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THE RELATION
OF LIBERALISM TO DEMOCRACY. ROUSSEAU'S IDEA
OF THE COMMUNAL WILL. ROUSSEAU AND HOBBES.
ROUSSEAU AS CREATOR OF THE MODERN STATE
REACTION. THE SOCIAL CONTRACT AND EQUALITY
BEFORE THE LAW. ROUSSEAU'S CONCEPTION OF
RIGHT. DEMOCRACY AND DICTATORSHIP.
ROUSSEAU'S INFLUENCE ON THE FRENCH
REVOLUTION. THE JACOBINS AS WILLEXECUTORS OF
THE MONARCHY. CENTRALISM. THE "SUN KING" AND
THE "SUN NATION." NATIONALISM AND DEMOCRACY.
THE NATION AS THE BEARER OF "THE COMMUNAL
WILL." THE NEW SOVEREIGN. NATIONALISM AND
THE CULT OF THE NEW STATE. THE "NATIONAL
WILL." NAPOLEON AS HEIR OF THE NEW STATE
IDEA. THE DREAM OF THE NATIONAL OMNIPOTENCE
OF THE STATE. THE CHANGING OF SOCIETY. THE
CITIZEN AS SOLDIER. THE NEW DREAM OF POWER.
THERE is an essential difference between
liberalism and democracy, based on two
different conceptions of the relationship
between man and society. Indeed, we have
stated in advance that we have in view here
solely the social and political trends of
liberal and democratic thought, not the
endeavours of the liberal and democratic
parties, which frequently bear a
relationship to their original ideals
similar to that which the practical
political efforts of the socialistic labor
parties bear to socialism. Most of all, one
must here beware of throwing liberalism into
the same pot with the so-called "Manchester
doctrines," as is frequently done. The
ancient wisdom of Protagoras, that man is
the measure of all things, has weight for
liberalism, also. On the basis of this
doctrine it judges the social environment
according as it furthers the natural
development of the individual or is a
hindrance to his personal freedom and
Independence. Its conceptions of society are
those of an organic process resulting from
man's natural necessities and leading to
free associations, which exist as long as
they fulfil their purpose, and dissolve
again when this purpose has become
meaningless. The less this natural course of
things is affected by forceful interference
and mechanical regulation from outside, the
freer and more frictionless will be all
social procedure and the more fully can man
enjoy the happiness of his personal freedom
and independence. From this point of view
liberalism judged also the state and all
forms of government. Its advocates believed,
however, that government in certain matters
cannot be entirely dispensed with. Yet they
saw clearly that every form of government
menaces man's freedom, hence they always
endeavoured to guard the individual from the
encroachments of governmental power and
strove to confine this to the smallest
possible field of activity. The
administration of things always meant more
to them than the government of men; hence,
the state, for them, had a right to exist
only as long as its functionaries strove
merely to protect the personal safety of its
citizens against forcible attacks. The state
constitution of liberalism was, therefore,
predominantly of a negative nature; the
focal point of all the socialpolitical
thought of its advocates was the largest
possible degree of freedom for the
individual. In contradistinction to
liberalism, the starting point of democracy
was a collective conceptthe people, the
community. But although this abstract
concept on which the democratic ideal is
founded could only lead to results
disastrous to the independence of human
personality, it was surrounded by the
aureole of a fictitious concept of freedom,
whose worth or unworth was yet to be proved.
Rousseau, the real prophet of the modern
democratic stateidea, in his Contrat social,
had opposed "the sovereignty of the king"
with "the sovereignty of the people." Thus
the dominance of the people was for him the
watchword of freedom against the tyranny of
the old regime. This alone necessarily gave
the democratic idea a great prestige; for no
power is stronger than that which pretends
to be founded on the principles of freedom.
Rousseau proceeded in his
socialphilosophical speculations from the
doctrine of the social contract, which he
had taken over from the advocates of
political radicalism in England; and it was
this doctrine which gave his work the power
to inflict such terrible wounds on royal
absolutism in France. This is also the
reason why there came to be current so many
contradictory opinions concerning Rousseau
and his teachings. Everyone knows to what a
degree his ideas contributed to the
overthrow of the old system and how strongly
the men of the great revolution were
influenced by his doctrines. But just
because of that it is all too frequently
overlooked that Rousseau was at the same
time the apostle of a new political
religion, whose consequences had just as
disastrous effects on the freedom of men as
had formerly the belief in the divine right
of kings. In fact, Rousseau was one of the
inventors of that new abstract state idea
arising in Europe after the fetish worship
of the state which found its expression in
the personal and absolute monarch had
reached its end. Not unjustly Bakunin called
Rousseau "the true creator of modern
reaction." For was he not one of the
spiritual fathers of that monstrous idea of
an allruling, allinclusive, political
providence which never loses sight of man
and mercilessly stamps upon him the mark of
its superior will? Rousseau and Hegel are --
each in his own way -- the two gatekeepers
of modern state reaction, which is today, in
fascism, preparing to climb to the highest
pinnacle of its dominance. But the influence
of the "citizen of Geneva" on the course of
this development was by far the greater, for
his works stirred public opinion in Europe
more deeply than did Hegel's obscure
symbolism. Rousseau's ideal state is an
artificial structure. Although he had
learned from Montesquieu to explain the
various state systems from the climatic
environment of each people, he nevertheless
followed in the footsteps of the alchemists
of his time, who made every conceivable
experiment with "the ignoble constituents of
human nature" in the constant hope of some
day pouring out from the crucible of their
idle speculation the pure gold of the state
founded on absolute reason. He was most
positively convinced that it depended only
on the right form of government or the best
form of legislation to develop men into
perfected beings. Thus he declares in his
Confessions: I found that politics was the
first means for furthering morals; that,
approach the matter as one may, the
character of a people will always evolve
according to the kind of government it has.
In this respect, it seemed to me that the
great question concerning the best form of
the state can be reduced to this: how must
the government be constituted to form a
people into the most virtuous, the most
enlightened, the wisest, in one word, the
best, people in the fullest sense. This idea
is a characteristic starting point for
democratic lines of thought in general, and
is peculiarly indicative of Rousseau's
mentality. Since democracy starts from a
collective concept and values the individual
accordingly, "man" became for its advocates
an abstract being with whom they could
continue to experiment until he should take
on the desired mental norm and, as model
citizen, be fitted to the forms of the
state. Not without reason, Rousseau called
the legislator "the mechanic who invents the
machine." In fact there is about democracy
something mechanical behind whose gearwheels
man vanishes. But as democracy, even in
Rousseau's sense, cannot function without
man, it first stretches him on the bed of
Procrustes that he may assume the mental
pattern the state requires. Just as Hobbes
gave the absolute state a power embodied in
the person of the monarch, against whom no
right of the individual could exist, so
Rousseau invented a phantom on which he
conferred the same absolute rights. The
"Leviathan" which he envisioned derived its
fullness of power from a collective concept,
the socalled "common will"the volonte
general. But Rousseau's common will was by
no means that will of all which is formed by
adding each individual will to the will of
all others, by this means reaching an
abstract concept of the social will. No.
Rousseau's common will is the immediate
result of the "social contract" from which,
according to his concept of political
society, the state has emerged. Hence, the
common will is always right, is always
infallible, since its activity in all
instances has the general good as a
presumption. Rousseau's idea springs from a
religious fancy having its root in the
concept of a political providence which,
being endowed with the gifts of allwisdom
and complete perfection, can consequently
never depart from the right way. Every
personal protest against the rule of such a
providence amounts to political blasphemy.
Men may err in the interpretation of the
common will; for, according to Rousseau,
"the people can never be bribed, but may
often be misled!" The common will itself,
however, remains unaffected by any false
interpretations; it floats like the spirit
of God over the waters of public opinion;
and while this may stray from time to time
into strange paths, it will always find its
way back again to the centre of social
equilibrium, as the misguided Jews to
Jehovah. Starting from this speculative
concept, Rousseau rejects every separate
association within the state, because by
such association the clear recognition of
the common will is blurred. The Jacobins,
following in his footsteps, therefore
threatened with death the first attempts of
the French workers to associate themselves
into trade guilds, and declared that the
National Convention could tolerate no
;'state within the state" because by such
associations the pure expression of the
common will would be disturbed. Today
Bolshevism in Russia, fascism in Germany and
Italy, enforce the same doctrine and
suppress all inconvenient separate
associations, transforming those which they
permit to exist into organs of the state.
Thus there grew from the idea of the common
will a new tyranny, whose chains were more
enduring because they were decorated with
the false gold of an imaginary freedom, the
freedom of Rousseau, which was just as
meaningless and shadowy as was the famous
concept of the common will. Rousseau became
the creator of new idols to which man
sacrificed liberty and life with the same
devotion as once to the fallen gods of a
vanished time. In view of the unlimited
completeness of the power of a fictitious
common will, any independence of thought
became a crime; all reason, as with Luther,
"the whore of the devil." For Rousseau, the
state became also the creator and preserver
of all morality, against which no other
ethical concept could maintain itself. It
was but a repetition of the same age-old
bloody tragedy: God everything, man nothing!
There is much insincerity and glamorous
shamfight in Rousseau's doctrine for which
the explanation is perhaps found only in the
man's shocking narrowness of mind and morbid
mistrust. How much mischievous histication
and hypocrisy is concealed in the words: "In
order that the Social Contract may be no
empty formula it tacitly impies that
obtigation which alone can give force to all
the others: namely, that anyone who aegses
obedience to the general will is to be
forced to it by the whole body. This merely
means that he is to be compelled to be
free." [1] "That he is to be compelled to be
free!" -- the freedom of the state power's
straitjacket! Could there be a worse parody
of libertarian feeling than this? And the
man whose sick brain bred such a monstrosity
is even today praised as an apostle of
freedom! But after all, Rousseau's concept
is only the result of thoroughly doctrinaire
thinking, which sacrifices every living
thing to the mechanics of a theory, and
whose representatives, with the obsessed
determination of madmen, ride roughshod over
human destinies as unconcernedly as if they
were bursting bubbles. For real man,
Rousseau had as little understanding as
Hegel. His man was the artificial product of
the retort, the homunculus of a political
alchemist, responsive to all the demands the
common will had prepared for him. He was
master neither of his own life nor of his
own thought. He felt, thought, acted, with
the mechanical precision of a machine put in
motion by a set of fixed ideas. If he lived
at all, it was only by the grace of a
political providence, so long as it found no
offence in his personal existence. For the
social contract served the purposes of the
contractors. Who wills the end wills also
the means, and these means are inseparable
from some danger, indeed, even from some
loss. He who wishes to preserve his life at
the expense of others must also be willing
to sacrifice it for them when that becomes
necessary. The citizen of a state is
therefore no longer the judge concerning the
danger to which he must expose himself at
the demand of the law, and when the prince
(state) says to him, "Thy death is necessary
for the state," he must die, since it is
only upon this condition that he has thus
far lived in security, and his life is no
longer merely a gift of nature, but is a
conditional grant from the state. [2]What
Rousseau calls freedom is the freedom to do
that which the state, the guardian of the
common will, prescribes for the citizen. It
is the tuning of all human feeling to one
note, the rejection of the rich diversity of
life, the mechanical fitting of all effort
to a designated pattern. To achieve this is
the high task of the legislator, who with
Rousseau plays the part of a political high
priest, a part vouchsafed to him by the
sanctity of his calling. It is his duty to
correct nature, to transform man into a
peculiar political creature no longer having
anything in common with his original status.
He who possesses the courage to give a
people institutions must be ready, as it
were, to change human nature, to transform
every individual, who by himself is a
complete and separate whole, into a part of
a greater whole from which this individual
in a certain sense receives his life and
character; to change the constitution of man
in order to strengthen it, and to substitute
for the corporeal and independent existence
which we all have received from nature a
merely partial and moral existence. In
short, he must take from man his native
individual powers and equip him with others
foreign to his nature, which he cannot
understand or use without the assistance of
others. The more completely these natural
powers are annihilated and destroyed and the
greater and more enduring are the ones
acquired, the more secure and the more
perfect is also the constitution. [3]These
words not only reveal the whole misanthropic
character of this doctrine, but bring out
more sharply the unbridgeable antithesis
between the original doctrines of liberalism
and the democracy of Rousseau and his
successors. Liberalism, which emanates from
the individual and sees in the organic
development of all man's natural capacities
and powers the essence of freedom, strives
for a condition that does not hinder this
natural course but leaves to the individual
in greatest possible measure his individual
life. To this thought Rousseau opposed the
equality principle of democracy, which
proclaims the equality of all citizens
before the law. And since he quite correctly
saw in the manifold and diverse factors in
human nature a danger to the smooth
functioning of his political machine, he
strove to supplant man's natural being by an
artificial substitute which was to endow the
citizen with the capacity of functioning in
rhythm with the machine. This uncanny idea,
aiming not merely at the complete
destruction of the personality but really
including also the complete abjuration of
all true humanity, became the first
assumption of a new reason of state, which
found its moral justification in the concept
of the communal will. Everything living
congeals into a dead scheme; all organic
function is replaced by the routine of the
machine; political technique devours all
individual lifejust as the technique of
modern economics devours the soul of the
producer. The most frightful fact is that we
are not here dealing with the unforeseen
results of a doctrine whose effects the
inventor himself could not anticipate. With
Rousseau everything happened consciously and
with inherent logical sequence. He speaks
about these things with the assurance of a
mathematician. The natural man existed for
him only until the conclusion of the social
contract. With that his time was fulfilled.
What has developed since then is but the
product of society become the statethe
political man. "The natural man is a whole
in himself; he is the numerical unit, the
absolute whole, which has relation y ship
only to itself and to its equals. Man, the
citizen, is only a partial unit, whose worth
lies in its relation to the whole which
constitutes the social body ". [4] It is one
of the most curious phenomena that the same
man who professed to despise culture and
preached the "return to nature," the man s
who for reasons of sentiment declined to
accept the thought structure of the
Encyclopaedists and whose writings released
among his contemporaries such a deep longing
for the simple natural lifeit is curious
that this same man, as a state theoretician,
violated human nature far more cruelly than
the cruelest despot and staked everything on
making it yield itself to the technique of
the law. It might be objected that
liberalism likewise rests on a fictitious
assumption, since it is difficult to
reconcile personal freedom with the existing
economic system. Without doubt the present
inequality of economic interests and the
resulting class conflicts in society are a
continued danger to the freedom of the
individual and lead inevitably to a steadily
increasing enslavement of the working
masses. However, the same is also true for
the famous "equality before the law," on
which democracy is based. Quite apart from
the fact that the possessing classes have
always found ways and means to corrupt the
administration of justice and make it
subservient to their ends, it is the rich
and the privileged who make the laws today
in all lands. But this is not the point: if
liberalism fails to function practically in
an economic system based on monopoly and
class distinction, it is not because it has
been mistaken in the correctness of its
fundamental point of view, but because the
undisturbed natural development of human
personality is impossible in a system which
has its root in the shameless exploitation
of the great mass of the members of society.
One cannot be free either politically or
personally so long as one is in the economic
servitude of another and cannot escape from
this condition. This was recognised long ago
by men like Godwin, Warren, Proudhon,
Bakunin, and many others who subsequently
reached the conviction that the dominion of
man over man will not disappear until there
is an end of the exploitation of man by man.
An "ideal state," however, such as Rousseau
strove to achieve, would never make men
free, even if they enjoyed the largest
possible degree of equality of economic
conditions. One creates no freedom by
seeking to take from man his natural
characteristics and to replace these by
foreign; ones in order that he may function
as the automaton of the common will. From
the equality of the barracks no breath of
freedom will ever blow. Rousseau's errorif
one can, indeed, speak of errorlies in the
starting point of his social theory. His
idea of a fictitious common will was the
Moloch which swallowed men. While the
political liberalism of Locke and
Montesquieu strove for a separation of the
functions of the state in order to limit the
power of government and to protect the
citizen from encroachment, Rousseau, on
principle, rejected this idea and scoffed at
philosophers who, considering the
sovereignty of the state, "cannot divide it
in principle, but wish to divide it in
relation to its object." The Jacobins,
consequently, acted quite in accordance with
his views when they abolished the partition
of powers laid down in the constitution and
transferred to the Convention, besides the
legislative, also the judicial function,
thus facilitating the transition to the
dictatorship of Robespierre and his
adherents. Likewise, the attitude of
liberalism toward "the native and
inalienable rights of men," as Locke states
them and as they later on found expression
in "the declaration of human rights,"
differs fundamentally from Rousseau's
democratic concept. To the advocates of
liberalism these rights constituted a
separate sphere which no government could
invade; it was the realm of man, which was
to be protected from any regimentation by
the state. Thus, they emphasised that there
existed something apart from the state, and
that this other was the most valuable and
permanent part of life. Quite different was
Rousseau's position and that of the
democratic movement in Europe founded on his
doctrine, except as it was softened by ideal
liberal viewsespecially in Spain and among
the South German democrats of 184849. Even
Rousseau spoke of "man's natural rights";
but in his view these rights had their root
entirely in the state, and were prescribed
for man by government. "One admits that by
the social contract one gives up only that
part of his power, his fortune and his
freedom which the community needs, but one
must also admit that only the sovereign can
determine the necessity of the part to be
yielded." [5] Hence, according to Rousseau,
natural right is by no means a domain of man
which lies outside the state's sphere of
function; but rather this right exists only
in the measure that the state finds it
unobjectionable, and its limits are at all
times subject to revision by the head of the
state. Consequently, a personal right does
not really exist. Whatever of private
freedom the individual possesses he has, so
to speak, as a loan from the state, which
can at any time be renounced as void and
withdrawn. It does not mean much when
Rousseau tries to sweeten this bitter pill
for the good citizen by stating: All
services which the citizen can render to the
state he owes to it as soon as the state
demands them On the other hand, the
sovereign cannot load the citizen with
chains useless to the community. Indeed, the
sovereign cannot even desire this, for
according to the laws of reason, just as
according to the laws of nature, nothing
happens without a cause.A worse sophistry --
inherently insincere, as is apparent at the
first glance -- designed to endow
self-evident despotism with the halo of
freedom can hardly be conceived. That
according to the law of reason nothing
happens without a cause is very comforting;
but it is most unfortunate that it is not
the citizen, but the head of the state, who
determines this cause. When Robespierre
delivered crowds of victims to the
executioner for treatment he surely did not
do so to give the good patriots practical
instruction concerning the invention of Dr.
Guillotine. Another cause animated him. He
had as the goal of all statecraft the ideal
structure of "the citizen of Geneva" in
view. And since republican virtue did not
spring up of itself among the lighthearted
Parisians, he tried to help it on with
Master Sanson's knife. If virtue will not
appear voluntarily, one must hasten it by
terror. The lawyer of Arras, therefore, had
a motive worthy of his goal, and to reach
this goal he took from man, in obedience to
the mandate of the common will, the first
and most important right," which includes
all othersthe right to live. Rousseau, who
revered Calvin as a great statesman and who
retained so much of his doctrinaire spirit,
in the construction of his "social contract"
undoubtedly had in view his native city,
Geneva. Only in a small community of the
type of the Swiss canton was it possible for
the people to vote for all the laws in
original assemblies and to regard the
administration merely as the executive organ
of the state. Rousseau recognised very
clearly that a form of government such as he
desired was not practical tor larger states.
He even intended to follow The Social
Contract with another work which was to deal
with this question, but he never got to it.
In his work, Considerations sur le
governement de Pologne, he therefore admits
delegates as representatives of the popular
will, but he assigns to them only the role
of functionaries in purely technical
matters. Apart from the common will they can
make effective no separate expression of
their own will. Besides, he strove to
mitigate the evils of representation by
frequent changes of the representative body.
When Rousseau, in his discussions of the
representative system, which contained many
good ideas, mentions with approval the
republican communities of antiquity, one
must by no means infer from this that the
ancient democracy was related to his own
views. Even the civil law of the Romans
recognised a whole series of personal
liberties untouched by the guardianship Of
the state. In the Greek cityrepublics,
moreover, such a splendour of divinity, so
also the lawgiver appears to the simple
citizen in the aureole of a terrestrial
providence which presides over the fate of
all. This belief is fatal not only to the
common man of the people, but also to the
chosen herald of the "common will." The very
part which he has been given to play causes
him to become constantly more estranged from
actual life. As his whole thought and action
are set on unison in all social matters, the
dead gearwork of the machine, obedient to
every pressure of the lever, gradually
becomes for him the symbol of all
perfection, behind which real life with its
endless variety completely disappears. For
this reason he feels every independent
movement, every impulse emanating from the
people themselves, as an antagonistic force
dangerous to his artificially drawn circle.
When this uncontrollable power which
transcends all calculations of the statesman
will not listen to reason, or even refuses
to yield due obedience to the lawgiver, it
must be silenced by force. This is done in
the name of the "higher interests," which
are always in question when something
happens outside the range of bureaucratic
habits. One feels oneself the chosen
guardian of these higher interests, the
living incarnation of that metaphysical
common will, which has its uncanny existence
in Rousseau's brain. In trying to harmonise
all manifestations of social life with the
tune of the machine, the lawgiver gradually
becomes a machine. The man Robespierre once
spoke great words against the institution of
capital punishment; the dictator Robespierre
made the guillotine "the altar of the
fatherland," made it a means of purification
of patriot virtue. In reality the men of the
Convention were not the inventors of
political centralisation. They only
continued after their fashion what the
monarchy had left to them as an heirloom and
developed to the utmost the tendency toward
national unification. The French monarchy
had since the time of Philip the Fair left
no means untried for removing opposing
forces in order to establish the political
unity of the country under the banner of
absolute monarchy. In doing this the
supporters of royal power were not
particular as to ways and means; treason,
murder, forgery of documents, and other
crimes were quite acceptable for them, if
they promised success. The reigns of Charles
V, Charles VII, Louis XI, Francis I, Henry
II, are the most prominent milestones in the
development of unlimited monarchy, which,
after the preliminary labors of Mazarin and
Richelieu, shone in fullest glory under
Louis XIV. This splendour of the "Sun King"
filled all lands. An army of venal
sycophants, poetasters, artists, living by
the favour of the court, had as their
special task to cause the fame of the
megalomaniac despot to glow with brightest
colours. French was spoken in all courts.
All strove to be intellectually brilliant
according to Parisian fashion and imitated
French court manners and ceremonies. The
most unimportant little despot in Europe was
consumed by the sole aim of imitating
Versailles, at least in miniature. Small
wonder that a ruler entirely unaffected by
any inferiority complex considered himself a
demigod and was intoxicated by his own
magnificence. But this blind devotion to the
king's person gradually intoxicated the
whole "nation," which venerated itself in
the person of the king. As Gobineau
significantly remarks: France became in its
own eyes the Sun Nation. The universe became
a planetary system in which France, at least
in its own opinion, had the first place.
With other peoples it could have nothing in
common except to shed light on them at its
pleasure, for it was quite convinced that
all were groping in the fog of densest
darkness. France, however, was France, and
as, in its view, all the rest of the world
daily sank into a joyless distance, it
gradually satisfied itself more and more
with veritable Chinese ideas. Its vanity
became a Chinese Great Wall. [6]The men of
the Convention, therefore, not only took
over the idea of political centralisation
from the monarchy, but the cult which they
carried on by means of the nation likewise
had there its beginning. It is true,
however, that in the age of Louis XIV the
nation was considered to consist only of the
privileged classes, the nobility, the
clergy, the prosperous citizens; the great
masses of the peasants and the city workers
did not count. It is related that Bonaparte,
a few days before the coup d'etat had a talk
with the Abbe Sieyesthen one of the five
members of the Directory and on this
occasion flung these words at the clever
theologian who had weathered successfully
all the storms of the revolution: "I have
created the Great Nation!" Whereupon Sieyes
smilingly replied: "Yes, because we had
first created the Nation." The clever Abbe
was right, and spoke with greater authority
than Bonaparte. The nation had first to be
born, or, as Sieyes so significantly said,
to be created, before it could become great.
It is significant that it was Sieyes who at
the beginning of the revolution gave the
concept of the nation its modern meaning. In
his essay, What Is the Third Estate? he
raised and answered three questions of
paramount importance: "What is the third
estate? Everything. What has it been up to
now in the political order of things?Nothing.
What will it become? Something." But in
order that the third estate might become
something entirely new, suitable political
conditions had first to be created in
France. The bourgeoisie could become
dominant only if the socalled "Estates
General" was replaced by a national assembly
based on a constitution. Hence the political
unification of the nation was the first
demand of the beginning revolution looking
toward the dissolution of the Estates. The
third estate felt itself ready, and Laclos
declared in the Deliberations, to which the
Duke of Orleans had only lent his name: "The
Third Estate; that is the nation!" In his
essay Sieyes has described the nation as a
"community of united individuals subject to
the same law and represented by the same
legislative body." But, influenced by the
ideas of Rousseau, he extended the meaning
of this purely technical definition and made
the nation the original basis of all
political and social institutions. Thus the
nation became the actual embodiment of the
common will in Rousseau's sense: "Her will
is always lawful, for she is herself the
embodiment of the law." From this concept
all other conclusions followed quite
obviously. If the nation was the embodiment
of the common will, then it had to be in its
very nature one and indivisible. In this
case, however, the national representative
assembly had also to be one and indivisible,
for it alone had the sacred task of
interpreting the nation's will and making it
intelligible to the citizens. Against the
nation all separate efforts of the estates
were futile; nothing could endure beside it,
not even the separate organization of the
church. Thus Mirabeau declared in the
Assembly a few days after the memorable
night of August 4th: No national law has
instituted the clergy as a permanent body in
the state. No law has deprived the nation of
the right to investigate whether the
servants of religion should form a political
corporation existing of itself and capable
of acquiring and possessing. Could simple
citizens by giving their possessions to the
clergy and the clergy by receiving them give
them the right to constitute themselves a
separate order within the state? Could they
rob the nation of the right to dissolve it?
All the members of the clergy are merely
officials of the state. The service of the
clergy is a public function, just as the
official and the soldier, so also the
priest, is a servant of the nation.Not
without reason had the king's brother, the
Comte d'Artois, with the rest of the royal
princes, in his Memoirs presentes au Roi,
etc., protested against the new role which
had been assigned to the nation and warned
the king that his approval of such ideas
would inevitably lead to the destruction of
the monarchy and the church, and of all
privileges. Indeed, the practical
consequences of this new concept were too
plain to be misunderstood. If the nation as
representative of the communal will stood
above all and everything, then the king was
nothing more than the highest official of
the national state and the time was past,
once and for all, when a "most Christian
king" could say with Louis XIV: "The nation
constitutes in France no corporation; it
exists exclusively in the person of the
king." The court recognised very clearly the
danger that hung over it and aroused itself
to make some threatening gestures; but it
was already too late. On the 16th of June,
1789, the representatives of the third
estate, who had been joined by the lower
clergy, on the motion of Abbe Sieyes
declared themselves to be the National
Assembly, with the argument that they
constituted 96 percent of the nation anyhow,
and that the other 4 percent were at any
time free to join them. The storming of the
Bastille and the march to Versailles soon
gave this declaration the necessary
revolutionary emphasis. With that the die
was cast. An old faith was buried, giving
place to a new. The "sovereignty of the
king" had to strike its flag before the
"sovereignty of the nation." The modern
state was lifted from the baptismal font and
anointed with the democratic oilfitted to
achieve the importance assigned to it in the
history of the modern era in Europe. The
situation was still not fully clarified,
however, for in the National Assembly itself
there was an influential section which
recognised Mirabeau as its leader and with
him advocated a socalled "kingdom of the
people." These sought to rescue as much of
the royal sovereignty as was possible under
the circumstances. This became especially
noticeable in the discussions concerning the
formulation of "human and civil rights,"
where the disciples of Montesquieu and
Rousseau stood often in sharp opposition. If
the former could record a success when a
majority of the Assembly declared for the
representative system and the partition of
powers, then the adherents of Rousseau had
their success when the third article in the
Declaration announced: "The principle of all
sovereignty rests by its very nature in the
nation. No corporation and no individual can
exercise an authority which does not openly
emanate from it." It was true that the great
masses of the people had little
understanding of these differences of
opinion in the bosom of the National
Assembly; just as they have always been
indifferent to the details of political
theories ant programs. In this instance as
in most, events themselves, especially the
ever more apparent treachery of the court,
contributed much more to the final solution
of the question than the dry dogmatism of
Rousseau's disciples. Anyway, the slogan,
"the sovereignty of the nation" was short
and impressive. Particularly, it brought the
contrast between the new order of things and
the old into the foreground of all
discussion in revolutionary times a matter
of great importance. After the royal
family's unsuccessful attempt at flight, the
internal situation became increasingly
acute, until finally the storming of the
Tuileries put an end to all half measures
and the people's representatives entered
seriously upon the discussion of the
abolition of royalty. Manuel stated the
whole problem in one sentence "It is not
enough to have declared the dominance of the
one and only true sovereign, the nation. We
must also free it from the rivalry of the
false sovereign, the king." And the Abbe
Gregoire supported him, describing the
dynasty as "generations living on human
flesh," and declaring: "The friends of
freedom must finally be given full security.
We must destroy this talisman whose magic
power can still darken the minds of many
men. I demand the abolition of royalty by a
solemn law." The grim Abbe was not wrong; as
a theologian he knew how intimately religion
and politics are united. Of course the old
talisman had to be broken in order that the
simpleminded should no longer be led into
temptation. But this could be done only by
transferring its magic influence to another
idol better fitted to man's need of faith
and likely in its practical effects to prove
stronger than the dying "divine right" of
kings. In the fight against absolutism the
doctrine of the "common will" which found
its expression in the "sovereignty of the
people" proved a weapon of powerful
revolutionary import. For that very reason
we all too often forget that the great
revolution introduced a new phase of religio-political
dependence whose spiritual roots have by no
means dried up. By surrounding the abstract
concepts of the "Fatherland" and the
"Nation" with a mystical aureole it created
a new faith which could again work wonders.
The old regime was no longer capable of
miracles, for the atmosphere of the divine
will which once surrounded it had lost its
attraction and could no longer set the heart
aglow with religious fervour. The
politically organised nation, however, was a
new god whose magic powers were still
unspent. Over his temple shone the
promise-filled words, "Liberty, Equality,
Fraternity," arousing in men the belief that
the coming order was to bring them
salvation. To this divinity France
sacrificed the blood of her sons, her
economic interests, her all. This new faith
resounding in the souls of her citizens
filled them with an enthusiasm which worked
greater wonders than the best strategy of
her generals. The religious character of
this powerful movement, under whose onset
the old Europe fell in ruins, showed its
full force only when royalty was totally
abolished and the "sovereignty of the
nation" no longer had a rival which looked
back to the old traditions. The French
historian, Mathiez, has demonstrated the
details of this new cult impressively and
has shown how in many of its manifestations
it leans on Catholicism. [7] In an address
of one of the Jacobin clubs to the mother
society in Paris occurs the statement: "The
Frenchman has no other divinity but the
nation, the fatherland!" The fatherland,
however, was "the new king with seven
hundred and fortynine heads," as Proudhon
called itthe new state, which served the
nation as makeshift. For Jacobinism the
state became the new national Providence,
hence its fanatical zeal for the "one and
indivisible Republic." For it would not do
for others to dabble in the trade of the new
Providence. Declared Danton, in September,
I793, from the rostrum of the Convention:
They say that there are persons among us who
are striving to dismember France. Let us
eliminate these inharmonious ideas by
proclaiming the death penalty for their
originators. France must be an indivisible
whole. There must be unity of
representation. The citizens of Marseilles
wish to grasp the hands of the citizens of
Dunkirk. I demand the death penalty for
those who would destroy the unity of France,
and I move the Convention that we declare as
the foundation of government unity of
representation and
administration.Legislation, army, public
education, press, clubs, assembliesall must
serve to perfect the spiritual drill of the
citizens, to make every brain conform to the
new political religion. No exception was
made of any movement, not even that of the
Girondists, who had been reviled as
federalists simply because their opponents
knew such an accusation would arouse the
patriots most violently against them. The
Girondists had contributed to the
deification of the nation no less than the
men of the Mountain; had not one of their
bestknown leaders, Isnard, given expression
to this sentiment?"The French have become
the elect people of the earth. Let us be
concerned that their attitude shall justify
their new destiny!" There was already in the
minds of the representatives of "la grande
nation" a premonition of Napoleon's
victories. A new priesthood had put in its
appearancethe modern popular assembly. To it
had been assigned the task of transmitting
the "will of the nation" to the people, just
as the earlier priests had transmitted to
them "the will of God." Undoubtedly the
revolution had swept away a rotten social
order with an iron broom and given the
people of Europe many glimpses of light for
the future; but in the political field its
results were, in spite of all revolutionary
phraseology, entirely reactionary. It had
strengthened the power idea anew, infused
new life into prostrate authority, and
chained man's will to freedom to a new
religious dogma, against which it was sure
to break its young wings. The absolutism of
royalty had fallen; but only to give place
to a new absolutism even more implacable
than the "divine right" of monarchy. The
absolute principle of monarchy lay outside
the citizen's sphere of activity, and was
supported solely by the "grace of God," to
whose will it allegedly gave expression. The
absolute principle of the nation, however,
made the least of mortals a cobearer of the
common will, even while it denied him the
right to interpret this according to his own
understanding. Imbued by this thought every
citizen from now on forged his own link in
the chain of dependence which formerly some
other had forged for him. The sovereignty of
the nation steered everyone into the same
path, absorbed every individual
consideration, and replaced personal freedom
by equality before the law. Not without
reason were Moses' tables of the law set up
in the Convention as a symbol of the
national will. Not without reason there hung
upon the walls of the Assembly the fasces
and ax of the lictors as the emblem of the
One and Indivisible Republic. Thus was the
man sacrificed to the citizen, individual
reason to the alleged will of the nation.
When the leading men of the revolution,
animated by Rousseau's spirit, strove to
destroy all natural associations in which
the needs and impulses of men sought
expression, they destroyed the root of all
true association, transformed the people
into the mob, and introduced that fateful
process of social uprooting which was later
speeded up and sharpened by the growing
development of capitalistic economy. Just as
the "will of God" has always been the will
of the priests who transmitted it and
interpreted it to the people, so the "will
of the nation" could be only the will of
those who happened to have the reigns of
public power in their hands and were,
consequently, in a position to transmit and
interpret the "common will" in their own
way. This phenomenon need not necessarily be
traced to inherent hypocrisy. Much more
reasonably can we in this instance speak of
"deceived deceivers"; for the more deeply
the enunciators of the national will are
convinced of the sacredness of their
mission, the more disastrous are the results
springing from their inherent honesty. There
is deep significance in Sorel's remark:
"Robespierre took his part seriously, but
his part was an artificial one." In the name
of the nation the Convention outlawed the
Girondists and sent their leaders to the
scaffold; in the name of the nation
Robespierre with Danton's help removed the
Hebertists and the so-called "enrages" in
the name of the nation Robespierre and
SaintJust made the Dantonists "sneeze into
the sack"; in the name of the nation the men
of Thermidor removed Robespierre and his
adherents; in the name of the nation
Bonaparte made himself Emperor of the
French. Vergniaud maintained that the
revolution was "a Saturn who swallowed his
own children." This could be said with much
more reason of the mystical principle of the
sovereignty of the nation, whose priests
constantly brought new sacrifices to it. In
fact, the nation became a Moloch which could
never be satisfied. Just as with all gods,
here, too, religious veneration led to its
inevitable result: the nation all, man
nothing! Everything appertaining to the
nation took on a sacred character. In the
smallest villages altars were erected to the
fatherland and sacrifices were offered. The
holidays of the patriots came to have the
character of religious feasts. There were
hymns, prayers, sacred symbols, solemn
processions, patriotic relics, shrines of
pilgrimage all to proclaim the glory of the
fatherland. From now on the "glory of the
nation" was spoken of as formerly the "glory
of God." One deputy solemnly called the
Declaration of the Rights of Man the
"catechism of the nation." The Contrat
Social of Rousseau became the "Bible of
Liberty." Enthusiastic believers compared
the Mountain of the Convention with Mount
Sinai, on which Moses received the sacred
tablets of the law. The Marseillaise became
the Te Deum of the new religion. An
intoxication of belief had overspread the
land. Every critical consideration was
submerged in the flood of feeling. On
November 5, 1793, Marie Joseph Chenier,
brother of the unhappy poet, Andre Chenier,
said to the assembled Convention: If you
have freed yourselves from all prejudices to
prove yourselves the more worthy of the
French nation, whose representatives you
are, then you know how on the ruins of the
dethroned superstitions can be founded the
one natural religion, having neither sects
nor mysteries. Her preachers are our
legislators, her priests our executive
officers of the state. In the temple of this
religion humanity will offer incense only on
the altar of our country, the mother of us
all and our divinity.In the sultry
atmosphere of this new faith modern
nationalism was born, and became the
religion of the democratic state. And the
more deeply the citizen venerated his own
nation, the wider became the abyss which
separated it from all other nations, the
more contemptuously he looked upon all who
were not so fortunate as to be of the elect.
It is only a step from the "nation" to the
"Great Nation" and that not alone in France.
The new religion had not only its own
ritual, its inviolable dogmas, its
holymission, but also the terrible orthodoxy
characteristic of all dogmatism, which will
permit no opinion but the one opinion to
find voice; for the will of the nation is
the revelation of God, intolerant of all
doubt. He who dares to doubt for all that,
and to pursue considerations contrary to the
expression of the national will, is a social
leper and must be weeded out from the
communion of the faithful. Saintlust
proclaimed gloomily before the Convention:
One dare not hope that things will improve
so long as one foe of Freedom breathes. Not
only the traitors, but also the lukewarm and
the indifferent, everyone who takes no part
in the republic and moves no finger for it.
After the French people has announced its
will everything which is contrary to its
will stands outside the sovereignty of the
nation; and who stands outside the sovereign
is his enemy.The young fanatic who had such
a strong influence on Robespierre did not
leave open to doubt what he meant by this
enmity"One must rule those with iron whom
one cannot rule with justice." But one could
not rule with justice over men who could see
the nation's will otherwise than as
Robespierre and the Jacobins explained it.
Hence, one must needs resort to iron. The
sharp logic of the guillotine could hardly
be justified more explicitly. This fanatic
logic of SaintJust was but the inevitable
result of his absolute faith in his point of
view. Every absolutism is based on fixed
norms, and must for that reason act as the
sworn enemy of any social development which
opens new outlooks on life and calls new
forms of the community into being. Behind
every absolutist idea grins the mask of the
inquisitor and the judge of heretics. The
sovereignty of the nation means tyranny as
surely as does the sovereignty of God or
that of the king. If formerly opposition to
the sacred person of the monarch was the
most abominable of all crimes, so now any
opposition to the sacred majesty of the
nation became the sin against the Holy Ghost
of the common will. In both instances, the
hangman was the executive instrument of a
despotic power which felt called upon to
guard the dead dogma. Before its soulless
cruelty every creative thought had to
founder, every human feeling bleed to death.
Robespierre, of whom Condorcet maintains
that he had "neither a thought in his brain
nor a feeling in his heart," was the man of
the dead formula. In place of a soul he had
his "principles." Preferably, he would have
founded the whole republic on the single
formula of virtue. But this virtue did not
have root in the personal righteousness of
the people; it was a bloodless phantom
hovering over men like the spirit of God
hovering over creation. Nothing is more
cruel and heartless than virtue, and most
cruel and heartless is that abstract virtue
which is not founded upon a living need, but
has its roots in "principles" and must be
continually protected by chemical means from
becoming motheaten. Although Jacobinism had
overthrown monarchy, it became fanatically
enamoured of the monarchic idea, which it
strengthened greatly by anchoring it to the
political theology of Rousseau. Rousseau's
doctrine culminated in the complete merging
of man in "the higher necessity" of a
metaphysical idea. Jacobinism had undertaken
the task of transmuting this monstrous
doctrine into life and quite logically had
reached the dictatorship of the guillotine;
which in turn smoothed the way for the saber
dictatorship of General Bonaparte who, on
his part, risked everything in order to
develop this new state idea to its highest
perfection. Man a machinenot in the sense of
La Mettrie, but as the end product of a
political religion which undertook to shape
everything human according to the same
pattern, and in the name of equality raised
conformity to a principle. Napoleon, the
laughing heir of the great revolution, who
had taken over from the Jacobins the
mandevouring machine of the centralised
state and the doctrine of the will of the
nation, attempted to develop the state
institutions into a flawless system in which
accident should have no place. What he
needed was not men, but chessmen, who would
obey every turn of his whim and
unconditionally submit to that "higher
necessity", whose executive instruments they
felt themselves to be. Men in the ordinary
sense were not useable for this; only
citizens, parts of the machine, members of
the state. "Thought is the ruler's chief
enemy", Napoleon once said, and this was no
chance figure of speech; he understood the
truth of the words in their deepest meaning.
What he needed was not men who would think,
but men who have their thinking done for
them, men who offer themselves up when
"destiny" speaks. Napoleon dreamed of a
state in which, above all, there existed no
distinction between the civil and the
military power: the whole nation an army,
every citizen a soldier. Industry,
agriculture, administration, were only
conceived as parts of this mighty state body
which, divided into regiments and commanded
by officers, would obey the slightest
pressure of the imperial will without
friction, without resistance. The
transmutation of the "Great Nation" into a
gigantic unit in which the independent
activity of the individual no longer had
room; which worked with the exactness of a
machine and, throbbing with the dead rhythm
of its own motion, unfeelingly obeyed the
will of him who had set it in motionthis was
Napoleon's political aim. And with iron
persistency he pursued it and tried to give
it life. Quite obsessed by this delusion, he
strove to exclude every possibility which
might lead to the formation of an
independent opinion. Hence, his bitter fight
against the press and all other means of
expressing public thought. He said: "The
printing press is an arsenal which must not
be made available to the generality. Books
must only be printed by persons who possess
the confidence of the government." In the
brain of this terrible man everything was
transformed into figures; only numbers
decide; statistics become the foundation of
the new statecraft. The emperor demanded of
his counsellors not only an, exact statement
and record of all material and technical
resources of the whole country, he also
demanded that "statistics of morals" should
be kept, in order that he might at all times
be informed of the most fl secret agitations
among his subjects. And Fouche, that
uncanny, spectre-like snooper, who saw with
a thousand eyes and heard with a thousand
ears, whose soul was just as icy as that of
his master, became the statistician of
"public morals," which he registered by
police methods, being quite well aware that
his own movements also were watched by
unknown spies and recorded in a separate
register. That Napoleon could never quite
attain the last aim of his internal policy,
that all his apparatus of government was
wrecked again and again on men, was probably
the bitterest pang of his powerloving soul,
the great tragedy of his monstrous life,
which even at St. Helena still burned within
him. But the mad idea he pursued did not die
with him It is even today the basis of the
will to power, which appears wherever the
love of men has died and sacrifices
pulsating life to the shadowy, pale, phantom
forms of tyrannical lust. For all power is
loveless, is inhuman in the nature of its
being. It changes the hearts of the powerful
into wolfdens of hate and cold contempt for
humanity, chokes all human emotion and
causes the despot to see his fellow man only
as an abstract number to be used in
calculating the execution of his plans.
Napoleon hated freedom on principle, as does
every tyrant who has become clearly aware of
the nature of power. But he also knew the
price he had to pay for this, knew very well
that to master mankind he must smother the
man hidden in himself. It is significant
that he says of himself: I love power as an
artist, as a violinist loves his violin. I
love it in order to coax from it tones,
melodies, harmonies." It is significant that
this same man, who almost as a child was
already evolving in his brain plans for
power, uttered in early youth the ominous
words: "I find that love is detrimental to
society and to the personal happiness of
man. If the gods were to free the world from
love, it would be the greatest of blessings.
This feeling never left him, and when in
later years he looked back on the separate
phases of his life, there remained for him
only this comfortless knowledge: There are
only two levers which move men, fear and
selfinterest. Lone is a stupid illusion, be
assured of it. Friendship is an empty word.
I love no one, not even my brothers possibly
Joseph a little, from habit and because he
is older than I. And I love Duroc; but why?
Because his character pleases me. He is
earnest and resolute, and I believe the
fellow has never shed a tear. I, for my
part, know that I have no true friends.How
empty this heart must have been which
through all the years pursued a phantom and
was animated by only one desireto rule. To
this madness he sacrificed the bodies and
souls of men after having first attempted to
make their spirits fit into the dead
mechanism of a political machine. But at
last it was made clear to him that the age
of the automatons had not yet arrived. Only
a man whose soul was a desert could say: "A
man like me cares nothing for the lives of
millions of men." Napoleon asserted that he
despised men and his uncritical admirers
have rated this almost as a merit. He may in
individual cases have found justification
enough for it; for it is by no means the men
of highest worth who crowd around the
powerful. But if the matter is pursued more
deeply one gets the impression that his
demonstratively displayed contempt of men is
to a large part pretence, intended to
impress his contemporaries and posterity
with the brilliance of his own achievements.
For this apparent misanthrope was a
firstclass actor to whom the judgment of
posterity was not a matter of indifference,
who left no means untried to influence the
opinion of future generations, who did not
even shrink from the falsification of
well-known facts in order to achieve this
end. It was not inner disgust which
separated him from men, but his unfathomable
egotism, which knew no scruples nor shrank
from any lies, from any villainy, any
dishonournot from the meanest of crimesin
order to make himself dominant. Emerson
rightly remarks: "Bonaparte was in a quite
unusual degree devoid of every highhearted
emotion.... He did not even possess the
merit of common truthfulness and honesty."
And in another place in his essay on
Napoleon he says: "His whole existence was
an experiment under the best possible
conditions to show of what intellect
divorced from conscience is capable." Only
as issuing from the disconsolate inner state
of a man in whom his own greed for glory had
utterly destroyed all social feeling are
these words of Napoleon understandable: "The
savage, like the civilised man, needs a lord
and master, a sorcerer who keeps his fancy
in check, subjects him to strict discipline,
chains him, prevents his biting at the wrong
time, clubs him, leads him to the chase.
Obedience is his destiny; he deserves
nothing better and has no rights." But this
heartless cynic, who in his youth had
intoxicated himself with the Contrat Social,
recognised to the uttermost the whole
disastrous significance of this new religion
on which in the last analysis his rule was
founded. Thus, in one of those unguarded
moments of complete truthfulness so rare
with him, he allowed himself to be enticed
into the statement: "Your Rousseau is a
madman who has led us to this condition!"
And on another occasion, somewhat pensively,
"The future will show whether it had not
been better for the world's peace if neither
Rousseau nor I had ever lived." [1] Jean
Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract, or,
The Principles of State Right. Bk 1, Chap.
VII. [2] The Social Contract. Bk. 11, Chap.
V. [3] The Social Contract. Book 11, Chap.
Vll. [4] Rousseau, Emile. First Book. [5]
The Social Contract. Bk. 11, Chap. IV. [6]
From a manuscript uncompleted at his death.
German translation by Rudolf Schlosser in "Frankreichs
Schicksal im Jahre 1870." S. 34
Reclam-Verlag. [7] A. Mathiez; "Les Origines
des Cultes Revolutionaires," Paris, 1904.
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