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Source: This essay first appeared in the journal Literature of Liberty: A Review of Contemporary Liberal Thought ,
vol. II, no. 1, January/March 1979 published by the Cato Institute
(1978-1979) and the Institute for Humane Studies (1980-1982) under the
editorial direction of Leonard P. Liggio. It is republished with thanks
to the original copyright holders.
Robert Nisbet (1913-1993), former professor of sociology at Columbia University, is the author of Sociology as an Art Form; The Social Philosophers; Prejudices: A Philosophical Dictionary; The Sociological Tradition; History of the Idea of Progress; and Twilight of Authority, also published by Liberty Fund.
Robert Nisbet, "The Idea of Progress"
Table of Contents
Introduction
Confusion Over the Meanings of Progress
The essence of the Western idea of progress can be simply stated: mankind has
advanced in the past, is now advancing, and may be expected to continue advancing
in the future. But what, it will be asked, does "advance" mean? Here
matters necessarily become more complex. Its meanings have ranged from the most
sublimely spiritual advance to the absolutely physical or material. In its most
common form the idea of progress has referred, ever since the Greeks, to the
advance of knowledge, more particularly the kind of practical knowledge contained
in the arts and sciences. But the idea has also been made to refer to the achievement
of what the early Christians called earthly paradise: a state of such spiritual
exaltation that man's liberation from all tormenting physical compulsions becomes
complete. We find the perspective of progress used, especially in the modern
world, to give substance to the hope for a future characterized by individual
freedom, equality, or justice. But we also find the idea of progress made to
serve belief in the desirability and necessity of political absolutism, racial
superiority, and the totalitarian state. In sum, there is almost no end to goals
and purposes which have been declared the fulfillment or outcome of mankind's
progress.
Progress as an Ancient Idea
In the form I have just described, the idea is peculiarly Western.
Other, older civilizations have certainly known the ideals of moral,
spiritual, and material improvement; have known the quest for virtue,
spirituality, and salvation in one degree or other. But only in Western
Civilization, apparently, does the idea exist that all history may be
seen as one of humanity improving itself, step by step, stage by stage,
through immanent forces, until at some remote time in the future a
condition of near-perfection for all will exist—such perfection
definable, as I have noted, in a great variety of ways.
There is a widespread misconception of this idea that I must
immediately identify. It is commonly believed that the idea of progress
is a peculiarly modern idea, largely unknown to the ancient
Greeks and Romans, wholly unknown to the Christian thinking that
governed Europe from the fall of Rome until the late seventeenth
century, and first manifest in the currents of rationalism and science.
These modern currents, the argument continues, repulsed Christian
theology and made possible, for the first time, a philosophy of human
progress on this earth. This is the view that governs the contents of
the single most widely read book on the history of the idea, J.B. Bury,
The Idea of Progress: An Inquiry into its Origin and Growth,
published in 1920. The view, or misconception, is not original with
Bury. It may be found in most of the philosophical and historical
writings in the West from the late eighteenth century on. Of all the
ideas which Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment thinkers cherished,
none was more favored than the idea of progress, so often used to
buttress other favored ideas, and with it the fancy that only in the
modern world was it possible for so noble an idea to have been born. I
venture the guess that in ninety-nine percent of the writing on the
idea of progress, the view is commonplace that the idea is inseparable
from modernity and that it became possible of formulation only after
Western thought had finally been able to throw the shackles of
Christian and classical-pagan dogma. The ancients, it is said, were
unable to shake off ideas of fate, of degeneration from a golden age,
of cycles, and an indemic pessimism. The Christians, although through
belief in redemption by Christ possessed of optimism and hope, turned
their minds entirely to the supernatural, believing that the things of
this world are of no importance, and foresaw an early end to this world
and the ascent by the blessed to an unchanging, eternal heaven.
Classical Antiquity and the Idea of Progress
So much for conventional wisdom. Let us turn to the results of
still-emerging, specialized modern scholarship on the different
episodes in the history of the idea and turn also to the actual texts,
from Hesiod to Toynbee, in which faith in progress has been expressed
for some 2,500 years.
The thesis that pagan-classical antiquity was bereft of belief in
man's material and moral progress has been utterly destroyed by such
authoritative works as Ludwig Edelstein, The Idea of Progress in Antiquity (the most comprehensive and thorough); W.K.C. Guthrie, especially his In the Beginning; E.R. Dodds, The Ancient Concept of Progress; and F.J. Teggart, Theory of History and his anthology, The Idea of Progress.
The late Professor Edelstein speaks for them all when he tells us that
the ancients "formulated most of the thoughts and sentiments that later
generations down to the nineteenth century were accustomed to associate
with the blessed or cursed word progress."
Greek Poets, Sophists, and Historians on Progress
We begin with Hesiod (ca. 700 B.C.) and his Works and Days,
second only to Homer in the impact that it had upon classical thinkers
for hundreds of years. We almost inevitably associate Hesiod with
belief in a primordial golden age, from which mankind has been steadily
degenerating, reaching, in Hesiod's time, an iron age that is deemed
the worst of all. Humanity confined its hopes to an early disappearance
of this iron age and mankind's return to the first, that golden age
when there was no knowledge but, at the same time, no contaminants to
moral virtue and universal happiness. Actually, Hesiod doesn't write of
ages at all, but of races: gold, silver, bronze, heroes, and iron.
Second, far from there being steady degeneration, the fourth, the age
of "hero-men" comes very close to the original "golden race" in
quality. The careful reader will in fact find many lines in Hesiod's
work which testify to his awareness of a great deal of good in the
world around him and, more important, to his conviction that genuine
reform is possible if only good men will rally to its cause. The
eminent classicist at Berkeley, George M. Calhoun, in his Growth of Criminal Law in Greece,
refers to Hesiod as the first European reformer, and to his book as the
beginning of Western "political literature." F.J. Teggart, in an
article, "The Argument of Hesiod's Works and Days," Journal of the History of Ideas, January 1947, writes, after long, meticulous analysis of the text, that Hesiod "set before men the first idea of progress."
What Hesiod began, a long succession of classical thinkers
continued. Late in the sixth century B.C. Xenophanes, in a surviving
fragment, declared: "The gods did not reveal to men all things in the
beginning, but men through their own search find in the course of time
that which is better." Not long afterward Protagoras, first and
greatest of the Sophists, made emphatic his conviction that man's
history is one of escape from primeval ignorance, fear, and barrenness
of culture, and of gradual ascent to ever-better conditions of life,
the consequence of the steady advancement of knowledge. There is no
better place than in Plato's dialogue, Protagoras, to acquire
first the substance of Protagoras' beliefs, and second the clear sense
of Plato's own admiration for this great philosopher—admiration
sufficient to lead Plato to put down, as it were, his cherished
Socrates, also present at the discussion. There is Aeschylus' Promotheus Bound
with its notable passage in which Prometheus bewails the terrible
punishment he has received from Zeus for the "crime" of having brought
to mankind fire and thus stimulates men to rise intellectually and
culturally to emulate the gods themselves. There is no more moving
passage in all literature than that in which Prometheus, consigned to
an eternity of punishment, tells how he had found mankind on earth in a
pitiful condition—subject to every kind of deprivation, ever-fearful,
ignorant, and living like animals in caves. He brought to man the gift
of fire, enabling mankind through its own efforts slowly to ascend the
scale of culture, learning language, arts and crafts, technology, and
how to live amicably in groups and federations. There is nothing
whatever in Aeschylus' drama of any descent in time from an original
golden age. The same is true of the celebrated passage in Sophocles' Antigone,
the ode by the chorus to man's achievements on earth: "Many a wonder
lives and moves, but the wonder of all is man . . . Wise utterance and
wind-swift thought, and city-moulding mind . . . Full of resource,
without device he meets no coming time. . . ." Not solely to past,
present, but also future achievement does Sophocles point. Thucydides,
in his history of the Peloponnesian War, devotes the first few
paragraphs to pointing out that in ancient times the Greeks lived just
as did contemporary barbarians and savages, but that over a long period
of time they had risen to greatness through their own efforts.
Plato is the next contributor to the idea of progress. It is a
serious error to categorize Plato's rich and complex thought as
directed solely to the perfect, the unchanging, the eternal, or to see
(as Karl Popper has in The Open Society, and Its Enemies) a
reactionary mind interested only in the return of Greece to a remote
past. Such a view, widespread though it be, is false. In Plato's
philosophy, as F.M. Cornford emphasizes in Plato's Cosmology,
two orders of reality exist: one directed toward the world of perfect
ideas, the other directed toward this life, with all its variety,
changes, conflicts, and needs for practical reforms. In The Statesman Plato delineates a historical account of the progress of mankind from lowly origins to its present heights. In Book III of The Laws
Plato presents an even more detailed picture of humanity's progress
from a state of nature, step by step, stage by stage, to ever-higher
levels of culture, economy, and polity. And as Edelstein observes,
"Nowhere does Plato contradict the assertion that the arts and sciences
. . . should proceed in their search 'for all future time.'"
Although Aristotle refers to cycles in some of his writings on
physics and allied sciences, he had a linear conception of human
history, one that began with mankind in the stage of kinship alone,
progressed to villages and confederations, and finally reached the
political state. Aristotle's Politics makes clear his belief
that reason and wisdom will lead to continuous progress with a
corresponding growth in knowledge. The theme of improvement through
individual effort and action that we find in his Ethics is
clearly set, as Edelstein emphasizes, in a conception of morality that
is not static but dynamic, one to be envisaged in a progress of
development.
Despite conventional assessments of Hellenistic Greece as a period
of decadence, withdrawal, and retreat from reason, two of Greece's
greatest philosophers thrived during this age: Zeno the Stoic and
Epicurus. Epicurus especially taught the immutability of natural
processes, among these the process of mankind's steady improvement from
lowly origins over a vast period of time. There were indeed
philosophers of primitivism—Cynics, Peripatetics, and others—who
believed that the best of mankind lived in the remote and simple past,
and for whom progress was but a myth. But their doctrines did not
compare in influence to those of Zeno and Epicurus.
Roman Philosophers on Progress
Perhaps the greatest description (in the sense of a systematic and
developed awareness) of human progress to be found in all of ancient
thought is the Roman Lucretius' On the Nature of Things
written in the first century B.C. It is an Epicurean account of
complete sciences—astronomy, physics, chemistry, anthropology,
psychology. In very modern fashion, Lucretius explains the beginnings
of the world through atoms in the void forming clusters which then
become tangible matter, and the eventual development of the world with
all that grows and lives on it. Book V of this general evolutionary
treatise is concerned solely with mankind's social and cultural
progress. It commences with primitive man living naked and shelterless,
dependent upon his cunning and ability to join forces with other men in
order to find safety from larger and more predatory beasts, in constant
fear of the elements. To assuage this fear mankind generally formed
religions for mental protection, and step by step (pedetemtim progredientes)
advanced to huts, then to houses and ships, diverse languages, the arts
and sciences, medicine, navigation, improvements in technology, making
for an ever richer existence. And, Lucretius is careful to tell us,
despite the grandeur of all that man has achieved on earth through his
own efforts, the human race is still in its infancy, and even greater
wonders may be expected.
The final philosopher of progress I shall select from classical
antiquity is Seneca. A Stoic, an adviser to emperors and others, he was
also a scientist in every sense of the word. His Quaestiones Naturales
presents a remarkable collection of observations and experiments in the
natural world and embodies virtually a Darwinian theory of evolution
(as there is in Lucretius also), with more than mere hints of the
mechanism of natural selection. But Seneca the social scientist, the
anthropologist, is best seen in his Epistulae Morales. Here
is another classical text in human progress. There is passing,
uninterested reference to some aboriginal golden age when virtue was
ascendant amid cultural simplicity and to a fall from this primeval
state (not different, really, from what Rousseau would write many
centuries later on the state of nature and of man's social and cultural
ascent from it). But what thoroughly engages Seneca's attention is the
means and the stages through which humanity has climbed to its present
vast knowledge. He grants philosophy some credit, but it is "man's
ingenuity, not his wisdom" that discovered all the really vital things
in civilization—farming, metallurgy, navigation, tools and implements
of every kind, language, and so on. And, despite Senecan ruminations
from time to time about the age and decrepitude of the world, there are
other, scintillating passages in which, like Lucretius, he foresees
long ages ahead of increase in knowledge. "The time will come," he
writes in the Quaestiones Naturales, "when mental acumen and
prolonged study will bring to light what is now hidden . . . the time
will come when our successors will wonder how we could have been
ignorant of things so obvious." And in his Epistulae Seneca
enjoins his contemporaries: "Much remains to do; much will remain; and
no one born after thousands of centuries will be deprived of the chance
of adding something in addition."
Christianity and the Idea of Progress
Let us now examine the Christian contribution to the idea of
progress in the West. It is very large indeed. As I have already noted,
the same bent of mind that denies to the Greeks and Romans any real
conception of progress is prone (with a few exceptions such as John
Baillie, The Belief in Progress, which attributes to
Christianity what it takes from the pagans) to deny Christianity any
vision of mankind's progress. But, as with the Greeks and Romans, a
substantial and growing body of scholarship demonstrates quite the
opposite. Such impressive studies as Gerhard B. Ladner, The Idea of Reform: Its Impact on Christian Thought and Action in the Age of the Fathers; Charles N. Cochrane, Christianity and Classical Culture; Karl Löwith, Meaning in History; and Marjorie Reeves, The Influence of Prophecy in the Later Middle Ages
make it certain beyond question that a very real philosophy of human
progress appears almost from the very beginning in Christian theology,
a philosophy stretching from St. Augustine (indeed his predecessors,
Eusebius and Tertullian) down through the seventeenth century.
The Augustinian Legacy: Stages of Historical Development
St. Augustine's The City of God has been often called the
first full-blown philosophy of world history, and it would be hard to
refute that statement. Augustine, as even J.B. Bury acknowledges, is
the earliest to emphatically insist upon the unity of mankind, the
ecumenical idea. This introduces the conception of a history of mankind
that, although predetermined by God in the beginning, has undergone an
unfolding, a realization of essence, a struggle toward perfection
through forces immanent in humanity. Augustine fused the Greek idea of
growth or development with the Jewish idea of a sacred history. As a
result Augustine sets forth the history of mankind in terms of both the
stages of growth understood by the Greeks and the historical epochs
into which the Jews divided their own Old Testament history.
Thus, in a celebrated and influential passage, Augustine writes:
"The education of the human race, represented by the people of God, has
advanced, like that of an individual, through certain epochs, or, as it
were, ages, so that it might gradually rise from earthly to heavenly
things, and from the visible to the invisible." The phrase "education
of the human race" and the analogy of the development of mankind to
growth in the individual would persist in Western thought, and we find
it both in philosophers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries who
would no doubt have been astounded had the actual origin of the phrase
and the analogy been revealed to their secular minds. St. Augustine is
not completely consistent in his divisions of historical time. In one
section, it is twofold: before Christ and after. In another we get what
is perhaps the first usage of a three-stage human history,
unquestionably the most popular version in the history of progress,
with the nineteenth-century Comte setting it forth in his "Law of Three
Stages." In still another section, at the end of The City of God,
Augustine refers to seven stages of earthly history, with the seventh
stage (one of happiness and peace on earth) yet to come. Augustine
gives it no precise length; it may be short or long. But he is clear
that prior to Judgment Day and the final destruction of the earth,
mankind, or at least the blessed, will know an earthly paradise, the
consequence of inexorable historical development from the primitivism
of the Garden.
Of all the contributions to the idea of progress by Christian
thought, none is greater than this Augustinian suggestion of a final
period on earth, utopian in character, and historically inevitable.
When these two ideas, namely, historical necessity and a utopian period
that is the culmination of man's progress on earth, become secularized
in the late eighteenth century, the way has been cleared for the
emergence of such modern secular millenarianisms as those associated
with the names of Saint-Simon, Comte, and Marx. The structure of
progress created by Augustine was comprehensible to him and subsequent
Christian philosophers only by virtue of the omnipotence of God. For
Augustine progress entails a premised origin within which
potentialities exist for all future development of man; a single,
linear order of time; the unity of mankind; a succession of fixed
stages of development; the assumption that all that has happened, and
that will happen, is necessary; and, not least, the vision of
a future condition of beatitude. Much of the later history of the idea
of progress amounts to little more than the displacement of God, but
with the structure of thought otherwise left intact.
Finally, it must be emphasized that, God- and Spirit-intoxicated
though St. Augustine was, his early pagan rearing, during which he read
the Greek and Roman thinkers omnivorously, gave him a solid sense of
the wonders of material progress in the world. Too few students of
Augustine are aware of the striking passages which appear in The City of God
Section 24 of Book XXII: passages which rival in eloquence anything
Protagoras or Aeschylus or Sophocles wrote on the wonders accomplished
by mankind, in which Augustine refers to "the genius of man." In this
section we have an inspired cataloguing of the great inventions and
scientific discoveries by which mankind, slowly, over a long period of
time, has conquered the earth; and a cataloguing too of all the sensual
delights man has made possible for himself as the result of this same
"genius." His appreciation of both the physical and the mental beauties
of the human figure is utterly pagan in nature, but it is not the less
a signal part of the Augustinian contribution to the Western philosophy
of progress.
Space prevents adequate account here of the direct influence and
legacy of Augustine: the philosophies of history written by such
Christian minds as the fifth century writer Orosius (student of
Augustine, who instructed him to write his Seven Books of History Against the Pagans); Otto of Freising's twelfth century Two Histories which built upon both Augustine and Orosius; and, in the seventeenth century, the Bishop Bossuet's immensely influential Discourse on Universal History,
dedicated in effect to Augustine, a book that Turgot, after his loss of
religious faith, took as a model for his own secularized Universal History.
Additional elements in Augustine's legacy of progress include: the
conception of time as linear and divisible into
developmental-historical ages; the doctrine of historical necessity
that would be, when purged of the divine, the stock in trade of a host
of "scientific" historians and social evolutionists; and, to reiterate,
the mesmerizing, the seductive conception of an earthly state ahead in
which man would know liberation from the toils and torments of prior
history and, for the first time, a condition of earthly paradise.
Joachim of Fiore and the Millennialist Legacy of Progress
One medieval figure must be given space here: the extraordinary
Joachim of Fiore, who lived and wrote in the second half of the twelfth
century. He, encouraged by at least three popes, declared that human
history must be seen as an ascent through three stages, each presided
over by a figure of the Trinity. First, the Age of the Father or of
Law; second, the Age of the Son, or of the Gospel; and third, still
ahead, a thousand-year Age of Spirit when human beings would be
liberated from their physical-animal desires and would know a
contemplative serenity and happiness of mind scarcely even describable.
Joachim was nothing if not radical. Not only will all secular
government disappear during this age but even the organization of the
Church itself, and all its hierarchy, would no longer be needed. Man
would, for a whole millennium prior to ascent to heaven, know absolute
peace, tranquillity, freedom, and contentment.
Marjorie Reeves, in her magisterial The Influence of Prophecy in the Later Middle Ages,
has given us the most authoritative insights into this remarkable
prophet, and has shown with meticulous documentation the deep,
widespread, and long-lasting influence Joachimite doctrines had upon a
great many later minds, not all of them overtly theological or
millennialist, by any means. Joachim preached that before the third
great Age of the Spirit could come into being, there must be a prelude
of destruction and conflict, the death throes of the second age. More
than a little of the special kind of terrorism Norman Cohn has written
of in his The Pursuit of the Millennium was activated and
justified by hope that human beings, by commencing the work of
destruction themselves, through fire and sword, could hasten the onset
of the Joachimite Age of the Spirit.
Melvin Lasky, in his excellent Utopia and Revolution, has
pointed out how Joachim's teachings became sources of inspiration not
only to Renaissance prophets and Reformation rebels but also to at
least a few major navigators and explorers. Columbus, as Lasky
observes, was buoyed up to a substantial degree in his Atlantic
crossings by the expectation that he would find the Otro Mundo, the Other World, the terrestrial paradise "where all land and islands end," where the promised renovatio mundi,
the reborn world, would have its beginning. And, as Reeves, and also
the Spanish-Americanist historian, J.H. Elliott have made clear, those
Franciscan explorers who were to leave so substantial a heritage in the
New World, were also steeped, and had been for centuries, in Joachimite
promises.
We associate one of Joachim's influential followers, the Dominican Campanella, usually with but one book, his The City of the Sun.
This work describes a relatively secular utopia in which all men are
governed by reason and science and live in a socialist community of
property. He wrote it while in prison, but well before this classic
utopia of 1602, Campanella, powerfully influenced by Joachimite
doctrines, had written other utopian works, but of a deeply religious
character.
Christian, including Joachimite, prophecy also played its part in
the Puritan Revolution of the seventeenth century. In 1615, James
Maxwell, with his Admirable and Notable Prophecies, declared Joachim to have been "extraordinarily inspired." Ernest Lee Tuveson, in his profoundly important Millennium and Utopia,
shows how easily secular progress conceived of as the rule of reason
and of the sciences could be derived from religious progress conceived
of as divine fulfillment. Thus he quotes a passage from Sheltoo a
Geveren in which we are told that God shows his affection for mankind
by raising up "some Valla, Agricola, Erasmus, Melancthon and others" in
order to bring "all sciences and knowledge of the tongues to their
purity" . . . and to attain "the perfect knowledge of them all by which
almost all Europe is set free from barbarousness." Tuveson's book was
one of the very first to point out the crucial importance of religious
ideas of man's progress on earth—of his destined existence in an
earthly paradise for a long period before Judgment Day comes, and of
the liberation of men from all want, superstition, ignorance, and
tyranny—as the forerunners of those secular ideas of progress
which flourished in the eighteenth century. The great weakness of so
many studies of the idea of progress in the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries is their serene conviction that between Christian prophecy
and the kind of idea of progress we find in, say, Condorcet at the end
of the eighteenth century, there is no affinity (in the sense of
historical lineage) whatever, only conflict. Not, this erroneous
argument goes, until Christianity with its idea of Providence had been
routed, was it possible for a perspective of human progress to make its
appearance.
A host of contemporary scholars have made clear to us the deep roots
which modern science has in Christian theology and prophecy.
Copernicus, Kepler, Newton, are major names among literally scores of
minds working in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries on the
physical universe and its laws, but in perfect confidence that what
their scientific labors would demonstrate was the wonder of God and His
design. The Isaac Newton of the Principia was a deeply
religious mind, and he saw no discontinuity whatever between this
scientific classic and the overtly religious studies which preoccupied
him during most of the years which followed publication of the Principia.
Precisely the same holds for the history of the idea of progress.
The fundamental structure of the idea, its governing assumptions and
premises, its crucial elements—cumulative growth, continuity in time,
necessity, the unfolding of potentiality, all of these and others—took
shape in the West within the Christian tradition. The secular forms in
which we find the idea of progress from the late seventeenth century on
in Europe are inconceivable in the historical sense apart from their
Christian roots.
The Seventeenth Century Battle of the Books: The Ancients
vs. The Moderns
It is generally agreed that the first secular statement of the idea
of progress in modern Europe occurred during the so-called Quarrel of
the Ancients and Moderns in France in the last part of the seventeenth
century. R.F. Jones, Ancients and Moderns and H. Rigault, Histoire de la querelle des anciens et des modernes
are the most complete and authoritative studies of this elegant
donnybrook. On the one side were those in the seventeenth century who
believed that nothing written or otherwise intellectually achieved in
modern times equalled the quality of that which had been contributed in
classical antiquity. No modern Homer, Aeschylus, Plato, Lucretius, or
Seneca is to be found: so declared the Ancients, the most learned and
effective of whom was undoubtedly Boileau, the most delightful being
Jonathan Swift in his notable The Battle of the Books.
The Case For and Against the Moderns and Progress
Quite the contrary, argued the Moderns, foremost among them Fontenelle and Perrault in France. Here Fontenelle's Digression on the Ancients and Moderns
(1688) will nicely serve as the most eloquent brief in behalf of the
superiority of modernity over antiquity. He makes his fundamental
premise Descartes's principle, set forth in his Discourse on Method
a half-century earlier, of the invariability of nature's laws. We may
assume, Fontenelle argues, that in light of this invariability, the
human mind is as good today, as rich in reason and imagination, as ever
it was in the past. There is no evidence whatever to support any view
of the degeneration of human reason since the time of the Greeks. And
if men today are as well constituted physically and mentally as were
the men of antiquity, then it follows that there has been and will
continue a definite advancement of both the arts and the sciences,
simply because it is possible for each age to build upon what has been
bequeathed to it by preceding ages.
Here Fontenelle introduces the analogy we have already found in St.
Augustine (it was a common one in the seventeenth century, though it is
unlikely that many of those who employed it were aware of its origin in
The City of God). The history of mankind can be likened, in
its constant development through time, to a single individual living
through all ages, beginning as an infant, advancing to adolescence, and
finally reaching maturity and then old age, always improving himself
through education. But there is one signal difference between
Fontenelle's and Augustine's use of the analogy. The latter had
followed through with the implications of the analogy, declaring
mankind to be now in its very old age, with degeneration of faculties
to be expected and, eventually, death. But here, Fontenelle makes
inconsistency a virtue, a polemical weapon, and although willing to let
the metaphor speak for past and present, he drops it so far as the
future is concerned. Mankind, he declares, will have no old age or "to
drop the metaphor, men will never degenerate."
Georges Sorel, in his The Illusions of Progress, would
pronounce the conclusion, indeed the whole Fontenellean argument, a
shabby piece of bourgeois trickery. The reasoning of the Moderns, Sorel
writes, is entirely circular. First, Molière, Racine, and others are
pronounced superior to Aeschylus and Sophocles. From this superiority,
progress as a principle in human history may be deduced. But how can we
be sure that a Molière is the superior to an Aeschylus? Because mankind
is always advancing, improving, progressing in its knowledge, and those
who come later are the inevitable beneficiaries of those earlier. We,
as a human race, know more than did our primitive forerunners: ergo, a seventeenth century dramatist is bound to be greater than one of the fifth century B.C.
Circular the reasoning most certainly is, and confused and
superficial the conclusion; but this notwithstanding, it was the
Moderns who carried the day, won the battle—at least by their and their
successors' standard. By the beginning of the eighteenth century this
modernist view was supreme among a growing number of intellectuals:
that mankind has advanced in culture, is now advancing, and will
continue to advance during a long future ahead, and that this advance
is the result solely of natural and human causes.
Turgot and the Christian Legacy of Progress
Probably the first full and complete statement of progress is that
of Turgot, expressed in his celebrated discourse before an admiring
audience at the Sorbonne in December 1750, one entitled "A
Philosophical Review of the Successive Advances of the Human Mind." In
this discourse progress is made to cover not simply the arts and
sciences but, on their base, the whole of culture—manner, mores,
institutions, legal codes, economy, etc. Even more comprehensive is
Turgot's "Plan for Two Discourses on Universal History" which he wrote
in 1751, just prior to his entry into government service and eventual
fame, and final humiliation as minister of finance. (All of Turgot's
writings on progress can be found, translated, in Ronald L. Meek, ed., Turgot on Progress, Society and Economy.)
In Turgot's "Universal History" we are given an account of the progress
of mankind which, in comprehensiveness and ordering of materials, would
not be equalled until Turgot's ardent admirer, Condorcet wrote his Outline of an Historical Picture of the Progress of the Human Mind
during the French Revolution. Condorcet wrote it in a period of but a
few weeks all the while hiding from the Jacobin police in an attic (a
staunch supporter of the Revolution, Condorcet had managed to incur
Robespierre's hostility).
Before leaving Turgot, it is important to stress once again the
historical importance of Christianity in the formation of the secular
modern conception of progress in Western Europe. In the first place,
Turgot began his career as a reasonably devout student of theology at
the Sorbonne, his aspiration then linked to a future in the Church.
Second, just six months before the discourse on "The Successive
Advances of the Human Mind" was given in 1750, he had presented another
public discourse, this one on the crucial importance of Christianity to
the progress of mankind. And third, it was Bossuet's Universal History,
which I have already referred to, that Turgot acknowledged to be his
inspiration for the writing, or the preparation of a plan of his own
"Universal History." Bossuet, proud and convinced Christian that he
was, constructed his history in terms of a succession of epochs, all
designed and given effect by God. Turgot allowed God to disappear (he
had lost his faith by 1751 when he wrote his "Universal History") and
replaced Bossuet's "epochs" by "stages": stages of social and cultural
progress, each emerging from its predecessor through human rather than
divine causes. But Turgot's alterations notwithstanding, it is unlikely
that his own secular work on progress would have been written apart
from the inspiration derived from Bishop Bossuet and other Christian
philosophers of history. He is an epitome, in this respect, of the
whole history of the modern idea of progress.
The Eighteenth-Century Views of Progress
There are many expressions of belief in mankind's progress to be
found in the late eighteenth century—in Germany, England, and elsewhere
as well as in France. For reasons of space I must confine attention
here to but a few of the principals.
Germany
In Germany there is Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, most famous for his Nathan the Wise, and the author of The Education of the Human Race,
commonly described as incorporating "Enlightenment-born" ideas of human
advancement in his otherwise religious structure of thought. But, as is
evident from the title, the entire work owes its argument to the
Christian, and more specifically, the Augustinian tradition. Much more
substantial and systematic is Johann Gottfried Herder, Outlines of a Philosophy of History of Man.
Here we are treated to mankind in a ceaseless process of evolution:
commencing with the very beginnings of the human race, proceeding stage
by stage, with potentiality unfolding into actuality, driven by an
immanent necessity, and reaching the level of civilization which Herder
thought to be Germanic at its best, but extending to the rest of the
West as well. And, Herder concludes, mankind will go on developing into
a very long future—in culture, institutions, government, learning, and
in man's own happiness.
The final German I shall mention here is the remarkable Immanuel Kant. He is of course universally known for his Critique of Pure Reason and Critique of Practical Reason,
and the idea of progress cannot be said to figure significantly in
either of these. But Kant is also the author of a brilliant and
suggestive shorter work, Idea of a Universal History from a Cosmopolitical Point of View, one in which the progress of mankind is made central. Some of his propositions drawn from this work are worth citing here:
All capacities implanted in a creature by nature are destined to
unfold themselves completely and conformably to their end, in the
course of time;
The means which nature employs to bring about the development of all
capacities implanted in men, is their mutual antagonism in society, but
only so far as this antagonism becomes at length the cause of an order
among them that is regulated by law; and
The history of the human race, viewed as a whole, may be regarded as
the realization of a hidden plan of nature to bring about a political
constitution, internally, and, for this purpose, also externally
perfect, as the only state in which all the capacities implanted by her
in mankind can be fully developed.
England and Scotland
In England, or rather the United Kingdom, including Scotland, there
are several works of first water in advancing the popularity of the
idea of progress and also its influence upon public policy. Foremost is
Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, the first systematic
textbook in economics, if we like, but a work written with the theme of
mankind's natural progress as the warp of Smith's classic. Fundamental
to this book is Smith's declaration that there is a natural order of
the progress of nations and that the reason England, and Western Europe
generally, now find themselves economically crippled, threatened with
stagnation, is that by unwise edict, law, and custom they have
interfered with the processes of the natural progress of wealth, labor,
skill, rent, and profits. Smith's "invisible hand" is as much directed
toward the mechanics of progress through time as it is the stability of
the economic system.
William Godwin, Enquiry Concerning Political Justice is
usually categorized as a plea for absolute anarchism, with removal of
all forms of authority and power deemed necessary to man's achievement
of true freedom. But it should be understood that Godwin too found it
proper to set this plea in the context of a theory of progress. Such
has been mankind's development over many thousands of years and such is
the rate of present advancement, that we may confidently anticipate a
long future in which human beings will be liberated not only from the
torments of environment—hunger, squalor, tyranny, and exploitation—but
from the torments too of physical and mental illness. In one enraptured
passage Godwin actually foresees a time when humanity will even be
removed from the inevitability of death.
It was Godwin's work, as well as Condorcet's (which I shall mention momentarily) that led Malthus, in his An Essay on the Principle of Population,
to point out that should such conditions ever actually prevail, the
earth would suffer such over-population as to make any thought of
sustenance fantastical; not that Malthus was indifferent or
antagonistic to a belief in progress. Both Gertrude Himmelfarb (in her
superlative volume of essays, Victorian Minds) and William Petersen in Malthus for Our Time
have highlighted in exhaustive fashion Malthus's belief that social and
moral checks to human fertility were possible, even probable—this
belief appears in subsequent editions of Malthus's Essay. In
addition, Malthus took the progressive view that humanity was destined
to very real and fruitful advancement into the distant future.
We must not neglect the Scottish moral philosophers (of whom Adam
Smith was of course one). Preeminent, apart only from Smith, is Adam
Ferguson, An Essay on the History of Civil Society; in this
lucid and elegant work, Ferguson lays out in considerable detail the
steps and stages through which mankind's arts, sciences, and
institutions have undergone almost continuous advancement. This volume
has been called the foundation of modern social science, but that is
declaring too much. Suffice it to say it is assuredly among the stones
of the foundation. There were others of great importance in Scotland at
the time, at Glasgow, Edinburgh, chiefly, and they have all been dealt
with in masterly fashion by the late Gladys Bryson, Man and Society: The Scottish Inquiry of the Eighteenth Century. Also to be recommended is William C. Lehman, Adam Ferguson and the Beginnings of Modern Sociology, which covers far more than that title might indicate.
France: Rousseau and Condorcet
Passing to the French (having already mentioned the seminal Turgot) there is Rousseau's Second Discourse, the Discourse on the Origins of Inequality.
It may come as a surprise to many readers to see this work put under
the rubric of progress, for, it will be said, that long essay is in
fact a kind of dirge, a lament for mankind's degeneration into social
inequality and all the vices which spring from inequality. Such readers
have not read closely enough. What Rousseau gives us with extraordinary
insight and detail (it is, allowing only for its polemical thrust, a
prime beginning of modern evolutionary anthropology) is a panorama
which has the state of nature for its beginning and then traces, stage
by stage, the ascent of mankind to ever higher cultural levels,
including those of morality, language, kinship, the arts and sciences,
and others. It was long ago pointed out by the great Arthur Lovejoy, in
an important article titled "On the Supposed Primitivism of Rousseau's Second Discourse" (found in Lovejoy's collected essays), that for Rousseau the initial state of nature was not
man's happiest condition on earth. But we still encounter the widely
stated belief that for Rousseau, man has never since known the
happiness, the bliss, and contentment he knew when he was in the state
of nature. In point of fact, as Lovejoy noted, and as Rousseau plainly
states in the Discourse, it was a later stage, approximately
the fifth, when a great deal of culture and social organization had
evolved, including families, villages, nations, and the like, that man
enjoyed "the happiest and most stable of all epochs," to use Rousseau's
words. Even more absurd is the prevalent conviction that Rousseau
"advocated return to the state of nature." On the contrary: what he
advocated was the political state, one resting totally upon the general
will.
Returning to the Second Discourse, it is true that Rousseau
emphasizes the harshly negative impact of, first, private property and,
second, the discovery of the agricultural and mechanical arts upon what
had previously been a felicitous development. Because now it became
possible, he tells us, for man to exploit man and thus make impossible
any longer the kind of equality men had hitherto known. So it is rise
and fall that we see in the Discourse. But it doesn't end with that. For in the Third Discourse on Political Economy and in the famous Social Contract,
we are shown in explicit detail just how mankind's degeneration can be
halted and progress achieved—through the instituting of the general
will and, with this, complete and enveloping social equality. In sum,
Rousseau belongs among the philosophers of progress. And this despite
his authorship of the First Discourse, namely, that on the
arts and sciences and their baneful effect upon human morality.
Rousseau in that work is pointing out, as Marx would a century later,
the iniquities of the present. But, also like Marx, Rousseau sets these
in a developmental context, one that when properly aided by human
action, will yield a golden future.
The one other French philosopher of progress I want to cite has been
mentioned, but without even brief description: Marie Jean Caritat,
Marquis de Condorcet (1743–1794). He had been deeply impressed by
Turgot's discourses and writings of 1750–1751, and had even written a
biography of Turgot before the outbreak of the Revolution. Progress was
in Condorcet's very marrow. He hailed the Revolution and never weakened
in his support of it, but, as I have already noted, he incurred the
hatred of Robespierre who consequently put the Jacobin police on
Condorcet's trail. It was while he was hiding from the police that he
wrote his Outline of a Historical Picture of the Progress of the Human Mind.
The three stages of progress Turgot and others had premised for human
advancement from past to present become nine stages for Condorcet, with
a tenth, still ahead, when man would know all joys of freedom,
equality, justice, and humanitarianism. Each of the nine stages is
given an identity drawn from some signal element of economy or culture;
thus the primitive pastoral stage, the agricultural, that of the towns,
the handicraft stage, etc., culminating in the kind of civilization
that had reached its highest level in Western Europe. For Condorcet
there were invariable laws of development, arising from man's own
nature, laws which, when finally discovered, as Condorcet believed that
he had discovered them, would guide our vision of the future. "If there
is to exist a science for anticipating the future progress of the human
kind, and for directing and hastening this progress, it must be based
primarily on the history of the progress already made."
This progress can be divided, Condorcet suggests, into some nine
epochs. The first, an epoch glimpsed only through imagination, is that
of mankind living in kinship organization, with the simplest possible
economy and material culture and the beginnings of religion ("the most
hateful of all despotisms upon the human mind"). The eight succeeding
epochs take us through the origins of language, handicraft,
pastoralism, villages, towns, commerce, and so on, reaching the first
great heights in ancient classical civilization. Next followed the
"barbarism" of Christian-medieval society, succeeded by the
Renaissance, the rise of modern science, with the ninth epoch
culminating in all that Condorcet and his fellow philosophers prized so
greatly. "Everything points to the fact that we are verging upon the
epoch of one of the great revolutions of the human race . . . The
existing state of knowledge guarantees that it will be auspicious." The
next, the tenth epoch still in the future, will represent man's
achievement at last of full equality, liberty, justice, and abolition
of not merely want and hunger but of all remaining restraints upon the
human mind.
America
Few places in the eighteenth century displayed a stronger belief in
the philosophy of progress than did the American colonies and, then,
the new, infant republic. Henry Steele Commager, in his recent The Empire of Reason, gives a good deal of stress to this; so does Edward McNall Burns in his The American Idea of Mission.
Thomas Jefferson, in 1824, two years before his death, marvelling at
the progress already to be seen on earth and all that he had seen in
his 81 years of life, writes: "And where this progress will stop no one
can say. Barbarism has, in the meantime, been receding before the
steady step of amelioration, and will in time, I trust, disappear from
the earth." The sometimes dour John Adams, in the Preface to his Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States,
writes of "the regular course of progressive improvement" in the arts
and sciences, and goes so far as to declare that "The institutions now
made in America will not wholly wear out for thousands of years."
Benjamin Franklin, in a letter to his friend Joseph Priestley in 1780,
writes: "It is impossible to imagine the Height to which may be
carried, in a thousand years, the Power of Man over Matter." Such
sentiments were commonplace in the America of the Founding Fathers.
The Nineteenth Century's View of Progress
In the nineteenth century, on both sides of the Atlantic, the belief
in progress attained the status of a popular religion among the middle
class, and was widely declared by intellectuals to be a fixed law.
France: Auguste Comte
Auguste Comte's Positive Philosophy, published in
successive volumes during the 1830s is probably the most systematic and
dedicated of all works on progress in the century, and, as Teggart has
shown in his Theory of History, this work exerted immense
influence upon the social and moral thought of the century—upon minds
not always willing to acknowledge the influence. The essence of human
progress for Comte is intellectual. Mankind's mentality has evolved
over the millennia through three stages: the theological, the
metaphysical, and, coming now into existence, the positive or
scientific. Comte argues that all physical disciplines have reached
scientific status—astronomy, physics, chemistry, and biology, in that
evolutionary order—and the time is now ripe for the creation of a true
science of society.
Comte first labelled this new science "social physics" then
"sociology." It would be a master-science, with economics, politics,
and others sections within sociology. The great object of the science
of sociology is demonstration to governments and citizens of the basic
laws of human behavior. These, for Comte, fall under two great
divisions: Social Statics, the study of social relationships; and
Social Dynamics, the essence of which is the study of the principles
which underlie human progress. "No real order can be established and
still less can it last, if it is not fully compatible with progress;
and no great progress can be accomplished if it does not tend to the
consolidation of order . . . The misfortune of our present state is
that the two ideas [progress and social order] are set up in radical
opposition to each other."
Such was Comte's absolute confidence in his own powers of prevision
that, working from his claimed laws of progress, he wrote a second
major work, The Positive Polity, published in the early
1850s, with a subtitle, "Treatise on Sociology," in which he actually
described, in abundant detail, the utopia that would exist on earth
once human beings, instructed by Comte's science of society, liberated
themselves from all existing beliefs, customs, and laws. Although this
work did not have the influence upon the developing social sciences
that his earlier one did, it played nevertheless a significant role in
Western utopianism, resulting in the creation of a Religion of Humanity
which had chapters in many parts of both European and American
societies. Messianic, Comte may have become the butt of sneers from
Marx and his followers, but his was a mind of power, and allow all we
will for the shaping influence Saint-Simon had on Comte during his
early years, his first major work, The Positive Philosophy,
is highly original. It is the fusion of a brilliantly creative mind and
a vast amount of reading done in his youthful years, which have been
fully treated in Henri Gouhier, La Jeunesse d'Auguste Comte.
Germany: Hegel and Marx
In Germany, G.W.F. Hegel's Philosophy of History (published
after Hegel's death in 1831) assumed much of the same influence that
Comte's writing held in France. Growth, dialectical in character, plays
a strong part conceptually in all of Hegel's work, but it is in his Philosophy of History
that the importance of the idea of progress is best to be noted. The
most striking difference between human history and what is revealed in
the study of sub-human species consists in "an impulse of
perfectibility" that the human species alone possesses, as the
consequence of its powers of reason and also of the cumulative
character of its mental experience. For Hegel human history is "the
development of spirit in time," and the essence of Hegelian spirit is
"freedom." The history of mankind has moved, he tells us, from east to
west, and fundamental in this history is the development and
enlargement of the sense of freedom. "The east knew and to the present
day knows only that one is free; The Greek and Roman world that some are free; the German world knows that all
are free." The laws of history have contrived to produce "only in the
history of the German nations" the political state, which for Hegel is
the acme of historical progress, within which the idea of freedom
attains "concrete reality."
By no means all of those who were deeply influenced by Hegel shared
Hegel's view of the state as the most perfect of institutions, least of
all the Prussian state to which Hegel gave utter devotion during his
years of lecturing at the University of Berlin. Shlomo Avineri, Hegel's Theory of the Modern State
deals illuminatingly not only with Hegel's philosophy of political
progress but with its impact upon the generation or two following
Hegel's death. The important point in this impact is that Hegel's
dialectic, his view of history as the war of opposites continuously and
cumulatively reaching ever-higher syntheses, in sum, Hegel's
perspective of mankind in ceaseless progress, touched a great many
minds, in fact helped shape these minds, which were in no way whatever
sympathetic to Hegel's veneration of the state.
Among these minds, is of course Karl Marx. In his Preface to the second edition of Capital
Marx pays his respects to Hegel, declaring himself "the pupil of that
mighty thinker" even though Marx felt obliged to separate himself from
the "mystification which dialectic suffers in Hegel's hands." As far as
Marx was concerned, Hegel was the first to clarify in systematic and
thorough fashion the process of change in history even if he did, in
Marx's opinion, have it "standing on its head." Is there a clear-cut,
deterministic belief in mankind's progress in Marx? A generation ago,
the affirmative answer was almost universal. Today, however, there are
enough followers of the "humanistic" Marx, the Marx of "praxis" to get
controversy rather than instant consensus when the question is asked,
at least in the Western world. No doubt there are passages in Marx's
voluminous writings to make possible both an affirmative and negative
reply. But in my judgment Marx cannot possibly be separated from the
same basic philosophy of progress that we find in dozens of other
influential minds in the nineteenth century.
Marx believed Capital to be his greatest and most seminal
work; so did Engels and scores of other followers who talked with or
corresponded with Marx. And in the Preface to the first edition of Capital
Marx leaves us in no doubt whatever of a philosophy of history, leading
toward capitalism's demise and the rise of socialism, one "working with
iron necessity towards inevitable results." Granted that "one nation
can and should learn from another," but even when a society has "got on
the right track for the discovery of its natural laws of movement . . .
it can neither clear by bold leaps nor remove by legal enactments the
obstacles offered by the successive phases of its normal development."
And in the slightly earlier Critique of Political Economy,
Marx writes: "In broad outlines we can designate the Asiatic, the
ancient, the feudal, and modern bourgeois methods of production as so
many epochs in the progress of the economic formation of society."
Who can miss in the most famous and powerful of all Marx's writings, The Manifesto,
the virtual ode to progress, an ode that allows, even compels, him to
hail the wonders of capitalism for its work in preparing the industrial
and technological scene for the eventual and, by virtue of the fatal
contradictions in capitalism, necessary appearance of socialism when at
long last humanity will "have an association in which the free
development of each is the condition for the free development of all."
And, to offer just one more bit of evidence in support of the reality
of the "deterministic" Marx, there is the fascinating article Marx
wrote, in English, for the New York Tribune in 1853 on "The
British Rule in India." The imperialist devastation of traditional
Indian society by England may spring from the crassest, most venal and
exploitative motives, Marx writes, but: "The question, can mankind
fulfill its destiny without a fundamental revolution in Asia? If not,
whatever may have been the crimes of England, she was the unconscious
tool of history in bringing about that revolution."
England: J.S. Mill and Spencer
John Stuart Mill wrote an entire book on Comte's philosophy, which he admired greatly in the form it had taken in the Positive Philosophy. Dealing with the proper methods for the social sciences in Book VI of his Logic,
Mill not only endorses Comte's 'law of three stages' but declares: "By
its aid we may hereafter succeed not only in looking far forward into
the future history of the human race, but in determining what
artificial means may be used . . . to accelerate the natural progress .
. ." He also insists that "The progressiveness of the human race is the
foundation on which a method of philosophizing in the social science
has been of late years erected, far superior to either of the two modes
which had previously been prevalent, the chemical or experimental, and
the geometrical modes." In his most famous essay, "On Liberty," Mill
distinguishes between "stationary" and "progressive" societies, and
argues that the greatest possible freedom of the individual is the
natural outcome of the laws of progress in society.
Very probably the most famous single philosopher of progress in the
nineteenth century, famous throughout the world, the Far East included,
was Herbert Spencer. For Spencer, as for so many others of the age, the
words "development," "evolution," and "progress" were synonyms (so are
they in Darwin's Origin of the Species). Spencer devoted his
life to demonstration of the operation of laws of progress throughout
nature and human society. Such demonstration is the declared objective
of his vast, ten-volume Synthetic Philosophy. But early on, in Social Statics,
Spencer set forth the guiding principle of his thought. "Progress,
therefore, is not an accident, but a necessity. Instead of civilization
being artificial, it is a part of nature; all of a piece with the
development of the embryo or the unfolding of a flower." Since Spencer
defines all evil as only a maladaptation of an organism to nature, (and
as maladaptation must, through evolutionary processes, disappear in
time) then "all excess and all deficiency must disappear; that is, all
unfitness must disappear; that is, all imperfection must disappear."
Not by an iota does that conception of progress change in any of
Spencer's later works. For him the theory of progress was the golden
thread making possible a single, unified science, one whose principles
would embrace the natural and social worlds alike. It is doubtful if
any philosopher has come even close to having the influence upon social
thought, lay and scholarly, that Spencer had for nearly a half-century.
America
In nineteenth century America, as David Marcel documents in detail in his Progress and Pragmatism,
progress became either religion directly or the context of religions.
George Bancroft devoted nearly fifty years to the writing of a history
of the United States that would prove beyond question the operation of
an iron law of progress, leading to ever-widening freedom, in America.
In New York City, at the height of the agonizing, bloody Civil War, the
philosopher-historian John W. Draper spoke to large audiences to
propound his thesis that American history embodies a "social
advancement . . . as completely under the control of natural law as is
the bodily growth of an individual."
Even Emerson, so often critical of American values, asked, in his
"Progress of Culture": "Who would live in the stone age or the bronze
or the iron or the lacustrine? Who does not prefer the age of steel, of
gold, of coal, petroleum, cotton, steam, electricity, and of the
spectroscope?" Such words no doubt strike chill into the hearts of our
environmentalists today, but they struck no chill in Emerson's day. And
in 1893, the midst of the worst single depression America had yet
experienced, Chicago opened the gates to its 600 acres of spectacular
exhibits of technological progress, more than 27 million people went
through, to marvel and even worship. Much the same had happened in
England in 1851 at the great Exhibition of London; its aim, in the
words of a writer in the Edinburgh Review, "to seize the living scroll of human progress, inscribed with every successive conquest of man's intellect."
Nineteenth Century Skeptics of Progress
There were assuredly skeptics with respect to progress when those
words were written, and there would be a continuing line of skeptics
from Jacob Burckhardt and Friedrich Nietzsche, through Arthur
Schopenhauer, down to Oswald Spengler, W. R. Inge, and Austin Freeman
in the early decades of the twentieth century. Only, really, during the
last quarter-century have we recognized those who doubted or hated the
changes in the natural and cultural landscape, which most people deemed
progressive. (Even in the French Enlightenment, as Henry Vyverberg has
shown in his Historical Pessimism in the French Enlightenment,
there were those who looked at past, present and future with but little
if any hope.) No idea, however grand and encompassing, ever captures
the loyalties of everyone in an age. But even though we acknowledge the
skeptics, there is no doubt whatever that the overwhelming majority of
people in the nineteenth and early twentieth century embraced faith in
human progress, with economic and technological advancement the
necessary vis creatrix, and accepted it as a fact of nature
and history. "You can't stop progress" had become a universal
colloquialism in this country well before the nineteenth century ended,
and that theme, variously stated, served our major scholars and
intellectuals as well as our politicians and statesmen.
The Dark Side of Progress: Power, Nationalism, and
Racism
It would be misleading to imply that the idea of progress has been
invariably linked to philosophies of liberalism, democracy, and legal
equality. There is a dark side to the idea, manifest in the writings of
those, on the one hand, who celebrated political power as the magic key
to human salvation on earth and, on the other, who linked progress with
some given race, usually "Nordic," "Teutonic," or "Anglo-Saxon," though
not seldom "French" and "American" during the latter part of the
nineteenth and early part of the twentieth century. The same conception
of a principle of mankind advancing necessarily to perfection that we
find in the liberal philosophy of a Herbert Spencer is to be found in
the absolutist philosophies of those who followed J. G. Fichte and
Hegel in dedication to the political state or the racialist
philosophies of Arthur de Gobineau, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, and
their numerous followers.
From Fichte's Addresses to the German Nation, through Hegel's Philosophy of History,
down to the spokesmen, Left and Right, of the twentieth century's
totalitarianisms, there has been a continuing philosophy of progress in
the West rooted in the transforming, redemptive uses of power. Hegel,
in his Philosophy of Right, had written: "The march of God in
the world, that is what the state is." And that is what the state or
nation meant to a great many in the nineteenth century, and continues,
in effect, to mean in our own day. It is one thing to declare oneself
in favor of an absolute state, however rooted. It is something vastly
different and greater in potential effect to say, as Fichte, Hegel, and
their followers said, that political absolutism is the necessary and
benign outcome of the principle of human progress.
Marx may have been hostile to the state as he knew it in its "bourgeois" form, and have actually believed what he wrote in the Manifesto,
that the triumph of the proletariat and the ending of class rule would
mean the abolition of the political state. But when late in life he
wrote his Criticism of the Gotha Program, he could give vent
to the following words: "Between capitalist and communist society lies
a period of revolutionary transformation from one to the other. There
is a corresponding period of transition in the political sphere and in
this period the state can only take the form of a revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat"
(italics Marx's). We can do Marx the charity of supposing that in his
view this dictatorship would be short-lived and would be literally of
the proletariat, not of a small clique; but it is hardly necessary here
to point to the ease with which proletariat became party and party
became governing committee and governing committee became one man in
the history of Marxism from Marx to Stalin. Without the sustaining,
sacralizing belief in human progress, and in the uses of state and
political power to facilitate this progress, it is unlikely that
totalitarianism as we have known it in the twentieth century would have
come about.
But we should not rest with the view that progress-as-power is to be
seen only among those who are intellectually descended from Hegel, or
any of his followers, Left or Right, Marx included. As Carleton Hayes,
in his Essays on Nationalism, Hans Kohn in his Idea of Nationalism, Boyd Shafer in his The Faces of Nationalism
have all made incontestable, the union between the idea of progress and
the idea of the nation with a mission affected the entire Western
world. Leonard Krieger, in his The German Idea of Freedom and Edward McNall Burns in The American Idea of Mission have demonstrated so effectively that no people in the West has been free, in some degree at least, of the view that national
progress, the advancement of the scope and interests of a nation, is
not merely progress but freedom, justice, and goodness too. There is no
coincidence whatever in the fact that those at the turn of the century
in this country who took the name Progressives for themselves in
politics combined belief in manifest destiny with belief that true
liberalism meant willingness to use the powers of government in
economy, society, and culture as the means of accelerating American
progress toward its destined purpose. A great deal of the difference
between liberalism as we know it today in the West and the liberalism
of Mill and Spencer is explainable in terms of the rhetoric of
progress—with the state made crucial in this rhetoric.
The same has to be said of racialism. It is doubtful that the kind
of racial obsession we have known in this century, reaching its ugliest
peak in German Nazism, would have existed had it not been for the
nineteenth century "proofs" by such minds as Gobineau, in his Essay on the Inequality of the Races, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, in Foundation of the Nineteenth Century, and, in this country, John W. Burgess, in his Political Science and Comparative Constitutional Law
that behind all genuine progress in civilization is the factor of race.
And, more important, behind all modern progress in the world lies the
contribution of a particular race—Teutonic, Nordic, call it what we
will. I am not suggesting that belief in racial superiority is
inseparable from some kind of belief in progress; of course it is. But
with race, as with political power, far more can be done to advance the
cause when it is linked with a progressive philosophy of history than
when it is put forward alone on its own merits.
To summarize and to reiterate: the idea of progress as we have known
it for two and a half millennia in the West is hydraheaded. It may
mean, as it meant to the Greeks and Romans, no more than advance of the
arts and sciences, with consequent boons to human welfare. It may mean
a Christian march to a final perfect millennium on this earth and then
eternal bliss in heaven. It may mean the constant increase in
knowledge, in free institutions, and in creativity, as it did to the
Founding Fathers and their kindred spirits in England and France. But
it may also mean the relentless enhancement of the political state, the
ever-more intrusive role of the state—and its military and police—into
our individual lives, or the equally relentless ascent to domination of
the world by a given race.
The Fate of Progress in the Twentieth Century
We have reached the twentieth century in our historical look at the
idea of progress. It is often said that this vaunted faith is dead, in
the West at least—killed by World War I, by the Great Depression, by
World War II, by the spectacle of military despotism, under whatever
ideological label, galloping across the earth at rising speed, by
belief in the exhaustion of nature and her resources, by malaise
compounded of boredom, apathy and disillusionment at one extreme and by
consecration to mindless terror at the other, or by some other lethal
force. Perhaps it is dead, or at least in extremis. Certainly
it cannot be said of the idea that it enjoys the favor that it did in
the nineteenth century, either as popular dogma or as intellectual
creed. But, for reasons I shall come to presently, it is unwise to
administer last rites, just yet at any rate.
The Early Twentieth Century's Faith in Progress
One point must be emphasized. The idea of progress entered the
twentieth century at flood tide. Among industrialists and small
businessmen alike, the idea had all the buoyancy during the first three
decades of the century that it ever had in nineteenth century
Manchester. Even during the Great Depression when Robert and Helen Lynd
revisited Middletown (Muncie, Indiana) they found faith in
progress as strong as they had ten years earlier when America was in
the throes of prosperity. And, as even casual review of the books and
articles written in the 1930s will make clear, there was no significant
waning of faith in progress among the economically and politically
active. There were those who believed that progress would be best
served by a full return to the principles of the free market, with a
retreat of government from the economy mandatory. But the most
determined opponents of the New Deal were hardly lacking in faith that
progress had been a reality and would be again, once natural economic
processes became ascendant.
Side by side, a growing number were both convinced of the reality of progress
and saw rational governmental planning as the necessary key. Michael Freeden,
in his The New Liberalism, traces this belief back to the influence
of John A. Hobson and Leonard Hobhouse in England at the beginning of the century.
It found fertile soil in this country, in the minds of intellectuals at least,
commencing with the presidency of Woodrow Wilson. From about 1915 through the
1950s, the New Liberalism was very strong indeed, and it was premised upon faith
in progress just as was the Old Liberalism of Spencer and Mill. William E. Akin,
in his valuable Technocracy and the American Dream, has recently reminded
us of the breadth and seriousness of the technocratic movement during the early
decades of this century, reaching its height in the Depression. Belief in progress,
or the possibility of progress once control of government was placed in the
hands of scientists and technologists, was as strong in technocratic minds as
belief had been among St. Simonians, Comteans, and Fourierists in the nineteenth
century. Nor is such belief dead even yet.
Nor can we forget radical progressive flowerings during the early
decades of the century. Whether native radicalism of the kind we
associate with Thorstein Veblen, Henry George, and Edward Bellamy, or
imported, chiefly Marxist, radicalism, there was profound conviction
that the future would be bright. This radical progressive faith
prophesied that all present barriers to abundance and happiness would
necessarily be removed by the forces of history, and that the day was
impending when equality, justice, and reason would govern our lives.
And as far as Communism is concerned, we find all the old faith in
humanity's golden future still intact in official pronouncements of the
Russians and the Chinese. It was the Chinese Liu Shao-chi only a few
years ago who declared for the world's benefit that Communism (Maoist
in thrust) "is the road that all humanity must inevitably take, in
accordance with the laws of the development of history." Maoism does
not currently reign in China, but we may take for granted that belief
in progress through Marxist Communism does.
There are other evidences of the persistence of belief in progress.
The philosophy of "social evolution" has never really disappeared from
the social sciences, though there was something of a lull for a number
of years. And right now this philosophy is undergoing a veritable
efflorescence. In my Social Change and History, I have argued
that the doctrine of social evolution has nothing to do, either
historically or logically, with biological evolution. The panoramas of
social evolution propounded today by Talcott Parsons and his followers
(not to mention those of the increasing number of anthropologists who
take Leslie White as their guide) all descend from the panoramas of
progress which Comte, Marx, Spencer, E.B. Tylor, and so many others put
before us in the last century. Exactly what would be the response from
any one of our present-day social evolutionists if asked whether the
future of mankind will be as rosy as that foreseen by a Spencer, we
cannot be sure. But the methodology, the structure, of current theories
of social evolution is almost precisely that generated by the Western
idea of progress, with its built-in assumption of slow, gradual,
continuous change—cumulative, purposive, and self-driven.
Current Skepticism on the Idea of Progress
But if the belief in progress, considered eudaemonistically, was
still strong during the first half of the twentieth century, it cannot
be so declared at the present moment. Without much doubt, it seems to
me, the idea has fallen upon hard times in this, the second half of the
century. The doubts, skepticisms, and repudiations of the idea of
progress during the nineteenth century—those of Alexis de Tocqueville,
Burckhardt, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, and Max Weber—have grown steadily
in our own century. W. R. Inge, in his famous lecture-essay, "The Idea
of Progress," of 1920; the works of Henry and Brooks Adams, especially
the latter's Law of Civilization and Decay; Georges Sorel, The Illusion of Progress; Austin Freeman, Social Decay and Regeneration; Spengler, Decline of the West; A.J. Toynbee, to very considerable degree, in his Study of History; Pitirim Sorokin, Social and Cultural Dynamics; Freud, Civilization and its Discontents—these
are but a few of the works which, building in effect upon the doubts
and disbeliefs of the nineteenth century figures I have cited, have
given the intellectual atmosphere a darker and darker hue. True, there
is Teilhard de Chardin, the Roman Catholic scientist-philosopher who,
almost alone, has given our century a systematic and complex, if not
always intelligible, philosophy of history based entirely upon the
principle of everperfecting mankind. Not even Spencer outdid Teilhard
in expression of long-run optimism. And, as I have noted, most, if not
all, of those committed deeply to Marxism, are inextricably committed
also to a progressive view of the future. The idea of progress, in
short, lives: but precariously, so far as a growing number of people,
intellectual and lay are concerned.
At the heart of late twentieth-century skepticism lie several
related convictions, all at odds with the beliefs that held sway during
the heyday of progress.
First, a spreading conclusion among intellectuals that we have reached the limits of economic advancement. Fred Hirsch, in his Social Limits of Growth and E.J. Mishan, The Costs of Economic Growth and The Economic Growth Debate
represent, intelligently and eruditely, this point of view. In essence,
this position holds that industrialism's lavish productivity has by now
weakened the desire for further material benefits and has even dampened
interest in those already achieved. Both Hirsch and Mishan argue that
each new advance in technology and industrialism weakens ever more
visibly the social and moral values which we cherish and which, for so
long, seemed entirely congruent with economic development. Max Weber,
at the very end of his famous The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism,
predicted that the very ethic which had nurtured the historical rise of
capitalism would in time wane, even die, and that capitalism would
thence be all superstructure without any vital psychological foundation
to hold it up for very long.
Second, a growing conviction that we are rapidly depleting
nature and her resources. Fundamental to the idea of progress, as we
have seen, from the time of the Greeks to our own century, was the
belief in what Descartes called the "invariability of the laws of
nature." Implicit in this belief, or certainly deducible from it, was a
confidence that nature's resources would never give out; that the only
real challenge was man's capacity for exploiting them. Today, whether
with genuine foundation or not, a suspicion spreads that our
prodigality is rapidly destroying nature's riches, or using them up
without regard to the future. Talbot Page, in his recent Conservation and Economic Efficiency,
expresses this view most soberly and learnedly (even if in my judgment
without full justification), but one need only look at the manifestoes
of environmentalist movements to see the view in its fullest light.
Ernest Beckerman, In Defense of Economic Growth presents, by
my lights at least, a very convincing refutation of the
depletion-argument, but it has had little if any effect upon those who
follow that argument.
Third, it is impossible to overlook the still small perhaps
but constantly enlarging belief that science has reached the limits of
its own capacity to advance. Or, if it be premised that science can
still make epochal discoveries, that science has reached the point
where further achievements will be adverse rather than beneficial so
far as human morality and psychology are concerned. A very perceptible
dethronement of knowledge, in all of the sciences, physical and social,
is taking place. Thus Gunther Stent, notable molecular biologist, has
put forward his view, in The Coming of the Golden Age: A View of the End of Progress, that the law of diminishing returns has set in, that further significant
advances in science become less and less likely. He candidly adds to
this view of science the belief that a widespread revulsion, presaged
by the beatniks and hippies, will take place against science, with
something resembling the life of pristine South Sea Islanders becoming
more and more mesmerizing to people.
I am not suggesting that any such view is at present endemic among
scientists; far from it. But it reflects nevertheless a state of mind
that shows considerable evidence of hardihood, even within science. And
there is a related belief, becoming rapidly widespread, I fear, that
science, for all the good it has done mankind, is now at a point where
it is more likely to be bureaucratic, oppressive in its prohibitions
beginning with tobacco, now extending to so many areas of our
recreations and pleasures, and likely to extend even farther in the
future, and, not least, to become increasingly mired in its own
controversies and contradictions. Nor can we forget here the
Tocquevillian law of rising expectations, with disillusionment and
disenchantment the inevitable consequences. Scientists, to be sure,
have contributed to the operation of this law by their own extravagant
promises, nowhere more evident than with respect to cancer a few years
ago. Disillusionment with science and technology is very much a part of
the intellectual landscape, and it would be a rash soul indeed who
declared it a purely peripheral and transitory thing.
Fourth, boredom is spreading in Western society: boredom
with the very goods, material and psychic, which modernity has
heretofore largely blessed. In his profoundly absorbing Inventing the Future,
scientist Dennis Gabor has suggested that "work is the only occupation
yet invented which mankind has been able to endure in any but the
smallest possible doses." But, through technology and the
fast-developing cult of leisure, we are pushing work into a constantly
diminishing place in Western society. The work-ethic wanes and the
leisure-ethic grows. But all present evidence is that few if any human
beings can endure leisure without becoming bored, succumbing to alcohol
and drugs, or other modes of escape, or turning to violence and
terrorism in mounting degree. Nothing in the bio- and psychological
evolution of mankind has prepared it in slightest degree for the
leisure that, by criteria drawn from even the recent historical past,
envelops us all in considerable, and rising, degree. Technology has
permitted us to make a virtual fetish of leisure, but even while
seeking it in constantly expanding dimensions, we are at bottom unable
to tolerate it—that is, without recourse to narcotic, psychological,
religious, sexual, and violence-saturated releases from the tensions
leisure generates. The spread of subjectivism, of what Tom Wolfe has
called "Me-ness," proceeds apace with leisure, inviting a view of the
future in which the bond of humanity, of community, and mutual
awareness will have disappeared altogether.
The Prospects for Progress
What is likely to be the future of the idea of progress? Only the
most tenuous speculation is possible. It may disappear altogether in
Western thought and life, victim of the forces I have just described,
or of some thermonuclear war so vast and encompassing and prolonged as
to destroy almost everything, intellectual as well as material. But it
may not. And if it doesn't disappear, my own prediction is that its
survival will be nurtured, not by rationalist-secular confidence, once
so great in Western society, now fast-diminishing but, rather, by a
renascence of religion, a renascence that may have already begun, most
evident in fundamentalist and pentecostal spheres. As I have shown, the
Western idea of progress was born of Greek imagery, religious in
foundation; the imagery of growth. It attained its fullness within
Christianity, starting with the Church Fathers, especially Augustine.
Central to any genuinely Christian form of religion is the Pauline
emphasis upon hope: hope to be given gratification in this
world as well as the next. Basically, the Christian creed, its concept
of Original Sin notwithstanding, is inseparable from a philosophy of
history that is overwhelmingly optimistic about man's estate in this
world and the next, provided only that due deference and commitment to
God are given. To the degree that we may properly expect the future
spread of the now-burgeoning millennarianism, I would assume that we
may also expect religion to fill the vacuum brought on by those
elements of modernity I have described—disillusionment with science,
boredom, etc.—and with this, a shoring-up of the idea of progress from
past to future. But that, obviously, is speculative in highest degree.
Notwithstanding the futurologists to the contrary, it is not possible,
and never will be possible, to predict the future. We are left with
surmise, intuition, hunch, and hope!
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