The Pursuit of Certainty. Shirley Robin Letwin
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Название: The Pursuit of Certainty

Автор: Shirley Robin Letwin

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Юриспруденция, право

Серия: none

isbn: 9781614872214

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ the conditions of life which meant to Hume accepting the inevitability of struggle, of unrest, of something less than perfect peace. The Civil War, for instance, ought not to be blamed on the failure of the king’s power to maintain order, nor on anyone’s weakness, but on the unwillingness of both sides to recognize that neither liberty nor authority could prevail absolutely, that they had to be incessantly adjusted. Judicious men, Hume was sure, were always reluctant to consider a conflict inevitable or to pronounce one side good and the other evil. If such men had had the sway of their respective parties, the war might have been avoided. For, “Even at present, many men of sense and knowledge are disposed to think that the question with regard to the justice of the quarrel may be regarded as very doubtful and ambiguous.”1

      A desire to halt the natural movement of life or to escape the necessity of solving problems over and over again never tempted Hume. He modestly wished only to confine the struggle somewhat. To this end he hoped to persuade his fellows that perfect peace was impossible and struggle eternal. One should try to define and limit the conditions of the struggle. But nothing could be settled for all times.

      On all other questions that divided his contemporaries, Hume’s attitude was similar. He considered them only in connection with particular circumstances; he credited neither side with a monopoly of truth or virtue; and he reduced the disagreement to a matter of degree.

      Even in a matter like corruption, there could be no verdict in the abstract. Hume was no admirer of Newcastle’s practices, and he condemned corruption as ignoble. Some forms of it, he declared, such as pensions or bribes, “cannot be too carefully guarded against, nor too vehemently decried, by everyone who has a regard for the virtue and liberty of a nation.”2 Nevertheless, he insisted that the influence acquired by the monarchy from the disposal of places, honours, and preferments, from a form of corruption, was the only means available under the British constitution for checking the power of the Commons. The very nature of parliamentary liberty made it impossible to limit it by law; “for who can foretell how frequently grievances may occur, or what part of the administration may be affected by them?” Yet it was natural that parliament should try to exercise its power to the fullest extent. Accident had provided, at different times, “irregular checks to this privilege of Parliament,” thus preserving “in some tolerable degree, the dignity and authority of the crown.”1 During the eighteenth century, this irregular check took the form of selling offices and distinctions to the king’s supporters.

      If members of parliament were entirely dependent on the Crown, or derived their property wholly from the king’s gifts, they would be slavish. But an interest in obtaining offices from the Crown only made them reluctant to oppose the king hastily or violently. It was easy to attach invidious names to the Crown’s use of its favours, “but some degree and some kind of it are inseparable from the very nature of the constitution, and necessary to the preservation of our mixed government.”2 Under other circumstances, like those of a century later, Hume might have found that such practices had grown too harmful, or too useless, to be tolerated. He had not argued for letting the Crown buy support at all times and places, but only for recognizing that under some circumstances it was more useful than harmful.

      Problems that inspired others to enunciate noble principles were simply dismissed by Hume. He had nothing very grand to offer on the question: are members of parliament obliged to obey instructions from their constituents? Yet the question attracted much attention later in the century and moved both Burke and Bentham to make some of their most impressive statements. Hume, however, said that the issue was not really about “obligation,” but merely about how seriously instructions should be taken. For whatever anyone might prefer, in fact constituents would always exert some influence on their representatives. And there could be no general decision about how far it should extend. Its character would vary in each case, depending on whether the electors were rebellious and sophisticated like those of London or more like those of Totnes, and whether the issue was foreign affairs or taxes. In each case the question had to be answered differently. And as always, Hume underscored the difficulties of putting sufficiently refined answers into words—“But such is the nature of language that it is impossible for it to express distinctly these different degrees; and if men will carry on a controversy on this head, it may wed happen that they differ in their language and yet agree in their sentiments; or differ in their sentiments and yet agree in their language.”3

      It was only natural that Hume should have been denounced by both parties. He refused even to see much distinction between them. He separated what he called personal parties from real parties, and divided real parties into three kinds, parties of interest, of principle, and of affection. But having made these distinctions, he proceeded to show that any actual party was not one of these: even where the parties were personal, that is, united by friendship and divided by animosity, a split in the government would not occur without some real differences of principle. Conversely, even in those factions founded on differences of principle, “there is always observed a great deal of personal animosity and affection.”1 The Court and Country parties were perhaps opposed on principle, as Bolingbroke alleged, but not altogether. Their disagreements on principles were, after ad, very much heightened by differences of interest. Those who were receiving favours from the Crown were not anxious to antagonize their patron. The others were not perhaps indifferent to the benefits they were deprived of.

      Anyway, the principles themselves were never perfectly clear. The Whigs, although they had loved liberty more than the Hanovers, had betrayed liberty, chiefly through “ignorance, frailty, or the interests of their leaders.” The Tories had once loved both monarchy and Stuarts, but the latter more, and in order to “depress” the Hanovers, they had embraced principles close’ to republicanism. The Tories “have been so long obliged to talk in the republican style,” Hume explained, “that they seem to have made converts of themselves by their hypocrisy.”2 Besides, no party could be all white or black because “to tell the truth,” men become associated with a particular party for a variety of reasons, of which they are not always aware, “from example, from passion, from idleness.”3

      And yet, although Hume disagreed with both sides, and found their quarrels somewhat tiresome, he did not wish to eliminate parties. They encouraged fierce animosities among men who should be assisting one another and weakened the government.4 Still, they were inevitable and even beneficial. As the exact balance between the republican and monarchical part of the English constitution was delicate and uncertain, there were bound to be different opinions about what it ought to be. There was no way of settling the question forever because the power of the king varies with the character of the king, and what might suffice to counterbalance the Crown in one case might be too little or too much in another.1 Most reasonable men might agree to preserve a mixed government, but they were bound to disagree on the particulars. Therefore, “However the nation may fluctuate between them the parties themselves will always subsist, so long as we are governed by a limited monarchy.”2 There were inconveniences to parties, but they had to be endured in order to enjoy the blessings of a mixed government.

      Instead of endorsing Bolingbroke’s call for a single party, Hume suggested that party conflicts might be softened. He even praised the growing interest in a coalition because it tended “to prevent all unreasonable insult and triumph of the one party over the other, to encourage moderate opinions, to find the proper medium in all disputes, to persuade each that its antagonists may possibly be sometimes in the right, and to keep a balance in the praise and blame which we bestow on either side.”3 But if a coalition had been likely, Hume might have been found on the other side, stirring up party differences. He looked for a moderation of disagreement, not for its disappearance. A balance between evils was the best one could hope for.

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