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| NUMBER 1665. — May 3, 2006 |
Aesthetic Realism was founded by Eli Siegel in 1941
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| Dear Unknown Friends:
Various persons of the right have turned Adam Smith into a kind of mascot for their views. Yet the Smith whom Mr. Siegel presents is vastly different from that. Smith, he makes clear, shows that at the very basis of economics as such is good will, "unarticulated," structural good will. Mr. Siegel described good will as "the desire to have something else stronger and more beautiful, for this desire makes oneself stronger and more beautiful" (TRO 121). And he shows that Smith is presenting "something like mechanical good will" in passages from The Wealth of Nations. They are passages about, for instance, the fact that what one person needs another produces, that my labor can do you good as yours can be good for me. Over the centuries, the primal, structural good will behind economics as such has not been continued by people in their thoughts about and use of others in daily economic life. It has not been continued in the way human beings have been made to work and live. Yet it can be. Economics Is the Oneness of Opposites
Exchange is always a oneness of sameness and difference. Barter is. One afternoon in the 12th century, Walter fixed Alison's door, and in exchange she gave him a cheese. Thus the cheese and the door-repair, while obviously different, became equivalent, or the same. Money puts together sameness and difference. Money is certainly different from an item it purchases. But if I pay sixty cents for an apple, then the sixty cents and the apple are akin. How utterly akin they are is something felt by a person who is hungry and does not have the funds to buy that apple: the lack of money is the lack of food for his aching stomach. Not only is money itself different-from-and-like something it buys-money shows that hugely different things are like each other. One hundred dollars can buy clothing; or it can buy food; or gasoline; or movie tickets; or medicine for an ailing animal; or books; or tools; or flowers. Therefore the hundred dollars, standing for them all, shows they have something in common; they have a likeness to each other. Adam Smith writes about the coming to be of money. The coming to be of money was a coming to be of greater aesthetics: of opposites joining more richly and flexibly and efficiently for people than they could through barter. The creation of money, Mr. Siegel and Adam Smith show, was part of unconscious good will: it was a means of people's getting what they needed through giving others something they could use with ease to get things they needed too. Matter & Feelings
There is no more important economic and ethical question than: what should be the relation of the tangible earth-the world as matter, goods, wealth-and every human being? Mr. Siegel answered that question very early, and he never deviated from the answer. In 1923, at age 20, he wrote in the Modern Quarterly:
Contempt Interferes
Let us look at a contemporary of Adam Smith (also with smith in his name): Oliver Goldsmith. Goldsmith was born in 1730, seven years after Smith, and his poem The Deserted Village was published in 1770, six years before The Wealth of Nations. The Deserted Village is about the fact that the earth of the English countryside, which many, many people needed for their sustenance, was increasingly being owned by only a few rich persons. And we should ask: Is the grabbingness, the ill will, the way of ownership that Goldsmith condemns, something Adam Smith was for, or was Smith against it too? For example, Goldsmith has this quite famous couplet about England-the nation is owned, he has been saying, by people who get richer by impoverishing others:
Goldsmith says that in the city, too, persons' ill will is running economics. This is about a man who has been forced to leave his rural home:
Goldsmith is very angry, and his poetry is at once graceful and fierce. The idea that a person should get rich, be able to pay for amusements, through the pain and weakness of others! But that is what the profit motive has made for these many years. There is the following description of a woman who has been made homeless and hungry because some lord was able to get hold of the land she needed:
This was happening in the Britain that Adam Smith also knew. Something like it, shamefully, is much with us now. Various people who present themselves as followers of Smith would say: "While the pain Goldsmith describes is, of course, unfortunate, the economic system in which it took place is nevertheless admirable. It is the laissez-faire economics advocated by Adam Smith." However, I do not think Smith would agree with them. This weakening of somebody to augment oneself is not what he was for as he showed that economically people and nations could become more themselves through the production and needs of one another. He writes, in chapter 8 of Book I:
There Is Prose Style
Here, then, is more of Eli Siegel's lecture, with its understanding of Smith, and of that oneness of the earth and every human self which is economics. — ELLEN REISS, Class Chairman of Aesthetic Realism
Right after he describes how carrying things by water could be more efficacious than by wagon, he has a lovely sentence, and it happens to be poetic. I have put it in line structure and titled it "Four Ton Weight of Goods":
Is that a four-square sentence! Is it matter-y; is it material! I think that Smith enjoys this moving bulkiness. That is in the third chapter of Book I, a chapter on the division of labor. Smith points out a very dramatic thing: that if people had to make all of a pin at once-if someone couldn't make the head and another the point and another shape the stem-fewer pins would be made. So there's the beginning of the assembly line, which could be kinder than it has been. I don't think Smith knew what would happen in Detroit. The Friendly Mediterranean
That is good 18th-century prose rhythm.
In other words, the Mediterranean doesn't have that which you can see at Rockaway Beach. There, if you want to, you can see the tides and enjoy yourself, and also be very melancholy, because you can get the heebie-jeebies watching those tides.
Which means that you could travel and feel you hadn't gone too far-you still knew where you were if you were on the Mediterranean. In fact, all the sea voyaging in the area for many years was done on the Mediterranean, because it could get you to three continents: Africa, Asia, and Europe .
That is, there's a story about how Carthaginians went down the side of Africa. They kept to the shore, but they went down-and it wasn't the Mediterranean. However, nobody emulated them. The Reason for Money
If your job was to make grandfather's clocks, and you wanted some goods from other people, you'd better have a few things besides grandfather's clocks, because not many people are wanting them. That has to do with supply and demand and the market. But again, what makes the passage so valuable is the way this is put. The facility with which what some people made was being used to get what other people made is a big thing in history. And there's a subtlety in this next passage, and a liveliness:
That is quite right. As Gautier says in his poem "Art," a medallion or coin outlasts an emperor. For those who want to have a few Roman coins, they can be had right in this city. You can get even a few Macedonian coins, and of course you can get early American coins, coins of every country. Metal lasts. At the moment, metals have been superseded by paper. It can seem paper has been superseded by credit cards. But the idea of money goes on. Smith says the biggest reason metals took the place of other things that could be used for barter or trade is that the metals were divisible.
Durability, Exchange, Pleasure
Metals remain. For instance, somebody would say, "I want a Bible. I have three sheep-will you take them?" Well, the sheep will not last forever. The Bible may last longer. But metals, if they were used, would perhaps outlast the Bible.
Smith relishes these exchanges of cattle for salt. He may be a learned person, but the idea of somebody giving cattle in order to get salt-he's very much taken by it.
It happens that in America, salt has been less at the command of the inflationary roughnecks and ruffians. The price of salt is still amazing. You can pay for it sometimes in pennies. These are passages from a book which in any list of great books simply has to be included. I've seen many a list of great books, and The Wealth of Nations is never left out. |
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Aesthetic Realism is based on these
principles, stated by Eli Siegel: 1. The deepest desire of every person is to like the world on an honest or accurate basis. 2. The greatest danger for a person is to have contempt for the world and what is in it .... Contempt can be defined as the lessening of what is different from oneself as a means of self-increase as one sees it. 3. All beauty is a making one of opposites, and the making one of opposites is what we are going after in ourselves. |
First Thursday of each month, 6:30 PM: Seminars with speakers from Aesthetic Realism faculty Third Saturday of each month, 8 PM: Aesthetic Realism Dramatic Presentations Editor: Ellen Reiss • Coordinator: Nancy Huntting Subscriptions: 26 issues, US $18; 12 issues, US $9, Canada and Mexico $14, elsewhere $20. Make check or money order payable to Aesthetic Realism Foundation.
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