Robert Owen,
already mentioned in this essay, who lived from 1771 to 1858, may in
a sense be designated a genius of practical social activity. He
possessed two qualities which may well justify this designation: a
circumstantial eye for institutions of social utility, and a noble
love of mankind. One has only to look at what he was able to
accomplish by means of these two faculties, in order to esteem them
at their due value.
He started, in New Lanark, model industries, in which he managed to
employ the workers in such a way that they not only enjoyed a decent
human existence in material respects, but also lived their lives
under conditions that satisfied the moral sense. Those who were
collected together in this place were in part people who had come
down in the world and taken to drink. Amongst such as these Owen
introduced better elements, whose example had a good influence on the
others. The results thus obtained were beneficial in the highest
degree. This achievement of Owen's makes it impossible to class
him with the usual type of more of less fantastic
“world-regenerator,” — Utopians, as they are
termed. For it is characteristic of Owen that he kept within the
lines of what was practicable and confined himself to schemes that
could be put into actual execution, and which the most hard-headed
person, averse to everything fanciful, might reasonably expect to do
something towards abolishing human misery within a small and limited
field. Nor was there anything unpractical in cherishing the belief
that this small field might perhaps serve as a model, and in course
of time give the incentive towards a healthy evolution of man's
human lot in the social direction.
Owen himself must have thought so; he ventured a step further
along the same road. In 1824, he set to work to create a sort of
little model State in the Indiana district of North America. He
obtained possession of a piece of territory with the intention of
founding there a human community based upon freedom and equality.
Every provision was made for rendering exploitation and enserfment
impossible. The man who embarks on such an enterprise must bring to
it the finest social virtues; the longing to make his fellow-men
happy, and faith in the goodness of human nature. He must believe
that the love of work will of itself grow up with man's nature,
once the benefits of his work seem to be secured by the needful
institutions. In Owen this faith was so firmly seated that the
experience must have been disastrous indeed that could shake
it.
And ... the experiences were, in fact,
disastrous. After prolonged and heroic efforts, Owen was brought at
last to the confession that: — Until one has effected a change
in the general moral standard, all attempts to realize such colonies
are bound to meet with failure; and that it is more worthwhile to try
and influence mankind by the way of theory, rather than of practice.
To such an opinion was this social reformer driven by the fact that
there proved to be no lack of “work-shys,” who desired
nothing better than to shoulder their work onto their neighbors;
which inevitably led to disputes and quarrels and, finally, to the
bankruptcy of the colony.
There is much to be learnt from this experience
of Owen's by all who are really willing to learn. It may lead
the way from all artificially devised schemes for the benefit of
mankind to really fruitful social work that reckons with matter of
fact.
These experiences were enough to cure Owen
radically of the belief that human misery is solely caused by the
“bad institutions” under which men live, and that the
goodness of human nature would manifest itself without more ado, once
these institutions were reformed. He was forced to the conviction
that any good institution is only so far maintainable as the human
beings concerned are disposed by their own inner nature to its
maintenance and are themselves warmly attached to
it.
One's first idea might be that what is
necessary is to give some preparatory theoretical instruction to the
people for whom such institutions are being established; by
demonstrating, perhaps, the appropriateness and utility of the
measures proposed. To an unprejudiced mind this might seem a fairly
obvious conclusion to be drawn from Owen's admission. Yet, for
the really practical lesson to be learnt from it, one must go deeper
into the matter. One must pass on beyond that mere faith in the
goodness of human nature, by which Owen was misled, to a real
knowledge of man. People may learn to perceive ever so clearly that
certain institutions are practical and would be of benefit to
mankind; but the clearest possible perception of this will not
suffice in the long run to carry them through to the goal proposed.
This kind of perception, clear as it may be, cannot supply a man with
the inner impulses that will make him work, when the instincts that
are based in egoism assert themselves upon the other side. This
egoism is there, once for all, as a part of human nature; and
consequently it begins to stir within the feeling of every human
being, when he is called upon to live and work together with others
in the social community. Thus, as a kind of inevitable sequence, most
people practically will consider that form of social institution the
best which best allows each individual to gratify his own wants. So
that the social question quite naturally under the influence of these
egoistic feelings comes to assume the form: What particular social
institutions must be devised, in order that each person may secure
the proceeds of his labor for himself? Few people, especially in our
age of materialistic thinking, start from any other assumption. How
often may one not hear it stated, as a truth beyond question, that it
would be a thing against all nature to try and constitute a society
on principles of good-will and human kindliness. People are much more
ready to go on the principle that a human community will, as a whole,
be most prosperous, when it also allows the individual to reap and
garner the full — or the largest possible — proceeds of
his own labor.
Exactly the contrary, however, is taught by
Anthroposophy, which is founded on a more profound knowledge of man
and the world. Anthroposophy, in fact, shows that all human suffering
is purely a consequence of egoism, and that in every human community,
at some time or other, suffering, poverty, and want must of necessity
arise, if this community is founded in any way upon egoism. Fully to
recognize this, however, requires knowledge of considerably greater
depth than much that sails about under the flag of “Social
Science”. For this so-called Social Science only takes account
of the exterior surface of human life, not of the deeper-seated
forces that move it. Indeed, with the majority of people of the
present day it is hard to arouse so much as even a feeling that there
can be a question of any such deeper-seated forces at all; and anyone
who talks to them of anything of the sort is looked upon as a dreamer
and a “crank”. Nor can there here be any attempt made to
elaborate a scheme of society based upon deeper, underlying forces.
To do so adequately would need a whole book. All that can be done is
to indicate the true laws of human co-operation and to show what,
therefore, will be the reasonable points for consideration in social
matters for one who is acquainted with these laws. A full
comprehension of the subject is only possible for someone who works
his way through to a world-conception based upon Anthroposophy. And
this whole magazine is an endeavor to convey such a world-conception;
one cannot expect to learn it from a single essay on the Social
Question. All that one such essay can attempt to do is to throw a
searchlight on this question from the anthroposophic standpoint.
Briefly as the subject must be dealt with, there will, at any rate,
always be some people whose feeling will lead them to recognize the
truth of what it is impossible to discuss in all its fullness
here.
There is, then,
a fundamental social law which Anthroposophy teaches us and which is
as follows:
In a community of
human beings working together, the well-being of the community will
be the greater, the less the individual claims for himself the
proceeds of the work he has himself done; i.e. the more of these
proceeds he makes over to his fellow workers, and the more his own
requirements are satisfied not out of his own work done, but out of
work done by the others.
Every institution in a
community of human beings that is contrary to this law will
inevitably engender in some part of it, after a while, suffering and
want. It is a fundamental law which holds good for all social life
with the same absoluteness and necessity as any law of nature within
a particular field of natural causation. It must not be supposed,
however, that it is sufficient to acknowledge this law as one for
general moral conduct, or to try and interpret it into the sentiment
that everyone should work for the good of his fellow-men. No —
this law only finds its living, fitting expression in actual reality,
when a community of human beings succeeds in creating institutions of
such a kind that no one can ever claim the results of his own labor
for himself, but that they all, to the last fraction, go wholly to
the benefit of the community. And he, again, must himself be
supported in return by the labors of his fellow-men. The important
point is, therefore, that working for one's fellow-men, and the
object of obtaining so much income, must be kept apart, as two
separate things.
The self-styled
“practical people” will, of course — the
Anthroposophist is under no illusion about it! — have nothing
but a smile for such “outrageous idealism”. And yet this
law is more really practical than any that ever was devised or
enacted by the practicians. For, as a matter of actual life, that
every human community that exists, or ever has existed anywhere,
possesses two sorts of institutions, of which the one is in
accordance with this law, and the other contrary to it. It is bound
to be so everywhere, whether men will, or no. Every community,
indeed, would fall to pieces at once, if the work of the individual
did not pass over into the whole body. But human egoism again has
from of old run counter to this law, and sought to extract as much as
possible for the individual out of his own work. And what has come
about in this way, as a consequence of egoism, this it is, and
nothing else, that from old has brought want and poverty and
suffering in its train; which is as good as saying that a part of
human institutions will always and inevitably prove to be unpractical
which owes its existence to “practicians” who calculated
either on the basis of their own egoism, or the egoism of
others.
Now obviously with a law of
this kind, all is not said and done when one has merely recognized
its existence. The real, practical part begins with the question: How
is one to translate this law into actual fact? Obviously, what it
says amounts to this: Man's welfare is the greater, in
proportion as egoism is the less. Which means, that for its practical
translation into reality one must have people who can find the way
out of their egoism. Practically, however, this is quite impossible,
if the individual's share of weal and woe is measured according
to his labor. He who labors for himself cannot help but gradually
fall a victim to egoism. Only one who labors solely and entirely for
the rest can, little by little, grow to be a worker without
egoism.
But there is one thing needed
to begin with. If any man works for another, he must find in this
other man the reason for his work; and if any man works for the
community, he must perceive and feel the meaning and value of this
community, and what it is as a living, organic whole. He can only do
this when the community is something other and quite different from a
more or less indefinite totality of individual men. It must be
informed by an actual spirit in which each single person has his
part. It must be such that each single one says: The communal body is
as it should be, and I will that it be thus. The whole communal body
must have a spiritual mission, and each individual member of it must
have the will to contribute towards the fulfilling of this mission.
All the vague progressive ideas, the abstract ideals, of which people
talk so much, cannot present such a mission. If there be nothing but
these as a guiding principle, then one individual here, or one group
there, will be working without any clear comprehension of what use
there is in their work, except its being to the advantage of their
families, or of those particular interests to which they happen to be
attached. In every single member, down to the least, this Spirit of
the Community must be alive and active.
Wherever, in any age,
anything good has thriven, it has only been where in some manner this
life of a communal spirit was realized. The individual citizen of a
Greek city in ancient days, even the citizen too of a “Free
City” in medieval times, had at least a dim sense of some such
communal spirit. The fact is not affected because, in Ancient Greece
for instance, the appropriate institutions were only made possible by
keeping a host of slaves, who did the manual labor for the
“free citizens”, and were not induced to do so by the
communal spirit, but compelled to it by their masters. This is an
instance from which only one thing may be learnt: namely, that
man's life is subject to evolution. And at the present day
mankind has reached a stage when such a solution of the associative
problem as found acceptance in Ancient Greece has become impossible.
Even by the noblest Greeks, slavery was not regarded as an injustice,
but as a human necessity; and so even the great Plato could hold up
as an ideal a state in which the communal spirit finds its
realization by the majority, the working people, being compelled to
labor at the dictation of the few wise ones. But the problem of the
present day is how to introduce people into conditions under which
each will, of his own inner, private impulse, do the work of the
community.
No one, therefore, need try
to discover a solution of the social question that shall hold good
for all time, but simply to find the right form for his social
thoughts and actions, in view of the immediate needs of the times in
which he is now living. Indeed, there is today no theoretic scheme
which could be devised or carried into effect by any one person,
which in itself could solve the social question. For this he would
need to possess the power to force a number of people into the
conditions which he had created. Most undoubtedly, had Owen possessed
the power of the will to compel all the people of his colony to do
their share of the labor, then the thing would have worked. But we
have to do with the present day; and in the present day any such
compulsion is out of the question. Some possibility must be found of
inducing each person, of his own free will, to do that which he is
called upon to do according to the measure of his particular powers
and abilities, But, for this very reason, there can be no possible
question of ever trying to work upon people theoretically, in the
sense suggested by Owen's admission, by merely indoctrinating
them with a view as to how social conditions might best be arranged.
A bald economic theory can never act as a force to counteract the
powers of egoism. For a while, such an economic theory may sweep the
masses along with a kind of impetus that, to all outward appearance,
resembles the enthusiasm of an ideal. But in the long run it helps
nobody. Anyone who inoculates such a theory into a mass of human
beings, without giving them some real spiritual substance along with
it, is sinning against the real meaning of human
evolution.
There is only one thing which can be of any use; and that is a
spiritual world-conception, which, of its own self, through that
which it has to offer, can make a living home in the thoughts, in the
feelings, in the will — in a man's whole soul, in short.
That faith which Owen had in the goodness of human nature is only
true in part; in part, it is one of the worst of illusions. It is
true to the extent that in every man there slumbers a “higher
self”, which can be awakened. But the bonds of its sleep can
only be dispelled by a world-conception of the character described.
One may induce men into conditions such as Owen devised, and the
community will prosper in the highest and fairest sense. But if one
brings men together, without their having a world-conception of this
kind, then all that is good in such institutions will, sooner or
later, inevitably turn to bad. With people who have no
world-conception centered in the spirit it is inevitable that just
those institutions which promote men's material well-being will
have the effect of also enhancing egoism, and therewith, little by
little, will engender want, poverty and suffering. For it may truly
be said in the simplest and most literal sense of the words: The
individual man you may help by simply supplying him with bread; a
community you can only supply with bread by assisting it to a
world-conception. Nor indeed would it be of any use to try and supply
each individual member of the community with bread; since, after a
while, things would still take such a form that many would again be
breadless.
The recognition of these principles, it is true, means the loss of many
an illusion for various people, whose ambition it is to be popular
benefactors. It makes working for the welfare of society no light
matter — one too, of which the results, under circumstances,
may only be composed of a collection of quite tiny part-results. Most
of what is given out today by whole parties as panaceas for social
life loses its value and is seen to be a mere bubble and hollow
phrase, lacking in due knowledge of human life. No parliament, no
democracy, no big popular agitation, none of all these things can
have any sense for a person who looks at all deeper, if they violate
the law stated above; whereas everything of the kind may work for
good, if it works on the lines of this law. It is a mischievous
delusion to believe that some particular persons, sent up to some
parliament as delegates from the people, can do anything for the good
of mankind, unless their whole line of activity is in conformity with
this, the fundamental social law.
Wherever this law finds outward expression, wherever anyone is at
work along its lines — so far as is possible for him in that
position in which he is placed within the human community —
there good results will be attained, though it be but in the one
single instance and in ever so small a measure. And it is only a
number of individual results, attained in this way, that together
combine to healthy collective progress throughout the whole body of
society.
There exist,
certainly, particular cases where bigger communities of men are in
possession of some special faculty, by aid of which a bigger result
could be attained all at once in this direction. Even today there
exist definite communities, in whose special dispositions something
of the kind is already preparing. These people will make it possible
for mankind, by their assistance, to make a leap forward, to
accomplish as it were a jump in social evolution. Anthroposophy is
well acquainted with such communities, but does not find itself
called upon to discuss these things in public. There are means, too,
by which large masses of mankind can be prepared for a leap of this
kind, which may possibly even be made at no very distant time. What,
however, can be done by everyone is to work on the lines of this law
within his own sphere of action. There is no position in the world
that man can occupy where this is not possible, be it to all
appearance ever so obscure, nor yet so influential.
But the principal and most important thing is, undoubtedly, that every
individual should seek the way to a world-conception directed towards
real knowledge of the Spirit. In Anthroposophy we have a spiritual
movement which can grow and become for all men a world-conception of
this kind, provided it continues to develop further in the form
proper to its own teachings and to its own inherent possibilities.
Anthroposophy may be the means of each man's learning to see
that it is not a mere chance that he happens to be born in a
particular place at a particular time, but that he has been put of
necessity by the law of spiritual causation — by Karma —
just in the place where he is; he learns to recognize that it is his
own fitting and well-founded fate which has placed him amidst that
human community in which he finds himself. His own powers and
capacities too will become apparent to him, as not allotted by blind
hazard, but as having their good meaning in the law of cause and
effect.
And he learns to
perceive all this in such a way that the perception does not remain a
mere matter of cold reason, but gradually comes to fill his whole
soul with inner life.
The outcome of such understanding will be no
shadowy idealism but a mighty pulse of new life throughout all a
man's powers. And this way of acting will be looked on by him
as being as much a matter of course as, in another respect, eating
and drinking is. Further, he will learn to see the meaning in the
human community to which he belongs. He will comprehend his own
community's relation to other human communities, and how it
stands towards them; and thus the several spirits of all these
communities will piece themselves together to a purposeful spiritual
design, a picture of the single, united mission of the whole human
race. And from the human race his mind will travel on to an
understanding of the whole earth and its existence. Only a person who
refuses to contemplate any such view of the world can harbor a doubt
that it will have the effects here
described.
At the present day, it is true, most people have but little inclination
to enter upon such things. But the time will not fail to come, when
the anthroposophic way of thinking will spread in ever- widening
circles. And in measure as it does so, men will take the right
practical steps to effect social progress. There can be no reason for
doubting this on the presumption that no world-conception yet has
ever brought about the happiness of mankind. By the laws of
mankind's evolution it was not possible for that to take place
at an earlier time, which, from now on, will gradually become
possible. Not until now could a world-conception with the prospect of
this kind of practical result be communicated to all and every man.
All the previous world-conceptions until now were accessible to
particular groups of human beings only. Nevertheless, everything that
has taken place for good as yet in the human race has come from its
world-conception. Universal welfare is only attainable through a
world-conception that shall lay hold upon the souls of all men and
fire the inner life within them. And this the anthroposophic form of
conception will always have the power to do, wherever it is really
true to its own inherent possibilities.
To recognize the justice of this, it will of
course not do to look simply at the form which such conceptions have
so far assumed. One must recognize that Anthroposophy has still to
expand and grow to the full height of its cultural mission. So far,
Anthroposophy cannot show the face that it will one day wear, and
this for many reasons. One of the reasons is, that it must first find
a foothold. Consequently, it must address itself to a particular
group of human beings; and this group can naturally be no other than
the one which, from the peculiar character of its evolution is
longing for a new solution of the world's problems, and which,
from the previous training of the persons united in it, is able to
bring active interest and understanding to such a solution. It is
obvious that, for the time being, Anthroposophy must couch the
message it has to deliver in such a language as shall be suited to
this particular group of people. Later on, as circumstances afford
opportunity, Anthroposophy will again find suitable terms, in which
to speak to other circles also. Nobody, whose mind is not rootedly
attached to hard and fast dogmas, can suppose that the form in which
the anthroposophic message is delivered today is a permanent or by
any means the only possible one. Just because, with Anthroposophy,
there can be no question of its remaining mere theory, or merely
gratifying intellectual curiosity, it is necessary for it to work in
this way, slowly. For amongst the aims and objects of Anthroposophy
are these same practical steps in the progress of mankind. But if it
is to help on the progress of mankind, Anthroposophy must first
create the practical conditions for its work; and there is no way to
bring about these conditions except by winning over the individual
human beings, one by one. The world moves forward, only when men WILL
that it shall. But, in order for them to will it, what is needed in
each individual case is inner soul-work; and this can only be
performed step by step. Were it not so, then Anthroposophy too would
do nothing in the social field but air brain-spun theories, and
perform no practical work.
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