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Front Page Archive Quotations about Liberty October 12-16, 2009 - Harriet Taylor on the end of privilege (1847)
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October 12-16, 2009 - Harriet Taylor on the end of privilege (1847) |
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Harriet Taylor wants to see "freedom
and admissibility" in all areas of human activity replace the system
of "privilege and exclusion" (1847)
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2007 was the 200th anniversary
of the birth of Harriet Taylor (1807-1858)
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Harriet Taylor (1807-1858), in an essay
dedicated to Queen Victoria, claims
that the replacement of "privilege
and exclusion" by that of "freedom and admissibility"
is "the very most
important advance which has hitherto been made in human society" (1847):
Trades and occupations have almost everywhere ceased to be privileges.
Thus exclusion after exclusion has disappeared, until privilege has ceased
to be the general rule, and tends more and more to become the exception:
it now no longer seems a matter of course that there should be an exclusion,
but it is conceded that freedom and admissibility ought to prevail, wherever
there is not some special reason for limiting them. Whoever considers how
immense a change this is from primitive opinions and feelings, will think
it nothing less than the very most important advance which has hitherto
been made in human society. It is nothing less than the beginning of the
reign of justice, or the first dawn of it at least. It is the introduction
of the principle that distinctions, and inequalities of rights, are not
good things in themselves, and that none ought to exist for which there
is not a special justification, grounded on the greatest good of the whole
community, privileged and excluded taken together.
[Other books on the Rights
of Women.]
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The full paragraph from which this quotation was taken can be be viewed below (front page quote in bold):
This is remarkably the case with respect to Privileges and Exclusions. In
every generation, the bulk of mankind imagine that all privileges and all
exclusions, then existing by law or usage, are natural, fit and proper, even
necessary: except such as happen to be, just at that time, in the very crisis
of the struggle which puts an end to them—which rarely happens to more
than one set or class of them at a time. But when we take all history into
view we find that its whole course is a getting rid of privileges and exclusions.
Anciently all was privilege and exclusion. There was not a person or class
of persons who had not a line marked round them which they were in no case
permitted to overstep. There was not a function or operation in society, sufficiently
desirable to be thought worth guarding, which was not rigidly confined to
a circumscribed class or body of persons. Some functions were confined to
particular families—some to particular guilds, corporations, or societies.
Whoever has any knowledge of ancient times knows that privilege and exclusion
was not only the general rule in point of fact, but that nothing else was
in accordance with the ideas of mankind. Whenever any action or occupation,
private or public, was thought of, it seemed natural to everybody that there
should be some persons who were allowed to do the action or follow the occupation,
and others who were not. People never thought of inquiring why it should be
so, or what there was in the nature of the particular case to require it.
People seldom ask reasons for what is in accordance with the whole spirit
of what they see round them, but only for what jars with that spirit. Even
bodily freedom, the right to use one’s own labour for one’s own
benefit, was once a privilege, and the great majority of mankind were excluded
from it. This seems to the people of our day something monstrously unnatural,
to people of former days it seemed the most natural of all things. It was
very gradually that this was got rid of, through many intermediate stages,
of serfage, villenage &c. Where this did not exist, the system of castes
did: and that appears profoundly unnatural to us, but so profoundly natural
to Hindoos that they have not yet given it up. Among the early Romans fathers
had the power of putting their sons to death, or selling them into slavery:
this seemed perfectly natural to them, most unnatural to us. To hold land,
in property, was throughout feudal Europe the privilege of a noble. This was
only gradually relaxed and in Germany there is still much land which can only
be so held. Up to the Reformation to teach religion was the exclusive privilege
of a male separate class, even to read the Bible was a privilege: Those who
lived at the time of the Reformation and who adopted it, ceased to recognize
this case of privilege and exclusion, but did not therefore call in question
any others. Throughout the Continent political office and military rank were
exclusive privileges of a hereditary noblesse, till the French revolution
destroyed these privileges. Trades and occupations have almost everywhere
ceased to be privileges. Thus exclusion after exclusion has disappeared, until
privilege has ceased to be the general rule, and tends more and more to become
the exception: it now no longer seems a matter of course that there should
be an exclusion, but it is conceded that freedom and admissibility ought to
prevail, wherever there is not some special reason for limiting them. Whoever
considers how immense a change this is from primitive opinions and feelings,
will think it nothing less than the very most important advance which has
hitherto been made in human society. It is nothing less than the beginning
of the reign of justice, or the first dawn of it at least. It is the introduction
of the principle that distinctions, and inequalities of rights, are not good
things in themselves, and that none ought to exist for which there is not
a special justification, grounded on the greatest good of the whole community,
privileged and excluded taken together.
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