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from:
http://www.bartleby.com/65/su/Sumner-W.html
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Sumner, William Graham


1840–1910, American sociologist and political economist, b. Paterson, N.J.,
grad. Yale, 1863, and studied in Germany, in Switzerland, and at Oxford. He
was ordained an Episcopal minister and from 1872 was professor of political
and social science at Yale. In economics he advocated a policy of extreme
laissez-faire, strongly opposing any government measures that he thought
interfered with the natural economics of trade. As a sociologist he did
valuable work in charting the evolution of human customs—folkways and mores.
He concluded that the power of these forces, developed in the course of human
evolution, rendered useless any attempts at social reform. He also originated
the concept of ethnocentrism, a term now commonly used, to designate
attitudes of superiority about one’s own group in comparison with others. His
major work was Folkways (1907). The massive Science of Society by Sumner and
Albert G. Keller, a colleague, was not completed and published until 1927 (4
vol.; Vol. IV by Sumner, Keller, and M. R. Davie).  1

See H. E. Starr, William Graham Sumner (1925); A. G. Keller, Reminiscences
(Mainly Personal) of William Graham Sumner (1933); W. G. Green, Sumner Today
(1940, repr. 1971); R. G. McCloskey, American Conservatism in the Age of
Enterprise (1951, repr. 1964); M. R. Davie, William Graham Sumner (1963).   2
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2000 Columbia
University Press.
-----
from:
http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~jboland/lect_12.html
Click Here: <A HREF="http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~jboland/lect_12.html">US
Political Thought, Lecture 12</A>
-----
U.S. Political Thought


Lecture 12


------------------------------------------------------------------------
November 9, 1995
Joseph Boland

Outline


Announcements and Reminders *   Readings for the next Tuesday, read Dewey,
Addams and Debs.

*   See posted notes on Herbert Croly’s The Promise of American Life.




Lecture Outline *   William Graham Sumner -- Social Darwinism and ne
o-liberalism in defense of laissez-faire capitalism
*   Introduction -- Social Darwinism in Sumner
*   Elements of Sumner’s doctrine
*   The minimal state
*   Glorification of economically acquisitive individualism
*   the desirability of large fortunes
*   denigration of workerS

*   Repudiation of republicanism



William Graham Sumner-- Social Darwinism and neo-liberalism in defense of
laissez-faire capitalism

Sumner sought to justify the new socio-economic order by marrying Social
Darwinism with a liberalism almost exclusively concerned with the
economically acquisitive individual. Social Darwinism was an application of
Darwin’s ideas of natural selection and biological evolution to human
societies. Its proponents were bent on naturalizing the social conditions of
the period, particularly those conditions which aroused the greatest
controversy and conflict--the rapid growth of an impoverished working class,
the huge gulf that had opened up between rich and poor, and the often filthy
and disorganized conditions in the burgeoning industrial cities. Social
Darwinists like Sumner argued that social existence was a competitive
struggle among individuals possessing different natural capacities and
traits. Overall, those with better traits succeeded, becoming wealthy and
powerful, while those lacking in inner discipline or intelligence sank into
poverty. Thus the very conditions that reformers decried were, to Sumner,
indications that society was functioning as it should. Government must not
interfere to ameliorate conditions because this would only result in the
preservation of bad traits even while penalizing those who possessed good
ones. Thus social evolution was best served by a minimal state. Social
Darwinism eliminated any sense of moral obligation to the poor or (as we see
in Sumner) to virtually anyone else beyond one’s family.
Social Darwinism has been criticized on many grounds, two of which I’ll
mention here. First, it lacked an ability to conceptualize the structural
dynamics of the industrialization process. Such things as the emergence of
new classes or the tendency toward economic concentration and limitation of
competition cannot be accounted for by Social Darwinism. Nor is this
blindness accidental. To give prominence to structural factors would undercut
the Social Darwinist emphasis on individual attributes and action as causes
of social conditions and of the individual’s sole responsibility for his or
condition.
Second, human societies have developed--for better and for worse--by applying
human ingenuity to the design of tools and of ways of organizing work and
concerted action generally. Hence human societies are certainly not natural.
In fact, Locke, the philosopher usually cited as the originator of
liberalism, argued that human governments were not natural but conventional.
If the economies, technologies, and institutions of human societies are
products of human ingenuity, then shouldn’t we pay attention to the human
purposes they serve and not deceive ourselves with the pretense that they are
natural?
What I want to do now is examine some of the main features of Sumner’s
doctrine:
The minimal state: Traditional liberal doctrine held that citizens were
sovereign and that the state existed to serve specific purposes for them.
Sumner, responding to early pressure for social reform by the state,
reaffirms this. All the state owes anybody is “peace, order, and the
guarantees of rights” (342). As he later makes clear, “rights” refers chiefly
to property rights and to a very limited notion of equal opportunity. It
seems safe to say that “peace” and “order” refer to the state’s
responsibility to guard against foreign attacks, domestic insurrections, and
violations of the law, particularly violations of “the property of men and
the honor of women” (349). Beyond this, “it is not the function of the State
to make men happy” (346). Sumner views social reform as little more than the
use of the state to steal from “the rich, comfortable, prosperous, virtuous,
respectable, educated, and healthy” (341) in order to give to “classes of
people who have not been able to satisfy their own desires . . . [and who] do
not take their achievements as a fair measure of their [property] rights”
(343).
Sumner’s position is more consistent than those who strongly opposed social
welfare and industrial regulation but who made enormous exceptions when it
came to subsidies and benefits for industry. Under the rubric of “jobbery,”
Sumner condemns “any scheme which aims to gain, not by the legitimate fruits
of industry and enterprise, but by extorting from somebody a part of his
product under guise of some pretended industrial undertaking” (354). He had
in mind state development projects--buildings, internal improvements,
investment credits, etc., along with the “greatest” bit of jobbery of all,
the protective tariff (354).
Glorification of economically acquisitive individualism: Sumner accepts
without question that material success is indicative of virtue; specifically,
that it evidences one’s superior capacity for “labor and self-denial.” These
are virtues ordained by “God and Nature,” which have also determined “the
chances and conditions of life on earth once for all” (343). (The parallel
between this biological predetermination and the Calvinist belief in
predestination is only one of many parallels between Sumner and Calvinism.)
The one duty of “Every man and woman” is “to take care of his or her own
self” (351). In fulfilling this private duty one at the same time fulfills
one’s social duty (352). Moreover, no man can do more than take care of
himself and possibly his family.
Given these premises, Sumner naturally applauds the existence of large
fortunes. Wealth is synonymous with virtue and wealthy individuals are the
biological future of the species because they possess the best traits. The
state should not interfere with the accumulation of wealth because, since
wealth comes through labor and self-denial, men would not strive to
accumulate it if it did not secure advantages of a high order. Moreover, “The
possession of capital is . . . an indispensable prerequisite of educational,
scientific, and moral goods” (348). This assertion, especially the “moral
goods” phrase, only makes sense if one lives in Sumner’s moral universe. It
is diametrically opposed to Thoreau’s moral philosophy, for example. In any
case, it allows Sumner to conclude that private capital accumulation is
coextensive with the development of civilization.
Sumner’s denigration of workers is only the flip side of this argument. Those
who are exploited are themselves to blame for their exploitation. By being
spendthrift and indulging in “vulgar enjoyments” they lay themselves open to
exploitation. And by increasing their numbers, they compete with each other
for food and wages, driving up the cost of the former and while lowering the
latter. Even the prudent few thereby “suffer the folly of the rest” (348).
This last observation actually clashes with Sumner’s emphasis on social
evolution as the outcome of competition among individuals, since here we see
that a structural dynamic--the supposed promiscuous breeding of the
underclass--actually prevents the meritorious members of this class from
succeeding.
Repudiation of republicanism: Sumner’s doctrine can be thought of as a
variety of liberalism purged of almost all links with republicanism. Of what
are arguably the three leading tenets of republicanism--civic virtue, popular
sovereignty, and economic independence as a condition of citizenship--only
the last survives. Civic virtue--an active concern for the common good, a
willingness to sacrifice if necessary for it, and an understanding that
public action is a vital mode of personal fulfillment--is regarded by Sumner
as mere meddling in other people’s business. Popular sovereignty is
undesirable given “the vices and passions of human nature.” “If political
power be given to the masses who have not hitherto had it, nothing will stop
them from abusing it but laws and institutions” (346). Democratic government
is particularly dangerous because sure of itself and “ready to undertake
anything” (346).
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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