what is property-第5章
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frankly admitted。 Did not Adam Smith find; in the principle of equality; the first of all the laws which govern wages? There are other laws; undoubtedly; but Proudhon considers them all as springing from the principle of property; as he defined it in his first memoir。 Thus; in humanity; there are two principles;one which leads us to equality; another which separates us from it。 By the former; we treat each other as associates; by the latter; as strangers; not to say enemies。 This distinction; which is constantly met with throughout the three memoirs; contained already; in germ; the idea which gave birth to the 〃System of Economical Contradictions;〃 which appeared in 1846; the idea of antinomy or contre…loi。
The 〃Notice to Proprietors〃 was seized by the magistrates of Besancon; and Proudhon was summoned to appear before the assizes of Doubs within a week。 He read his written defence to the jurors in person; and was acquitted。 The jury; like M。 Blanqui; viewed him only as a philosopher; an inquirer; a savant。
In 1843; Proudhon published the 〃Creation of Order in Humanity;〃 a large volume; which does not deal exclusively with questions of social economy。 Religion; philosophy; method; certainty; logic; and dialectics are treated at considerable length。
Released from his printing…office on the 1st of March of the same year; Proudhon had to look for a chance to earn his living。 Messrs。 Gauthier Bros。; carriers by water between Mulhouse and Lyons; the eldest of whom was Proudhon's companion in childhood; conceived the happy thought of employing him; of utilizing his ability in their business; and in settling the numerous points of difficulty which daily arose。 Besides the large number of accounts which his new duties required him to make out; and which retarded the publication of the 〃System of Economical Contradictions;〃 until October; 1846; we ought to mention a work; which; before it appeared in pamphlet form; was published in the 〃Revue des Economistes;〃〃Competition between Railroads and Navigable Ways。〃
〃Le Miserere; or the Repentance of a King;〃 which he published in March; 1845; in the 〃Revue Independante;〃 during that Lenten season when Lacordaire was preaching in Lyons; proves that; though devoting himself with ardor to the study of economical problems; Proudhon had not lost his interest in questions of religious history。 Among his writings on these questions; which he was unfortunately obliged to leave unfinished; we may mention a nearly completed history of the early Christian heresies; and of the struggle of Christianity against Caesarism。
We have said that; in 1848; Proudhon recognized three masters。 Having no knowledge of the German language; he could not have read the works of Hegel; which at that time had not been translated into French。 It was Charles Grun; a German; who had come to France to study the various philosophical and socialistic systems; who gave him the substance of the Hegelian ideas。 During the winter of 1844…45; Charles Grun had some long conversations with Proudhon; which determined; very decisively; not the ideas; which belonged exclusively to the bisontin thinker; but the form of the important work on which he labored after 1843; and which was published in 1846 by Guillaumin。
Hegel's great idea; which Proudhon appropriated; and which he demonstrates with wonderful ability in the 〃System of Economical Contradictions;〃 is as follows: Antinomy; that is; the existence of two laws or tendencies which are opposed to each other; is possible; not only with two different things; but with one and the same thing。 Considered in their thesis; that is; in the law or tendency which created them; all the economical categories are rational;competition; monopoly; the balance of trade; and property; as well as the division of labor; machinery; taxation; and credit。 But; like communism and population; all these categories are antinomical; all are opposed; not only to each other; but to themselves。 All is opposition; and disorder is born of this system of opposition。 Hence; the sub…title of the work;〃Philosophy of Misery。〃 No category can be suppressed; the opposition; antinomy; or contre…tendance; which exists in each of them; cannot be suppressed。
Where; then; lies the solution of the social problem? Influenced by the Hegelian ideas; Proudhon began to look for it in a superior synthesis; which should reconcile the thesis and antithesis。 Afterwards; while at work upon his book on 〃Justice;〃 he saw that the antinomical terms do not cancel each other; any more than the opposite poles of an electric pile destroy each other; that they are the procreative cause of motion; life; and progress; that the problem is to discover; not their fusion; which would be death; but their equilibrium;an equilibrium for ever unstable; varying with the development of society。
On the cover of the 〃System of Economical Contradictions;〃 Proudhon announced; as soon to appear; his 〃Solution of the Social Problem。〃 This work; upon which he was engaged when the Revolution of 1848 broke out; had to be cut up into pamphlets and newspaper articles。 The two pamphlets; which he published in March; 1848; before he became editor of 〃Le Representant du Peuple;〃 bear the same title;〃Solution of the Social Problem。〃 The first; which is mainly a criticism of the early acts of the provisional government; is notable from the fact that in it Proudhon; in advance of all others; energetically opposed the establishment of national workshops。 The second; 〃Organization of Credit and Circulation;〃 sums up in a few pages his idea of economical progress: a gradual reduction of interest; profit; rent; taxes; and wages。 All progress hitherto has been made in this manner; in this manner it must continue to be made。 Those workingmen who favor a nominal increase of wages are; unconsciously。 following a back…track; opposed to all their interests。
After having published in 〃Le Representant du Peuple;〃 the statutes of the Bank of Exchange;a bank which was to make no profits; since it was to have no stockholders; and which; consequently; was to discount commercial paper with out interest; charging only a commission sufficient to defray its running expenses;Proudhon endeavored; in a number of articles; to explain its mechanism and necessity。 These articles have been collected in one volume; under the double title; 〃Resume of the Social Question; Bank of Exchange。〃 His other articles; those which up to December; 1848; were inspired by the progress of events; have been collected in another volume;〃Revolutionary Ideas。〃
Almost unknown in March; 1848; and struck off in April from the list of candidates for the Constituent Assembly by the delegation of workingmen which sat at the Luxembourg; Proudhon had but a very small number of votes at the general elections of April。 At the complementary elections; which were held in the early days of June; he was elected in Paris by seventy…seven thousand votes。
After the fatal days of June; he published an article on le terme; which caused the first suspension of 〃Le Representant du Peuple。〃 It was at that time that he introduced a bill into the Assembly; which; being referred to the Committee on the Finances; drew forth; first; the report of M。 Thiers; and then the speech which Proudhon delivered; on the 31st of July; in reply to this report。 〃Le Representant du Peuple;〃 reappearing a few days later; he wrote; a propos of the law requiring journals to give bonds; his famous article on 〃The Malthusians〃 (August 10; 1848)。
Ten days afterwards; 〃Le Representant du Peuple;〃 again suspended; definitively ceased to appear。 〃Le Peuple;〃 of which he was the editor…in…chief; and the first number of which was issued in the early part of September; appeared weekly at first; for want of sufficient bonds; it afterwards appeared daily; with a double number once a week。 Before 〃Le Peuple〃 had obtained its first bond; Proudhon published a remarkable pamphlet on the 〃Right to Labor;〃a right which he denied in the form in which it was then affirmed。 It was during the same period that he proposed; at the Poissonniere banquet; his Toast to the Revolution。
Proudhon; who had been asked to preside at