"overall? this is a short text, but it took me a long time to get through it because i found it very difficult to put it into context. i suspect that that difficulty placing it into context may be why it's not often cited today. whatever it's value as a liberalizing document in it's own time, it reads off today as a manifesto of the type of social conservatism that is often found on the religious right. yet, price was a major opponent of no less a conservative icon than edmund burke himself. when the lines are this blurry, it's no wonder that he's been left unclaimed in the second half of the twentieth century. however, that doesn't negate the text's historical value. it may not have a direct successor today, but it may perhaps be traced forwards in time as an influential text on the socially conservative aspect of the progressive movement of the late nineteenth century."
that was also painful. i had this idea i could do fifty pages of reading in the morning and record all night, but i found myself getting through a few paragraphs of this thing per day. i have to admit i was hugely distracted by youtube, as you may have noticed.
i'm not giving up on the idea yet, but i'm thinking song/book alternation may be a better idea.
derp
i was tangentially blown off course to this text when attempting to
get in between the ideological debate carried out by burke and paine
over the revolution in france. i seem to have gotten some wires crossed
(i'm going to guess it was complications from a google search) in
thinking that the editor of my copy of burke's reflections on the revolution in france claimed that his text was in response to this one. rather, the claim was that burke was replying to a sermon given by rev./dr. price in 1789.
this text is claimed by some, however, to have had a strong influence
on certain american revolutionaries, so i've decided to give it a read
through for historical purposes.
price splits his text into two sections. the first states a few
assumptions about liberty and is likewise split into three sections:
liberty in general, civil liberties as they relate to government and
what could vaguely be called sovereignty in the context of empire. price
cites locke in his preface and, without having read much locke
directly, i'm willing to take him at face value in his claim that he's
merely stating lockean principles. the second section discusses the
possibility of a war with the american colonies and is really the crux
of the text. as the first section is merely a statement of principles,
deconstructing it in too much detail is to largely miss the point of his
argument about the possible upcoming war against the colonies. however,
there are a few curiosities that are worth pointing out to more broadly
understand what 'liberty' meant, as a concept, amongst liberals
(including proto-anarchists and proto-socialists) of the time period.
price specifies four different types of liberty: physical,
religious, civil and moral. the first three are intuitive; the last
references the liberty to not be controlled by 'contrary principles'.
today, most people would acknowledge that intellectual liberty (the
liberty to define our own principles) is a key type of liberty and
contrast it directly against this idea of 'moral liberty' that price is
asserting. i think it's worthwhile to try and understand this a little
bit better in case i see it jump up elsewhere.
would it not be easy to derive the idea of defining our own
principles from not being controlled by those of others? sure, and this
is the intuitive connection between moral and intellectual liberty.
however, price is being far too specific to allow that derivation. to
price, "contrary principles" means "principles contrary to christian
principles". specifically, he claims that those who are "controlled by
passions" have lost their moral liberty and those without moral liberty
are "wicked and detestable". again, it's easy to claim this can be
converted into modern language by talking about various types of sexual
oppression, but he speaks not of this but of "licentiousness", which no
doubt referred to any kind of sexuality that was not properly puritan.
he takes it a step further than this in comparing licentiousness to a
type of despotism. while he's not explicit, it's clear that he means to
state that the despot is satan. his concept of moral freedom is
consequently one of freedom from enslavement to satanic principles and,
while this is maybe an easily understood relic of classical thinking, it
is not at all consistent with intellectual liberty. rather, it reduces
the parliament to a rubber stamp for the church and threatens to oppress
all those who do not conform to the doctrine dictated by the
church-state; "moral freedom" is the so-called "freedom" to not be
exposed to ideas that differ from the state's (and church's) official
pronunciations. this is 1776, not 1984.
it's not entirely clear how far price would enforce his right to
"moral freedom" in an attempt to suppress "intellectual freedom" and
emancipate those whom he considers to be enslaved to their corrupt
desires. he does suggest that licentiousness should be restricted by
laws, but he's also careful to point out that despotism is the greater
threat than licentiousness. on the other hand, he makes it clear that he
believes that people have the "right" to "protect" themselves from
influences that may lead them away from the church. he also seems to
reject the idea of a written constitution - specifically because it may
restrict government in punishing "licentiousness". i'm really not able
to develop a cogent thought from that seemingly contradictory mess of
ideas, other than to derive the somewhat outlandish view that price
believed that restricting "licentiousness" was a valid act of
communitarian democracy, in the sense that it protects the majority from
harm (as he sees it). that is, he seems to be arguing in favour
of the tyranny of the majority and specifically when it comes to
sexuality. such thinking seems better suited to the spanish inquisition
than to british liberalism, and yet here it is in an important
revolutionary document. i cannot make further sense of it, other than to
applaud jefferson's insistence on the lockean notion of separating
church and state in an environment where not doing so could have been
truly catastrophic.
i also want to take note of how haphazardly price glosses over the
problems of corruption that are endemic in government. it does not seem
as though price is interested in the kinds of objections that an ancient
philosopher like socrates may have provided against democracy. nor does
he provide arguments for his claims, but this is to be forgiven due to
the nature of the first section as a statement of principles rather than
an exposition of them. it is somewhat annoying, though, that, even
while arguing against authority, he asserts his arguments in the form of
sometimes inane assertions. it may indeed be obvious that pure
democracy becomes less and less reasonable as population size increases,
but it in no way follows that "a free government may be established in
the largest state" by setting up a decentralized representative
democracy. while price correctly points out that money is a possible
corrupting influence in representative democracies, centralized or not,
he does not present any kind of argument as to why his proposals will
not lead to that kind of corruption or why "in these circumstances," of
decentralized representative democracy, "each separate state would be
secure against the interference of sovereign power in its private
concerns, and, therefore, would possess liberty". could the corrupting
forces not merely simultaneously co-opt several states? i'm not saying
they must or can't, i'm just pointing out that there's no argument at
all and that reduces price to some kind of cheap mystical guru, pumping
out oracular nonsense that seems almost precious in hindsight.
he closes the first section by arguing (i use that word lightly)
that empires are impossible to maintain and always eventually result in
dissolution. the empire must demand certain things of it's client
states, which it's client states will see as rightfully theirs, leading
to a conflict developing between positions of imperial authority (which
are illegitimate) and expressions of popular rule. the imperial state
will need to assert itself by force, which will produce a violent
reaction. this is a much easier set of statements to take at face value,
although it's perhaps no longer reasonable in our world to think a
popular movement can offer any kind of violent resistance to a
centralized state. of course, he's setting himself up for a discussion
of the situation in america, which he turns to in his second section.
while price provides moral and constitutional arguments, and these
form an important part of his perspective, what he's really suggesting
is that it is not in britain's self-interest to try and suppress the
colonies by force. price is by no means a revolutionary himself. rather,
his main concern is the strength of the empire and how to maintain
america within it in a way that both grants the colonists a higher level
of autonomy and maintains the cohesion of a greater, trans-oceanic
british civilization. the real core of his opposition to military action
consequently reduces to his perception that such a conflict is
unwinnable, from the british perspective; that is to say that the crux
of his essay is to suggest that the crown ought to have been using more
enlightened tactics than they were using in order to maintain the
empire.
was the probability of success really so remote? well, it depended
entirely on how many people could be convinced to fight, and price
realized that. his calculation assumed that the british empire could not
gather any recruits from russia, india or canada (a clear
underestimation) and also assumed that every single colonist would fight
against the empire (a clear exaggeration that, as a canadian, is
especially absurd to me). he consequently derives a force of 40,000
imperial british soldiers vs. 500,000 american colonists. in reality,
the loyalists in america actually outnumbered the revolutionaries; the
empire had a large numerical advantage in the war. price
continues by suggesting that blockading the colonies could not truly
harm them because they were entirely self-sufficient. he once again
becomes incoherent here, in suggesting that the blockade he opposes
would be an act of providence to deliver the colonists from the
temptation of foreign luxuries.
throughout his arguments, price persistently returns to this
romanticized conception of the american colonists as a pious, pure
entity that understands and practices an undiluted, true kind of liberty
and continually contrasts them against his perception of the british as
corrupted by earthly desires. it's maybe easy to forget at this point
that the puritan founding myth was as much of a british invention as an
american one and that the historical roots of it carried on in britain
for at least as long as it did in america. that is to say that price was
producing british stereotypes of america while speaking to a british
audience. ulterior motives that price may have had aside, one gets the
impression that the british would have generally taken this entirely
outlandish, romanticized idealization at face value. the following
passage illustrates this:
In this hour of tremendous danger it would become us to turn our
thoughts to Heaven. This is what our brethren in the Colonies are
doing. From one end of North-America to the other they are fasting and
praying. But what are we doing? We are ridiculing them as fanatics, and
scoffing at religion, We are running wild after pleasure and forgetting
every thing serious and decent at masquerades. We are trafficking for
boroughs, perjuring ourselves at elections, and selling ourselves for
places. Which side then is Providence likely to favour?
price even ends the text (somewhat hilariously) by comparing
america to jesus: he asks the colonists to forgive the empire for it's
oppression, as it knows not what it is doing.
on the brighter side of things, it should be noted that price had a
fairly refreshing view of indigenous concerns, relative to the period.
while he ultimately puts the question aside, seemingly due to the
perception that it is an argument he can't win, his articulation both of
british massacres in india and of native american sovereignty
demonstrate that these were not unknown moral concerns at the time:
If sailing along a coast can give a right to a country, then
might the people of Japan become, as soon as they please, the
proprietors of Britain. Nothing can be more chimerical than property
founded on such a reason. If the land on which the colonies first
settled had any proprietors, they were the natives.
indeed, they were.
another thing that price seems abstractly (if not explicitly) aware
of is the revolution as a process of recentering the empire in
washington, rather than one of an independent entity breaking off and
starting a new nation. while he upholds the constitutional principle of
"no taxation without representation", he also makes it clear that he
doesn't really see the colonists as representing a new national identity
that in any way transcends their inherent britishness. he demonstrates
this by projecting a possible future where the hanoverian kings (or some
other aristocratic family of continental despots) have reduced britain
to an authoritarian monarchy, consequently creating a situation where
the colonists are the remaining descendants of traditional concepts of
british liberty. such a future is one where the colonies would be
drastically more populous, have a much larger economy, be more
intellectually advanced and command a much stronger military. out of
this, price is able to project a fantasy where america is both morally
and realistically superior to britain. he dares not suggest that britain
would be forced into submission, but the implication is between the
lines. he then uses this projection to argue for reconciliation with the
colonists out of british self-interest.
overall? this is a short text, but it took me a long time to get
through it because i found it very difficult to put it into context. i
suspect that that difficulty placing it into context may be why it's not
often cited today. whatever it's value as a liberalizing document in
it's own time, it reads off today as a manifesto of the type of social
conservatism that is often found on the religious right. yet, price was a
major opponent of no less a conservative icon than edmund burke
himself. when the lines are this blurry, it's no wonder that he's been
left unclaimed in the second half of the twentieth century. however,
that doesn't negate the text's historical value. it may not have a
direct successor today, but it may perhaps be traced forwards in time as
an influential text on the socially conservative aspect of the
progressive movement of the late nineteenth century.
full text:
http://www.constitution.org/price/price_3.htm
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/books/congress/E/211.P930.1776b/index.html