all the simple truths necessary for common
+conduct by its own unaided light. His motives are all pure and unselfish
+and his intelligence is unclouded, until priests and tyrants mutilate
+the one and corrupt the other. We who have the benefit of the historic
+method, and have to take into account the medium that surrounds a human
+creature the moment it comes into the world, to say nothing of all the
+inheritance from the past which it brings within it into the world at
+the same moment, cannot take up this ground. We cannot maintain that
+everybody is born with light enough to see the rational defences of
+things for himself, without the education of institutions. What we do
+maintain is--and this is the answer to the plea for error at present
+under consideration--that whatever impairs the brightness of such light
+as a man has, is not useful but hurtful. Our reply to those who contend
+for the usefulness of error on the ground of the comparative impotence
+of rationality over ordinary minds, is something of this kind.
+Superstition, blind obedience to custom, and the other substitutes for a
+right and independent use of the mind, may accidentally and in some few
+respects impress good ideas upon persons who are too darkened to accept
+those ideas on their real merits. But then superstition itself is the
+main cause of this very darkness. To hold error is in so far to foster
+erroneous ways of thinking on all subjects; is to make the intelligence
+less and less ready to receive truth in all matters whatever. Men are
+made incapable of perceiving the rational defences, and of feeling
+rational motives, for good habits,--so far as they are thus
+incapable,--by the very errors which we are asked silently to
+countenance as useful substitutes for right reason. 'Erroneous motives,'
+as Condorcet has expressed this matter, 'have an additional drawback
+attached to them, the habit which they strengthen of reasoning ill. The
+more important the subject on which you reason ill, and the more you
+busy yourself about it, by so much the more dangerous do the influences
+of such a habit become. It is especially on subjects analogous to that
+on which you reason wrongly, or which you connect with it by habit, that
+such a defect extends most powerfully and most rapidly. Hence it is
+extremely hard for the man who believes himself obliged to conform in
+his conduct to what he considers truths useful to men, but who
+attributes the obligation to erroneous motives, to reason very correctly
+on the truths themselves; the more attention he pays to such motives,
+and the more importance he comes to attach to them, the more likely he
+will be to go wrong.'[9] So, in short, superstition does an immense harm
+by enfeebling rational ways of thinking; it does a little good by
+accidentally endorsing rational conclusions in one or two matters. And
+yet, though the evil which it is said to repair is a trifle beside the
+evil which it is admitted to inflict, the balance of expediencies is
+after all declared to be such as to warrant us in calling errors useful!
+
+III. A third objection now presents itself to me, which I wish to state
+as strongly as possible. 'Even if a false opinion cannot in itself be
+more useful than a true one, whatever good habits may seem to be
+connected with it, yet,' it may be contended, 'relatively to the general
+mental attitude of a set of men, to their other notions and maxims, the
+false opinion may entail less harm than would be wrought by its mere
+demolition. There are false opinions so intimately bound up with the
+whole way of thinking and feeling, that to introduce one or two detached
+true opinions in their stead, would, even if it were possible, only
+serve to break up that coherency of character and conduct which it is
+one of the chief objects of moralists and the great art of living to
+produce. For a true opinion does not necessarily bring in its train all
+the other true opinions that are logically connected with it. On the
+contrary, it is only too notorious a fact in the history of belief, that
+not merely individuals but whole societies are capable of holding at one
+and the same time contradictory opinions and mutually destructive
+principles. On the other hand, neither does a false opinion involve
+practically all the evil consequences deducible from it. For the results
+of human inconsistency are not all unhappy, and if we do not always act
+up to virtuous principle, no more do we always work out to its remotest
+inference every vicious principle. Not insincerity, but inconsistency,
+has constantly turned the adherents of persecuting precepts into friends
+of tolerant practice.'
+
+'It is a comparatively small thing to persuade a superstitious person to
+abandon this or that article of his superstition. You have no security
+that the rejection of the one article which you have displaced will lead
+to the rejection of any other, and it is quite possible that it may lead
+to all the more fervid an adhesion to what remains behind. Error,
+therefore, in view of such considerations may surely be allowed to have
+at least a provisional utility.'
+
+Now undoubtedly the repudiation of error is not at all the same thing
+as embracing truth. People are often able to see the force of arguments
+that destroy a given opinion, without being able to see the force of
+arguments for the positive opinion that ought to replace it. They can
+only be quite sure of seeing both, when they have acquired not merely a
+conviction that one notion is false and another true, but have
+furthermore exchanged a generally erroneous way of thinking for a
+generally correct way. Hence the truly important object with every one
+who holds opinions which he deems it of the highest moment that others
+should accept, must obviously be to reach people's general ways of
+thinking; to stir their love of truth; to penetrate them with a sense of
+the difference in the quality of evidence; to make them willing to
+listen to criticism and new opinion; and perhaps above all to teach them
+to take ungrudging and daily trouble to clear up in their minds the
+exact sense of the terms they use.
+
+If this be so, a false opinion, like an erroneous motive, can hardly
+have even a provisional usefulness. For how can you attack an erroneous
+way of thinking except in detail, that is to say through the sides of
+this or that single wrong opinion? Each of these wrong opinions is an
+illustration and type, as it is a standing support and abettor, of some
+kind of wrong reasoning, though they are not all on the same scale nor
+all of them equally instructive. It is precisely by this method of
+gradual displacement of error step by step, that the few stages of
+progress which the race has yet traversed, have been actually achieved.
+Even if the place of the erroneous idea is not immediately taken by the
+corresponding true one, or by the idea which is at least one or two
+degrees nearer to the true one, still the removal of error in this
+purely negative way amounts to a positive gain. Why? For the excellent
+reason that it is the removal of a bad element which otherwise tends to
+propagate itself, or even if it fails to do that, tends at the best to
+make the surrounding mass of error more inveterate. All error is what
+physiologists term fissiparous, and in exterminating one false opinion
+you may be hindering the growth of an uncounted brood of false opinions.
+
+Then as to the maintenance of that coherency, interdependence, and
+systematisation of opinions and motives, which is said to make character
+organic, and is therefore so highly prized by some schools of thought.
+No doubt the loosening of this or that part of the fabric of
+heterogeneous origin, which constitutes the character of a man or woman,
+tends to loosen the whole. But do not let us feed ourselves upon
+phrases. This organic coherency, what does it come to? It signifies in a
+general way, to describe it briefly, a harmony between the intellectual,
+the moral, and the practical parts of human nature; an undisturbed
+cooperation between reason, affection, and will; the reason prescribing
+nothing against which the affections revolt, and proscribing nothing
+which they crave; and the will obeying the joint impulses of these two
+directing forces, without liability to capricious or extravagant
+disturbance of their direction. Well, if the reason were perfect in
+information and method, and the affections faultless in their impulse,
+then organic unity of character would be the final consummation of all
+human improvement, and it would be criminal, even if it were possible,
+to undermine a structure of such priceless value. But short of this
+there can be no value in coherency and harmonious consistency as such.
+So long as error is an element in it, then for so long the whole product
+is vitiated. Undeniably and most fortunately, social virtues are found
+side by side with speculative mistakes and the gravest intellectual
+imperfections. We may apply to humanity the idea which, as Hebrew
+students tell us, is imputed in the Talmud to the Supreme Being. _God
+prays_, the Talmud says; and his prayer is this,--'Be it my will that my
+mercy overpower my justice.' And so with men, with or without their
+will, their mercifulness overpowers their logic. And not their
+mercifulness only, but all their good impulses overpower their logic. To
+repeat the words which I have put into the objector's mouth, we do not
+always work out every vicious principle to its remotest inference. What,
+however, is this but to say that in such cases character is saved, not
+by its coherency, but by the opposite; to say not that error is useful,
+but what is a very different thing, that its mischievousness is
+sometimes capable of being averted or minimised?
+
+The apologist may retort that he did not mean answer to the argument
+from coherency of conduct. In measuring utility you have to take into
+account not merely the service rendered to the objects of the present
+hour, but the contribution to growth, progress, and the future. From
+this point of view most of the talk about unity of character is not much
+more than a glorifying of stagnation. It leaves out of sight the
+conditions necessary for the continuance of the unending task of human
+improvement. Now whatever ease may be given to an individual or a
+generation by social or religious error, such error at any rate can
+conduce nothing to further advancement That, at least, is not one of its
+possible utilities.
+
+This is also one of the answers to the following plea. 'Though the
+knowledge of every positive truth is an useful acquisition, this
+doctrine cannot without reservation he applied to negative truth. When
+the only truth ascertainable is that nothing can be known, we do not, by
+this knowledge, gain any new fact by which to guide ourselves.'[10] But
+logical coherency, but a kind of practical everyday coherency, which
+may be open to a thousand abstract objections, yet which still secures
+both to the individual and to society a number of advantages that might
+be endangered by any disturbance of opinion or motive. No doubt, and the
+method and season of chasing erroneous opinions and motives out of the
+mind must always be a matter of much careful and far-seeing
+consideration. Only in the course of such consideration, let us not
+admit the notion in any form that error can have even provisional
+utility. For it is not the error which confers the advantages that we
+desire to preserve, but some true opinion or just motive or high or
+honest sentiment, which exists and thrives and operates in spite of the
+error and in face of it, springing from man's spontaneous and
+unformulated recognition of the real relations of things. This
+recognition is very faint in the beginnings of society. It grows clearer
+and firmer with each step forward. And in a tolerably civilised age it
+has become a force on which you can fairly lean with a considerable
+degree of assurance.
+
+And this leads to the central point of the the negative truth that
+nothing can be known is in fact a truth that guides us. [Transcriber's
+note: sic.] It leads us away from sterile and irreclaimable tracts
+of thought and emotion, and so inevitably compels the energies which
+would otherwise have been wasted, to feel after a more profitable
+direction. By leaving the old guide-marks undisturbed, you may give
+ease to an existing generation, but the present ease is purchased at
+the cost of future growth. To have been deprived of the faith of the
+old dispensation, is the first condition of strenuous endeavour after
+the new.
+
+No doubt history abounds with cases in which a false opinion on moral or
+religious subjects, or an erroneous motive in conduct, has seemed to be
+a stepping-stone to truth. But this is in no sense a demonstration of
+the utility of error. For in all such cases the erroneous opinion or
+motive was far from being wholly erroneous, or wholly without elements
+of truth and reality. If it helped to quicken the speed or mend the
+direction of progress, that must have been by virtue of some such
+elements within it. All that was error in it was pure waste, or worse
+than waste. It is true that the religious sentiment has clothed itself
+in a great number of unworthy, inadequate, depressing, and otherwise
+misleading shapes, dogmatic and liturgic. Yet on the whole the religious
+sentiment has conferred enormous benefits on civilisation. This is no
+proof of the utility of the mistaken direction which these dogmatic or
+liturgic shapes imposed upon it. On the contrary, the effect of the
+false dogmas and enervating liturgies is so much that has to be deducted
+from the advantages conferred by a sentiment in itself valuable and of
+priceless capability.[11]
+
+Yes, it will be urged, but from the historic conditions of the time,
+truth could only be conveyed in erroneous forms, and motives of
+permanent price for humanity could only be secured in these mistaken
+expressions. Here I would again press the point of this necessity for
+erroneous forms and mistaken expressions being, in a great many of the
+most important instances, itself derivative, one among other ill
+consequences of previous moral and religious error. 'It was gravely
+said,' Bacon tells us, 'by some of the prelates in the Council of Trent,
+where the doctrines of the Schoolmen have great sway; that the schoolmen
+were like Astronomers, which did faigne Eccentricks and Epicycles and
+Engines of Orbs to save the Phenomena; though they know there were no
+such Things; and in like manner that the Schoolmen had framed a number
+of subtile and intricate Axioms and Theorems, to save the practice of
+the Church.' This is true of much else besides scholastic axioms and
+theorems. Subordinate error was made necessary and invented, by reason
+of some pro-existent main stock of error, and to save the practice of
+the Church. Thus we are often referred to the consolation which this or
+that doctrine has brought to the human spirit. But what if the same
+system had produced the terror which made absence of consolation
+intolerable? How much of the necessity for expressing the enlarged
+humanity of the Church in the doctrine of purgatory, arose from the
+existence of the older unsoftened doctrine of eternal hell?
+
+Again, how much of this alleged necessity of error, as alloy for the too
+pure metal of sterling truth, is to be explained by the interest which
+powerful castes or corporations have had in preserving the erroneous
+forms, even when they could not resist, or did not wish to resist, their
+impregnation by newer and better doctrine? This interest was not
+deliberately sinister or malignant. It may be more correctly as well as
+more charitably explained by that infirmity of human nature, which makes
+us very ready to believe what it is on other grounds convenient to us to
+believe. Nobody attributes to pure malevolence the heartiness with which
+the great corporation of lawyers, for example, resist the removal of
+superfluous and obstructive forms in their practice; they have come to
+look on such forms as indispensable safeguards. Hence powerful teachers
+and preachers of all kinds have been spontaneously inclined to suppose
+a necessity, which had no real existence, of preserving as much as was
+possible of what we know to be error, even while introducing wholesome
+modification of it. This is the honest, though mischievous, conservatism
+of the human mind. We have no right to condemn our foregoers; far less
+to lavish on them the evil names of impostor, charlatan, and brigand,
+which the zealous unhistoric school of the last century used so
+profusely. But we have a right to say of them, as we say of those who
+imitate their policy now, that their conservatism is no additional proof
+of the utility of error. Least of all is it any justification for those
+who wish to have impressed upon the people a complete system of
+religious opinion which men of culture have avowedly put away. And,
+moreover, the very priests must, I should think, be supposed to have put
+it away also. Else they would hardly be invited deliberately to abdicate
+their teaching functions in the very seats where teaching is of the
+weightiest and most far-spreading influence.
+
+Meanwhile our point is that the reforms in opinion which have been
+effected on the plan of pouring the new wine of truth into the old
+bottles of superstition--though not dishonourable to the sincerity of
+the reformers--are no testimony to even the temporary usefulness of
+error. Those who think otherwise do not look far enough in front of the
+event. They forget the evil wrought by the prolonged duration of the
+error, to which the added particle of truth may have given new vitality.
+They overlook the ultimate enervation that is so often the price paid
+for the temporary exaltation.
+
+Nor, finally, can they know the truths which the error thus prolonged
+has hindered from coming to the birth. A strenuous disputant has
+recently asserted against me that 'the region of the _might have been_
+lies beyond the limits of sane speculation.'[12] It in surely extending
+optimism too far to insist on carrying it back right through the ages.
+To me at any rate the history of mankind is a huge _pis-aller_, just as
+our present society is; a prodigious wasteful experiment, from which a
+certain number of precious results have been extracted, but which is
+not now, nor ever has been at any other time, a final measure of all the
+possibilities of the time. This is not inconsistent with the scientific
+conception of history; it is not to deny the great law that society has
+a certain order of progress; but only to urge that within that, the only
+possible order, there is always room for all kinds and degrees of
+invention, improvement, and happy or unhappy accident. There is no
+discoverable law fixing precisely the more or the less of these; nor how
+much of each of them a community shall meet with, nor exactly when it
+shall meet with them. We have to distinguish between possibility and
+necessity. Only certain steps in advance are possible at a given time;
+but it is not inevitable that those potential advances should all be
+realised. Does anybody suppose that humanity has had the profit of all
+the inventive and improving capacity born into the world? That Turgot,
+for example, was the only man that ever lived who might have done more
+for society than he was allowed to do, and spared society a cataclysm?
+No,--history is a _pis-aller_. It has assuredly not moved without the
+relation of cause and effect; it is a record of social growth and its
+conditions; but it is also a record of interruption and misadventure and
+perturbation. You trace the long chain which has made us what we are in
+this aspect and that. But where are the dropped links that might have
+made all the difference? _Ubi sunt eorum tabulae qui post vota nuncupate
+perierunt_? Where is the fruit of those multitudinous gifts which came
+into the world in untimely seasons? We accept the past for the same
+reason that we accept the laws of the solar system, though, as Comte
+says, 'we can easily conceive them improved in certain respects.' The
+past, like the solar system, is beyond reach of modification at our
+hands, and we cannot help it. But it is surely the mere midsummer
+madness of philosophic complacency to think that we have come by the
+shortest and easiest of all imaginable routes to our present point in
+the march; to suppose that we have wasted nothing, lost nothing, cruelly
+destroyed nothing, on the road. What we have lost is all in the region
+of the 'might have been,' and we are justified in taking this into
+account, and thinking much of it, and in trying to find causes for the
+loss. One of them has been want of liberty for the human intelligence;
+and another, to return to our proper subject, has been the prolonged
+existence of superstition, of false opinions, and of attachment to gross
+symbols, beyond the time when they might have been successfully
+attacked, and would have fallen into decay but for the mistaken
+political notion of their utility. In making a just estimate of this
+utility, if we see reason to believe that these false opinions, narrow
+superstitions, gross symbols, have been an impediment to the free
+exercise of the intelligence and a worthier culture of the emotions,
+then we are justified in placing the unknown loss as a real and most
+weighty item in the account against them.
+
+In short, then, the utmost that can be said on behalf of errors in
+opinion and motive, is that they are inevitable elements in human
+growth. But the inevitable does not coincide with the useful. Pain can
+be avoided by none of the sons of men, yet the horrible and
+uncompensated subtraction which it makes from the value and usefulness
+of human life, is one of the most formidable obstacles to the smoother
+progress of the world. And as with pain, so with error. The moral of our
+contention has reference to the temper in which practically we ought to
+regard false doctrine and ill-directed motive. It goes to show that if
+we have satisfied ourselves on good grounds that the doctrine is false,
+or the motive ill directed, then the only question that we need ask
+ourselves turns solely upon the possibility of breaking it up and
+dispersing it, by methods compatible with the doctrine of liberty. Any
+embarrassment in dealing with it, due to a semi-latent notion that it
+may be useful to some one else is a weakness that hinders social
+progress.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 5: Mill's _Autobiography_ p. 170.]
+
+[Footnote 6: M. Renan's _Reforme Intellectuelle et Morale de la France_,
+p. 98.]
+
+[Footnote 7: _Etudes d'Histoire Religieuse_, Preface, p. xvi.]
+
+[Footnote 8: In 1779 the Academy of Prussia announced this as the
+question for their annual prize essay:--'_S'il est utile au peuple
+d'etre trompe_.' They received thirty-three essays; twenty showing that
+it is not useful, thirteen showing that it is. The Academy, with an
+impartiality that caused much amusement in Paris and Berlin, awarded two
+prizes, one to the best proof of the negative answer, another to the
+best proof of the affirmative. See Bartholmess, _Hist. Philosophique de
+l'Academie de Prusse_, i. 281, and ii. 278. Condorcet did not actually
+compete for the prize, but he wrote a very acute piece, suggested by the
+theme, which was printed in 1790. _Oeuv._ v. 343.
+
+To illustrate the common fact of certain currents of thought being in
+the air at given times, we may mention that in 1770 was published the
+posthumous work of another Frenchman, Chesneau du Marsais (1676-1756)
+entitled:--'_Essai sur les Prejuges; ou de l'influence des Opinions sur
+les Moeurs et sur le Bonheur des Hommes_.' The principal prejudices to
+which he refers are classed under Antiquity--Ancestry--Native
+Country--Religion--Respect for Wealth. Some of the reasoning is almost
+verbally identical with Condorcet's. For an account of Du Marsais, see
+D'Alembert, _Oeuv._ iii 481.]
+
+[Footnote 9: _Oeuv._ v. 354.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Mill's _Three Essays on Religion_, p.73. I have offered
+some criticisms on the whole passage in _Critical Miscellanies, Second
+Series_, pp. 300-304.]
+
+[Footnote 11: 'Enfin, supposons pour un instant que le dogme de l'autre
+vie soit de quelqu'utilite, et qu'il retienne vraiment un petit nombre
+d'individus, qu'est-ce que ces foibles avantages compares a la foule de
+maux que l'on en voir decouler? Contre un homme timide que cette idee
+contient, il en est des millions qu'elle ne peut contenir; il en des
+millions qu'elle rend insenses, farouches, fanatiques, inutiles et
+mechants; il en est des millions qu'elle detourne de leurs devoirs
+envers la societe; il en est une infinite qu'elle afflige et qu'elle
+trouble, sans aucun bien reel pour leurs associes.--_Systeme de la
+Nature_, i. xiii.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Sir J.F. Stephen's _Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity_,
+2d. ed., p. 19, _note_.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+INTELLECTUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE POLITICAL SPIRIT.
+
+We have been considering the position of those who would fain divide the
+community into two great castes; the one of thoughtful and instructed
+persons using their minds freely, but guarding their conclusions in
+strict reserve; the other of the illiterate or unreflecting, who should
+have certain opinions and practices taught them, not because they are
+true or are really what their votaries are made to believe them to be,
+but because the intellectual superiors of the community think the
+inculcation of such a belief useful in all cases save their own. Nor is
+this a mere theory. On the contrary, it is a fair description of an
+existing state of things. We have the old _disciplina arcani_ among us
+in as full force as in the primitive church, but with an all-important
+difference. The Christian fathers practised reserve for the sake of
+leading the acolyte the more surely to the fulness of truth. The modern
+economiser keeps back his opinions, or dissembles the grounds of them,
+for the sake of leaving his neighbours the more at their ease in the
+peaceful sloughs of prejudice and superstition and low ideals. We quote
+Saint Paul when he talked of making himself all things to all men, and
+of becoming to the Jews a Jew, and as without the Law to the heathen.
+But then we do so with a view to justifying ourselves for leaving the
+Jew to remain a Jew, and the heathen to remain heathen. We imitate the
+same apostle in accepting old time-worn altars dedicated to the Unknown
+God. We forget that he made the ancient symbol the starting-point of a
+revolutionised doctrine. There is, as anybody can see, a whole world of
+difference between the reserve of sagacious apostleship, on the one
+hand, dealing tenderly with scruple and tearfulness and fine sensibility
+of conscience, and the reserve of intellectual cowardice on the other
+hand, dealing hypocritically with narrow minds in the supposed interests
+of social peace and quietness. The old _disciplina arcani_ signified
+the disclosure of a little light with a view to the disclosure of more.
+The new means the dissimulation of truth with a view to the perpetuation
+of error. Consider the difference between these two fashions of
+compromise, in their effects upon the mind and character of the person
+compromising. The one is fully compatible with fervour and hopefulness
+and devotion to great causes. The other stamps a man with artifice, and
+hinders the free eagerness of his vision, and wraps him about with
+mediocrity,--not always of understanding, but that still worse thing,
+mediocrity of aspiration and purpose.
+
+The coarsest and most revolting shape which the doctrine of conformity
+can assume, and its degrading consequences to the character of the
+conformer, may be conveniently illustrated by a passage in the life of
+Hume. He looked at things in a more practical manner than would find
+favour with the sentimental champions of compromise in nearer times.
+There is a well-known letter of Hume's, in which he recommends a young
+man to become a clergyman, on the ground that it was very hard to got
+any tolerable civil employment, and that as Lord Bute was then all
+powerful, his friend would be certain of preferment. In answer to the
+young man's scruples as to the Articles and the rest, Hume says:--
+
+'It is putting too great a respect on the vulgar and their superstitions
+to pique one's self on sincerity with regard to them. If the thing were
+worthy of being treated gravely, I should tell him [the young man] that
+the Pythian oracle with the approbation of Xenophon advised every one to
+worship the gods--[Greek: nhomo pholeos]. I wish it were still in my
+power to be a hypocrite in this particular. The common duties of society
+usually require it; and the ecclesiastical profession only adds a little
+more to an innocent dissimulation, or rather simulation, without which
+it is impossible to pass through the world.'[13]
+
+This is a singularly straightforward way of stating a view which
+silently influences a much greater number of men than it is pleasant to
+think of. They would shrink from throwing their conduct into so gross a
+formula. They will lift up their hands at this quotation, so strangely
+blind are we to the hiding-places of our own hearts, even when others
+flash upon them the terrible illumination that comes of calling conduct
+and motives by plain names. Now it is not merely the moral improbity of
+these cases which revolts us--the improbity of making in solemn form a
+number of false statements for the sake of earning a livelihood; of
+saying in order to get money or social position that you accept a number
+of propositions which in fact you utterly reject; of declaring expressly
+that you trust you are inwardly moved to take upon you this office and
+ministration by the Holy Ghost, when the real motive is a desire not to
+miss the chance of making something out of the Earl of Bute. This side
+of such dissimulation is shocking enough. And it is not any more
+shocking to the most devout believer than it is to people who doubt
+whether there be any Holy Ghost or not. Those who no longer place their
+highest faith in powers above and beyond men, are for that very reason
+more deeply interested than others in cherishing the integrity and
+worthiness of man himself. Apart, however, from the immorality of such
+reasoned hypocrisy, which no man with a particle of honesty will
+attempt to blink, there is the intellectual improbity which it brings in
+its train, the infidelity to truth, the disloyalty to one's own
+intelligence. Gifts of understanding are numbed and enfeebled in a man,
+who has once played such a trick with his own conscience as to persuade
+himself that, because the vulgar are superstitious, it is right for the
+learned to earn money by turning themselves into the ministers and
+accomplices of superstition. If he is clever enough to see through the
+vulgar and their beliefs, he is tolerably sure to be clever enough from
+time to time and in his better moments to see through himself. He begins
+to suspect himself of being an impostor. That suspicion gradually unmans
+him when he comes to use his mind in the sphere of his own
+enlightenment. One of really superior power cannot escape these better
+moments and the remorse that they bring. As he advances in life, as his
+powers ought to be coming to fuller maturity and his intellectual
+productiveness to its prime, just in the same degree the increasing
+seriousness of life multiplies such moments and deepens their remorse,
+and so the light of intellectual promise slowly goes out in impotent
+endeavour, or else in taking comfort that much goods are laid up, or,
+what is deadliest of all, in a soulless cynicism.
+
+We do not find out until it is too late that the intellect too, at least
+where it is capable of being exercised on the higher objects, has its
+sensitiveness. It loses its colour and potency and finer fragrance in an
+atmosphere of mean purpose and low conception of the sacredness of fact
+and reality. Who has not observed inferior original power achieving
+greater results even in the intellectual field itself, where the
+superior understanding happens to have been unequally yoked with a
+self-seeking character, over scenting the expedient? If Hume had been in
+the early productive part of his life the hypocrite which he wished it
+were in his power to show himself in its latter part, we may be
+tolerably sure that European philosophy would have missed one of its
+foremost figures. It has been often said that he who begins life by
+stifling his convictions is in a fair way for ending it without any
+convictions to stifle. We may, perhaps, add that he who sets out with
+the notion that the difference between truth and falsehood is a thing of
+no concern to the vulgar, is very likely sooner or later to come to the
+kindred notion that it is not a thing of any supreme concern to himself.
+
+Let thus much have been said as to those who deliberately and knowingly
+sell their intellectual birthright for a mess of pottage, making a
+brazen compromise with what they hold despicable, lest they should have
+to win their bread honourably. Men need to expend no declamatory
+indignation upon them. They have a hell of their own; words can add no
+bitterness to it. It is no light thing to have secured a livelihood on
+condition of going through life masked and gagged. To be compelled, week
+after week, and year after year, to recite the symbols of ancient faith
+and lift up his voice in the echoes of old hopes, with the blighting
+thought in his soul that the faith is a lie, and the hope no more than
+the folly of the crowd; to read hundreds of times in a twelvemonth with
+solemn unction as the inspired word of the Supreme what to him are
+meaningless as the Abracadabras of the conjuror in a booth; to go on to
+the end of his days administering to simple folk holy rites of
+commemoration and solace, when he has in his mind at each phrase what
+dupes are those simple folk and how wearisomely counterfeit their rites:
+and to know through all that this is really to be the one business of
+his prostituted life, that so dreary and hateful a piece of play-acting
+will make the desperate retrospect of his last hours--of a truth here is
+the very [Greek: bdhelygma tes eremhoseos], the abomination of
+desolation of the human spirit indeed.
+
+No one will suppose that this is designed for the normal type of priest.
+But it is well to study tendencies in their extreme catastrophe. This is
+only the catastrophe, in one of its many shapes, of the fatal doctrine
+that money, position, power, philanthropy, or any of the thousand
+seductive masks of the pseudo-expedient, may carry a man away from love
+of truth and yet leave him internally unharmed. The depravation that
+follows the trucking for money of intellectual freedom and self-respect,
+attends in its degree each other departure from disinterested following
+of truth, and each other substitution of convenience, whether public or
+private, in its place. And both parties to such a compromise are losers.
+The world which offers gifts and tacitly undertakes to ask no questions
+as to the real state of the timeserver's inner mind, loses no less than
+the timeserver himself who receives the gifts and promises to hold his
+peace. It is as though a society placed penalties on mechanical
+inventions and the exploration of new material resources, and offered
+bounties for the steadiest adherence to all ancient processes in culture
+and production. The injury to wealth in the one case would not be any
+deeper than the injury to morality is in the other.
+
+
+To pass on to less sinister forms of this abnegation of intellectual
+responsibility. In the opening sentences of the first chapter we spoke
+of a wise suspense in forming opinions, a wise reserve in expressing
+them, and a wise tardiness in trying to realise them. Thus we meant to
+mark out the three independent provinces of compromise, each of them
+being the subject of considerations that either do not apply at all to
+the other two, or else apply in a different degree. Disingenuousness or
+self-illusion, arising from a depressing deference to the existing state
+of things, or to what is immediately practicable, or to what other
+people would think of us if they knew our thoughts, is the result of
+compromising truth in the matter of forming and holding opinions.
+Secondly, positive simulation is what comes of an unlawful willingness
+to compromise in the matter of avowing and publishing them. Finally,
+pusillanimity or want of faith is the vice that belongs to unlawful
+compromise in the department of action and realisation. This is not
+merely a division arranged for convenience of discussion. It goes to the
+root of conduct and character, and is the key to the present mood of our
+society. It is always a hardy thing to attempt to throw a complex matter
+into very simple form, but we should say that the want of energy and
+definiteness in contemporary opinions, of which we first complained, is
+due mainly to the following notion; that if a subject is not ripe for
+practical treatment, you and I are therefore entirely relieved from the
+duty of having clear ideas about it. If the majority cling to an
+opinion, why should we ask whether that is the sound and right opinion
+or the reverse? Now this notion, which springs from a confusion of the
+three fields of compromise with one another, quietly reigns almost
+without dispute. The devotion to the practical aspect of truth is in
+such excess, as to make people habitually deny that it can be worth
+while to form an opinion, when it happens at the moment to be incapable
+of realisation, for the reason that there is no direct prospect of
+inducing a sufficient number of persons to share it. 'We are quite
+willing to think that your view is the right one, and would produce all
+the improvements for which you hope; but then there is not the smallest
+chance of persuading the only persons able to carry out such a view; why
+therefore discuss it?' No talk is more familiar to us than this. As if
+the mere possibility of the view being a right one did not obviously
+entitle it to discussion; discussion being the only process by which
+people are likely to be induced to accept it, or else to find good
+grounds for finally dismissing it.
+
+It is precisely because we believe that opinion, and nothing but
+opinion, can effect great permanent changes, that we ought to be
+careful to keep this most potent force honest, wholesome, fearless, and
+independent. Take the political field. Politicians and newspapers almost
+systematically refuse to talk about a new idea, which is not capable of
+being at once embodied in a bill, and receiving the royal assent before
+the following August. There is something rather contemptible, seen from
+the ordinary standards of intellectual integrity, in the position of a
+minister who waits to make up his mind whether a given measure, say the
+disestablishment of the Irish Church, is in itself and on the merits
+desirable, until the official who runs diligently up and down the
+backstairs of the party, tells him that the measure is practicable and
+required in the interests of the band. On the one hand, a leader is
+lavishly panegyrised for his highmindedness, in suffering himself to be
+driven into his convictions by his party. On the other, a party is
+extolled for its political tact, in suffering itself to be forced out of
+its convictions by its leader. It is hard to decide which is the more
+discreditable and demoralising sight. The education of chiefs by
+followers, and of followers by chiefs, into the abandonment in a month
+of the traditions of centuries or the principles of a lifetime may
+conduce to the rapid and easy working of the machine. It certainly marks
+a triumph of the political spirit which the author of _The Prince_ might
+have admired. It is assuredly mortal to habits of intellectual
+self-respect in the society which allows itself to be amused by the
+cajolery and legerdemain and self-sophistication of its rulers.
+
+Of course there are excellent reasons why a statesman immersed in the
+actual conduct of affairs, should confine his attention to the work
+which his hands find to do. But the fact that leading statesmen are of
+necessity so absorbed in the tasks of the hour furnishes all the better
+reason why as many other people as possible should busy themselves in
+helping to prepare opinion for the practical application of unfamiliar
+but weighty and promising suggestions, by constant and ready discussion
+of them upon their merits. As a matter of fact it is not the men most
+occupied who are usually most deaf to new ideas. It is the loungers of
+politics, the quidnuncs, gossips, bustling idlers, who are most
+industrious in stifling discussion by protests against the waste of
+time and the loss of force involved in talking about proposals which are
+not exactly ready to be voted on. As it is, everybody knows that
+questions are inadequately discussed, or often not discussed at all, on
+the ground that the time is not yet come for their solution. Then when
+some unforeseen perturbation, or the natural course of things, forces on
+the time for their resolution, they are settled in a slovenly,
+imperfect, and often downright vicious manner, from the fact that
+opinion has not been prepared for solving them in an efficient and
+perfect manner. The so-called settlement of the question of national
+education is the most recent and most deplorable illustration of what
+comes of refusing to examine ideas alleged to be impracticable. Perhaps
+we may venture to prophesy that the disendowment of the national church
+will supply the next illustration on an imposing scale. Gratuitous
+primary instruction, and the redistribution of electoral power, are
+other matters of signal importance, which comparatively few men will
+consent to discuss seriously and patiently, and for our indifference to
+which we shall one day surely smart. A judicious and cool writer has
+said that 'an opinion gravely professed by a man of sense and education
+demands always respectful consideration--demands and actually receives
+it from those whose own sense and education give them a correlative
+right; and whoever offends against this sort of courtesy may fairly be
+deemed to have forfeited the privileges it secures.'[14] That is the
+least part of the matter. The serious mischief is the eventual
+miscarriage and loss and prodigal waste of good ideas.
+
+The evil of which we have been speaking comes of not seeing the great
+truth, that it is worth while to take pains to find out the best way of
+doing a given task, even if you have strong grounds for suspecting that
+it will ultimately be done in a worse way. And so also in spheres of
+thought away from the political sphere, it is worth while 'to scorn
+delights and live laborious days' in order to make as sure as we can of
+having the best opinion, even if we know that this opinion has an
+infinitely small chance of being speedily or ever accepted by the
+majority, or by anybody but ourselves. Truth and wisdom have to bide
+their time, and then take their chance after all. The most that the
+individual can do is to seek them for himself, even if he seek alone.
+And if it is the most, it is also the least. Yet in our present mood we
+seem not to feel this. We misunderstand the considerations which should
+rightly lead us in practice to surrender some of what we desire, in
+order to secure the rest; and rightly make us acquiesce in a second-best
+course of action, in order to avoid stagnation or retrogression. We
+misunderstand all this, and go on to suppose that there are the same
+grounds why we should in our own minds acquiesce in second-best
+opinions; why we should mix a little alloy of conventional expression
+with the too fine ore of conviction; why we should adopt beliefs that we
+suspect in our hearts to be of more than equivocal authenticity, but
+into whose antecedents we do not greatly care to inquire, because they
+stand so well with the general public. This is compromise or economy or
+management of the first of the three kinds of which we are talking. It
+is economy applied to the formation of opinion; compromise or management
+in making up one's mind.
+
+The lawfulness or expediency of it turns mainly, as with the other two
+kinds of compromise, upon the relative rights of the majority and the
+minority, and upon the respect which is owing from the latter to the
+former. It is a very easy thing for people endowed with the fanatical
+temperament, or demoralised by the habit of looking at society
+exclusively from the juridical point of view, to insist that no respect
+at all, except the respect that arises from being too weak to have your
+own way, is due from either to the other. This shallow and mischievous
+notion rests either on a misinterpretation of the experience of
+civilised societies, or else on nothing more creditable than an
+arbitrary and unreflecting temper. Those who have thought most carefully
+and disinterestedly about the matter, are agreed that in advanced
+societies the expedient course is that no portion of the community
+should insist on imposing its own will upon any other portion, except in
+matters which are vitally connected with the maintenance of the social
+union. The question where this vital connection begins is open to much
+discussion. The line defining the sphere of legitimate interference may
+be drawn variously, whether at self-regarding acts, or in some other
+condition and element of conduct. Wherever this line may be best taken,
+not only abstract speculation, but the practical and spontaneous tact of
+the world, has decided that there are limits, alike in the interest of
+majority and minority, to the rights of either to disturb the other. In
+other words, it is expedient in certain affairs that the will of the
+majority should be absolutely binding, while in affairs of a different
+order it should count for nothing, or as nearly nothing, as the sociable
+dependence of a man on his fellows will permit.
+
+Our thesis is this. In the positive endeavour to realise an opinion, to
+convert a theory into practice, it may be, and very often is, highly
+expedient to defer to the prejudices of the majority, to move very
+slowly, to bow to the conditions of the _status quo_, to practise the
+very utmost sobriety, self-restraint, and conciliatoriness. The mere
+expression of opinion, in the next place, the avowal of dissent from
+received notions, the refusal to conform to language which implies the
+acceptance of such notions,--this rests on a different footing. Here
+the reasons for respecting the wishes and sentiments of the majority are
+far less strong, though, as we shall presently see, such reasons
+certainly exist, and will weigh with all well-considering men. Finally,
+in the formation of an opinion as to the abstract preferableness of one
+course of action over another, or as to the truth or falsehood or right
+significance of a proposition, the fact that the majority of one's
+contemporaries lean in the other direction is naught, and no more than
+dust in the balance. In making up our minds as to what would be the
+wisest line of policy if it were practicable, we have nothing to do with
+the circumstance that it is not practicable. And in settling with
+ourselves whether propositions purporting to state matters of fact are
+trim or not, we have to consider how far they are conformable to the
+evidence. We have nothing to do with the comfort and solace which they
+would be likely to bring to others or ourselves, if they were taken as
+true.
+
+A nominal assent to this truth will be instantly given even by those who
+in practice systematically disregard it. The difficulty of transforming
+that nominal assent into a reality is enormous in such a community as
+ours. Of all societies since the Roman Republic, and not even excepting
+the Roman Republic, England has been the most emphatically and
+essentially political. She has passed through military phases and
+through religious phases, but they have been transitory, and the great
+central stream of national life has flowed in political channels. The
+political life has been stronger than any other, deeper, wider, more
+persistent, more successful. The wars which built up our far-spreading
+empire were not waged with designs of military conquest; they were
+mostly wars for a market. The great spiritual emancipation of the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries figures in our history partly as an
+accident, partly as an intrigue, partly as a raid of nobles in search of
+spoil. It was hardly until the reformed doctrine became associated with
+analogous ideas and corresponding precepts in government, that people
+felt at home with it, and became really interested in it.
+
+One great tap-root of our national increase has been the growth of
+self-government, or government by deliberative bodies, representing
+opposed principles and conflicting interests. With the system of
+self-government has grown the habit--not of tolerance precisely, for
+Englishmen when in earnest are as little in love with tolerance as
+Frenchmen or any other people, but--of giving way to the will of the
+majority, so long as they remain a majority. This has come to pass for
+the simple reason that, on any other terms, the participation of large
+numbers of people in the control and arrangement of public affairs
+immediately becomes unworkable. The gradual concentration of power in
+the hands of a supreme deliberative body, the active share of so many
+thousands of persons in choosing and controlling its members, the close
+attention with which the proceedings of parliament are followed and
+watched, the kind of dignity that has been lent to parliamentary methods
+by the great importance of the transactions, have all tended in the same
+direction. They have all helped both to fix our strongest and most
+constant interests upon politics, and to ingrain the mental habits
+proper to politics, far more deeply than any other, into our general
+constitution and inmost character.
+
+Thus the political spirit has grown to be the strongest element in our
+national life; the dominant force, extending its influence over all our
+ways of thinking in matters that have least to do with politics, or even
+nothing at all to do with them. There has thus been engendered among us
+the real sense of political responsibility. In a corresponding degree
+has been discouraged, what it is the object of the present chapter to
+urge, the sense of intellectual responsibility. If it were inevitable
+that one of these two should always enfeeble or exclude the other, if
+the price of the mental alacrity and open-mindedness of the age of
+Pericles must always be paid in the political incompetence of the age of
+Demosthenes, it would be hard to settle which quality ought to be most
+eagerly encouraged by those who have most to do with the spiritual
+direction of a community. No doubt the tone of a long-enduring and
+imperial society, such as Rome was, must be conservative, drastic,
+positive, hostile to the death to every speculative novelty. But then,
+after all, the permanence of Roman power was only valuable to mankind
+because it ensured the spread of certain civilising ideas. And these
+ideas had originated among people so characteristically devoid of the
+sovereign faculty of political coherency as were the Greeks and the
+Jews. In the Greeks, it is true, we find not only ideas of the highest
+speculative fertility, but actual political institutions. Still we
+should hardly point to Greek history for the most favourable examples of
+their stable working. Practically and as a matter of history, a society
+is seldom at the same time successfully energetic both in temporals and
+spirituals; seldom prosperous alike in seeking abstract truth and
+nursing the political spirit. There is a decisive preponderance in one
+direction or the other, and the equal balance between free and active
+thinking, and coherent practical energy in a community, seems too hard
+to sustain. The vast military and political strength of Germany, for
+instance, did not exist, and was scarcely anticipated in men's minds,
+during the time of her most strenuous passion for abstract truth and
+deeper learning and new criticism. In France never was political and
+national interest so debilitated, so extinct, as it was during the reign
+of Lewis the Fifteenth: her intellectual interest was never so vivid,
+so fruitful, or so widely felt.
+
+Yet it is at least well, and more than that, it is an indispensable
+condition of social wellbeing, that the divorce between political
+responsibility and intellectual responsibility, between respect for what
+is instantly practicable and search after what is only important in
+thought, should not be too complete and universal. Even if there were no
+other objection, the undisputed predominance of the political spirit has
+a plain tendency to limit the subjects in which the men animated by it
+can take a real interest. All matters fall out of sight, or at least
+fall into a secondary place, which do not bear more or less directly and
+patently upon the material and structural welfare of the community. In
+this way the members of the community miss the most bracing, widening,
+and elevated of the whole range of influences that create great
+characters. First, they lose sincere concern about the larger questions
+which the human mind has raised up for itself. Second, they lose a
+fearless desire to reach the true answers to them, or if no certain
+answers should prove to be within reach, then at any rate to be
+satisfied on good grounds that this is so. Such questions are not
+immediately discerned by commonplace minds to be of social import.
+Consequently they, and all else that is not obviously connected with the
+machinery of society, give way in the public consideration to what is so
+connected with it, in a manner that cannot be mistaken.
+
+Again, even minds that are not commonplace are affected for the worse by
+the same spirit. They are aware of the existence of the great
+speculative subjects and of their importance, but the pressure of the
+political spirit on such men makes them afraid of the conclusions to
+which free inquiry might bring them. Accordingly they abstain from
+inquiry, and dread nothing so much as making up their minds. They see
+reasons for thinking that, if they applied themselves seriously to the
+formation of true opinions in this or that department, they would come
+to conclusions which, though likely to make their way in the course of
+some centuries, are wholly unpopular now, and which might ruin the
+influence of anybody suspected of accepting, or even of so much as
+leaning towards, them. Life, they reflect, is short; missionaries do
+not pass for a very agreeable class, nor martyrs for a very sensible
+class; one can only do a trifling amount of good in the world, at best;
+it is moral suicide to throw away any chance of achieving even that
+trifle; and therefore it is best not only not to express, but not to
+take the trouble to acquire, right views in this quarter or that, and to
+draw clear away from such or such a region of thought, for the sake of
+keeping peace on earth and superficial good will among men.
+
+It would be too harsh to stigmatise such a train of thought as
+self-seeking and hypocritical. It is the natural product of the
+political spirit, which is incessantly thinking of present consequences
+and the immediately feasible. There is nothing in the mere dread of
+losing it, to hinder influence from being well employed, so far as it
+goes. But one can hardly overrate the ill consequences of this
+particular kind of management, this unspoken bargaining with the little
+circle of his fellows which constitutes the world of a man. If he may
+retain his place among them as preacher or teacher, he is willing to
+forego his birthright of free explanation; he consents to be blind to
+the duty which attaches to every intelligent man of having some clear
+ideas, even though only provisional ones, upon the greatest subjects of
+human interest, and of deliberately preferring these, whatever they may
+be, to their opposites. Either an individual or a community is fatally
+dwarfed by any such limitation of the field in which one is free to use
+his mind. For it is a limitation, not prescribed by absorption in one
+set of subjects rather than another, nor by insufficient preparation for
+the discussion of certain subjects, nor by indolence nor incuriousness,
+but solely by apprehension of the conclusions to which such use of the
+mind might bring the too courageous seeker. If there were no other ill
+effect, this kind of limitation would at least have the radical
+disadvantage of dulling the edge of responsibility, of deadening the
+sharp sense of personal answerableness either to a God, or to society,
+or to a man's own conscience and intellectual self-respect.
+
+How momentous a disadvantage this is, we can best know by contemplating
+the characters which have sometimes lighted up the old times. Men were
+then devoutly persuaded that their eternal salvation depended on their
+having true beliefs. Any slackness in finding out which beliefs are the
+true ones would have to be answered for before the throne of Almighty
+God, at the sure risk and peril of everlasting damnation. To what
+quarter in the large historic firmament can we turn our eyes with such
+certainty of being stirred and elevated, of thinking better of human
+life and the worth of those who have been most deeply penetrated by its
+seriousness, as to the annals of the intrepid spirits whom the
+protestant doctrine of indefeasible personal responsibility brought to
+the front in Germany in the sixteenth century, and in England and
+Scotland in the seventeenth? It is not their fanaticism, still less is
+it their theology, which makes the great Puritan chiefs of England and
+the stern Covenanters of Scotland so heroic in our sight. It is the fact
+that they sought truth and ensued it, not thinking of the practicable
+nor cautiously counting majorities and minorities, but each man
+pondering and searching so 'as ever in the great Taskmaster's eye.'
+
+It is no adequate answer to urge that this awful consciousness of a
+divine presence and supervision has ceased to be the living fact it once
+was. That partly explains, but it certainly does not justify, our
+present lassitude. For the ever-wakeful eye of celestial power is not
+the only conceivable stimulus to responsibility. To pass from those grim
+heroes of protestantism to the French philosophers of the last century
+is a wide leap in a hundred respects, yet they too were pricked by the
+oestrus of intellectual responsibility. Their doctrine was dismally
+insufficient, and sometimes, as the present writer has often pointed
+out, it was directly vicious. Their daily lives were surrounded by much
+shabbiness and many meannesses. But, after all, no temptation and no
+menace, no pains or penalties for thinking about certain subjects, and
+no rewards for turning to think about something else, could divert such
+men as Voltaire and Diderot from their alert and strenuous search after
+such truth as could be vouchsafed to their imperfect lights. A
+catastrophe followed, it is true, but the misfortunes which attended it
+were due more to the champions of tradition and authority than to the
+soldiers of emancipation. Even in the case of the latter, they were due
+to an inadequate doctrine, and not at all either to their sense of the
+necessity of free speculation and inquiry, or to the intrepidity with
+which they obeyed the promptings of that ennobling sense.
+
+Perhaps the latest attempt of a considerable kind to suppress the
+political spirit in non-political concerns was the famous movement which
+had its birth a generation ago among the gray quadrangles and ancient
+gardens of Oxford, 'the sweet city with her dreaming spires,' where
+there has ever been so much detachment from the world, alongside of the
+coarsest and fiercest hunt after the grosser prizes of the world. No one
+has much less sympathy with the direction of the tractarian revival than
+the present writer, in whose Oxford days the star of Newman had set, and
+the sun of Mill had risen in its stead. And it is needful to distinguish
+the fervid and strong spirits with whom the revival began from the
+mimics of our later day. No doubt the mere occasion of tractarianism was
+political. Its leaders were alarmed at the designs imputed to the newly
+reformed parliament of disestablishing the Anglican Church. They asked
+themselves the question, which I will put in their own words (_Tract_
+i.)--'Should the government of the country so far forget their God as to
+cut off the Church, to deprive it of its temporal honours and substance,
+on what will you rest the claims to respect and attention which you make
+upon your flock? In answering this question they speedily found
+themselves, as might have been expected, at the opposite pole of thought
+from things political. The whole strength of their appeal to members of
+the Church lay in men's weariness of the high and dry optimism, which
+presents the existing order of things as the noblest possible, and the
+undisturbed way of the majority as the way of salvation. Apostolical
+succession and Sacramentalism may not have been in themselves
+progressive ideas. The spirit which welcomed them had at least the
+virtue of taking away from Caesar the things that are not Caesar's.
+
+Glaring as were the intellectual faults of the Oxford movement, it was
+at any rate a recognition in a very forcible way of the doctrine that
+spiritual matters are not to be settled by the dicta of a political
+council. It acknowledged that a man is answerable at his own peril for
+having found or lost the truth. It was a warning that he must reckon
+with a judge who will not account the _status quo_, nor the convenience
+of a cabinet, a good plea for indolent acquiescence in theological
+error. It ended, in the case of its most vigorous champions, in a final
+and deliberate putting out of the eyes of the understanding. The last
+act of assertion of personal responsibility was a headlong acceptance of
+the responsibility of tradition and the Church. This was deplorable
+enough. But apart from other advantages incidental to the tractarian
+movement, such as the attention which it was the means of drawing to
+history and the organic connection between present and past, it had, we
+repeat, the merit of being an effective protest against what may be
+called the House of Commons' view of human life--a view excellent in its
+place, but most blighting and dwarfing out of it. It was, what every
+sincere uprising of the better spirit in men and women must always be,
+an effective protest against the leaden tyranny of the man of the world
+and the so-called practical person. The man of the world despises
+catholics for taking their religious opinions on trust and being the
+slaves of tradition. As if he had himself formed his own most important
+opinions either in religion or anything else. He laughs at them for
+their superstitious awe of the Church. As if his own inward awe of the
+Greater Number were one whit less of a superstition. He mocks their
+deference for the past. As if his own absorbing deference to the present
+were one tittle better bottomed or a jot more respectable. The modern
+emancipation will profit us very little if the _status quo_ is to be
+fastened round our necks with the despotic authority of a heavenly
+dispensation, and if in the stead of ancient Scriptures we are to accept
+the plenary inspiration of Majorities.
+
+
+It may be urged that if, as it is the object of the present chapter to
+state, there are opinions which a man should form for himself, and which
+it may yet be expedient that he should not only be slow to attempt to
+realise in practical life, but sometimes even slow to express,--then we
+are demanding from him the performance of a troublesome duty, while we
+are taking from him the only motives which could really induce him to
+perform it. If, it may be asked, I am not to carry my notions into
+practice, nor try to induce others to accept them, nor even boldly
+publish them, why in the name of all economy of force should I take so
+much pains in forming opinions which are, after all, on these conditions
+so very likely to come to naught? The answer to this is that opinions do
+not come to naught, even if the man who holds them should never think
+fit to publish them. For one thing, as we shall see in our next
+division, the conditions which make against frank declaration of our
+convictions are of rare occurrence. And, apart from this, convictions
+may well exert a most decisive influence over our conduct, even if
+reasons exist, or seem to exist, for not pressing them on others. Though
+themselves invisible to the outer world, they may yet operate with
+magnetic force both upon other parts of our belief which the outer world
+does see, and upon the whole of our dealings with it. Whether we are
+good or bad, it is only a broken and incoherent fragment of our whole
+personality that even those who are intimate with us, much less the
+common world, can ever come into contact with. The important thing is
+that the personality itself should be as little as possible broken,
+incoherent, and fragmentary; that reasoned and consistent opinions
+should back a firm will, and independent convictions inspire the
+intellectual self-respect and strenuous self-possession which the
+clamour of majorities and the silent yet ever-pressing force of the
+_status quo_ are equally powerless to shake.
+
+Character is doubtless of far more importance than mere intellectual
+opinion. We only too often see highly rationalised convictions in
+persons of weak purpose or low motives. But while fully recognising
+this, and the sort of possible reality which lies at the root of such a
+phrase as 'godless intellect' or 'intellectual devils'--though the
+phrase has no reality when it is used by self-seeking politicians or
+prelates--yet it is well to remember the very obvious truth that
+opinions are at least an extremely important part of character. As it is
+sometimes put, what we think has a prodigiously close connection with
+what we are. The consciousness of having reflected seriously and
+conclusively on important questions, whether social or spiritual,
+augments dignity while it does not lessen humility. In this sense,
+taking thought can and does add a cubit to our stature. Opinions which
+we may not feel bound or even permitted to press on other people, are
+not the less forces for being latent. They shape ideals, and it is
+ideals that inspire conduct. They do this, though from afar, and though
+he who possesses them may not presume to take the world into his
+confidence. Finally, unless a man follows out ideas to their full
+conclusion without fear what the conclusion may be, whether he thinks it
+expedient to make his thought and its goal fully known or not, it is
+impossible that he should acquire a commanding grasp of principles. And
+a commanding grasp of principles, whether they are public or not, is at
+the very root of coherency of character. It raises mediocrity near to a
+level with the highest talents, if those talents are in company with a
+disposition that allows the little prudences of the hour incessantly to
+obscure the persistent laws of things. These persistencies, if a man
+has once satisfied himself of their direction and mastered their
+bearings and application, are just as cogent and valuable a guide to
+conduct, whether he publishes them _ad urbem et orbem_, or esteems them
+too strong meat for people who have, through indurated use and wont,
+lost the courage of facing unexpected truths.
+
+One conspicuous result of the failure to see that our opinions have
+roots to them, independently of the feelings which either majorities or
+other portions of the people around us may entertain about them, is that
+neither political matters nor any other serious branches of opinion,
+engage us in their loftiest or most deep-reaching forms. The advocate of
+a given theory of government or society is so misled by a wrong
+understanding of the practice of just and wise compromise in applying
+it, as to forget the noblest and most inspiring shape which his theory
+can be made to assume. It is the worst of political blunders to insist
+on carrying an ideal set of principles into execution, where others have
+rights of dissent, and those others persons whose assent is as
+indispensable to success, as it is impossible to attain. But to be
+afraid or ashamed of holding such an ideal set of principles in one's
+mind in their highest and most abstract expression, does more than any
+one other cause to stunt or petrify those elements in character to which
+life should owe most of its savour.
+
+If a man happens to be a Conservative, for instance, it is pitiful that
+he should think so much more of what other people on his side or the
+other think, than of the widest and highest of the ideas on which a
+conservative philosophy of life and human society reposes. Such ideas
+are these,--that the social union is the express creation and ordering
+of the Deity: that its movements follow his mysterious and fixed
+dispensation: that the church and the state are convertible terms, and
+each citizen of the latter is an incorporated member of the former: that
+conscience, if perversely and misguidedly self-asserting, has no rights
+against the decrees of the conscience of the nation: that it is the most
+detestable of crimes to perturb the pacific order of society either by
+active agitation or speculative restlessness; that descent from a long
+line of ancestors in great station adds an element of dignity to life,
+and imposes many high obligations. We do not say that these and the
+rest of the propositions which make up the true theoretic basis of a
+conservative creed, are proper for the hustings, or expedient in an
+election address or a speech in parliament. We do say that if these high
+and not unintelligible principles, which alone can give to reactionary
+professions any worth or significance, were present in the minds of men
+who speak reactionary language, the country would be spared the ignominy
+of seeing certain real truths of society degraded at the hands of
+aristocratic adventurers and plutocratic parasites into some miserable
+process of 'dishing Whigs.'
+
+This impoverishment of aims and depravation of principles by the triumph
+of the political spirit outside of its proper sphere, cannot
+unfortunately be restricted to any one set of people in the state. It is
+something in the very atmosphere, which no sanitary cordon can limit.
+Liberalism, too, would be something more generous, more attractive--yes,
+and more practically effective, if its professors and champions could
+allow their sense of what is feasible to be refreshed and widened by a
+more free recognition, however private and undemonstrative, of the
+theoretic ideas which give their social creed whatever life and
+consistency it may have. Such ideas are these: That the conditions of
+the social union are not a mystery, only to be touched by miracle, but
+the results of explicable causes, and susceptible of constant
+modification: that the thoughts of wise and patriotic men should be
+perpetually turned towards the improvement of these conditions in every
+direction: that contented acquiescence in the ordering that has come
+down to us from the past is selfish and anti-social, because amid the
+ceaseless change that is inevitable in a growing organism, the
+institutions of the past demand progressive re-adaptations: that such
+improvements are most likely to be secured in the greatest abundance by
+limiting the sphere of authority, extending that of free individuality,
+and steadily striving after the bestowal, so far as the nature of things
+will ever permit it, of equality of opportunity: that while there is
+dignity in ancestry, a modern society is only safe in proportion as it
+summons capacity to its public counsels and enterprises; that such a
+society to endure must progress: that progress on its political side
+means more than anything else the substitution of Justice as a governing
+idea, instead of Privilege, and that the best guarantee for justice in
+public dealings is the participation in their own government of the
+people most likely to suffer from injustice. This is not an exhaustive
+account of the progressive doctrine, and we have here nothing to say as
+to its soundness. We only submit that if those who use the watchwords of
+Liberalism were to return upon its principles, instead of dwelling
+exclusively on practical compromises, the tone of public life would be
+immeasurably raised. The cause of social improvement would be less
+systematically balked of the victories that are best worth gaining.
+Progress would mean something more than mere entrances and exits on the
+theatre of office. We should not see in the mass of parliamentary
+candidates--and they are important people, because nearly every
+Englishman with any ambition is a parliamentary candidate, actual or
+potential--that grave anxiety, that sober rigour, that immense caution,
+which are all so really laughable, because so many of those men are only
+anxious lest they should make a mistake in finding out what the
+majority of their constituents would like them to think; only rigorous
+against those who are indiscreet enough to press a principle against the
+beck of a whip or a wire-puller; and only very cautious not so much lest
+their opinion should be wrong, as lest it should not pay.
+
+
+Indolence and timidity have united to popularise among us a flaccid
+latitudinarianism, which thinks itself a benign tolerance for the
+opinions of others. It is in truth only a pretentious form of being
+without settled opinions of our own, and without any desire to settle
+them. No one can complain of the want of speculative activity at the
+present time in a certain way. The air, at a certain social elevation,
+is as full as it has ever been of ideas, theories, problems, possible
+solutions, suggested questions, and proffered answers. But then they are
+at large, without cohesion, and very apt to be the objects even in the
+more instructed minds of not much more than dilettante interest. We see
+in solution an immense number of notions, which people think it quite
+unnecessary to precipitate in the form of convictions. We constantly
+hear the age lauded for its tolerance, for its candour, for its openness
+of mind, for the readiness with which a hearing is given to ideas that
+forty years ago, or even less than that, would have excluded persons
+suspected of holding them from decent society, and in fact did so
+exclude them. Before, however, we congratulate ourselves too warmly on
+this, let us be quite sure that we are not mistaking for tolerance what
+is really nothing more creditable than indifference. These two attitudes
+of mind, which are so vitally unlike in their real quality, are so hard
+to distinguish in their outer seeming.
+
+One is led to suspect that carelessness is the right name for what looks
+like reasoned toleration, by such a line of consideration as the
+following. It is justly said that at the bottom of all the great
+discussions of modern society lie the two momentous questions, first
+whether there is a God, and second whether the soul is immortal. In
+other words, whether our fellow-creatures are the highest beings who
+take an interest in us, or in whom we need take an interest; and, then,
+whether life in this world is the only life of which we shall ever be
+conscious. It is true of most people that when they are talking of
+evolution, and the origin of species, and the experiential or
+intuitional source of ideas, and the utilitarian or transcendental basis
+of moral obligation, these are the questions which they really have in
+their minds. Now, in spite of the scientific activity of the day, nobody
+is likely to contend that men are pressed keenly in their souls by any
+poignant stress of spiritual tribulation in the face of the two supreme
+enigmas. Nobody will say that there is much of that striving and
+wrestling and bitter agonising, which whole societies of men have felt
+before now on questions of far less tremendous import. Ours, as has been
+truly said, is 'a time of loud disputes and weak convictions,' In a
+generation deeply impressed by a sense of intellectual responsibility
+this could not be. As it is, even superior men are better pleased to
+play about the height of these great arguments, to fly in busy
+intellectual sport from side to side, from aspect to aspect, than they
+are intent on resolving what it is, after all, that the discussion comes
+to and to which solution, when everything has been said and heard, the
+balance of truth really to incline. There are too many giggling
+epigrams; people are too willing to look on collections of mutually
+hostile opinions with the same kind of curiosity which they bestow on a
+collection of mutually hostile beasts in a menagerie. They have very
+faint predilections for one rather than another. If they were truly
+alive to the duty of conclusiveness, or to the inexpressible magnitude
+of the subjects which nominally occupy their minds, but really only
+exercise their tongues, this elegant Pyrrhonism would be impossible, and
+this light-hearted neutrality most unendurable.
+
+Well has the illustrious Pascal said with reference to one of the two
+great issues of the modern controversy:--'The immortality of the soul is
+a thing that concerns us so closely and touches us so profoundly, that
+one must have lost all feeling to be indifferent as to knowing how the
+matter is. All our actions and all our thoughts must follow such
+different paths, according as there are eternal goods to hope for or are
+not, that it is impossible to take a step with sense and judgment,
+without regulating it in view of this point, which ought to be our first
+object.... I can have nothing but compassion for those who groan and
+travail in this doubt with all sincerity, who look on it as the worst of
+misfortunes, and who, sparing no pains to escape from it, make of this
+search their chief and most serious employment.... But he who doubts and
+searches not is at the same time a grievous wrongdoer, and a grievously
+unfortunate man. If along with this he is tranquil and self-satisfied,
+if he publishes his contentment to the world and plumes himself upon it,
+and if it is this very state of doubt which he makes the subject of his
+joy and vanity--I have no terms in which to describe so extravagant a
+creature.'[15] Who, except a member of the school of extravagant
+creatures themselves, would deny that Pascal's irritation is most
+wholesome and righteous?
+
+Perhaps in reply to this, we may be confronted by our own doctrine of
+intellectual responsibility interpreted in a directly opposite sense. We
+may be reminded of the long array of difficulties that interfere between
+us and knowledge in that tremendous matter, and of objections that rise
+in such perplexing force to an answer either one way or the other. And
+finally we may be despatched with a eulogy of caution and a censure of
+too great heat after certainty. The answer is that there is a kind of
+Doubt not without search, but after and at the end of search, which is
+not open to Pascal's just reproaches against the more ignoble and
+frivolous kind. And this too has been described for us by a subtle
+doctor of Pascal's communion. 'Are there pleasures of Doubt, as well as
+of Inference and Assent? In one sense there are. Not indeed if doubt
+means ignorance, uncertainty, or hopeless suspense; but there is a
+certain grave acquiescence in ignorance, a recognition of our impotence
+to solve momentous and urgent questions, which has a satisfaction of its
+own. After high aspirations, after renewed endeavours, after bootless
+toil, after long wanderings, after hope, effort, weariness, failure,
+painfully alternating and recurring, it is an immense relief to the
+exhausted mind to be able to say, "At length I know that I can know
+nothing about anything." ... Ignorance remains the evil which it ever
+was, but something of the peace of certitude is gained in knowing the
+worst, and in having reconciled the mind to the endurance of it.'[16]
+Precisely, and what one would say of our own age is that it will not
+deliberately face this knowledge of the worst. So it misses the peace of
+certitude, and not only its peace, but the strength and coherency that
+follow strict acceptance of the worst, when the worst is after all the
+best within reach.
+
+Those who are in earnest when they blame too great haste after
+certainty, do in reality mean us to embrace certainty, but in favour of
+the vulgar opinions. They only see the prodigious difficulties of the
+controversy when you do not incline to their own side in it. They only
+panegyrise caution and the strictly provisional when they suspect that
+intrepidity and love of the conclusive would lead them to unwelcome
+shores. These persons, however, whether fortunately or unfortunately,
+have no longer much influence over the most active part of the national
+intelligence. Whether permanently or not, resolute orthodoxy, however
+prosperous it may seem among many of the uncultivated rich, has lost its
+hold upon thought. For thought has become dispersive, and the
+centrifugal forces of the human mind, among those who think seriously,
+have for the time become dominant and supreme. No one, I suppose,
+imagines that the singular ecclesiastical revival which is now going on,
+is accompanied by any revival of real and reasoned belief; or that the
+opulent manufacturers who subscribe so generously for restored cathedral
+fabrics and the like, have been moved by the apologetics of _Aids to
+Faith_ and the Christian Evidence Society.
+
+Obviously only three ways of dealing with the great problems of which we
+have spoken are compatible with a strong and well-bottomed character. We
+may affirm that there is a deity with definable attributes; and that
+there is a conscious state and continued personality after the
+dissolution of the body. Or we may deny. Or we may assure ourselves that
+we have no faculties enabling us on good evidence either to deny or
+affirm. Intellectual self-respect and all the qualities that are derived
+from that, may well go with any one of these three courses, decisively
+followed and consistently applied in framing a rule of life and a
+settled scheme of its aims and motives. Why do we say that intellectual
+self-respect is not vigorous, nor the sense of intellectual
+responsibility and truthfulness and coherency quick and wakeful among
+us? Because so many people, even among those who might be expected to
+know better, insist on the futile attempt to reconcile all those
+courses, instead of fixing on one and steadily abiding in it. They speak
+as if they affirmed, and they act as if they denied, and in their hearts
+they cherish a slovenly sort of suspicion that we can neither deny nor
+affirm. It may be said that this comes to much the same thing as if they
+had formally decided in the last or neutral sense. It is not so. This
+illegitimate union of three contradictories fritters character away,
+breaks it up into discordant parts, and dissolves into mercurial
+fluidity that leavening sincerity and free and cheerful boldness, which
+come of harmonious principles of faith and action, and without which men
+can never walk as confident lovers of justice and truth.
+
+
+Ambrose's famous saying, that 'it hath not pleased the Lord to give his
+people salvation in dialectic,' has a profound meaning far beyond its
+application to theology. It is deeply true that our ruling convictions
+are less the product of ratiocination than of sympathy, imagination,
+usage, tradition. But from this it does not follow that the reasoning
+faculties are to be further discouraged. On the contrary, just because
+the other elements are so strong that they can be trusted to take care
+of themselves, it is expedient to give special countenance to the
+intellectual habits, which alone can check and rectify the constantly
+aberrating tendencies of sentiment on the one side, and custom on the
+other. This remark brings us to another type, of whom it is not
+irrelevant to speak shortly in this place. The consequences of the
+strength of the political spirit are not all direct, nor does its
+strength by any means spring solely from its indulgence to the less
+respectable elements of character, such as languor, extreme pliableness,
+superficiality. On the contrary, it has an indirect influence in
+removing the only effective restraint on the excesses of some qualities
+which, when duly directed and limited, are among the most precious parts
+of our mental constitution. The political spirit is the great force in
+throwing love of truth and accurate reasoning into a secondary place.
+The evil does not stop here. This achievement has indirectly
+countenanced the postponement of intellectual methods, and the
+diminution of the sense of intellectual responsibility, by a school that
+is anything rather than political.
+
+Theology has borrowed, and coloured for her own use, the principles
+which were first brought into vogue in politics. If in the one field it
+is the fashion to consider convenience first and truth second, in the
+other there is a corresponding fashion of placing truth second and
+emotional comfort first. If there are some who compromise their real
+opinions, or the chance of reaching truth, for the sake of gain, there
+are far more who shrink from giving their intelligence free play, for
+the sake of keeping undisturbed certain luxurious spiritual
+sensibilities. This choice of emotional gratification before truth and
+upright dealing with one's own understanding, creates a character that
+is certainly far less unlovely than those who sacrifice their
+intellectual integrity to more material convenience. The moral flaw is
+less palpable and less gross. Yet here too there is the stain of
+intellectual improbity, and it is perhaps all the more mischievous for
+being partly hidden under the mien of spiritual exaltation.
+
+There is in literature no more seductive illustration of this seductive
+type than Rousseau's renowned character of the Savoyard
+Vicar--penetrated with scepticism as to the attributes of the deity, the
+meaning of the holy rites, the authenticity of the sacred documents; yet
+full of reverence, and ever respecting in silence what he could neither
+reject nor understand. 'The essential worship,' he says, 'is the worship
+of the heart. God never rejects this homage, under whatever form it be
+offered to him. In old days I used to say mass with the levity which in
+time infects even the gravest things when we do them too often. Since
+acquiring my new principles [of reverential scepticism] I celebrate it
+with more veneration: I am overcome by the majesty of the Supreme Being,
+by his presence, by the insufficiency of the human mind, which conceives
+so ill what pertains to its author. When I approach the moment of
+consecration, I collect myself for performing the act with all the
+feelings required by the church and the majesty of the sacrament. I
+strive to annihilate my reason before the Supreme Intelligence, saying,
+Who art thou that thou shouldst measure infinite power?'[17]
+
+The Savoyard Vicar is not imaginary. The acquiescence in indefinite
+ideas for the sake of comforted emotions, and the abnegation of strong
+convictions in order to make room for free and plenteous effusion, have
+for us all the marks of a too familiar reality. Such a doctrine is an
+everyday plea for self-deception, and a current justification for
+illusion even among some of the finer spirits. They have persuaded
+themselves not only that the life of the religious emotions is the
+highest life, but that it is independent of the intellectual forms with
+which history happens to have associated it. And so they refine and
+sophisticate and make havoc with plain and honest interpretation, in
+order to preserve a soft serenity of soul unperturbed.
+
+Now, we are not at all concerned to dispute such positions as that
+Feeling is the right starting-point of moral education; that in forming
+character appeal should be to the heart rather than to the
+understanding; that the only basis on which our faculties can be
+harmoniously ordered is the preponderance of affection over reason.
+These propositions open much grave and complex discussion, and they are
+not to our present purpose. We only desire to state the evil of the
+notion that a man is warranted in comforting himself with dogmas and
+formularies, which he has first to empty of all definite, precise, and
+clearly determinable significance, before he can get them out of the way
+of his religious sensibilities. Whether Reason or Affection is to have
+the empire in the society of the future, when Reason may possibly have
+no more to discover for us in the region of morals and religion, and so
+will have become _emeritus_ and taken a lower place, as of a tutor whose
+services the human family, being now grown up, no longer
+requires,--however this may be, it is at least certain that in the
+meantime the spiritual life of man needs direction quite as much as it
+needs impulse, and light quite as much as force. This direction and
+light can only be safely procured by the free and vigorous use of the
+intelligence. But the intelligence is not free in the presence of a
+mortal fear lest its conclusions should trouble soft tranquillity of
+spirit. There is always hope of a man so long as he dwells in the region
+of the direct categorical proposition and the unambiguous term; so long
+as he does not deny the rightly drawn conclusion after accepting the
+major and minor premisses. This may seem a scanty virtue and very easy
+grace. Yet experience shows it to be too hard of attainment for those
+who tamper with disinterestedness of conviction, for the sake of
+luxuriating in the softness of spiritual transport without interruption
+from a syllogism. It is true that there are now and then in life as in
+history noble and fair natures, that by the silent teaching and
+unconscious example of their inborn purity, star-like constancy, and
+great devotion, do carry the world about them to further heights of
+living than can be attained by ratiocination. But these, the blameless
+and loved saints of the earth, rise too rarely on our dull horizons to
+make a rule for the world. The law of things is that they who tamper
+with veracity, from whatever motive, are tampering with the vital force
+of human progress. Our comfort and the delight of the religious
+imagination are no better than forms of self-indulgence, when they are
+secured at the cost of that love of truth on which, more than on
+anything else, the increase of light and happiness among men must
+depend. We have to fight and do lifelong battle against the forces of
+darkness, and anything that turns the edge of reason blunts the surest
+and most potent of our weapons.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 13: Burton's _Lift of Hume,_ ii. 186-188]
+
+[Footnote 14: Isaac Taylor's _Natural History of Enthusiasm_, p. 226.]
+
+[Footnote 15: _Pensees_, II. Art ii.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Dr. Newman's _Grammar of Assent_, p. 201.]
+
+[Footnote 17: _Emile_, bk. iv.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+RELIGIOUS CONFORMITY.
+
+The main field of discussion touching Compromise in expression and
+avowal lies in the region of religious belief. In politics no one
+seriously contends that respect for the feelings and prejudices of other
+people requires us to be silent about our opinions. A republican, for
+instance, is at perfect liberty to declare himself so. Nobody will say
+that he is not within his rights if he should think it worth while to
+practise this liberty, though of course he will have to face the obloquy
+which attends all opinion that is not shared by the more demonstrative
+and vocal portions of the public. It is true that in every stable
+society a general conviction prevails of the extreme undesirableness of
+constantly laying bare the foundations of government. Incessant
+discussion of the theoretical bases of the social union is naturally
+considered worse than idle. It is felt by many wise men that the chief
+business of the political thinker is to interest himself in
+generalisations of such a sort as leads with tolerable straightness to
+practical improvements of a far-reaching and durable kind. Even among
+those, however, who thus feel it not to be worth while to be for ever
+handling the abstract principles which are, after all, only clumsy
+expressions of the real conditions that bring and keep men together in
+society, yet nobody of any consideration pretends to silence or limit
+the free discussion of these principles. Although a man is not likely to
+be thanked who calls attention to the vast discrepancies between the
+theory and practice of the constitution, yet nobody now would
+countenance the notion of an inner doctrine in politics. We smile at the
+line that Hume took in speaking of the doctrine of non-resistance. He
+did not deny that the right of resistance to a tyrannical sovereign does
+actually belong to a nation. But, he said, 'if ever on any occasion it
+were laudable to conceal truth from the populace, it must be confessed
+that the doctrine of resistance affords such an example; and that all
+speculative reasoners ought to observe with regard to this principle
+the same cautious silence which the laws, in every species of
+government, have ever prescribed to themselves.' As if the cautious
+silence of the political writer could prevent a populace from feeling
+the heaviness of an oppressor's hand, and striving to find relief from
+unjust burdens. As if any nation endowed with enough of the spirit of
+independence to assent to the right of resistance when offered to them
+as a speculative theorem, would not infallibly be led by the same spirit
+to assert the right without the speculative theorem. That so acute a
+head as Hume's should have failed to perceive these very plain
+considerations, and that he should moreover have perpetrated the
+absurdity of declaring the right of resistance, in the same breath in
+which he declares the laudableness of keeping it a secret, only allows
+how carefully a man need steer after he has once involved himself in the
+labyrinths of Economy.[18]
+
+In religion the unreasonableness of imposing a similar cautious silence
+is not yet fully established, nor the vicious effects of practising it
+clearly recognised. In these high matters an amount of economy and
+management is held praiseworthy, which in any other subject would be
+universally condemned as cowardly and ignoble. Indeed the preliminary
+stage has scarcely been reached--the stage in which public opinion
+grants to every one the unrestricted right of shaping his own beliefs,
+independently of those of the people who surround him. Any woman, for
+instance, suspected of having cast behind her the Bible and all
+practices of devotion and the elementary articles of the common creed,
+would be distrustfully regarded even by those who wink at the same kind
+of mental boldness in men. Nay, she would be so regarded even by some of
+the very men who have themselves discarded as superstition what they
+still wish women to retain for law and gospel. So long as any class of
+adults are effectually discouraged in the free use of their minds upon
+the most important subjects, we are warranted in saying that the era of
+free thought, which naturally precedes the era of free speech, is still
+imperfectly developed.
+
+The duties and rights of free speech are by no means identical with
+those of independent thought. One general reason for this is tolerably
+plain. The expression of opinion directly affects other people, while
+its mere formation directly affects no one but ourselves. Therefore the
+limits of compromise in expression are less widely and freely placed,
+because the rights and interests of all who may be made listeners to our
+spoken or written words are immediately concerned. In forming opinions,
+a man or woman owes no consideration to any person or persons whatever.
+Truth is the single object. It is truth that in the forum of conscience
+claims an undivided allegiance. The publication of opinion stands on
+another footing. That is an external act, with possible consequences,
+like all other external acts, both to the doer and to every one within
+the sphere of his influence. And, besides these, it has possible
+consequences to the prosperity of the opinion itself.[19]
+
+A hundred questions of fitness, of seasonableness, of conflicting
+expediencies, present themselves in this connection, and nothing gives
+more anxiety to a sensible man who holds notions opposed to the current
+prejudices, than to hit the right mark where intellectual integrity and
+prudence, firmness and wise reserve, are in exact accord. When we come
+to declaring opinions that are, however foolishly and unreasonably,
+associated with pain and even a kind of turpitude in the minds of those
+who strongly object to them, then some of our most powerful sympathies
+are naturally engaged. We wonder whether duty to truth can possibly
+require us to inflict keen distress on those to whom we are bound by the
+tenderest and most consecrated ties. This is so wholly honourable a
+sentiment, that no one who has not made himself drunk with the thin sour
+wine of a crude and absolute logic will refuse to consider it. Before,
+however, attempting to illustrate cases of conscience in this order, we
+venture to make a short digression into the region of the matter, as
+distinct from the manner of free speech. One or two changes of great
+importance in the way in which men think about religion, bear directly
+upon the conditions on which they may permit themselves and others to
+speak about it.
+
+
+The peculiar character of all the best kinds of dissent from the nominal
+creed of the time, makes it rather less difficult for us to try to
+reconcile unflinching honesty with a just and becoming regard for the
+feelings of those who have claims upon our forbearance, than would have
+been the case a hundred years ago. 'It is not now with a polite sneer,'
+as a high ecclesiastical authority lately admitted, 'still less with a
+rude buffet or coarse words, that Christianity is assailed.' Before
+churchmen congratulate themselves too warmly on this improvement in the
+nature of the attack, perhaps they ought to ask themselves how far it is
+due to the change in the position of the defending party. The truth is
+that the coarse and realistic criticism of which Voltaire was the
+consummate master, has done its work. It has driven the defenders of the
+old faith into the milder and more genial climate of non-natural
+interpretations, and the historic sense, and a certain elastic
+relativity of dogma. The old criticism was victorious, but after victory
+it vanished. One reason of this was that the coarse and realistic forms
+of belief had either vanished before it, or else they forsook their
+ancient pretensions and clothed themselves in more modest robes. The
+consequence of this, and of other causes which might be named, is that
+the modern attack, while fully as serious and much more radical, has a
+certain gravity, decorum, and worthiness of form. No one of any sense or
+knowledge now thinks the Christian religion had its origin in
+deliberate imposture. The modern freethinker does not attack it; he
+explains it. And what is more, he explains it by referring its growth to
+the better, and not to the worse part of human nature. He traces it to
+men's cravings for a higher morality. He finds its source in their
+aspirations after nobler expression of that feeling for the
+incommensurable things, which is in truth under so many varieties of
+inwoven pattern the common universal web of religious faith.
+
+The result of this way of looking at a creed which a man no longer
+accepts, is that he is able to speak of it with patience and historic
+respect. He can openly mark his dissent from it, without exacerbating
+the orthodox sentiment by galling pleasantries or bitter animadversion
+upon details. We are now awake to the all-important truth that belief in
+this or that detail of superstition is the result of an irrational state
+of mind, and flows logically from superstitious premisses. We see that
+it is to begin at the wrong end, to assail the deductions as impossible,
+instead of sedulously building up a state of mind in which their
+impossibility would become spontaneously visible.
+
+Besides the great change which such a point of view makes in men's way
+of speaking of a religion, whose dogmas and documents they reject, there
+is this further consideration leaning in the same direction. The
+tendency of modern free thought is more and more visibly towards the
+extraction of the first and more permanent elements of the old faith, to
+make the purified material of the new. When Dr. Congreve met the famous
+epigram about Comte's system being Catholicism minus Christianity, by
+the reply that it is Catholicism plus Science, he gave an ingenious
+expression to the direction which is almost necessarily taken by all who
+attempt, in however informal a manner, to construct for themselves some
+working system of faith, in place of the faith which science and
+criticism have sapped. In what ultimate form, acceptable to great
+multitudes of men, these attempts will at last issue, no one can now
+tell. For we, like the Hebrews of old, shall all have to live and die in
+faith, 'not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off,
+and being persuaded of them, and embracing them, and confessing that we
+are strangers and pilgrims on the earth.' Meanwhile, after the first
+great glow and passion of the just and necessary revolt of reason
+against superstition have slowly lost the exciting splendour of the
+dawn, and become diffused in the colourless space of a rather bleak
+noonday, the mind gradually collects again some of the ideas of the old
+religion of the West, and willingly, or even joyfully, suffers itself to
+be once more breathed upon by something of its spirit. Christianity was
+the last great religious synthesis. It is the one nearest to us. Nothing
+is more natural than that those who cannot rest content with
+intellectual analysis, while awaiting the advent of the Saint Paul of
+the humanitarian faith of the future, should gather up provisionally
+such fragmentary illustrations of this new faith as are to be found in
+the records of the old. Whatever form may be ultimately imposed on our
+vague religious aspirations by some prophet to come, who shall unite
+sublime depth of feeling and lofty purity of life with strong
+intellectual grasp and the gift of a noble eloquence, we may at least be
+sure of this, that it will stand as closely related to Christianity as
+Christianity stood closely related to the old Judaic dispensation. It is
+commonly assumed that the rejecters of the popular religion stand in
+face of it, as the Christians stood in face of the pagan belief and
+pagan rites in the Empire. The analogy is inexact. The modern denier, if
+he is anything better than that, or entertains hopes of a creed to come,
+is nearer to the position of the Christianising Jew.[20] Science, when
+she has accomplished all her triumphs in her own order, will still have
+to go back, when the time comes, to assist in the building up of a new
+creed by which men can live. The builders will have to seek material in
+the purified and sublimated ideas, of which the confessions and rites of
+the Christian churches have been the grosser expression. Just as what
+was once the new dispensation was preached _a Judaeos ad Judaeos apud
+Judaeos_, so must the new, that is to be, find a Christian teacher and
+Christian hearers. It can hardly be other than an expansion, a
+development, a readaptation, of all the moral and spiritual truth that
+lay hidden under the worn-out forms. It must be such a harmonising of
+the truth with our intellectual conceptions as shall fit it to be an
+active guide to conduct. In a world '_where men sit and hear each other
+groan, where but to think is to be full of sorrow_,' it is hard to
+imagine a time when we shall be indifferent to that sovereign legend of
+Pity. We have to incorporate it in some wider gospel of Justice and
+Progress.
+
+I shall not, I hope, be suspected of any desire to prophesy too smooth
+things. It is no object of ours to bridge over the gulf between belief
+in the vulgar theology and disbelief. Nor for a single moment do we
+pretend that, when all the points of contact between virtuous belief and
+virtuous disbelief are made the most of that good faith will allow,
+there will not still and after all remain a terrible controversy between
+those who cling passionately to all the consolations, mysteries,
+personalities, of the orthodox faith, and us who have made up our minds
+to face the worst, and to shape, as best we can, a life in which the
+cardinal verities of the common creed shall have no place. The future
+faith, like the faith of the past, brings not peace but a sword. It is a
+tale not of concord, but of households divided against themselves. Those
+who are incessantly striving to make the old bottles hold the new wine,
+to reconcile the irreconcilable, to bring the Bible and the dogmas of
+the churches to be good friends with history and criticism, are prompted
+by the humanest intention.[21] One sympathises with this amiable anxiety
+to soften shocks, and break the rudeness of a vital transition. In this
+essay, at any rate, there is no such attempt. We know that it is the son
+against the father, and the mother-in-law against the daughter-in-law.
+No softness of speech will disguise the portentous differences between
+those who admit a supernatural revelation and those who deny it. No
+charity nor goodwill can narrow the intellectual breach between those
+who declare that a world without an ever-present Creator with
+intelligible attributes would be to them empty and void, and those who
+insist that none of the attributes of a Creator can ever be grasped by
+the finite intelligence of men.[22] Our object in urging the historic,
+semi-conservative, and almost sympathetic quality, which distinguishes
+the unbelief of to-day from the unbelief of a hundred years ago, is only
+to show that the most strenuous and upright of plain-speakers is less
+likely to shock and wound the lawful sensibilities of devout persons
+than he would have been so long as unbelief went no further than bitter
+attack on small details. In short, all save the purely negative and
+purely destructive school of freethinkers, are now able to deal with
+the beliefs from which they dissent, in a way which makes patient and
+disinterested controversy not wholly impossible.
+
+One more point of much importance ought to be mentioned. The belief that
+heresy is the result of wilful depravity is fast dying out. People no
+longer seriously think that speculative error is bound up with moral
+iniquity, or that mistaken thinking is either the result or the cause of
+wicked living. Even the official mouthpieces of established beliefs now
+usually represent a bad heart as only one among other possible causes of
+unbelief. It divides the curse with ignorance, intellectual shallowness,
+the unfortunate influence of plausible heresiarchs, and other
+alternative roots of evil. They thus leave a way of escape, by which the
+person who does not share their own convictions may still be credited
+with a good moral character. Some persons, it is true, 'cannot see how a
+man who deliberately rejects the Roman Catholic religion can, in the
+eyes of those who earnestly believe it, be other than a rebel against
+God.' They assure us that, 'as opinions become better marked and more
+distinctly connected with action, the truth that decided dissent from
+them implies more or less of a reproach upon those who hold them
+decidedly, becomes so obvious that every one perceives it.' No doubt a
+protestant or a sceptic regards the beliefs of a catholic as a reproach
+upon the believer's understanding. So the man whose whole faith rests on
+the miraculous and on acts of special intervention, regards the strictly
+positive and scientific thinker as the dupe of a crude and narrow logic.
+But this now carries with it no implication of moral obliquity. De
+Maistre's rather grotesque conviction that infidels always die of
+horrible diseases with special names, could now only be held among the
+very dregs of the ecclesiastical world.
+
+Nor is it correct to say that 'when religious differences come to be,
+and are regarded as, mere differences of opinion, it is because the
+controversy is really decided in the sceptical sense.' Those who agree
+with the present writer, for example, are not sceptics. They positively,
+absolutely, and without reserve, reject as false the whole system of
+objective propositions which make up the popular belief of the day, in
+one and all of its theological expressions. They look upon that system
+as mischievous in its consequences to society, for many reasons,--among
+others because it tends to divert and misdirect the most energetic
+faculties of human nature. This, however, does not make them suspect the
+motives or the habitual morality of those who remain in the creed in
+which they were nurtured. The difference is a difference of opinion, as
+purely as if we refused to accept the undulatory theory of light; and we
+treat it as such. Then reverse this. Why is it any more impossible for
+those who remain in the theological stage, who are not in the smallest
+degree sceptical, who in their heart of hearts embrace without a shadow
+of misgiving all the mysteries of the faith, why is it any more
+impossible for them than for us, whose convictions are as strong as
+theirs, to treat the most radical dissidence as that and nothing other
+or worse? Logically, it perhaps might not be hard to convict them of
+inconsistency, but then, as has been so often said, inconsistency is a
+totally different thing from insincerity, or doubting adherence, or
+silent scepticism. The beliefs of an ordinary man are a complex
+structure of very subtle materials, all compacted into a whole, not by
+logic, but by lack of logic; not by syllogism or sorites, but by the
+vague.
+
+As a plain matter of fact and observation, we may all perceive that
+dissent from religious opinion less and less implies reproach in any
+serious sense. We all of us know in the flesh liberal catholics and
+latitudinarian protestants, who hold the very considerable number of
+beliefs that remain to them, quite as firmly and undoubtingly as
+believers who are neither liberal nor latitudinarian. The compatibility
+of error in faith with virtue in conduct is to them only a mystery the
+more, a branch of the insoluble problem of Evil, permitted by a Being at
+once all-powerful and all-benevolent. Stringent logic may make short
+work of either fact,--a benevolent author of evil, or a virtuous
+despiser of divine truth. But in an atmosphere of mystery, logical
+contradictions melt away. Faith gives a sanction to that tolerant and
+charitable judgment of the character of heretics, which has its real
+springs partly in common human sympathy whereby we are all bound to one
+another, and partly in experience, which teaches us that practical
+righteousness and speculative orthodoxy do not always have their roots
+in the same soil. The world is every day growing larger. The range of
+the facts of the human race is being enormously extended by naturalists,
+by historians, by philologists, by travellers, by critics. The manifold
+past experiences of humanity are daily opening out to us in vaster and
+at the same time more ordered proportions. And so even those who hold
+fast to Christianity as the noblest, strongest, and only final
+conclusion of these experiences, are yet constrained to admit that it is
+no more than a single term in a very long and intricate series.
+
+
+The object of the foregoing digression is to show some cause for
+thinking that dissent from the current beliefs is less and less likely
+to inflict upon those who retain them any very intolerable kind or
+degree of mental pain. Therefore it is in so far all the plainer, as
+well as easier, a duty not to conceal such dissent. What we have been
+saying comes to this. If a believer finds that his son, for instance,
+has ceased to believe, he no longer has this disbelief thrust upon him
+in gross and irreverent forms. Nor does he any longer suppose that the
+unbelieving son must necessarily be a profligate. And moreover, in
+ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, he no longer supposes that infidels,
+of his own family or acquaintance at any rate, will consume for eternal
+ages in lakes of burning marl.
+
+Let us add another consideration. One reason why so many persons are
+really shocked and pained by the avowal of heretical opinions is the
+very fact that such avowal is uncommon. If unbelievers and doubters were
+more courageous, believers would be less timorous. It is because they
+live in an enervating fool's paradise of seeming assent and conformity,
+that the breath of an honest and outspoken word strikes so eager and
+nipping on their sensibilities. If they were not encouraged to suppose
+that all the world is of their own mind, if they were forced out of that
+atmosphere of self-indulgent silences and hypocritical reserves, which
+is systematically poured round them, they would acquire a robuster
+mental habit. They would learn to take dissents for what they are worth.
+They would be led either to strengthen or to discard their own
+opinions, if the dissents happened to be weighty or instructive; either
+to refute or neglect such dissents as should be ill-founded or
+insignificant. They will remain valetudinarians, so long as a curtain of
+compromise shelters them from the real belief of those of their
+neighbours who have ventured to use their minds with some measure of
+independence. A very brief contact with people who, when the occasion
+comes, do not shrink from saying what they think, is enough to modify
+that excessive liability to be shocked at truth-speaking, which is only
+so common because truth-speaking itself is so unfamiliar.
+
+Now, however great the pain inflicted by the avowal of unbelief, it
+seems to the present writer that one relationship in life, and one only,
+justifies us in being silent where otherwise it would be right to speak.
+This relationship is that between child and parents. Those parents are
+wisest who train their sons and daughters in the utmost liberty both of
+thought and speech; who do not instill dogmas into them, but inculcate
+upon them the sovereign importance of correct ways of forming opinions;
+who, while never dissembling the great fact that if one opinion is
+true, its contradictory cannot be true also, but must be a lie and must
+partake of all the evil qualities of a lie, yet always set them the
+example of listening to unwelcome opinions with patience and candour.
+Still all parents are not wise. They cannot all endure to hear of any
+religious opinions except their own. Where it would give them sincere
+and deep pain to hear a son or daughter avow disbelief in the
+inspiration of the Bible and so forth, then it seems that the younger
+person is warranted in refraining from saying that he or she does not
+accept such and such doctrines. This, of course, only where the son or
+daughter feels a tender and genuine attachment to the parent. Where the
+parent has not earned this attachment, has been selfish, indifferent, or
+cruel, the title to the special kind of forbearance of which we are
+speaking can hardly exist. In an ordinary way, however, a parent has a
+claim on us which no other person in the world can have, and a man's
+self-respect ought scarcely to be injured if he finds himself shrinking
+from playing the apostle to his own father and mother.
+
+One can indeed imagine circumstances where this would not be true. If
+you are persuaded that you have had revealed to you a glorious gospel of
+light and blessedness, it is impossible not to thirst to impart such
+tidings most eagerly to those who are closest about your heart. We are
+not in that position. We have as yet no magnificent vision, so definite,
+so touching, so 'clothed with the beauty of a thousand stars,' as to
+make us eager, for the sake of it, to murder all the sweetnesses of
+filial piety in an aggressive eristic. This much one concedes. Yet let
+us ever remember that those elders are of nobler type who have kept
+their minds in a generous freedom, and have made themselves strong with
+that magnanimous confidence in truth, which the Hebrew expressed in old
+phrase, that if counsel or work be of men it will come to nought, but if
+it be of God ye cannot overthrow it.
+
+Even in the case of parents, and even though our new creed is but
+rudimentary, there can be no good reason why we should go further in the
+way of economy than mere silence. Neither they nor any other human being
+can possibly have a right to expect us, not merely to abstain from the
+open expression of dissents, but positively to profess unreal and
+feigned assents. No fear of giving pain, no wish to soothe the alarms of
+those to whom we owe much, no respect for the natural clinging of the
+old to the faith which has accompanied them through honourable lives,
+can warrant us in saying that we believe to be true what we are
+convinced is false. The most lax moralist counts a lie wrong, even when
+the motive is unselfish, and springs from the desire to give pleasure to
+those whom it is our duty to please. A deliberate lie avowedly does not
+cease to be one because it concerns spiritual things. Nor is it the less
+wrong because it is uttered by one to whom all spiritual things have
+become indifferent. Filial affection is a motive which would, if any
+motive could, remove some of the taint of meanness with which pious
+lying, like every other kind of lying, tends to infect character. The
+motive may no doubt ennoble the act, though the act remains in the
+category of forbidden things. But the motive of these complaisant
+assents and false affirmations, taken at their very best, is still
+comparatively a poor motive. No real elevation of spirit is possible for
+a man who is willing to subordinate his convictions to his domestic
+affections, and to bring himself to a habit of viewing falsehood
+lightly, lest the truth should shock the illegitimate and over-exacting
+sensibilities either of his parents or any one else. We may understand
+what is meant by the logic of the feelings, and accept it as the proper
+corrective for a too intense egoism. But when the logic of the feelings
+is invoked to substitute the egoism of the family for the slightly
+narrower egoism of the individual, it can hardly be more than a fine
+name for self-indulgence and a callous indifference to all the largest
+human interests.
+
+
+This brings us to consider the case of another no less momentous
+relationship, and the kind of compromise in the matter of religious
+conformity which it justifies or imposes. It constantly happens that the
+husband has wholly ceased to believe the religion to which his wife
+clings with unshaken faith. We need not enter into the causes why women
+remain in bondage to opinions which so many cultivated men either reject
+or else hold in a transcendental and non-natural sense. The only
+question with which we are concerned is the amount of free assertion of
+his own convictions which a man should claim and practise, when he knows
+that such convictions are distasteful to his wife. Is it lawful, as it
+seems to be in dealing with parents, to hold his conviction silently? Is
+it lawful either positively or by implication to lead his wife to
+suppose that he shares her opinions, when in truth he rejects them?
+
+If it were not for the maxims and practice in daily use among men
+otherwise honourable, one would not suppose it possible that two answers
+could be given to these questions by any one with the smallest pretence
+of principle or self-respect. As it is, we all of us know men who
+deliberately reject the entire Christian system, and still think it
+compatible with uprightness to summon their whole establishments round
+them at morning and evening, and on their knees to offer up elaborately
+formulated prayers, which have just as much meaning to them as the
+entrails of the sacrificial victim had to an infidel haruspex. We see
+the same men diligently attending religious services; uttering assents
+to confessions of which they really reject every syllable; kneeling,
+rising, bowing, with deceptive solemnity; even partaking of the
+sacrament with a consummate devoutness that is very edifying to all who
+are not in the secret, and who do not know that they are acting a part,
+and making a mock both of their own reason and their own probity, merely
+to please persons whose delusions they pity and despise from the bottom
+of their hearts.
+
+On the surface there is certainly nothing to distinguish this kind of
+conduct from the grossest hypocrisy. Is there anything under the surface
+to relieve it from this complexion? Is there any weight in the sort of
+answer which such men make to the accusation that their conformity is a
+very degrading form of deceit, and a singularly mischievous kind of
+treachery? Is the plea of a wish to spare mental discomfort to others an
+admissible and valid plea? It seems to us to be none of these things,
+and for the following among other reasons.
+
+If a man drew his wife by lot, or by any other method over which neither
+he nor she has any control, as in the case of parents, perhaps he might
+with some plausibleness contend that he owed her certain limited
+deferences and reserves, just as we admit that he may owe them to his
+parents. But this is not the case. Marriage, in this country at least,
+is the result of mutual choice. If men and women do as a matter of fact
+usually make this choice hastily and on wofully imperfect information of
+one another's characters, that is no warrant for a resort to unlawful
+expedients to remedy the blunder. If a woman cares ardently enough about
+religion to feel keen distress at the idea of dissent from it on the
+part of those closely connected with her, she surely may be expected to
+take reasonable pains to ascertain beforehand the religious attitude of
+one with whom she is about to unite herself for life. On the other hand,
+if a man sets any value on his own opinions, if they are in any real
+sense a part of himself, he must be guilty of something like deliberate
+and systematic duplicity during the acquaintance preceding marriage, if
+his dissent has remained unsuspected. Certainly if men go through
+society before marriage under false colours, and feign beliefs which
+they do not hold, they have only themselves to thank for the degradation
+of having to keep up the imposture afterwards. Suppose a protestant
+were to pass himself off for a catholic because he happened to meet a
+catholic lady whom he desired to marry. Everybody would agree in calling
+such a man by a very harsh name. It is hard to see why a freethinker,
+who by reticence and conformity passes himself off for a believer,
+should be more leniently judged. The differences between a catholic and
+a protestant are assuredly not any greater than those between a believer
+and an unbeliever. We all admit the baseness of dissimulation in the
+former case. Why is it any less base in the latter?
+
+Marriages, however, are often made in haste, or heedlessly, or early in
+life, before either man or woman has come to feel very deeply about
+religion either one way or another. The woman does not know how much she
+will need religion, nor what comfort it may bring to her. The man does
+not know all the objections to it which may disclose themselves to his
+understanding as the years ripen. There is always at work that most
+unfortunate maxim, tacitly held and acted upon in ninety-nine marriages
+out of a hundred, that money is of importance, and social position is of
+importance, and good connections are of importance, and health and
+manners and comely looks, and that the only thing which is of no
+importance whatever is opinion and intellectual quality and temper. Now
+granting that both man and woman are indifferent at the time of their
+union, is that any reason why upon either of them acquiring serious
+convictions, the other should be expected, out of mere complaisance, to
+make a false and hypocritical pretence of sharing them? To see how
+flimsy is this plea of fearing to give pain to the religious
+sensitiveness of women, we have only to imagine one or two cases which
+go beyond the common experience, yet which ought not to strain the plea,
+if it be valid.
+
+Thus, if my wife turns catholic, am I to pretend to turn catholic too,
+to save her the horrible distress of thinking that I am doomed to
+eternal perdition? Or if she chooses to embrace the doctrine of direct
+illumination from heaven, and to hear voices bidding her to go or come,
+to do or abstain from doing, am I too to shape my conduct after these
+fancied monitions? Or if it comes into her mind to serve tables, and to
+listen in all faith to the miracles of spiritualism, am I, lest I
+should pain her, to feign a surrender of all my notions of evidence, to
+pretend a transformation of all my ideas of worthiness in life and
+beyond life, and to go to seances with the same regularity and
+seriousness with which you go to church? Of course in each of these
+cases everybody who does not happen to share the given peculiarity of
+belief, will agree that however severely a husband's dissent might pain
+the wife, whatever distress and discomfort it might inflict upon her,
+yet he would be bound to let her suffer, rather than sacrifice his
+veracity and self-respect. Why then is it any less discreditable to
+practise an insincere conformity in more ordinary circumstances? If the
+principle of such conformity is good for anything at all, it ought to
+cover these less usual cases as completely as the others which are more
+usual. Indeed there would be more to be said on behalf of conformity for
+politeness' sake, where the woman had gone through some great process of
+change, for then one might suppose that her heart was deeply set on the
+matter. Even then the plea would be worthless, but it is more
+indisputably worthless still where the sentiment which we are bidden to
+respect at the cost of our own freedom of speech is nothing more
+laudable than a fear of moving out of the common groove of religious
+opinion, or an intolerant and unreasoned bigotry, or mere stupidity and
+silliness of the vulgarest type.[23]
+
+Ah, it is said, you forget that women cannot live without religion. The
+present writer is equally of this opinion that women cannot be happy
+without a religion, nor men either. That is not the question. It does
+not follow because a woman cannot be happy without a religion, that
+therefore she cannot be happy unless her husband is of the same
+religion. Still less, that she would be made happy by his insincerely
+pretending to be of the same religion. And least of all is it true, if
+both these propositions were credible, that even then for the sake of
+her happiness he is bound not merely to live a life of imposture, but in
+so doing to augment the general forces of imposture in the world, and to
+make the chances of truth, light, and human improvement more and more
+unfavourable. Women are at present far less likely than men to possess a
+sound intelligence and a habit of correct judgment. They will remain so,
+while they have less ready access than men to the best kinds of literary
+and scientific training, and--what is far more important--while social
+arrangements exclude them from all those kinds of public activity, which
+are such powerful agents both in fitting men to judge soundly, and in
+forming in them the sense of responsibility for their judgments being
+sound.
+
+It may be contended that this alleged stronger religiosity of women,
+however coarse and poor in its formulae, is yet of constant value as a
+protest in favour of the maintenance of the religious element in human
+character and life, and that this is a far more important thing for us
+all than the greater or less truth of the dogmas with which such
+religiosity happens to be associated. In reply to this, without
+tediously labouring the argument, I venture to make the following
+observations. In the first place, it is an untenable idea that
+religiosity or devoutness of spirit is valuable in itself, without
+reference to the goodness or badness of the dogmatic forms and the
+practices in which it clothes itself. A fakir would hardly be an
+estimable figure in our society, merely because his way of living
+happens to be a manifestation of the religious spirit. If the religious
+spirit leads to a worthy and beautiful life, if it shows itself in
+cheerfulness, in pity, in charity and tolerance, in forgiveness, in a
+sense of the largeness and the mystery of things, in a lifting up of the
+soul in gratitude and awe to some supreme power and sovereign force,
+then whatever drawback there may be in the way of superstitious dogma,
+still such a spirit is on the whole a good thing. If not, not. It would
+be better without the superstition: even with the superstition it is
+good. But if the religious spirit is only a fine name for narrowness of
+understanding, for stubborn intolerance, for mere social formality, for
+a dread of losing that poor respectability which means thinking and
+doing exactly as the people around us think and do, then the religious
+spirit is not a good thing, but a thoroughly bad and hateful thing. To
+that we owe no management of any kind. Any one who suppresses his real
+opinions, and feigns others, out of deference to such a spirit as this
+in his household, ought to say plainly both to himself and to us that he
+cares more for his own ease and undisturbed comfort than he cares for
+truth and uprightness. For it is that, and not any tenderness for holy
+things, which is the real ground of his hypocrisy.
+
+Now with reference to the religious spirit in its nobler form, it is
+difficult to believe that any one genuinely animated by it would be
+soothed by the knowledge that her dearest companion is going through
+life with a mask on, quietly playing a part, uttering untrue
+professions, doing his best to cheat her and the rest of the world by a
+monstrous spiritual make-believe. One would suppose that instead of
+having her religious feeling gratified by conformity on these terms,
+nothing could wound it so bitterly nor outrage it so unpardonably. To
+know that her sensibility is destroying the entireness of the man's
+nature, its loyalty alike to herself and to truth, its freedom and
+singleness and courage--surely this can hardly be less distressing to a
+fine spirit than the suspicion that his heresies may bring him to the
+pit, or than the void of going through life without even the semblance
+of religious sympathy between them. If it be urged that the woman would
+never discover the piety of the man to be a counterfeit, we reply that
+unless her own piety were of the merely formal kind, she would be sure
+to make the discovery. The congregation in the old story were untouched
+by the disguised devil's eloquence on behalf of religion: it lacked
+unction. The verbal conformity of the unbeliever lacks unction, and its
+hollowness is speedily revealed to the quick apprehension of true
+faith.[24]
+
+Let us not be supposed to be arguing in favour of incessant battle of
+high dialectic in the household. Nothing could be more destructive of
+the gracious composure and mental harmony, of which household life ought
+to be, but perhaps seldom is, the great organ and instrument. Still less
+are we pleading for the freethinker's right at every hour of day or
+night to mock, sneer, and gibe at the sincere beliefs and
+conscientiously performed rites of those, whether men or women, whether
+strangers or kinsfolk, from whose religion he disagrees. 'It is not
+ancient impressions only,' said Pascal, 'which are capable of abusing
+us. The charm of novelty has the same power.' The prate of new-born
+scepticism may be as tiresome and as odious as the cant of gray
+orthodoxy. Religious discussion is not to be foisted upon us at every
+turn either by defenders or assailants. All we plead for is that when
+the opportunity meets the freethinker full in front, he is called upon
+to speak as freely as he thinks. Not more than this. A plain man has no
+trouble in acquiring this tact of reasonableness. We may all write what
+we please, because it is in the discretion of the rest of the world
+whether they will hearken or not. But in the family this is not so. If a
+man systematically intrudes disrespectful and unwelcome criticism upon a
+woman who retains the ancient belief, he is only showing that
+freethinker may be no more than bigot differently writ. It ought to be
+essential to no one's self-respect that he cannot consent to live with
+people who do not think as he thinks. We may be sure that there is
+something shallow and convulsive about the beliefs of a man who cannot
+allow his house-mates to possess their own beliefs in peace.
+
+On the other hand, it is essential to the self-respect of every one
+with the least love of truth that he should be free to express his
+opinions on every occasion, where silence would be taken for an assent
+which he does not really give. Still more unquestionably, he should be
+free from any obligation to forswear himself either directly, as by
+false professions, or by implication, as when he attend services, public
+or private, which are to him the symbol of superstition and mere
+spiritual phantasmagoria. The vindication of this simple right of living
+one's life honestly can hardly demand any heroic virtue. A little of the
+straightforwardness which men are accustomed to call manly, is the only
+quality that is needed; a little of that frank courage and determination
+in spiritual things, which men are usually so ready to practise towards
+their wives in temporal things. It must be a keen delight to a cynic to
+see a man who owns that he cannot bear to pain his wife by not going to
+church and saying prayers, yet insisting on having his own way,
+fearlessly thwarting her wishes, and contradicting her opinions, in
+every other detail, small and great, of the domestic economy.
+
+The truth of the matter is that the painful element in companionship is
+not difference of opinion, but discord of temperament. The important
+thing is not that two people should be inspired by the same convictions,
+but rather that each of them should hold his and her own convictions in
+a high and worthy spirit. Harmony of aim, not identity of conclusion, is
+the secret of the sympathetic life; to stand on the same moral plane,
+and that, if possible, a high one; to find satisfaction in different
+explanations of the purpose and significance of life and the universe,
+and yet the same satisfaction. It is certainly not less possible to
+disbelieve religiously than to believe religiously. This accord of mind,
+this emulation in freedom and loftiness of soul, this kindred sense of
+the awful depth of the enigma which the one believes to be answered, and
+the other suspects to be for ever unanswerable--here, and not in a
+degrading and hypocritical conformity, is the true gratification of
+those spiritual sensibilities which are alleged to be so much higher in
+women than in men. Where such an accord exists, there may still be
+solicitude left in the mind of either at the superstition or the
+incredulity of the other, but it will be solicitude of that magnanimous
+sort which is in some shape or other the inevitable and not unfruitful
+portion of every better nature.
+
+If there are women who petulantly or sourly insist on more than this
+kind of harmony, it is probable that their system of divinity is little
+better than a special manifestation of shrewishness. The man is as much
+bound to resist that, as he is bound to resist extravagance in spending
+money, or any other vice of character. If he does not resist it, if he
+suppresses his opinions, and practices a hypocritical conformity, it
+must be from weakness of will and principle. Against this we have
+nothing to say. A considerable proportion of people, men no less than
+women, are born invertebrate, and they must got on as they best can. But
+let us at least bargain that they shall not erect the maxims of their
+own feebleness into a rule for those who are braver and of stronger
+principle than themselves. And do not let the accidental exigencies of a
+personal mistake be made the foundation of a general doctrine. It is a
+poor saying, that the world is to become void of spiritual sincerity,
+because Xanthippe has a turn for respectable theology.
+
+
+One or two words should perhaps be said in this place as to conformity
+to common religious belief in the education of children. Where the
+parents differ, the one being an unbeliever, the other a believer, it is
+almost impossible for anybody to lay down a general rule. The present
+writer certainly has no ambition to attempt the thorny task of compiling
+a manual for mixed marriages. It is perhaps enough to say that all would
+depend upon the nature of the beliefs which the religious person wished
+to inculcate. Considering that the woman has an absolutely equal moral
+right with the man to decide in what faith the child shall be brought
+up, and considering how important it is that the mother should take an
+active part in the development of the child's affections and impulses,
+the most resolute of deniers may perhaps think that the advantages of
+leaving the matter to her, outweigh the disadvantages of having a
+superstitious bias given to the young mind. In these complex cases an
+honest and fair-minded man's own instincts are more likely to lead him
+right than any hard and fast rule. Two reserves in assenting to the
+wife's control of early teaching will probably suggest themselves to
+everybody who is in earnest about religion. First, if the theology which
+the woman desires to instill contains any of those wicked and depraving
+doctrines which neither Catholicism nor Calvinism is without, in the
+hands of some professors, the husband is as much justified in pressing
+his legal rights over the child to the uttermost, as he would be if the
+proposed religion demanded physical mutilation. Secondly, he will not
+himself take part in baptismal or other ceremonies which are to him no
+better than mere mummeries, nor will he ever do anything to lead his
+children at any age to suppose that he believes what he does not
+believe. Such limitations as these are commanded by all considerations
+alike of morality and good sense.
+
+To turn to the more normal case where either the man has had the wise
+forethought not to yoke himself unequally with a person of ardent belief
+which he does not share, or where both parents dissent from the popular
+creed. Here, whatever difficulties may attend its application, the
+principle is surely as clear as the sun at noonday. There can be no good
+plea for the deliberate and formal inculcation upon the young of a
+number of propositions which you believe to be false. To do this is to
+sow tares not in your enemy's field, but in the very ground which is
+most precious of all others to you and most full of hope for the future.
+To allow it to be done merely that children may grow up in the
+stereotyped mould, is simply to perpetuate in new generations the
+present thick-sighted and dead-heavy state of our spirits. It is to do
+one's best to keep society for an indefinite time sapped by hollow and
+void professions, instead of being nourished by sincerity and
+whole-heartedness.[25]
+
+Nor here, more than elsewhere in this chapter, are we trying to turn
+the family into a field of ceaseless polemic. No one who knows the stuff
+of which life is made, the pressure of material cares, the play of
+passion, the busy energising of the affections, the anxieties of health,
+and all the other solicitudes, generous or ignoble, which naturally
+absorb the days of the common multitude of men--is likely to think such
+an ideal either desirable or attainable. Least of all is it desirable
+to give character a strong set in this polemical direction in its most
+plastic days. The controversial and denying humour is a different thing
+from the habit of being careful to know what we mean by the words we
+use, and what evidence there is for the beliefs we hold. It is possible
+to foster the latter habit without creating the former. And it is
+possible to bring up the young in dissent from the common beliefs around
+them, or in indifference to them, without engendering any of that pride
+in eccentricity for its own sake, which is so little likeable a quality
+in either young or old. There is, however, little risk of an excess in
+this direction. The young tremble even more than the old at the
+penalties of nonconformity. There is more excuse for them in this. Such
+penalties in their case usually come closer and in more stringent forms.
+Neither have they had time to find out, as their elders have or ought to
+have found out, what a very moderate degree of fortitude enables us to
+bear up against social disapproval, when we know that it is nothing more
+than the common form of convention.
+
+The great object is to keep the minds of the young as open as possible
+in the matter of religion; to breed in them a certain simplicity and
+freedom from self-consciousness, in finding themselves without the
+religious beliefs and customs of those around them; to make them regard
+differences in these respects as very natural and ordinary matters,
+susceptible of an easy explanation. It is of course inevitable, unless
+they are brought up in cloistered seclusion, that they should hear much
+of the various articles of belief which we are anxious that they should
+not share. They will ask you whether the story of the creation of the
+universe is true; whether such and such miracles really happened;
+whether this person or that actually lived, and actually did all that he
+is said to have done. Plainly the right course is to tell them, without
+any agitation or excess or vehemence or too much elaboration, the simple
+truth in such matters exactly as it appears to one's own mind. There is
+no reason why they should not know the best parts of the Bible as well
+as they know the Iliad or Herodotus. There are many reasons why they
+should know them better. But one most important condition of this is
+constantly overlooked by people, who like to satisfy their intellectual
+vanity by scepticism, and at the same time to make their comfort safe by
+external conformity. If the Bible is to be taught only because it is a
+noble and most majestic monument of literature, it should be taught as
+that and no more. That a man who regards it solely us supreme
+literature, should impress it upon the young as the supernaturally
+inspired word of God and the accurate record of objective occurrences,
+is a piece of the plainest and most shocking dishonesty. Let a youth be
+trained in simple and straightforward recognition of the truth that we
+can know, and can conjecture, nothing with any assurance as to the
+ultimate mysteries of things. Let his imagination and his sense of awe
+be fed from those springs, which are none the less bounteous because
+they flow in natural rather than supernatural channels. Let him be
+taught the historic place and source of the religions which he is not
+bound to accept, unless the evidence for their authority by and by
+brings him to another mind. A boy or girl trained in this way has an
+infinitely better chance of growing up with the true spirit and
+leanings of religion implanted in the character, than if they had been
+educated in formulae which they could not understand, by people who do
+not believe them.
+
+The most common illustration of a personal mistake being made the base
+of a general doctrine, is found in the case of those who, after
+committing themselves for life to the profession of a given creed, awake
+to the shocking discovery that the creed has ceased to be true for them.
+The action of a popular modern story, Mrs. Gaskell's _North and South_,
+turns upon the case of a clergyman whoso faith is overthrown, and who in
+consequence abandons his calling, to his own serious material detriment
+and under circumstances of severe suffering to his family. I am afraid
+that current opinion, especially among the cultivated class, would
+condemn such a sacrifice as a piece of misplaced scrupulosity. No man,
+it would be said, is called upon to proclaim his opinions, when to do so
+will cost him the means of subsistence. This will depend upon the value
+which he sets upon the opinions that be has to proclaim. If such a
+proposition is true, the world must efface its habit of admiration for
+the martyrs and heroes of the past, who embraced violent death rather
+than defile themselves by a lying confession. Or is present heroism
+ridiculous, and only past heroism admirable? However, nobody has a right
+to demand the heroic from all the world; and if to publish his dissent
+from the opinions which he nominally holds would reduce a man to
+beggary, human charity bids us say as little as may be. We may leave
+such men to their unfortunate destiny, hoping that they will make what
+good use of it may be possible. _Non ragioniam di lor_. These cases only
+show the essential and profound immorality of the priestly
+profession--in all its forms, and no matter in connection with what
+church or what dogma--which makes a man's living depend on his
+abstaining from using his mind, or concealing the conclusions to which
+use of his mind has brought him. The time will come when society will
+look back on the doctrine, that they who serve the altar should live by
+the altar, as a doctrine of barbarism and degradation.
+
+But if one, by refusing to offer a pinch of incense to the elder gods,
+should thus strip himself of a marked opportunity of exerting an
+undoubtedly useful influence over public opinion, or over a certain
+section of society, is he not justified in compromising to the extent
+necessary to preserve this influence? Instead of answering this
+directly, we would make the following remarks. First, it can seldom be
+clear in times like our own that religious heterodoxy must involve the
+loss of influence in other than religious spheres. The apprehension that
+it will do so is due rather to timorousness and a desire to find a fair
+reason for the comforts of silence and reserve. If a teacher has
+anything to tell the world in science, philosophy, history, the world
+will not be deterred from listening to him by knowing that he does not
+walk in the paths of conventional theology. Second, what influence can a
+man exert, that should seem to him more useful than that of a protester
+against what he counts false opinions, in the most decisive and
+important of all regions of thought? Surely if any one is persuaded,
+whether rightly or wrongly, that his fellows are expending the best part
+of their imaginations and feelings on a dream and a delusion, and that
+by so doing moreover they are retarding to an indefinite degree the
+wider spread of light and happiness, then nothing that he can tell them
+about chemistry or psychology or history can in his eyes be comparable
+in importance to the duty of telling them this. There is no advantage
+nor honest delight in influence, if it is only to be exerted in the
+sphere of secondary objects, and at the cost of the objects which ought
+to be foremost in the eyes of serious people. In truth the men who have
+done most for the world have taken very little heed of influence. They
+have sought light, and left their influence to fare as it might list.
+Can we not imagine the mingled mystification and disdain with which a
+Spinosa or a Descartes, a Luther or a Pascal, would have listened to an
+exhortation in our persuasive modern manner on the niceties of the
+politic and the social obligation of pious fraud? It is not given to
+many to perform the achievements of such giants as these, but every one
+may help to keep the standard of intellectual honesty at a lofty pitch,
+and what better service can a man render than to furnish the world with
+an example of faithful dealing with his own conscience and with his
+fellows? This at least is the one talent that is placed in the hands of
+the obscurest of us all.[26]
+
+And what is this smile of the world, to win which we are bidden to
+sacrifice our moral manhood; this frown of the world, whose terrors are
+more awful than the withering up of truth and the slow going out of
+light within the souls of us? Consider the triviality of life and
+conversation and purpose, in the bulk of those whose approval is held
+out for our prize and the mark of our high calling. Measure, if you can,
+the empire over them of prejudice unadulterated by a single element of
+rationality, and weigh, if you can, the huge burden of custom,
+unrelieved by a single leavening particle of fresh thought. Ponder the
+share which selfishness and love of ease have in the vitality and the
+maintenance of the opinions that we are forbidden to dispute. Then how
+pitiful a thing seems the approval or disapproval of these creatures of
+the conventions of the hour, as one figures the merciless vastness of
+the universe of matter sweeping us headlong through viewless space; as
+one hears the wail of misery that is for ever ascending to the deaf
+gods; as one counts the little tale of the years that separate us from
+eternal silence. In the light of these things, a man should surely dare
+to live his small span of life with little heed of the common speech
+upon him or his life, only caring that his days may be full of reality,
+and his conversation of truth-speaking and wholeness.
+
+Those who think conformity in the matters of which we have been
+speaking harmless and unimportant, must do so either from indifference
+or else from despair. It is difficult to convince any one who is
+possessed by either one or other of these two evil spirits. Men who have
+once accepted them, do not easily relinquish philosophies that relieve
+their professors from disagreeable obligations of courage and endeavour.
+To the indifferent person one can say nothing. We can only acquiesce in
+that deep and terrible scripture, 'He that is filthy, let him be filthy
+still.' To those who despair of human improvement or the spread of light
+in the face of the huge mass of brute prejudice, we can only urge that
+the enormous weight and the firm hold of baseless prejudice and false
+commonplace are the very reasons which make it so important that those
+who are not of the night nor of the darkness should the more strenuously
+insist on living their own lives in the daylight. To those, finally, who
+do not despair, but think that the new faith will come so slowly that it
+is not worth while for the poor mortal of a day to make himself a
+martyr, we may suggest that the new faith when it comes will be of
+little worth, unless it has been shaped by generations of honest and
+fearless men, and unless it finds in those who are to receive it an
+honest and fearless temper. Our plea is not for a life of perverse
+disputings or busy proselytising, but only that we should learn to look
+at one another with a clear and steadfast eye, and march forward along
+the paths we choose with firm step and erect front. The first advance
+towards either the renovation of one faith or the growth of another,
+must be the abandonment of those habits of hypocritical conformity and
+compliance which have filled the air of the England of to-day with gross
+and obscuring mists.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 18: It may be said that Hume meant no more than this: that of
+two equally oppressed nations, the one which had been taught to assent
+to the doctrine of resistance would be more likely to practise 'the
+sacred duty of insurrection' than the other, from whom the doctrine had
+been concealed. Or, in other words, that the first would rise against
+oppression, when the oppression had reached a pitch which to the second
+would still seem bearable. The answer to Hume's proposition, interpreted
+in this way, would be that if the doctrine of resistance be presented to
+the populace in its true shape,--if it be 'truth,' as he admits,--then
+the application of it in practice should be as little likely to prove
+mischievous as that of any other truth. If the gist of the remark be
+that this is a truth which the populace is especially likely to apply
+wrongly, in consequence of its ignorance, passion, and heedlessness, we
+may answer by appealing to history, which is rather a record of
+excessive patience in the various nations of the earth than of excessive
+petulance.]
+
+[Footnote 19: There is another ground for the distinction between the
+conditions of holding and those of expressing opinion. This depends upon
+the psychological proposition that belief is independent of the will.
+Though this or any other state of the understanding may be involuntary,
+the manifestation of such a state is not so, but is a voluntary act,
+and, 'being neutral in itself, may be commendable or reprehensible
+according to the circumstances in which it takes place.' (Bailey's
+_Essay on Formation of Opinion_, Sec. 7).]
+
+[Footnote 20: The following words, illustrating the continuity between
+the Christian and Jewish churches, are not without instruction to those
+who meditate on the possible continuity between the Christian church and
+that which is one day to grow into the place of it:--'Not only do forms
+and ordinances remain under the Gospel equally as before; but, what was
+in use before is not so much superseded by the Gospel ordinances as
+changed into them. What took place under the Law is a pattern, what was
+commanded is a rule, under the Gospel. The substance remains, the use,
+the meaning, the circumstances, the benefit is changed; grace is added,
+life is infused: "the body is of Christ;" but it is in great measure
+that same body which was in being before He came. The Gospel has not put
+aside, it has incorporated into itself the revelation which went before
+it. It avails itself of the Old Testament, as a great gift to Christian
+as well as to Jew. It does not dispense with it, but it dispenses it.
+Persons sometimes urge that there is no code of duty in the New
+Testament, no ceremonial, no rules for Church polity. Certainly not;
+they are unnecessary; they are already given in the Old. Why should the
+Old Testament remain in the Christian church but to be used? _There_ we
+are to look for our forms, our rites, our polity; only illustrated,
+tempered, spiritualised by the Gospel. The preempts remain, the
+observance of them is changed,'--Dr. J.H. Newman; _Sermon on Subjects of
+the Day_, p. 205.]
+
+[Footnote 21: There is a set of most acute and searching criticisms on
+this matter in Mr. Leslie Stephen's _Essays on Free-Thinking and
+Plain-Speaking_ (Longmans, 1873). The last essay in the volume, _An
+Apology for Plain-Speaking_, is a decisive and remarkable exposition of
+the treacherous playing with words, which underlies even the most
+vigorous efforts to make the phrases and formula of the old creed hold
+the reality of new faith.]
+
+[Footnote 22: Upon this sentence the following criticism has been
+made:--'Surely both of these so-called contradictions are deliberately
+affirmed by the vast majority of all thinkers upon the subject. What
+orthodox asserter of the omnipresence of a "Creator with intelligible
+attributes" ever maintained that these attributes could be "grasped by
+men"?'--The orthodox asserter, no doubt, _says_ that he does not
+maintain that the divine attributes can be grasped by men; but his
+habitual treatment of them as intelligible, and as the subjects of
+propositions made in languages that is designed to be intelligible,
+shows that his first reservation is merely nominal, as it is certainly
+inconsistent with his general position. Religious people who warn you
+most solemnly that man who is a worm and the son of a worm cannot
+possibly compass in his puny understanding the attributes of the Divine
+Being, will yet--as an eminent divine not in holy orders has truly
+said--tell you all about him, as if he were the man who lives in the
+next street.]
+
+[Footnote 23: That able man, the late J.E. Cairnes, suggested the
+following objection to this paragraph. When two persons marry, there is
+a reasonable expectation, almost amounting to an understanding, that
+they will both of them adhere to their religion, just as both of them
+tacitly agree to follow the ways of the world in the host of minor
+social matters. If, therefore, either of them turns to some other creed,
+the person so turning has, so to speak, broken the contract. The utmost
+he or she can contend for is forbearance. If a woman embraces
+catholicism, she may seek tolerance, but she has no right to exact
+conformity. If the man becomes an unbeliever, he in like manner breaks
+the bargain, and may be justly asked not to flaunt his misdemeanour.
+
+My answer to this would turn upon the absolute inexpediency of such
+silent bargains being assumed by public opinion. In the present state of
+opinion, where the whole air is alive with the spirit of change, nobody
+who takes his life or her life seriously, could allow an assumption
+which means reduction of one of the most important parts of character,
+the love of truth, to a nullity.]
+
+[Footnote 24: The reader remembers how Wolmar, the atheistic husband of
+Julie in Rousseau's _New Heloisa_, is distressed by the chagrin which
+his unbelief inflicts on the piety of his wife. 'He told me that he had
+been frequently tempted to make a feint of yielding to her arguments,
+and to pretend, for the sake of calming her sentiments that he did not
+really hold. But such baseness of soul is too far from him. Without for
+a moment imposing on Julie, such dissimulation would only have been a
+new torment to her. The good faith, the frankness, the union of heart,
+that console for so many troubles, would have been eclipsed between
+them. Was it by lessening his wife's esteem for him that he could
+reassure her? Instead of using any disguise, he tells her sincerely what
+he thinks, but he says it in so simple a tone, etc.--V. v. 126.]
+
+[Footnote 25: The common reason alleged by freethinkers for having their
+children brought up in the orthodox ways is that, if they were not so
+brought up, they would be looked on as contaminating agents whom other
+parents would take care to keep away from the companionship of their
+children. This excuse may have had some force at another time. At the
+present day, when belief is so weak, we doubt whether the young would be
+excluded from the companionship of their equals in age, merely because
+they had not been trained in some of the conventional shibboleths. Even
+if it were so, there are certainly some ways of compensating for the
+disadvantages of exclusion from orthodox circles.
+
+I have heard of a more interesting reason; namely, that the historic
+position of the young, relatively to the time in which they are placed,
+is in some sort falsified, unless they have gone through a training in
+the current beliefs of their age: unless they have undergone that, they
+miss, as it were, some of the normal antecedents. I do not think this
+plea will hold good. However desirable it may be that the young should
+know all sorts of erroneous beliefs and opinions as products of the
+past, it can hardly be in any degree desirable that they should take
+them for truths. If there were no other objection, there would be this,
+that the disturbance and waste of force involved in shaking off in their
+riper years the erroneous opinions which had been instilled into them
+in childhood, would more than counter-balance any advantages, whatever
+their precise nature may be, to be derived from having shared in their
+own proper persons the ungrounded notions of others.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Miss Martineau has an excellent protest against 'the
+dereliction of principle shown in supposing that any "Cause" can be of
+so much importance as fidelity to truth, or can be important at all
+otherwise than in its relation to truth which wants vindicating. It
+reminds me of an incident which happened when I was in America, at the
+time of the severest trials of the Abolitionists. A pastor from the
+southern States lamented to a brother clergyman in the North the
+introduction of the Anti-slavery question, because the views of their
+sect were "getting on so well before!" "Getting on!" cried the northern
+minister. "What is the use of getting your vessel on when you have
+thrown both captain and cargo overboard?" Thus, what signifies the
+pursuit of any one reform, like those specified,--Anti-slavery and the
+Woman question,--when the freedom which is the very soul of the
+controversy, the very principle of the movement,--is mourned over in any
+other of its many manifestations? The only effectual advocates of such
+reforms as those are people who follow truth wherever it
+leads.'--_Autobiography_, ii. 442.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+THE REALISATION OF OPINION.
+
+A person who takes the trouble to form his own opinions and beliefs will
+feel that he owes no responsibility to the majority for his conclusions.
+If he is a genuine lover of truth, if he is inspired by the divine
+passion for seeing things as they are, and a divine abhorrence of
+holding ideas which do not conform to the facts, he will be wholly
+independent of the approval or assent of the persons around him. When he
+proceeds to apply his beliefs in the practical conduct of life, the
+position is different. There are now good reasons why his attitude
+should be in some ways less inflexible. The society in which he is
+placed is a very ancient and composite growth. The people from whom he
+dissents have not come by their opinions, customs, and institutions by a
+process of mere haphazard. These opinions and customs all had their
+origin in a certain real or supposed fitness. They have a certain depth
+of root in the lives of a proportion of the existing generation. Their
+fitness for satisfying human needs may have vanished, and their
+congruity with one another may have come to an end. That is only one
+side of the truth. The most zealous propagandism cannot penetrate to
+them. The quality of bearing to be transplanted from one kind of soil
+and climate to another is not very common, and it is far from being
+inexhaustible even where it exists.
+
+In common language we speak of a generation as something possessed of a
+kind of exact unity, with all its parts and members one and homogeneous.
+Yet very plainly it is not this. It is a whole, but a whole in a state
+of constant flux. Its factors and elements are eternally shifting. It is
+not one, but many generations. Each of the seven ages of man is
+neighbour to all the rest. The column of the veterans is already
+staggering over into the last abyss, while the column of the newest
+recruits is forming with all its nameless and uncounted hopes. To each
+its tradition, its tendency, its possibilities. Only a proportion of
+each in one society can have nerve enough to grasp the banner of a new
+truth, and endurance enough to bear it along rugged and untrodden ways.
+
+And then, as we have said, one must remember the stuff of which life is
+made. One must consider what an overwhelming preponderance of the most
+tenacious energies and most concentrated interests of a society must be
+absorbed between material cares and the solicitude of the affections. It
+is obviously unreasonable to lose patience and quarrel with one's time,
+because it is tardy in throwing off its institutions and beliefs, and
+slow to achieve the transformation which is the problem in front of it.
+Men and women have to live. The task for most of them is arduous enough
+to make them well pleased with even such imperfect shelter as they find
+in the use and wont of daily existence. To insist on a whole community
+being made at once to submit to the reign of new practices and new
+ideas, which have just begun to commend themselves to the most advanced
+speculative intelligence of the time,--this, even if it were a possible
+process, would do much to make life impracticable and to hurry on social
+dissolution.
+
+'It cannot be too emphatically asserted,' as has been said by one of
+the most influential of modern thinkers, 'that this policy of
+compromise, alike in institutions, in actions, and in beliefs, which
+especially characterises English life, is a policy essential to a
+society going through the transitions caused by continued growth and
+development. Ideas and institutions proper to a past social state, but
+incongruous with the new social state that has grown out of it,
+surviving into this new social state they have made possible, and
+disappearing only as this new social state establishes its own ideas and
+institutions, are necessarily, during their survival, in conflict with
+these new ideas and institutions--necessarily furnish elements of
+contradiction in men's thoughts and deeds. And yet, as for the carrying
+on of social life, the old must continue so long as the new is not
+ready, this perpetual compromise is an indispensable accompaniment of a
+normal development.'[27]
+
+Yet we must not press this argument, and the state of feeling that
+belongs to it, further than they may be fairly made to go. The danger in
+most natures lies on this side, for on this side our love of ease
+works, and our prejudices. The writer in the passage we have just quoted
+is describing compromise as a natural state of things, the resultant of
+divergent forces. He is not professing to define its conditions or
+limits as a practical duty. Nor is there anything in his words, or in
+the doctrine of social evolution of which he is the most elaborate and
+systematic expounder, to favour that deliberate sacrifice of truth,
+either in search or in expression, against which our two previous
+chapters were meant to protest.[28] When Mr. Spencer talks of a new
+social state establishing its own ideas, of course he means, and can
+only mean, that men and women establish their own ideas, and to do that,
+it is obvious that they must at one time or another have conceived them
+without any special friendliness of reference to the old ideas, which
+they were in the fulness of time to supersede. Still less, of course,
+can a new social state ever establish its ideas, unless the persons who
+hold them confess them openly, and give to them an honest and effective
+adherence.
+
+Every discussion of the more fundamental principles of conduct must
+contain, expressly or by implication, some general theory of the nature
+and constitution of the social union. Let us state in a few words that
+which seems to command the greatest amount both of direct and analogical
+evidence in our time. It is perhaps all the more important to discuss
+our subject with immediate and express reference to this theory, because
+it has become in some minds a plea for a kind of philosophic
+indifference towards any policy of Thorough, as well as an excuse for
+systematic abstention from vigorous and downright courses of action.
+
+A progressive society is now constantly and justly compared to a growing
+organism. Its vitality in this aspect consists of a series of changes in
+ideas and institutions. These changes arise spontaneously from the
+operation of the whole body of social conditions, external and
+internal. The understanding and the affections and desires are always
+acting on the domestic, political, and economic ordering. They influence
+the religious sentiment. They touch relations with societies outside. In
+turn they are constantly being acted on by all these elements. In a
+society progressing in a normal and uninterrupted course, this play and
+interaction is the sign and essence of life. It is, as we are so often
+told, a long process of new adaptations and re-adaptations; of the
+modification of tradition and usage by truer ideas and improved
+institutions. There may be, and there are, epochs of rest, when this
+modification in its active and demonstrative shape slackens or ceases to
+be visible. But even then the modifying forces are only latent. Further
+progress depends on the revival of their energy, before there has been
+time for the social structure to become ossified and inelastic. The
+history of civilisation is the history of the displacement of old
+conceptions by new ones more conformable to the facts. It is the record
+of the removal of old institutions and ways of living, in favour of
+others of greater convenience and ampler capacity, at once multiplying
+and satisfying human requirements.
+
+Now compromise, in view of the foregoing theory of social advance, may
+be of two kinds, and of these two kinds one is legitimate and the other
+not. It may stand for two distinct attitudes of mind, one of them
+obstructive and the other not. It may mean the deliberate suppression or
+mutilation of an idea, in order to make it congruous with the
+traditional idea or the current prejudice on the given subject, whatever
+that may be. Or else it may mean a rational acquiescence in the fact
+that the bulk of your contemporaries are not yet prepared either to
+embrace the new idea, or to change their ways of living in conformity to
+it. In the one case, the compromiser rejects the highest truth, or
+dissembles his own acceptance of it. In the other, he holds it
+courageously for his ensign and device, but neither forces nor expects
+the whole world straightway to follow. The first prolongs the duration
+of the empire of prejudice, and retards the arrival of improvement. The
+second does his best to abbreviate the one, and to hasten and make
+definite the other, yet he does not insist on hurrying changes which,
+to be effective, would require the active support of numbers of persons
+not yet ripe for them. It is legitimate compromise to say:--'I do not
+expect you to execute this improvement, or to surrender that prejudice,
+in my time. But at any rate it shall not be my fault if the improvement
+remains unknown or rejected. There shall be one man at least who has
+surrendered the prejudice, and who does not hide that fact.' It is
+illegitimate compromise to say:--'I cannot persuade you to accept my
+truth; therefore I will pretend to accept your falsehood.'
+
+That this distinction is as sound on the evolutional theory of society
+as on any other is quite evident. It would be odd if the theory which
+makes progress depend on modification forbade us to attempt to modify.
+When it is said that the various successive changes in thought and
+institution present and consummate themselves spontaneously, no one
+means by spontaneity that they come to pass independently of human
+effort and volition. On the contrary, this energy of the members of the
+society is one of the spontaneous elements. It is quite as
+indispensable as any other of them, if indeed it be not more so.
+Progress depends upon tendencies and forces in a community. But of these
+tendencies and forces, the organs and representatives must plainly be
+found among the men and women of the community, and cannot possibly be
+found anywhere else. Progress is not automatic, in the sense that if we
+were all to be cast into a deep slumber for the space of a generation,
+we should awake to find ourselves in a greatly improved social state.
+The world only grows better, even in the moderate degree in which it
+does grow better, because people wish that it should, and take the right
+steps to make it better. Evolution is not a force, but a process; not a
+cause, but a law. It explains the source, and marks the immovable
+limitations, of social energy. But social energy itself can never be
+superseded either by evolution or by anything else.
+
+The reproach of being impracticable and artificial attaches by rights
+not to those who insist on resolute, persistent, and uncompromising
+efforts to remove abuses, but to a very different class--to those,
+namely, who are credulous enough to suppose that abuses and bad customs
+and wasteful ways of doing things will remove themselves. This
+credulity, which is a cloak for indolence or ignorance or stupidity,
+overlooks the fact that there are bodies of men, more or less numerous,
+attached by every selfish interest they have to the maintenance of these
+abusive customs. 'A plan,' says Bentham, 'may be said to be too good to
+be practicable, where, without adequate inducement in the shape of
+personal interest, it requires for its accomplishment that some
+individual or class of individuals shall have made a sacrifice of his or
+their personal interest to the interest of the whole. When it is on the
+part of a body of men or a multitude of individuals taken at random that
+any such sacrifice is reckoned upon, then it is that in speaking of the
+plan the term _Utopian_ may without impropriety be applied.' And this is
+the very kind of sacrifice which must be anticipated by those who so
+misunderstand the doctrine of evolution as to believe that the world is
+improved by some mystic and self-acting social discipline, which
+dispenses with the necessity of pertinacious attack upon institutions
+that have outlived their time, and interests that have lost their
+justification.
+
+We are thus brought to the position--to which, indeed, bare observation
+of actual occurrences might well bring us, if it were not for the
+clouding disturbances of selfishness, or of a true philosophy of society
+wrongly applied--that a society can only pursue its normal course by
+means of a certain progression of changes, and that these changes can
+only be initiated by individuals or very small groups of individuals.
+The progressive tendency can only be a tendency, it can only work its
+way through the inevitable obstructions around it, by means of persons
+who are possessed by the special progressive idea. Such ideas do not
+spring up uncaused and unconditioned in vacant space. They have had a
+definite origin and ordered antecedents. They are in direct relation
+with the past. They present themselves to one person or little group of
+persons rather than to another, because circumstances, or the accident
+of a superior faculty of penetration, have placed the person or group in
+the way of such ideas. In matters of social improvement the most common
+reason why one hits upon a point of progress and not another, is that
+the one happens to be more directly touched than the other by the
+unimproved practice. Or he is one of those rare intelligences, active,
+alert, inventive, which by constitution or training find their chief
+happiness in thinking in a disciplined and serious manner how things can
+be better done. In all cases the possession of a new idea, whether
+practical or speculative, only raises into definite speech what others
+have needed without being able to make their need articulate. This is
+the principle on which experience shows us that fame and popularity are
+distributed. A man does not become celebrated in proportion to his
+general capacity, but because he does or says something which happened
+to need doing or saying at the moment.
+
+This brings us directly to our immediate subject. For such a man is the
+holder of a trust It is upon him and those who are like him that the
+advance of a community depends. If he is silent, then repair is checked,
+and the hurtful elements of worn-out beliefs and waste institutions
+remain to enfeeble the society, just as the retention of waste products
+enfeebles or poisons the body. If in a spirit of modesty which is often
+genuine, though it is often only a veil for love of ease, he asks why he
+rather than another should speak, why he before others should refuse
+compliance and abstain from conformity, the answer is that though the
+many are ultimately moved, it is always one who is first to leave the
+old encampment. If the maxim of the compromiser were sound, it ought to
+be capable of universal application. Nobody has a right to make an
+apology for himself in this matter, which he will not allow to be valid
+for others. If one has a right to conceal his true opinions, and to
+practice equivocal conformities, then all have a right. One plea for
+exemption is in this case as good as another, and no better. That he has
+married a wife, that he has bought a yoke of oxen and must prove them,
+that he has bidden guests to a feast--one excuse lies on the same level
+as the rest. All are equally worthless as answers to the generous
+solicitation of enlightened conscience. Suppose, then, that each man on
+whom in turn the new ideas dawned wore to borrow the compromiser's plea
+and imitate his example. We know what would happen. The exploit in
+which no one will consent to go first, remains unachieved. You wait
+until there are persons enough agreeing with you to form an effective
+party? But how are the members of the band to know one another, if all
+are to keep their dissent from the old, and their adherence to the new,
+rigorously private? And how many members constitute the innovating band
+an effective force! When one-half of the attendants at a church are
+unbelievers, will that warrant us in ceasing to attend, or shall we
+tarry until the dissemblers number two-thirds? Conceive the additions
+which your caution has made to the moral integrity of the community in
+the meantime. Measure the enormous hindrances that will have been placed
+in the way of truth and improvement, when the day at last arrives on
+which you and your two-thirds take heart to say that falsehood and abuse
+have now reached their final term, and must at length be swept away into
+the outer darkness. Consider how much more terrible the shock of change
+will be when it does come, and how much less able will men be to meet
+it, and to emerge successfully from it.
+
+Perhaps the compromiser shrinks, not because he fears to march alone,
+but because he thinks that the time has not yet come for the progressive
+idea which he has made his own, and for whose triumph one day he
+confidently hopes. This plea may mean two wholly different states of the
+case. The time has not yet come for what? For making those positive
+changes in life or institution, which the change in idea must ultimately
+involve? That is one thing. Or for propagating, elaborating, enforcing
+the new idea, and strenuously doing all that one can to bring as many
+people as possible to a state of theory, which will at last permit the
+requisite change in practice to be made with safety and success? This is
+another and entirely different thing. The time may not have come for the
+first of these two courses. The season may not be advanced enough for us
+to push on to active conquest. But the time has always come, and the
+season is never unripe, for the announcement of the fruitful idea.
+
+We must go further than that. In so far as it can be done by one man
+without harming his neighbours, the time has always come for the
+realisation of an idea. When the change in way of living or in
+institution is one which requires the assent and co-operation of numbers
+of people, it may clearly be a matter for question whether men enough
+are ready to yield assent and co-operation. But the expression of the
+necessity of the change and the grounds of it, though it may not always
+be appropriate, can never be premature, and for these reasons. The fact
+of a new idea having come to one man is a sign that it is in the air.
+The innovator is as much the son of his generation as the conservative.
+Heretics have as direct a relation to antecedent conditions as the
+orthodox. Truth, said Bacon, has been rightly named the daughter of
+Time. The new idea does not spring up uncaused and by miracle. If it has
+come to me, there must be others to whom it has only just missed coming.
+If I have found my way to the light, there must be others groping after
+it very close in my neighbourhood. My discovery is their goal. They are
+prepared to receive the new truth, which they were not prepared to find
+for themselves. The fact that the mass are not yet ready to receive, any
+more than to find, is no reason why the possessor of the new truth
+should run to hide under a bushel the candle which has been lighted for
+him. If the time has not come for them, at least it has come for him. No
+man can ever know whether his neighbours are ready for change or not. He
+has all the following certainties, at least:--that he himself is ready
+for the change; that he believes it would be a good and beneficent one;
+that unless some one begins the work of preparation, assuredly there
+will be no consummation; and that if he declines to take a part in the
+matter, there can be no reason why every one else in turn should not
+decline in like manner, and so the work remain for ever unperformed. The
+compromiser who blinds himself to all those points, and acts just as if
+the truth were not in him, does for ideas with which he agrees, the very
+thing which the acute persecutor does for ideas which he dislikes--he
+extinguishes beginnings and kills the germs.
+
+
+The consideration on which so many persons rely, that an existing
+institution, though destined to be replaced by a better, performs useful
+functions provisionally, is really not to the point. It is an excellent
+reason why the institution should not be removed or fundamentally
+modified, until public opinion is ripe for the given piece of
+improvement. But it is no reason at all why those who are anxious for
+the improvement, should speak and act just as they would do if they
+thought the change perfectly needless and undesirable. It is no reason
+why those who allow the provisional utility of a belief or an
+institution or a custom of living, should think solely of the utility
+and forget the equally important element of its provisionalness. For the
+fact of its being provisional is the very ground why every one who
+perceives this element, should set himself to act accordingly. It is the
+ground why he should set himself, in other words, to draw opinion in
+every way open to him--by speech, by voting, by manner of life and
+conduct--in the direction of new truth and the better practice. Let us
+not, because we deem a thing to be useful for the hour, act as if it
+were to be useful for ever. The people who selfishly seek to enjoy as
+much comfort and ease as they can in an existing state of things, with
+the desperate maxim, 'After us, the deluge,' are not any worse than
+those who cherish present comfort and case and take the world as it
+comes, in the fatuous and self-deluding hope, 'After us, the
+millennium.' Those who make no sacrifice to avert the deluge, and those
+who make none to hasten their millennium, are on the same moral level.
+And the former have at least the quality of being no worse than their
+avowed principle, while the latter nullify their pretended hopes by
+conformities which are only proper either to profound social
+contentment, or to profound social despair. Nay, they seem to think that
+there is some merit in this merely speculative hopefulness. They act as
+if they supposed that to be very sanguine about the general improvement
+of mankind, is a virtue that relieves them from taking trouble about any
+improvement in particular.
+
+If those who defend a given institution are doing their work well, that
+furnishes the better reason why those who disapprove of it and
+disbelieve in its enduring efficacy, should do their work well also.
+Take the Christian churches, for instance. Assume, if you will, that
+they are serving a variety of useful functions. If that were all, it
+would be a reason for conforming. But we are speaking of those for whom
+the matter does not end here. If you are convinced that the dogma is not
+true; that a steadily increasing number of persons are becoming aware
+that it is not true; that its efficacy as a basis of spiritual life is
+being lowered in the same degree as its credibility; that both dogma and
+church must be slowly replaced by higher forms of faith, if not also by
+more effective organisations; then, all who hold such views as these
+have as distinctly a function in the community as the ministers and
+upholders of the churches, and the zeal of the latter is simply the most
+monstrously untenable apology that could be invented for dereliction of
+duty by the former.
+
+If the orthodox to some extent satisfy certain of the necessities of the
+present, there are other necessities of the future which can only be
+satisfied by those who now pass for heretical. The plea which we are
+examining, if it is good for the purpose for which it is urged, would
+have to be expressed in this way:--The institution is working as
+perfectly as it can be made to do, or as any other in its place would be
+likely to do, and therefore I will do nothing by word or deed towards
+meddling with it. Those who think this, and act accordingly, are the
+consistent conservatives of the community. If a man takes up any
+position short of this, his conformity, acquiescence, and inertia at
+once become inconsistent and culpable. For unless the institution or
+belief is entirely adequate, it must be the duty of all who have
+satisfied themselves that it is not so, to recognise its deficiences,
+and at least to call attention to them, even if they lack opportunity or
+capacity to suggest remedies. Now we are dealing with persons who, from
+the hypothesis, do not admit that this or that factor in an existing
+social state secures all the advantages which might be secured if
+instead of that factor there were some other. We are speaking of all the
+various kinds of dissidents, who think that the current theology, or an
+established church, or a monarchy, or an oligarchic republic, is a bad
+thing and a lower form, even at the moment while they attribute
+provisional merit to it. They can mean nothing by classing each of
+these as bad things, except that they either bring with them certain
+serious drawbacks, or exclude certain valuable advantages. The fact that
+they perform their functions well, such as they are, leaves the
+fundamental vice or defect of these functions just where it was. If any
+one really thinks that the current theology involves depraved notions of
+the supreme impersonation of good, restricts and narrows the
+intelligence, misdirects the religious imagination, and has become
+powerless to guide conduct, then how does the circumstance that it
+happens not to be wholly and unredeemedly bad in its influence, relieve
+our dissident from all care or anxiety as to the points in which, as we
+have seen, he does count it inadequate and mischievous? Even if he
+thinks it does more good than harm--a position which must be very
+difficult for one who believes the common supernatural conception of it
+to be entirely false--even then, how is he discharged from the duty of
+stigmatising the harm which he admits that it does?
+
+Again, take the case of the English monarchy. Grant, if you will, that
+this institution has a certain function, and that by the present chief
+magistrate this function is estimably performed. Yet if we are of those
+who believe that in the stage of civilisation which England has reached
+in other matters, the monarchy must be either obstructive and injurious,
+or else merely decorative; and that a merely decorative monarchy tends
+in divers ways to engender habits of abasement, to nourish lower social
+ideals, to lessen a high civil self-respect in the community; then it
+must surely be our duty not to lose any opportunity of pressing these
+convictions. To do this is not necessarily to act as if one were anxious
+for the immediate removal of the throne and the crown into the museum of
+political antiquities. We may have no urgent practical solicitude in
+this direction, on the intelligible principle that a free people always
+gets as good a kind of government as it deserves. Our conviction is not,
+on the present hypothesis, that monarchy ought to be swept away in
+England, but that monarchy produces certain mischievous consequences to
+the public spirit of the community. And so what we are bound to do is to
+take care not to conceal this conviction; to abstain scrupulously from
+all kinds of action and observance, public or private, which tend ever
+so remotely to foster the ignoble and degrading elements that exist in a
+court and spread from it outwards; and to use all the influence we have,
+however slight it may be, in loading public opinion to a right attitude
+of contempt and dislike for these ignoble and degrading elements, and
+the conduct engendered by them. A policy like this does not interfere
+with the advantages of the monarchy, such as they are asserted to be,
+and it has the effect of making what are supposed to be its
+disadvantages as little noxious as possible. The question whether we can
+get others to agree with us is not relevant. If we were eager for
+instant overthrow, it would be the most relevant of all questions. But
+we are in the preliminary stage, the stage for acting on opinion. The
+fact that others do not yet share our opinion, is the very reason for
+our action. We can only bring them to agree with us, if it be possible
+on any terms, by persistency in our principles. This persistency, in all
+but either very timid or very vulgar natures, always has been and
+always will be independent of external assent or co-operation. The
+history of success, as we can never too often repeat to ourselves, is
+the history of minorities. And what is more, it is for the most part the
+history of insurrection exactly against what the worldly spirits of the
+time, whenever it may have been, deemed mere trifles and accidents, with
+which sensible men should on no account dream of taking the trouble to
+quarrel.
+
+'Halifax,' says Macaulay, 'was in speculation a strong republican and
+did not conceal it. He often made hereditary monarchy and aristocracy
+the subjects of his keen pleasantry, while he was fighting the battles
+of the court and obtaining for himself step after step in the peerage.'
+We are perfectly familiar with this type, both in men who have, and men
+who have not, such brilliant parts as Halifax. Such men profess to
+nourish high ideals of life, of character, of social institutions. Yet
+they never think of these ideals, when they are deciding what is
+practically attainable. One would like to ask them what purpose is
+served by an ideal, if it is not to make a guide for practice and a
+landmark in dealing with the real. A man's loftiest and most ideal
+notions must be of a singularly ethereal and, shall we not say,
+senseless kind, if he can never see how to take a single step that may
+tend in the slightest degree towards making them more real. If an ideal
+has no point of contact with what exists, it is probably not much more
+than the vapid outcome of intellectual or spiritual self-indulgence. If
+it has such a point of contact, then there is sure to be something which
+a man can do towards the fulfilment of his hopes. He cannot substitute a
+new national religion for the old, but he can at least do something to
+prevent people from supposing that the adherents of the old are more
+numerous than they really are, and something to show them that good
+ideas are not all exhausted by the ancient forms. He cannot transform a
+monarchy into a republic, but he can make sure that one citizen at least
+shall aim at republican virtues, and abstain from the debasing
+complaisance of the crowd.
+
+
+'It is a very great mistake, said Burke, many years before the French
+Revolution is alleged, and most unreasonably alleged, to have alienated
+him from liberalism: 'it is a very great mistake to imagine that
+mankind follow up practically any speculative principle, either of
+government or of freedom, as far as it will go in argument and logical
+illation. All government, indeed every human benefit and enjoyment,
+every virtue, and every prudent act, is founded on compromise and
+barter. We balance inconveniences; we give and take;--we remit some
+rights that we may enjoy others.... Man acts from motives relative to
+his interests; and not on metaphysical speculations.[29] These are the
+words of wisdom and truth, if we can be sure that men will interpret
+them in all the fulness of their meaning, and not be content to take
+only that part of the meaning which falls in with the dictates of their
+own love of ease. In France such words ought to be printed in capitals
+on the front of every newspaper, and written up in letters of burnished
+gold over each faction of the Assembly, and on the door of every bureau
+in the Administration. In England they need a commentary which shall
+bring out the very simple truth, that compromise and barter do not mean
+the undisputed triumph of one set of principles. Nor, on the other hand,
+do they mean the mutilation of both sets of principles, with a view to
+producing a _tertium quid_ that shall involve the disadvantages of each,
+without securing the advantages of either. What Burke means is that we
+ought never to press our ideas up to their remotest logical issues,
+without reference to the conditions in which we are applying them. In
+politics we have an art. Success in politics, as in every other art,
+obviously before all else implies both knowledge of the material with
+which we have to deal, and also such concession as is necessary to the
+qualities of the material. Above all, in politics we have an art in
+which development depends upon small modifications. That is the true
+side of the conservative theory. To hurry on after logical perfection is
+to show one's self ignorant of the material of that social structure
+with which the politician has to deal. To disdain anything short of an
+organic change in thought or institution in infatuation. To be willing
+to make such changes too frequently, even when they are possible, is
+foolhardiness. That fatal French saying about small reforms being the
+worst enemies of great reforms is, in the sense in which it is commonly
+used, a formula of social ruin.
+
+On the other hand, let us not forget that there is a sense in which this
+very saying is profoundly true. A small and temporary improvement may
+really be the worst enemy of a great and permanent improvement, unless
+the first is made on the lines and in the direction of the second. And
+so it may, if it be successfully palmed off upon a society as actually
+being the second. In such a case as this, and our legislation presents
+instances of the kind, the small reform, if it be not made with
+reference to some large progressive principle and with a view to further
+extension of its scope, makes it all the more difficult to return to the
+right line and direction when improvement is again demanded. To take an
+example which is now very familiar to us all. The Education Act of 1870
+was of the nature of a small reform. No one pretends that it is anything
+approaching to a final solution of a complex problem. But the government
+insisted, whether rightly or wrongly, that their Act was as large a
+measure as public opinion was at that moment ready to support. At the
+same time it was clearly agreed among the government and the whole of
+the party at their backs, that at some time or other, near or remote, if
+public instruction was to be made genuinely effective, the private,
+voluntary, or denominational system would have to be replaced by a
+national system. To prepare for this ultimate replacement was one of the
+points to be most steadily borne in mind, however slowly and tentatively
+the process might be conducted. Instead of that, the authors of the Act
+deliberately introduced provisions for extending and strengthening the
+very system which will have eventually to be superseded. They thus by
+their small reform made the future great reform the more difficult of
+achievement. Assuredly this is not the compromise and barter, the give
+and take, which Burke intended. What Burke means by compromise, and what
+every true statesman understands by it, is that it may be most
+inexpedient to meddle with an institution merely because it does not
+harmonise with 'argument and logical illation.' This is a very different
+thing from giving new comfort and strength with one hand, to an
+institution whose death-warrant you pretend to be signing with the
+other.
+
+In a different way the second possible evil of a small reform may be
+equally mischievous--where the small reform is represented as settling
+the question. The mischief here is not that it takes us out of the
+progressive course, as in the case we have just been considering, but
+that it sets men's minds in a posture of contentment, which is not
+justified by the amount of what has been done, and which makes it all
+the harder to arouse them to new effort when the inevitable time
+arrives.
+
+In these ways, then, compromise may mean, not acquiescence in an
+instalment, on the ground that the time is not ripe to yield us more
+than an instalment, but either the acceptance of the instalment as
+final, followed by the virtual abandonment of hope and effort; or else
+it may mean a mistaken reversal of direction, which augments the
+distance that has ultimately to be traversed. In either of these senses,
+the small reform may become the enemy of the great one. But a right
+conception of political method, based on a rightly interpreted
+experience of the conditions on which societies unite progress with
+order, leads the wise conservative to accept the small change, lest a
+worse thing befall him, and the wise innovator to seize the chance of a
+small improvement, while incessantly working in the direction of great
+ones. The important thing is that throughout the process neither of them
+should lose sight of his ultimate ideal; nor fail to look at the detail
+from the point of view of the whole; nor allow the near particular to
+bulk so unduly large as to obscure the general and distant.
+
+If the process seems intolerably slow, we may correct our impatience by
+looking back upon the past. People seldom realise the enormous period of
+time which each change in men's ideas requires for its full
+accomplishment. We speak of these changes with a peremptory kind of
+definiteness, as if they had covered no more than the space of a few
+years. Thus we talk of the time of the Reformation, as we might talk of
+the Reform Bill or the Repeal of the Corn Duties. Yet the Reformation is
+the name for a movement of the mind of northern Europe, which went on
+for three centuries. Then if we turn to that still more momentous set
+of events, the rise and establishment of Christianity, one might suppose
+from current speech that we could fix that within a space of half a
+century or so. Yet it was at least four hundred years before all the
+foundations of that great superstructure of doctrine and organisation
+were completely laid. Again, to descend to less imposing occurrences,
+the transition in the Eastern Empire from the old Roman system of
+national organisation to that other system to which we give the specific
+name of Byzantine,--this transition, so infinitely less important as it
+was than either of the two other movements, yet occupied no less than a
+couple of hundred years. The conditions of speech make it indispensable
+for us to use definite and compendious names for movements that were
+both tardy and complex. We are forced to name a long series of events as
+if they were a single event. But we lose the reality of history, we fail
+to recognise one of the most striking aspects of human affairs, and
+above all we miss that most invaluable practical lesson, the lesson of
+patience, unless we remember that the great changes of history took up
+long periods of time which, when measured by the little life of a man,
+are almost colossal, like the vast changes of geology. We know how long
+it takes before a species of plant or animal disappears in face of a
+better adapted species. Ideas and customs, beliefs and institutions,
+have always lingered just as long in face of their successors, and the
+competition is not less keen nor less prolonged, because it is for one
+or other inevitably destined to be hopeless. History, like geology,
+demands the use of the imagination, and in proportion as the exercise of
+the historic imagination is vigorously performed in thinking of the
+past, will be the breadth of our conception of the changes which the
+future has in store for us, as well as of the length of time and the
+magnitude of effort required for their perfect achievement[30].
+
+This much, concerning moderation in political practice. No such
+considerations present themselves in the matters which concern the
+shaping of our own lives, or the publications of our social opinions. In
+this region we are not imposing charges upon others, either by law or
+otherwise. We therefore owe nothing to the prejudices or habits of
+others. If any one sets serious value upon the point of difference
+between his own ideal and that which is current, if he thinks that his
+'experiment in living' has promise of real worth, and that if more
+persons could be induced to imitate it, some portion of mankind would be
+thus put in possession of a better kind of happiness, then it is selling
+a birthright for a mess of pottage to abandon hopes so rich and
+generous, merely in order to avoid the passing and casual penalties of
+social disapproval. And there is a double evil in this kind of flinching
+from obedience to the voice of our better selves, whether it takes the
+form of absolute suppression of what we think and hope, or only of
+timorous and mutilated presentation. We lose not only the possible
+advantage of the given change. Besides that, we lose also the certain
+advantage of maintaining or increasing the amount of conscientiousness
+in the world. And everybody can perceive the loss incurred in a society
+where diminution of the latter sort takes place. The advance of the
+community depends not merely on the improvement and elevation of its
+moral maxima, but also on the quickening of moral sensibility. The
+latter work has mostly been effected, when it has been effected on a
+large scale, by teachers of a certain singular personal quality. They do
+nothing to improve the theory of conduct, but they have the art of
+stimulating men to a more enthusiastic willingness to rise in daily
+practice to the requirements of whatever theory they may accept. The
+love of virtue, of duty, of holiness, or by whatever name we call this
+powerful sentiment, exists in the majority of men, where it exists at
+all, independently of argument. It is a matter of affection, sympathy,
+association, aspiration. Hence, even while, in quality, sense of duty is
+a stationary factor, it is constantly changing in quantity. The amount
+of conscience in different communities, or in the same community at
+different times, varies infinitely. The immediate cause of the decline
+of a society in the order of morals is a decline in the quantity of its
+conscience, a deadening of its moral sensitiveness, and not a
+depravation of its theoretical ethics. The Greeks became corrupt and
+enfeebled, not for lack of ethical science, but through the decay in the
+numbers of those who were actually alive to the reality and force of
+ethical obligations. Mahometans triumphed over Christians in the East
+and in Spain--if we may for a moment isolate moral conditions from the
+rest of the total circumstances--not because their scheme of duty was
+more elevated or comprehensive, but because their respect for duty was
+more strenuous and fervid.
+
+The great importance of leaving this priceless element in a community
+as free, as keen, and as active as possible, is overlooked by the
+thinkers who uphold coercion against liberty, as a saving social
+principle. Every act of coercion directed against an opinion or a way of
+living is in so far calculated to lessen the quantity of conscience in
+the society where such acts are practised. Of course, where ways of
+living interfere with the lawful rights of others, where they are not
+strictly self-regarding in all their details, it is necessary to force
+the dissidents, however strong may be their conscientious sentiment. The
+evil of attenuating that sentiment is smaller than the evil of allowing
+one set of persons to realise their own notions of happiness, at the
+expense of all the rest of the world. But where these notions can be
+realised without unlawful interference of that kind, then the forcible
+hindrance of such realisation is a direct weakening of the force and
+amount of conscience on which the community may count. There is one
+memorable historic case to illustrate this. Lewis XIV., in revoking the
+Edict of Nantes, and the author of the still more cruel law of 1724, not
+only violently drove out multitudes of the most scrupulous part of the
+French nation; they virtually offered the most tremendous bribes to
+those of less stern resolution, to feign conversion to the orthodox
+faith. This was to treat conscience as a thing of mean value. It was to
+scatter to the wind with both hands the moral resources of the
+community. And who can fail to see the strength which would have been
+given to France in her hour of storm, a hundred years after the
+revocation of the Edict of Nantes, if her protestant sons, fortified by
+the training in the habits of individual responsibility which
+protestantism involves, had only been there to aid?
+
+
+This consideration brings us to a new side of the discussion. We may
+seem to have been unconsciously arguing as strongly in favour of a
+vigorous social conservatism as of a self-asserting spirit of social
+improvement. All that we have been saying may appear to cut both ways.
+If the innovator should decline to practise silence or reserve, why
+should the possessor of power be less uncompromising, and why should he
+not impose silence by force? If the heretic ought to be uncompromising
+in expressing his opinions, and in acting upon them, in the fulness of
+his conviction that they are right, why should not the orthodox be
+equally uncompromising in his resolution to stamp out the heretical
+notions and unusual ways of living, in the fulness of his conviction
+that they are thoroughly wrong? To this question the answer is that the
+hollow kinds of compromise are as bad in the orthodox as in the
+heretical. Truth has as much to gain from sincerity and thoroughness in
+one as in the other. But the issue between the partisans of the two
+opposed schools turns upon the sense which we design to give to the
+process of stamping out. Those who cling to the tenets of liberty limit
+the action of the majority, as of the minority, strictly to persuasion.
+Those who dislike liberty, insist that earnestness of conviction
+justifies either a majority or a minority in using not persuasion only,
+but force. I do not propose here to enter into the great question which
+Mr. Mill pressed anew upon the minds of this generation. His arguments
+are familiar to every reader, and the conclusion at which he arrived is
+almost taken for a postulate in the present essay.[31] The object of
+these chapters is to reiterate the importance of self-assertion,
+tenacity, and positiveness of principle. The partisan of coercion will
+argue that this thesis is on one side of it a justification of
+persecution, and other modes of interfering with new opinions and new
+ways of living by force, and the strong arm of the law, and whatever
+other energetic means of repression may be at command. If the minority
+are to be uncompromising alike in seeking and realising what they take
+for truth, why not the majority? Now this implies two propositions. It
+is the same as to say, first, that earnestness of conviction is not to
+be distinguished from a belief in our own infallibility; second, that
+faith in our infallibility is necessarily bound up with intolerance.
+
+Neither of these propositions is true. Let us take them in turn.
+Earnestness of conviction is perfectly compatible with a sense of
+liability to error. This has been so excellently put by a former writer
+that we need not attempt to better his exposition. 'Every one must, of
+course, think his own opinions right; for if he thought them wrong, they
+would no longer be his opinions: but there is a wide difference between
+regarding ourselves as infallible, and being firmly convinced of the
+truth of our creed. When a man reflects on any particular doctrine, he
+may be impressed with a thorough conviction of the improbability or even
+impossibility of its being false: and so he may feel with regard to all
+his other opinions, when he makes them objects of separate
+contemplation. And yet when he views them in the aggregate, when he
+reflects that not a single being on the earth holds collectively the
+same, when he looks at the past history and present state of mankind,
+and observes the various creeds of different ages and nations, the
+peculiar modes of thinking of sects and bodies and individuals, the
+notions once firmly held, which have been exploded, the prejudices once
+universally prevalent, which have been removed, and the endless
+controversies which have distracted those who have made it the business
+of their lives to arrive at the truth; and when he further dwells on
+the consideration that many of these, his fellow-creatures, have had a
+conviction of the justness of their respective sentiments equal to his
+own, he cannot help the obvious inference, that in his own opinion it is
+next to impossible that there is not an admixture of error; that there
+is an infinitely greater probability of his being wrong in some than
+right in all.'[32]
+
+Of course this is not an account of the actual frame of mind of ordinary
+men. They never do think of their opinions in the aggregate in
+comparison with the collective opinions of others, nor ever draw the
+conclusions which such reflections would suggest. But such a frame of
+mind is perfectly attainable, and has often been attained, by persons of
+far lower than first-rate capacity. And if this is so, there is no
+reason why it should not be held up for the admiration and imitation of
+all those classes of society which profess to have opinions. It would
+thus become an established element in the temper of the age. Nor need we
+fear that the result of this would be any flaccidity of conviction, or
+lethargy in act. A man would still be penetrated with the rightness of
+his own opinion on a given issue, and would still do all that he could
+to make it prevail in practice. But among the things which he would no
+longer permit himself to do, would be the forcible repression in others
+of any opinions, however hostile to his own, or of any kind of conduct,
+however widely it diverged from his own, and provided that it concerned
+themselves only. This widening of his tolerance would be the natural
+result of a rational and realised consciousness of his own general
+fallibility.
+
+Next, even belief in one's own infallibility does not necessarily lead
+to intolerance. For it may be said that though no man in his senses
+would claim to be incapable of error, yet in every given case he is
+quite sure that he is not in error, and therefore this assurance in
+particular is tantamount by process of cumulation to a sense of
+infallibility in general. Now even if this were so, it would not of
+necessity either produce or justify intolerance. The certainty of the
+truth of your own opinions is independent of any special idea as to the
+means by which others may best be brought to share them. The question
+between persuasion and force remains apart--unless, indeed, we may say
+that in societies where habits of free discussion have once begun to
+take root, those who are least really sure about their opinions, are
+often most unwilling to trust to persuasion to bring them converts, and
+most disposed to grasp the rude implements of coercion, whether legal or
+merely social. The cry, 'Be my brother, or I slay thee,' was the sign of
+a very weak, though very fiery, faith in the worth of fraternity. He
+whose faith is most assured, has the best reason for relying on
+persuasion, and the strongest motive to thrust from him all temptations
+to use angry force. The substitution of force for persuasion, among its
+other disadvantages, has this further drawback, from our present point
+of view, that it lessens the conscience of a society and breeds
+hypocrisy. You have not converted a man, because you have silenced him.
+Opinion and force belong to different elements. To think that you are
+able by social disapproval or other coercive means to crush a man's
+opinion, is as one who should fire a blunderbuss to put out a star. The
+acquiescence in current notions which is secured by law or by petulant
+social disapproval, is as worthless and as essentially hypocritical, as
+the conversion of an Irish pauper to protestantism by means of
+soup-tickets, or that of a savage to Christianity by the gift of a
+string of beads. Here is the radical fallacy of those who urge that
+people must use promises and threats in order to encourage opinions,
+thoughts, and feelings which they think good, and to prevent others
+which they think bad. Promises and threats can influence acts. Opinions
+and thoughts on morals, politics, and the rest, after they have once
+grown in a man's mind, can no more be influenced by promises and threats
+than can my knowledge that snow is white or that ice is cold. You may
+impose penalties on me by statute for saying that snow is white, or
+acting as if I thought ice cold, and the penalties may affect my
+conduct. They will not, because they cannot, modify my beliefs in the
+matter by a single iota. One result therefore of intolerance is to make
+hypocrites. On this, as on the rest of the grounds which vindicate the
+doctrine of liberty, a man who thought himself infallible either in
+particular or in general, from the Pope of Rome down to the editor of
+the daily newspaper, might still be inclined to abstain from any form of
+compulsion. The only reason to the contrary is that a man who is so
+silly as to think himself incapable of going wrong, is very likely to be
+too silly to perceive that coercion may be one way of going wrong.
+
+The currency of the notion that earnest sincerity about one's opinions
+and ideals of conduct is inseparably connected with intolerance, is
+indirectly due to the predominance of legal or juristic analogies in
+social discussion. For one thing, the lawyer has to deal mainly with
+acts, and to deal with them by way of repression. His attention is
+primarily fixed on the deed, and only secondarily on the mind of the
+doer. And so a habit of thought is created, which treats opinion as
+something equally in the sphere of coercion with actions. At the same
+time it favours coercive ways of affecting opinion. Then, what is still
+more important, the jurist's conception of society has its root in the
+relation between sovereign and subject, between lawmaker and those whom
+law restrains. Exertion of power on one hand, and compliance on the
+other--this is his type of the conditions of the social union. The
+fertility and advance of discussion on social issues depends on the
+substitution of the evolutional for the legal conception. The lawyer's
+type of proposition is absolute. It is also, for various reasons which
+need not be given here, inspired by involuntary reference to the lower,
+rather than to the more highly developed, social states. In the lower
+states law, penalties, coercion, compulsion, the strong hand, a sternly
+repressive public opinion, were the conditions on which the community
+was united and held together. But the line of thought which these
+analogies suggest, becomes less and less generally appropriate in social
+discussion, in proportion as the community becomes more complex, more
+various in resource, more special in its organisation, in a word, more
+elaborately civilised. The evolutionist's idea of society concedes to
+law its historic place and its actual part. But then this idea leads
+directly to a way of looking at society, which makes the replacement of
+law by liberty a condition of reaching the higher stages of social
+development.
+
+The doctrine of liberty belongs to the subject of this chapter, because
+it is only another way of expressing the want of connection between
+earnestness in realising our opinions, and anything like coercion in
+their favour. If it were true that aversion from compromise, in carrying
+out our ideas, implied the rightfulness of using all the means in our
+power to hinder others from carrying out ideas hostile to them, then we
+should have been preaching in a spirit unfavourable to the principle of
+liberty. Our main text has been that men should refuse to sacrifice
+their opinions and ways of living (in the self-regarding sphere) out of
+regard to the _status quo_, or the prejudices of others. And this, as a
+matter of course, excludes the right of forcing or wishing any one else
+to make such a sacrifice to us. Well, the first foundation-stone for the
+doctrine of liberty is to be sought in the conception of society as a
+growing and developing organism. This is its true base, apart from the
+numerous minor expediencies which may be adduced to complete the
+structure of the argument. It is fundamentally advantageous that in
+societies which have reached our degree of complex and intricate
+organisation, unfettered liberty should be conceded to ideas and, within
+the self-regarding sphere, to conduct also. The reasons for this are of
+some such kind as the following. New ideas and new 'experiments in
+living' would not arise, if there were not a certain inadequateness in
+existing ideas and ways of living. They may not point to the right mode
+of meeting inadequateness, but they do point to the existence and
+consciousness of it. They originate in the social capability of growth.
+Society can only develop itself on condition that all such novelties
+(within the limit laid down, for good and valid reasons, at self
+regarding conduct) are allowed to present themselves. First, because
+neither the legislature nor any one else can ever know for certain what
+novelties will prove of enduring value. Second, because even if we did
+know for certain that given novelties were pathological growths and not
+normal developments, and that they never would be of any value, still
+the repression necessary to extirpate them would involve too serious a
+risk both of keeping back social growth at some other point, and of
+giving the direction of that growth an irreparable warp. And let us
+repeat once more, in proportion as a community grows more complex in its
+classes, divisions, and subdivisions, more intricate in its productive,
+commercial, or material arrangements, so does this risk very obviously
+wax more grave.
+
+In the sense in which we are speaking of it, liberty is not a positive
+force, any more than the smoothness of a railroad is a positive
+force.[33] It is a condition. As a force, there is a sense in which it
+is true to call liberty a negation. As a condition, though it may still
+be a negation, yet it may be indispensable for the production of certain
+positive results. The vacuity of an exhausted receiver is not a force,
+but it is the indispensable condition of certain positive operations.
+Liberty as a force may be as impotent as its opponents allege. This does
+not affect its value as a preliminary or accompanying condition. The
+absence of a strait-waistcoat is a negation; but it is a useful
+condition for the activity of sane men. No doubt there must be a
+definite limit to this absence of external interference with conduct,
+and that limit will be fixed at various points by different thinkers. We
+are now only urging that it cannot be wisely fixed for the more complex
+societies by any one who has not grasped this fundamental preconception,
+that liberty, or the absence of coercion, or the leaving people to
+think, speak, and act as they please, is in itself a good thing. It is
+the object of a favourable presumption. The burden of proving it
+inexpedient always lies, and wholly lies, on those who wish to abridge
+it by coercion, whether direct or indirect.
+
+One reason why this truth is so reluctantly admitted, is men's
+irrational want of faith in the self-protective quality of a highly
+developed and healthy community. The timid compromiser on the one hand,
+and the advocate of coercive restriction on the other, are equally the
+victims of a superfluous apprehension. The one fears to use his liberty
+for the same reason that makes the other fearful of permitting liberty.
+This common reason is the want of a sensible confidence that, in a free
+western community, which has reached our stage of development,
+religious, moral, and social novelties--provided they are tainted by no
+element of compulsion or interference with the just rights of others,
+may be trusted to find their own level. Moral and intellectual
+conditions are not the only motive forces in a community, nor are they
+even the most decisive. Political and material conditions fix the limits
+at which speculation can do either good or harm. Let us take an
+illustration of the impotence of moral ideas to override material
+circumstances; and we shall venture to place this illustration somewhat
+fully before the reader.
+
+There is no more important distinction between modern civilised
+communities and the ancient communities than the fact that the latter
+rested on Slavery, while the former have abolished it. Hence there can
+hardly be a more interesting question than this--by what agencies so
+prodigious a transformation of one of the fundamental conditions of
+society was brought about. The popular answer is of a very ready kind,
+and it passes quite satisfactorily. This answer is that the first great
+step towards free labour, the transformation of personal slavery into
+serfdom, was the result of the spiritual change which was wrought in
+men's minds by the teaching of the Church. It is unquestionable that the
+influence of the Church tended to mitigate the evils of slavery, to
+humanise the relations between master and slave, between the lord and
+the serf. But this is a very different thing from the radical
+transformation of those relations. If we think of society as an
+organism we instantly understand that so immense a change as this could
+not possibly have been effected without the co-operation of the other
+great parts of the social system, any more than a critical evolution
+could take place in the nutritive apparatus of an animal, without a
+change in the whole series of its organs. Thus in order that serfage
+should be evolved from slavery, and free labour again from serfage, it
+could not be enough that an alteration should have been wrought in men's
+ideas as to their common brotherhood, and the connected ideas as to the
+lawfulness or unlawfulness of certain human relations. There must have
+been an alteration also of the economic and material conditions. History
+confirms the expectations which we should thus have been led to
+entertain. The impotence of spiritual and moral agencies alone in
+bringing about this great metamorphosis, is shown by such facts as
+these. For centuries after the new faith had consolidated itself,
+slavery was regarded without a particle of that deep abhorrence which
+the possession of man by man excites in us now. In the ninth and tenth
+centuries the slave trade was the most profitable branch of the
+commerce that was carried on in the Mediterranean. The historian tells
+us that, even so late as this, slaves were the principal article of
+European export to Africa, Syria, and Egypt, in payment for the produce
+of the East which was brought from those countries. It was the crumbling
+of the old social system which, by reducing the population, lessening
+the wealth, and lowering the standard of living among the free masters,
+tended to extinguish slavery, by diminishing the differences between the
+masters and their bondsmen. Again, it was certain laws enacted by the
+Roman government for the benefit of the imperial fisc, which first
+conferred rights on the slave. The same laws brought the free farmer,
+whose position was less satisfactory for the purposes of the revenue,
+down nearer and nearer to a servile condition. Again, in the ninth and
+tenth centuries, pestilence and famine accelerated the extinction of
+predial slavery by weakening the numbers of the free population.
+'History,' we are told by that thoroughly competent authority, Mr.
+Finlay, 'affords its testimony that neither the doctrines of
+Christianity, nor the sentiments of humanity, have ever yet succeeded
+in extinguishing slavery, where the soil could be cultivated with profit
+by slave labour. No Christian community of slave-holders has yet
+voluntarily abolished slavery. In no country where it prevailed has
+rural slavery ceased, until the price of productions raised by slave
+labour has fallen so low as to leave no profit to the slave-owner.'
+
+The moral of all this is the tolerably obvious truth, that the
+prosperity of an abstract idea depends as much on the medium into which
+it is launched, as upon any quality of its own. Stable societies are
+amply furnished with force enough to resist all effort in a destructive
+direction. There is seldom much fear, and in our own country there is
+hardly any fear at all, of hasty reformers making too much way against
+the spontaneous conservatism which belongs to a healthy and
+well-organised community. If dissolvent ideas do make their way, it is
+because the society was already ripe for dissolution. New ideas, however
+ardently preached, will dissolve no society which was not already in a
+condition of profound disorganisation. We may be allowed just to point
+to two memorable instances, by way of illustration, though a long and
+elaborate discussion would be needed to bring out their full force. It
+has often been thought since, as it was thought by timorous
+reactionaries at the time, that Christianity in various ways sapped the
+strength of the Roman Empire, and opened the way for the barbarians. In
+truth, the most careful and competent students know now that the Empire
+slowly fell to pieces, partly because the political arrangements were
+vicious and inadequate, but mainly because the fiscal and economic
+system impoverished and depopulated one district of the vast empire
+after another. It was the break-up of the Empire that gave the Church
+its chance; not the Church that broke up the Empire. It is a mistake of
+the same kind to suppose that the destructive criticism of the French
+philosophers a hundred years ago was the great operative cause of the
+catastrophe which befel the old social regime. If Voltaire, Diderot,
+Rousseau, had never lived, or if their works had all been suppressed as
+soon as they were printed, their absence would have given no new life to
+agriculture, would not have stimulated trade, nor replenished the
+bankrupt fisc, nor incorporated the privileged classes with the bulk of
+the nation, nor done anything else to repair an organisation of which
+every single part had become incompetent for its proper function. It was
+the material misery and the political despair engendered by the reigning
+system, which brought willing listeners to the feet of the teachers who
+framed beneficent governments on the simple principles of reason and the
+natural law. And these teachers only busied themselves with abstract
+politics, because the real situation was desperate. They had no
+alternative but to evolve social improvements out of their own
+consciousness. There was not a single sound organ in the body politic,
+which they could have made the starting-point of a reconstitution of a
+society on the base of its actual or historic structure. The mischiefs
+which resulted from their method are patent and undeniable. But the
+method was made inevitable by the curse of the old regime.[34]
+
+Nor is there any instance in history of mere opinion making a breach in
+the essential constitution of a community, so long as the political
+conditions were stable and the economic or nutritive conditions sound.
+If some absolute monarch were to be seized by a philanthropic resolution
+to transform the ordering of a society which seemed to be at his
+disposal, he might possibly, by the perseverance of a lifetime, succeed
+in throwing the community into permanent confusion. Joseph II. perhaps
+did as much as a modern sovereign can do in this direction. Yet little
+came of his efforts, either for good or harm. But a man without the
+whole political machinery in his power need hardly labour under any
+apprehension that he may, by the mere force of speculative opinion,
+involuntarily work a corresponding mischief. If it is true that the most
+fervent apostles of progress usually do very little of the good on which
+they congratulate themselves, they ought surely on the same ground to be
+acquitted of much of the harm for which they are sometimes reviled. In a
+country of unchecked and abundant discussion, a new idea is not at all
+likely to make much way against the objection of its novelty, unless it
+is really commended by some quality of temporary or permanent value. So
+far therefore as the mere publication of new principles is concerned,
+and so far also as merely self-regarding action goes, one who has the
+keenest sense of social responsibility, and is most scrupulously afraid
+of doing anything to slacken or perturb the process of social growth,
+may still consistently give to the world whatever ideas he has gravely
+embraced. He may safely trust, if the society be in a normal condition,
+to its justice of assimilation and rejection. There are a few
+individuals for whom newness is a recommendation. But what are these
+few among the many to whom newness is a stumbling-block? Old ideas may
+survive merely because they are old. A new one will certainly not, among
+a considerable body of men in a healthy social state, gain any
+acceptance worth speaking of, merely because it is new.
+
+The recognition of the self-protecting quality of society is something
+more than a point of speculative importance. It has a direct practical
+influence. For it would add to the courage and intrepidity of the men
+who are most attached to the reigning order of things. If such men could
+only divest themselves of a futile and nervous apprehension, that things
+as they are have no root in their essential fitness and harmony, and
+that order consequently is ever hanging on a trembling and doubtful
+balance, they would not only gain by the self-respect which would be
+added to them and the rest of the community, but all discussion would
+become more robust and real. If they had a larger faith in the stability
+for which they profess so great an anxiety, they would be more free
+alike in understanding and temper to deal generously, honestly, and
+effectively with those whom they count imprudent innovators. There is
+nothing more amusing or more instructive than to turn to the debates in
+parliament or the press upon some innovating proposal, after an interval
+since the proposal was accepted by the legislature. The flaming hopes of
+its friends, the wild and desperate prophecies of its antagonists, are
+found to be each as ill-founded as the other. The measure which was to
+do such vast good according to the one, such portentous evil according
+to the other, has done only a part of the promised good, and has done
+none of the threatened evil. The true lesson from this is one of
+perseverance and thoroughness for the improver, and one of faith in the
+self-protectiveness of a healthy society for the conservative. The
+master error of the latter is to suppose that men are moved mainly by
+their passions rather than their interests, that all their passions are
+presumably selfish and destructive, and that their own interests can
+seldom be adequately understood by the persons most directly concerned.
+How many fallacies are involved in this group of propositions, the
+reader may well be left to judge for himself.
+
+We have in this chapter considered some of the limitations which are
+set by the conditions of society on the duty of trying to realise our
+principles in action. The general conclusion is in perfect harmony with
+that of the previous chapters. A principle, if it be sound, represents
+one of the larger expediencies. To abandon that for the sake of some
+seeming expediency of the hour, is to sacrifice the greater good for the
+less, on no more creditable ground than that the less is nearer. It is
+better to wait, and to defer the realisation of our ideas until we can
+realise them fully, than to defraud the future by truncating them, if
+truncate them we must, in order to secure a partial triumph for them in
+the immediate present. It is better to bear the burden of
+impracticableness, than to stifle conviction and to pare away principle
+until it becomes more hollowness and triviality. What is the sense, and
+what is the morality, of postponing the wider utility to the narrower?
+Nothing is so sure to impoverish an epoch, to deprive conduct of
+nobleness, and character of elevation.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 27: _The Study of Sociology_, p. 396.]
+
+[Footnote 28: No one, for instance, has given more forcible or decisive
+expression than Mr. Spencer has done to the duty of not passively
+accepting the current theology. See his _First Principles_, pt. i. ch.
+vi, Sec. 34; paragraph beginning,--'Whoever hesitates to utter that which
+he thinks the highest truth, lest it should be too much in advance of
+the time, may reassure himself by looking at his acts from an impersonal
+point of view,' etc.]
+
+[Footnote 29: _Speech on Conciliation with America_.]
+
+[Footnote 30: 'Toute enormite dans les esprits d'un certain ordre n'est
+souvent qu'une grande vue prise hors du temps et du lieu, et ne gardant
+aucun rapport reel avec les objets environnants. Le propre de certaines
+prunelles ardentes est de franchir du regard les intervalles et de les
+supprimer. Tantot c'est une idee qui retarde de plusieurs siecles, et
+que ces vigoureux esprits se figurent encore presente et vivante; tantot
+c'est une idee qui avance, et qu'ils croient incontinent realisable. M.
+de Couaen etait ainsi; il voyait 1814 des 1804, et de la une
+superiorite; mais il jugeait 1814 possible des 1804 ou 1805, et de la
+tout un chimerique entassement.--Voila un point blanc a l'horizon,
+chacun jurerait que c'est un nuage. "C'est une montagne," dit le
+voyageur a l'oeil d'aigle; mais s'il ajoute: "Nous y arriverons ce soir,
+dans deux heures;" si, a chaque heure de marche, il crie avec
+emportement: "Nous y sommes," et le veut demontrer, il choque les
+voisins avec sa poutre, et donne l'avantage aux yeux moins percants et
+plus habitues a la plaine.'--Ste. Beuve's _Volupte_, p. 262]
+
+[Footnote 31: It is sometimes convenient to set familiar arguments down
+once more; so I venture to reprint in a note at the end of the chapter a
+short exposition of the doctrine of liberty, which I had occasion to
+make in considering Sir J.F. Stephen's vigorous attack on that
+doctrine.]
+
+[Footnote 32: Mr. Samuel Bailey's _Essays on the Formation and
+Publication of Opinions_, etc., p. 138, (1826.)]
+
+[Footnote 33: There is a sense, and a most important sense, in which
+liberty is a positive force. It is its robust and bracing influence on
+character, which makes wise men prize freedom and strive for the
+enlargement of its province. As Mr. Mill expressed this:--'It is of
+importance not only what men do, but what manner of men they are that do
+it,' Milton pointed to the positive effect of liberty on character in
+the following passage:--'They are not skilful considerers of human
+things who imagine to remove sin by removing the matter of sin. Though
+ye take from a covetous man his treasure, he has yet one jewel left; ye
+cannot bereave him of his covetousness. Banish all objects of lust, shut
+up all youth into the severest discipline that can be exercised in any
+hermitage, ye cannot make them chaste that came not thither so. Suppose
+we could expel sin by this means; look how much we thus expel of sin, so
+much we expel of virtue. And were I the chooser, a dram of well-doing
+should be preferred before many times as much the forcible hindrance of
+evil-doing. For God sure esteems the growth and completing of one
+virtuous person, more than the restraint of ten vicious.']
+
+[Footnote 34: There is, I think, nothing in this paragraph really
+inconsistent with De Tocqueville's well-known and striking chapter,
+'Comment les hommes de lettres devinrent les principaux hommes
+politiques du pays, et des effets qui en resulterent.' (_Ancien Regime_,
+iii. i.) Thus Senac de Meilhan writes in 1795;--'C'est quand la
+Revolution a ete entamee qu'on a cherche dans Mably, dans Rousseau, des
+armes pour sustenter le systeme vers lequel entrainait l'effervescence
+de quelques esprits hardis. Mais ce ne sont point les auteurs que j'ai
+cites qui ont enflamme les tetes; M. Necker seul a produit cet effet, et
+determine l'explosion,' ... 'Les ecrits de Voltaire ont certainement nui
+a la religion, et ebranle la croyance dans un assez grand nombre; mais
+ils n'ont aucun rapport avec les affaires du gouvernement, et sont plus
+favorables que contraires a la monarchie....' Of Rousseau's _Social
+Contract_:--'Ce livre profond et abstrait etait peu lu, et etendu de
+bien peu de gens.' Mably--'avait peu de vogue.' _De Gouvernment, etc.,
+en France_, p. 129, etc.]
+
+
+
+
+NOTE TO PAGE 242.
+
+
+THE DOCTRINE OF LIBERTY.
+
+Mr. Mill's memorable plea for social liberty was little more than an
+enlargement, though a very important enlargement, of the principles of
+the still more famous Speech for Liberty of Unlicensed Printing with
+which Milton ennobled English literature two centuries before. Milton
+contended for free publication of opinion mainly on these grounds:
+First, that the opposite system implied the 'grace of infallibility and
+incorruptibleness' in the licensers. Second, that the prohibition of
+bold books led to mental indolence and stagnant formalism both in
+teachers and congregations, producing the 'laziness of a licensing
+church.' Third, that it 'hinders and retards the importation of our
+richest merchandise, truth;' for the commission of the licenser enjoins
+him to let nothing pass which is not vulgarly received already, and 'if
+it come to prohibiting, there is not aught more likely to be prohibited
+than truth itself, whose first appearance to our eyes, bleared and
+dimmed with prejudice and custom, is more unsightly and unplausible
+than many errors, even as the person is of many a great man slight and
+contemptible to see to.' Fourth, that freedom is in itself an ingredient
+of true virtue, and 'they are not skilful considerers of human things
+who imagine to remove sin by removing the matter of sin; that virtue
+therefore, which is but a youngling in the contemplation of evil, and
+knows not the utmost that vice promises to her followers, and rejects
+it, is but a blank virtue, not a pure; her virtue is but an excremental
+virtue, which was the reason why our sage and serious poet Spenser, whom
+I dare be known to think a better teacher than Scotus or Aquinas,
+describing true temperance under the form of Guion, brings him in with
+his palmer through the cave of Mammon and the tower of earthly bliss,
+that he might see and know and yet abstain.'
+
+The four grounds on which Mr. Mill contends for the necessity of freedom
+in the expression of opinion to the mental wellbeing of mankind, are
+virtually contained in these. His four grounds are, (1) that the
+silenced opinion may be true; (2) it may contain a portion of truth,
+essential to supplement the prevailing opinion; (3) vigorous contesting
+of opinions that are even wholly true, is the only way of preventing
+them from sinking to the level of uncomprehended prejudices; (4) without
+such contesting, the doctrine will lose its vital effect on character
+and conduct.
+
+But Milton drew the line of liberty at what he calls 'neighbouring
+differences, or rather indifferences.' The Arminian controversy had
+loosened the bonds with which the newly liberated churches of the
+Reformation, had made haste to bind themselves again, and weakened that
+authority of confessions, which had replaced the older but not more
+intolerant authority of the universal church. Other controversies which
+raged during the first half of the seventeenth century,--those between
+catholics and protestants, between prelatists and presbyterians, between
+socinians and trinitarians, between latitudinarians, puritans, and
+sacramentalists,--all tended to weaken theological exclusiveness. This
+slackening, however, was no more than partial. Roger Williams, indeed,
+the Welsh founder of Rhode Island, preached, as early as 1631, the
+principles of an unlimited toleration, extending to catholics, Jews, and
+even infidels. Milton stopped a long way short of this. He did not mean
+'tolerated popery and open superstition, which, as it extirpates all
+religious and civil supremacies, so itself should be extirpate, provided
+first that all charitable and compassionate means be used to win and
+regain the weak and the misled: that also which is impious or evil
+absolutely either against faith or manners no law can possibly permit
+that intends not to unlaw itself.'
+
+
+Locke, writing five-and-forty years later, somewhat widened these
+limitations. His question was not merely whether there should be free
+expression of opinion, but whether there should furthermore be freedom
+of worship and of religious union. He answered both questions
+affirmatively,--not on the semi-sceptical ground of Jeremy Taylor, which
+is also one of the grounds taken by Mr. Mill, that we cannot be sure
+that our own opinion is the true one,--but on the strength of his
+definition of the province of the civil magistrate. Locke held that the
+magistrate's whole jurisdiction reached only to civil concernments, and
+that 'all civil power, right, and dominion is bounded to that only care
+of promoting these things; and that it neither can nor ought in any
+manner to be extended to the saving of souls. This chiefly because the
+power of the civil magistrate consists only in outward force, while true
+and saving religion consists in the inward persuasion of the mind,
+without which nothing can be acceptable to God, and such is the nature
+of the understanding that it cannot he compelled to the belief of
+anything by outward force.... It is only light and evidence that can
+work a change in men's opinions; and that light can in no manner proceed
+from corporal sufferings, or any other outward penalties.' 'I may grow
+rich by an art that I take not delight in; I may be cured of some
+disease by remedies that I have not faith in; but I cannot be saved by a
+religion that at I distrust and a ritual that I abhor.' (_First Letter
+concerning Toleration_.) And much more in the same excellent vein. But
+Locke fixed limits to toleration. 1. No opinions contrary to human
+society, or to those moral rules which are necessary to the preservation
+of civil society, are to be tolerated by the magistrate. Thus, to take
+examples from our own day, a conservative minister would think himself
+right on this principle in suppressing the Land and Labour League; a
+catholic minister in dissolving the Education League; and any minister
+in making mere membership of the Mormon sect a penal offence. 2. No
+tolerance ought to be extended to 'those who attribute unto the
+faithful, religious, and orthodox, that is in plain terms unto
+themselves, any peculiar privilege or power above other mortals, in
+civil concernments; or who, upon pretence of religion, do challenge any
+manner of authority over such as are not associated with them in their
+ecclesiastical communion.' As I have seldom heard of any sect, except
+the Friends, who did not challenge as much authority as it could
+possibly get over persons not associated with it, this would amount to a
+universal proscription of religion; but Locke's principle might at any
+rate be invoked against Ultra-montanism in some circumstances. 3. Those
+are not at all to be tolerated who deny the being of God. The taking
+away of God, _though but even in thought_, dissolves all society; and
+promises, covenants, and oaths, which are the bonds of human society,
+have no hold on such. Thus the police ought to close Mr. Bradlaugh's
+Hall of Science, and perhaps on some occasions the Positivist School.
+
+Locke's principles depended on a distinction between civil concernments,
+which he tries to define, and all other concernments. Warburton's
+arguments on the alliance between church and state turned on the same
+point, as did the once-famous Bangorian controversy. This distinction
+would fit into Mr. Mill's cardinal position, which consists in a
+distinction between the things that only affect the doer or thinker of
+them, and the things that affect other persons as well. Locke's attempt
+to divide civil affairs from affairs of salvation, was satisfactory
+enough for the comparatively narrow object with which he opened his
+discussion. Mr. Mill's account of civil affairs is both wider and more
+definite; naturally so, as he had to maintain the cause of tolerance in
+a much more complex set of social conditions, and amid a far greater
+diversity of speculative energy, than any one dreamed of in Locke's
+time. Mr. Mill limits the province of the civil magistrate to the
+repression of acts that directly and immediately injure others than the
+doer of them. So long as acts, including the expression of opinions, are
+purely self-regarding, it seems to him expedient in the long run that
+they should not be interfered with by the magistrate. He goes much
+further than this. Self-regarding acts should not be interfered with by
+the magistrate. Not only self-regarding acts, but all opinions
+whatever, should, moreover, be as little interfered with as possible by
+public opinion, except in the way of vigorous argumentation and earnest
+persuasion in a contrary direction; the silent but most impressive
+solicitation of virtuous example; the wise and careful upbringing of the
+young, so that when they enter life they may be most nobly fitted to
+choose the right opinions and obey the right motives.
+
+The consideration by which he supports this rigorous confinement of
+external interference on the part of government, or the unorganised
+members of the community whose opinion is called public opinion, to
+cases of self-protection, are these, some of which have been already
+stated:--
+
+1. By interfering to suppress opinions or experiments in living, you may
+resist truths and improvements in a greater or less degree.
+
+2. Constant discussion is the only certain means of preserving the
+freshness of truth in men's minds, and the vitality of its influence
+upon their conduct and motives.
+
+3. Individuality is one of the most valuable elements of wellbeing, and
+you can only be sure of making the most of individuality, if you have an
+atmosphere of freedom, encouraging free development and expansion.
+
+4. Habitual resort to repressive means of influencing conduct tends more
+than anything else to discredit and frustrate the better means, such as
+education, good example, and the like. (_Liberty_, 148.)
+
+The principle which he deduces from these considerations 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; the only purpose for which power can be rightfully
+exercised over any member of a civilised community, is to prevent harm
+to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient
+warrant. He cannot be rightfully compelled to do or forbear because it
+will make him happier, because in the opinion 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 others.' (_Liberty_,
+22.)
+
+
+Two disputable points in the above doctrine are likely at once to reveal
+themselves to the least critical eye. First, that doctrine would seem to
+check the free expression of disapproval; one of the most wholesome and
+indispensable duties which anybody with interest in serious questions
+has to perform, and the non-performance of which would remove the most
+proper and natural penalty from frivolous or perverse opinions and
+obnoxious conduct. Mr. Mill deals with this difficulty as follows:--'We
+have a right in various ways to act upon our unfavourable 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.' (_Liberty_,
+139.) This appears to be a satisfactory way of meeting the objection.
+For though the penalties of disapproval may be just the same, whether
+deliberately inflicted, or naturally and spontaneously falling on the
+object of such disapproval, yet there is a very intelligible difference
+between the two processes in their effect on the two parties concerned.
+A person imbued with Mr. Mill's principle would feel the responsibility
+of censorship much more seriously; would reflect more carefully and
+candidly about the conduct or opinion of which he thought ill; would be
+more on his guard against pharisaic censoriousness, and that desire to
+be ever judging one another, which Milton well called the stronghold of
+our hypocrisy. The disapproval of such a person would have an austere
+colour, a gravity, a self-respecting reserve, which could never belong
+to an equal degree of disapproval in a person who had started from the
+officious principle, that if we are sure we are right, it is straightway
+our business to make the person whom we think wrong smart for his error.
+And in the same way such disapproval would be much more impressive to
+the person whom it affected. If it was justified, he would be like a
+froward child who is always less effectively reformed--if reformable at
+all--by angry chidings and passionate punishments than by the sight of a
+cool and austere displeasure which lets him persist in his frowardness
+if he chooses.
+
+
+The second weak point in the doctrine lies in the extreme vagueness of
+the terms, protective and self-regarding. The practical difficulty
+begins with the definition of these terms. Can any opinion, or any
+serious part of conduct, be looked upon as truly and exclusively
+self-regarding? This central ingredient in the discussion seems
+insufficiently laboured in the essay on Liberty. Yet it is here more
+than anywhere else that controversy is needed to clear up what is in
+just as much need of elucidation, whatever view we may take of the
+inherent virtue of freedom--whether we look on freedom as a mere
+negation, or as one of the most powerful positive conditions of
+attaining the highest kind of human excellence.
+
+To some persons the analysis of conduct, on which the whole doctrine of
+liberty rests, seems metaphysical and arbitrary. They are reluctant to
+admit there are any self-regarding acts at all. This reluctance implies
+a perfectly tenable proposition, a proposition which has been maintained
+by nearly all religious bodies in the world's history in their
+non-latitudinarian stages. To distinguish the self-regarding from the
+other parts of conduct, strikes them not only as unscientific, but as
+morally and socially mischievous. They insist that there is a social as
+well as a personal element in every human act, though in very different
+proportions. There is no gain, they contend, and there may be much harm,
+in trying to mark off actions, in which the personal element decisively
+preponderates, from actions of another sort. Mr. Mill did so distinguish
+actions, nor was his distinction either metaphysical or arbitrary in its
+source. As a matter of observation, and for the practical purposes of
+morality, there are kinds of action whose consequences do not go beyond
+the doer of them. No doubt, you may say that by engaging in these kinds
+in any given moment, the doer is neglecting the actions in which the
+social element preponderates, and therefore even acts that seem purely
+self-regarding have indirect and negative consequences to the rest of
+the world. But to allow considerations of this sort to prevent us from
+using a common-sense classification of acts by the proportion of the
+personal element in them, is as unreasonable as if we allowed the
+doctrine of the conservation of physical force, or the evolution of one
+mode of force into another, to prevent us from classifying the
+affections of matter independently, as light, heat, motion, and the
+rest. There is one objection obviously to be made to most of the
+illustrations which are designed to show the public element in all
+private conduct. The connection between the act and its influence on
+others is so remote (using the word in a legal sense), though quite
+certain, distinct, and traceable, that you can only take the act out of
+the self-regarding category, by a process which virtually denies the
+existence of any such category. You must set a limit to this 'indirect
+and at-a-distance argument,' as Locke called a similar plea, and the
+setting of this limit is the natural supplement to Mr. Mill's 'simple
+principle.'
+
+The division between self-regarding acts and others then, rests on
+observation of their actual consequences. And why was Mr. Mill so
+anxious to erect self-regarding acts into a distinct and important
+class, so important as to be carefully and diligently secured by a
+special principle of liberty? Because observation of the recorded
+experience of mankind teaches us, that the recognition of this
+independent provision is essential to the richest expansion of human
+faculty. To narrow or to repudiate such a province, and to insist
+exclusively on the social bearing of each part of conduct, is to limit
+the play of motives, and to thwart the doctrine that 'mankind obtain a
+greater sum of happiness when each pursues his own, under the rules and
+conditions required by the rest, than when each makes the good of the
+rest his only object.' To narrow or to repudiate such a province is to
+tighten the power of the majority over the minority, and to augment the
+authority of whatever sacerdotal or legislative body may represent the
+majority. Whether the lawmakers be laymen in parliament, or priests of
+humanity exercising the spiritual power, it matters not.
+
+
+We may best estimate the worth and the significance of the doctrine of
+Liberty by considering the line of thought and observation which led to
+it. To begin with, it is in Mr. Mill's hands something quite different
+from the same doctrine as preached by the French revolutionary school;
+indeed one might even call it reactionary, in respect of the French
+theory of a hundred years back. It reposes on no principle of abstract
+right, but, like the rest of its author's opinions, on principles of
+utility and experience. Dr. Arnold used to divide reformers into two
+classes, popular and liberal. The first he defined as seekers of
+liberty, the second as seekers of improvement; the first were the goats,
+and the second were the sheep. Mr. Mill's doctrine denied the mutual
+exclusiveness of the two parts of this classification, for it made
+improvement the end and the test, while it proclaimed liberty to be the
+means. Every thinker now perceives that the strongest and most durable
+influences in every western society lead in the direction of democracy,
+and tend with more or less rapidity to throw the control of social
+organisation into the hands of numerical majorities. There are many
+people who believe that if you only make the ruling body big enough, it
+is sure to be either very wise itself, or very eager to choose wise
+leaders. Mr. Mill, as any one who is familiar with his writings is well
+aware, did not hold this opinion. He had no more partiality for mob rule
+than De Maistre or Goethe or Mr. Carlyle. He saw its evils more clearly
+than any of these eminent men, because he had a more scientific eye, and
+because he had had the invaluable training of a political administrator
+on a large scale, and in a very responsible post. But he did not content
+himself with seeing these evils, and he wasted no energy in passionate
+denunciation of them, which he knew must prove futile. Guizot said of De
+Tocqueville, that he was an aristocrat who accepted his defeat. Mr. Mill
+was too penetrated by popular sympathies to be an aristocrat in De
+Tocqueville's sense, but he likewise was full of ideas and hopes which
+the unchecked or undirected course of democracy would defeat without
+chance of reparation. This fact he accepted, and from this he started.
+Mr. Carlyle, and one or two rhetorical imitators, poured malediction on
+the many-headed populace, and with a rather pitiful impatience insisted
+that the only hope for men lay in their finding and obeying a strong
+man, a king, a hero, a dictator. How he was to be found, neither the
+master nor his still angrier and more impatient mimics could ever tell
+us.
+
+Now Mr. Mill's doctrine laid down the main condition of finding your
+hero; namely, that all ways should be left open to him, because no man,
+nor majority of men, could possibly tell by which of these ways their
+deliverers were from time to time destined to present themselves. Wits
+have caricatured all this, by asking us whether by encouraging the tares
+to grow, you give the wheat a better chance. This is as misleading as
+such metaphors usually are. The doctrine of liberty rests on a faith
+drawn from the observation of human progress, that though we know wheat
+to be serviceable and tares to be worthless, yet there are in the great
+seed-plot of human nature a thousand rudimentary germs, not wheat and
+not tares, of whose properties we have not had a fair opportunity of
+assuring ourselves. If you are too eager to pluck up the tares, you are
+very likely to pluck up with them these untried possibilities of human
+excellence, and you are, moreover, very likely to injure the growing
+wheat as well. The demonstration of this lies in the recorded experience
+of mankind.
+
+
+Nor is this all. Mr. Mill's doctrine does not lend the least countenance
+to the cardinal opinion of some writers in the last century, that the
+only need of human character and of social institutions is to be let
+alone. He never said that we were to leave the ground uncultivated, to
+bring up whatever might chance to grow. On the contrary, the ground was
+to be cultivated with the utmost care and knowledge, with a view to
+prevent the growth of tares--but cultivated in a certain manner. You may
+take the method of the Inquisition, of the more cruel of the Puritans,
+of De Maistre, of Mr. Carlyle; or you may take Mr. Mill's method of
+cultivation. According to the doctrine of Liberty, we are to devote
+ourselves to prevention, as the surest and most wholesome mode of
+extirpation. Persuade; argue; cherish virtuous example; bring up the
+young in habits of right opinion and right motive; shape your social
+arrangements so as to stimulate the best parts of character. By these
+means you will gain all the advantages that could possibly have come of
+heroes and legislative dragooning, as well as a great many more which
+neither heroes nor legislative dragooning could ever have secured.
+
+It is well with men, Mr. Mill said, moreover, in proportion as they
+respect truth. Now they at once prove and strengthen their respect for
+truth, by having an open mind to all its possibilities, while at the
+same time they hold firmly to their own proved convictions, until they
+hear better evidence to the contrary. There is no anarchy, nor
+uncertainty, nor paralysing air of provisionalness in such a frame of
+mind. So far is it from being fatal to loyalty or reverence, that it is
+an indispensable part of the groundwork of the only loyalty that a wise
+ruler or teacher would care to inspire--the loyalty springing from a
+rational conviction that, in a field open to all comers, he is the best
+man they can find. Only on condition of liberty without limit is the
+ablest and most helpful of 'heroes' sure to be found; and only on
+condition of liberty without limit are his followers sure to be worthy
+of him. You must have authority, and yet must have obedience. The
+noblest and deepest and most beneficent kind of authority is that which
+rests on an obedience that is rational and spontaneous.
+
+
+The same futile impatience which animates the political utterances of
+Mr. Carlyle and his more weak-voiced imitators, takes another form in
+men of a different training or temperament. They insist that if the
+majority has the means of preventing vice by law, it is folly and
+weakness not to resort to those means. The superficial attractiveness
+of such a doctrine is obvious. The doctrine of liberty implies a broader
+and a more patient view. It says:--Even if you could be sure that what
+you take for vice is so--and the history of persecution shows how
+careful you should be in this preliminary point--even then it is an
+undoubted and, indeed, a necessary tendency of this facile repressive
+legislation, to make those who resort to it neglect the more effective,
+humane, and durable kinds of preventive legislation. You pass a law (if
+you can) putting down drunkenness; there is a neatness in such a method
+very attractive to fervid and impatient natures. Would you not have done
+better to leave that law unpassed, and apply yourselves sedulously
+instead to the improvement of the dwellings of the more drunken class,
+to the provision of amusements that might compete with the ale-house, to
+the extension and elevation of instruction, and so on? You may say that
+this should be done, and yet the other should not be left undone; but,
+as matter of fact and history, the doing of the one has always gone with
+the neglect of the other, and ascetic law-making in the interests of
+virtue has never been accompanied either by law-making or any other
+kinds of activity for making virtue easier or more attractive. It is the
+recognition how little punishment can do, that leaves men free to see
+how much social prevention can do. I believe, then, that what seems to
+the criminal lawyers and passionate philanthropists self-evident, is in
+truth an illusion, springing from a very shallow kind of impatience,
+heated in some of them by the addition of a cynical contempt for human
+nature and the worth of human existence.
+
+If people believe that the book of social or moral knowledge is now
+completed, that we have turned over the last page and heard the last
+word, much of the foundation of Mr. Mill's doctrine would disappear. But
+those who hold this can hardly have much to congratulate themselves
+upon. If it were so, and if governments were to accept the principle
+that the only limits to the enforcement of the moral standard of the
+majority are the narrow expediencies of each special case, without
+reference to any deep and comprehensive principle covering all the
+largest considerations, why, then, the society to which we ought to look
+with most admiration and envy, is the Eastern Empire during the ninth
+and tenth centuries, when the Byzantine system of a thorough
+subordination of the spiritual power had fully consolidated itself!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
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