What Is "The Good Society"?

Walzer, Michael

What Is "The Good Society"? Michael Walzer PREiIMIwnRv DIALOGUE: The co-edi­tor of Dissent argues with a philo­sophical friend to determine the truth (or a truth) of the matter. MW: The...

...Of course, com­munities also co-exist in time and space, and have to forge relationships beyond their bound­aries, but they are at the same time somehow self-sufficient, complete-at least, they aspire to completeness...
...Well, not everything (and not noth­ing...
...so what...
...I don't believe this, for reasons that should be apparent from my list of good societies...
...Of course, they disagree...
...The coercive im­position of a single version would destroy both freedom and equality...
...Since the powers-that-be always prefer to rule over populations that are passive, inarticulate, fear­ful, subdued, and obedient, active participa­tion is itself a good thing, even though some of us wí11 want to criticize or oppose the re­sulting activities...
...Monism is a radical philosophy, whereas pluralism seems to allow more room for nego­tiation and accommodation . After all, there actually are movements, associations, commu­nities, and states in the world, some better, some worse...
...MW: Can you really look at all the different societies that human beings have built, ac­knowledge the range of difference, and still believe that it would be better if all humanity were living in the same way, with the same so­cial practices and political institutions, in one big society (Plato's Republic writ large) or in many similar smaller ones (like the Israeli kib­butzim...
...What matters is the manner in which the doctrine is socially enacted : Is it freely accepted by all the members...
...Michael Walzer PREiIMIwnRv DIALOGUE: The co-edi­tor of Dissent argues with a philo­sophical friend to determine the truth (or a truth) of the matter...
...That means many people participating actively in many different ways in many different groups...
...Some political theo­rists have argued that this political community, the democratic state, is in fact the good soci­ety and that the engagement of citizens in run­ning the state and "giving the law to themselves" is the good life...
...it provides the structure and mean­ing of their daily lives...
...How should these be described...
...I am going to consider three kinds (though there may be more) : movements, asso­ciations, and communities . And then I wí11 add to the list the liberal state, which represents but isn't the only possible form of the enclosing frame and which is also a society in its own right . Movements: Remember Eduard Bernstein's line, "The movement is everything, the end nothing...
...Just as the ongoing engagement of individuals in the work of the movement or as­sociation is a kind of test, so is the engagement of generations of individuals in the life of the community...
...Since the ends of the movement are com­monly radical and far-reaching, it doesn't ac­tually have to achieve them...
...What actual or possible societies exist within the hol­lowed-out social frame-and what are their qualities...
...The notion of the good society is al­ways a critical notion, since it is immediately obvious that we are not living in such a soci­ety...
...its different features will fit together in a specific way that is the right way...
...76 . DISSENT I Winter 2009 What is most distinctive about communities is their collective desire to pass on their way of life to successive generations...
...The standards here have to do with the ends of the movement (despite Bernstein's claim) as well as with the structure of its in­ternal life...
...Many men and women find greater goodness in their movements, associa­tions, and communities than they find in the state...
...But they won't be better until more people are involved more deeply in more of them­and involved as free and equal men and women...
...Isn't the pursuit of justice, truth, and beauty also, simultaneously, the pursuit of the good society, in which our higher nature would finally be fulfilled...
...Let their projects and the societies they create co-exist . But doesn't this co-existence, whatever form it takes, require that each society recog­nize the rights of the others : the right to a place in the world, the right to organize a common life, the right to pursue goodness according to the local lights...
...We must now look for a pluralist realization, that is, for many partial, incomplete, contradictory realiza­tions, of these values...
...How much coercion are you prepared to use on behalf of your conception of the good soci­ety...
...On the other hand, groups within the movement, like labor unions in the socialist movement, must provide real benefits to their members . In this sense, they are like associations . Associations: Movements make very strong (sometimes total) claims on the loyalty and also on the time, energy, and wealth of their mem­bers...
...some part of what the members think good wí11 have to be given up...
...This last is perhaps the most interesting form of co-existence . Associations can live, so to speak, inside communities and states ; mem­bers of communities, sometimes communities collectively, can join in political or social moveDISSENT I Winter 2009 . 77 ments...
...The field can be more or less open, more or less supportive, so there are bet­ter and worse civil societies...
...One might say of a medieval mon­astery that it was a good community for the monks but not for the serfs of the monks ; hence so long as there were serfs it wasn't a good com­munity...
...Indeed, they wí11 be realized differently in different settings, or they won't be realized at all anywhere...
...Is it open for revision...
...they wí11 build differ­ent "good societies," and live in them, and teach their children that the society they have built is better than all the others...
...but movements have certainly provided large numbers of men and women with a pow­erful experience of a good society...
...it only has, so to speak, to sustain them...
...Don't they have differ­ent ideals...
...Some of the associations are "campaigns" in Richard Rorty's sense (see "Movements and Campaigns," Dissent, Winter 1995), with an external purpose that is reso­lutely pursued...
...MW: The definite article is wrong...
...APF: No, the idea of the good must be coher­ent...
...and they would be good (if they were good) in different ways . M v BASIC CLAIM is that all these kinds of difference are themselves good and represent a central part of what goodness is in social and political life . But I worry that this may sound like a conservative argument...
...Let there be many good societies, or at least many agents aiming at goodness of different sorts...
...It is pos­sible to imagine, therefore, that a single indi­vidual could take part in many good societies, organized at different levels of social life and over different geographic areas . The societies would themselves be different...
...The "marketplace of ideas" must be open to all comers . MW: No, no, the good society isn't a debating society-or rather, a debating society, a really lively debating society, may be one kind of good society, but not the only kind...
...APF: All right, that just means that the good society has to leave room for all those imaginings-it has to be liberal and demo­cratic...
...But no civil soci­ety is the good society, for greater value resides in the associations themselves-that serve our interests or advance our moral purposes-than in the field they occupy...
...It makes no sense to tell people who are fully commit­ted to a good movement that they are making a mistake...
...A Philosophical Friend: Well, there is one human nature, recognizable across many his­torical and cultural settings . So why shouldn't there be one good society that "fits" human nature and enables all men and women to reach their highest potential...
...Social de­mocracy, with its parties, unions, schools, newspapers, cultural and athletic organiza­tions, youth groups, and summer camps, is a prime example . Most social democrats, no doubt, thought that their movement was a model for the good society...
...The in­ternal life must be meaningful to the members and equally accessible to all of them ; whatever patterns of super- or subordination exist in the community must be freely accepted...
...The groups sometimes compete, sometimes form alliances, mostly just co-exist...
...So let's try to figure out what that is...
...and so on...
...Goodness requires plenitude...
...But it also has to be judged by its effectiveness: it must bring (some of) the benefits it promises to its own members or to outsiders . Because they make only partial claims on their members, associations co-exist and over­lap in space...
...The Project of the Left Movements are judged first of all by their pur­poses, but also, more important, by the degree to which their internal life is already shaped by those purposes . Associations are judged by their purposes, by the active participation of their members, and also by their ability to de­liver what they promise to their members and to people in need outside the association...
...The movement's purposive urgency, its intense solidarity, the moral and political commitment of its members-none of these can be sustained over long periods of time . At some point, the claims of ordinary life wí11 take over...
...These societies co-exist in time and space both with societies of their own kind and of other kinds...
...I suppose that their ability to do that is one of the tests of their goodness...
...Rousseau said of his re­public that its citizens would derive their greatest happiness from their citizenship : "The aggregate of the common happiness furnishes a greater proportion of that of each individual, so that there is less for him to seek in particu­lar cares...
...they have a lifespan-in the same way that men and DISSENT I Winter 2009 . 75 women do, whose generations both overlap and succeed one another...
...I won't pretend that freedom and equality are the common qualities of all good societies (monasteries are an obvious excep­tion), but they are common to all left versions of goodness . I can be tolerant of, even welcom­ing to, other versions and, in some general way, I am . In principle I believe that there ought to he other versions, fighting (peacefully) for their place in the social sun . I also value the fights . But when I join them, I can only fight for my own version . Even here, however, on the left, freedom and equality don't make for a single good soci­ety, for these values are open to a variety of en­actments...
...and the members must also be free to leave whenever they choose to do so (well, not whenever: they may have residual obligations to the people they have lived and worked with ; they can't just walk away in a time of trouble) . I don't think that the particular religion or ideology of the communi­ty determines its goodness or badness . Barring ideologies that are Nazi-like, racist, or chauvin­ist, the range of legitimate doctrinal commit­ment is very wide...
...Communities: Movements and associations are parts of a larger world ; I imagine commu­nities as worlds-ín-themselves, constituted by men and women committed not just to a project but to a way of life...
...Movements rise and decline...
...People won't just argue about different versions of goodness, they will try to act them out...
...What am I arguing here except that it would be better if more of these societ­ies were . . . better...
...Communities, by contrast, incorporate successive generations and sustain themselves over many years ; move­ments commonly can't do that...
...the commit­ment required for participation would be dif­ferent...
...The chronology of move­ments is similarly patterned...
...So if we set out on the pluralist path, we are effectively giving up the definite article and the singular goal...
...The goodness of the movement can survive this ten­dency-though it doesn't always do so...
...And so it makes sense to think of existing societies as so many failed efforts to reach the right way...
...It protects its citi­zens not only against other states but also against oppression or illegitimate coercion in the different groups: it is the guarantor of in­dividual rights . So a good state is one whose guarantee is effective for all its citizens ; this is what makes its own coercive power legitimate . But effectiveness requires, so we have learned, that the state be in the hands of those same citizens-that it is a democratic state . Note that the state is also a community of a kind : it seeks to educate its children to be good citizens and to sustain a common politi­cal life across generations...
...But in a society of societies, there would be no common happiness . There would be no common experience, at least in Rousseau's sense of "common," for we don't participate directly in the framework that we share with all our fellows, but only in the en­closed societies that we share with some of them...
...How do you pro­pose to bring them all to accept those losses...
...Some of the different so­cieties are better than others, which is to say, they are closer to the ideal . And the ideal is the good society...
...They are free to decide (and a good state will guarantee this freedom) that they are "called" elsewhere...
...They also overlap with one an­other, and they can be included inside one an­other...
...associations are much less demanding, their ends less encompassing . Nevertheless, they often have an internal life that is highly rewarding for the participants . Assume that they are doing good work: they are helping the sick and infirm, defending a neighborhood against crime or a country against environmen­tal pollution, seeking constitutional reform, promoting the interests and values of teachers or social workers or doctors, bringing together people with a common interest in Jane Austin, or stamp collecting, or 1940s jazz, and so on . Assume also that their members freely coop­erate with one another and decide together on the structure of their enterprise . Then their association is a good society...
...So why not say that the good society, in the singular, is precisely this plural­ity, taken together, organized or at least en­closed in some larger whole...
...Does it make sense to say that all the actually existing societies are really trying to reach the same ideal...
...Does your argument require some world-historical agent-the mes­siah, the communist vanguard, an enlightened despot...
...There are standards of goodness, but these aren't the standards of the good society, but of a good movement . I wí11 try to say what those standards are, and do the same for associations and communities and then for states...
...Com­munities are judged primarily by the value of the common life to the members themselves (all of them...
...That kind of practical plurality within theo­retical singularity is fine with me . The good so­ciety can be imagined as a framework that encompasses all the versions of goodness...
...These two sometimes exist in ten­sion-especially so in left movements where the end is equality and democracy, while the organizational structure, because of the urgen­cies imposed by social conflict, is something less than fully egalitarian or democratic . I am doubtful about Robert Michels's "iron law of oligarchy" but a tendency to curtail internal democracy is certainly visible in many left movements, to a greater or lesser extent...
...Isn't this the goal of philosophy since its Greek beginnings, and of most of the world's religions, especially the monotheistic ones (think of the city on the hí11, the holy commonwealth, the messianic king­dom), and of the left also for the last several centuries...
...Instead, there are many forms of agency, all of them on a smaller, more local scale...
...As we wí11 see, the standards are differ­ent, though they have important common fea­tures...
...The good society is constituted by the peaceful co-existence of all the societies that aim at goodness...
...But they were wrong about that...
...Hannah Arendt sometimes wrote as if she believed that citi­zens meeting in the assembly, arguing about war and peace, displaying their wisdom or vir­tue to their fellows, stand at the very zenith of human achievement...
...And this finding is definitive...
...the same people can be members of different groups...
...MW: But surely what is most distinctive about humanity is its creative power-to think, imag­ine, speculate, argue, and disagree...
...MW: Well, I agree that there are failures, but they are of many different kinds-and there are also different kinds of success . Suppose, 74 . DISSENT I Winter 2009 though, for the sake of the argument, that you are right about the one right way: there remains a practical moral question of considerable im­portance, especially for the left . Reaching a sin­gular goodness is going to involve serious losses from the perspective of each of the existing societies (or of their majority or dominant groups...
...And then our maxim should be, Let a hundred flowers bloom...
...Our experience with world-historical agents hasn't been all that "good ." Good Societies So the argument goes on and on, but I will stop here, giving my own side the last word . Let's assume that there isn't and shouldn't be a single world-historical agent...
...in communities experimenting with different understandings of a common life ; and also, finally, in states where the practice of democracy engages the interests and pas­sions of the citizens . To create and sustain this plurality of good societies wí11 never be easy...
...Perhaps incompatible ideals...
...States: The state provides the most important framework, but not the only possible one, within which movements, associations, and communities can co-exist...
...Most religious communities have this character, even if it is often compro­mised by the engagement of community mem­bers in life outside . Secular, ideological, utopian communities, like Brook Farm or the early kib­butzim, also aim at completeness, sometimes with religious zeal...
...this is the critical les­son of the communist experiment and, more generally, of the twentieth century...
...It will turn out, in fact, to be a substantial, difficult, and radical project . But it is a pos­sible project, while the one and only good so­ciety is both dangerous to attempt and impossible to achieve . MICHAEL WALZER is the co-editor of Dissent and author of numerous works of political thought . 78 . DISSENT I Winter 2009...
...But this isn't a sufficient test, since all sorts of social and economic pressures may force people out of these groups-people who would stay if the moral attractiveness of the groups were their only consideration . What makes communities morally attractive...
...And who is to use ít...
...How could there be one good society, given the immense variety of human cultures...
...States are judged by their effec­tiveness in protecting the rights of their citi­zens, as individuals, in and against all these groups and also by the engagement of the citi­zens in running state affairs...
...its different features can't be inconsistent with one another, or else we wouldn't be able to say what goodness is . The good society wí11 no doubt be a complex creation, but, finally, it wí11 be a singular creation...
...APF: OK, I concede the point : that's what has happened, that's what people say to their chil­dren...
...But that isn't what most people who imagine it, and seek to establish it, are after...
...So men and women wí11 imagine different good societies, argue about their political and economic ar­rangements, and disagree about which one is best...
...The field of their co-existence is called "civil society...
...In all the visions of social goodness from Plato onward and in all the experiments (so far, at least), the good society is singular in a much stronger sense . It is the focus of the energy and loyalty of its members...
...No doubt, citizens have obligations, but they are not obligated to accept the propo­sition that citizenship is the highest calling of humankind...
...And if such an agent is necessary, should you really pursue the argument...
...Many different people aim at the good society and claim to have achieved goodness or to be on the way...
...some of them are support groups, focused inwardly on the troubles of their own members...
...When it does, the movement wí11 be marked by the sense of a valued enterprise, freely chosen, and then by political friendship and solidarity...
...Standing on the left, I imag­ine goodness being created and sustained by activist men and women in movements that are hostile to authoritarianism and hierarchy ; in associations whose members commit them­selves freely to one another-and to other oth­ers too...
...We are also giving up the old idea of "soci­ety" or, better, we are hollowing it out and then focusing our hopes for goodness on a long se­ries of lesser, more local, more particularized "so­cieties...
...What's crucial is that they can't all be right-otherwise what would be the point of the disagreement...
...movements can organize within as well as across state boundaries...
...But in their time, for decades, not centuries, they are or can be good societies . N OT EVERY movement is good, of course...

Vol. 56 • January 2009 • No. 1


 
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