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This essay first appeared in the New Individualist Review, vol. 1, no.
1, April 1961 published by the University of Chicago chapter of the Intercollegiate
Society of Individualists. The entire periodical was reprinted by Liberty Fund
in 1981. The biographical essay on Humboldt was written by Ralph Raico who was
then a graduate student at the Committee on Social Thought at the University
of Chicago and the Editor-in-Chief of the Review. It was the first in
a series of essays on "Great Individualists of the Past" and further
essays "on past thinkers who have contributed to individualist philosophy...
such as Burke, Acton, Bastiat and Herbert Spencer" were promised.
Ralph Raico, "Great Individualists of the Past: Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767-1835)"
When Oswald Spengler in one of his minor books scornfully characterized German
classical liberalism as, "a bit of the spirit of England on German soil,"
he was merely displaying the willful blindness of the school of militaristic-statist
German historians, who refused to acknowledge as a true compatriot any thinker
who did not form part of the "intellectual bodyguard of the House of Hohenzollern."
Spengler had apparently forgotten that Germany had had its Enlightenment, and
the ideals of freedom which were conceived and propagated in England, Scotland
and France towards the end of the eighteenth century, had found an echo and
a support in the works of writers such as Kant, Schiller and even the young
Fichte. Although by 1899 William Graham Sumner could write that, "there
is today scarcely an institution in Germany except the army," it is nevertheless
true that there existed a native German tradition of distinguished, libertarian
thought, which had, in the course of the nineteenth century, to some degree
at least been translated into action. Of the thinkers who contributed to this
tradition, Wilhelm von Humboldt was unquestionably one of the greatest.
Born in 1767, Humboldt was descended from a Junker family which had faithfully
served the rulers of Prussia for generations - a fact which was later to cause
surprise to some of those who heard young Humboldt in conversation passionately
defend personal liberty. He was educated at Frankfurt-am-Oder, and later at
Göttingen, at that time one of the centers of liberal ideas in Germany.
In the summer of 1789, Humboldt undertook a trip to Paris, in the company of
his former tutor, Campe, who was a devotee of the philosophes, and now
eager to see with his own eyes, "the funeral rites of French despotism."
His pupil did not share his enthusiasm for the Revolution, however, for from
what Humboldt had witnessed at Paris and from conversations with Friedrich Gentz
(at that time a supporter of the French Revolution) there issued a brief article,
"Ideas on the Constitutions of States, occasioned by the New French Constitution."
[1]
This little essay, originally intended as a letter to a friend, is noteworthy
for a number of reasons. In the first place, Humboldt appears to have arrived
at some of the major conclusions of Burke, without at that time being familiar
with the latter's work. He states, for instance, that "reason is capable
to be sure of giving form to material already present, but it has no power to
create new material... Constitutions cannot be grafted upon men as sprigs upon
trees." For a new political order to be successful, it is necessary for
"time and nature" to have prepared the ground. Since this has not
been the case in France, historical analogy compels us to answer no to the question
whether this new constitution will succeed.
In addition, this essay is interesting because it anticipates an idea which
was central to the thesis of Humboldt's most important work on political theory,
and which was never far from his mind whenever he deliberated on the nature
of man - the notion that, "whatever is to flourish in a man must spring
from within him, and not be given him from without."
Nevertheless, Humboldt does not, in this essay, display the hostility towards
the French people which was characteristic of Burke. He realizes that if the
French had given themselves over to ill-considered schemes for remolding their
society according to a preconceived plan, it was a reaction which might have
been expected, given the provocations of the Old Regime. "Mankind had suffered
at the hands of one extreme; it understandably sought its salvation at the other."
On his return to Berlin, Humboldt had been given a minor post at the law court.
But the relative freedom of thought which had been enjoyed in Prussia under
Frederick the Great, was at this time being replaced by persecutions of the
press and religious intolerance and Humboldt did not find the atmosphere of
public life congenial. Added to this, was the disinclination which he felt to
interfere in the lives of others (a nicety of feeling almost grotesquely out
of place in a "public servant"). Most important of all, perhaps, was
the new conception which he was beginning to formulate of the legitimate functions
of government, a conception which virtually compelled him to look on the states
of his time as engines of injustice. In the spring of 1791, Humboldt resigned
his position.
The genesis of his major work on political theory, and the one of most interest
to individualists, is also to be found in discussions with a friend - Karl von
Dalberg, who was a proponent of the "enlightened" state paternalism
then prevalent in Germany. He pressed Humboldt for a written exposition of his
views on the subject, and Humboldt responded, in 1792, by composing his classic,
The Sphere and Duties of Government. [2]
This little book was later to have a good deal of influence. It was of importance
in shaping some of John Stuart Mill's ideas in this field, and may even have
provided the immediate occasion for his On Liberty. In France, Laboulaye,
the late nineteenth century individualist, owed much to this work of Humboldt's,
and in Germany it exercised an influence even over such a basically unsympathetic
mind as von Treitschke's. But it is also a book which has an inherent value,
because in it are set forth - in some cases, I believe, for the first time -
some of the major arguments for freedom.
Humboldt begins his work by remarking that previous writers on political philosophy
have concerned themselves almost exclusively with investigating the divisions
of governmental power and what part the nation, or certain sectors of it, ought
to have in the exercise of this power. These writers have neglected the more
fundamental question, "to what end ought the whole apparatus of the state
to aim, and what limits ought to be set to its activity?" It is this question
that Humboldt intends to answer.
"The true end of man - not that which capricious inclination prescribes
for him, but that which is prescribed by eternally immutable reason - is the
highest and most harmonious cultivation of his faculties into one whole. For
this cultivation, freedom is the first and indispensable condition." Humboldt
thus begins by placing his argument within the framework of a particular conception
of man's nature, but it ought to be noted that the validity of his argument
does not depend upon the correctness of his view of "the true end of man."
Of primary importance are his ideas in regard to the mechanism of individual
and social progress, and here even such a socially-minded utilitarian as John
Stuart Mill could find instruction and inspiration.
For the full flourishing of the individual, Humboldt asserts, there is requisite,
besides freedom, a "manifoldness of situations," which, while logically
distinct from freedom, has always followed upon it. It is only when men are
placed in a great variety of circumstances that those experiments in living
can take place which expand the range of values with which the human race is
familiar, and it is through expanding this range that increasingly better answers
can be found to the question, "In exactly what ways are men to arrange
their lives?"
A free nation would, according to Humboldt, be one in which "the continuing
necessity of association with others would urgently impel each gradually to
modify himself" in the light of his appreciation of the value of the life-patterns
others have accepted. In such a society, "no power and no hand would be
lost for the elevation and enjoyment of human existence." Each man, in
applying his reason to his own life and circumstances, would contribute to the
education of other men, and would, in turn, learn from their experience. This
is Humboldt's view of the mechanism of human progress.
It should be clear, however, that this progressive refinement of the individual
personality can only take place under a regime of freedom, since "what
is not chosen by the individual himself, that in which he is only restricted
and led, does not enter into his being. It remains foreign to him, and he does
not really accomplish it with human energy, but with mechanical address."
This is one of the central ideas of the book, and merits some discussion.
It is an idea which no one will dispute, when it is a question of scientific
progress. No one expects worthwhile scientific thought to take place where the
scientist is compelled or restricted in some important facet of his work. He
must be free to develop his ideas, in accordance with the self-imposed standards
of his profession, out of his own orginality. But scientific knowledge is only
one type of knowledge; there are other types, some at least as socially useful.
There is the knowledge which consists in skills and techniques of production,
and the type which, as we have seen, is embedded in values and ways of life:
besides the sort of knowledge which is acquired through abstract thought, there
is the sort acquired through practical thought and through action. The argument
for freedom in the elaboration of scientific knowledge, therefore, is simply
a special instance of the argument for freedom in general.
Professor Michael Polanyi has described the benefits of "individualism
in the cultivation of science":
The pursuit of science can be organized . . . in no other manner than by
granting complete independence to all mature scientists. They will then distribute
themselves over the whole field of possible discoveries, each applying his
own special ability to the task that appears most profitable to him. Thus
as many trails as possible will be covered, and science will penetrate most
rapidly in every direction towards that kind of hidden knowledge which is
unsuspected by all but its discoverer, the kind of new knowledge on which
the progress of science truly depends.[3]
Few will doubt that scientific progress would have been appallingly retarded
if, for instance, Einstein had been compelled to obtain permission from a board
in charge of "planning science" before he could undertake his researches
(or if a government commission had been empowered to pass on Galileo's intended
work!). But if men like Henry Ford had not been free to put their ideas into
operation, industrial progress would have been no less stanched. We may freely
concede that the abstract scientific thought of an Einstein is a loftier thing,
representing a greater achievement of the human mind. But this has no bearing
on the argument.
We believe that individual scientists should be unhindered in the pursuit of
their aims, because those who would be in charge of the central direction of
scientific research, or those who had power to restrict scientists in essential
ways, would not know as well as the scientists themselves - each of whom has
an immediate knowledge of the relevant factors in his particular situation -
which are the most promising lines to be explored. In addition, a self-chosen
activity, or one which may be freely followed up in all of its ramifications,
will summon forth energy which will not be available in cases where a task is
imposed from without, or where the researcher meets up against countless frustrations
in the pursuit of his goal - the free activity, in other words, will command
greater incentive
But both of these propositions are equally true of activities involving practical
knowledge, or knowledge in action, of which techniques of production are an
example. The socialist who believes in central direction of economic activity
ought, consistently, to believe also in the central planning of science, and
those who favor widespread government control of economic life, because the
state "knows better," should, if they were consistent, favor a return
to the system that shackled the scientific enterprise as well.
It was partly because force necessarily interferes with individual self-development
and the proliferation of new ideas, by erecting a barrier between the individual's
perception of a situation and the solution he thinks it best to attempt, that
Humboldt wanted to limit the activities of the state as severely as possible.
Another argument in favor of this conclusion is that a government wishing to
supervise to even a modest degree such a complex phenomenon as society, simply
cannot fit its regulations to the peculiarities of various concatenations of
circumstances. But measures which ignore such peculiarities will tend to produce
uniformity, and contract the "manifoldness of situations" which is
the spur to all progress.
But what is the indispensable minimum of government activity? Humboldt finds
that the one good which society cannot provide for itself is security against
those who aggress against the person and property of others. His answer to the
question which he posed at the beginning of his work, "what limits ought
to be set to the activity of the state," is "that the provision of
security, against both external enemies and internal dissensions must constitute
the purpose of the state, and occupy the circle of its activity."
As for the services which it is commonly held must fall within the scope of
government action, as, for instance, charity, Humboldt believes that they need
not be provided by political institutions, but can safely be entrusted to social
ones. "It is only requisite that freedom of association be given to individual
parts of the nation or to the nation itself," in order for charitable ends
to be satisfactorily fulfilled. In this, as, indeed, throughout his whole book,
Humboldt shows himself to be a thoughtful but passionate believer in the efficacy
of truly social forces, in the possibility of great social ends being achieved
without any necessity for direction on the part of the state. Humboldt thus
allies himself with the thinkers who rejected the state in order to affirm society.
Parts of Humboldt's book appeared in two German periodicals in 1792, but difficulties
with the Prussian censorship and a certain apparently innate lack of confidence
in his own works, caused him to put off publication of the work until it could
be revised. The day for revision never came, however, and it was only sixteen
years after the author's death that The Sphere and Duties of Government
was published in its entirety.
For ten years after the completion of this book, Humboldt devoted himself to
traveling and private studies, principally in aesthetics and the classics, linguistics
and comparative anthropology. From 1802 to 1808 he served as Prussian minister
to Rome, a post which involved a minimum of official business, and which he
accepted chiefly out of his love for the city. Humboldt's real "return
to the state" occurs in 1809, when he became Director of the Section for
Public Worship and Education, in the Ministry of Interior. In this capacity,
he directed the reorganization of the Prussian public education system, and,
in particular, founded the University of Berlin.
That so unquestionably sincere a man as Humboldt could have acted in such disharmony
with the principles set forth in his only book on political philosophy (among
them, that the state should have no connection with education), requires some
explanation. The reason is to be sought in his patriotism, which had been aroused
by the utter defeat suffered by Prussia at the hands of Napoleon. Humboldt wished
to contribute to the regeneration of his country which was being undertaken
by men such as Stein and Hardenberg, and the reform of the educational system
fitted his abilities and inclinations.
This task completed, Humboldt served in various diplomatic posts for a number
of years, including that of Prussian minister to the Congress of Vienna, and,
after peace had been established, as a member of the Council of State. But the
spirit which now predominated in Berlin, as well as throughout Europe, was the
spirit of Metternich, who, always able accurately to identify the enemies of
his system, had already in 1814 termed Humboldt a "Jacobin." Humboldt's
opposition to the reactionary policies of his government gained for him as much
ill-will at court as it did popularity among the people. He was hated and intrigued
against by the reactionaries at court; they went so far as to open his mail,
as if he had in actuality been a Jacobin. When, in 1819, Metternich induced
Prussia to agree to the Karlsbad Decrees, which attempted to establish a rigid
censorship for all of Germany, Humboldt termed the regulations "shameful,
unnational and provoking to a great people," and demanded the impeachment
of Bernstorff, the Prussian minister who had signed them.
It was clear that a man like Humboldt was an anomaly in a government which
treacherously refused to fulfill its wartime promises of a constitution, and
whose domestic policies were largely dictated by Metternich. In December, 1819,
Humboldt was dismissed. He refused the pension offered him by the king.
The rest of his life he devoted to his studies, of which the researches into
linguistics were the most important and gained for him the reputation of a pioneer
in the field. He died in 1835.
If we ask what are the primary contributions of Humboldt to libertarian thought,
we will find the answer in his ideas on the value of the free, self-sustaining
activity of the individual, and of the importance of the unhindered collaboration
- often unconscious - of the members of society. The first is a conception which
is finding remarkable support and application in the work of the Client-centered,
or Non-directive school of psychotherapists [4],
while the second has been explored in the recent books of writers such as F.
A. Hayek and Michael Polanyi.[5]
That ideas which were set forth by Humboldt should be proving so relevant to
contemporary research into man and society, is a sign of the clearly discernible
trend towards individualism in present-day thought at the highest levels.
Endnotes
[1] "Ideen über
Staatsverfassung, durch die neue französische Constitution veranlasst,"
in Humboldt's Gesammelte Schriften, vol. i, (Berlin, 1903), pp. 77-85.
[2] It was under this
title that Humboldt's book appeared in English, in 1854. The German title is,
Ideen zu einem Versuch, die Grenzen der Wirksamkeit des Staats zu bestimmen;
in Humboldt op, cit. vol. i, pp. 97-254.
[3] Michael Polanyi,
The Logic of Liberty, (London, 1951), p. 89.
[4] On this very suggestive
approach to psychotherapy, see Carl R. Rogers, et. al., Client-Centered Therapy,
(New York, 1951).
[5] See, especially,
F. A. Hayek, The Counter-Revolution of Science, (Glencoe, Ill., 1952),
and The Constitution of Liberty, (Chicago, 1960), and Michael Polanyi,
op. cit.
Bibliography
Works by the Author
Wilhelm von Humboldt, The Limits of State Action, ed. J.W. Burrow (Iindianapolis:
Liberty Fund, 1993). This book is available from the Liberty Fund Online
catalog.
Works about the Author
"Editor's Introduction" to Wilhelm von Humboldt, The Limits of
State Action, ed. J.W. Burrow (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 1993), pp. xvii-lxii.
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