The Primacy of The Common Good
The Primacy of The Common Good
The Primacy of The Common Good
Common Good:
Against the Personalists
and
The Principle of the New
Order.
Charles De Koninck
Edited by Aquinas Review (1997)
Charles De Koninck, who died in 1964, was for many years
the Dean of the Faculté de Philosophie at l'Université Laval in
Quebec. He was as well a professeur auxiliare of the Faculté de
Theologie of the same university and a visiting professor at Notre
Dame. The Aquinas Review here reproduces the work in its
entirety, originally published in French in 1943 by Université
Laval. (Editions Fides.) The translation from the French is by
Sean Collins.
Preface to the Original Edition of 1943.
The work presented here is not an ordinary book. It is pure
wisdom. But one is no longer in the habit of looking at the
practical world in the light of its most profound principles;
except, perhaps, for those inverted thinkers who shake up the
order of thought so that they might better thereafter disturb the
real order, the political and moral order, and organize with an
innocent air the most radical revolutions, those which finish by
being altogether the most bloody and cynical. At the same time,
good souls raise their hands with terror and scandal; but little by
little they come to think like the revolutionaries, not noticing
the equivocations hidden under seemingly acceptable formulas,
nor noticing that such concession is a way of actually
cooperating with the shedding of blood.
The author sees undoubtedly better than most the horrible
perils and the social disorders which are borne of Nazism and
communism.
He sees them better because he penetrates their false wisdom,
the principles which remain in latent activity under the
advances and retreats of these organizations of disorder. He sees
these principles in all of their perfidiousness, in their truth
turned backwards, truth poisoned by the germ of pride which
then uses terms of truth to make them carry error, and words of
virtue to cover sin and evil. And what horrifies him, what grips
his soul, is that the good, sometimes the best among us, accustom
themselves, perhaps at first frightened by the revolutions which
unfold before their eyes, to conceive amiss the essence of what
they witness, letting their minds be intoxicated with the most
deleterious formulas. In a word the cause of fright is that the
world grows accustomed to think as a communist does, as a
Marxist, a radical negator, first unconscious, befuddled, and
then cynical and enthusiastic, negating all things which are true
because they are real, just because ordered, all that perfects man
because it is subordinated to God and rectified by order to the
true sovereign end.
In former studies the author has already shown the historical
origins and the evolution of this essentially deviant and
corrosive philosophy. One must go back to the Averoism which
seeks emancipation from the natural order, to voluntarism
which tends towards the emancipation of desire, to nominalism
which conduces towards emancipation of human discourse, to
the moralism of good will which seeks the emancipation of
sentiment, to methodic and pretended skepticism which seeks
the emancipation of purely human thought, to Kantian
subjectivism which tends towards the emancipation of reason
against understanding and of rights against the common good,
and which has continued its avatars in the emancipated dialectic
of Hegel, turning against all nature in Marxism, acquiring its
power of destruction in Bolschevism and Nazism. And it is from
seeing how, little by little, even on the part of the traditional,
revolutionary thought gains more or less conscious adherents,
that the author finds himself both horrified and inflamed with
zeal for the truth.
Currently, it is personalism which has become fashionable.
Very sincere minds advocate it. The dignity of the human
person is exalted; respect for the human person is desired;
authors write to defend a personalist order, and one works to
create a civilization which is for man.... That is all very well, but
too simple, for the person, man, is not ordered to himself as his
end, nor is he the end of everything. The person has God as his
end, and to want to borrow the language of others, even when
one seems to correct it by the charm of the best adjectives (have
they not even gone as far as to speak of the "dialectical
materialism of Aristotle and Saint Thomas" to designate their
natural doctrine?), even if one does not exclude the tacit
suppositions which orthodoxy requires, one still implies the
thought of others, a thought which is naturalist and atheist even
if only by its indifference, radically humanist, and one
encourages the overthrow of civilization because one
overthrows language, and with it philosophy and theology. It is
this that the author rises up against. He is not mistaken. For now
is the time, more than ever, to cry out in warning. Now is the
time to hope that societies will not reorganize themselves
around the individual person, but around the common good, in
its various degrees, that is, around the sovereign end, that is,
around God.
The author openly attacks the personalists, but in order to
truly defend the dignity of the human person. His study insists
without flattery on the greatness of the person. It is opposed to
any doctrine which, under pretext of glorification, diminishes
and atrophies the human person and deprives it of its most
divine goods.
***
Among the Christian thinkers today there is agreement
concerning the social facts of the contemporary age, but at the
same time one discerns among them two clearly contrary
tendencies when it comes to interpreting those facts.
Everyone seems to recognize that political society fails more
and more in its obligations, that it is dissolving and becoming
less worthy of its most essential tasks; it cares no longer about
God, about the soul, about nontemporal goods; it drowns and
consumes itself in entirely economic preoccupations and in
corporeal well-being. That is what, in fact, makes the
responsibility of the family grow heavier, for under the
constraint of circumstances the family must supply more and
more of the goods which it itself should expect from public
society. But--alas!--the same authors see moreover a constantly
growing dissolution of the family; the individual person is more
and more isolated and abandoned to himself by the home, as the
family is by the society. What to do?
When it comes to interpreting these facts, so as to correct the
misfortunes, some, imbued with the idea of Progress, see in this
increasing dissolution a reemphasis of the true hierarchy; in the
utter failure of civil society, they find a good which inclines
them to justify this failure, namely the opportunity for the
individual person, whom they conceive as the term of all human
order, to climb back onto his pedestal, to shine forth more
brilliantly, forgetting that by nature the person is a part of the
greater order, that one does not fully and profoundly attain
perfection except by reason of the various common goods to
which one is in fact ordered as to the greatest goods, which have
at the very summit, as beginning and end, that sovereign
common good which is God Himself. They make, in effect, an
essential concession to Marxism. They pervert the rule of
Christian optimism, God only permits evil if He can bring a greater
good out of it, by confusing evolutionary progress with perfection
which is necessarily based on order and which rests on the
essential and immutable.
Others, on the contrary, and our author is decisively among
them, see in this social and familial dissolution, predicted and
deplored by the most authoritative voice, namely that of the
Church, a pure and simple increase of human misery, a gradual
impoverishment. And they see that this collapse is the natural
consequence of exploiting civil society and the family for the
profit of an individual person.
It is true that the role of the family must increase--it always
ought to--but it must do so now so much the more because the
very existence of the family is threatened. It is true that now it
has become more important than ever to insist upon the dignity
of the individual person, to say it out loud, to the public powers,
and to individual persons. The person must be saved in spite of
the corruption of the family environment and the social
environment. But that does not at all imply that the corruption
of the environment is good, an occasion for the person to
demonstrate richer qualities. You have lost an eye. Now the one
which remains requires more care and special prudence.
Understood. But should the semi-blind man console himself by
pretending it is better to have one eye than two, on account of
the value which the remaining one receives? Because of practical
expedients for surmounting misfortune, should we theoretically
renounce things better in themselves? Must the speculative
order then be subject to the practical? Must we falsify the dignity
of the person and preach personalism because corrupt society no
longer fulfills its role towards the common good, and because
the person is thus deprived of those supports which would be
natural to him if the family and society remained centered on
the notion of the common good?
There is the thesis of this work: the primacy of the common
good, in society, in the family, for the soul itself, provided that
the notion of a common good is well understood, as the greatest
good of the singular, not by being a collection of singular goods,
but best for each of the particular individuals who participate in
it precisely on account of its being common. Those who defend
the primacy of the singular good of the singular person suppose
a false notion of the common good as if it were alien to the good
of the singular; whereas it is natural and proper that the singular
seek more the good of the species than his singular good. Since
the person, an intellectual substance, is a part of the universe in
whom the perfection of the whole universe can exist according
to knowledge, his most proper good as intellectual substance will
be the good of the universe, which is an essentially common
good.
Rational creatures, persons, are distinguished from irrational,
by being more ordered to the common good and by being able to
act expressly for its sake. It is true also that a person can
perversely prefer his own singular good to the common good,
attaching himself to the singularity of his person, or as we say
today to his personality, set up as a common measure of all good.
Furthermore, if the reasonable creature cannot entirely limit
himself to a subordinate common good, such as the family or
political society, this is not because his particular good as such is
greater; it is because of his proper ordination to a superior
common good to which he is principally ordered. In this
case, the common good is not sacrificed to the good of the
individual as individual, but to the good of the individual insofar
as the latter is ordered to a more universal common good, indeed
to God. A society consisting of persons who love their private
good above the common good, or who identify the common good
with a private good, is not a society of free men, but of tyrants,
who menace each other by force, and in which the final head is
merely the most astute and the strongest among the tyrants, the
subjects being nothing but frustrated tyrants.
That is the substance of the book. It establishes its position
by the hammer of reason, striking blows firmly on the anvil of
fundamental and evident notions, the iron hot with the truth,
making clear as well the inconsistency and absurdity of
equivocation and error.
The dissolution of human societies would not be such a great
evil if it was not the corruption of the greatest of human goods,
the common good, and if that did not at the same time lead to
clouding of the very notion of a common good. One cannot build
a better society with personalism, if one destroys the very
principle of all society, the very first principle which is the
common good.
It is therefore not in a personalist conception of marriage, nor in
a so-called Christian and socialist personalism, which both result
from theoretical and ethical concessions to error, that one will
be able to find the solution to the problems which deviations
from the truth more and more tragically produce. It is always
the truth which must deliver us. But these conceptions merely
aim to push to the point of exasperation the perilous solitude in
which the human person is placed, once he is detached and
isolated from the common good under the pretext of exalting his
dignity.
***
Some have dared to see, in the insistence of Encyclicals on the
dignity of the person, a late recognition of the doctrine of
personal emancipation. They go even so far as to say that
communism will be a salutary expedient for putting the new
conception of society into practice; some think the danger of
such evil doctrines is exaggerated, that it is in the logic of things
that human nature should always come out victorious.
And so it is that now the most evident truths, and the most
firmly established principles, are to be subjected to a historical
dialectic. The errors that the popes have not ceased to condemn
are supposed to have become now, after mature reflection and
thanks to new perspectives furnished by the advantage of new
experience, very just claims. Certain Catholics even suggest,
forgetting that Pope Pius XI denounced communism as a false
redemption and as intrinsically perverse (in the
Encyclical Divini Redemptoris), that the Church has not made the
concessions that it ought to make, and that could save so many
generous souls vexed by its rebuffs. Ingratitude and blasphemy.
They find our Mother the holy Church to be at fault precisely
where She shows Herself to be heroic. For the Church defends
the person against the very consequences of doctrines which,
following a false conception of the state, following the exclusive
preoccupation which States have for the purely personal good,
following the apathy of persons towards the common good, have
given to the state a growing and blind power to crush.
There will only be a still greater manifestation of the Divine
mercy, which can save the person from the solitude into which
men have placed him. Karl Marx observed that privation
increases in the world, but this privation according to him is
merely an occasion for man to show his own power; he called
upon man purely as man to correct such privation; not at all
upon man as ordered to the common good, ordered to God.
We, faced with the greatest of menaces, still maintain the
truth, namely that the person must rely upon the family and the
society, and that all created order must rely upon God. We, faced
with the scandal of the world which scorns the hungry and those
who seek justice, we call upon God, upon His hidden mercy.
And faced with a world which thinks badly in order to
accommodate evil realities, which wants to find good in evil, we
have no easy solutions, none but to correct the facts according to
the principles of all good.
Evil could not exist if God could not draw good from it; evil
could not be so great, if God could not draw from it a greater
good. But woe to those who, either by teaching or by action, push
men into that extreme indulgence, into that infernal solitude in
which the person himself would perish unless the pure liberality
of God does not save him. Woe to those who encourage evil ut
eveniat bonum.
When the tempter addresses himself to men, he knows that he
must speak to them of divinity; you will be like gods. Since then,
every attack against religion and truth, against the rights of God
and the true dignity of the person, has been made in analogous
terms. Even Karl Marx could gain a hearing only by proclaiming
that "the human consciousness is the highest divinity." But just
as Divine mercy increases over the course of time, so also does
the cleverness of the devil grow sharper. Listen attentively to the
warning of the Apostle: I do fear lest, as Eve was seduced by the
cleverness of the serpent, your thoughts also be corrupted and lose their
simplicity with regard to Christ. (II Cor. XI, 3)
In circuitu impii ambulant, according to the Book of Psalms (XI,
9). The evil walk in circles without ceasing. And they always
come back to the attack. When they have been chased out one
door, they try to enter by another, especially by one where they
are not expected.
We must expect a more veiled return of the most ill-omened
doctrines of the past. There is perhaps no doctrine that has had
more rebirths than the many-headed monster, Pelagianism.
That is still another reason for Christians to proclaim the
necessity of grace for saving man from sin and for healing his
wounds, to proclaim that the person is nothing except by
imitation of God, by participation in uncreated Being, by
ordination to the divine common good, by the supernatural
vocation to partake in the life and splendor of the Lord.
May the sons of St. Thomas, who directly bestir themselves
even as the shadow of this peril appears, obtain from God that
they might never weaken in their vigilance.
That is the justified warning of the author of The Primacy of
the Common Good Against the Personalists.
Some would dispute, under pretext of prudence, whether
there should be relentless agitation about the irresolvable
doctrinal differences which are the object of this study. To them
we recall these words of the Apostle, which one finds in the
Epistle of the Mass for a Doctor: Before God and before Christ
Jesus, I put this duty to you, in the name of His Appearing and of His
kingdom: proclaim the message and, welcome or unwelcome, insist on
it. Refute falsehood, correct error, call to obedience--but do all with
patience and with the intention of teaching. The time is sure to come
when, far from being content with sound teaching, people will be avid
for the latest novelty and collect themselves a whole series of teachers
according to their own tastes; and then, instead of listening to the truth,
they will turn to myths (II Timothy IV:1-4).
Appendices
I. Personal Fulfilment
II. Every Person Desires His Good
III. Nebuchadnezzar, my Servant
IV. Feuerbach Interprets St. Thomas
V. The Revolution of the Natural Philosophers
FOREWORD
Human society is made for man. Any political doctrine which
ignores the rational nature of man, and which consequently
denies the freedom and dignity of man, is vitiated at its very
roots and subjects man to inhuman conditions. It is therefore
with good reason that totalitarian doctrines are rejected in the
name of human dignity.
Does this mean that we must agree with all of those who
invoke the dignity of man? It must not be forgotten that the
philosophers responsible for modern totalitarianism did not
deny the dignity of the human person; on the contrary, they
exalted this dignity more than ever before. Hence it is evidently
necessary to determine what the dignity of man consists of.
The Marxists push the dignity of man even to the point of
denying God. "Philosophy makes no secret of it," Marx says.
"The profession of Prometheus: 'in a word, I hate all gods... ,' is
the profession of philosophy itself, the discourse which it holds
and which it will always hold against every god of heaven and
earth which does not recognize human consciousness as the
highest divinity. This divinity suffers no rival."
Let us not forget that the sin of him who sins since the
beginning consisted in the exaltation of his personal dignity
and of the proper good of his nature; he preferred his proper
good to the common good, to a beatitude which was
participated and common to many; he refused this latter
because it was participated and common. Even though he
possessed his natural happiness and the excellence of his
person by no special favor, but rather by a right founded on his
creation itself--to God he owed his creation, but all else
belonged properly to him--, by this invitation to participate he
felt injured in his proper dignity. "Taking hold of their proper
dignity (the fallen angels) desired their 'singularity,' which is
most proper to those who are proud."
The dignity of the created person is not without ties, and the
purpose of our liberty is not to overcome these ties, but to free
us by strengthening them. These ties are the principal cause of
our dignity. Liberty itself is not a guarantee of dignity and of
practical truth. "Even aversion towards God has the character
of an end insofar as it is desired under the notion of liberty, as
according to the words of Jeremiah (II, 20): For a long time you
have broken the yoke, you have broken bonds, and you have
said, 'I will not serve.'1
One can affirm personal dignity and at the same time be in
very bad company. Does it suffice then to affirm the primacy of
the common good? That will not suffice either. Totalitarian
regimes recognize the common good as a pretext for
subjugating persons in the most ignoble way. Compared with
the slavery with which they menace us, the slavery of brute
animals is liberty. Shall we be so lax as to allow totalitarianism
this perversion of the common good and of its primacy?
Might there not be, between the exaltation of the entirely
personal good above any good that is truly common on the one
hand, and the negation of the dignity of persons on the other, a
very logical connection which could be seen working in the
course of history? The sin of the angels was practically a
personalist error: they preferred the dignity of their own
person to the dignity which they would receive through their
subordination to a good which was superior but common in its
very superiority. The Pelagian heresy, according to John of St.
Thomas, can be considered as somewhat like the sin of the
angels. It is only somewhat like it, because whereas the angels
committed a purely practical sin, the error of the Pelagians was
at the same time speculative.2 We believe that modern
personalism is but a reflection of the Pelagian heresy,
speculatively still more feeble. It raises to the level of a
speculative doctrine an error which was at the beginning only
practical. The enslavement of the person in the name of the
common good is like a diabolical vengeance, both remarkable
1
S. Thomas, IIIa Pars, q. 8, n. 7, c.
2
John of S. Thomas, loc. cit., n. 39, p. 954.
and cruel, a cunning attack against the community of good to
which the devil refused to submit. The denial of the
higher dignity which man receives through the subordination
of his purely personal good to the common good would ensure
the denial of all human dignity.
We do not mean to claim that the error of those who today
call themselves personalists is anything more than speculative.
Let there be no ambiguity about this. Undoubtedly our
insistence could injure those personalists who have identified
themselves with what they hold. That is their own very
personal responsibility. But we have our responsibility as well-
-and we judge this doctrine to be pernicious in the extreme.
“... Although the (fallen) Angel was really abased by this
abandonment of superior goods, although he was, as St. Augustine
says, fallen to the level of his proper good, nonetheless he elevated
himself in his own eyes, and he forced himself, by mighty arguments
(magna negotiatione) to prove completely to others that he aimed
in this only at a greater resemblance with God, because thus he
proceeded with less dependence on His grace and His favors, and in
a more personal manner (magis singulariter), and also by not
communicating with inferiors”.
John of St. Thomas, On the Evil of the Angels.
“I will never exchange, be sure, my miserable lot to serve you. I would
rather be bound to this rock than be the faithful valet, the messenger of
Father Zeus”.
Prometheus, cited by Karl Marx
I
ON THE PRIMACY OF THE COMMON GOOD
AGAINST THE PERSONALISTS.
The Common Good and against its Primacy.
The good is what all things desire insofar as they desire their
perfection. Therefore the good has the notion of a final cause.
Hence it is the first of causes, and consequently diffusive of
itself. But "the higher a cause is, the more numerous the beings
to which it extends its causality. For a more elevated cause has a
more elevated proper effect, which is more common and present
in many things."5 "Whence it follows that the good, which has
the notion of a final cause, is so much the more efficacious as it
communicates itself to more numerous beings. And therefore, if
the same thing is a good for each individual of a city and for the
city itself, it is clear that it is much greater and more perfect to
have at heart--that is, to secure and defend--that which is the
good of the entire city than that which is the good of a single
man. Certainly the love that should exist between men has for
its end to conserve the good even of the individual. But it is
much better and more divine to show this love towards the
entire nation and towards cities. Or, if it is certainly desirable
sometimes to show this love to a single city, it is much more
divine to show it for the entire nation, which contains several
cities. We say that it is more 'divine' because it is more like God,
who is the ultimate cause of all goods."6
The common good differs from the singular good by this very
universality. It has the character of superabundance and it is
eminently diffusive of itself insofar as it is more communicable:
it reaches the singular more than the singular good: it is the
greater good of the singular.
The common good is greater not because it includes the
singular good of all the singulars; in that case it would not have
the unity of the common good which comes from a certain kind
of universality in the latter, but would merely be a collection,
and only materially better than the singular good. The common
good is better for each of the particulars which participate in it,
insofar as it is communicable to the other particulars;
communicability is the very reason for its perfection. The
particular attains to the common good considered precisely as
common good only insofar as it attains to it as to something
communicable to others. The good of the family is better than
the singular good not because all the members of the family find
therein their singular good; it is better because, for each of the
individual members, it is also the good of the others. That does
not mean that the others are the reason for the love which the
common good itself merits; on the contrary, in this formal
relationship it is the others which are lovable insofar as they are
able to participate in this common good.
Thus the common good is not a good other than the good of
the particulars, a good which is merely the good of the
collectivity looked upon as a kind of singular. In that case, it
would be common only accidentally; properly speaking it would
be singular, or if you wish, it would differ from the singular by
being nullius. But when we distinguish the common good from
the particular good, we do not mean thereby that it is not the
good of the particulars; if it were not, then it would not be truly
common.
The good is what all things desire insofar as they desire their
perfection. This perfection is for each thing its good--bonum
suum--and in this sense, its good is a proper good. But thus the
proper good is not opposed to the common good. For the proper
good to which a being tends, the 'bonum suum', can in fact be
understood in different ways, according to the diverse good in
which it finds its perfection.7 It can be understood first of the
proper good of a particular considered as an individual. It is this
good which animals pursue when they desire nourishment for
conserving their being. Secondly, it can be understood as the
good of a particular on account of the species of the particular.
This is the good which an animal desires in the generation, the
nutrition, and the defense of the individuals of its species. The
singular animal 'naturally'--i.e., in virtue of the inclination
which is in it by nature (ratio indita rebus ab arte divina) prefers
the good of its species to its singular good. "Every singular
naturally loves the good of its species more than its singular
good."8 For the good of the species is a greater good for the
singular than its singular good. This is not therefore a species
prescinded from individuals, which desires its good against the
natural desire of the individual; it is the singular itself, which,
by nature, desires more the good of the species than its particular
good. This desire for the common good is in the singular itself.
Hence the common good does not have the character of an alien
good--bonum alienum--as in the case of the good of another
considered as such.9 Is it not this which, in the social order,
distinguishes our position profoundly from collectivism, which
latter errs by abstraction, by demanding an alienation from the
proper good as such and consequently from the common good
since the latter is the greatest of proper goods? Those who defend
the primacy of the singular good of the singular person are
themselves supposing this false notion of the common good. In
the third place, the good of a particular can be understood of that
good which belongs to it according to its genus. This is the good
of equivocal agents and of intellectual substances, whose action
can by itself attain not only to the good of the species, but also
to a greater good, one which is communicable to many species.
In the fourth place, the good of a particular can be understood of
that good which belongs to it on account of the similitude of
analogy which "principled things" (i.e., things which proceed
from a principle) bear to their principle. Thus God, a purely and
simply universal good, is the proper good which all things
naturally desire as their highest and greatest good, the good
which which gives all things their entire being. In short, "nature
turns back to itself not only in that which is singular, but much
more in that which is common: for every being tends to conserve
not only its individual, but also its species. And much more is
every being borne naturally towards that which is the absolute
universal good."10
Thence one sees to what a profound degree nature is a
participation in intellect. It is thanks to this participation in
intellect that every nature tends principally towards a universal
good.
In that desire which follows knowledge, we find a similar
order. Beings are more perfect to the degree that their desire
extends to a good more distant from their mere singular good.
The knowledge of irrational animals is bound to the sensible
singular, and hence their desire cannot extend beyond the
singular and private good; explicit action for a common good
presupposes a knowledge which is universal. Intellectual
substance being "comprehensiva totius entis"11, being in other words
a part of the universe in which the perfection of the entire
universe can exist according to knowledge12, the most proper
good of it taken as intellectual substance is the good of the
universe, an essentially common good. Intellectual substance
cannot be said to be this good in the way that it can be said to be
the universe according to knowledge. It is indeed worth noting
here the radical difference which exists between desire and
knowledge: 'the known is in the knower; the good is in things'.
If, like that which is known, the good were in the one who loves,
we would ourselves be the good of the universe.
Consequently inferior beings differ from superior ones in that
the most perfect good which they know is identified with their
singular good, and in that the good which they can give is
restricted to the good of the individual. "The more the virtue of
a being is perfect and against its degree of goodness eminent, the
more its desire for the good is universal and the more it seeks
and works towards the good in beings which are distant from
itself. For imperfect beings tend towards the mere good of the
individual as properly understood; perfect beings tend towards
the good of the species; and the most perfect beings towards the
good of the genus. But God, Who is most perfectly good, tends
towards the good of being as a whole. And thus not without
reason it is said that the good as such is diffusive; for the more a
being is good, the more it spreads forth its goodness to beings
which are further from itself. And because that which is most
perfect in each genus is the exemplar and measure of all which
is contained in the genus, God, Who is most perfect in goodness
and Who spreads forth this goodness most universally, must be
the exemplar of all beings which give forth any goodness."13 It is
the created common good, of any order, which imitates most
properly the absolute common good.
Thus one sees that the more a being is perfect, the more it
implies relation to the common good, and the more it acts
principally for this good which not only in itself but also for the
being which acts for it is the greatest. Rational creatures,
persons, distinguish themselves from irrational beings in that
they are more ordered to the common good and in that they can
act expressly towards it. It is true as well that perversely they
can prefer the singular good of their person to the common good,
by attaching themselves to the singularity of their person, or as
we say today, to their personality, set up as though it were a
common measure of every good. Further, if a rational creature
cannot limit itself entirely to a subordinate common good, such
as the good of the family or the good of public society, this is not
because its singular good as such is greater; rather it is because
of its order to a superior common good to which it is principally
ordered. In this case the common good is not sacrificed for the
good of the individual as individual, but rather for the good of
the individual considered as ordered to a more universal
common good. Singularity alone cannot be the reason per se. In
every genus the common good is superior. Comparison to cases
which go beyond a single genus, far from disproving this
principle, will presuppose it and confirm it.
It is in the most perfect created persons, pure spirits, that one
sees best this profound ordering towards the common good. For
the common good is more theirs in proportion as they are more
intelligent. "Since desire follows knowledge, the more universal
a knowledge is, the more the desire which derives from it tends
towards the common good; and the more a knowledge is
particular, the more the desire which derives from it is borne
towards the private good. Thus it is that in us love of the private
good follows sensible knowledge, but the love of the common
and absolute good follows intellectual knowledge. Thus, because
the angels have a knowledge which is more elevated to the extent
that they themselves are more perfect ... , their love tends more
towards the common good."14 And this love of the common good
is so perfect and so great that the angels love their inequality and
the very subordination of their singular good, which is always
more distant from their common good, more subjected and more
conformed thereto in proportion as they are higher in perfection.
"Therefore by being different in species, as this pertains more to
the perfection of the universe, they love each other more than if
they were of one species, which would be fitting to the private
good of a single species."15 And this greater good exists because
"their love looks more to the common good."
In sum, according to those authors who put the common good
of persons in second place, the more perfect angels would also be
the more subject and the least free. By his attachment to the
common good, the citizen would be in truth the slave, whereas
this latter would be the one who was free. For the slave lived
principally on the margin of society, and he was free from the
order of society, as the stone in a heap is free from the order of a
being. "As it is with a house," said Aristotle, "so it is with the
world, where free men are not at all subject to doing this or that
according to occasional circumstances, but all of their functions,
or the greater number of them are ruled; for slaves or beasts of
burden, on the contrary, there are but a few things that have any
relation to the common good, and most things are left to
arbitrary decision."16 In Marxist personalism, which is
accomplished in the last phase of communism, the citizen is
nothing other than a slave to whom one gives, while he remains
in the condition of a slave, a title of apparent liberty by which
even participation in true liberty is taken away.17
The common good is both in itself and for us more lovable
than the private good. But there could still remain a confusion,
for one can love the common good in two ways. One can love it
to possess it, and one can love it for its conservation and against
its diffusion. In effect, one can say: I prefer the common good
because its possession is for me a greater good. But this is not a
love of the common good as common good. It is a love which
identifies the common good with the good of the singular person
considered as such. "To love the good of a city in order to
appropriate it and possess it for oneself is not what the good
political man does; for thus it is that the tyrant, too, loves the
good of the city, in order to dominate it, which is to love oneself
more than the city; in effect it is for himself that the tyrant
desires this good, and not for the city. But to love the good of the
city in order that it be conserved and defended, this is truly to
love the city, and it is what the good political man does, even so
that, in order to conserve or augment the good of the city, he
exposes himself to the danger of death and neglects his private
good." And St. Thomas immediately applies this distinction to
supernatural beatitude in which the notion of common good
exists most perfectly: "Thus to love the good in which the
blessed participate in order to acquire or possess it does not make
man well disposed towards it, for the evil envy this good also;
but to love it in itself, in order that it be conserved and spread,
and so that nothing be done against it, this is what makes man
well disposed to this society of the blessed; and this is what
charity consists of, to love God for himself, and the neighbor
who is capable of beatitude as oneself."18 Hence one cannot love
the common good without loving it in its capacity to be
participated in by others. The fallen angels did not refuse the
perfection of the good which was offered to them; they refused
the fact of its being common, and they despised
this community. If truly the good of their singular person
should have been first, how could they have sinned against the
common good? And most of all, how could the most naturally
worthy rational creature fall away from the most divine good
that exists?
A society constituted by persons who love their private good
above the common good, or who identify the common good with
the private good, is a society not of free men, but of tyrants--
"and thus the entire people becomes like one tyrant"19--who lead
each other by force, in which the ultimate head is no one other
than the most clever and strong among the tyrants, the subjects
being merely frustrated tyrants. This refusal of the common
good proceeds, at root, from mistrust and contempt of persons.
There are those who have tried to maintain that the good of
the singular person is purely and simply superior to the common
good, basing themselves on the absolute transcendance of
supernatural beatitude--as though this beatitude were not, in its
transcendence and even through its transcendence, the most
universal common good which must be loved for itself and for
its own spreading. This ultimate good does not distinguish itself
from inferior common goods by being a singular good of the
individual person. One can, indeed, play upon the words
'particular', 'proper', and 'singular.' "The proper good of man
must be understood in diverse ways, according as man is taken
in diverse ways. For the proper good of man considered as man
is the good of reason, because for man, to be is to be rational. But
the good of man considered as a maker is the artistic good; and
likewise considered as a political being, his good is the common
good of the city."20 But just as the good of man considered as
citizen is not the good of man considered as man simply, so also
the good of beatitude is not the good of man only as man, nor
the good of man as citizen of civil society, but as citizen of the
celestial city. "To be politically good one must love the good of
the city. But if man, insofar as he is admitted to participate in
the good of some city and is made the citizen thereof, needs
certain virtues to accomplish the things which pertain to citizens
and to love the good of the city; so also is it for the man who,
admitted by grace to the participation in celestial beatitude
which consists in the vision and enjoyment of God, becomes as
it were a citizen and member of this blessed society which is
called the celestial Jerusalem, according to the words of St. Paul
to the Ephesians, II, 19: You are citizens of the city of saints, and
members of the family of God."21 And as the virtues of man
considered simply as such do not suffice to rectify us towards
the common good of civil society, so also there must be entirely
particular virtues, most superior and noble ones, to order us to
beatitude, and beatitude considered under the very formal aspect
of common good: "Therefore, to the man thus admitted to
celestial life, certain free virtues are necessary; the infused
virtues namely, whose proper exercise presupposes the love of
the common good of the entire society, namely the divine good
insofar as it is the object of beatitude."22 And it is here that St.
Thomas makes the distinction cited above between the love of
possession and the love of diffusion. You are citizens, especially
in this beatitude in which the common good has more than
anywhere else the notion of common good.
The elevation to the supernatural order only increases the
dependence of the good of the singular person, considered as
such, on a higher and more distant good. If a monastic virtue
cannot accomplish an act ordered to the common good of civil
society except insofar as it is elevated by a superior virtue which
looks properly to this common good, it will be still less able to
do so when the common good is properly divine: "Since there
can be no merit without charity, the act of acquired virtue cannot
be meritorious without charity.... For a virtue ordered to an
inferior end cannot accomplish this act ordered to a superior end,
except by means of a superior virtue. For example, the strength
which is the virtue of a man considered as man cannot order the
action of a man to the political good, except by means of the
strength which is the virtue of man considered as citizen."23 The
strength of a man considered as man by which he defends the
good of his person does not suffice in order to sufficiently
defend the common good. That society is very corrupt which
cannot call upon the love of the arduous common good and the
superior force of the citizen considered as citizen, but which
must present its good under the shape of the good of the singular
person.
We must not treat the virtues of the political man as mere
accessory complements of the virtues of man considered simply
as man. It is imagined that the latter are more profound, while
yet on the other hand it is imagined that a man who is evil in his
personal or domestic life might still be a good political man.
That is a sign of the contempt bestowed upon whatever formally
regards the common good. But "those will attain to an eminent
degree of celestial beatitude who fulfill in a noble and
praiseworthy manner the office of king. For if that happiness
which virtue achieves is a recompense, it follows that the greater
virtue will lead to the greater happiness which is its due. But the
virtue by which a man can not only direct himself but others as
well is a superior virtue; and it is so much the more superior as
it is able to direct a greater number of men; just as someone is
reputed more virtuous according to corporal virtues when he can
overcome a greater number of adversaries, or lift a greater
weight. Thus, a greater virtue is required to direct a family than
to direct oneself, and a still greater virtue to govern a city and a
kingdom.... But one is more pleasing to God insofar as he
imitates God more: hence this admonition of the Apostle to the
Ephesians, V, 1: Be imitators of God, as beloved sons. But, as the
Sage says: 'Every animal likes its like, insofar as effects have a
certain likeness to their cause; thence it follows that good kings
are very pleasing to God and that they will receive from Him a
very great recompense.' "24
The position which holds that the good of the singular person
considered as such should be superior to the good of the
community becomes abominable when one considers that the
person is himself the object of the love of his singular good. "...
As love has for its object the good, it is also diversified according
to the diversity of goods. But there is a good proper to a man as
the latter is a singular person; and as for the love which has this
good for its object, each person is the principal object of his own
love. But there is a common good which belongs to this or that
individual insofar as he is a part of some whole, as for example
to the soldier insofar as he is a part of the army, and to the citizen
insofar as he is a part of the city; and in regard to the love whose
object is this good, its principal object is that in which this good
principally exists, as the good of the army in the head of the
army, and the good of the city in the king; that is why it is the
duty of the good soldier to neglect even his proper safety in order
to conserve the good of his head, just as a man will naturally
expose his arm in order to conserve his head...."25
In other words, the highest good of a man belongs to him not
insofar as he is himself a certain whole in which the self is the
principal object of his love, but "insofar as he is part of a whole,"
a whole which is accessible to him because of the very
universality of his knowledge. You say that the notion of part is
not appropriate to man considered in his relation to the ultimate
end? Here is the text immediately following what was just cited:
"... and it is in this way that charity has, for its principal object,
the divine good, which is the good of each according as each is
able to participate in beatitude."26 Thus it is indeed as part that
we are ordered to this greatest of all goods which can only be
ours most completely through being communicable to others. If
the divine good were formally "a proper good of man insofar as
he is a singular person", we should ourselves be the measure of
this good, which is very properly an abomination.
Even the love of the proper good of the singular person
depends on the love of the common good. For indeed we have so
perfectly the nature of a part that rectification with regard to the
proper good cannot be real unless it is in conformity with, and
subordinated to, the common good. "... The goodness of every
part is in its relation to the whole: that is why Augustine says
that 'every part is bad which is not conformed to the whole'.
Therefore, since every man is part of the city, it is impossible
that a man be good if he is not perfectly proportioned to the
common good; and the whole itself cannot well exist except by
means of parts which are proportioned to it."27 This ordering is
so integral that those who strive towards the common good
strive towards their own proper good ex consequenti: "because,
first, the proper good cannot exist without the common good of
the family, of the city, or of the kingdom. For which reason
Valerius Maximus says of the ancient Romans that 'they
preferred to be poor in a rich empire than to be rich in a poor
empire'. And because, in the second place, as man is a part of the
household and of the city, it is necessary for him to judge what
is good for himself in the light of prudence, whose object is the
good of the multitude; for the right disposition of the part is
found in its relation with the whole."28 And this appears most
strikingly in the common good of beatitude, in which the very
universality of the good is the principle whereby it constitutes
blessedness for the singular person. For it is indeed by reason of
its universality that it can be the source of blessedness for the
singular person. And this communication with the common
good founds the communication among singular persons extra
verbum: the common good insofar as it is common is the root of
this communication which would not be possible if the Divine
good were not already loved in its communicability to others:
"praeexigitur amor boni communis toti societati, quod est
bonum divinum, prout est beatitudinis objectum."29
If it is conceded that singular persons are ordered to the
ultimate separate good insofar as the latter has the notion of
common good, one is still not likely to concede very willingly
that, in the universe itself, persons are not willed except for the
good of the order of the universe, a common intrinsic good
which is better than the singular persons which materially
constitute it. It is preferred that the order of the universe be
thought of as a mere superstructure of persons whom God wills,
not as parts, but as radically independent wholes, and as parts
only secondarily. For is it not true that rational creatures differ
from irrational ones in that they are willed and governed for
themselves, not only with regard to their species, but also with
regard to the individual? "The acts ... of the rational creature are
directed by Divine providence, not only on account of their
pertaining to a species, but also insofar as they are personal
acts."30 Therefore, one apparently concludes, individual persons
are themselves goods willed first of all for themselves, and in
themselves superior to the good of the accidental whole whose
constitution out of them is a kind of consequence and
complement of their own existence.
But what is the end which God intends in the production of
things? "God produced the being of all things, not by natural
necessity, but by his intellect and will. His intellect and will can
have nothing for an ultimate end other than His own goodness,
which He communicates to things. Things participate in Divine
goodness through similitude, insofar as they are themselves
good. But what is best in created things is the good of the order
of the universe, which is the most perfect, as the Philosopher
says (XII Metaphysics, c. 10); this is also in accordance with Holy
Scriptures, where it is said: And God saw all that He had made, and
it was very good. (Gen. I, 31), whereas of the works of creation
taken separately He had simply said that they were good.
Consequently, the good of the order of things created by God
is also the principal object of the will and intention of God
(praecipue volitum et intentum). But to govern a being is none other
than to impose an order upon it....
"Furthermore, that which tends towards an end is more
concerned (magis curat) with that which is closer to the ultimate
end, because the latter is also the end of all the other intermediate
ends. But the ultimate end of the Divine will is its proper
goodness, and in created things, it is the good of the order of the
universe which is closest to this goodness (cui propinquissimum),
for every particular good of this thing or that is ordered to the
good of the order of the universe as to its end, as the less perfect
is ordered to the more perfect. Hence each part is found to exist
for the whole. Consequently, it is the order of the universe for
which God has the greatest care among created things."31
Why does God will the distinction among things, their order
and their inequality? "The distinction among things, and their
multitude, is from the intention of the first agent, which is God.
For God gave being to things in order to communicate His
goodness to creatures, and to manifest this goodness through
them; and because this goodness cannot be sufficiently
manifested by one creature alone, He produced many and
diverse creatures, in order that what is lacking in one towards
manifesting the Divine goodness might be supplemented in
another. For goodness, which exists in God according to a simple
and uniform mode, exists in creatures in a multiple and divided
way; that is why the whole universe participates more in the
Divine goodness, and manifests the latter more perfectly than
any other created thing."32
"... In every effect that which is an ultimate end is properly
willed by the principal agent, as the order of the army is willed
by the general. But what is most perfect in things is the good of
the universal order.... Therefore, the order of the universe is
properly willed by God, and is not an accidental product of the
succession of agents.... But, ... this same universal order is, in
itself, created and willed by God...."33
"The end for which an effect is produced is that in it which is
good and best. But what is good and best in the universe consists
in the order which its parts have among themselves, which order
cannot exist without distinction; for indeed it is this very order
which constitutes the universe in its character of being a whole,
which latter is what is best in it. Therefore the very order of the
parts of the universe and their distinction, is the end for which
it was created."34
***
According to your program I am supposed to speak to you about
"Philosophy and Order in International Relations." Actually I
was asked to submit to you, as matter for discussion, the
following problem: "Metaphysics and International Order". I
must bring this to your attention, because the subject that I am
in fact going to deal with is as distant from the second topic just
mentioned as the latter is from the first topic mentioned.
The problem of international order is not properly a problem
of metaphysics, but of political science and political prudence.
Among the speculative sciences even the philosophy of nature
will be more closely pertinent than metaphysics. Yet it is
significant that the most radical and most coherent doctrine of
the international revolution always takes care to attack
metaphysics as its absolute contrary.78 The emancipation of
political life necessarily led to this result. If politics is a certain
wisdom, if in the practical order it is the architectonic science, it
is nonetheless not an absolute wisdom, but must remain
subordinate. It could not emancipate itself except by denying all
subordination. But the philosophy of the revolution well
understood that metaphysics indeed takes upon itself to defend
first principles, that it is the most proper science for leading us
to things which are more noble by nature and more divine than
man. The common good of political society is not the purely and
simply universal good; it cannot be conserved when one does not
order it to the sovereign good. Man is not the measure of man.
That is what by all evidence matters for a universal order
among nations. You know very well that the end of
revolutionary philosophy is not international order in the strict
sense of the word. Revolutionary philosophy does not recognize
nations, any more than it recognizes families. It does not even
recognize the true common good of political society, nor of
political societies. It does want a certain universal order, but it
seeks the principle for it in what is materially first in any social
order: man purely as man, considered in his most subjective
condition, in a state of privation both material and spiritual.
That is how one must understand the radical character of this
doctrine.