Leslie G. Rubin: America, Aristotle, and the Politics of a Middle Class. Waco: Baylor University Press, 2018.
Although it is more usual to associate the moral foundations of the American republic with the political philosophy of John Locke, attempts to link them to Aristotle are not unknown. [1] Here, Leslie G. Rubin illuminates one substantial connection between Americanism and Aristotelianism: a shared esteem for a ‘middling’ class of citizens who can serve as moderating ballast for a regime of the people, who might otherwise list catastrophically, to the left or to the right—or even worse, to shiver between both sides in a factional conflict that splits the ship and sends it to the bottom of the sea.
The American Founders’ “new science of politics” (as Publius called it) addressed the “inconvenience” of faction by proposing a large, “extended” republic in which no faction could likely dominate the others; in America’s capacious civil society, factions would survive, even thrive, but their very contentiousness would cause them to frustrate each other’s plans. As Publius also remarks, American civil society is and will remain middle-class or, as its enemies like to say, bourgeois; America is a commercial republic, and many of its factional conflicts have centered on what sort of commerce should prevail—agrarian, agrarian-slaveowning, financial, industrial, and now ‘post-industrial’. And in the government, faction would be thwarted by the separation of powers, which makes it much less likely that any faction could seize control of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches at once.
Aristotle too commends that republican lawgivers base their regime “upon the middling element,” and to arrange the ruling offices in such a way that the several governing powers “interact in order to discourage a regime’s tendency toward tyranny.” The middling element is the one most amenable to political life, strictly speaking, which is a life of ruling and being ruled in turn, a life that eschews the one-way rule of both patriarchy (or matriarchy) and mastery or tyranny. Thus, “the insights of the science of politics are not as new as Publius might suggest,” although they had “never [been] put together into a working regime until the American experiment.” [2] “The founders rediscovered some long-ignored truths about human nature, and they had the resources, the political will, and the political culture required to put them into effect, while Aristotle did not.”
Both the Aristotelian and the American sciences of politics contradict the political science and indeed the ‘social science’ generally prevalent in the United States today. “Modern Americans speak of office politics and sexual politics and governmental politics as if they were all subcategories of an essentially similar assertion of power.” But this reduces human rule to the dominance games animals play, a reduction which overlooks a distinctive human trait: “Humans do not use their voices like other animals.” “The political animal uses logos, speech that implies reason,” in discovering the advantageous and the harmful, the just and the unjust.” Unlike herds, human association, and especially the political association, “is based on common moral perceptions—not [or not distinctly] on place, leadership, or ethnic bonds, but on a common understanding of the good and the just.” “If the fundamental moral consensus does not hold, there is no political whole.” Elk and gorillas have no such concerns. They do not deliberate together about the common good. Human beings, however, must deliberate together not only in order to survive but in order to thrive—for “the good life, that is, the practice of the excellence appropriate to being human.” The regime—the way political communities are ordered in terms of who rules, the ruling structures or offices within which their rulers rule, way of life those rulers and structures conduce to, and the purposes they aim at all require such deliberation.
The word translated as ‘regime,’ politeia, is also the word Aristotle uses for the best practicable regime, usually translated as ‘polity’ or ‘republic.’ Rubin prefers ‘republic,’ deriving as it does from the Latin res publica, the ‘public thing,’ a ‘mixed’ regime is ruled by all the people, rich and poor alike. To avoid factitious rule by the rich of the poor or by the poor over the rich, such a regime needs the moderating, balancing influence of a middle class. That need needs to be seen as needed: “If most citizens—wealthy, middling, and poor alike—are not raised to appreciate the middling virtues (including the political/moral/social value of the middle class itself), to take a turn in some office beneficial to the community, to cultivate friendly relations across the economic spectrum, and to aspire to personal and community-wide excellence, the republic will suffer a decline.” This is likely to occur especially if the middle class fails to appreciate its own virtues, first among them being moderation.
To be the best practicable regime does not mean that the republic is readily founded and readily sustained. Politics is difficult work. Rubin sets herself “to illuminat[ing] both the brilliance and the weaknesses of the Philosopher’s and the founders’ expectations.” Aristotle himself is well aware of the difficulties; “if politics and the city are natural to human beings,” he needs to explain “why it is so hard to find a stable and self-sufficient city,” in practice and even in theory.
In terms of theory, Aristotle’s most distinguished political-philosophic predecessor made two main proposals, one in the Republic, the other in the Laws. The regime of the Republic is not republican in Aristotle’s sense of a mixed regime but the rule of philosopher-kings. In subordinating the other parts of the city, the warriors and the craftsmen, this regime cannot endure for long; those excluded from rule rebel, their own rule inducing future rebellions in an endless cycle. Plato’s Socrates’ (quite possibly ironic) attempt to reduce “a theme to a single beat,” as Aristotle puts it, fails because it is insufficiently political, lacking in reciprocal ruling and being-ruled. The regime’s “communal arrangement of property,” which “aimed to create an artificial friendship among the guardians and between the guardians and the working classes,” is not sustainable because it is not consensual. The regime of the Laws attempts to address this problem. Neither a democracy nor an oligarchy, it aims at a midway point between the two, a polity founded on an arms-bearing middle class. Aristotle rejects this more practicable regime, as well, because it valorizes military virtues to the extent of ignoring “other productive services for the city,” such as agriculture and manufacturing. Supporting “five thousand warriors (and their wives and attendants) in idleness is not economically feasible.” And the more the city’s economic belt is tightened to accommodate such a regime, the more moderation becomes stinginess, the less liberality or generosity can flourish. But liberality is a foundation of friendship, and political friendship is indispensable to political cohesion, to the prevention of severe factionalism. Both of the Platonic regimes overlook this.
Aristotle shows how such theoretical misconceptions work out in practice, even in regimes whose citizens don’t do much theorizing. Sparta’s founders failed to “understand the delicate relationship between education for citizenship and the institutional arrangements for the restraint of the citizens from vice.” Spartan women are as undisciplined as their warrior husbands are overdisciplined, since the regime’s “excessive emphasis on soldiering…leaves these self-indulgent persons essentially in charge of the city much of the time.” (In the middle-class American republic, the separation of home and workplace has caused a less acute version of the same disadvantage.) Oftentimes the only men left at home are the underclass, the helots, who restlessly eye not only ruling-class women and property but the regime itself. “Sparta’s experience serves as a warning to all founders and legislators.” The polis at Crete suffers similar defects, despite its somewhat more democratic structure. Food is distributed on an equal basis and population is controlled “by the encouragement of homosexuality and the segregation of the women” from the men. But the actual governing body is less democratic than that of Sparta; “the people’s opportunities to defend themselves or to influence political decisions are limited to a virtually powerless assembly,” leading to instability.
Carthage is superior to Sparta and Crete. “Internally peaceful” and with none of its citizens enslaved, the regime enjoys the consent of the governed. This is due to its “more balanced mixture of the elements” of democracy and oligarchy, along with a requisite degree of attention to virtue, to ‘aristocratic’ rule in Aristotle’s sense of the word. The regime prevents oligarchy, the rule of the few who are rich, by enabling those of middling or low riches to become rich through service in the empire—a point the modern Britons would take. But as in modernity so in antiquity; if the empire falls, crisis will ensue. “In Carthage, as in Sparta and Crete, the majority of Aristotle’s criticisms center on the problem of keeping the many satisfied and preventing a revolt.” As a more commercial republic than either Sparta or Crete, Carthage does a better job of this, but at the cost of a fragile imperialism.
Rubin summarizes the importance of both political theory and practice, citing Aristotle’s insistence that theory provides standards that are ‘ideal,’ but that such standards are not directly applicable to practice, to the “activity of politics and the arrangements proper to political life.” We might well pray for the ideal but we had better attend to the real. He therefore “introduces a standard for a stable and decent regime,” the republic, applying that standard to the actual regimes in of the Spartans, Cretans, and Carthaginians. If political science, the result of philosophizing about politics, points beyond politics to the higher and more comprehensive good of philosophizing, of science concerning nature as a whole, then the political art is the needed corrective, ensuring that the best not become the enemy of the good, the decent, the ‘middling’ way. And so, although “Sparta, Crete, and Carthage aimed at becoming aristocracies,” regimes aimed at achieving the good simply, “Aristotle praises them for the aspects that would make them republics.” Would-be aristocracies overreach because genuine virtue is rare. Not only can no regime, even one that “respects the freedom and the equal claims of all its citizens,” can “control all the chance events or the human choices that would need to be controlled in order to predict the long-range effects of their policies.” And even if it could, “a regime that controls education and the actions of citizens to such an extent that it can guarantee full virtue is not actually producing virtue, which is a matter of reasoned choice.” “The best political regime is not the best that can be imagined, but the best that can be accomplished among free and equal people, people practicing politics.”
In considering the several types of regimes, Aristotle accordingly judges them against standards whereby “the goodness of both the regime and the citizen body are judged” by “the requirements of political life, as distinct from other human activities.” If “the purpose of city life is mutual assistance for life and the good life,” regimes should be classified with respect to “whether they aim at such mutual assistance—the common good—or at the benefit of the ruler(s) alone.” Although “no good political life is possible without attention to the good of all involved,” “actual cities are full of people of a despotic bent, who believe that they are ‘sick’ unless they are ruling.” This is an important point the more materialist/’economistic’ observers of politics miss: as Aristotle puts it, no one becomes a tyrant in order to get out of the cold. Tyrants want to rule, defining ruling itself, preferably with no backtalk, as the good life. In this, they recognize that political life aims at more than mere life, mere survival; “a central flaw in most cities is the failure to recognize just this distinguishing characteristic of politics,” the characteristic not satisfied, or not satisfied in some, by farming, hunting, making, fighting.
Although the Spartan and Cretan regimes take the militarization of the citizen body too far, citizens in every well-ordered regime will need to be capable of bearing arms and practicing military virtue. Aristotle therefor must “explain why it is good political practice to reward with exclusive political power those who provide only one, albeit a necessary, material benefit to the city, the wherewithal for its defense.” But such a regime is not a military oligarchy but the rule of the middle class; “however unextraordinary, the self-supporting citizen-warrior displays some virtues, while a poor freeman or a very wealthy oligarch need not display any virtues to maintain his status. To define a citizen body in terms of military capacity, then, is to give some attention to political virtue.” A large middle class of citizen-warriors stands ready to sacrifice not only comfort but individual self-preservation for the sake of the city, for the way of life of the city. “Political virtue or noble action is what distinguishes the full practice of true politics from the practice of subordinate parts of politics,” such as household management and commercial production, “which may call forth some virtues, but not all and not the finer ones.” Oligarchs and democrats tend to use political life to serve the interests of themselves; the middle class, somewhat less so, and without insisting on excluding others from a share in rule.
Oligarchs want to squeeze the poor in order further to enrich themselves. The poor want to squeeze the rich, confiscate their property. Both ambitions ruin regimes, including the regimes that undertake to enact such ambitions. However one defines justice, one must admit that “justice does not destroy the city,” the association justice is intended to perfect. At the same time, given the recalcitrance of reality in the face of ‘idealism,’ seen in consideration of Platonic regime theory, “justice, including the justice of a particular person’s claim to rule, cannot be considered in abstraction from the political need to preserve the locus of justice, the city itself and its regime.” Reasoned consent of the governed is required for the establishment of justice, but reasoned consent is often not forthcoming from impassioned human beings. In recognition of this, some take the shortcut of defining justice as “the will of the stronger,” with strength derived from “numerical superiority, wealth, or physical or military power.” And in recognition of that, many (including Plato) incline to uphold the rule of law in an attempt to avoid rule by sheer coercion. This strengthens the tendency to define justice as the rule of law because law seems to hover above the various factions in the city, moderating all of them. “Aristotle rejects both definitions of justice.” The inconvenience of defining justice as the rule of the strongest readily occurs to everyone who finds himself on the receiving end of such rule. The inconvenience of the rule of law is that law doesn’t really rule; human beings do, framing and wielding laws. Laws are subordinate to regimes; though needed, they cannot make the regime problem disappear.
To achieve the common good of the city as a whole, its survival and its material and ethical prosperity, “all regimes” should “consider the claims of the excluded,” as “even those who do not measure up to a regime’s standards may have at least a partial claim to consideration.” The ‘mixed’ or republican regime is the only one “that deprives no one of honor arbitrarily or by force,” or even by legalistic sleight-of-hand. Republics and democracies, the two regimes ruled by ‘the many,’ resemble one another ‘quantitatively’ but not ‘qualitatively’ precisely because democracy, the rule of the many who are poor to the exclusion of the rich and the middle class, invite the overthrow of their own regime on the grounds of its own injustice. Indeed, while “the many must be given some prerogatives in order to retain them as friends of the regime,” the ruling offices “with the greatest discretionary power require a greater-than-average capacity for just and prudent decision-making.” Those prerogatives include serving on juries, with evidence and arguments are laid in front of them, and judging the performance of public officials by the results they achieve—no trivial tasks, as both Socrates and Pericles would acknowledge. The practice of statecraft is another matter. “Because the best political actor requires prudence above all in order to contribute to the good of the regime, and prudence is a virtue and a knowledge that eludes precise definition and is impossible to display fully outside of ruling office, there are great disagreements, among regimes and sometimes among citizens of the same regime, about who, among those who are not holding office at the moment, has the potential to fulfill the requirements of a good political ruler.” That arduous challenge is not necessarily beyond the capacity of a popular regime.
To meet that challenge, the city’s inhabitants need to be “educated in the principles revered by the regime.” Such “education in the regime” will “teach the full citizens both to rule well and to be good human beings.” Teaching requires teachable persons, however. “If the citizens are incapable of the highly trained virtues, the legislator must decide which element among his less gifted citizens to honor and to put in office in order to benefit the whole city.” Education must supplement the rule of law, both understood as emanations of the regime. Rule of a “political multitude” that includes a substantial middle class will feature virtues sufficient to sit still for civic education and to exercise rule by just laws, justly, consisting as it does of “all kinds of people capable of some self-mastery” and excluding those who are incapable. [3]
The founder of a republic should therefore “not confuse this task with that of the founder of the simply best regime, and [Professor Rubin adds, astutely] the citizens probably should not be reminded of a standard of educated virtue that they will never attain collectively.” Such a political science differs from Socratic political philosophy, to say nothing of efforts of professional rhetoricians and sophists. Aristotelian political science remains mindful of the best regime discovered by political philosophy, as this provides a standard of justice uncompromised by circumstances, but it concentrates its attention on finding “the best regime under given circumstances,” taking note of regimes (and they have multiplied in modern times) “governed by a partisan principle of justice that may assume it is the best simply or the best possible, but is neither,” and, finally, considering “the regime most fitting for all cities.” Aristotle offers a typology of regimes. One set of identifying criteria are material, consisting socioeconomic classes; “the preeminence of one economic class will create, in general, an oligarchy, a democracy or a republic.” These ‘quantitative’ regime identifiers must be supplemented by ‘qualitative’ ones, regimes that are better or worse, ethically. This category is very far from abstract, however. “Because of the superiority of the good life to mere life and of the soul to the body, despite the fact that the mouth and the digestive system are crucial to existence, the parts that contribute to knowledge and that allow the whole are superior.” In a good regime, politicians and warriors outrank farmers and artisans. But “the key to the characters of the regimes in the second list is not so much the type of work the citizens perform…as the quantity of leisure time available to them,” time they can use to deliberate about city policies. For Aristotle, political freedom or liberty consists not simply in freedom from unjust government coercion but in the political participation that enables citizens to guard themselves and their fellow citizens against such coercion.
Although “other forms of government may produce as superior way of life for some of the inhabitants, it is their exclusion of large numbers of free persons from participation in ruling that marks them as inferior,” as “they are not political in the strict sense, characterized by ruling and being ruled among free and roughly equal persons.” This is the merit of the republic. Whereas aristocracy, rule of the few who are virtuous (and “usually wealthy”) aims higher than most political communities can reach, the republic is “the good regime for those of some wealth and freedom who are not extraordinarily virtuous”—the sort of population a founder/lawgiver is much more likely to encounter. “The excellence of a republic lies not so much in the virtue of its citizens individually as in its balance” among the several classes of people within it. Political stability, a very great good but one detested by many ambitieux, “is not to be purchased at the cost of tyrannical measures, but to be earned by satisfying all the major parts of the city.” In this regime, the middle class serves the indispensable function of enabling the governing body to avoid both deadlock and class warfare between the few who are rich and the many who are poor. In so doing, the middle class arbitrates between the rich and the poor. “The middle class satisfies uniquely the requirement that the republic take account of riches and poverty without outstanding virtue, by mixing riches and poverty in the same persons, so to speak, in a combination that produces a certain moderate virtue” within the city. A middle-class republic gives voice to practical if not to theoretical reason, to citizens if not to philosopher-kings. In it, citizens will exhibit “a willingness to rule untyrannically and to be ruled unslavishly.” This regime gives citizens fewer reasons who “desire the regime to change.”
This can be so, because “moderate property holders are temperate by the nature of their social and economic position, not so much by an education that tries to create a ‘second nature'” in them. The passions of middle-class persons “more ruled by reason” than those of the rich or the poor; their ambitions are also more moderate; relatively easygoing, they readily make friends among themselves; and they neither envy the rich nor fear the poor. And they are ready, willing, and able to defend themselves and their city in war. And not only in war: “Both the justice and the stability attained by a republic should be able to withstand chance, the hard times or crises that are brought on by domestic strife, warfare, and economic decline.” The middle class will “muddle through,” waiting for the first opportunity to restore more favorable circumstances. While aristocracies require “extensive education” to discipline and refine the young, the middle-class republics “are educational in the way they operate,” institutionalizing “the tendency toward moderation that the middling citizens ordinarily displays” and, by institutionalizing that tendency, reinforcing it. “The citizen virtue of a middling republic does not create grand individuals worthy of great honor but rather good citizens who, when considered as a whole, sustain a regime worthy of emulation.” A principal danger to that regime is the failure of brilliant and ambitious souls to appreciate such virtue and the regime animated by it. Unlike America’s Franklin, a man scarcely lacking in brilliance and ambition, they cannot bring themselves to laud “happy Mediocrity.”
What would Aristotle think of the United States? “Two prime factors make the modern liberal state praiseworthy in Aristotelian terms: political stability and an understanding of justice as fairness to all parts of the society.” He would also see a weakness: “Modern Americans, like Aristotle’s middling element, know they should participate in elections and they should serve on the jury, but when the moment arrives, any think of something they would rather be doing.” Unlike the middle class of an ancient polis, where the connection between citizen participation and liberty was obvious, the middle class of the large, centralized modern state inclines to abominate ‘the politicians’ while refusing to engage in politics.
Prominent American Founders esteemed the middle class. John Adams “seriously studied Aristotle” and praised the rule of law, equally, over “all men.” With Aristotle, Adams praised the middle class as “compliant to reason,” as “willing to submit to command or law” while “knowing how to rule over freemen,” as neither covetous nor thieving but intolerant of being stolen from, as likely neither to scheme against others nor to tolerate others who scheme against them, and as the class “least liable to seditions and insurrections.” Middle-class “self-restraint and public spirit” will “keep factional conflict at bay both inside and outside the government,” so long as the state and federal constitutions reinforce those virtues by separating and balancing the three powers of government, including a division of the legislative power into two institutional branches, one representative of the rich, the other of ‘the commons.’ In America’s case, however, the existence of a middle class more numerous than the poor will require not the middle class itself but the executive branch to serve as the arbiter between the two legislative chambers. And although the founding generation would soon divide into partisan ‘Republicans’ and ‘Federalists,’ Adams’s Republican rivals concurred with him on the value of the middle class; as Republican James Madison wrote, “mediocrity of fortune is a leading feature in our national character” in a population with “few dangerously rich” and “few miserably poor.” Republicans inclined rather to worry that the middle class might in time be too complacent, “too moderate in their ambition to combat the avaricious forces” of rich and poor.
Federalists, the early anti-Federalists and later Democratic Republicans accordingly saw the need to inculcate citizen virtue in successive generations, “simple manners” among a “laborious and saving” population. Federalists “left the control of education and the administration of people and things to the states and their localities,” practicing a “laissez-faire attitude over what recent commentators call family values or personal moral choices.” But in those states, counties, and municipalities, Federalists and their opponents alike worked to cultivate what Delaware delegate to the 1787 Constitutional Convention John Dickinson called “the seeds of liberty.” “Dickinson argues that the only way that the new government will become a despotism is ‘after a general corruption of manners,’ at which time will be a matter of course.”
To stave that off, Noah Webster of Massachusetts became America’s most prominent advocate of a public civic education entailing “knowledge of the rights of men and the principles of government” and encouraging a “keen sense of liberty and a watchful jealousy” in guarding those rights and principles. In a democratic republic, the great dangers are the demagogue who beguiles the people by “pretending to patriotism,” wins their votes, then rules “like a giant” and a “powerful lawmaking body favoring the propertyless over the moderate property holder and not restrained by moral integrity.” Foreseeing “a day when economic circumstances will move the society away from rough equality and self-reliance,” when “the family farm will decline and manufacturing arise” and the consequent increased dependence of the middle-class and the poor upon the rich, Webster calls not only for civic education but for better educators, paying “extended attention to finding good teachers for the common schools as well as academies.” Such men (and the teachers in the early decades of the United States were men, for the most part) must be “prudent, accomplished, agreeable, and respectable,” inasmuch as students learn as much from example as from books. Students who respect their teachers (because the teachers themselves are respectable) are more likely to become good citizens as adults. “Parents who abide ill-mannered, clownish, or profligate teachers must not be paying sufficient attention” to hiring, or perhaps refuse to pay for better ones. Even as the students, in Webster’s words, “lisp the praise of liberty and of those illustrious heroes and statesmen who have wrought a revolution in her favor,” they will have before them decent if not heroic men who exhibit the steady habits of the middle class.
“Self-government, at both the individual and the community levels, requires sustained effort, and in the modern world, where the acknowledgment of human rationality has released humanity from blind obedience, that sustained effort must be rationally defensible and appealing.” Can “each new generation” in the middle-class republic resist “the temptation to climb into a more luxurious social position”? Can “the chosen leaders of the political institutions resist the lure of becoming an oligarchy”? Alexander Hamilton came to doubt it. “As riches increase and accumulate in few hands; as luxury prevails in society; virtue will be in a greater degree considered as only a graceful appendage of wealth, and the tendency of things will be to depart from the republican standard. This is the real disposition of human nature…. It is a common misfortune, that awaits our state constitution, as well as all others.” Webster, Delaware Anti-Federalist newspaper editor Robert Coram, along with Benjamin Franklin and Samuel Adams, all in effect turned toward the Aristotelian remedy for such decline, citizen education, if not precisely toward Aristotelian ethics as the substance of that education. Coram advocated a national education curriculum “intended to produce good citizens of the new republic through job training, inasmuch as a “truly free government, suited to the nature of man, requires teaching all the citizens how to make a living.” Public schools that teach literacy, mathematics, and the sciences, along with “mechanics and husbandry,” followed by apprenticeship programs, will accomplish that. Franklin thought in similar terms, while emphasizing the study of political and commercial history as a means of smartening up students about the menace posed by tyrants and titled aristocrats while instilling a good regard for such virtues as temperance, order, frugality, industry, and perseverance. Both men commended religious instruction insofar as it fostered sound morals. Franklin especially “combines the traditional lures of liberal learning with the commercial inducements of a modern society.”
Pennsylvania’s Benjamin Rush, a signer of the Declaration of Independence along with Franklin, emphasized the importance of religious instruction for republican citizenship. Public education in the primary grades should “be founded upon the study of the Bible, both for learning to read and write and for inculcating at the most retentive age the Christian virtues of ‘humility, self-denial, and brotherly kindness’ and the Golden Rule, all of which are ‘useful to the republic’ and ‘wholly inoffensive.'” Indeed, as he wrote, “the only foundation for a useful education in a republic is to be laid in Religion. Without this there can be no virtue, and without virtue there can be no liberty, and liberty is the object and life of all republican governments.” Rubin cautions that Rush’s claims “should not be simply labeled either prejudice or proselytizing zeal,” but rather as the basis of a serious matter public policy should address: the need for young people “to choose the religion that will form the moral center of their adult lives.” As a stalwart of the American branch of the Enlightenment, Rush himself did not assume that Christian revelation was true, but rather that Christian “doctrines and precepts are calculated to promote the happiness of society and the safety and well-being of civil government.” Some other religion might serve that purpose, but Christianity is the one we have. To prevent bitter disputes over sectarian doctrine, Rush recommended that children of the same religious sect be educated together in “a variety of schools [that] might enhance the citizens’ toleration of other religions.” Such religious instruction will reduce crime (“confessions of criminals show that vices are the fatal consequences of the want of proper early education,” Rush maintained) and thereby reduce the tax revenues needed to support jails. As Rubin summarizes it, “A free citizen will vote wisely, work hard, obey the law and stay out of trouble, and make efforts to improve his community and his state without taxing and spending too much.” And he will do so as a citizen, that is, as a person who shares a core of moral convictions and habits with other citizens in the regime. And not only “he”: girls will be educated in much the same way; as the first teachers of children and exercisers of influence over men, they too must understand the principles of liberty and government. They will also prove important supporters of education and the rule of law. The right kind of education, Rush hoped, would “preserve our morals, manners, and government from the infection of European vices.”
Rubin completes her survey of Founding-era American educational writings with Nicholas Collin, a pre-Independence Swedish immigrant who became the pastor of the New Jersey Branch of the Lutheran Church of Sweden and eventually a minister at Gloria Dei Church in Philadelphia. Instead of proposing a variety of public schools serving the many Christian sects, Collin devised a syncretic approach, writing “a how-to book incorporating all the wisdom of the world’s religions that teach about an afterlife without offending any of them,” a book he intended for inclusion in public school curricula. A doctrine concerning the afterlife supports morality. Since “a truly republican government cannot impose its laws by force,” since laws “cannot enforce themselves,” and since “the theoretical foundation of republican government is the justice of each human being’s ruling himself,” the majority of its citizens “must be so satisfied with the laws that they obey them as if they and made them themselves.” In Collin’s words, “As the people cannot be led as children, or drove as mules, the only method is, to make them rational beings.” That won’t be easy, as civil society will always have its “refractory elements”—those of “weaker wills” and “slower intellect,” who might still be brought to trust those who have “better knowledge” of politics and government. Religious education can accomplish this. “While Aristotle associated the middling virtues with middling economic status, Collin implies that the larger the ruling class, the more effort has to be put into their intellectual moral development.” Without the pressure from powerful rich and poor classes to keep the middle class on the straight and narrow, that class will lapse into complacent self-indulgence. “The ‘overdriven spirit of trade,’ put together with America’s ‘overdriven principle of equality,’ creates the sense that all can have and should have whatever they desire.” This would lead the American middle class into the characteristic mistake of Aristotle’s democrats: defining liberty not as self-government but as doing as one likes. Add to this the absence of fixed classes in America, with the resulting tendency of everyone to “both envy and emulate the rich,” and the need for a serious religious upbringing at home and in school becomes clear.
“Politics—the experience of debating and horse-trading, drafting and redrafting, articulating principles and compromising on specifics—led the Americans to produce a republic similar in crucial ways to Aristotle’s best political regime,” a regime characterized by “rule of law rather than…human whim,” crucially inflected by a reasonable and reasoning middle class. While much of recent political science scholarship foregrounds the Founders’ constitutionalism, their application of the rule of law, Rubin sees that the Founders “also took up Aristotle’s parallel concern with the moral qualities, the ‘manners,’ as they term them, of the citizens who both rule and are ruled, whose way of life characterized the republic,” gives it its distinctive ethos. As the Founders foresaw, as Tocqueville and Lincoln would soon warn, “if the majority of citizens no longer knows how the system works or why it was instituted, no longer cherishes citizen virtues and votes for respectable officials, and no longer sustains itself independently, the majority will be hard pressed to make a sensible judgment about needed reforms and trustworthy reformers.” They will then become prey for demagogues and for “unsympathetic elites.” Those elites are likely themselves to fall prey to “philosophic demands,” that is, demands by philosophers (to say nothing of rhetoricians and sophists) that their ideas be realized, persons who may be ‘political’ in the sense of addressing political life, but are not ‘politic,’ lacking a prudential sense of what most human beings can achieve and sustain. The libertarianism of Thoreau, the utilitarianism of Mill, the socialism of Marx, the progressivism of Croly all exemplify philosophizing that had calcified into ideology. “A large but partially obscured challenge of the founding era, as for Aristotle, is to make mediocrity admirable.” “This is mediocrity, which is but called moderation!” Nietzsche exclaims, beckoning subsequent generations to deplore along with him. The results of such efforts have been less than impressive. What happens when Thomas Jefferson’s natural aristocracy of virtue and talent separates virtue from talent, proposing instead a social science that studies ‘values’ and ‘facts’? “Barely a single one of the Aristotelian middling virtues or the Founders’ republican manners is openly revered today.” Are Americans the better for that, the happier for it? What has “a culture that prizes self-definition (license) over old-fashioned liberty and notions of equality that are beyond the capacity of a free society to achieve” achieved?
Notes
- See Robert H. Horwitz, ed.: The Moral Foundations of the American Republic (Charlottesville: Uni9vrsity Press of Virginia, 2001). On American Aristotelianism, see Paul Eidelberg: A Discourse on Statesmanship: The Design and Transformation of the America Polity (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1974).
- The Roman Republic and the modern British republic of the Founders’ time might be put forth as conspicuous exceptions, although of course the Founders regarded British rule of its colonies as nothing better than tyrannical.
- Self-government has been a neglected theme of American political thought; studies more usually address equality and liberty. For two attempts to redress the balance, see Will Morrisey: Self-Government, The American Theme: Presidents of the Founding and Civil War (Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield, 20004) and The Dilemma of Progressivism: How Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson Reshaped the American Regime of Self-Government (Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield, 2009).
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