Aldous
Huxley's
BRAVE NEW WORLD REVISITED
___________
Foreword
The
soul of wit may become the very body of untruth. However elegant and memorable, brevity can
never, in the nature of things, do justice to all the facts of a complex
situation. On such a theme one can be brief
only by omission and simplification.
Omission and simplification help us to understand - but help us, in many
cases, to understand the wrong thing; for our comprehension may be only of the
abbreviator's neatly formulated notions, not of the vast, ramifying reality
from which these notions have been so arbitrarily abstracted.
But life is short and information
endless: nobody has time for everything.
In practice we are generally forced to choose between an unduly brief
exposition and no exposition at all.
Abbreviation is a necessary evil and the abbreviator's business is to
make the best of a job which, though intrinsically bad, is still better than
nothing. He must learn to simplify, but
not to the point of falsification. He
must learn to concentrate upon the essentials of a situation, but without
ignoring too many of reality's qualifying side-issues. In this way he may be able to tell not indeed
the whole truth whole truth about almost any important subject is incompatible
with brevity), but considerably more than the dangerous quarter-truths and
half-truths which have always been the current coin of thought.
The subject of freedom and its enemies
is enormous, and what I have written is certainly too short to do it full
justice; but at least I have touched on many aspects of the problem. Each aspect may have been somewhat
over-simplified in the expositions; but these successive over-simplifications
add up to a picture that, I hope, gives some hint of the vastness and
complexity of the original.
Omitted from the picture (not as being
unimportant, but merely for convenience and because I have discussed them on
earlier occasions) are the mechanical and military enemies of freedom - the
weapons and gadgets which have so powerfully strengthened the hands of the
world's rulers against their subjects, and the ever more ruinously costly
preparations for ever more senseless and suicidal wars. The chapters that follow should be read
against a background of thoughts about the Hungarian uprising and its repression,
about the H-bombs, about the cost of what every nation refers to as 'defence',
about those endless columns of uniformed boys, while, black, brown, yellow,
marching obediently towards the common grave.
___________________
I
Overpopulation
In
1931, when Brave New World was being written, I was convinced that there
was still plenty of time. The completely
organized society, the scientific caste system, the abolition of free will by
methodical conditioning, the servitude made acceptable by regular doses of
chemically induced happiness, the orthodoxies drummed in by nightly courses of
sleep-teaching - these things were coming all right, but not in my time, not
even in the time of my grandchildren. I
forget the exact date of the events recorded in Brave New World; but it
was somewhere in the sixth or seventh century A.F. (after Ford). We who were living in the second quarter of
the twentieth century A.D. were the inhabitants, admittedly, of a gruesome kind
of universe; but the nightmare of those depression years was radically
different from the nightmare of the future, described in Brave New World. Ours was a nightmare of too little order;
theirs, in the seventh century A.F., of too much. In the process of passing from one extreme to
the other, there would be a long interval, so I imagined, during which the more
fortunate third of the human race would make the best of both worlds - the
disorderly world of liberalism and the much too orderly Brave New World where
perfect efficiency left no room for freedom or personal initiative.
Twenty-seven years later, in this third
quarter of the twentieth century AD, and long before the end of the first
century AF, I feel a good deal less optimistic than I did when I was writing Brave
New World. The prophecies made in
1931 are coming true much sooner than I thought they would. The blessed interval between two little order
and the nightmare of too much has not begun and shows no sign of beginning. In the West, it is true, individual men and
women still enjoy a large measure of freedom.
But even in those countries that have a tradition of democratic
government, this freedom and even the desire for this freedom seems to be on
the wane. In the rest of the world
freedom for individuals has already gone, or is manifestly about to go. The nightmare of total organization, which I
had situated in the seventh century after Ford, has emerged from the safe,
remote future and is now awaiting us, just around the next corner.
George Orwell's 1984 was a magnified
projection into the future of a present that contained Stalinism and an
immediate past that had witnessed the flowering of Nazism. Brave New World was written before the
rise of Hitler to supreme power in Germany and when the Russian tyrant had not
yet got into his stride. In 1931
systematic terrorism was not the obsessive contemporary fact which it had
become in 1948, and the future dictatorship of my imaginary world was a good
deal less brutal than the future dictatorship so brilliantly portrayed by
Orwell. In the context of 1948, 1984
seemed dreadfully convincing. But
tyrants, after all, are mortal and circumstances change. Recent developments in Russia, and recent
advances in science and technology, have robbed Orwell's book of some of its
gruesome verisimilitude. A nuclear war
will, of course, make nonsense of everybody's predictions. But, assuming for the moment that the Great
Powers can somehow refrain from destroying us, we can say that it now looks as
though the odds were more in favour of something like Brave New World
than of something like 1984.
In the light of what we have recently
learned about animal behaviour in general, and human behaviour in particular,
it has become clear that control through the punishment of undesirable behaviour
is less effective, in the long run, than control through the reinforcement of
desirable behaviour by rewards, and that government through terror works on the
whole less well than government through the non-violent manipulation of the
environment and of the thoughts and feelings of the individual men, women and
children. Punishment temporarily puts a
stop to undesirable behaviour, but does not permanently reduce the victim's
tendency to indulge in it. Moreover, the
psycho-physical by-products of punishment may be just as undesirable as the
behaviour for which an individual has been punished. Psychotherapy is largely concerned with the
debilitating or anti-social consequences of past punishments.
The society described in 1984 is
a society controlled almost exclusively by punishment and the fear of
punishment. In the imaginary world of my
own fables, punishment is infrequent and generally mild. The nearly perfect control exercised by the
government is achieved by systematic reinforcement of desirable behaviour, by
many kinds of nearly non-violent manipulation, both physical and psychological,
and by genetic standardization. Babies
in bottles and the centralized control of reproduction are not perhaps
impossible; but it is quite clear that for a long time to come we shall remain
a viviparous species breeding at random.
For practical purposes genetic standardization may be ruled out. Societies will continue to be controlled post-natally - by punishment, as in the past, and to an
ever-increasing extent by the more effective methods of reward and scientific
manipulation.
In Russia the old-fashioned, 1984-style
dictatorship of Stalin has begun to give way to a more up-to-date form of
tyranny. In the upper levels of the
Soviets' hierarchical society the reinforcement of desirable behaviour has
begun to replace the older methods of control through the punishment of
undesirable behaviour. Engineers and
scientists, teachers and administrators, are handsomely paid for good work and
so moderately taxed that they are under constant incentive to do better and so
be more highly rewarded. In certain
areas they are at liberty to think and do more or less what they like. Punishment awaits them only when they stray
beyond their prescribed limits into the realms of ideology and politics. It is because they have been granted a
measure of professional freedom that Russian teachers, scientists and
technicians have achieved such remarkable successes. Those who live near the base of the Soviet
pyramid enjoy none of the privileges accorded to the lucky or specially gifted
minority. Their wages are meagre and
they pay, in the form of high prices, a disproportionately large share of the
taxes. The area in which they can do as
they please is extremely restricted, and their rulers control them more by
punishment and the threat of punishment than through non-violent manipulation
or the reinforcement of desirable behaviour by reward. The Soviet system combines elements of 1984
with elements that are prophetic of what went on among the higher castes in Brave
New World.
Meanwhile impersonal forces over which
we have almost no control seem to be pushing us all in the direction of the
Brave New Worldian nightmare; and this impersonal
pushing is being consciously accelerated by representatives of commercial and
political organizations who have developed a number of new techniques for
manipulating, in the interests of some minority, the thoughts and feelings of
the masses. The techniques of manipulation
will be discussed in later chapters. For
the moment let us confine our attentions to those impersonal forces which are
now making the world so extremely unsafe for democracy, so very inhospitable to
individual freedom. What are these
forces? And why has the nightmare which
I had projected into the seventh century A.F., made so swift an advance in our
direction? The answer to these questions
must begin where the life of even the most highly civilized society has its
beginnings - on the level of biology.
On
the first Christmas Day the population of our planet was about two hundred and
fifty million - less than half the population of modern China. Sixteen centuries later, when the Pilgrim
Fathers landed at Plymouth Rock, human numbers had climbed to a little more
than five hundred million. By the time
of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, world population had passed
the seven hundred million mark. In 1931,
when I was writing Brave New World, it stood at just under two
billion. Today, only twenty-seven years
later, there are two thousand eight hundred million of us. And tomorrow - what? Penicillin, DDT and clean water are cheap
commodities, whose effects on public health are out of all proportion to their
cost. Even the poorest government is rich
enough to provide its subjects with a substantial measure of death
control. Birth control is a very
different matter. Death control is
something which can be provided for a whole people by a few technicians working
in the pay of a benevolent government.
Birth control depends on the cooperation of an entire people. It must be practised by countless
individuals, from whom it demands more intelligence and willpower than most of
the world's teeming illiterates possess, and (where chemical or mechanical methods
of contraception are used) an expenditure of more money than most of these
millions can now afford. Moreover, there
are nowhere any religious traditions in favour of unrestricted death, whereas
religious and social traditions in favour of unrestricted reproduction are
widespread. For all these reasons, death
control is achieved very easily, birth control is
achieved with great difficulty. Death
rates have therefore fallen in recent years with startling suddenness. But birth rates have either remained at their
old high level or, if they have fallen, have fallen very little and at a very
slow rate. In consequence, human numbers
are now increasing more rapidly than at any time in the history of the species.
Moreover, the yearly increases are themselves
increasing. They increase regularly,
according to the rules of compound interest; and they also increase irregularly
with every application, by a technologically backward society, of the
principles of Public Health. At the
present time the annual increase in the world population runs to about
forty-three millions. This means that
every four years mankind adds to its numbers the equivalent of the present
population of the United States, every eight and a half years the equivalent of
the present population of India. At the
rate of increase prevailing between the birth of Christ and the death of Queen
Elizabeth I it took sixteen centuries for the population of the earth to
double. At the present rate it will
double in less than half a century. And
this fantastically rapid doubling of our numbers will be taking place on a
planet whose most desirable and productive areas are already densely populated,
whose soils are being eroded by the frantic efforts of bad farmers to raise
more food, and whose easily available mineral capital is being squandered with
the reckless extravagance of a drunken sailor getting rid of his accumulated
pay.
In the Brave New World of my fable, the
problem of human numbers in their relation to natural resources had been
effectively solved. An optimum figure
for world population had been calculated and numbers were maintained at this
figure (a little under two billions, if I remember rightly) generation after
generation. In the real contemporary
world, the population problem has not been solved. On the contrary it is becoming graver and
more formidable with every passing year.
It is against this grim biological background that all the political,
economic, cultural and psychological dramas of our time are being played
out. At the twentieth century wears on,
as the new billions are added to the existing billions (there will be more than
five and a half billion of us by the time my granddaughter is fifty), this
biological background will advance, ever more insistently, ever more menacingly,
towards the front and centre of the historical stage. The problem of rapidly increasing numbers in
relation to natural resources, to social stability and to the well-being of
individuals - this is now the central problem of mankind; and it will remain
the central problem certainly for another century, and perhaps for several
centuries thereafter. A new age is
supposed to have begun on October 4th, 1957.
But actually, in the present context, all our exuberant post-Sputnik
talk is irrelevant and even nonsensical.
So far as the masses of mankind are concerned, the coming time will not
be the Space Age; it will be the Age of Overpopulation. We can parody the words of the old song
and ask,
Will
the space that you're so rich in
Light a fire in the
kitchen,
Or the little god of
space turn the spit, spit, spit?
The
answer, it is obvious, is in the negative.
A settlement on the moon may be of some military advantage to the nation
that does the settling. But it will do
nothing whatever to make life more tolerable, during the fifty years that it
will take our present population to double, for the earth's undernourished and
proliferating billions. And even if, at
some future date, emigration to Mars should become feasible, even if any
considerable number of men and women were desperate enough to choose a new life
under conditions comparable to those prevailing on a mountain twice as high as
Mount Everest, what difference would that make?
In the course of the last four centuries quite a number of people sailed
from the Old World to the New. But
neither their departure nor the returning flow of food and raw materials could
solve the problems of the Old World.
Similarly the shipping of a few surplus humans to Mars (at a cost, for
transportation and development, of several million dollars a head) will do
nothing to solve the problem of mounting population pressures on our own
planet. Unsolved, that problem will
render insoluble all our other problems.
Worse still, it will create conditions in which individual freedom and
the social decencies of the democratic way of life will become impossible,
almost unthinkable.
Not all dictatorships arise the same
way. There are many roads to Brave New
World; but perhaps the straightest and the broadest of them is the road we are
travelling today, the road that leads through gigantic numbers and accelerating
increases. Let us briefly review the
reasons for this close correlation between too many people, too rapidly multiplying,
and the formulation of authoritarian philosophies, the rise of totalitarian
systems of government.
As large and increasing numbers press
more heavily upon available resources, the economic position of the society
undergoing this ordeal becomes ever more precarious. This is especially true of those
underdeveloped regions, where a sudden lowering of the death rate by means of
DTT, penicillin and clean water has not been accompanied by a corresponding
fall in the birth rate. In parts of Asia
and in most of Central and South America populations are increasing so fast
that they will double themselves in little more than twenty years. If the production of food and manufactured
articles, of houses, schools and teachers, could be increased at a greater rate
than human numbers, it would be possible to improve the wretched lot of those
who live in these underdeveloped and overpopulated countries. But unfortunately these countries lack not
merely agricultural machinery and an industrial plant capable of turning out
this machinery, but also the capital required to create such a plant. Capital is what is left over after the
primary needs of a population have been satisfied. But the primary needs of most of the people
in underdeveloped countries are never fully satisfied. At the end of each year almost nothing is
left over, and there is almost no capital available for creating the industrial
and agricultural plants, by means of which the people's needs might be
satisfied. Moreover, there is, in all
these underdeveloped countries, a serious shortage of the trained manpower
without which a modern industrial and agricultural plant cannot be
operated. The present educational
facilities are inadequate; so are the resources, financial and cultural, for
improving the existing facilities as fast as the situation demands. Meanwhile the population of some of these
underdeveloped countries is increasing at the rate of three per cent per annum.
Their tragic situation is discussed in
an important book, published in 1957 - The Next Hundred Years, by
Professors Harrison Brown, James Bonner and John Weir of the California
Institute of Technology. How is mankind
coping with the problem of rapidly increasing numbers? Not very successfully. 'The evidence suggests rather strongly that
in most underdeveloped countries the lot of the average individual has worsened
appreciably in the last half-century.
People have become more poorly fed.
There are fewer available goods per person. And practically every attempt to improve the
situation has been nullified by the relentless pressure of continued population
growth.'
Whenever the economic life of a nation
becomes precarious, the central government is forced to assume additional
responsibilities for the general welfare.
It must work out elaborate plans for dealing with a critical situation;
it must impose ever greater restrictions upon the activities of its subjects;
and if, as is very likely, worsening economic conditions result in political
unrest, or open rebellion, the central government must intervene to preserve public
order and its own authority. More and
more power is thus concentrated in the hands of the executives and their
bureaucratic managers. But the nature of
power is such that even those who have not sought it, but have had it forced
upon them, tend to acquire a taste for more. 'Lead us not into temptation,' we pray - and
with good reason; for when human beings are tempted too enticingly or too long,
they generally yield. A democratic
constitution is a device for preventing the local rulers from yielding to those
particularly dangerous temptations that arise when too much power is
concentrated in too few hands. Such a
constitution works pretty well where, as in Britain or the United States, there
is a traditional respect for constitutional procedures. Where the republican or limited monarchical
tradition is weak, the best of constitutions will not prevent ambitious
politicians from succumbing with glee and gusto to the temptations of
power. And in any country where numbers
have begun to press heavily upon available resources, these temptations cannot
fail to arise. Overpopulation leads to
economic insecurity and social unrest.
Unrest and insecurity lead to more control by central governments and an
increase of their power. In the absence
of a constitutional tradition, this increased power will probably be exercised
in a dictatorial fashion. Even if
Communism had never been invented, this would be likely to happen. But Communism has been invented. Given this fact, the probability of
overpopulation leading through unrest to dictatorship becomes a virtual
certainty. It is a pretty safe bet that,
twenty years from now, all the world's overpopulated
and underdeveloped countries will be under some form of totalitarian rule -
probably by the Communist Party.
How will this development affect the
overpopulated, but highly industrialized and still democratic countries of
Europe? If the newly formed
dictatorships were hostile to them, and if the normal flow of raw materials
from the underdeveloped countries were deliberately interrupted, the nations of
the West would find themselves in a very bad way indeed. Their industrial system would break down, and
the highly developed technology, which up till now has permitted them to
sustain a population much greater than that which could be supported by locally
available resources, would no longer protect them against the consequences of
having too many people in too small a territory. If this should happen, the enormous powers
forced by unfavourable conditions upon central governments may come to be used
in the spirit of totalitarian dictatorship.
The United States is not at present an
overpopulated country. If, however, the
population continues to increase at the present rate (which is higher than that
of India's increase, though happily a good deal lower than the rate now current
in Mexico or Guatemala), the problem of numbers in relation to available
resources might well become troublesome by the beginning of the twenty-first
century. For the moment overpopulation
is not a direct threat to the personal freedom of Americans. It, remains, however, an indirect threat, a
menace at one remove. If overpopulation
should drive the underdeveloped countries into totalitarianism, and if these
new dictatorships should ally themselves with
II
Quantity, Quality, Morality
In
the Brave New World of my phantasy, eugenics and
dysgenics were practised systematically.
In one set of bottles biologically superior ova, fertilized by
biologically superior sperm, were given the best possible pre-natal treatment
and were finally decanted as Betas, Alphas, and even Alpha Pluses. In another, much more numerous set of
bottles, biologically inferior ova, fertilized by biologically inferior sperm,
were subjected to the Bokanovsky Process (ninety-six
identical twins out of a single egg) and treated pre-natally
with alcohol and other protein poisons.
The creatures finally decanted were almost sub-human; but they were
capable of performing unskilled work and, when properly conditioned, detensioned by free and frequent access to the opposite
sex, constantly distracted by gratuitous entertainment and reinforced in their
good behaviour patterns by daily doses of soma, could be counted on to
give no trouble to their superiors.
In this second half of the twentieth
century we do nothing systematic about our breeding; but in our random and
unregulated way we are not only overpopulating our planet, we are also, it
would seem, making sure that these greater numbers shall be of biologically
poorer quality. In the bad old days
children with considerable, or even slight, hereditary
defects rarely survived. Today, thanks
to sanitation, modern pharmacology and the social conscience, most of the
children born with hereditary defects reach maturity and multiply their
kind. Under the conditions now
prevailing, every advance in medicine will tend to be offset by a corresponding
advance in the survival rates of individuals cursed by some genetic
insufficiency. In spite of new wonder
drugs and better treatment (indeed, in a certain sense, precisely because of
these things), the physical health of the general population will show no
improvement, and may even deteriorate.
And along with a decline in average healthiness there may well go a
decline in average intelligence. Indeed,
some competent authorities are convinced that such a decline has already taken
place and is continuing. 'Under
conditions that are both soft and unregulated,' writes Dr W.H. Sheldon, 'our
best stock tends to be outbred by stock that is
inferior to it in every respect ... It is the fashion in some academic circles
to assure students
that the alarm over differential birth-rates is unfounded; that
these problems are merely economic, or merely educational, or merely religious,
or merely cultural or something of the sort.
This is Pollyanna optimism. Reproductive
delinquency is biological and basis.'
And he adds that 'nobody knows just how far the average IQ in this
country (the USA) has declined since 1916, when Terman
attempted to standardize the meaning of IQ too.'
In an underdeveloped and overpopulated
country, where four-fifths of the people get less than 2000 calories a day and
one-fifth enjoys an adequate diet, can democratic institutions arise
spontaneously? Or if they should be
imposed from outside or from above, can they possibly survive?
And now let us consider the case of the
rich, industrialized and democratic society, in which, owing to the random but
effective practice of dysgenics, IQ's and physical vigour are on the
decline. For how long can such a society
maintain its traditions of individual liberty and democratic government? Fifty or a hundred years from now our
children will learn the answer to this question.
Meanwhile we find ourselves confronted
by a most disturbing moral problem. We
know that the pursuit of good ends does not justify the employment of bad
means. But what about those situations,
now of such frequent occurrence, in which good means have end results which
turn out to be bad?
For example, we go to a tropical island
and with the aid of DDT we stamp out malaria and, in two or three years, save
hundreds of thousands of lives. This is
obviously good. But the hundreds of
thousands of human beings thus saved, and the millions whom they beget and
bring to birth, cannot be adequately clothed, houses, educated or even fed out
of the island's available resources.
Quick death by malaria has been abolished; but life made miserable by undernourishment and overcrowding is now the rule and slow
death by outright starvation threatens ever greater numbers.
And what about the congenitally
insufficient organisms, whom our medicine and our social services now preserve
so that they may propagate their kind?
To help the unfortunate is obviously good. But the wholesale transmission to our
descendants of the results of unfavourable mutations, and the progressive
contamination of the genetic pool from which the members of our species will
have to draw, are no less obviously bad.
We are on the horns of an ethical dilemma, and to find the middle way
will require all our intelligence and all our good will.
III
Over-organization
The
shortest and broadest road to the nightmare of Brave New World leads, as I have
pointed out, through overpopulation and the accelerating increase of human
numbers - twenty-eight hundred millions today, fifty-five hundred millions by
the turn of the century, with most of humanity facing the choice between
anarchy and totalitarian control. But
the increasing pressure of numbers upon available resources is not the only
force propelling us in the direction of totalitarianism. This blind biological enemy of freedom is
allied with immensely powerful forces generated by the very advances in
technology of which we are most proud.
Justifiably proud, it may be added; for these advances are the fruits of
genius and persistent hard work, of logic, imagination and self-denial - in a
word, of moral and intellectual virtues for which one can feel nothing but
admiration. But the Nature of Things is
such that nobody in this world ever gets anything for nothing. These amazing and admirable advances have to
be paid for. Indeed, like last year's
washing machine, they are still being paid for - and each instalment is higher
than the last. Many historians, many
sociologists and psychologists have written at length, and with deep concern,
about the price that Western man has had to pay and will go on paying for
technological progress. They point out,
for example, that democracy can hardly be expected to flourish in societies
where political and economic power is being progressively concentrated and
centralized. But the progress of
technology has led and is still leading to just such concentration and
centralization of power. As the
machinery of mass production is made more efficient it tends to become more
complex and more expensive - and so less available to the enterpriser of
limited means. Moreover, mass production
cannot work without mass distribution; but mass distribution raises problems
which only the largest producers can satisfactorily solve. In a world of mass production and mass
distribution the Little Man, with his inadequate stock of working capital, is
at a grave disadvantage. In competition
with the Big Man, he loses his money and finally his very existence as an
independent producer; the Big Man has gobbled him up. As the Little Men disappear, more and more
economic power comes to be wielded by fewer and fewer people. Under a dictatorship the Big Business, made
possible by advancing technology and the consequent ruin of Little Business, is
controlled by the State - that is to say, by a small group of party leaders and
the soldiers, policemen and civil servants who carry out their orders. In a capitalist democracy, such as the United
States, it is controlled by what Professor C. Wright Mills has called the Power
Elite. This Power Elite directly employs
several millions of the country's working force in its factories, offices and
stores, controls many millions more by lending them money to buy its products,
and, through its ownership of the media of mass communication, influences the
thoughts, the feelings and the actions of virtually everybody. To parody the words of Winston Churchill,
never have so many been manipulated so much by so few. We are far indeed from Jefferson's ideal of a
genuinely free society composed of a hierarchy of self-governing units - 'the
elementary republics of the wards, the county republics, the State republics
and the Republic of the Union, forming a gradation of authorities.'
We see, then, that modern technology has
led to the concentration of economic and political power, and to the
development of a society controlled (ruthlessly in the totalitarian states,
politely and inconspicuously in the democracies) by Big Business and Big
Government. But societies are composed
of individuals and are good only insofar as they help individuals to realize
their potentialities and to lead a happy and fruitful life. How have individuals been affected by the
technological advances of recent years?
Here is the answer to this question given by a philosopher-psychiatrist,
Dr Erich Fromm:
'Our contemporary Western society, in
spite of its material, intellectual and political progress, is increasingly
less conducive to mental health, and tends to undermine the inner security,
happiness, reason and the capacity for love in the individual; it tends to turn
him into an automaton who pays for his human failure with increasing mental
sickness, and with despair hidden under a frantic drive for work and so-called
pleasure.'
Our 'increasing mental sickness' may
find expression in neurotic symptoms.
These symptoms are conspicuous and extremely distressing. But 'let us beware', says Dr Fromm, 'of defining mental hygiene as the prevention of
symptoms. Symptoms as such are not our
enemy, but our friend; where there are symptoms there is conflict, and conflict
always indicates that the forces of life which strive for integration and
happiness are still fighting.' The
really hopeless victims of mental illness are to be found among those who
appear to be most normal. 'Many of them
are normal because they are so well adjusted to our mode of existence, because
their human voice has been silenced so early in their lives,
that they do not even struggle or suffer or develop symptoms as the
neurotic does.' They are normal not in
what may be called the absolute sense of the word; they are normal only in
relation to a profoundly abnormal society.
Their perfect adjustment to that abnormal society is a measure of their
mental sickness. These millions of
abnormally normal people, living without fuss in a society to which, if they
were fully human beings, they ought not to be adjusted, still cherish 'the
illusion of individuality', but in fact they have been to a great extent
de-individualized. Their conformity is
developing into something like uniformity.
But 'uniformity and freedom are incompatible. Uniformity and mental health are incompatible
too ... Man is not made to be an automaton, and if he becomes one, the basis
for mental health is destroyed.'
In the course of evolution nature has
gone to endless trouble to see that every individual is unlike every other
individual. We reproduce our kind by
bringing the father's genes into contact with the mother's. These hereditary factors may be combined in
an almost infinite number of ways.
Physically and mentally, each one of us is unique. And culture which, in the interests of
efficiency or in the name of some political or religious dogma, seeks to
standardize the human individual, commits an outrage against man's biological
nature.
Science may be defined as the reduction
of multiplicity to unity. It seeks to
explain the endlessly diverse phenomena of nature by ignoring the uniqueness of
particular events, concentrating on what they have in common and finally
abstracting some kind of 'law', in terms of which they make sense and can be
effectively dealt with. As examples,
applies fall from the tree and the moon moves across the sky. People had been observing these facts from
time immemorial. With Gertrude Stein
they were convinced that an apple is an apple is an apple, whereas the moon is
the moon is the moon. It remained for
Isaac Newton to perceive what these very dissimilar phenomena had in common,
and to formulate a theory of gravitation in terms of which certain aspects of
the behaviour of apples, of the heavenly bodies and indeed of everything else
in the physical universe could be explained and dealt with in terms of a single
system of ideas. In the same spirit the
artist takes the innumerable diversities and uniquenesses
of the outer world and his own imagination and gives them meaning within an
orderly system of plastic, literary or musical patterns. The wish to impose order upon confusion, to
bring harmony out of dissonance and unity out of multiplicity, is a kind of
intellectual instinct, a primary and fundamental urge of the mind. Within the realms of science, art and
philosophy the workings of what I may call this 'Will to Order' are mainly
beneficent. True, the Will to Order has
produced many premature syntheses based upon insufficient evidence, many absurd
systems of metaphysics and theology, much pedantic mistaking of notions for
realities, of symbols and abstractions for the data of immediate
experience. But these errors, however
regrettable, do not do much harm, at any rate directly - though it sometimes
happens that bad philosophical systems may do harm indirectly, by being used as
justification for senseless and inhuman actions. It is in the social sphere, in the realm of
politics and economics, that the Will of Order becomes really dangerous.
Here the theoretical reduction of
unmanageable multiplicity to comprehensible unity becomes the practical
reduction of human diversity to subhuman uniformity, of freedom to
servitude. In politics the equivalent of
a fully developed scientific theory or philosophical system is a totalitarian
dictatorship. In economics, the
equivalent of a beautifully composed work of art is the smoothly running
factory in which the workers are perfectly adjusted to the machines. The Will to Order can make tyrants out of
those who merely aspire to clear up a mess.
The beauty of tidiness is used as a justification for despotism.
Organization is indispensable; for
liberty arises and has meaning only within a self-regulating community of
freely cooperating individuals. But, though
indispensable, organization can also be fatal.
Too much organization transforms men and women into automata, suffocates
the creative spirit and abolishes the very possibility of freedom. As usual, the only safe course is in the
middle, between the extremes of laissez-faire at one end of the scale
and of total control at the other.
During the past century the successive
advances in technology have been accompanied by corresponding advances in
organization. Complicated machinery has
had to be matched by complicated social arrangements, designed to work as
smoothly and efficiently as the new instruments of production. In order to fit into these organizations,
individuals have had to de-individualize themselves, have had to deny their
native diversity and conform to a standard pattern, have had to do their best
to become automata.
The dehumanizing effects of
over-organization are reinforced by the dehumanizing effects of
overpopulation. Industry, as it expands,
draws an ever greater proportion of humanity's increasing numbers into large
cities. But life in large cities is not
conducive to mental health (the highest incidence of schizophrenia, we are
told, occurs among the swarming inhabitants of industrial slums); nor does it
foster the kind of responsible freedom within small self-governing groups,
which is the first condition of a genuine democracy. City life is anonymous and, as it were,
abstract. People are related to one
another, not as total personalities, but as the embodiments of economic functions
or, when they are not at work, as irresponsible seekers of entertainment. Subjected to this kind of life, individuals
tend to feel lonely and insignificant.
Their existence ceases to have any point or meaning.
Biologically speaking, man is a moderately
gregarious, not a completely social, animal - a creature more like a wolf, let
us say, or an elephant, than like a bee or an ant. In their original form human societies bore
no resemblance to the hive or the ant heap; they were merely packs. Civilization is, among other things, the
process by which primitive packs are transformed into an analogue, crude and
mechanical, of the social insects' organic communities. At the present time the pressures of overpopulation
and technological changes are accelerating this process. The termitary has
come to seem a realizable and even, in some eyes, a desirable ideal. Needless to say, the ideal will never in fact
be realized. A great gulf separates the
social insects from the not too gregarious, big-brained mammal; and even though
the mammal should do his best to imitate the insect, the gulf would
remain. However hard they try, men
cannot create a social organism, they can only create
an organization. In the process of
trying to create an organism they will merely create a totalitarian despotism.
Brave New World presents a
fanciful and somewhat ribald picture of a society, in which the attempt to
recreate human beings in the likeness of termites has been pushed almost to the
limits of the possible. That we are
being propelled in the direction of Brave New World is obvious. But no less obvious is the fact that we can,
if we so desire, refuse to cooperate with the blind forces that are propelling
us. For the moment, however, the wish to
resist does not seem to be very strong or very widespread. As Mr William Whyte
has shown in his remarkable book, The Organization Man, a new Social
Ethic is replacing our traditional ethical system - the system in which the
individual is primary. The key words in
this Social Ethic are 'adjustment', 'adaptation', 'socially orientated
behaviour', 'belongingness', 'acquisition of social skills', 'team work',
'group living', 'group loyalty', 'group dynamics', 'group thinking', 'group
creativity'. Its basic assumption is
that the social whole has greater worth and significance than its individual
parts, that inborn biological differences should be sacrificed to cultural uniformity, that the rights of
the collectivity should take precedence over what the
eighteenth century called the Rights of Man.
According to the Social Ethic, Jesus was completely wrong in asserting
that the Sabbath was made for man. On
the contrary, man was made for the Sabbath, and must sacrifice his inherited
idiosyncrasies and pretend to be the kind of standardized good mixer that
organizers of group activity regard as ideal for their purposes. This ideal man is the man who displays
'dynamic conformity' (delicious phrase!) and an intense loyalty to the group,
an unflagging desire to subordinate himself, to belong. And the ideal man must have an ideal wife,
highly gregarious, infinitely adaptable and not merely resigned to the fact
that her husband's first loyalty is to the Corporation, but actively loyal on
her own account. 'He for God only,' as
Milton said of Adam and Eve, 'she for God in him.' And in one important respect the wife of the
ideal organization man is a good deal worse off than our First Mother. She and Adam were permitted by the Lord to be
completely uninhibited in the matter of 'youthful dalliance'.
Nor turned, I ween,
Adam from his fair
spouse, nor Eve the rites
Mysterious of connubial
love refused
Today,
according to the writer in the Harvard Business Review, the wife of the
man who is trying to live up to the ideal proposed by the Social Ethics, 'must
not demand too much of her husband's time and interest. Because of his single-minded concentration on
his job, even his sexual activity must be relegated to a secondary place.' The monk makes vows of poverty, obedience and
chastity. The organization man is
allowed to be rich, but promises obedience ('he accepts authority without
resentment, he looks up to his superiors' - Mussolini ha sempre
ragione) and he must be prepared, for the greater
glory of the organization that employs him, to forswear even conjugal love. [Under
Mao Tse-tung these capitalistic counsels of
perfection have become commandments and been modified as regulations. In the new People's Communes the conjugal
state has been abolished. That there may
be no mutual tenderness, husbands and wives are housed in separate barracks and
are permitted to sleep together (for a brief hour or two, like prostitutes and
their clients) only on alternate Saturday nights.]
It is worth remarking that, in 1984,
the members of the Party are compelled to conform to a sexual ethic of more
than Puritan severity. In Brave New
World, on the other hand, all are permitted to indulge their sexual
impulses without let or hindrance. The
society described in Orwell's fable is a society permanently at war, and the
aim of its rulers is first, of course, to exercise power for its own delightful
sake, and second, to keep their subjects in that state of constant tension
which a state of constant war demands of those who wage it. By crusading against sexuality the bosses are
able to maintain the required tension in their lust for power in a most
gratifying way. The society described in
Brave New World is a world-state in which war has been eliminated and
where the first aim of rulers is at all cost to keep their subjects from making
trouble. This they achieve by (among
other methods) legalizing a degree of sexual freedom (made possible by the
abolition of the family) that practically guarantees the Brave New Worlders against any form of destructive (or creative)
emotional tension. In 1984 the
lust for power is satisfied by inflicting pain; in Brave New World, by
inflicting a hardly less humiliating pleasure.
The current Social Ethic, it is obvious,
is merely a justification after the fact of the less desirable consequences of
over-organization. It represents a
pathetic attempt to make a virtue of necessity, to extract a positive value
from an unpleasant datum. It is a very unrealistic,
and therefore very dangerous, system of morality. The social whole, whose value is assumed to
be greater than that of its component parts, is not an organism in the sense
that a hive or a termitary may be thought of as an
organism. It is merely an organization,
a piece of social machinery. There can
be no value except in relation to life and awareness. An organization is neither conscious nor
alive. Its value is instrumental and
derivative. It is not good in itself; it
is good only to the extent that it promotes the good of the individuals who are
the parts of the collective whole. To
give organizations precedence over persons is to subordinate ends to means.
What happens when ends are subordinated to means was clearly demonstrated by
Hitler and Stalin. Under their hideous
rule personal ends were subordinated to organizational means by a mixture of
violence and propaganda, systematic terror and the systematic manipulation of
minds. In the more efficient
dictatorship of tomorrow there will probably be much less violence than under
Hitler and Stalin. The future dictator's
subjects will be painlessly regimented by a corps of highly trained Social
engineers. 'The challenge of social
engineering in our time,' writes an enthusiastic advocate of this new science,
'is like the challenge of technical engineering fifty years ago. If the first half of the twentieth century
was the era of the technical engineers, the second half may well be the era of
the social engineers' - and the twenty-first century, I suppose, will be the
era of World Controllers, the scientific caste system and Brave New World. To the question quis custodiet custodes? - who will
mount guard over our guardians, who will engineer the engineers? - the answer is a bland denial that they need any
supervision. There seems to be a
touching belief among certain Ph.D.s in sociology that Ph.D.s in sociology will
never be corrupted by power. Like Sir Galahad's, their strength is as the strength of ten because
they are scientists and have taken six thousand hours of social studies.
Alas, higher education is not necessarily
a guarantee of higher virtue, or higher political wisdom. And to these misgivings on ethical and
psychological grounds must be added misgivings of a purely scientific
character. Can we accept the theories on
which the social engineers base their practice, and in terms of which they
justify their manipulations of human beings?
For example, Professor Elton Mayo tells us categorically that 'man's
desire to be continually associated in work with his fellows is a strong, if
not the strongest human characteristic'.
This, I would say, is manifestly untrue.
Some people have the kind of desire described by Mayo; others do
not. It is a matter of temperament and
inherited constitution. And social
organization based upon the assumption that 'man' (whoever 'man' may be)
desires to be continuously associated with his fellows would be, for many
individual men and women, a bed of Procrustes. Only by being amputated or stretched upon a
rack could they be adjusted to it.
Again, how romantically misleading are
the lyrical accounts of the Middle Ages, with which many contemporary theorists
of social relations adorn their works!
'Membership in a guild, manorial estate or village protected medieval
man throughout his life and gave him peace and serenity.' Protected him from what, we may ask? Certainly not from
remorseless bullying at the hands of his superiors. And along with all that 'peace and serenity'
there was, throughout the Middle Ages, an enormous amount of chronic
frustration, acute unhappiness and a passionate resentment against the rigid,
hierarchical system that permitted no vertical movement up the social ladder
and, for those who were bound to the land, very little horizontal movement in
space. The impersonal forces of
overpopulation and over-organization, and the social engineers
who are trying to direct these forces, are pushing us in the direction of a new
medieval system. This revival will be
made more acceptable than the original by such Brave-New-Worldian
amenities as infant conditioning, sleep teaching and drug-induced euphoria;
but, for the majority of men and women, it will still be a kind of servitude.
IV
Propaganda in a Democratic Society
'The
doctrines of Europe', Jefferson wrote, 'were that men in numerous associations cannot
be restrained within the limits of order and justice, except by forces physical
and moral wielded over them by authorities independent of their will ... We
(the founders of the New American democracy) believe that man was a rational
animal, endowed by nature with rights, and with an innate sense of justice, and
that he could be restrained from wrong, and protected in right, by moderate
powers, confided to persons of his own choice and held to their duties by
dependence on his own will.' To
post-Freudian ears, this kind of language seems touchingly quaint and
ingenuous. Human beings are a good deal
less rational and innately just than the optimists of the eighteenth century
supposed. On the other hand they are
neither so morally blind nor so hopelessly
unreasonable as the pessimists of the twentieth would have us believe. In spite of the Id and the Unconscious, in
spite of endemic neurosis and the prevalence of low IQ's, most men and women
are probably decent enough and sensible enough to be trusted with the direction
of their own destinies.
Democratic institutions are devices for
reconciling social order with individual freedom and initiative, and for making
the immediate power of a country's rulers subject to the ultimate power of the
ruled. The fact that, in Western Europe
and America, these devices have worked, all things considered, not too badly is
proof enough that the eighteenth-century optimists were not entirely
wrong. Given a fair chance, human beings
can govern themselves, and govern themselves better, though perhaps with less
mechanical efficiency, than they can be governed by 'authorities independent of
their will'. Given a fair chance, I
repeat; for the fair chance is an indispensable prerequisite. No people that passes abruptly from a state
of subservience under the rule of a despot to the completely unfamiliar state
of political independence can be said to have a fair chance of making
democratic institutions work. Again, no people in a precarious economic condition has a fair chance
of being able to govern itself democratically.
Liberalism flourishes in an atmosphere of prosperity and declines as
declining prosperity makes it necessary for the government to intervene ever
more frequently and drastically in the affairs of its subjects. Overpopulation and over-organization are two
conditions which, as I have already pointed out, deprive a society of a fair
chance of making democratic institutions work effectively. We see, then, that there are certain
historical, economic, demographic and technological conditions which make it
very hard for Jefferson's rational animals, endowed by nature with inalienable
rights and an innate sense of justice, to exercise their reason, claim their
rights and act justly within a democratically organized society. We in the West have been supremely fortunate
in having been given our fair chance of making the great experiment in
self-government. Unfortunately it now
looks as though, owing to recent changes in our circumstances, this infinitely
precious fair chance were being, little by little, taken away from us. And this, of course, is not the whole
story. These blind impersonal forces are
not the only enemies of individual liberty and democratic institutions. There are also forces of another, less abstract
character, forces that can be deliberately used by power-seeking individuals
whose aim is to establish partial or complete control over their fellows. Fifty years ago, when I was a boy, it seemed
completely self-evident that the bad old days were over, that torture and
massacre, slavery, and the persecution of heretics, were things of the
past. Among people who wore top hats,
travelled in trains, and took a bath every morning such horrors were simply out
of the question. After all, we were
living in the twentieth century. A few
years later these people who took daily baths and went to church in top hats
were committing atrocities on a scale undreamed of by the benighted Africans
and Asiatics.
In the light of recent history it would be foolish to suppose that this
sort of things cannot happen again. It
can and, no doubt, it will. But in the
immediate future there is some reason to believe that the unitive
methods of 1984 will give place to the reinforcements and manipulations
of Brave New World.
There are two kinds of propaganda -
rational propaganda in favour of action that is consonant with the enlightened
self-interest of those who make it and those to whom it is addressed, and
non-rational propaganda that is not consonant with anybody's enlightened
self-interest, but is dictated by, and appeals to, passions, blind impulses,
unconscious cravings or fears. Where the
actions of individuals are concerned, there are motives more exalted than
enlightened self-interest, but where collective action has to be taken in the
fields of politics and economics, enlightened self-interest is probably the
highest of effective motives. If
politicians and their constituents always acted to promote their own or their
country's long-range self-interest, this world would be an earthly
paradise. As it is, they often act
against their own interests, merely to gratify their least creditable passions;
the world, in consequence, is a place of misery. Propaganda in favour of action that is
consonant with enlightened self-interest appeals to reason by means of logical
arguments based upon the best available evidence fully and honestly set
forth. Propaganda in favour of action
dictated by the impulses that are below self-interest, offers false, garbled or
incomplete evidence, avoids logical argument and seeks to influence its victims
by the mere repetition of catchwords, by the furious denunciation of foreign or
domestic scapegoats, and by cunningly associating the lowest passions with the
highest ideals, so that atrocities are perpetrated in the name of God and the
most cynical kind of realpolitik becomes a
matter of religious principle and patriotic duty.
In John Dewey's words, 'a renewal of
faith in common human nature, in its potentialities in general, and in its
power in particular to respond to reason and truth, is a surer bulwark against
totalitarianism than a demonstration of material success or a devout worship of
special legal and political forms'. The
power to respond to reason and truth exists in all of us. But so, unfortunately, does the tendency to
respond to unreason and falsehood - particularly in those cases where the
falsehood evokes some enjoyable emotion, or where the appeal to unreason
strikes some answering chord in the primitive, subhuman depths of our
being. In certain fields of activity men
have learned to respond to reason and truth pretty consistently. The authors of learned articles do not appeal
to the passions of their fellow scientists and technologists. They set forth what, to the best of their
knowledge, is the truth about some particular aspect of reality, they use
reason to explain the facts they have observed, and they support their points
of view with arguments that appeal to reason in other people. All this is fairly easy in the fields of
physical science and technology. It is
much more difficult in the fields of politics and religion and ethics. Here the relevant facts often elude us. As for the meaning of the facts, that of
course depends upon the particular system of ideas in terms of which you choose
to interpret them. And these are not the
only difficulties that confront the rational truth-seeker. In public and in private life, it often
happens that there is simply no time to collect the relevant facts or to weigh
their significance. We are forced to act
on insufficient evidence and by a light considerably less steady than that of
logic. With the best will in the world,
we cannot always be completely truthful or consistently rational. All that is in our power to be as truthful
and rational as circumstances permit us to be, and to respond as well as we can
to the limited truth and imperfect reasonings offered
for our consideration by others.
'If a nation expects to be ignorant and
free', said Jefferson, 'it expects what never was and never will be ... The
people cannot be safe without information.
Where the press is free, and every man able to read, all is safe.' Across the Atlantic another passionate
believer in reason was thinking, about the same time, in almost precisely
similar terms. Here is what John Stewart
Mill wrote of his father, the utilitarian philosopher, James Mill. 'So complete was his reliance upon the
influence of reason over the minds of mankind, whenever it is allowed to reach
them, that he felt as if all would be gained, if the whole population were able
to read, and if all sorts of opinions were allowed to be addressed to them by
word or in writing, and if by the suffrage they could nominate a legislature to
give effect to the opinions they had adopted.'
All is safe, all would be gained!
Once more we hear the note of eighteenth-century optimism. Jefferson, it is true, was a realist as well
as an optimist. He knew by bitter
experience that the freedom of the press can be shamefully abused. 'Nothing', he declared, 'can now be believed
which is seen in a newspaper.' And yet,
he insisted (and we can only agree with him), 'within the pale of truth, the
press is a noble institution, equally the friend of science and civil
liberty'. Mass communication, in a word,
is neither good nor bad; it is simply a force and, like any other force, it can
be used either well or ill. Used in one
way, the press, the radio and the cinema are indispensable tot he survival of
democracy. Used in another way, they are
among the most powerful weapons in the dictator's armoury. In the field of mass communications as in
almost every other field of enterprise, technological progress has hurt the
Little Man and helped the Big Man. As
lately as fifty years ago, every democratic country could boast of a great
number of small journals and local newspapers.
Thousands of country editors expressed thousands of independent
opinions. Somewhere or other almost
anybody could get almost anything printed.
Today the press is still legally free; but most of the little papers
have disappeared. The cost of wood-pulp,
of modern printing machinery and of syndicated news is too high for the Little
Man. In the totalitarian East there is
political censorship, and the media of mass communication are controlled by the
State. In the democratic West there is
economic censorship and the media of mass communication are controlled by
members of the Power Elite. Censorship
by rising costs and concentration of communication-power in the hands of a few
big concerns is less objectionable than State ownership and government
propaganda; but certainly it is not something of which a Jeffersonian
democrat could possibly approve.
In regard to propaganda, the early
advocates of universal literacy and a free press envisaged only two
possibilities: the propaganda might be true, or it might be false. They did not foresee what in fact has
happened, above all in our Western capitalist democracies - the development of
a vast mass communications industry, concerned in the main neither with the
true nor the false, but with the unreal, the more or less totally
irrelevant. In a word, they failed to
take into account man's almost infinite appetite for distractions.
In the past most people never got a
chance of fully satisfying this appetite.
They might long for distractions, but the distractions were not
provided. Christmas came but once a
year, feasts were 'solemn and rare', there were few readers and very little to
read, and the nearest approach to a neighbourhood movie theatre was the parish
church, where the performances, though frequent, were somewhat monotonous. For conditions even remotely comparable to
those now prevailing we must return to imperial Rome, where the populace was
kept in good humour by frequent, gratuitous doses of many kind of entertainment
- from poetical dramas to gladiatorial fights, from recitations of Virgil to
all-out boxing, from concerts to military reviews and public executions. But even in Rome there was nothing like the
non-stop distraction now provided by newspapers and magazines, by radio,
television and the cinema. In Brave
New World non-stop distractions of the most fascinating nature (the feelies, orgy-porgy, centrifugal bumblepuppy) are deliberately used as instruments of
policy, for the purpose of preventing people from paying too much attention to
the realities of the social and political situation. The other world of religion is different from
the other world of entertainment; but they still resemble one another in being
most decidedly 'not of this world'. Both
are distractions and, if lived in too continuously, both can become, in Marx's
phrase, 'the opium of the people' and so a threat to freedom. Only the vigilant can maintain their
liberties, and only those who are constantly and intelligently on the spot can
hope to govern themselves effectively by democratic procedures. A society, most of whose members spend a
great part of their time not on the spot, not here and now in the calculable
future, but somewhere else, in the irrelevant other worlds of sport and soap
opera, of mythology and metaphysical phantasy, will
find it hard to resist the encroachments of those who would manipulate and
control it.
In their propaganda, today's dictators
rely for the most part on repetition, suppression and rationalization - the
repetition of catchwords which they wish to be accepted as true, the
suppression of facts which they wish to be ignored, the arousal and
rationalization of passions which may be used in the interests of the Party or the
State. As the art and science of
manipulation come to be better understood, the dictators of the future will
doubtless learn to combine these techniques with the non-stop distractions
which, in the West, are now threatening to drown in a sea of irrelevance the
rational propaganda essential to the maintenance of individual liberty and the
survival of democratic institutions.
V
Propaganda under a Dictatorship
At
his trial after the Second World War, Hitler's Minister for Armaments, Albert Speer,
delivered a long speech in which, with remarkable acuteness, he described the
Nazi tyranny and analysed its methods.
'Hitler's dictatorship', he said, 'differed in one fundamental point
from all its predecessors in history. It
was the first dictatorship in the present period of modern technical
development, a dictatorship which made complete use of all technical means for
the domination of its own country.
Through technical devices like the radio and the loudspeaker, eighty
million people were deprived of independent thought. It was thereby possible to subject them to
the will of one man ... Earlier dictators needed highly qualified assistants
even at the lowest level - men who could think and act independently. The totalitarian system in the period of
modern technical development can dispense with such men; thanks to modern
methods of communication, it is possible to mechanize the lower
leadership. As a result of this there
has arisen the new type of the uncritical recipient of orders.'
In the Brave New World of my prophetic
fable technology had advanced far beyond the point it had reached in Hitler's
day; consequently the recipients of orders were far less critical than their
Nazi counterparts, far more obedient to the order-giving élite. Moreover they had been genetically
standardized and post-natally conditioned to perform
their subordinate functions, and could therefore be depended upon to behave
almost as predictably as machines. As we
shall see in a later chapter, this conditioning of 'the lower leadership' is
already going on under the Communist dictatorships. The Chinese and the Russians are not relying
merely on the indirect effects of advancing technology; they are working
directly on the psycho-physical organisms of their lower leaders, subjecting
minds and bodies to a system of ruthless and, from all accounts, highly
effective conditioning. 'Many a man',
said Speer, 'has been haunted by the nightmare that
one day nations might be dominated by technical means. That nightmare was almost realized in
Hitler's totalitarian system.' Almost, but not quite.
The Nazis did not have time - and perhaps did not have the intelligence
and the necessary knowledge - to brainwash and condition their lower
leadership. This, it may be, is one of
the reasons why they failed.
Since Hitler's day the armoury of
technical devices at the disposal of the would-be dictator has been
considerably enlarged. As well as the
radio, the loudspeaker, the moving picture camera and the rotary press, the
contemporary propagandist can make use of television to broadcast the image as
well as the voice of his client, and can record both image and voice on spools
of magnetic tape. Thanks to
technological progress, Big Brother can now be almost as omnipresent as
God. Nor is it only on the technical
front that the hand of the would-be dictator has been strengthened. Since Hitler's day a great deal of work has
been carried out in those fields of applied psychology and neurology which are
the special province of the propagandist, the indoctrinator and the
brainwasher. In the past these
specialists in the art of changing people's minds were empiricists. By a method of trial and error they had worked
out a number of techniques and procedures, which they used very effectively
without, however, knowing precisely why they were effective. Today the art of mind-control is in process
of becoming a science. The practitioners
of this science know what they are doing and why. They are guided in their work by theories and
hypotheses solidly established on a massive foundation of experimental
evidence. Thanks to the new insights and
the new techniques made possible by these insights, the nightmare that was 'all
but realized in Hitler's totalitarian system' may soon be completely realizable.
But before we discuss these new insights
and techniques let us take a look at the nightmare that so nearly came true in
Nazi Germany. What were the methods used
by Hitler and Goebbels for 'depriving eighty million
people of independent thought and subjecting them to the will of one man'? And what was the theory of human nature upon
which these terrifyingly successful methods were based? These questions can be answered, for the most
part, in Hitler's own words. And what
remarkably clear and astute words they are!
When he writes about such vast abstractions as Race History and
Providence, Hitler is strictly unreadable.
But when he writes about the German masses and the methods he used to
dominating and directing them, his style changes. Nonsense gives place to sense, bombast to a
hard-boiled and cynical lucidity. In his
philosophical lucubrations Hitler was either cloudily
daydreaming or reproducing other people's half-baked notions. In his comments on crowds and propaganda he
was writing of things he knew by first-hand experience. In the words of his ablest biographer, Mr
Alan Bullock, 'Hitler was the greatest demagogue in history. Those who add, "only
a demagogue", fail to appreciate the nature of political power in an age
of mass politics. As he himself said,
"To be a leader means to be able to move the masses."' Hitler's aim was first to move the masses and
then, having pried them loose from their traditional loyalties and moralities,
to impose upon them (with the hypnotized consent of the majority) a new
authoritarian order of his own devising.
'Hitler', wrote Hermann Rauschning in 1939,
'has a deep respect for the Catholic church and the Jesuit order; not because
of their Christian doctrine, but because of the "machinery" they have
elaborated and controlled, their hierarchical system, their extremely clever
tactics, their knowledge of human nature and their wise use of human weakness
in ruling over believers.'
Ecclesiasticism without Christianity, the discipline of a monastic rule,
not for God's sake or in order to achieve personal salvation, but for the sake
of the State and for the greater glory and power of the demagogue turned Leader
- this was the goal towards which the systematic moving of the masses was to
lead.
Let us see what Hitler thought of the
masses he moved and how he did the moving.
The first principle from which he started was a value judgement: the
masses are utterly contemptible. They
are incapable of abstract thinking and uninterested in any fact outside the
circle of their immediate experience.
Their behaviour is determined, not by knowledge and reason, but by
feelings and unconscious drives. It is
in these drives and feelings that 'the roots of their positive as well as their
negative attitudes are implanted'. To be
successful a propagandist must learn how to manipulate these instincts and
emotions. 'The driving force which has
brought about the most tremendous revolutions on this earth has never been a
body of scientific teaching which has gained power over the masses, but always
a devotion which has inspired them, and often a kind of hysteria which has
urged them into action. Whoever wishes
to win over the masses must know the key that will open the door of their
hearts.' - In post-Freudian jargon, of their unconscious.
Hitler made his strongest appeal to
those members of the lower middle classes who had been ruined by the inflation
of 1923, and then ruined all over again by the depression of 1929 and the
following years. 'The masses' of whom he
speaks were these bewildered, frustrated and chronically anxious millions. To make them more mass-like, more
homogeneously subhuman, he assembled them, by the thousands and the tens of
thousands, in vast halls and arenas, where individuals could lose their
personal identity, even their elementary humanity and be merged with the
crowd. A man or woman makes direct
contact with society in two ways: as a member of some familiar, professional or
religious group, or as a member of a crowd.
Groups are capable of being as moral and intelligent as the individuals
who form them; a crowd is chaotic, has no purpose of its own, and is capable of
anything except intelligent action and realistic thinking. Assembled in a crowd, people lose their
powers of reasoning and their capacity for moral choice. Their suggestibility is increased to the
point where they cease to have any judgement or will of their own. They become very excitable, they lose all
sense of individual or collective responsibility, they
are subject to sudden accesses of rage, enthusiasm and panic. In a word, a man in a crowd behaves as though
he had swallowed a large dose of some powerful intoxicant. He is a victim of what I have called 'herd-poisoning'. Like alcohol, herd-poison is an active,
extroverted drug. The crowd-intoxicated
individual escapes from responsibility, intelligence and morality into a kind
of frantic, animal mindlessness.
During his long career as an agitator,
Hitler had studied the effects of herd-poison and had learned how to exploit
them for his own purposes. He had
discovered that the orator can appeal to those 'hidden forces', which motivate
men's actions, much more effectively than can the writer. Reading is a private, not a collective
activity. The writer speaks only to
individuals, sitting by themselves in a state of normal sobriety. The orator speaks to masses of individuals,
already well primed with herd-poison.
They are at his mercy and, if he knows his business, he can do what he
likes with them. As an orator, Hitler
knew his business supremely well. He was
able, in his own words, 'to follow the lead of the great mass in such a way
that from the living emotion of his hearers the apt word which he needed would
be suggested to him and in its turn this would go straight to the heart of his
hearers'. Otto Strasser
called him 'a loudspeaker, proclaiming the most secret desires, the least
admissible instincts, the sufferings and personal revolts of a whole
nation'. Twenty years before Madison
Avenue embarked upon 'Motivational Research', Hitler was systematically
exploring and exploiting the secret fears and hopes, the cravings, anxieties
and frustrations of the German masses.
It is by manipulating 'hidden forces' that the advertising experts
induce us to buy their wares - a toothpaste, a brand
of cigarettes, a political candidate.
And it was by appealing to the same hidden forces - and to others too
dangerous for Madison Avenue to meddle with - that Hitler induced the German
masses to buy themselves a Fuehrer, an insane philosophy and the Second World
War.
Unlike the masses, intellectuals have a
taste for rationality and an interest in facts.
Their critical habit of mind makes them resistant to the kind of
propaganda that works so well on the majority.
Among the masses 'instinct is supreme, and from instinct comes faith ...
While the healthy common folk instinctively close their ranks to form a
community of the people' (under a Leader, it goes without saying)
'intellectuals run this way and that, like hens in a poultry yard. With them one cannot make history; they
cannot be used as elements composing a community.' Intellectuals are the kind of people who
demand evidence and are shocked by logical inconsistencies and fallacies. They regard oversimplification as the
original sin of the mind and have no use for the slogans, the unqualified
assertions and sweeping generalizations which are the propagandist's stock in
trade. 'All effective propaganda',
Hitler wrote, 'must be confined to a few bare necessities and then must be
expressed in a few stereotyped formulas.'
These stereotyped formulas must be constantly repeated for 'only
constant repetition will finally succeed in imprinting an idea upon the memory
of a crowd'. Philosophy teaches us to
feel uncertain about the things that seem to us self-evident. Propaganda, on the other hand, teaches us to
accept as self-evident matters about which it would be reasonable to suspend
our judgement or to feel doubt. The aim
of the demagogue is to create social coherence under his own leadership. But, as Bertrand Russell has pointed out,
'systems of dogma without empirical foundations, such as scholasticism, Marxism
and fascism, have the advantage of producing a great deal of social coherence
among their disciples'. The demagogic
propagandist must therefore be consistently dogmatic. All his statements are made without
qualification. There are no greys in his
picture of the world; everything is either diabolically black or celestially
white. In Hitler's words, the
propagandist should adopt 'a systematically one-sided attitude towards every
problem that has to be dealt with'. He
must never admit that he might be wrong or that people with a different point
of view might be even partially right.
Opponents should not be argued with; they should be attacked, shouted
down, or, if they become too much of a nuisance, liquidated. The morally squeamish intellectual may be
shocked by this kind of thing. But the
masses are always convinced that 'right is on the side of the active
aggressor'.
Such, then, was Hitler's opinion of
humanity in the mass. It was a very low
opinion. Was it also an incorrect
opinion? The tree is known by its
fruits, and a theory of human nature which inspired the kind of techniques that
proved so horribly effective must contain at least an element of truth. Virtue and intelligence belong to human
beings as individuals freely associating with other individuals in small
groups. So do sin and stupidity. But the subhuman mindlessness to which the
demagogue makes his appeal, the moral imbecility on which he relies when he
goads his victims into action, are characteristics not of men and women as
individuals, but of men and women in masses.
Mindlessness and moral idiocy are not characteristically human
attributes; they are symptoms of herd-poisoning. In all the world's higher religions,
salvation and enlightenment are for individuals. The kingdom of heaven is within the mind of a
person, not within the collective mindlessness of a crowd. Christ promised to be present where two or
three are gathered together. He did not
say anything about being present where thousands are intoxicating one another
with herd-poison. Under the Nazis,
enormous numbers of people were compelled to spend an enormous amount of time
marching in serried ranks from point A to point B and back again to point
A. 'This keeping of the whole population
on the march seemed to be a senseless waste of time and energy. Only much later', adds Hermann Rauschning, 'was there revealed in it a subtle intention based
on a well-judged adjustment of ends and means.
Marching diverts men's thoughts.
Marching kills thought. Marching
makes an end of individuality. Marching
is the indispensable magic stroke performed in order to accustom the people to
a mechanical, quasi-ritualistic activity until it becomes second nature.'
From his point of view and at the level
where he had chosen to do his dreadful work, Hitler was perfectly correct in
his estimate of human nature. To those of
us who look at men and women as individuals rather than as members of crowds,
or of regimented collectives, he seems hideously wrong. In an age of accelerating overpopulation, of
accelerating over-organization and ever more efficient means of mass communication,
how can we preserve the integrity and re-assert the value of the human
individual? This is a question that can
still be asked and perhaps effectively answered. A generation from now it may be too late to
find an answer and perhaps impossible, in the stifling collective climate of
that future time, even to ask the question.
VI
The Arts of Selling
The
survival of democracy depends on the ability of large numbers of people to make
realistic choices in the light of adequate information. A dictatorship, on the other hand, maintains
itself by censoring or distorting the facts, and by appealing, not to reason,
not to enlightened self-interest, but to passion and prejudice, to the powerful
'hidden forces', as Hitler called them, present in the unconscious depths of
every human mind.
In the West, democratic principles are
proclaimed and many able and conscientious publicists do their best to supply
electors with adequate information and to persuade them, by rational argument,
to make realistic choices in the light of that information. All this is greatly to the good. But unfortunately propaganda in the Western
democracies, above all in America, has two faces and a divided
personality. In charge of the editorial
department there is often a democratic Dr Jekyll - a propagandist who would be
very happy to prove that John Dewey had been right about the ability of human
nature to respond to truth and reason.
But this worthy man controls only a part of the machinery of mass
communication. In charge of advertising
we find an anti-democratic, because anti-rational, Mr
Hyde - or rather a Doctor Hyde, for Hyde is now a Ph.D. in psychology and has a
master's degree as well in the Social Sciences.
This Dr Hyde would be very unhappy indeed if everybody always lived up
to John Dewey's faith in human nature.
Truth and reason are Jekyll's affairs, not
his. Hyde is a Motivation Analyst, and
his business is to study human weaknesses and failings, to investigate these
unconscious desires and fears by which so much of men's conscious thinking and
overt doing is determined. And he does
this, not in the spirit of the moralist who would like to make people better,
or of the physician who would like to improve health, but simply in order to
find out the best way to take advantage of their ignorance and to exploit their
irrationality for the pecuniary benefit of his employers. But after all, it may be argued, 'capitalism
is dead, consumerism is king' - and consumerism requires the services of expert
salesmen versed in all the arts (including the more insidious arts) of
persuasion. Under a free enterprise
system commercial propaganda by any and every means is absolutely
indispensable. But the indispensable is
not necessarily the desirable. What is
demonstrably good in the sphere of economics may be far from good for men and
women as voters or even as human beings.
An earlier, more moralistic generation would have been profoundly
shocked by the bland cynicism of the Motivation Analysts. Today we read a book like Mr Vance Packard's The
Hidden Persuaders, and are more amused than horrified, more resigned than
indignant. Given Freud, given
Behaviourism, given the mass producer's chronically desperate need for mass
consumption, this is the sort of thing that is only to be expected. But what, we may ask, is the sort of thing
that is to be expected in the future?
Are Hyde's activities compatible in the long run with Jekyll's? Can a
campaign in favour of rationality be successful in the teeth of another and
even more vigorous campaign in favour of irrationality? These are questions which, for the moment, I
shall not attempt to answer, but shall leave hanging, so to speak, as a
backdrop to our discussion of the methods of mass persuasion in a
technologically advanced democratic society.
The task of the commercial propagandist
in a democracy is in some ways easier and in some ways more difficult than that
of a political propagandist employed by an established dictator or a dictator
in the making. It is easier inasmuch as
almost everyone starts out with a prejudice in favour of beer, cigarettes and
refrigerators, whereas almost nobody starts out with a prejudice in favour of
tyrants. It is more difficult inasmuch
as the commercial propagandist is not permitted, by the rules of his particular
game, to appeal to the more savage instincts of his public. The advertiser of dairy products would dearly
love to tell his readers and listeners that all their troubles are caused by
the machinations of a gang of godless international margarine manufacturers,
and that it is their patriotic duty to march out and burn the oppressors'
factories. This sort of thing, however,
is ruled out, and he must be content with a milder approach. But the mild approach is less exciting than
the approach through verbal or physical violence. In the long run, anger and hatred are
self-defeating emotions. But in the
short run they pay high dividends in the form of psychological and even (since
they release large quantities of adrenalin and noradrenalin) physiological
satisfaction. People may start out with
an initial prejudice against tyrants; but when tyrants or would-be tyrants
treat them to adrenalin-releasing propaganda about the wickedness of their
enemies - particularly of enemies weak enough to be persecuted - they are ready
to follow him with enthusiasm. In his
speeches Hitler kept repeating such words as 'hatred', 'force', 'ruthless',
'crush', 'smash'; and he would accompany these violent words with even more
violent gestures. He would yell, he would
scream, his veins would swell, his face would turn
purple. Strong emotion (as every actor
and dramatist knows) is in the highest degree contagious. Infected by the malignant frenzy of the
orator, the audience would groan and sob and scream in an orgy of uninhibited
passion. And these orgies were so
enjoyable that most of those who had experienced them eagerly came back for
more. Almost all of us long for peace
and freedom; but very few of us have much enthusiasm for the thoughts, feelings
and actions that make for peace and freedom.
Conversely, almost nobody wants war or tyranny; but a great many people
find an intense pleasure in the thoughts, feelings and actions that make for
war and tyranny. These thoughts,
feelings and actions are too dangerous to be exploited for commercial
purposes. Accepting this handicap, the
advertising man must do the best he can with the less intoxicating emotions,
the quieter forms of irrationality.
Effective rational propaganda becomes
possible only when there is a clear understanding, on the part of all
concerned, of the nature of symbols and of their relations to the things and
events symbolized. Irrational propaganda
depends for its effectiveness on a general failure to understand the nature of
symbols. Simple-minded people tend to
equate the symbol with what it stands for, to attribute to things and events
some of the qualities expressed by the words in terms of which the propagandist
has chosen, for his own purposes, to talk about them. Consider a simple example. Most cosmetics are made of lanolin, which is
a mixture of purified wool-fat and water beaten up into an emulsion. This emulsion has many valuable properties:
it penetrates the skin, it does not become rancid, it is mildly antiseptic, and
so forth. But the commercial
propagandists do not speak about the genuine virtues of the emulsion. They give it some picturesquely voluptuous
name, talk ecstatically and misleadingly about feminine beauty, and show
pictures of gorgeous blondes nourishing their tissues with skin food. 'The cosmetic manufacturers', one of their
number has written, 'are not selling lanolin, they are selling hope.' For this hope, this fraudulent implication of
a promise that they will be transfigured, women will pay ten or twenty times
the value of the emulsion which the propagandists have so skilfully related, by
means of misleading symbols, to a deep-seated and almost universal feminine
wish - the wish to be more attractive to members of the opposite sex. The principles underlying this kind of
propaganda are extremely simple. Find
some common desire, some widespread unconscious fear or anxiety; think about
some way to relate this wish or fear to the product you have to sell; then
build a bridge of verbal or pictorial symbols over which your customer can pass
from fact to compensatory dream, and from the dream to the illusion that your
product, when purchased, will make the dream come true. 'We no longer buy oranges, we buy vitality. We do not buy just a car, we buy
prestige.' And so with
all the rest. In toothpaste, for
example, we buy, not a mere cleanser and antiseptic, but release from the fear
of being sexually repulsive. In vodka
and whisky we are not buying a protoplasmic poison which, in small doses, may
depress the nervous system in a psychologically valuable way; we are buying
friendliness and good fellowship, the warmth of Dingley
Dell and the brilliance of the Mermaid Tavern.
With our laxatives we buy the health of a Greek God, the radiance of one
of Diana's nymphs. With the monthly best
seller we acquire culture, the envy of our less literate neighbours and the
respect of the sophisticated. In every
case the motivation analyst has found some deep-seated wish or fear, whose
energy can be used to move the consumer to part with cash and so, indirectly,
to turn the wheels of industry. Stored
in the minds and bodies of countless individuals, this potential energy is
released by, and transmitted along, a line of symbols carefully laid out so as
to by-pass rationality and obscure the real issue.
Sometimes the symbols take effect by
being disproportionately impressive, haunting and fascinating in their own
right. Of this kind are the rites and pomps of religion.
These 'beauties of holiness' strengthen faith where it already exists
and, where there is no faith, contribute to conversion. Appealing, as they do, only to the aesthetic
sense, they guarantee neither the truth nor the ethical value of the doctrines
with which they have been, quite arbitrarily, associated. As a matter of plain historical fact, the
beauties of holiness have often been matched and indeed surpassed by the
beauties of unholiness. Under Hitler, for example, the yearly
Nuremberg rallies were masterpieces of ritual and theatrical art. I had spent six years in
In commercial propaganda the principle
of the disproportionately fascinating symbol is clearly understood. Every propagandist has his Art Department,
and attempts are constantly being made to beautify the billboards with striking
posters, the advertising pages of magazines with lively drawings and
photographs. There are no masterpieces;
for masterpieces appeal only to a limited audience, and the commercial
propagandist is out to captivate the majority.
Those who like this not too good, but sufficiently striking, art may be
expected to like the products with which it has been associated and for which
it symbolically stands.
Another disproportionately fascinating
symbol is the Singing Commercial.
Singing Commercials are a recent invention; but the Singing Theological
and the Singing Devotional - the hymn and the psalm - are as old as religion
itself. Singing Militaries, or marching
songs, are coeval with war, and Singing Patriotics,
the precursors of our national anthems, were doubtless used to promote group
solidarity, to emphasize the distinction between 'us' and 'them', by the
wandering bands of paleolithic hunters and food
gatherers. To most people must is
intrinsically attractive. Moreover,
melodies tend to ingrain themselves in the listener's mind. A tune will haunt the memory during the whole
of a lifetime. Here, for example, is a
quite uninteresting statement or value judgement. As it stands, nobody will pay attention to
it. But now set the words to a catchy
and easily remembered tune. Immediately
they become words of power. Moreover,
the words will tend automatically to repeat themselves every time the melody is
heard or spontaneously remembered.
Orpheus has entered into an alliance with Pavlov - the power of sound
with the conditioned reflex. For the
commercial propagandist, as for his colleagues in the fields of politics and
religion, music possesses yet another advantage. Nonsense which it would be shameful for a
reasonable being to write, speak or hear spoken, can be sung or listened to by
that same rational being with pleasure and even with a kind of intellectual
conviction. Can we learn to separate the
pleasure of singing or of listening to song from the all too human tendency to
believe in the propaganda which the song is putting over? That again is the question.
Thanks to compulsory education and the
rotary press, the propagandist has been able, for many years past, to convey
his messages to virtually every adult in every civilized country. Today, thanks to radio and television he is
in the happy position of being able to communicate even with unschooled adults
and not yet literate children.
Children, as might be expected, are
highly susceptible to propaganda. They
are ignorant of the world and its ways, and therefore completely
unsuspecting. Their critical faculties
are underdeveloped. The youngest of them
have not yet reached the age of reason and the older ones lack the experience
on which their new-found rationality can effectively work. In Europe, conscripts used to be playfully
referred to as 'cannot fodder'. Their
little brothers and sisters have now become radio fodder and television
fodder. In my childhood we were taught
to sing nursery rhymes and, in pious households, hymns. Today the little ones warble the Singing
Commercials. Which is better -
'Rheingold is my beer, the dry beer', or 'Hey diddle-diddle, the cat and the fiddle'?
'Abide with me' or 'You'll wonder where the yellow went, when you brush your
teeth with Pepsodent'? Who knows?
'I don't say that children should be
forced to harass their parents into buying products they've seen advertised on
television, but at the same time I cannot close my eyes to the fact that it's
being done every day.' So writes the
star of one of the many programmes beamed to a juvenile audience. 'Children', he adds, 'are living, talking
records of what we tell them every day.'
And in due course these living, talking records of television
commercials will grow up, earn money and buy the products of industry. 'Think,' writes Mr Clyde Miller ecstatically,
'think of what it can mean to your firm in profits if you can condition a
million or ten million children, who will grow up into adults trained to buy
your product, as soldiers are trained in advance when they hear the trigger
words, Forward March!' Yes, just think
of it! And at the same time remember
that the dictators and the would-be dictators have been thinking about this
sort of thing for years, and that millions, tens of millions, hundreds of
millions of children are in process of growing up to buy the local despot's
ideological product and, like well-trained soldiers, to respond with
appropriate behaviour to the trigger words implanted in those young minds by
the despot's propagandists.
Self-government is in inverse ratio to
numbers. The larger
the constituency, the less value of any particular vote. When he is merely one of millions, the
individual elector feels himself to be impotent, a negligible quantity. The candidates he has voted into office are
far away, at the top of the pyramid of power.
Theoretically they are the servants of the people; but in fact it is the
servants who give orders and the people, far off at the base of the great
pyramid, who must obey. Increasing
population and advancing technology have resulted in an increase in the number
and complexity of organizations, an increase in the amount of power concentrated
in the hands of officials and a corresponding decrease in the amount of control
exercised by electors, coupled with a decrease in the public's regard for
democratic procedures. Already weakened
by the vast impersonal forces at work in the modern world, democratic
institutions are now being undermined from within by the politicians and their
propagandists.
Human beings act in a great variety of
irrational ways, but all of them seem to be capable, if given a fair chance, of
making a reasonable choice in the light of available evidence. Democratic institutions can be made to work
only if all concerned do their best to impart knowledge and to encourage
rationality. But today, in the world's
most powerful democracy, the politicians and their propagandists prefer to make
nonsense of democratic procedures by appealing almost exclusively to the
ignorance and irrationality of the electors.
'Both parties', we were told in 1956 by the editor of a leading business
journal, 'will merchandize their candidates and issues by the same methods that
business has developed to sell goods.
These include scientific selection of appeals and planned repetition ...
Radio spot announcements and ads will repeat phrases with a planned intensity. Billboards will push slogans of proven power
... Candidates need, in addition to rich voices and good diction, to be able to
look "sincerely" at the TV camera.'
The political merchandisers appeal only
to the weaknesses of voters, never to their potential strength. They make no attempt to educate the masses
into becoming fit for self-government; they are content merely to manipulate
and exploit them. For this purpose all
the resources of psychology and the social sciences are mobilized and set to
work. Carefully selected samples of the
electorate are given 'interviews in depth'.
These interviews in depth reveal the unconscious fears and wishes most
prevalent in a given society at the time of an election. Phrases and images aimed at allaying or, if
necessary, enhancing these fears, at satisfying these wishes, at least
symbolically, are then chosen by the experts, tried out on readers and
audiences, changed or improved in the light of the information thus
obtained. After which the political campaign
is ready for the mass communicators. All
that is now needed is money and a candidate who can be coached to look
'sincere'. Under the new dispensation,
political principles and plans for specific action have come to lose most of
their importance. The personality of the
candidate and the way he is projected by the advertising experts are the things
that really matter.
In one way or another, as vigorous
he-man or kindly father, the candidate must be glamorous. He must also be an entertainer who never
bores his audience. Inured to television
and radio, that audience is accustomed to being distracted and does not like to
be asked to concentrate or make a prolonged intellectual effort. All speeches by the entertainer-candidate
must therefore be short and snappy. The
great issues of the day must be dealt with in five minutes at the most - and
preferably (since the audience will be eager to pass on to something a little
livelier than inflation or the H-bomb) in sixty seconds flat. The nature of oratory is such that there has
always been a tendency among politicians and clergymen to over-simplify complex
issues. From a pulpit or a platform even
the most conscientious of speakers finds it very difficult to tell the whole
truth. The methods now being used to
merchandise the political candidate as though he were a deodorant, positively
guarantee the electorate against ever hearing the truth about anything.
VII
Brainwashing
In
the two preceding chapters I have described the techniques of what may be called
wholesale mind-manipulation, as practised by the greatest demagogue and the
most successful salesmen in recorded history.
But no human problem can be solved by wholesale methods alone. The shotgun has its place, but so has the
hypodermic syringe. In the chapters that
follow I shall describe some of the more effective techniques for manipulating
not crowds, not entire publics, but isolated individuals.
In the course of his epoch-making
experiments on the conditioned reflex, Ivan Pavlov observed that, when
subjected to prolonged physical or psychic stress, laboratory animals exhibit
all the symptoms of a nervous breakdown.
Refusing to cope any longer with the intolerable situation, their brains
go on strike, so to speak, and either stop working altogether (the dog loses
consciousness), or else resort to showdowns and sabotage (the dog behaves
unrealistically, or develops the kind of physical symptoms which, in a human
being, we would call hysterical). Some
animals are more resistant to stress than others. Dogs possessing what Pavlov
called a 'strong excitatory' constitution break down much more quickly than
dogs of a merely 'lively' (as opposed to a choleric or agitated) temperament. Similarly, 'weak inhibitory' dogs reach the
end of their tether much sooner than do 'calm imperturbable' dogs. But even the most stoical dog is unable to
resist indefinitely. If the stress to
which he is subjected is sufficiently intense or sufficiently prolonged, he
will end by breaking down as abjectly and as completely as the weakest of his
kind.
Pavlov's findings were confirmed in the
most distressing manner, and on a very large scale, during the two World
Wars. As the result of a single
catastrophic experience, or of a succession of terrors less appalling but frequently
repeated, soldiers develop a number of disabling psycho-physical symptoms. Temporary unconsciousness, extreme agitation,
lethargy, functional blindness or paralysis, completely unrealistic responses
to the challenge of events, strange reversals of life-long patterns of
behaviour - all the symptoms, which Pavlov observed in his dogs, re-appeared
among the victims of what in the First World War was called 'shell shock', in
the Second 'battle fatigue'. Every man,
like every dog, has his own individual limit of endurance. Most men reach their limits after about
thirty days of more or less continuous stress under the conditions of modern
combat. The more than averagely susceptible
succumb in only fifteen days. The more
than averagely tough can resist for forty-five or even fifty days. Strong or weak, in the long run all of them
break down. All, that
is to say, of those who are initially sane.
For, ironically enough, the only people who can hold up indefinitely
under the stress of modern war are psychotics.
Individual insanity is immune to the consequences of collective
insanity.
The fact that every individual has his
breaking point has been known and, in a crude unscientific way, exploited from
time immemorial. In some cases man's
dreadful inhumanity to man has been inspired by the love of cruelty for its own
horrible and fascinating sake. More
often, however, pure sadism was tempered by utilitarianism, theology or reasons
of state. Physical torture and other
forms of stress were inflicted by lawyers in order to loosen the tongues of
reluctant witnesses; by clergymen in order to punish the unorthodox and induce
them to change their opinions; by secret police to extract confessions from
persons suspected of being hostile to the government. Under Hitler, torture, followed by mass
extermination, was used on those biological heretics, the Jews. For a young Nazi, a tour of duty in the
Extermination Camps was (in Himmler's words) 'the
best indoctrination on inferior beings and the subhuman races'. Given the obsessional quality of the Anti-Semitism which Hitler
picked up as a young man in the slums of
Whatever may have happened in earlier
years, it seems fairly certain that torture is not extensively used by the
Communist police today. They draw their
inspiration, not from the Inquisitor or the SS man, but from the physiologist
and his methodically conditioned laboratory animals. For the dictator and his policemen, Pavlov's
findings have important practical implications.
If the central nervous system of dogs can be broken down, so can the
central nervous system of political prisoners.
It is simply a matter of applying the right amount of stress for the
right length of time. At the end of the
treatment, the prisoner will be in a state of neurosis or hysteria, and will be
ready to confess whatever his captors want him to confess.
But confession is not enough. A hopeless neurotic is no use to anyone. What the intelligent and practical dictator
needs is not a patient to be institutionalized, or a victim to be shot, but a
convert who will work for the Cause.
Turning once again to Pavlov, he learns that, on their way to the point
of final breakdown, dogs become more than normally suggestible. New behaviour patterns can easily be
installed while the dog is at or near the limit of its cerebral endurance, and
these new behaviour patterns seem to be ineradicable. The animal in which they have been implanted
cannot be de-conditioned; that which it has learned under stress will remain an
integral part of its make-up.
Psychological stresses can be produced
in many ways. Dogs become disturbed when
stimuli are unusually strong; when the interval between a stimulus and the
customary response is unduly prolonged and the animal is left in a state of
suspense; when the brain is confused by stimuli that run counter to what the
dog has learned to expect; when stimuli make no sense within the victim's
established frame of reference.
Furthermore, it has been found that the deliberate induction of fear,
rage or anxiety markedly heightens the dog's suggestibility. If these emotions are kept at a high pitch of
intensity for a long enough time, the brain goes 'on strike'. When this happens, new behaviour patterns may
be installed with the greatest of ease.
Among the physical stresses that
increase a dog's suggestibility are fatigue, wounds and every form of sickness.
For the would-be dictator these findings
possess important practical implications.
They prove, for example, that Hitler was quite right in maintaining that
mass meetings at night were more effective than mass meetings in the day
time. 'During the day', he wrote, 'man's
will power revolts with highest energy against any attempt at being forced
under another's will and another's opinion.
In the evening, however, they succumb more easily to the dominating
force of a stronger will.'
Pavlov would have agreed with him;
fatigue increases suggestibility. (That
is why, among other reasons, the commercial sponsors of television programmes
prefer the evening hours and are ready to back their preferences with hard
cash.)
Illness is even more effective than
fatigue as an intensifier of suggestibility.
In the past, sickrooms were the scene of countless religious
conversions. The scientifically trained
dictator of the future will have all the hospitals in his dominions wired for
sound and equipped with pillow speakers.
Canned persuasion will be on the air twenty-four hours a day, and the
more important patients will be visited by political soul-savers and
mind-changers just as, in the past, their ancestors were visited by priests,
nuns and pious laymen.
The fact that strong negative emotions
tend to heighten suggestibility and so facilitate a change of heart had been
observed and exploited long before the days of Pavlov. As Dr William Sargant
has pointed out in his enlightening book, Battle for the Mind, John
Wesley's enormous success as a preacher was based upon an intuitive
understanding of the central nervous system.
He would open his sermon with a long and detailed description of the
torments to which, unless they underwent conversion, his hearers would
undoubtedly be condemned for all eternity.
Then, when terror and an agonizing sense of guilt had brought his
audience to the verge, or in some cases over the
verge, of a complete cerebral breakdown, he would change his tone and promise
salvation to those who believed and repented.
By this kind of preaching, Wesley converted thousands of men, women and
children. Intense, prolonged fear broke
them down and produced a state of greatly intensified suggestibility. In this state they were able to accept the
preacher's theological pronouncements without question. After which they were reintegrated by words
of comfort, and emerged from their ordeal with new and generally better
behaviour patterns ineradicably implanted in their minds and nervous systems.
The effectiveness of political and
religious propaganda depends upon the methods employed, not upon the doctrines
taught. These doctrines may be true or
false, wholesome or pernicious - it makes little or no difference. If the indoctrination is given in the right
way at the proper stage of nervous exhaustion, it will work. Under favourable conditions, practically
everybody can be converted to practically anything.
We possess detailed descriptions of the
methods used by the Communist police for dealing with political prisoners. From the moment he is taken into custody, the
victim is subjected systematically to many kinds of
physical and psychological stress. He is
badly fed, he is made extremely uncomfortable, he is
not allowed to sleep for more than a few hours each night. And all the time he is kept in a state of
suspension, uncertainty and acute apprehension.
Day after day - or rather night after night, for these Pavlovian policemen understand the value of fatigue as an
intensifier of suggestibility - he is questioned, often for many hours at a
stretch, by interrogators who do their best to frighten, confuse and bewilder
him. After a few weeks or months of such
treatment, his brain goes on strike and he confesses whatever it is that his
captors want him to confess. Then, if he
is to be converted rather than shot, he is offered the comfort of hope. If he will but accept the true faith, he can
yet be saved - not, of course, in the next life (for, officially, there is no
next life), but in this.
Similar but rather less drastic methods
were used during the Korean War on military prisoners. In their Chinese camps the young Western
captives were systematically subjected to stress. Thus, for the most trivial breaches of the
rules, offenders would be summoned to the commandant's office, there to be
questioned, browbeaten and publicly humiliated.
And the process would be repeated, again and again, at any hour of the
day or night. This continuous harassment
produced in its victims a sense of bewilderment and chronic anxiety. To intensify their sense of guilt, prisoners
were made to write and rewrite, in ever more intimate detail, long
autobiographical accounts of their shortcomings. And after having confessed their own sins,
they were required to confess the sins of their companions. The aim was to create within the camp a
nightmarish society, in which everybody was spying on, and informing against,
everyone else. To these mental stresses
were added the physical stresses of malnutrition, discomfort and illness. The increased suggestibility thus induced was
skilfully exploited by the Chinese, who poured into these abnormally receptive
minds large doses of pro-Communist and anti-capitalist literature. These Pavlovian
techniques were remarkably successful.
One out of every seven American prisoners was guilty, we are officially
told, of grave collaboration with the Chinese authorities, one out of three of
technical collaboration.
It must not be supposed that this kind
of treatment is reserved by the Communists exclusively for their enemies. The young field workers, whose business it
was, during the first years of the new regime, to act as Communist missionaries
and organizers in China's innumerable towns and villages, were made to take a course
of indoctrination far more intense than that to which any prisoner of war was
ever subjected. In his China under
Communism R.L. Walker describes the methods by which the party leaders are
able to fabricate out of ordinary men and women the thousands of selfless
fanatics required for spreading the Communist gospel and for enforcing
Communist policies. Under this system of
training, the human raw material is shipped to special camps, where the
trainees are completely isolated from their friends, families and the outside
world in general. In these camps they
are made to perform exhausting physical and mental work; they are never alone,
always in groups; they are encouraged to spy on one another; they are required
to write self-accusatory autobiographies; they live in chronic fear of the
dreadful fate that may befall them on account of what has been said about them
by informers or of what they themselves have confessed. In this state of heightened suggestibility they
are given an intensive course in theoretical and applied Marxism - a course in
which failure to pass examinations may mean anything from ignominious expulsion
to a term in a forced labour camp or even liquidation. After about six months of this kind of thing,
prolonged mental and physical stress produces the results which Pavlov's
findings would lead one to expect. One
after another, or in whole groups, the trainees break
down. Neurotic and hysterical symptoms
make their appearance. Some of the
victims commit suicide, others (as many, we are told, as twenty per cent of the
total) develop a severe mental illness.
Those who survive the rigours of the conversion process emerge with new
and ineradicable behaviour patterns. All their ties with the past - friends,
family, traditional decencies and pieties - have been severed. They are new men, recreated in the image of
their new god and totally dedicated to his service. [In
the new People's Communes of China the educational methods hitherto reserved
for missionaries are now being applied, it would seem, to everybody. A twelve-hour working day ensures a state of
permanent exhaustion; spying, delation and ubiquitous
policemen foster a chronic anxiety; and the forced repression of sexual
impulses and the common affections tends to create a sense of profound and
hopeless frustration. On men, women and
children softened up by these tested Pavlovian
methods there is poured a never-ceasing stream of command and dogmatic
assertion, of red-hot jingoism and hymns of hate, of threats of dire punishment
mitigated by millennial promises of glorious things to come. How many millions will break down under this
educational ordeal, remains to be seen.]
Throughout the Communist world tens of
thousands of these disciplined and devoted young men are being turned out every
year from hundreds of conditioning centres.
What the Jesuits did for the Roman Church of the Counter-Reformation,
these products of a more scientific and even harsher training are now doing,
and will doubtless continue to do, for the Communist Parties of Europe, Asia
and Africa.
In politics Pavlov seems to have been an
old-fashioned liberal. But, by a strange
irony of fate, his researches and the theories he based upon them have called
into existence a great army of fanatics dedicated heart and soul, reflex and
nervous system, to the destruction of old-fashioned liberalism, wherever it can
be found.
Brainwashing, as it is now practised, is
a hybrid technique, depending for its effectiveness partly on the systematic
use of violence, partly on skilful psychological manipulation. It represents the tradition of 1984 on
its way to becoming the tradition of Brave New World. Under a long-established and well-regulated
dictatorship our current methods of semi-violent manipulation will seem, no
doubt, absurdly crude. Conditioned from
earliest infancy (and perhaps also biologically predestined) the average
middle- or lower-caste individual will never require conversion or even a
refresher course in the true faith. The
members of the highest caste will have to be able to think new thoughts in
response to new situations: consequently their training will be much less rigid
than the training imposed upon those whose business is not to reason why, but
merely to do and die with the minimum of fuss.
These upper-caste individuals will be members, still, of a wild species
- the trainers and guardians, themselves only slightly conditioned, of a vast
herd of completely domesticated animals.
Their wildness will make it possible for them to become heretical and rebellious. When this happens they will have to be either
liquidated, or brainwashed back into orthodoxy, or (as in Brave New World)
exiled to some island, where they can give no further trouble, except of course
to one another. But universal infant
conditioning and the other techniques of manipulation and control are still a
few generations away in the future. On
the road to the Brave New World our rulers will have to rely on the
transitional and provisional techniques of brainwashing.
VIII
Chemical Persuasion
In
the Brave New World of my fables there was no whisky, no tobacco, no illicit
heroin, no bootlegged cocaine. People neither smoked, nor drank, nor
sniffed, nor gave themselves injections.
Whenever anyone felt depressed or below par he would swallow a tablet or
two of a chemical compound called Soma.
The original Soma, from which I took the name of the hypothetical drug,
was an unknown plant (possibly Asclepias acida) used by the ancient Aryan invaders of India in
one of the most solemn of their religious rites. The intoxicating juice expressed from the
stems of this plant was drunk by the priests and nobles in the course of an
elaborate ceremony. In the Vedic hymns
we are told that the drinkers of Soma were blessed in many ways. Their bodies were strengthened, their hearts
were filled with courage, joy and enthusiasm, their minds were enlightened, and
in an immediate experience of eternal life they received the assurance of their
immortality. But the sacred juice had
its drawbacks. Soma was a dangerous drug
- so dangerous that even the great sky-god, Indra,
was sometimes made ill by drinking it.
Ordinary mortals might even die of an overdose. But the experience was so transcendentally
blissful and enlightening that Soma drinking was regarded as a high
privilege. For this privilege no price
was too great.
The Soma of Brave New World had
none of the drawbacks of its Indian original.
In small doses it brought a sense of bliss, in larger doses it made you
see visions and, if you took three tablets, you would sink in a few minutes
into refreshing sleep. And all at no physiological or mental cost. The Brave New Worlders
could take holidays from their black moods, or from the familiar annoyances of
everyday life, without sacrificing their health or permanently reducing their
efficiency.
In the Brave New World the Soma habit
was not a private vice; it was a political institution, it was the very essence
of the Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness guaranteed by the Bill of Rights.
But this most precious of the subjects'
inalienable privileges was at the same time one of the most powerful
instruments of rule in the dictator's armoury.
The systematic drugging of individuals for the benefit of the State
(and, incidentally, of course, for their own delights) was a main plank in the
policy of the World Controllers. The
daily Soma ration was an insurance against personal maladjustment, social
unrest and the spread of subversive ideas.
Religion, Karl Marx declared, is the opium of the people. In the Brave New World this situation was
reversed. Opium, or rather Soma, was the
people's religion. Like religion, the
drug had power to console and compensate, it called up visions of another,
better world, it offered hope, strengthened faith and promoted charity. 'Beer,' a poet has written,
'does more than
To
justify God's ways to man.'
And
let us remember that, compared with Soma, beer is a
drug of the crudest and most unreliable kind.
In this matter of justifying God's ways to man, Soma is to alcohol as
alcohol is to the theological arguments of Milton.
In 1931, when I was writing about the
imaginary synthetic by means of which future generations would be made both
happy and docile, the well-known American biochemist, Dr Irvine Page, was
preparing to leave Germany, where he had spent the three preceding years at the
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, working on the chemistry of the brain. 'It is hard to understand', Dr Page has
written in a recent article, 'why it took so long for scientists to get around
to investigating the chemical reactions in their own brains. I speak', he adds, 'from acute personal
experience. When I came home in 1931 ...
I could not get a job in this field (the field of brain chemistry) or stir a
ripple of interest in it.' Today,
twenty-seven years later, the non-existent ripple of 1931 has become a tidal
wave of biochemical and psycho-pharmacological research. The enzymes which regulate the workings of
the brain are being studied. Within the
body, hitherto unknown chemical substances such as adrenochrome
and serotonin (of which Dr Page was a co-discoverer) have been isolated and
their far-reaching effects on our mental and physical functions are now being
investigated. Meanwhile new drugs are
being synthesized - drugs that reinforce or correct or interfere with the
actions of the various chemicals, by means of which the nervous system performs
its daily and hourly miracles as the controller of the body, the instrument and
mediator of consciousness. From our
present point of view, the most interesting fact about these new drugs is that
they temporarily alter the chemistry of the brain and the associated state of
the mind without doing any permanent damage to the organism as a whole. In this respect they are like Soma - and
profoundly unlike the mind-changing drugs of the past. For example, the classical tranquillizer is
opium. But opium is a dangerous drug
which, from neolithic times down to the present day,
has been making addicts and ruining health.
The same is true of the classical euphoric, alcohol - the drug which, in
the words of the Psalm, 'maketh glad the heart of
man'. But unfortunately alcohol not only
maketh glad the heart of man; it also, in excessive
doses, causes illness and addiction, and has been a main source, for the last
eight or ten thousand years, of crime, domestic unhappiness, moral degradation
and avoidable accidents.
Among the classical stimulants, tea,
coffee and maté are, thank goodness, almost
completely harmless. They are also very
weak stimulants. Unlike these 'cups that
cheer but not inebriate', cocaine is a very powerful and a very dangerous
drug. Those who make use of it must pay
for their ecstasies, their sense of unlimited physical and mental power, by
spells of agonizing depression, by such horrible physical symptoms as the
sensation of being infested by myriads of crawling insects, and by paranoid
delusions that may lead to crimes of violence.
Another stimulant of more recent vintage is amphetamine, better known under
its trade name of Benzedrine.
Amphetamine works very effectively - but works, if abused, at the
expense of mental and physical health.
It has been estimated that, in Japan, there are now about one million
amphetamine addicts.
Of the classical vision-producers the
best known are the peyote of Mexico and the South-Western United States and Cannibis sativa,
consumed all over the world under such names as hashish, bhang, kif and marihuana.
According to the best medical and anthropological evidence, peyote is
far less harmful than the White Man's gin or whisky. It permits the Indians who use it in their
religious rites to enter paradise, and to feel at one with the beloved
community, without making them pay for the privilege by anything worse than the
ordeal of having to chew on something with a revolting flavour and of feeling
somewhat nauseated for an hour or two. Cannabis
sativa is a less innocuous drug - though not
nearly so harmful as the sensation-mongers would have us believe. The Medical Committee, appointed in 1944 by
the Mayor of New York to investigate the problem of marihuana, came to the
conclusion, after careful investigation, that Cannabis sativa
is not a serious menace to society, or even to those who indulge in it. It is merely a nuisance.
From these classical mind-changers we
pass to the latest products of psycho-pharmacological research. Most highly publicized of these are the three
new tranquillizers, reserpine, chlorpromazine and meprobamate.
Administered to certain classes of psychotics, the first two have proved
to be remarkably effective, not in curing mental illness, but at least in
temporarily abolishing their more distressing symptoms. Meprobamate (alias Miltown) produces similar effects in persons suffering from
various forms of neurosis. None of these
drugs is perfectly harmless; but their cost, in terms of physical health and
mental efficiency, is extraordinarily low.
In a word where nobody gets anything for nothing, tranquillizers offer a
great deal for very little. Miltown and chlorpromazine are not yet Soma; but they come
fairly near to being one of the aspects of that mythical drug. They provide temporary relief from nervous
tension without, in the great majority of cases, inflicting permanent organic
harm, and without causing more than a rather slight impairment, while the drug
is working, of intellectual and physical efficiency. Except as narcotics, they are probably to be
preferred to the barbiturates, which blunt the mind's cutting edge and, in
large doses, cause a number of undesirable psycho-physical symptoms and may
result in a full-blown addiction.
In LSD-25 (lysergic acid diethylamide)
the pharmacologists have recently created another aspect of Soma - a
perception-improver and vision-producer that is, physiologically speaking,
almost costless. This extraordinary
drug, which is effective in doses as small as fifty or even twenty-five
millionths of a gram, has power (like peyote) to transport people into the
Other World. In the majority of cases,
the Other World to which LSD-25 gives access is heavenly; alternatively it may
be purgatorial or even infernal. But,
positive or negative, the lysergic acid experience is felt by almost everyone
who undergoes it to be profoundly significant and enlightening. In any event, the fact that minds can be
changed so radically at so little cost to the body is altogether astonishing.
Soma was not only a vision-producer and
a tranquillizer; it was also (and no doubt impossibly) a stimulant of mind and
body, a creator of active euphoria as well as of the negative happiness that
follows the release from anxiety and tension.
The ideal stimulant - powerful but
innocuous - still awaits discovery.
Amphetamine, as we have seen, was far from satisfactory; it exacted too
high a price for what it gave. A more
promising candidate for the role of Soma in its third aspect is Iproniazid, which is now being used to lift depressed
patients out of their misery, to enliven the apathetic and in general to
increase the amount of available psychic energy. Still more promising, according to a
distinguished pharmacologist of my acquaintance, is a new compound, still in
the testing stage, to be known as Deaner. Deaner is an
amino-alcohol and is thought to increase the production of acetyl-choline within the body, and thereby to increase the
activity and effectiveness of the nervous system. The man who takes
the new pill needs less sleep, feels more alert and cheerful, thinks faster and
better - and all at next to no organic cost, at any rate in the short run. It sounds almost too good to be true.
We see then, that, though Soma does not
yet exist (and will probably never exist) fairly good substitutes for the
various aspects of Soma have already been discovered. There are now physiologically cheap
tranquillizers, physiologically cheap vision-producers and physiologically
cheap stimulants.
That a dictator could, if he so desired,
make use of these drugs for political purposes is obvious. He could ensure himself against political
unrest by changing the chemistry of his subjects' brains and so making them
content with their servile conditions.
He could use tranquillizers to calm the excited, stimulants to arouse
enthusiasm in the indifferent, hallucinants to
distract the attention of the wretched from their miseries. But how, it may be asked, will the dictator
get his subjects to take the pills that will make them think, feel and behave
in the ways he finds desirable? In all
probability it will be enough merely to make the pills available. Today alcohol and tobacco are available, and
people spend considerably more on these very unsatisfactory euphorics,
pseudo-stimulants and sedatives than they are ready to spend on the education
of their children. Or consider the
barbiturates and the tranquillizers. In
the United States these drugs can be obtained only on a doctor's
prescription. But the demand of the
American public for something that will make life in an urban-industrial
environment a little more tolerable is so great that doctors are now writing
prescriptions for the various tranquillizers at the rate of forty-eight
millions a year. Moreover, a majority of
these prescriptions are refilled. A
hundred doses of happiness are not enough: send to the drugstore for another
bottle - and, when that is finished, for another ... There can be no doubt
that, if tranquillizers could be bought as easily and cheaply as aspirin, they
would be consumed, not only by the billions, as they are at present, but by the
scores and hundreds of billions. And a
good, cheap stimulant would be almost as popular.
Under a dictatorship pharmacists would
be instructed to change their tune with every change of circumstance. In times of national crisis it would be their
business to push the sale of stimulants.
Between crises, too much alertness and energy on the part of his
subjects might prove embarrassing to the tyrant. At such times the masses would be urged to
buy tranquillizers and vision-producers.
Under the influence of these soothing syrups they could be relied upon
to give their master no trouble.
As things now stand, the tranquillizers
may prevent some people from giving enough trouble, not only to their rulers,
but even to themselves. Too much tension
is a disease; but so is too little.
There are certain occasions when we ought to be tense, when an
excess of tranquillity (and especially of tranquillity imposed from the
outside, by a chemical) is entirely inappropriate.
At a recent symposium on meprobamate, in which I was a participant, an eminent biochemist
playfully suggested that the United States government should make a free gift
to the Soviet people of fifty billion doses of this most popular of the
tranquillizers. The joke had a serious
point to it. In a contest between two
populations one of which is being constantly stimulated by threats and
promises, constantly directed by one-pointed propaganda, while the other is no
less constantly being distracted by television and tranquillized by Miltown, which of the opponents is more likely to come out
on top?
As well as tranquillizing, hallucinating
and stimulating, the Soma of my fable had the power to reinforce the effects of
governmental propaganda. Less
effectively and at a higher physiological cost, several drugs already in the
pharmacopoeia can be used for the same purpose.
There is scopolamine, for example, the active principle of henbane and,
in large doses, a powerful poison; there are pentothal
and sodium amytal.
Nicknamed, for some odd reason, 'the truth serum', pentothal
has been used by the police of various countries for the purpose of extracting
confessions from (or perhaps suggesting confessions to) reluctant
criminals. Pentothal and sodium amytal lower the barrier between the conscious and the
subconscious mind and are of great value in the treatment of 'battle fatigue'
by the process know as 'narcosynthesis'. It is said that these drugs are sometimes
employed by the Communists when preparing important prisoners for their public
appearance in court.
Meanwhile pharmacology, biochemistry and
neurology are on the march, and we can be quite certain that, in the course of
the next few years, new and better chemical methods for increasing
suggestibility and lowering psychological resistance will be discovered. Like everything else these discoveries may be
used well or badly. They may help the
psychiatrist in his battle against mental illness, or they may help the
dictator in his battle against freedom.
More probably (since science is divinely impartial) they will both enslave and make free, heal and at the same time
destroy.
IX
Subconscious Persuasion
In
a footnote appended to the 1919 edition of his book, The Interpretation of
Dreams, Sigmund Freud called attention to the work of Dr Poetzl, an Austrian neurologist, who had recently published
a paper describing his experiments with the tachistoscope. (The tachistoscope
is an instrument that comes in two forms - a viewing box, into which the
subject looks at an image that is exposed for a small fraction of a second; or
a magic lantern with a high-speed shutter, capable of projecting an image very
briefly upon a screen.) In these
experiments 'Poetzl required the subjects to make a
drawing of what they had consciously noted of a picture exposed to their view
in a tachistoscope ... He then turned his attention
to the dreams dreamed by the subjects during the following night and required
them once more to make drawings of appropriate portions of these dreams. It was shown unmistakably that those details
of the exposed picture which had not been noted by the subject provided
material for the construction of the dream.'
With various modifications and
refinements Poetzl's experiments have been repeated
several times, most recently by Dr Charles Fisher, who has contributed three
excellent papers on the subject of dreams and 'pre-conscious perception' to the
Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association. Meanwhile the academic psychologists have not
been idle. Confirming Poetzl's findings, their studies have shown that people
actually see and hear a great deal more than they consciously know they see and
hear without knowing it is recorded by the subconscious mind and may affect
their conscious thoughts, feelings and behaviour.
Pure science does not remain pure
indefinitely. Sooner or later it is apt
to turn into applied science and finally into technology. Theory modulates into industrial practice,
knowledge becomes power, formulas and laboratory experiments undergo a
metamorphosis, and emerge as the H-bomb.
In the present case, Poetzl's nice little
piece of pure science, and all the other nice little pieces of pure science in
the field of pre-conscious perception, retained their pristine purity for a
surprisingly long time. Then, in the
early autumn of 1957, exactly forty years after the publication of Poetzl's original paper, it was announced that their purity
was a thing of the past; they had been applied, they had entered the realm of
technology. The announcement made a
considerable stir, and was talked and written about all over the civilized
world. And no wonder; for the new
technique of 'subliminal projection', as it was called, was intimately
associated with mass entertainment, and in the life of civilized human beings
mass entertainment now plays a part comparable to that played, in the Middle
Ages, by religion. Our epoch has been
given many nicknames - the Age of Anxiety, the Atomic Age, the Space Age. It might, with equally good reason, by called
the Age of Television Addiction, the Age of Soap Opera, the
Age of the Disc Jockey. In such an age
the announcement that Poetzl's pure science had been
applied in the form of a technique of subliminal projection could not fail to
arouse the most intense interest among the world's mass entertainees. For the new technique was aimed
directly at them, and its purpose was to manipulate their minds without their
being aware of what was being done to them. By means of specially designed tachistoscopes words or images were to be flashed for a
millisecond or less upon the screens of television sets and motion picture
theatres during (not before or after) the programme. 'Drink Coca-Cola' or 'Light up a Camel' would
be superimposed upon the lovers' embrace, the tears of the broken-hearted
mother, and the optic nerves of the viewers would record these secret messages,
their subconscious minds would respond to them and in due course they would
consciously feel a craving for soda pop and tobacco. And meanwhile other secret messages would be
whispered too softly, or squeaked too shrilly, for conscious hearing. Consciously the listener might be paying
attention to some such phrase as 'Darling, I love you'; but subliminally,
beneath the threshold of awareness, his incredibly sensitive ears and his subconscious
mind would be taking in the latest good news about deodorants and laxatives.
Does this kind of commercial propaganda
really work? The evidence produced by
the commercial firm that first unveiled a technique for subliminal projection
was vague and, from a scientific point of view, very unsatisfactory. Repeated at regular intervals during the
showing of a picture in a movie theatre, the command to buy more popcorn was
said to have resulted in a fifty per cent increase in popcorn sales during the
intermission. But a single experiment proves
very little. Moreover this particular
experiment was poorly set up. There were
no controls and no attempt was made to allow for the many variables that
undoubtedly affect the consumption of popcorn by a theatre audience. And anyhow was this the most effective way of
applying the knowledge accumulated over the years by the scientific
investigators of subconscious perception?
Was it intrinsically probable that, by merely flashing the name of a
product and a command to buy it, you would be able to break down sales
resistance and recruit new customers?
The answer to both these questions is pretty obviously in the
negative. But this does not mean, of
course, that the findings of the neurologists and psychologists are without any
practical importance. Skilfully applied,
Poetzl's nice little piece of pure science might well
become a powerful instrument for the manipulation of unsuspecting minds.
For a few suggestive hints let us now
turn from the popcorn vendors to those who, with less noise but more imagination
and better methods, have been experimenting in the same field. In Britain, where the process of manipulating
minds below the level of consciousness is known as 'strobonic
injection', investigators have stressed the practical importance of creating
the right psychological conditions for the subconscious persuasion. A suggestion above the threshold of awareness
is more likely to take effect when the recipient is in a light hypnotic trance,
under the influence of certain drugs, or has been debilitated by illness,
starvation, or any kind of physical or emotional stress. But what is true for suggestions above the
threshold of consciousness is also true for suggestions beneath that threshold. In a word, the lower the level of a person's
psychological resistance, the greater will be the effectiveness of strobonically injected suggestions. The scientific dictator of tomorrow will set
up his whispering machines and subliminal projectors in schools and hospitals
(children and the sick are highly suggestible), and in all public places where
audiences can be given a preliminary softening-up by suggestibility-increasing
oratory or rituals.
From the conditions under which we may
expect subliminal suggestion to be effective we now pass to the suggestions
themselves. In what terms should the
propagandist address himself to his victims' subconscious minds? Direct commands ('Buy popcorn' or 'Vote for
Jones') and unqualified statements ('Socialism stinks' or 'X's toothpaste cures
halitosis') are likely to take effect only upon those minds that are already
partial to Jones and popcorn, already alive to the dangers of body odours and
the public ownership of the means of production. But to strengthen existing faith is not enough;
the propagandist, if he is worth his salt, must create new faith, must know how
to bring the indifferent and the undecided over to his side, must be able to
mollify and perhaps even convert the hostile.
To subliminal assertion and command he knows that he must add subliminal
persuasion.
Above the threshold of awareness, one of
the most effective methods of non-rational persuasion is what may be called
persuasion-by-association. The
propagandist arbitrarily associates his chosen product, candidate or cause with
some idea, some image of a person or thing, which most people, in a given
culture, unquestioningly regard as good.
Thus, in a selling campaign, female beauty may be arbitrarily associated
with anything from a bulldozer to a diuretic; in a political campaign
patriotism may be associated with any cause from apartheid to
integration, and with any kind of person, from a Mahatma Gandhi to a Senator
McCarthy. Years ago, in Central America,
I observed an example of persuasion-by-association which filled me with an
appalled admiration for the men who had devised it. In the mountains of Guatemala the only
imported art works are the coloured calendars distributed free of charge by the
foreign companies whose products are sold to the Indians. The American calendars showed pictures of
dogs, of landscapes, of young women in a state of partial nudity. But to the Indian, dogs are merely
utilitarian objects, landscapes are what he sees only too much of, every day of
his life, and half-naked blondes are uninteresting, perhaps a little
repulsive. American calendars were, in
consequence, far less popular than German calendars; for the German advertisers
had taken the trouble to find out what the Indians valued and were interested
in. I remember in particular one
masterpiece of commercial propaganda. It
was a calendar put out by a manufacturer of aspirin. At the bottom of the picture one saw the
familiar trademark on the familiar bottle of white tablets. Above it were no snow-scenes or autumnal
woods, no cocker spaniels or bosomy chorus girls. No - the wily Germans had associated the
pain-relievers with a brightly coloured and extremely life-like picture of the
Holy Trinity sitting on a cumulus cloud and surrounded by St Joseph, the Virgin
Mary, assorted saints and a large number of angels. The miraculous virtues of acetyl salicylic
acid were thus guaranteed, in the Indians' simple and deeply religious minds,
by God the Father and the entire heavenly host.
This kind of persuasion-by-association
is something to which the techniques of subliminal projection seem to lend
themselves particularly well. In a
series of experiments carried out at New York University, under the auspices of
the National Institution of Health, it was found that a person's feelings about
some consciously seen image could be modified by associating it, on the
subconscious level, with another image, or, better still, with value-bearing
words. Thus, when associated, on the
subconscious level, with the word 'happy', a blank expressionless face would
seem to be observer to smile, to look friendly, amiable, outgoing. When the same face was associated, also on
the subconscious level, with the word 'angry', it took on a forbidding
expression, and seemed to the observer to have become hostile and
disagreeable. (To a group of young women,
it also came to seem very masculine - whereas when it was associated with
'happy', they saw the face as belonging to a member of their own sex. Fathers and husbands, please take note.) For the commercial and political
propagandist, these findings, it is obvious, are highly significant. If he can put his victims into a state of
abnormally high suggestibility, if he can show them, while they are in that
state, the thing, the person or, through a symbol, the cause he has to sell,
and if, on the subconscious level, he can associate this thing, person or
symbol with some value-bearing word or image, he may be able to modify their
feelings and opinions without their having any idea of what he is doing. It should be possible, according to an
enterprising commercial group in New Orleans, to enhance the entertainment
value of films and television plays by using this technique. People like to feel strong emotions and
therefore enjoy tragedies, thrillers, murder mysteries and tales of
passion. The dramatization of a fight or
an embrace produces strong emotions in the spectators. It might produce even strong emotions if it
were associated, on the subconscious level, with appropriate words or symbols. For example, in the film version of A
Farewell to Arms, the death of the heroine in childbirth might be made even
more distressing than it already is by subliminally flashing upon the screen,
again and again, during the playing of the scene, such ominous words as 'pain',
'blood' and 'death'. Consciously, the
words would not be seen; but their effect upon the subconscious mind might be
very great and these effects might powerfully reinforce the emotions evoked, on
the conscious level, by the acting and the dialogue. If, as seems pretty certain, subliminal
projection can consistently intensify the emotions felt by movie-goers, the
motion picture industry may yet be saved from bankruptcy - that is, if the producers of television plays don't get there first.
In the light of what has been said about
persuasion-by-association and the enhancement of emotions by subliminal
suggestion, let us try to imagine what the political meeting of tomorrow will
be like. The candidate (if there is
still a question of candidates), or the appointed representative of the ruling
oligarchy, will make his speech for all to hear. Meanwhile the tachistoscopes,
the whispering and squeaking machines, the projectors of images so dim that
only the subconscious mind can respond to them, will be reinforcing what he
says by systematically associating the man and his cause with positively
charged words and hallowed images, and by strobonically
injecting negatively charged words and odious symbols whenever he mentions the
enemies of the state or the party. In
the United States brief flashes of Abraham Lincoln and the words 'government by
the people' will be projected upon the rostrum.
In Russia the speaker will, of course, be associated with glimpses of
Lenin, with the words 'people's democracy', with the prophetic beard of Father
Marx. Because all this is still safely
in the future, we can afford to smile.
Ten or twenty years from now, it will probably seem a good deal less
amusing. For what is now merely science
fiction will have become everyday political fact.
Poetzl was one
of the portents which, when writing Brave New World, I somehow
overlooked. There is no reference in my
fable to subliminal projection. It is a
mistake of omission which, if I were to rewrite the book today, I should most
certainly correct.
X
Hypnopaedia
In
the late autumn of 1957 the Woodland Road Camp, a penal institution in Tulare
County, California, became the scene of a curious and interesting
experiment. Miniature loudspeakers were
placed under the pillows of a group of prisoners who had volunteered to act as
psychological guinea-pigs. Each of these
pillow speakers was hooked up to a phonograph in the Warden's office. Every hour throughout the night an
inspirational whisper repeated a brief homily on 'the principles of moral
living'. Waking at midnight, a prisoner
might hear this still small voice extolling the cardinal virtues or murmuring,
on behalf of his own Better Self, 'I am filled with love and compassion for
all, so help me God.'
After reading about the Woodland Road
Camp, I turned to the second chapter of Brave New World. In that chapter the Director of Hatcheries
and Conditioning for Western Europe explains to a group of freshman
conditioners and hatchers the workings of that state-controlled system of
ethical education, known in the seventh century after Ford as Hypnopaedia. The earliest attempts at sleep-teaching, the
Director told his audience, had been misguided, and therefore
unsuccessful. Educators had tried to
given intellectual training to their slumbering pupils. But intellectual activity is incompatible
with sleep. Hypnopaedia became
successful only when it was used for moral training - in other words,
for the conditioning of behaviour through verbal suggestion at a time of
lowered psychological resistance.
'Wordless conditioning is crude and wholesale, cannot inculcate the more
complex courses of behaviour required by the State. For that there must be
words, but words without reason' ... the kind of words that require no analysis
for their comprehension, but can be swallowed whole by the sleeping brain. This is true hypnopaedia, 'the greatest
moralizing and socializing force of all time'.
In the Brave New World, no citizens belonging to the lower castes ever
gave any trouble. Why? Because, from the moment he could speak and
understand what was said to him, every lower-caste child was exposed to
endlessly repeated suggestions, night after night, during the hours of
drowsiness and sleep. These suggestions
were 'like drops of liquid sealing wax, drops that adhere, incrust, incorporate themselves with what they fall on, till finally
the rock is all one scarlet blob. Till
at last the child's mind is these suggestions and the sum of these
suggestions is the child's mind. And not the child's mind only. The adult's mind too - all his life
long. The mind that judges and desires
and decides - made up of these suggestions.
But these suggestions are our suggestions - suggestions from the
State ...'
To date, so far as I know, hypnopaedic suggestions have been given by no State more formidable
than Tulare County, and the nature of Tulare's hypnopaedic
suggestions to lawbreakers is unexceptionable.
If only all of us, and not only the inmates of the Woodland Road Cam-,
could be effectively filled, during our sleep, with love and compassion for
all! No, it is not the message conveyed
by the inspirational whisper that one objects to; it is the principle of
sleep-teaching by governmental agencies.
Is hypnopaedia the sort of instrument that officials, delegated to
exercise authority in a democratic society, ought to be allowed to use at their
discretion? In the present instance they
are using it only on volunteers and with the best intentions. But there is no guarantee that in other cases
the intentions will be good or the indoctrination on a voluntary basis. And law or social arrangement which makes it
possible for officials to be led into temptation is bad. And law or arrangement which preserves them
from being tempted to abuse their delegated power for their own advantage, or
for the benefit of the State or of some political, economic or ecclesiastical
organization, is good. Hypnopaedia, if
it is effective, would be a tremendously powerful instrument in the hands of
anyone in a position to impose suggestions upon a captive audience. A democratic society is a society dedicated to
the proposition that power is often abused and should therefore be entrusted to
officials only in limited amounts and for limited periods of time. In such a society, the use of hypnopaedia by
officials should be regulated by law - that is, of course, if hypnopaedia is
genuinely an instrument of power. But is
it in fact an instrument of power? Will
it work now as well as I imagined it working in the seventh century A.F.? Let us examine the evidence.
In the Psychological Bulletin for
July 1955, Charles W. Simon and William H. Emmons have analysed and evaluated
the ten most important studies in the field.
All these studies were concerned with memory. Does sleep-teaching help the pupil in his
task of learning by rote? And to what
extent is material whispered into the ear of a sleeping person remembered next
morning when he wakes? Simon and Emmons answer as follows: 'Ten sleep-learning
studies were reviewed. Many of these
have been cited uncritically by commercial firms or in popular magazines and
news articles as evidence in support of the feasibility of learning during
sleep. A critical analysis was made of
their experimental design, statistics, methodology and criteria of sleep. All the studies had weaknesses in one or more
of these areas.' The studies do not make
it unequivocally clear that learning during sleep actually takes
place. But some learning appears to take
place in 'a special kind of waking state wherein the subjects do not remember
later on if they had been awake. This
may be of great practical importance from the standpoint of economy in study
time, but it cannot be construed as sleep learning ... The problem is
partially confounded by an inadequate definition of sleep.'
Meanwhile the fact remains that in the
American Army during the Second World War (and even, experimentally, during the
First) day-time instruction in the Morse Code and in
foreign languages was supplemented by instruction during sleep - apparently
with satisfactory results. Since the end
of the Second World War several commercial firms in the United States and
elsewhere have sold large numbers of pillow speakers and clock-controlled
phonographs and tape recorders for the use of actors in a hurry to learn their
parts, of politicians and preachers who want to give the illusion of being
extemporaneously eloquent, of students preparing for examinations and, finally
and most profitably, of the countless people who are dissatisfied with
themselves as they are and would like to be suggested or auto-suggested into
becoming something else.
Self-administered suggestions can easily be recorded on magnetic tape
and listened to, over and over again, by day and during sleep. Suggestions from the outside may be bought in
the form of records carrying a wide variety of helpful messages. There are on the market records for the
release of tension and the induction of deep relaxation, records for promoting
self-confidence (much used by salesmen), records for increasing one's charm and
making one's personality more magnetic.
Among the best sellers are records for the achievement of sexual harmony
and records for those who wish to lose weight.
('I am cold to chocolate, insensible to the lure of potatoes, utterly
unmoved by muffins.') There are records
fro improved health and even records for making more money. And the remarkable thing is that, according
to the unsolicited testimonials sent in by grateful purchasers of these
records, many people actually do make more money after listening to hypnopaedic suggestions to that effect, many obese ladies
do lose weight and many couples on the verge of divorce achieve sexual harmony
and live happily ever after.
In this context an article by Theodore
X. Barber, 'Sleep and Hypnosis' which appeared in The Journal of Clinical
and Experimental Hypnosis for October 1956 is most enlightening. Mr Barber points out that there is a
significant difference between light sleep and deep sleep. In deep sleep the electro-encephalograph
records no alpha waves; in light sleep alpha waves make their appearance. In this respect light sleep is closer to the
waking and hypnotic states (in both of which alpha waves are present) than it
is to deep sleep. A loud noise will
cause a person in deep sleep to awaken.
A less violent stimulus will not arouse him, but will cause the
reappearance of alpha waves. Deep sleep
has given place for the time being to light sleep.
A person in deep sleep is unsuggestible. But
when subjects in light sleep are given suggestions, they will respond to them,
Mr Barber found, in the same way that they respond to suggestions when in the
hypnotic trance.
Many of the earlier investigators of
hypnotism made similar experiments. In
his classical History, Practice and Theory of Hypnosis, first published
in 1903, Milne Bramwell records that 'many
authorities claim to have changed natural sleep into hypnotic sleep. According to Wetterstrand,
it is often very easy to put oneself en rapport with sleeping persons,
especially children ... Wetterstrand thinks this
method of inducing hypnosis of much practical value and claims to have often
used it successfully.' Bramwell cites many other experienced hypnotists (including
such eminent authorities as Bernheim, Moll and Forel) to the same effect.
Today an experimenter would not speak of 'changing natural into hypnotic
sleep'. All he is prepared to say is
that light sleep (as opposed to deep sleep without alpha waves) is a state in
which many subjects will accept suggestions as readily as they do when under
hypnosis. For example, after being told,
when lightly asleep, that they will wake up in a little while, feeling
extremely thirsty, many subjects will duly wake up with a dry throat and a
craving for water. The cortex may be too
inactive to think straight; but it is alert enough to respond to suggestions
and to pass them on to the autonomic nervous system.
As we have already seen, the well-known
Swedish physician and experimenter, Wetterstrand, was
especially successful in the hypnotic treatment of sleeping children. In our own day Wetterstrand's
methods are followed by a number of paediatricians, who instruct young mothers
in the art of giving helpful suggestions to their children during the hours of
light sleep. By this kind of hypnopaedia
children can be cured of bed wetting and nail biting, can be prepared to go
into surgery without apprehension, can be given confidence and reassurance
when, for any reason, the circumstances of their life have become
distressing. I myself have seen
remarkable results achieved by the therapeutic sleep-teaching of small
children. Comparable results could
probably be achieved with many adults.
For a would-be dictator, the moral of
all this is plain. Under proper
conditions, hypnopaedia actually works - works, it would seem, about as well as
hypnosis. Most of the things that can be
done with and to a person in hypnotic trance can be done with and to a person
in light sleep. Verbal suggestions can
be passed through the somnolent cortex to the midbrain, the brain stem and the
autonomic nervous system. If these
suggestions are well conceived and frequently repeated, the bodily functions of
the sleeper can be improved or interfered with, new patterns of feeling can be
installed and old ones modified, post-hypnotic commands can be given, slogans,
formulas and trigger words deeply ingrained in the memory. Children are better hypnopaedic
subjects than adults, and the would-be dictator will take full advantage of the
fact. Children of nursery-school and
kindergarten age will be treated to hypnopaedic
suggestions during their afternoon nap.
For older children and particularly the children of party members - the
boys and girls who will grow up to be leaders, administrators and teachers -
there will be boarding schools, in which an excellent day-time education will
be supplemented by nightly sleep-teaching.
In the case of adults, special attention will be paid to the sick. As Pavlov demonstrated many
years ago, strong-minded and resistant dogs become completely suggestible after
an operation or when suffering from some debilitating illness. Our dictator will therefore see that every
hospital ward is wired for sound. An
appendectomy, an accouchement, a bout of pneumonia or hepatitis, can be made
the occasion for an intensive course in loyalty and the true faith, a refresher
in the principles of the local ideology.
Other captive audiences can be found in prisons, in labour camps, in
military barracks, on ships at sea, on trains and aeroplanes in the night, in
the dismal waiting rooms of bus terminals and railway stations. Even if the hypnopaedic
suggestions given to these captive audiences were no more than ten per cent
effective, the results would still be impressive and, for a dictator, highly
desirable.
From the heightened suggestibility
associated with light sleep and hypnosis let us pass to the normal
suggestibility of those who are awake - or at least who think they are
awake. (In fact, as the Buddhists
insist, most of us are half asleep all the time and go through life as
somnambulists obeying somebody else's suggestions. Enlightenment is total awakeness. The word 'Buddha' can be translated as 'The
Awake'.)
Genetically, every human being is unique
and in many ways unlike every other human being. The range of individual variation from the
statistical norm is amazingly wide. And
the statistical norm, let us remember, is useful only in actuarial
calculations, not in real life. In real
life there is no such person as the average man. There are only particular men, women and
children, each with his or her inborn idiosyncrasies of mind and body, and all
trying (or being compelled) to squeeze their biological diversities into the
uniformity of some cultural mould.
Suggestibility is one of the qualities
that vary significantly from individual to individual. Environmental factors certainly play their
part in making one person more responsive to suggestion than another; but there
are also, no less certainly, constitutional differences in the suggestibility
of individuals. Extreme resistance to
suggestion is rather rare. Fortunately so. For if everyone were as unsuggestible as
some people are, social life would be impossible. Societies can function with a reasonable
degree of efficiency because, in varying degrees, most people are fairly
suggestible. Extreme suggestibility is
probably about as rare as extreme unsuggestibility. And this also is fortunate. For if most people were as responsive to
outside suggestions as the men and women at the extreme limits of suggestibility,
free, rational choice would become for the majority of the electorate virtually
impossible, and democratic institutions could not survive, or even come into
existence.
A few years ago, at the Massachusetts
General Hospital, a group of researchers carried out a most illuminating
experiment on the pain-relieving effects of placebos. (A placebo is anything which the patient
believes to be an active drug, but which in fact is pharmacologically
inactive.) In this experiment the
subjects were one hundred and sixty-two patients who had just come out of
surgery and were all in considerable pain.
Whenever a patient asked for medication to relieve pain, he or she was
given an injection, either of morphine or of distilled water. All the patients received some injections of
morphine and some of the placebo. About
thirty per cent of the patients never obtained relief from the placebo. On the other hand, fourteen per cent obtained
relief after every injection of distilled water. The remaining fifty-five per cent of the
group were relieved by the placebo on some occasions, but not on others.
In what respects did the suggestible
reactors differ from the unsuggestible
non-reactors? Careful study and testing
revealed that neither age nor sex was a significant factor. Men reacted to the placebo as frequently as
did women, and young people as often as old ones. Nor did intelligence, as measured by the
standard tests, seem to be important.
The average IQ of the two groups was about the same. It was above all in temperament,
in the way they felt about themselves and other people that the members of the
two groups were significantly different.
The reactors were more cooperative than the non-reactors, less critical
and suspicious. They gave the nurses no
trouble and thought that the case they were receiving in the hospital was
simply 'wonderful'. But
though less unfriendly towards others than the non-reactors, the reactors were
generally much more anxious about themselves. Under stress, this anxiety tended to translate
itself into various psychosomatic symptoms, such as stomach upsets, diarrhoea
and headaches. In spite of or because of
their anxiety, most of the reactors were more uninhibited in the display of
emotions than were the non-reactors, and more voluble. They were also much more religious, much more
active in the affairs of their church and much more preoccupied, on a
subconscious level, with their pelvic and abdominal organs.
It is interesting to compare these
figures for reaction to placebos with the estimates made, in their own special
field, by writers on hypnosis. About a
fifth of the population, they tell us, can be hypnotized very easily. Another fifth cannot be hypnotized at all, or
can be hypnotized only when drugs or fatigue have lowered psychological
resistance. The remaining three-fifths
can be hypnotized somewhat less easily than the first group, but considerably
more easily than the second. A
manufacturer of hypnopaedic records has told me that
about twenty per cent of his customers are enthusiastic and report striking
results in a very short time. At the
other end of the spectrum of suggestibility there is an eight per cent minority
that regularly asks for its money back.
Between these two extremes are the people who fail to get quick results,
but are suggestible enough to be affected in the long run. If they listen perseveringly to the
appropriate hypnopaedic instructions they will end by
getting what they want - self-confidence or sexual harmony, less weight or more
money.
The ideals of democracy and freedom
confront the brute fact of human suggestibility. One-fifth of every electorate can be
hypnotized almost in the twinkling of an eye, one-seventh can be relieved of
pain by injections of water, one-quarter will respond promptly and
enthusiastically to hypnopaedia. And to
these all too cooperative minorities must be added the slow-starting
majorities, whose less extreme suggestibility can be effectually exploited by
anyone who knows his business and is prepared to take the necessary time and
trouble.
Is individual freedom compatible with a
high degree of individual suggestibility?
Can democratic institutions survive the subversion from within of
skilled mind-manipulators trained in the science and art of exploiting the
suggestibility both of individuals and of crowds? To what extent can the inborn tendency to be
too suggestible for one's own good or the good of a democratic society be
neutralized by education? How far can
the exploitation of inordinate suggestibility by businessmen and ecclesiastics,
by politicians in and out of power, be controlled by law? Explicitly or implicitly, the first two
questions have been discussed in earlier chapters. In what follows I shall consider the problems
of prevention and cure.
XI
Education for Freedom
Education
for freedom must begin by stating facts and enunciating values, and must go on
to develop appropriate techniques for realizing the values and for combating
those who, for whatever reason, choose to ignore the facts or deny the values.
In an earlier chapter I have discussed
the Social Ethic, in terms of which the evil resulting from over-organization
and overpopulation are justified and made to seem good. Is such a system of values consonant with what
we know about human physique and temperament?
The Social Ethic assumes that nurture is all-important in determining
human behaviour and that nature - the psycho-physical equipment with which
individuals are born - is a negligible factor.
But is this true? Is it true that
human beings are nothing but the products of their social environment? And if it is not true, what justification can
there be for maintaining that the individual is less important than the group
of which he is a member?
All the available evidence points to the
conclusion that in the life of individuals and societies heredity is no less
significant than culture. Every
individual is biologically unique and unlike all other individuals. Freedom is therefore a great good, tolerance
a great virtue and regimentation a great misfortune. For practical or theoretical reasons,
dictators, Organization Men and certain scientists are anxious to reduce the
maddening diversity of men's natures to some kind of manageable uniformity. In the first flush of his Behaviouristic
fervour, J.B. Watson roundly declared that he could find 'no support for
hereditary patterns of behaviour, nor for special abilities
(musical, art, etc.) which are supposed to run in families'. And even today we find a distinguished
psychologist, Professor B.F. Skinner of Harvard, insisting that, 'as scientific
explanation becomes more and more comprehensive, the contribution which may be
claimed by the individual himself approach zero. Man's vaunted creative powers, his
achievements in art, science and morals, his capacity to choose and our right
to hold him responsible for the consequences of his choice - none of these is
conspicuous in the new scientific self-portrait.' In a word, Shakespeare's plays were not written
by Shakespeare, nor even by Bacon or the Earl of Oxford; they were written by
Elizabethan England.
More than sixty years ago William James
wrote an essay on 'Great Men and their Environment', in which he set out to
defend the outstanding individual against the assaults of Herbert Spencer. Spencer had proclaimed that 'Science' (that
wonderfully convenient personification of the opinions, at a given date, of
Professors X, Y and Z) had completely abolished the Great Man. 'The great man', he had written, 'must be
classed with all other phenomena in the society that gave him birth, as a
product of its antecedents.' The great
man may be (or seem to be) 'the proximate initiator of changes ... But if there
is to be anything like a real explanation of these changes, it must be sought
in the aggregate of conditions out of which both he and they have arisen.' This is one of those empty profundities to
which no operational meaning can possibly be attached. What our philosopher is saying is that we
must know everything before we can fully understand anything. No doubt.
But in fact we shall never know everything. We must therefore be content with partial
understanding and proximate causes - including the influence of great men. 'If anything is humanly certain', writes
William James, 'it is that the great man's society, properly so called, does
not make him before he can remake it.
Physiological forces with which the social, political, geographical and
to a great extent anthropological conditions have just as much and just as
little to do as the crater of Vesuvius has to do with the flickering of this
gas by which I write, are what make him.
Can it be that Mr Spencer holds the convergence of sociological
pressures to have so impinged upon
Professor Skinner is an experimental
psychologist, and his treatise on 'Science and Human Behaviour' is solidly
based upon facts. But unfortunately the
facts belong to so limited a class that when at last
he ventures upon a generalization, his conclusions are as sweepingly
unrealistic as those of the Victorian theorizer. Inevitably so; for Professor Skinner's
indifference to what James calls the 'physiological forces' is almost as
complete as Herbert Spencer's. The
genetic factors determining human behaviour are dismissed by him in less than a
page. There is no reference in his book
to the findings of constitutional medicine, nor any hint of that constitutional
psychology in terms of which (and in terms of which alone, so far as I can
judge) it might be possible to write a complete and realistic biography of an
individual in relation to the relevant facts of his existence - his body, his
temperament, his intellectual endowments, his immediate environment from moment
to moment, his time, place and culture.
A science of human behaviour is like a science of motion in the abstract
- necessary but, by itself, wholly inadequate to the facts. Consider a dragonfly, a rocket and a breaking
wave. All three of them illustrate the
same fundamental laws of motion; but they illustrate these laws in different
ways, and the differences are at least as important as the identities. By itself, a study of motion can tell us
almost nothing about that which, in any given instance, is being moved. Similarly a study of behaviour can, by
itself, tell us almost nothing about the individual mind-body that, in any
particular instance, is exhibiting the behaviour. But to us who are mind-bodies, a knowledge of mind-bodies is of paramount importance. Moreover, we know by observation and
experience that the differences between individual mind-bodies can and do
profoundly affect their social environment.
On this last point, Mr Bertrand Russell is in full agreement with
William James - and with practically everyone, I would add, except the
proponents of Spencerian or Behaviouristic
scientism. In Russell's view the causes
of historical change are of three kinds - economic change, political theory and
important individuals. 'I do not
believe', says Mr Russell, 'that any of these can be ignored, or wholly
explained away as the effect of causes of another kind.' Thus, if Bismarck and Lenin had died in
infancy, our world would be very different from what, thanks in part to
Bismarck and Lenin, it now is. 'History
is not yet a science, and can only be made to seem scientific by falsifications
and omissions. In real life, life as it
is lived from day to day, the individual can never be
explained away. It is only in theory
that his contributions appear to approach zero; in practice they are
all-important. When a piece of work gets
done in the world, who actually does it? Whose eyes and ears do the perceiving, whose
cortex does the thinking, who has the feelings that motivate, the will that
overcomes obstacles? Certainly
not the social environment; for a group is not an organism, but only a blind
unconscious organization.
Everything that is done within a society is done by individuals. These individuals are, of course, profoundly
influenced by the local culture, the taboos and moralities, the information and
misinformation handed down from the past and preserved in a body of spoken
traditions or written literature; but whatever each individual takes from
society (or, to be more accurate, whatever he takes from other individuals
associated in groups, or from the symbolic records compiled by other
individuals, living or dead) will be used by him in his own unique way - with his
special senses, his biochemical make-up, his physique and temperament,
and nobody else's. No amount of
scientific explanation, however comprehensive, can explain away these
self-evident facts. And let us remember
that Professor Skinner's scientific portrait of man as the product of the
social environment is not the only scientific portrait. There are other, more realistic
likenesses. Consider, for example,
Professor Roger William's portrait. What
he paints is not behaviour in the abstract, but mind-bodies behaving -
mind-bodies that are the products partly of the environment they share with
other mind-bodies, partly of their own private heredity. In The Human Frontier and Free but
Unequal Professor Williams has expatiated, with a wealth of detailed
evidence, on those innate differences between individuals for which Dr Watson
could find no support and whose importance, in Professor Skinner's eyes,
approaches zero. Among animals,
biological variability within a given species becomes more and more conspicuous
as we move up the evolutionary scale.
This biological variability is highest in man, and human beings display
a greater degree of biochemical, structural and temperamental diversity than do
the members of any other species. This
is a plain observable fact. But what I
have called the Will to Order, the desire to impose a comprehensible uniformity
upon the bewildering manifoldness of things and events, has led many people to
ignore this fact. They have minimized
biological uniqueness and have concentrated all their attention upon the
simpler and, in the present state of knowledge, more understandable
environmental factors involved in human behaviour. 'As a result of this environmentally centred
thinking and investigation,' writes Professor Williams, 'the doctrine of the essential
uniformity of human infants has been widely accepted and is held by a great
body of social psychologists, sociologists, social anthropologists, and many
others, including historians, economists, educationalists, legal scholars and
men in public life. This doctrine has
been incorporated into the prevailing mode of thought of many who have had to
do with shaping educational and governmental policies and is often accepted
unquestioningly by those who do little critical thinking of their own.'
An ethical system that is based upon a
fairly realistic appraisal of the data of experience is likely to do more good
than harm. But many ethical systems have
been based upon an appraisal of experience, a view of the nature of things, that is hopelessly unrealistic. Such an ethic is likely to do more harm than
good. Thus, until quite recent times, it
was universally believed that bad weather, diseases of cattle and sexual
impotence could be, and in many cases actually were, caused by the malevolent
operations of magicians. To catch and
kill magicians was therefore a duty - and this duty, moreover, had been
divinely ordained in the second Book of Moses: 'Thou shalt
not suffer a witch to live.' The systems
of ethics and law that were based upon this erroneous view of the nature of
things were the cause (during the centuries when they were taken most seriously
by men in authority) of the most appalling evils. The orgy of spying, lynching and judicial
murder, which these wrong views about magic made logical and mandatory, was not
matched until our own days, when the Communist ethic, based upon erroneous
views about race, commanded and justified atrocities on an even greater
scale. Consequences hardly less
undesirable are likely to follow the general adoption of a Social Ethic, based
upon the erroneous view that ours is a fully social species,
that human infants are born uniform and that individuals are the product
of conditioning by and within the collective environment. If these views were correct, if human beings
were in fact the members of a truly social species, and if their individual
differences were trifling and could be completely ironed out by appropriate
conditioning, then, obviously, there would be no need for liberty and the State
would be justified in persecuting the heretics who demanded it. For the individual termite, service to the termitary is perfect freedom. But human beings are not completely social;
they are only moderately gregarious.
Their societies are not organisms, like the hive or the anthill; they
are organizations, in other words ad hoc machines for collective
living. Moreover, the differences
between individuals are so great that, in spite of the most intensive cultural
ironing, an extreme endomorph (to use W.H. Sheldon's terminology) will retain
his sociable viscerotonic characteristics, an extreme
mesomorph will remain energetically somatotonic through thick and thin, and an extreme ectomorph will always be cerebrotonic,
introverted and over-sensitive. In the
Brave New World of my fable socially desirable behaviour was ensured by a
double process of genetic manipulation and post-natal conditioning. Babies were cultivated in bottles and a high
degree of uniformity in the human product was assured by using ova from a
limited number of mothers and by treating each ovum in such a way that it would
split and split again, producing identical twins in batches of a hundred or
more. In this way it was possible to
produce standardized machine-minders for standardized machines. And the standardization of the
machine-minders was perfected, after birth, by infant conditioning, hypnopaedia
and chemically induced euphoria as a substitute for the satisfaction of feeling
oneself free and creative. In the world
we live in, as has been pointed out in earlier chapters, vast impersonal forces
are making for the centralization of power and a regimented society. The genetic standardization of individuals is
still impossible; but Big Government and Big Business already possess, or will
very soon possess, all the techniques for mind-manipulation described in Brave
New World, along with others of which I was too unimaginative to
dream. Lacking the ability to impose
genetic uniformity upon embryos, the rulers of tomorrow's overpopulated and
over-organized world will try to impose social and cultural uniformity upon
adults and their children. To achieve
this end, they will (unless prevented) make use of all the mind-manipulating
techniques at their disposal and will not hesitate to reinforce these methods of
non-rational persuasion by economic coercion and threats of physical
violence. If this kind of tyranny is to
be avoided, we must begin without delay to educate ourselves and our children
for freedom and self-government.
Such an education for freedom should be,
as I have said, an education first of all in facts and in values - the facts of
individual diversity and genetic uniqueness and the values of freedom,
tolerance and mutual charity which are the ethical corollaries of these
facts. But unfortunately correct
knowledge and sound principles are not enough.
An unexciting truth may be eclipsed by a thrilling falsehood. A skilful appeal to passion is often too
strong for the best of good resolutions.
The effects of false and pernicious propaganda cannot be neutralized
except by a thorough training in the art of analysing its techniques and seeing
through its sophistries. Language has
made possible man's progress from animality to
civilization. But language has also
inspired that sustained folly and that systematic, that genuinely diabolic wickedness
which are no less characteristic of human behaviour than are the
language-inspired virtues of systematic forethought and sustained angelic
benevolence. Language permits its users
to pay attention to things, persons and events, even when the things and
persons are absent and the events are not taking place. Language gives definition to our memories
and, by translating experiences into symbols, converts the immediacy of craving
or abhorrence, of hatred or love, into fixed principles of feeling and
conduct. In some way of which we are
wholly unconscious, the reticular system of the brain selects from a countless
host of stimuli those few experiences which are of practical importance to us. From these unconsciously selected experiences
we more or less consciously select and abstract a smaller number, which we
label with words from our vocabulary and then classify within a system at once
metaphysical, scientific and ethical, made up of other words on a higher level
of abstraction. In cases where the
selecting and abstracting have been dictated by a system that is not too
erroneous as a view of the nature of things, and where the verbal labels have
been intelligently chosen and their symbolic nature clearly understood, our
behaviour is apt to be realistic and tolerably decent. But under the influence of badly chosen
words, applied, without any understanding of their merely symbolic character,
to experiences that have been selected and abstracted in the light of a system
of erroneous ideas, we are apt to behave with a fiendishness and an organized
stupidity, of which dumb animals (precisely because they are dumb and
cannot speak) are blessedly incapable.
In their anti-rational propaganda the
enemies of freedom systematically pervert the resources of language in order to
wheedle or stampede their victims into thinking, feeling and acting as they,
the mind-manipulators, want them to think, feel and act. An education for freedom (and for the love
and intelligence which are at once the conditions and the results of freedom)
must be, among other things, an education in the proper uses of language. For the last two or three generations
philosophers have devoted a great deal of time and thought to the analysis of
symbols and the meaning of meaning. How are the words and sentences which we speak related to the
things, persons and events, with which we have to deal in our day-to-day
living? To discuss this problem would
take too long and lead us too far afield. Suffice it to say that all the intellectual
materials for a sound education in the proper use of language - an education on
every level from the kindergarten to the post-graduate school - are now
available. Such an education in the art
of distinguishing between the proper and the improper use of symbols could be
inaugurated immediately. Indeed it might
have been inaugurated at any time during the last thirty or forty years. And yet children are nowhere taught, in any
systematic way, to distinguish true from false, or meaningful from meaningless,
statements. Why is this so? Because their elders, even
in the democratic countries, do not want them to be given this kind of
education. In this context the
brief, sad history of the Institute for Propaganda Analysis is highly
significant. The Institute was founded
in 1937, when Nazi propaganda was at its noisiest and most effective, by Mr Filene, the New England philanthropist. Under its auspices analyses of non-rational
propaganda were made and several texts for the instruction of high-school and
university students were prepared. Then came the war - a total war on all the fronts, the mental no
less than the physical. With all the
Allied Governments engaging in 'Psychological Warfare' an
insistence upon the desirability of analysing propaganda seemed a bit
tactless. The Institute was closed in
1941. But even before the outbreak of
hostilities, there were many persons to whom its activities seemed profoundly
objectionable. Certain educators, for
example, disapproved of the teaching of propaganda analysis on the grounds that
it would make adolescents unduly cynical.
Nor was it welcomed by the military authorities, who were afraid that
recruits might start to analyse the utterances of drill sergeants. And then there were the clergymen and the
advertisers. The clergymen were against
propaganda analysis as tending to undermine belief and diminish church-going;
the advertisers objected on the grounds that it might undermine brand loyalty
and reduce sales.
These fears and dislikes were not
unfounded. Too searching a scrutiny by
too many of the common folk of what is said by their pastors and masters might
prove to be profoundly subversive. In
its present form, the social order depends for its continued existence on the
acceptance, without too many embarrassing questions, of the propaganda put
forth by those in authority and the propaganda hallowed by the local
traditions. The problem, once more, is
to find the happy mean. Individuals must
be suggestible enough to be willing and able to make their society work, but
not so suggestible as to fall helplessly under the spell of professional
mind-manipulators. Similarly, they
should be taught enough about propaganda analysis to preserve them from an
uncritical belief in sheer nonsense, but not so much as to make them reject
outright the not always rational outpourings of the well-meaning guardians of
tradition. Probably the happy mean
between gullibility and a total scepticism can never be discovered and
maintained by analysis alone. This
rather negative approach to the problem will have to be supplemented by
something more positive - the enunciation of a set of generally acceptable
values based upon a solid foundation of facts.
The value, first of all, of individual freedom, based upon the facts of
human diversity and genetic uniqueness; the value of charity and compassion,
based upon the old familiar fact, lately rediscovered by modern psychiatry -
the fact that, whatever their mental and physical diversity, love is as
necessary to human beings as food and shelter; and finally the value of
intelligence, without which love is impotent and freedom unattainable. This set of values will provide us with a
criterion by which propaganda may be judged.
The propaganda that is found to be both nonsensical and immoral may be
rejected out of hand. That which is
merely irrational, but compatible with love and freedom, and not on principle
opposed to the exercise of intelligence, may be provisionally accepted for what
it is worth.
XII
What can be Done?
We
can be educated for freedom - much better educated for it than we are at
present. But freedom, as I have tried to
show, is threatened from many directions, and these threats are of many
different kinds - demographic, social, political, psychological. Our disease has a multiplicity of cooperating
causes and is not to be cured except by a multiplicity of cooperating
remedies. In coping with any complex
human situation, we must take account of all the relevant factors, not merely
of a single factor. Nothing short of everything
is ever really enough. Freedom is
menaced, and education for freedom is urgently needed. But so are many other things - for example,
social organization for freedom, birth control for freedom, legislation for
freedom. Let us begin with the last of
these items.
From the time of Magna Carta and even earlier, the makers of English law have been
concerned to protect the physical freedom of the individual. A person who is being kept in prison on
grounds of doubtful legality has the right under the Common Law as clarified by
the statute of 1679, to appeal to one of the higher courts of justice for a
writ of habeas corpus. This writ
is addressed by a judge of the high court to a sheriff or jailer, and commands
him, within a specified period of time, to bring the person he is holding in
custody to the court for an examination of his case - to bring, be it noted,
not the person's written complaint, nor his legal representatives, but his corpus,
his body, the too too solid flesh which has been made
to sleep on boards, to smell the fetid prison air, to eat the revolting prison
food. This concern with the basic
condition of freedom - the absence of physical constraint - is unquestionably
necessary, but is not all that is necessary.
It is perfectly possible for a man to be out of prison, and yet not free
- to be under no physical constraint and yet to be a psychological captive,
compelled to think, feel and act as the representatives of the national state,
or of some private interest within the nation, wants him to think, feel and
act. There will never be such a thing as
a writ of habeas mentem; for no sheriff or
jailer can bring an illegally imprisoned mind into court, and no person whose
mind had been made captive by the methods outlined in earlier chapters would be
in a position to complain of his captivity.
The nature of psychological compulsion is such that those who act under
constraint remain under the impression that they are acting on their own
initiative. The victim of
mind-manipulation does not know that he is a victim. To him, the walls of his prison are
invisible, and he believes himself to be free.
That he is not free is apparent only to other people. His servitude is strictly objective.
No, I repeat, there can never be such a thing
as a writ of habeas mentem. But there can be preventive
legislation - an outlawing of the psychological slave trade, a statute for the
protection of minds against the unscrupulous purveyors of poisonous propaganda,
modelled on the statutes for the protection of bodies against the unscrupulous
purveyors of adulterated food and dangerous drugs. For example, there could and, I think, there
should be legislation limiting the right of public officials, civil or military,
to subject the captive audiences under their command or in their custody to
sleep teaching. There could and, I
think, there should be legislation prohibiting the use of subliminal projection
in public places or on television screens.
There could and, I think, there should be legislation to prevent
political candidates not merely from spending more than a certain amount of
money on their election campaigns, but also to prevent them from resorting to
the kind of anti-rational propaganda that makes nonsense of the whole
democratic process.
Such preventive legislation might do
some good; but if the great impersonal forces now menacing freedom continue to
gather momentum, they cannot do much good for very long. The best of constitutions and preventive laws
will be powerless against the steadily increasing pressures of overpopulation
and of the over-organization imposed by growing numbers and advancing
technology. The constitutions will not
be abrogated and the good laws will remain on the statute book; but these
liberal forms will merely serve to mask and adorn a profoundly illiberal
substance. Given unchecked
overpopulation and over-organization, we may expect to see in the democratic
countries a reversal of the process which transformed England into a democracy,
while retaining all the outward forms of a monarchy. Under the relentless thrust of accelerating
overpopulation and increasing over-organization, and by means of ever more
effective methods of mind-manipulation, the democracies will change their
nature; the quaint old forms - elections, parliaments, Supreme Courts and all
the rest - will remain. The underlying
substance will be a new kind of non-violent totalitarianism. All the traditional names, all the hallowed
slogans will remain exactly what they were in the good old days. Democracy and freedom will be the theme of
every broadcast and editorial - but democracy and freedom in a strictly Pickwickian sense.
Meanwhile the ruling oligarchy and its highly trained élite of soldiers, policemen, thought-manufacturers and
mind-manipulators will quietly run the show as they see fit.
How can we control the vast impersonal
forces that now menace our hard-won freedoms?
On the verbal level and in general terms, the question may be answered
with the utmost ease. Consider the
problem of overpopulation. Rapidly
mounting human numbers are pressing ever more heavily on natural
resources. What is to be done? Obviously we must, with all possible speed,
reduce the birth rate to the point where it does not exceed the death
rate. At the same time we must, with all
possible speed, increase food production, we must institute and implement a
world-wide policy for conserving our soils and our forests, we must develop
practical substitutes, preferably less dangerous and less rapidly exhaustible
than uranium, for our present fuels; and, while husbanding our dwindling
resources of easily available minerals, we must work out new and not too costly
methods for extracting these minerals from ever poorer and poorer ores - the
poorest ore of all being sea water. But
all this, needless to say, is almost infinitely easier said than done. The annual increase of numbers should be
reduced. But how? We are given two choices - famine, pestilence
and war on the one hand, birth control on the other. Most of us choose birth control - and
immediately find ourselves confronted by a problem that is simultaneously a
puzzle in physiology, pharmacology, sociology, psychology and even
theology. 'The Pill' has not yet been
perfected. When and if it is perfected,
how can it be distributed to the many hundreds of millions of potential mothers
(or, if it is a pill that works upon the male, potential fathers) who will have
to take it if the birth-rate of the species is to be reduced? And, given existing social customs and the
forces of cultural and psychological inertia, how can those who ought to take
the pill, but don't want to, be persuaded to change their minds? And what about the objections on the part of
the Roman Catholic Church to any form of birth control except the so-called
Rhythm Method - a method, incidentally, which has proved, hitherto, to be
almost completely ineffective in reducing the birth-rate of those industrially
backward societies where such a reduction is most urgently necessary? And these questions about the hypothetically
perfect Pill must be asked, with as little prospect of eliciting satisfactory
answers, about the chemical and mechanical methods of birth control already
available.
When we pass from the problems of birth
control to the problems of increasing the available food supply and conserving
our natural resources, we find ourselves confronted by difficulties not perhaps
quite so great, but still enormous.
There is the problem, first of all, of education. How soon can the innumerable peasants and
farmers, who are now responsible for raising most of the world's supply of
food, be educated into improving their methods?
And when and if they are educated, where will they find the capital to
provide them with the machines, the fuel and lubricants, the electric power,
the fertilizers and the improved strains of food-plants and domestic animals,
without which the best agricultural education is useless? Similarly, who is going to educate the human
race in the principles and practice of conservation? And how are the hungry peasant-citizens of a
country whose population and demands for food are rapidly rising, be prevented
from 'mining the soil'? And, if they can
be prevented, who will pay for their support while the wounded and exhausted
earth is being gradually nursed back, if that is still feasible, to health and
restored to fertility? Or consider the
backward societies that are now trying to industrialize. If they succeed, who is to prevent them, in
their desperate effort to catch up and keep up, from squandering the planet's
irreplaceable resources as stupidly and wantonly as was done, and is still
being done, by their forerunners in the race?
And when the day of reckoning comes, where, in the poorer countries,
will anyone find the scientific manpower and the huge amounts of capital that
will be required to extract the indispensable minerals from ores in which their
concentration is too low, under existing circumstances, to make extraction
technically feasible or economically justifiable? It may be that, in time, a practical answer
to all these questions can be found. But in how much time?
In any race between human numbers and natural resources, time is against
us. By the end of the present
[twentieth] century, there may, if we try very hard, be twice as much food on
the world's markets as there is today.
But there will also be about twice as many people, and several billions
of these people will be living in partially industrialized countries and consuming
ten times as much power, water, timber and irreplaceable minerals as their
parents are consuming now. In a word,
the food situation will be as bad as it is today, and the raw materials
situation will be considerably worse.
To find a solution to the problem of
over-organization is hardly less difficult than to find a solution to the
problem of natural resources and increasing numbers. On the verbal level and in general terms, the
answer is perfectly simple. Thus, it is
a political axiom that power follows property.
But it is now a historical fact that the means of production are fast
becoming the monopolistic property of Big Business and Big Government. Therefore, if you believe in democracy, make
arrangements to distribute property as widely as possible.
Or take the right to vote. In principle, it is a great privilege. In practice, as recent history has repeated
shown, the right to vote, by itself, is not guarantee of liberty. Therefore, if you wish to avoid dictatorship
by plebiscite, break up modern society's vast, machine-like collectives into
self-governing, voluntarily cooperating groups, capable of functioning outside
the bureaucratic systems of Big Business and Big Government.
Overpopulation and over-organization
have produced the modern metropolis, in which a fully human life of multiple
personal relationships has become almost impossible. Therefore, if you wish to avoid the spiritual
impoverishment of individuals and whole societies, leave the metropolis and
revive the small country community, or alternatively humanize the metropolis by
creating within its network of mechanical organizations the urban equivalents
of small country communities, in which individuals can meet and cooperate as
complete persons, not as the mere embodiments of specialized functions.
All this is obvious today and, indeed,
was obvious fifty years ago. From Hilaire Belloc to Mr Mortimer
Adler, from the early apostles of cooperative credit unions to the land
reformers of modern Italy and Japan, men of goodwill have for generations been
advocating the decentralization of economic power and the widespread
distribution of property. And how many
ingenious schemes have been propounded for the dispersal of production, for a
return to small scale 'village industry'.
And then there were Dubreuil's elaborate plans
for giving a measure of autonomy and initiative to the various departments of a
single large industrial organization.
There were the Syndicalists, with their
blueprints for a stateless society organized as a federation of productive
groups under the auspices of the trade unions.
In America, Arthur Morgan and Baker Brownell have set forth the theory
and described the practice of a new kind of community living on the village and
small town level.
Professor Skinner of Harvard has set
forth a psychologist's view of the problem in his Walden Two, a Utopian
novel about a self-sustaining and autonomous community so scientifically
organized that nobody is ever led into anti-social temptation and, without
resort to coercion or undesirable propaganda, everyone does what he or she
ought to do, and everyone is happy and creative. In France, during and after the Second World
War, Marcel Barbu and his followers set up a number
of self-governing, non-hierarchical communities of production, which were also
communities for mutual aid and fully human living. And meanwhile, in London, the Peckham
Experiment has demonstrated that it is possible, by coordinating health
services with the wider interests of the group, to create a true community even
in a metropolis.
We see, then, that the disease of
over-organization has been clearly recognized, that various comprehensive
remedies have been prescribed and that experimental treatments of symptoms have
been attempted here and there, often with considerable success. And yet, in spite of all this preaching and
this exemplary practice, the disease grows steadily worse. We know that it is unsafe to allow power to
be concentrated in the hands of a ruling oligarchy; nevertheless power is in fact
being concentrated in fewer and fewer hands.
We know that, for most people, life in a huge modern city is anonymous,
atomic, less than fully human; nevertheless the huge cities grow steadily huger
and the pattern of urban-industrial living remains unchanged. We know that, in a very large complex
society, democracy is almost meaningless except in relation to autonomous
groups of manageable size; nevertheless more and more of every nation's affairs
are managed by the bureaucrats of Big Government and Big Business. It is only too evident that, in practice, the
problem of over-organization is almost as hard to solve as the problem of
overpopulation. In both cases we know
what ought to be done; but in neither case have we been able, as yet, to act
effectively upon our knowledge.
At this point we find ourselves
confronted by a very disquieting question: Do we really wish to act upon our
knowledge? Does a majority of the
population think it worthwhile to take a good deal of trouble, in order to halt
and, if possible, reverse the current drift towards totalitarian control of
everything? In the United States - and
America is the prophetic image of the rest of the urban-industrial world as it
will be a few years from now - recent public opinion polls have revealed that
an actual majority of young people in their teens, the voters of tomorrow, have
no faith in democratic institutions, see no objection to the censorship of
unpopular ideas, do not believe that government of the people by the people is
possible, and would be perfectly content, if they can continue to live in the
style to which the boom has accustomed them, to be ruled, from above, by an
oligarchy of assorted experts. That so
many of the well-fed young television-watchers in the world's most powerful
democracy should be so completely indifferent to the idea of self-government,
so blankly uninterested in freedom of thought and the right to dissent, is
distressing, but not too surprising.
'Free as a bird', we say, and envy the winged creatures for their power
of unrestricted movement in all the three dimensions. But, alas, we forget the dodo. Any bird that has learned how to grub up a
good living without being compelled to use its wings will soon renounce the privilege
of flight and remain forever grounded.
If the bread is supplied regularly and copiously three times a day, many
of them will be perfectly content to live by bread alone - or at least by bread
and circuses alone. 'In the end', says
the Grand Inquisitor in Dostoevsky's parable, 'in the end they will lay their
freedom at our feet and say to us, "Make us your slaves, but feed
us."' And when Alyosha
Karamazov asks his brother, the teller of the story, if the Grand Inquisitor is
speaking ironically, Ivan answers: 'Not a bit of it! He claims it as a merit for himself and his
Church that they have vanquished freedom and done so to make men happy.' Yes, to make men happy: 'for nothing', the
Inquisitor insists, 'has ever been more insupportable for a man or a human
society than freedom.' Nothing, except
the absence of freedom; for when things go badly, and the rations are reduced
and the slave drivers step up their demands, the grounded dodos will clamour
again for their wings - only to renounce them, yet once more, when times grow
better and the dodo-farmers become more lenient and generous. The young people who now think so poorly of
democracy may grow up to become fighters for freedom. The cry of 'Give me television and
hamburgers, but don't bother me with the responsibilities of liberty', may give
place, under altered circumstances, to the cry of 'Give me Liberty or give me
death'. If such a revolution takes
place, it will be due in part to the operation of forces over which even the
most powerful rulers have very little control, in part to the incompetence of
those rulers, their inability to make effective use of the mind-manipulating
instruments with which science and technology have supplied, and will go on
supplying, the would-be tyrant.
Considering how little they knew and how poorly they were equipped, the
Grand Inquisitors of earlier times did remarkably well. But their successors, the well-informed,
thoroughly scientific dictators of the future, will undoubtedly be able to do a
great deal better. The Grand Inquisitor
reproaches Christ with having called upon men to be free and tells Him that 'we
have corrected Thy work and founded it upon miracle, mystery and
authority'. But miracle, mystery and
authority are not enough to guarantee the indefinite survival of a
dictatorship. In my fable of Brave
New World, the dictators had added science to the list and thus were able
to enforce their authority by manipulating the bodies of embryos, the reflexes
of infants, and the minds of children and adults. And instead of merely talking about miracles
and hinting symbolically at mysteries, they were able, by means of drugs, to
give their subjects the direct experience of mysteries and miracles - to
transform mere faith into ecstatic knowledge.
The older dictators fell because they could never supply their subjects
with enough bread, enough circuses, enough miracles and mysteries. Nor did they possess a really effective
system of mind-manipulation. In the past
free-thinkers and revolutionaries were often the products of the most piously
orthodox education. This is not
surprising. The methods employed by
orthodox educators were and still are extremely inefficient. Under a scientific dictator education will
really work - with the result that most men and women will grow up to love
their servitude and will never dream of revolution. There seems to be no good reason why a
thoroughly scientific dictatorship should ever be overthrown.
Meanwhile there is still freedom left in
the world. Many young people, it is
true, do not seem to value freedom. But
some of us still believe that, without freedom, human beings cannot become
fully human and that freedom is therefore supremely valuable. Perhaps the forces that now menace freedom
are too strong to be resisted for very long.
It is still our duty to do whatever we can to resist them.