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| NUMBER 1667. — May 31, 2006 |
Aesthetic Realism was founded by Eli Siegel in 1941
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| Dear Unknown Friends:
Mr. Siegel has defined good will as "the desire to have something else stronger and more beautiful, for this desire makes oneself stronger and more beautiful" (TRO 121). At the point we have reached, he is discussing Smith's The Wealth of Nations. And he shows that this person, so often presented as the classical theorist for capitalism, is really saying something much larger than, and quite different from, what is put forth by those who picture themselves Smith's ideological heirs. What the lecture makes clear is this: as Smith describes how economics works, he is describing, with vividness and in great prose, an elemental structure of good will. For example: economics is based on the fact that the needs of one person will be met by another-that someone somewhere is making a garment, or writing a book, or harvesting wheat, which will strengthen someone else; and the someone else is doing work which in turn is needed by and strengthening to another person. Smith, Mr. Siegel shows, makes immediate and tangible this primal mechanism of good will, without which economics itself cannot go on. As he quotes Smith describing other aspects of economics too, from the division of labor to the coming to be of money, we see that they are, in various ways, mechanical good will. The Meaning of Labor
The most important thing in industry is the person who does the industry, which is the worker. That is still true. It never can change. Labor is the only source of wealth. There is no other source, except land, the raw material. The other sources are decorations. I said this ever so many years ago, and it's still true. Every bit of capital that exists was made by labor, just as everything that is consumed is. We see Adam Smith affirming this statement. The Interference
Eli Siegel answered these questions, and said what has not been said by any other economist. The answer is in this Aesthetic Realism principle: "The greatest danger or temptation of man is to get a false importance or glory from the lessening of things not himself; which lessening is Contempt." Contempt is the thing which has made for the injustice, cruelty, coldheartedness in every aspect of human life. Economics arises from people, and what is hurtful in self has made economics hurtful. The unstated but driving feeling, "I'm more if I can lessen you," yesterday impelled a husband and wife to belittle each other sneeringly across a breakfast table so that each felt later, with a kind of aching dullness, "What's happened to us and the love we once had?" Contempt is in a wife's thinking of her husband not as a full person in his own right, not as part of the whole large world, but as someone who exists to make her happy, who is essentially owned by her. And contempt is in a husband's seeing his wife that way. The same contempt has made economics a field for selfishness and agony. Let us take a poem Mr. Siegel mentions here: Shelley's "Song to the Men of England," of 1819. It begins:
Shelley saw that there was something deeply insane in the economy of England. People were wearing out their lives producing wealth-food, clothing, and other good things-which benefited the "privileged" but not themselves. He asks the people of England, "Have ye leisure, comfort, calm, / Shelter, food...?" The answer was no. And he says the English workers have been monumentally swindled:
The cause is contempt. In economics as in love, it is contempt that has a person see another not as a full human being with feelings real as one's own, not as somebody to be fair to, but as a creature existing to provide profit for oneself. It is contempt that has had people feel it's tolerable for some persons to be very poor and others very rich, even though there's enough for everybody to live with dignity and ease. It is contempt that has had people think about the world not as something to understand and value, but as consisting of things to grab. Adam Smith knew a great deal, but he did not know what contempt was and how it worked. Neither, it can be said, did Shelley. In the following great statement from his James and the Children, Eli Siegel describes what has made people cruel to each other; and the cruelty includes that of profit economics for centuries:
The continuous fight within every person is between contempt and good will. That is what people now need to know about, for personal life to fare well and for economics to be sane. A New Era
This is our present situation. People have had to be made poorer and poorer in order for that completely unnecessary and immoral thing, economics based on seeing humans in terms of money, just to keep going at all. An article in the New York Times (May 8) contains some vivid descriptions of the American economy today. It is about how easily people who do not see themselves as poor can suddenly become poor. Here are several sentences:
There is a description of a woman, representative of many, who
That people who work hard should have to go to food pantries and be unable to afford healthcare! An economy having this, while wealth and goods and services abound, will be looked upon in future years as plainly evil and insane. Yet the reason more and more people are in such a situation is: they must be sacrificed if profits are to come to those who didn't do the work. The answer, Mr. Siegel has explained, is not in "the rival system." It is in taking with real seriousness the good will Adam Smith presents as the very foundation of all economics. In another of his lectures, Mr. Siegel composed a couplet which stands for some of that good will. I think it is beautiful as poetry, with its snap and resonant width, its no-nonsense and its longing:
There Is Warmth
— ELLEN REISS, Class Chairman of Aesthetic Realism
e come to the passage, early in The Wealth of Nations, that has perhaps the most good will in it. I hope to read passages from everywhere in the book. But the passage that has the most good will is about labor and people, and is in chapter 5 of Book I. The chapter's title is "Of the Real and Nominal Price of Commodities, or of Their Price in Labour, and Their Price in Money." We'll see that Shelley, in his prose and also his poetry, has dealt with these matters. This is what Smith says:
We have this stating of three things wanted: "necessaries, conveniences, and amusements." It starts with the utmost in inevitability (necessaries); then what's less so (conveniences); then amusements. It's a little bit like must, might be, could be.
One definition of money arises from this: Money is that through which you can get the equivalent of other people's good will shown substantially; that is, by goods or commodities. Want to buy a pair of boots? Through money, you can get the desire of another person to give you a pair of boots. The thing necessary to substantiate the good will and set it in motion is money. So money is that which sets an appearance of good will in motion.
What Smith says is true: through money you can command or purchase labor. And labor is the compact state of good will.
A Banner Headline
When people feel, If I work I can't make, directly, what I need, but if somebody else works it can be made-that is inevitable good will. I know how to make shirts, but he knows how to make shoes; therefore I can try to use the shirt I make to get a pair of shoes: that is where mechanism becomes at least the first sketch of good will. Smith never says in any important way that there's any value in any object whatsoever which deeply does not arise from labor. That idea can be seen in this sentence: "They contain the value of a certain quantity of labour which we exchange for what is supposed at the time to contain the value of an equal quantity." Shelley's insurrectionary poem "Song to the Men of England" is related to this.
This is one of the great books of the world, and I'm so glad it sounds a little insurrectionary.
In the 18th century Thomas Hobbes was still called Mr. Hobbes. That's a great privilege of the 18th century. It's hard to call him that now.
Labor Is Poetic Then Smith says:
That makes labor poetic, because hardship endured, difficulty, and also ingenuity or cleverness are both important things in labor, as they are in poetry.
The history of humanity has been: what is labor worth at any one time or in any one place, and what is the labor that people are seeking? The passages I have quoted have an aroma of good will. And the chapters on monopoly, the chapters on free trade, the desire for friendliness among nations, the desire for France and England to look upon each other with more commercial benevolence-all that is in the field of good will; and later I'll read more from The Wealth of Nations. |
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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 The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known (TRO) is a biweekly periodical of the Aesthetic Realism Foundation. 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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