Social
Problems
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/ Chapter 2
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Social Problems
by Henry George 1883
Chapter 1
The Increasing Importance of Social Questions
[01] THERE come moments
in our lives that summon all our powers -- when we feel that, casting
away illusions, we must decide and act with our utmost intelligence
and energy. So in the lives of peoples come periods specially calling
for earnestness and intelligence.
[02] We seem to have
entered one of these periods. Over and again have nations and civilizations
been confronted with problems which, like the riddle of the Sphinx,
not to answer was to be destroyed; but never before have problems
so vast and intricate been presented. This is not strange. That the
closing years of this century must bring up momentous social questions
follows from the material and intellectual progress that has marked
its course.
[03] Between the development
of society and the development of species there is a close analogy.
In the lowest forms of animal life there is little difference of parts;
both wants and powers are few and simple; movement seems automatic;
and instincts are scarcely distinguishable from those of the vegetable.
So homogeneous are some of these living things, that if cut in pieces,
each piece still lives. But as life rises into higher manifestations,
simplicity gives way to complexity, the parts develop into organs
having separate functions and reciprocal relations, new wants and
powers arise, and a greater and greater degree of intelligence is
needed to secure food and avoid danger. Did fish, bird or beast possess
no higher intelligence than the polyp, nature could bring them forth
only to die.
[04] This law -- that
the increasing complexity and delicacy of organization which give
higher capacity and increased power are accompanied by increased wants
and dangers, and require, therefore, increased intelligence -- runs
through nature. In the ascending scale of life at last comes man,
the most highly and delicately organized of animals. Yet not only
do his higher powers require for their use a higher intelligence than
exists in other animals, but without higher intelligence he could
not live. His skin is too thin; his nails too brittle; he is too poorly
adapted for running, climbing, swimming or burrowing. Were he not
gifted with intelligence greater than that of any beast, he would
perish from cold, starve from inability to get food, or be exterminated
by animals better equipped for the struggle in which brute instinct
suffices.
[05] In man, however,
the intelligence which increases all through nature's rising scale
passes at one bound into an intelligence so superior, that the difference
seems of kind rather than degree. In him, that narrow and seemingly
unconscious intelligence that we call instinct becomes conscious reason,
and the godlike power of adaptation and invention makes feeble man
nature's king.
[06] But with man the
ascending line stops. Animal life assumes no higher form; nor can
we affirm that, in all his generations, man, as an animal, has a whit
improved. But progression in another line begins. Where the development
of species ends, social development commences, and that advance of
society that we call civilization so increases human powers, that
between savage and civilized man there is a gulf so vast as to suggest
the gulf between the highly organized animal and the oyster glued
to the rocks. And with every advance upon this line new vistas open.
When we try to think what knowledge and power progressive civilization
may give to the men of the future, imagination fails.
[07] In this progression
which begins with man, as in that which leads up to him, the same
law holds. Each advance makes a demand for higher and higher intelligence.
With the beginnings of society arises the need for social intelligence
-- for that consensus of individual intelligence which forms a public
opinion, a public conscience, a public will, and is manifested in
law, institutions and administration. As society develops, a higher
and higher degree of this social intelligence is required, for the
relation of individuals to each other becomes more intimate and important,
and the increasing complexity of the social organization brings liability
to new dangers.
[08] In the rude beginning,
each family produces its own food, makes its own clothes, builds its
own house, and, when it moves, furnishes its own transportation. Compare
with this independence the intricate interdependence of the denizens
of a modern city. They may supply themselves with greater certainty,
and in much greater variety and abundance, than the savage; but it
is by the cooperation of thousands. Even the water they drink, and
the artificial light they use, are brought to them by elaborate machinery,
requiring the constant labor and watchfulness of many men. They may
travel at a speed incredible to the savage; but in doing so resign
life and limb to the care of others. A broken rail, a drunken engineer,
a careless switchman, may hurl them to eternity. And the power of
applying labor to the satisfaction of desire passes, in the same way,
beyond the direct control of the individual. The laborer becomes but
part of a great machine, which may at any time be paralyzed by causes
beyond his power, or even his foresight. Thus does the well-being
of each become more and more dependent upon the well-being of all
-- the individual more and more subordinate to society.
[09] And so come new
dangers. The rude society resembles the creatures that though cut
into pieces will live; the highly civilized society is like a highly
organized animal: a stab in a vital part, the suppression of a single
function, is death. A savage village may be burned and its people
driven off -- but, used to direct recourse to nature, they can maintain
themselves. Highly civilized man, however, accustomed to capital,
to machinery, to the minute division of labor, becomes helpless when
suddenly deprived of these and thrown upon nature. Under the factory
system, some sixty persons, with the aid of much costly machinery,
cooperate to the making of a pair of shoes. But, of the sixty, not
one could make a whole shoe. This is the tendency in all branches
of production, even in agriculture. How many farmers of the new generation
can use the flail? How many farmers' wives can now make a coat from
the wool? Many of our farmers do not even make their own butter or
raise their own vegetables! There is an enormous gain in productive
power from this division of labor, which assigns to the individual
the production of but a few of the things, or even but a small part
of one of the things, he needs, and makes each dependent upon others
with whom he never comes in contact; but the social organization becomes
more sensitive. A primitive village community may pursue the even
tenor of its life without feeling disasters which overtake other villages
but a few miles off; but in the closely knit civilization to which
we have attained, a war, a scarcity, a commercial crisis, in one hemisphere
produces powerful effects in the other, while shocks and jars from
which a primitive community easily recovers would to a highly civilized
community mean wreck.
[10] It is startling
to think how destructive in a civilization like ours would be such
fierce conflicts as fill the history of the past. The wars of highly
civilized countries, since the opening of the era of steam and machinery,
have been duels of armies rather than conflicts of peoples or classes.
Our only glimpse of what might happen, wore passion fully aroused,
was in the struggle of the Paris Commune. And, since 1870, to the
knowledge of petroleum has been added that of even more destructive
agents. The explosion of a little nitro-glycerin under a few water-mains
would make a great city uninhabitable; the blowing up of a few railroad
bridges and tunnels would bring famine quicker than the wall of circumvallation
that Titus drew around Jerusalem; the pumping of atmospheric air into
the gas-mains, and the application of a match, would tear up every
street and level every house. The Thirty Years' War set back civilization
in Germany; so fierce a war now would all but destroy it. Not merely
have destructive powers vastly increased, but the whole social organization
has become vastly more delicate.
[11] In a simpler state
master and man, neighbor and neighbor, know each other, and there
is that touch of the elbow which, in times of danger, enables society
to rally. But present tendencies are to the loss of this. In London,
dwellers in one house do not know those in the next; the tenants of
adjoining rooms are utter strangers to each other. Let civil conflict
break or paralyze the authority that preserves order and the vast
population would become a terror-stricken mob, without point of rally
or principle of cohesion, and your London would be sacked and burned
by an army of thieves. London is only the greatest of great cities.
What is true of London is true of New York, and in the same measure
true of the many cities whose hundreds of thousands are steadily growing
toward millions. These vast aggregations of humanity, where he who
seeks isolation may find it more truly than in the desert; where wealth
and poverty touch and jostle; where one revels and another starves
within a few feet of each other, yet separated by as great a gulf
as that fixed between Dives in Hell and Lazarus in Abraham's bosom
-- they are centers and types of our civilization. Let jar or shock
dislocate the complex and delicate organization, let the policeman's
club be thrown down or wrested from him, and the fountains of the
great deep are opened, and quicker than ever before chaos comes again.
Strong as it may seem, our civilization is evolving destructive forces.
Not desert and forest, but city slums and country roadsides are nursing
the barbarians who may be to the new what Hun and Vandal were to the
old.
[12] Nor should we forget
that in civilized man still lurks the savage. The men who, in past
times, oppressed or revolted, who fought to the death in petty quarrels
and drunk fury with blood, who burned cities and rent empires, were
men essentially such as those we daily meet. Social progress has accumulated
knowledge, softened manners, refined tastes and extended sympathies,
but man is yet capable of as blind a rage as when, clothed in skins,
he fought wild beasts with a flint. And present tendencies, in some
respects at least, threaten to kindle passions that have so often
before flamed in destructive fury.
[13] There is in all
the past nothing to compare with the rapid changes now going on in
the civilized world. It seems as though in the European race, and
in the nineteenth century, man was just beginning to live -- just
grasping his tools and becoming conscious of his powers. The snail's
pace of crawling ages has suddenly become the headlong rush of the
locomotive, speeding faster and faster. This rapid progress is primarily
in industrial methods and material powers. But industrial changes
imply social changes and necessitate political changes. Progressive
societies outgrow institutions as children outgrow clothes. Social
progress always requires greater intelligence in the management of
public affairs; but this the more as progress is rapid and change
quicker.
[14] And that the rapid
changes now going on are bringing up problems that demand most earnest
attention may be seen on every hand. Symptoms of danger, premonitions
of violence, are appearing all over the civilized world. Creeds are
dying, beliefs are changing; the old forces of conservatism are melting
away. Political institutions are failing, as clearly in democratic
America as in monarchical Europe. There is growing unrest and bitterness
among the masses, whatever be the form of government, a blind groping
for escape from conditions becoming intolerable. To attribute all
this to the teachings of demagogues is like attributing the fever
to the quickened pulse. It is the new wine beginning to ferment in
old bottles. To put into a sailing-ship the powerful engines of a
first-class ocean steamer would be to tear her to pieces with their
play. So the new powers rapidly changing all the relations of society
must shatter social and political organizations not adapted to meet
their strain.
[15] To adjust our institutions
to growing needs and changing conditions is the task which devolves
upon us. Prudence, patriotism, human sympathy, and religious sentiment,
alike call upon us to undertake it. There is danger in reckless change;
but greater danger in blind conservatism. The problems beginning to
confront us are grave -- so grave that there is fear they may not
be solved in time to prevent great catastrophes. But their gravity
comes from indisposition to recognize frankly and grapple boldly with
them.
[16] These dangers,
which menace not one country alone, but modern civilization itself,
do but show that a higher civilization is struggling to be born --
that the needs and the aspirations of men have outgrown conditions
and institutions that before sufficed.
[17] A civilization
which tends to concentrate wealth and power in the hands of a fortunate
few, and to make of others mere human machines, must inevitably evolve
anarchy and bring destruction. But a civilization is possible in which
the poorest could have all the comforts and conveniences now enjoyed
by the rich; in which prisons and almshouses would be needless, and
charitable societies unthought of. Such a civilization waits only
for the social intelligence that will adapt means to ends. Powers
that might give plenty to all are already in our hands. Though there
is poverty and want, there is, yet, seeming embarrassment from the
very excess of wealth-producing forces. "Give us but a market," say
manufacturers, "and we will supply goods without end!" "Give us but
work!" cry idle men.
[18] The evils that
begin to appear spring from the fact that the application of intelligence
to social affairs has not kept pace with the application of intelligence
to individual needs and material ends. Natural science strides forward,
but political science lags. With all our progress in the arts which
produce wealth, we have made no progress in securing its equitable
distribution. Knowledge has vastly increased; industry and commerce
have been revolutionized; but whether free trade or protection is
best for a nation we are not yet agreed. We have brought machinery
to a pitch of perfection that, fifty years ago, could not have been
imagined; but, in the presence of political corruption, we seem as
helpless as idiots. The East River bridge is a crowning triumph of
mechanical skill; but to get it built a leading citizen of Brooklyn
had to carry to New York sixty thousand dollars in a carpet bag to
bribe New York aldermen. The human soul that thought out the great
bridge is prisoned in a crazed and broken body that lies bedfast,
and could watch it grow only by peering through a telescope. Nevertheless,
the weight of the immense mass is estimated and adjusted for every
inch. But the skill of the engineer could not prevent condemned wire
being smuggled into the cable.
[19] The progress of
civilization requires that more and more intelligence be devoted to
social affairs, and this not the intelligence of the few, but that
of the many. We cannot safely leave politics to politicians, or political
economy to college professors. The people themselves must think, because
the people alone can act.
[20] In a "journal of
civilization" a professed teacher declares the saving word for society
to be that each shall mind his own business. This is the gospel of
selfishness, soothing as soft flutes to those who, having fared well
themselves, think everybody should be satisfied. But the salvation
of society, the hope for the free, full development of humanity, is
in the gospel of brotherhood -- the gospel of Christ. Social progress
makes the well-being of all more and more the business of each; it
binds all closer and closer together in bonds from which none can
escape. He who observes the law and the proprieties, and cares for
his family, yet takes no interest in the general weal, and gives no
thought to those who are trodden under foot, save now and then to
bestow aims, is not a true Christian. Nor is he a good citizen. The
duty of the citizen is more and harder than this.
[21] The intelligence
required for the solving of social problems is not a thing of the
mere intellect. It must be animated with the religious sentiment and
warm with sympathy for human suffering. It must stretch out beyond
self-interest, whether it be the self-interest of the few or of the
many. It must seek justice. For at the bottom of every social problem
we will find a social wrong.
Table of Contents / Preface
/ Chapter 2
Henry George / other
authors / home page
how to link to specific passages
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