A Guide
to Reading John Locke's
Concerning Civil Government
(Second
Essay)
In the history of human liberty, Locke's essay
Concerning Civil Government stands out not
only as a great contribution to political theory,
but also as an effective instigator of political
action. It is a stirring pronouncement of the
principles of the English "bloodless revolution" of
1688, which brought about fundamental innovations
in the British constitution. It also set the stage
for the American Revolution of 1776 by furnishing
inspiration to the writers of the Declaration of
Independence.
Its central doctrines of man's natural and
unalienable rights, of popular sovereignty, and of
the right of rebellion are eloquently set forth in
the opening paragraphs of the Declaration. "That
all men are endowed with certain unalienable
rights," that "governments derive their just powers
from the consent of the governed," and that when
government becomes destructive of human rights, "it
is the right of the people to alter or to abolish
it" -- these are the principles (and, for the most
part, the words) which Thomas Jefferson and his
associates adopted from Locke and put to good
use.
While the image of good government that Locke
had in mind was a constitutional monarchy, in which
the legislative power of Parliament was supreme but
in which the king retained certain executive
prerogatives, the republican form of government set
up by the Constitution of the United States is a
more thoroughgoing embodiment of his ideal of
government by law rather than by men. All our
political liberties are rooted in the rule of law.
It is this which makes constitutional government
"free government" -- government that secures to all
of us "the blessings of liberty." No American can
ever afford to forget this basic truth. The reading
of Locke's essay will never permit him to.
I.
Locke's two essays on government were first
published in 1690, the same year in which his
Essay Concerning Human Understanding
appeared. The date is of some significance, for it
is just a year after the accession of William and
Mary to the throne of England.
He wrote his political treatises in Holland,
where he had gone into exile in 1683, returning to
England six years later on the same ship which
carried Princess Mary, the wife of William of
Orange. In the preface to the two treatises, Locke
expresses the hope that these works
- would establish the throne of our great
restorer, our present King William -- to make
good his title in the consent of the people,
which, being only one of all lawful governments,
be has more fully and clearly than any prince in
Christendom; and to justify to the world the
people of England whose love of their just and
natural rights, with their resolution to
preserve them, saved the nation when it was on
the very brink of slavery and ruin.
The first Treatise on Civil Government is
directed against Sir Robert Filmer's Patriarcha,
which upheld the theory that monarchs rule by
divine right -- a right supposedly transmitted from
Adam. In the first chapter of the second treatise,
Locke summarizes what he has shown in the first,
and indicates what the subject matter of the second
treatise is. If kings do not govern by divine
right, and if government is more than the rule of
the strongest (which hardly seems to deserve being
dignified by the name "government"), then we must
discover some other source for the authority of
government. Accordingly, the full title of the
second treatise is: An Essay Concerning the True
Original Extent and End of Civil
Government.
In other words, Locke did not believe that royal
authority was divinely given and therefore
unchallengeable. Such a theory, of course, would
have given the English throne to James II rather
than to William of Orange. But if royal authority
is challengeable, if a king may, upon cause, be
deposed, who has the authority to say that a king
should be dismissed and a new one installed? Who
shall be the judge between a king and his people?
In Chapter XIX of the second treatise (entitled "Of
the Dissolution of Government") Locke answers the
question:
- Who shall be judge whether the prince or
legislative act contrary to their trust?...To
this I reply, The people shall be judge...
This treatise, therefore, is dedicated to
establishing that the authority of governments
derives from those whom they govern -- a
proposition which it succeeded in establishing so
well that less than a hundred years later we read
in the American Declaration of Independence:
- We hold these truths to be
self-evident....That, to secure these
[natural] rights, governments are
instituted among men, deriving their just powers
from the consent of the governed...
II.
Locke begins his quest for the legitimacy of
government by defining political power:
- Political power, then, I take to be a right
of making laws, with penalties of death, and
consequently all less penalties for the
regulating and preserving of property, and of
employing the force of the community in the
execution of such laws, and in the defence of
the commonwealth from foreign injury, and all
this only for the public good.
Such power and the government which wields it
comes into being, Locke maintains, as the result of
a compact made by persons who previously lived in a
non-political condition.
Locke is by no means the first political
philosopher to have a "social contract" theory. For
instance, the English philosopher Thomas Hobbes
(1588-1679) had a fully developed theory of this
sort. But there are great differences,
nevertheless, between Hobbes's and Locke's view of
the origin of the state.
These differences have to do with the condition
of men prior to the formation of the state, and
with the consequences that derive from living in a
state. If men enter into civil society by making a
contract among themselves, then they must first
exist in a condition prior to the state. Both
Hobbes and Locke call this the "state of nature" --
that is to say, a condition which is natural to
man. Here we may recall, by way of contrast,
Aristotle's view that the political state is
natural to man.
According to Hobbes, the state of nature is a
state of war; men are either actually fighting each
other or threatening each other. In such a state,
Hobbes says, there are "no arts; no letters; no
society; and which is worst of all, continual fear,
and danger of violent death; and the life of man,
solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short."
(Leviathan, Vol. 23, Ch. 13) But Locke does
not view the state of nature (Or, presumably, human
nature itself) so darkly. Rather, be says, in the
state of. nature men enjoy "a state of perfect
freedom to order their actions, and dispose of
their possessions and persons as they think fit,
within the bounds of the law of Nature, without
asking leave or depending upon the will of any
other man."
Thus, while Hobbes thinks of the state of nature
as one of war and brutishness, Locke thinks of it
as a state of liberty. For there may be liberty
either in the state of nature or in the state of
civil society:
- The natural liberty of man is to be free
from any superior power on earth, and not to be
under the will or legislative authority of man,
but to have only the law of Nature for his rule.
The liberty of man in society is to be under no
other legislative power but that established by
consent in the commonwealth, nor under the
dominion of any will, or restraint of any law,
but what that legislative shall enact according
to the trust put in it. Freedom, then, is not
what Sir Robert Filmer tells us: "A liberty for
every one to do what he lists, to live as he
pleases, and not to be tied by any laws"; but
freedom of men under government is to have a
standing rule to live by, common to every one of
that society, and made by the legislative power
erected in it. A liberty to follow my own will
in all things where that rule prescribes not,
not to be subject to the inconstant, uncertain,
unknown, arbitrary will of another man, as
freedom of nature is to be under no other
restraint but the law of Nature.
Thus even the state of nature has a law,
according to Locke:
- The state of Nature has a law of Nature to
govern it, which obliges every one, and reason,
which is that law, teaches all mankind who will
but consult it, that being all equal and
independent, no one ought to harm another in his
life, health, liberty or possessions...
Locke himself makes his difference from Hobbes
quite explicit in the following passage which we
may assume has Hobbes in mind:
- Here we have the plain difference between
the state of Nature and the state of war, which
however some men have confounded, are as far
distant as a state of peace, goodwill, mutual
assistance, and preservation; and a state of
enmity, malice, violence and mutual destruction
are one from another.
From this difference their conceptions of the
state of nature follows a difference in their views
of the social contract and civil society. For
Hobbes, man is in such a miserable state naturally
that he gives up all rights upon entering civil
society, in order only to be safe and protected
from the lusts and passions of other men.
For Locke, too, man has something to gain from
entering into the social contract. He enumerates
the disadvantages of the state of nature as (1)
lack of established and promulgated law, (2)
absence of a judge to make determinations according
to this law, and (3) lack of power to execute what
is in accord with the law. But Locke hastens to add
that men do not give up all their rights upon
entering civil society:
- But though men when they enter into society
give up the equality, liberty, and executive
power they had in the state of Nature into the
hands of the society, to be so far disposed of
by the legislative as the good of the society
shall require, yet it being only with an
intention in every one the better to preserve
himself, his liberty and property (for no
rational creature can be supposed to change his
condition with an intention to be worse), the
power of the society or legislative constituted
by them can never be supposed to extend farther
than the common good, but is obliged to secure
every one's property by providing against those
three defects above mentioned that made the
state of Nature so unsafe and uneasy.
And so he describes the actual formation of
political society as follows:
- Men being, as has been said, by nature all
free, equal, and independent, no one can be put
out of this estate and subjected to the
political power of another without his own
consent, which is done by agreeing with other
men, to join and unite into a community for
their comfortable, safe, and peaceable living,
one amongst another, in a secure enjoyment of
their properties, and a greater security against
any that are not of it.
III.
What Locke has to say about the origin of civil
society is also of interest in connection with the
concept of property. It is apparent that property
is very important in Locke's political theory. He
says that the law of nature commands one not to
harm another's possessions; and he also says that
men enter into society in order to preserve more
perfectly their liberty and property. Thus the
right to property is protected both by the law of
nature and the civil law; in fact, one of the
reasons for the existence of civil society is the
preservation of property. In Chapter V, Locke takes
up the question of property in detail. By property
Locke means private property; for that is a man's
property which is his own. In this chapter, Locke
considers how it comes about that anyone has
private property, i.e., owns something to the
exclusion of all others. He concludes that it is
labor which gives the laborer a right to, or
property in, that which he produces or adds his
labor to. He summarizes his view as follows:
- Though the things of Nature are given in
common, man (by being master of himself, and
proprietor of his own person, and the actions or
labour of it) had still in himself the great
foundation of property...
- Thus labour, in the beginning, gave a right
of property, wherever any one was pleased to
employ it, upon what was common ...
We must realize that Locke uses the term
"property" to refer not only to land or goods, but
also to anything else that is a man's own, as the
following passage indicates:
- Man being born, as has been proved, with a
title to perfect freedom and an uncontrolled
enjoyment of all the rights and privileges of
the law of Nature, equally with any other man,
or number of men in the world, hath by nature a
power not only to preserve his property -- that
is, his life, liberty, and estate, against the
injuries and attempts of other men, but to judge
of and punish the breaches of that law...
Since man has a natural right to property in
this wider sense (i.e., life, liberty, and estate),
the state cannot take it away from him, but must
rather protect his right to it. The Declaration of
Independence echoes Locke, substituting, however,
"pursuit of happiness" for "estate":
- We hold these truths to be self-evident,
that all men are created equal; that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable rights; that among these are life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That to
secure these rights, governments are instituted
among men...
IV.
Aristotle said that the political state is
natural. Locke says that the natural condition of
man is that in which he existed prior to the origin
of the state. What is the reason for this
difference?
Such a difference of opinion can result from a
different understanding of (1) what man is, or (2)
what it means for something to be natural.
We can illustrate how differences in these
concepts would lead to differences concerning the
naturalness of the state. It is completely natural
for bees to form a kind of society, as every
beehive illustrates. But there are many animals
that live solitarily, i.e. not even in packs or
herds; nevertheless they may occasionally be found
in a group because of special circumstances. As an
example of this consider tigers. They ordinarily
live and hunt alone, yet they may live in a group
in a zoo or menagerie. Such a group is clearly an
artificial one.
Whether the state is natural or artificial
depends, therefore, on whether human gregariousness
is like that of bees, or is something imposed on
men by artificial convention. This matter is
further complicated, however. For the beehive comes
about as the result of completely instinctual
action, whereas those who maintain that the state
is natural also agree that its origin is not due to
instinct but to reason. Thus Aristotle
distinguishes between the gregariousness of bees
and that of men. Only the latter are political
animals, because of their possession of speech and
reason.
It is easier to see how differences in the
meaning of "natural" affect the question. If
"natural" means that which is normal, what occurs
always or for the most part, then the political
state is natural. If, on the other hand, "natural"
means "original" or refers to any condition that is
stripped of all complications, additions, and
embellishments, or if it is taken to be the same as
"primitive," then a pre-societal or pre-political
condition may well be natural.
Does a "social contract" theory require us
to believe that there actually was a time when men
lived in a state of nature?
It is not always easy to see, in a given author,
whether he treats the social contract as a fiction
or a hypothesis -- as something that must be
imagined to have taken place in order to legitimize
present governments -- or whether be actually
thinks there was such a historical event. Locke
discusses the question; we shall return to his
answer below.
To give some examples of these opposing views,
it seems on the whole safe to say that Rousseau
thinks of the state of nature as a hypothesis; see
for example the Discourse on the Origin of
Inequality. Kant appears to take a similar view
in The Science of Right. On the other hand,
Hobbes says that although there was perhaps never a
time when everyone in the world was in a state of
nature, there are nevertheless even now many men in
such a condition. (See Leviathan)
Are sovereign nations in a state of
nature?
It seems in Locke's view that they are. And if
they are, then this also has a bearing on the
previous question. For even if man's living in a
state of nature and entering a social contract turn
out to be fictions, a state of nature among nations
seems real enough, and so does the need for a
social contract among them.
That sovereign nations are in a state of nature
can be seen readily. No laws govern them; no nation
is secure from the predatory attacks of another;
the strongest nation enforces its will. Indeed it
seems as though it is Hobbes's rather than Locke's
conception of the state of nature that applies to
nations.
Locke himself writes as follows:
- It is often asked as a mighty objection,
where are, or ever were, there any men in such a
state of Nature? To which it may suffice as an
answer at present, that since all princes and
rulers of "independent" governments all through
the world are in a state of Nature, it is plain
the world never was, nor never will be, without
numbers of men in that state.
A social contract among nations would, by
analogy, require each nation to give up its
"equality, liberty and executive power" in order to
be more secure, in a society of nations, in its
"life, liberty, and estates." In other words, a
society of nations would require each nation to
give up its sovereignty. Thus we see that the
United Nations is not a political society, for each
nation in it maintains its sovereignty, as is
evidenced by the right of the veto in the Security
Council and the immunity of the member states from
the UN's "interference" in their internal
affairs.
Since, according to social contract
theories, a state is formed by the consent of all
those who were in a state of nature, must the
government of a civil society also be based on
consent, i.e., must it be
constitutional?
The answer is no, or at least uncertain. For
Hobbes, although an adherent of the social contract
theory of the origin of the state, is also a firm
believer in the absolute power of governments once
established; while Locke, as we have seen, is an
advocate of constitutionalism, i.e., government
based on the consent of the governed.
Curiously enough, however, both Hobbes and Locke
derive their differing views as to the nature of
government from their social contract theories. The
difference is explained by their differing views of
the state of nature.
For Hobbes, the state of nature is so terrible
(nasty, brutish, and short) that men give up
everything in order to get away from it. Thus they
give up, forever, any rights against the sovereign.
Locke, however, conceiving men to have liberties
and rights in the state of nature, holds that no
man would want to make his condition worse than it
was, and therefore maintains that men always retain
rights against the sovereign. Their consent, in
other words, is conditional upon his executing the
trust placed in him.
What, if anything, is the significance of
substituting "life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness" for "life, liberty, and estates" in the
enumeration of natural rights?
Were the writers of the Declaration of
Independence any less believers in the right to
"estates" (i.e., private property) than Locke? That
is hardly likely, if we examine the other writings
of the Declaration's authors and signers.
Nor is it likely that the substitution is
altogether insignificant, constituting merely a
slip of the pen, or the substitution of a more
euphonious phrase for one less so. There was
disagreement among the Founding Fathers about the
political significance of private property.
Franklin, for example, opposing the limitation of
suffrage to property-holders, asked, "Why should
property be represented at all?"
"Pursuit of happiness" seems to take in a wider
territory than "estate." Perhaps it can be
maintained that that was the reason for the change.
If pursuit of happiness requires a man's estate to
be secure, then the Declaration of Independence
affirms that to be part of man's inalienable right;
but if other things are also required, it also
asserts his right to those.
From The Great Ideas Program: An Introduction to
The Great Books and to a Liberal Education, by
Mortimer J. Adler and and Peter Wolff
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