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John Stuart Mill (1806–1873). On
Liberty. 1869. |
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Chapter IV: Of the Limits to the
Authority of Society
over the Individual |
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| WHAT,
then, is the rightful limit to the sovereignty of the
individual over himself? Where does the authority of
society begin? How much of human life should be assigned
to individuality, and how much to society? |
1 |
| Each will receive its proper share,
if each has that which more particularly concerns it. To
individuality should belong the part of life in which it
is chiefly the individual that is interested; to
society, the part which chiefly interests society. |
2 |
| Though society is not founded on a
contract, and though no good purpose is answered by
inventing a contract in order to deduce social
obligations from it, every one who receives the
protection of society owes a return for the benefit, and
the fact of living in society renders it indispensable
that each should be bound to observe a certain line of
conduct towards the rest. This conduct consists first,
in not injuring the interests of one another; or rather
certain interests, which, either by express legal
provision or by tacit understanding, ought to be
considered as rights; and secondly, in each person's
bearing his share (to be fixed on some equitable
principle) of the labours and sacrifices incurred for
defending the society or its members from injury and
molestation. These conditions society is justified in
enforcing at all costs to those who endeavour to
withhold fulfilment. Nor is this all that society may
do. The acts of an individual may be hurtful to others,
or wanting in due consideration for their welfare,
without going the length of violating any of their
constituted rights. The offender may then be justly
punished by opinion, though not by law. As soon as any
part of a person's conduct affects prejudicially the
interests of others, society has jurisdiction over it,
and the question whether the general welfare will or
will not be promoted by interfering with it, becomes
open to discussion. But there is no room for
entertaining any such question when a person's conduct
affects the interests of no persons besides himself, or
needs not affect them unless they like (all the persons
concerned being of full age, and the ordinary amount of
understanding). In all such cases there should be
perfect freedom, legal and social, to do the action and
stand the consequences. |
3 |
| It would be a great
misunderstanding of this doctrine to suppose that it is
one of selfish indifference, which pretends that human
beings have no business with each other's conduct in
life, and that they should not concern themselves about
the well-doing or well-being of one another, unless
their own interest is involved. Instead of any
diminution, there is need of a great increase of
disinterested exertion to promote the good of others.
But disinterested benevolence can find other instruments
to persuade people to their good, than whips and
scourges, either of the literal or the metaphorical
sort. I am the last person to undervalue the
self-regarding virtues; they are only second in
importance, if even second, to the social. It is equally
the business of education to cultivate both. But even
education works by conviction and persuasion as well as
by compulsion, and it is by the former only that, when
the period of education is past, the self-regarding
virtues should be inculcated. Human beings owe to each
other help to distinguish the better from the worse, and
encouragement to choose the former and avoid the latter.
They should be for ever stimulating each other to
increased exercise of their higher faculties, and
increased direction of their feelings and aims towards
wise instead of foolish, elevating instead of degrading,
objects and contemplations. But neither one person, nor
any number of persons, is warranted in saying to another
human creature of ripe years, that he shall not do with
his life for his own benefit what he chooses to do with
it. He is the person most interested in his own
well-being: the interest which any other person, except
in cases of strong personal attachment, can have in it,
is trifling, compared with that which he himself has;
the interest which society has in him individually
(except as to his conduct to others) is fractional, and
altogether indirect: while, with respect to his own
feelings and circumstances, the most ordinary man or
woman has means of knowledge immeasurably surpassing
those that can be possessed by any one else. The
interference of society to overrule his judgment and
purposes in what only regards himself, must be grounded
on general presumptions; which may be altogether wrong,
and even if right, are as likely as not to be misapplied
to individual cases, by persons no better acquainted
with the circumstances of such cases than those are who
look at them merely from without. In this department,
therefore, of human affairs, Individuality has its
proper field of action. In the conduct of human beings
towards one another, it is necessary that general rules
should for the most part be observed, in order that
people may know what they have to expect; but in each
person's own concerns, his individual spontaneity is
entitled to free exercise. Considerations to aid his
judgment, exhortations to strengthen his will, may be
offered to him, even obtruded on him, by others; but he
himself is the final judge. All errors which he is
likely to commit against advice and warning, are far
outweighed by the evil of allowing others to constrain
him to what they deem his good. |
4 |
| I do not mean that the feelings
with which a person is regarded by others, ought not to
be in any way affected by his self-regarding qualities
or deficiencies. This is neither possible nor desirable.
If he is eminent in any of the qualities which conduce
to his own good, he is, so far, a proper object of
admiration. He is so much the nearer to the ideal
perfection of human nature. If he is grossly deficient
in those qualities, a sentiment the opposite of
admiration will follow. There is a degree of folly, and
a degree of what may be called (though the phrase is not
unobjectionable) lowness or depravation of taste, which,
though it cannot justify doing harm to the person who
manifests it, renders him necessarily and properly a
subject of distaste, or, in extreme cases, even of
contempt: a person could not have the opposite qualities
in due strength without entertaining these feelings.
Though doing no wrong to any one, a person may so act as
to compel us to judge him, and feel to him, as a fool,
or as a being of an inferior order: and since this
judgment and feeling are a fact which he would prefer to
avoid, it is doing him a service to warn him of it
beforehand, as of any other disagreeable consequence to
which he exposes himself. It would be well, indeed, if
this good office were much more freely rendered than the
common notions of politeness at present permit, and if
one person could honestly point out to another that he
thinks him in fault, without being considered unmannerly
or presuming. We have a right, also, in various ways, to
act upon our unfavourable opinion of any one, not to the
oppression of his individuality, but in the exercise of
ours. We are not bound, for example, to seek his
society; we have a right to avoid it (though not to
parade the avoidance), for we have a right to choose the
society most acceptable to us. We have a right, and it
may be our duty, to caution others against him, if we
think his example or conversation likely to have a
pernicious effect on those with whom he associates. We
may give others a preference over him in optional good
offices, except those which tend to his improvement. In
these various modes a person may suffer very severe
penalties at the hands of others, for faults which
directly concern only himself; but he suffers these
penalties only in so far as they are the natural, and,
as it were, the spontaneous consequences of the faults
themselves, not because they are purposely inflicted on
him for the sake of punishment. A person who shows
rashness, obstinacy, self-conceit—who cannot live within
moderate means—who cannot restrain himself from hurtful
indulgences—who pursues animal pleasures at the expense
of those of feeling and intellect—must expect to be
lowered in the opinion of others, and to have a less
share of their favourable sentiments; but of this he has
no right to complain, unless he has merited their favour
by special excellence in his social relations, and has
thus established a title to their good offices, which is
not affected by his demerits towards himself. |
5 |
What I contend for is, that the
inconveniences which are strictly inseparable from the
unfavourable judgment of others, are the only ones to
which a person should ever be subjected for that portion
of his conduct and character which concerns his own
good, but which does not affect the interests of others
in their relations with him. Acts injurious to others
require a totally different treatment. Encroachment on
their rights; infliction on them of any loss or damage
not justified by his own rights; falsehood or duplicity
in dealing with them; unfair or ungenerous use of
advantages over them; even selfish abstinence from
defending them against injury—these are fit objects of
moral reprobation, and, in grave cases, of moral
retribution and punishment. And not only these acts, but
the dispositions which lead to them, are properly
immoral, and fit subjects of disapprobation which may
rise to abhorrence. Cruelty of disposition; malice and
ill-nature; that most anti-social and odious of all
passions, envy; dissimulation and insincerity,
irascibility on insufficient cause, and resentment
disproportioned to the provocation; the love of
domineering over others; the desire to engross more than
one's share of advantages (the of
the Greeks); the pride which derives gratification from
the abasement of others; the egotism which thinks self
and its concerns more important than everything else,
and decides all doubtful questions in its own
favour;—these are moral vices, and constitute a bad and
odious moral character: unlike the self-regarding faults
previously mentioned, which are not properly
immoralities, and to whatever pitch they may be carried,
do not constitute wickedness. They may be proofs of any
amount of folly, or want of personal dignity and
self-respect; but they are only a subject of moral
reprobation when they involve a breach of duty to
others, for whose sake the individual is bound to have
care for himself. What are called duties to ourselves
are not socially obligatory, unless circumstances render
them at the same time duties to others. The term duty to
oneself, when it means anything more than prudence,
means self-respect or self-development; and for none of
these is any one accountable to his fellow creatures,
because for none of them is it for the good of mankind
that he be held accountable to them. |
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| The distinction between the loss of
consideration which a person may rightly incur by defect
of prudence or of personal dignity, and the reprobation
which is due to him for an offence against the rights of
others, is not a merely nominal distinction. It makes a
vast difference both in our feelings and in our conduct
towards him, whether he displeases us in things in which
we think we have a right to control him, or in things in
which we know that we have not. If he displeases us, we
may express our distaste, and we may stand aloof from a
person as well as from a thing that displeases us; but
we shall not therefore feel called on to make his life
uncomfortable. We shall reflect that he already bears,
or will bear, the whole penalty of his error; if he
spoils his life by mismanagement, we shall not, for that
reason, desire to spoil it still further: instead of
wishing to punish him, we shall rather endeavour to
alleviate his punishment, by showing him how he may
avoid or cure the evils his conduct tends to bring upon
him. He may be to us an object of pity, perhaps of
dislike, but not of anger or resentment; we shall not
treat him like an enemy of society: the worst we shall
think ourselves justified in doing is leaving him to
himself, if we do not interfere benevolently by showing
interest or concern for him. It is far otherwise if he
has infringed the rules necessary for the protection of
his fellow-creatures, individually or collectively. The
evil consequences of his acts do not then fall on
himself, but on others; and society, as the protector of
all its members, must retaliate on him; must inflict
pain on him for the express purpose of punishment, and
must take care that it be sufficiently severe. In the
one case, he is an offender at our bar, and we are
called on not only to sit in judgment on him, but, in
one shape or another, to execute our own sentence: in
the other case, it is not our part to inflict any
suffering on him, except what may incidentally follow
from our using the same liberty in the regulation of our
own affairs, which we allow to him in his. |
7 |
| The distinction here pointed out
between the part of a person's life which concerns only
himself, and that which concerns others, many persons
will refuse to admit. How (it may be asked) can any part
of the conduct of a member of society be a matter of
indifference to the other members? No person is an
entirely isolated being; it is impossible for a person
to do anything seriously or permanently hurtful to
himself, without mischief reaching at least to his near
connexions, and often far beyond them. If he injures his
property, he does harm to those who directly or
indirectly derived support from it, and usually
diminishes, by a greater or less amount, the general
resources of the community. If he deteriorates his
bodily or mental faculties, he not only brings evil upon
all who depended on him for any portion of their
happiness, but disqualifies himself for rendering the
services which he owes to his fellow-creatures
generally; perhaps becomes a burthen on their affection
or benevolence; and if such conduct were very frequent,
hardly any offence that is committed would detract more
from the general sum of good. Finally, if by his vices
or follies a person does no direct harm to others, he is
nevertheless (it may be said) injurious by his example;
and ought to be compelled to control himself, for the
sake of those whom the sight or knowledge of his conduct
might corrupt or mislead. |
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| And even (it will be added) if the
consequences of misconduct could be confined to the
vicious or thoughtless individual, ought society to
abandon to their own guidance those who are manifestly
unfit for it? If protection against themselves is
confessedly due to children and persons under age, is
not society equally bound to afford it to persons of
mature years who are equally incapable of
self-government? If gambling, or drunkenness, or
incontinence, or idleness, or uncleanliness, are as
injurious to happiness, and as great a hindrance to
improvement, as many or most of the acts prohibited by
law, why (it may be asked) should not law, so far as is
consistent with practicability and social convenience,
endeavour to repress these also? And as a supplement to
the unavoidable imperfections of law, ought not opinion
at least to organize a powerful police against these
vices, and visit rigidly with social penalties those who
are known to practise them? There is no question here
(it may be said) about restricting individuality, or
impeding the trial of new and original experiments in
living. The only things it is sought to prevent are
things which have been tried and condemned from the
beginning of the world until now; things which
experience has shown not to be useful or suitable to any
person's individuality. There must be some length of
time and amount of experience, after which a moral or
prudential truth may be regarded as established: and it
is merely desired to prevent generation after generation
from falling over the same precipice which has been
fatal to their predecessors. |
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| I fully admit that the mischief
which a person does to himself may seriously affect,
both through their sympathies and their interests, those
nearly connected with him, and in a minor degree,
society at large. When, by conduct of this sort, a
person is led to violate a distinct and assignable
obligation to any other person or persons, the case is
taken out of the self-regarding class, and becomes
amenable to moral disapprobation in the proper sense of
the term. If, for example, a man, through intemperance
or extravagance, becomes unable to pay his debts, or,
having undertaken the moral responsibility of a family,
becomes from the same cause incapable of supporting or
educating them, he is deservedly reprobated, and might
be justly punished; but it is for the breach of duty to
his family or creditors, not for the extravagance. If
the resources which ought to have been devoted to them,
had been diverted from them for the most prudent
investment, the moral culpability would have been the
same. George Barnwell murdered his uncle to get money
for his mistress, but if he had done it to set himself
up in business, he would equally have been hanged.
Again, in the frequent case of a man who causes grief to
his family by addiction to bad habits, he deserves
reproach for his unkindness or ingratitude; but so he
may for cultivating habits not in themselves vicious, if
they are painful to those with whom he passes his life,
or who from personal ties are dependent on him for their
comfort. Whoever fails in the consideration generally
due to the interests and feelings of others, not being
compelled by some more imperative duty, or justified by
allowable self-preference, is a subject of moral
disapprobation for that failure, but not for the cause
of it, nor for the errors, merely personal to himself,
which may have remotely led to it. In like manner, when
a person disables himself, by conduct purely
self-regarding, from the performance of some definite
duty incumbent on him to the public, he is guilty of a
social offence. No person ought to be punished simply
for being drunk; but a soldier or a policeman should be
punished for being drunk on duty. Whenever, in short,
there is a definite damage, or a definite risk of
damage, either to an individual or to the public, the
case is taken out of the province of liberty, and placed
in that of morality or law. |
10 |
| But with regard to the merely
contingent, or, as it may be called, constructive injury
which a person causes to society, by conduct which
neither violates any specific duty to the public, nor
occasions perceptible hurt to any assignable individual
except himself; the inconvenience is one which society
can afford to bear, for the sake of the greater good of
human freedom. If grown persons are to be punished for
not taking proper care of themselves, I would rather it
were for their own sake, than under pretence of
preventing them from impairing their capacity of
rendering to society benefits which society does not
pretend it has a right to exact. But I cannot consent to
argue the point as if society had no means of bringing
its weaker members up to its ordinary standard of
rational conduct, except waiting till they do something
irrational, and then punishing them, legally or morally,
for it. Society has had absolute power over them during
all the early portion of their existence: it has had the
whole period of childhood and nonage in which to try
whether it could make them capable of rational conduct
in life. The existing generation is master both of the
training and the entire circumstances of the generation
to come; it cannot indeed make them perfectly wise and
good, because it is itself so lamentably deficient in
goodness and wisdom; and its best efforts are not
always, in individual cases, its most successful ones;
but it is perfectly well able to make the rising
generation, as a whole, as good as, and a little better
than, itself. If society lets any considerable number of
its members grow up mere children, incapable of being
acted on by rational consideration of distant motives,
society has itself to blame for the consequences. Armed
not only with all the powers of education, but with the
ascendancy which the authority of a received opinion
always exercises over the minds who are least fitted to
judge for themselves; and aided by the natural
penalties which cannot be prevented from falling on
those who incur the distaste or the contempt of those
who know them; let not society pretend that it needs,
besides all this, the power to issue commands and
enforce obedience in the personal concerns of
individuals, in which, on all principles of justice and
policy, the decision ought to rest with those who are to
abide the consequences. Nor is there anything which
tends more to discredit and frustrate the better means
of influencing conduct, than a resort to the worse. If
there be among those whom it is attempted to coerce into
prudence or temperance, any of the material of which
vigorous and independent characters are made, they will
infallibly rebel against the yoke. No such person will
ever feel that others have a right to control him in his
concerns, such as they have to prevent him from injuring
them in theirs; and it easily comes to be considered a
mark of spirit and courage to fly in the face of such
usurped authority, and do with ostentation the exact
opposite of what it enjoins; as in the fashion of
grossness which succeeded, in the time of Charles II, to
the fanatical moral intolerance of the Puritans. With
respect to what is said of the necessity of protecting
society from the bad example set to others by the
vicious or the self-indulgent; it is true that bad
example may have a pernicious effect, especially the
example of doing wrong to others with impunity to the
wrong-doer. But we are now speaking of conduct which,
while it does no wrong to others, is supposed to do
great harm to the agent himself: and I do not see how
those who believe this, can think otherwise than that
the example, on the whole, must be more salutary than
hurtful, since, if it displays the misconduct, it
displays also the painful or degrading consequences
which, if the conduct is justly censured, must be
supposed to be in all or most cases attendant on it. |
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| But the strongest of all the
arguments against the interference of the public with
purely personal conduct, is that when it does interfere,
the odds are that it interferes wrongly, and in the
wrong place. On questions of social morality, of duty to
others, the opinion of the public, that is, of an
overruling majority, though often wrong, is likely to be
still oftener right; because on such questions they are
only required to judge of their own interests; of the
manner in which some mode of conduct, if allowed to be
practised, would affect themselves. But the opinion of a
similar majority, imposed as a law on the minority, on
questions of self-regarding conduct, is quite as likely
to be wrong as right; for in these cases public opinion
means, at the best, some people's opinion of what is
good or bad for other people; while very often it does
not even mean that; the public, with the most perfect
indifference, passing over the pleasure or convenience
of those whose conduct they censure, and considering
only their own preference. There are many who consider
as an injury to themselves any conduct which they have a
distaste for, and resent it as an outrage to their
feelings; as a religious bigot, when charged with
disregarding the religious feelings of others, has been
known to retort that they disregard his feelings, by
persisting in their abominable worship or creed. But
there is no parity between the feeling of a person for
his own opinion, and the feeling of another who is
offended at his holding it; no more than between the
desire of a thief to take a purse, and the desire of the
right owner to keep it. And a person's taste is as much
his own peculiar concern as his opinion or his purse. It
is easy for any one to imagine an ideal public, which
leaves the freedom and choice of individuals in all
uncertain matters undisturbed, and only requires them to
abstain from modes of conduct which universal experience
has condemned. But where has there been seen a public
which set any such limit to its censorship? or when does
the public trouble itself about universal experience? In
its interferences with personal conduct it is seldom
thinking of anything but the enormity of acting or
feeling differently from itself; and this standard of
judgment, thinly disguised, is held up to mankind as the
dictate of religion and philosophy, by nine-tenths of
all moralists and speculative writers. These teach that
things are right because they are right; because we feel
them to be so. They tell us to search in our own minds
and hearts for laws of conduct binding on ourselves and
on all others. What can the poor public do but apply
these instructions, and make their own personal feelings
of good and evil, if they are tolerably unanimous in
them, obligatory on all the world? |
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| The evil here pointed out is not
one which exists only in theory; and it may perhaps be
expected that I should specify the instances in which
the public of this age and country improperly invests
its own preferences with the character of moral laws. I
am not writing an essay on the aberrations of existing
moral feeling. That is too weighty a subject to be
discussed parenthetically, and by way of illustration.
Yet examples are necessary, to show that the principle I
maintain is of serious and practical moment, and that I
am not endeavouring to erect a barrier against imaginary
evils. And it is not difficult to show, by abundant
instances, that to extend the bounds of what may be
called moral police, until it encroaches on the most
unquestionably legitimate liberty of the individual, is
one of the most universal of all human propensities. |
13 |
| As a first instance, consider the
antipathies which men cherish on no better grounds than
that persons whose religious opinions are different from
theirs, do not practise their religious observances,
especially their religious abstinences. To cite a rather
trivial example, nothing in the creed or practice of
Christians does more to envenom the hatred of Mahomedans
against them, than the fact of their eating pork. There
are few acts which Christians and Europeans regard with
more unaffected disgust, than Mussulmans regard this
particular mode of satisfying hunger. It is, in the
first place, an offence against their religion; but this
circumstance by no means explains either the degree or
the kind of their repugnance; for wine also is forbidden
by their religion, and to partake of it is by all
Mussulmans accounted wrong, but not disgusting. Their
aversion to the flesh of the "unclean beast" is, on the
contrary, of that peculiar character, resembling an
instinctive antipathy, which the idea of uncleanness,
when once it thoroughly sinks into the feelings, seems
always to excite even in those whose personal habits are
anything but scrupulously cleanly, and of which the
sentiment of religious impurity, so intense in the
Hindoos, is a remarkable example. Suppose now that in a
people, of whom the majority were Mussulmans, that
majority should insist upon not permitting pork to be
eaten within the limits of the country. This would be
nothing new in Mahomedan countries.
1
Would it be a legitimate exercise of
the moral authority of public opinion? and if not, why
not? The practice is really revolting to such a public.
They also sincerely think that it is forbidden and
abhorred by the Deity. Neither could the prohibition be
censured as religious persecution. It might be religious
in its origin, but it would not be persecution for
religion, since nobody's religion makes it a duty to eat
pork. The only tenable ground of condemnation would be,
that with the personal tastes and self-regarding
concerns of individuals the public has no business to
interfere. |
14 |
| To come somewhat nearer home: the
majority of Spaniards consider it a gross impiety,
offensive in the highest degree to the Supreme Being, to
worship him in any other manner than the Roman Catholic;
and no other public worship is lawful on Spanish soil.
The people of all Southern Europe look upon a married
clergy as not only irreligious, but unchaste, indecent,
gross, disgusting. What do Protestants think of these
perfectly sincere feelings, and of the attempt to
enforce them against non-Catholics? Yet, if mankind are
justified in interfering with each other's liberty in
things which do not concern the interests of others, on
what principle is it possible consistently to exclude
these cases? or who can blame people for desiring to
suppress what they regard as a scandal in the sight of
God and man? No stronger case can be shown for
prohibiting anything which is regarded as a personal
immorality, than is made out for suppressing these
practices in the eyes of those who regard them as
impieties; and unless we are willing to adopt the logic
of persecutors, and to say that we may persecute others
because we are right, and that they must not persecute
us because they are wrong, we must beware of admitting a
principle of which we should resent as a gross injustice
the application to ourselves. |
15 |
| The preceding instances may be
objected to, although unreasonably, as drawn from
contingencies impossible among us: opinion, in this
country, not being likely to enforce abstinence from
meats, or to interfere with people for worshipping, and
for either marrying or not marrying, according to their
creed or inclination. The next example, however, shall
be taken from an interference with liberty which we have
by no means passed all danger of. Wherever the Puritans
have been sufficiently powerful, as in New England, and
in Great Britain at the time of the Commonwealth, they
have endeavoured, with considerable success, to put down
all public, and nearly all private, amusements:
especially music, dancing, public games, or other
assemblages for purposes of diversion, and the theatre.
There are still in this country large bodies of persons
by whose notions of morality and religion these
recreations are condemned; and those persons belonging
chiefly to the middle class, who are the ascendant power
in the present social and political condition of the
kingdom, it is by no means impossible that persons of
these sentiments may at some time or other command a
majority in Parliament. How will the remaining portion
of the community like to have the amusements that shall
be permitted to them regulated by the religious and
moral sentiments of the stricter Calvinists and
Methodists? Would they not, with considerable
peremptoriness, desire these intrusively pious members
of society to mind their own business? This is precisely
what should be said to every government and every
public, who have the pretension that no person shall
enjoy any pleasure which they think wrong. But if the
principle of the pretension be admitted, no one can
reasonably object to its being acted on in the sense of
the majority, or other preponderating power in the
country; and all persons must be ready to conform to the
idea of a Christian commonwealth, as understood by the
early settlers in New England, if a religious profession
similar to theirs should ever succeed in regaining its
lost ground, as religions supposed to be declining have
so often been known to do. |
16 |
| To imagine another contingency,
perhaps more likely to be realized than the one last
mentioned. There is confessedly a strong tendency in the
modern world towards a democratic constitution of
society, accompanied or not by popular political
institutions. It is affirmed that in the country where
this tendency is most completely realized—where both
society and the government are most democratic—the
United States—the feeling of the majority, to whom any
appearance of a more showy or costly style of living
than they can hope to rival is disagreeable, operates as
a tolerably effectual sumptuary law, and that in many
parts of the Union it is really difficult for a person
possessing a very large income, to find any mode of
spending it, which will not incur popular
disapprobation. Though such statements as these are
doubtless much exaggerated as a representation of
existing facts, the state of things they describe is not
only a conceivable and possible, but a probable result
of democratic feeling, combined with the notion that the
public has a right to a veto on the manner in which
individuals shall spend their incomes. We have only
further to suppose a considerable diffusion of Socialist
opinions, and it may become infamous in the eyes of the
majority to possess more property than some very small
amount, or any income not earned by manual labour.
Opinions similar in principle to these, already prevail
widely among the artizan class, and weigh oppressively
on those who are amenable to the opinion chiefly of that
class, namely, its own members. It is known that the bad
workmen who form the majority of the operatives in many
branches of industry, are decidedly of opinion that bad
workmen ought to receive the same wages as good, and
that no one ought to be allowed, through piecework or
otherwise, to earn by superior skill or industry more
than others can without it. And they employ a moral
police, which occasionally becomes a physical one, to
deter skilful workmen from receiving, and employers from
giving, a larger remuneration for a more useful service.
If the public have any jurisdiction over private
concerns, I cannot see that these people are in fault,
or that any individual's particular public can be blamed
for asserting the same authority over his individual
conduct, which the general public asserts over people in
general. |
17 |
| But, without dwelling upon
supposititious cases, there are, in our own day, gross
usurpations upon the liberty of private life actually
practised, and still greater ones threatened with some
expectation of success, and opinions propounded which
assert an unlimited right in the public not only to
prohibit by law everything which it thinks wrong, but in
order to get at what it thinks wrong, to prohibit any
number of things which it admits to be innocent. |
18 |
| Under the name of preventing
intemperance, the people of one English colony, and of
nearly half the United States, have been interdicted by
law from making any use whatever of fermented drinks,
except for medical purposes: for prohibition of their
sale is in fact, as it is intended to be, prohibition of
their use. And though the impracticability of executing
the law has caused its repeal in several of the States
which had adopted it, including the one from which it
derives its name, an attempt has notwithstanding been
commenced, and is prosecuted with considerable zeal by
many of the professed philanthropists, to agitate for a
similar law in this country. The association, or
"Alliance" as it terms itself, which has been formed for
this purpose, has acquired some notoriety through the
publicity given to a correspondence between its
Secretary and one of the very few English public men who
hold that a politician's opinions ought to be founded on
principles. Lord Stanley's share in this correspondence
is calculated to strengthen the hopes already built on
him, by those who know how rare such qualities as are
manifested in some of his public appearances, unhappily
are among those who figure in political life. The organ
of the Alliance, who would "deeply deplore the
recognition of any principle which could be wrested to
justify bigotry and persecution," undertakes to point
out the "broad and impassable barrier" which divides
such principles from those of the association. "All
matters relating to thought, opinion, conscience, appear
to me," he says, "to be without the sphere of
legislation; all pertaining to social act, habit,
relation, subject only to a discretionary power vested
in the State itself, and not in the individual, to be
within it." No mention is made of a third class,
different from either of these, viz. acts and habits
which are not social, but individual; although it is to
this class, surely, that the act of drinking fermented
liquors belongs. Selling fermented liquors, however, is
trading, and trading is a social act. But the
infringement complained of is not on the liberty of the
seller, but on that of the buyer and consumer; since the
State might just as well forbid him to drink wine, as
purposely make it impossible for him to obtain it. The
Secretary, however, says, "I claim, as a citizen, a
right to legislate whenever my social rights are invaded
by the social act of another." And now for the
definition of these "social rights." "If anything
invades my social rights, certainly the traffic in
strong drink does. It destroys my primary right of
security, by constantly creating and stimulating social
disorder. It invades my right of equality, by deriving a
profit from the creation of a misery I am taxed to
support. It impedes my right to free moral and
intellectual development, by surrounding my path with
dangers, and by weakening and demoralizing society, from
which I have a right to claim mutual aid and
intercourse." A theory of "social rights," the like of
which probably never before found its way into distinct
language: being nothing short of this—that it is the
absolute social right of every individual, that every
other individual shall act in every respect exactly as
he ought; that whosoever fails thereof in the smallest
particular, violates my social right, and entitles me to
demand from the legislature the removal of the
grievance. So monstrous a principle is far more
dangerous than any single interference with liberty;
there is no violation of liberty which it would not
justify; it acknowledges no right to any freedom
whatever, except perhaps to that of holding opinions in
secret, without ever disclosing them: for, the moment an
opinion which I consider noxious passes any one's lips,
it invades all the "social rights" attributed to me by
the Alliance. The doctrine ascribes to all mankind a
vested interest in each other's moral, intellectual, and
even physical perfection, to be defined by each claimant
according to his own standard. |
19 |
| Another important example of
illegitimate interference with the rightful liberty of
the individual, not simply threatened, but long since
carried into triumphant effect, is Sabbatarian
legislation. Without doubt, abstinence on one day in the
week, so far as the exigencies of life permit, from the
usual daily occupation, though in no respect religiously
binding on any except Jews, is a highly beneficial
custom. And inasmuch as this custom cannot be observed
without a general consent to that effect among the
industrious classes, therefore, in so far as some
persons by working may impose the same necessity on
others, it may be allowable and right that the law
should guarantee to each the observance by others of the
custom, by suspending the greater operations of industry
on a particular day. But this justification, grounded on
the direct interest which others have in each
individual's observance of the practice, does not apply
to the self-chosen occupations in which a person may
think fit to employ his leisure; nor does it hold good,
in the smallest degree, for legal restrictions on
amusements. It is true that the amusement of some is the
day's work of others; but the pleasure, not to say the
useful recreation, of many, is worth the labour of a
few, provided the occupation is freely chosen, and can
be freely resigned. The operatives are perfectly right
in thinking that if all worked on Sunday, seven days'
work would have to be given for six days' wages: but so
long as the great mass of employments are suspended, the
small number who for the enjoyment of others must still
work, obtain a proportional increase of earnings; and
they are not obliged to follow those occupations, if
they prefer leisure to emolument. If a further remedy is
sought, it might be found in the establishment by custom
of a holiday on some other day of the week for those
particular classes of persons. The only ground,
therefore, on which restrictions on Sunday amusements
can be defended, must be that they are religiously
wrong; a motive of legislation which never can be too
earnestly protested against. "Deorum injuriæ Diis curæ."
It remains to be proved that society or any of its
officers holds a commission from on high to avenge any
supposed offence to Omnipotence, which is not also a
wrong to our fellow creatures. The notion that it is one
man's duty that another should be religious, was the
foundation of all the religious persecutions ever
perpetrated, and if admitted, would fully justify them.
Though the feeling which breaks out in the repeated
attempts to stop railway travelling on Sunday, in the
resistance to the opening of Museums, and the like, has
not the cruelty of the old persecutors, the state of
mind indicated by it is fundamentally the same. It is a
determination not to tolerate others in doing what is
permitted by their religion, because it is not permitted
by the persecutor's religion. It is a belief that God
not only abominates the act of the misbeliever, but will
not hold us guiltless if we leave him unmolested. |
20 |
| I cannot refrain from adding to
these examples of the little account commonly made of
human liberty, the language of downright persecution
which breaks out from the press of this country,
whenever it feels called on to notice the remarkable
phenomenon of Mormonism. Much might be said on the
unexpected and instructive fact, that an alleged new
revelation, and a religion founded on it, the product of
palpable imposture, not even supported by the
prestige of extraordinary qualities in its founder,
is believed by hundreds of thousands, and has been made
the foundation of a society, in the age of newspapers,
railways, and the electric telegraph. What here concerns
us is, that this religion, like other and better
religions, has its martyrs; that its prophet and founder
was, for his teaching, put to death by a mob; that
others of its adherents lost their lives by the same
lawless violence; that they were forcibly expelled, in a
body, from the country in which they first grew up;
while, now that they have been chased into a solitary
recess in the midst of a desert, many in this country
openly declare that it would be right (only that it is
not convenient) to send an expedition against them, and
compel them by force to conform to the opinions of other
people. The article of the Mormonite doctrine which is
the chief provocative to the antipathy which thus breaks
through the ordinary restraints of religious tolerance,
is its sanction of polygamy; which, though permitted to
Mahomedans, and Hindoos, and Chinese, seems to excite
unquenchable animosity when practised by persons who
speak English, and profess to be a kind of Christians.
No one has a deeper disapprobation than I have of this
Mormon institution; both for other reasons, and because,
far from being in any way countenanced by the principle
of liberty, it is a direct infraction of that principle,
being a mere riveting of the chains of one-half of the
community, and an emancipation of the other from
reciprocity of obligation towards them. Still, it must
be remembered that this relation is as much voluntary on
the part of the women concerned in it, and who may be
deemed the sufferers by it, as is the case with any
other form of the marriage institution; and however
surprising this fact may appear, it has its explanation
in the common ideas and customs of the world, which
teaching women to think marriage the one thing needful,
make it intelligible that many a woman should prefer
being one of several wives, to not being a wife at all.
Other countries are not asked to recognise such unions,
or release any portion of their inhabitants from their
own laws on the score of Mormonite opinions. But when
the dissentients have conceded to the hostile sentiments
of others, far more than could justly be demanded; when
they have left the countries to which their doctrines
were unacceptable, and established themselves in a
remote corner of the earth, which they have been the
first to render habitable to human beings; it is
difficult to see on what principles but those of tyranny
they can be prevented from living there under what laws
they please, provided they commit no aggression on other
nations, and allow perfect freedom of departure to those
who are dissatisfied with their ways. A recent writer,
in some respects of considerable merit, proposes (to use
his own words) not a crusade, but a civilizade,
against this polygamous community, to put an end to what
seems to him a retrograde step in civilization. It also
appears so to me, but I am not aware that any community
has a right to force another to be civilized. So long as
the sufferers by the bad law do not invoke assistance
from other communities, I cannot admit that persons
entirely unconnected with them ought to step in and
require that a condition of things with which all who
are directly interested appear to be satisfied, should
be put an end to because it is a scandal to persons some
thousands of miles distant, who have no part or concern
in it. Let them send missionaries, if they please, to
preach against it; and let them, by any fair means (of
which silencing the teachers is not one,) oppose the
progress of similar doctrines among their own people. If
civilization has got the better of barbarism when
barbarism had the world to itself, it is too much to
profess to be afraid lest barbarism, after having been
fairly got under, should revive and conquer
civilization. A civilization that can thus succumb to
its vanquished enemy, must first have become so
degenerate, that neither its appointed priests and
teachers, nor anybody else, has the capacity, or will
take the trouble, to stand up for it. If this be so, the
sooner such a civilization receives notice to quit, the
better. It can only go on from bad to worse, until
destroyed and regenerated (like the Western Empire) by
energetic barbarians. |
21 |
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| Note 1
The case of the Bombay Parsees is a curious instance
in point. When this industrious and enterprising
tribe, the descendants of the Persian
fire-worshippers, flying from their native country
before the Caliphs, arrived in Western India, they
were admitted to toleration by the Hindoo
sovereigns, on condition of not eating beef. When
those regions afterwards fell under the dominion of
Mahomedan conquerors, the Parsees obtained from them
a continuance of indulgence, on condition of
refraining from pork. What was at first obedience to
authority became a second nature, and the Parsees to
this day abstain both from beef and pork. Though not
required by their religion, the double abstinence
has had time to grow into a custom of their tribe;
and custom, in the East, is a religion. |
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