Essay
The Social Organism (1860)
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This essay was first published in
The Westminster Review for January 1860 and was reprinted in
Spencer's Essays: Scientific, Political and Speculative (London
and New York, 1892, in three volumes).
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9.0 |
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Sir James Macintosh got great credit for the saying, that
"constitutions are not made, but grow". In our day, the
most significant thing about this saying is, that it was ever
thought so significant. As from the surprise displayed by a man at
some familiar fact, you may judge of his general culture; so from
the admiration which an age accords to a new thought, its average
degree of enlightenment may be inferred. That this apophthegm of
Macintosh should have been quoted and requoted as it has, shows
how profound has been the ignorance of social science. A small ray
of truth has seemed brilliant, as a distant rushlight looks like a
star in the surrounding darkness.
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9.1 |
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Such a conception could not, indeed, fail to be startling when
let fall in the midst of a system of thought to which it was
utterly alien. Universally in Macintosh's day, things were
explained on the hypothesis of manufacture, rather than that of
growth; as indeed they are, by the majority, in our own day. It
was held that the planets were severally projected round the Sun
from the Creator's hand, with just the velocity required to
balance the Sun's attraction. The formation of the Earth, the
separation of sea from land, the production of animals, were
mechanical works from which God rested as a labourer rests. Man
was supposed to be moulded after a manner somewhat akin to that in
which a modeller makes a clay-figure. And of course, in harmony
with such ideas, societies were tacitly assumed to be arranged
thus or thus by direct interposition of Providence; or by the
regulations of law-makers; or by both.
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9.2 |
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Yet that societies are not artificially put together, is a
truth so manifest, that it seems wonderful men should ever have
overlooked it. Perhaps nothing more clearly shows the small value
of historical studies, as they have been commonly pursued. You
need but to look at the changes going on around, or observe social
organization in its leading traits, to see that these are neither
supernatural, nor are determined by the wills of individual men,
as by implication the older historians teach; but are consequent
on general natural causes. The one case of the division of labour
suffices to prove this. It has not been by command of any ruler
that some men have become manufacturers, while others have
remained cultivators of the soil. In Lancashire, millions have
devoted themselves to the making of cotton-fabrics; in Yorkshire,
another million lives by producing woollens; and the pottery of
Staffordshire, the cutlery of Sheffield, the hardware of
Birmingham, severally occupy their hundreds of thousands. These
are large facts in the structure of English society; but we can
ascribe them neither to miracle, nor to legislation. It is not by
"the hero as king," any more than by "collective
wisdom," that men have been segregated into producers,
wholesale distributors, and retail distributors. Our industrial
organization, from its main outlines down to its minutest details,
has become what it is, not simply without legislative guidance,
but, to a considerable extent, in spite of legislative hindrances.
It has arisen under the pressure of human wants and resulting
activities. While each citizen has been pursuing his individual
welfare, and none taking thought about division of labour, or
conscious of the need of it, division of labour has yet been ever
becoming more complete. It has been doing this slowly and
silently: few having observed it until quite modern times. By
steps so small, that year after year the industrial arrangements
have seemed just what they were before—by changes as insensible
as those through which a seed passes into a tree; society has
become the complex body of mutually-dependent workers we now see.
And this economic organization, mark, is the all-essential
organization. Through the combination thus spontaneously evolved,
every citizen is supplied with daily necessaries; while he yields
some product or aid to others. That we are severally alive today,
we owe to the regular working of this combination during the past
week; and could it be suddenly abolished, multitudes would be dead
before another week ended. If these most conspicuous and vital
arrangements of our social structure have arisen not by the
devising of any one, but through the individual efforts of
citizens to satisfy their own wants; we may be tolerably certain
that the less important arrangements have similarly arisen.
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9.3 |
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"But surely," it will be said, "the social
changes directly produced by law, cannot be classed as spontaneous
growths. When parliaments or kings order this or that thing to be
done, and appoint officials to do it, the process is clearly
artificial; and society to this extent becomes a manufacture
rather than a growth." No, not even these changes are
exceptions, if they be real and permanent changes. The true
sources of such changes lie deeper than the acts of legislators.
To take first the simplest instance. We all know that the
enactments of representative governments ultimately depend on the
national will: they may for a time be out of harmony with it, but
eventually they must conform to it. And to say that the national
will finally determines them, is to say that they result from the
average of individual desires; or, in other words—from the
average of individual natures. A law so initiated, therefore,
really grows out of the popular character. In the case of a
Government representing a dominant class, the same thing holds,
though not so manifestly. For the very existence of a class
monopolizing all power, is due to certain sentiments in the
commonalty. Without the feeling of loyalty on the part of
retainers, a feudal system could not exist. We see in the protest
of the Highlanders against the abolition of heritable
jurisdictions, that they preferred that kind of local rule. And if
to the popular nature must be ascribed the growth of an
irresponsible ruling class; then to the popular nature must be
ascribed the social arrangements which that class creates in the
pursuit of its own ends. Even where the Government is despotic,
the doctrine still holds. The character of the people is, as
before, the original source of this political form; and, as we
have abundant proof, other forms suddenly created will not act,
but rapidly retrograde to the old form. Moreover, such regulations
as a despot makes, if really operative, are so because of their
fitness to the social state. His acts being very much swayed by
general opinion—by precedent, by the feeling of his nobles, his
priesthood, his army—are in part immediate results of the
national character; and when they are out of harmony with the
national character, they are soon practically abrogated. The
failure of Cromwell permanently to establish a new social
condition, and the rapid revival of suppressed institutions and
practices after his death, show how powerless is a monarch to
change the type of society he governs. He may disturb, he may
retard, or he may aid the natural process of organization; but the
general course of this process is beyond his control. Nay, more
than this is true. Those who regard the histories of societies as
the histories of their great men, and think that these great men
shape the fates of their societies, overlook the truth that such
great men are the products of their societies. Without certain
antecedents—without a certain average national character, they
neither could have been generated nor could have had the culture
which formed them. If their society is to some extent re-moulded
by them, they were, both before and after birth, moulded by their
society—were the results of all those influences which fostered
the ancestral character they inherited, and gave their own early
bias, their creed, morals, knowledge, aspirations. So that such
social changes as are immediately traceable to individuals of
unusual power, are still remotely traceable to the social causes
which produced these individuals; and hence, from the highest
point of view, such social changes also, are parts of the general
developmental process.
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9.4 |
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Thus that which is so obviously true of the industrial
structure of society, is true of its whole structure. The fact
that "constitutions are not made, but grow," is simply a
fragment of the much larger fact, that under all its aspects and
through all its ramifications, society is a growth and not a
manufacture.
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9.5 |
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A perception that there exists some analogy between the body
politic and a living individual body, was early reached; and has
from time to time re-appeared in literature. But this perception
was necessarily vague and more or less fanciful. In the absence of
physiological science, and especially of those comprehensive
generalizations which it has but lately reached, it was impossible
to discern the real parallelisms.
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9.6 |
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The central idea of Plato's model Republic, is the
correspondence between the parts of a society and the faculties of
the human mind. Classifying these faculties under the heads of
Reason, Will, and Passion, he classifies the members of his ideal
society under what he regards as three analogous heads:—councillors,
who are to exercise government; military or executive, who are to
fulfil their behests; and the commonalty, bent on gain and selfish
gratification. In other words, the ruler, the warrior, and the
craftsman, are, according to him, the analogues of our reflective,
volitional, and emotional powers. Now even were there truth in the
implied assumption of a parallelism between the structure of a
society and that of a man, this classification would be
indefensible. It might more truly be contended that, as the
military power obeys the commands of the Government, it is the
Government which answers to the Will; while the military power is
simply an agency set in motion by it. Or, again, it might be
contended that whereas the Will is a product of predominant
desires, to which the Reason serves merely as an eye, it is the
craftsmen, who, according to the alleged analogy, ought to be the
moving power of the warriors.
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9.7 |
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Hobbes sought to establish a still more definite parallelism:
not, however, between a society and the human mind, but between a
society and the human body. In the introduction to the work in
which he develops this conception, he says:
For by art is created that great LEVIATHAN called a
COMMONWEALTH, or STATE, in Latin CIVITAS, which is but an
artificial man; though of greater stature and strength than the
natural, for whose protection and defence it was intended, and
in which the sovereignty is an artificial soul, as
giving life and motion to the whole body; the magistrates
and other officers of judicature and execution,
artificial joints; reward and punishment, by
which, fastened to the seat of the sovereignty, every joint and
member is moved to perform his duty, are the nerves, that
do the same in the body natural; the wealth and riches
of all the particular members are the strength; salus populi,
the people's safety, its business; counsellors, by
whom all things needful for it to know are suggested unto it,
are the memory; equity and laws an artificial reason
and will; concord, health; sedition, sickness; and civil
war, death.
And Hobbes carries this comparison so far as actually to give a
drawing of the Leviathan—a vast human-shaped figure, whose body
and limbs are made up of multitudes of men. Just noting that these
different analogies asserted by Plato and Hobbes serve to cancel
each other (being, as they are, so completely at variance), we may
say that on the whole those of Hobbes are the more plausible. But
they are full of inconsistencies. If the sovereignty is the soul
of the body-politic, how can it be that magistrates, who are a
kind of deputy-sovereigns, should be comparable to joints?
Or, again, how can the three mental functions, memory, reason, and
will, be severally analogous, the first to counsellors, who are a
class of public officers, and the other two to equity and laws,
which are not classes of officers, but abstractions? Or, once
more, if magistrates are the artificial joints of society, how can
reward and punishment be its nerves? Its nerves must surely be
some class of persons. Reward and punishment must in societies, as
in individuals, be conditions of the nerves, and not the
nerves themselves.
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9.8 |
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But the chief errors of these comparisons made by Plato and
Hobbes, lie much deeper. Both thinkers assume that the
organization of a society is comparable, not simply to the
organization of a living body in general, but to the organization
of the human body in particular. There is no warrant whatever for
assuming this. It is in no way implied by the evidence; and is
simply one of those fancies which we commonly find mixed up with
the truths of early speculation. Still more erroneous are the two
conceptions in this, that they construe a society as an artificial
structure. Plato's model republic—his ideal of a healthful
body-politic—is to be consciously put together by men, just as a
watch might be; and Plato manifestly thinks of societies in
general as thus originated. Quite specifically does Hobbes express
a like view. "For by art," he says, "is
created that great LEVIATHAN called a COMMONWEALTH." And he
even goes so far as to compare the supposed social contract, from
which a society suddenly originates, to the creation of a man by
the divine fiat. Thus they both fall into the extreme
inconsistency of considering a community as similar in structure
to a human being, and yet as produced in the same way as an
artificial mechanism—in nature, an organism; in history, a
machine.
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9.9 |
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Notwithstanding errors, however, these speculations have
considerable significance. That such likenesses, crudely as they
are thought out, should have been alleged by Plato and Hobbes and
others, is a reason for suspecting that some analogy
exists. The untenableness of the particular parallelisms above
instanced, is no ground for denying an essential parallelism;
since early ideas are usually but vague adumbrations of the truth.
Lacking the great generalizations of biology, it was, as we have
said, impossible to trace out the real relations of social
organizations to organizations of another order. We propose here
to show what are the analogies which modern science discloses.
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9.10 |
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Let us set out by succinctly stating the points of similarity
and the points of difference. Societies agree with individual
organisms in four conspicuous peculiarities:
1. That commencing as small aggregations,
they insensibly augment in mass: some of them eventually
reaching ten thousand times what they originally were.
2. That while at first so simple in structure as to be
considered structureless, they assume, in the course of their
growth, a continually-increasing complexity of structure.
3. That though in their early, undeveloped states, there
exists in them scarcely any mutual dependence of parts, their
parts gradually acquire a mutual dependence; which becomes at
last so great, that the activity and life of each part is made
possible only by the activity and life of the rest.
4. That the life of a society is independent of, and far
more prolonged than, the lives of any of its component units;
who are severally born, grow, work, reproduce, and die, while
the body-politic composed of them survives generation after
generation, increasing in mass, in completeness of structure,
and in functional activity.
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9.11 |
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These four parallelisms will appear the more significant the
more we contemplate them. While the points specified, are points
in which societies agree with individual organisms, they are also
points in which individual organisms agree with one another, and
disagree with all things else. In the course of its existence,
every plant and animal increases in mass, in a way not paralleled
by inorganic objects: even such inorganic objects as crystals,
which arise by growth, show us no such definite relation between
growth and existence as organisms do. The orderly progress from
simplicity to complexity, displayed by bodies-politic in common
with living bodies, is a characteristic which distinguishes living
bodies from the inanimate bodies amid which they move. That
functional dependence of parts, which is scarcely more manifest in
animals than in nations, has no counterpart elsewhere. And in no
aggregate except an organic or a social one, is there a perpetual
removal and replacement of parts, joined with a continued
integrity of the whole. Moreover, societies and organisms are not
only alike in these peculiarities, in which they are unlike all
other things; but the highest societies, like the highest
organisms, exhibit them in the greatest degree. We see that the
lowest animals do not increase to anything like the sizes of the
higher ones; and, similarly, we see that aboriginal societies are
comparatively limited in their growths. In complexity, our large
civilized nations as much exceed primitive savage tribes, as a
mammal does a zoophyte. Simple communities, like simple creatures,
have so little mutual dependence of parts, that mutilation or
subdivision causes but little inconvenience; but from complex
communities, as from complex creatures, you cannot remove any
considerable organ without producing great disturbance or death of
the rest. And in societies of low type, as in inferior animals,
the life of the aggregate, often cut short by division or
dissolution, exceeds in length the lives of the component units,
very far less than in civilized communities and superior animals;
which outlive many generations of their component units.
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On the other hand, the leading differences between societies
and individual organisms are these:
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9.13 |
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1. That societies have no specific external forms. This,
however, is a point of contrast which loses much of its
importance, when we remember that throughout the vegetal kingdom,
as well as in some lower divisions of the animal kingdom, the
forms are often very indefinite—definiteness being rather the
exception than the rule: and that they are manifestly in part
determined by surrounding physical circumstances, as the forms of
societies are. If, too, it should eventually be shown, as we
believe it will, that the form of every species of organism has
resulted from the average play of the external forces to which it
has been subject during its evolution as a species; then, that the
external forms of societies should depend, as they do, on
surrounding conditions, will be a further point of community.
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9.14 |
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2. That though the living tissue whereof an individual organism
consists, forms a continuous mass, the living elements of a
society do not form a continuous mass; but are more or less widely
dispersed over some portion of the Earth's surface. This, which at
first sight appears to be an absolute distinction, is one which
yet to a great extent fades when we contemplate all the facts.
For, in the lower divisions of the animal and vegetal kingdoms,
there are types of organization much more nearly allied, in this
respect, to the organization of a society, than might be
supposed—types in which the living units essentially composing
the mass, are dispersed through an inert substance, that can
scarcely be called living in the full sense of the word. It is
thus with some of the Protococci and with the Nostoceæ,
which exist as cells imbedded in a viscid matter. It is so, too,
with the Thalassicollæ—bodies made up of differentiated
parts, dispersed through an undifferentiated jelly. And throughout
considerable portions of their bodies, some of the Acalephæ
exhibit more or less this type of structure. Now this is very much
the case with a society. For we must remember that though the men
who make up a society are physically separate, and even scattered,
yet the surface over which they are scattered is not one devoid of
life, but is covered by life of a lower order which ministers to
their life. The vegetation which clothes a country makes possible
the animal life in that country; and only through its animal and
vegetal products can such a country support a society. Hence the
members of the body-politic are not to be regarded as separated by
intervals of dead space, but as diffused through a space occupied
by life of a lower order. In our conception of a social organism,
we must include all that lower organic existence on which human
existence, and therefore social existence, depend. And when we do
this, we see that the citizens who make up a community may be
considered as highly vitalized units surrounded by substances of
lower vitality, from which they draw their nutriment: much as in
the cases above instanced.
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9.15 |
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3. The third difference is that while the ultimate living
elements of an individual organism are mostly fixed in their
relative positions, those of the social organism are capable of
moving from place to place. But here, too, the disagreement is
much less than would be supposed. For while citizens are
locomotive in their private capacities, they are fixed in their
public capacities. As farmers, manufacturers, or traders, men
carry on their businesses at the same spots, often throughout
their whole lives; and if they go away occasionally, they leave
behind others to discharge their functions in their absence. Each
great centre of production, each manufacturing town or district,
continues always in the same place; and many of the firms in such
town or district, are for generations carried on either by the
descendants or successors of those who founded them. Just as in a
living body, the cells that make up some important organ severally
perform their functions for a time and then disappear, leaving
others to supply their places; so, in each part of a society the
organ remains, though the persons who compose it change. Thus, in
social life, as in the life of an animal, the units as well as the
larger agencies formed of them, are in the main stationary as
respects the places where they discharge their duties and obtain
their sustenance. And hence the power of individual locomotion
does not practically affect the analogy.
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9.16 |
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4. The last and perhaps the most important distinction is, that
while in the body of an animal only a special tissue is endowed
with feeling, in a society all the members are endowed with
feeling. Even this distinction, however, is not a complete one.
For in some of the lowest animals, characterized by the absence of
a nervous system, such sensitiveness as exists is possessed by all
parts. It is only in the more organized forms that feeling is
monopolized by one class of the vital elements. And we must
remember that societies, too, are not without certain
differentiation of this kind. Though the units of a community are
all sensitive, they are so in unequal degrees. The classes engaged
in laborious occupations are less susceptible, intellectually and
emotionally, than the rest; and especially less so than the
classes of highest mental culture. Still, we have here a tolerably
decided contrast between bodies-politic and individual bodies; and
it is one which we should keep constantly in view. For it reminds
us that while, in individual bodies, the welfare of all other
parts is rightly subservient to the welfare of the nervous system,
whose pleasurable or painful activities make up the good or ill of
life; in bodies-politic the same thing does not hold, or holds to
but a very slight extent. It is well that the lives of all parts
of an animal should be merged in the life of the whole, because
the whole has a corporate consciousness capable of happiness or
misery. But it is not so with a society; since its living units do
not and cannot lose individual consciousness, and since the
community as a whole has no corporate consciousness. This is an
everlasting reason why the welfares of citizens cannot rightly be
sacrificed to some supposed benefit of the State, and why, on the
other hand, the State is to be maintained solely for the benefit
of citizens. The corporate life must here be subservient to the
lives of the parts, instead of the lives of the parts being
subservient to the corporate life.
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9.17 |
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Such, then, are the points of analogy and the points of
difference. May we not say that the points of difference serve but
to bring into clearer light the points of analogy? While
comparison makes definite the obvious contrasts between organisms
commonly so called, and the social organism, it shows that even
these contrasts are not so decided as was to be expected. The
indefiniteness of form, the discontinuity of the parts, and the
universal sensitiveness, are not only peculiarities of the social
organism which have to be stated with considerable qualifications;
but they are peculiarities to which the inferior classes of
animals present approximations. Thus we find but little to
conflict with the all-important analogies. Societies slowly
augment in mass; they progress in complexity of structure; at the
same time their parts become more mutually dependent; their living
units are removed and replaced without destroying their integrity;
and the extents to which they display these peculiarities are
proportionate to their vital activities. These are traits that
societies have in common with organic bodies. And these traits in
which they agree with organic bodies and disagree with all other
things, entirely subordinate the minor distinctions: such
distinctions being scarcely greater than those which separate one
half of the organic kingdom from the other. The principles
of organization are the same, and the differences are simply
differences of application.
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9.18 |
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Here ending this general survey of the facts which justify the
comparisons of a society with a living body, let us look at them
in detail. We shall find that the parallelism becomes the more
marked the more closely it is examined.
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9.19 |
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The lowest animal and vegetal forms—Protozoa and Protophyta—are
chiefly inhabitants of the water. They are minute bodies, most of
which are made individually visible only by the microscope. All of
them are extremely simple in structure, and some of them, as the Rhizopods,
almost structureless. Multiplying, as they ordinarily do, by the
spontaneous division of their bodies, they produce halves which
may either become quite separate and move away in different
directions, or may continue attached. By the repetition of this
process of fission, aggregations of various sizes and kinds are
formed. Among the Protophyta we have some classes, as the Diatomaceæ
and the Yeast-plant, in which the individuals may be either
separate or attached in groups of two, three, four, or more; other
classes in which a considerable number of cells are united into a
thread (Conferva, Monilia); others in which they form a
network (Hydrodictyon); others in which they form plates (Ulva);
and others in which they form masses (Laminaria, Agaricus):
all which vegetal forms, having no distinction of root, stem, or
leaf, are called Thallogens. Among the Protozoa we
find parallel facts. Immense numbers of Amœba-like
creatures, massed together in a framework of horny fibres,
constitute Sponge. In the Foraminifera we see smaller
groups of such creatures arranged into more definite shapes. Not
only do these almost structureless Protozoa unite into
regular or irregular aggregations of various sizes, but among some
of the more organized ones, as the Vorticellæ, there are
also produced clusters of individuals united to a common stem. But
these little societies of monads, of cells, or whatever else we
may call them, are societies only in the lowest sense: there is no
subordination of parts among them—no organization. Each of the
component units lives by and for itself; neither giving nor
receiving aid. The only mutual dependence is that consequent on
mechanical union.
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9.20 |
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Do we not here discern analogies to the first stages of human
societies? Among the lowest races, as the Bushmen, we find but
incipient aggregation: sometimes single families sometimes two or
three families wandering about together. The number of associated
units is small and variable, and their union inconstant. No
division of labour exists except between the sexes, and the only
kind of mutual aid is that of joint attack or defence. We see an
undifferentiated group of individuals, forming the germ of a
society; just as in the homogeneous groups of cells above
described, we see the initial stage of animal and vegetal
organization.
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9.21 |
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The comparison may now be carried a step higher. In the vegetal
kingdom we pass from the Thallogens, consisting of mere
masses of similar cells, to the Acrogens, in which the
cells are not similar throughout the whole mass; but are here
aggregated into a structure serving as leaf and there into a
structure serving as root; thus forming a whole in which there is
a certain subdivision of functions among the units, and therefore
a certain mutual dependence. In the animal kingdom we find
analogous progress. From mere unorganized groups of cells, or
cell-like bodies, we ascend to groups of such cells arranged into
parts that have different duties. The common Polype, from the
substance of which may be separated cells that exhibit, when
detached, appearances and movements like those of a solitary Amœba,
illustrates this stage. The component units, though still showing
great community of character, assume somewhat diverse functions in
the skin, in the internal surface, and in the tentacles. There is
a certain amount of "physiological division of labour."
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9.22 |
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Turning to societies, we find these stages paralleled in most
aboriginal tribes. When, instead of such small variable groups as
are formed by Bushmen, we come to the larger and more permanent
groups formed by savages not quite so low, we find traces of
social structure. Though industrial organization scarcely shows
itself, except in the different occupations of the sexes; yet
there is more or less of governmental organization. While all the
men are warriors and hunters, only a part of them are included in
the council of chiefs; and in this council of chiefs some one has
commonly supreme authority. There is thus a certain distinction of
classes and powers; and through this slight specialization of
functions is effected a rude cooperation among the increasing mass
of individuals, whenever the society has to act in its corporate
capacity. Beyond this analogy in the slight extent to which
organization is carried, there is analogy in the indefiniteness of
the organization. In the Hydra, the respective parts of the
creature's substance have many functions in common. They are all
contractile; omitting the tentacles, the whole of the external
surface can give origin to young hydræ; and, when turned
inside out, stomach performs the duties of skin and skin the
duties of stomach. In aboriginal societies such differentiations
as exist are similarly imperfect. Notwithstanding distinctions of
rank, all persons maintain themselves by their own exertions. Not
only do the head men of the tribe, in common with the rest, build
their own huts, make their own weapons, kill their own food; but
the chief does the like. Moreover, such governmental organization
as exists is inconstant. It is frequently changed by violence or
treachery, and the function of ruling assumed by some other
warrior. Thus between the rudest societies and some of the lowest
forms of animal life, there is analogy alike in the slight extent
to which organization is carried, in the indefiniteness of this
organization, and in its want of fixity.
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9.23 |
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A further complication of the analogy is at hand. From the
aggregation of units into organized groups, we pass to the
multiplication of such groups, and their coalescence into compound
groups. The Hydra, when it has reached a certain bulk, puts
forth from its surface a bud which, growing and gradually assuming
the form of the parent, finally becomes detached; and by this
process of gemmation the creature peoples the adjacent water with
others like itself. A parallel process is seen in the
multiplication of those lowly-organized tribes above described.
When one of them has increased to a size that is either too great
for coordination under so rude a structure, or else that is
greater than the surrounding country can supply with game and
other wild food, there arises a tendency to divide; and as in such
communities there often occur quarrels, jealousies, and other
causes of division, there soon comes an occasion on which a part
of the tribe separates under the leadership of some subordinate
chief and migrates. This process being from time to time repeated,
an extensive region is at length occupied by numerous tribes
descended from a common ancestry. The analogy by no means ends
here. Though in the common Hydra the young ones that bud
out from the parent soon become detached and independent; yet
throughout the rest of the class Hydrozoa, to which this
creature belongs, the like does not generally happen. The
successive individuals thus developed continue attached; give
origin to other such individuals which also continue attached; and
so there results a compound animal. As in the Hydra itself
we find an aggregation of units which, considered separately, are
akin to the lowest Protozoa; so here, in a Zoophyte,
we find an aggregation of such aggregations. The like is also seen
throughout the extensive family of Polyzoa or Molluscoida.
The Ascidian Mollusks, too, in their many forms, show us the same
thing: exhibiting, at the same time, various degrees of union
among the component individuals. For while in the Salpæ
the component individuals adhere so slightly that a blow on the
vessel of water in which they are floating will separate them; in
the Botryllidæ there exist vascular connexions among them,
and a common circulation. Now in these different stages of
aggregation, may we not see paralleled the union of groups of
connate tribes into nations? Though, in regions where
circumstances permit, the tribes descended from some original
tribe migrate in all directions, and become far removed and quite
separate; yet, where the territory presents barriers to distant
migration, this does not happen: the small kindred communities are
held in closer contact, and eventually become more or less united
into a nation. The contrast between the tribes of American Indians
and the Scottish clans, illustrates this. And a glance at our own
early history, or the early histories of continental nations,
shows this fusion of small simple communities taking place in
various ways and to various extents. As says M. Guizot, in his History
of the Origin of Representative Government:
By degrees, in the midst of the chaos of the rising society,
small aggregations are formed which feel the want of alliance
and union with each other. ... Soon inequality of strength is
displayed among neighbouring aggregations. The strong tend to
subjugate the weak, and usurp at first the rights of taxation
and military service. Thus political authority leaves the
aggregations which first instituted it, to take a wider range.
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9.24 |
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That is to say, the small tribes, clans, or feudal groups,
sprung mostly from a common stock, and long held in contact as
occupants of adjacent lands, gradually get united in other ways
than by kinship and proximity.
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9.25 |
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A further series of changes begins now to take place, to which,
as before, we find analogies in individual organisms. Returning to
the Hydrozoa, we observe that in the simplest of the
compound forms the connected individuals are alike in structure,
and perform like functions; with the exception that here and there
a bud, instead of developing into a stomach, mouth, and tentacles,
becomes an egg-sac. But with the oceanic Hydrozoa this is
by no means the case. In the Calycophoridæ some of the
polypes growing from the common germ, become developed and
modified into large, long, sack-like bodies, which, by their
rhythmical contractions, move through the water, dragging the
community of polypes after them. In the Physophoridæ a
variety of organs similarly arise by transformation of the budding
polypes; so that in creatures like the Physalia, commonly
known as the "Portuguese Man-of-war," instead of that
tree-like group of similar individuals forming the original type,
we have a complex mass of unlike parts fulfilling unlike duties.
As an individual Hydra may be regarded as a group of Protozoa
which have become partially metamorphosed into different organs;
so a Physalia is, morphologically considered, a group of Hydræ
of which the individuals have been variously transformed to fit
them for various functions.
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9.26 |
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This differentiation upon differentiation is just what takes
place during the evolution of a civilized society. We observed
how, in the small communities first formed, there arises a simple
political organization: there is a partial separation of classes
having different duties. And now we have to observe how, in a
nation formed by the fusion of such small communities, the several
sections, at first alike in structures and modes of activity, grow
unlike in both—gradually become mutually-dependent parts,
diverse in their natures and functions.
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9.27 |
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The doctrine of the progressive division of labour, to which we
are here introduced, is familiar to all readers. And further, the
analogy between the economical division of labour and the
"physiological division of labour," is so striking as
long since to have drawn the attention of scientific naturalists:
so striking, indeed, that the expression "physiological
division of labour," has been suggested by it. It is not
needful, therefore, to treat this part of the subject in great
detail. We shall content ourselves with noting a few general and
significant facts, not manifest on a first inspection.
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9.28 |
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Throughout the whole animal kingdom, from the Cœlenterata
upwards, the first stage of evolution is the same. Equally in the
germ of a polype and in the human ovum, the aggregated mass of
cells out of which the creature is to arise, gives origin to a
peripheral layer of cells, slightly differing from the rest which
they include; and this layer subsequently divides into two—the
inner, lying in contact with the included yelk, being called the
mucous layer, and the outer, exposed to surrounding agencies,
being called the serous layer: or, in the terms used by Prof.
Huxley, in describing the development of the Hydrozoa—the
endoderm and ectoderm. This primary division marks out a
fundamental contrast of parts in the future organism. From the
mucous layer, or endoderm, is developed the apparatus of
nutrition; while from the serous layer, or ectoderm, is developed
the apparatus of external action. Out of the one arise the organs
by which food is prepared and absorbed, oxygen imbibed, and blood
purified; while out of the other arise the nervous, muscular, and
osseous systems, by the combined actions of which the movements of
the body as a whole are effected. Though this is not a
rigorously-correct distinction, seeing that some organs involve
both of these primitive membranes, yet high authorities agree in
stating it as a broad general distinction. Well, in the evolution
of a society, we see a primary differentiation of analogous kind,
which similarly underlies the whole future structure. As already
pointed out, the only manifest contrast of parts in primitive
societies, is that between the governing and the governed. In the
least organized tribes, the council of chiefs may be a body of men
distinguished simply by greater courage or experience. In more
organized tribes, the chief-class is definitely separated from the
lower class, and often regarded as different in nature—sometimes
as god-descended. And later, we find these two becoming
respectively freemen and slaves, or nobles and serfs. A glance at
their respective functions, makes it obvious that the great
divisions thus early formed, stand to each other in a relation
similar to that in which the primary divisions of the embryo stand
to each other. For, from its first appearance, the warrior-class,
headed by chiefs, is that by which the external acts of the
society are carried on: alike in war, in negotiation, and in
migration. Afterwards, while this upper class grows distinct from
the lower, and at the same time becomes more and more exclusively
regulative and defensive in its functions, alike in the persons of
kings and subordinate rulers, priests, and soldiers; the inferior
class becomes more and more exclusively occupied in providing the
necessaries of life for the community at large. From the soil,
with which it comes in most direct contact, the mass of the people
takes up, and prepares for use, the food and such rude articles of
manufacture as are known; while the overlying mass of superior
men, maintained by the working population, deals with
circumstances external to the community—circumstances with
which, by position, it is more immediately concerned. Ceasing
by-and-by to have any knowledge of, or power over, the concerns of
the society as a whole, the serf-class becomes devoted to the
processes of alimentation; while the noble class, ceasing to take
any part in the processes of alimentation, becomes devoted to the
coordinated movements of the entire body-politic.
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9.29 |
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Equally remarkable is a further analogy of like kind. After the
mucous and serous layers of the embryo have separated, there
presently arises between the two a third, known to physiologists
as the vascular layer—a layer out of which are developed the
chief blood-vessels. The mucous layer absorbs nutriment from the
mass of yelk it encloses; this nutriment has to be transferred to
the overlying serous layer, out of which the nervo-muscular system
is being developed; and between the two arises a vascular system
by which the transfer is effected—a system of vessels which
continues ever after to be the transferrer of nutriment from the
places where it is absorbed and prepared, to the places where it
is needed for growth and repair. Well, may we not trace a parallel
step in social progress? Between the governing and the governed,
there at first exists no intermediate class; and even in some
societies that have reached considerable sizes, there are scarcely
any but the nobles and their kindred on the one hand, and the
serfs on the other: the social structure being such that transfer
of commodities takes place directly from slaves to their masters.
But in societies of a higher type, there grows up, between these
two primitive classes, another—the trading or middle class.
Equally at first as now, we may see that, speaking generally, this
middle class is the analogue of the middle layer in the embryo.
For all traders are essentially distributors. Whether they be
wholesale dealers, who collect into large masses the commodities
of various producers; or whether they be retailers, who divide out
to those who want them, the masses of commodities thus collected
together; all mercantile men are agents of transfer from the
places where things are produced to the places where they are
consumed. Thus the distributing apparatus in a society, answers to
the distributing apparatus in a living body; not only in its
functions, but in its intermediate origin and subsequent position,
and in the time of its appearance.
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9.30 |
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Without enumerating the minor differentiations which these
three great classes afterwards undergo, we will merely note that
throughout, they follow the same general law with the
differentiations of an individual organism. In a society, as in a
rudimentary animal, we have seen that the most general and broadly
contrasted divisions are the first to make their appearance; and
of the subdivisions it continues true in both cases, that they
arise in the order of decreasing generality.
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9.31 |
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Let us observe, next, that in the one case as in the other, the
specializations are at first very incomplete, and approach
completeness as organization progresses. We saw that in primitive
tribes, as in the simplest animals, there remains much community
of function between the parts which are nominally
different—that, for instance, the class of chiefs long remains
industrially the same as the inferior class; just as in a Hydra,
the property of contractility is possessed by the units of the
endoderm as well as by those of the ectoderm. We noted also how,
as the society advanced, the two great primitive classes partook
less and less of each other's functions. And we have here to
remark that all subsequent specializations are at first vague and
gradually become distinct. "In the infancy of society,"
says M. Guizot, "everything is confused and uncertain; there
is as yet no fixed and precise line of demarcation between the
different powers in a state." "Originally kings lived
like other landowners, on the incomes derived from their own
private estates." Nobles were petty kings; and kings only the
most powerful nobles. Bishops were feudal lords and military
leaders. The right of coining money was possessed by powerful
subjects, and by the Church, as well as by the king. Every leading
man exercised alike the functions of landowner, farmer, soldier,
statesman, judge. Retainers were now soldiers, and now labourers,
as the day required. But by degrees the Church has lost all civil
jurisdiction; the State has exercised less and less control over
religious teaching; the military class has grown a distinct one;
handicrafts have concentrated in towns; and the spinning-wheels of
scattered farmhouses, have disappeared before the machinery of
manufacturing districts. Not only is all progress from the
homogeneous to the heterogeneous, but, at the same time, it is
from the indefinite to the definite.
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9.32 |
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Another fact which should not be passed over, is that in the
evolution of a large society out of a cluster of small ones, there
is a gradual obliteration of the original lines of separation—a
change to which, also, we may see analogies in living bodies. The
sub-kingdom Annulosa, furnishes good illustrations. Among
the lower types the body consists of numerous segments that are
alike in nearly every particular. Each has its external ring; its
pair of legs, if the creature has legs; its equal portion of
intestine, or else its separate stomach; its equal portion of the
great blood-vessel, or, in some cases, its separate heart; its
equal portion of the nervous cord; and, perhaps, its separate pair
of ganglia. But in the highest types, as in the large Crustacea,
many of the segments are completely fused together; and the
internal organs are no longer uniformly repeated in all the
segments. Now the segments of which nations at first consist, lose
their separate external and internal structures in a similar
manner. In feudal times the minor communities, governed by feudal
lords, were severally organized in the same rude way, and were
held together only by the fealty of their respective rulers to a
suzerain. But along with the growth of a central power, the
demarcations of these local communities become relatively
unimportant, and their separate organizations merge into the
general organization. The like is seen on a larger scale in the
fusion of England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland; and, on the
Continent, in the coalescence of provinces into kingdoms. Even in
the disappearance of law-made divisions, the process is analogous.
Among the Anglo-Saxons, England was divided into tithings,
hundreds, and counties: there were county-courts, courts of
hundred, and courts of tithing. The courts of tithing disappeared
first; then the courts of hundred, which have, however, left
traces; while the county-jurisdiction still exists. Chiefly,
however, it is to be noted, that there eventually grows up an
organization which has no reference to these original divisions,
but traverses them in various directions, as is the case in
creatures belonging to the sub-kingdom just named; and, further,
that in both cases it is the sustaining organization which thus
traverses old boundaries, while, in both cases, it is the
governmental, or coordinating organization in which the original
boundaries continue traceable. Thus, in the highest Annulosa
the exo-skeleton and the muscular system never lose all traces of
their primitive segmentation; but throughout a great part of the
body, the contained viscera do not in the least conform to the
external divisions. Similarly with a nation we see that while, for
governmental purposes, such divisions as counties and parishes
still exist, the structure developed for carrying on the nutrition
of society wholly ignores these boundaries: our great
cotton-manufacture spreads out of Lancashire into North
Derbyshire; Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire have long divided
the stocking-trade between them; one great centre for the
production of iron and iron-goods, includes parts of Warwickshire,
Staffordshire, and Worcestershire; and those various
specializations of agriculture which have made different parts of
England noted for different products, show no more respect to
county-boundaries than do our growing towns to the boundaries of
parishes.
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9.33 |
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If, after contemplating these analogies of structure, we
inquire whether there are any such analogies between the processes
of organic change, the answer is—yes. The causes which lead to
increase of bulk in any part of the body-politic, are of like
nature with those which lead to increase of bulk in any part of an
individual body. In both cases the antecedent is greater
functional activity consequent on greater demand. Each limb,
viscus, gland, or other member of an animal, is developed by
exercise—by actively discharging the duties which the body at
large requires of it; and similarly, any class of labourers or
artisans, any manufacturing centre, or any official agency, begins
to enlarge when the community devolves on it more work. In each
case, too, growth has its conditions and its limits. That any
organ in a living being may grow by exercise, there needs a due
supply of blood. All action implies waste; blood brings the
materials for repair; and before there can be growth, the quantity
of blood supplied must be more than is requisite for repair. In a
society it is the same. If to some district which elaborates for
the community particular commodities—say the woollens of
Yorkshire—there comes an augmented demand; and if, in fulfilment
of this demand, a certain expenditure and wear of the
manufacturing organization are incurred; and if, in payment for
the extra quantity of woollens sent away, there comes back only
such quantity of commodities as replaces the expenditure, and
makes good the waste of life and machinery; there can clearly be
no growth. That there may be growth, the commodities obtained in
return must be more than sufficient for these ends; and just in
proportion as the surplus is great will the growth be rapid.
Whence it is manifest that what in commercial affairs we call profit,
answers to the excess of nutrition over waste in a living body.
Moreover, in both cases when the functional activity is high and
the nutrition defective, there results not growth but decay. If in
an animal, any organ is worked so hard that the channels which
bring blood cannot furnish enough for repair, the organ dwindles:
atrophy is set up. And if in the body-politic, some part has been
stimulated into great productivity, and cannot afterwards get paid
for all its produce, certain of its members become bankrupt, and
it decreases in size.
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9.34 |
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One more parallelism to be here noted, is that the different
parts of a social organism, like the different parts of an
individual organism, compete for nutriment; and severally obtain
more or less of it according as they are discharging more or less
duty. If a man's brain be over-excited it abstracts blood from his
viscera and stops digestion; or digestion, actively going on, so
affects the circulation through the brain as to cause drowsiness;
or great muscular exertion determines such a quantity of blood to
the limbs as to arrest digestion or cerebral action, as the case
may be. So, likewise, in a society, great activity in some one
direction causes partial arrests of activity elsewhere by
abstracting capital, that is commodities: as instance the way in
which the sudden development of our railway-system hampered
commercial operations; or the way in which the raising of a large
military force temporarily stops the growth of leading industries.
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9.35 |
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The last few paragraphs introduce the next division of our
subject. Almost unawares we have come upon the analogy which
exists between the blood of a living body and the circulating mass
of commodities in the body-politic. We have now to trace out this
analogy from its simplest to its most complex manifestations.
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9.36 |
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In the lowest animals there exists no blood properly so called.
Through the small assemblage of cells which make up a Hydra,
permeate the juices absorbed from the food. There is no apparatus
for elaborating a concentrated and purified nutriment, and
distributing it among the component units; but these component
units directly imbibe the unprepared nutriment, either from the
digestive cavity or from one another. May we not say that this is
what takes place in an aboriginal tribe? All its members severally
obtain for themselves the necessaries of life in their crude
states; and severally prepare them for their own uses as well as
they can. When there arises a decided differentiation between the
governing and the governed, some amount of transfer begins between
those inferior individuals who, as workers, come directly in
contact with the products of the earth, and those superior ones
who exercise the higher functions—a transfer parallel to that
which accompanies the differentiation of the ectoderm from the
endoderm. In the one case, as in the other, however, it is a
transfer of products that are little if at all prepared; and takes
place directly from the unity which obtains to the unit which
consumes, without entering into any general current.
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9.37 |
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Passing to larger organisms—individual and social—we meet
the first advance on this arrangement. Where, as among the
compound Hydrozoa, there is a union of many such primitive
groups as form Hydræ; or where, as in a Medusa, one
of these groups has become of great size; there exist rude
channels running throughout the substance of the body: not,
however, channels for the conveyance of prepared nutriment, but
mere prolongations of the digestive cavity, through which the
crude chyle-aqueous fluid reaches the remoter parts, and is moved
backwards and forwards by the creature's contractions. Do we not
find in some of the more advanced primitive communities an
analogous condition? When the men, partially or fully united into
one society, become numerous—when, as usually happens, they
cover a surface of country not everywhere alike in its
products—when, more especially, there arise considerable classes
which are not industrial; some process of exchange and
distribution inevitably arises. Traversing here and there the
earth's surface, covered by that vegetation on which human life
depends, and in which, as we say, the units of a society are
imbedded, there are formed indefinite paths, along which some of
the necessaries of life occasionally pass, to be bartered for
others which presently come back along the same channels. Note,
however, that at first little else but crude commodities are thus
transferred—fruits, fish, pigs or cattle, skins, etc.: there are
few, if any, manufactured products or articles prepared for
consumption. And note also, that such distribution of these
unprepared necessaries of life as takes place, is but
occasional—goes on with a certain slow, irregular rhythm.
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9.38 |
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Further progress in the elaboration and distribution of
nutriment, or of commodities, is a necessary accompaniment of
further differentiation of functions in the individual body or in
the body-politic. As fast as each organ of a living animal becomes
confined to a special action, it must become dependent on the rest
for those materials which its position and duty do not permit it
to obtain for itself; in the same way that, as fast as each
particular class of a community becomes exclusively occupied in
producing its own commodity, it must become dependent on the rest
for the other commodities it needs. And, simultaneously, a more
perfectly-elaborated blood will result from a highly specialized
group of nutritive organs, severally adapted to prepare its
different elements; in the same way that the stream of commodities
circulating throughout a society, will be of superior quality in
proportion to the greater division of labour among the workers.
Observe, also, that in either case the circulating mass of
nutritive materials, besides coming gradually to consist of better
ingredients, also grows more complex. An increase in the number of
the unlike organs which add to the blood their waste matters, and
demand from it the different materials they severally need,
implies a blood more heterogeneous in composition—an a priori
conclusion which, according to Dr. Williams, is inductively
confirmed by examination of the blood throughout the various
grades of the animal kingdom. And similarly, it is manifest that
as fast as the division of labour among the classes of a community
becomes greater, there must be an increasing heterogeneity in the
currents of merchandise flowing throughout that community.
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9.39 |
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The circulating mass of nutritive materials in individual
organisms and in social organisms, becoming at once better in the
quality of its ingredients and more heterogeneous in composition,
as the type of structure becomes higher, eventually has added to
it in both cases another element, which is not itself nutritive
but facilitates the processes of nutrition. We refer, in the case
of the individual organism, to the blood-discs; and in the case of
the social organism, to money. This analogy has been observed by
Liebig, who in his Familiar Letters on Chemistry says:
Silver and gold have to perform in the organism of the state,
the same function as the blood-corpuscles in the human organism.
As these round discs, without themselves taking an immediate
share in the nutritive process, are the medium, the essential
condition of the change of matter, of the production of the heat
and of the force by which the temperature of the body is kept
up, and the motions of the blood and all the juices are
determined, so has gold become the medium of all activity in the
life of the state.
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9.40 |
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And blood-corpuscles being like coin in their functions, and in
the fact that they are not consumed in nutrition, he further
points out that the number of them which in a considerable
interval flows through the great centres, is enormous when
compared with their absolute number; just as the quantity of money
which annually passes through the great mercantile centres, is
enormous when compared with the quantity of money in the kingdom.
Nor is this all. Liebig has omitted the significant circumstance
that only at a certain stage of organization does this element of
the circulation make its appearance. Throughout extensive
divisions of the lower animals, the blood contains no corpuscles;
and in societies of low civilization, there is no money.
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9.41 |
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Thus far we have considered the analogy between the blood in a
living body and the consumable and circulating commodities in the
body-politic. Let us now compare the appliances by which they are
respectively distributed. We shall find in the developments of
these appliances parallelisms not less remarkable than those above
set forth. Already we have shown that, as classes, wholesale and
retail distributors discharge in a society the office which the
vascular system discharges in an individual creature; that they
come into existence later than the other two great classes, as the
vascular layer appears later than the mucous and serous layers;
and that they occupy a like intermediate position. Here, however
it remains to be pointed out that a complete conception of the
circulating system in a society, includes not only the active
human agents who propel the currents of commodities, and regulate
their distribution, but includes, also, the channels of
communication. It is the formation and arrangement of these to
which we now direct attention.
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9.42 |
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Going back once more to those lower animals in which there is
found nothing but a partial diffusion, not of blood, but only of
crude nutritive fluids, it is to be remarked that the channels,
through which the diffusion takes place, are mere excavations
through the half-organized substance of the body: they have no
lining membranes, but are mere lacunæ traversing a rude
tissue. Now countries in which civilization is but commencing,
display a like condition: there are no roads properly so called;
but the wilderness of vegetal life covering the earth's surface is
pierced by tracks, through which the distribution of crude
commodities takes place. And while, in both cases, the acts of
distribution occur only at long intervals (the currents, after a
pause, now setting towards a general centre and now away from it),
the transfer is in both cases slow and difficult. But among other
accompaniments of progress, common to animals and societies, comes
the formation of more definite and complete channels of
communications. Blood-vessels acquire distinct walls; roads are
fenced and gravelled. This advance is first seen in those roads or
vessels that are nearest to the chief centres of distribution;
while the peripheral roads and peripheral vessels long continue in
their primitive states. At a yet later stage of development, where
comparative finish of structure is found throughout the system as
well as near the chief centres, there remains in both cases the
difference that the main channels are comparatively broad and
straight, while the subordinate ones are narrow and tortuous in
proportion to their remoteness. Lastly, it is to be remarked that
there ultimately arise in the higher social organisms, as in the
higher individual organisms, main channels of distribution still
more distinguished by their perfect structures, their comparative
straightness, and the absence of those small branches which the
minor channels perpetually give off. And in railways we also see,
for the first time in the social organism, a system of double
channels conveying currents in opposite directions, as do the
arteries and veins of a well-developed animal.
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9.43 |
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These parallelisms in the evolutions and structures of the
circulating systems, introduce us to others in the kinds and rates
of the movements going on through them. Through the lowest
societies, as through the lowest creatures, the distribution of
crude nutriment is by slow gurgitations and regurgitations. In
creatures that have rude vascular systems, just as in societies
that are beginning to have roads, there is no regular circulation
along definite courses; but, instead, periodical changes of the
currents—now towards this point and now towards that. Through
each part of an inferior mollusc's body, the blood flows for a
while in one direction, then stops and flows in the opposite
direction; just as through a rudely-organized society, the
distribution of merchandise is slowly carried on by great fairs,
occurring in different localities, to and from which the currents
periodically set. Only animals of tolerably complete
organizations, like advanced communities, are permeated by
constant currents that are definitely directed. In living bodies,
the local and variable currents disappear when there grow up great
centres of circulation, generating more powerful currents by a
rhythm which ends in a quick, regular pulsation. And when in
social bodies there arise great centres of commercial activity,
producing and exchanging large quantities of commodities, the
rapid and continuous streams drawn in and emitted by these centres
subdue all minor and local circulations: the slow rhythm of fairs
merges into the faster one of weekly markets, and in the chief
centres of distribution, weekly markets merge into daily markets;
while in place of the languid transfer from place to place, taking
place at first weekly, then twice or thrice a week, we by-and-by
get daily transfer, and finally transfer many times a day—the
original sluggish, irregular rhythm, becomes a rapid, equable
pulse. Mark, too, that in both cases the increased activity, like
the greater perfection of structure, is much less conspicuous at
the periphery of the vascular system. On main lines of railway, we
have, perhaps, a score trains in each direction daily, going at
from thirty to fifty miles an hour; as, through the great
arteries, the blood moves rapidly in successive gushes. Along high
roads, there go vehicles conveying men and commodities with much
less, though still considerable, speed, and with a much less
decided rhythm; as, in the smaller arteries, the speed of the
blood is greatly diminished and the pulse less conspicuous. In
parish-roads, narrower, less complete, and more tortuous, the rate
of movement is further decreased and the rhythm scarcely
traceable; as in the ultimate arteries. In those still more
imperfect by-roads which lead from these parish-roads to scattered
farmhouses and cottages, the motion is yet slower and very
irregular; just as we find it in the capillaries. While along the
field-roads, which, in their unformed, unfenced state, are typical
of lacunæ, the movement is the slowest, the most
irregular, and the most infrequent; as it is, not only in the
primitive lacunæ of animals and societies, but as it is
also in those lacunæ in which the vascular system ends
among extensive families of inferior creatures.
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9.44 |
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Thus, then, we find between the distributing systems of living
bodies and the distributing systems of bodies-politic, wonderfully
close parallelisms. In the lowest forms of individual and social
organisms, there exist neither prepared nutritive matters nor
distributing appliances; and in both, these, arising as necessary
accompaniments of the differentiation of parts, approach
perfection as this differentiation approaches completeness. In
animals, as in societies, the distributing agencies begin to show
themselves at the same relative periods, and in the same relative
positions. In the one, as in the other, the nutritive materials
circulated are at first crude and simple, gradually become better
elaborated and more heterogeneous, and have eventually added to
them a new element facilitating the nutritive processes. The
channels of communication pass through similar phases of
development, which bring them to analogous forms. And the
directions, rhythms, and rates of circulation, progress by like
steps to like final conditions.
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9.45 |
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We come at length to the nervous system. Having noticed the
primary differentiation of societies into the governing and
governed classes, and observed its analogy to the differentiation
of the two primary tissues which respectively develop into organs
of external action and organs of alimentation; having noticed some
of the leading analogies between the development of industrial
arrangements and that of the alimentary apparatus; and having,
above, more fully traced the analogies between the distributing
systems, social and individual; we have now to compare the
appliances by which a society, as a whole, is regulated, with
those by which the movements of an individual creature are
regulated. We shall find here parallelisms equally striking with
those already detailed.
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9.46 |
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The class out of which governmental organization originates,
is, as we have said, analogous in its relations to the ectoderm of
the lowest animals and of embryonic forms. And as this primitive
membrane, out of which the nervo-muscular system is evolved, must,
even in the first stage of its differentiation, be slightly
distinguished from the rest by that greater impressibility and
contractility characterizing the organs to which it gives rise;
so, in that superior class which is eventually transformed into
the directo-executive system of a society (its legislative and
defensive appliances), does there exist in the beginning, a larger
endowment of the capacities required for these higher social
functions. Always, in rude assemblages of men, the strongest, most
courageous, and most sagacious, become rulers and leaders; and, in
a tribe of some standing, this results in the establishment of a
dominant class, characterized on the average by those mental and
bodily qualities which fit them for deliberation and vigorous
combined action. Thus that greater impressibility and
contractility, which in the rudest animal types characterize the
units of the ectoderm, characterize also the units of the
primitive social stratum which controls and fights; since
impressibility and contractility are the respective roots of
intelligence and strength.
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9.47 |
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Again, in the unmodified ectoderm, as we see it in the Hydra,
the units are all endowed both with impressibility and
contractility; but as we ascend to higher types of organization,
the ectoderm differentiates into classes of units which divide
those two functions between them: some, becoming exclusively
impressible, cease to be contractile; while some, becoming
exclusively contractile, cease to be impressible. Similarly with
societies. In an aboriginal tribe, the directive and executive
functions are diffused in a mingled form throughout the whole
governing class. Each minor chief commands those under him, and,
if need be, himself coerces them into obedience. The council of
chiefs itself carries out on the battlefield its own decisions.
The head chief not only makes laws, but administers justice with
his own hands. In larger and more settled communities, however,
the directive and executive agencies begin to grow distinct from
each other. As fast as his duties accumulate, the head chief or
king confines himself more and more to directing public affairs,
and leaves the execution of his will to others: he deputes others
to enforce submission, to inflict punishments, or to carry out
minor acts of offence and defence; and only on occasions when,
perhaps, the safety of the society and his own supremacy are at
stake, does he begin to act as well as direct. As this
differentiation establishes itself, the characteristics of the
ruler begin to change. No longer, as in an aboriginal tribe, the
strongest and most daring man, the tendency is for him to become
the man of greatest cunning, foresight, and skill in the
management of others; for in societies that have advanced beyond
the first stage, it is chiefly such qualities that insure success
in gaining supreme power, and holding it against internal and
external enemies. Thus that member of the governing class who
comes to be the chief directing agent, and so plays the same part
that a rudimentary nervous centre does in an unfolding organism,
is usually one endowed with some superiorities of nervous
organization.
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9.48 |
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In those larger and more complex communities possessing,
perhaps, a separate military class, a priesthood, and dispersed
masses of population requiring local control, there grow up
subordinate governing agents; who, as their duties accumulate,
severally become more directive and less executive in their
characters. And when, as commonly happens, the king begins to
collect round himself advisers who aid him by communicating
information, preparing subjects for his judgment, and issuing his
orders; we may say that the form of organization is comparable to
one very general among inferior types of animals, in which there
exists a chief ganglion with a few dispersed minor ganglia under
its control.
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9.49 |
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The analogies between the evolution of governmental structures
in societies, and the evolution of governmental structures in
living bodies, are, however, more strikingly displayed during the
formation of nations by coalescence of tribes—a process already
shown to be, in several respects, parallel to the development of
creatures that primarily consist of many like segments. Among
other points of community between the successive rings which make
up the body in the lower Annulosa, is the possession of
similar pairs of ganglia. These pairs of ganglia, though connected
by nerves, are very incompletely dependent on any general
controlling power. Hence it results that when the body is cut in
two, the hinder part continues to move forward under the
propulsion of its numerous legs; and that when the chain of
ganglia has been divided without severing the body, the hind limbs
may be seen trying to propel the body in one direction while the
fore limbs are trying to propel it in another. But in the higher Annulosa,
called Articulata, sundry of the anterior pairs of ganglia,
besides growing larger, unite in one mass; and this great cephalic
ganglion having become the coordinator of all the creature's
movements, there no longer exists much local independence. Now may
we not in the growth of a consolidated kingdom out of petty
sovereignties or baronies, observe analogous changes? Like the
chiefs and primitive rulers above described, feudal lords,
exercising supreme power over their respective groups of
retainers, discharge functions analogous to those of rudimentary
nervous centres. Among these local governing centres there is, in
early feudal times, very little subordination. They are in
frequent antagonism; they are individually restrained chiefly by
the influence of parties in their own class; and they are but
irregularly subject to that most powerful member of their order
who has gained the position of head-suzerain or king. As the
growth and organization of the society progresses, these local
directive centres fall more and more under the control of a chief
directive centre. Closer commercial union between the several
segments is accompanied by closer governmental union; and these
minor rulers end in being little more than agents who administer,
in their several localities, the laws made by the supreme ruler:
just as the local ganglia above described, eventually become
agents which enforce, in their respective segments, the orders of
the cephalic ganglion. The parallelism holds still further. We
remarked above, when speaking of the rise of aboriginal kings,
that in proportion as their territories increase, they are obliged
not only to perform their executive functions by deputy, but also
to gather round themselves advisers to aid in their directive
functions; and that thus, in place of a solitary governing unit,
there grows up a group of governing units, comparable to a
ganglion consisting of many cells. Let us here add that the
advisers and chief officers who thus form the rudiment of a
ministry, tend from the beginning to exercise some control over
the ruler. By the information they give and the opinions they
express, they sway his judgement and affect his commands. To this
extent he is made a channel through which are communicated the
directions originating with them; and in course of time, when the
advice of ministers becomes the acknowledged source of his
actions, the king assumes the character of an automatic centre,
reflecting the impressions made on him from without.
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9.50 |
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Beyond this complication of governmental structure many
societies do not progress; but in some, a further development
takes place. Our own case best illustrates this further
development and its further analogies. To kings and their
ministries have been added, in England, other great directive
centres, exercising a control which, at first small, has been
gradually becoming predominant: as with the great governing
ganglia which especially distinguish the highest classes of living
beings. Strange as the assertion will be thought, our Houses of
Parliament discharge, in the social economy, functions which are
in sundry respects comparable to those discharged by the cerebral
masses in a vertebrate animal. As it is in the nature of a single
ganglion to be affected only by special stimuli from particular
parts of the body; so it is in the nature of a single ruler to be
swayed in his acts by exclusive personal or class interests. As it
is in the nature of a cluster of ganglia, connected with the
primary one, to convey to it a greater variety of influences from
more numerous organs, and thus to make its acts conform to more
numerous requirements; so it is in the nature of the subsidiary
controlling powers surrounding a king to adapt his rule to a
greater number of public exigencies. And as it is in the nature of
those great and latest-developed ganglia which distinguish the
higher animals, to interpret and combine the multiplied and varied
impressions conveyed to them from all parts of the system, and to
regulate the actions in such way as duly to regard them all; so it
is in the nature of those great and latest-developed legislative
bodies which distinguish the most advanced societies, to interpret
and combine the wishes of all classes and localities, and to make
laws in harmony with the general wants. We may describe the office
of the 'brain as that of averaging the interests of life,
physical, intellectual, moral; and a good brain is one in which
the desires answering to these respective interests are so
balanced, that the conduct they jointly dictate, sacrifices none
of them. Similarly, we may describe the office of a Parliament as
that of averaging the interests of the various classes in a
community; and a good Parliament is one in which the parties
answering to these respective interests are so balanced, that
their united legislation allows to each class as much as consists
with the claims of the rest. Besides being comparable in their
duties, these great directive centres, social and individual, are
comparable in the processes by which their duties are discharged.
The cerebrum is not occupied with direct impressions from without
but with the ideas of such impressions. Instead of the actual
sensations produced in the body, and directly appreciated by the
sensory ganglia, or primitive nervous centres, the cerebrum
receives only the representations of these sensations; and its
consciousness is called representative consciousness, to
distinguish it from the original or presentative
consciousness. Is it not significant that we have hit on the same
word to distinguish the function of our House of Commons? We call
it a representative body, because the interests with which
it deals are not directly presented to it, but represented to it
by its various members; and a debate is a conflict of
representations of the results likely to follow from a proposed
course—a description which applies with equal truth to a debate
in the individual consciousness. In both cases, too, these great
governing masses take no part in the executive functions. As,
after a conflict in the cerebrum, those desires which finally
predominate act on the subjacent ganglia, and through their
instrumentality determine the bodily actions; so the parties
which, after a parliamentary struggle, gain the victory, do not
themselves carry out their wishes, but get them carried out by the
executive divisions of the Government. The fulfilment of all
legislative decisions still devolves on the original directive
centres: the impulse passing from the Parliament to the Ministers
and from the Ministers to the King, in whose name everything is
done; just as those smaller, first-developed ganglia, which in the
lowest vertebrata are the chief controlling agents, are still, in
the brains of the higher vertebrata, the agents through which the
dictates of the cerebrum are worked out. Moreover, in both cases
these original centres become increasingly automatic. In the
developed vertebrate animal, they have little function beyond that
of conveying impressions to, and executing the determinations of,
the larger centres. In our highly organized government, the
monarch has long been lapsing into a passive agent of Parliament;
and now, ministries are rapidly falling into the same position.
Nay, between the two cases there is a parallelism even in respect
of the exceptions to this automatic action. For in the individual
creature it happens that under circumstances of sudden alarm, as
from a loud sound close at hand, an unexpected object starting up
in front, or a slip from insecure footing, the danger is guarded
against by some quick involuntary jump, or adjustment of the
limbs, which occurs before there is time to consider the impending
evil and take deliberate measures to avoid it: the rationale of
which is that these violent impressions produced on the senses,
are reflected from the sensory ganglia to the spinal cord and
muscles, without, as in ordinary cases, first passing through the
cerebrum. In like manner on national emergencies calling for
prompt action, the King and Ministry, not having time to lay the
matter before the great deliberative bodies, themselves issue
commands for the requisite movements or precautions; the
primitive, and now almost automatic, directive centres, resume for
a moment their original uncontrolled power. And then, strangest of
all, observe that in either case there is an after-process of
approval or disapproval. The individual on recovering from his
automatic start, at once contemplates the cause of his fright;
and, according to the case, concludes that it was well he moved as
he did, or condemns himself for his groundless alarm. In like
manner, the deliberative powers of the State discuss, as soon as
may be, the unauthorized acts of the executive powers; and,
deciding that the reasons were or were not sufficient, grant or
withhold a bill of indemnity.*91
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9.51 |
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Thus far in comparing the governmental organization of the
body-politic with that of an individual body, we have considered
only the respective co-ordinating centres. We have yet to consider
the channels through which these co-ordinating centres receive
information and convey commands. In the simplest societies, as in
the simplest organisms, there is no "internuncial
apparatus," as Hunter styled the nervous system.
Consequently, impressions can be but slowly propagated from unit
to unit throughout the whole mass. The same progress, however,
which, in animal-organization, shows itself in the establishment
of ganglia or directive centres, shows itself also in the
establishment of nerve-threads, through which the ganglia receive
and convey impressions and so control remote organs. And in
societies the like eventually takes place. After a long period
during which the directive centres communicate with various parts
of the society through other means, there at last comes into
existence an "internuncial apparatus," analogous to that
found in individual bodies. The comparison of telegraph-wires to
nerves is familiar to all. It applies, however, to an extent not
commonly supposed. Thus, throughout the vertebrate sub-kingdom,
the great nerve-bundles diverge from the vertebrate axis side by
side with the great arteries; and similarly, our groups of
telegraph-wires are carried along the sides of our railways. The
most striking parallelism, however, remains. Into each great
bundle of nerves, as it leaves the axis of the body along with an
artery, there enters a branch of the sympathetic nerve; which
branch, accompanying the artery throughout its ramifications, has
the function of regulating its diameter and otherwise controlling
the flow of blood through it according to local requirements.
Analogously, in the group of telegraph-wires running alongside
each railway, there is a wire for the purpose of regulating the
traffic—for retarding or expediting the flow of passengers and
commodities, as the local conditions demand. Probably, when our
now rudimentary telegraph-system is fully developed, other
analogies will be traceable.
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9.52 |
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Such, then, is a general outline of the evidence which
justifies the comparison of societies to living organisms. That
they gradually increase in mass; that they become little by little
more complex; that at the same time their parts grow more mutually
dependent; and that they continue to live and grow as wholes,
while successive generations of their units appear and disappear;
are broad peculiarities which bodies-politic display in common
with all living bodies; and in which they and living bodies differ
from everything else. And on carrying out the comparison in
detail, we find that these major analogies involve many minor
analogies, far closer than might have been expected. Others might
be added. We had hoped to say something respecting the different
types of social organization, and something also on social
metamorphoses; but we have reached our assigned limits.
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To achieve all these failures and produce all these evils, many thousands of
hard-working ratepayers, who have difficulty in making both ends meet, have been
taxed and pinched and distressed. See, then, the enormous evils that follow in
the train of the baseless belief in the unlimited power of a majority—the
miserable superstition that a body elected by the greater number of citizens has
the right to take from citizens at large any amount of money for any purpose it
pleases!