Ethics: Morality of the State
The Theory of Social Contract.
Man is not only the most individual being on earth-he is also
the most social being. It was a great fallacy on the part of Jean
Jacques Rousseau to have assumed that primitive society was established
by a free contract entered into by savages. But Rousseau was not
the only one to uphold such views. The majority of jurists and
modern writers, whether of the Kantian school or of other individualist
and liberal schools, who do not accept the theological idea of
society being founded upon divine right, nor that of the Hegelian
school-of society as the more or less mystic realization of objective
morality- nor the primitive animal society of the naturalist school-take
nolens volens, for lack of any other foundation, the tacit contract,
as their point of departure.
A tacit contract! That is to say, a wordless, and consequently
a thoughtless and will-less contract: a revolting nonsense! An
absurd fiction, and what is more, a wicked fiction! An unworthy
hoax! For it assumes that while I was in a state of not being
able to will, to think, to speak, I bound myself and all my descendants-only
by virtue of having let myself be victimized without raising any
protest - into perpetual slavery.
Lack of Moral Discernment in the State Preceding the Original
Social Contract.
From the point of view of the system which we are now examining
the distinction between good and bad did not exist prior to the
conclusion of the social contract. At that time every individual
remained isolated in his liberty or in his absolute right, paying
no attention to the freedom of others except in those cases wherein
such attention was dictated by his weakness or his relative strength
- in other words, by his own prudence and interest. At that time
egoism, according to the same theory, was the supreme law, the
only extant right. The good was determined by success, the bad
only by failure, and justice was simply the consecration of the
accomplished fact, however horrible, cruel, or infamous it might
be - as is the rule in the political morality which now prevails
in Europe.
The Social Contract as the Criterion of Good and Bad.
The distinction between good and bad, according to this system,
began only with the conclusion of the social contract. All that
which had been recognized as constituting the general interest
was declared to be the good, and everything contrary to it, the
bad. Members of society who entered into this compact having become
citizens, having bound themselves by solemn obligations, assumed
thereby the duty of subordinating their private interests to the
common weal, to the inseparable interest of all. They also divorced
their individual rights from public rights, the only representative
of which - the State - was thereby invested with the power to
suppress all the revolts of individual egoism, having, however,
the duty of protecting every one of its members in the exercise
of his rights in so far as they did not run counter to the general
rights of the community.
The State Formed by the Social Contract Is the Modern
Atheistic State.
Now we are going to examine the nature of the relations which
the State, thus constituted, is bound to enter into with other
similar States, and also its relations to the population which
it governs. Such an analysis appears to us to be the more interesting
and useful inasmuch as the State, as defined here, is precisely
the modern State in so far as it is divorced from the religious
idea: it is the lay State or the atheist State proclaimed by modern
writers.
Let us then see wherein this morality consists. The modern State,
as we have said, has freed itself from the yoke of the Church
and consequently has shaken off the yoke of universal or cosmopolitan
morality of the Christian religion, but it has not yet become
permeated with the humanitarian idea or ethics - which it cannot
do without destroying itself, for in its detached existence and
isolated concentration the State is much too narrow to embrace,
to contain the interests and consequently the morality of, humanity
as a whole.
Ethics Identified with State Interests.
Modern States have arrived precisely at that point. Christianity
serves them only as a pretext and a phrase, only as a means to
fool the simpletons, for the aims pursued by them have nothing
in common with religious goals. And the eminent statesmen of our
times - the Palmerstons, the Muravievs, the Cavours, the Bismarcks,
the Napoleons, would laugh a great deal if their openly professed
religious convictions were taken seriously. They would laugh even
more if anyone attributed to them humanitarian sentiments, considerations,
and intentions, which they have always treated publicly as mere
silliness. Then what constitutes their morality? Only State interests.
From this point of view, which, with very few exceptions, has
been the point of view of statesmen, of strong men of all times
and all countries, all that is instrumental in conserving, exalting,
and consolidating the power of the State is good-sacrilegious
though it might be from a religious point of view and revolting
as it might appear from the point of view of human morality -
and vice versa, whatever militates against the interests of the
State is bad, even if it be in other respects the most holy and
humanely just thing. Such is the true morality and secular practice
of all States.
The Collective Egoism of Particular Associations Raised into Ethical
Categories.
Such also is the morality of the State founded upon the theory
a of social contract. According to this system, the good and the
just, since they begin only with the social contract, are in fact
nothing but the content and the end purpose of the contract -
that is to say, the common interest and the public right of all
individuals who formed this contract, with the exception of those
who remained outside of it. Consequently, by good in this system
is meant only the greatest satisfaction given to the collective
egoism of a particular and limited association, which, being founded
upon the partial sacrifice of the individual egoism of every one
of its members, excludes from its midst, as strangers and natural
enemies, the vast majority of the human species whether or not
it is formed into similar associations.
Morality Is Co-Extensive Only With the Boundaries of Particular
States.
The existence of a single limited State necessarily presupposed
the existence, and if necessary provokes the formation of several
States, it being quite natural that the individuals who find themselves
outside of this State and who are menaced by it in their existence
and liberty, should in turn league themselves against it. Here
we have humanity broken up into an indefinite number of States
which are foreign, hostile, and menacing toward one another.
There is no common right, and no social contract among them, for
if such a contract and right existed, the various States would
cease to be absolutely independent of one another, becoming federated
members of one great State. Unless this great State embraces humanity
as a whole, it will necessarily have against it the hostility
of other great States, federated internally. Thus war would always
be supreme law and the inherent necessity of the very existence
of humanity.
Jungle Law Governs Interrelations of States.
Every State, whether it is of a federative or a non-federative
character, must seek, under the penalty of utter ruin, to become
the most powerful of States. It has to devour others in order
not to be devoured in turn, to conquer in order not to be conquered,
to enslave in order not to be enslaved - for two similar and at
the same time alien powers, cannot co-exist without destroying
each other.