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Reflections on a Rotten Apple
From The Well and the Shallows
Our age is obviously the Nonsense Age; the wiser sort of nonsense being
provided for the children and the sillier sort of nonsense for the grown-up
people. The eighteenth century has been called the Age of Reason; I suppose
there is no doubt that the twentieth century is the Age of Unreason. But
even that is an understatement. The Age of Reason was nicknamed from a
famous rationalist book. [Thomas Paine's <The Age of Reason> 1794-
95.] But the rationalist was not really so much concerned to urge the
rational against the irrational; but rather specially to urge the natural
against the supernatural. But there is a degree of the unreasonable that
would go even beyond the unnatural. It is not merely an
incredible tale, but an inconsistent idea. As I pointed out to somebody
long ago, it is one thing to believe that a beanstalk scaled the sky,
and quite another to believe that fifty-seven beans make five.
For instance, a man may disbelieve in miracles; normally on some <a
priori> principle of determinist thought; in some cases even on examination
of the evidence. But on being told of the miracle of the multiplication
of the loaves and fishes, he is told something that is logical if it is
not natural. He is not told that there were fewer fishes because the fishes
had been multiplied. Multiplication is still a mathematical term; and
a mob all feeding on miraculous fishes is a less mysterious or monstrous
sight than a man saying that multiplication is the same as subtraction.
Such a story, for such a sceptic, does not carry conviction; but it does
make sense. He can recognise the logical consequence, if he cannot understand
the logical cause. But no pope or priest ever asked him to believe that
thousands died of starvation in the desert because they were loaded with
loaves and fishes. No creed or dogma ever declared that there was too
little food because there was too much fish. But that is the precise,
practical and prosaic definition of the present situation in the modern
science of economics. And the man of the Nonsense Age must bow his head
and repeat his <credo>, the motto of his time, <Credo quia impossible>.
["I believe because it is impossible."]
Or again, the term unreason is sometimes used rather more reasonably;
for a sort of loose or elliptical statement, which is at least illogical
in form. The most popular case is what was called the Irish Bull; often
suspected of resembling the Papal Bull, in being a supernatural monster
bred of credulity and superstition. But even this old sort of confusion
stopped short of the new sort of contradiction. If any Irishman really
does say, "We are not birds, to be in two places at once," at least
we know what he means, even if it is not what he says. But suppose he
says that one bird has been miraculously multiplied into a million birds,
and that in consequence there are fewer birds in the world than there
were before. We should then be dealing, not merely with an Irish Bull
but with a Mad Bull, and concerned not with the incredible but with the
incomprehensible. Or, to apply the parable, the Irish have sometimes been
accused of unbalanced emotion or morbid sentiment. But nobody says that
they merely imagined the Great Famine, in which multitudes starved because
the potatoes were few and small. Only suppose an Irishman
had said that they starved because the potatoes were gigantic and innumerable.
I think we should not yet have heard the last of the wrong-headed absurdity
of that Irishman. Yet that is an exact description of the economic condition
to-day as it affects the Englishman. And, to a great extent, the American.
We learn that there is a famine because there is not a scarcity; and there
is such a good potato-crop that there are no potatoes. The Irishman, with
his bull or his bird, is quite a hard-headed realist and rationalist compared
to that. Thus, the old examples of the fantastic fell far short of the
modern fact; whether they were mysteries supposed to be above reason or
merely muddles supposed to be below it. Their miracles were more normal
than our scientific averages; and the Irish blunder was less illogical
than the actual logic of events.
For it seems that we live to-day in a world of witchcraft, in which the
orchards wither because they prosper, and the multitude of apples on the
apple-tree of itself turns them into forbidden fruit, and makes the effort
to consume them in every sense fruitless. This is the modern economic
paradox, which is called Over-Production, or a glut in the market, and
though at first sight it sounds like the wildest fantasy, it is well to
realise in what sense it is the most solid of facts. Let it be clearly
understood, therefore, that as a description of the objective social situation
at this instant in this industrial society, the
paradox is perfectly true. But it is not really true that the contradiction
in terms is true. If we take it, not as a description but as a definition,
if we take it as a matter of abstract argument, then certainly the contradiction
is untrue, as every contradiction is untrue.
The truth is that a third element has entered into the matter, which
is not mentioned in this abstract statement of it. That element might
be stated in many ways; perhaps the shortest statement of it is in the
fable of the man who sold razors, and afterwards explained to an indignant
customer, with simple dignity, that he had never said the
razors would shave. When asked if razors were not made to shave, he replied
that they were made to sell. That is A Short History of Trade and Industry
During the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries.
God made a world of reason as sure as God made little apples (as the
beautiful proverb goes); and God did not make little apples larger than
large apples. It is not true that a man whose apple-tree is loaded with
apples will suffer from a want of apples; though he may indulge in a waste
of apples. But if he never looks upon apples as things to eat, but always
looks on them as things to sell, he will really get into another sort
of complication; which may end in a sort of contradiction. If, instead
of producing as many apples as he wants, he produces as many apples as
he imagines the whole world wants, with the hope of capturing the trade
of the whole world - then he will be either successful or unsuccessful
in competing with the man next door who also wants the whole world's trade
to himself. Between them, they will produce so many apples that apples
in the market will be about as valuable as pebbles on the beach. Thus
each of them will
find he has very little money in his pocket, with which to go and buy
fresh pears at the fruiterer's shop. If he had never expected to get fruit
at the fruiterer's shop, but had put up his hand and pulled them off his
own tree, his difficulty would never have arisen. It seems simple; but
at the root of all apple-trees and apple-growing, it is really as simple
as that.
Of course I do not mean that the practice is at present simple; for no
practical problem is simple, least of all at the present time, when everything
is confused by the corrupt and evasive muddlers who are called practical
politicians. But the principle is simple; and the
only way to proceed through a complex situation is to start with the
right first principle. How far we can do without, or control, or merely
modify the disadvantages of buying and selling is quite another matter.
But the disadvantages do arise from buying and selling, and not from producing:
not even from over-producing. And it is some satisfaction to realise that
we are not living in a nightmare in which No is the same as Yes; that
even the modern world has not actually gone mad, with all its ingenious
attempts to do so; that two and two do in fact make four; and that the
man who has four apples really has
more than the man who has three. For some modern metaphysicians and moral
philosophers seem disposed to leave us in doubt on these points. It is
not the fundamental reason in things that is at fault; it is a particular
hitch or falsification, arising from a very recent trick of regarding
everything only in relation to trade. Trade is all very well
in its way, but Trade has been put in the place of Truth. Trade, which
is in its nature a secondary or dependent thing, has been treated as a
primary and independent thing; as an absolute. The moderns, mad upon mere
multiplication, have even made a plural out of what is eternally singular,
in the sense of single. They have taken what all ancient philosophers
called the Good, and translated it as the Goods.
I believe that certain mystics, in the American business world, protested
against the slump by pinning labels to their coats inscribed, Trade Is
Good," along with other similar proclamations, such as, "Capone Is Dead,"
or "Cancer Is Pleasant," or "Death Is Abolished," or any other hard realistic
truths for which they might find space upon their persons. But what interests
me about these magicians is that, having decided to call up ideal conditions
by means of spells and incantations to control the elements, they did
not (so to speak) understand the elements of the elements. They did not
go to the root
of the matter, and imagine that their troubles had really come to an
end. Rather they worshipped the means instead of the end. While they were
about it, they ought to have said, not "Trade Is Good," but "Living Is
Good," or "Life Is Good." I suppose it would be too much to expect such
thoroughly respectable people to say, "God Is Good"; but it is really
true that their conception of what is good lacks the philosophical finality
that belonged to the goodness of God. When God looked on created things
and saw that they were good, it meant that they were good in themselves
and as they stood; but by the
modern mercantile idea, God would only have looked at them and seen that
they were The Goods. In other words, there would be a label tied to the
tree or the hill, as to the hat of the Mad Hatter, with "This Style, 10/6."
All the flowers and birds would be ticketed with their reduced prices;
all the creation would be for sale or all the creatures seeking employment;
with all the morning stars making sky-signs together and all the Sons
of God shouting for jobs. In other words, these people are incapable of
imagining any good except that which comes from bartering something for
something else. The idea of a
man enjoying a thing in itself, for himself, is inconceivable to them.
The notion of a man eating his own apples off his own apple-tree seems
like a fairy-tale. Yet the fall from that first creation that was called
good has very largely come from the restless impotence for
valuing things in themselves; the madness of the trader who cannot see
any good in a good, except as something to get rid of. It was once admitted
that with sin and death there entered the world something that we call
change. It is none the less true and tragic, because what we called change,
we called afterwards exchange. Anyhow, the result
of that extravagance of exchange has been that when there are too many
apples there are too few apple-eaters. I do not insist on the symbol of
Eden, or the parable of the apple-tree, but it is odd to notice that even
that accidental image pursues us at every stage of
this strange story. The last result of treating a tree as a shop or a
store instead of as a store-room, the last effect of treating apples as
goods rather than as good, has been in a desperate drive of public charity
and in poor men selling apples in the street.
In all normal civilisations the trader existed and must exist. But in
all normal civilisations the trader was the exception; certainly he was
never the rule; and most certainly he was never the ruler. The predominance
which he has gained in the modern world is the cause
of all the disasters of the modern world. The universal habit of humanity
has been to produce and consume as part of the same process; largely conducted
by the same people in the same place. Sometimes goods were produced and
consumed on the same great
feudal manor; sometimes even on the same small peasant farm. Sometimes
there was a tribute from serfs as yet hardly distinguishable from slaves;
sometimes there was a co-operation between free-men which the superficial
can hardly distinguish from communism. But none of these many historical
methods, whatever their vices or
limitations, was strangled in the particular tangle of our own time;
because most of the people, for most of the time, were thinking about
growing food and then eating it; not entirely about growing food and selling
it at the stiffest price to somebody who had nothing to eat. And I for
one do not believe that there is any way out of the modern
tangle, except to increase the proportion of the people who are living
according to the ancient simplicity. Nobody in his five wits proposes
that there should be no trade and no traders. Nevertheless, it is important
to remember, as a matter of mere logic, that there might conceivably be
great wealth, even if there were no trade and no traders. It is important
for the sort of man whose only hope is that Trade Is Good or whose only
secret terror is that Trade Is Bad. In principle, prosperity might be
very great, even if trade were very bad. If a village were so fortunately
situated that, for some reason, it was
easy for every family to keep its own chickens, to grow its own vegetables,
to milk its own cow and (I will add) to brew its own beer, the standard
of life and property might be very high indeed, even though the long memory
of the Oldest Inhabitant only recorded two or three pure transactions
of trade; if he could only recall the one far-off event of his neighbour
buying a new hat from a gipsy's barrow; or the singular incident of Farmer
Billings purchasing an umbrella.
As I have said, I do not imagine, or desire, that things would ever be
quite so simple as that. But we must understand things in their simplicity
before we can explain or correct their complexity. The complexity of commercial
society has become intolerable, because
that society is commercial and nothing else. The whole mind of the community
is occupied, not with the idea of possessing things, but with the idea
of passing them on. When the simple enthusiasts already mentioned say
that Trade is Good, they mean that all the people who possess goods are
perpetually parting with them. These Optimists presumably invoke the poet,
with some slight emendation of the poet's meaning, when he cries aloud,
'Our souls are love and a perpetual farewell.' In that sense, our individualistic
and commercial modern society is actually the very reverse of a society
founded on Private Property. I mean that the actual direct and isolated
enjoyment of private property, as distinct from the excitement of exchanging
it or getting a profit on it, is rather rarer than in many simple communities
that seem almost communal in their simplicity. In the
case of this sort of private consumption, which is also private production,
it is very unlikely that it will run continually into overproduction.
There is a limit to the number of apples a man can eat, and there will
probably be a limit, drawn by his rich and healthy
hatred of work, to the number of apples which he will produce but cannot
eat. But there is no limit to the number of apples he may possibly sell;
and he soon becomes a pushing, dexterous and successful Salesman and turns
the whole world upside-down. For it is
he who produces this huge pantomimic paradox with which this rambling
reflection began. It is he who makes a wilder revolution than the apple
of Adam which was the loosening of death, or the apple of Newton which
was the apocalypse of gravitation, by proclaiming the supreme blasphemy
and heresy, that the apple was made for the market and not for the mouth.
It was he, by starting the wild race of pouring endless apples into a
bottomless market, who opened the abyss of irony and contradiction into
which we are staring to-day. That trick of treating the trade as the test,
and the only test, has left
us face to face with a piece of stark staring nonsense written in gigantic
letters across the world; more gigantic than all its own absurd advertisements
and announcements; the statement that the more we produce the less we
possess.
Oscar Wilde would probably have fainted with equal promptitude, if told
he was being used in an argument about American salesmanship, or in defence
of a thrifty and respectable family life on the farm. But it does so happen
that one true epigram, among many of his false epigrams, sums up correctly
and compactly a certain truth, not (I
am happy to say) about Art, but about all that he desired to separate
from Art; ethics and even economics. He said in one of his plays: "A cynic
is a man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing."
[The quotation is from <Lady Windermere's Fan> (1892).] It is extraordinarily
true; and the answer to most other things that he said. But it is yet
more extraordinary that the modern men who make that mistake most obviously
are not the cynics. On the contrary, they are those who call themselves
the Optimists; perhaps
even those who would call themselves the Idealists; certainly those who
regard themselves as the Regular Guys and the Sons of Service and Uplift.
It is too often those very people who have spoilt all their good effect,
and weakened their considerable good example in work and social contact,
by that very error: that things are to be judged by
the price and not by the value. And since Price is a crazy and incalculable
thing, while Value is an intrinsic and indestructible thing, they have
swept us into a society which is no longer solid but fluid, as unfathomable
as a sea and as treacherous as a quicksand.
Whether anything more solid can be built again upon a social philosophy
of values, there is now no space to discuss at length here; but I am certain
that nothing solid can be built on any other philosophy; certainly not
upon the utterly unphilosophical philosophy of blind buying and selling;
of bullying people into purchasing what they do not want; of making it
badly so that they may break it and imagine they want it again; of keeping
rubbish in rapid circulation like a dust-storm in a desert; and pretending
that you are teaching men to hope, because you do not leave them one intelligent
instant in which to despair.
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