| |
The
JUST Response collection of classics: BERTRAND RUSSELL (4)
What Desires Are Politically
Important?
- Bertrand Russell
(1950)
I have chosen this subject for my lecture
tonight because I think that most current discussions of politics and
political theory take insufficient account of psychology. Economic
facts, population statistics, constitutional organization, and so on,
are set forth minutely. There is no difficulty in finding out how many
South Koreans and how many North Koreans there were when the Korean War
began. If you will look into the right books you will be able to
ascertain what was their average income per head, and what were the
sizes of their respective armies. But if you want to know what sort of
person a Korean is, and whether there is any appreciable difference
between a North Korean and a South Korean; if you wish to know what they
respectively want out of life, what are their discontents, what their
hopes and what their fears; in a word, what it is that, as they say,
"makes them tick", you will look through the reference books
in vain. And so you cannot tell whether the South Koreans are
enthusiastic about UNO, or would prefer union with their cousins in the
North. Nor can you guess whether they are willing to forgo land reform
for the privilege of voting for some politician they have never heard
of. It is neglect of such questions by the eminent men who sit in remote
capitals, that so frequently causes disappointment. If politics is to
become scientific, and if the event is not to be constantly surprising,
it is imperative that our political thinking should penetrate more
deeply into the springs of human action. What is the influence of hunger
upon slogans? How does their effectiveness fluctuate with the number of
calories in your diet? If one man offers you democracy and another
offers you a bag of grain, at what stage of starvation will you prefer
the grain to the vote? Such questions are far too little considered.
However, let us, for the present, forget the Koreans, and consider the
human race.
All human activity is prompted by desire. There is a wholly fallacious
theory advanced by some earnest moralists to the effect that it is
possible to resist desire in the interests of duty and moral principle.
I say this is fallacious, not because no man ever acts from a sense of
duty, but because duty has no hold on him unless he desires to be
dutiful. If you wish to know what men will do, you must know not only,
or principally, their material circumstances, but rather the whole
system of their desires with their relative strengths.
There are some desires which, though very powerful, have not, as a rule,
any great political importance. Most men at some period of their lives
desire to marry, but as a rule they can satisfy this desire without
having to take any political action. There are, of course, exceptions;
the rape of the Sabine women is a case in point. And the development of
northern Australia is seriously impeded by the fact that the vigorous
young men who ought to do the work dislike being wholly deprived of
female society. But such cases are unusual, and in general the interest
that men and women take in each other has little influence upon
politics.
The desires that are politically important may be divided into a primary
and a secondary group. In the primary group come the necessities of
life: food and shelter and clothing. When these things become very
scarce, there is no limit to the efforts that men will make, or to the
violence that they will display, in the hope of securing them. It is
said by students of the earliest history that, on four separate
occasions, drought in Arabia caused the population of that country to
overflow into surrounding regions, with immense effects, political,
cultural, and religious. The last of these four occasions was the rise
of Islam. The gradual spread of Germanic tribes from southern Russia to
England, and thence to San Francisco, had similar motives. Undoubtedly
the desire for food has been, and still is, one of the main causes of
great political events.
But man differs from other animals in one very important respect, and
that is that he has some desires which are, so to speak, infinite, which
can never be fully gratified, and which would keep him restless even in
Paradise. The boa constrictor, when he has had an adequate meal, goes to
sleep, and does not wake until he needs another meal. Human beings, for
the most part, are not like this. When the Arabs, who had been used to
living sparingly on a few dates, acquired the riches of the Eastern
Roman Empire, and dwelt in palaces of almost unbelievable luxury, they
did not, on that account, become inactive. Hunger could no longer be a
motive, for Greek slaves supplied them with exquisite viands at the
slightest nod. But other desires kept them active: four in particular,
which we can label acquisitiveness, rivalry, vanity, and love of power.
Acquisitiveness - the wish to possess as much as possible of goods, or
the title to goods - is a motive which, I suppose, has its origin in a
combination of fear with the desire for necessaries. I once befriended
two little girls from Estonia, who had narrowly escaped death from
starvation in a famine. They lived in my family, and of course had
plenty to eat. But they spent all their leisure visiting neighbouring
farms and stealing potatoes, which they hoarded. Rockefeller, who in his
infancy had experienced great poverty, spent his adult life in a similar
manner. Similarly the Arab chieftains on their silken Byzantine divans
could not forget the desert, and hoarded riches far beyond any possible
physical need. But whatever may be the psychoanalysis of
acquisitiveness, no one can deny that it is one of the great motives -
especially among the more powerful, for, as I said before, it is one of
the infinite motives. However much you may acquire, you will always wish
to acquire more; satiety is a dream which will always elude you.
But acquisitiveness, although it is the mainspring of the capitalist
system, is by no means the most powerful of the motives that survive the
conquest of hunger. Rivalry is a much stronger motive. Over and over
again in Mohammedan history, dynasties have come to grief because the
sons of a sultan by different mothers could not agree, and in the
resulting civil war universal ruin resulted. The same sort of thing
happens in modern Europe. When the British Government very unwisely
allowed the Kaiser to be present at a naval review at Spithead, the
thought which arose in his mind was not the one which we had intended.
What he thought was, "I must have a Navy as good as Grandmamma's".
And from this thought have sprung all our subsequent troubles. The world
would be a happier place than it is if acquisitiveness were always
stronger than rivalry. But in fact, a great many men will cheerfully
face impoverishment if they can thereby secure complete ruin for their
rivals. Hence the present level of taxation.
Vanity is a motive of immense potency. Anyone who has much to do with
children knows how they are constantly performing some antic, and saying
"Look at me". "Look at me" is one of the most
fundamental desires of the human heart. It can take innumerable forms,
from buffoonery to the pursuit of posthumous fame. There was a
Renaissance Italian princeling who was asked by the priest on his
deathbed if he had anything to repent of. "Yes", he said,
"there is one thing. On one occasion I had a visit from the Emperor
and the Pope simultaneously. I took them to the top of my tower to see
the view, and I neglected the opportunity to throw them both down, which
would have given me immortal fame". History does not relate whether
the priest gave him absolution. One of the troubles about vanity is that
it grows with what it feeds on. The more you are talked about, the more
you will wish to be talked about. The condemned murderer who is allowed
to see the account of his trial in the press is indignant if he finds a
newspaper which has reported it inadequately. And the more he finds
about himself in other newspapers, the more indignant he will be with
the one whose reports are meagre. Politicians and literary men are in
the same case. And the more famous they become, the more difficult the
press-cutting agency finds it to satisfy them. It is scarcely possible
to exaggerate the influence of vanity throughout the range of human
life, from the child of three to the potentate at whose frown the world
trembles. Mankind have even committed the impiety of attributing similar
desires to the Deity, whom they imagine avid for continual praise.
But great as is the influence of the motives we have been considering,
there is one which outweighs them all. I mean the love of power. Love of
power is closely akin to vanity, but it is not by any means the same
thing. What vanity needs for its satisfaction is glory, and it is easy
to have glory without power. The people who enjoy the greatest glory in
the United States are film stars, but they can be put in their place by
the Committee for Un-American Activities, which enjoys no glory
whatever. In England, the King has more glory than the Prime Minister,
but the Prime Minister has more power than the King. Many people prefer
glory to power, but on the whole these people have less effect upon the
course of events than those who prefer power to glory. When Blücher, in
1814, saw Napoleon's palaces, he said, "Wasn't he a fool to have
all this and to go running after Moscow." Napoleon, who certainly
was not destitute of vanity, preferred power when he had to choose. To
Blücher, this choice seemed foolish. Power, like vanity, is insatiable.
Nothing short of omnipotence could satisfy it completely. And as it is
especially the vice of energetic men, the causal efficacy of love of
power is out of all proportion to its frequency. It is, indeed, by far
the strongest motive in the lives of important men.
Love of power is greatly increased by the experience of power, and this
applies to petty power as well as to that of potentates. In the happy
days before 1914, when well-to-do ladies could acquire a host of
servants, their pleasure in exercising power over the domestics steadily
increased with age. Similarly, in any autocratic regime, the holders of
power become increasingly tyrannical with experience of the delights
that power can afford. Since power over human beings is shown in making
them do what they would rather not do, the man who is actuated by love
of power is more apt to inflict pain than to permit pleasure. If you ask
your boss for leave of absence from the office on some legitimate
occasion, his love of power will derive more satisfaction from a refusal
than from a consent. If you require a building permit, the petty
official concerned will obviously get more pleasure from saying "No"
than from saying "Yes". It is this sort of thing which makes
the love of power such a dangerous motive.
But it has other sides which are more desirable. The pursuit of
knowledge is, I think, mainly actuated by love of power. And so are all
advances in scientific technique. In politics, also, a reformer may have
just as strong a love of power as a despot. It would be a complete
mistake to decry love of power altogether as a motive. Whether you will
be led by this motive to actions which are useful, or to actions which
are pernicious, depends upon the social system, and upon your
capacities. If your capacities are theoretical or technical, you will
contribute to knowledge or technique, and, as a rule, your activity will
be useful. If you are a politician you may be actuated by love of power,
but as a rule this motive will join itself on to the desire to see some
state of affairs realized which, for some reason, you prefer to the
status quo. A great general may, like Alcibiades, be quite indifferent
as to which side he fights on, but most generals have preferred to fight
for their own country, and have, therefore, had other motives besides
love of power. The politician may change sides so frequently as to find
himself always in the majority, but most politicians have a preference
for one party to the other, and subordinate their love of power to this
preference. Love of power as nearly pure as possible is to be seen in
various different types of men. One type is the soldier of fortune, of
whom Napoleon is the supreme example. Napoleon had, I think, no
ideological preference for France over Corsica, but if he had become
Emperor of Corsica he would not have been so great a man as he became by
pretending to be a Frenchman. Such men, however, are not quite pure
examples, since they also derive immense satisfaction from vanity. The
purest type is that of the eminence grise - the power behind the
throne that never appears in public, and merely hugs itself with the
secret thought: "How little these puppets know who is pulling the
strings." Baron Holstein, who controlled the foreign policy of the
German Empire from 1890 to 1906, illustrates this type to perfection. He
lived in a slum; he never appeared in society; he avoided meeting the
Emperor, except on one single occasion when the Emperor's importunity
could not be resisted; he refused all invitations to Court functions, on
the ground that he possessed no court dress. He had acquired secrets
which enabled him to blackmail the Chancellor and many of the Kaiser's
intimates. He used the power of blackmail, not to acquire wealth, or
fame, or any other obvious advantage, but merely to compel the adoption
of the foreign policy he preferred. In the East, similar characters were
not very uncommon among eunuchs.
I come now to other motives which, though in a sense less fundamental
than those we have been considering, are still of considerable
importance. The first of these is love of excitement. Human beings show
their superiority to the brutes by their capacity for boredom, though I
have sometimes thought, in examining the apes at the zoo, that they,
perhaps, have the rudiments of this tiresome emotion. However that may
be, experience shows that escape from boredom is one of the really
powerful desires of almost all human beings. When white men first effect
contact with some unspoilt race of savages, they offer them all kinds of
benefits, from the light of the gospel to pumpkin pie. These, however,
much as we may regret it, most savages receive with indifference. What
they really value among the gifts that we bring to them is intoxicating
liquor which enables them, for the first time in their lives, to have
the illusion for a few brief moments that it is better to be alive than
dead. Red Indians, while they were still unaffected by white men, would
smoke their pipes, not calmly as we do, but orgiastically, inhaling so
deeply that they sank into a faint. And when excitement by means of
nicotine failed, a patriotic orator would stir them up to attack a
neighbouring tribe, which would give them all the enjoyment that we
(according to our temperament) derive from a horse race or a General
Election. The pleasure of gambling consists almost entirely in
excitement. Monsieur Huc describes Chinese traders at the Great Wall in
winter, gambling until they have lost all their cash, then proceeding to
lose all their merchandise, and at last gambling away their clothes and
going out naked to die of cold. With civilized men, as with primitive
Red Indian tribes, it is, I think, chiefly love of excitement which
makes the populace applaud when war breaks out; the emotion is exactly
the same as at a football match, although the results are sometimes
somewhat more serious.
It is not altogether easy to decide what is the root cause of the love
of excitement. I incline to think that our mental make-up is adapted to
the stage when men lived by hunting. When a man spent a long day with
very primitive weapons in stalking a deer with the hope of dinner, and
when, at the end of the day, he dragged the carcass triumphantly to his
cave, he sank down in contented weariness, while his wife dressed and
cooked the meat. He was sleepy, and his bones ached, and the smell of
cooking filled every nook and cranny of his consciousness. At last,
after eating, he sank into deep sleep. In such a life there was neither
time nor energy for boredom. But when he took to agriculture, and made
his wife do all the heavy work in the fields, he had time to reflect
upon the vanity of human life, to invent mythologies and systems of
philosophy, and to dream of the life hereafter in which he would
perpetually hunt the wild boar of Valhalla. Our mental make-up is suited
to a life of very severe physical labor. I used, when I was younger, to
take my holidays walking. I would cover twenty-five miles a day, and
when the evening came I had no need of anything to keep me from boredom,
since the delight of sitting amply sufficed. But modern life cannot be
conducted on these physically strenuous principles. A great deal of work
is sedentary, and most manual work exercises only a few specialized
muscles. When crowds assemble in Trafalgar Square to cheer to the echo
an announcement that the government has decided to have them killed,
they would not do so if they had all walked twenty-five miles that day.
This cure for bellicosity is, however, impracticable, and if the human
race is to survive - a thing which is, perhaps, undesirable - other
means must be found for securing an innocent outlet for the unused
physical energy that produces love of excitement. This is a matter which
has been too little considered, both by moralists and by social
reformers. The social reformers are of the opinion that they have more
serious things to consider. The moralists, on the other hand, are
immensely impressed with the seriousness of all the permitted outlets of
the love of excitement; the seriousness, however, in their minds, is
that of Sin. Dance halls, cinemas, this age of jazz, are all, if we may
believe our ears, gateways to Hell, and we should be better employed
sitting at home contemplating our sins. I find myself unable to be in
entire agreement with the grave men who utter these warnings. The devil
has many forms, some designed to deceive the young, some designed to
deceive the old and serious. If it is the devil that tempts the young to
enjoy themselves, is it not, perhaps, the same personage that persuades
the old to condemn their enjoyment? And is not condemnation perhaps
merely a form of excitement appropriate to old age? And is it not,
perhaps, a drug which - like opium - has to be taken in continually
stronger doses to produce the desired effect? Is it not to be feared
that, beginning with the wickedness of the cinema, we should be led step
by step to condemn the opposite political party, dagoes, wops, Asiatics,
and, in short, everybody except the fellow members of our club? And it
is from just such condemnations, when widespread, that wars proceed. I
have never heard of a war that proceeded from dance halls.
What is serious about excitement is that so many of its forms are
destructive. It is destructive in those who cannot resist excess in
alcohol or gambling. It is destructive when it takes the form of mob
violence. And above all it is destructive when it leads to war. It is so
deep a need that it will find harmful outlets of this kind unless
innocent outlets are at hand. There are such innocent outlets at present
in sport, and in politics so long as it is kept within constitutional
bounds. But these are not sufficient, especially as the kind of politics
that is most exciting is also the kind that does most harm. Civilized
life has grown altogether too tame, and, if it is to be stable, it must
provide harmless outlets for the impulses which our remote ancestors
satisfied in hunting. In Australia, where people are few and rabbits are
many, I watched a whole populace satisfying the primitive impulse in the
primitive manner by the skillful slaughter of many thousands of rabbits.
But in London or New York some other means must be found to gratify
primitive impulse. I think every big town should contain artificial
waterfalls that people could descend in very fragile canoes, and they
should contain bathing pools full of mechanical sharks. Any person found
advocating a preventive war should be condemned to two hours a day with
these ingenious monsters. More seriously, pains should be taken to
provide constructive outlets for the love of excitement. Nothing in the
world is more exciting than a moment of sudden discovery or invention,
and many more people are capable of experiencing such moments than is
sometimes thought.
Interwoven with many other political motives are two closely related
passions to which human beings are regrettably prone: I mean fear and
hate. It is normal to hate what we fear, and it happens frequently,
though not always, that we fear what we hate. I think it may be taken as
the rule among primitive men, that they both fear and hate whatever is
unfamiliar. They have their own herd, originally a very small one. And
within one herd, all are friends, unless there is some special ground of
enmity. Other herds are potential or actual enemies; a single member of
one of them who strays by accident will be killed. An alien herd as a
whole will be avoided or fought according to circumstances. It is this
primitive mechanism which still controls our instinctive reaction to
foreign nations. The completely untravelled person will view all
foreigners as the savage regards a member of another herd. But the man
who has travelled, or who has studied international politics, will have
discovered that, if his herd is to prosper, it must, to some degree,
become amalgamated with other herds. If you are English and someone says
to you, "The French are your brothers", your first instinctive
feeling will be, "Nonsense. They shrug their shoulders, and talk
French. And I am even told that they eat frogs." If he explains to
you that we may have to fight the Russians, that, if so, it will be
desirable to defend the line of the Rhine, and that, if the line of the
Rhine is to be defended, the help of the French is essential, you will
begin to see what he means when he says that the French are your
brothers. But if some fellow-traveller were to go on to say that the
Russians also are your brothers, he would be unable to persuade you,
unless he could show that we are in danger from the Martians. We love
those who hate our enemies, and if we had no enemies there would be very
few people whom we should love.
All this, however, is only true so long as we are concerned solely with
attitudes towards other human beings. You might regard the soil as your
enemy because it yields reluctantly a niggardly subsistence. You might
regard Mother Nature in general as your enemy, and envisage human life
as a struggle to get the better of Mother Nature. If men viewed life in
this way, cooperation of the whole human race would become easy. And men
could easily be brought to view life in this way if schools, newspapers,
and politicians devoted themselves to this end. But schools are out to
teach patriotism; newspapers are out to stir up excitement; and
politicians are out to get re-elected. None of the three, therefore, can
do anything towards saving the human race from reciprocal suicide.
There are two ways of coping with fear: one is to diminish the external
danger, and the other is to cultivate Stoic endurance. The latter can be
reinforced, except where immediate action is necessary, by turning our
thoughts away from the cause of fear. The conquest of fear is of very
great importance. Fear is in itself degrading; it easily becomes an
obsession; it produces hate of that which is feared, and it leads
headlong to excesses of cruelty. Nothing has so beneficent an effect on
human beings as security. If an international system could be
established which would remove the fear of war, the improvement in
everyday mentality of everyday people would be enormous and very rapid.
Fear, at present, overshadows the world. The atom bomb and the bacterial
bomb, wielded by the wicked communist or the wicked capitalist as the
case may be, make Washington and the Kremlin tremble, and drive men
further along the road toward the abyss. If matters are to improve, the
first and essential step is to find a way of diminishing fear. The world
at present is obsessed by the conflict of rival ideologies, and one of
the apparent causes of conflict is the desire for the victory of our own
ideology and the defeat of the other. I do not think that the
fundamental motive here has much to do with ideologies. I think the
ideologies are merely a way of grouping people, and that the passions
involved are merely those which always arise between rival groups. There
are, of course, various reasons for hating communists. First and
foremost, we believe that they wish to take away our property. But so do
burglars, and although we disapprove of burglars our attitude towards
them is very different indeed from our attitude towards communists -
chiefly because they do not inspire the same degree of fear. Secondly,
we hate the communists because they are irreligious. But the Chinese
have been irreligious since the eleventh century, and we only began to
hate them when they turned out Chiang Kai-shek. Thirdly, we hate the
communists because they do not believe in democracy, but we consider
this no reason for hating Franco. Fourthly, we hate them because they do
not allow liberty; this we feel so strongly that we have decided to
imitate them. It is obvious that none of these is the real ground for
our hatred. We hate them because we fear them and they threaten us. If
the Russians still adhered to the Greek Orthodox religion, if they had
instituted parliamentary government, and if they had a completely free
press which daily vituperated us, then - provided they still had armed
forces as powerful as they have now - we should still hate them if they
gave us ground for thinking them hostile. There is, of course, the odium
theologicum, and it can be a cause of enmity. But I think that this
is an offshoot of herd feeling: the man who has a different theology
feels strange, and whatever is strange must be dangerous. Ideologies, in
fact, are one of the methods by which herds are created, and the
psychology is much the same however the herd may have been generated.
You may have been feeling that I have allowed only for bad motives, or,
at best, such as are ethically neutral. I am afraid they are, as a rule,
more powerful than more altruistic motives, but I do not deny that
altruistic motives exist, and may, on occasion, be effective. The
agitation against slavery in England in the early nineteenth century was
indubitably altruistic, and was thoroughly effective. Its altruism was
proved by the fact that in 1833 British taxpayers paid many millions in
compensation to Jamaican landowners for the liberation of their slaves,
and also by the fact that at the Congress of Vienna the British
Government was prepared to make important concessions with a view to
inducing other nations to abandon the slave trade. This is an instance
from the past, but present-day America has afforded instances equally
remarkable. I will not, however, go into these, as I do not wish to
become embarked in current controversies.
I do not think it can be questioned that sympathy is a genuine motive,
and that some people at some times are made somewhat uncomfortable by
the sufferings of some other people. It is sympathy that has produced
the many humanitarian advances of the last hundred years. We are shocked
when we hear stories ofthe ill-treatment of lunatics, and there are now
quite a number of asylums in which they are not ill-treated. Prisoners
in Western countries are not supposed to be tortured, and when they are,
there is an outcry if the facts are discovered. We do not approve of
treating orphans as they are treated in Oliver Twist. Protestant
countries disapprove of cruelty to animals. In all these ways sympathy
has been politically effective. If the fear of war were removed, its
effectiveness would become much greater. Perhaps the best hope for the
future of mankind is that ways will be found of increasing the scope and
intensity of sympathy.
The time has come to sum up our discussion. Politics is concerned with
herds rather than with individuals, and the passions which are important
in politics are, therefore, those in which the various members of a
given herd can feel alike. The broad instinctive mechanism upon which
political edifices have to be built is one of cooperation within the
herd and hostility towards other herds. The co-operation within the herd
is never perfect. There are members who do not conform, who are, in the
etymological sense, "egregious", that is to say, outside the
flock. These members are those who have fallen below, or risen above,
the ordinary level. They are: idiots, criminals, prophets, and
discoverers. A wise herd will learn to tolerate the eccentricity of
those who rise above the average, and to treat with a minimum of
ferocity those who fall below it.
As regards relations to other herds, modern technique has produced a
conflict between self-interest and instinct. In old days, when two
tribes went to war, one of them exterminated the other, and annexed its
territory. From the point of view of the victor, the whole operation was
thoroughly satisfactory. The killing was not at all expensive, and the
excitement was agreeable. It is not to be wondered at that, in such
circumstances, war persisted. Unfortunately, we still have the emotions
appropriate to such primitive warfare, while the actual operations of
war have changed completely. Killing an enemy in a modern war is a very
expensive operation. If you consider how many Germans were killed in the
late war, and how much the victors are paying in income tax, you can, by
a sum in long division, discover the cost of a dead German, and you will
find it considerable. In the East, it is true, the enemies of the
Germans have secured the ancient advantages of turning out the defeated
population and occupying their lands. The Western victors, however, have
secured no such advantages. It is obvious that modern war is not good
business from a financial point of view. Although we won both the world
wars, we should now be much richer if they had not occured. If men were
actuated by self-interest, which they are not - except in the case of a
few saints - the whole human race would cooperate. There would be no
more wars, no more armies, no more navies, no more atom bombs. There
would not be armies of propagandists employed in poisoning the minds of
Nation A against Nation B, and reciprocally of Nation B against Nation
A. There would not be armies of officials at frontiers to prevent the
entry of foreign books and foreign ideas, however excellent in
themselves. There would not be customs barriers to ensure the existence
of many small enterprises where one big enterprise would be more
economic. All this would happen very quickly if men desired their own
happiness as ardently as they desired the misery of their neighbours.
But, you will tell me, what is the use of these utopian dreams?
Moralists will see to it that we do not become wholly selfish, and until
we do the millenium will be impossible.
I do not wish to seem to end upon a note of cynicism. I do not deny that
there are better things than selfishness, and that some people achieve
these things. I maintain, however, on the one hand, that there are few
occasions upon which large bodies of men, such as politics is concerned
with, can rise above selfishness, while, on the other hand, there are a
very great many circumstances in which populations will fall below
selfishness, if selfishness is interpreted as enlightened self-interest.
And among those occasions on which people fall below self-interest are
most of the occasions on which they are convinced that they are acting
from idealistic motives. Much that passes as idealism is disguised
hatred or disguised love of power. When you see large masses of men
swayed by what appear to be noble motives, it is as well to look below
the surface and ask yourself what it is that makes these motives
effective. It is partly because it is so easy to be taken in by a facade
of nobility that a psychological inquiry, such as I have been
attempting, is worth making. I would say, in conclusion, that if what I
have said is right, the main thing needed to make the world happy is
intelligence. And this, after all, is an optimistic conclusion, because
intelligence is a thing that can be fostered by known methods of
education.
Note:
The text is that of Bertrand Russell's Literature
Nobel Lecture delivered on December 11, 1950.
See
also: JUST
Response Select quotes
Return to top
Return to
opening page
|
|