Max Weber
Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit
of Capitalism. New York: Scribner's Press, 1958, pp. 47 - 78.
CHAPTER II
THE SPIRIT OF CAPITALISM
IN the title of this study is used the somewhat pretentious
phrase, the spirit of capitalism. What is to be understood by it?
The attempt to give anything like a definition of it brings out certain
difficulties which are in the very nature of this type of investigation.
If any object can be found to which this
term can be applied with any understandable meaning, it can only be an
historical individual, i.e. a complex of elements associated in historical
reality which we unite into a conceptual whole from the standpoint of their
cultural significance.
Such an historical concept, however, since
it refers in its content to a phenomenon significant for its unique individuality,
cannot be defined according to the formula genus proximum, differentia
specifica, but it must be gradually put together out of the individual
parts which are taken from historical reality to make it up. Thus the final
and definitive concept cannot stand at the beginning of the investigation,
but must come at the end. We must, in other words, work out in the course
of the discussion, as its most important result, the best conceptual formulation
of what we here understand by the spirit of capitalism, that is the best
from the point of view which interests us here. This point of view (the
one of which we shall speak later) is, further, by no means the only possible
one from which the historical phenomena we are investigating can be analysed.
Other standpoints would, for this as for every historical phenomenon, yield
other characteristics as the essential ones. The result is that it is by
no means necessary to understand by the spirit of capitalism only what
it will come to mean to us for the purposes of our analysis. This is a
necessary result of the nature of historical concepts which attempt for
their methodological purposes not to grasp historical reality in abstract
general formulae, but in concrete genetic sets of relations which are inevitably
of a specifically unique and individual characters
Thus, if we try to determine the object,
the analysis and historical explanation of which we are attempting, it
cannot be in the form of a conceptual definition, but at least in the beginning
only a provisional description of what is here meant by the spirit of capitalism.
Such a description is, however, indispensable in order clearly to understand
the object of the investigation. For this purpose we turn to a document
of that spirit which contains what we are looking for in almost classical
purity, and at the same time has the advantage of being free from all direct
relationship to religion, being thus, for our purposes, free of preconceptions.
"Remember, that time is money. He that
can earn ten shillings a day by his labour, and goes abroad, or sits idle,
one half of that day, though he spends but sixpence during his diversion
or idleness, ought not to reckon that the only expense; he has really
spent, or rather thrown away, five shillings besides.
"Remember, that credit is money.
If a man lets his money lie in my hands after it is due, he gives me the
interest, or so much as I can make of it during that time. This amounts
to a considerable sum where a man has good and large credit, and makes
good use of it.
"Remember, that money is of the prolific,
generating nature. Money can beget money, and its offspring can beget more,
and so on. Five shillings turned is six, turned again it is seven and threepence,
and so on, till it becomes a hundred pounds. The more there is of it, the
more it produces every turning, so that the profits rise quicker and quicker.
He that kills a breeding-sow, destroys all her offspring to the thousandth
generation. He that murders a crown, destroys all that it might have produced,
even scores of pounds."
"Remember this saying, The good paymaster is
lord of another man's purse. He that is known to pay punctually and
exactly to the time he promises, may at any time, and on any occasion,
raise all the money his friends can spare. This is sometimes of great use.
After industry and frugality, nothing contributes more to the raising of
a young man in the world than punctuality and justice in all his dealings;
therefore never keep borrowed money an hour beyond the time you promised,
lest a disappointment shut up your friend's purse for ever.
"The most trifling actions that affect a
man's credit are to be regarded. The sound of your hammer at five in the
morning, or eight at night, heard by a creditor, makes him easy six months
longer; but if he sees you at a billiard-table, or hears your voice at
a tavern, when you should be at work, he sends for his money the next day;
demands it, before he can receive it, in a lump.
"It shows, besides, that you are mindful
of what you owe; it makes you appear a careful as well as an honest man,
and that still increases your credit.
"Beware of thinking all your own that you
possess, and of living accordingly. It is a mistake that many people who
have credit fall into. To prevent this, keep an exact account for some
time both of your expenses and your income. If you take the pains at first
to mention particulars, it will have this good effect: you will discover
how wonderfully small, trifling expenses mount up to large sums, and will
discern what might have been, and may for the future be saved, without
occasioning any great inconvenience."
"For six pounds a year you may have the use of
one hundred pounds, provided you are a man of known prudence and honesty.
"He that spends a groat a day idly, spends
idly above six pounds a year, which is the price for the use of one hundred
pounds.
"He that wastes idly a groat's worth of
his time per day, one day with another, wastes the privilege of using one
hundred pounds each day.
"He that idly loses five shillings' worth
of time, loses five shillings, and might as prudently throw five shillings
into the sea.
"He that loses five shillings, not only
loses that sum, but all the advantage that might be made by turning it
in dealing, which by the time that a young man becomes old, will amount
to a considerable sum of money." [2]
It is Benjamin Franklin who preaches to us in
these sentences, the same which Ferdinand Kurnberger satirizes in his clever
and malicious Picture of American Culture [3] as the supposed confession
of faith of the Yankee. That it is the spirit of capitalism which here
speaks in characteristic fashion, no one will doubt, however little we
may wish to claim that everything which could be understood as pertaining
to that spirit is contained in it. Let us pause a moment to consider this
passage, the philosophy of which Kurnberger sums up in the words, "They
make tallow out of cattle and money out of men". The peculiarity of this
philosophy of avarice appears to be the ideal of the honest man of recognized
credit, and above all the idea of a duty of the individual toward the increase
of his capital, which is assumed as an end in itself. Truly what is here
preached is not simply a means of making one's way in the world, but a
peculiar ethic. The infraction of its rules is treated not as foolishness
but as forgetfulness of duty. That is the essence of the matter. It is
not mere business astuteness, that sort of thing is common enough, it is
an ethos. This is the quality which interests us.
When Jacob Fugger, in speaking to a business
associate who had retired and who wanted to persuade him to do the same,
since he had made enough money and should let others have a chance, rejected
that as pusillanimity and answered that "he (Fugger) thought otherwise,
he wanted to make money as long as he could", [4] the spirit of his statement
is evidently quite different from that of Franklin. What in the former
case was an expression of commercial daring and a personal inclination
morally neutral, [5] in the latter takes on the character of an ethically
coloured maxim for the conduct of life. The concept spirit of capitalism
is here used in this specific sense, [6] it is the spirit of modern capitalism.
For that we are here dealing only with Western European and American capitalism
is obvious from the way in which the problem was stated. Capitalism existed
in China, India, Babylon, in the classic world, and in the Middle Ages.
But in all these cases, as we shall see, this particular ethos was lacking.
Now, all Franklin's moral attitudes are
coloured with utilitarianism. Honesty is useful, because it assures credit;
so are punctuality, industry, frugality, and that is the reason they are
virtues. A logical deduction from this would be that where, for instance,
the appearance of honesty serves the same purpose, that would suffice,
and an unnecessary surplus of this virtue would evidently appear to Franklin's
eyes as unproductive waste. And as a matter of fact, the story in his autobiography
of his conversion to those virtues, [7] or the discussion of the value
of a strict maintenance of the appearance of modesty, the assiduous belittlement
of one's own deserts in order to gain general recognition later, [8] confirms
this impression. According to Franklin, those virtues, like all others,
are only in so far virtues as they are actually useful to the individual,
and the surrogate of mere appearance is always sufficient when it accomplishes
the end in view. It is a conclusion which is inevitable for strict utilitarianism.
The impression of many Germans that the virtues professed by Americanism
are pure hypocrisy seems to have been confirmed by this striking case.
But in fact the matter is not by any means so simple. Benjamin Franklin's
own character, as it appears in the really unusual candidness of his autobiography,
belies that suspicion. The circumstance that he ascribes his recognition
of the utility of virtue to a divine revelation which was intended to lead
him in the path of righteousness, shows that something more than mere garnishing
for purely egocentric motives is involved.
In fact, the summum bonum of this
ethic, the earning of more and more money, combined with the strict avoidance
of all spontaneous enjoyment of life, is above all completely devoid of
any eudaemonistic, not to say hedonistic, admixture. It is thought of so
purely as an end in itself, that from the point of view of the happiness
of, or utility to, the single individual, it appears entirely transcendental
and absolutely irrational. [9] Man is dominated by the making of money,
by acquisition as the ultimate purpose of his life. Economic acquisition
is no longer subordinated to man as the means for the satisfaction of his
material needs. This reversal of what we should call the natural relationship,
so irrational from a naive point of view, is evidently as definitely a
leading principle of capitalism as it is foreign to all peoples not under
capitalistic influence. At the same time it expresses a type of feeling
which is closely connected with certain religious ideas. If we thus ask,
why should "money be made out of men", Benjamin Franklin himself, although
he was a colourless deist, answers in his autobiography with a quotation
from the Bible, which his strict Calvinistic father drummed into him again
and again in his youth: "Seest thou a man diligent in his business? He
shall stand before kings" (Prov. xxii. 29). The earning of money within
the modern economic order is, so long as it is done legally, the result
and the expression of virtue and proficiency in a calling; and this virtue
and proficiency are, as it is now not difficult to see, the real Alpha
and Omega of Franklin's ethic, as expressed in the passages we have quoted,
as well as in all his works without exception. [10]
And in truth this peculiar idea, so familiar
to us to-day, but in reality so little a matter of course, of one's duty
in a calling, is what is most characteristic of the social ethic of capitalistic
culture, and is in a sense the fundamental basis of it. It is an obligation
which the individual is supposed to feel and does feel towards the content
of his professional [11] activity, no matter in what it consists, in particular
no matter whether it appears on the surface as a utilization of his personal
powers, or only of his material possessions (as capital).
Of course, this conception has not appeared
only under capitalistic conditions. On the contrary, we shall later trace
its origins back to a time previous to the advent of capitalism. Still
less, naturally, do we maintain that a conscious acceptance of these ethical
maxims on the part of the individuals, entrepreneurs or labourers, in modern
capitalistic enterprises, is a condition of the further existence of present-day
capitalism. The capitalistic economy of the present day is an immense cosmos
into which the individual is born, and which presents itself to him, at
least as an individual, as an unalterable order of things in which he must
live. It forces the individual, in so far as he is involved in the system
of market relationships, to conform to capitalistic rules of action. The
manufacturer who in the long run acts counter to these norms, will just
as inevitably be eliminated from the economic scene as the worker who cannot
or will not adapt himself to them will be thrown into the streets without
a job.
Thus the capitalism of to-day, which has
come to dominate economic life, educates and selects the economic subjects
which it needs through a process of economic survival of the fittest. But
here one can easily see the limits of the concept of selection as a means
of historical explanation. In order that a manner of life so well adapted
to the peculiarities of capitalism could be selected at all, i.e. should
come to dominate others, it had to originate somewhere, and not in isolated
individuals alone, but as a way of life common to whole groups of men.
This origin is what really needs explanation. Concerning the doctrine of
the more naive historical materialism, that such ideas originate as a reflection
or superstructure of economic situations, we shall speak more in detail
below. At this point it will suffice for our purpose to call attention
to the fact that without doubt, in the country of Benjamin Franklin's birth
(Massachusetts), the spirit of capitalism (in the sense we have attached
to it) was present before the capitalistic order. There were complaints
of a peculiarly calculating sort of profit-seeking in New England, as distinguished
from other parts of America, as early as 1632. It is further undoubted
that capitalism remained far less developed in some of the neighbouring
colonies, the later Southern States of the United States of America, in
spite of the fact that these latter were founded by large capitalists for
business motives, while the New England colonies were founded by preachers
and seminary graduates with the help of small bourgeois, craftsmen and
yoemen, for religious reasons. In this case the causal relation is certainly
the reverse of that suggested by the materialistic standpoint.
But the origin and history of such ideas
is much more complex than the theorists of the superstructure suppose.
The spirit of capitalism, in the sense in which we are using the term,
had to fight its way to supremacy against a whole world of hostile forces.
A state of mind such as that expressed in the passages we have quoted from
Franklin, and which called forth the applause of a whole people, would
both in ancient times and in the Middle Ages [12] have been proscribed
as the lowest sort of avarice and as an attitude entirely lacking in self-respect.
It is, in fact, still regularly thus looked upon by all those social groups
which are least involved in or adapted to modern capitalistic conditions.
This is not wholly because the instinct of acquisition was in those times
unknown or undeveloped, as has often been said. Nor because the auri
sacra fames, the greed for gold, was then, or now, less powerful outside
of bourgeois capitalism than within its peculiar sphere, as the illusions
of modern romanticists are wont to believe. The difference between the
capitalistic and precapitalistic spirits is not to be found at this point.
The greed of the Chinese Mandarin, the old Roman aristocrat, or the modern
peasant, can stand up to any comparison. And the auri sacra fames
of a Neapolitan cab-driver or barcaiuolo, and certainly of Asiatic
representatives of similar trades, as well as of the craftsmen of southern
European or Asiatic countries, is, as anyone can find out for himself,
very much more intense, and especially more unscrupulous than that of,
say, an Englishman in similar circumstances. [13]
The universal reign of absolute unscrupulousness
in the pursuit of selfish interests by the making of money has been a specific
characteristic of precisely those countries whose bourgeois-capitalistic
development, measured according to Occidental standards, has remained backward.
As every employer knows, the lack of coscienziosita of the labourers
[14] of such countries, for instance Italy as compared with Germany, has
been, and to a certain extent still is, one of the principal obstacles
to their capitalistic development. Capitalism cannot make use of the labour
of those who practise the doctrine of undisciplined liberum arbitrium,
any more than it can make use of the business man who seems absolutely
unscrupulous in his dealings with others, as we can learn from Franklin.
Hence the difference does not lie in the degree of development of any impulse
to make money. The auri sacra fames is as old as the history of
man. But we shall see that those who submitted to it without reserve as
an uncontrolled impulse, such as the Dutch sea-captain who "would go through
hell for gain, even though he scorched his sails", were by no means the
representatives of that attitude of mind from which the specifically modern
capitalistic spirit as a mass phenomenon is derived, and that is what matters.
At all periods of history, wherever it was possible, there has been ruthless
acquisition, bound to no ethical norms whatever. Like war and piracy, trade
has often been unrestrained in its relations with foreigners and those
outside the group. The double ethic has permitted here what was forbidden
in dealings among brothers.
Capitalistic acquisition as an adventure
has been at home in all types of economic society which have known trade
with the use of money and which have offered it opportunities, through
commenda, farming of taxes, State loans, financing of wars, ducal
courts and officeholders. Likewise the inner attitude of the adventurer,
which laughs at all ethical limitations, has been universal. Absolute and
conscious ruthlessness in acquisition has often stood in the closest connection
with the strictest conformity to tradition. Moreover, with the breakdown
of tradition and the more or less complete extension of free economic enterprise,
even to within the social group, the new thing has not generally been ethically
justified and encouraged, but only tolerated as a fact. And this fact has
been treated either as ethically indifferent or as reprehensible, but unfortunately
unavoidable. This has not only been the normal attitude of all ethical
teachings, but, what is more important, also that expressed in the practical
action of the average man of pre-capitalistic times, pre-capitalistic in
the sense that the rational utilization of capital in a permanent enterprise
and the rational capitalistic organization of labour had not yet become
dominant forces in the determination of economic activity. Now just this
attitude was one of the strongest inner obstacles which the adaptation
of men to the conditions of an ordered bourgeois-capitalistic economy has
encountered everywhere.
The most important opponent with which the
spirit of capitalism, in the sense of a definite standard of life claiming
ethical sanction, has had to struggle, was that type of attitude and reaction
to new situations which we may designate as traditionalism. In this case
also every attempt at a final definition must be held in abeyance. On the
other hand, we must try to make the provisional meaning clear by citing
a few cases. We will begin from below, with the labourers.
One of the technical means which the modern
employer uses in order to secure the greatest possible amount of work from
his men is the device of piece-rates. In agriculture, for instance, the
gathering of the harvest is a case where the greatest possible intensity
of labour is called for, since, the weather being uncertain, the difference
between high profit and heavy loss may depend on the speed with which the
harvesting can be done. Hence a system of piece-rates is almost universal
in this case. And since the interest of the employer in a speeding up of
harvesting increases with the increase of the results and the intensity
of the work, the attempt has again and again been made, by increasing the
piece-rates of the workmen, thereby giving them an opportunity to earn
what is for them a very high wage, to interest them in increasing their
own efficiency. But a peculiar difficulty has been met with surprising
frequency: raising the piece-rates has often had the result that not more
but less has been accomplished in the same time, because the worker reacted
to the increase not by increasing but by decreasing the amount of his work.
A man, for instance, who at the rate of 1 mark per acre mowed 2 1/2 acres
per day and earned 2 1/2 marks, when the rate was raised to 1.25 marks
per acre mowed, not 3 acres, as he might easily have done, thus earning
3.75 marks, but only 2 acres, so that he could still earn the 2 1/2 marks
to which he was accustomed. The opportunity of earning more was less attractive
than that of working less. He did not ask: how much can I earn in a day
if I do as much work as possible ? but: how much must I work in order to
earn the wage, 2 1/2 marks, which I earned before and which takes care
of my traditional needs? This is an example of what is here meant by traditionalism.
A man does not "by nature" wish to earn more and more money, but simply
to live as he is accustomed to live and to earn as much as is necessary
for that purpose. Wherever modern capitalism has begun its work of increasing
the productivity of human labour by increasing its intensity, it has encountered
the immensely stubborn resistance of this leading trait of pre-capitalistic
labour. And to-day it encounters it the more, the more backward (from a
capitalistic point of view) the labouring forces are with which it has
to deal.
Another obvious possibility, to return to
our example, since the appeal to the acquisitive instinct through higher
wage-rates failed, would have been to try the opposite policy, to force
the worker by reduction of his wage-rates to work harder to earn the same
amount than he did before. Low wages and high profits seem even to-day
to a superficial observer to stand in correlation; everything which is
paid out in wages seems to involve a corresponding reduction of profits.
That road capitalism has taken again and again since its beginning. For
centuries it was an article of faith, that low wages were productive, i.e.
that they increased the material results of labour so that, as Pieter de
la Cour, on this point, as we shall see, quite in the spirit of the old
Calvinism, said long ago, the people only work because and so long as they
are poor.
But the effectiveness of this apparently
so efficient method has its limits. [15] Of course the presence of a surplus
population which it can hire cheaply in the labour market is a necessity
for the development of capitalism. But though too large a reserve army
may in certain cases favour its quantitative expansion, it checks its qualitative
development, especially the transition to types of enterprise which make
more intensive use of labour. Low wages are by no means identical with
cheap labour. [16] From a purely quantitative point of view the efficiency
of labour decreases with a wage which is physiologically insufficient,
which may in the long run even mean a survival of the unfit. The present-day
average Silesian mows, when he exerts himself to the full, little more
than two-thirds as much land as the better paid and nourished Pomeranian
or Mecklenburger, and the Pole, the further East he comes from, accomplishes
progressively less than the German. Low wages fail even from a purely business
point of view wherever it is a question of producing goods which require
any sort of skilled labour, or the use of expensive machinery which is
easily damaged, or in general wherever any great amount of sharp attention
or of initiative is required. Here low wages do not pay, and their effect
is the opposite of what was intended. For not only is a developed sense
of responsibility absolutely indispensable, but in general also an attitude
which, at least during working hours, is freed from continual calculations
of how the customary wage may be earned with a maximum of comfort and a
minimum of exertion. Labour must, on the contrary, be performed as if it
were an absolute end in itself, a calling. But such an attitude is by no
means a product of nature. It cannot be evoked by low wages or high ones
alone, but can only be the product of a long and arduous process of education.
To-day, capitalism, once in the saddle, can recruit its labouring force
in all industrial countries with comparative ease. In the past this was
in every case an extremely difficult problem. [17] And even to-day it could
probably not get along without the support of a powerful ally along the
way, which, as we shall see below, was at hand at the time of its development.
What is meant can again best be explained
by means of an example. The type of backward traditional form of labour
is to-day very often exemplified by women workers, especially unmarried
ones. An almost universal complaint of employers of girls, for instance
German girls, is that they are almost entirely unable and unwilling to
give up methods of work inherited or once learned in favour of more efficient
ones, to adapt themselves to new methods, to learn and to concentrate their
intelligence, or even to use it at all. Explanations of the possibility
of making work easier, above all more profitable to themselves, generally
encounter a complete lack of understanding. Increases of piece-rates are
without avail against the stone wall of habit. In general it is otherwise;
and that is a point of no little importance from our view-point, only with
girls having a specifically religious, especially a Pietistic, background.
One often hears, and statistical investigation confirms it, [18] that by
far the best chances of economic education are found among this group.
The ability of mental concentration, as well as the absolutely essential
feeling of obligation to one's job, are here most often combined with a
strict economy which calculates the possibility of high earnings, and a
cool self-control and frugality which enormously increase performance.
This provides the most favourable foundation for the conception of labour
as an end in itself, as a calling which is necessary to capitalism: the
chances of overcoming traditionalism are greatest on account of the religious
upbringing. This observation of present-day capitalism [19] in itself suggests
that it is worth while to ask how this connection of adaptability to capitalism
with religious factors may have come about in the days of the early development
of capitalism. For that they were even then present in much the same form
can be inferred from numerous facts. For instance, the dislike and the
persecution which Methodist workmen in the eighteenth century met at the
hands of their comrades were not solely nor even principally the result
of their religious eccentricities, England had seen many of those and more
striking ones. It rested rather, as the destruction of their tools, repeatedly
mentioned in the reports, suggests, upon their specific willingness to
work as we should say to-day.
However, let us again return to the present,
and this time to the entrepreneur, in order to clarify the meaning of traditionalism
in his case.
Sombart, in his discussions of the genesis
of capitalism, [20] has distinguished between the satisfaction of needs
and acquisition as the two great leading principles in economic history.
In the former case the attainment of the goods necessary to meet personal
needs, in the latter a struggle for profit free from the limits set by
needs, have been the ends controlling the form and direction of economic
activity. What he calls the economy of needs seems at first glance to be
identical with what is here described as economic traditionalism. That
may be the case if the concept of needs is limited to traditional needs.
But if that is not done, a number of economic types which must be considered
capitalistic according to the definition of capital which Sombart gives
in another part of his work, [21] would be excluded from the category of
acquisitive economy and put into that of needs economy. Enterprises, namely,
which are carried on by private entrepreneurs by utilizing capital (money
or goods with a money value) to make a profit, purchasing the means of
production and selling the product, i.e. undoubted capitalistic enterprises,
may at the same time have a traditionalistic character. This has, in the
course even of modern economic history, not been merely an occasional case,
but rather the rule, with continual interruptions from repeated and increasingly
powerful conquests of the capitalistic spirit. To be sure the capitalistic
form of an enterprise and the spirit in which it is run generally stand
in some sort of adequate relationship to each other, but not in one of
necessary interdependence. Nevertheless, we provisionally use the expression
spirit of (modern) capitalism [22] to describe that attitude which seeks
profit rationally and systematically in the manner which we have illustrated
by the example of Benjamin Franklin. This, however, is justified by the
historical fact that that attitude of mind has on the one hand found its
most suitable expression in capitalistic enterprise, while on the other
the enterprise has derived its most suitable motive force from the spirit
of capitalism.
But the two may very well occur separately.
Benjamin Franklin was filled with the spirit of capitalism at a time when
his printing business did not differ in form from any handicraft enterprise.
And we shall see that at the beginning of modern times it was by no means
the capitalistic entrepreneurs of the commercial aristocracy, who were
either the sole or the predominant bearers of the attitude we have here
called the spirit of capitalism. [23] It was much more the rising strata
of the lower industrial middle classes. Even in the nineteenth century
its classical representatives were not the elegant gentlemen of Liverpool
and Hamburg, with their commercial fortunes handed down for generations,
but the self-made parvenus of Manchester and Westphalia, who often rose
from very modest circumstances. As early as the sixteenth century the situation
was similar; the industries which arose at that time were mostly created
by parvenus. [24]
The management, for instance, of a bank,
a wholesale export business, a large retail establishment, or of a large
putting-out enterprise dealing with goods produced in homes, is certainly
only possible in the form of a capitalistic enterprise. Nevertheless, they
may all be carried on in a traditionalistic spirit. In fact, the business
of a large bank of issue cannot be carried on in any other way. The foreign
trade of whole epochs has rested on the basis of monopolies and legal privileges
of strictly traditional character. In retail trade--and we are not here
talking of the small men without capital who are continually crying out
for Government aid -- the revolution which is making an end of the old
traditionalism is still in full swing. lt is the same development which
broke up the old putting-out system, to which modem domestic labour is
related only in form. How this revolution takes place and what is its significance
may, in spite of the fact these things are so familiar, be again brought
out by a concrete example.
Until about the middle of the past century
the life of a putter-out was, at least in many of the branches of the Continental
textile industry, [25] what we should to-day consider very comfortable.
We may imagine its routine somewhat as follows: The peasants came with
their cloth, often (in the case of linen) principally or entirely made
from raw material which the peasant himself had produced, to the town in
which the putter-out lived, and after a careful, often official, appraisal
of the quality, received the customary price for it. The putter-out's customers,
for markets any appreciable distance away, were middlemen, who also came
to him, generally not yet following samples, but seeking traditional qualities,
and bought from his warehouse, or, long before delivery, placed orders
which were probably in turn passed on to the peasants. Personal canvassing
of customers took place, if at all, only at long intervals. Otherwise correspondence
sufficed, though the sending of samples slowly gained ground. The number
of business hours was very moderate, perhaps five to six a day, sometimes
considerably less; in the rush season, where there was one, more. Earnings
were moderate; enough to lead a respectable life and in good times to put
away a little. On the whole, relations among competitors were relatively
good, with a large degree of agreement on the fundamentals of business.
A long daily visit to the tavern, with often plenty to drink, and a congenial
circle of friends, made life comfortable and leisurely.
The form of organization was in every respect
capitalistic; the entrepreneur's activity was of a purely business character;
the use of capital, turned over in the business, was indispensable; and
finally, the objective aspect of the economic process, the book-keeping,
was rational. But it was traditionalistic business, if one considers the
spirit which animated the entrepreneur: the traditional manner of life,
the traditional rate of profit, the traditional amount of work, the traditional
manner of regulating the relationships with labour, and the essentially
traditional circle of customers and the manner of attracting new ones.
All these dominated the conduct of the business, were at the basis, one
may say, of the ethos of this group of business men.
Now at some time this leisureliness was
suddenly destroyed, and often entirely without any essential change in
the form of organization, such as the transition to a unified factory,
to mechanical weaving, etc. What happened was, on the contrary, often no
more than this: some young man from one of the putting-out families went
out into the country, carefully chose weavers for his employ, greatly increased
the rigour of his supervision of their work, and thus turned them from
peasants into labourers. On the other hand, he would begin to change his
marketing methods by so far as possible going directly to the final consumer,
would take the details into his own hands, would personally solicit customers,
visiting them every year, and above all would adapt the quality of the
product directly to their needs and wishes. At the same time he began to
introduce the principle of low prices and large turnover. There was repeated
what everywhere and always is the result of such a process of rationalization:
those who would not follow suit had to go out of business. The idyllic
state collapsed under the pressure of a bitter competitive struggle, respectable
fortunes were made, and not lent out at interest, but always reinvested
in the business. The old leisurely and comfortable attitude toward life
gave way to a hard frugality in which some participated and came to the
top, because they did not wish to consume but to earn, while others who
wished to keep on with the old ways were forced to curtail their consumption.
[26]
And, what is most important in this connection,
it was not generally in such cases a stream of new money invested in the
industry which brought about this revolution--in several cases known to
me the whole revolutionary process was set in motion with a few thousands
of capital borrowed from relations--but the new spirit, the spirit of modern
capitalism, had set to work. The question of the motive forces in the expansion
of modern capitalism is not in the first instance a question of the origin
of the capital sums which were available for capitalistic uses, but, above
all, of the development of the spirit of capitalism. Where it appears and
is able to work itself out, it produces its own capital and monetary supplies
as the means to its ends, but the reverse is not true. [27] Its entry on
the scene was not generally peaceful. A flood of mistrust, sometimes of
hatred, above all of moral indignation, regularly opposed itself to the
first innovator. Often--I know of several cases of the sort--regular legends
of mysterious shady spots in his previous life have been produced. It is
very easy not to recognize that only an unusually strong character could
save an entrepreneur of this new type from the loss of his temperate self-control
and from both moral and economic shipwreck. Furthermore, along with clarity
of vision and ability to act, it is only by virtue of very definite and
highly developed ethical qualities that it has been possible for him to
command the absolutely indispensable confidence of his customers and workmen.
Nothing else could have given him the strength to overcome the innumerable
obstacles, above all the infinitely more intensive work which is demanded
of the modern entrepreneur. But these are ethical qualities of quite a
different sort from those adapted to the traditionalism of the past.
And, as a rule, it has been neither dare-devil
and unscrupulous speculators, economic adventurers such as we meet at all
periods of economic history, nor simply great financiers who have carried
through this change, outwardly so inconspicuous, but nevertheless so decisive
for the penetration of economic life with the new spirit. On the contrary,
they were men who had grown up in the hard school of life, calculating
and daring at the same time, above all temperate and reliable, shrewd and
completely devoted to their business, with strictly bourgeois opinions
and principles.
One is tempted to think that these personal
moral qualities have not the slightest relation to any ethical maxims,
to say nothing of religious ideas, but that the essential relation between
them is negative. The ability to free oneself from the common tradition,
a sort of liberal enlightenment, seems likely to be the most suitable basis
for such a business man's success. And to-day that is generally precisely
the case. Any relationship between religious beliefs and conduct is generally
absent, and where any exists, at least in Germany, it tends to be of the
negative sort. The people filled with the spirit of capitalism to-day tend
to be indifferent, if not hostile, to the Church. The thought of the pious
boredom of paradise has little attraction for their active natures; religion
appears to them as a means of drawing people away from labour in this world.
If you ask them what is the meaning of their restless activity, why they
are never satisfied with what they have, thus appearing so senseless to
any purely worldly view of life, they would perhaps give the answer, if
they know any at all: "to provide for my children and grandchildren". But
more often and, since that motive is not peculiar to them, but was just
as effective for the traditionalist, more correctly, simply: that business
with its continuous work has become a necessary part of their lives. That
is in fact the only possible motivation, but it at the same time expresses
what is, seen from the view-point of personal happiness, so irrational
about this sort of life, where a man exists for the sake of his business,
instead of the reverse.
Of course, the desire for the power and
recognition which the mere fact of wealth brings plays its part. When the
imagination of a whole people has once been turned toward purely quantitative
bigness, as in the United States, this romanticism of numbers exercises
an irresistible appeal to the poets among business men. Otherwise it is
in general not the real leaders, and especially not the permanently successful
entrepreneurs, who are taken in by it. In particular, the resort to entailed
estates and the nobility, with sons whose conduct at the university and
in the officers' corps tries to cover up their social origin, as has been
the typical history of German capitalistic parvenu families, is a product
of later decadence. The ideal type [28] of the capitalistic entrepreneur,
as it has been represented even in Germany by occasional outstanding examples,
has no relation to such more or less refined climbers. He avoids ostentation
and unnecessary expenditure, as well as conscious enjoyment of his power,
and is embarrassed by the outward signs of the social recognition which
he receives. His manner of life is, in other words, often, and we shall
have to investigate the historical significance of just this important
fact, distinguished by a certain ascetic tendency, as appears clearly enough
in the sermon of Franklin which we have quoted. It is, namely, by no means
exceptional, but rather the rule, for him to have a sort of modesty which
is essentially more honest than the reserve which Franklin so shrewdly
recommends. He gets nothing out of his wealth for himself, except the irrational
sense of having done his job well.
But it is just that which seems to the pre-capitalistic
man so incomprehensible and mysterious, so unworthy and contemptible. That
anyone should be able to make it the sole purpose of his life-work, to
sink into the grave weighed down with a great material load of money and
goods, seems to him explicable only as the product of a perverse instinct,
the auri sacra fames.
At present under our individualistic political,
legal, and economic institutions, with the forms of organization and general
structure which are peculiar to our economic order, this spirit of capitalism
might be understandable, as has been said, purely as a result of adaptation.
The capitalistic system so needs this devotion to the calling of making
money, it is an attitude toward material goods which is so well suited
to that system, so intimately bound up with the conditions of survival
in the economic struggle for existence, that there can to-day no longer
be any question of a necessary connection of that acquisitive manner of
life with any single Weltanschauung. In fact, it no longer needs
the support of any religious forces, and feels the attempts of religion
to influence economic life, in so far as they can still be felt at all,
to be as much an unjustified interference as its regulation by the State.
In such circumstances men's commercial and social interests do tend to
determine their opinions and attitudes. Whoever does not adapt his manner
of life to the conditions of capitalistic success must go under, or at
least cannot rise. But these are phenomena of a time in which modern capitalism
has become dominant and has become emancipated from its old supports. But
as it could at one time destroy the old forms of medieval regulation of
economic life only in alliance with the growing power of the modern State,
the same, we may say provisionally, may have been the case in its relations
with religious forces. Whether and in what sense that was the case, it
is our task to investigate. For that the conception of money-making as
an end in itself to which people were bound, as a calling, was contrary
to the ethical feelings of whole epochs, it is hardly necessary to prove.
The dogma Deo placere vix potest which was incorporated into the
canon law and applied to the activities of the merchant, and which at that
time (like the passage in the gospel about interest) [29] was considered
genuine, as well as St. Thomas's characterization of the desire for gain
as turpitudo (which term even included unavoidable and hence ethically
justified profit-making), already contained a high degree of concession
on the part of the Catholic doctrine to the financial powers with which
the Church had such intimate political relations in the Italian cities,
[30] as compared with the much more radically anti-chrematistic views of
comparatively wide circles. But even where the doctrine was still better
accommodated to the facts, as for instance with Anthony of Florence, the
feeling was never quite overcome, that activity directed to acquisition
for its own sake was at bottom a pudendum which was to be tolerated
only because of the unalterable necessities of life in this world.
Some moralists of that time, especially
of the nominalistic school, accepted developed capitalistic business forms
as inevitable, and attempted to justify them, especially commerce, as necessary.
The industria developed in it they were able to regard, though not
without contradictions, as a legitimate source of profit, and hence ethically
unobjectionable. But the dominant doctrine rejected the spirit of capitalistic
acquisition as turpitudo, or at least could not give it a positive
ethical sanction. An ethical attitude like that of Benjamin Franklin would
have been simply unthinkable. This was, above all, the attitude of capitalistic
circles themselves. Their life-work was, so long as they clung to the tradition
of the Church, at best something morally indifferent. It was tolerated,
but was still, even if only on account of the continual danger of collision
with the Church's doctrine on usury, somewhat dangerous to salvation. Quite
considerable sums, as the sources show, went at the death of rich people
to religious institutions as conscience money, at times even back to former
debtors as usura which had been unjustly taken from them. It was
otherwise, along with heretical and other tendencies looked upon with disapproval,
only in those parts of the commercial aristocracy which were already emancipated
from the tradition. But even sceptics and people indifferent to the Church
often reconciled themselves with it by gifts, because it was a sort of
insurance against the uncertainties of what might come after death, or
because (at least according to the very widely held latter view) an external
obedience to the commands of the Church was sufficient to insure salvation.
[31] Here the either non-moral or immoral character of their action in
the opinion of the participants themselves comes clearly to light.
Now, how could activity, which was at best
ethically tolerated, turn into a calling in the sense of Benjamin Franklin?
The fact to be explained historically is that in the most highly capitalistic
centre of that time, in Florence of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries,
the money and capital market of all the great political Powers, this attitude
was considered ethically unjustifiable, or at best to be tolerated. But
in the backwoods small bourgeois circumstances of Pennsylvania in the eighteenth
century, where business threatened for simple lack of money to fall back
into barter, where there was hardly a sign of large enterprise, where only
the earliest beginnings of banking were to be found, the same thing was
considered the essence of moral conduct, even commanded in the name of
duty. To speak here of a reflection of material conditions in the ideal
superstructure would be patent nonsense. What was the background of ideas
which could account for the sort of activity apparently directed toward
profit alone as a calling toward which the individual feels himself to
have an ethical obligation? For it was this idea which gave the way of
life of the new entrepreneur its ethical foundation and justification.
The attempt has been made, particularly
by Sombart, in what are often judicious and effective observations, to
depict economic rationalism as the salient feature of modern economic life
as a whole. Undoubtedly with justification, if by that is meant the extension
of the productivity of labour which has, through the subordination of the
process of production to scientific points of view, relieved it from its
dependence upon the natural organic limitations of the human individual.
Now this process of rationalization in the field of technique and economic
organization undoubtedly determines an important part of the ideals of
life of modern bourgeois society. Labour in the service of a rational organization
for the provision of humanity with material goods has without doubt always
appeared to representatives of the capitalistic spirit as one of the most
important purposes of their life-work. It is only necessary, for instance,
to read Franklin's account of his efforts in the service of civic improvements
in Philadelphia clearly to apprehend this obvious truth. And the joy and
pride of having given employment to numerous people, of having had a part
in the economic progress of his home town in the sense referring to figures
of population and volume of trade which capitalism associated with the
word, all these things obviously are part of the specific and undoubtedly
idealistic satisfactions in life to modern men of business. Similarly it
is one of the fundamental characteristics of an individualistic capitalistic
economy that it is rationalized on the basis of rigorous calculation, directed
with foresight and caution toward the economic success which is sought
in sharp contrast to the hand- to-mouth existence of the peasant, and to
the privileged traditionalism of the guild craftsman and of the adventurers'
capitalism, oriented to the exploitation of political opportunities and
irrational speculation.
It might thus seem that the development
of the spirit of capitalism is best understood as part of the development
of rationalism as a whole, and could be deduced from the fundamental position
of rationalism on the basic problems of life. In the process Protestantism
would only have to be considered in so far as it had formed a stage prior
to the development of a purely rationalistic philosophy. But any serious
attempt to carry this thesis through makes it evident that such a simple
way of putting the question will not work, simply because of the fact that
the history of rationalism shows a development which by no means follows
parallel lines in the various departments of life. The rationalization
of private law, for instance, if it is thought of as a logical simplification
and rearrangement of the content of the law, was achieved in the highest
hitherto known degree in the Roman law of late antiquity. But it remained
most backward in some of the countries with the highest degree of economic
rationalization, notably in England, where the Renaissance of Roman Law
was overcome by the power of the great legal corporations, while it has
always retained its supremacy in the Catholic countries of Southern Europe.
The worldly rational philosophy of the eighteenth century did not find
favour alone or even principally in the countries of highest capitalistic
development. The doctrines of Voltaire are even to-day the common property
of broad upper, and what is practically more important, middle-class groups
in the Romance Catholic countries. Finally, if under practical rationalism
is understood the type of attitude which sees and judges the world consciously
in terms of the worldly interests of the individual ego, then this view
of life was and is the special peculiarity of the peoples of the liberum
arbitrium, such as the Italians and the French are in very flesh and
blood. But we have already convinced ourselves that this is by no means
the soil in which that relationship of a man to his calling as a task,
which is necessary to capitalism, has pre-eminently grown. In fact, one
may--this simple proposition, which is often forgotten, should be placed
at the beginning of every study which essays to deal with rationalism--rationalize
life from fundamentally different basic points of view and in very different
directions. Rationalism is an historical concept which covers a whole world
of different things. It will be our task to find out whose intellectual
child the particular concrete form of rational thought was, from which
the idea of a calling and the devotion to labour in the calling has grown,
which is, as we have seen, so irrational from the standpoint of purely
eudaemonistic self-interest, but which has been and still is one of the
most characteristic elements of our capitalistic culture. We are here particularly
interested in the origin of precisely the irrational element which lies
in this, as in every conception of a calling.
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