These letters simply had an electrifying impact on me.
I guess Tolstoy is invoking a simple observation of the mysteries of life, that anyone who looks inward can attest to – that all of mankind is one, and the love for our fellow man should naturally extend to all mankind, and this is how our societies and their politics should be structured. Also, it was through reading this letter that I could gain some further understanding on the motivation behind Gandhi’s ‘Universal brotherhood’.
Tolstoy’s argument in support of this is clearly intuitive – for I do believe that love for our fellow humans is, for the most part, deeply encoded into the human psyche, and one does not frequently observe hatred or extreme malice in young children. Man is born free, yet everywhere he is in chains – I do believe that it is society and its conventions that imprint evil on a man’s heart. My recent reading of Schopenhauer further intrigued me on this point, whereby Schopenhauer made the forceful claim in his ‘The basis of Morality’ that it is intelligent people, attuned to philosophy, who are better able to grasp the metaphysical concept of the unity of all life forms, and thus see others in themselves, which compels them to act morally.
It is thought-provoking to reflect on the fact that throughout human history, the many have been subjected to the rule of the few. Why is this seemingly such a natural phenomenon of human society? Tolstoy’s claim that, over time, those in power perpetrate lies and myths to restrain the people from seeing the obvious truth of universal love and equality, is hard to falsify. But then, easy examples come to mind, among them being:
i) The Egyptian myth of Pharaoh being the mediator between gods and men,
ii) The Indian rulers’ poisonous perpetration of the notion of castes, which to this day, deeply affect and restrain Indian society in profoundly complex ways,
iii) And obviously, the prosecution of Christians has happened since Christ Himself walked this earth, as per Tolstoy’s argument that the oppressors use force to silence the truth of universal love.
Does the long stretch of history really march towards freedom? These letters between Tolstoy and Gandhi made me reflect on this again. I suspect it does. And if it really does, I would hazard that the truth of universal love and non-resistance is so self-evident as to conquer any forms of evil that attempt to suppress it.
While Tolstoy made an insightful point regarding the emergence of ‘science’ that supplanted ‘religion’ as a means to suppress the truth and justify the status quo, nevertheless he does make some arguments that I can’t help but resist.
Firstly, it doesn’t sit well with me to accept the take, that the science behind the intellectual justification of the status quo is all bad. If I interpret ‘science’ to mean political economy or philosophy, then I find myself agreeing with plenty of political philosophy arguments that justify a strong state. The argument that’s front and center on my mind is Hobbes. I’ve come to realise that often-times, the key behind one’s politics lies in one’s assumptions about the state of nature – Hobbes imagined a nasty, brutish and short life in the state of nature, whereby Tolstoy clearly imagines a utopian state of nature, characterized by love.
Can we trust people to love each other?
The realist in me leans towards Hobbes.
Did Tolstoy lock the doors of Yasnaya Polyana when he went to bed at night? If he did, then I’m not too sure if he REALLY wanted anarchy, or strong forms of communitarianism. Like Tolstoy and Gandhi, I certainly find within myself (on good days) a vague, lingering notion of love for my fellow humans, but that’s not the point! The point is – can I trust others to love me? If I can’t, and I must lock my door at night, then I can love my neighbours however much I want, but I’d still need the Leviathan. Which leads me to my 2nd point of:
Does Tolstoy have a well-conceived economic and political system to administer his vision of society whereby love is seen as the highest good? I myself have not yet studied Tolstoy’s economics so I have little right to comment on this, but his preaching of communitarianism and the abolition of private property (and he even calls taxation evil in these letters) is unsettling. So, all the earth belongs to all mankind? What should we do, plough the soils together and share its spoils equally among all? Where would be the incentives to work, when I can rely on the universal love of my dear brothers? How can I have a single moment of peace, when I have no private property and any random smelly tramp can invade on my privacy (and I myself have no bed to call my own)? What would we do once we have far surpassed the largely agrarian society which Tolstoy lived and operated in, and live in a knowledge society where the value of one’s labour is very difficult to gauge due to asymmetric information and skill biases?
Can humans even agree on the good life? History seems to suggest that we can’t. Should we, then, pursue such lofty politics then, or should we settle for the 2nd-best solution, of subverting politics of ‘the good life’ and delegate the pursue of happiness to individual liberty?
My 3rd point isn’t a challenge to Tolstoy, but rather a refinement of an interesting point he made which I think he missed a chance to make conclusive.
The science that Tolstoy inveighs against, makes 2 justifications of the status quo, according to Tolstoy:
i) Coercion of man by man has existed in all ages, hence it follows that such coercion should continue.
ii) It is observed that lower life forms, e.g. plants and the beasts, are locked in a perpetual struggle for existence, and survival of the fittest. Hence, it follows that manking should live in this state as well.
The underlying causal mechanism that these 2 faulty arguments appear to invoke, is that the factual observations imply a ‘natural state of the world’, ‘this is just how things are’, hence humans should just abide to this natural state, i.e. coercion and unfettered competition.
Tolstoy argues against these 2 scientific justifications by merely invoking the intuitive conscience of loving-kindness, and also hints at notions of the supremacy of human nature (as compared to the lower life forms), and universal human rights.
But I myself think that there’s a much better way to argue against these justifications: the is-ought fallacy.
Observations of positive facts of the world doesn’t immediately lead to normative judgments.
In fact, I don’t think pure reason can ever lead us to normative judgments, unless we invoke the passions!
Even if I relax this high philosophical standard somewhat for the time being, I still find myself in a messy situation to justify how human society should be organized, just by observing the natural world. What is the logical chain of thought? Intuitively, it is the aforementioned ‘natural state of the world’ causal link that these factual observations summon to mind. Presumably, straying away from the ‘natural state of the world’ is unwise, since it is unnatural by definition and would revert to the mean anyway. But even if I accept this causal link, I still find myself skeptical of this causal chain, via standard Humean logic, because if 1 hypothesis explains the facts, an infinite number of other hypotheses do. In short, I do not observe the underlying cause!
I now find myself troubled, as I descend once more to my philosophical skepticism, as I wonder what empirical data can tell me at all concerning the normative questions of the high-causal-density world of political economy.