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A Discourse Upon The Origin And The Foundation Of The Inequality Among
A Discourse on the Origin and the Foundation of Inequality Among
Mankind
Humanity
By J. J. Rousseau
By J.J. Rousseau
INTRODUCTORY NOTE
Jean Jacques Rousseau was born at Geneva, June 28, 1712, the son of a watchmaker of French origin. His education was irregular, and though he tried many professions—including engraving, music, and teaching—he found it difficult to support himself in any of them. The discovery of his talent as a writer came with the winning of a prize offered by the Academy of Dijon for a discourse on the question, "Whether the progress of the sciences and of letters has tended to corrupt or to elevate morals." He argued so brilliantly that the tendency of civilization was degrading that he became at once famous. The discourse here printed on the causes of inequality among men was written in a similar competition.
Jean Jacques Rousseau was born in Geneva on June 28, 1712, to a watchmaker of French descent. His education was uneven, and although he explored various careers—including engraving, music, and teaching—he struggled to make a living in any of them. He discovered his talent for writing when he won a prize from the Academy of Dijon for an essay on the question, "Does the progress of the sciences and the arts corrupt or elevate morals?" He made such a compelling argument that civilization had a degrading effect that he quickly became well-known. The essay included here, discussing the causes of inequality among people, was written for a similar competition.
He now concentrated his powers upon literature, producing two novels, "La Nouvelle Heloise," the forerunner and parent of endless sentimental and picturesque fictions; and "Emile, ou l'Education," a work which has had enormous influence on the theory and practise of pedagogy down to our own time and in which the Savoyard Vicar appears, who is used as the mouthpiece for Rousseau's own religious ideas. "Le Contrat Social" (1762) elaborated the doctrine of the discourse on inequality. Both historically and philosophically it is unsound; but it was the chief literary source of the enthusiasm for liberty, fraternity, and equality, which inspired the leaders of the French Revolution, and its effects passed far beyond France.
He now focused his efforts on literature, writing two novels, "La Nouvelle Heloise," which set the stage for countless sentimental and picturesque stories, and "Emile, ou l'Education," a work that has had a huge impact on the theory and practice of teaching up to this day and features the Savoyard Vicar, who serves as the voice for Rousseau's own religious beliefs. "Le Contrat Social" (1762) expanded on the ideas presented in the discourse on inequality. While it is historically and philosophically flawed, it was a major literary source of the passion for liberty, fraternity, and equality that motivated the leaders of the French Revolution, influencing far beyond France.
His most famous work, the "Confessions," was published after his death. This book is a mine of information as to his life, but it is far from trustworthy; and the picture it gives of the author's personality and conduct, though painted in such a way as to make it absorbingly interesting, is often unpleasing in the highest degree. But it is one of the great autobiographies of the world.
His most famous work, the "Confessions," was published after he died. This book is a treasure trove of information about his life, but it isn't very reliable; the portrayal of the author's personality and behavior, while crafted to be incredibly engaging, is often quite unflattering. Still, it stands as one of the great autobiographies in history.
During Rousseau's later years he was the victim of the delusion of persecution; and although he was protected by a succession of good friends, he came to distrust and quarrel with each in turn. He died at Ermenonville, near Paris, July 2, 1778, the most widely influential French writer of his age.
During Rousseau's later years, he fell into the delusion of persecution; and although he was supported by a series of good friends, he started to distrust and argue with each one in turn. He died at Ermenonville, near Paris, on July 2, 1778, as the most influential French writer of his time.
The Savoyard Vicar and his "Profession of Faith" are introduced into "Emile" not, according to the author, because he wishes to exhibit his principles as those which should be taught, but to give an example of the way in which religious matters should be discussed with the young. Nevertheless, it is universally recognized that these opinions are Rousseau's own, and represent in short form his characteristic attitude toward religious belief. The Vicar himself is believed to combine the traits of two Savoyard priests whom Rousseau knew in his youth. The more important was the Abbe Gaime, whom he had known at Turin; the other, the Abbe Gatier, who had taught him at Annecy.
The Savoyard Vicar and his "Profession of Faith" are included in "Emile" not because the author wants to present his ideas as the ones that should be taught, but rather to show how to discuss religious topics with young people. Still, it's widely accepted that these views are Rousseau's own, reflecting his typical stance on religious belief. The Vicar is thought to embody the qualities of two Savoyard priests Rousseau encountered in his youth. The more significant of the two was the Abbe Gaime, whom he knew in Turin, and the other was the Abbe Gatier, who had taught him in Annecy.
QUESTION PROPOSED BY THE ACADEMY OF DIJON
What is the Origin of the Inequality among Mankind; and whether such
Inequality is authorized by the Law of Nature?
What is the origin of inequality among people, and is such inequality justified by the law of nature?
A DISCOURSE UPON THE ORIGIN AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE INEQUALITY AMONG MANKIND
'Tis of man I am to speak; and the very question, in answer to which I am to speak of him, sufficiently informs me that I am going to speak to men; for to those alone, who are not afraid of honouring truth, it belongs to propose discussions of this kind. I shall therefore maintain with confidence the cause of mankind before the sages, who invite me to stand up in its defence; and I shall think myself happy, if I can but behave in a manner not unworthy of my subject and of my judges.
I'm here to talk about humanity, and the very question I'm addressing tells me I'm speaking to people who are willing to honor the truth, as only they would want to discuss these matters. So, I will confidently defend the cause of mankind in front of the wise ones who have invited me to take this stand. I will feel fortunate if I can present myself in a way that reflects well on my topic and my audience.
I conceive two species of inequality among men; one which I call natural, or physical inequality, because it is established by nature, and consists in the difference of age, health, bodily strength, and the qualities of the mind, or of the soul; the other which may be termed moral, or political inequality, because it depends on a kind of convention, and is established, or at least authorized, by the common consent of mankind. This species of inequality consists in the different privileges, which some men enjoy, to the prejudice of others, such as that of being richer, more honoured, more powerful, and even that of exacting obedience from them.
I see two types of inequality among people; one I call natural or physical inequality, because it’s created by nature, and it includes differences in age, health, physical strength, and mental or emotional qualities; the other I refer to as moral or political inequality, because it relies on a form of agreement and is established, or at least accepted, by the general consent of society. This type of inequality involves the various privileges that some people have over others, such as being wealthier, more respected, more powerful, and even having the right to demand obedience from others.
It were absurd to ask, what is the cause of natural inequality, seeing the bare definition of natural inequality answers the question: it would be more absurd still to enquire, if there might not be some essential connection between the two species of inequality, as it would be asking, in other words, if those who command are necessarily better men than those who obey; and if strength of body or of mind, wisdom or virtue are always to be found in individuals, in the same proportion with power, or riches: a question, fit perhaps to be discussed by slaves in the hearing of their masters, but unbecoming free and reasonable beings in quest of truth.
It’s ridiculous to ask what causes natural inequality since the basic definition of natural inequality already provides the answer. It would be even more absurd to question whether there is some essential link between the two types of inequality. That would be like asking if those in power are necessarily better than those who follow them, or if physical or mental strength, wisdom, or virtue are always found in the same proportion as power or wealth. This is a question that might be suitable for slaves to discuss in front of their masters but is inappropriate for free and rational individuals seeking the truth.
What therefore is precisely the subject of this discourse? It is to point out, in the progress of things, that moment, when, right taking place of violence, nature became subject to law; to display that chain of surprising events, in consequence of which the strong submitted to serve the weak, and the people to purchase imaginary ease, at the expense of real happiness.
What, then, is the exact topic of this discussion? It's to highlight that moment in history when, after violence, nature came under the rule of law; to illustrate the series of surprising events that led the strong to serve the weak, and the people to trade real happiness for a false sense of comfort.
The philosophers, who have examined the foundations of society, have, every one of them, perceived the necessity of tracing it back to a state of nature, but not one of them has ever arrived there. Some of them have not scrupled to attribute to man in that state the ideas of justice and injustice, without troubling their heads to prove, that he really must have had such ideas, or even that such ideas were useful to him: others have spoken of the natural right of every man to keep what belongs to him, without letting us know what they meant by the word belong; others, without further ceremony ascribing to the strongest an authority over the weakest, have immediately struck out government, without thinking of the time requisite for men to form any notion of the things signified by the words authority and government. All of them, in fine, constantly harping on wants, avidity, oppression, desires and pride, have transferred to the state of nature ideas picked up in the bosom of society. In speaking of savages they described citizens. Nay, few of our own writers seem to have so much as doubted, that a state of nature did once actually exist; though it plainly appears by Sacred History, that even the first man, immediately furnished as he was by God himself with both instructions and precepts, never lived in that state, and that, if we give to the books of Moses that credit which every Christian philosopher ought to give to them, we must deny that, even before the deluge, such a state ever existed among men, unless they fell into it by some extraordinary event: a paradox very difficult to maintain, and altogether impossible to prove.
The philosophers who have looked into the foundations of society have all recognized the need to trace it back to a state of nature, yet none have actually gotten there. Some have boldly claimed that in that state, humans had concepts of justice and injustice without bothering to prove that these ideas truly existed or that they were beneficial. Others have discussed the natural right of everyone to keep what belongs to them without clarifying what they meant by "belong." Still, others have casually assigned authority to the strongest over the weakest and immediately jumped to the concept of government, not considering how long it takes for people to understand what authority and government actually mean. Ultimately, they keep focusing on wants, greed, oppression, desires, and pride, projecting ideas from society onto the state of nature. When they talk about savages, they’re really describing citizens. In fact, few of our own writers seem to even question the existence of a state of nature, although it is clear from Sacred History that even the first man, who was directly given guidance and rules by God, never lived in such a state. If we give the books of Moses the respect that every Christian philosopher should, we must reject the idea that such a state among humans existed even before the flood, unless they somehow fell into it due to some extraordinary event—a paradox that is very hard to support and completely impossible to prove.
Let us begin therefore, by laying aside facts, for they do not affect the question. The researches, in which we may engage on this occasion, are not to be taken for historical truths, but merely as hypothetical and conditional reasonings, fitter to illustrate the nature of things, than to show their true origin, like those systems, which our naturalists daily make of the formation of the world. Religion commands us to believe, that men, having been drawn by God himself out of a state of nature, are unequal, because it is his pleasure they should be so; but religion does not forbid us to draw conjectures solely from the nature of man, considered in itself, and from that of the beings which surround him, concerning the fate of mankind, had they been left to themselves. This is then the question I am to answer, the question I propose to examine in the present discourse. As mankind in general have an interest in my subject, I shall endeavour to use a language suitable to all nations; or rather, forgetting the circumstances of time and place in order to think of nothing but the men I speak to, I shall suppose myself in the Lyceum of Athens, repeating the lessons of my masters before the Platos and the Xenocrates of that famous seat of philosophy as my judges, and in presence of the whole human species as my audience.
Let's start by putting aside facts, since they don’t really impact the question. The research we’re about to undertake shouldn’t be viewed as historical truths, but rather as hypothetical and conditional reasoning, more suitable for illustrating the nature of things than for revealing their true origins, similar to the theories our naturalists develop daily about the formation of the world. Religion tells us to believe that people were created by God from a natural state and are unequal because it pleases Him. However, religion doesn’t stop us from making guesses solely based on human nature itself and the beings around us, regarding what might have happened to humanity if they had been left to their own devices. This is the question I’m here to address, the question I’ll be examining in this discussion. Since humanity as a whole has a stake in my topic, I will try to use language that resonates with all cultures. More importantly, forgetting the specifics of time and place, I’ll imagine myself in the Lyceum of Athens, sharing my insights before the Platos and Xenocrates of that renowned school of philosophy, with the entire human species as my audience.
O man, whatever country you may belong to, whatever your opinions may be, attend to my words; you shall hear your history such as I think I have read it, not in books composed by those like you, for they are liars, but in the book of nature which never lies. All that I shall repeat after her, must be true, without any intermixture of falsehood, but where I may happen, without intending it, to introduce my own conceits. The times I am going to speak of are very remote. How much you are changed from what you once were! 'Tis in a manner the life of your species that I am going to write, from the qualities which you have received, and which your education and your habits could deprave, but could not destroy. There is, I am sensible, an age at which every individual of you would choose to stop; and you will look out for the age at which, had you your wish, your species had stopped. Uneasy at your present condition for reasons which threaten your unhappy posterity with still greater uneasiness, you will perhaps wish it were in your power to go back; and this sentiment ought to be considered, as the panegyric of your first parents, the condemnation of your contemporaries, and a source of terror to all those who may have the misfortune of succeeding you.
O man, no matter where you come from or what you believe, listen to my words; you will hear your history as I think I've read it, not in books written by people like you, because they lie, but in the book of nature, which never lies. Everything I’m about to share is true, without any mix of falsehood—unless I accidentally share my own ideas. The times I’m going to discuss are very old. Just look at how much you’ve changed from what you once were! I’m essentially going to write about the life of your species, based on the traits you’ve inherited, which your upbringing and habits can distort but not eliminate. I know there comes an age when each of you would want to pause; and you will seek out the age at which, if you could, your species would have remained. Disturbed by your current state for reasons that threaten to make your unfortunate descendants even more uneasy, you might wish you could go back; and this feeling should be seen as praise for your first ancestors, a critique of your peers, and a source of dread for all those who may come after you.
DISCOURSE FIRST PART
However important it may be, in order to form a proper judgment of the natural state of man, to consider him from his origin, and to examine him, as it were, in the first embryo of the species; I shall not attempt to trace his organization through its successive approaches to perfection: I shall not stop to examine in the animal system what he might have been in the beginning, to become at last what he actually is; I shall not inquire whether, as Aristotle thinks, his neglected nails were no better at first than crooked talons; whether his whole body was not, bear-like, thick covered with rough hair; and whether, walking upon all-fours, his eyes, directed to the earth, and confined to a horizon of a few paces extent, did not at once point out the nature and limits of his ideas. I could only form vague, and almost imaginary, conjectures on this subject. Comparative anatomy has not as yet been sufficiently improved; neither have the observations of natural philosophy been sufficiently ascertained, to establish upon such foundations the basis of a solid system. For this reason, without having recourse to the supernatural informations with which we have been favoured on this head, or paying any attention to the changes, that must have happened in the conformation of the interior and exterior parts of man's body, in proportion as he applied his members to new purposes, and took to new aliments, I shall suppose his conformation to have always been, what we now behold it; that he always walked on two feet, made the same use of his hands that we do of ours, extended his looks over the whole face of nature, and measured with his eyes the vast extent of the heavens.
No matter how important it is to understand the natural state of humanity by looking at its origins and examining it in its earliest form, I won’t try to trace how its organization evolved over time toward perfection. I won’t dive into what he might have been as an animal in the beginning to ultimately become what he is today. I won’t question whether, as Aristotle believed, his neglected nails were once no better than crooked claws; whether his body wasn’t, much like a bear’s, thickly covered with rough hair; or whether, walking on all fours, his eyes, focused on the ground and limited to a short horizon, didn’t clearly define the nature and limits of his thoughts. I can only make vague and almost imaginary guesses about this. Comparative anatomy hasn’t been developed enough, nor have the observations in natural philosophy been thoroughly established, to lay a solid foundation for a reliable system. For this reason, instead of relying on supernatural insights that have been shared with us or considering the changes that must have occurred in the structure of both the inner and outer parts of the human body as he adapted his body for new tasks and new foods, I’ll assume that his structure has always been as we see it now; that he has always walked on two feet, used his hands the same way we do, gazed across the entire landscape of nature, and looked up at the vastness of the sky with his eyes.
If I strip this being, thus constituted, of all the supernatural gifts which he may have received, and of all the artificial faculties, which we could not have acquired but by slow degrees; if I consider him, in a word, such as he must have issued from the hands of nature; I see an animal less strong than some, and less active than others, but, upon the whole, the most advantageously organized of any; I see him satisfying the calls of hunger under the first oak, and those of thirst at the first rivulet; I see him laying himself down to sleep at the foot of the same tree that afforded him his meal; and behold, this done, all his wants are completely supplied.
If I take away all the supernatural gifts this being might have received, along with all the skills we could only gain gradually, and if I consider him, in short, as he must have come from nature’s hands, I see an animal that is not as strong as some and not as active as others, but overall, the best organized of them all. I see him satisfying his hunger under the first oak and quenching his thirst at the first stream. I see him laying down to sleep at the base of the same tree that provided his meal; and once that’s done, all his needs are fully met.
The earth left to its own natural fertility and covered with immense woods, that no hatchet ever disfigured, offers at every step food and shelter to every species of animals. Men, dispersed among them, observe and imitate their industry, and thus rise to the instinct of beasts; with this advantage, that, whereas every species of beasts is confined to one peculiar instinct, man, who perhaps has not any that particularly belongs to him, appropriates to himself those of all other animals, and lives equally upon most of the different aliments, which they only divide among themselves; a circumstance which qualifies him to find his subsistence, with more ease than any of them.
The earth, left to its natural fertility and covered with vast forests that no axe has ever damaged, provides food and shelter for every type of animal at every turn. Humans, scattered among them, observe and mimic their skills, thereby tapping into the instincts of animals. The key difference is that while each animal species is limited to its own unique instinct, humans, who don’t have a specific instinct that belongs only to them, can take on the instincts of all other animals. This allows them to eat a wide variety of foods, which animals only share among their own kind, giving humans a better chance of finding food more easily than any of them.
Men, accustomed from their infancy to the inclemency of the weather, and to the rigour of the different seasons; inured to fatigue, and obliged to defend, naked and without arms, their life and their prey against the other wild inhabitants of the forest, or at least to avoid their fury by flight, acquire a robust and almost unalterable habit of body; the children, bringing with them into the world the excellent constitution of their parents, and strengthening it by the same exercises that first produced it, attain by this means all the vigour that the human frame is capable of. Nature treats them exactly in the same manner that Sparta treated the children of her citizens; those who come well formed into the world she renders strong and robust, and destroys all the rest; differing in this respect from our societies, in which the state, by permitting children to become burdensome to their parents, murders them all without distinction, even in the wombs of their mothers.
Men, conditioned from childhood to deal with harsh weather and the challenges of different seasons; used to exhaustion, and forced to protect themselves, unarmed and vulnerable, from the other wild creatures in the forest, or at least to escape their wrath, develop a strong and almost unchangeable physical condition; the children, inheriting the strong constitution of their parents and enhancing it through the same activities that originally shaped it, gain all the strength that the human body can achieve. Nature treats them just like Sparta treated the children of its citizens; those who are born healthy and well-formed are made strong and resilient, while the rest are eliminated; this is different from our societies, where the state, by allowing children to become burdensome to their parents, ends up destroying them all indiscriminately, even while they are still in their mothers' wombs.
The body being the only instrument that savage man is acquainted with, he employs it to different uses, of which ours, for want of practice, are incapable; and we may thank our industry for the loss of that strength and agility, which necessity obliges him to acquire. Had he a hatchet, would his hand so easily snap off from an oak so stout a branch? Had he a sling, would it dart a stone to so great a distance? Had he a ladder, would he run so nimbly up a tree? Had he a horse, would he with such swiftness shoot along the plain? Give civilized man but time to gather about him all his machines, and no doubt he will be an overmatch for the savage: but if you have a mind to see a contest still more unequal, place them naked and unarmed one opposite to the other; and you will soon discover the advantage there is in perpetually having all our forces at our disposal, in being constantly prepared against all events, and in always carrying ourselves, as it were, whole and entire about us.
The body is the only tool that primitive man knows how to use, and he uses it for various purposes that we, due to our lack of practice, aren’t capable of. We can thank our hard work for the loss of the strength and agility that survival pushes him to develop. If he had a hatchet, would his hand easily snap off a sturdy oak branch? If he had a sling, could he throw a stone that far? If he had a ladder, would he climb a tree so quickly? If he had a horse, would he race across the plains with such speed? Give a civilized person enough time to gather all their tools, and there's no doubt they’ll outperform the savage: but if you want to see an even more unequal contest, put them bare and unarmed facing each other; and you’ll quickly see the benefits of always having all our resources at our fingertips, being ready for anything, and carrying ourselves fully and completely at all times.
Hobbes would have it that man is naturally void of fear, and always intent upon attacking and fighting. An illustrious philosopher thinks on the contrary, and Cumberland and Puffendorff likewise affirm it, that nothing is more fearful than man in a state of nature, that he is always in a tremble, and ready to fly at the first motion he perceives, at the first noise that strikes his ears. This, indeed, may be very true in regard to objects with which he is not acquainted; and I make no doubt of his being terrified at every new sight that presents itself, as often as he cannot distinguish the physical good and evil which he may expect from it, nor compare his forces with the dangers he has to encounter; circumstances that seldom occur in a state of nature, where all things proceed in so uniform a manner, and the face of the earth is not liable to those sudden and continual changes occasioned in it by the passions and inconstancies of collected bodies. But savage man living among other animals without any society or fixed habitation, and finding himself early under a necessity of measuring his strength with theirs, soon makes a comparison between both, and finding that he surpasses them more in address, than they surpass him in strength, he learns not to be any longer in dread of them. Turn out a bear or a wolf against a sturdy, active, resolute savage, (and this they all are,) provided with stones and a good stick; and you will soon find that the danger is at least equal on both sides, and that after several trials of this kind, wild beasts, who are not fond of attacking each other, will not be very fond of attacking man, whom they have found every whit as wild as themselves. As to animals who have really more strength than man has address, he is, in regard to them, what other weaker species are, who find means to subsist notwithstanding; he has even this great advantage over such weaker species, that being equally fleet with them, and finding on every tree an almost inviolable asylum, he is always at liberty to take it or leave it, as he likes best, and of course to fight or to fly, whichever is most agreeable to him. To this we may add that no animal naturally makes war upon man, except in the case of self-defence or extreme hunger; nor ever expresses against him any of these violent antipathies, which seem to indicate that some particular species are intended by nature for the food of others.
Hobbes argues that humans are naturally fearless and always ready to attack and fight. However, a well-known philosopher believes otherwise, and Cumberland and Puffendorf also agree, claiming that nothing is more fearful than a person in a state of nature, who is always trembling and ready to flee at the slightest movement or noise. This may actually be true when it comes to unfamiliar objects; I have no doubt that a person would be scared by every new thing they encounter when they can’t determine the good and bad that may come from it, nor can they compare their strength to the dangers they face. Such situations rarely happen in nature, where everything moves in a consistent way, and the landscape doesn’t suffer from the sudden and constant changes caused by the emotions and unpredictability of gathered beings. But a wild person living among other animals without any community or permanent home, having to measure their strength against that of animals early on, quickly learns to compare the two. They find that they excel more in skill than the animals do in strength, which leads them to lose their fear of them. If you set a bear or a wolf against a tough, active, determined wild person (and they all are), armed with stones and a sturdy stick, you'll soon see that the danger is at least equal for both sides. After several encounters like this, wild animals, who generally avoid attacking each other, will not be eager to attack a person who they see as just as wild as themselves. As for animals that are actually stronger than humans are skillful, humans are like other weaker species that find ways to survive, and they even have a big advantage over these weaker species. Since they can run as fast as them and find a safe spot in trees, they have the freedom to choose whether to fight or flee, depending on what suits them best. Additionally, no animals naturally wage war on humans unless it's for self-defense or extreme hunger, and they never show any intense hostility towards them, which suggests that no particular species is meant by nature to be prey for another.
But there are other more formidable enemies, and against which man is not provided with the same means of defence; I mean natural infirmities, infancy, old age, and sickness of every kind, melancholy proofs of our weakness, whereof the two first are common to all animals, and the last chiefly attends man living in a state of society. It is even observable in regard to infancy, that the mother being able to carry her child about with her, wherever she goes, can perform the duty of a nurse with a great deal less trouble, than the females of many other animals, who are obliged to be constantly going and coming with no small labour and fatigue, one way to look out for their own subsistence, and another to suckle and feed their young ones. True it is that, if the woman happens to perish, her child is exposed to the greatest danger of perishing with her; but this danger is common to a hundred other species, whose young ones require a great deal of time to be able to provide for themselves; and if our infancy is longer than theirs, our life is longer likewise; so that, in this respect too, all things are in a manner equal; not but that there are other rules concerning the duration of the first age of life, and the number of the young of man and other animals, but they do not belong to my subject. With old men, who stir and perspire but little, the demand for food diminishes with their abilities to provide it; and as a savage life would exempt them from the gout and the rheumatism, and old age is of all ills that which human assistance is least capable of alleviating, they would at last go off, without its being perceived by others that they ceased to exist, and almost without perceiving it themselves.
But there are other, more serious enemies that people don’t have the same defenses against; I’m talking about natural weaknesses like infancy, old age, and all kinds of sickness. These are clear reminders of our fragility, with the first two being shared by all animals, while the last primarily affects humans living in a society. It’s even noticeable that in infancy, a mother can carry her child with her wherever she goes, making it much easier for her to nurse than for many other animals that have to constantly come and go, exhausting themselves to find food and feed their young. It's true that if a mother dies, her child is at great risk of dying too, but this danger is common to many other species, whose young take a long time to become independent. While our infancy is longer, our lifespan is also longer, making things somewhat equal in that respect. There are other rules about how long the early stages of life last and the number of young for humans and other animals, but those aren't my focus here. For elderly individuals, who move and sweat less, their need for food decreases along with their ability to get it. If they lived a more primitive life, they might be free from gout and rheumatism, and since old age is one of the ailments least helped by human intervention, they would eventually pass away without anyone noticing and almost without realizing it themselves.
In regard to sickness, I shall not repeat the vain and false declamations made use of to discredit medicine by most men, while they enjoy their health; I shall only ask if there are any solid observations from which we may conclude that in those countries where the healing art is most neglected, the mean duration of man's life is shorter than in those where it is most cultivated? And how is it possible this should be the case, if we inflict more diseases upon ourselves than medicine can supply us with remedies! The extreme inequalities in the manner of living of the several classes of mankind, the excess of idleness in some, and of labour in others, the facility of irritating and satisfying our sensuality and our appetites, the too exquisite and out of the way aliments of the rich, which fill them with fiery juices, and bring on indigestions, the unwholesome food of the poor, of which even, bad as it is, they very often fall short, and the want of which tempts them, every opportunity that offers, to eat greedily and overload their stomachs; watchings, excesses of every kind, immoderate transports of all the passions, fatigues, waste of spirits, in a word, the numberless pains and anxieties annexed to every condition, and which the mind of man is constantly a prey to; these are the fatal proofs that most of our ills are of our own making, and that we might have avoided them all by adhering to the simple, uniform and solitary way of life prescribed to us by nature. Allowing that nature intended we should always enjoy good health, I dare almost affirm that a state of reflection is a state against nature, and that the man who meditates is a depraved animal. We need only call to mind the good constitution of savages, of those at least whom we have not destroyed by our strong liquors; we need only reflect, that they are strangers to almost every disease, except those occasioned by wounds and old age, to be in a manner convinced that the history of human diseases might be easily composed by pursuing that of civil societies. Such at least was the opinion of Plato, who concluded from certain remedies made use of or approved by Podalyrus and Macaon at the Siege of Troy, that several disorders, which these remedies were found to bring on in his days, were not known among men at that remote period.
When it comes to sickness, I won’t repeat the useless and misleading claims made by most people to undermine medicine while they’re healthy; I’ll just ask if there are any solid observations to suggest that in countries where medical practice is most ignored, the average lifespan is shorter than in those where it’s most practiced? And how can that be true if we create more illnesses ourselves than medicine can treat? The huge disparities in how different social classes live, the excess of idleness for some and hard work for others, the ease of indulging our desires and appetites, the extravagant and overly rich foods that fill the wealthy with bitter juices and cause indigestion, and the unhealthy food of the poor, which they often go without, leading them to eat greedily whenever they get the chance and overstuff their stomachs; sleepless nights, all kinds of excesses, uncontrolled bursts of emotion, exhaustion, and the mental strain that constantly plagues us—these are clear signs that most of our suffering is self-inflicted and that we could have avoided it all by living the simple, regular, and solitary lifestyle that nature intended for us. If we accept that nature meant for us to always enjoy good health, I would almost argue that a state of deep thought is against nature, and that someone who overthinks is a corrupted being. All we need to do is think of the robust health of primitive people, at least those we haven’t destroyed with our strong alcohol; we just need to remember that they are unfamiliar with almost every disease, except those caused by injuries and old age, to be fairly convinced that the history of human diseases could easily be written by tracing the history of civilized societies. That was at least the belief of Plato, who concluded from certain remedies used or endorsed by Podalyrus and Macaon during the Siege of Troy that many disorders recognized in his time were unknown in that distant era.
Man therefore, in a state of nature where there are so few sources of sickness, can have no great occasion for physic, and still less for physicians; neither is the human species more to be pitied in this respect, than any other species of animals. Ask those who make hunting their recreation or business, if in their excursions they meet with many sick or feeble animals. They meet with many carrying the marks of considerable wounds, that have been perfectly well healed and closed up; with many, whose bones formerly broken, and whose limbs almost torn off, have completely knit and united, without any other surgeon but time, any other regimen but their usual way of living, and whose cures were not the less perfect for their not having been tortured with incisions, poisoned with drugs, or worn out by diet and abstinence. In a word, however useful medicine well administered may be to us who live in a state of society, it is still past doubt, that if, on the one hand, the sick savage, destitute of help, has nothing to hope from nature, on the other, he has nothing to fear but from his disease; a circumstance, which oftens renders his situation preferable to ours.
Man, in a natural state where sources of sickness are rare, doesn't have much need for medicine, and even less for doctors; the human species isn't to be pitied more in this regard than any other animal. Just ask those who hunt for fun or work if they encounter many sick or weak animals. They find plenty that bear the marks of serious wounds that have healed perfectly. They see many whose broken bones and nearly torn-off limbs have healed completely, without any surgeon but time, no other treatment than their usual way of living, and whose recoveries were just as good despite not being subjected to cuts, poisoning from drugs, or exhausting diets. In short, while medicine can be quite helpful for those of us living in society, it's clear that the sick savage, lacking assistance, has nothing to expect from nature but also has nothing to fear except his illness—this often makes his situation better than ours.
Let us therefore beware of confounding savage man with the men, whom we daily see and converse with. Nature behaves towards all animals left to her care with a predilection, that seems to prove how jealous she is of that prerogative. The horse, the cat, the bull, nay the ass itself, have generally a higher stature, and always a more robust constitution, more vigour, more strength and courage in their forests than in our houses; they lose half these advantages by becoming domestic animals; it looks as if all our attention to treat them kindly, and to feed them well, served only to bastardize them. It is thus with man himself. In proportion as he becomes sociable and a slave to others, he becomes weak, fearful, mean-spirited, and his soft and effeminate way of living at once completes the enervation of his strength and of his courage. We may add, that there must be still a wider difference between man and man in a savage and domestic condition, than between beast and beast; for as men and beasts have been treated alike by nature, all the conveniences with which men indulge themselves more than they do the beasts tamed by them, are so many particular causes which make them degenerate more sensibly.
Let’s be careful not to mix up wild humans with the ones we see and talk to every day. Nature treats all animals left to her care with a preference that shows how protective she is of that right. Horses, cats, bulls, and even donkeys typically grow taller and are generally stronger, more vigorous, and braver in the wild than in our homes; they lose half of these advantages by becoming domestic animals. It seems our desire to treat them kindly and feed them well only weakens them. The same goes for humans. As people become more social and dependent on others, they become weaker, more fearful, and less spirited, and their comfortable, soft way of living only drains their strength and courage. We should also note that there’s an even greater difference between humans in wild and domestic settings than between animals; since both humans and animals have been treated similarly by nature, all the comforts that humans enjoy—much more than those given to the animals they tame—are specific factors that contribute to their decline.
Nakedness therefore, the want of houses, and of all these unnecessaries, which we consider as so very necessary, are not such mighty evils in respect to these primitive men, and much less still any obstacle to their preservation. Their skins, it is true, are destitute of hair; but then they have no occasion for any such covering in warm climates; and in cold climates they soon learn to apply to that use those of the animals they have conquered; they have but two feet to run with, but they have two hands to defend themselves with, and provide for all their wants; it costs them perhaps a great deal of time and trouble to make their children walk, but the mothers carry them with ease; an advantage not granted to other species of animals, with whom the mother, when pursued, is obliged to abandon her young ones, or regulate her steps by theirs. In short, unless we admit those singular and fortuitous concurrences of circumstances, which I shall speak of hereafter, and which, it is very possible, may never have existed, it is evident, in every state of the question, that the man, who first made himself clothes and built himself a cabin, supplied himself with things which he did not much want, since he had lived without them till then; and why should he not have been able to support in his riper years, the same kind of life, which he had supported from his infancy?
Nakedness, the lack of houses, and all those things we consider essential, are not really terrible problems for these early humans, and they certainly don’t hinder their survival. Sure, their skin has no hair, but they don’t need it in warm climates; in colder areas, they quickly learn to use the fur of the animals they hunt. They may only have two feet to run, but they have two hands to defend themselves and meet their needs. It might take a lot of time and effort to teach their children to walk, but mothers carry them easily—an advantage not given to most other animals, which have to abandon their young or move at their pace when in danger. In short, unless we consider those unique and random circumstances, which I’ll talk about later and might have never actually happened, it’s clear that the person who first made clothes and built a shelter provided themselves with things they didn’t really need, since they had lived without them up to that point. So why couldn’t they have continued living the same way they had since they were young?
Alone, idle, and always surrounded with danger, savage man must be fond of sleep, and sleep lightly like other animals, who think but little, and may, in a manner, be said to sleep all the time they do not think: self-preservation being almost his only concern, he must exercise those faculties most, which are most serviceable in attacking and in defending, whether to subdue his prey, or to prevent his becoming that of other animals: those organs, on the contrary, which softness and sensuality can alone improve, must remain in a state of rudeness, utterly incompatible with all manner of delicacy; and as his senses are divided on this point, his touch and his taste must be extremely coarse and blunt; his sight, his hearing, and his smelling equally subtle: such is the animal state in general, and accordingly if we may believe travellers, it is that of most savage nations. We must not therefore be surprised, that the Hottentots of the Cape of Good Hope, distinguish with their naked eyes ships on the ocean, at as great a distance as the Dutch can discern them with their glasses; nor that the savages of America should have tracked the Spaniards with their noses, to as great a degree of exactness, as the best dogs could have done; nor that all these barbarous nations support nakedness without pain, use such large quantities of Piemento to give their food a relish, and drink like water the strongest liquors of Europe.
Alone, idle, and always surrounded by danger, primitive humans must really appreciate sleep, and they likely sleep lightly like other animals, who think very little and can, in a way, be said to be sleeping most of the time they aren’t thinking. With self-preservation being almost their only focus, they must primarily develop the skills that are most useful for attacking and defending, whether to capture their prey or to avoid becoming prey to other animals. On the other hand, the abilities that softness and sensuality could improve must stay underdeveloped, completely incompatible with any kind of delicacy. As a result, his senses are limited; his touch and taste must be very rough and dull, while his sight, hearing, and smell are just as sharp. This is the general state of being animalistic, and according to travelers, it reflects the condition of most primitive nations. Therefore, it shouldn’t surprise us that the Hottentots of the Cape of Good Hope can see ships on the ocean with their bare eyes at a distance that the Dutch only spot with their binoculars, or that the Native Americans could track Spaniards with their sense of smell as accurately as the best dogs, or that all these so-called barbaric nations can endure being naked without discomfort, consume large amounts of Piemento to flavor their food, and drink the strongest European liquors like water.
As yet I have considered man merely in his physical capacity; let us now endeavour to examine him in a metaphysical and moral light.
Up until now, I have looked at humanity just in terms of physical ability; let’s now try to explore him from a metaphysical and moral perspective.
I can discover nothing in any mere animal but an ingenious machine, to which nature has given senses to wind itself up, and guard, to a certain degree, against everything that might destroy or disorder it. I perceive the very same things in the human machine, with this difference, that nature alone operates in all the operations of the beast, whereas man, as a free agent, has a share in his. One chooses by instinct; the other by an act of liberty; for which reason the beast cannot deviate from the rules that have been prescribed to it, even in cases where such deviation might be useful, and man often deviates from the rules laid down for him to his prejudice. Thus a pigeon would starve near a dish of the best flesh-meat, and a cat on a heap of fruit or corn, though both might very well support life with the food which they thus disdain, did they but bethink themselves to make a trial of it: it is in this manner dissolute men run into excesses, which bring on fevers and death itself; because the mind depraves the senses, and when nature ceases to speak, the will still continues to dictate.
I can find nothing in any simple animal except an ingenious machine, which nature has equipped with senses to keep itself running and protect itself, to some extent, against anything that could harm or disrupt it. I see the same traits in humans, with this key difference: nature solely controls the actions of animals, while humans, as free agents, have a role in theirs. One acts on instinct; the other acts with free will. For this reason, animals can't stray from the rules set for them, even when breaking those rules could be beneficial, and humans often stray from the rules made for them, sometimes to their own detriment. For example, a pigeon might starve next to a plate of prime meat, and a cat might do the same next to a pile of fruit or grains, even though both could easily survive on the food they reject if they’d just try it. In this way, reckless people indulge in excess, which leads to fevers and even death because the mind corrupts the senses; when nature stops communicating, the will still tries to take charge.
All animals must be allowed to have ideas, since all animals have senses; they even combine their ideas to a certain degree, and, in this respect, it is only the difference of such degree, that constitutes the difference between man and beast: some philosophers have even advanced, that there is a greater difference between some men and some others, than between some men and some beasts; it is not therefore so much the understanding that constitutes, among animals, the specifical distinction of man, as his quality of a free agent. Nature speaks to all animals, and beasts obey her voice. Man feels the same impression, but he at the same time perceives that he is free to resist or to acquiesce; and it is in the consciousness of this liberty, that the spirituality of his soul chiefly appears: for natural philosophy explains, in some measure, the mechanism of the senses and the formation of ideas; but in the power of willing, or rather of choosing, and in the consciousness of this power, nothing can be discovered but acts, that are purely spiritual, and cannot be accounted for by the laws of mechanics.
All animals should be allowed to have thoughts because they all have senses; they even combine their thoughts to some extent. In this way, the only thing that separates humans from animals is the degree of this combination. Some philosophers have even argued that there’s a bigger difference between some people and others than there is between some people and some animals. So, it’s not mainly understanding that distinguishes humans from animals, but rather the ability to act freely. Nature communicates with all animals, and they obey her call. Humans feel the same influence, but they also realize they have the freedom to resist or agree. This awareness of freedom is where the spirituality of the human soul mainly shows itself. Natural philosophy explains, to some extent, how the senses work and how ideas form; but when it comes to the power of willing, or rather choosing, and the awareness of this power, what we find are purely spiritual acts that can’t be explained by mechanical laws.
But though the difficulties, in which all these questions are involved, should leave some room to dispute on this difference between man and beast, there is another very specific quality that distinguishes them, and a quality which will admit of no dispute; this is the faculty of improvement; a faculty which, as circumstances offer, successively unfolds all the other faculties, and resides among us not only in the species, but in the individuals that compose it; whereas a beast is, at the end of some months, all he ever will be during the rest of his life; and his species, at the end of a thousand years, precisely what it was the first year of that long period. Why is man alone subject to dotage? Is it not, because he thus returns to his primitive condition? And because, while the beast, which has acquired nothing and has likewise nothing to lose, continues always in possession of his instinct, man, losing by old age, or by accident, all the acquisitions he had made in consequence of his perfectibility, thus falls back even lower than beasts themselves? It would be a melancholy necessity for us to be obliged to allow, that this distinctive and almost unlimited faculty is the source of all man's misfortunes; that it is this faculty, which, though by slow degrees, draws them out of their original condition, in which his days would slide away insensibly in peace and innocence; that it is this faculty, which, in a succession of ages, produces his discoveries and mistakes, his virtues and his vices, and, at long run, renders him both his own and nature's tyrant. It would be shocking to be obliged to commend, as a beneficent being, whoever he was that first suggested to the Oronoco Indians the use of those boards which they bind on the temples of their children, and which secure to them the enjoyment of some part at least of their natural imbecility and happiness.
But even though the challenges surrounding all these questions might allow for some debate about the difference between humans and animals, there’s one very specific trait that clearly separates them, and it’s a trait that can't be argued; this is the ability to improve. This ability, as situations arise, gradually develops all the other capabilities, and it exists not just in the species as a whole, but also in the individuals within it. In contrast, an animal, after a few months, becomes all it will ever be for the rest of its life, and its species remains exactly the same after a thousand years as it was in the first year of that long stretch. Why is man the only one who experiences decline in old age? Isn’t it because he returns to a more primitive state? While an animal, which gains nothing and has nothing to lose, always holds onto its instincts, a human can lose all the skills they’ve acquired over time due to aging or accidents, which can ultimately make them worse off than the animals. It would be a sad reality for us to admit that this unique and almost limitless ability is the root of all human misfortune; that this ability, gradually, pulls them away from their original state, where their lives could pass in peace and innocence; that this ability, across generations, leads to their discoveries and mistakes, their virtues and vices, and, in the end, makes them both tyrants of themselves and of nature. It would be disturbing to think we might have to praise whoever first suggested to the Oronoco Indians the use of those boards on their children’s heads, which allows them to retain at least some of their natural simplicity and happiness.
Savage man, abandoned by nature to pure instinct, or rather indemnified for that which has perhaps been denied to him by faculties capable of immediately supplying the place of it, and of raising him afterwards a great deal higher, would therefore begin with functions that were merely animal: to see and to feel would be his first condition, which he would enjoy in common with other animals. To will and not to will, to wish and to fear, would be the first, and in a manner, the only operations of his soul, till new circumstances occasioned new developments.
Savage humans, left by nature to follow pure instincts, or rather compensated for what may have been taken away from them by abilities that could immediately replace it, and later elevate them much higher, would start with functions that were purely animalistic: seeing and feeling would be their initial state, which they would share with other animals. Wanting and not wanting, wishing and fearing, would be the first, and in a way, the only actions of their minds until new circumstances led to new developments.
Let moralists say what they will, the human understanding is greatly indebted to the passions, which, on their side, are likewise universally allowed to be greatly indebted to the human understanding. It is by the activity of our passions, that our reason improves: we covet knowledge merely because we covet enjoyment, and it is impossible to conceive why a man exempt from fears and desires should take the trouble to reason. The passions, in their turn, owe their origin to our wants, and their increase to our progress in science; for we cannot desire or fear anything, but in consequence of the ideas we have of it, or of the simple impulses of nature; and savage man, destitute of every species of knowledge, experiences no passions but those of this last kind; his desires never extend beyond his physical wants; he knows no goods but food, a female, and rest; he fears no evil but pain, and hunger; I say pain, and not death; for no animal, merely as such, will ever know what it is to die, and the knowledge of death, and of its terrors, is one of the first acquisitions made by man, in consequence of his deviating from the animal state.
Let moralists say what they want, human understanding owes a lot to our passions, which are also universally recognized to owe a lot to human understanding. It's through our passions that our reasoning gets better: we seek knowledge simply because we want enjoyment, and it’s hard to imagine why someone who has no fears or desires would bother to think things through. Passions come from our needs, and they grow as we advance in knowledge; we can’t desire or fear anything without the ideas we have about it or basic instincts. A primitive human, lacking all forms of knowledge, feels only basic instincts; his desires don’t go beyond physical needs; he knows only food, a mate, and rest; he fears only pain and hunger; I say pain, not death, because no animal, just by being an animal, understands what it means to die, and the understanding of death and its fears is one of the first things humans acquire as they move away from the animal state.
I could easily, were it requisite, cite facts in support of this opinion, and show, that the progress of the mind has everywhere kept pace exactly with the wants, to which nature had left the inhabitants exposed, or to which circumstances had subjected them, and consequently to the passions, which inclined them to provide for these wants. I could exhibit in Egypt the arts starting up, and extending themselves with the inundations of the Nile; I could pursue them in their progress among the Greeks, where they were seen to bud forth, grow, and rise to the heavens, in the midst of the sands and rocks of Attica, without being able to take root on the fertile banks of the Eurotas; I would observe that, in general, the inhabitants of the north are more industrious than those of the south, because they can less do without industry; as if nature thus meant to make all things equal, by giving to the mind that fertility she has denied to the soil.
I could easily, if needed, provide evidence to back up this opinion and demonstrate that the development of the mind has always matched the needs that nature exposed the inhabitants to or the circumstances they faced, along with the passions that motivated them to address these needs. I could show how the arts emerged and grew in Egypt alongside the flooding of the Nile; I could trace their progress among the Greeks, where they blossomed, developed, and soared into greatness, in the midst of Attica's sands and rocks, unable to take root on the fertile banks of the Eurotas; I would note that, in general, people in the north tend to be more hardworking than those in the south because they are less able to survive without effort, as if nature intended to create balance by endowing the mind with the resources it denied to the land.
But exclusive of the uncertain testimonies of history, who does not perceive that everything seems to remove from savage man the temptation and the means of altering his condition? His imagination paints nothing to him; his heart asks nothing from him. His moderate wants are so easily supplied with what he everywhere finds ready to his hand, and he stands at such a distance from the degree of knowledge requisite to covet more, that he can neither have foresight nor curiosity. The spectacle of nature, by growing quite familiar to him, becomes at last equally indifferent. It is constantly the same order, constantly the same revolutions; he has not sense enough to feel surprise at the sight of the greatest wonders; and it is not in his mind we must look for that philosophy, which man must have to know how to observe once, what he has every day seen. His soul, which nothing disturbs, gives itself up entirely to the consciousness of its actual existence, without any thought of even the nearest futurity; and his projects, equally confined with his views, scarce extend to the end of the day. Such is, even at present, the degree of foresight in the Caribbean: he sells his cotton bed in the morning, and comes in the evening, with tears in his eyes, to buy it back, not having foreseen that he should want it again the next night.
But aside from the uncertain accounts of history, who doesn’t see that everything seems to take away from primitive man the urge and the ability to change his situation? His imagination doesn’t inspire him; his heart doesn’t desire anything more. His simple needs are easily met with what he finds around him, and he stands so far from the level of knowledge needed to want more that he lacks both foresight and curiosity. The wonders of nature, becoming completely familiar, eventually leave him indifferent. It’s always the same patterns, always the same cycles; he doesn’t have enough awareness to be surprised by the greatest marvels, and we shouldn't expect that philosophy, which man must possess to appreciate what he sees every day for the first time, to be found in his mind. His soul, which remains undisturbed, is completely focused on the awareness of its current existence, with no thoughts about even the immediate future; his plans, just as limited as his outlook, barely reach the end of the day. Such is, even now, the level of foresight in the Caribbean: he sells his cotton mattress in the morning and comes back in the evening, tearful, to buy it back, not having anticipated that he would need it again that night.
The more we meditate on this subject, the wider does the distance between mere sensation and the most simple knowledge become in our eyes; and it is impossible to conceive how man, by his own powers alone, without the assistance of communication, and the spur of necessity, could have got over so great an interval. How many ages perhaps revolved, before men beheld any other fire but that of the heavens? How many different accidents must have concurred to make them acquainted with the most common uses of this element? How often have they let it go out, before they knew the art of reproducing it? And how often perhaps has not every one of these secrets perished with the discoverer? What shall we say of agriculture, an art which requires so much labour and foresight; which depends upon other arts; which, it is very evident, cannot be practised but in a society, if not a formed one, at least one of some standing, and which does not so much serve to draw aliments from the earth, for the earth would yield them without all that trouble, as to oblige her to produce those things, which we like best, preferably to others? But let us suppose that men had multiplied to such a degree, that the natural products of the earth no longer sufficed for their support; a supposition which, by the bye, would prove that this kind of life would be very advantageous to the human species; let us suppose that, without forge or anvil, the instruments of husbandry had dropped from the heavens into the hands of savages, that these men had got the better of that mortal aversion they all have for constant labour; that they had learned to foretell their wants at so great a distance of time; that they had guessed exactly how they were to break the earth, commit their seed to it, and plant trees; that they had found out the art of grinding their corn, and improving by fermentation the juice of their grapes; all operations which we must allow them to have learned from the gods, since we cannot conceive how they should make such discoveries of themselves; after all these fine presents, what man would be mad enough to cultivate a field, that may be robbed by the first comer, man or beast, who takes a fancy to the produce of it. And would any man consent to spend his day in labour and fatigue, when the rewards of his labour and fatigue became more and more precarious in proportion to his want of them? In a word, how could this situation engage men to cultivate the earth, as long as it was not parcelled out among them, that is, as long as a state of nature subsisted.
The more we think about this topic, the larger the gap seems between just feeling something and having even the simplest knowledge. It's hard to imagine how humans, on their own, without communication and the drive of necessity, could have crossed such a vast divide. How many ages might have passed before people saw anything but the fire in the sky? What different events must have combined for them to discover even the basic uses of this element? How often did they let it go out before they figured out how to make it again? And how many of these secrets might have died with the person who discovered them? What about farming, an activity that demands so much labor and foresight, relies on other skills, and clearly can only be done in a society—if not a well-structured one, at least one with some stability? Farming doesn't just help us gather food from the earth—since the earth would provide it without all that effort—but also requires the earth to produce the things we prefer over others. Now, imagine if humans multiplied to the point where the earth's natural offerings weren't enough to support them; this scenario would suggest that this way of living would be very beneficial for humans. Picture that, without tools, the instruments for farming fell from the sky into the hands of primitive people, and these individuals overcame their deep-seated dislike for constant work. Let’s assume they developed the ability to anticipate their future needs far ahead of time; they figured out how to cultivate the land, plant seeds, and grow trees; they discovered how to grind their grain and ferment grape juice—all amazing feats we can only believe they learned from the gods, as it’s hard to see how they could figure these things out on their own. After all these generous gifts, who would be foolish enough to farm a field that could be raided by anyone—human or animal—who fancied the harvest? And would anyone willingly spend their days toiling when the rewards for their hard work became increasingly uncertain? In essence, how could this situation encourage people to farm the land as long as it hadn't been divided among them, meaning, as long as a state of nature existed?
Though we should suppose savage man as well versed in the art of thinking, as philosophers make him; though we were, after them, to make him a philosopher himself, discovering of himself the sublimest truths, forming to himself, by the most abstract arguments, maxims of justice and reason drawn from the love of order in general, or from the known will of his Creator: in a word, though we were to suppose his mind as intelligent and enlightened, as it must, and is, in fact, found to be dull and stupid; what benefit would the species receive from all these metaphysical discoveries, which could not be communicated, but must perish with the individual who had made them? What progress could mankind make in the forests, scattered up and down among the other animals? And to what degree could men mutually improve and enlighten each other, when they had no fixed habitation, nor any need of each other's assistance; when the same persons scarcely met twice in their whole lives, and on meeting neither spoke to, or so much as knew each other?
Even if we imagine primitive man as skilled in the art of thinking, like philosophers suggest; even if we were to turn him into a philosopher himself, discovering the deepest truths and creating maxims of justice and reason based on a general love of order or the known will of his Creator: in short, even if we think his mind was as intelligent and enlightened as it actually is dull and unrefined; what benefit would humanity gain from all these metaphysical insights, which could only exist in the mind of the individual who discovered them and would be lost with him? How could humanity make progress in the wilderness, scattered among other animals? And how could people help and enlighten each other when they had no permanent homes and no need for each other's help; when the same individuals barely met twice in their lifetimes and, when they did, neither spoke to nor even recognized each other?
Let us consider how many ideas we owe to the use of speech; how much grammar exercises, and facilitates the operations of the mind; let us, besides, reflect on the immense pains and time that the first invention of languages must have required: Let us add these reflections to the preceding; and then we may judge how many thousand ages must have been requisite to develop successively the operations, which the human mind is capable of producing.
Let’s think about how many ideas we owe to speech; how much grammar helps and makes it easier for our minds to work; additionally, let’s consider the immense effort and time it must have taken to invent languages in the first place. Let’s combine these thoughts with the previous ones, and then we can estimate how many thousands of years it must have taken to develop the various operations that the human mind can perform.
I must now beg leave to stop one moment to consider the perplexities attending the origin of languages. I might here barely cite or repeat the researches made, in relation to this question, by the Abbe de Condillac, which all fully confirm my system, and perhaps even suggested to me the first idea of it. But, as the manner, in which the philosopher resolves the difficulties of his own starting, concerning the origin of arbitrary signs, shows that he supposes, what I doubt, namely a kind of society already established among the inventors of languages; I think it my duty, at the same time that I refer to his reflections, to give my own, in order to expose the same difficulties in a light suitable to my subject. The first that offers is how languages could become necessary; for as there was no correspondence between men, nor the least necessity for any, there is no conceiving the necessity of this invention, nor the possibility of it, if it was not indispensable. I might say, with many others, that languages are the fruit of the domestic intercourse between fathers, mothers, and children: but this, besides its not answering any difficulties, would be committing the same fault with those, who reasoning on the state of nature, transfer to it ideas collected in society, always consider families as living together under one roof, and their members as observing among themselves an union, equally intimate and permanent with that which we see exist in a civil state, where so many common interests conspire to unite them; whereas in this primitive state, as there were neither houses nor cabins, nor any kind of property, every one took up his lodging at random, and seldom continued above one night in the same place; males and females united without any premeditated design, as chance, occasion, or desire brought them together, nor had they any great occasion for language to make known their thoughts to each other. They parted with the same ease. The mother suckled her children, when just born, for her own sake; but afterwards out of love and affection to them, when habit and custom had made them dear to her; but they no sooner gained strength enough to run about in quest of food than they separated even from her of their own accord; and as they scarce had any other method of not losing each other, than that of remaining constantly in each other's sight, they soon came to such a pass of forgetfulness, as not even to know each other, when they happened to meet again. I must further observe that the child having all his wants to explain, and consequently more things to say to his mother, than the mother can have to say to him, it is he that must be at the chief expense of invention, and the language he makes use of must be in a great measure his own work; this makes the number of languages equal to that of the individuals who are to speak them; and this multiplicity of languages is further increased by their roving and vagabond kind of life, which allows no idiom time enough to acquire any consistency; for to say that the mother would have dictated to the child the words he must employ to ask her this thing and that, may well enough explain in what manner languages, already formed, are taught, but it does not show us in what manner they are first formed.
I need to take a moment to talk about the complexities surrounding how languages originated. I could mention the research done on this topic by the Abbe de Condillac, which all supports my theory and might have even inspired my initial thoughts on it. However, the way the philosopher tackles the issues related to the origin of arbitrary signs suggests he assumes there was some form of society already in place among those who invented languages, which I question. Therefore, I think it's important to share my own insights alongside his to shed light on these same challenges in a way that fits my topic. The first question that arises is how languages could have become necessary; since there was no interaction between people, nor any real need for it, it's hard to understand how this invention could arise unless it was absolutely necessary. I could argue, like many others, that languages come from the close interactions between parents and their children. However, this doesn't address the difficulties and is similar to those who, when discussing the state of nature, incorrectly project societal ideas onto it, treating families as if they lived under one roof and shared a close, lasting bond like that in a civil society where common interests unite them. In the primitive state, there were no houses or properties, and people moved around freely, rarely staying in one place for more than a night. Males and females came together randomly, driven by chance or desire, and there was little need for language to express their thoughts to one another. They could part ways easily. A mother would nurse her newborn for her own well-being, then later out of love, but as soon as the child could move around to find food, they would separate on their own. Since they had no way to keep in touch except by staying in sight of each other, they quickly reached a point where they wouldn't even recognize each other if they happened to meet later. It's also worth noting that the child, needing to communicate all their wants, had much more to say to the mother than she did to him. Therefore, it was the child who had to come up with most of the language, making it largely his own creation. This leads to as many languages as there are individuals who speak them, and this diversity is further increased by their wandering lifestyle, which doesn't allow any language enough time to stabilize. Saying that the mother would teach the child the words to ask for things helps explain how already-formed languages are taught but doesn’t clarify how they were first created.
Let us suppose this first difficulty conquered: Let us for a moment consider ourselves at this side of the immense space, which must have separated the pure state of nature from that in which languages became necessary, and let us, after allowing such necessity, examine how languages could begin to be established. A new difficulty this, still more stubborn than the preceding; for if men stood in need of speech to learn to think, they must have stood in still greater need of the art of thinking to invent that of speaking; and though we could conceive how the sounds of the voice came to be taken for the conventional interpreters of our ideas we should not be the nearer knowing who could have been the interpreters of this convention for such ideas, as, in consequence of their not having any sensible objects, could not be made manifest by gesture or voice; so that we can scarce form any tolerable conjectures concerning the birth of this art of communicating our thoughts, and establishing a correspondence between minds: a sublime art which, though so remote from its origin, philosophers still behold at such a prodigious distance from its perfection, that I never met with one of them bold enough to affirm it would ever arrive there, though the revolutions necessarily produced by time were suspended in its favour; though prejudice could be banished from, or would be at least content to sit silent in the presence of our academies, and though these societies should consecrate themselves, entirely and during whole ages, to the study of this intricate object.
Let’s assume we’ve overcome this first challenge: Let’s take a moment to imagine ourselves on this side of the vast divide that must have existed between the pure state of nature and the point at which languages became necessary. After acknowledging that necessity, let’s explore how languages might have started to develop. This presents an even tougher challenge than the first; if people needed speech to learn to think, they must have needed the ability to think even more to come up with the idea of speaking. While we can understand how vocal sounds were accepted as conventional symbols for our ideas, we still have no clue who could have been the originators of this convention for ideas that, since they lack physical forms, couldn’t be expressed through gestures or voice. Therefore, it’s hard to form any reasonable theories about the emergence of this communication art and the establishment of connections between minds: a remarkable skill that, despite being far removed from its beginnings, philosophers still view as a significant distance from its ideal state. I’ve never encountered a philosopher brave enough to claim it would ever achieve that perfection, even if time’s changes were put on hold to favor it, even if biases could be dismissed or at least kept quiet in the presence of our academic institutions, and even if these groups dedicated themselves completely and for long periods to studying this complex topic.
The first language of man, the most universal and most energetic of all languages, in short, the only language he had occasion for, before there was a necessity of persuading assembled multitudes, was the cry of nature. As this cry was never extorted but by a kind of instinct in the most urgent cases, to implore assistance in great danger, or relief in great sufferings, it was of little use in the common occurrences of life, where more moderate sentiments generally prevail. When the ideas of men began to extend and multiply, and a closer communication began to take place among them, they laboured to devise more numerous signs, and a more extensive language: they multiplied the inflections of the voice, and added to them gestures, which are, in their own nature, more expressive, and whose meaning depends less on any prior determination. They therefore expressed visible and movable objects by gestures and those which strike the ear, by imitative sounds: but as gestures scarcely indicate anything except objects that are actually present or can be easily described, and visible actions; as they are not of general use, since darkness or the interposition of an opaque medium renders them useless; and as besides they require attention rather than excite it: men at length bethought themselves of substituting for them the articulations of voice, which, without having the same relation to any determinate object, are, in quality of instituted signs, fitter to represent all our ideas; a substitution, which could only have been made by common consent, and in a manner pretty difficult to practise by men, whose rude organs were unimproved by exercise; a substitution, which is in itself more difficult to be conceived, since the motives to this unanimous agreement must have been somehow or another expressed, and speech therefore appears to have been exceedingly requisite to establish the use of speech.
The first language of humanity, the most universal and powerful of all languages, or simply the only language needed before there was a need to persuade large groups, was the cry of nature. This cry was only instinctively used in urgent situations to seek help in great danger or relief in intense suffering, making it not very useful for everyday life, where more moderate feelings usually dominate. As people's ideas started to expand and communication among them increased, they worked to create more signs and a broader language: they varied their vocal sounds and added gestures, which are naturally more expressive and less reliant on prior definitions. They represented visible and moving objects with gestures and things that could be heard with imitative sounds. However, since gestures only indicated objects that were physically present or could be easily described, and were not generally useful due to darkness or obstacles blocking visibility, and needed attention rather than drawing it, people eventually thought of replacing them with vocal sounds. These sounds, unlike gestures, have no necessary connection to any specific object and, as established signs, are better suited to represent all our ideas. This replacement could only have happened through mutual agreement and was quite challenging for people whose unrefined vocal abilities hadn't been developed through practice; it's difficult to even imagine, as the reasons for this collective agreement must have been expressed in some way, making speech seem essential to establish the use of speech.
We must allow that the words, first made use of by men, had in their minds a much more extensive signification, than those employed in languages of some standing, and that, considering how ignorant they were of the division of speech into its constituent parts; they at first gave every word the meaning of an entire proposition. When afterwards they began to perceive the difference between the subject and attribute, and between verb and noun, a distinction which required no mean effort of genius, the substantives for a time were only so many proper names, the infinitive was the only tense, and as to adjectives, great difficulties must have attended the development of the idea that represents them, since every adjective is an abstract word, and abstraction is an unnatural and very painful operation.
We have to recognize that the words first used by people had a much broader meaning in their minds than those found in established languages. Considering how little they understood about breaking speech down into its parts, they initially assigned each word the meaning of a complete statement. Later, as they started to notice the differences between the subject and the attribute, as well as between verbs and nouns—a distinction that required considerable intellectual effort—the nouns were essentially just a series of proper names, the infinitive was the only tense, and there were significant challenges in developing the concept of adjectives, since every adjective is an abstract term, and abstraction is a difficult and often uncomfortable process.
At first they gave every object a peculiar name, without any regard to its genus or species, things which these first institutors of language were in no condition to distinguish; and every individual presented itself solitary to their minds, as it stands in the table of nature. If they called one oak A, they called another oak B: so that their dictionary must have been more extensive in proportion as their knowledge of things was more confined. It could not but be a very difficult task to get rid of so diffuse and embarrassing a nomenclature; as in order to marshal the several beings under common and generic denominations, it was necessary to be first acquainted with their properties, and their differences; to be stocked with observations and definitions, that is to say, to understand natural history and metaphysics, advantages which the men of these times could not have enjoyed.
At first, they gave every object a strange name, without considering its type or category, which these early creators of language were not in a position to identify. Each individual object appeared to them in isolation, just as it exists in nature. If they named one oak A, they named another oak B; so their vocabulary had to be broader even though their understanding of things was limited. It must have been quite a challenge to eliminate such a complex and confusing naming system; to organize various beings under common and general names, they first needed to know their characteristics and differences. They had to be filled with observations and definitions, in other words, to grasp natural history and metaphysics—knowledge that people of that time likely did not possess.
Besides, general ideas cannot be conveyed to the mind without the assistance of words, nor can the understanding seize them without the assistance of propositions. This is one of the reasons, why mere animals cannot form such ideas, nor ever acquire the perfectibility which depends on such an operation. When a monkey leaves without the least hesitation one nut for another, are we to think he has any general idea of that kind of fruit, and that he compares these two individual bodies with his archetype notion of them? No, certainly; but the sight of one of these nuts calls back to his memory the sensations which he has received from the other; and his eyes, modified after some certain manner, give notice to his palate of the modification it is in its turn going to receive. Every general idea is purely intellectual; let the imagination tamper ever so little with it, it immediately becomes a particular idea. Endeavour to represent to yourself the image of a tree in general, you never will be able to do it; in spite of all your efforts it will appear big or little, thin or tufted, of a bright or a deep colour; and were you master to see nothing in it, but what can be seen in every tree, such a picture would no longer resemble any tree. Beings perfectly abstract are perceivable in the same manner, or are only conceivable by the assistance of speech. The definition of a triangle can alone give you a just idea of that figure: the moment you form a triangle in your mind, it is this or that particular triangle and no other, and you cannot avoid giving breadth to its lines and colour to its area. We must therefore make use of propositions; we must therefore speak to have general ideas; for the moment the imagination stops, the mind must stop too, if not assisted by speech. If therefore the first inventors could give no names to any ideas but those they had already, it follows that the first substantives could never have been anything more than proper names.
Moreover, general ideas can’t be communicated to the mind without the help of words, and the understanding can’t grasp them without the help of propositions. This is one reason why mere animals can’t form such ideas or achieve the level of perfection that relies on this process. When a monkey easily chooses one nut over another, should we think it has a general idea of that type of fruit and compares these two specific nuts with its ideal concept of them? No, certainly not; rather, the sight of one nut reminds it of the sensations it’s had with the other, and its eyes, changed in a specific way, alert its palate about the experience it’s about to have. Every general idea is purely intellectual; the moment the imagination plays even a little with it, it instantly turns into a specific idea. Try to imagine a tree in general, and you’ll never be able to do it; despite all your efforts, it will appear large or small, thin or bushy, bright or dark in color; and if you were to perceive nothing but what is common to every tree, such an image would no longer resemble any actual tree. Beings that are completely abstract are understandable in the same way, or can only be conceived with the help of language. Only the definition of a triangle can give you a correct idea of that shape: as soon as you form a triangle in your mind, it’s this specific triangle or that specific one and not any other, and you can’t help but add width to its lines and color to its area. Therefore, we must use propositions; we must speak to have general ideas; because the moment the imagination halts, the mind must stop too, unless supported by speech. Thus, if the first inventors could only give names to ideas they already had, it follows that the first nouns could only have been proper names.
But when by means, which I cannot conceive, our new grammarians began to extend their ideas, and generalize their words, the ignorance of the inventors must have confined this method to very narrow bounds; and as they had at first too much multiplied the names of individuals for want of being acquainted with the distinctions called genus and species, they afterwards made too few genera and species for want of having considered beings in all their differences; to push the divisions far enough, they must have had more knowledge and experience than we can allow them, and have made more researches and taken more pains, than we can suppose them willing to submit to. Now if, even at this present time, we every day discover new species, which had before escaped all our observations, how many species must have escaped the notice of men, who judged of things merely from their first appearances! As to the primitive classes and the most general notions, it were superfluous to add that these they must have likewise overlooked: how, for example, could they have thought of or understood the words, matter, spirit, substance, mode, figure, motion, since even our philosophers, who for so long a time have been constantly employing these terms, can themselves scarcely understand them, and since the ideas annexed to these words being purely metaphysical, no models of them could be found in nature?
But when, through means I can't understand, our new grammarians started to expand their ideas and generalize their terms, the inventors' ignorance must have limited this approach to very narrow confines. Initially, they seemed to have overly multiplied the names for individuals due to their lack of understanding about categories like genus and species. Later on, they created too few genera and species because they didn't consider all the differences among beings. To effectively categorize them, they would have needed more knowledge and experience than we can attribute to them, and they would have had to conduct more research and put in more effort than we can assume they were willing to do. Now, if even today we continuously discover new species that had previously gone unnoticed, how many must have escaped the attention of people who judged things only based on first appearances! Regarding the primary classes and the most general concepts, it's unnecessary to point out that they must have overlooked these as well. How could they have conceived or understood terms like matter, spirit, substance, mode, figure, or motion, especially when our philosophers, who have been using these terms for so long, can hardly comprehend them themselves? Since the ideas tied to these words are purely metaphysical, there are no examples of them to be found in nature.
I stop at these first advances, and beseech my judges to suspend their lecture a little, in order to consider, what a great way language has still to go, in regard to the invention of physical substantives alone, (though the easiest part of language to invent,) to be able to express all the sentiments of man, to assume an invariable form, to bear being spoken in public and to influence society: I earnestly entreat them to consider how much time and knowledge must have been requisite to find out numbers, abstract words, the aorists, and all the other tenses of verbs, the particles, and syntax, the method of connecting propositions and arguments, of forming all the logic of discourse. For my own part, I am so scared at the difficulties that multiply at every step, and so convinced of the almost demonstrated impossibility of languages owing their birth and establishment to means that were merely human, that I must leave to whoever may please to take it up, the task of discussing this difficult problem. "Which was the most necessary, society already formed to invent languages, or languages already invented to form society?"
I pause at these initial points and ask my judges to hold off on their lecture for a moment to reflect on how much further language still needs to go. Specifically, when it comes to creating physical nouns, which is the easiest part of language to develop, we still struggle to express all human emotions effectively, to adopt a consistent form, to be suitable for public speaking, and to impact society. I urge them to think about how much time and knowledge it took to discover numbers, abstract terms, the aorist tense, and all other verb tenses, along with particles and syntax, as well as the strategies for linking propositions and arguments and constructing the logic of discourse. Personally, I'm so overwhelmed by the challenges that arise at every turn and so convinced that it’s nearly impossible for languages to have been created and established solely through human efforts that I have to leave it to anyone interested to tackle this complex issue. "Which came first, a society that was already formed to create languages, or languages that were already created to shape society?"
But be the case of these origins ever so mysterious, we may at least infer from the little care which nature has taken to bring men together by mutual wants, and make the use of speech easy to them, how little she has done towards making them sociable, and how little she has contributed to anything which they themselves have done to become so. In fact, it is impossible to conceive, why, in this primitive state, one man should have more occasion for the assistance of another, than one monkey, or one wolf for that of another animal of the same species; or supposing that he had, what motive could induce another to assist him; or even, in this last case, how he, who wanted assistance, and he from whom it was wanted, could agree among themselves upon the conditions. Authors, I know, are continually telling us, that in this state man would have been a most miserable creature; and if it is true, as I fancy I have proved it, that he must have continued many ages without either the desire or the opportunity of emerging from such a state, this their assertion could only serve to justify a charge against nature, and not any against the being which nature had thus constituted; but, if I thoroughly understand this term miserable, it is a word, that either has no meaning, or signifies nothing, but a privation attended with pain, and a suffering state of body or soul; now I would fain know what kind of misery can be that of a free being, whose heart enjoys perfect peace, and body perfect health? And which is aptest to become insupportable to those who enjoy it, a civil or a natural life? In civil life we can scarcely meet a single person who does not complain of his existence; many even throw away as much of it as they can, and the united force of divine and human laws can hardly put bounds to this disorder. Was ever any free savage known to have been so much as tempted to complain of life, and lay violent hands on himself? Let us therefore judge with less pride on which side real misery is to be placed. Nothing, on the contrary, must have been so unhappy as savage man, dazzled by flashes of knowledge, racked by passions, and reasoning on a state different from that in which he saw himself placed. It was in consequence of a very wise Providence, that the faculties, which he potentially enjoyed, were not to develop themselves but in proportion as there offered occasions to exercise them, lest they should be superfluous or troublesome to him when he did not want them, or tardy and useless when he did. He had in his instinct alone everything requisite to live in a state of nature; in his cultivated reason he has barely what is necessary to live in a state of society.
But regardless of how mysterious these origins may be, we can at least infer from the little effort that nature has put into bringing people together through shared needs and making communication easy for them, how little she has done to make them sociable, and how little she has contributed to any efforts they've made to become so. In fact, it’s hard to understand why, in this primitive state, one man would need another’s help any more than one monkey or one wolf would need the help of another animal of its species; or if he did need it, what would motivate another to help him; or even how the one needing help and the one able to give it could agree on the terms. Authors often tell us that in this state, man would have been a miserable creature; and if it’s true, as I believe I have shown, that he must have remained in this condition for many ages without the desire or chance to escape it, their claims would only serve to accuse nature, rather than the being that nature had created. However, if I understand this term "miserable" correctly, it either has no real meaning or refers only to a lack that's accompanied by pain, and a state of suffering for body or soul. Now, I wonder what kind of misery could afflict a free being who enjoys perfect peace of mind and perfect health? Which is more intolerable for those who experience it: civil life or natural life? In civil life, we can hardly find anyone who doesn’t complain about their existence; many even try to end it by any means possible, and both divine and human laws struggle to contain this disorder. Has there ever been a free savage known to have been tempted to complain about life or to harm himself? So let’s judge with a little less arrogance which side real misery belongs to. On the contrary, nothing could be more unhappy than the savage man, blinded by glimpses of knowledge, tormented by passions, and reasoning about a state of being different from his own. It was through very wise Providence that the faculties he had were not allowed to develop until there were opportunities to use them, to prevent them from being unnecessary or burdensome when not needed, or slow and unhelpful when they were. He had everything necessary to live in a state of nature solely in his instincts; in contrast, his cultivated reason barely fulfills what’s required to live in a society.
It appears at first sight that, as there was no kind of moral relations between men in this state, nor any known duties, they could not be either good or bad, and had neither vices nor virtues, unless we take these words in a physical sense, and call vices, in the individual, the qualities which may prove detrimental to his own preservation, and virtues those which may contribute to it; in which case we should be obliged to consider him as most virtuous, who made least resistance against the simple impulses of nature. But without deviating from the usual meaning of these terms, it is proper to suspend the judgment we might form of such a situation, and be upon our guard against prejudice, till, the balance in hand, we have examined whether there are more virtues or vices among civilized men; or whether the improvement of their understanding is sufficient to compensate the damage which they mutually do to each other, in proportion as they become better informed of the services which they ought to do; or whether, upon the whole, they would not be much happier in a condition, where they had nothing to fear or to hope from each other, than in that where they had submitted to an universal subserviency, and have obliged themselves to depend for everything upon the good will of those, who do not think themselves obliged to give anything in return.
At first glance, it seems that since there were no moral relationships between people in this state, and no known duties, they couldn't be classified as good or bad, nor did they possess vices or virtues—unless we interpret these words in a physical sense, defining vices in an individual as qualities that might harm their own survival, and virtues as those that could help it. In that case, we would have to consider the person who yields least to the basic drives of nature as the most virtuous. However, without straying from the usual meanings of these terms, it's best to hold off on forming a judgment about such a situation and remain cautious of biases until we can examine, with an unbiased perspective, whether civilized people exhibit more virtues or vices; or whether the enhancement of their understanding makes up for the harm they do to one another as they become more aware of the obligations they ought to fulfill; or whether, overall, they would be much happier in a condition where they had nothing to fear or hope from each other than in one where they have submitted to total subservience, becoming dependent on the goodwill of those who don’t feel compelled to give anything in return.
But above all things let us beware concluding with Hobbes, that man, as having no idea of goodness, must be naturally bad; that he is vicious because he does not know what virtue is; that he always refuses to do any service to those of his own species, because he believes that none is due to them; that, in virtue of that right which he justly claims to everything he wants, he foolishly looks upon himself as proprietor of the whole universe. Hobbes very plainly saw the flaws in all the modern definitions of natural right: but the consequences, which he draws from his own definition, show that it is, in the sense he understands it, equally exceptionable. This author, to argue from his own principles, should say that the state of nature, being that where the care of our own preservation interferes least with the preservation of others, was of course the most favourable to peace, and most suitable to mankind; whereas he advances the very reverse in consequence of his having injudiciously admitted, as objects of that care which savage man should take of his preservation, the satisfaction of numberless passions which are the work of society, and have rendered laws necessary. A bad man, says he, is a robust child. But this is not proving that savage man is a robust child; and though we were to grant that he was, what could this philosopher infer from such a concession? That if this man, when robust, depended on others as much as when feeble, there is no excess that he would not be guilty of. He would make nothing of striking his mother when she delayed ever so little to give him the breast; he would claw, and bite, and strangle without remorse the first of his younger brothers, that ever so accidentally jostled or otherwise disturbed him. But these are two contradictory suppositions in the state of nature, to be robust and dependent. Man is weak when dependent, and his own master before he grows robust. Hobbes did not consider that the same cause, which hinders savages from making use of their reason, as our jurisconsults pretend, hinders them at the same time from making an ill use of their faculties, as he himself pretends; so that we may say that savages are not bad, precisely because they don't know what it is to be good; for it is neither the development of the understanding, nor the curb of the law, but the calmness of their passions and their ignorance of vice that hinders them from doing ill: tantus plus in illis proficit vitiorum ignorantia, quam in his cognito virtutis. There is besides another principle that has escaped Hobbes, and which, having been given to man to moderate, on certain occasions, the blind and impetuous sallies of self-love, or the desire of self-preservation previous to the appearance of that passion, allays the ardour, with which he naturally pursues his private welfare, by an innate abhorrence to see beings suffer that resemble him. I shall not surely be contradicted, in granting to man the only natural virtue, which the most passionate detractor of human virtues could not deny him, I mean that of pity, a disposition suitable to creatures weak as we are, and liable to so many evils; a virtue so much the more universal, and withal useful to man, as it takes place in him of all manner of reflection; and so natural, that the beasts themselves sometimes give evident signs of it. Not to speak of the tenderness of mothers for their young; and of the dangers they face to screen them from danger; with what reluctance are horses known to trample upon living bodies; one animal never passes unmoved by the dead carcass of another animal of the same species: there are even some who bestow a kind of sepulture upon their dead fellows; and the mournful lowings of cattle, on their entering the slaughter-house, publish the impression made upon them by the horrible spectacle they are there struck with. It is with pleasure we see the author of the fable of the bees, forced to acknowledge man a compassionate and sensible being; and lay aside, in the example he offers to confirm it, his cold and subtle style, to place before us the pathetic picture of a man, who, with his hands tied up, is obliged to behold a beast of prey tear a child from the arms of his mother, and then with his teeth grind the tender limbs, and with his claws rend the throbbing entrails of the innocent victim. What horrible emotions must not such a spectator experience at the sight of an event which does not personally concern him? What anguish must he not suffer at his not being able to assist the fainting mother or the expiring infant?
But above all, we should be careful not to conclude with Hobbes that man, having no idea of goodness, must be naturally bad; that he is vicious because he doesn't understand virtue; that he always refuses to help others of his kind because he believes no help is owed to them; that, based on the right he claims to everything he wants, he foolishly sees himself as the owner of the entire universe. Hobbes clearly pointed out the flaws in all the modern definitions of natural rights, but the conclusions he draws from his own definition show it has its own issues. This author, using his own principles, should argue that the state of nature, being where our desire for self-preservation interferes the least with the preservation of others, is actually the most favorable for peace and humanity; however, he states the opposite because he mistakenly includes the satisfaction of countless passions that arise from society as the concerns savage man should have for his preservation, which have made laws necessary. A bad man, he claims, is like a strong child. But this does not prove that a savage man is like a strong child; and even if we granted that he was, what could this philosopher conclude from such a concession? If this strong man depended on others just as much when weak, there would be no limit to the wrongs he might commit. He would have no qualms about hitting his mother when she took even a moment too long to feed him; he would scratch, bite, and choke the first of his younger brothers who accidentally bumped into him. But these are two contradictory ideas in the state of nature: to be strong and dependent. Man is weak when dependent and independent before he becomes strong. Hobbes didn’t realize that the same reason which stops savages from using their reason, as our legal experts claim, also prevents them from misusing their faculties, as he himself suggests. Therefore, we can say that savages are not bad precisely because they don't know what it means to be good; for it is neither the development of understanding nor the restraint of laws, but the calmness of their passions and their ignorance of vice that stops them from doing wrong: tantus plus in illis proficit vitiorum ignorantia, quam in his cognito virtutis. Furthermore, there is another principle that Hobbes overlooked, which helps man temper the blind and impulsive urges of self-love or self-preservation before those urges appear, calming the intensity with which he naturally seeks his own welfare through an innate aversion to seeing beings like himself suffer. I am sure I won’t be contradicted when I acknowledge the only natural virtue that the most passionate critic of human virtues couldn't deny: the virtue of pity, a trait relevant to creatures as frail as we are, vulnerable to many evils; a virtue that is all the more universal and useful to mankind, as it occurs through all forms of reflection; and so natural that even animals sometimes show clear signs of it. Just think of the tenderness of mothers for their young and the dangers they face to protect them; how reluctantly horses are known to trample on living bodies; how one animal cannot ignore the dead carcass of another of its kind; some even give a sort of burial to their dead companions; and the mournful sounds of cattle as they enter the slaughterhouse show the impact of the horrific sight that overwhelms them. It is gratifying to see the author of the fable of the bees forced to recognize man as a compassionate and sensitive being; he sets aside his cold and cunning style to present us with the emotional image of a man, with his hands tied, forced to witness a predator tearing a child from its mother’s arms, then grinding the tender limbs with its teeth and ripping apart the innocent victim’s entrails with its claws. What horrific emotions must such a bystander feel at the sight of an event that doesn't even directly involve him? What anguish must he endure knowing he cannot assist the fainting mother or the dying infant?
Such is the pure motion of nature, anterior to all manner of reflection; such is the force of natural pity, which the most dissolute manners have as yet found it so difficult to extinguish, since we every day see, in our theatrical representation, those men sympathize with the unfortunate and weep at their sufferings, who, if in the tyrant's place, would aggravate the torments of their enemies. Mandeville was very sensible that men, in spite of all their morality, would never have been better than monsters, if nature had not given them pity to assist reason: but he did not perceive that from this quality alone flow all the social virtues, which he would dispute mankind the possession of. In fact, what is generosity, what clemency, what humanity, but pity applied to the weak, to the guilty, or to the human species in general? Even benevolence and friendship, if we judge right, will appear the effects of a constant pity, fixed upon a particular object: for to wish that a person may not suffer, what is it but to wish that he may be happy? Though it were true that commiseration is no more than a sentiment, which puts us in the place of him who suffers, a sentiment obscure but active in the savage, developed but dormant in civilized man, how could this notion affect the truth of what I advance, but to make it more evident. In fact, commiseration must be so much the more energetic, the more intimately the animal, that beholds any kind of distress, identifies himself with the animal that labours under it. Now it is evident that this identification must have been infinitely more perfect in the state of nature than in the state of reason. It is reason that engenders self-love, and reflection that strengthens it; it is reason that makes man shrink into himself; it is reason that makes him keep aloof from everything that can trouble or afflict him: it is philosophy that destroys his connections with other men; it is in consequence of her dictates that he mutters to himself at the sight of another in distress, You may perish for aught I care, nothing can hurt me. Nothing less than those evils, which threaten the whole species, can disturb the calm sleep of the philosopher, and force him from his bed. One man may with impunity murder another under his windows; he has nothing to do but clap his hands to his ears, argue a little with himself to hinder nature, that startles within him, from identifying him with the unhappy sufferer. Savage man wants this admirable talent; and for want of wisdom and reason, is always ready foolishly to obey the first whispers of humanity. In riots and street-brawls the populace flock together, the prudent man sneaks off. They are the dregs of the people, the poor basket and barrow-women, that part the combatants, and hinder gentle folks from cutting one another's throats.
Such is the natural instinct of humanity, before any kind of thought; such is the power of natural compassion, which even the most corrupt behaviors have struggled to erase, since we see every day in our theatrical performances that these men sympathize with those who are suffering and cry for their pain, even though, if they were in the tyrant's position, they would only increase their enemies' torment. Mandeville understood that people, despite all their morals, would never be better than monsters if nature hadn’t given them compassion to complement reason; however, he didn’t realize that this quality is the source of all social virtues, which he believed humanity didn’t possess. In reality, what is generosity, what is mercy, what is humanity, but compassion shown towards the weak, the guilty, or humanity as a whole? Even goodwill and friendship, if we think about it correctly, are simply the outcomes of a lasting compassion directed at a specific person: for wishing that someone doesn’t suffer is essentially wishing for their happiness. Even if it were true that sympathy is merely a feeling that puts us in the shoes of those who are hurting—a feeling unclear yet active in the savage, manifested but dormant in civilized individuals—how could this idea undermine the truth of what I claim, but rather make it more obvious? In fact, compassion must be more powerful the closer the individual is to the being experiencing any sort of distress. Clearly, this connection must have been far stronger in a natural state than in a state governed by reason. It is reason that breeds self-interest, and contemplation that reinforces it; reason is what causes a person to withdraw into themselves; it is reason that makes them distance themselves from anything that could bother or upset them. Philosophy breaks his bonds with others; because of her guidance, he whispers to himself when witnessing another’s suffering, “You can perish for all I care; nothing can harm me.” Only those threats that could impact the entire species can disturb the philosopher’s peaceful sleep and compel him to get out of bed. One person can kill another without consequence outside his window; he simply has to cover his ears and rationalize a bit to prevent his innate nature from connecting him with the unfortunate victim. The savage lacks this remarkable ability; and due to his lack of wisdom and reason, he is always foolishly ready to heed the first whispers of humanity. In riots and street fights, the crowd gathers, while the cautious person quietly leaves. It’s the lowest members of society, the poor basket and barrow women, who step in to separate the fighters and prevent decent folks from killing each other.
It is therefore certain that pity is a natural sentiment, which, by moderating in every individual the activity of self-love, contributes to the mutual preservation of the whole species. It is this pity which hurries us without reflection to the assistance of those we see in distress; it is this pity which, in a state of nature, stands for laws, for manners, for virtue, with this advantage, that no one is tempted to disobey her sweet and gentle voice: it is this pity which will always hinder a robust savage from plundering a feeble child, or infirm old man, of the subsistence they have acquired with pain and difficulty, if he has but the least prospect of providing for himself by any other means: it is this pity which, instead of that sublime maxim of argumentative justice, Do to others as you would have others do to you, inspires all men with that other maxim of natural goodness a great deal less perfect, but perhaps more useful, Consult your own happiness with as little prejudice as you can to that of others. It is in a word, in this natural sentiment, rather than in fine-spun arguments, that we must look for the cause of that reluctance which every man would experience to do evil, even independently of the maxims of education. Though it may be the peculiar happiness of Socrates and other geniuses of his stamp, to reason themselves into virtue, the human species would long ago have ceased to exist, had it depended entirely for its preservation on the reasonings of the individuals that compose it.
It’s clear that pity is a natural feeling that helps balance self-love in everyone, contributing to the survival of our species as a whole. This pity drives us instinctively to help those in distress; it serves as a form of law, manners, and virtue in a natural state, with the benefit that no one is tempted to ignore its gentle call. It’s this pity that prevents a strong savage from robbing a weak child or an elderly person of their hard-earned resources, as long as he sees even a small chance to provide for himself in another way. Instead of the grand principle of justice, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you,” it’s pity that encourages everyone to consider their own happiness while minimizing harm to others. In short, it’s this natural sentiment, not elaborate arguments, that explains why every person feels hesitant to do wrong, even without the influence of education. While it might be the special gift of thinkers like Socrates to think their way to virtue, humanity would have vanished long ago if its survival relied solely on the reasoning of its individuals.
With passions so tame, and so salutary a curb, men, rather wild than wicked, and more attentive to guard against mischief than to do any to other animals, were not exposed to any dangerous dissensions: As they kept up no manner of correspondence with each other, and were of course strangers to vanity, to respect, to esteem, to contempt; as they had no notion of what we call Meum and Tuum, nor any true idea of justice; as they considered any violence they were liable to, as an evil that could be easily repaired, and not as an injury that deserved punishment; and as they never so much as dreamed of revenge, unless perhaps mechanically and unpremeditatedly, as a dog who bites the stone that has been thrown at him; their disputes could seldom be attended with bloodshed, were they never occasioned by a more considerable stake than that of subsistence: but there is a more dangerous subject of contention, which I must not leave unnoticed.
With passions so controlled and a healthy restraint, people were more wild than wicked, focusing more on preventing harm than causing it to other beings. They didn’t have any meaningful communication with one another, making them strangers to vanity, respect, esteem, and contempt. They had no concepts of what we refer to as mine and yours, nor a real understanding of justice. They viewed any violence they faced as something easily fixed, not as a wrongdoing that warranted punishment. They never thought about revenge, except maybe instinctively, like a dog that bites the rock thrown at him. Their conflicts rarely resulted in violence if they were only about survival. However, there’s a more dangerous issue of conflict that I must address.
Among the passions which ruffle the heart of man, there is one of a hot and impetuous nature, which renders the sexes necessary to each other; a terrible passion which despises all dangers, bears down all obstacles, and to which in its transports it seems proper to destroy the human species which it is destined to preserve. What must become of men abandoned to this lawless and brutal rage, without modesty, without shame, and every day disputing the objects of their passion at the expense of their blood?
Among the passions that stir a person's heart, there's one that is intense and overwhelming, making the sexes dependent on each other; a fierce passion that disregards all dangers, pushes through all obstacles, and in its fervor, seems bent on destroying humanity even as it seeks to preserve it. What happens to people who are left to this uncontrolled and savage rage, without modesty or shame, constantly fighting over the objects of their desire at the cost of their own blood?
We must in the first place allow that the more violent the passions, the more necessary are laws to restrain them: but besides that the disorders and the crimes, to which these passions daily give rise among us, sufficiently grove the insufficiency of laws for that purpose, we would do well to look back a little further and examine, if these evils did not spring up with the laws themselves; for at this rate, though the laws were capable of repressing these evils, it is the least that might be expected from them, seeing it is no more than stopping the progress of a mischief which they themselves have produced.
We must first acknowledge that the more intense the passions, the more necessary laws are to control them. However, in addition to the disorders and crimes that these passions frequently cause among us, it is clear that laws alone are not enough to address the issue. We should also take a step back and consider whether these problems emerged alongside the laws themselves. If that's the case, even if the laws could manage to curb these issues, it would be the least we could expect from them, since it would simply involve halting the spread of a problem that they have created in the first place.
Let us begin by distinguishing between what is moral and what is physical in the passion called love. The physical part of it is that general desire which prompts the sexes to unite with each other; the moral part is that which determines that desire, and fixes it upon a particular object to the exclusion of all others, or at least gives it a greater degree of energy for this preferred object. Now it is easy to perceive that the moral part of love is a factitious sentiment, engendered by society, and cried up by the women with great care and address in order to establish their empire, and secure command to that sex which ought to obey. This sentiment, being founded on certain notions of beauty and merit which a savage is not capable of having, and upon comparisons which he is not capable of making, can scarcely exist in him: for as his mind was never in a condition to form abstract ideas of regularity and proportion, neither is his heart susceptible of sentiments of admiration and love, which, even without our perceiving it, are produced by our application of these ideas; he listens solely to the dispositions implanted in him by nature, and not to taste which he never was in a way of acquiring; and every woman answers his purpose.
Let’s start by distinguishing between what is moral and what is physical in the emotion called love. The physical aspect refers to the general desire that drives the sexes to come together; the moral aspect is what shapes that desire and directs it toward a specific person to the exclusion of others, or at least strengthens it for that preferred person. It’s easy to see that the moral aspect of love is a constructed sentiment, created by society, and promoted by women with great care and skill to establish their power and ensure that the other sex submits. This sentiment is based on certain ideas of beauty and worth that a primitive person can't comprehend, and on comparisons they can't make. Therefore, it can hardly exist in them: since their minds are not capable of forming abstract ideas of order and proportion, their hearts aren't open to feelings of admiration and love, which are triggered by these ideas. They only respond to the instincts instilled in them by nature, not to an aesthetic sense they never had the chance to develop; for them, every woman fits their needs.
Confined entirely to what is physical in love, and happy enough not to know these preferences which sharpen the appetite for it, at the same time that they increase the difficulty of satisfying such appetite, men, in a state of nature, must be subject to fewer and less violent fits of that passion, and of course there must be fewer and less violent disputes among them in consequence of it. The imagination which causes so many ravages among us, never speaks to the heart of savages, who peaceably wait for the impulses of nature, yield to these impulses without choice and with more pleasure than fury; and whose desires never outlive their necessity for the thing desired.
Confined entirely to the physical aspects of love and blissfully unaware of preferences that intensify the longing for it—while also making it harder to fulfill that longing—men in a natural state must experience fewer and less intense outbursts of that passion. Consequently, there must be fewer and less intense conflicts among them as a result. The imagination that causes so much turmoil for us doesn’t influence the hearts of savages, who calmly follow their natural instincts, surrendering to these impulses without choice and finding more pleasure than anger in it; their desires never linger beyond their need for what they want.
Nothing therefore can be more evident, than that it is society alone, which has added even to love itself as well as to all the other passions, that impetuous ardour, which so often renders it fatal to mankind; and it is so much the more ridiculous to represent savages constantly murdering each other to glut their brutality, as this opinion is diametrically opposite to experience, and the Caribbeans, the people in the world who have as yet deviated least from the state of nature, are to all intents and purposes the most peaceable in their amours, and the least subject to jealousy, though they live in a burning climate which seems always to add considerably to the activity of these passions.
Nothing could be more obvious than that it is society alone that has added a fierce intensity to love, as well as to all other passions, which often makes it destructive to humanity. It’s even more absurd to depict savages as constantly murdering each other to satisfy their brutality, as this view is completely contrary to reality. The Caribbeans, who have strayed the least from a natural state, are in many ways the most peaceful in their relationships and the least prone to jealousy, even though they live in a hot climate that seems to amplify these passions.
As to the inductions which may be drawn, in respect to several species of animals, from the battles of the males, who in all seasons cover our poultry yards with blood, and in spring particularly cause our forests to ring again with the noise they make in disputing their females, we must begin by excluding all those species, where nature has evidently established, in the relative power of the sexes, relations different from those which exist among us: thus from the battle of cocks we can form no induction that will affect the human species. In the species, where the proportion is better observed, these battles must be owing entirely to the fewness of the females compared with the males, or, which is all one, to the exclusive intervals, during which the females constantly refuse the addresses of the males; for if the female admits the male but two months in the year, it is all the same as if the number of females were five-sixths less than what it is: now neither of these cases is applicable to the human species, where the number of females generally surpasses that of males, and where it has never been observed that, even among savages, the females had, like those of other animals, stated times of passion and indifference, Besides, among several of these animals the whole species takes fire all at once, and for some days nothing is, to be seen among them but confusion, tumult, disorder and bloodshed; a state unknown to the human species where love is never periodical. We can not therefore conclude from the battles of certain animals for the possession of their females, that the same would be the case of man in a state of nature; and though we might, as these contests do not destroy the other species, there is at least equal room to think they would not be fatal to ours; nay it is very probable that they would cause fewer ravages than they do in society, especially in those countries where, morality being as yet held in some esteem, the jealousy of lovers, and the vengeance of husbands every day produce duels, murders and even worse crimes; where the duty of an eternal fidelity serves only to propagate adultery; and the very laws of continence and honour necessarily contribute to increase dissoluteness, and multiply abortions.
As for the implications we can draw from the fights among male animals—who, throughout the year, leave our poultry yards stained with blood and especially in spring fill our forests with the sounds of their disputes over females—we should start by excluding those species where nature has clearly established a different balance of power between the sexes than what we see in humans. Thus, we cannot make any inferences about the human species from the fights of roosters. In species where the ratio of males to females is more balanced, these battles must arise solely from the scarcity of females compared to males, or from the specific times when females consistently reject the advances of males. If a female only allows a male to mate for two months each year, it's the same as if there were five-sixths fewer females than there actually are. Neither situation applies to humans, where females typically outnumber males, and it has never been seen—even among primitive cultures—that females have fixed times for desire and disinterest, like many other animals do. Additionally, in several animal species, the whole group breeds at once, resulting in days filled with chaos, uproar, disarray, and bloodshed—conditions that are not present in humans, where love is never cyclical. Therefore, we cannot conclude from the fights of certain animals for access to females that humans would behave the same way in a natural state. While these contests don’t necessarily destroy those species, one could equally consider that they wouldn’t be deadly for ours; in fact, it’s likely they would cause less destruction than what occurs in society. Especially in areas where morality still holds some value, the jealousy of lovers and the vengeance of husbands lead to daily duels, murders, and even worse crimes, where the expectation of eternal loyalty fosters adultery, and the very laws of restraint and honor inevitably contribute to increased promiscuity and a rise in abortions.
Let us conclude that savage man, wandering about in the forests, without industry, without speech, without any fixed residence, an equal stranger to war and every social connection, without standing in any shape in need of his fellows, as well as without any desire of hurting them, and perhaps even without ever distinguishing them individually one from the other, subject to few passions, and finding in himself all he wants, let us, I say, conclude that savage man thus circumstanced had no knowledge or sentiment but such as are proper to that condition, that he was alone sensible of his real necessities, took notice of nothing but what it was his interest to see, and that his understanding made as little progress as his vanity. If he happened to make any discovery, he could the less communicate it as he did not even know his children. The art perished with the inventor; there was neither education nor improvement; generations succeeded generations to no purpose; and as all constantly set out from the same point, whole centuries rolled on in the rudeness and barbarity of the first age; the species was grown old, while the individual still remained in a state of childhood.
Let’s wrap up by saying that the primitive person, roaming the forests without any skills, language, or permanent home, was completely disconnected from war and any social ties. He had no need for others and no desire to harm them, perhaps not even recognizing them as individuals. With few emotions and finding everything he needed within himself, we can conclude that this primitive individual had no knowledge or feelings beyond what was suitable for his state. He was only aware of his real needs and only noticed what was in his interest to see, and his understanding advanced as little as his self-importance. If he made any discoveries, he couldn't share them since he didn't even know his own children. The knowledge died with the creator; there was no education or progress. Generations came and went without purpose; since everyone started from the same point, centuries passed in the same barbarism of the early days. The species aged while individuals remained stuck in a childlike state.
If I have enlarged so much upon the supposition of this primitive condition, it is because I thought it my duty, considering what ancient errors and inveterate prejudices I have to extirpate, to dig to the very roots, and show in a true picture of the state of nature, how much even natural inequality falls short in this state of that reality and influence which our writers ascribe to it.
If I’ve gone into so much detail about this basic condition, it’s because I felt it was necessary to address the ancient mistakes and deep-seated biases I need to eliminate. I wanted to get to the very root of the issue and show a real picture of the state of nature, illustrating how much even natural inequality falls short of the reality and impact that our writers attribute to it.
In fact, we may easily perceive that among the differences, which distinguish men, several pass for natural, which are merely the work of habit and the different kinds of life adopted by men living in a social way. Thus a robust or delicate constitution, and the strength and weakness which depend on it, are oftener produced by the hardy or effeminate manner in which a man has been brought up, than by the primitive constitution of his body. It is the same thus in regard to the forces of the mind; and education not only produces a difference between those minds which are cultivated and those which are not, but even increases that which is found among the first in proportion to their culture; for let a giant and a dwarf set out in the same path, the giant at every step will acquire a new advantage over the dwarf. Now, if we compare the prodigious variety in the education and manner of living of the different orders of men in a civil state, with the simplicity and uniformity that prevails in the animal and savage life, where all the individuals make use of the same aliments, live in the same manner, and do exactly the same things, we shall easily conceive how much the difference between man and man in the state of nature must be less than in the state of society, and how much every inequality of institution must increase the natural inequalities of the human species.
In fact, we can easily see that among the differences that distinguish people, many are seen as natural when they are actually just the result of habits and the various lifestyles adopted by people living socially. So, a strong or weak physical constitution—and the strengths and weaknesses that come with it—often come more from the tough or gentle way a person has been raised than from their body's original constitution. The same goes for mental abilities; education not only creates a gap between educated and uneducated minds, but it also widens the gap among the educated based on the level of their education. For instance, if a giant and a dwarf start on the same path, the giant will gain a new advantage with every step. Now, if we compare the immense variety in the education and lifestyles of different social classes with the simplicity and uniformity found in animal and primitive life, where everyone eats the same food, lives the same way, and does the same things, it becomes clear that the differences between humans in their natural state are much smaller than in society, and that any inequality in institutions amplifies the natural inequalities of the human species.
But though nature in the distribution of her gifts should really affect all the preferences that are ascribed to her, what advantage could the most favoured derive from her partiality, to the prejudice of others, in a state of things, which scarce admitted any kind of relation between her pupils? Of what service can beauty be, where there is no love? What will wit avail people who don't speak, or craft those who have no affairs to transact? Authors are constantly crying out, that the strongest would oppress the weakest; but let them explain what they mean by the word oppression. One man will rule with violence, another will groan under a constant subjection to all his caprices: this is indeed precisely what I observe among us, but I don't see how it can be said of savage men, into whose heads it would be a harder matter to drive even the meaning of the words domination and servitude. One man might, indeed, seize on the fruits which another had gathered, on the game which another had killed, on the cavern which another had occupied for shelter; but how is it possible he should ever exact obedience from him, and what chains of dependence can there be among men who possess nothing? If I am driven from one tree, I have nothing to do but look out for another; if one place is made uneasy to me, what can hinder me from taking up my quarters elsewhere? But suppose I should meet a man so much superior to me in strength, and withal so wicked, so lazy and so barbarous as to oblige me to provide for his subsistence while he remains idle; he must resolve not to take his eyes from me a single moment, to bind me fast before he can take the least nap, lest I should kill him or give him the slip during his sleep: that is to say, he must expose himself voluntarily to much greater troubles than what he seeks to avoid, than any he gives me. And after all, let him abate ever so little of his vigilance; let him at some sudden noise but turn his head another way; I am already buried in the forest, my fetters are broke, and he never sees me again.
But even though nature should really influence all the preferences that people attribute to her, what benefit could the most favored gain from her bias against others in a situation where there's hardly any connection among her followers? What good is beauty if there's no love? What use is wit to people who don't communicate, or skill to those who have no business to handle? Writers constantly lament that the strong would oppress the weak; but they need to clarify what they mean by oppression. One person may rule through force, while another suffers under constant submission to that person's whims: this is exactly what I see among us, but I don't understand how this can be applied to savage people, who would find it much harder to grasp even the meaning of domination and servitude. One person could indeed take the fruits someone else has gathered, the game another has hunted, or the cave another has occupied for shelter; but how could he ever demand obedience from that person, and what chains of dependency can exist among people who own nothing? If I'm forced away from one tree, I can simply look for another; if one place becomes uncomfortable, what prevents me from settling elsewhere? But let's say I encounter a man who's so much stronger than me, and also so cruel, lazy, and barbaric that he forces me to provide for him while he does nothing; he would have to keep his eyes on me at all times, to tie me down before he could even take a short nap, for fear that I might kill him or escape while he sleeps: in other words, he must willingly expose himself to far more trouble than he's trying to avoid, than he inflicts on me. And if he ever relaxes his vigilance just a bit; if he turns his head at the sound of something unexpected; I'm already lost in the forest, my chains are broken, and he never sees me again.
But without insisting any longer upon these details, every one must see that, as the bonds of servitude are formed merely by the mutual dependence of men one upon another and the reciprocal necessities which unite them, it is impossible for one man to enslave another, without having first reduced him to a condition in which he can not live without the enslaver's assistance; a condition which, as it does not exist in a state of nature, must leave every man his own master, and render the law of the strongest altogether vain and useless.
But without dwelling on these details any longer, everyone must realize that since the bonds of servitude are created solely by people's mutual dependence and the needs that connect them, it's impossible for one person to enslave another without first putting them in a situation where they can't survive without the enslaver's help; a situation that doesn't exist in a natural state, which means every person remains their own master, making the law of the strongest completely pointless and ineffective.
Having proved that the inequality, which may subsist between man and man in a state of nature, is almost imperceivable, and that it has very little influence, I must now proceed to show its origin, and trace its progress, in the successive developments of the human mind. After having showed, that perfectibility, the social virtues, and the other faculties, which natural man had received in potentia, could never be developed of themselves, that for that purpose there was a necessity for the fortuitous concurrence of several foreign causes, which might never happen, and without which he must have eternally remained in his primitive condition; I must proceed to consider and bring together the different accidents which may have perfected the human understanding by debasing the species, render a being wicked by rendering him sociable, and from so remote a term bring man at last and the world to the point in which we now see them.
Having demonstrated that the inequality between individuals in a natural state is nearly imperceptible and has minimal impact, I will now reveal its origins and track its development through the evolution of the human mind. After showing that perfectibility, social virtues, and other natural abilities that humans possessed in potentia could never develop on their own and required the random combination of various external factors that might never occur, without which humanity would have remained in its primitive state, I will now consider and gather the various events that may have refined human understanding by diminishing the species, making a being wicked by making him social, and ultimately bringing mankind and the world to the state we see today.
I must own that, as the events I am about to describe might have happened many different ways, my choice of these I shall assign can be grounded on nothing but mere conjecture; but besides these conjectures becoming reasons, when they are not only the most probable that can be drawn from the nature of things, but the only means we can have of discovering truth, the consequences I mean to deduce from mine will not be merely conjectural, since, on the principles I have just established, it is impossible to form any other system, that would not supply me with the same results, and from which I might not draw the same conclusions.
I admit that the events I’m about to describe could have unfolded in many different ways, and the reasons I’m choosing these are based on nothing but speculation; however, these speculations become valid reasons when they are not only the most likely that can be inferred from the situation but also the only way we can uncover the truth. The conclusions I plan to draw from my analysis won't just be speculative, since, based on the principles I’ve just laid out, it’s impossible to create any other system that wouldn’t lead to the same outcomes and from which I couldn't derive the same conclusions.
This will authorize me to be the more concise in my reflections on the manner, in which the lapse of time makes amends for the little verisimilitude of events; on the surprising power of very trivial causes, when they act without intermission; on the impossibility there is on the one hand of destroying certain Hypotheses, if on the other we can not give them the degree of certainty which facts must be allowed to possess; on its being the business of history, when two facts are proposed, as real, to be connected by a chain of intermediate facts which are either unknown or considered as such, to furnish such facts as may actually connect them; and the business of philosophy, when history is silent, to point out similar facts which may answer the same purpose; in fine on the privilege of similitude, in regard to events, to reduce facts to a much smaller number of different classes than is generally imagined. It suffices me to offer these objects to the consideration of my judges; it suffices me to have conducted my inquiry in such a manner as to save common readers the trouble of considering them.
This will allow me to be more concise in my thoughts about how the passage of time makes up for the lack of realism in events; about the surprising impact of very minor causes when they persist without interruption; about the impossibility, on one hand, of disproving certain hypotheses, if on the other we can't give them the level of certainty that facts are supposed to have; about the role of history, when two facts are presented as real, to connect them with a series of intermediate facts that are either unknown or deemed as such, by providing the facts that can actually connect them; and the role of philosophy, when history is silent, to point out similar facts that can serve the same purpose; ultimately about the privilege of similarity, regarding events, to group facts into a much smaller number of different categories than is usually thought. It’s enough for me to present these points for my judges to consider; it’s enough for me to have carried out my inquiry in a way that spares everyday readers the effort of contemplating them.
SECOND PART
The first man, who, after enclosing a piece of ground, took it into his head to say, "This is mine," and found people simple enough to believe him, was the true founder of civil society. How many crimes, how many wars, how many murders, how many misfortunes and horrors, would that man have saved the human species, who pulling up the stakes or filling up the ditches should have cried to his fellows: Be sure not to listen to this imposter; you are lost, if you forget that the fruits of the earth belong equally to us all, and the earth itself to nobody! But it is highly probable that things were now come to such a pass, that they could not continue much longer in the same way; for as this idea of property depends on several prior ideas which could only spring up gradually one after another, it was not formed all at once in the human mind: men must have made great progress; they must have acquired a great stock of industry and knowledge, and transmitted and increased it from age to age before they could arrive at this last term of the state of nature. Let us therefore take up things a little higher, and collect into one point of view, and in their most natural order, this slow succession of events and mental improvements.
The first person who enclosed a piece of land and declared, "This is mine," convincing others to believe him, was the true founder of society. How many crimes, wars, murders, misfortunes, and horrors could that person have spared humanity if he had simply pulled up the stakes or filled in the ditches and told his neighbors, "Don’t listen to this fraud; you’re doomed if you forget that the earth's resources belong to all of us, and the land itself belongs to no one!" But it's likely that things had already reached a point where they couldn't continue in the same way; the concept of property relies on earlier ideas that could only develop gradually, not all at once. People must have made significant advancements; they needed to gain a wealth of skills and knowledge, passing it down and building upon it over generations before reaching this final stage of the natural state. So, let’s step back a bit and gather together this slow progression of events and intellectual growth in their most natural order.
The first sentiment of man was that of his existence, his first care that of preserving it. The productions of the earth yielded him all the assistance he required; instinct prompted him to make use of them. Among the various appetites, which made him at different times experience different modes of existence, there was one that excited him to perpetuate his species; and this blind propensity, quite void of anything like pure love or affection, produced nothing but an act that was merely animal. The present heat once allayed, the sexes took no further notice of each other, and even the child ceased to have any tie in his mother, the moment he ceased to want her assistance.
The first feeling humans had was awareness of their own existence, and their main concern was to protect it. The resources provided by the earth gave them everything they needed; their instincts guided them to use these resources. Among the various urges that led them to experience different ways of living, one was a drive to ensure the continuation of their species; this blind urge, lacking any semblance of true love or affection, resulted in actions that were purely instinctual. Once the initial passion faded, the sexes paid no further attention to one another, and even the child lost its connection to the mother as soon as it no longer needed her help.
Such was the condition of infant man; such was the life of an animal confined at first to pure sensations, and so far from harbouring any thought of forcing her gifts from nature, that he scarcely availed himself of those which she offered to him of her own accord. But difficulties soon arose, and there was a necessity for learning how to surmount them: the height of some trees, which prevented his reaching their fruits; the competition of other animals equally fond of the same fruits; the fierceness of many that even aimed at his life; these were so many circumstances, which obliged him to apply to bodily exercise. There was a necessity for becoming active, swift-footed, and sturdy in battle. The natural arms, which are stones and the branches of trees, soon offered themselves to his assistance. He learned to surmount the obstacles of nature, to contend in case of necessity with other animals, to dispute his subsistence even with other men, or indemnify himself for the loss of whatever he found himself obliged to part with to the strongest.
This was the state of early humans; they were like animals, initially limited to basic sensations and hardly thinking about making the most of nature’s offerings, often not even taking advantage of what was freely given. However, challenges quickly emerged, and they needed to learn how to overcome them: tall trees that blocked access to their fruits, competition from other animals that also craved these fruits, and the danger posed by fierce predators that threatened their lives. These factors pushed them to engage in physical activity. They needed to be quick, agile, and strong in fights. Natural tools like stones and tree branches soon became helpful aids. They learned how to overcome nature’s barriers, defend themselves against other animals, compete for survival against fellow humans, and compensate for anything they lost to the stronger ones.
In proportion as the human species grew more numerous, and extended itself, its pains likewise multiplied and increased. The difference of soils, climates and seasons, might have forced men to observe some difference in their way of living. Bad harvests, long and severe winters, and scorching summers which parched up all the fruits of the earth, required extraordinary exertions of industry. On the sea shore, and the banks of rivers, they invented the line and the hook, and became fishermen and ichthyophagous. In the forests they made themselves bows and arrows, and became huntsmen and warriors. In the cold countries they covered themselves with the skins of the beasts they had killed; thunder, a volcano, or some happy accident made them acquainted with fire, a new resource against the rigours of winter: they discovered the method of preserving this element, then that of reproducing it, and lastly the way of preparing with it the flesh of animals, which heretofore they devoured raw from the carcass.
As the human population grew and spread out, their struggles also increased and multiplied. Differences in soil, climate, and seasons may have forced people to adapt their lifestyles. Poor harvests, long harsh winters, and scorching summers that dried up all the crops required exceptional effort and hard work. Along the shores and riverbanks, they developed fishing lines and hooks, becoming fishermen and eating fish. In the forests, they crafted bows and arrows, turning into hunters and warriors. In colder regions, they used the skins of animals they hunted for warmth; thunder, volcanoes, or fortunate accidents taught them about fire, which became a vital resource against the harshness of winter. They learned how to maintain fire, how to recreate it, and eventually how to cook animal meat that they had previously eaten raw from the carcass.
This reiterated application of various beings to himself, and to one another, must have naturally engendered in the mind of man the idea of certain relations. These relations, which we express by the words, great, little, strong, weak, swift, slow, fearful, bold, and the like, compared occasionally, and almost without thinking of it, produced in him some kind of reflection, or rather a mechanical prudence, which pointed out to him the precautions most essential to his preservation and safety.
This repeated application of different beings to himself and to each other must have naturally led humans to develop the idea of certain relationships. These relationships, which we express with words like big, small, strong, weak, fast, slow, scared, and brave, when compared almost automatically, produced some sort of reflection in him, or rather a kind of instinctive caution, that indicated the most important precautions for his survival and safety.
The new lights resulting from this development increased his superiority over other animals, by making him sensible of it. He laid himself out to ensnare them; he played them a thousand tricks; and though several surpassed him in strength or in swiftness, he in time became the master of those that could be of any service to him, and a sore enemy to those that could do him any mischief. 'Tis thus, that the first look he gave into himself produced the first emotion of pride in him; 'tis thus that, at a time he scarce knew how to distinguish between the different ranks of existence, by attributing to his species the first rank among animals in general, he prepared himself at a distance to pretend to it as an individual among those of his own species in particular.
The new insights from this development made him more aware of his superiority over other animals. He set out to trap them, played countless tricks on them, and even though some were stronger or faster than he was, he eventually became the master of those that could help him and a fierce enemy to those that could harm him. This is how the first glance he took at himself sparked his first feelings of pride; it's also how, at a time when he barely knew how to tell the different levels of existence apart, he assigned his species the top spot among all animals, preparing himself to pretend he deserved that status as an individual among his own kind.
Though other men were not to him what they are to us, and he had scarce more intercourse with them than with other animals, they were not overlooked in his observations. The conformities, which in time he might discover between them, and between himself and his female, made him judge of those he did not perceive; and seeing that they all behaved as himself would have done in similar circumstances, he concluded that their manner of thinking and willing was quite conformable to his own; and this important truth, when once engraved deeply on his mind, made him follow, by a presentiment as sure as any logic, and withal much quicker, the best rules of conduct, which for the sake of his own safety and advantage it was proper he should observe towards them.
Although other men weren't as significant to him as they are to us, and he hardly interacted with them more than with other animals, he didn't ignore them in his observations. The similarities he might notice over time between them and between himself and his female made him judge those he didn't fully understand; and realizing that they all acted as he would have in similar situations, he concluded that their way of thinking and wanting was pretty aligned with his own. This important truth, once it was firmly established in his mind, led him to instinctively follow, with a certainty as strong as any logic and much faster, the best guidelines for conduct that were necessary for his own safety and benefit in dealing with them.
Instructed by experience that the love of happiness is the sole principle of all human actions, he found himself in a condition to distinguish the few cases, in which common interest might authorize him to build upon the assistance of his fellows, and those still fewer, in which a competition of interests might justly render it suspected. In the first case he united with them in the same flock, or at most by some kind of free association which obliged none of its members, and lasted no longer than the transitory necessity that had given birth to it. In the second case every one aimed at his own private advantage, either by open force if he found himself strong enough, or by cunning and address if he thought himself too weak to use violence.
Guided by experience that the pursuit of happiness is the main motivation behind all human actions, he learned to identify the few situations where common interests might allow him to rely on the help of others, and the even rarer cases where competing interests could make that trust questionable. In the first situation, he teamed up with others in the same group, or at most through a kind of voluntary association that didn’t force any member to stay and lasted only as long as the temporary need that created it. In the second situation, everyone was focused on their personal gain, either through outright force if they felt strong enough, or using cleverness and strategy if they thought they were too weak for violence.
Such was the manner in which men might have insensibly acquired some gross idea of their mutual engagements and the advantage of fulfilling them, but this only as far as their present and sensible interest required; for as to foresight they were utter strangers to it, and far from troubling their heads about a distant futurity, they scarce thought of the day following. Was a deer to be taken? Every one saw that to succeed he must faithfully stand to his post; but suppose a hare to have slipped by within reach of any one of them, it is not to be doubted but he pursued it without scruple, and when he had seized his prey never reproached himself with having made his companions miss theirs.
This is how men might have unknowingly developed a rough understanding of their mutual responsibilities and the benefits of meeting them, but only to the extent that it served their immediate interests; they were completely unaware of the concept of foresight and didn’t concern themselves with the distant future, barely thinking about the next day. If a deer was to be caught, everyone understood that to succeed, they had to stick to their assigned positions; but if a hare happened to get away within anyone’s reach, there’s no doubt they would chase it without any hesitation, and once they had captured it, they never felt guilty about making their friends miss out on their own chances.
We may easily conceive that such an intercourse scarce required a more refined language than that of crows and monkeys, which flock together almost in the same manner. Inarticulate exclamations, a great many gestures, and some imitative sounds, must have been for a long time the universal language of mankind, and by joining to these in every country some articulate and conventional sounds, of which, as I have already hinted, it is not very easy to explain the institution, there arose particular languages, but rude, imperfect, and such nearly as are to be found at this day among several savage nations. My pen straightened by the rapidity of time, the abundance of things I have to say, and the almost insensible progress of the first improvements, flies like an arrow over numberless ages, for the slower the succession of events, the quicker I may allow myself to be in relating them.
We can easily imagine that this kind of interaction didn't require a more sophisticated language than that of crows and monkeys, which gather together in a similar way. Unclear sounds, lots of gestures, and some mimicking noises must have been the universal language for a long time. By adding some spoken and agreed-upon sounds in every country, which, as I've mentioned before, are hard to explain in terms of their origin, distinct languages emerged. However, these languages were rough, incomplete, and quite similar to those still found today among some Indigenous groups. My writing, constrained by the speed of time, the sheer amount of things I need to say, and the barely noticeable development of the initial advancements, races like an arrow across countless ages. The slower the events unfold, the faster I can afford to be in telling them.
At length, these first improvements enabled man to improve at a greater rate. Industry grew perfect in proportion as the mind became more enlightened. Men soon ceasing to fall asleep under the first tree, or take shelter in the first cavern, lit upon some hard and sharp kinds of stone resembling spades or hatchets, and employed them to dig the ground, cut down trees, and with the branches build huts, which they afterwards bethought themselves of plastering over with clay or dirt. This was the epoch of a first revolution, which produced the establishment and distinction of families, and which introduced a species of property, and along with it perhaps a thousand quarrels and battles. As the strongest however were probably the first to make themselves cabins, which they knew they were able to defend, we may conclude that the weak found it much shorter and safer to imitate than to attempt to dislodge them: and as to those, who were already provided with cabins, no one could have any great temptation to seize upon that of his neighbour, not so much because it did not belong to him, as because it could be of no service to him; and as besides to make himself master of it, he must expose himself to a very sharp conflict with the present occupiers.
Eventually, these early advancements allowed humans to progress at a faster pace. Industry improved as people's understanding deepened. People stopped just sleeping under the first tree they found or hiding in the first cave; instead, they discovered hard, sharp stones that resembled spades or hatchets and used them to dig the ground, chop down trees, and build huts from branches, which they later covered with clay or dirt. This marked the beginning of a significant change, leading to the formation and distinction of families and introducing a concept of property, along with countless disputes and conflicts. The strongest individuals likely built the first cabins, knowing they could defend them, so we can assume that the weaker individuals found it easier and safer to copy them instead of trying to displace them. As for those who already had cabins, there was little incentive to take someone else's, not just because it didn't belong to them, but also because it wouldn't benefit them; to take it, they would have to face a risky fight with the current occupants.
The first developments of the heart were the effects of a new situation, which united husbands and wives, parents and children, under one roof; the habit of living together gave birth to the sweetest sentiments the human species is acquainted with, conjugal and paternal love. Every family became a little society, so much the more firmly united, as a mutual attachment and liberty were the only bonds of it; and it was now that the sexes, whose way of life had been hitherto the same, began to adopt different manners and customs. The women became more sedentary, and accustomed themselves to stay at home and look after the children, while the men rambled abroad in quest of subsistence for the whole family. The two sexes likewise by living a little more at their ease began to lose somewhat of their usual ferocity and sturdiness; but if on the one hand individuals became less able to engage separately with wild beasts, they on the other were more easily got together to make a common resistance against them.
The first developments of the heart came from a new situation that brought husbands and wives, parents and children, under one roof. The habit of living together led to the sweetest feelings known to humanity: love between partners and love for children. Every family turned into a little community, even more tightly bonded since mutual attachment and freedom were its only ties. It was at this point that the sexes, who had previously lived similarly, started to develop different lifestyles and customs. Women became more home-centered, taking care of the children, while men ventured out to seek food for the whole family. As both sexes enjoyed a bit more comfort, they began to lose some of their usual toughness and aggressiveness. However, while individuals became less equipped to fend off wild animals alone, they were more likely to come together to resist them as a group.
In this new state of things, the simplicity and solitariness of man's life, the limitedness of his wants, and the instruments which he had invented to satisfy them, leaving him a great deal of leisure, he employed it to supply himself with several conveniences unknown to his ancestors; and this was the first yoke he inadvertently imposed upon himself, and the first source of mischief which he prepared for his children; for besides continuing in this manner to soften both body and mind, these conveniences having through use lost almost all their aptness to please, and even degenerated into real wants, the privation of them became far more intolerable than the possession of them had been agreeable; to lose them was a misfortune, to possess them no happiness.
In this new situation, the simplicity and isolation of human life, the limited nature of his needs, and the tools he created to meet them gave him a lot of free time. He used this time to provide himself with various comforts that his ancestors didn’t have; this was the first burden he unknowingly placed on himself, and the first source of trouble he set up for his children. Not only did he continue to soften both body and mind in this way, but these comforts, through frequent use, lost almost all their enjoyment and even turned into actual needs. Losing them became far more unbearable than having them had been enjoyable; it was a disaster to lose them, while having them brought no real happiness.
Here we may a little better discover how the use of speech insensibly commences or improves in the bosom of every family, and may likewise from conjectures concerning the manner in which divers particular causes might have propagated language, and accelerated its progress by rendering it every day more and more necessary. Great inundations or earthquakes surrounded inhabited districts with water or precipices, portions of the continent were by revolutions of the globe torn off and split into islands. It is obvious that among men thus collected, and forced to live together, a common idiom must have started up much sooner, than among those who freely wandered through the forests of the main land. Thus it is very possible that the inhabitants of the islands formed in this manner, after their first essays in navigation, brought among us the use of speech; and it is very probable at least that society and languages commenced in islands and even acquired perfection there, before the inhabitants of the continent knew anything of either.
Here, we can better understand how the use of speech naturally begins or improves within every family, and we can also make educated guesses about how various specific factors might have spread language and sped up its development by making it increasingly essential. Major floods or earthquakes could have isolated communities with water or cliffs, and parts of the continent were separated and turned into islands by shifts in the Earth's structure. It's clear that among people gathered in this way, forced to live together, a common language would have emerged much sooner than among those who roamed freely through the mainland forests. Thus, it's very likely that the islanders, after their initial attempts at navigation, introduced the use of language to us; and it's quite probable that societies and languages began and even developed there before the people on the mainland knew anything about them.
Everything now begins to wear a new aspect. Those who heretofore wandered through the woods, by taking to a more settled way of life, gradually flock together, coalesce into several separate bodies, and at length form in every country distinct nations, united in character and manners, not by any laws or regulations, but by an uniform manner of life, a sameness of provisions, and the common influence of the climate. A permanent neighborhood must at last infallibly create some connection between different families. The transitory commerce required by nature soon produced, among the youth of both sexes living in contiguous cabins, another kind of commerce, which besides being equally agreeable is rendered more durable by mutual intercourse. Men begin to consider different objects, and to make comparisons; they insensibly acquire ideas of merit and beauty, and these soon produce sentiments of preference. By seeing each other often they contract a habit, which makes it painful not to see each other always. Tender and agreeable sentiments steal into the soul, and are by the smallest opposition wound up into the most impetuous fury: Jealousy kindles with love; discord triumphs; and the gentlest of passions requires sacrifices of human blood to appease it.
Everything now starts to take on a new look. Those who previously roamed the woods, by adopting a more settled lifestyle, gradually come together, merge into several distinct groups, and eventually form separate nations in every country. These nations are united in character and customs not by laws or rules, but by a shared way of life, similar resources, and the common impact of the climate. Eventually, close living conditions inevitably create some connection between different families. The brief exchanges needed by nature soon lead to, among the youth of both genders living in nearby cabins, another type of relationship, which, besides being equally enjoyable, becomes more lasting through mutual interaction. People begin to notice different things and make comparisons; they unconsciously develop ideas of value and beauty, and these soon create feelings of preference. By seeing each other frequently, they develop a habit that makes it hard to be apart. Tender and pleasant feelings seep into the soul, and with the smallest conflict, they can explode into intense anger: Jealousy ignites with love; conflict thrives; and even the gentlest of feelings demands human sacrifices to be calmed.
In proportion as ideas and sentiments succeed each other, and the head and the heart exercise themselves, men continue to shake off their original wildness, and their connections become more intimate and extensive. They now begin to assemble round a great tree: singing and dancing, the genuine offspring of love and leisure, become the amusement or rather the occupation of the men and women, free from care, thus gathered together. Every one begins to survey the rest, and wishes to be surveyed himself; and public esteem acquires a value. He who sings or dances best; the handsomest, the strongest, the most dexterous, the most eloquent, comes to be the most respected: this was the first step towards inequality, and at the same time towards vice. From these first preferences there proceeded on one side vanity and contempt, on the other envy and shame; and the fermentation raised by these new leavens at length produced combinations fatal to happiness and innocence.
As ideas and feelings come and go, and as the mind and heart engage, people continue to shed their primal wildness, forming deeper and broader connections. They start gathering around a big tree: singing and dancing, the natural expressions of love and relaxation, become their entertainment or rather their focus, free from worries. Everyone begins to look at each other and wants to be looked at in return; public esteem starts to hold value. Those who sing or dance best, the most attractive, the strongest, the most skilled, and the most articulate gain the most respect: this marks the first step toward inequality, and at the same time, toward moral decline. From these initial preferences arose vanity and contempt on one side, and envy and shame on the other; the turmoil created by these new influences eventually led to combinations that undermined happiness and innocence.
Men no sooner began to set a value upon each other, and know what esteem was, than each laid claim to it, and it was no longer safe for any man to refuse it to another. Hence the first duties of civility and politeness, even among savages; and hence every voluntary injury became an affront, as besides the mischief, which resulted from it as an injury, the party offended was sure to find in it a contempt for his person more intolerable than the mischief itself. It was thus that every man, punishing the contempt expressed for him by others in proportion to the value he set upon himself, the effects of revenge became terrible, and men learned to be sanguinary and cruel. Such precisely was the degree attained by most of the savage nations with whom we are acquainted. And it is for want of sufficiently distinguishing ideas, and observing at how great a distance these people were from the first state of nature, that so many authors have hastily concluded that man is naturally cruel, and requires a regular system of police to be reclaimed; whereas nothing can be more gentle than he in his primitive state, when placed by nature at an equal distance from the stupidity of brutes, and the pernicious good sense of civilized man; and equally confined by instinct and reason to the care of providing against the mischief which threatens him, he is withheld by natural compassion from doing any injury to others, so far from being ever so little prone even to return that which he has received. For according to the axiom of the wise Locke, Where there is no property, there can be no injury.
As soon as men began to value one another and understand respect, they all wanted it, and it became unsafe for anyone to deny it to others. This gave rise to the basic rules of civility and politeness, even among primitive people; thus, any willful harm became an insult—and on top of the damage done, the offended party felt a contempt for their person that was more unbearable than the harm itself. In this way, every person punished the disrespect shown to them by others according to how much they valued themselves, leading to terrible acts of revenge and encouraging brutal behavior. This is the level that many of the savage societies we know reached. Many writers have hastily concluded that humans are naturally cruel and need a structured system of law to be civilized, simply because they fail to recognize how far these societies are from the original state of nature. In fact, in his natural state, man is gentle, positioned between the ignorance of animals and the harmful cleverness of civilized individuals; equally limited by instinct and reason in protecting against threats, he is naturally compassionate and not inclined to harm others, let alone retaliate. As the wise Locke stated, where there is no property, there can be no injury.
But we must take notice, that the society now formed and the relations now established among men required in them qualities different from those, which they derived from their primitive constitution; that as a sense of morality began to insinuate itself into human actions, and every man, before the enacting of laws, was the only judge and avenger of the injuries he had received, that goodness of heart suitable to the pure state of nature by no means suited infant society; that it was necessary punishments should become severer in the same proportion that the opportunities of offending became more frequent, and the dread of vengeance add strength to the too weak curb of the law. Thus, though men were become less patient, and natural compassion had already suffered some alteration, this period of the development of the human faculties, holding a just mean between the indolence of the primitive state, and the petulant activity of self-love, must have been the happiest and most durable epoch. The more we reflect on this state, the more convinced we shall be, that it was the least subject of any to revolutions, the best for man, and that nothing could have drawn him out of it but some fatal accident, which, for the public good, should never have happened. The example of the savages, most of whom have been found in this condition, seems to confirm that mankind was formed ever to remain in it, that this condition is the real youth of the world, and that all ulterior improvements have been so many steps, in appearance towards the perfection of individuals, but in fact towards the decrepitness of the species.
But we should notice that the society we've created and the relationships that have formed among people now require different qualities than those from their original state. As a sense of morality began to take hold in human actions, each person, before laws were enacted, was the sole judge and avenger of the wrongs they experienced. Kindness and goodwill that fit the pure state of nature were not suitable for a developing society. It became necessary for punishments to become harsher in direct relation to the increase in opportunities to offend, and the fear of retaliation had to strengthen the law, which was too weak on its own. So, even though people had become less tolerant and natural compassion had changed, this stage in the development of human abilities struck a balance between the laziness of the primitive era and the restless activity of selfishness, making it potentially the happiest and longest-lasting period. The more we reflect on this state, the more we’ll realize it was the least prone to upheaval, the best for humanity, and that nothing could have pulled people away from it but some unfortunate event that, for the greater good, should never have occurred. The example of the savages, most of whom have been found in this state, seems to support the idea that humanity was meant to stay in it, that this condition is the real youth of the world, and that all later improvements have only appeared to advance individual perfection, but in reality have led to the decline of the species.
As long as men remained satisfied with their rustic cabins; as long as they confined themselves to the use of clothes made of the skins of other animals, and the use of thorns and fish-bones, in putting these skins together; as long as they continued to consider feathers and shells as sufficient ornaments, and to paint their bodies of different colours, to improve or ornament their bows and arrows, to form and scoop out with sharp-edged stones some little fishing boats, or clumsy instruments of music; in a word, as long as they undertook such works only as a single person could finish, and stuck to such arts as did not require the joint endeavours of several hands, they lived free, healthy, honest and happy, as much as their nature would admit, and continued to enjoy with each other all the pleasures of an independent intercourse; but from the moment one man began to stand in need of another's assistance; from the moment it appeared an advantage for one man to possess the quantity of provisions requisite for two, all equality vanished; property started up; labour became necessary; and boundless forests became smiling fields, which it was found necessary to water with human sweat, and in which slavery and misery were soon seen to sprout out and grow with the fruits of the earth.
As long as people were happy living in their simple cabins; as long as they used clothes made from animal skins and relied on thorns and fish bones to put these skins together; as long as they thought feathers and shells were enough for decoration and painted their bodies in different colors, enhancing or decorating their bows and arrows, crafting small fishing boats with sharp stones, or making basic musical instruments; in short, as long as they only took on tasks that one person could complete and focused on skills that didn't need the combined efforts of multiple people, they lived freely, healthily, honestly, and happily, to the fullest extent of their nature, enjoying the benefits of independent relationships. But once one person needed help from another; once it seemed beneficial for one person to have enough provisions for two, all equality disappeared; property emerged; labor became necessary; and vast forests turned into fertile fields that required human effort to cultivate, where slavery and suffering soon began to flourish alongside the fruits of the earth.
Metallurgy and agriculture were the two arts whose invention produced this great revolution. With the poet, it is gold and silver, but with the philosopher it is iron and corn, which have civilized men, and ruined mankind. Accordingly both one and the other were unknown to the savages of America, who for that very reason have always continued savages; nay other nations seem to have continued in a state of barbarism, as long as they continued to exercise one only of these arts without the other; and perhaps one of the best reasons that can be assigned, why Europe has been, if not earlier, at least more constantly and better civilized than the other quarters of the world, is that she both abounds most in iron and is best qualified to produce corn.
Metallurgy and agriculture were the two skills that sparked this major revolution. For the poet, it’s all about gold and silver, but for the philosopher, it’s iron and grain that have civilized people and led to humanity's downfall. Because of this, both of these resources were unknown to the Native Americans, which is why they have always remained uncivilized. Other nations seem to have stayed in a state of barbarism as long as they practiced only one of these skills without the other. Perhaps one of the main reasons Europe has been more consistently and effectively civilized than other regions is that it has an abundance of iron and is well-suited to produce grain.
It is a very difficult matter to tell how men came to know anything of iron, and the art of employing it: for we are not to suppose that they should of themselves think of digging it out of the mines, and preparing it for fusion, before they knew what could be the result of such a process. On the other hand, there is the less reason to attribute this discovery to any accidental fire, as mines are formed nowhere but in dry and barren places, and such as are bare of trees and plants, so that it looks as if nature had taken pains to keep from us so mischievous a secret. Nothing therefore remains but the extraordinary circumstance of some volcano, which, belching forth metallic substances ready fused, might have given the spectators a notion of imitating that operation of nature; and after all we must suppose them endued with an extraordinary stock of courage and foresight to undertake so painful a work, and have, at so great a distance, an eye to the advantages they might derive from it; qualities scarcely suitable but to heads more exercised, than those of such discoverers can be supposed to have been.
It's really hard to say how people first learned about iron and how to use it. We can't assume that they just thought to dig it out of the ground and melt it down without knowing what might come of that process. On the other hand, it seems unlikely that this discovery was made by accident, since mines are typically located in dry, barren areas with few trees or plants, as if nature deliberately kept such a dangerous secret from us. So, the only remaining explanation is the unusual occurrence of a volcano that erupted with molten metal, which could have inspired people to mimic that natural process. Still, we should think they must have had an extraordinary level of courage and foresight to take on such a difficult task and to consider the benefits they might gain from it—traits that don't seem to fit with what we would expect from those early discoverers.
As to agriculture, the principles of it were known a long time before the practice of it took place, and it is hardly possible that men, constantly employed in drawing their subsistence from trees and plants, should not have early hit on the means employed by nature for the generation of vegetables; but in all probability it was very late before their industry took a turn that way, either because trees, which with their land and water game supplied them with sufficient food, did not require their attention; or because they did not know the use of corn; or because they had no instruments to cultivate it; or because they were destitute of foresight in regard to future necessities; or in fine, because they wanted means to hinder others from running away with the fruit of their labours. We may believe that on their becoming more industrious they began their agriculture by cultivating with sharp stones and pointed sticks a few pulse or roots about their cabins; and that it was a long time before they knew the method of preparing corn, and were provided with instruments necessary to raise it in large quantities; not to mention the necessity there is, in order to follow this occupation and sow lands, to consent to lose something at present to gain a great deal hereafter; a precaution very foreign to the turn of man's mind in a savage state, in which, as I have already taken notice, he can hardly foresee his wants from morning to night.
When it comes to agriculture, people understood its principles long before they actually started practicing it. It's unlikely that those who relied on trees and plants for their food didn’t figure out the natural ways vegetables grow. However, it probably took a long time for them to focus their efforts in that direction. This could be because trees, along with land and water resources, provided enough food without needing much attention; or because they didn’t know about growing grains; or maybe they lacked the tools to cultivate it; or they simply couldn’t foresee future needs; or finally, because they lacked ways to protect their harvest from others. We can assume that as they became more industrious, they started agriculture by using sharp stones and pointed sticks to grow some pulses or roots near their homes. It likely took a long time for them to learn how to prepare grains properly and to get the tools needed to grow it in larger amounts. Not to mention, they had to be willing to sacrifice some current resources to reap much greater rewards later—a mindset that isn’t very common among people in a primitive state, who can’t easily predict their needs from one day to the next.
For this reason the invention of other arts must have been necessary to oblige mankind to apply to that of agriculture. As soon as men were wanted to fuse and forge iron, others were wanted to maintain them. The more hands were employed in manufactures, the fewer hands were left to provide subsistence for all, though the number of mouths to be supplied with food continued the same; and as some required commodities in exchange for their iron, the rest at last found out the method of making iron subservient to the multiplication of commodities. Hence on the one hand husbandry and agriculture, and on the other the art of working metals and of multiplying the uses of them.
For this reason, the creation of other trades must have been essential to encourage people to focus on agriculture. As soon as there was a need for people to melt and shape iron, there were others needed to support them. The more workers were involved in manufacturing, the fewer were available to provide food for everyone, even though the number of people needing to be fed stayed the same. And as some sought goods in exchange for their iron, eventually everyone discovered how to use iron to increase the variety of goods. Thus, on one side we have farming and agriculture, and on the other, the craft of working with metals and expanding their uses.
To the tilling of the earth the distribution of it necessarily succeeded, and to property once acknowledged, the first rules of justice: for to secure every man his own, every man must have something. Moreover, as men began to extend their views to futurity, and all found themselves in possession of more or less goods capable of being lost, every one in particular had reason to fear, lest reprisals should be made on him for any injury he might do to others. This origin is so much the more natural, as it is impossible to conceive how property can flow from any other source but industry; for what can a man add but his labour to things which he has not made, in order to acquire a property in them? 'Tis the labour of the hands alone, which giving the husbandman a title to the produce of the land he has tilled gives him a title to the land itself, at least till he has gathered in the fruits of it, and so on from year to year; and this enjoyment forming a continued possession is easily transformed into a property. The ancients, says Grotius, by giving to Ceres the epithet of Legislatrix, and to a festival celebrated in her honour the name of Thesmorphoria, insinuated that the distribution of lands produced a new kind of right; that is, the right of property different from that which results from the law of nature.
As people began to farm the land, the sharing of it naturally followed, and with property being recognized, the initial rules of justice emerged: to ensure that everyone has their own, each person must possess something. Additionally, as individuals started to think about the future, realizing they owned various goods that could be lost, everyone had personal reasons to worry about facing consequences for any harm they might inflict on others. This idea makes sense since it’s hard to believe that property could come from anywhere other than through hard work; after all, what else can a person contribute to things they haven’t created to claim ownership over them? It is only through their labor that a farmer earns a right to the harvest from the land they cultivate, which also grants them a claim to the land itself, at least until they reap its benefits, continuing this pattern year after year. This ongoing enjoyment of the land turns into a form of ownership. The ancients, as Grotius pointed out, suggested that by referring to Ceres as the "Legislatrix" and naming a festival in her honor "Thesmorphoria," they implied that the distribution of land created a new type of right—property rights that differ from those arising from natural law.
Things thus circumstanced might have remained equal, if men's talents had been equal, and if, for instance, the use of iron, and the consumption of commodities had always held an exact proportion to each other; but as this proportion had no support, it was soon broken. The man that had most strength performed most labour; the most dexterous turned his labour to best account; the most ingenious found out methods of lessening his labour; the husbandman required more iron, or the smith more corn, and while both worked equally, one earned a great deal by his labour, while the other could scarce live by his. It is thus that natural inequality insensibly unfolds itself with that arising from a variety of combinations, and that the difference among men, developed by the difference of their circumstances, becomes more sensible, more permanent in its effects, and begins to influence in the same proportion the condition of private persons.
Things could have remained equal if everyone's talents were the same, and if, for example, the use of iron and the consumption of goods always matched perfectly; but since this balance had no basis, it quickly fell apart. The strongest person did the most work; the most skilled person got the best results from their efforts; and the most inventive figured out ways to reduce their workload. The farmer needed more iron, or the blacksmith needed more grain, and even though both worked equally hard, one made a lot from his labor while the other struggled to get by. This is how natural inequality gradually reveals itself alongside the inequalities created by various circumstances, making the differences among people more noticeable, more permanent in their effects, and begins to affect the situations of individuals accordingly.
Things once arrived at this period, it is an easy matter to imagine the rest. I shall not stop to describe the successive inventions of other arts, the progress of language, the trial and employments of talents, the inequality of fortunes, the use or abuse of riches, nor all the details which follow these, and which every one may easily supply. I shall just give a glance at mankind placed in this new order of things.
Once things reached this period, it’s easy to picture the rest. I won’t spend time describing the successive inventions of other arts, the evolution of language, the testing and use of talents, the disparities in wealth, the benefits or drawbacks of riches, or all the details that follow, which anyone can easily figure out. I’ll just give a brief overview of humanity in this new order of things.
Behold then all our faculties developed; our memory and imagination at work, self-love interested; reason rendered active; and the mind almost arrived at the utmost bounds of that perfection it is capable of. Behold all our natural qualities put in motion; the rank and condition of every man established, not only as to the quantum of property and the power of serving or hurting others, but likewise as to genius, beauty, strength or address, merit or talents; and as these were the only qualities which could command respect, it was found necessary to have or at least to affect them. It was requisite for men to be thought what they really were not. To be and to appear became two very different things, and from this distinction sprang pomp and knavery, and all the vices which form their train. On the other hand, man, heretofore free and independent, was now in consequence of a multitude of new wants brought under subjection, as it were, to all nature, and especially to his fellows, whose slave in some sense he became even by becoming their master; if rich, he stood in need of their services, if poor, of their assistance; even mediocrity itself could not enable him to do without them. He must therefore have been continually at work to interest them in his happiness, and make them, if not really, at least apparently find their advantage in labouring for his: this rendered him sly and artful in his dealings with some, imperious and cruel in his dealings with others, and laid him under the necessity of using ill all those whom he stood in need of, as often as he could not awe them into a compliance with his will, and did not find it his interest to purchase it at the expense of real services. In fine, an insatiable ambition, the rage of raising their relative fortunes, not so much through real necessity, as to over-top others, inspire all men with a wicked inclination to injure each other, and with a secret jealousy so much the more dangerous, as to carry its point with the greater security, it often puts on the face of benevolence. In a word, sometimes nothing was to be seen but a contention of endeavours on the one hand, and an opposition of interests on the other, while a secret desire of thriving at the expense of others constantly prevailed. Such were the first effects of property, and the inseparable attendants of infant inequality.
Look at how all our abilities have developed; our memory and imagination are at work, self-love is engaged; reason is active, and the mind is almost reaching the highest level of perfection it can achieve. See how all our natural qualities are set in motion; the status and condition of each person established, not just in terms of wealth and the power to help or harm others, but also regarding talent, beauty, strength, skill, merit, or abilities; since these were the only traits that could command respect, it became necessary to possess or at least pretend to have them. It was essential for people to be seen as what they weren't. Being and appearing became two very different things, and from this distinction arose arrogance and deceit, along with all the vices that accompany them. On the other hand, man, once free and independent, was now, due to a multitude of new needs, subjected to all of nature and especially to his fellow humans, becoming a slave in a sense even by becoming their master; if wealthy, he needed their services, and if poor, their help; even mediocrity couldn’t allow him to do without them. He had to constantly work to engage them in his happiness and make them, if not genuinely, at least seemingly find their benefit in working for him: this made him sly and cunning in his interactions with some, domineering and cruel with others, and forced him to mistreat those he relied on whenever he couldn’t intimidate them into submission and didn't see it as beneficial to win them over through genuine effort. In the end, an unquenchable ambition, the desire to elevate their relative status, not solely out of actual necessity but to surpass others, drove everyone to harbor a wicked inclination to harm one another, along with a hidden jealousy that was all the more dangerous because it often masked itself with a facade of kindness. In short, it sometimes looked like nothing more than a struggle between efforts on one side and conflicting interests on the other, while a hidden desire to prosper at others' expense consistently dominated. These were the initial effects of property and the unavoidable consequences of early inequality.
Riches, before the invention of signs to represent them, could scarce consist in anything but lands and cattle, the only real goods which men can possess. But when estates increased so much in number and in extent as to take in whole countries and touch each other, it became impossible for one man to aggrandise himself but at the expense of some other; and the supernumerary inhabitants, who were too weak or too indolent to make such acquisitions in their turn, impoverished without losing anything, because while everything about them changed they alone remained the same, were obliged to receive or force their subsistence from the hands of the rich. And hence began to flow, according to the different characters of each, domination and slavery, or violence and rapine. The rich on their side scarce began to taste the pleasure of commanding, when they preferred it to every other; and making use of their old slaves to acquire new ones, they no longer thought of anything but subduing and enslaving their neighbours; like those ravenous wolves, who having once tasted human flesh, despise every other food, and devour nothing but men for the future.
Before signs were invented to represent wealth, riches could only be lands and livestock, the only true possessions people could have. However, as estates grew in number and size to encompass entire countries and connect with one another, it became impossible for one person to gain wealth without taking it from someone else. The extra inhabitants, who were either too weak or too lazy to make their own acquisitions, became poorer without losing anything because, while everything around them changed, they remained the same. They were forced to depend on the wealthy for their survival. This led to domination and slavery, as well as violence and robbery, depending on the character of each group. As the rich started to enjoy the power of commanding, they favored it above all else; using their existing slaves to acquire new ones, they became solely focused on conquering and enslaving their neighbors. They resembled hungry wolves that, having tasted human flesh, disregard all other foods and only consume men from then on.
It is thus that the most powerful or the most wretched, respectively considering their power and wretchedness as a kind of title to the substance of others, even equivalent to that of property, the equality once broken was followed by the most shocking disorders. It is thus that the usurpations of the rich, the pillagings of the poor, and the unbridled passions of all, by stifling the cries of natural compassion, and the as yet feeble voice of justice, rendered man avaricious, wicked and ambitious. There arose between the title of the strongest, and that of the first occupier a perpetual conflict, which always ended in battery and bloodshed. Infant society became a scene of the most horrible warfare: Mankind thus debased and harassed, and no longer able to retreat, or renounce the unhappy acquisitions it had made; labouring, in short merely to its confusion by the abuse of those faculties, which in themselves do it so much honour, brought itself to the very brink of ruin and destruction.
It is this way that the most powerful and the most miserable, whether looking at their power or misery as a sort of claim to the substance of others, comparable to owning property, created a situation where equality, once broken, led to the most shocking chaos. This is how the greed of the rich, the exploitation of the poor, and the unchecked desires of everyone, by silencing the cries of natural compassion and the still weak voice of justice, made humans greedy, wicked, and ambitious. A constant struggle arose between the claim of the strongest and that of the first occupant, always ending in violence and bloodshed. Early society became a battleground of the most horrific war: Humanity, degraded and tormented, no longer able to withdraw or let go of the unfortunate gains it had made; ultimately struggling, only to its own detriment through the misuse of those abilities that bring so much honor, brought itself to the brink of ruin and destruction.
Attonitus novitate mali, divesque miserque,
Effugere optat opes; et quoe modo voverat, odit.
Attonitus by the newness of evil, both rich and miserable,
He wishes to escape riches; and what he had just vowed, he hates.
But it is impossible that men should not sooner or later have made reflections on so wretched a situation, and upon the calamities with which they were overwhelmed. The rich in particular must have soon perceived how much they suffered by a perpetual war, of which they alone supported all the expense, and in which, though all risked life, they alone risked any substance. Besides, whatever colour they might pretend to give their usurpations, they sufficiently saw that these usurpations were in the main founded upon false and precarious titles, and that what they had acquired by mere force, others could again by mere force wrest out of their hands, without leaving them the least room to complain of such a proceeding. Even those, who owed all their riches to their own industry, could scarce ground their acquisitions upon a better title. It availed them nothing to say, 'Twas I built this wall; I acquired this spot by my labour. Who traced it out for you, another might object, and what right have you to expect payment at our expense for doing that we did not oblige you to do? Don't you know that numbers of your brethren perish, or suffer grievously for want of what you possess more than suffices nature, and that you should have had the express and unanimous consent of mankind to appropriate to yourself of their common, more than was requisite for your private subsistence? Destitute of solid reasons to justify, and sufficient force to defend himself; crushing individuals with ease, but with equal ease crushed by numbers; one against all, and unable, on account of mutual jealousies, to unite with his equals against banditti united by the common hopes of pillage; the rich man, thus pressed by necessity, at last conceived the deepest project that ever entered the human mind: this was to employ in his favour the very forces that attacked him, to make allies of his enemies, to inspire them with other maxims, and make them adopt other institutions as favourable to his pretensions, as the law of nature was unfavourable to them.
But it’s impossible for people not to have thought about such a miserable situation sooner or later, and the disasters they were facing. The wealthy, in particular, must have quickly realized how much they suffered from a constant war, which they alone funded, and in which, despite everyone risking their lives, they were the only ones risking their wealth. Furthermore, no matter what justification they tried to give for their takeovers, they clearly understood that these takeovers were mostly based on false and shaky claims, and that what they had gained through sheer force, others could just as easily take back through force, leaving them with no legitimate grounds for complaint. Even those who built their wealth through their hard work could hardly justify their possessions on a better basis. It didn’t help them to say, “I built this wall; I earned this land through my labor.” Someone else could easily retort, “Who mapped this out for you, and what right do you have to expect compensation from us for something we didn't ask you to do? Don’t you realize that many of your fellow humans are suffering or dying from a lack of what you have in abundance, and that you should have had the clear and unanimous consent of everyone to claim more than you need for your own survival?” Lacking solid reasons to justify their claims and adequate power to defend themselves; easily overpowering individuals but just as easily overwhelmed by the masses; one against all, and unable, due to mutual distrust, to unite with their peers against groups banded together by the shared desire for plunder; the wealthy, thus pressed by necessity, eventually hatched the most profound scheme humanity has ever seen: to use the very forces attacking him in his favor, to turn his enemies into allies, to instill them with new ideas, and to get them to adopt different systems that would support his claims while the laws of nature were against them.
With this view, after laying before his neighbours all the horrors of a situation, which armed them all one against another, which rendered their possessions as burdensome as their wants were intolerable, and in which no one could expect any safety either in poverty or riches, he easily invented specious arguments to bring them over to his purpose. "Let us unite," said he, "to secure the weak from oppression, restrain the ambitious, and secure to every man the possession of what belongs to him: Let us form rules of justice and peace, to which all may be obliged to conform, which shall not except persons, but may in some sort make amends for the caprice of fortune, by submitting alike the powerful and the weak to the observance of mutual duties. In a word, instead of turning our forces against ourselves, let us collect them into a sovereign power, which may govern us by wise laws, may protect and defend all the members of the association, repel common enemies, and maintain a perpetual concord and harmony among us."
With this in mind, after showing his neighbors all the terrible aspects of a situation that turned them against each other, making their possessions feel as burdensome as their needs were unbearable, and where no one could expect safety in either poverty or wealth, he easily crafted convincing arguments to win them over to his side. "Let’s unite," he said, "to protect the weak from oppression, keep the ambitious in check, and ensure that everyone has what rightfully belongs to them. Let's create rules for justice and peace that everyone must follow, which won't favor anyone but will somewhat compensate for the randomness of fortune by making both the powerful and the weak adhere to shared responsibilities. In short, instead of using our strength against each other, let's channel it into a ruling power that can govern us with wise laws, protect and defend all members of our group, fend off common enemies, and maintain lasting peace and harmony among us."
Much fewer words of this kind were sufficient to draw in a parcel of rustics, whom it was an easy matter to impose upon, who had besides too many quarrels among themselves to live without arbiters, and too much avarice and ambition to live long without masters. All offered their necks to the yoke in hopes of securing their liberty; for though they had sense enough to perceive the advantages of a political constitution, they had not experience enough to see beforehand the dangers of it; those among them, who were best qualified to foresee abuses, were precisely those who expected to benefit by them; even the soberest judged it requisite to sacrifice one part of their liberty to ensure the other, as a man, dangerously wounded in any of his limbs, readily parts with it to save the rest of his body.
Fewer words of this kind were enough to attract a group of country folks, who were easy to deceive and had too many disputes among themselves to function without mediators, along with too much greed and ambition to go long without rulers. They all willingly accepted the burden in hopes of gaining their freedom; for while they understood the benefits of a political system, they lacked the experience to foresee its dangers. Those among them who could best predict the potential abuses were precisely those who hoped to gain from them; even the most level-headed thought it necessary to sacrifice some of their freedom to protect what remained, just as a person dangerously injured in a limb readily relinquishes it to save the rest of their body.
Such was, or must have been, had man been left to himself, the origin of society and of the laws, which increased the fetters of the weak, and the strength of the rich; irretrievably destroyed natural liberty, fixed for ever the laws of property and inequality; changed an artful usurpation into an irrevocable title; and for the benefit of a few ambitious individuals subjected the rest of mankind to perpetual labour, servitude, and misery. We may easily conceive how the establishment of a single society rendered that of all the rest absolutely necessary, and how, to make head against united forces, it became necessary for the rest of mankind to unite in their turn. Societies once formed in this manner, soon multiplied or spread to such a degree, as to cover the face of the earth; and not to leave a corner in the whole universe, where a man could throw off the yoke, and withdraw his head from under the often ill-conducted sword which he saw perpetually hanging over it. The civil law being thus become the common rule of citizens, the law of nature no longer obtained but among the different societies, in which, under the name of the law of nations, it was qualified by some tacit conventions to render commerce possible, and supply the place of natural compassion, which, losing by degrees all that influence over societies which it originally had over individuals, no longer exists but in some great souls, who consider themselves as citizens of the world, and forcing the imaginary barriers that separate people from people, after the example of the Sovereign Being from whom we all derive our existence, make the whole human race the object of their benevolence.
This is how, or how it would have been, had people been left to their own devices, the origin of society and laws emerged, which tightened the chains of the weak and bolstered the power of the rich; irreparably lost natural freedom, permanently established laws of property and inequality; transformed a cunning seizure of power into an unchangeable claim; and for the benefit of a few ambitious individuals forced the rest of humanity into endless labor, servitude, and suffering. We can easily imagine how the creation of one society made the formation of all others absolutely necessary, and how, to stand against united forces, it became essential for the rest of humanity to band together in response. Once societies were established in this way, they quickly multiplied or spread to such an extent that they covered the entire earth, leaving no place where a person could escape the burden and remove their head from under the often poorly wielded sword that hung constantly over it. With civil law thus becoming the common standard for citizens, natural law no longer prevailed except among the different societies, where, under the title of the law of nations, it was adjusted by some unspoken agreements to make trade possible and replace the natural compassion that gradually lost its influence over societies just as it once held over individuals. Now, it exists only in a few exceptional individuals who see themselves as citizens of the world and break through the imaginary barriers that separate people from one another, following the example of the Sovereign Being from whom we all originate and making the entire human race the focus of their goodwill.
Political bodies, thus remaining in a state of nature among themselves, soon experienced the inconveniences which had obliged individuals to quit it; and this state became much more fatal to these great bodies, than it had been before to the individuals which now composed them. Hence those national wars, those battles, those murders, those reprisals, which make nature shudder and shock reason; hence all those horrible prejudices, which make it a virtue and an honour to shed human blood. The worthiest men learned to consider the cutting the throats of their fellows as a duty; at length men began to butcher each other by thousands without knowing for what; and more murders were committed in a single action, and more horrible disorders at the taking of a single town, than had been committed in the state of nature during ages together upon the whole face of the earth. Such are the first effects we may conceive to have arisen from the division of mankind into different societies. Let us return to their institution.
Political groups, still stuck in a state of nature with one another, soon faced the same problems that had led individuals to abandon it; this state became far more damaging to these large entities than it had been for the individuals who made them up. This led to national wars, battles, murders, and acts of revenge that make nature shudder and challenge reason; to all those awful prejudices that turn it into a virtue and honor to spill human blood. The most respectable individuals learned to see the act of killing their peers as a duty; eventually, people began slaughtering each other by the thousands without even knowing why, and more murders occurred in a single battle, along with more terrifying chaos during the capture of a single city, than had been seen in the state of nature over many ages across the entire world. These are the initial consequences we can imagine arising from humanity's division into different societies. Now, let’s go back to their foundation.
I know that several writers have assigned other origins of political society; as for instance, the conquests of the powerful, or the union of the weak; and it is no matter which of these causes we adopt in regard to what I am going to establish; that, however, which I have just laid down, seems to me the most natural, for the following reasons: First, because, in the first case, the right of conquest being in fact no right at all, it could not serve as a foundation for any other right, the conqueror and the conquered ever remaining with respect to each other in a state of war, unless the conquered, restored to the full possession of their liberty, should freely choose their conqueror for their chief. Till then, whatever capitulations might have been made between them, as these capitulations were founded upon violence, and of course de facto null and void, there could not have existed in this hypothesis either a true society, or a political body, or any other law but that of the strongest. Second, because these words strong and weak, are ambiguous in the second case; for during the interval between the establishment of the right of property or prior occupation and that of political government, the meaning of these terms is better expressed by the words poor and rich, as before the establishment of laws men in reality had no other means of reducing their equals, but by invading the property of these equals, or by parting with some of their own property to them. Third, because the poor having nothing but their liberty to lose, it would have been the height of madness in them to give up willingly the only blessing they had left without obtaining some consideration for it: whereas the rich being sensible, if I may say so, in every part of their possessions, it was much easier to do them mischief, and therefore more incumbent upon them to guard against it; and because, in fine, it is but reasonable to suppose, that a thing has been invented by him to whom it could be of service rather than by him to whom it must prove detrimental.
I know that some writers have suggested different origins for political society, such as the conquests of the powerful or the alliance of the weak. However, it doesn’t matter which of these causes we choose regarding what I'm about to establish. The argument I just presented seems to me the most natural for the following reasons: First, in the case of conquest, since the right of conquest is really no right at all, it cannot be the basis for any other right. The conqueror and the conquered would always remain in a state of war with each other, unless the conquered were restored to full liberty and chose their conqueror as their leader. Until that point, any agreements made between them would be based on violence and therefore void; there would be no true society, political body, or any law other than that of the strongest. Second, the terms strong and weak are ambiguous in the second case. Between the establishment of property rights or prior occupation and that of political government, it is more accurate to refer to people as poor and rich. Before laws were established, individuals had no other way to undermine their equals except by invading their property or giving away some of their own to them. Third, since the poor had nothing to lose but their freedom, it would have been crazy for them to willingly give up the only thing they had left without getting something in return. On the other hand, the rich, being aware of their possessions, found it easier to be harmed, so it was more important for them to protect themselves. Finally, it’s reasonable to think that something would be created by someone who would benefit from it rather than by someone for whom it would be harmful.
Government in its infancy had no regular and permanent form. For want of a sufficient fund of philosophy and experience, men could see no further than the present inconveniences, and never thought of providing remedies for future ones, but in proportion as they arose. In spite of all the labours of the wisest legislators, the political state still continued imperfect, because it was in a manner the work of chance; and, as the foundations of it were ill laid, time, though sufficient to discover its defects and suggest the remedies for them, could never mend its original vices. Men were continually repairing; whereas, to erect a good edifice, they should have begun as Lycurgus did at Sparta, by clearing the area, and removing the old materials. Society at first consisted merely of some general conventions which all the members bound themselves to observe, and for the performance of which the whole body became security to every individual. Experience was necessary to show the great weakness of such a constitution, and how easy it was for those, who infringed it, to escape the conviction or chastisement of faults, of which the public alone was to be both the witness and the judge; the laws could not fail of being eluded a thousand ways; inconveniences and disorders could not but multiply continually, till it was at last found necessary to think of committing to private persons the dangerous trust of public authority, and to magistrates the care of enforcing obedience to the people: for to say that chiefs were elected before confederacies were formed, and that the ministers of the laws existed before the laws themselves, is a supposition too ridiculous to deserve I should seriously refute it.
Government in its early days didn’t have a regular or lasting structure. Due to a lack of deep philosophical understanding and experience, people could only focus on the immediate problems and didn’t think ahead to address future issues until they appeared. Despite the efforts of the wisest lawmakers, the political situation remained flawed because it was somewhat random; the foundations were poorly laid, and even though time revealed its shortcomings and offered solutions, it couldn’t fix the original faults. People were constantly making repairs; instead, to build a solid foundation, they should have started like Lycurgus did in Sparta—by clearing the space and removing old materials. Initially, society was just a set of general agreements that all members committed to uphold, with the entire group guaranteeing each individual’s compliance. It took experience to reveal the significant weaknesses of this system and how easy it was for those who violated it to evade accountability, as the public acted as both witness and judge; laws could easily be avoided in numerous ways, and problems and disorder would only continue to grow until it became necessary to delegate the risky responsibility of public authority to private individuals, and to assign magistrates the task of ensuring compliance among the populace. The idea that leaders were chosen before societies were formed, and that law enforcers existed before the laws themselves, is too ludicrous to even warrant a serious response.
It would be equally unreasonable to imagine that men at first threw themselves into the arms of an absolute master, without any conditions or consideration on his side; and that the first means contrived by jealous and unconquered men for their common safety was to run hand over head into slavery. In fact, why did they give themselves superiors, if it was not to be defended by them against oppression, and protected in their lives, liberties, and properties, which are in a manner the constitutional elements of their being? Now in the relations between man and man, the worst that can happen to one man being to see himself at the discretion of another, would it not have been contrary to the dictates of good sense to begin by making over to a chief the only things for the preservation of which they stood in need of his assistance? What equivalent could he have offered them for so fine a privilege? And had he presumed to exact it on pretense of defending them, would he not have immediately received the answer in the apologue? What worse treatment can we expect from an enemy? It is therefore past dispute, and indeed a fundamental maxim of political law, that people gave themselves chiefs to defend their liberty and not be enslaved by them. If we have a prince, said Pliny to Trajan, it is in order that he may keep us from having a master.
It would be just as unreasonable to think that people initially submitted themselves to an absolute leader without any conditions or considerations from him. It doesn't make sense that the first thing independent and fierce individuals did for their mutual safety was to rush headlong into slavery. In reality, why did they appoint leaders if not to be defended by them against oppression and to protect their lives, freedoms, and properties—essentially the foundational elements of their existence? In the relationships between people, the worst thing that can happen to one individual is to find themselves at the mercy of another. Wouldn’t it have been against common sense to start by handing over to a leader the very things they needed his help to preserve? What could he possibly offer them in exchange for such a precious right? And if he dared to demand it under the guise of protecting them, wouldn’t they have immediately responded with the moral lesson? What worse treatment could we expect from an enemy? Therefore, it’s beyond question—and indeed a fundamental principle of political law—that people chose leaders to safeguard their freedom, not to be enslaved by them. If we have a prince, Pliny told Trajan, it’s so that he can prevent us from having a master.
Political writers argue in regard to the love of liberty with the same philosophy that philosophers do in regard to the state of nature; by the things they see they judge of things very different which they have never seen, and they attribute to men a natural inclination to slavery, on account of the patience with which the slaves within their notice carry the yoke; not reflecting that it is with liberty as with innocence and virtue, the value of which is not known but by those who possess them, though the relish for them is lost with the things themselves. I know the charms of your country, said Brasidas to a satrap who was comparing the life of the Spartans with that of the Persepolites; but you can not know the pleasures of mine.
Political writers discuss the love of freedom in the same way that philosophers talk about the state of nature; they judge things they’ve never experienced based on what they see around them, and they assume that people have a natural tendency towards slavery because of the way the slaves they observe bear their burdens. They fail to realize that freedom, like innocence and virtue, is valuable only to those who actually have it, and that the appreciation for these ideals fades along with their absence. "I understand the beauty of your country," Brasidas said to a satrap who was comparing the lives of Spartans to those of the Persepolites, "but you can’t understand the joys of my own."
As an unbroken courser erects his mane, paws the ground, and rages at the bare sight of the bit, while a trained horse patiently suffers both whip and spur, just so the barbarian will never reach his neck to the yoke which civilized man carries without murmuring but prefers the most stormy liberty to a calm subjection. It is not therefore by the servile disposition of enslaved nations that we must judge of the natural dispositions of man for or against slavery, but by the prodigies done by every free people to secure themselves from oppression. I know that the first are constantly crying up that peace and tranquillity they enjoy in their irons, and that miserrimam servitutem pacem appellant: but when I see the others sacrifice pleasures, peace, riches, power, and even life itself to the preservation of that single jewel so much slighted by those who have lost it; when I see free-born animals through a natural abhorrence of captivity dash their brains out against the bars of their prison; when I see multitudes of naked savages despise European pleasures, and brave hunger, fire and sword, and death itself to preserve their independency; I feel that it belongs not to slaves to argue concerning liberty.
As an unbroken horse raises its mane, stamps its hooves, and rages at the mere sight of the bit, a trained horse patiently endures both whip and spur. In the same way, the barbarian will never submit to the yoke that civilized people bear without complaint, preferring the most tumultuous freedom over a peaceful submission. We shouldn’t judge the natural inclinations of humanity regarding slavery by the servile behavior of enslaved nations, but rather by the incredible acts performed by every free people to protect themselves from oppression. I know that the former constantly praise the peace and tranquility they experience in their chains and that they call their miserable slavery peace: but when I see others sacrifice pleasures, peace, wealth, power, and even their very lives to protect that single treasure so dismissed by those who have lost it; when I witness free beings, out of a natural aversion to captivity, bash their heads against the bars of their prison; when I see crowds of naked savages disregard European comforts and bravely face hunger, fire, sword, and even death to maintain their independence; I believe it’s not for slaves to debate about freedom.
As to paternal authority, from which several have derived absolute government and every other mode of society, it is sufficient, without having recourse to Locke and Sidney, to observe that nothing in the world differs more from the cruel spirit of despotism that the gentleness of that authority, which looks more to the advantage of him who obeys than to the utility of him who commands; that by the law of nature the father continues master of his child no longer than the child stands in need of his assistance; that after that term they become equal, and that then the son, entirely independent of the father, owes him no obedience, but only respect. Gratitude is indeed a duty which we are bound to pay, but which benefactors can not exact. Instead of saying that civil society is derived from paternal authority, we should rather say that it is to the former that the latter owes its principal force: No one individual was acknowledged as the father of several other individuals, till they settled about him. The father's goods, which he can indeed dispose of as he pleases, are the ties which hold his children to their dependence upon him, and he may divide his substance among them in proportion as they shall have deserved his attention by a continual deference to his commands. Now the subjects of a despotic chief, far from having any such favour to expect from him, as both themselves and all they have are his property, or at least are considered by him as such, are obliged to receive as a favour what he relinquishes to them of their own property. He does them justice when he strips them; he treats them with mercy when he suffers them to live. By continuing in this manner to compare facts with right, we should discover as little solidity as truth in the voluntary establishment of tyranny; and it would be a hard matter to prove the validity of a contract which was binding only on one side, in which one of the parties should stake everything and the other nothing, and which could turn out to the prejudice of him alone who had bound himself.
Regarding paternal authority, from which many have derived absolute rule and other forms of society, it's enough to say, without referencing Locke and Sidney, that nothing contrasts more with the harshness of tyranny than the gentle nature of authority, which prioritizes the well-being of the one obeying over the benefit of the one commanding; that by natural law, a father is only in control of his child for as long as the child needs his help; and that once that need is gone, they become equals. After that, the son, completely independent from the father, owes him only respect, not obedience. Gratitude is indeed a duty we should uphold, but it cannot be demanded by those who help us. Rather than claiming that civil society comes from paternal authority, we should state that the latter owes much of its strength to the former: No one was recognized as the father of multiple individuals until they settled around him. The father's resources, which he can manage as he wishes, are what bind his children to him, and he can distribute his wealth among them based on how well they have respected his commands. In contrast, the subjects of a despotic ruler, rather than expecting such favors, find that everything they own is his property or at least regarded as such by him and must accept whatever he concedes as a favor from their own belongings. When he takes from them, he serves them justice; when he allows them to live, he shows them mercy. By continuously comparing facts with rights, we'd find little solidity or truth in the voluntary establishment of tyranny; it would be difficult to prove the validity of a contract that binds only one party, where one stakes everything and the other nothing, and which could ultimately harm only the one who committed.
This odious system is even, at this day, far from being that of wise and good monarchs, and especially of the kings of France, as may be seen by divers passages in their edicts, and particularly by that of a celebrated piece published in 1667 in the name and by the orders of Louis XIV. "Let it therefore not be said that the sovereign is not subject to the laws of his realm, since, that he is, is a maxim of the law of nations which flattery has sometimes attacked, but which good princes have always defended as the tutelary divinity of their realms. How much more reasonable is it to say with the sage Plato, that the perfect happiness of a state consists in the subjects obeying their prince, the prince obeying the laws, and the laws being equitable and always directed to the good of the public?" I shall not stop to consider, if, liberty being the most noble faculty of man, it is not degrading one's nature, reducing one's self to the level of brutes, who are the slaves of instinct, and even offending the author of one's being, to renounce without reserve the most precious of his gifts, and submit to the commission of all the crimes he has forbid us, merely to gratify a mad or a cruel master; and if this sublime artist ought to be more irritated at seeing his work destroyed than at seeing it dishonoured. I shall only ask what right those, who were not afraid thus to degrade themselves, could have to subject their dependants to the same ignominy, and renounce, in the name of their posterity, blessings for which it is not indebted to their liberality, and without which life itself must appear a burthen to all those who are worthy to live.
This terrible system is, even today, far from being that of wise and good rulers, especially the kings of France, as can be seen in various parts of their decrees, particularly in a well-known piece published in 1667 under the authority of Louis XIV. "So it should not be said that the sovereign is not subject to the laws of their realm, because he is, and this is a fundamental principle of international law, which flattery sometimes undermines, but which good rulers have always upheld as the protector of their realms. How much more reasonable is it to agree with the wise Plato that a state's true happiness lies in subjects obeying their ruler, the ruler obeying the laws, and the laws being fair and always aimed at the common good?" I won't dwell on whether liberty, being the noblest quality of humanity, makes it degrading to renounce it entirely and reduce oneself to the level of animals, who are governed by instinct, and even offend our creator by submitting to the crimes He has prohibited, simply to please a mad or cruel master; nor whether this great creator should be more upset by seeing his work destroyed than by witnessing it being dishonored. I will only question what right those who were unafraid to degrade themselves had to impose the same humiliation on their dependents and to renounce, on behalf of their descendants, the blessings they didn't earn, without which life itself must feel like a burden to all who are worthy to live.
Puffendorf says that, as we can transfer our property from one to another by contracts and conventions, we may likewise divest ourselves of our liberty in favour of other men. This, in my opinion, is a very poor way of arguing; for, in the first place, the property I cede to another becomes by such cession a thing quite foreign to me, and the abuse of which can no way affect me; but it concerns me greatly that my liberty is not abused, and I can not, without incurring the guilt of the crimes I may be forced to commit, expose myself to become the instrument of any. Besides, the right of property being of mere human convention and institution, every man may dispose as he pleases of what he possesses: But the case is otherwise with regard to the essential gifts of nature, such as life and liberty, which every man is permitted to enjoy, and of which it is doubtful at least whether any man has a right to divest himself: By giving up the one, we degrade our being; by giving up the other we annihilate it as much as it is our power to do so; and as no temporal enjoyments can indemnify us for the loss of either, it would be at once offending both nature and reason to renounce them for any consideration. But though we could transfer our liberty as we do our substance, the difference would be very great with regard to our children, who enjoy our substance but by a cession of our right; whereas liberty being a blessing, which as men they hold from nature, their parents have no right to strip them of it; so that as to establish slavery it was necessary to do violence to nature, so it was necessary to alter nature to perpetuate such a right; and the jurisconsults, who have gravely pronounced that the child of a slave comes a slave into the world, have in other words decided, that a man does not come a man into the world.
Puffendorf argues that since we can transfer our property to others through contracts and agreements, we can also give up our freedom for the sake of other people. In my opinion, this is a weak argument. For one, when I give my property to someone else, it becomes something entirely separate from me, and how they abuse it doesn't affect me at all; however, it really matters to me that my freedom isn't abused, and I can't, without bearing the guilt of any crimes I'm forced to commit, put myself in a position to become someone else's tool. Moreover, the right to property is simply a human agreement and institution, allowing everyone to do what they wish with what they own. But the situation is different when it comes to vital gifts of nature, like life and freedom, which everyone is entitled to enjoy, and it's at least questionable whether anyone has the right to give these up. By giving up one, we diminish our humanity; by giving up the other, we destroy it as much as we can. Since no temporary pleasures can make up for the loss of either, it would be a direct offense against both nature and reason to give them up for any reason. Even if we could transfer our freedom like we do our possessions, there would be a significant difference regarding our children, who inherit our possessions only through a transfer of our rights; whereas freedom is a gift they receive naturally as human beings, and their parents have no right to take it away from them. Therefore, to establish slavery, it would be necessary to go against nature, and to maintain such a right, nature itself would need to be changed; those legal experts who have seriously stated that the child of a slave is born a slave have essentially claimed that a man does not come into the world as a man.
It therefore appears to me incontestably true, that not only governments did not begin by arbitrary power, which is but the corruption and extreme term of government, and at length brings it back to the law of the strongest, against which governments were at first the remedy, but even that, allowing they had commenced in this manner, such power being illegal in itself could never have served as a foundation to the rights of society, nor of course to the inequality of institution.
It seems completely clear to me that governments did not start with arbitrary power, which is just the corruption and extreme version of government, eventually leading back to the law of the strongest. Governments were originally meant to address this issue. Even if we assume they began this way, such power, being illegal in itself, could never be a legitimate basis for the rights of society, or for the inequality of institutions.
I shall not now enter upon the inquiries which still remain to be made into the nature of the fundamental pacts of every kind of government, but, following the common opinion, confine myself in this place to the establishment of the political body as a real contract between the multitude and the chiefs elected by it. A contract by which both parties oblige themselves to the observance of the laws that are therein stipulated, and form the bands of their union. The multitude having, on occasion of the social relations between them, concentered all their wills in one person, all the articles, in regard to which this will explains itself, become so many fundamental laws, which oblige without exception all the members of the state, and one of which laws regulates the choice and the power of the magistrates appointed to look to the execution of the rest. This power extends to everything that can maintain the constitution, but extends to nothing that can alter it. To this power are added honours, that may render the laws and the ministers of them respectable; and the persons of the ministers are distinguished by certain prerogatives, which may make them amends for the great fatigues inseparable from a good administration. The magistrate, on his side, obliges himself not to use the power with which he is intrusted but conformably to the intention of his constituents, to maintain every one of them in the peaceable possession of his property, and upon all occasions prefer the good of the public to his own private interest.
I won't dive into the questions that still need to be addressed about the fundamental agreements of all types of governments, but I’ll stick to the common viewpoint here that sees the political system as a real contract between the people and their elected leaders. This contract binds both sides to follow the laws outlined within it, establishing their unity. The people, by focusing all their wills on one individual due to their social interactions, create fundamental laws that apply to all state members without exception. One of these laws determines how magistrates are chosen and what powers they have to ensure the rest of the laws are followed. This power covers everything needed to uphold the constitution but does not allow for any changes to it. This power is also accompanied by honors that help give the laws and those who enforce them respect. The officials are recognized with certain privileges that compensate for the significant challenges that come with good governance. In return, the magistrate commits to using the power entrusted to him in line with the wishes of the people, ensuring everyone enjoys peaceful ownership of their property, and consistently prioritizing the public good over his own interests.
Before experience had demonstrated, or a thorough knowledge of the human heart had pointed out, the abuses inseparable from such a constitution, it must have appeared so much the more perfect, as those appointed to look to its preservation were themselves most concerned therein; for magistracy and its rights being built solely on the fundamental laws, as soon as these ceased to exist, the magistrates would cease to be lawful, the people would no longer be bound to obey them, and, as the essence of the state did not consist in the magistrates but in the laws, the members of it would immediately become entitled to their primitive and natural liberty.
Before experience proved it and a deep understanding of human nature revealed the inevitable problems of such a system, it must have seemed even more perfect, as those tasked with its protection were the most invested in it. Since the authority and rights of officials were entirely based on the fundamental laws, if those laws disappeared, the officials would no longer be legitimate, the people wouldn't have to obey them, and because the essence of the state lay in the laws rather than the officials, its members would instantly regain their original and natural freedom.
A little reflection would afford us new arguments in confirmation of this truth, and the nature of the contract might alone convince us that it can not be irrevocable: for if there was no superior power capable of guaranteeing the fidelity of the contracting parties and of obliging them to fulfil their mutual engagements, they would remain sole judges in their own cause, and each of them would always have a right to renounce the contract, as soon as he discovered that the other had broke the conditions of it, or that these conditions ceased to suit his private convenience. Upon this principle, the right of abdication may probably be founded. Now, to consider as we do nothing but what is human in this institution, if the magistrate, who has all the power in his own hands, and who appropriates to himself all the advantages of the contract, has notwithstanding a right to divest himself of his authority; how much a better right must the people, who pay for all the faults of its chief, have to renounce their dependence upon him. But the shocking dissensions and disorders without number, which would be the necessary consequence of so dangerous a privilege, show more than anything else how much human governments stood in need of a more solid basis than that of mere reason, and how necessary it was for the public tranquillity, that the will of the Almighty should interpose to give to sovereign authority, a sacred and inviolable character, which should deprive subjects of the mischievous right to dispose of it to whom they pleased. If mankind had received no other advantages from religion, this alone would be sufficient to make them adopt and cherish it, since it is the means of saving more blood than fanaticism has been the cause of spilling. But to resume the thread of our hypothesis.
A bit of reflection would give us new reasons to support this truth, and just the nature of the agreement might convince us that it can't be permanent: if there were no higher authority able to ensure the loyalty of the parties involved and to force them to meet their mutual obligations, they would be the only judges in their situation. Each party would always have the right to back out of the agreement as soon as they realized that the other had violated its terms or that those terms no longer served their personal interests. This principle could likely support the right to withdraw. Now, considering only the human aspects of this system, if a magistrate, who holds all the power and reaps all the benefits of the agreement, has the right to relinquish his authority, how much stronger is the right of the people, who bear the consequences of their leader's faults, to reject their dependence on him. However, the countless shocking disputes and disorders that would inevitably arise from such a risky privilege demonstrate more than anything else how much human governments need a sturdier foundation than mere reason. It's essential for public peace that the will of the Almighty intervene to give sovereign authority a sacred and inviolable nature, which would prevent subjects from carelessly transferring it to whomever they choose. If humanity received no other benefits from religion, this alone would be enough to make them embrace and value it, as it saves more lives than fanaticism has caused to be lost. But let's get back to our main argument.
The various forms of government owe their origin to the various degrees of inequality between the members, at the time they first coalesced into a political body. Where a man happened to be eminent for power, for virtue, for riches, or for credit, he became sole magistrate, and the state assumed a monarchical form; if many of pretty equal eminence out-topped all the rest, they were jointly elected, and this election produced an aristocracy; those, between whose fortune or talents there happened to be no such disproportion, and who had deviated less from the state of nature, retained in common the supreme administration, and formed a democracy. Time demonstrated which of these forms suited mankind best. Some remained altogether subject to the laws; others soon bowed their necks to masters. The former laboured to preserve their liberty; the latter thought of nothing but invading that of their neighbours, jealous at seeing others enjoy a blessing which themselves had lost. In a word, riches and conquest fell to the share of the one, and virtue and happiness to that of the other.
The different types of government came about because of the varying levels of inequality among people when they first came together as a political group. When someone stood out due to their power, goodness, wealth, or reputation, they became the sole leader, and the government took on a monarchy. If a group of people, who were relatively equal in status, surpassed the rest, they were collectively chosen, leading to an aristocracy. Those whose wealth or abilities were evenly matched, and who had strayed the least from their natural state, shared control over the government and formed a democracy. Over time, it became clear which type of government was best for humanity. Some people remained completely bound by laws; others quickly submitted to rulers. The first group worked hard to protect their freedom, while the second only focused on taking away the freedom of others, envious of those who enjoyed the privilege they had lost. In short, wealth and conquest went to one group, while virtue and happiness belonged to the other.
In these various modes of government the offices at first were all elective; and when riches did not preponderate, the preference was given to merit, which gives a natural ascendant, and to age, which is the parent of deliberateness in council, and experience in execution. The ancients among the Hebrews, the Geronts of Sparta, the Senate of Rome, nay, the very etymology of our word seigneur, show how much gray hairs were formerly respected. The oftener the choice fell upon old men, the oftener it became necessary to repeat it, and the more the trouble of such repetitions became sensible; electioneering took place; factions arose; the parties contracted ill blood; civil wars blazed forth; the lives of the citizens were sacrificed to the pretended happiness of the state; and things at last came to such a pass, as to be ready to relapse into their primitive confusion. The ambition of the principal men induced them to take advantage of these circumstances to perpetuate the hitherto temporary charges in their families; the people already inured to dependence, accustomed to ease and the conveniences of life, and too much enervated to break their fetters, consented to the increase of their slavery for the sake of securing their tranquillity; and it is thus that chiefs, become hereditary, contracted the habit of considering magistracies as a family estate, and themselves as proprietors of those communities, of which at first they were but mere officers; to call their fellow-citizens their slaves; to look upon them, like so many cows or sheep, as a part of their substance; and to style themselves the peers of Gods, and Kings of Kings.
In different types of government, all the positions were initially elected, and when wealth didn't dominate, preference was given to merit, which naturally gives an advantage, and to age, which brings thoughtfulness in decision-making and experience in carrying out actions. The elders among the Hebrews, the Geronts of Sparta, the Senate of Rome, and even the origin of our word "seigneur," show how much respect was given to gray hair in the past. As older men were chosen more often, it became necessary to hold elections repeatedly, and the burden of these repeated votes became apparent; campaigning began; factions emerged; different parties grew hostile towards each other; civil wars ignited; the lives of citizens were sacrificed for the supposed betterment of the state; and ultimately, things were on the brink of falling back into chaos. The ambition of influential individuals led them to exploit these situations to make their previously temporary positions hereditary in their families; the population, already used to being dependent, enjoying comfort and the conveniences of life, and too weak to break free from their chains, agreed to tighten their bondage for the sake of maintaining their peace. This is how leaders became hereditary, developing the attitude of seeing magistracies as family property and themselves as owners of the communities where they were once just officials; they referred to their fellow citizens as their slaves; viewed them as mere resources, like cattle or sheep; and called themselves equals of the gods, and kings of kings.
By pursuing the progress of inequality in these different revolutions, we shall discover that the establishment of laws and of the right of property was the first term of it; the institution of magistrates the second; and the third and last the changing of legal into arbitrary power; so that the different states of rich and poor were authorized by the first epoch; those of powerful and weak by the second; and by the third those of master and slave, which formed the last degree of inequality, and the term in which all the rest at last end, till new revolutions entirely dissolve the government, or bring it back nearer to its legal constitution.
By examining the development of inequality during these different revolutions, we’ll find that the establishment of laws and property rights was the first step; the creation of magistrates followed as the second; and the final step was the shift from legal power to arbitrary power. This meant that the varying statuses of rich and poor were sanctioned by the first phase; those of powerful and weak were legitimized by the second; and by the third, the dynamics of master and slave emerged, representing the ultimate degree of inequality and the endpoint for all the previous forms until new revolutions either completely dismantle the government or restore it closer to its legal framework.
To conceive the necessity of this progress, we are not so much to consider the motives for the establishment of political bodies, as the forms these bodies assume in their administration; and the inconveniences with which they are essentially attended; for those vices, which render social institutions necessary, are the same which render the abuse of such institutions unavoidable; and as (Sparta alone excepted, whose laws chiefly regarded the education of children, and where Lycurgus established such manners and customs, as in a great measure made laws needless,) the laws, in general less strong than the passions, restrain men without changing them; it would be no hard matter to prove that every government, which carefully guarding against all alteration and corruption should scrupulously comply with the ends of its institution, was unnecessarily instituted; and that a country, where no one either eluded the laws, or made an ill use of magistracy, required neither laws nor magistrates.
To understand why this progress is necessary, we shouldn't just look at the reasons for creating political bodies, but also at the forms these bodies take in their administration and the issues that come with them. The problems that make social institutions necessary are the same ones that make their abuse inevitable. Except for Sparta, where the laws mainly focused on educating children and where Lycurgus established customs that largely made laws unnecessary, laws are generally weaker than human passions. They may restrain people without changing them. It wouldn’t be difficult to argue that any government that meticulously guards against corruption and adheres strictly to its original purpose is unnecessary, and that a country where no one circumvents the law or misuses authority wouldn’t need either laws or officials.
Political distinctions are necessarily attended with civil distinctions. The inequality between the people and the chiefs increase so fast as to be soon felt by the private members, and appears among them in a thousand shapes according to their passions, their talents, and the circumstances of affairs. The magistrate can not usurp any illegal power without making himself creatures, with whom he must divide it. Besides, the citizens of a free state suffer themselves to be oppressed merely in proportion as, hurried on by a blind ambition, and looking rather below than above them, they come to love authority more than independence. When they submit to fetters, 'tis only to be the better able to fetter others in their turn. It is no easy matter to make him obey, who does not wish to command; and the most refined policy would find it impossible to subdue those men, who only desire to be independent; but inequality easily gains ground among base and ambitious souls, ever ready to run the risks of fortune, and almost indifferent whether they command or obey, as she proves either favourable or adverse to them. Thus then there must have been a time, when the eyes of the people were bewitched to such a degree, that their rulers needed only to have said to the most pitiful wretch, "Be great you and all your posterity," to make him immediately appear great in the eyes of every one as well as in his own; and his descendants took still more upon them, in proportion to their removes from him: the more distant and uncertain the cause, the greater the effect; the longer line of drones a family produced, the more illustrious it was reckoned.
Political distinctions inevitably come with civil distinctions. The gap between the people and their leaders grows so quickly that private individuals feel it soon enough, showing up in various ways depending on their emotions, skills, and circumstances. A magistrate can't take unlawful power without creating followers who share that power. Moreover, citizens in a free state allow themselves to be oppressed largely because, driven by blind ambition and focusing more on those below them than those above, they come to value authority over independence. When they submit to chains, it's only to have the chance to chain others in return. It's difficult to make someone obey who doesn’t want to lead, and the most sophisticated strategies would struggle to conquer those who only wish to be free; however, inequality readily takes hold among petty and ambitious individuals, who are always willing to gamble on fortune and are nearly indifferent to whether they command or obey, depending on how fortune treats them. There must have been a time when the people's vision was so clouded that their rulers simply had to tell even the most miserable person, "You and your descendants will be great," to make them feel great both in the eyes of others and in their own. Over time, their descendants grew even prouder, as their distance from him increased; the more vague the origins, the bigger the impact; and the longer a family produced mediocrities, the more illustrious it was considered.
Were this a proper place to enter into details, I could easily explain in what manner inequalities in point of credit and authority become unavoidable among private persons the moment that, united into one body, they are obliged to compare themselves one with another, and to note the differences which they find in the continual use every man must make of his neighbour. These differences are of several kinds; but riches, nobility or rank, power and personal merit, being in general the principal distinctions, by which men in society measure each other, I could prove that the harmony or conflict between these different forces is the surest indication of the good or bad original constitution of any state: I could make it appear that, as among these four kinds of inequality, personal qualities are the source of all the rest, riches is that in which they ultimately terminate, because, being the most immediately useful to the prosperity of individuals, and the most easy to communicate, they are made use of to purchase every other distinction. By this observation we are enabled to judge with tolerable exactness, how much any people has deviated from its primitive institution, and what steps it has still to make to the extreme term of corruption. I could show how much this universal desire of reputation, of honours, of preference, with which we are all devoured, exercises and compares our talents and our forces: how much it excites and multiplies our passions; and, by creating an universal competition, rivalship, or rather enmity among men, how many disappointments, successes, and catastrophes of every kind it daily causes among the innumerable pretenders whom it engages in the same career. I could show that it is to this itch of being spoken of, to this fury of distinguishing ourselves which seldom or never gives us a moment's respite, that we owe both the best and the worst things among us, our virtues and our vices, our sciences and our errors, our conquerors and our philosophers; that is to say, a great many bad things to a very few good ones. I could prove, in short, that if we behold a handful of rich and powerful men seated on the pinnacle of fortune and greatness, while the crowd grovel in obscurity and want, it is merely because the first prize what they enjoy but in the same degree that others want it, and that, without changing their condition, they would cease to be happy the minute the people ceased to be miserable.
If this were the right place to go into details, I could easily explain how differences in credit and authority become inevitable among individuals once they come together and start comparing themselves to one another, noticing the disparities that arise from each person's interactions. These disparities come in various forms; however, wealth, social status or title, power, and personal merit are generally the main criteria through which people assess one another in society. I could demonstrate that the balance or conflict between these different factors is a clear indicator of the overall quality of a state’s original structure. I could show that, among these four types of inequality, personal attributes are the root of all others, with wealth being the most tangible outcome. Wealth is ultimately the most directly beneficial for individual prosperity, and since it's the easiest to share, it's often used to acquire other forms of distinction. This observation allows us to accurately gauge how far any group has strayed from its original principles and how much further it must go before reaching total decay. I could illustrate how this universal craving for reputation, honors, and preference, which consumes us all, tests and compares our skills and strengths. It fuels our passions and creates widespread competition—almost rivalry, or even hostility—among people, leading to countless disappointments, achievements, and failures among the many individuals pursuing the same goals. I could argue that this itching need for recognition and our relentless drive to stand out, which rarely gives us a moment's peace, is responsible for both our greatest and our worst traits, our virtues and our vices, our knowledge and our mistakes, our conquerors and our philosophers; that is to say, we owe a great many bad things to very few good ones. In summary, if we see a small group of wealthy and powerful individuals at the height of success while the majority struggle in obscurity and poverty, it’s simply because the first enjoy their position only to the extent that others are lacking, and without a shift in circumstances, they would lose their happiness the instant the masses ceased to suffer.
But these details would alone furnish sufficient matter for a more considerable work, in which might be weighed the advantages and disadvantages of every species of government, relatively to the rights of man in a state of nature, and might likewise be unveiled all the different faces under which inequality has appeared to this day, and may hereafter appear to the end of time, according to the nature of these several governments, and the revolutions time must unavoidably occasion in them. We should then see the multitude oppressed by domestic tyrants in consequence of those very precautions taken by them to guard against foreign masters. We should see oppression increase continually without its being ever possible for the oppressed to know where it would stop, nor what lawful means they had left to check its progress. We should see the rights of citizens, and the liberties of nations extinguished by slow degrees, and the groans, and protestations and appeals of the weak treated as seditious murmurings. We should see policy confine to a mercenary portion of the people the honour of defending the common cause. We should see imposts made necessary by such measures, the disheartened husbandman desert his field even in time of peace, and quit the plough to take up the sword. We should see fatal and whimsical rules laid down concerning the point of honour. We should see the champions of their country sooner or later become her enemies, and perpetually holding their poniards to the breasts of their fellow citizens. Nay, the time would come when they might be heard to say to the oppressor of their country:
But these details alone would provide enough material for a more significant work, where we could evaluate the pros and cons of every type of government in relation to human rights in a natural state. It could also reveal all the different forms that inequality has taken up to now and may take until the end of time, depending on the nature of these governments and the inevitable changes that time will bring to them. We would see the masses oppressed by domestic tyrants as a result of the very measures taken to protect against foreign rulers. We would witness oppression continually growing without the oppressed ever knowing when it would end or what lawful means they had left to stop it. We would observe the rights of citizens and the freedoms of nations gradually extinguished, with the cries, protests, and appeals of the powerless dismissed as mere rebellious murmurs. We would see policies restrict the honor of defending the common cause to a paid subset of the population. We would see taxes become necessary due to such policies, the discouraged farmer abandon his field even in peacetime, leaving the plow to take up arms. We would witness absurd and deadly rules established regarding honor. We would see the champions of their country eventually become its enemies, continually holding their daggers to the hearts of their fellow citizens. Indeed, a time would come when they could be heard saying to the oppressor of their country:
Pectore si fratris gladium juguloque parentis
Condere me jubeas, gravidoeque in viscera partu
Conjugis, in vita peragam tamen omnia dextra.
Pectore si fratris gladium juguloque parentis
Condere me jubeas, gravidoeque in viscera partu
Conjugis, in vita peragam tamen omnia dextra.
From the vast inequality of conditions and fortunes, from the great variety of passions and of talents, of useless arts, of pernicious arts, of frivolous sciences, would issue clouds of prejudices equally contrary to reason, to happiness, to virtue. We should see the chiefs foment everything that tends to weaken men formed into societies by dividing them; everything that, while it gives society an air of apparent harmony, sows in it the seeds of real division; everything that can inspire the different orders with mutual distrust and hatred by an opposition of their rights and interest, and of course strengthen that power which contains them all.
From the huge inequality of circumstances and fortunes, from the wide range of passions and talents, of useless skills, of harmful practices, of trivial studies, would arise waves of prejudices that go against reason, happiness, and virtue. We would see leaders encourage anything that weakens people united in society by dividing them; everything that, while giving society a facade of harmony, actually plants the seeds of real division; everything that can instill mutual distrust and hatred among different groups by opposing their rights and interests, thus strengthening the power that encompasses them all.
'Tis from the bosom of this disorder and these revolutions, that despotism gradually rearing up her hideous crest, and devouring in every part of the state all that still remained sound and untainted, would at last issue to trample upon the laws and the people, and establish herself upon the ruins of the republic. The times immediately preceding this last alteration would be times of calamity and trouble: but at last everything would be swallowed up by the monster; and the people would no longer have chiefs or laws, but only tyrants. At this fatal period all regard to virtue and manners would likewise disappear; for despotism, cui ex honesto nulla est spes, tolerates no other master, wherever it reigns; the moment it speaks, probity and duty lose all their influence, and the blindest obedience is the only virtue the miserable slaves have left them to practise.
From the chaos of this disorder and these revolutions, despotism slowly rises with its monstrous presence, consuming everything in the state that remains healthy and pure. Ultimately, it will trample on the laws and the people, settling on the ruins of the republic. The times right before this final change will be filled with calamity and trouble; but eventually, everything will be consumed by this beast, and the people will no longer have leaders or laws, only tyrants. During this dreadful period, any sense of virtue and decency will also vanish, as despotism, cui ex honesto nulla est spes, accepts no other master wherever it rules. The moment it makes its voice heard, integrity and duty will lose all significance, leaving blind obedience as the only virtue the wretched slaves have left to practice.
This is the last term of inequality, the extreme point which closes the circle and meets that from which we set out. 'Tis here that all private men return to their primitive equality, because they are no longer of any account; and that, the subjects having no longer any law but that of their master, nor the master any other law but his passions, all notions of good and principles of justice again disappear. 'Tis here that everything returns to the sole law of the strongest, and of course to a new state of nature different from that with which we began, in as much as the first was the state of nature in its purity, and the last the consequence of excessive corruption. There is, in other respects, so little difference between these two states, and the contract of government is so much dissolved by despotism, that the despot is no longer master than he continues the strongest, and that, as soon as his slaves can expel him, they may do it without his having the least right to complain of their using him ill. The insurrection, which ends in the death or despotism of a sultan, is as juridical an act as any by which the day before he disposed of the lives and fortunes of his subjects. Force alone upheld him, force alone overturns him. Thus all things take place and succeed in their natural order; and whatever may be the upshot of these hasty and frequent revolutions, no one man has reason to complain of another's injustice, but only of his own indiscretion or bad fortune.
This is the final term of inequality, the extreme point that completes the cycle and connects back to where we began. Here, everyone returns to their basic equality because they no longer hold any significance; and since the subjects have no law other than that of their master, and the master has no other law but his own desires, all ideas of good and principles of justice fade away. Here, everything reverts to the sole law of the strongest, leading to a new state of nature that differs from the initial one, since the first was a pure state of nature, while the last results from extreme corruption. In many ways, there's very little difference between these two states, and the agreement of governance is so thoroughly undermined by tyranny that the tyrant is only in power as long as he remains the strongest. As soon as his subjects can oust him, they can do so without him having any right to complain about their treatment of him. The uprising that results in the death or downfall of a ruler is as legitimate an act as any by which, the day before, he controlled the lives and fortunes of his subjects. Only force keeps him in power, and only force can bring him down. Thus, everything happens and unfolds in its natural order; and regardless of the outcomes of these sudden and frequent revolutions, no one person has any reason to complain about another's injustice, but only about their own foolishness or bad luck.
By thus discovering and following the lost and forgotten tracks, by which man from the natural must have arrived at the civil state; by restoring, with the intermediate positions which I have been just indicating, those which want of leisure obliges me to suppress, or which my imagination has not suggested, every attentive reader must unavoidably be struck at the immense space which separates these two states. 'Tis in this slow succession of things he may meet with the solution of an infinite number of problems in morality and politics, which philosophers are puzzled to solve. He will perceive that, the mankind of one age not being the mankind of another, the reason why Diogenes could not find a man was, that he sought among his cotemporaries the man of an earlier period: Cato, he will then see, fell with Rome and with liberty, because he did not suit the age in which he lived; and the greatest of men served only to astonish that world, which would have cheerfully obeyed him, had he come into it five hundred years earlier. In a word, he will find himself in a condition to understand how the soul and the passions of men by insensible alterations change as it were their nature; how it comes to pass, that at the long run our wants and our pleasures change objects; that, original man vanishing by degrees, society no longer offers to our inspection but an assemblage of artificial men and factitious passions, which are the work of all these new relations, and have no foundation in nature. Reflection teaches us nothing on that head, but what experience perfectly confirms. Savage man and civilised man differ so much at bottom in point of inclinations and passions, that what constitutes the supreme happiness of the one would reduce the other to despair. The first sighs for nothing but repose and liberty; he desires only to live, and to be exempt from labour; nay, the ataraxy of the most confirmed Stoic falls short of his consummate indifference for every other object. On the contrary, the citizen always in motion, is perpetually sweating and toiling, and racking his brains to find out occupations still more laborious: He continues a drudge to his last minute; nay, he courts death to be able to live, or renounces life to acquire immortality. He cringes to men in power whom he hates, and to rich men whom he despises; he sticks at nothing to have the honour of serving them; he is not ashamed to value himself on his own weakness and the protection they afford him; and proud of his chains, he speaks with disdain of those who have not the honour of being the partner of his bondage. What a spectacle must the painful and envied labours of an European minister of state form in the eyes of a Caribbean! How many cruel deaths would not this indolent savage prefer to such a horrid life, which very often is not even sweetened by the pleasure of doing good? But to see the drift of so many cares, his mind should first have affixed some meaning to these words power and reputation; he should be apprised that there are men who consider as something the looks of the rest of mankind, who know how to be happy and satisfied with themselves on the testimony of others sooner than upon their own. In fact, the real source of all those differences, is that the savage lives within himself, whereas the citizen, constantly beside himself, knows only how to live in the opinion of others; insomuch that it is, if I may say so, merely from their judgment that he derives the consciousness of his own existence. It is foreign to my subject to show how this disposition engenders so much indifference for good and evil, notwithstanding so many and such fine discourses of morality; how everything, being reduced to appearances, becomes mere art and mummery; honour, friendship, virtue, and often vice itself, which we at last learn the secret to boast of; how, in short, ever inquiring of others what we are, and never daring to question ourselves on so delicate a point, in the midst of so much philosophy, humanity, and politeness, and so many sublime maxims, we have nothing to show for ourselves but a deceitful and frivolous exterior, honour without virtue, reason without wisdom, and pleasure without happiness. It is sufficient that I have proved that this is not the original condition of man, and that it is merely the spirit of society, and the inequality which society engenders, that thus change and transform all our natural inclinations.
By discovering and following the lost and forgotten paths through which humanity transitioned from nature to civilization, and by restoring the connections that I’ve just mentioned—though I am obliged to skip over some due to lack of time or due to my own imagination not suggesting them—any attentive reader will undoubtedly notice the vast gap separating these two states. In this gradual progression, one might find answers to countless moral and political questions that have puzzled philosophers. They will see that the people of one era are not the same as those of another, and that Diogenes couldn’t find a man because he was searching among contemporaries for someone from an earlier time. Cato, they will observe, fell with Rome and with liberty because he didn’t fit the age he lived in; and the greatest figures only served to astonish a world that would have gladly followed them had they been born five hundred years earlier. In short, they will be able to understand how the soul and the passions of people change almost imperceptibly, as if altering their very nature; how, over time, our desires and pleasures change their objects; and how, as original man gradually disappears, society now presents us with an assembly of artificial people and manufactured passions—products of all these new relationships that have no basis in nature. Reflection offers us little on this, but experience confirms it perfectly. The savage man and the civilized man differ fundamentally in their inclinations and passions, to the extent that what constitutes ultimate happiness for one could drive the other to despair. The former longs for nothing but rest and freedom; he wishes only to live and to be free from work; indeed, even the tranquility of the most steadfast Stoic falls short of his complete indifference to everything else. Conversely, the citizen, always bustling, is constantly sweating and toiling, striving to find even more laborious tasks: he remains a drudge until his last moment; he even embraces death to continue living or gives up life in pursuit of immortality. He fawns over those in power whom he despises and the wealthy whom he loathes; he stops at nothing to earn the honor of serving them; he has no shame in feeling proud of his own weaknesses and their protection; and, proud of his chains, he looks down on those who lack the honor of sharing in his bondage. What a sight the painful and envied labors of a European minister must present to a Caribbean person! How many cruel deaths would this lazy savage not choose over such a miserable existence, one that often lacks the sweetness of doing good? Yet, to understand the purpose of so much worry, he must first attach some significance to the terms power and reputation; he must realize that there are people who find validation in the opinions of others rather than in their own self-satisfaction. In reality, the root of all these differences lies in the fact that the savage lives within himself, while the citizen, constantly focused on external validations, only knows how to exist through the opinions of others; in such a way that, if I may say so, his very awareness of existence comes merely from their judgments. It's outside the scope of my topic to illustrate how this mindset breeds indifference to good and evil, despite so many eloquent moral discussions; how everything, being reduced to appearances, becomes mere performance and pretense; honor, friendship, virtue, and often vice itself, which we eventually learn to take pride in; how, in summary, always asking others who we are and never daring to question ourselves on such a delicate matter, in the midst of all our philosophy, humanity, politeness, and lofty maxims, we end up with nothing to show for ourselves but a deceptive and superficial exterior, honor without virtue, reason without wisdom, and pleasure without happiness. It suffices to demonstrate that this is not humanity's original condition, and that it is merely societal spirit and the inequalities society creates that alter and transform all our natural inclinations.
I have endeavoured to exhibit the origin and progress of inequality, the institution and abuse of political societies, as far as these things are capable of being deduced from the nature of man by the mere light of reason, and independently of those sacred maxims which give to the sovereign authority the sanction of divine right. It follows from this picture, that as there is scarce any inequality among men in a state of nature, all that which we now behold owes its force and its growth to the development of our faculties and the improvement of our understanding, and at last becomes permanent and lawful by the establishment of property and of laws. It likewise follows that moral inequality, authorised by any right that is merely positive, clashes with natural right, as often as it does not combine in the same proportion with physical inequality: a distinction which sufficiently determines, what we are able to think in that respect of that kind of inequality which obtains in all civilised nations, since it is evidently against the law of nature that infancy should command old age, folly conduct wisdom, and a handful of men should be ready to choke with superfluities, while the famished multitude want the commonest necessaries of life.
I have tried to show the origin and development of inequality, the establishment and misuse of political societies, as far as these can be understood from human nature through reason alone, without relying on those sacred beliefs that give the government authority based on divine right. From this perspective, it follows that since there is hardly any inequality among people in a state of nature, everything we see now is the result of our evolving abilities and the advancement of our understanding, which ultimately becomes permanent and legitimate through the establishment of property and laws. It also follows that moral inequality, justified by any rights that are simply based on social convention, conflicts with natural rights whenever it doesn't align proportionately with physical inequality. This distinction clearly indicates what we should think about the kind of inequality that exists in all civilized nations, as it is obviously against the law of nature for the young to command the old, for ignorance to lead wisdom, and for a few people to be overwhelmed with excess while the starving majority lack the most basic necessities of life.
[Transcriber's Note: Some words which appear to be potential typos are printed as such in the original book: These possible words include cotemporaries and oftens. The paragraph starting with the words "This odius system is even" contains unmatched quotes, which have been reproduced as they appeared in the orginal. This work was transcribed from a anthology (Harvard Classics Volume 34) published in 1910. The editor of the entire series was Charles W. Eliot. The name of the translator was not given, nor was the name of the author of the introduction. Indented lines indicate embedded verse that should not be re-wrapped.]
[Transcriber's Note: Some words that seem to be potential typos are printed as such in the original book: These possible words include cotemporaries and oftens. The paragraph starting with the words "This odious system is even" contains unmatched quotes, which have been reproduced as they appeared in the original. This work was transcribed from an anthology (Harvard Classics Volume 34) published in 1910. The editor of the entire series was Charles W. Eliot. The name of the translator was not given, nor was the name of the author of the introduction. Indented lines indicate embedded verse that should not be re-wrapped.]
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