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Human Creativity
We affirm the creativity instilled in humans by God. Since God
created man in His image, it is good for man to exercise his creativity
as an expression of God. Mans creativity, then, is often expressed
in his technological and scientific innovations. Creativity, therefore,
should generally remain unhampered by cumbersome government regulations,
and should primarily be directed by moral, ethical, and religious guidelines.
FEATURED ARTICLE:
“The
Judeo-Christian Foundation of Human Dignity, Personal Liberty, and the Concept
of the Person”
by Michael Novak
Journal of Markets & Morality
October 1998
The Impact of Religion on Economics
The great sociologist of economics Max Weber (1864-1920) demonstrated to the
scholarly world that religious convictions alter economic systems. Against the
Marxists, Weber showed that profound currents, stirring deeply in the human
spirit, shake human beings from their bodily torpor in remarkably different
ways, with notable effects upon economic systems. Although he is most famous
for The Protestant Ethic and The Spirit of Capitalism (1904),
Weber examined the interplay of religion and economics in many books on the
history of various cultures. Because of the abundance of literature available
today on "the clash of civilizations" and the real-world consequences of different
formations of the human spirit through religion and culture, Max Webers
work may be more influential than ever.
Indeed, Webers work suggests an important perspective for approaching
the topic of human dignity. Empirical research led Weber to the hypothesis that
Christianity (in one of its forms) and, behind Christianity, Judaism shaped
human expectations in ways favorable to economic development. Stated in this
general way, Webers hypothesis has been solidly confirmed by a century
of further research, although modified in important ways by other findings.
For example, Professor Randall Collins has shown how, from about a.d. 1100 to
1350, the international system of Catholic monasteries produced several important
characteristics of a capitalist economy: an explosion of economically useful
inventions, the rule of law, a rationalized system of responsibilities, among
others.
These [Cistercian] monasteries were the most economically effective units
that had ever existed in Europe, and perhaps in the world, before that time.
The community of monks typically operated a factory. There would be a complex
of mills, usually hydraulically powered, for grinding corn as well as for
other purposes. In iron-producing regions, they operated forges with water-powered
trip-hammers; after 1250 the Cistercians dominated iron production in central
France. Iron was produced for their own use but also for sale. In England,
the entire monastic economy was geared toward producing wool for the export
market. The Cistercians were the cutting edge of medieval economic growth.
They pioneered in machinery because of their continuing concern to find laborsaving
devices. Their mills were not only used by the surrounding populace (at a
fee) for grinding corn but were widely imitated. The spread of Cistercian
monasteries around Europe was probably the catalyst for much other economic
development, including imitation of its cutthroat investment practices.
In my own work, on the conceptual rather than the empirical level, I have attempted
to demonstrate that the theological category of imago Dei (which affirms
that every single human is made in the image of God) implies a specific kind
of "calling" or "vocation" that Weber oddly neglects, the vocation to be creative,
inventive, and intellectually alert in a practical way, in order "to build up
the kingdom of God." It is not so much the asceticism of biblical teaching as
its call to creativity and inventiveness that accounts for the dynamism of Jewish
and Christian civilization, including economic dynamism.
Most economists accept the principle that "ideas have consequences." Nonetheless,
it has been a convention ever since the Enlightenment to regard as less than
consequential the immense explosion of theological ideas during the era a.d.
1100-1350, an explosion that erupted in the breakthrough mentioned above. This
is a serious practical error. Scores of thousands of men and women entered monasteries
and launched highly rationalized and disciplined economic ventures. Moreover,
at least five concepts crucial to the theme of human dignity and human liberty
were brought to light during that period: the concepts of person, conscience,
truth, liberty, and dignity. Although some shadow of each of these terms can
be found in the pre-Christian period, no full understanding of any of them existed
that would enable a fashioning of a new practical order, a new civilization,
the new "city on the hill" that the medieval civitas was taught to emulate.
It was the work of the medieval schoolmen that can be credited with developing
these crucial tools.
In recognition of this achievement, Nobel laureate Friedrich Hayek (1899-1992),
following Lord Acton, called one of these monks, Thomas Aquinas (1224-1274),
"the First Whig," that is, the founder of the party of liberty in human history.
Many commentators have also noted that in The Divine Comedy, one of the
greatest works of poetry in any language, Alighieri Dante (1265-1321) created
both a dramatic rendition of the Thomist vision and a testament to the high
importance an entire civilization attached to human liberty. Dante had wholeheartedly
accepted the fact that every story in the BibleJewish and Christiangathers
its suspense from the free choices that confront every human being. How humans
use their liberty determines their destiny; how we use our freedom is the essential
human drama. Liberty is the axial point of the universe, the point of its creation.
That is the premise of The Divine Comedy and the ground of human dignity.
Human Dignity
What, after all, is human dignity? The English word dignity is rooted in the
Latin dignus, "worthy of esteem and honor, due a certain respect, of
weighty importance." In ordinary discourse, we use dignity only in reference
to human persons. (But, of course, in the Bible it is also used of other special
persons or "spiritual substances," that is, beings capable of insight and choice
such as God, angels, and demons). Both Aristotle and Plato held that most humans
are by nature slavish and suitable only to be slaves. Most do not have natures
worthy of freedom and proper to free men. The Greeks did not use the term dignity
for all human beings, only the few. By contrast, Christianity insisted that
every single human is loved by the Creator, made in His image, and destined
for eternal friendship and communion. Following Judaism, Christianity made human
dignity a concept of universal application. "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto
one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me" (Matt. 25:40).
Christianity made it a matter of self-condemnation to use another human as a
means to an end. Each human being is to be shown the dignity due to God because
God loves each as a friend. Each has God as "a father."
Obviously, many students of economics are neither Christians nor even believers
in God. They, therefore, do not hold such things or look at the world in precisely
this way. Nonetheless, as a matter of intellectual history, it is of great utility
to discover the origin of concepts. Conventionally, intellectual history has
been undertaken from the point of view of the Enlightenment, with a certain
insouciant dismissal of what went before (as part of the "darkness," over against
which the "enlightenment" is placed in contrast). But this is to gloss over
too many deeply buried presuppositions and hidden premises. Today, as the Enlightenment
recedes ever further back in history and as its own limitations and failures
become clearer, the intellectual arrogance of its early generations has dissipated.
Its own inadequacies, too, are under judgment.
In particular, the partisans of the Enlightenment have not weathered well the
assaults of nihilists, relativists, and post-modernists, especially in the last
two decades. Reason, it sometimes seems, is inadequate for its own defense.
In Western universities, those who loathe the Enlightenment as an expression
of "white male hegemony""phallic," "patriarchal," from the "right side
of the brain," and "oppressive"seem to outnumber, or at least to intimidate,
those who remain reasons supporters. Even many supporters of reason today
express their commitment to it, not as a self-confident assertion of truth as
of yore but as a personal preference; they speak in the language of faith. Partisans
of the Enlightenment were successful in pushing aside religious peoplewhich
they neatly did by changing the rules to "Religion within the bounds of reason
alone." But they have not been successful in meeting the assault on their other
flank from those who do not share any faith in reason at all.
It is both fascinating and frightening in our time to watch the high priests
of the Enlightenment being unceremoniously disestablished and mocked; fascinating
because so they once treated the earlier establishment; frightening because
the twentieth century began with the abandonment of reason (in nazism and socialism)
and one does not wish the twenty-first century to repeat the twentieth.
Among the figures of the Enlightenment, Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) is probably
the one who most clearly spoke to the concept of human dignity. He did so in
the light of a categorical imperative that he discerned in the rational being,
and he made famous this formulation of the principle of human dignity: "Act
so that you treat humanity, whether in your own person or in that of another,
always as an end and never as a means only." This is not, of course, a description
of the way in which humans always (or even mostly) treat other human beings.
It is, in the Kantian scheme, a prescription, an imperative, a duty. Whereas,
in other schemes, it might appear as an aspiration, a good to be pursued, an
ideal for which to strive.
Still, it is not difficult, I think, to see in Kants formulation a repetition
in non-biblical language of the essential teaching of Judaism and Christianity:
"Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself" (Lev. 19:18). "And this commandment
have we from him, That he who loveth God love his brother also" (1 John 4:21).
This interpretation of Kant seems correct for two reasons: First, the ancient
philosophers of Greece and Rome, before the contact of those regions with Christianity,
did not reach this principle. Second, one must note the quiet but strong culture
of German pietism in which Kant grew to maturity.
From the point of view of modern history, of course, it seems absurd to say
that humans are not means but only ends. In the twentieth century, more than
a hundred million persons in Europe alone died by violence, often in a way they
could not have foreseen even in their worst nightmares. In our century, history
has been a butchers bench, and the words human dignity have often
sounded empty.
From the point of view of modern astronomy, too, it seems absurd to imagine
the human being as the center of the drama of creation. The earth is far from
being the center of the known universe; not even our solar system seems to be
at the center, or even to be a major system among the almost innumerable galaxies
(such as we see in the Milky Way) already known to us, not to mention many others
whose existence we have reason to suspect. To many, it seems likely that there
are other forms of rational lifebeings capable of insight and choicein
other galaxies, although no such creatures have actually been detected. What
seems beyond doubt, however, is that the human race is tiny and seems insignificant
and highly perishable in the vastness known to modern physics. As a secular
friend of mine puts it, the cockroaches or even simple bacteria may be more
important in the scheme of things than weand outlast us. So where does
modern science leave human dignity? Regrettably, I must refrain from discussing
here the "Anthropic Principle" advanced by some physicists who hypothesize that
from the very first "Big Bang," so many fundamental contingencies had to be
in place for humans to have emerged, as we in fact have emerged, that a consistent
pattern of improbable happenings in favor of human life is apparent.
Liberty and Truth
Jews and Christians explain human dignity by pointing to human liberty. For
Christianity and Judaism, human liberty is an absolutely fundamental datum of
Gods revelation to humanityor, if you prefer, an absolutely central
datum of Jewish and Christian philosophy. It is less central to Islam because
key Islamic philosophers of the early Middle Ages, such as Avicenna (980-1037),
Omar Khayyam (1048-1123),
and Averroes (1126-98), developed concepts from Aristotle in a way that gave
God total initiative and power over the human intellect, and thus, over the
human will; they pictured the will of Allah as all-mastering. The essence of
their theory was that in human understanding it is not the human subject who
understands but, rather, the one Agent Intellect in creation, that of the Almighty.
This seemed plausible since we often experience as a surprise and a gift an
insight that we have for a long time struggled to attain.
In the thirteenth century, many Christian philosophers and even theologians
at the university of Paris and elsewhere first encountered Aristotle through
these Arab philosophers (many of the original Greek manuscripts had been lost
for centuries) and were swayed by the Arab interpretation. Not Thomas Aquinas.
He understood immediately that human liberty was at stake. He was also fortunate
to have in his hands, through his teacher Albert the Great of Cologne (Albertus
Magnus, 1200-80) fresh Latin translations from the original Greek. The fifteen-year
struggle of Thomas against the Averroistswho wanted him driven out of
Pariswas a decisive event for Christian humanism and for the cause of
liberty in the West. It fully earned Thomas the title of "the First Whig," first
given him by Lord Acton and later by Hayek.
Because the teaching of the Gospels is intended for Christians in every sort
of culture, political system, and time, Christian philosophers are first of
all concerned with an understanding of the interior act of liberty, only in
the second place with liberty as a political and economic act. Confronted with
any propositionof fact, principle, theory, or faithhumans are responsible
for the assent or the dissent they give to it. They are responsible for gathering
the evidence necessary to make such judgments wisely, for struggling to understand
the necessary materials, and for disposing themselves to judge such evidence
soberly, calmly, and dispassionately. When they declare a proposition to be
true or false, they assert what is true and real. In so doing, they open themselves
to counter-argument and challenge from others, in the light of the evidence,
over which no one person has total control. In this way, each person is called
to be open to the truth of things, to the whole of reality, and each is subject
to criticism from those who may be more penetrating, or less one-sided, than
they. When human beings reach a judgment, they reveal a great deal about themselves.
They are, in effect, under judgment by reality itself, as mediated by the community
of inquirers who seek the truth of things.
Thomas Aquinas further noted that in every human act there are two moments.
In the first place, human consciousness is open to everything around usto,
as the Harvard philosopher William James (1842-1910) called it, the whole "blooming,
buzzing confusion" of present sensory impressions, memory, emotion, passion,
imagination, concept, idea, and expectation. Human understanding cannot focus
on all of these things at the same time, at least not directly. Thus, the first
human liberty is the liberty of human understanding to focus (like a searchlight
in the dark chaos) on one thing rather than another. Aquinas called this the
liberty of specification. Then, as the human understanding focuses on the many
materials relevant to its consent or its dissent, another liberty becomes apparent:
the liberty involved in reaching a determination that sufficient evidence is
at hand for reaching a judgment, and the decision not to evade the evidence
but, rather, to be faithful to itto go ahead and make the judgment. This
last step is not to be taken for granted. Often, we dread the evidence mounting
before us or the consequences of what we are about to decide. At such times,
we are tempted to take evasive action. Aquinas calls this second moment of liberty,
the liberty of exercise. Thus, even within the inner realm of the soul there
are already two moments of liberty.
In the prison literature of the twentieth century, there are many witnesses
to the inner drama of these two internal acts of libertyin the prison
reflections of Mihailo Mihailov and Nathan Scharansky, for example, but also
in many others. Even when all other external liberties are taken away, even
in prison and under torture, the human mind and will retain the power to perform
these two acts of liberty. Those who, when all else is lost, cling to the ideal
of truth seeking retain their liberty of specification. They retain their liberty
of exercise by being determined not to be complicit in lies. "Purity of heart
is to will one thing," Søren Kierkegaard (1813-55) wrote. To will to
be perfectly faithful to the truth of things is to live by purity of heart and
to act as a free man or woman even in the most extreme of circumstances.
To move from this profound concept of internal liberty to a projection of the
sort of political, economic, and cultural institutions that make pure human
liberty of this sort frequent in human lives is a very long step. It requires
many generations of social experimentation. It is not to be imagined that the
way to building a city of true liberty is a purely rational, abstract, conceptual
achievement. Hayek quite rightly calls this "the fatal conceit." That conceit
was the chief engine of the murderous ideologies of the twentieth century.
The Concept of Conscience
In conjunction with his defense of the interior ground of human liberty, Aquinas
also formulated, for the first time, the concept of conscience. Conscience is
not a term of the ancient Greeks or Romans. Neither is it, exactly, a biblical
concept, although many texts in the Bible show the inner conflicts that gave
rise to the need for such a concept: "And it came to pass afterward, that Davids
heart smote him, because he had cut off Sauls skirt" (1 Sam. 24:5); "The
spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak" (Matt. 26:40); and "For the
good that I would I do not: but the evil which I would not, that I do" (Rom.
7:19). After Kant, it has become common for modern people to think of the moral
life as a matter of duties to be observeda kind of obedience. But in earlier
Christian ages, the moral life was thought of rather as a way to be walked,
a set of paths to follow (with the lives of the saints as pathbreakers), an
archetype (Christ) to model ones life upon, an image of a life to be lived
out: "Whosoever will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross,
and follow me" (Mark 8:34).
For Thomas Aquinas, the first practical problem of the moral life is to find
out what to do in the unique circumstances in which you, a unique, irreparable
person, now find yourself. The moral life taxes our capacities for practical
knowing. Even when we know the model or ideal we are pursuing, the right thing
to do now is not always clear. Besides, we sometimes wish to evade clear knowledge,
or we prefer to let passion drive us. Afterward, following an act of passion
or evasion, we sometimes see clearly what we ought to have done, and feel the
bite of remorse. This bite, too, comes from our faculty of practical knowing.
Conscience, then, is the habit of practical knowing by which we discern the
right thing to do in immediate circumstances, and by which we blame ourselves
when we have turned away from this discernmentthat is, failed to use the
light within us. By frequent failures to use it, and by deliberate abuse of
it, we can dim this light and all but extinguish conscience. We can also deceive
it, and some of the stratagems by which we deceive our own consciences are so
classic that the great Oxford writer C. S. Lewis (1896-1963) set them forth
vividly in The Screwtape Letters.
The Person
Finally, it is useful to mention that the concept of person also entered Western
thought by way of sustained reflection on the Bible. For one thing, a concept
was needed to name the special kind of spiritual substance capable of acts of
insight and choicesuch as the human being isbut not only the human
being, but also God and the angels. Physicists speculate these days about whether
in other galaxies there is also personal life capable of insight and choice
that is not of the human species. In fact, the Bible describes creatures of
that sortmany different genera and species of themand calls them
angels and archangels. The idea of many other living species is not unbiblical.
In another context, the concept of person was also needed to express the dual
nature of Jesus Christ, who, according to the Bible, has both a human and a
divine nature that remains the same. In other words, what is the principle that
unites these two natures? This is the historical genesis of the concept of person.
Its utility lies in designating what exactly it is in humans that is the ground
of their dignity and the source of their free acts of insight and choice. A
person is a substance with a capacity for insight and choice and an independent
existence as a locus of responsibility. The fifth-century Christian thinker
Boethius (c. 480-524) was the first to codify the definition: A person is a
substantia rationalis subsistens. This concept of the "person"
adds a significant new note to the concept of the "individual." A cat or a dog
may be utterly individual and even manifest (in an extended sense) a distinctive
personality. Still, cats are not held responsible for their acts, never have
to choose a vocation, or a careeri.e., do not qualify as persons. Human
beings are persons, as other individual animals are not. "The problem with animal
rights," a friend of mine once said, "is getting the animals to respect them."
Acquiring this concept of the person was a crucial step for the modern age,
for it led directly to the first declaration of human rights in history, when
the Spanish missionaries argued that the Indians encountered in the New World
were persons of full human dignity, not some inferior species. The missionaries
argued that it was sinful before God and contrary to natural law to offend the
dignity of the Indians, as many of their compatriots were obviously doing. They
pressed their case at the Spanish Court, urging the monarch to rule accordingly.
The suit was argued successfully by theologians of Salamanca, the same school
of theologians to whom Joseph Schumpeter (1883-1950) and Friedrich Hayek have
given credit for many of the pioneering insights into the distinctive features
of economic action, as well.
This successful lawsuit helps to explain why outside the United Nations building
in New York there stands a statue of one of the greatest of these theologians,
the founder of international law, Francesco de Vitoria (1486-1546). The public
recognition that oppression of the Indians was sinful, and the public declaration
of their rights, alas, did not prevent terrible abuses. This is another indication
of the power of the observation by James Madison (1751-1836) in the United States
that mere declarations of rights are not enough. Rights are never sufficiently
defended by "parchment barriers," but only by internalized habits and institutions
that incorporate checks and balances.
Conclusion: The New Economics
The civilized world is already beginning to celebrate the imminent arrival
of the third millennium after the birth of Christ. Since the crucial civilizing
ideas of human dignity, liberty, truth, conscience, and person have been slowly
developed over the first two millennia after Christs birth, and since
their development was given a powerful impulsion by Christs teaching,
it is perhaps not at all unfitting that we should take note of these contributions
at this crucial time.
One of the most important contributions of the New Economics is to have focused
attention on the primary importance of human capital. The concept of human capital,
as Nobel Laureate Gary Becker makes clear, includes personal and social habits,
as well as the slowly and experimentally developed social practices and institutions
that are decisive for economic development. On the role of social trust and
others of these social practices, the recent book by Francis Fukayama and earlier
ones by Laurence Harrison are highly instructive.
A second important contribution of the New Economics is to have focussed on
human action and the human subjectthat is, on the human person and human
liberty. A third contribution of the New Economics is to have focused on the
central role of choicepersonal choice and public choicein the dynamics
of economic life.
It is my hope that on all of these important contributions of the New Economics
the present reflections have shed some historical and conceptual light. Helping
to ground the New Economics in an accurate representation of human history and
culture, and thus to engraft it into larger movements of culture, is the distinctive
contribution I hope this essay furthers.

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