|
Bertrand Russell
Icarus, or, the Future of Science
1924
I. Introductory
Mr. Haldane's has set forth an attractive picture of the future as it may
become through the use of scientific discoveries to promote human happiness.
Much as I should like to agree with his forecast, a long experience of
statesmen and government has made me somewhat sceptical. I am compelled to fear
that science will be used to promote the power of dominant groups, rather than
to make men happy. Icarus, having been taught to fly by his father Daedalus,
was destroyed by his rashness. I fear that the same fate may overtake the
populations whom modern men of science have taught to fly. Some of the dangers
inherent in the progress of science while we retain our present political and
economic institutions are set forth in the following pages.
This subject is so vast that it is impossible, within a limited space, to do
more than outline some of its aspects. The world in which we live differs
profoundly from that of Queen Anne's time, and this difference is mainly
attributable to science. That is to say, the difference would be very much less
than it is but for various scientific discoveries, but resulted from those
discoveries by the operation of ordinary human nature. The changes that have
been brought about have been partly good, partly bad; whether, in the end,
science will prove to have been a blessing or a curse to mankind, is to my
mind, still a doubtful question.
A science may affect human life in two different ways. On the one hand, without
altering men's passions or their general outlook, it may increase their power
of gratifying their desires. On the other hand, it may operate through an
effect upon the imaginative conception of the world, the theology or philosophy
which is accepted in practice by energetic men. The latter is a fascinating
study, but I shall almost wholly ignore it, in order to bring my subject within
a manageable compass. I shall confine myself almost wholly to the effect of
science in enabling us to gratify our passions more freely, which has hitherto
been far the more important of the two.
From our point of view, we may divide the sciences into three groups: physical,
biological, and anthropological. In the physical group I include chemistry, and
broadly speaking any science concerned with the properties of matter apart from
life. In the anthropological group I include all studies especially concerned
with man: human physiology and psychology (between which no sharp line can be
drawn), anthropology, history, sociology, and economics. All these studies can
be illuminated by considerations drawn from biology; for instance, Rivers threw
a new light on parts of economics by adducing facts about landed property among
birds during the breeding season. But in spite of their connection with biology
--- a connection which is likely to grow closer as time goes on --- they are
broadly distinguished from biology by their methods and data, and deserve to be
grouped apart, at any rate in a sociological inquiry.
The effect of the biological sciences, so far, has been very small. No doubt
Darwinism and the idea of evolution affected men's imaginative outlook;
arguments were derived in favour of free competition, and also of nationalism.
But these effects were of the sort that I propose not to consider. It is
probable that great effects will come from these sciences sooner or later.
Mendelism might have revolutionized agriculture, and no doubt some similar
theory will do so sooner or later. Bacteriology may enable us to exterminate
our enemies by disease. The study of heredity may in time make eugenics an
exact science, and perhaps we shall in a later age be able to determine at will
the sex of our children. This would probably lead to an excess of males,
involving a complete change in family institutions. But these speculations
belong to the future. I do not propose to deal with the possible future effects
of biology, both because my knowledge of biology is very limited, and because
the subject has been admirably treated by Mr. Haldane.
The anthropological sciences are those from which, a priori, we might
have expected the greatest social effects, but hitherto this has not proved to
be the case, partly because these sciences are mostly still at an early stage
of development. Even economics has not so far had much effect. Where it has
seemed to have, this is because it advocated what was independently desired.
Hitherto, the most effective of the anthropological sciences has been medicine,
through its influence on sanitation and public health, and through the fact
that it has discovered how to deal with malaria and yellow fever. Birth-control
is also a very important social fact which comes into this category. But
although the future effect of the anthropological sciences (to which I shall
return presently) is illimitable, the effect up to the present has been
confined within fairly narrow limits.
One general observation to begin with. Science has increased man's control over
nature, and might therefore be supposed likely to increase his happiness and
well-being. This would be the case if men were rational, but in fact they are
bundles of passions and instincts. An animal species in a stable environment,
if it does not die out, acquires an equilibrium between its passions and the
conditions of its life. If the conditions are suddenly altered, the equilibrium
is upset. Wolves in a state of nature have difficulty in getting food, and
therefore need the stimulus of a very insistent hunger. The result is that
their descendants, domestic dogs, over-eat if they are allowed to do so. When a
certain amount of something is useful, and the difficulty of obtaining it is
diminished, instinct will usually lead an animal to excess in the new
circumstances. The sudden change produced by science has upset the balance
between our instincts and our circumstances, but in directions not sufficiently
noted. Over-eating is not a serious danger, but over-fighting is. The human
instincts of power and rivalry, like the dog's wolfish appetite will need to be
artificially curbed, if industrialism is to succeed.
II. Effects of the Physical Sciences
Much the greatest part of the changes which science has made in social life is
due to the physical sciences, as is evident when we consider that they brought
about the industrial revolution. This is a trite topic, about which I shall say
as little as my subject permits. There are, however, some points which must be
made.
First, industrialism still has great parts of the earth's surface to conquer.
Russia and India are very imperfectly industrialized; China hardly at all. In
South America there is room for immense development. One of the effects of
industrialism is to make the world an economic unit: its ultimate consequences
will be very largely due to this fact. But before the world can be effectively
organized as a unit, it will probably be necessary to develop industrially all
the regions capable of development that are at present backward. The effects of
industrialism change as it becomes more wide-spread; this must be remembered in
any attempt to argue from its past to its future.
The second point about industrialism is that it increases the productivity of
labour, and thus makes more luxuries possible. At first, in England, the chief
luxury achieved was a larger population with an actual lowering of the standard
of life. Then came a golden age when wages increased, hours of labour
diminished, and simultaneously the middle-class grew more prosperous. That was
while Great Britain was still supreme. With the growth of foreign
industrialism, a new epoch began. Industrial organizations have seldom
succeeded in becoming world-wide, and have consequently become national.
Competition, formerly between individual firms, is now mainly between nations,
and is therefore conducted by methods quite different from those contemplated
by the classical economists.
Modern industrialism is a struggle between nations for two things, markets and
raw materials, as well as for the sheer pleasure of domination. The labour
which is set free from providing the necessaries of life tends to be more and
more absorbed by national rivalry. There are first the armed forces of the
State; then those who provide munitions of war, from the raw minerals up to the
finished product; then the diplomatic and consular services; then the teachers
of patriotism in schools; then the Press. All of these perform other functions
as well, but the chief purpose is to minister to international competition. As
another class whose labours are devoted to the same end, we must add a
considerable proportion of the men of science. These men invent continually
more elaborate methods of attack and defence. The net result of their labours
is to diminish the proportion of the population that can be put into the
fighting line, since more are required for munitions. This might seem a boon,
but in fact war is now-a-days primarily against the civilian population, and in
a defeated country they are liable to suffer just as much as the soldiers.
It is science above all that has determined the importance of raw materials in
international competition. Coal and iron and oil, especially, are the bases of
power, and thence of wealth. The nation which possesses them, and has the
industrial skill required to utilize them in war, can acquire markets by armed
force, and levy tribute upon less fortunate nations. Economists have
underestimated the part played by military prowess in the acquisition of
wealth. The landed aristocracies of Europe were, in origin, warlike invaders.
Their defeat by the bourgeoisie in the French Revolution, and the fear which
this generated in the Duke of Wellington, facilitated the rise of the middle
class. The wars of the eighteenth century decided that England was to be richer
than France. The traditional economist's rules for the distribution of wealth
hold only when men's actions are governed by law, i. e. when most people think
the issue unimportant. The issues that people have considered vital have been
decided by civil war or wars between nations. And for the present, owing to
science, the art of war consists in possessing coal, iron, oil, and the
industrial skill to work them. For the sake of simplicity, I omit other raw
materials, since they do not affect the essence of our problem.
We may say, therefore, speaking very generally, that men have used the
increased productivity which they owe to science for three chief purposes in
succession: first, to increase the population; then, to raise the standard of
comfort; and, finally, to provide more energy to war. This last result has been
chiefly brought about by competition for markets, which led to competition for
raw materials, especially the raw materials of munitions.
III. The Increase of Organization
The stimulation of nationalism which has taken place in modern times is,
however, due very largely to another factor, namely the increase of
organization, which is of the very essence of industrialism. Wherever expensive
fixed capital is required, organization, on a large scale is of course
necessary. In view of the economies of large scale production, organization in
marketing also becomes of great importance. For some purposes, if not for all,
many industries come to be organized nationally, so as to be in effect one
business in each nation.
Science has not only brought about the need for large organizations, but also
the technical possibility of their existence. Without railways, telegraphs and
telephones, control from a centre is very difficult. In ancient empires, and in
China down to modern times, provinces were governed by practically independent
satraps or proconsuls, who were appointed by the central government, but
decided almost all questions on their own initiative. If they displeased the
sovereign, they could only be controlled by civil war, of which the issue was
doubtful. Until the invention of the telegraph, ambassadors had a great measure
of independence, since it was often necessary to act without waiting for orders
from home. What applied in politics applied also in business: an organization
controlled from the centre had to be very loosely knit, and to allow much
autonomy to subordinates. Opinion as well as action was difficult to mould from
a centre, and local variations marred the uniformity of party creeds.
Now-a-days all this is changed. Telegraph, telephone, and wireless make it easy
to transmit orders from a centre: railways and steamers make it easy to
transport troops in case the orders are disobeyed. Modern methods of printing
and advertising make it enormously cheaper to produce and distribute one
newspaper with a large circulation than many with small circulations;
consequently, in so far as the Press controls opinion, there is uniformity,
and, in particular, there is uniformity of news. Elementary education, except
in so far as religious denominations introduce variety, is conducted on a
uniform pattern decided by the State, by means of teachers whom the State has
trained, as far as possible, to imitate the regularity and mutual similarity of
machines produced to standard. Thus the material and psychological conditions
for a great intensity of organization have increased pari passu, but
the basis of the whole development is scientific invention in the purely
physical realm. Increased productivity has played its part, by making it
possible to set apart more labour for propaganda, under which head are to be
included advertisement, the cinema, the Press, education, politics, and
religion. Broadcasting is a new method likely to acquire great potency as soon
as people are satisfied that it is not a method of propaganda.
Political controversies, as Mr. Graham Wallas has pointed out, ought to be
conducted in quantitative terms. If sociology were one of the sciences that had
affected social institutions (which it is not), this would be the case. The
dispute between anarchism and bureaucracy at present tends to take the form of
one side maintain that we want no organization, while the other maintains that
we want as much as possible. A person imbued with the scientific spirit would
hardly even examine these extreme positions. Some people think that we keep our
rooms too hot for health, others that we keep them too cold. If this were a
political question, one party would maintain that the best temperature is the
absolute zero, the other that it is the melting point of iron. Those who
maintained any intermediate position would be abused as timorous time-servers,
concealed agents of the other side, men who ruined the enthusiasm of a sacred
cause by tepid appeals to mere reason. Any man who had the courage to say that
our rooms ought to be neither very hot nor very cold would be abused by both
parties, and probably shot in No Man's Land. Possibly some day politics may
become more rational, but so far there is not the faintest indication of a
change in this direction.
To a rational mind, the question is not: Do we want organization or do we not?
The question is: How much organization do we want, and where and when and of
what kind? In spite of a temperamental leaning to anarchism, I am persuaded
that an industrial world cannot maintain itself against internal disruptive
forces without a great deal more organization than we have at present. It is
not the amount of organization, buts its kind and its purpose, that causes our
troubles. But before tackling this question, let us pause for a moment to ask
ourselves what is the measure of the intensity of organization in a given
community.
A man's acts are partly determined by spontaneous impulse, partly by the
conscious or unconscious effects of the various groups to which he belongs. A
man who works (say) on a railway or in a mine, is, in his working hours almost
entirely determined in his actions by those who direct the collective labour of
which he forms part. If he decides to strike, his action is again not
individual, but determined by his Union. When he votes for Parliament, party
caucuses have limited his choice to one of two or three men, and party
propaganda has induced him to accept in toto one of two or three
blocks of opinions which form the rival party programmes. His choice between
the parties may be individual, but it may also be determined by the action of
some group, such as a trade union, which collectively supports one party. His
newspaper-reading exposes him to great organized forces; so does the cinema, if
he goes to it. His choice of a wife is probably spontaneous, except that he
must choose a woman of his own class. But in the education of his children he
is almost entirely powerless: they must have the education which is provided.
Organization thus determines many vital things in his life. Compare him to a
handicraftsman or peasant-proprietor who cannot read and does not have his
children educated, and it becomes clear what is meant by saying that
industrialism has increased the intensity of organization. To defines this term
we must, I think, exclude the unconscious effects of groups, except as causes
facilitating the conscious effects. We may define the intensity of organization
to which a given individual is subject as the proportion of his acts which is
determined by the orders or advice of some group, expressed through democratic
decisions or executive officers. The intensity of organization in a community
may then be defined as the average intensity for its several members.
The intensity of organization is increased not only when a man belongs to more
organizations, but also when the organizations to which he already belongs play
a larger part in his life, as, for example, the State plays a larger part in
war than in peace.
Another matter which needs to be treated quantitatively is the degree of
democracy, oligarchy, or monarchy in an organization. No organization belongs
completely to any one of the three types. There must be executive officers, who
will often in practice be able to decide policy, even if in theory they cannot
do so. And even if their power depends upon persuasion, they may so completely
control the relevant publicity that they can always rely upon a majority. The
directors of a railway company, for instance, are to all intents and purposes
uncontrolled by the shareholders, who have no adequate means of organizing an
opposition if they should wish to do so. In America, a railroad president is
almost a monarch. In party politics, the power of leaders, although it depends
upon persuasion, continually increases as printed propaganda becomes more
important. For these reasons, even where formal democracy increases, the real
degree of democratic control tends to diminish, except on a few questions which
rouse strong popular passions.
The result of these causes is that, in consequence of scientific inventions
which facilitate centralization and propaganda, groups become more organized,
more disciplined, more group-conscious and more docile to leaders. The effect
of leaders on followers is increased, and the control of events by a few
prominent personalities becomes more marked.
In all this there would be nothing very tragic, but for the fact, with which
science has nothing to do, that organization is almost wholly national. If men
were actuated by the love of gain, as the older economists supposed, this would
not be the case; the same causes which have led to national trusts would have
led to international trusts. This has happened in a few instances, but not on a
sufficiently wide scale to affect politics or economics very vitally. Rivalry
is, with most well-to-do energetic people, a stronger motive than love of
money. Successful rivalry requires organization of rival forces; the tendency
is for a business such as oil, for example, to organize itself into two rival
groups, between them covering the world. They might, of course, combine, and
they would no doubt increase their wealth if they did so. But combination would
take the zest out of life. The object of a football team, one might say, is to
kick goals. If two rival teams combined, and kicked the ball alternately over
the two goals, many more goals would be scored. Nevertheless no one suggest
that this should be done, the object of a football team being not to kick goals
but to win. So the object of a big business is not to make money, but to win in
the contest with some other business. If there were no other business to be
defeated, the whole thing would become uninteresting. This rivalry has attached
itself to nationalism, and enlisted the support of the ordinary citizens of the
countries concerned; they seldom know what it is that they are supporting, but,
like the spectators at a football-match, they grow enthusiastic for their own
side. The harm that is being done by science and industrialism is almost wholly
due to the fact that, while they have proved strong enough to produce a
national organization of economic forces, they have not proved strong
enough to produce an international organization. It is clear that political
internationalism such as the League of Nations was supposed to inaugurate, will
never be successful until we have economic internationalism, which would
require, as a minimum, an agreement between various national organizations
dividing among them the raw material and markets of the world. This, however,
can hardly be brought about while big business is controlled by men who are so
rich as to have grown indifferent to money, and to be willing to risk enormous
losses for the pleasure of rivalry.
The increase of organization in the modern world has made the ideals of
liberalism wholly inapplicable. Liberalism, from Monteqsuieu to President
Wilson, was based upon the assumption of a number of more or less equal
individuals or groups, with no differences so vital that they were willing to
die sooner than compromise. It was supposed that there was to be free
competition between individuals and between ideas. Experience has shown,
however, that the existing economic system is incompatible with all forms of
free competition except between States by means of armaments. I should wish,
for my part, to preserve free competition between ideas, though not between
individuals and groups, but this is only possible by means of what an
old-fashioned liberal would regard as interferences with personal liberty. So
long as the sources of economic power remain in private hands, there will be no
liberty except for the few who control those sources.
Such liberal ideals as free trade, free press, unbiased educated, either
already belong to the past or soon will do so. One of the triumphs of early
liberalism in England was the establishment of parliamentary control of the
army; this was the casus belli in the Civil War, and was decided by
the Revolution of 1688. It was effective so long as Parliament represented the
same class from which army officers were drawn. This was still the case with
the late Parliament, but may cease to be the case with the advent of a Labour
Government. Russia, Hungary, Italy, Spain and Bavaria have shown in recent
years how frail democracy has become; east of the Rhine it lingers only in
outlying regions. Constitutional control over armaments must, therefore, be
regarded as another liberal principle which is rapidly becoming obsolete.
It would seem probable that, in the next fifty years or so, we shall see a
still further increase in the power of governments, and a tendency for
governments to be such as are desired by the men who control armaments and raw
materials. The forms of democracy may survive in western countries, since those
who possess military and economic power can control education and the press,
and therefore can usually secure a subservient democracy. Rival economic groups
will presumably remain associated with rival nations, and will foster
nationalism in order to recruit their football teams.
There is, however, a hopeful element in the problem. The planet is of finite
size, but the most efficient size for an organization is continually increased
by new scientific inventions. The world becomes more and more of an economic
unity. Before very long the technical conditions will exist for organizing the
whole world as one producing and consuming unit. If, when that time comes, two
rival groups contend for mastery, the victor may be able to introduce that
single world-wide organization that is needed to prevent the mutual
extermination of civilized nations. The world which would result would be, at
first, very different from the dreams of either liberals or socialists; but it
might grow less different with the lapse of time. There would be at first
economic and political tyranny of the victors, a dread of renewed upheavals,
and therefore a drastic suppression of liberty. But if the first half-dozen
revolts were successfully repressed, the vanquished would give up hope, and
accept the subordinate place assigned to them by the victors in the great
world-trust. As soon as the holders of power felt secure, they would grow less
tyrannical and less energetic. The motive of rivalry being removed, they would
not work so hard as they do now, and would soon cease to exact such hard work
from their subordinates. Life at first might be unpleasant, but it would at
least be possible, which would be enough to recommend the system after a long
period of warfare. Given a stable world-organization, economic and political,
even if, at first, it rested upon nothing but armed force, the evils which now
threaten civilization would gradually diminish, and a more thorough democracy
than that which now exists might become possible. I believe that, owing to
men's folly, a world-government will only be established by force, and
therefore be at first cruel and despotic. But I believe that it is necessary
for the preservation of a scientific civilization, and that, if once realized,
it will gradually give rise to the other conditions of a tolerable existence.
IV. The Anthropological Sciences
It remains to say something about the future effects of the anthropological
sciences. This is of course extremely conjectural, because we do not know what
discoveries will be made. The effect is likely to be far greater than we can
now imagine, because these sciences are still in their infancy. I will,
however, take a few points on which to hang conjectures. I do not wish to be
supposed to be making prophecies: I am only suggesting possibilities which it
may be instructive to consider.
Birth-control is a matter of great importance, particularly in relation to the
possibility of a world-government, which could hardly be stable if some nations
increased their population much more rapidly than others. At present,
birth-control is increasing in all civilized countries, though in most it is
opposed by governments. This opposition is due partly to mere superstition and
desire to conciliate the Catholic vote, partly to the desire for large armies
and severe competition between wage-earners, so as to keep down wages. In spite
of the opposition of governments, it seems probable that birth-control will
lead to a stationary population in most white nations within the next fifty
years. There can be no security that it will stop with a stationary population;
it may go on to the point where the population diminishes.
The increase in the practice of birth-control is an example of a process
contrary to that seen in industrialism: it represents a victory of individual
over collective passions. Collectively, Frenchmen desire that France should be
populous, in order to be able to defeat her enemies in war. Individually, they
desire that their own families should be small, in order to increase the
inheritance of their children and to diminish the expense of education. The
individual desire has triumphed over the collective desire, and even, in many
cases, over religious scruples. In this case, as in most others, the individual
desire is less harmful to the world than the collective desire: the man who
acts from pure selfishness does less damage than the man who is actuated by
``public spirit.'' For, since medicine and sanitation have diminished the
infant death-rate, the only checks to over-population that remain (apart from
birth-control) are war and famine. So long as this continues to be the case,
the world must either have a nearly stationary population, or employ war to
produce famine. The latter method, which is that favoured by opponents of
birth-control, has been adopted on a large scale since 1914; it is however
somewhat wasteful. We require a certain number of cattle and sheep, and we take
steps to secure the right number. If we were as indifferent about them as we
are about human beings, we should produce far too many, and cause the surplus
to die by the slow misery of under-feeding. Farmers would consider this plan
extravagant, and humanitarians would consider it cruel. But where human beings
are concerned, it is considered the only proper course, and works advocating
any other are confiscated by the police if they are intelligible to those whom
they concern.
It must be admitted, however, that there are certain dangers. Before long the
population may actually diminish. This is already happening in the most
intelligent sections of the most intelligent nations; government opposition to
birth-control propaganda gives a biological advantage to stupidity, since it is
chiefly stupid people who governments succeed in keeping in ignorance. Before
long, birth-control may become nearly universal among the white races; it will
then not deteriorate their quality, but only diminish their numbers, at a time
when uncivilized races are still prolific and are preserved from a high
death-rate by white science.
This situation will lead to a tendency --- already shown by the French --- to
employ more prolific races as mercenaries. Governments will oppose the teaching
of birth-control among Africans, for fear of losing recruits. The result will
be an immense numerical inferiority of the white races, leading probably to
their extermination in a mutiny of mercenaries. If, however, a world-government
is established, it may see the desirability of making subject races also less
prolific, and may permit mankind to solve the population question. This is
another reason for desiring a world-government.
Passing from quantity to quality of population, we come to the question of
eugenics. We may perhaps assume that, if people grow less superstitious,
government will acquire the right to sterilize those who are not considered
desirable as parents. This power will be used, at first, to diminish
imbecility, a most desirable object. But probably, in time, opposition to the
government will be taken to prove imbecility, so that rebels of all kinds will
be sterilized. Epileptics, consumptives, dipsomaniacs and so on will gradually
be included; in the end, there will be a tendency to include all who fail to
pass the usual school examinations. The result will be to increase the average
intelligence; in the long run, it may be greatly increased. But probably the
effect upon really exceptional intelligence will be bad. Mr. Micawber, who was
Dickens's father, would hardly have been regarded as a desirable parent. How
many imbeciles ought to outweigh one Dickens I do not profess to know.
Eugenics has, of course, more ambitious possibilities in a more distant future.
It may aim not only at eliminating undesired types, but at increasing desired
types. Moral standards may alter so as to make it possible for one man to be
the sire of a vast progeny by many different mothers. When men of science
envisage a possibility of this kind, they are prone to a type of fallacy which
is common also in other directions. They imagine that a reform inaugurated by
men of science would be administered as men of science would wish, by men
similar in outlook to those who have advocated it. In like manner women who
advocated votes for women used to imagine that the woman voter of the future
would resemble the ardent feminist who won her the vote; and socialist leaders
imagine that a socialist State would be administered by idealistic reformers
like themselves. These are, of course, delusions; a reform, once achieved, is
handed over to the average citizen. So, if eugenics reached the point where it
could increase desired types, it would not be the types desired by present-day
eugenists that would be increased, but rather the type desired by the average
official. Prime Ministers, Bishops, and others whom the State considers
desirable might become the fathers of half the next generation. Whether this
would be an improvement it is not for me to say, as I have no hope of ever
becoming either a Bishop or a Prime Minister.
If we knew enough about heredity to determine, within limits, what sort of
population we would have, the matter would of course be in the hands of State
officials, presumably elderly medical men. Whether they would really be
preferable to Nature I do not feel sure. I suspect that they would breed a
subservient population, convenient to rulers but incapable of initiative.
However, it may be that I am too sceptical of the wisdom of officials.
The effects of psychology on practical life may in time become very great.
Already advertisers in America employ eminent psychologists to instruct them in
the technique of producing irrational belief; such men may, when they have
grown more proficient, be very useful in persuading the democracy that
governments are wise and good. Then, again, there are the psychological tests
of intelligence, as applied to recruits for the American army during the war. I
am very sceptical of the possibility of testing anything except average
intelligence by such methods, and I think that, if they were widely adopted,
they would probably lead to many persons of great artistic capacity being
classified as morons. The same thing would have happened to some first-rate
mathematicians. Specialized ability not infrequently goes with general
disability, but this would not be shown by the kind of tests which
psychologists recommend to the American government.
More sensational than tests of intelligence is the possibility of controlling
the emotional life through the secretions of the ductless glands. It will be
possible to make people choleric or timid, strongly or weakly sexed, and so on,
as may be desired. Differences of emotional disposition seem to be chiefly due
to secretions of the ductless glands, and therefore controllable by injections
or by increasing or diminishing the secretions. Assuming an oligarchic
organization of society, the State could give to the children of holders of
power the disposition required for command, and to the children of the
proletariat the disposition required for obedience. Against the injections of
the State physicians the most eloquent Socialist oratory would be powerless.
The only difficulty would be to combine this submissiveness with the necessary
ferocity against external enemies; but I do not doubt that official science
would be equal to the task.
It is not necessary, when we are considering political consequences, to pin our
faith to the particular theories of the ductless glands, which may blow over,
like other theories. All that is essential in our hypothesis is the belief that
physiology will in time find ways of controlling emotion, which it is scarcely
possible to doubt. When that day comes we shall have the emotions desired by
our rulers, and the chief business of elementary education will be to produce
the desired disposition, no longer by punishment or moral precept, but by the
far surer method of injection or diet. The men who will administer this system
will have a power beyond the dreams of the Jesuits, but there is no reason to
suppose that they will have more sense than the men who control education
to-day. Technical scientific knowledge does not make men sensible in their
aims, and administrators in the future, will be presumably no less stupid and
no less prejudiced than they are at present.
Conclusion:
It may seem as though I had been at once gloomy and frivolous in some of my
prognostications. I will end, however, with the serious lesson which seems to
me to result. Men sometimes speak as though the progress of science must
necessarily be a boon to mankind, but that, I fear, is one of the comfortable
nineteenth-century delusions which our more disillusioned age must discard.
Science enables the holders of power to realize their purposes more fully than
they could otherwise do. If their purposes are good, this is a gain; if they
are evil, it is a loss. In the present age, it seems that the purposes of the
holders of power are in the main evil, in the sense that they involve a
diminution, in the world at large, of the things men are agreed in thinking
good. Therefore, at present, science does harm by increasing the power of
rulers. Science is no substitute for virtue; the heart is as necessary for a
good life as the head.
If men were rational in their conduct, that is to say, if they acted in the way
most likely to bring about the ends that they deliberately desire, intelligence
would be enough to make the world almost a paradise. In the main, what is in
the long run advantageous to one man is also advantageous to another. But men
are actuated by passions which distort their view; feeling an impulse to injure
others, they persuade themselves that it is to their interest to do so. They
will not, therefore, act in the way that is in fact to their own interest
unless they are actuated by generous impulses which make them indifferent to
their own interest. This is why the heart is as important as the head. By the
``heart'' I mean, for the moment, the sum-total of kindly impulses. Where they
exist, science helps them to be effective; where they are absent, science only
makes men more cleverly diabolic.
It may be laid down as a general principle to which there are few exceptions
that, when people are mistaken as to what is to their own interest, the course
they believe to be wise is more harmful to others than the course that really
is wise. There are innumerable examples of men making fortunes because, on
moral grounds, they did something which they believed to be contrary to their
own interests. For instance, among early Quakers there were a number of
shopkeepers, who adopted the practice of asking no more for their goods than
they were willing to accept, instead of bargaining with each customer, as
everybody else did. They adopted this practice because they held it to be a lie
to ask more than they would take. But the convenience to customers was so great
that everybody came to their shops and they grew rich. (I forget where I read
this, but if my memory serves me it was in some reliable source.) The same
policy might have been adopted from shrewdness, but in fact no one was
sufficiently shrewd. Our unconscious is more malevolent than it pays us to be;
therefore the people who do most completely what is in fact to their interest
are those who, on moral grounds, do what they believe to be against their
interest.
For this reason, it is of the greatest importance to inquire whether any method
of strengthening kindly impulses exists. I have no doubt that their strength or
weakness depends upon discoverable physiological causes; let us assume that it
depends upon the glands. If so, an international secret society of
physiologists could bring about the millennium by kidnapping, on a given day,
all the rulers of the world, and injecting into their blood some substance
which would fill them with benevolence towards their fellow-creatures. Suddenly
M. Poincare would wish well to Ruhr miners, Lord Curzon to Indian nationalists,
Mr. Smuts to the natives of what was German South West Africa, the American
government to its political prisoners and its victims in Ellis Island. But
alas, the physiologists would first have to administer the love-philtre to
themselves before they would undertake such a task. Otherwise, they would
prefer to win titles and fortunes by injecting military ferocity into recruits.
And so we come back to the old dilemma: only kindliness can save the world, and
even if we knew how to produce kindliness we should not do so unless we were
already kindly. Failing that, it seems that the solution which the Houynhnms
adopted towards the Yahoos, namely extermination, is the only one; apparently
the Yahoos are bent on applying it to each other.
We may sum up this discussion in a few words. Science has not given men more
self-control, more kindliness, or more power of discounting their passions in
deciding upon a course of action. It has given communities more power to
indulge their collective passions, but, by making society more organic, it has
diminished the part played by private passions. Men's collective passions are
mainly evil; far the strongest of them are hatred and rivalry directed towards
other groups. Therefore at present all that gives men power to indulge their
collective passions is bad. That is why science threatens to cause the
destruction of our civilization. The only solid hope seems to lie in the
possibility of world-wide domination by one group, say the United States,
leading to the gradual formation of an orderly economic and political
world-government. But perhaps, in view of the sterility of the Roman Empire,
the collapse of our civilization would in the end be preferable to this
alternative.
|