No, this is not a discussion on the various types of
socialism, such as Marxist, Georgist, Relgious, or Democratic (especially since
there are many more than that), but on four key aspects of socialist thought
itself. We will have to look briefly at a
couple of the different forms of socialism, but that is not the main point
here.
Aristotle: difference between being and essence. |
As we saw in the
previous posting on this subject, the question is who or what has a natural
right to be an owner. This is important when
looking into the origins of modern socialism, because in order to confuse the
issue, or because they have not thought the matter through logically, many
socialists separate out aspects of socialism and declare they are not socialist
for one reason or another.
They are absolutely correct . . . but not for the
reason(s) they suppose. A thing is not
defined by its characteristics (its form), but by its essence (substance). A characteristic taken alone and by itself is
not the thing, and you can separate a characteristic of a thing from the thing
and it still remains the thing, but claiming that the thing does not have that
characteristic and is therefore not the thing is a bad argument.
For example, human beings have arms. An arm taken by itself is not a human being,
but that does not mean that a human being without arms is not, therefore, a
human being. Human beings are defined by
their “substance” or essence, which is the capacity to acquire and develop
humanness or “virtue.”
Karl Marx meant property, not ownership. |
Similarly, when Karl Marx declared that socialism (specifically
his brand of scientific socialism he called communism) could be summed up in
the single sentence “the abolition of private property,” he was absolutely
correct . . . but only if you understand that private property is a natural
right. Marx gave the substance of
socialism in the form of an example that many apologists for socialism have
taken as a statement about a characteristic of socialism.
What Marx meant — and which is precisely what he said — is
that the essence of socialism is the shift of natural rights from the human
person to the collective. That is the “substance”
of socialism, that it makes the possession of rights and thus personality (“personhood”)
dependent on something other than mere existence as a human being, e.g.,
a declaration by the Supreme Court of the United States.
What socialist apologists have done is reinterpret what
Marx said to mean “the abolition of private ownership” — which is not
what he meant at all! That way, they can
change the issue or question by declaring that Marxist communism and their form
of socialism are completely different because they would permit private
ownership, or that the meaning of socialism has changed because many forms now
permit private ownership (showing they don’t know their own socialist history),
that the Catholic Church’s condemnation of socialism either no longer applies
or was misinformed in the first place, or, or, or, ad infinitum.
George would abolish property, not ownership. |
Marx permitted private ownership, even as he abolished
private property. So did Henry
George and the Fabians, for that matter.
Legal ownership — title — is irrelevant, however, if it does not carry
with it the rights of ownership, that is, private property, as a natural right. George’s plan for abolishing private property
in land, in fact, depended on separating title (ownership) from the rights of
ownership (property).
Thus, as George explained his proposal in Progress and
Poverty (1879), anybody could own land by having legal title, but such
ownership would be utterly meaningless due to the fact that the one holding
legal title had no right of control or to receive the fruits of ownership. It would all be paid to the State in the form
of “the single tax,” which consisted of all rent or any other profit from land
ownership. As George explained his
proposal,
What I, therefore, propose, as the simple yet sovereign
remedy, which will raise wages, increase the earnings of capital, extirpate
pauperism, abolish poverty, give remunerative employment to whoever wishes it,
afford free scope to human powers, lessen crime, elevate morals, and taste, and
intelligence, purify government and carry civilization to yet nobler heights,
is — to appropriate rent by taxation.
In this way the State may become the universal landlord
without calling herself so, and without assuming a single new function. In
form, the ownership of land would remain just as now. No owner of land need be
dispossessed, and no restriction need be placed upon the amount of land any one
could hold. For, rent being taken by the State in taxes, land, no matter in
whose name it stood, or in what parcels it was held, would be really common
property, and every member of the community would participate in the advantages
of its ownership. (Henry George, Progress and Poverty. New York: The Robert Schalkenbach Foundation,
1935, 406.)
What modern socialist apologists have done in many cases
is to take some of the characteristics of socialism, confuse them with the
substance or essence of socialism, and claim either that socialism never should
have been condemned, or that what was condemned wasn’t socialism. Specifically, socialist apologists have
tended to focus on four characteristics of socialism that they claim are not
what was condemned, is not really socialism, or that socialism has changed:
These characteristics (which we take from an analysis of the thought of Robert Owen) are not themselves socialism. They are, rather, characteristics or "accidentals" that have been applied in ways that conform to the essence of socialism, i.e., the shift of rights from the human person to some form of the collective.
It cannot be stressed enough that none of these characteristics are themselves socialism. Every one of them, even the abolition of private ownership (in a sense and under very limited conditions) is either a good thing that socialism has twisted or distorted, or is an unintended evil permitted under the principle of double effect to deal with an emergency. The problem is that even a very good thing, such as philanthropy, can turn into something not so good if used improperly or turned into a mandate, e.g., the voluntary surrender of wealth for the common good by the philanthropist that is done to avoid confiscation, or is considered the solution to the growing wealth and income gap when all it is, is a temporary stopgap.
These characteristics (which we take from an analysis of the thought of Robert Owen) are not themselves socialism. They are, rather, characteristics or "accidentals" that have been applied in ways that conform to the essence of socialism, i.e., the shift of rights from the human person to some form of the collective.
It cannot be stressed enough that none of these characteristics are themselves socialism. Every one of them, even the abolition of private ownership (in a sense and under very limited conditions) is either a good thing that socialism has twisted or distorted, or is an unintended evil permitted under the principle of double effect to deal with an emergency. The problem is that even a very good thing, such as philanthropy, can turn into something not so good if used improperly or turned into a mandate, e.g., the voluntary surrender of wealth for the common good by the philanthropist that is done to avoid confiscation, or is considered the solution to the growing wealth and income gap when all it is, is a temporary stopgap.
·
Philanthropy, or voluntary redistribution
of one’s wealth for the good of the community or mankind as a whole (a virtuous act that socialism considers mandatory),
·
Communitarianism, or a concern for the
common good (an essential virtue that socialism distorts by subsuming all individual natural rights into the collective),
·
Reform of Religion to focus on,
emphasize, or exclusively work for temporal ends (continual reform of religion is essential, but not in a way that changes the nature of religion itself as the socialists demand), and
·
Abolition of Private Ownership (an allowed expedient under the principle of double effect in an emergency that socialism considers mandatory in all cases, disconnecting private ownership completely from the natural right to be an owner.
We will look at each of these in future postings on this
subject.
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