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At all times sincere friends of freedom have been rare, and its triumphs have been due to minorities, that have prevailed by associating themselves with auxiliaries whose objects often differed from their own; and this association, which is always dangerous, has sometimes been disastrous, by giving to opponents just grounds of opposition.- Lord Acton
1. At a time when most movements that are
thought to be progressive advocate further encroachments on individual
liberty,those who cherish freedom are
likely to expend their energies in opposition. In this they find
themselves much of the time on the same side as those who habitually
resist change. In matters of current politics today they generally
have little choice but to support the conservative parties. But,
though the position I have tried to define is also often described
as conservative, it is very different from that to
which this name has been traditionally attached. There is danger
in the confused condition which brings the defenders of liberty
and the true conservatives together in common opposition to developments
which threaten their ideals equally. It is therefore important
to distinguish clearly the position taken here from that which
has long been known - perhaps more appropriately - as conservatism.
Conservatism proper is a legitimate, probably
necessary, and certainly widespread attitude of opposition to
drastic change. It has, since the French Revolution, for a century
and a half played an important role in European politics. Until
the rise of socialism its opposite was liberalism. There is nothing
corresponding to this conflict in the history of the United States,
because what in Europe was called liberalism was here
the common tradition on which the American polity had been built:
thus the defender of the American tradition was a liberal in the
European sense. This already existing confusion
was made worse by the recent attempt to transplant to America
the European type of conservatism, which, being alien to the American
tradition, has acquired a somewhat odd character. And some time
before this, American radicals and socialists began calling themselves
liberals. I will nevertheless continue for the moment
to describe as liberal the position which I hold and which I believe
differs as much from true conservatism as from socialism. Let
me say at once, however, that I do so with increasing misgivings,
and I shall later have to consider what would be the appropriate
name for the party of liberty. The reason for this is not only
that the term liberal in the United States is the
cause of constant misunderstandings today, but also that in Europe
the predominant type of rationalistic liberalism has long been
one of the pacemakers of socialism.
Let me now state what seems to me the decisive
objection to any conservatism which deserves to be called such.
It is that by its very nature it cannot offer an alternative to
the direction in which we are moving. It may succeed by its resistance
to current tendencies in slowing down undesirable developments,
but, since it does not indicate another direction, it cannot prevent
their continuance. It has, for this reason, invariably been the
fate of conservatism to be dragged along a path not of its own
choosing. The tug of war between conservatives and progressives
can only affect the speed, not the direction, of contemporary
developments. But, though there is a need for a brake on
the vehicle of progress, I personally
cannot be content with simply helping to apply the brake. What
the liberal must ask, first of all, is not how fast or how far
we should move, but where we should move. In fact, he differs
much more from the collectivist radical of today than does the
conservative. While the last generally holds merely a mild and
moderate version of the prejudices of his time, the liberal today
must more positively oppose some of the basic conceptions which
most conservatives share with the socialists.
2. The picture generally given of the relative
position of the three parties does more to obscure than to elucidate
their true relations. They are usually represented as different
positions on a line, with the socialists on the left, the conservatives
on the right, and the liberals somewhere in the middle. Nothing
could be more misleading. If we want a diagram, it would be more
appropriate to arrange them in a triangle with the conservatives
occupying one corner, with the socialists pulling toward the second
and the liberals toward the third. But, as the socialists have
for a long time been able to pull harder, the conservatives have
tended to follow the socialist rather than the liberal direction
and have adopted at appropriate intervals of time those ideas
made respectable by radical propaganda. It has been regularly
the conservatives who have compromised with socialism and stolen
its thunder. Advocates of the Middle Way
with no goal of their own, conservatives have been guided by the
belief that the truth must lie somewhere between the extremes
- with the result that they have shifted their position every
time a more extreme movement appeared on either wing.
The position which can be rightly described
as conservative at any time depends, therefore, on the direction
of existing tendencies. Since the development during the last
decades has been generally in a socialist direction, it may seem
that both conservatives and liberals have been mainly intent on
retarding that movement. But the main point about liberalism is
that it wants to go elsewhere, not to stand still. Though today
the contrary impression may sometimes be caused by the fact that
there was a time when liberalism was more widely accepted and
some of its objectives closer to being achieved, it has never
been a backward-looking doctrine. There has never been a time
when liberal ideals were fully realized and when liberalism did
not look forward to further improvement of institutions. Liberalism
is not averse to evolution and change; and where spontaneous change
has been smothered by government control, it wants a great deal
of change of policy. So far as much of current governmental action
is concerned, there is in the present world very little reason
for the liberal to wish to preserve things as they are. It would
seem to the liberal, indeed, that what is most urgently needed
in most parts of the world is a thorough sweeping away of the
obstacles to free growth.
This difference between liberalism and conservatism
must not be obscured by the fact that in the United States it
is still possible to defend individual liberty by defending long-established
institutions. To the liberal they are valuable not mainly because
they are long established or because they are American but because
they correspond to the ideals which he cherishes.
3. Before I consider the main points on
which the liberal attitude is sharply opposed to the conservative
one, I ought to stress that there is much that the liberal might
with advantage have learned from the work of some conservative
thinkers. To their loving and reverential study of the value of
grown institutions we owe (at least outside the field of economics)
some profound insights which are real contributions to our understanding
of a free society. However reactionary in politics such figures
as Coleridge, Bonald, De Maistre, Justus Möser, or Donoso
Cortès may have been, they did show an understanding of
the meaning of spontaneously grown institutions such as language,
law, morals, and conventions that anticipated modern scientific
approaches and from which the liberals might have profited. But
the admiration of the conservatives for free growth generally
applies only to the past. They typically lack the courage to welcome
the same undesigned change from which new tools of human endeavors
will emerge.
This brings me to the first point on which
the conservative and the liberal dispositions differ radically.
As has often been acknowledged by conservative writers, one of
the fundamental traits of the conservative attitude is a fear
of change, a timid distrust of the new as such,
while the liberal position is based on courage and confidence,
on a preparedness to let change run its course even if we cannot
predict where it will lead. There would not be much to object
to if the conservatives merely disliked too rapid change in institutions
and public policy; here the case for caution and slow process
is indeed strong. But the conservatives are inclined to use the
powers of government to prevent change or to limit its rate to
whatever appeals to the more timid mind. In looking forward, they
lack the faith in the spontaneous forces of adjustment which makes
the liberal accept changes without apprehension, even though he
does not know how the necessary adaptations will be brought about.
It is, indeed, part of the liberal attitude to assume that, especially
in the economic field, the self-regulating forces of the market
will somehow bring about the required adjustments to new conditions,
although no one can foretell how they will do this in a particular
instance. There is perhaps no single factor contributing so much
to people's frequent reluctance to let the market work as their
inability to conceive how some necessary balance, between demand
and supply, between exports and imports, or the like, will be
brought about without deliberate control. The conservative feels
safe and content only if he is assured that some higher wisdom
watches and supervises change, only if he knows that some authority
is charged with keeping the change orderly.
This fear of trusting uncontrolled social
forces is closely related to two other characteristics of conservatism:
its fondness for authority and its lack of understanding of economic
forces. Since it distrusts both abstract theories and general
principles,it neither understands those
spontaneous forces on which a policy of freedom relies nor possesses
a basis for formulating principles of policy. Order appears to
the conservative as the result of the continuous attention of
authority, which, for this purpose, must be allowed to do what
is required by the particular circumstances and not be tied to
rigid rule. A commitment to principles presupposes an understanding
of the general forces by which the efforts of society are co-ordinated,
but it is such a theory of society and especially of the economic
mechanism that conservatism conspicuously lacks. So unproductive
has conservatism been in producing a general conception of how
a social order is maintained that its modern votaries, in trying
to construct a theoretical foundation, invariably find themselves
appealing almost exclusively to authors who regarded themselves
as liberal. Macaulay, Tocqueville, Lord Acton, and Lecky certainly
considered themselves liberals, and with justice; and even Edmund
Burke remained an Old Whig to the end and would have shuddered
at the thought of being regarded as a Tory.
Let me return, however, to the main point,
which is the characteristic complacency of the conservative toward
the action of established authority and his prime concern that
this authority be not weakened rather than that its power be kept
within bounds. This is difficult to reconcile with the preservation
of liberty. In general, it can probably be said that the conservative
does not object to coercion or arbitrary power so long as it is
used for what he regards as the right purposes. He believes that
if government is in the hands of decent men, it ought not to be
too much restricted by rigid rules. Since he is essentially opportunist
and lacks principles, his main hope must be that the wise and
the good will rule - not merely by example, as we all must wish,
but by authority given to them and enforced by them.
Like the socialist, he is less concerned with the problem of how
the powers of government should be limited than with that of who
wields them; and, like the socialist, he regards himself as entitled
to force the value he holds on other people.
When I say that the conservative lacks principles,
I do not mean to suggest that he lacks moral conviction. The typical
conservative is indeed usually a man of very strong moral convictions.
What I mean is that he has no political principles which enable
him to work with people whose moral values differ from his own
for a political order in which both can obey their convictions.
It is the recognition of such principles that permits the coexistence
of different sets of values that makes it possible to build a
peaceful society with a minimum of force. The acceptance of such
principles means that we agree to tolerate much that we dislike.
There are many values of the conservative which appeal to me more
than those of the socialists; yet for a liberal the importance
he personally attaches to specific goals is no sufficient justification
for forcing others to serve them. I have little doubt that some
of my conservative friends will be shocked by what they will regard
as concessions to modern views that I have made in
Part III of this book. But, though I may dislike some of the measures
concerned as much as they do and might vote against them, I know
of no general principles to which I could appeal to persuade those
of a different view that those measures are not permissible in
the general kind of society which we both desire. To live and
work successfully with others requires more than faithfulness
to one's concrete aims. It requires an intellectual commitment
to a type of order in which, even on issues which to one are fundamental,
others are allowed to pursue different ends.
It is for this reason that to the liberal
neither moral nor religious ideals are proper objects of coercion,
while both conservatives and socialists recognize no such limits.
I sometimes feel that the most conspicuous attribute of liberalism
that distinguishes it as much from conservatism as from socialism
is the view that moral beliefs concerning matters of conduct which
do not directly interfere with the protected sphere of other persons
do not justify coercion. This may also explain why it seems to
be so much easier for the repentant socialist to find a new spiritual
home in the conservative fold than in the liberal.
In the last resort, the conservative position
rests on the belief that in any society there are recognizably
superior persons whose inherited standards and values and position
ought to be protected and who should have a greater influence
on public affairs than others. The liberal, of course, does not
deny that there are some superior people - he is not an egalitarian
- bet he denies that anyone has authority to decide who these
superior people are. While the conservative inclines to defend
a particular established hierarchy and wishes authority to protect
the status of those whom he values, the liberal feels that no
respect for established values can justify the resort to privilege
or monopoly or any other coercive power of the state in order
to shelter such people against the forces of economic change.
Though he is fully aware of the important role that cultural and
intellectual elites have played in the evolution of civilization,
he also believes that these elites have to prove themselves by
their capacity to maintain their position under the same rules
that apply to all others.
Closely connected with this is the usual
attitude of the conservative to democracy. I have made it clear
earlier that I do not regard majority rule as an end but merely
as a means, or perhaps even as the least evil of those forms of
government from which we have to choose. But I believe that the
conservatives deceive themselves when they blame the evils of
our time on democracy. The chief evil is unlimited government,
and nobody is qualified to wield unlimited power.
The powers which modern democracy possesses would be even more
intolerable in the hands of some small elite.
Admittedly, it was only when power came
into the hands of the majority that further limitations of the
power of government was thought unnecessary. In this sense democracy
and unlimited government are connected. But it is not democracy
but unlimited government that is objectionable, and I do not see
why the people should not learn to limit the scope of majority
rule as well as that of any other form of government. At any rate,
the advantages of democracy as a method of peaceful change and
of political education seem to be so great compared with those
of any other system that I can have no sympathy with the antidemocratic
strain of conservatism. It is not who governs but what government
is entitled to do that seems to me the essential problem.
That the conservative opposition to too
much government control is not a matter of principle but is concerned
with the particular aims of government is clearly shown in the
economic sphere. Conservatives usually oppose collectivist and
directivist measures in the industrial field, and here the liberals
will often find allies in them. But at the same time conservatives
are usually protectionists and have frequently supported socialist
measures in agriculture. Indeed, though the restrictions which
exist today in industry and commerce are mainly the result of
socialist views, the equally important restrictions in agriculture
were usually introduced by conservatives at an even earlier date.
And in their efforts to discredit free enterprise many conservative
leaders have vied with the socialists.
4. I have already referred to the differences
between conservatism and liberalism in the purely intellectual
field, but I must return to them because the characteristic conservative
attitude here not only is a serious weakness of conservatism but
tends to harm any cause which allies itself with it. Conservatives
feel instinctively that it is new ideas more than anything else
that cause change. But, from its point of view rightly, conservatism
fears new ideas because it has no distinctive principles of its
own to oppose them; and, by its distrust of theory and its lack
of imagination concerning anything except that which experience
has already proved, it deprives itself of the weapons needed in
the struggle of ideas. Unlike liberalism, with its fundamental
belief in the long-range power of ideas, conservatism is bound
by the stock of ideas inherited at a given time. And since it
does not really believe in the power of argument, its last resort
is generally a claim to superior wisdom, based on some self-arrogated
superior quality.
The difference shows itself most clearly
in the different attitudes of the two traditions to the advance
of knowledge. Though the liberal certainly does not regard all
change as progress, he does regard the advance of knowledge as
one of the chief aims of human effort and expects from it the
gradual solution of such problems and difficulties as we can hope
to solve. Without preferring the new merely because it is new,
the liberal is aware that it is of the essence of human achievement
that it produces something new; and he is prepared to come to
terms with new knowledge, whether he likes its immediate effects
or not.
Personally, I find that the most objectionable
feature of the conservative attitude is its propensity to reject
well-substantiated new knowledge because it dislikes some of the
consequences which seem to follow from it - or, to put it bluntly,
its obscurantism. I will not deny that scientists as much as others
are given to fads and fashions and that we have much reason to
be cautious in accepting the conclusions that they draw from their
latest theories. But the reasons for our reluctance must themselves
be rational and must be kept separate from our regret that the
new theories upset our cherished beliefs. I can have little patience
with those who oppose, for instance, the theory of evolution or
what are called mechanistic explanations of the phenomena
of life because of certain moral consequences which at first seem
to follow from these theories, and still less with those who regard
it as irrelevant or impious to ask certain questions at all. By
refusing to face the facts, the conservative only weakens his
own position. Frequently the conclusions which rationalist presumption
draws from new scientific insights do not at all follow from them.
But only by actively taking part in the elaboration of the consequences
of new discoveries do we learn whether or not they fit into our
world picture and, if so, how. Should our moral beliefs really
prove to be dependent on factual assumptions shown to be incorrect,
it would hardly be moral to defend them by refusing to acknowledge
facts.
Connected with the conservative distrust
if the new and the strange is its hostility to internationalism
and its proneness to a strident nationalism. Here is another source
of its weakness in the struggle of ideas. It cannot alter the
fact that the ideas which are changing our civilization respect
no boundaries. But refusal to acquaint one's self with new ideas
merely deprives one of the power of effectively countering them
when necessary. The growth of ideas is an international process,
and only those who fully take part in the discussion will be able
to exercise a significant influence. It is no real argument to
say that an idea is un-American, or un-German, nor is a mistaken
or vicious ideal better for having been conceived by one of our
compatriots.
A great deal more might be said about the
close connection between conservatism and nationalism, but I shall
not dwell on this point because it might be felt that my personal
position makes me unable to sympathize with any form of nationalism.
I will merely add that it is this nationalistic bias which frequently
provides the bridge from conservatism to collectivism: to think
in terms of our industry or resource is only a short
step away from demanding that these national assets be directed
in the national interest. But in this respect the Continental
liberalism which derives from the French Revolution is little
better than conservatism. I need hardly say that nationalism of
this sort is something very different from patriotism and that
an aversion to nationalism is fully compatible with a deep attachment
to national traditions. But the fact that I prefer and feel reverence
for some of the traditions of my society need not be the cause
of hostility to what is strange and different.
Only at first foes it seem paradoxical that
the anti-internationalism of conservatism is so frequently associated
with imperialism. But the more a person dislikes the strange and
thinks his own ways superior, the more he tends to regard it as
his mission to civilize other
- not by the voluntary and unhampered intercourse which the liberal
favors, but by bringing them the blessings of efficient government.
It is significant that here again we frequently find the conservatives
joining hands with the socialists against the liberals - not only
in England, where the Webbs and their Fabians were outspoken imperialists,
or in Germany, where state socialism and colonial expansionism
went together and found the support of the same group of socialists
of the chair, but also in the United States, where even
at the time of the first Roosevelt it could be observed: the
Jingoes and the Social Reformers have gotten together; and have
formed a political party, which threatened to capture the Government
and use it for their program of Caesaristic paternalism, a danger
which now seems to have been averted only by the other parties
having adopted their program in a somewhat milder degree and form.
5. There is one respect, however, in which
there is justification for saying that the liberal occupies a
position midway between the socialist and the conservative: he
is as far from the crude rationalism of the socialist, who wants
to reconstruct all social institutions according to a pattern
prescribed by his individual reason, as from the mysticism to
which the conservative so frequently has to resort. What I have
described as the liberal position shares with conservatism a distrust
of reason to the extent that the liberal is very much aware that
we do not know all the answers and that he is not sure that the
answers he has are certainly the rights ones or even that we can
find all the answers. He also does not disdain to seek assistance
from whatever non-rational institutions or habits have proved
their worth. The liberal differs from the conservative in his
willingness to face this ignorance and to admit how little we
know, without claiming the authority of supernatural forces of
knowledge where his reason fails him. It has to be admitted that
in some respects the liberal is fundamentally a skeptic
- but it seems to require a certain degree of diffidence to let
others seek their happiness in their own fashion and to adhere
consistently to that tolerance which is an essential characteristic
of liberalism.
There is no reason why this need mean an
absence of religious belief on the part of the liberal. Unlike
the rationalism of the French Revolution, true liberalism has
no quarrel with religion, and I can only deplore the militant
and essentially illiberal antireligionism which animated so much
of nineteenth-century Continental liberalism. That this is not
essential to liberalism is clearly shown by its English ancestors,
the Old Whigs, who, if anything, were much too closely allied
with a particular religious belief. What distinguishes the liberal
from the conservative here is that, however profound his own spiritual
beliefs, he will never regard himself as entitled to impose them
on others and that for him the spiritual and the temporal are
different sphere which ought not to be confused.
6. What I have said should suffice to explain
why I do not regard myself as a conservative. Many people will
feel, however, that the position which emerges is hardly what
they used to call liberal I must, therefore, now
face the question of whether this name is today the appropriate
name for the party of liberty. I have already indicated that,
though I have all my life described myself as a liberal, I have
done so recently with increasing misgivings - not only because
in the United States this term constantly gives rise to misunderstandings,
but also because I have become more and more aware of the great
gulf that exists between my position and the rationalistic Continental
liberalism or even the English liberalism of the utilitarians.
If liberalism still meant what it meant
to an English historian who in 1827 could speak of the revolution
of 1688 as the triumph of those principles which in the
language of the present day are denominated liberal or constitutional
or if one could still, with Lord Acton,
speak of Burke, Macaulay, and Gladstone as the three greatest
liberals, or if one could still, with Harold Laske, regard Tocqueville
and Lord Acton as the essential liberals of the nineteenth
century,I should indeed be only
too proud to describe myself by that name. But, much as I am tempted
to call their liberalism true liberalism, I must recognize that
the majority of Continental liberals stood for ideas to which
these men were strongly opposed, and that they were led more by
a desire to impose upon the world a preconceived rational pattern
than to provide opportunity for free growth. The same is largely
true of what has called itself Liberalism in England at least
since the time of Lloyd George.
It is thus necessary to recognize that what
I have called liberalism has little to do with any
political movement that goes under that name today. It is also
questionable whether the historical associations which that name
carries today are conducive to the success of any movement. Whether
in these circumstances one ought to make an effort to rescue the
term from what one feels is its misuse is a question on which
opinions may well differ. I myself feel more and more that to
use it without long explanations causes too much confusion and
that as a label it has become more of a ballast than a source
of strength.
In the United States, where it has become
almost impossible to use liberal in the sense in which
I have used it, the term libertarian has been used
instead. It may be the answer; but for my part I find it singularly
unattractive. For my taste it carries too much the flavor of a
manufactured term and of a substitute. What I should want is a
word which describes the party of life, the party that favors
free growth and spontaneous evolution. But I have racked my brain
unsuccessfully to find a descriptive term which commends itself.
7. We should remember, however, that when
the ideals which I have been trying to restate first began to
spread through the Western world, the party which represented
spread through the Western world, the party which represented
them had a generally recognized name. It was the ideals of the
English Whigs that inspired what later came to be known as the
liberal movement in the whole of Europe
and that provided the conceptions that the American colonists
carried with them and which guided them in their struggle for
independence and in the establishment of their constitution.
Indeed, until the character of this tradition was altered by the
accretions due to the French Revolution, with its totalitarian
democracy and socialist leanings, Whig was the name
by which the party of liberty was generally known.
The name died in the country of its birth
partly because for a time the principles for which it stood were
no longer distinctive of a particular party, and partly because
the men who bore the name did not remain true to those principles.
The Whig parties of the nineteenth century, in both Britain and
the United States, finally brought discredit to the name among
the radicals. But it is still true that, since liberalism took
the place of Whiggism only after the movement for liberty had
absorbed the crude and militant rationalism of the French Revolution,
and since our task must largely be to free that tradition from
the overrationalistic, nationalistic, and socialistic influences
which have intruded into it, Whiggism is historically the correct
name for the ideas in which I believe. The more I learn about
the evolution of ideas, the more I have become aware that I am
simply an unrepentant Old Whig - with the stress on the old.
To confess one's self as an Old Whig does
not mean, of course, that one wants to go back to where we were
at the end of the seventeenth century. It has been one of the
purposes of this book to show that the doctrines then first stated
continued to grow and develop until about seventy or eighty years
ago, even though they were no longer the chief aim of a distinct
party. We have since learned much that should enable us to restate
them in a more satisfactory and effective form. But, though they
require restatement in the light of our present knowledge, the
basic principles are still those of the Old Whigs. True, the later
history of the party that bore that name has made some historians
doubt where there was a distinct body of Whig principles; but
I can but agree with Lord Acton that, though some of the
patriarchs of the doctrine were the most infamous of men, the
notion of a higher law above municipal codes, with which Whiggism
began, is the supreme achievement of Englishmen and their bequest
to the nation- and, we may add,
to the world. It is the doctrine which is at the basis of the
common tradition of the Anglo-Saxon countries. It is the doctrine
from which Continental liberalism took what is valuable in it.
It is the doctrine on which the American system of government
is based. In its pure form it is represented in the United States,
not by the radicalism of Jefferson, nor by the conservatism of
Hamilton or even of John Adams, but by the ideas of James Madison,
the;father of the Constitution.
I do not know whether to revive that old
name is practical politics. That to the mass of people, both in
the Anglo-Saxon world and elsewhere, it is today probably a term
without definite associations is perhaps more an advantage than
a drawback. To those familiar with the history of ideas it is
probably the only name that quite expresses what the tradition
means. That, both for the genuine conservative and still more
for the many socialists turned conservative, Whiggism is the name
for their pet aversion shows a sound instinct on their part. It
has been the name for the only set of ideals that has consistently
opposed all arbitrary power.
8. It may well be asked whether the name
really matters so much. In a country like the United States, which
on the whole has free institutions and where, therefore, the defense
of the existing is often a defense of freedom, it might not make
so much difference if the defenders of freedom call themselves
conservatives, although even here the association with the conservatives
by disposition will often be embarrassing. Even when men approve
of the same arrangements, it must be asked whether they approve
of them because they exist or because they are desirable in themselves.
The common resistance to the collectivist tide should not be allowed
to obscure the fact that the belief in integral freedom is based
on an essentially forward-looking attitude and not on any nostalgic
longing for the past or a romantic admiration for what has been.
The need for a clear distinction is absolutely
imperative, however, where, as is true in many parts of Europe,
the conservatives have already accepted a large part of the collectivist
creed - a creed that has governed policy for so long that many
of its institutions have come to be accepted as a matter of course
and have become a source of pride to conservative
parties who created them. Here the believer
in freedom cannot but conflict with the conservative and take
an essentially radical position, directed against popular prejudices,
entrenched positions, and firmly established privileges. Follies
and abuses are no better for having long been established principles
of folly.
Though quieta non movere may at times
be a wise maxim for the statesman it cannot satisfy the political
philosopher. He may wish policy to proceed gingerly and not before
public opinion is prepared to support it, but he cannot accept
arrangements merely because current opinion sanctions them. In
a world where the chief need is once more, as it was at the beginning
of the nineteenth century, to free the process of spontaneous
growth from the obstacles and encumbrances that human folly has
erected, his hopes must rest on persuading and gaining the support
of those who by disposition are progressives those
who, though they may now be seeking change in the wrong direction,
are at least willing to examine critically the existing and to
change it wherever necessary.
I hope I have not misled the reader by occasionally
speaking of party when I was thinking of groups of
men defending a set of intellectual and moral principles. Party
politics of any one country has not been the concern of this book.
The question of how the principles I have tried to reconstruct
by piecing together the broken fragments of a tradition can be
translated into a program with mass appeal, the political philosopher
must leave to that insidious and crafty animal, vulgarly
called a statesman or politician, whose councils are directed
by the momentary fluctuations of affairs.
The task of the political philosopher can only be to influence
public opinion, not to organize people for action. He will do
so effectively only if he is not concerned with what is now politically
possible but consistently defends the general principles
which are always the same. In this
sense I doubt whether there can be such a thing as a conservative
political philosophy. Conservatism may often be a useful practical
maxim, but it does not give us any guiding principles which can
influence long-range developments. |