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From:
[log in to unmask] (Roy Davidson)
Date:
Wed Jun 21 20:39:27 2006
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James seems to believe that Henry George was an advocate of socialism. I  
don't know if he is familiar with The Science of Political Economy  
published posthumously in 1898. They say "politics makes strange  
bedfellows"  and it is certainly true that many of the socialist  
persuasion supported George in his two races for mayor of N.Y. But in  
Chapter VII entitled Ineffectual Gropings he made clear his disdain for  
Marxism and socialism.  
  
In the Science of Political Economy George is critical of virtually all  
the schools of economic thought he was aware of at the time including  
the Austrian which he called a "pseudo-science" and "if it has any  
principles, I have been utterly unable to find them." See Chapter VIII  
entitled The Scholastic Breakdown. Actually, the whole text of some 528  
pp  should be studied by anyone who is interested  in more than a  
superficial critique of his views.  
  
Incidentally, I believe Marx somewhere referred to George's economic  
analysis as "the capitalists last ditch."  
  
Under the name of socialism, a name which all such movements have now  
succeeded in appropriating, all such plans are embraced. We sometimes  
hear of "scientific socialism," as something to be established, as it  
were, by proclamation, or by act of government. In this there is a  
tendency to confuse the idea of science with that of something purely  
conventional or political, a scheme or proposal, not a science. For  
science, as previously explained, is concerned with natural laws, not  
with the proposal of man -- with relations which always have existed and  
always must exist. Socialism takes no account of natural laws, neither  
seeking them nor striving to be governed by them. It is an art or  
conventional scheme like any other scheme in politics or government,  
while political economy is an exposition of certain invariable laws of  
human nature. The proposal which socialism makes is that the  
collectivity or state shall assume the management of all means of  
production, including land, capital and man himself; do away with all  
competition, and convert mankind into two classes, the directors, taking  
their orders from government and acting by governmental authority, and  
the workers, for whom everything shall be provided, including the  
directors themselves. It is a proposal to bring back mankind to the  
socialism of Peru, but without reliance on divine will or power. Modern  
socialism is in fact without religion, and its tendency is atheistic. It  
is more destitute of any central and guiding principle than any  
philosophy I know of. Mankind is here; how, it does not state; and must  
proceed to make a world for itself, as disorderly as that which Alice in  
Wonderland confronted. It has no system of individual rights whereby it  
can define the extent to which the individual is entitled to liberty or  
to which the state may go in restraining it. And so long as no  
individual has any principle of guidance it is impossible that society  
itself should have any. How such a combination could be called a  
science, and how it should get a following, can be accounted for only by  
the "fatal facility of writing without thinking," which the learned  
German ability of studying details without any leading principle permits  
to pass, and by the number of places which such a bureaucratic  
organization would provide. However, through government repression and  
its falling in with trade-union notions it has made great headway in  
Germany, and has taken considerable hold in England.  
  
Roy Davidson  

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