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Tolstoy, Proudhon and Henry George
Edward J. Dodson
[Reprinted from the
Georgist Journal, Summer, 1985]
Most of us are to some degree familiar with the influence Henry
George had on the great Russian thinker, Leo Tolstoy. Tolstoy's
writings began to make reference to George's Ideas as early as 1885,
and the two of them corresponded on the abolition of private property
in land and the single tax. George's untimely death prevented a
planned meeting at Tolstoy's home, Yasnaya Polyana. Tolstoy's respect
for George is expressed in the oft-quoted "People do not argue
with the teaching of George; they simply do not know it. And it is
impossible to do otherwise with his teaching, for he who becomes
acquainted with it cannot but agree."
As the child is father to the man, Tolstoy (apparently with little
disagreement) found in George's words written exposition of ideas and
truths he had known all his life. This is related in a letter from
Tolstoy to Tatiana, his daughter: "I have long ceased to interest
myself - and in fact I never interested myself -- in political
questions; but the question of the land, that is of land slavery,
though it is considered a political question, is...a moral question, a
question of the violation of the most elementary demands of morality,
and therefore that question not only occupies my mind but torments me."
Tolstoy was earlier also tormented by the repressiveness of the
State, which made him a kindred spirit of the celebrated French
anarchist, Pierre Joseph Proudhon; and from whom Tolstoy acquired his
appreciation of the anarchistic political analysis. From Paris in 1857
he wrote to Botkin: "...for me, political laws are such a
horrible lie that I do not see in them anything either better or
worse... I will never again look at such a thing and I will never
anywhere serve any government."
As did Proudhon, Tolstoy came to view private property as theft,
government of man by man as oppression and the union of order and
anarchy as the highest form of society. Tolstoy is also known to have
read Herbert Spencer (whose positivist philosophy he rejected). If
Spencer's original treatment of the land question in Social Statics
found its way into Tolstoy's reading, this may have planted a seed
later to be-watered by George's Progress and Poverty. What is evident
is that because of Proudhon and George, Tolstoy came to understand why
his earlier philanthropic scheme to distribute his estates among the
peasant farmers had failed, and the reasons why governments cannot bet
eventually become either totalitarian or authoritarian. Individualism,
anarchism, pacifism and Georgism are intricately, woven together in
Tolstoy's personal philosophy. He may not have been, as one of his
critics have taken pains to note, an original thinker; there is no
question as to his ability to recognize sound and original thinking in
others.
Tolstoy's denial of private property and his anarchistic views on
government are to most Georgists and Libertarians philosophically
extreme; and, in our interdependent modern world, impractical. His
world still provided the opportunities of a vast frontier.
Importantly, there is a great deal one can learn about the human
condition from Tolstoy's writing. His thinking derives from a long
history of intellectual dialogue among conservative
counterrevolutionaries in Europe who benefited by the evolution of
Jeffersonian democracy.
George's personal attachment to the democratic experience was a
distinct advantage as his own political thinking matured; he
instinctively tied together as necessary preconditions to democratic
society both free access to land and individual freedom. That the
English colonies in North America became the breeding ground of
democracy was largely fortuitous because it could not have occurred
even in England, whose political economy was ripe for class struggle.
The colonials were largely ungovernable without the expenditure of
tremendous sums, and so were able to construct a government of very
limited powers while taking advantage of the free frontier.
The ideal conditions of free soil and benign government has long
since disappeared from civilization; however, in 1776 the tide of
despotism was temporarily pushed back. Peter Drucker, in The
Future of Industrial Man, without really appreciating the
dynamics, accurately presents the impact on world history:
"The American Revolution brought victory and power
to a group which in Europe had been almost completely defeated and
which was apparently dying out rapidly: the anticentralist,
antitotalitarian conservatives with their hostility to absolute and
centralized government and their distrust of any ruler claiming
perfection. It saved the autonomous common law from submersion under
perfect law codes; and it reestablished independent law courts.
Above all, it reasserted the belief in the imperfection of man as
the basis of freedom."
I cannot help but think that we have again reached the point where
only a second such revolution can again push back the despots. Since
the frontier is gone, that revolution must take place not on the
battlefields but in the heart and mind of each individual. As did
Tolstoy, I have found no better teacher than Henry George and no
better peaceful method than to collect the rental value of land for
the common good. In these respects, I stand with Proudhon, with
Tolstoy and with George as a fellow conservative counterrevolutionary.
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