*****   _Objectivity Is Not Neutrality: Explanatory Schemes in
History_ (Baltimore, 1998): 280-306.

Responsibility, Convention, and the Role of Ideas in History*

Thomas L. Haskell

...My debt to Quentin Skinner is already apparent. In the interest of
brevity, my plan here is to hoist myself up on the shoulders of two
other scholars, neither of them historians, who have had penetrating
things to say about the conventions that had to prevail before
"responsibility" could take on its present range of meanings. The
first is Friedrich Nietzsche, who had no qualms at all about
asserting the priority of convention over reason, just so long as he
secured recognition that both were subordinate to the "will to
power." The second is the philosopher Bernard Williams, whose recent
book, _Shame and Necessity_, addresses (among other issues) a classic
problem: the
puzzling absence from ancient Greek culture, in spite of its
undeniable philosophical sophistication, of any conception of
responsibility capable of sustaining an attack on slavery. Although
the judicious balance Williams strikes between the claims of reason
and the force of convention has much to commend it, I shall argue
that certain amendments might yield a still more satisfying
formulation.

"Responsibility" is a word of surprisingly recent coinage. Like
"individualism" and "altruism." French imports that entered the
English language only in the 1830s, "responsibility" plays such a
central role in the form of life we inhabit today that it is not easy
to imagine how our ancestors ever got along without it. Yet the word
is as young as the United States, its first recorded usage having
occurred in 1788, during the debate over the Constitution. Federalist
paper 63, written by James Madison, speaks of frequent elections as a
means of ensuring "a due responsibility in the government to the
people," and notes that "responsibility, in order to be reasonable,
must be limited to objects within the power of the responsible
party."[5] "Responsibilité" first appeared in France at about the
same time.

Although born under political auspices, the word's meaning has never
been confined to politics. This is not surprising--although the
abstract noun "responsibility" was new in 1788, the adjective
"responsible" was not. No counterpart either to the noun or to the
adjective existed in classical Latin, but "responsible" or its
equivalents existed in French as early as the thirteenth century, in
English by the end of the sixteenth century, and in German by the
middle of the seventeenth century. These dates considerably lengthen
the word's lineage, yet even they seem surprisingly recent, given the
primal quality of the values and practices to which the word refers.
Once coined, "responsibility" was easily assimilated to philosophical
controversies that had been begun in other terms, such as "free
will," "accountability," "answerability," and "imputability." Richard
McKeon found the earliest philosophical treatment of responsibility
in 1859, when Alexander Bain mentioned it only to recommend an
alternative, "punishability." Bain contended that "a man can never be
said to be responsible, if you are not prepared to punish him when he
cannot satisfactorily answer the charges against him." John Stuart
Mill agreed, declaring in 1865 that "responsibility means
punishment." By the 1880s, L. Lévy-Bruhl was using the term in a more
ambitious way that made it a touchstone for moral inquiry of all
kinds, but precisely because the term could be so easily substituted
for older alternatives, McKeon concludes that its introduction did
little to alter the course of philosophical debate.[6]

The element of continuity should not be exaggerated, however. What is
most intriguing about the comparatively short etymological lineage of
"responsible" and "responsibility" is the thought that our
conceptions of morality and human agency, in which these terms figure
so prominently today, may be less a timeless feature of human nature
and more the product of changing historical conditions than is
commonly recognized. No one would argue that the consequentiality of
human choice only began to be noticed in 1788, but it puts no strain
on common sense to suggest that the emergence of a new word signifies
something new in the lives of those who use it. At the very least we
might say that a relationship between persons and events that had
hitherto been a comparatively compartmentalized matter, discussed in
other terms by theologians and philosophers, took on in these years a
sufficiently novel prominence or centrality in everyday political and
civil affairs to prompt the adoption of a new word, one sufficiently
attractive that it came into wide use, eventually displacing
established alternatives. Praise and blame obviously were not new in
1788. but conventions governing their imputation may well have been
changing--possibly in response to rising standards of accountability
in government, triggered by democratic revolutions in America and
France; or more broadly in response to an escalating sense of human
agency, fostered not only by political events but also by economic
development and the accelerating pace of technological innovation in
societies increasingly oriented to the market....

The "ripest fruit" of this stupendous development was what Nietzsche
called the "sovereign individual," who, having earned the right to
make promises, could not but be aware of his "mastery over
circumstances, over nature, and over all more short-willed and
unreliable creatures." "The proud awareness of the extraordinary
privilege of responsibility, the consciousness of this rare freedom,
this power over oneself and over fate, has in his case penetrated to
the profoundest depths and become instinct, the dominating instinct.
What will he call this dominating instinct, supposing he feels the
need to give it a name? The answer is beyond doubt: this sovereign
man calls it his conscience" (59-60). Ironically, it was this great
historical drama--the advent of the responsible, conscientious,
sovereign individual, an "animal soul turned against itself" so as to
become worthy of "divine spectators"--that inspired Nietzsche's
grandiose fantasies about the coming of an overman, a still higher
and more godlike specimen of humanity who would exercise his will to
power without guilt, thereby rescuing Europe from self-loathing and
rendering the choice between good and evil obsolete (85)....

Max Weber, who read and respected Nietzsche, took the Protestant
Reformation of the sixteenth century to be the great watershed
between "traditional" and "rational" (or modern) ways of life in
Europe. If Weber was right, the ascetic values that largely define
responsible conduct in Western culture today were initially
cultivated in monasteries and oriented to other-worldly goals, but
they were carried into the marketplace of everyday life and evolved
in close conjunction with capitalism from the time of the Reformation
forward. Any thought of a link between capitalism and rising
standards of responsibility may seem paradoxical, yet Weber's point
was sound: Even though market economies live by the rule of Caveat
emptor and deliberately shrink responsibility in some dimensions
(e.g., the limited-liability corporation), they also depend on a norm
of promise keeping and cannot thrive without an ample supply of
calculating, self-disciplined "economic men" (and women), alert to
their interests and acutely attentive to the remote consequences of
their conduct. It is among people of just this consequentialist cast
of mind that perceptions of responsibility are most likely to
flourish.[14] My assumption is not that the market elevates morality,
but that the form of life the market fosters may entail the
heightened sense of agency and enlarged causal horizon without which
Nietzsche's "long-willed" sovereign individual cannot function,
whether for good or evil. The expansive causal imagination that
enables the entrepreneur confidently to assume responsibility for
constructing a profitable future is no less necessary for ambitious
projects of humanitarian reform than for brutal schemes of
self-aggrandizement.

Recent research by social historians suggests that, as a cultural and
psychological phenomenon, the ethic of responsibility had not
achieved dominion at all levels of European society even as late as
the mid-nineteenth century.

Middle-class moralists of the Victorian era no doubt indulged their
own hunger for amour-propre and underestimated the degree to which
responsible conduct presupposes economic security, but they were
probably not wrong to sense in working-class culture an attitude more
fatalistic and more tolerant of irresponsibility than that of their
own class. Evangelical Protestants in England certainly felt that
they were fighting an uphill battle as they tried to inculcate habits
of foresight, repression of impulse, and delay of gratification in
working-class populations.[15] "Thinking causally" and anticipating
"distant eventualities as if they belonged to the present" are not
built into human nature. These traits are no less historical than the
rational forms of acquisitiveness that Weber associated with the
market and traced back to the worldly asceticism of the early
Protestants. Such traits helped constitute the cultural phenomenon
that Nietzsche thought so momentous, but the triumph of
responsibility may have been more recent than either Nietzsche or
Weber recognized--if, indeed, it is complete even today....

*[Chapter 10 in a twelve chapter collection of essays. The author's
introduction asserts that the themes developed in this part of the
book are the "most important...and the ones I am most eager to follow
up in future work." (p. 11) With respect to the postmodern challenge
to traditional intellectual history, Haskell states "I unreservedly
admire the broadly epistemological questions postmodernists have
raised" but positions himself with late nineteenth-century
"fallibilists" such as Max Weber (seeker of understanding rather than
infallible truth). Haskell explains: "Although I have no quarrel with
those who remind us that history and fiction are not easily
separable, I do resist those who glibly dismiss the distinction, as
if it made no difference to the conduct of life or scholarship." (pp.
8, 9) Of Chapter 10 Haskell confesses not much is new: "Parts of this
essay draw on three previous essays of mine on humanitarianism and
antislavery that first appeared in the _American Historical Review_
between 1985 and 1987. Those essays now appear together with
vigorously critical rejoinders by David Brion Davis and John Ashworth
in _The Antislavery Debate: Capitalism and Abolitionism as a Problem
in Historical Interpretation_, ed. Thomas Bender (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1992). Reviews of the Bender volume
include Seymour Drescher, in _History and Theory_ 32 (1993): 311-29,
and Morton J. Horwitz, "Reconstructing Historical Theory from the
Debris of the Cold War," _Yale Law Journal_ 102 (1993): 1287-92. An
important comment on and extension of the argument appears in David
Eltis, "Europeans and the Rise and Fall of African Slavery in the
Americas: An Interpretation," _American Historical Review_ 98
(Dec.1993): 1399-423. Another essay by Seymour Drescher, "The Long
Goodbye: Dutch Capitalism and Antislavery in Comparative
Perspective," _American Historical Review_ 99 (Feb. 1994): 44-69, is
also relevant. "I have received valuable advice about this
essay--often taking the form of vigorous dissent from its
conclusions--from Don Morrison, David Nirenberg, Larry Temkin, and
Martin Wiener. What I say here has undoubtedly been influenced by all
these critics and commentators but of course they bear no
responsibility for my views, and this essay is not meant as a
response to any of them." What the essay does seem to represent is
the distillation of fifteen years of thinking about the problem of
understanding the notions of generations past.]

[The full text of the essay is available at
<http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~sprague/hask1.htm>.]   *****

Thomas L. Haskell, _Objectivity Is Not Neutrality: Explanatory
Schemes in History_ (2000):
<http://www.press.jhu.edu/press/books/titles/f00/f00haob.htm>

Thomas L. Haskell, "Objectivity Is Not Neutrality Rhetoric vs.
Practice In Peter Novick's _That Noble Dream_,"
<http://www.famu.edu/acad/colleges/cas/histpol/eidahl/Fall/HIS3104/objectivity.pdf>

Thomas L. Haskell, "Capitalism and the Origins of the Humanitarian
Sensibility, Part 1," _American Historical Review_ 90.2 (April 1985):
<http://www.jstor.org/view/00028762/di951440/95p00067/0>

Thomas L. Haskell, "Capitalism and the Origins of the Humanitarian
Sensibility, Part 2 ," _American Historical Review_ 90.3 (June 1985):
<http://www.jstor.org/view/00028762/di951441/95p00045/0>

_The Antislavery Debate: Capitalism and Abolitionism as a Problem in
Historical Interpretation: Contributions by John Ashworth, David
Brion Davis, and Thomas L. Haskell_, ed. Thomas Bender, 1992:
<http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/5259.html>

David Brion Davis, "Reflections on Abolitionism and Ideological
Hegemony," _American Historical Review_ 92.4 (October 1987):
<http://www.jstor.org/view/00028762/di951452/95p00056/0>

John Ashworth, "The Relationship between Capitalism and
Humanitarianism," _American Historical Review_ 92.4 (October 1987):
<http://www.jstor.org/view/00028762/di951452/95p00067/0>

Thomas L. Haskell, "Convention and Hegemonic Interest in the Debate
over Antislavery: A Reply to Davis and Ashworth," _American
Historical Review_ 92.4 (October 1987):
<http://www.jstor.org/view/00028762/di951452/95p00077/0>

David Brion Davis: <http://www.yale.edu/glc/info/staff.html>

John Ashworth: <http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/american/staff/jash.htm>

Thomas L. Haskell: <http://dacnet.rice.edu/Faculty/?FDSID=648>
--
Yoshie

* Calendar of Events in Columbus:
<http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/calendar.html>
* Anti-War Activist Resources: <http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/activist.html>
* Student International Forum: <http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/>
* Committee for Justice in Palestine: <http://www.osu.edu/students/CJP/>

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