Preface to the First French Edition
One of us is soon to tell in all its details the story of
the life of Michael Bakunin, but its general features are already sufficiently
familiar. Friends and enemies know that this man was great in thought, will,
persistent energy; they know also with what lofty contempt he looked down upon
wealth, rank, glory, all the wretched ambitions which most human beings are
base enough to entertain. A Russian gentleman related by marriage to the
highest nobility of the empire, he was one of the first to enter that intrepid
society of rebels who were able to release themselves from traditions,
prejudices, race and class interests, and set their own comfort at naught. With
them he fought the stern battle of life, aggravated by imprisonment, exile, all
the dangers and all the sorrows that men of self-sacrifice have to undergo
during their tormented existence.
A simple stone and a name mark the spot in the cemetery of
Berne where was laid the body of Bakunin. Even that is perhaps too much to
honor the memory of a worker who held vanities of too much to honor the memory
of a worker who held vanities of that sort in such slight esteem. His friends
surely will raise to him no ostentatious tombstone or statue. They know with
what a huge laugh he would have received them, had they spoken to him of a
commemorative structure erected to his glory; they knew, too, that the true way
to honor their dead is to continue their work—with the same ardor and
perseverance that they themselves brought to it. In this case, indeed, a
difficult task demanding all our efforts, for among the revolutionists of the
present generation not one has labored more fervently in the common cause of
the Revolution.
In Russia among the students, in Germany among the
insurgents of Dresden, in Siberia among his brothers in exile, in America, in
England, in France, in Switzerland, in Italy, among all earnest men, his direct
influence has been considerable. The originality of his ideas, the imagery and
vehemence of his eloquence, his untiring zeal in propogandism, helped too by
the natural majesty of his person and by a powerful vitality, gave Bakunin
access to all the revolutionary groups, and his efforts left deep traces everywhere,
even upon those who, after having welcomed him, thrust him out because of a
difference of object or method. His correspondence was most extensive; he
passed entire nights in preparing long letters to his friends in the
revolutionary world, and some of these letters, written to strengthen the
timid, arouse the sluggish, and outline plans of propagandism or revolt, took
on the proportions of veritable volumes. These letters more than anything else
explain the prodigious work of Bakunin in the revolutionary movement of the
century. The pamphlets published by him, in Russian, French, and Italian,
however important they may be, and however useful they may have been in
spreading the new ideas, are the smallest part of Bakunin's work.
The present memoir, "God and the State," is really
a fragment of a letter or report. Composed in the same manner as most of
Bakunin's other writings, it has the same literary fault, lack of proportion;
moreover it breaks off abruptly: we have searched in vain to discover the end
of the manuscript. Bakunin never had the time necessary to finish all the tasks
he undertook. One work was not completed when others were already under way.
"My life itself is a fragment," he said to those who criticized his
writings. Nevertheless, the readers of "God and the State" certainly
will not regret that Bakunin's memoir, incomplete though it be, has been
published. The questions discussed in it are treated decisively and with a
singular vigor of logic. Rightly addressing himself only to his honest
opponents, Bakunin demonstrates to them the emptiness of their belief in that
divine authority on which all temporal authorities are founded; he proves to
them the purely human genesis of all governments; finally, without stopping to
discuss those bases of the State already condemned by public morality, such as
physical superiority, violence, nobility, wealth, he does justice to the theory
which would entrust science with the government of societies. Supposing even
that it were possible to recognize, amid the conflict of rival ambitions and
intrigues, who are the pretenders and who are the real savants, and that a
method of election could be found which would not fail to lodge the power in
the hands of those whose knowledge is authentic, what guarantee could they
offer us of the wisdom and honesty of their government? On the contrary, can we
not foresee in these new masters the same follies and the same crimes found in
those of former days and of the present time? In the first place, science is
not: it is becoming. The learned man of to-day is but the know-nothing of
tomorrow. Let him once imagine that he has reached the end, and for that very
reason he sinks beneath even the babe just born. But, could he recognize truth
in its essence, he can only corrupt himself by privilege and corrupt others by
power. To establish his government, he must try, like all chiefs of State, to
arrest the life of the masses moving below him, keep them in ignorance in order
to preserve quiet, and gradually debase them that he may rule them from a
loftier throne.
For the rest, since the doctrinaires made their appearance,
the true or pretended "genius" has been trying his hand at wielding
the scepter of the world, and we know what it has cost us. WE have seen them at
work, all these savants: the more hardened the more they have studied; the
narrower in their views the more time they have spent in examining some
isolated fact in all its aspects; without any experience of life, because they
have long known no other horizon than the walls of their cheese; childish in
their passions and vanities, because they have been unable to participate in
serious struggles and have never learned the true proportion of things. Have we
not recently witnessed the foundation of a white school of
"thinkers"—wretched courtiers, too, and people of unclean lives—who
have constructed a whole cosmogony for their sole use? According to them,
worlds have been created, societies have developed, revolutions have overturned
nations, empires have gone down in blood, poverty, disease, and death have been
the queens of humanity, only to raise up an élite of academicians, the
full-blown flower, of which all other men are but the manure. That these
editors of the Temps and the Debats may have leisure to "think,"
nations live and die in ignorance; all other human beings are destined for
death in order that these gentlemen may become immortal!
But we may reassure ourselves: all these academicians will
not have the audacity of Alexander in cutting with his sword the Gordian knot;
they will not lift the blade of Charlemagne. Government by science is becoming
as impossible as that of divine right, wealth, or brute force. All powers are
henceforth to be submitted to pitiless criticism. Men in whom the sentiment of
equality is born suffer themselves no longer to be governed; they learn to
govern themselves. In precipitating from the heights of the heavens him from
whom all power is reputed to descend, societies unseat also all those who
reigned in his name. Such is the revolution now in progress. States are
breaking up to give place to a new order, in which, as Bakunin was fond of
saying, "human justice will be substituted for divine justice." If it
is allowable to cite any one name from those of the revolutionists who have
taken part in this immense work of renovation, there is not one that may be
singled out with more justice than that of Michael Bakunin.
Carlo Cafiero.
Elisée Reclus.
Who are right, the idealists or the materialists? The
question once stated in this way hesitation becomes impossible. Undoubtedly the
idealists are wrong and the materialists right. Yes, facts are before ideas;
yes, the ideal, as Proudhon said, is but a flower, whose root lies in the material
conditions of existence. Yes, the whole history of humanity, intellectual and
moral, political and social, is but a reflection of its economic history.
All branches of modem science, of true and disinterested
science, concur in proclaiming this grand truth, fundamental and decisive: The
social world, properly speaking, the human world-in short, humanity-is nothing
other than the last and supreme development-at least on our planet and as far
as we know-the highest manifestation of animality. But as every development
necessarily implies a negation, that of its base or point of departure,
humanity is at the same time and essentially the deliberate and gradual
negation of the animal element in man; and it is precisely this negation, as
rational as it is natural, and rational only because natural-at once historical
and logical, as inevitable as the development and realization of all the
natural laws in the world-that constitutes and creates the ideal, the world of
intellectual and moral convictions, ideas.
Yes, our first ancestors, our Adams and our Eves, were, if
not gorillas, very near relatives of gorillas, omnivorous, intelligent and
ferocious beasts, endowed in a higher degree than the animals of another
species with two precious faculties-the power to think and the desire to rebel.
These faculties, combining their progressive action in
history, represent the essential factor, the negative power in the positive
development of human animality, and create consequently all that constitutes
humanity in man.
The Bible, which is a very interesting and here and there
very profound book when considered as one of the oldest surviving
manifestations of human wisdom and fancy, expresses this truth very naively in
its myth of original sin. Jehovah, who of all the good gods adored by men was
certainly the most jealous, the most vain, the most ferocious, the most unjust,
the most bloodthirsty, the most despotic, and the most hostile to human dignity
and liberty-Jehovah had just created Adam and Eve, to satisfy we know not what
caprice; no doubt to while away his time, which must weigh heavy on his hands
in his eternal egoistic solitude, or that he might have some new slaves. He
generously placed at their disposal the whole earth, with all its fruits and
animals, and set but a single limit to this complete enjoyment. He expressly
forbade them from touching the fruit of the tree of knowledge. He wished,
therefore, that man, destitute of all understanding of himself, should remain
an eternal beast, ever on all-fours before the eternal God, his creator and his
master. But here steps in Satan, the eternal rebel, the first freethinker and
the emancipator of worlds. He makes man ashamed of his bestial ignorance and
obedience; he emancipates him, stamps upon his brow the seal of liberty and
humanity, in urging him to disobey and eat of the fruit of knowledge.
We know what followed. The good God, whose foresight, which
is one of the divine faculties, should have warned him of what would happen,
flew into a terrible and ridiculous rage; he cursed Satan, man, and the world
created by himself, striking himself so to speak in his own creation, as
children do when they get angry; and, not content with smiting our ancestors
themselves, he cursed them in all the generations to come, innocent of the
crime committed by their forefathers. Our Catholic and Protestant theologians
look upon that as very profound and very just, precisely because it is
monstrously iniquitous and absurd. Then, remembering that he was not only a God
of vengeance and wrath, but also a God of love, after having tormented the
existence of a few milliards of poor human beings and condemned them to an
eternal hell, he took pity on the rest, and, to save them and reconcile his
eternal and divine love with his eternal and divine anger, always greedy for
victims and blood, he sent into the world, as an expiatory victim, his only
son, that he might be killed by men. That is called the mystery of the
Redemption, the basis of all the Christian religions. Still, if the divine
Savior had saved the human world! But no; in the paradise promised by Christ,
as we know, such being the formal announcement, the elect will number very few.
The rest, the immense majority of the generations present and to come, will
burn eternally in hell. In the meantime, to console us, God, ever just, ever
good, hands over the earth to the government of the Napoleon Thirds, of the
William Firsts, of the Ferdinands of Austria, and of the Alexanders of all the
Russias.
Such are the absurd tales that are told and the monstrous
doctrines that are taught, in the full light of the nineteenth century, in all
the public schools of Europe, at the express command of the government. They
call this civilizing the people! Is it not plain that all these governments are
systematic poisoners, interested stupefies of the masses?
I have wandered from my subject, because anger gets hold of
me whenever I think of the base and criminal means which they employ to keep
the nations in perpetual slavery, undoubtedly that they may be the better able
to fleece them. Of what consequence are the crimes of all the Tropmanns in the
world compared with this crime of treason against humanity committed daily, in
broad day, over the whole surface of the civilized world, by those who dare to
call themselves the guardians and the fathers of the people? I return to the
myth of original sin.
God admitted that Satan was right; he recognized that the
devil did not deceive Adam and Eve in promising them knowledge and liberty as a
reward for the act of disobedience which he bad induced them to commit; for,
immediately they had eaten of the forbidden fruit, God himself said (see
Bible): 'Behold, the man is become as one of the gods, to know good and evil;
prevent him, therefore, from eating of the fruit of eternal life, lest he
become immortal like Ourselves."
Let us disregard now the fabulous portion of this myth and
consider its true meaning, which is very clear. Man has emancipated himself; he
has separated himself from animality and constituted himself a man; he has
begun his distinctively human history and development by an act of disobedience
and science-that is, by rebellion and by thought.
Three elements or, if you like, three fundamental principles
constitute the essential conditions of all human development, collective or
individual, in history: (1) human animality; (2) thought; and (3) rebellion. To
the first properly corresponds social and private economy; to the second, science;
to the third, liberty.
Idealists of all schools, aristocrats and bourgeois,
theologians and metaphysicians, politicians and moralists, religionists,
philosophers, or poets, not forgetting the liberal economists-unbounded
worshippers of the ideal, as we know-are much offended when told that man, with
his magnificent intelligence, his sublime ideas, and his boundless aspirations,
is, like all else existing in the world, nothing but matter, only a product of vile
matter.
We may answer that the matter of which materialists speak,
matter spontaneously and eternally mobile, active, productive, matter
chemically or organically determined and manifested by the properties or
forces, mechanical, physical, animal, and intelligent, which necessarily belong
to it-that this matter has nothing in common with the vile matter of the
idealists. The latter, a product of their false abstraction, is indeed a
stupid, inanimate, immobile thing, incapable of giving birth to the smallest
product, a caput mortuum, an ugly fancy in contrast to the beautiful fancy
which they call God; as the opposite of this supreme being, matter, their
matter, stripped by that constitutes its real nature, necessarily represents
supreme nothingness. They have taken away intelligence, life, all its
determining qualities, active relations or forces, motion itself, without which
matter would not even have weight, leaving it nothing but impenetrability and
absolute immobility in space; they have attributed all these natural forces,
properties, and manifestations to the imaginary being created by their abstract
fancy; then, interchanging rôles, they have called this product of their
imagination, this phantom, this God who is nothing, "supreme Being"
and, as a necessary consequence, have declared that the real being, matter, the
world, is nothing. After which they gravely tell us that this matter is
incapable of producing anything, not even of setting itself in motion, and
consequently must have been created by their God.
At the end of this book I exposed the fallacies and truly
revolting absurdities to which one is inevitably led by this imagination of a
God, let him be considered as a personal being, the creator and organizer of
worlds; or even as impersonal, a kind of divine soul spread over the whole
universe and constituting thus its eternal principle; or let him be an idea,
infinite and divine, always present and active in the world, and always
manifested by the totality of material and definite beings. Here I shall deal
with one point only.
The gradual development of the material world, as well as of
organic animal life and of the historically progressive intelligence of man,
individually or socially, is perfectly conceivable. It is a wholly natural
movement from the simple to the complex, from the lower to the higher, from the
inferior to the superior; a movement in conformity with all our daily
experiences, and consequently in conformity also with our natural logic, with
the distinctive laws of our mind, which being formed and developed only by the
aid of these same experiences; is, so to speak, but the mental, cerebral
reproduction or reflected summary thereof.
The system of the idealists is quite the contrary of this.
It is the reversal of all human experiences and of that universal and common
good sense which is the essential condition of all human understanding, and
which, in rising from the simple and unanimously recognized truth that twice
two are four to the sublimest and most complex scientific
considerations-admitting, moreover, nothing that has not stood the severest
tests of experience or observation of things and facts-becomes the only serious
basis of human knowledge.
Very far from pursuing the natural order from the lower to
the higher, from the inferior to the superior, and from the relatively simple
to the more complex; instead of wisely and rationally accompanying the
progressive and real movement from the world called inorganic to the world
organic, vegetables, animal, and then distinctively human-from chemical matter
or chemical being to living matter or living being, and from living being to
thinking being-the idealists, obsessed, blinded, and pushed on by the divine
phantom which they have inherited from theology, take precisely the opposite
course. They go from the higher to the lower, from the superior to the
inferior, from the complex to the simple. They begin with God, either as a
person or as divine substance or idea, and the first step that they take is a
terrible fall from the sublime heights of the eternal ideal into the mire of
the material world; from absolute perfection into absolute imperfection; from
thought to being, or rather, from supreme being to nothing. When, how, and why
the divine being, eternal, infinite, absolutely perfect, probably weary of
himself, decided upon this desperate salto mortale is something which no
idealist, no theologian, no metaphysician, no poet, has ever been able to
understand himself or explain to the profane. All religions, past and present,
and all the systems of transcendental philosophy hinge on this unique and
iniquitous mystery.1
Holy men, inspired lawgivers, prophets, messiahs, have searched it for life,
and found only torment and death. Like the ancient sphinx, it has devoured
them, because they could not explain it. Great philosophers from Heraclitus and
Plato down to Descartes, Spinoza: Leibnitz, Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel,
not to mention the Indian philosophers, have written heaps of volumes and built
systems as ingenious as sublime, in which they have said by the way many
beautiful and grand things and discovered immortal truths, but they have left
this mystery, the principal object of their transcendental investigations, as
unfathomable as before. The gigantic efforts of the most Wonderful geniuses
that the world has known, and who, one after another, for at least thirty
centuries, have undertaken anew this labor of Sisyphus, have resulted only in
rendering this mystery still more incomprehensible. Is it to be hoped that it
will be unveiled to us by the routine speculations of some pedantic disciple of
an artificially warmed-over metaphysics at a time when all living and serious
spirits have abandoned that ambiguous science born of a compromise-historically
explicable no doubt-between the unreason of faith and sound scientific reason?
It is evident that this terrible mystery is
inexplicable-that is, absurd, because only the absurd admits of no explanation.
It is evident that whoever finds it essential to his happiness and life must
renounce his reason, and return, if he can, to naive, blind, stupid faith, to
repeat with Tertullianus and all sincere believers these words, which sum up
the very quintessence of theology: Credo quia absurdum. Then all discussion
ceases, and nothing remains but the triumphant stupidity of faith. But
immediately there arises another question: How comes an intelligent and
well-informed man ever to feel the need of believing in this mystery?
Nothing is more natural than that the belief in God, the
creator, regulator, judge, master, curser, savior, and benefactor of the world,
should still prevail among the people, especially in the rural districts, where
it is more widespread than among the proletariat of the cities. The people,
unfortunately, are still very ignorant, and are kept in ignorance by the
systematic efforts of all the governments, who consider this ignorance, not
without good reason, as one of the essential conditions of their own power. Weighted
down by their daily labor, deprived of leisure, of intellectual intercourse, of
reading, in short of all the means and a good portion of the stimulants that
develop thought in men, the people generally accept religious traditions
without criticism and in a lump. These traditions surround them from infancy in
all the situations of life, and artificially sustained in their minds by a
multitude of official poisoners of all sorts, priests and laymen, are
transformed therein into a sort of mental and moral babit, too often more
powerful even than their natural good sense.
There is another reason which explains and in some sort
justifies the absurd beliefs of the people-namely, the wretched situation to
which they find themselves fatally condemned by the economic organization of
society in the most civilized countries of Europe. Reduced, intellectually and
morally as well as materially, to the minimum of human existence, confined in
their life like a prisoner in his prison, without horizon, without outlet, without
even a future if we believe the economists, the people would have the
singularly narrow souls and blunted instincts of the bourgeois if they did not
feel a desire to escape; but of escape there are but three methods-two
chimerical and a third real. The first two are the dram-shop and the church,
debauchery of the body or debauchery of the mind; the third is social
revolution. Hence I conclude this last will be much more potent than all the
theological propagandism of the freethinkers to destroy to their last vestige
the religious beliefs and dissolute habits of the people, beliefs and habits
much more intimately connected than is generally supposed. In substituting for
the at once illusory and brutal enjoyments of bodily and spiritual
licentiousness the enjoyments, as refined as they are real, of humanity
developed in each and all, the social revolution alone will have the power to
close at the same time all the dram-shops and all the churches.
Till then the people. Taken as a whole, will believe; and, if
they have no reason to believe, they will have at least a right.
There is a class of people who, if they do not believe, must
at least make a semblance of believing. This class comprising all the
tormentors, all the oppressors, and all the exploiters of humanity; priests,
monarchs, statesmen, soldiers, public and private financiers, officials of all
sorts, policemen, gendarmes, jailers and executioners, monopolists,
capitalists, tax-leeches, contractors and landlords, lawyers, economists,
politicians of all shades, down to the smallest vendor of sweetmeats, all will
repeat in unison those words of Voltaire:
"If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent
him." For, you understand, "the people must have a religion."
That is the safety-valve.
There exists, finally, a somewhat numerous class of honest
but timid souls who, too intelligent to take the Christian dogmas seriously,
reject them in detail, but have neither the courage nor the strength nor the
necessary resolution to summarily renounce them altogether. They abandon to
your criticism all the special absurdities of religion, they turn up their
noses at all the miracles, but they cling desperately to the principal
absurdity; the source of all the others, to the miracle that explains and
justifies all the other miracles, the existence of God. Their God is not the
vigorous and powerful being, the brutally positive God of theology. It is a
nebulous, diaphanous, illusory being that vanishes into nothing at the first
attempt to grasp it; it is a mirage, an ignis fatugs that neither warms nor
illuminates. And yet they hold fast to it, and believe that, were it to
disappear, all would disappear with it. They are uncertain, sickly souls, who
have lost their reckoning in the present civilisation, belonging to neither the
present nor the future, pale phantoms eternally suspended between heaven and
earth, and occupying exactly the same position between the politics of the
bourgeois and the Socialism of the proletariat. They have neither the power nor
the wish nor the determination to follow out their thought, and they waste
their time and pains in constantly endeavouring to reconcile the
irreconcilable. In public life these are known as bourgeois Socialists.
With them, or against them, discussion is out of the
question. They are too puny.
But there are a few illustrious men of whom no one will dare
to speak without respect, and whose vigorous health, strength of mind, and good
intention no one will dream of calling in question. I need only cite the names
of Mazzini, Michelet, Quinet, John Stuart Mill.2
Generous and strong souls, great hearts, great minds, great writers, and the
first the heroic and revolutionary regenerator of a great nation, they are all
apostles of idealism and bitter despisers and adversaries of materialism, and
consequently of Socialism also, in philosophy as well as in politics.
Against them, then, we must discuss this question.
First, let it be remarked that not one of the illustrious
men I have just named nor any other idealistic thinker of any consequence in
our day has given any attention to the logical side of this question properly
speaking. Not one has tried to settle philosophically the possibility of the
divine salto mortale from the pure and eternal regions of spirit into the mire
of the material world. Have they feared to approach this irreconcilable
contradiction and despaired of solving it after the failures of the greatest
geniuses of history, or have they looked upon it as already sufficiently well
settled? That is their secret. The fact is that they have neglected the
theoretical demonstration of the existence of a God, and have developed only
its practical motives and consequences. They have treated it as a fact
universally accepted, and, as such, no longer susceptible of any doubt
whatever, for sole proof thereof limiting themselves to the establishment of
the antiquity and this very universality of the belief in God.
This imposing unanimity, in the eyes of many illustrious men
and writers to quote only the most famous of them who eloquently expressed it,
Joseph de Maistre and the great Italian patriot, Giuseppe Mazzini -- is of more
value than all the demonstrations of science; and if the reasoning of a small
number of logical and even very powerful, but isolated, thinkers is against it,
so much the worse, they say, for these thinkers and their logic, for universal
consent, the general and primitive adoption of an idea, has always been
considered the most triumphant testimony to its truth. The I sentiment of the
whole world, a conviction that is found ' and maintained always and everywhere,
cannot be mistaken; it must have its root in a necessity absolutely inherent in
the very nature of man. And since it has been established that all peoples,
past and present, have believed and still believe in the existence of God, it
is clear that those who have the misfortune to doubt it, whatever the logic
that led them to this doubt, are abnormal exceptions, monsters.
Thus, then, the antiquity and universality of a belief
should be regarded, contrary to all science and all logic, as sufficient and
unimpeachable proof of its truth. Why?
Until the days of Copernicus and Galileo everybody believed
that the sun revolved about the earth. Was not everybody mistaken? What is more
ancient and more universal than slavery? Cannibalism perhaps. From the origin
of historic society down to the present day there has been always and everywhere
exploitation of the compulsory labour of the masses--slaves, serfs, or wage
workers -- by some dominant minority; oppression of the people by the Church
and by the State. Must it be concluded that this exploitation and this
oppression are necessities absolutely inherent in the very existence of human
society? These are examples which show that the argument of the champions of
God proves nothing.
Nothing, in fact, is as universal or as ancient as the
iniquitous and absurd; truth and justice, on the contrary, are the least
universal, the youngest features in the development of human society. In this
fact, too, lies the explanation of a constant historical phenomenon -- namely,
the persecution of which those who first proclaim the truth have been and continue
to be the objects at the hands of the official, privileged, and interested
representatives of "universal" and "ancient" beliefs, and
often also at the hands of the same masses who, after having tortured them,
always end by adopting their ideas and rendering them victorious.
To us materialists and Revolutionary Socialists, there is
nothing astonishing or terrifying in this historical phenomenon. Strong in our
conscience, in our love of truth at all hazards, in that passion for logic
which of itself alone constitutes a great power and outside of which there is
no thought; strong in our passion for justice and in our unshakeable faith in
the triumph of humanity over all theoretical and practical bestialities;
strong, finally, in the mutual confidence and support given each other by the
few who share our convictions -- we resign ourselves to all the consequences of
this historical phenomenon, in which we see the manifestation of a social law
as natural, as necessary, and as invariable as all the other laws which govern
the world.
This law is a logical, inevitable consequence of the animal
origin of human society; for in face of all the scientific, physiological,
psychological, and historical proofs accumulated at the present day, as well as
in face of the exploits of the Germans conquering France, which now furnish so
striking a demonstration thereof, it is no longer possible to really doubt this
origin. But from the moment that this animal origin of man is accepted, all is
explained. History then appears to us as the revolutionary negation, now slow,
apathetic, sluggish, now passionate and powerful, of the past. It consists
precisely in the progressive negation of the primitive animality of man by the
development of his humanity. Man, a wild beast, cousin of the gorilla, has
emerged from the profound darkness of animal instinct into the light of the
mind, which explains in a wholly natural way all his past mistakes and
partially consoles us for his present errors. He has gone out from animal
slavery, and passing through divine slavery, a temporary condition between his
animality and his humanity, he is now marching on to the conquest and
realisation of human liberty. Whence it results that the antiquity of a belief,
of an idea, far from proving anything in its favour, ought, on the contrary, to
lead us to suspect it. For behind us is our animality and before us our
humanity; human light, the only thing that can warm and enlighten us, the only
thing that can emancipate us, give us dignity, freedom, and happiness, and
realise fraternity among us, is never at the beginning, but, relatively to the
epoch in which we live, always at the end of history. Let us, then, never look
back, let us look ever forward; for forward is our sunlight, forward our
salvation. If it is justifiable, and even useful and necessary, to turn back to
study our past, it is only in order to establish what we have been and what we
must no longer be, what we have believed and thought and what we must no longer
believe or think, what we have done and what we must do nevermore.
So much for antiquity. As for the universality of an error,
it proves but one thing -- the similarity, if not the perfect identity, of
human nature in all ages and under all skies. And, since it is established that
all peoples, at all periods of their life, have believed and still believe in
God, we must simply conclude that the divine idea, an outcome of ourselves, is
an error historically necessary in the development of humanity, and ask why and
how it was produced in history and why an immense majority of the human race
still accept it as a truth.
Until we shall account to ourselves for the manner in which
the idea of a supernatural or divine world was developed and had to be
developed in the historical evolution of the human conscience, all our
scientific conviction of its absurdity will be in vain; until then we shall
never succeed in destroying it in the opinion of the majority, because we shall
never be able to attack it in the very depths of the hut man being where it had
birth. Condemned to a fruitless struggle, without issue and without end, we
should for ever have to content ourselves with fighting it solely on the
surface, in its innumerable manifestations, whose absurdity will be scarcely
beaten down by the blows of common sense before it will reappear in a new form
no less nonsensical. While the root of all the absurdities that torment the
world, belief in God, remains intact, it will never fail to bring forth new
offspring. Thus, at the present time, in certain sections of the highest
society, Spiritualism tends to establish itself upon the ruins of Christianity.
It is not only in the interest of the masses, it is in that
of the health of our own minds, that we should strive to understand the
historic genesis, the succession of causes which developed and produced the
idea of God in the consciousness of men. In vain shall we call and believe
ourselves Atheists, until we comprehend these causes, for, until then, we shall
always suffer ourselves to be more or less governed by the clamours of this
universal conscience whose secret we have not discovered; and, considering the
natural weakness of even the strongest individual against the all-powerful
influence of the social surroundings that trammel him, we are always in danger
of relapsing sooner or later, in one way or another, into the abyss of
religious absurdity. Examples of these shameful conversions are frequent in
society to-day.

II
I have stated the chief practical reason of the power still
exercised to-day over the masses by religious beliefs. These mystical
tendencies do not signify in man so much an aberration of mind as a deep
discontent at Heart. They are the instinctive and passionate protest of the
human being against the narrowness, the platitudes, the sorrows, and the shame
of a wretched existence. For this malady, I have already said, there is but one
remedy-Social Revolution.
In the meantime I have endeavored to show the causes
responsible for the birth and historical development of religious
hallucinations in the human conscience. Here it is my purpose to treat this
question of the existence of a God, or of the divine origin of the world and of
man, solely from the standpoint of its moral and social utility, and I shall
say only a few words, to better explain my thought, regarding the theoretical
grounds of this belief.
All religions, with their gods, their demigods, and their
prophets, their messiahs and their saints, were created by the credulous fancy
of men who had not attained the full development and full possession of their
faculties. Consequently, the religious heaven is nothing but a mirage in which
man, exalted by ignorance and faith, discovers his own image, but enlarged and
reversed-that is, divinized. The history of religion, of the birth, grandeur,
and decline of the gods who have succeeded one another in human belief, is
nothing, therefore, but the development of the collective intelligence and
conscience of mankind. As fast as they discovered, in the course of their
historically progressive advance, either in themselves or in external nature, a
power, a quality, or even any great defect whatever, they attributed them to
their gods, after having exaggerated and enlarged them beyond measure, after
the manner of children, by an act of their religious fancy. Thanks to this
modesty and pious generosity of believing and credulous men, heaven has grown
rich with the spoils of the earth, and, by a necessary consequence, the richer
heaven became, the more wretched became humanity and the earth. God once
installed, he was naturally proclaimed the cause, reason, arbiter and absolute
disposer of all things: the world thenceforth was nothing, God was all; and
man, his real creator, after having unknowingly extracted him from the void,
bowed down before him, worshipped him, and avowed himself his creature and his
slave.
Christianity is precisely the religion par excellence,
because it exhibits and manifests, to the fullest extent, the very nature and
essence of every religious system, which is the impoverishment, enslavement, and
annihilation of humanity for the benefit of divinity.
God being everything, the real world and man are nothing.
God being truth, justice, goodness, beauty, power, and life, man is falsehood,
iniquity, evil, ugliness, impotence, and death. God being master, man is the
slave. Incapable of finding justice, truth, and eternal life by his own effort,
he can attain them only through a divine revelation. But whoever says
revelation says revealers, messiahs, prophets, priests, and legislators
inspired by God himself; and these, once recognized as the representatives of
divinity on earth, as the holy instructors of humanity, chosen by God himself
to direct it in the path of salvation, necessarily exercise absolute power. All
men owe them passive and unlimited obedience; for against the divine reason
there is no human reason, and against the justice of God no terrestrial justice
holds. Slaves of God, men must also be slaves of Church and State, in so far as
the State is consecrated by the Church. This truth Christianity, better than
all other religions that exist or have existed, understood, not excepting even
the old Oriental religions, which included only distinct and privileged
nations, while Christianity aspires to embrace entire humanity; and this truth
Roman Catholicism, alone among all the Christian sects, has proclaimed and
realized with rigorous logic. That is why Christianity is the absolute
religion, the final religion; why the Apostolic and Roman Church is the only
consistent, legitimate, and divine church.
With all due respect, then, to the metaphysicians and
religious idealists, philosophers, politicians, or poets: The idea of God
implies the abdication of human reason and justice; it is the most decisive
negation of human liberty, and necessarily ends in the enslavement of mankind,
both in theory and practice.
Unless, then, we desire the enslavement and degradation of
mankind, as the Jesuits desire it, as the mômiers, pietists, or Protestant
Methodists desire it, we may not, must not make the slightest concession either
to the God of theology or to the God of metaphysics. He who, in this mystical
alphabet, begins with A will inevitably end with Z; he who desires to worship
God must harbor no childish illusions about the matter, but bravely renounce his
liberty and humanity.
If God is, man is a slave; now, man can and must be free;
then, God does not exist.
I defy anyone whomsoever to avoid this circle; now,
therefore, let all choose.
Is it necessary to point out to what extent and in what
manner religions debase and corrupt the people? They destroy their reason, the
principal instrument of human emancipation, and reduce them to imbecility, the
essential condition of their slavery. They dishonor human labor, and make it a
sign and source of servitude. They kill the idea and sentiment of human
justice, ever tipping the balance to the side of triumphant knaves, privileged
objects of divine indulgence. They kill human pride and dignity, protecting
only the cringing and humble. They stifle in the heart of nations every feeling
of human fraternity, filling it with divine cruelty instead.
All religions are cruel, all founded on blood; for all rest
principally on the idea of sacrafice-that is, on the perpetual immolation of
humanity to the insatiable vengeance of divinity. In this bloody mystery man is
always the victim, and the priest-a man also, but a man privileged by grace- is
the divine executioner. That explains why the priests of all religions, the
best, the most humane, the gentlest, almost always have at the bottom of their
hearts-and, if not in their hearts, in their imaginations, in their minds (and
we know the fearful influence of either on the hearts of men)-something cruel
and sanguinary.
None know all this better than our illustrious contemporary
idealists. They are learned men, who know history by heart; and, as they are at
the same time living men, great souls penetrated with a sincere and profound
love for the welfare of humanity, they have cursed and branded all these
misdeeds, all these crimes of religion with an eloquence unparalleled. They
reject with indignation all solidarity with the God of positive religions and
with his representatives, past, present, and on earth.
The God whom they adore, or whom they think they adore, is
distinguished from the real gods of history precisely in this-that he is not at
all a positive god, defined in any way whatever, theologically or even
metaphysically. He is neither the supreme being of Robespierre and J. J.
Rousseau, nor the pantheistic god of Spinoza, nor even the at once immanent,
transcendental, and very equivocal god of Hegel. They take good care not to
give him any positive definition whatever, feeling very strongly that any
definition would subject him to the dissolving power of criticism. They will
not say whether be is a personal or impersonal god, whether he created or did
not create the world; they will not even speak of his divine providence. All
that might compromise him. They content themselves with saying "God"
and nothing more. But, then, what is their God? Not even an idea; it is an
aspiration.
It is the generic name of all that seems grand, good,
beautiful, noble, human to them. But why, then, do they not say,
"Man." Ah! because King William of Prussia and Napoleon III, and all
their compeers are likewise men: which bothers them very much. Real humanity
presents a mixture of all I that is most sublime and beautiful with all that is
vilest and most monstrous in the world. How do they get over this? Why, they
call one divine and the other bestial, representing divinity and animality as
two poles, between which they place humanity. They either will not or cannot
understand that these three terms are really but one, and that to separate them
is to destroy them.
They are not strong on logic, and one might say that they
despise it. That is what distinguishes them from the pantheistical and
deistical metaphysicians, and gives their ideas the character of a practical
idealism, drawing its inspiration much less from the severe development of a thought
than from the experiences, I might almost say the emotions, historical and
collective as well as individual, of life. This gives their propaganda an
appearance of wealth and vital power, but an appearance only; for life itself
becomes sterile when paralyzed by a logical contradiction.
This contradiction lies here: they wish God, and they wish
humanity. They persist in connecting two terms which, once separated, can come
together again only to destroy each other. They say in a single breath:
"God and the liberty of man," "God and the dignity, justice,
equality, fraternity, prosperity of men"-regardless of the fatal logic by
virtue of which, if God exists, all these things are condemned to
non-existence. For, if God is, he is necessarily the eternal, supreme, absolute
master, and, if such a master exists, man is a slave; now, if he is a slave,
neither justice, nor equality, nor fraternity, nor prosperity are possible for
him. In vain, flying in the face of good sense and all the teachings of
history, do they represent their God as animated by the tenderest love of human
liberty: a master, whoever he may be and however liberal he may desire to show
himself, remains none the less always a master. His existence necessarily
implies the slavery of all that is beneath him. Therefore, if God existed, only
in one way could he serve human liberty-by ceasing to exist.
A jealous lover of human liberty, and deeming it the
absolute condition of all that we admire and respect in humanity, I reverse the
phrase of Voltaire, and say that, if God really existed, it would be necessary
to abolish him.
The severe logic that dictates these words is far too
evident to require a development of this argument. And it seems to me
impossible that the illustrious men, whose names so celebrated and so justly
respected I have cited, should not have been struck by it themselves, and
should not have perceived the contradiction in which they involve themselves in
speaking of God and human liberty at once. To have disregarded it, they must have
considered this inconsistency or logical license practically necessary to
humanity's well-being.
Perhaps, too, while speaking of liberty as something very
respectable and very dear in their eyes, they give the term a meaning quite
different from the conception entertained by us, materialists and Revolutionary
Socialists. Indeed, they never speak of it without immediately adding another
word, authority-a word and a thing which we detest with all our heart.
What is authority? Is it the inevitable power of the natural
laws which manifest themselves in the necessary concatenation and succession of
phenomena in the physical and social worlds? Indeed, against these laws revolt
is not only forbidden-it is even impossible. We may misunderstand them or not
know them at all, but we cannot disobey them; because they constitute the basis
and fundamental conditions of our existence; they envelop us, penetrate us,
regulate all our movements, thoughts, and acts; even when we believe that we
disobey them, we only show their omnipotence.
Yes, we are absolutely the slaves of these laws. But in such
slavery there is no humiliation, or, rather, it is not slavery at all. For
slavery supposes an external master, a legislator outside of him whom he
commands, while these laws are not outside of us; they are inherent in us; they
constitute our being, our whole being, physically-intellectually, and morally:
we live, we breathe, we act, we think, we wish only through these laws. Without
them we are nothing, we are not. Whence, then, could we derive the power and
the wish to rebel against them?
In his relation to natural laws but one liberty is possible
to man-that of recognizing and applying them on an ever-extending scale in
conformity with the object of collective and individual emancipation or
humanization which he pursues. These laws, once recognized, exercise an
authority which is never disputed by the mass of men. One must, for instance,
be at bottom either a fool or a theologian or at least a metaphysician, jurist,
or bourgeois economist to rebel against the law by which twice two make four.
One must have faith to imagine that fire will not burn nor water drown, except,
indeed, recourse be had to some subterfuge founded in its turn on some other
natural law. But these revolts, or, rather, these attempts at or foolish
fancies of an impossible revolt, are decidedly, the exception; for, in general,
it may be said that the mass of men, in their daily lives, acknowledge the
government of common sense-that is, of the sum of the natural laws generally
recognized-in an almost absolute fashion.
The great misfortune is that a large number of natural laws,
already established as such by science, remain unknown to the masses, thanks to
the watchfulness of these tutelary governments that exist, as we know, only for
the good of the people. There is another difficulty-namely, that the major
portion of the natural laws connected with the development of human society,
which are quite as necessary, invariable, fatal, as the laws that govern the
physical world, have not been duly established and recognized by science
itself.
Once they shall have been recognized by science, and then
from science, by means of an extensive system of popular education and
instruction, shall have passed into the consciousness of all, the question of
liberty will be entirely solved. The most stubborn authorities must admit that
then there will be no need either of political organization or direction or
legislation, three things which, whether they emanate from the will of the
sovereign or from the vote of a parliament elected by universal suffrage, and
even should they conform to the system of natural laws-which has never been the
case and never will be the case-are always equally fatal and hostile to the
liberty of the masses from the very fact that they impose upon them a system of
external and therefore despotic laws.
The liberty of man consists solely in this: that he obeys
natural laws because he has himself recognized them as such, and not because
they have been externally imposed upon him by any extrinsic will whatever,
divine or human, collective or individual.
Suppose a learned academy, composed of the most illustrious
representatives of science; suppose this academy charged with legislation for
and the organization of society, and that, inspired only by the purest love of
truth, it frames none but laws in absolute harmony with the latest discoveries
of science. Well, I maintain, for my part, that such legislation and such
organization would be a monstrosity, and that for two reasons: first, that
human science is always and necessarily imperfect, and that, comparing what it
has discovered with what remains to be discovered, we may say that it is still
in its cradle. So that were we to try to force the practical life of men,
collective as well as individual, into strict and exclusive conformity with the
latest data of science, we should condemn society as well as individuals to
suffer martyrdom on a bed of Procrustes, which would soon end by dislocating
and stifling them, life ever remaining an infinitely greater thing than
science.
The second reason is this: a society which should obey
legislation emanating from a scientific academy, not because it understood
itself the rational character of this legislation (in which case the existence
of the academy would become useless), but because this legislation, emanating
from the academy, was imposed in the name of a science which it venerated
without comprehending -such a society would be a society, not of men, but of
brutes. It would be a second edition of those missions in Paraguay which
submitted so long to the government of the Jesuits. It would surely and rapidly
descend to the lowest stage of idiocy.
But there is still a third reason which would render such a
government impossible-namely that a scientific academy invested with a
sovereignty, so to speak, absolute, even if it were composed of the most
illustrious men, would infallibly and soon end in its own moral and
intellectual corruption. Even to-day, with the few privileges allowed them,
such is the history of all academies. The greatest scientific genius, from the
moment that he becomes an academician, an officially licensed savant,
inevitably lapses into sluggishness. He loses his spontaneity, his
revolutionary hardihood, and that troublesome and savage energy characteristic
of the grandest geniuses, ever called to destroy old tottering worlds and lay
the foundations of new. He undoubtedly gains in politeness, in utilitarian and
practical wisdom, what he loses in power of thought. In a word, he becomes
corrupted.
It is the characteristic of privilege and of every
privileged position to kill the mind and heart of men. The privileged man,
whether politically or economically, is a man depraved in mind and heart. That
is a social law which admits of no exception, and is as applicable to entire
nations as to classes, corporations, and individuals. It is the law of
equality, the supreme condition of liberty and humanity. The principal object
of this treatise is precisely to demonstrate this truth in all the
manifestations of human life.
A scientific body to which had been confided the government
of society would soon end by devoting itself no longer to science at all, but
to quite another affair; and that affair, as in the case of all established
powers, would be its own eternal perpetuation by rendering the society confided
to its care ever more stupid and consequently more in need of its government
and direction.
But that which is true of scientific academies is also true
of all constituent and legislative assemblies, even those chosen by universal
suffrage. In the latter case they may renew their composition, it is true, but
this does not prevent the formation in a few years' time of a body of
politicians, privileged in fact though not in law, who, devoting themselves
exclusively to the direction of the public affairs of a country, finally form a
sort of political aristocracy or oligarchy. Witness the United States of
America and Switzerland.
Consequently, no external legislation and no authority-one,
for that matter, being inseparable from the other, and both tending to the
servitude of society and the degradation of the legislators themselves.
Does it follow that I reject all authority? Far from me such
a thought. In the matter of boots, I refer to the authority of the bootmaker;
concerning houses, canals, or railroads, I consult that of the architect or
engineer. For such or such special knowledge I apply to such or such a savant.
But I allow neither the bootmaker nor the architect nor the savant to impose
his authority upon me. I listen to them freely and with all the respect merited
by their intelligence, their character, their knowledge, reserving always my incontestable
right of criticism censure. I do not content myself with consulting authority
in any special branch; I consult several; I compare their opinions, and choose
that which seems to me the soundest. But I recognize no infallible authority,
even in special questions; consequently, whatever respect I may have for the
honesty and the sincerity of such or such an individual, I have no absolute
faith in any person. Such a faith would be fatal to my reason, to my liberty,
and even to the success of my undertakings; it would immediately transform me
into a stupid slave, an instrument of the will and interests of others.
If I bow before the authority of the specialists and avow my
readiness to follow, to a certain extent and as long as may seem to me necessary,
their indications and even their directions, it is because their authority is
imposed upon me by no one, neither by men nor by God. Otherwise I would repel
them with horror, and bid the devil take their counsels, their directions, and
their services, certain that they would make me pay, by the loss of my liberty
and self-respect, for such scraps of truth, wrapped in a multitude of lies, as
they might give me.
I bow before the authority of special men because it is
imposed upon me by my own reason. I am conscious of my inability to grasp, in
all its details and positive developments, any very large portion of human
knowledge. The greatest intelligence would not be equal to a comprehension of
the whole. Thence results, for science as well as for industry, the necessity
of the division and association of labor. I receive and I give-such is human
life. Each directs and is directed in his turn. Therefore there is no fixed and
constant authority, but a continual exchange of mutual, temporary, and, above
all, voluntary authority and subordination.
This same reason forbids me, then, to recognize a fixed,
constant, and universal authority, because there is no universal man, no man
capable of grasping in that wealth of detail, without which the application of
science to life is impossible, all the sciences, all the branches of social
life. And if such universality could ever be realized in a single man, and if
be wished to take advantage thereof to impose his authority upon us, it would
be necessary to drive this man out of society, because his authority would
inevitably reduce all the others to slavery and imbecility. I do not think that
society ought to maltreat men of genius as it has done hitherto; but neither do
I think it should indulge them too far, still less accord them any privileges
or exclusive rights whatsoever; and that for three reasons: first, because it
would often mistake a charlatan for a man of genius; second, because, through
such a system of privileges, it might transform into a charlatan even a real
man of genius, demoralize him, and degrade him; and, finally, because it would
establish a master over itself.
To sum up. We recognize, then, the absolute authority of
science, because the sole object of science is the mental reproduction, as
well-considered and systematic as possible, of the natural laws inherent in the
material, intellectual, and moral life of both the physical and the social
worlds, these two worlds constituting, in fact, but one and the same natural
world. Outside of this only legitimate authority, legitimate because rational
and in harmony with human liberty, we declare all other authorities false,
arbitrary and fatal.
We recognize the absolute authority of science, but we
reject the infallibility and universality of the savant. In our church-if I may
be permitted to use for a moment an expression which I so detest: Church and
State are my two bêtes noires-in our church, as in the Protestant church, we
have a chief, an invisible Christ, science; and, like the Protestants, more logical
even than the Protestants, we will suffer neither pope, nor council, nor
conclaves of infallible cardinals, nor bishops, nor even priests. Our Christ
differs from the Protestant and Christian Christ in this-that the latter is a
personal being, ours impersonal; the Christian Christ, already completed in an
eternal past, presents himself as a perfect being, while the completion and
perfection of our Christ, science, are ever in the future: which is equivalent
to saying that they will never be realized. Therefore, in recognizing absolute
science as the only absolute authority, we in no way compromise our liberty.
I mean by the words "absolute science," the truly
universal science which would reproduce ideally, to its fullest extent and in
all its infinite detail, the universe, the system or co-ordination of all the
natural laws manifested by the incessant development of the world. It is
evident that such a science, the sublime object of all the efforts of the human
mind, will never be fully and absolutely realized. Our Christ, then, will
remain eternally unfinished, which must considerably take down the pride of his
licensed representatives among us. Against that God the Son in whose name they
assume to impose upon us their insolent and pedantic authority, we appeal to
God the Father, who is the real world, real life, of which he (the Son) is only
a too imperfect expression, whilst we real beings, living, working, struggling,
loving, aspiring, enjoying, and suffering, are its immediate representatives.
But, while rejecting the absolute, universal, and infallible
authority of men of science, we willingly bow before the respectable, although
relative, quite temporary, and very restricted authority of the representatives
of special sciences, asking nothing better than to consult them by turns, and
very grateful for such precious information as they may extend to us, on
condition of their willingness to receive from us on occasions when, and
concerning matters about which, we are more learned than they. In general, we
ask nothing better than to see men endowed with great knowledge, great
experience, great minds, and, above all, great hearts, exercise over us a
natural and legitimate influence, freely accepted, and never imposed in the
name of any official authority whatsoever, celestial or terrestrial. We accept
all natural authorities and all influences of fact, but none of right; for
every authority or every influence of right, officially imposed as such,
becoming directly an oppression and a falsehood, would inevitably impose upon
us, as I believe I have sufficiently shown, slavery and absurdity.
In a word, we reject all legislation, all authority, and all
privileged, licensed, official, and legal influence, even though arising from
universal suffrage, convinced that it can turn only to the advantage of a
dominant minority of exploiters against the interests of the immense majority
in subjection to them.
This is the sense in which we are really Anarchists.
The modern idealists understand authority in quite a different
way. Although free from the traditional superstitions of all the existing
positive religions, they nevertheless attach to this idea of authority a
divine, an absolute meaning. This authority is not that of a truth miraculously
revealed, nor that of a truth rigorously and scientifically demonstrated. They
base it to a slight extent upon quasi-philosophical reasoning, and to a large
extent also on sentiment, ideally, abstractly poetical. Their religion is, as
it were, a last attempt to divinise all that constitutes humanity in men.
This is just the opposite of the work that we are doing. On
behalf of human liberty, dignity and prosperity, we believe it our duty to
recover from heaven the goods which it has stolen and return them to earth.
They, on the contrary, endeavouring to commit a final religiously heroic
larceny, would restore to heaven, that divine robber, finally unmasked, the
grandest, finest and noblest of humanity's possessions. It is now the
freethinker's turn to pillage heaven by their audacious piety and scientific
analysis.
The idealists undoubtedly believe that human ideas and
deeds, in order to exercise greater authority among men, must be invested with
a divine sanction. How is this sanction manifested? Not by a miracle, as in the
positive religions, but by the very grandeur of sanctity of the ideas and
deeds: whatever is grand, whatever is beautiful, whatever is noble, whatever is
just, is considered divine. In this new religious cult every man inspired by
these ideas, by these deeds, becomes a priest, directly consecrated by God
himself. And the proof? He needs none beyond the very grandeur of the ideas
which he expresses and the deeds which he performs. These are so holy that they
can have been inspired only by God.
Such, in so few words, is their whole philosophy: a
philosophy of sentiments, not of real thoughts, a sort of metaphysical pietism.
This seems harmless, but it is not so at all, and the very precise, very narrow
and very barren doctrine hidden under the intangible vagueness of these poetic
forms leads to the same disastrous results that all the positive religions lead
to--namely, the most complete negation of human liberty and dignity.
To proclaim as divine all that is grand, just, noble, and
beautiful in humanity is to tacitly admit that humanity of itself would have
been unable to produce it -- that is, that, abandoned to itself, its own nature
is miserable, iniquitous, base, and ugly. Thus we come back to the essence of
all religion--in other words, to the disparagement of humanity for the greater
glory of divinity. And from the moment that the natural inferiority of man and
his fundamental incapacity to rise by his own effort, unaided by any divine
inspiration, to the comprehension of just and true ideas, are admitted, it becomes
necessary to admit also all the theological, political, and social consequences
of the positive religions. From the moment that God, the perfect and supreme
being, is posited face to face with humanity, divine mediators, the elect, the
inspired of God spring from the earth to enlighten, direct, and govern in his
name the human race.
May we not suppose that all men are equally inspired by God?
Then, surely, there is no further use for mediators. But this supposition is
impossible, because it is too clearly contradicted by the facts. It would
compel us to attribute to divine inspiration all the absurdities and errors
which appear, and all the horrors, follies, base deeds, and cowardly actions
which are committed, in the world. But perhaps, then, only a few men are
divinely inspired, the great men of history, the virtuous geniuses, as the
illustrious Italian citizen and prophet, Giuseppe Mazzini, called them.
Immediately inspired by God himself and supported upon universal consent
expressed by popular suffrage -- Dio e Popolo -- such as these should be called
to the government of human societies.3
But here we are again fallen back under the yoke of Church
and State. It is true that in this new organization, indebted for its
existence, like all the old political organisations, to the grace of God, but
supported this time--at least so far as form is concerned, as a necessary
concession to the spirit of modern times, and just as in the preambles of the
imperial decrees of Napoleon III. -- on the (pretended) will of the people, the
Church will no longer call itself Church; it will call itself School. What
matters it? On the benches of this School will be seated not children only;
there will be found the eternal minor, the pupil confessedly forever
incompetent to pass his examinations, rise to the knowledge of his teachers,
and dispense with their discipline--the people.4
The State will no longer call itself Monarchy; it will call itself Republic:
but it will be none the less the State -- that is, a tutelage officially and
regularly established by a minority of competent men, men of virtuous genius or
talent, who will watch and guide the conduct of this great, incorrigible, and
terrible child, the people. The professors of the School and the functionaries
of the State will call themselves republicans; but they will be none the less
tutors, shepherds, and the people will remain what they have been hitherto from
all eternity, a flock. Beware of shearers, for where there is a flock there
necessarily must be shepherds also to shear and devour it.
The people, in this system, will be the perpetual scholar
and pupil. In spite of its sovereignty, wholly fictitious, it will continue to
serve as the instrument of thoughts, wills, and consequently interests not its
own. Between this situation and what we call liberty, the only real liberty,
there is an abyss. It will be the old oppression and old slavery under new
forms; and where there is slavery there is misery, brutishness, real social materialism,
among the privileged classes as well as among the masses.
In defying human things the idealists always end in the
triumph of a brutal materialism. And this for a very simple reason: the divine
evaporates and rises to its own country, heaven, while the brutal alone remains
actually on earth.
Yes, the necessary consequence of theoretical idealism is
practically the most brutal materialism; not, undoubtedly, among those who
sincerely preach it--the usual result as far as they are concerned being that
they are constrained to see all their efforts struck with sterility--but among
those who try to realise their precepts in life, and in all society so far as
it allows itself to be dominated by idealistic doctrines.
To demonstrate this general fact, which may appear strange
at first, but which explains itself naturally enough upon further reflection,
historical proofs are not lacking.
Compare the last two civilisations of the ancient world --
the Greek and the Roman. Which is the most materialistic, the most natural, in
its point of departure, and the most humanly ideal in its results? Undoubtedly
the Greek civilisation. Which on the contrary, is the most abstractly ideal in
its point of departure--sacrificing the material liberty of the man to the
ideal liberty of the citizen, represented by the abstraction of judicial law,
and the natural development of human society to the abstraction of the State --
and which became nevertheless the most brutal in its consequences? The Roman
civilisation, certainly. It is true that the Greek civilisation, like all the
ancient civilisations, including that of Rome, was exclusively national and
based on slavery. But, in spite of these two immense defects, the former none
the less conceived and realised the idea of humanity; it ennobled and really
idealised the life of men; it transformed human herds into free associations of
free men; it created through liberty the sciences, the arts, a poetry, an
immortal philosophy, and the primary concepts of human respect. With political
and social liberty, it created free thought. At the close of the Middle Ages,
during the period of the Renaissance, the fact that some Greek emigrants
brought a few of those immortal books into Italy sufficed to resuscitate life,
liberty, thought, humanity, buried in the dark dungeon of Catholicism. Human
emancipation, that is the name of the Greek civilisation. And the name of the
Roman civilisation? Conquest, with all its brutal consequences. And its last
word? The omnipotence of the Caesars. Which means the degradation and
enslavement of nations and of men.
To-day even, what is it that kills, what is it that crushes
brutally, materially, in all European countries, liberty and humanity? It is
the triumph of the Caesarian or Roman principle.
Compare now two modern civilisations -- the Italian and the
German. The first undoubtedly represents, in its general character,
materialism; the second, on the contrary, represents idealism in its most
abstract, most pure, and most transcendental form. Let us see what are the
practical fruits of the one and the other.
Italy has already rendered immense services to the cause of
human emancipation. She was the first to resuscitate and widely apply the
principle of liberty in Europe, and to restore to humanity its titles to
nobility: industry, commerce, poetry, the arts, the positive sciences, and free
thought. Crushed since by three centuries of imperial and papal despotism, and
dragged in the mud by her governing bourgeoisie, she reappears to-day, it is true,
in a very degraded condition in comparison with what she once was. And yet how
much she differs from Germany! In Italy, in spite of this decline -- temporary
let us hope -- one may live and breathe humanly, surrounded by a people which
seems to be born for liberty. Italy, even bourgeois Italy, can point with pride
to men like Mazzini and Garibaldi. .In Germany one breathes the atmosphere of
an immense political and social slavery, philosophically explained and accepted
by a great people with deliberate resignation and free will. Her heroes -- I
speak always of present Germany, not of the Germany of the future; of
aristocratic, bureaucratic, political and bourgeoisie Germany, not of the
Germany of the prolétaires -- her heroes are quite the opposite of Mazzini and
Garibaldi: they are William I., that ferocious and ingenuous representative of
the Protestant God, Messrs, Bismarck and Moltke, Generals Manteuffel and
Werder. In all her international relations Germany, from the beginning of her
existence, has been slowly, systematically invading, conquering, ever ready to
extend her own voluntary enslavement into the territory of her neighbours; and,
since her definitive establishment as a unitary power, she has become a menace,
a danger to the liberty of entire Europe. To-day Germany is servility brutal
and triumphant.
To show how theoretical idealism incessantly and inevitably
changes into practical materialism, one needs only to cite the example of all
the Christian Churches, and, naturally, first of all, that of the Apostolic and
Roman Church. What is there more sublime, in the ideal sense, more
disinterested, more separate from all the interests of this earth, than the
doctrine of Christ preached by that Church? And what is there more brutally
materialistic than the constant practice of that same Church since the eighth
century, from which dates her definitive establishment as a power? What has
been and still is the principal object of all her contests with the sovereigns
of Europe? Her temporal goods, her revenues first, and then her temporal power,
her political privileges. We must do her the justice to acknowledge that she
was the first to discover, in modern history, this incontestable but scarcely
Christian truth that wealth and power, the economic exploitation and the
political oppression of the masses, are the two inseparable terms of the reign
of divine ideality on earth: wealth consolidating and augmenting power, power
ever discovering and creating new sources of wealth, and both assuring, better
than the martyrdom and faith of the apostles, better than divine grace, the
success of the Christian propagandism. This is a historical truth, and the
Protestant Churches do not fail to recognise it either. I speak, of course, of
the independent churches of England, America, and Switzerland, not of the
subjected churches of Germany. The latter have no initiative of their own; they
do what their masters, their temporal sovereigns, who are at the same time
their spiritual chieftains, order them to do, It is well known that the
Protestant propagandism, especially in England and America, is very intimately
connected with the propagandism of the material, commercial interests of those
two great nations; and it is known also that the objects of the latter
propagandism is not at all the enrichment and material prosperity of the
countries into which it penetrates in company with the Word of God, but rather
the exploitation of those countries with a view to the enrichment and material
prosperity of certain classes, which in their own country are very covetous and
very pious at the same time.
In a word, it is not at all difficult to prove, history in
hand, that the Church, that all the Churches, Christian and non-Christian, by
the side of their spiritualistic propagandism, and probably to accelerate and
consolidate the success thereof, have never neglected to organise themselves
into great corporations for the economic exploitation of the masses under the
protection and with the direct and special blessing of some divinity or other;
that all the States, which originally, as we know, with all their political and
judicial institutions and their dominant and privileged classes have been only
temporal branches of these various Churches have likewise had principally in
view this same exploitation for the benefit of lay minorities indirectly
sanctioned by the Church; finally and in general, that the action of the good
God and of all the divine idealities on earth has ended at last, always and
everywhere, in founding the prosperous materialism of the few over the
fanatical and constantly famishing idealism of the masses.
We have a new proof of this in what we see to-day. With the
exception of the great hearts and great minds whom I have before referred to as
misled, who are to-day the most obstinate defenders of idealism? In the first
places all the sovereign courts. In France, until lately, Napoleon III. and his
wife, Madame Eugénie; all their former ministers, courtiers, and ex-marshals,
from Rouher and Bazaine to Fleury and Piétri; the men and women of this
imperial world, who have so completely idealised and saved France; their
journalists and their savants -- the Cssagnacs, the Girardins, the Duvernois,
the Veuillots, the Leverriers, the Dumas; the black phalanx of Jesuits and
Jesuitesses in every garb; the whole upper and middle bourgeoisie of France;
the doctrinaire liberals, and the liberals without doctrine -- the Guizots, the
Thiers, the Jules Favres, the Pelletans, and the Jules Simons, all obstinate
defenders of the bourgeoisie exploitation. In Prussia, in Germany, William I.,
the present royal demonstrator of the good God on earth; all his generals, all
his officers, Pomeranian and other; all his army, which, strong in its
religious faith, has just conquered France in that ideal way we know so well.
In Russia, the Czar and his court; the Mouravieffs and the Bergs, all the
butchers and pious proselyters of Poland. Everywhere, in short, religious or
philosophical idealism, the one being but the more or less free translation of
the other, serves to-day as the flag of material, bloody, and brutal force, of
shameless material exploitation; while, on the contrary, the flag of
theoretical materialism, the red flag of economic equality and social justice,
is raised by the practical idealism of the oppressed and famishing masses,
tending to realise the greatest liberty and the human right of each in the
fraternity of all men on the earth.
Who are the real idealists -- the idealists not of
abstraction, but of life, not of heaven, but of earth -- and who are the
materialists?
It is evident that the essential condition of theoretical or
divine idealism is the sacrifice of logic, of human reason, the renunciation of
science. We see, further, that in defending the doctrines of idealism one finds
himself enlisted perforce in the ranks of the oppressors and exploiters of the
masses. These are two great reasons which, it would seem, should be sufficient
to drive every great mind, every great heart, from idealism. How does it happen
that our illustrious contemporary idealists, who certainly lack neither mind,
nor heart, nor good will, and who have devoted their entire existence to the
service of humanity -- how does it happen that they persist in remaining among
the representatives of a doctrine henceforth condemned and dishonoured?
They must be influenced by a very powerful motive. It cannot
be logic or science, since logic and science have pronounced their verdict
against the idealistic doctrine. No more can it be personal interests, since
these men are infinitely above everything of that sort. It must, then, be a
powerful moral motive. Which? There can be but one. These illustrious men
think, no doubt, that idealistic theories or beliefs are essentially necessary
to the moral dignity and grandeur of man, and that materialistic theories, on
the contrary, reduce him to the level of the beasts.
And if the truth were just the opposite!
Every development, I have said, implies the negation of its
point of departure. The basis or point of departure, according to the
materialistic school, being material, the negation must be necessarily ideal.
Starting from the totality of the real world, or from what is abstractly called
matter, it logically arrives at the real idealisation -- that is, at the
humanisation, at the full and complete emancipation of society. Per contra and
for the same reason, the basis and point of departure of the idealistic school
being ideal, it arrives necessarily at the materialisation of society, at the
organization of a brutal despotism and an iniquitous and ignoble exploitation,
under the form of Church and State. The historical development of man according
to the materialistic school, is a progressive ascension; in the idealistic
system it can be nothing but a continuous fall.
Whatever human question we may desire to consider, we always
find this same essential contradiction between the two schools. Thus, as I have
already observed, materialism starts from animality to establish humanity;
idealism starts from divinity to establish slavery and condemn the masses to an
endless animality. Materialism denies free will and ends in the establishment
of liberty; idealism, in the name of human dignity, proclaims free will, and on
the ruins of every liberty founds authority. Materialism rejects the principle
of authority, because it rightly considers it as the corollary of animality,
and because, on the contrary, the triumph of humanity, the object and chief
significance of history, can be realised only through liberty. In a word, you
will always find the idealists in the very act of practical materialism, while
you will see the materialists pursuing and realising the most grandly ideal
aspirations and thoughts.
History, in the system of the idealists, as I have said, can
be nothing but a continuous fall. They begin by a terrible fall, from which
they never recover -- by the salto mortale from the sublime regions of pure and
absolute idea into matter. And into what kind of matter ! Not into the matter
which is eternally active and mobile, full of properties and forces, of life
and intelligence, as we see it in the real world; but into abstract matter,
impoverished and reduced to absolute misery by the regular looting of these
Prussians of thought, the theologians and metaphysicians, who have stripped it
of everything to give everything to their emperor, to their God; into the
matter which, deprived of all action and movement of its own, represents, in
opposition to the divine idea, nothing but absolute stupidity, impenetrability,
inertia and immobility.
The fall is so terrible that divinity, the divine person or
idea, is flattened out, loses consciousness of itself, and never more recovers
it. And in this desperate situation it is still forced to work miracles ! For
from the moment that matter becomes inert, every movement that takes place in
the world, even the most material, is a miracle, can result only from a
providential intervention, from the action of God upon matter. And there this
poor Divinity, degraded and half annihilated by its fall, lies some thousands
of centuries in this swoon, then awakens slowly, in vain endeavouring to grasp
some vague memory of itself, and every move that it makes in this direction
upon matter becomes a creation, a new formation, a new miracle. In this way it
passes through all degrees of materiality and bestiality -- first, gas, simple
or compound chemical substance, mineral, it then spreads over the earth as
vegetable and animal organization till it concentrates itself in man. Here it
would seem as if it must become itself again, for it lights in every human
being an angelic spark, a particle of its own divine being, the immortal soul.
How did it manage to lodge a thing absolutely immaterial in
a thing absolutely material; how can the body contain, enclose, limit, paralyse
pure spirit? This, again, is one of those questions which faith alone, that
passionate and stupid affirmation of the absurd, can solve. It is the greatest
of miracles. Here, however, we have only to establish the effects, the
practical consequences of this miracle.
After thousands of centuries of vain efforts to come back to
itself, Divinity, lost and scattered in the matter which it animates and sets
in motion, finds a point of support, a sort of focus for self-concentration.
This focus is man his immortal soul singularly imprisoned in a mortal body. But
each man considered individually is infinitely too limited, too small, to
enclose the divine immensity; it can contain only a very small particle,
immortal like the whole, but infinitely smaller than the whole. It follows that
the divine being, the absolutely immaterial being, mind, is divisible like
matter. Another mystery whose solution must be left to faith.
If God entire could find lodgment in each man, then each man
would be God. We should have an immense quantity of Gods, each limited by all
the others and yet none the less infinite -- a contradiction which would imply
a mutual destruction of men, an impossibility of the existence of more than
one. As for the particles, that is another matter; nothing more rational,
indeed, than that one particle should be limited by another and be smaller than
the whole. Only, here another contradiction confronts us. To be limited, to be
greater and smaller are attributes of matter, not of mind. According to the materialists,
it is true, mind is only the working of the wholly material organism of man,
and the greatness or smallness of mind depends absolutely on the greater or
less material perfection of the human organism. But these same attributes of
relative limitation and grandeur cannot be attributed to mind as the idealists
conceive it, absolutely immaterial mind, mind existing independent of matter.
There can be neither greater nor smaller nor any limit among minds, for there
is only one mind -- God. To add that the infinitely small and limited particles
which constitute human souls are at the same time immortal is to carry the
contradiction to a climax. But this is a question of faith. Let us pass on.
Here then we have Divinity torn up and lodged, in infinitely
small particles, in an immense number of beings of all sexes, ages, races, and
colours. This is an excessively inconvenient and unhappy situation, for the
divine particles are so little acquainted with each other at the outset of
their human existence that they begin by devouring each other. Moreover, in the
midst of this state of barbarism and wholly animal brutality, these divine
particles, human souls, retain as it were a vague remembrance of their
primitive divinity, and are irresistibly drawn towards their whole; they seek
each other, they seek their whole. It is Divinity itself, scattered and lost in
the natural world, which looks for itself in men, and it is so demolished by
this multitude of human prisons in which it finds itself strewn, that, in looking
for itself, it commits folly after folly.
Beginning with fetishism, it searches for and adores itself,
now in a stone, now in a piece of wood, now in a rag. It is quite likely that
it would never have succeeded in getting out of the rag, if the other divinity
which was not allowed to fall into matter and which is kept in a state of pure
spirit in the sublime heights of the absolute ideal, or in the celestial
regions, had not had pity on it.
Here is a new mystery -- that of Divinity dividing itself
into two halves, both equally infinite, of which one -- God the Father -- stays
in the purely immaterial regions, and the other -- God the Son--falls into
matter. We shall see directly, between these two Divinities separated from each
other, continuous relations established, from above to below and from below to
above; and these relations, considered as a single eternal and constant act,
will constitute the Holy Ghost. Such, in its veritable theological and
metaphysical meaning, is the great, the terrible mystery of the Christian
Trinity.
But let us lose no time in abandoning these heights to see
what is going on upon earth.
God the Father, seeing from the height of his eternal
splendour that the poor God the Son, flattened out and astounded by his fall,
is so plunged and lost in matter that even having reached human state he has
not yet recovered himself, decides to come to his aid. From this immense number
of particles at once immortal, divine, and infinitely small, in which God the
Son has disseminated himself so thoroughly that he does not know himself, God
the Father chooses those most pleasing to him, picks his inspired persons, his
prophets, his "men of virtuous genius," the great benefactors and
legislators of humanity: Zoroaster, Buddha, Moses, Confucius, Lycurgus, Solon,
Socrates, the divine Plato, and above all Jesus Christ, the complete
realisation of God the Son, at last collected and concentrated in a single
human person; all the apostles, Saint Peter, Saint Paul, Saint John before all,
Constantine the Great, Mahomet, then Charlemagne, Gregory VII Dante, and,
according to some, Luther also, Voltaire and Rousseau, Robespierre and Danton,
and many other great and holy historical personages, all of whose names it is
impossible to recapitulate, but among whom I, as a Russian, beg that Saint
Nicholas may not be forgotten.
Then we have reached at last the manifestation of God upon
earth. But immediately God appears, man is reduced to nothing. It will be said
that he is not reduced to nothing, since he is himself a particle of God.
Pardon me! I admit that a particle of a definite, limited whole, however small
it be, is a quantity, a positive greatness. But a particle of the infinitely
great, compared with it, is necessarily infinitely small, Multiply milliards of
milliards by milliards of milliards -- their product compared to the infinitely
great, will be infinitely small, and the infinitely small is equal to zero. God
is everything; therefore man and all the real world with him, the universe, are
nothing. You will not escape this conclusion.
God appears, man is reduced to nothing; and the greater
Divinity becomes, the more miserable becomes humanity. That is the history of
all religions; that is the effect of all the divine inspirations and
legislations. In history the name of God is the terrible club with which all
divinely inspired men, the great "virtuous geniuses," have beaten
down the liberty, dignity, reason, and prosperity of man.
We had first the fall of God. Now we have a fall which
interests us more--that of man, caused solely by the apparition of God
manifested on earth.
See in how profound an error our dear and illustrious
idealists find themselves. In talking to us of God they purpose, they desire,
to elevate us, emancipate us, ennoble us, and, on the contrary, they crush and
degrade us. With the name of God they imagine that they can establish
fraternity among men, and, on the contrary, they create pride, contempt; they
sow discord, hatred, war; they establish slavery. For with God come the
different degrees of divine inspiration; humanity is divided into men highly
inspired, less inspired, uninspired. All are equally insignificant before God,
it is true; but, compared with each other, some are greater than others; not
only in fact--which would be of no consequence, because inequality in fact is
lost in the collectivity when it cannot cling to some legal fiction or
institution--but by the divine right of inspiration, which immediately
establishes a fixed, constant, petrifying inequality. The highly inspired must
be listened to and obeyed by the less inspired, and the less inspired by the
uninspired. Thus we have the principle of authority well established, and with
it the two fundamental institutions of slavery: Church and State.
Of all despotisms that of the doctrinaires or inspired
religionists is the worst. They are so jealous of the glory of their God and of
the triumph of their idea that they have no heart left for the liberty or the
dignity or even the sufferings of living men, of real men. Divine zeal,
preoccupation with the idea, finally dry up the tenderest souls, the most
compassionate hearts, the sources of human love. Considering all that is, all
that happens in the world from the point of view of eternity or of the abstract
idea, they treat passing matters with disdain; but the whole life of real men,
of men of flesh and bone, is composed only of passing matters; they themselves
are only passing beings, who, once passed, are replaced by others likewise
passing, but never to return in person. Alone permanent or relatively eternal
in men is humanity, which steadily developing, grows richer in passing from one
generation to another. I say relatively eternal, because, our planet once
destroyed -- it cannot fail to perish sooner or later, since everything which
has begun must necessarily end -- our planet once decomposed, to serve
undoubtedly as an element of some new formation in the system of the universe,
which alone is really eternal, who knows what will become of our whole human
development? Nevertheless, the moment of this dissolution being an enormous
distance in the future, we may properly consider humanity, relatively to the
short duration of human life, as eternal. But this very fact of progressive
humanity is real and living only through its manifestations at definite times,
in definite places, in really living men, and not through its general idea.
The general idea is always an abstraction and, for that very
reason, in some sort a negation of real life. I have stated in the Appendix
that human thought and, in consequence of this, science can grasp and name only
the general significance of real facts, their relations, their laws--in short,
that which is permanent in their continual transformations--but never their
material, individual side, palpitating, so to speak, with reality and life, and
therefore fugitive and intangible. Science comprehends the thought of the
reality, not reality itself; the thought of life, not life. That is its limit,
its only really insuperable limit, because it is founded on the very nature of
thought, which is the only organ of science.
Upon this nature are based the indisputable rights and grand
mission of science, but also its vital impotence and even its mischievous
action whenever, through its official licensed representatives, it arrogantly
claims the right to govern life. The mission of science is, by observation of
the general relations of passing and real facts, to establish the general laws
inherent in the development of the phenomena of the physical and social world;
it fixes, so to speak, the unchangeable landmarks of humanity's progressive
march by indicating the general conditions which it is necessary to rigorously
observe and always fatal to ignore or forget. In a word, science is the compass
of life; but it is not life. Science is unchangeable, impersonal, general,
abstract, insensible, like the laws of which it is but the ideal reproduction,
reflected or mental -- that is cerebral (using this word to remind us that
science itself is but a material product of a material organ, the brain). Life
is wholly fugitive and temporary, but also wholly palpitating with reality and
individuality, sensibility, sufferings, joys, aspirations, needs, and passions.
It alone spontaneously creates real things and; beings. Science creates
nothing; it establishes and recognises only the creations of life. And every
time that scientific men, emerging from their abstract world, mingle with
living creation in the real world, all that they propose or create is poor,
ridiculously abstract, bloodless and lifeless, still-born, like the homunculus
created by Wagner, the pedantic disciple of the immortal Doctor Faust. It
follows that the only mission of science is to enlighten life, not to govern
it.
The government of science and of men of science, even be
they positivists, disciples of Auguste Comte, or, again, disciples of the doctrinaire
school of German Communism, cannot fail to be impotent, ridiculous, inhuman,
cruel, oppressive, exploiting, maleficent. We may say of men of science, as
such, what I have said of theologians and metaphysicians: they have neither
sense nor heart for individual and living beings. We cannot even blame them for
this, for it is the natural consequence of their profession. In so far as they
are men of science, they have to deal with and can take interest in nothing
except generalities; that do the laws 5.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . they are not exclusively men of science,
but are also more or less men of life. 6

III
Nevertheless, we must not rely too much on this. Though we
may be well nigh certain that a savant would not dare to treat a man today as
he treats a rabbit, it remains always to be feared that the savants as a body,
if not interfered with, may submit living men to scientific experiments,
undoubtedly less cruel but none the less disagreeable to their victims. If they
cannot perform experiments upon the bodies of individuals, they will ask
nothing better than to perform them on the social body, and that what must be
absolutely prevented.
In their existing organisation, monopolising science and
remaining thus outside of social life, the savants form a separate caste, in
many respects analogous to the priesthood. Scientific abstractions is their
God, living and real individuals are their victims, and they are the
consecrated and licensed sacrificers.
Science cannot go outside of the sphere of abstractions. In
this respect it is infinitely inferior to art, which, in its turn, is
peculiarly concerned also with general types and general situations, but which
incarnates them by an artifice of its own in forms which, if they are not
living in the sense of real life none the less excite in our imagination the
memory and sentiment of life; art in a certain sense individualizes the types
and situations which it conceives; by means of the individualities without
flesh and bone, and consequently permanent and immortal, which it has the power
to create, it recalls to our minds the living, real individualities which
appear and disappear under our eyes. Art, then, is as it were the return of
abstraction to life; science, on the contrary, is the perpetual immolation of
life, fugitive, temporary, but real, on the altar of eternal abstractions.
Science is as incapable of grasping the individuality of a
man as that of a rabbit, being equally indifferent to both. Not that it is
ignorant of the principle of individuality: it conceives it perfectly as a
principle, but not as a fact. It knows very well that all the animal species,
including the human species, have no real existence outside of an indefinite
number of individuals, born and dying to make room for new individuals equally
fugitive. It knows that in rising from the animal species to the superior
species the principle of individuality becomes more pronounced; the individuals
appear freer and more complete. It knows that man, the last and most perfect
animal of earth, presents the most complete and most remarkable individuality,
because of his power to conceive, concrete, personify, as it were, in his
social and private existence, the universal law. It knows, finally, when it is
not vitiated by theological or metaphysical, political or judicial doctrinairisme,
or even by a narrow scientific pride, when it is not deaf to the instincts and
spontaneous aspirations of life-- it knows (and this is its last word) that
respect for man is the supreme law of Humanity, and that the great, the real
object of history, its only legitimate object is the humanization and
emancipation, the real liberty, the prosperity and happiness of each individual
living in society. For, if we would not fall back into the liberticidal fiction
of the public welfare represented by the State, a fiction always founded on the
systematic sacrifice of the people, we must clearly recognize that collective
liberty and prosperity exist only so far as they represent the sum of
individual liberties and prosperities.
Science knows all these things, but it does not and cannot
go beyond them. Abstraction being its very nature, it can well enough conceive
the principle of real and living individuality, but it can have no dealings
with real and living individuals; it concerns itself with individuals in
general, but not with Peter or James, not with such or such a one, who, so far
as it is concerned, do not, cannot, have any existence. Its individuals, I
repeat, are only abstractions.
Now, history is made, not by abstract individuals, but by
acting, living and passing individuals. Abstractions advance only when borne
forward by real men. For these beings made, not in idea only, but in reality of
flesh and blood, science has no heart: it considers them at most as material
for intellectual and social development. What does it care for the particular
conditions and chance fate of Peter or James? It would make itself ridiculous,
it would abdicate, it would annihilate itself, if it wished to concern itself
with them otherwise than as examples in support of its eternal theories. And it
would be ridiculous to wish it to do so, for its mission lies not there. It
cannot grasp the concrete; it can move only in abstractions. Its mission is to
busy itself with the situation and the general conditions of the existence and
development, either of the human species in general, or of such a race, such a
people, such a class or category of individuals; the general causes of their
prosperity, their decline, and the best general methods of securing, their
progress in all ways. Provided it accomplishes this task broadly and
rationally, it will do its whole duty, and it would be really unjust to expect
more of it.
But it would be equally ridiculous, it would be disastrous
to entrust it with a mission which it is incapable of fulfilling. Since its own
nature forces it to ignore the existence of Peter and James, it must never be
permitted, nor must anybody be permitted in its name, to govern Peter and
James. For it were capable of treating them almost as it treats rabbits. Or
rather, it would continue to ignore them; but its licensed representatives, men
not at all abstract, but on the contrary in very active life and having very
substantial interests, yielding to the pernicious influence which privilege
inevitably exercises upon men, would finally fleece other men in the name of
science, just as they have been fleeced hitherto by priests, politicians of all
shades, and lawyers, in the name of God, of the State, of judicial Right.
What I preach then is, to a certain extent, the revolt of
life against science, or rather against the government of science, not to
destroy science-that would be high treason to humanity-but to remand it to its
place so that it can never leave it again. Until now all human history has been
only a perpetual and bloody immolation of millions of poor human beings in
honor of some pitiless abstraction-God, country, power of State, national
honor, historical rights, judicial rights, political liberty, public welfare.
Such has been up to today the natural, spontaneous, and inevitable movement of
human societies. We cannot undo it; we must submit to it so far as the past is
concerned, as we submit to all natural fatalities. We must believe that that
was the only possible way, to educate the human race. For we must not deceive
ourselves: even in attributing the larger part to the Machiavellian wiles of
the governing classes, we have to recognize that no minority would have been
powerful enough to impose all these horrible sacrifices upon the masses if
there had not been in the masses themselves a dizzy spontaneous movement which
pushed them on to continual self-sacrifice, now to one, now to another of these
devouring abstractions the vampires of history ever nourished upon human blood.
We readily understand that this is very gratifying, to the
theologians, politicians, and jurists. Priests of these abstractions, they live
only by the continual immolation of the people. Nor is it more surprising that
metaphysics too, should give its consent. Its only mission is to justify and
rationalize as far as possible the iniquitous and absurd. But that positive
science itself should have shown the same tendencies is a fact which we must
deplore while we establish it. That it has done so is due to two reasons: in
the first place, because, constituted outside of life, it is represented by a
privileged body; and in the second place, because thus far it has posited
itself as an absolute and final object of all human development. By a judicious
criticism, which it can and finally will be forced to pass upon itself, it
would understand, on the contrary, that it is only a means for the realization
of a much higher object-that of the complete humanization of the real situation
of all the real individuals who are born, who live, and who die, on earth.
The immense advantage of positive science over theology,
metaphysics, politics, and judicial right consists in this-that, in place of
the false and fatal abstractions set up by these doctrines, it posits true
abstractions which express the general nature and logic of things, their general
relations, and the general laws of their development. This separates it
profoundly from all preceding doctrines, and will assure it for ever a great
position in society: it will constitute in a certain sense society's collective
consciousness. But there is one aspect in which it resembles all these
doctrines: its only possible object being abstractions, it is forced by its
very nature to ignore real men, outside of whom the truest abstractions have no
existence. To remedy this radical defect positive science will have to proceed
by a different method from that followed by the doctrines of the past. The
latter have taken advantage of the ignorance of the masses to sacrifice them
with delight to their abstractions, which by the way, are always very lucrative
to those who represent them in flesh and bone. Positive science, recognizing
its absolute inability to conceive real individuals and interest itself in
their lot, must definitely and absolutely renounce all claim to the government
of societies; for if it should meddle therein, it would only sacrifice
continually the living men whom it ignores to the abstractions which constitute
the sole object of its legitimate preoccupations.
The true science of history, for instance, does not yet
exist; scarcely do we begin today to catch a glimpse of its extremely
complicated conditions. But suppose it were definitely developed, what could it
give us? It would exhibit a faithful and rational picture of the natural
development of the general conditions-material and ideal, economical, political
and social, religious, philosophical, aesthetic, and scientific-of the
societies which have a history. But this universal picture of human
civilization, however detailed it might be, would never show anything beyond
general and consequently abstract estimates. The milliards of individuals who
have furnished the living and suffering materials of this history at once
triumphant and dismal-triumphant by its general results, dismal by the immense
hecatomb of human victims "crushed under its car"-those milliards of
obscure individuals without whom none of the great abstract results of history
would have been obtained-and who, bear in mind, have never benefited by any of
these results-will find no place, not even the slightest in our annals. They
have lived and been sacrificed, crushed for the good of abstract humanity, that
is all.
Shall we blame the science of history. That would be unjust
and ridiculous. Individuals cannot be grasped by thought, by reflection, or
even by human speech, which is capable of expressing abstractions only; they
cannot be grasped in the present day any more than in the past. Therefore
social science itself, the science of the future, will necessarily continue to
ignore them. All that, we have a right to demand of it is that it shall point
us with faithful and sure hand to the general causes of individual suffering-
among these causes it will not forget the immolation and subordination (still
too frequent, alas!) of living individuals to abstract generalities-at the same
time showing us the general conditions necessary to the real emancipation of
the individuals living in society. That is its mission; those are its limits,
beyond which the action of social science can be only impotent and fatal.
Beyond those limits being the doctrinaire and governmental pretentious of its
licensed representatives, its priests. It is time to have done with all popes
and priests; we want them no longer, even if they call themselves Social
Democrats.
Once more, the sole mission of science is to light the road.
Only Life, delivered from all its governmental and doctrinaire barriers, and
given full liberty of action, can create.
How solve this antinomy?
On the one hand, science is indispensable to the rational
organization of society; on the other, being incapable of interesting itself in
that which is real and living, it must not interfere with the real or practical
organization of society.
This contradiction can be solved only in one way: by the
liquidation of science as a moral being existing outside the life of all, and
represented by a body of breveted savants; it must spread among the masses.
Science, being called upon to henceforth represent society's collective
consciousness, must really become the property of everybody. Thereby, without
losing anything of its universal character, of which it can never divest itself
without ceasing to be science, and while continuing to concern itself
exclusively with general causes, the conditions and fixed relations of
individuals and things, it will become one in fact with the immediate and real
life of all individuals. That will be a movement analogous to that which said
to the Protestants at the beginning of the Reformation that there was no
further need of priests for man, who would henceforth be his own priest, every
man, thanks to the invisible intervention of the Lord Jesus Christ alone,
having at last succeeded in swallowing his good God. But here the question is
not of Jesus Christ, nor good God, nor of political liberty, nor of judicial right-things
all theologically or metaphysically revealed, and all alike indigestible. The
world of scientific abstractions is not revealed; it is inherent in the real
world, of which it is only the general or abstract expression and
representation. As long as it forms a separate region, specially represented by
the savants as a body, this ideal world threatens to take the place of a good
God to the real world, reserving for its licensed representatives the office of
priests. That is the reason why it is necessary to dissolve the special social
organization of the savants by general instruction, equal for all in all
things, in order that the masses, ceasing to be flocks led and shorn by
privileged priests, may take into their own hands the direction of their
destinies.7
But until the masses shall have reached this degree of
instruction, will it be necessary to leave them to the government of scientific
men? Certainly not. It would be better for them to dispense with science than
allow themselves to be governed by savants. The first consequence of the
government of these men would be to render science inaccessible to the people,
and such a government would necessarily be aristocratic because the existing
scientific institutions are essentially aristocratic. An aristocracy of
learning! from the practical point of view the most implacable, and from the
social point of view the most haughty and insulting-such would be the power
established in the name of science. This régime would be capable of paralyzing
the life and movement of society. The savants always presumptuous, ever
self-sufficient and ever impotent, would desire to meddle with everything, and
the sources of life would dry up under the breath of their abstractions.
Once more, Life, not science, creates life; the spontaneous
action of the people themselves alone can create liberty. Undoubtedly it would
be a very fortunate thing if science could, from this day forth, illuminate the
spontaneous march of the people towards their emancipation. But better an
absence of light than a false and feeble light, kindled only to mislead those
who follow it. After all, the people will not lack light. Not in vain have they
traversed a long historic career, and paid for their errors by centuries of
misery. The practical summary of their painful experiences constitutes a sort
of traditional science, which in certain respects is worth as much as
theoretical science. Last of all, a portion of the youth-- those of the
bourgeois students who feel hatred enough for the falsehood, hypocrisy,
injustice, and cowardice of the bourgeoisie to find courage to turn their backs
upon it, and passion enough to unreservedly embrace the just and human cause of
the proletariat-those will be, as I have already said, fraternal instructors of
the people; thanks to them, there will be no occasion for the government of the
savants.
If the people should beware of the government of the savants,
all the more should they provide against that of the inspired idealists. The
more sincere these believers and poets of heaven, the more dangerous they
become. The scientific abstraction, I have said, is a rational abstraction,
true in its essence, necessary to life, of which it is the theoretical
representation, or, if one prefers, the conscience. It may, it must be,
absorbed and digested by life. The idealistic abstraction, God, is a corrosive
poison, which destroys and decomposes life, falsifies and kills it. The pride
of the idealists, not being personal but divine, is invincible and inexorable:
it may, it must, die, but it will never yield, and while it has a breath left
it will try to subject men to its God, just as the lieutenants of Prussia,
these practical idealists of Germany, would like to see the people crushed
under the spurred boot of their emperor. The faith is the same, the end but
little different, and the result, as that of faith, is slavery.
It is at the same time the triumph of the ugliest and most
brutal materialism. There is no need to demonstrate this in the case of
Germany; one would have to be blind to avoid seeing it at the present hour. But
I think it is still necessary to demonstrate it in the case of divine idealism.
Man, like all the rest of nature, is an entirely material
being. The mind, the facility of thinking, of receiving and reflecting upon
different external and internal sensations, of remembering them when they have
passed and reproducing them by the imagination, of comparing and distinguishing
them, of abstracting determinations common to them and thus creating general
concepts, and finally of forming ideas by grouping and combining concepts
according to different methods -- -intelligence, in a word, sole creator of our
whole, ideal world, is a property of the animal body and especially of the
quite material organism of the brain.
We know this certainly, by the experience of all, which no
fact has ever contradicted and which any man can verify at any moment of his
life. In all animals, without excepting the wholly inferior species, we find a
certain degree of intelligence, and we see that, in the series of species,
animal intelligence develops in proportion as the organization of a species
approaches that of man, but that in man alone it attains to that power of
abstraction which properly constitutes thought.
Universal experience,8
which is the sole origin, the source of all our knowledge, shows us, therefore,
that all intelligence is always attached to some animal body, and that the
intensity, the power, of this animal function depends on the relative
perfection of the organism. The latter of these results of universal experience
is not applicable only to the different animal species; we establish it
likewise in men, whose intellectual and moral power depends so clearly upon the
greater or less perfection of their organism as a race, as a nation, as a
class, and as individuals, that it is not necessary to insist upon this point.9
On the other hand, it is certain that no man has ever seen
or can see pure mind, detached from all material form existing separately from
any animal body whatsoever. But if no person has seen it, how is it that men
have come to believe in its existence? The fact of this belief is certain and if
not universal, as all the idealists pretend, at least very general, and as such
it is entirely worthy of our closest attention, for a general belief, however
foolish it may be, exercises too potent a sway over the destiny of men to
warrant us in ignoring it or putting it aside.
The explanation of this belief, moreover, is rational
enough. The example afforded us by children and young people, and even by many
men long past the age of majority, shows us that man may use his mental
faculties for a long time before accounting to himself for the way in which he
uses them, before becoming clearly conscious of it. During this working of the
mind unconscious of itself, during this action of innocent or believing
intelligence, man, obsessed by the external world, pushed on by that internal
goad called life and its manifold necessities, creates a quantity of
imaginations, concepts, and ideas necessarily very imperfect at first and
conforming but slightly to the reality of the things and facts which they
endeavour to express Not having yet the consciousness of his own intelligent
action, not knowing yet that he himself has produced and continues to produce
these imaginations, these concepts, these ideas, ignoring their wholly subjective
-- that is, human--origin, he must naturally consider them as objective beings,
as real beings, wholly independent of him, existing by themselves and in
themselves.
It was thus that primitive peoples, emerging slowly from
their animal innocence, created their gods. Having created them, not suspecting
that they themselves were the real creators, they worshipped them; considering
them as real beings infinitely superior to themselves, they attributed
omnipotence to them, and recognised themselves as their creatures, their
slaves. As fast as human ideas develop, the gods, who, as I have already
stated, were never anything more than a fantastic, ideal, poetical
reverberation of an inverted image, become idealised also. At first gross
fetishes, they gradually become pure spirits, existing outside of the visible
world, and at last, in the course of a long historic evolution, are confounded
in a single Divine Being, pure, eternal, absolute Spirit, creator and master of
the worlds.
In every development, just or false, real or imaginary
collective or individual, it is always the first step, the first act that is
the most difficult. That step once taken, the rest follows naturally as a
necessary consequence. The difficult step in the historical development of this
terrible religious insanity which continues to obsess and crush us was to posit
a divine world as such, outside the world. This first act of madness, so
natural from the physiological point of view and consequently necessary in the
history of humanity, was not accomplished at a single stroke. I know not how
many centuries were needed to develop this belief and make it a governing
influence upon the mental customs of men. But, once established, it became
omnipotent, as each insane notion necessarily becomes when it takes possession
of man's brain. Take a madman, whatever the object of his madness--you will
find that obscure and fixed idea which obsesses him seems to him the most
natural thing in the world, and that, on the contrary, the real things which
contradict this idea seem to him ridiculous and odious follies. Well religion
is a collective insanity, the more powerful because it is traditional folly,
and because its origin is lost in the most remote antiquity. As collective
insanity it has penetrated to the very depths of the public and private
existence of the peoples; it is incarnate in society; it has become, so to
speak, the collective soul and thought. Every man is enveloped in it from his
birth; he sucks it in with his mother's milk, absorbs it with all that he
touches, all that he sees. He is so exclusive]y fed upon it, so poisoned and
penetrated by it in all his being that later, however powerful his natural
mind, he has to make unheard-of efforts to deliver himself from it, and then
never completely succeeds. We have one proof of this in our modern idealists,
and another in our doctrinaire materialists--the German Communists. They have
found no way to shake off the religion of the State.
The supernatural world, the divine world, once well
established in the imagination of the peoples, the development of the various
religious systems has followed its natural and logical course, conforming,
moreover, in all things to the contemporary development of economical and
political relations of which it has been in all ages, in the world of religious
fancy, the faithful reproduction and divine consecration. Thus has the
collective and historical insanity which calls itself religion been developed
since fetishism, passing through all the stages from polytheism to Christian
monotheism.
The second step in the development of religious beliefs,
undoubtedly the most difficult next to the establishment of a separate divine
world, was precisely this transition from polytheism to monotheism, from the
religious materialism of the pagans to the spiritualistic faith of the
Christians. She pagan gods--and this was their principal characteristic--were
first of all exclusively national gods. Very numerous, they necessarily
retained a more or less material character, or, rather, they were so numerous
because they were material, diversity being one of the principal attributes of
the real world. The pagan gods were not yet strictly the negation of real
things; they were only a fantastic exaggeration of them.
We have seen how much this transition cost the Jewish
people, constituting, so to speak, its entire history. In vain did Moses and
the prophets preach the one god; the people always relapsed into their
primitive idolatry, into the ancient and comparatively much more natural and
convenient faith in many good gods, more material, more human, and more
palpable. Jehovah himself, their sole God, the God of Moses and the prophets,
was still an extremely national God, who, to reward and punish his faithful
followers, his chosen people, used material arguments, often stupid, always
gross and cruel. It does not even appear that faith in his existence implied a
negation of the existence of earlier gods. The Jewish God did not deny the
existence of these rivals; he simply did not want his people to worship them
side by side with him, because before all Jehovah was a very Jealous God. His
first commandment was this:
"I am the Lord thy God, and thou shalt have no other
gods before me."
Jehovah, then, was only a first draft, very material and
very rough, of the supreme deity of modern idealism. Moreover, he was only a
national God, like the Russian God worshipped by the German generals, subjects
of the Czar and patriots of the empire of all the Russias; like the German God,
whom the pietists and the German generals, subjects of William I. at Berlin,
will no doubt soon proclaim. The supreme being cannot be a national God; he
must be the God of entire Humanity. Nor can the supreme being be a material
being; he must be the negation of all matter-- pure spirit. Two things have
proved necessary to the realisation of the worship of the supreme being: (1) a
realisation, such as it is, of Humanity by the negation of nationalities and
national forms of worship; (2) a development, already far advanced, of
metaphysical ideas in order to spiritualise the gross Jehovah of the Jews.
The first condition was fulfilled by the Romans, though in a
very negative way no doubt, by the conquest of most of the countries known to
the ancients and by the destruction of their national institutions. The gods of
all the conquered nations, gathered in the Pantheon, mutually cancelled each
other. This was the first draft of humanity, very gross and quite negative.
As for the second condition, the spiritualisation of
Jehovah, that was realised by the Greeks long before the conquest of their
country by the Romans. They were the creators of metaphysics. Greece, in the
cradle of her history, had already found from the Orient a divine world which
had been definitely established in the traditional faith of her peoples; this world
had been left and handed over to her by the Orient. In her instinctive period,
prior to her political history, she had developed and prodigiously humanised
this divine world through her poets; and when she actually began her history,
she already had a religion readymade, the most sympathetic and noble of all the
religions which have existed, so far at least as a religion--that is, a
lie--can be noble and sympathetic. Her great thinkers--and no nation has had
greater than Greece--found the divine world established, not only outside of
themselves in the people, but also in themselves as a habit of feeling and
thought, and naturally they took it as a point of departure. That they made no
theology--that is, that they did not wait in vain to reconcile dawning reason
with the absurdities of such a god, as did the scholastics of the Middle
Ages--was already much in their favour. They left the gods out of their
speculations and attached themselves directly to the divine idea, one,
invisible, omnipotent, eternal, and absolutely spiritualistic but impersonal.
As concerns Spiritualism, then, the Greek metaphysicians, much more than the
Jews, were the creators of the Christian god. The Jews only added to it the
brutal personality of their Jehovah.
That a sublime genius like the divine Plato could have been
absolutely convinced of the reality of the divine idea shows us how contagious,
how omnipotent, is the tradition of the religious mania even on the greatest
minds. Besides, we should not be surprised at it, since, even in our day, the
greatest philosophical genius which has existed since Aristotle and Plato,
Hegel--in spite even of Kant's criticism, imperfect and too metaphysical though
it be, which had demolished the objectivity or reality of the divine ideas--tried
to replace these divine ideas upon their transcendental or celestial throne. It
is true that Hegel went about his work of restoration in so impolite a manner
that he killed the good God for ever. He took away from these ideas their
divine halo, by showing to whoever will read him that they were never anything
more than a creation of the human mind running through history in search of
itself. To put an end to all religious insanities and the divine mirage, he
left nothing lacking but the utterance of those grand words which were said
after him, almost at the same time, by two great minds who had never heard of
each other--Ludwig Feuerbach, the disciple and demolisher of Hegel, in Germany,
and Auguste Comte, the founder of positive philosophy, in France. These words
were as follows:
"Metaphysics are reduced to psychology." All the
metaphysical systems have been nothing else than human psychology developing
itself in history.
To-day it is no longer difficult to understand how the
divine ideas were born, how they were created in succession by the abstractive
faculty of man. Man made the gods. But in the time of Plato this knowledge was
impossible. The collective mind, and consequently the individual mind as well,
even that of the greatest genius, was not ripe for that. Scarcely had it said
with Socrates: "Know thyself!" This self-knowledge existed only in a
state of intuition; in fact, it amounted to nothing. Hence it was impossible
for the human mind to suspect that it was itself the sole creator of the divine
world. It found the divine world before it; it found it as history, as
tradition, as a sentiment, as a habit of thought; and it necessarily made it
the object of its loftiest speculations. Thus was born metaphysics, and thus
were developed and perfected the divine ideas, the basis of Spiritualism.
It is true that after Plato there was a sort of inverse
movement in the development of the mind. Aristotle, the true father of science
and positive philosophy, did not deny the divine world, but concerned himself with
it as little as possible. He was the first to study, like the analyst and
experimenter that he was, logic, the laws of human thought, and at the same
time the physical world, not in its ideal, illusory essence, but in its real
aspect. After him the Greeks of Alexandria established the first school of the
positive scientists. They were atheists. But their atheism left no mark on
their contemporaries. Science tended more and more to separate itself from
life. After Plato, divine ideas were rejected in metaphysics themselves; this
was done by the Epicureans and Sceptics, two sects who contributed much to the
degradation of human aristocracy, but they had no effect upon the masses.
Another school, infinitely more influential, was formed at
Alexandria. This was the school of neo-Platonists. These, confounding in an
impure mixture the monstrous imaginations of the Orient with the ideas of
Plato, were the true originators, and later the elaborators, of the Christian
dogmas.
Thus the personal and gross egoism of Jehovah, the not less
brutal and gross Roman conquest, and the metaphysical ideal speculation of the
Greeks, materialised by contact with the Orient, were the three historical
elements which made up the spiritualistic religion of the Christians.
Before the altar of a unique and supreme God was raised on
the ruins of the numerous altars of the pagan gods, the autonomy of the various
nations composing the pagan or ancient world had to be destroyed first. This
was very brutally done by the Romans who, by conquering the greatest part of
the globe known to the ancients, laid the first foundations, quite gross and
negative ones no doubt, of humanity. A God thus raised above the national
differences, material and social, of all countries, and in a certain sense the
direct negation of them, must necessarily be an immaterial and abstract being.
But faith in the existence of such a being, so difficult a matter, could not
spring into existence suddenly. Consequently, as I have demonstrated in the
Appendix, it went through a long course of preparation and development at the
hands of Greek metaphysics, which were the first to establish in a
philosophical manner the notion of the divine idea, a model eternally creative
and always reproduced by the visible world. But the divinity conceived and
created by Greek philosophy was an impersonal divinity. No logical and serious
metaphysics being able to rise, or, rather, to descend, to the idea of a
personal God, it became necessary, therefore, to imagine a God who was one and
very personal at once. He was found in the very brutal, selfish, and cruel
person of Jehovah, the national God of the Jews. But the Jews, in spite of that
exclusive national spirit which distinguishes them even to-day, had become in
fact, long before the birth of Christ, the most international people of the
world. Some of them carried away as captives, but many more even urged on by
that mercantile passion which constitutes one of the principal traits of their
character, they had spread through all countries, carrying everywhere the
worship of their Jehovah, to whom they remained all the more faithful the more
he abandoned them.
In Alexandria this terrible god of the Jews made the
personal acquaintance of the metaphysical divinity of Plato, already much
corrupted by Oriental contact, and corrupted her still more by his own. In
spite of his national, jealous, and ferocious exclusivism, he could not long
resist the graces of this ideal and impersonal divinity of the Greeks. He
married her, and from this marriage was born the spiritualistic--but not
spirited--God of the Christians. The neoplatonists of Alexandria are known to
have been the principal creators of the Christian theology.
Nevertheless theology alone does not make a religion, any
more than historical elements suffice to create history. By historical elements
I mean the general conditions of any real development whatsoever--for example
in this case the conquest of the world by the Romans and the meeting of the God
of the Jews with the ideal of divinity of the Greeks. To impregnate the
historical elements, to cause them to run through a series of new historical
transformations, a living, spontaneous fact was needed, without which they
might have remained many centuries longer in the state of unproductive elements.
This fact was not lacking in Christianity: it was the propagandism, martyrdom,
and death of Jesus Christ.
We know almost nothing of this great and saintly personage,
all that the gospels tell us being contradictory, and so fabulous that we can
scarcely seize upon a few real and vital traits. But it is certain that he was
the preacher of the poor, the friend and consoler of the wretched, of the
ignorant, of the slaves, and of the women, and that by these last he was much
loved. He promised eternal life to all who are oppressed, to all who suffer
here below; and the number is immense. He was hanged, as a matter of course, by
the representatives of the official morality and public order of that period.
His disciples and the disciples of his disciples succeeded in spreading, thanks
to the destruction of the national barriers by the Roman conquest, and
propagated the Gospel in all the countries known to the ancients. Everywhere
they were received with open arms by the slaves and the women, the two most
oppressed, most suffering, and naturally also the most ignorant classes of the
ancient world. For even such few proselytes as they made in the privileged and
learned world they were indebted in great part to the influence of women. Their
most extensive propagandism was directed almost exclusively among the people,
unfortunate and degraded by slavery. This was the first awakening, the first
intellectual revolt of the proletariat.
The great honour of Christianity, its incontestable merit,
and the whole secret of its unprecedented and yet thoroughly legitimate
triumph, lay in the fact that it appealed to that suffering and immense public
to which the ancient world, a strict and cruel intellectual and political
aristocracy, denied even the simplest rights of humanity. Otherwise it never
could have spread. The doctrine taught by the apostles of Christ, wholly
consoling as it may have seemed to the unfortunate, was too revolting, too
absurd from the standpoint of human reason, ever to have been accepted by
enlightened men According with what joy the apostle Paul speaks of the scandale
de la foi and of the triumph of that divine folie rejected by the powerful and
wise of the century, but all the more passionately accepted by the simple, the
ignorant, and the weak-minded!
Indeed there must have been a very deep-seated
dissatisfaction with life, a very intense thirst of heart, and an almost
absolute poverty of thought, to secure the acceptance of the Christian
absurdity, the most audacious and monstrous of all religious absurdities.
This was not only the negation of all the political, social,
and religious institutions of antiquity: it was the absolute overturn of common
sense, of all human reason. The living being, the real world, were considered
thereafter as nothing; whereas the product of man's abstractive faculty, the
last and supreme abstraction in which this faculty, far beyond existing things,
even beyond the most general determinations of the living being, the ideas of
space and time. having nothing left to advance beyond, rests in contemplation
of his emptiness and absolute immobility.
That abstraction, that caput mortuum, absolutely void of all
contents the true nothing, God, is proclaimed the only real, eternal,
all-powerful being. The real All is declared nothing and the absolute nothing
the All. The shadow becomes the substance and the substance vanishes like a
shadow.10
All this was audacity and absurdity unspeakable, the true scandale
de la foi, the triumph of credulous stupidity over the mind for the masses;
and--for a few--the triumphant irony of a mind wearied, corrupted,
disillusioned, and disgusted in honest and serious search for truth; it was
that necessity of shaking off thought and becoming brutally stupid so
frequently felt by surfeited minds:

Credo quod absurdum.
I believe in the absurd; I believe in it, precisely and
mainly, because it is absurd. In the same way many distinguished and
enlightened minds in our day believe in animal magnetism, spiritualism, tipping
tables, and--why go so far?--believe still in Christianity, in idealism, in
God.
The belief of the ancient proletariat, like that of the
modern, was more robust and simple, less haut goût. The Christian propagandism
appealed to its heart, not to its mind; to its eternal aspirations, its
necessities, its sufferings, its slavery, not to its reason, which still slept
and therefore could know nothing about logical contradictions and the evidence
of the absurd. It was interested solely in knowing when the hour of promised
deliverance would strike, when the kingdom of God would come. As for
theological dogmas, it did not trouble itself about them because it understood
nothing about them The proletariat converted to Christianity constituted its
growing material but not its intellectual strength.
As for the Christian dogmas, it is known that they were
elaborated in a series of theological and literary works and in the Councils,
principally by the converted neo-Platonists of the Orient. The Greek mind had
fallen so low that, in the fourth century of the Christian era, the period of
the first Council, the idea of a personal God, pure, eternal, absolute mind,
creator and supreme master, existing outside of the world, was unanimously
accepted by the Church Fathers; as a logical consequence of this absolute
absurdity, it then became natural and necessary to believe in the immateriality
and immortality of the human soul, lodged and imprisoned in a body only
partially mortal, there being in this body itself a portion which, while
material is immortal like the soul, and must be resurrected with it. We see how
difficult it was, even for the Church Fathers; to conceive pure minds outside
of any material form. It should be added that, in general, it is the character
of every metaphysical and theological argument to seek to explain one absurdity
by another.
It was very fortunate for Christianity that it met a world
of slaves. It had another piece of good luck in the invasion of the Barbarians.
The latter were worthy people, full of natural force, and, above all, urged on
by a great necessity of life and a great capacity for it; brigands who had
stood every test, capable of devastating and gobbling up anything, like their
successors, the Germans of today; but they were much less systematic and
pedantic than these last, much less moralistic, less learned, and on the other
hand much more independent and proud, capable of science and not incapable of
liberty, as are the bourgeois of modern Germany. But, in spite of all their
great qualities, they were nothing but barbarians--that is, as indifferent to
all questions of theology and metaphysics as the ancient slaves, a great number
of whom, moreover, belonged to their race. So that, their practical repugnance
once overcome, it was not difficult to convert them theoretically to
Christianity.
For ten centuries Christianity, armed with the omnipotence
of Church and State and opposed by no competition, was able to deprave, debase,
and falsify the mind of Europe It had no competitors, because outside of the
Church there were neither thinkers nor educated persons. It alone though,, it
alone spoke and wrote, it alone taught. Though heresies arose in its bosom,
they affected only the theological or practical developments of the fundamental
dogma never that dogma itself. The belief in God, pure spirit and creator of
the world, and the belief in the immateriality of the soul remained untouched.
This double belief became the ideal basis of the whole Occidental and Oriental
civilization of Europe; it penetrated and became incarnate in all the
institutions, all the details of the public and private life of all classes,
and the masses as well.
After that, is it surprising that this belief has lived
until the present day, continuing to exercise its disastrous influence even
upon select minds, such as those of Mazzini, Michelet, Quinet, and so many
others? We have seen that the first attack upon it came from the renaissance of
the free mind in the fifteenth century, which produced heroes and martyrs like
Vanini, Giordano Bruno, and Galileo. Although drowned in the noise, tumult, and
passions of the Reformation, it noiselessly continued its invisible work,
bequeathing to the noblest minds of each generation its task of human
emancipation by the destruction of the absurd, until at last, in the latter
half of the eighteenth century, it again reappeared in broad day, boldly waving
the flag of atheism and materialism.
The human mind, then, one might have supposed, was at last
about to deliver itself from all the divine obsessions. Not at all. The divine
falsehood upon which humanity had been feeding for eighteen centuries (speaking
of Christianity only) was once more to show itself more powerful than human
truth. No longer able to make use of the black tribe, of the ravens consecrated
by the Church, of the Catholic or Protestant priests, all confidence in whom
had been lost, it made use of lay priests, short-robed liars and sophists.
among whom the principal rôles devolved upon two fatal men, one the falsest
mind, the other the most doctrinally despotic will, of the last century--J. J.
Rousseau and Robespierre.
The first is the perfect type of narrowness and suspicious
meanness, of exaltation without other object than his own person, of cold
enthusiasm and hypocrisy at once sentimental and implacable, of the falsehood
of modern idealism. He may be considered as the real creator of modern
reaction. To all appearance the most democratic writer of the eighteenth
century, he bred within himself the pitiless despotism of the statesman. He was
the prophet of the doctrinaire State, as Robespierre, his worthy and faithful
disciple, tried to become its high priest. Having heard the saying of Voltaire
that, if God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him, J. J. Rousseau
invented the Supreme Being, the abstract and sterile God of the deists. And It
was in the name of the Supreme Being, and of the hypocritical virtue commanded
by this Supreme Being, that Robespierre guillotined first the Hébertists and
then the very genius of the Revolution, Danton, in whose person he assassinated
the Republic, thus preparing the way for the thenceforth necessary triumph of
the dictatorship of Bonaparte I. After this great triumph, the idealistic
reaction sought and found servants less fanatical, less terrible nearer to the
diminished stature of the actual bourgeoisie. In France, Chateaubriand,
Lamartine, and--shall I say it? Why not? All must be said if it is
truth--Victor Hugo himself, the democrat, the republican, the quasi-socialist
of today! and after them the whole melancholy and sentimental company of poor
and pallid minds who, under the leadership of these masters, established the
modern romantic school in Germany, the Schlegels, the Tiecks, the Novalis, the
Werners, the Schellings, and so many others besides, whose names do not even
deserve to be recalled.
The literature created by this school was the very reign of
ghosts and phantoms. It could not stand the sunlight; the twilight alone
permitted it to live. No more could it stand the brutal contact of the masses.
It was the literature of the tender, delicate, distinguished souls, aspiring to
heaven, and living on earth as if in spite of themselves. It had a horror and
contempt for the politics and questions of the day; but when perchance it
referred to them, it showed itself frankly reactionary, took the side of the
Church against the insolence of the freethinkers, of the kings against the
peoples, and of all the aristocrats against the vile rabble of the streets. For
the rest, as I have just said, the dominant feature of the school of
romanticism was a quasi-complete indifference to politics. Amid the clouds in
which it lived could be distinguished two real points-- the rapid development
of bourgeois materialism and the ungovernable outburst of individual vanities.
To understand this romantic literature, the reason for its
existence must be sought in the transformation which had been effected in the
bosom of the bourgeois class since the revolution of 1793.
From the Renaissance and the Reformation down to the
Revolution, the bourgeoisie, if not in Germany, at least in Italy, in France,
in Switzerland, in England, in Holland, was the hero and representative of the
revolutionary genius of history. From its bosom sprang most of the freethinkers
of the fifteenth century, the religious reformers of the two following
centuries, and the apostles of human emancipation, including this time those of
Germany, of the past century. It alone, naturally supported by the powerful arm
of the people, who had faith in it, made the revolution of 1789 and '93. It
proclaimed the downfall of royalty and of the Church, the fraternity of the
peoples, the rights of man and of the citizen. Those are its titles to glory;
they are immortal!
Soon it split. A considerable portion of the purchasers of
national property having become rich, and supporting themselves no longer on
the proletariat of the cities, but on the major portion of the peasants of
France, these also having become landed proprietors, had no aspiration left but
for peace, the re-establishment of public order, and the foundation of a strong
and regular government. It therefore welcomed with joy the dictatorship of the
first Bonaparte, and, although always Voltairean, did not view with displeasure
the Concordat with the Pope and the re-establishment of the official Church in
France: "Religion is so necessary to the people!" Which means that,
satiated themselves, this portion of the bourgeoisie then began to see that it
was needful to the maintenance of their situation and the preservation of their
newly-acquired estates to appease the unsatisfied hunger of the people by
promises of heavenly manna. Then it was that Chateaubriand began to preach.11
Napoleon fell and the Restoration brought back into France
the legitimate monarchy, and with it the power of the Church and of the nobles,
who regained, if not the whole, at least a considerable portion of their former
influence. This reaction threw the bourgeoisie back into the Revolution, and
with the revolutionary spirit that of scepticism also was re-awakened in it. It
set Chateaubriand aside and began to read Voltaire again; but it did not go so
far as Diderot: its debilitated nerves could not stand nourishment so strong.
Voltaire, on the contrary, at once a freethinker and a deist, suited it very
well. Béranger and P. L. Courier expressed this new tendency perfectly. The God
of the good people" and the ideal of the bourgeois king, at once liberal
and democratic, sketched against the majestic and thenceforth inoffensive
background of the Empire's gigantic victories such was at that period the daily
intellectual food of the bourgeoisie of France.
Lamartine, to be sure, excited by a vain and ridiculously
envious desire to rise to the poetic height of the great Byron, had begun his
coldly delirious hymns in honour of the God of the nobles and of the legitimate
monarchy. But his songs resounded only in aristocratic salons. The bourgeoisie
did not hear them. Béranger was its poet and Courier was its political writer.
The revolution of July resulted in lifting its tastes. We
know that every bourgeois in France carries within him the imperishable type of
the bourgeois gentleman, a type which never fails to appear immediately the
parvenu acquires a little wealth and power. In 1830 the wealthy bourgeoisie had
definitely replaced the old nobility in the seats of power. It naturally tended
to establish a new aristocracy. An aristocracy of capital first of all, but
also an aristocracy of intellect, of good manners and delicate sentiments. It
began to feel religious.
This was not on its part simply an aping of aristocratic
customs. It was also a necessity of its position. The proletariat had rendered
it a final service in once more aiding it to overthrow the nobility. The
bourgeoisie now had no further need of its co-operation, for it felt itself
firmly seated in the shadow of the throne of July, and the alliance with the
people, thenceforth useless, began to become inconvenient. It was necessary to
remand it to its place, which naturally could not be done without provoking
great indignation among the masses. It became necessary to restrain this
indignation. In the name of what? In the name of the bourgeois interest bluntly
confessed ? That would have been much too cynical. The more unjust and inhuman
an interest is, the greater need it has of sanction. Now, where find it if not
in religion, that good protectress of al I the well-fed and the useful consoler
of the hungry? And more than ever the triumphant bourgeoisie saw that religion
was indispensable to the people.
After having won all its titles to glory in religious,
philosophical, and political opposition, in protest and in revolution, it at last
became the dominant class and thereby even the defender and preserver of the
State, thenceforth the regular institution of the exclusive power of that
class. The State is force, and for it, first of all, is the right of force, the
triumphant argument of the needle-gun, of the chassepot. But man is so
singularly constituted that this argument, wholly eloquent as it may appear, is
not sufficient in the long run. Some moral sanction or other is absolutely
necessary to enforce his respect. Further, this sanction must be at once so
simple and so plain that it may convince the masses, who, after having been
reduced by the power of the State. must also be induced to morally recognise
its right.
There are only two ways of convincing the masses of the
goodness of any social institution whatever. The first, the only real one, but
also the most difficult to adopt--because it implies the abolition of the
State, or, in other words, the abolition of the organised political
exploitation of the majority by any minority whatsoever--would be the direct
and complete satisfaction of the needs and aspirations of the people, which
would be equivalent to the complete liquidation of the political and economical
existence of the bourgeois class, or, again, to the abolition of the State.
Beneficial means for the masses, but detrimental to bourgeois interests; hence
it is useless to talk about them.
The only way, on the contrary, harmful only to the people,
precious in its salvation of bourgeois privileges, is no other than religion.
That is the eternal mirage which leads away the masses in a search for divine
treasures, while much more reserved, the governing class contents itself with
dividing among all its members--very unequally, moreover and always giving most
to him who possesses most--the miserable goods of earth and the plunder taken
from the people, including their political and social liberty.
There is not, there cannot be, a State without religion.
Take the freest States in the world--the United States of America or the Swiss
Confederation, for instance--and see what an important part is played in all
official discourses by divine Providence, that supreme sanction of all States.
But whenever a chief of State speaks of God, be he Wil1iam
I., the Knouto-Germanic emperor, or Grant, the president of the great republic,
be sure that he is getting ready to shear once more his people-flock.
The French liberal and Voltairean bourgeoisie, driven by
temperament to a positivism (not to say a materialism) singularly narrow and
brutal, having become the governing class of the State by its triumph of 1830,
had to give itself an official religion. It was not an easy thing. The
bourgeoisie could not abruptly go back under the yoke of Roman Catholicism.
Between it and the Church of Rome was an abyss of blood and hatred, and,
however practical and wise one becomes, it is never possible to repress a
passion developed by history. Moreover, the French bourgeoisie would have
covered itself with ridicule if it had gone back to the Church to take part in
the pious ceremonies of its worship, an essential condition of a meritorious
and sincere conversion. Several attempted it, it is true, but their heroism was
rewarded by no other result than a fruitless scandal. Finally, a return to
Catholicism was impossible on account of the insolvable contradiction which
separates the invariable politics of Rome from the development of the
economical and political interests of the middle class.
In this respect Protestantism is much more advantageous. It
is the bourgeois religion par excellence. It accords just as much liberty as is
necessary to the bourgeois, and finds a way of reconciling celestial
aspirations with the respect which terrestrial conditions demand. Consequently
it is especially in Protestant countries that commerce and industry have been
developed. But it was impossible for the French bourgeoisie to become
Protestant. To pass from one religion to another--unless it be done
deliberately, as sometimes in the case of the Jews of Russia and Poland, who
get baptised three or four times in order to receive each time the remuneration
allowed them--to seriously change one's religion, a little faith is necessary.
Now, in the exclusive positive heart of the French bourgeois there is no room
for faith. He professes the most profound indifference for all questions which
touch neither his pocket first nor his social vanity afterwards. He is as
indifferent to Protestantism as to Catholicism. On the other hand, the French
bourgeois could not go over to Protestantism without putting himself in
conflict with the Catholic routine of the majority of the French people, which
would have been great imprudence on the part of a class pretending to govern
the nation.
There was still one way left--to return to the humanitarian
and revolutionary religion of the eighteenth century. But that would have led
too far. So the bourgeoisie was obliged, in order to sanction its new State, to
create a new religion which might be boldly proclaimed, without too much
ridicule and scandal, by the whole bourgeois class.
Thus was born doctrinaire Deism.
Others have told, much better than I could tell it, the
story of the birth and development of this school, which had so decisive
and--we may well add--so fatal an influence on the political, intellectual, and
moral education of the bourgeois youth of France. It dates from Benjamin
Constant and Madame de Staël; its real founder was Royer-Collard; its apostles,
Guizot, Cousin, Villemain, and many others. Its boldly avowed object was the
reconciliation of Revolution with Reaction, or, to use the language of the
school, of the principle of liberty with that of authority, and naturally to
the advantage of the latter.
This reconciliation signified: in politics, the taking away
of popular liberty for the benefit of bourgeois rule, represented by the
monarchical and constitutional State; in philosophy, the deliberate submission
of free reason to the eternal principles of faith. We have only to deal here with
the latter.
We know that this philosophy was specially elaborated by M.
Cousin, the father of French eclecticism. A
superficial and pedantic talker, incapable of any original
conception, of any idea peculiar to himself, but very strong on commonplace,
which he confounded with common sense, this illustrious philosopher learnedly
prepared, for the use of the studious youth of France, a metaphysical dish of
his own making the use of which, made compulsory in all schools of the State
under the University, condemned several generations one after the other to a
cerebral indigestion. Imagine a philosophical vinegar sauce of the most opposed
systems, a mixture of Fathers of the Church, scholastic philosophers, Descartes
and Pascal, Kant and Scotch psychologists all this a superstructure on the
divine and innate ideas of Plato, and covered up with a layer of Hegelian
immanence accompanied, of course, by an ignorance, as contemptuous as it is
complete, of natural science, and proving just as two times two make five the
existence of a personal God. . . . .
Footnotes
1 I call it "iniquitous" because, as I believe I
have proved In the Appendix alluded to, this mystery has been and still
continues to be the consecration of all the horrors which have been and are
being committed in the world; I call it unique, because all the other
theological and metaphysical absurdities which debase the human mind are but
its necessary consequences.
2Mr. Stuart Mill is perhaps the only one whose serious
idealism may be fairly doubted, and that for two resons: first, that if not
absolutely the disciple, he is a passionate admirer, an adherent of the
positive philosphy of Auguste Comte, a philosophy which, in spite of its
numerous reservations, is realy Atheistic; second, that Mr. Stuart Mill is
English, and in England to proclaim oneself an Atheist is to ostracise oneself,
even at this late day.
3In London I once heard M. Louis Blanc express almost the
same idea. "The best form of government," said he to me, "would
be that which would invariably call men of virtuous genius to the control of
affairs."
4 One day I asked Mazzini what measures would be taken for
the emancipation of the people, once his triumphant unitary republic had been
definitely established. "The first measure," he answered "will
be the foundation of schools for the people." "And what will the
people be taught in these schools?" "The duties of man -- sacrifice
and devotion." But where will you find a sufficient number of professors
to teach these things, which no one has the right or power to teach, unless he
preaches by example? Is not the number of men who find supreme enjoyment in
sacrifice and devotion exceedingly limited? Those who sacrifice themselves in
the service of a great idea obey a lofty passion, and, satisfying this personal
passion, outside of which life itself loses all value in their eyes, they
generally think of something else than building their action into doctrine,
while those who teach doctrine usually forget to translate it into action, for
the simple reason that doctrine kills the life, the living spontaneity, of
action. Men like Mazzini, in whom doctrine and action form an admirable unity,
are very rare exceptions. In Christianity also there have been great men, holy
men, who have really practised, or who, at least, have passionately tried to
practice all that they preached, and whose hearts, overflowing with love, were
full of contempt for the pleasures and goods of this world. But the immense
majority of Catholic and Protestant priests who, by trade, have preached and
still preach the doctrines of chastity, abstinence, and renunciation belie
their teachings by their example It is not without reason, but because of
several centuries' experience, that among the people of all countries these
phrases have become by-words: As licentious as a priest; as gluttonous as a
priest; as ambitious as a priest; as greedy, selfish, and grasping as a priest.
It is, then, established that the professors of the Christian virtues,
consecrated by the Church, the priests, in the immense majority of cases, have
practised quite the contrary of what they have preached. This very majority,
the universality of this fact, show that the fault is not to be attributed to
them as individuals, but to the social position, impossible and contradictory
in itself, in which these individuals are placed. The position of the Christian
priest involves a double contradiction. In the first place, that between the
doctrine of abstinence and renunciation and the positive tendencies and needs
of human nature -- tendencies and needs which, in some individual cases, always
very rare, may indeed be continually held back, suppressed, and even entirely
annihilated by the constant influence of some potent intellectual and moral
passion; which at certain moments of collective exaltation, may be forgotten
and neglected for some time by a large mass of men at once; but which are so
fundamentally inherent in our nature that sooner or later they always resume
their rights: so that, when they are not satisfied in a regular and normal way,
they are always replaced at last by unwholesome and monstrous satisfaction.
This is a natural and consequently fatal and irresistible law, under the
disastrous action of which inevitably fall all Christian priests and especially
those of the Roman Catholic Church. It cannot apply to the professors, that is
to the priests of the modern Church, unless they are also obliged to preach
Christian abstinence and renunciation.
But there is another contradiction common to the priests of
both sects. This contradiction grows out of the very title and position of
master. A master who commands, oppresses, and exploits is a wholly logical and
quite natural personage. But a master who sacrifices himself to those who are
subordinated to him by his divine or human privilege is a contradictory and
quite impossible being. This is the very constitution of hypocrisy, so well
personified by the Pope, who, while calling himself the lowest servant of the
servants of God -- in token whereof, following the example of Christ, he even
washes once a year the feet of twelve Roman beggars -- proclaims himself at the
same time vicar of God, absolute and infallible master of the world. Do I need
to recall that the priests of all churches, far from sacrificing themselves to
the flocks confided to their care, have always sacrificed them, exploited them,
and kept them in the condition of a flock, partly to satisfy their own personal
passions and partly to serve the omnipotence of the Church? Like conditions,
like causes, always produce like effects. It will, then, be the same with the
professors of the modern School divinely inspired and licensed by the State.
They will necessarily become, some without knowing it, others with full
knowledge of the cause, teachers of the doctrine of popular sacrifice to the
power of the State and to the profit of the privileged classes.
Must we, then, eliminate from society all instruction and
abolish all schools? Far from it! Instruction must be spread among the masses
without stint, transforming all the churches, all those temples dedicated to
the glory of God and to the slavery of men, into so many schools of human
emancipation. But, in the first place, let us understand each other; schools,
properly speaking, in a normal society founded on equality and on respect for
human liberty, will exist only for children and not for adults: and, in order
that they may become schools of emancipation and not of enslavement, it will be
necessary to eliminate, first of all, this fiction of God, the eternal and
absolute enslaver. The whole education of children and their instruction must
be founded on the scientific development of reason, not on that of faith; on
the development of personal dignity and independence, not on that of piety and obedience;
on the worship of truth and justice at any cost, and above all on respect for
humanity, which must replace always and everywhere the worship of divinity. The
principle of authority, in the education of children, constitutes the natural
point of departure; it is legitimate, necessary, when applied to children of a
tender age, whose intelligence has not yet openly developed itself. But as the
development of everything, and consequently of education, implies the gradual
negation of the point of departure, this principle must diminish as fast as
education and instruction advance, giving place to increasing liberty. All
rational education is at bottom nothing but this progressive immolation of
authority for the benefit of liberty, the final object of education necessarily
being the formation of free men full of respect and love for the liberty of
others. Therefore the first day of the pupils' life, if the school takes
infants scarcely able as yet to stammer a few words, should be that of the
greatest authority and an almost entire absence of liberty; but its last day
should be that of the greatest liberty and the absolute abolition of every
vestige of the animal or divine principle of authority.
The principle of authority, applied to men who have surpassed
or attained their majority, becomes a monstrosity, a flagrant denial of
humanity, a source of slavery and intellectual and moral depravity.
Unfortunately, paternal governments have left the masses to wallow in an
ignorance so profound that it will be necessary to establish schools not only
for the people's children, but for the people themselves. From these schools
will be absolutely eliminated the smallest applications or manifestations of
the principle of authority. They will be schools no longer; they will be
popular academies, in which neither pupils nor masters will be known, where the
people will come freely to get, if they need it, free instruction, and in
which, rich in their own experience, they will teach in their turn many things
to the professors who shall bring them knowledge which they lack. This, then,
will be a mutual instruction, an act of intellectual fraternity between the
educated youth and the people.
The real school for the people and for all grown men is
life. The only grand and omnipotent authority, at once natural and rational,
the only one which we may respect, will be that of the collective and public
spirit of a society founded on equality and solidarity and the mutual human
respect of all its members. Yes. this is an authority which is not at all
divine, wholly human, but before which we shall bow willingly, certain that,
far from enslaving them, it will emancipate men. It will be a thousand times
more powerful, be sure of it than all your divine, theological metaphysical,
political, and judicial authorities, established by the Church and by the
State, more powerful than your criminal codes, your jailers, and your
executioners.
The power of collective sentiment or public spirit is even
now a very serious matter. The men most ready to commit crimes rarely dare to
defy it, to openly affront it. They will seek to deceive it, but will take care
not to be rude with it unless they feel the support of a minority larger or
smaller. No man, however powerful he believes himself, will ever have the
strength to bear the unanimous contempt of society; no one can live without
feeling himself sustained by the approval and esteem of at least some portion
of society. A man must be urged on by an immense and very sincere conviction in
order to find courage to speak and act against the opinion of all, and never
will a selfish, depraved, and cowardly man have such courage.
Nothing proves more clearly than this fact the natural and
inevitable solidarity--this law of sociability--which binds all men together,
as each of us can verify daily, both on himself and on all the men whom he
knows But, if this social power exists, why has it not sufficed hitherto to
moralise, to humanise men? Simply because hitherto this power has not been
humanised itself; it has not been humanised because the social life of which it
is ever the faithful expression is based, as we know, on the worship of
divinity not on respect for humanity; on authority, not on liberty; on
privilege, not on equality; on the exploitation, not on the brotherhood of men;
on iniquity and falsehood, not on justice and truth. Consequently its real
action, always in contradiction of the humanitarian theories which it
professes, has constantly exercised a disastrous and depraving influence. It
does not repress vices and crimes; it creates them. Its authority is
consequently a divine, anti-human authority; its influence is mischievous and
baleful. Do you wish to render its authority and influence beneficent and
human? Achieve the social revolution. Make all needs really solidary, and cause
the material and social interests of each to conform to the human duties of
each. And to this end there is but one means: Destroy all the institutions of
Inequality; establish the economic and social equality of all, and on this
basis will arise the liberty the morality, the solidary humanity of all.
I shall return to this, the most important question of
Socialism.
5 Here three pages of Bakunin's manuscript are missing.
6 The lost part of this sentence perhaps said: "If men
of science in their researches and experiments are not treating men actually as
they treat animals, the reason is that" they are not exclusively men of
science, but are also more or less men of life.
7 Science, in becoming the patrimony of everybody, will wed
itself in a certain sense to the immediate and real life of each. It will gain
in utility and grace what it loses in pride, ambition, and doctrinaire
pedantry. This, however, will not prevent men of genius, better organized for
scientific speculation than the majority of their fellows, from devoting
themselves exclusively to the cultivation of the sciences, and rendering great
services to humanity. Only, they will be ambitious for no other social
influence than the natural influence exercised upon its surroundings by every
superior intelligence, and for no other reward than the high delight which a
noble mind always finds in the satisfaction of a noble passion.
8 Universal experience, on which all science rests, must be
clearly distinguished from universal faith, on which the idealists wish to
support their beliefs: the first is a real authentication of facts; the second
is only a supposition of facts which nobody has seen, and which consequently
are at variance with the experience of everybody.
9 The idealists, all those who believe in the immateriality
and immortality of the human soul, must be excessively embarrassed by the
difference in intelligence existing between races, peoples, and individuals.
Unless we suppose that the various divine particles have been irregularly
distributed, how is this difference to be explained? Unfortunately there is a
considerable number of men wholly stupid, foolish even to idiocy. Could they
have received in the distribution a particle at once divine and stupid? To escape
this embarrassment the idealists must necessarily suppose that all human souls
are equal. but that the prisons in which they find themselves necessarily
confined, human bodies, are unequal, some more capable than others of serving
as an organ for the pure intellectuality of soul. According to this. such a one
might have very fine organs at his disposition. such another very gross organs.
But these are distinctions which idealism has not the power to use without
falling into inconsistency and the grossest materialism, for in the presence of
absolute immateriality of soul all bodily differences disappear, all that is
corporeal, material, necessarily appearing indifferent, equally and absolutely
gross. The abyss which separates soul from body, absolute immateriality from
absolute materiality, is infinite. Consequently all differences, by the way
inexplicable and logically impossible, which may exist on the other side of the
abyss, in matter, should be to the soul null and void, and neither can nor
should exercise any influence over it. In a word, the absolutely immaterial
cannot be constrained, imprisoned, and much less expressed in any degree
whatsoever by the absolutely material. Of all the gross and materialistic
(using the word in the sense attached to it by the idealists) imaginations
which were engendered by the primitive ignorance and stupidity of men, that of
an immaterial soul imprisoned in a material body is certainly the grossest, the
most stupid. and nothing better proves the omnipotence exercised by ancient
prejudices even over the best minds than the deplorable sight of men endowed
with lofty intelligence still talking of it in our days.
10 I am well aware that in the theological and metaphysical
systems of the Orient, and especially in those of India, including Buddhism, we
find the principle of the annihilation of the real world in favour of the ideal
and of absolute abstraction. But it has not the added character of voluntary
and deliberate negation which distinguishes Christianity; when those systems
were conceived. the world of human thought of will and of liberty, had not
reached that stage of development which was afterwards seen in the Greek and
Roman civilisation.
11 It seems to me useful to recall at this point an
anecdote--one, by the way, well known and thoroughly authentic--which sheds a
very clear light on the personal value of this warmer-over of the Catholic
beliefs and on the religious sincerity of that period. Chateaubriand submitted
to a publisher a work attacking faith. The publisher called his attention to
the fact that atheism had gone out of fashion, that the reading public cared no
more for it, and that the demand, on the contrary, was for religious works.
Chateaubriand withdrew, but a few months later came back with his Genius of
Christianity.
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