Dictionary of the History of Ideas
PRIMITIVISM
Primitivism is a name for a cluster of ideas arising from meditations on the course of human history and the value of human institutions and accomplishments. It is found in two forms, chronological and cultural, each of which may exist as "soft" or "hard" primitivism.
I. FORMS OF PRIMITIVISM
Chronological primitivism
maintains that the earliest stage of human history was the best,
that the earliest period of national, religious, artistic, or in fact any strand
of history was better than the periods that have followed, that childhood is
better than maturity. In short, it argues that to discover the best stage of
any historical series one must return to its origin. Primitive man, for instance,
was better than civilized man, primitive Christianity was better than later
developments of Christianity, the arts of savages and children are better than
those of educated men and adults.
Cultural primitivism maintains
that whatever additions have been made to what is called the "natural"
condition of mankind have been deleterious. Unfortunately the meanings of the
natural are so multiple that cultural primitivists vary widely in what they
consider to be the state of nature. They are often chronological primitivists
as well, but this is not inevitable. One may believe that a complete absence
of civilized institutions is a blessing and yet think that primitive man was
as much beset by them as modern man. Or one may think that man as he first appeared
on earth was gifted with all that man requires to live well and yet not to believe
that such requirements are sufficient for modern man. Logically one may be both
a chronological and a cultural primitivist, a chronological but not a cultural
primitivist, a cultural but not a chronological primitivist, or neither one
nor the other.
Hard primitivism is the doctrine
that man is happiest when he is not burdened with arts and sciences, lives with
the fewest possible needs, is satisfied with the simplest of lives. A cave suffices
for a house, acorns for food, the skins of wild beasts for clothing, a heap
of dried leaves for a bed. The hard primitivist is likely to hold up the animals
as exemplars; for they ask, he will say, for no more than Mother Nature has
given them at birth. When the hard primitivist is also a chronological primitivist,
he will maintain that at the earliest period of human history man lived as the
animals do, without luxuries. But he is not forced to be a chronological primitivist;
he may simply believe that men are overburdened with unnecessary desires and
that they should "return to Nature" or to the "simple life."
Soft primitivism maintains that the best life is the life without toil, the sort of life that was sometimes depicted as characteristic of the islands of the South Seas where the climate is gentle, the earth spontaneously productive, the animals friendly, the sea full of fish easily caught. Soft primitivism often accompanies chronological primitivism, as it did in the legend of the Golden Age or in one version of life before the Fall.
II. CULTURAL PRIMITIVISM
Cultural primitivism came to the fore in the Greek Cynics who apparently had no interest in appraising contemporary life. In spite of the fundamental differences in the Greek and Latin ethical schools, they all agreed that the end of life was personal self-sufficiency (autarky), freedom from all claims made by the external world upon the soul of the individual. The Platonist found this in the life of reason, freedom from the demands of the senses; the Aristotelian found it in the Golden Mean, freedom from extremes; the Epicurean found it in freedom from pain and indeed from all but the simplest pleasures; the Stoic found it in apathy, freedom from any emotional attachments. The emphasis on freedom from something or other is the essential point; and one might reasonably conclude that the ancient philosophers had become weary of society, of family, of friends.
1. Cynicism. The most extreme form of autarky was sought and
found by Diogenes of Sinope, whose teacher, if tradition is correct, was Antisthenes
(ca. 444-365 B.C.), a member of the Socratic circle. Though we have no writings
of Diogenes and only scattered fragments of dubious authenticity from his master,
it is fairly well established that their principal axiom was that life according
to nature was the best of life. "Nature," however, is one of the most
ambiguous words in either Greek, Latin, or English. It may refer to that which
distinguishes one class of things from all others, or to the geological landscape.
It may name that which is congenital as contrasted with the unnatural and the
supernatural as well. It is both descriptive and normative. For the very reason
of its invincible ambiguity it has taken on a strong emotional color, and arguments
about the value of human behavior are based on whether it is natural or unnatural,
natural or merely customary, instinctive or deliberate. One is always hard put
to it to know precisely what a man means when he calls an act "unnatural"
or "natural."
To the early Cynic one of the basic meanings of the natural was that which
distinguishes it from the customary, that is, physis vs. nomos. (Later nomos
in the sense of "law" came to be divided into the Law of Nature and
the Law of the State.) And if we read the tradition correctly, we should have
to conclude that for Diogenes the natural was that which he could not discard
and still live. Thus we could discard clothing and throw a rag about us to keep
off the cold; we could discard a house and creep into a wine jar; we could discard
all family ties, wives and children, and procreate like the animals; we could
even discard cooked meat and eat food raw. Those things that could be discarded
without committing suicide are all the contributions of civilization, and it
might be assumed that mankind as it came from the hands of the Creator was without
them. As far as Diogenes was concerned, he had only to look at the beasts to
see what was natural and what unnatural; and, looking at them, he threw away
his clothes and his cup, wrapped a length of cloth round his body, and lapped
up water like a dog. To carry out this program to its logical consequences was
to renounce all social life whatsoever, to give up schooling, the arts and sciences,
all crafts except the simplest (for the birds built nests and the spiders spun
webs), and to roam about in solitude.
The revolt of the Cynic was above all a revolt against the intellect. The use
of reason might seem to be natural to man in that most of the ancients believed
rationality to be man's differentia, the one thing that distinguished him from
the animals. But it was perhaps easier to follow one's instincts and appetites
than to reason to what ends one wished to attain. So the Cynic deprecated any
attempt to supersede instinct by learning. If one did not follow one's instincts
and appetites, one could substitute something else which would do just as well:
intuition, direct communication with revelation, momentary desires. And there
are grounds for believing that this is precisely what Diogenes did.
Hence stories began to circulate about the Cynics that seemed obscene to their
contemporaries: doing "the works of Demeter and Aphrodite" in public.
If the charge was founded, the Cynic was obscene. And if his program eventuated
in such practices, it followed that the arts and sciences were an evil and should
be discarded. When he assumed that primeval man was more natural than civilized
man, he turned to chronological primitivism
and attributed to our primordial ancestors only those forms of behavior which
were not based on learning, or, as he would have said, on art. The natural desires
are then defined as those which can be gratified by all men regardless of their
state of civilization: the universal, the biologically irrepressible, the primary.
Hence shame and modesty must be repressed, as Aratus had said the Iron Race
had repressed them, for they obstruct the satisfaction of our fundamenal drives.
Cynicism was the most extreme form of cultural primitivism.
Platonists, Aristotelians, and Stoics, having accepted reason as essential
to humanity, could not indulge in this kind of moral philosophy. Reason is above
all a critical faculty, whether it is employed in logic, science, or ethics.
In Aristotle it chastens our instinctive appetites by holding them to the mean;
in Plato it teaches us to reject the temporary for eternal goods; in the Stoics
it clarifies our duties and corrects passionate and willful behavior. The Epicurean
with his emphasis on pleasure and his dislike of "culture" nevertheless
saw, by using his reason, that most pleasures are the prelude to pain and that
the avoidance of pain is the sanest form of hedonism. Antirationalism was an
inherent part of cultural primitivism as
it appeared in pagan thought.
Occasionally Socrates was held up as an exemplar by the Cynics. He was represented
as being contented with simple pleasures, being neither an ascetic nor a voluptuary.
He could withstand cold and hunger and yet did not disdain the comforts of life.
He was about as self-sufficient as a man could be and yet he enjoyed the company
of friends and philosophic discussion. He was rational and yet listened to the
controlling voice of his daimon ("guiding spirit"). The true Cynic,
however, could not follow Socrates, for he could not admit that any desire which
was "natural" should be controlled. He could not disapprove of incest,
as Dio Chrysostom puts it in his Discourses (X, 29-30), for "cocks do not
see anything wrong in such unions, no do dogs or asses, nor yet the Persians."
Diogenes even approved of cannibalism, since some nations indulge in it.
Perhaps the best account of the Cynic life is that given by Lucian in his Cynicus,
though it dates from a much later period (second century A.D.). Here the Cynic
is pictured as unshorn, shirtless, barefoot, roaming from place to place, sleeping
alone on the hard ground, dirty and in rags. He is proud of his economy, for
he needs no money. He has everything he requires. He is chided for rejecting
the good things that Nature has given him-the wool of sheep, wine, oil, and
honey-but replies that like a temperate man he uses those goods that he needs
and does not gorge himself with delicacies that are superfluous. Lucian launches
into a criticism of luxury that was to be repeated over and over again in the
course of history. "Embroidered clothes are no warmer than others, houses
with gilded roofs keep out the rain no better; a drink out of a silver cup-or
a gold one for that matter-is no more refreshing, and sleep is no sweeter on
an ivory bed-the reverse in fact is true." The enjoyment of these supposed
delights simply involves one in endless trouble, whereas the simplicity of the
Cynic's life is free from worry and anxiety.
The fusion of the simple life with life in the Golden Age was made by the essayist,
Maximus of Tyre (second century A.D.), in his question, "Whether the Cynic
life is to be preferred." Maximus was a paradoxist and it is doubtful that
his conclusions were to be taken seriously. But whether this is so or not, some
people did take them seriously. When man was created, by Prometheus, he was
"in mind approaching very near to the gods, in body slender, erect and
symmetrical, mild of aspect, apt for handicraft, firm of step." He had
at his disposal an environment with abundant food such as Earth "is accustomed
to bear when undisturbed by husbandsmen...." Strife was unknown, peace
reigned, health was in every body, all was perfection itself. But then in another
age men began to divide up the earth, built walls and fortifications, made soft
clothes for their bodies, hung gold about their necks and on their fingers,
built houses, and invented locks and keys. They molested the earth with mining,
built ships for war and foreign trade, caught birds out of the air, slaughtered
the animals, and filled their bellies with blood, and, seeking wealth and pleasure,
they fell into poverty and misery. Maximus gives us here a picture of man's
unhappiness which might apply to any century, whether pagan or Christian.
The remedy for this condition is obviously the simple life. Compare the men
who live naked, without a house, without arts, who have all the earth for their
city and their household, with the men who have all the clothes, the kind of
house, the arts and contrivances of civilization. Who is the happier? Obviously
the former. For he is free, whereas the latter is as a man in a dark prison,
weighted down with irons. He will relieve his misery by singing, guzzling food,
and sexual indulgence. Yet he is always afraid of the consequences and is never
really free. His antithesis is the Cynic, the man of the Golden Age, who "is
living in the clear light of day, whose hands and feet are free, who can turn
his neck in any direction, can lift his eyes to the rising sun, look at the
stars...." In short, he is Diogenes. There follows a eulogy of the early
Cynic describing him as the one free man.
If then Cynicism is the natural program of life, it must be the program followed by all who are not corrupted by civilization. Hence it is the universal philosophy, much as the "religion of nature" was believed to be the universal religion in the eighteenth century. Its universality sufficed to recommend it and in a time when cosmopolitanism was being preached, not only by the Stoics but by the Christians as well, the search for a universal philosophy was of paramount interest. It was not surprising that the monks should have been identified later on with the followers of Diogenes and that they should have adopted as their uniform the Cynic cloak, the tribon, a cloth wrapped loosely about the body.
2. Epicureanism. But before entering into the Christian version
of cultural primitivism, we must say a
few words about Epicureanism, Stoicism, and the simple life. Though this doctrine
sometimes has been interpreted as urging involvement in all sorts of pleasures
and the very name of its founder has become a synonym for the ultrahedonist,
the original sources of the doctrine, as far as we have them, tone down the
note of pleasure seeking. Epicurus himself urged men to simplify their desires
and to search for the attainment of only those which are necessary for the free
life. He did not refuse to partake of the pleasures that were offered to him
so long as he had to make no effort to get them. But as a free agent, seeking
autarky, he would be content with very simple pleasures. "Bread and water,"
he says in his Third Letter (Diogenes La?rtius, Book X, 130-31), "yield
the very acme of pleasure to a man who is really hungry and thirsty." And
the same frugality of corporal delights was to be paralled in the delights of
the spirit. But there was certainly no anti-intellectualism and the Epicurean
seldom went to the extremes of the Cynic in shocking his neighbors.
The Epicurean who is best know is Lucretius (first century B.C.). And though
he is in some ways an anti-primitivist, assenting to man's technological progress
through the discovery of fire, yet he had a streak of hard primitivism
in him which comes out when he is relating the life of primitive
man. Lucretius clearly admires the physical strength of the first man "created
out of hard earth," who was able to stand the cold or heat and was not
assailed by illness. He lived like an animal, roving about, and had neither
agriculture nor cooking, but fed on acorns and berries, which were then more
plentiful than they are now. He drank water from the streams, had no fire, no
system of laws, no settled customs. "Whatever booty or chance gave to each,"
he says (Book V, 958ff.), "that each bore off at his own pleasure, taught
to be strong and live for himself alone. And in the woods Venus united the bodies
of lovers; for each woman was won either by mutual desire, or by the violence
of a man and his vehement lust or at a price of acorns." These men chased
the wild beasts with stones and heavy clubs, lying on the naked ground when
fatigued and sleeping until dawn awoke them. But their Spartan regimen was no
preventive of lamentation; for they often met death through encounters with
wild beasts which caught and mangled them, and they died "in wild convulsions."
But at the same time they were not bothered with foreign trade and navigation,
which apparently most primitivistic authors disdained, and rather than seek
food in foreign lands they let themselves die of famine. "In those days
men often took poison in ignorance; now, better instructed, they give it to
others."
In such a passage as this Lucretius admires the vigor of our primordial ancestors
and their ability to do without some of the superfluities of life which his
contemporaries thought of as necessities. But he is no chronological primitivist.
For he goes on to relate the story of man's progress from savagery to civilization,
beginning with the discovery of fire. This part of the story properly belongs
to the history of the idea of progress and we shall leave Lucretius here. But
we should point out that he regrets man's lapse from primitive simplicity. Our
greatest misfortune seems to have been the discovery of gold, "for the
majority follow the party of the richer" (V, 1113-15). The idea of wealth
stirs men to seek position and power and they forget that it is better to live
as a subject and in peace than as the governors of others. Men, moreover, having
discovered metals, had the means to make weapons, and war began; Lucretius dilates
upon our departure from primitive pacifism. Yet he also praises learning and
the arts.
But best of all was the philosophy of Epicurus, which freed men from their
supernatural terrors, "set bounds to both desire and fear," and showed
us the chief good
which we all seek. It is clear that Lucretius is ambivalent about primitive
conditions, admiring physical strength and the ability to do without luxury,
but also regretting the absence of the arts that enlighten men. He definitely
rejects chronological primitivism, for the
first stage of history was far from the best. He wavers also about the value
of cultural primitivism, for the best period
was the second stage of history when men lived a simple pastoral and agricultural
life. Men then for the most part lived at peace with one another and only later
did ever more horrible wars begin. His attitude is very similar to that of Rousseau
in the Second Discourse. Both men are on the whole cultural but not chronological
primitivists.
Though Lucretius' contemporary Cicero favored antiprimitivism
to primitivism, there were certain primitivistic
strains which appear in his writings. He too uses "nature" as a catchword,
without any definite meaning, goes back to antiquity for authoritative knowledge,
looks for the natural in the child. But he also believes in the value of racial
experience, holds up the light of nature as a guide which has been diverted
from the true path by prejudices, and often has recourse to the consensus gentium
("general agree-
ment") as a criterion of truth. The Law of Nature has been corrupted by
man, who has invented statutes which are as poisons to the body politic (De
legibus II, v, 13). None of this is systematic and it would be misleading to
try to organize such ideas into a system.
3. Stoicism. The early Stoics-Zeno, Cleanthes, and Chrysippus-are
said to have agreed with the Cynics about some of their tenets. For instance,
Zeno and Chrysippus are said to have believed in the community of wives and
the permissibility of incest. Zeno even is reported to have approved of cannibalism
"in certain circumstances," and to have argued that money is needed
neither for travel nor for exchange and that the reputation and the esteem of
others are not goods. These resemble Cynic doctrines and all seem to issue from
the initial axiom, "follow nature."
Along with such ideas went a positive adoration of the cosmic scene, as expressed
in the Hymn to Zeus of Cleanthes. This religious attitude towards the cosmic
order led to a contempt for man, to whom all evils were attributed. Yet since
man had been created by
Nature and therefore was created good, evil must be due to a Fall. But how explain
the fall of a perfect man? This problem was solved by the Stoic invention of
cycles, according to which doctrine things went from good to bad indefinitely,
with a cosmic conflagration putting an end to the world's Great Year. Since
the rise of evil is inherent in natural law, it was one of many reasons for
remaining in a state of apathy and taking things as they come. But unfortunately
for the consistency of the system, the Stoic was more apathetic about evil than
he was about good. And among the goods of life was the use of reason. The Stoic
was not indifferent to philosophy nor to the pleasant aspects of civilization.
His apathy was internal. He accepted or rejected goods as they occurred. Stoicism
in fact was a doctrine with many shades of meaning, some members of the school
being closer to Cynicism than others, and some, like Seneca, now being more,
now less "cynical."
Seneca emphasizes the physical superiority of primitive man and the advantages
of the absence of the arts and of private property. But at the same time, the
primitives were obviously not Stoics and their resemblances to Stoics in their
way of life were instinctive rather than rational. Seneca was a strong believer
in the value of knowledge: it is better to know why a certain course is right
and then to pursue it than it is to pursue it without knowing why. The innocence
of the savage, like that of the child, is good but not so good as the conscious
virtue of the Sage. Most of this can be found in Seneca's ninetieth Moral Epistle,
addressed to Lucilius, which begins with the opinion that though life is a gift
of the gods, the good life is a gift of philosophy. The first men followed nature,
had the strongest man as their chief; but his strength lay in his mind as well
as in his body. Therefore in the Golden Age the wisest man was the leader. Seneca's
description of such a leader would correspond to what was later said about benevolent
despots: they were all-powerful but used their power for the benefit of the
tribe. Yet, as in so many political philosophies, one had to admit that degeneration
could set in and the benevolent despot become a tyrant; the rule of law had
to take the place of the rule of a king.
So far Seneca says that he is following Posidonius. But since Posidonius says
that philosophy gave men all the arts, of which Seneca has a low opinion, he
is abandoned as a guide at this point. Seneca cannot believe that architecture
and the use of iron, from both of which only evil has resulted, could have come
from philosophy. Here his cultural primitivism
shows itself strongly. On the contrary, Seneca believes that it was man's cunning
(sagacitas) that invented these things. The wise or philosophic man can do without
houses and rare foods. He is content with little, for most of the things we
prize are encumbrances. Seneca launches into a typical diatribe against luxury
in the vein of the early Cynics, a diatribe which is the more amusing in that
its author was enjoying all the luxuries of the imperial court while writing
this. "Luxury has abandoned nature; day by day she grows greater, age after
age she has been gathering strength and making intellect the minister of vice."
Almost everything which civilized men value is subjected to the philosopher's
scorn. The only way to reconcile the acceptance of all these evils rationally
is to see that they follow from the cosmic law, the steady degeneration of mankind.
It was probably from Seneca that Rousseau found his source for his First Discourse,
if one was needed. For Rousseau too took as his theme the depreciation of all
the arts and sciences (see also Seneca's eighty-eighth Moral Epistle). Though
there are less woeful passages in Seneca, in the end his teaching leads to despair.
In each cycle the earth is destined to senescence and decay, and all that a
man may accomplish will be in vain if he hopes that his accomplishments will
be lasting. As he puts it in Natural Questions (III, xxx, 7-8), once the cycle
is ended, men will be created anew, "born under happier auspices, knowing
naught of evil." But their innocence will endure only so long as they are
new. Wickedness creeps in quickly.
4. Christianity and Cynicism. The cultural primitivism of the
Christians appears in the influence of Cynicism upon the ideas which they held
concerning the best life. Unlike the Pagans, however, they had a sacred text
which told them at least the rudiments of a moral philosophy. Their problem
was mainly a rationalization of the doctrine and the drawing of inferences from
its basic principles. For just as the Pagan believed in a fundamental distinction
between nature and custom, so the Christian believed a conflict to exist between
the laws of God and those of man. There was a further contrast found in Christianity,
one arising from the Platonistic inference that the creation was inferior to
the Creator. Nature, in every sense except that which equated it with God, was
part of creation and, though inferior to God, yet it showed traces of its Maker's
hand. But there were other traces of the Greek use of the term "nature"
in Christianity. Saint Paul, for instance, when he tells the Corinthians that
women should cover their heads, bases his lesson not on Scripture but on the
unnaturalness of a woman's hair being her covering. The "teachings of Nature"
also turn up in the Epistle to the Romans, where the Gentiles are described
as doing by nature the things that are commanded by the Law.
This became customary in the patristic period. When one comes to a man like
Tertullian, who was born a pagan, it is not surprising to find him resorting
to an appeal to nature when he can find no scriptual support for his teachings.
He uses the argument when he is preaching against the wearing of wreaths as
decorations for the head; such usage is unnatural. But he equates the Law of
Nature with the Law of God, the Creator of nature. In general one can say that
Tertullian turns to nature about as often as he turns to Scripture. So Lactantius,
attacking philosophy, uses a type of epistemological primitivism,
arguing that philosophy is too recently founded a practice to be followed. True
wisdom, he maintains, must be innate, and what is acquired must thus be rejected
in favor of the innate. In fact, if philosophy were true wisdom, then before
its appearance on earth men would have lived sineratione. But this is absurd,
for by definition man is a rational animal. The Carpocratians, an heretical
sect, appealed to nature in support of equalitarianism. This heresy, which seems
to have recurred in the thirteenth century, and appears in the Roman de la Rose,
supported the marital status of nature, for the community of goods demands the
community of wives. The Marcionites, on the other hand, saw Nature as an evil
deity and did not contrast nature and custom, but Nature and God. Hence that
which was natural and good to the Carpocratians was on that very account evil
to the Marcionites.
Out of this confusion Saint Ambrose draws a conclusion which had definite effects.
He puts this cultural primitivism to special
use in arguing that the Law of
Nature decreed that all things should be owned in common; but wives were not
among the things owned. We have already seen that it was common among the Pagans
to oppose private property; indeed many of them maintained that its initiation
in early times was the source of most of our ills. Now there was no basis in
the Old Testament for the belief that private property is unnatural or that
God had ordained the earth to be owned by all in common. But certain texts of
the New Testament, such as Matthew 19 and its parallels, condemned riches, though
even these texts did nothing more than advocate an extreme form of charity.
But by seeing Adam, as Saint Augustine also was to do, as the entire human race
and God's gifts to Adam as of the earth and the fruits thereof as a gift to
all mankind, Ambrose was able to preach primitive communism as a Christian doctrine.
Mankind thus becomes a corporate person bound together by the Law of Nature.
It is for that reason that charity has the position that Saint Paul gave it.
But, says Ambrose, there is no distinction between the Law of Nature and the
Law of God. Both appear in the operation of instinct, though sometimes we fail
to follow instinct. If we had continued to follow it as the first men did, we
should have had no need for statute. He is so convinced of this that he is almost
unique in early writers in finding in children a model for the kind of behavior
of which he approves. The child, who is innocent, follows the Law of Nature
(lex naturae); he is a living example of what Adam was like before the Fall.
He is, in Cicero's language, a mirror of nature (speculum naturae). And like
Adam he is neither avaricious, guileful, cruel, ambitious, or insolent. He is
the opposite of such things because he follows nature, not because he has received
any instruction. Saint Ambrose
has his own interpretation of the word "knowledge." Knowledge for
him is cunning (astutia). The commandment not to eat of the Tree of Knowledge
was the commandment not to be cunning, thus avoiding all the vices attendant
upon its use. The good Christian then is a man in the state of nature, childlike
and unreasoning. Thus the same type of argument which in Cynicism produced the
ragged and wanton Diogenes, produced the saint in Christianity.
The cultural primitivism of the Cynic also
comes out in the Christian doctrine of the simple life. The Cynic had rejected
almost everything which civilization had given mankind. But this contempt for
the worldly things of life was also shared by some of the Christians. Justin
Martyr, for instance, continued to wear the philosopher's cloak, the tribon,
after his conversion, and it was easy for a third- or fourth-century man to
confuse the monks with the Cynics; both wore soiled garments and carried wallet
and staff. Even Saint Basil confuses Cynics and saints from time to time, as
when he compares the ethical ideals of the Pagans and the Christians. The teachings
are highly similar but their motivation is quite different.
Moreover some of the early Fathers did not hesitate to use pagan as well as
biblical sources in support of their ideas. One of the best examples is Constantine's
using Vergil as a prophet, in the Fourth Eclogue, of the birth of Christ. Another
is the legend that Saint Paul and Seneca had been friends, a legend that produced
their correspondence. In fact the use of pagan sources grew to such a point
that Saint Jerome protested vigorously against it. But that did not prevent
him from listing Seneca among the saints. The similarity between the two sets
of doctrine was so great that some writers explained it away as plagiarism on
the part of the pagans. So Philo Judaeus (first century A.D.) had spoken of
Plato as "Moses speaking Greek."
It must be granted that the Christian who followed the way of poverty and chastity,
who was free internally while a slave externally, was indeed hard to distinguish
from a Cynic or a Stoic. And when monasticism was instituted, the resemblance
was all the greater. The hermit for that matter was not unlike Diogenes in his
wine jar; the monk in his monastery reminded one, as the Essenes had, of the
Golden Race, sharing all things in common, having few if any wants, and living
a life of freedom from external goods. But the resemblance was superficial.
For the Christian lived not in dependence on himself alone, but in full dependence
on God. The pagan ascetic was not an ascetic because he was doing penance, but
because he wanted to be free from all social ties. In reality the Cynic or Stoic
reduced his wants as a gesture of self-assertion, the Christian as self-denial.
One of the clearest examples of the Christian motivation, and practice as well,
is
in the Pseudo-Clementina (Homilies XII, vi), where Peter says, "I eat only
bread and olives and rarely vegetables-and my wrap and cloak (tribon) are this
very thing which is thrown about me. Nor have I any other nor need I others.
For in these I have more than enough, for my mind, looking upon all the eternal
goods over yonder, sees none of the things here below." With the exception
of the last sentence, this might have been said by any Cynic, by Epictetus,
or even by Epicurus.
This difference in motivation sharply distinguishes Christian cultural primitivism
from pagan. The pagan would be free not only of wants for material things, but,
as we have said above, from the claims of family and friends. The Christian
would be free of the former but hardly of the latter, since brotherly love or
caritas was one of the virtues which Saint Paul had most earnestly commended.
In Saint Basil's Longer Rules it is made clear that a communal life was to be
instituted for the monks, but within the community living was on a par with
what one had learned from pagan cultural primitivists. Dress should be as simple
as possible and a single cloth ought to suffice for protection against
the weather; the rule of poverty should be strictly enforced and it was pointed
out that there is virtue in living a hard life. Basil actually refers to Hesiod
as a teacher of this rule and offers the Cynic hero, Hercules, as an exemplar.
But he was schooled in the classics and did not hesitate to use even the language
of the Cynics when it suited his purposes. Nor does he refrain from the Cynic
argument that desiring only the bare necessities is in accordance with nature.
But he, as a saint, exceeds their limitations, for the Cynic permitted the gratification
of bodily needs, including the sexual, whereas he suppresses all pleasures and
is suspicious even of good health.
The hard primitivism of the monks, regardless
of its motivation, so closely resembled that of the Cynics that it was easy
to confuse the two. But after the Dark Ages
the Cynic was forgotten and the ascetic monks stood in his place as models of
the virtuous life. In the twelfth century we find a man like Alain of Lille
writing a Summa of the Art of Preaching in which (Ch. 25) he refers to nature
without any mention of those biblical passages which one might expect him to
quote. He urges self-sufficiency (autarky) and indicates that it can be attained
by checking concupiscence, rejecting pleasures, being moderate in eating and
drinking, and limiting one's wants to those that Nature demands, that is, to
sustaining life. The basis of this passage is Seneca, not the Bible, and earlier
in the same work (Ch. 5) he almost reproduces a speech of the Cynic Antisthenes
in saying, "If you live in accordance with Nature, you will never be poor."
But Alain had read his Latin authors and held them in greater respect than was
customary in the earlier period of Christianity. So Peter Cantor (twelfth century),
whose Verbum abbreviatum is a sort of anthology, sets forth not only passages
such as Luke 6:20 and Matthew 8:20, but alongside these, long quotations from
Seneca's epistles. This is a way of bringing pagan and biblical authority into
harmony.
More typically Christian was Guigo the Carthusian (early twelfth century).
Addressing his fellow monks and extolling poverty, he recalls the hermits and
their life of hard work and abstinence. He was impressed by the communism of
the primitive church and the sacrifice of possessions. Yet, as might be expected,
the hard primitivism of his appeal is based
on the need for self-humiliation rather than on the Law of Nature.
Another aspect of the cultural primitivism
of the Middle Ages was a strain of anti-intellectualism which, though never
dominant, was nevertheless strong. It could not be denied that Adam fell because
he wished to know something which he had been forbidden to learn. In Tertullian
the sacrifice of rationality is no more than any saint should be willing to
make. Pope John XIII took another stance: living in the tenth century, he pointed
out that the vicars of Peter and his disciples had no need for pagan authorities,
that God had not chosen orators and philosophers to preach his word, but illiterate
and unpolished men. But these words, which were only the faint echo of a philosophy,
were repeated by none other than Saint Anselm in his De contemptu mundi. And
Saint Bernard in the twelfth century put intellectual curiosity in the same
class as the sin of Eve. Self-knowledge, he insisted, was alone worth seeking-paradoxically
enough a pagan goal-but knowledge about external things is vain. As for that
knowledge which is necessary for the Christian life, self-knowledge and the
knowledge of God, these may be had without technological or scientific training.
In his The Steps of Humility and Pride (II, 10) we find him praising ignorance
of both the mechanical and the liberal arts on the ground that the Apostles
were ignorant of both. A pure conscience and unsullied faith are enough to win
salvation.
Similar views are expressed by Helinandus, the Venerable Guibertus, Hildebert, and even Pope Innocent III. The Pope almost preached ignorance on the plea that we are made sick by too much learning. "Let scholars," he says in his De contemptu mundi (I, xiii), "scrutinize, let them investigate the heights of heaven, the stretches of the earth, the depths of the sea, and let them dispute over each particular and explore whole subjects, let them spend their time in learning and teaching. For what shall they discover from this occupation but labor and pain and affliction of the spirit?" And he refers back to Ecclesiastes. This is followed by a diatribe against all the arts and sciences, a diatribe which was to be made again in the sixteenth century by Agrippa von Nettesheim. It was in itself a repetition of the thoughts of the Greek Cynics.
III. THE NOBLE SAVAGE
One of the problems that confronted the primitivist was the discovery, if possible,
of the natural man-the man who followed nature rather than custom or opinion,
and who was a living exemplar of the primitivistic life. The Greeks found such
persons among the savages, both real and imaginary. The Scythians, the "blameless
Ethiopians," the inhabitants of the Fortunate Islands, and the Hyperboreans
were fair samples of what they found or invented. Life in the Fortunate Islands,
as in the Land beyond the North Wind, was characterized as softly primitive:
the climate was pleasant, earth gave its fruits spontaneously, the goats, as
Horace put it (Epode XVI, lines 40ff.), came to be milked unbidden. In short,
all the delights of the Golden Age seen through the magnifying glass of the
poetic imagination are attributed to these lands. And as for the Hyper-boreans,
they live until they have found their pleasant life sufficient-not boring, according
to Mela in his Chorographia (III, 35-37). They then wreathe their heads with
garlands and fling themselves into the sea. The Scythians, like most Noble Savages,
lived a hard primitivistic life. They were nomads, ate meat, and drank mare's
milk, and, though they grew fat and indolent, they had no need for luxuries.
In Herodotus (IV, xix, 46-47) they emerge as a somewhat praise-worthy people
for they have produced at least onesage, Anacharsis.
But in later writers they are described as very pious, never injuring anyone,
nomadic, and communistic. So Pseudo-Scymnus, in his Orbis descriptio (A.D. 850-59),
describes them. Similar remarks are made by Strabo, the geographer; and the
tradition of thee hardy and wise Scythian passes on into Latin in Cicero, Horace,
and Vergil. Ovid, however, who knew whereof he was speaking, despises the savages
of the Pontus, region of the Scythians, and can find nothing good to say of
them. It is interesting that when the colonists came to America, their views
of the Noble Savage were similarly modified by direct acquaintance. They may
have been touched by the glowing accounts of the native American which had been
made by the first explorers, but they were quickly disillusioned.
The most famous passage in Latin literature on a savage people is in the Germania
of Tacitus. But the Germans had already been described by Julius Caesar in his
Gallic Wars (VI, 21-23) as men who admire chastity, live mainly on milk, cheese,
and meat, have no private property, and are noticeably brave in war. The tradition
that idealizes them begins in Seneca's De providentia (IV, 14-15). Though Seneca
admits the
harshness of the German climate, he admires the people for walking in the path
of nature. Tacitus gives us more details. The Germans are a cattle raising people;
they have no pride in adornment; are particularly brave; have no cities; are
chaste and in general monogamous, knowing little of adultery; are very hospitable;
are communistic; and have no elaborate funerals. They are thus contrasted with
the Romans. But at the same time, they have certain weaknesses: belligerency,
gluttony, drunkenness. In short he is describing this people as he believes
them to be and is not imagining a culture to fit a preconceived theory.
The Christian writers were not so fond of Noble Savages as the pagans were.
After all they had tried to convert them and had suffered directly at their
hands. Many of the twelve Apostles had been sent beyond the frontiers of the
Mediterranean Basin and had not been welcomed by the inhabitants. Above all
the barbarians had not received the Revelation and, though they could hardly
be blamed for that, they could not be thought of as on a par with Jews and Christians.
But sometimes one finds an early Christian author who will see some good in
them. Saint Jerome for one used the barbarians as a standard of comparison with
Christians, excusing to some extent their injustice, their avarice, and their
general wickedness, since they knew no better, whereas the Christians did know
better and hence were less excusable for their sins. Salvianus (fifth century)
goes a bit farther in his De gubernatione Dei (III, i, 2) citing the Goths as
models of sexual decency. The Romans, he says, are unchaste, the Goths are pure,
and that is precisely why God permitted them to conquer the Romans.
The Greek Fathers also occasionally refer to the barbarians in terms of praise.
Clement of Alexandria, for instance, admits their moral weaknesses, drunkenness,
idolatry, belligerency, but at the same time says that they are superior to
the Christians in invention. He even brings up the case of that preeminent Noble
Savage, Anacharsis, as a model for Christians to observe with shame. But his
point usually is that if the savage can achieve excellence, the Christian ought
to do as well. This, as a matter of fact, was the general tendency of Christian
writers until the twelfth century when the reading of classical texts was revived.
Then one finds, for instance, Hugh of Saint Victor writing of the Scythians
in his Excerptiones priores (V, ii) in the same vein as his Greek forebears
had done, emphasizing Scythian virtues, their Spartan endurance, their abstemious
diet of milk and honey, and their great corporeal strength. By this time the
Scythians had become a legendary people.
The idea that somewhere there was a people living in accordance with nature
never died out. Though the Christian writer could not find a real Noble Savage,
he could find a few imaginary ones. The Camerini, for instance, have never been
identified with any real tribe, but in the Liber junioris philosophi (ca. fifth
century A.D.) we are told that they receive their food as a gift from heaven,
live in a juristic state of nature, know no evil, do no work, and die happy
at the age of one hundred and twenty years. At the same time, along with this
mild form of cultural primitivism, the author
reports that their country abounds in precious stones, something no pagan author
had ever imagined. The emeralds, pearls, and sapphires remind one of Saint John's
heaven.
The Camerini did not survive, as far as is known, in medieval literature; the
Brahmins who, though real, were treated with as much fantasy as the Camerini,
became known in Western Europe as early as the fourth century B.C. through the
histories of Alexander's wars. In the Gesta Alexandri of Pseudo-Callisthenes,
a work influenced by Christianity, the Brahmins take the place of the Scythians.
They are withdrawn from the world like monks, live in nakedness, have neither
domestic animals, agriculture, iron, buildings, fire, bread, wine, clothing,
"nor anything pertaining to the productive arts or to pleasure." Their
diet is vegetables, fruits, and water. They sleep on beds of leaves. The passage
describing them ends with a dialogue between the Brahmins and Alexander, in
which the former talk like Greek Cynics who have learned some manners. Their
aim, they say, is to live in accordance with nature, which means to have no
wealth, to withstand the cold and the heat, to conquer oneself rather than others.
They have no love of money, of pleasure, of fornication, murder, or wrangling.
In short the main difference between the regimen of the Brahmins and that of
Diogenes is that it is communal rather than solitary. The story of this encounter
was repeated and with repetition grew until by the twelfth century the Brahmins
were proto-Christians.
Yet it is fair to say that medieval writers were not enthusiastic about savages.
The main function of these writers in the history of cultural primitivism was
to keep alive the idea that it was possible to live in a hard primitivistic
fashion and at the same time be virtuous, in fact exemplary in behavior. And
it goes without saying that such men would also be happy. The more remote the
savage, the more likely was it that he would be virtuous. The Icelanders win
the palm, for they live on the young of their flock exclusively, are clothed
in skins, inhabit caves, and, as Adam of Bremen (eleventh century) put it in
his Description of the Islands of the North, they lead "a life holy in
its simplicity." They ask for no more than nature yields and are especially
happy in their poverty. They own all in common and practice charity to all.
But, says Adam, they are now all Christians.
The desire to find somewhere or to believe that somewhere there exists a really virtuous and happy people may have been the stimulus in the Middle Ages to invent islands in the Atlantic where a life in accordance with nature would be lived. The Fortunate Islands, the Earthly Paradise, the Islands of the Blessed, Saint Brendan's Island, Perdita, the country of Prester John (though not an island in this case)-these were some but not all of these happy lands, far, far away. When it was a question of the Earthly Paradise, clearly the apocalyptic visions of early Christianity played their role in describing these lands. But the belief in such lands persisted up to the time of Columbus and indeed beyond that time. In fact Columbus' account of his third voyage almost if not quite identifies the West Indies with the Earthly Paradise. The people, he says, are graceful, shrewd, intelligent, and courageous. But they are also timid, and this was a trait that made them little to be feared. They are the best people in the world, "so unsuspicious and so generous with what they have, that no one who had not seen it would believe it." With Columbus we are at the beginning of the Renaissance and modern views of primitivism.
IV. MODERN PRIMITIVISM
By the end of the fifteenth century the explorers had changed men's minds about
the inhabitants of the globe, having found men who had never heard of the Gospel
and who nevertheless seemed to be living in relative decency. The invention
of printing moreover had given more men access to the accounts of these people
and when combined with all the inventions and discoveries of the sixteenth century,
permitted people to doubt a good portion of what they had always accepted on
authority. But the proliferation of books, which were now preserved instead
of being lost, makes it impossible to enter into details about the history of
a point of view which was widely adopted and as widely combated. Hence what
follows attempts to be no more than a sketch of the various kinds of modern
primitivism.
Saint Augustine had laid it down as an outline of history that there would
be seven ages of the world, of which the first, from Adam to Noah was the best.
This age corresponded to infancy; and Augustine drew a parallel between the
life of a human being, from babyhood to senescence, and the life of the race.
This parallel has been used in historical accounts of civilization up to our
own times by a writer like Spengler and in a modified form by Arnold Toynbee.
To Augustine all would end in a cosmic Sabbath corresponding to the seventh
day of Creation on which God rested. His outline was repeated without significant
variation throughout the Middle Ages, and in modern times vestiges of it appear
in speculations on the senescence of the world, of which the outstanding example
is Thomas Burnet's Theory of the Earth, of which the first edition appeared
in 1681. By emphasizing the decay of all the physical forces, proved by the
diminution in size of the animals, including man, the book gave additional reason
for looking backwards with longing to the first age when all was fresh and vigorous.
But by the end of the fourteenth century the submerged social classes had revolted in England, France, and a bit later in Germany. The famous cry of Wat Tyler,
When Adam delved and Eve span,
Who was then the gentleman?
recalled to his listeners that social class was not in the order established
by God, and was a stimulus to return to the original plan according to which
the Creator ordained the life of his people. One found much the same thing in
the Proto-Protestant and Protestant movements in the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries, when only primitive Christianity and the words of the Bible as "uncorrupted"
by commentators were considered authoritative. Of these movements in their most
primitivistic form one might select the Adamites. From
then on the idea that the best condition of anything was its primordial condition
was often taken for granted; and we find that there is a tradition not only
of seeking the earliest form of religion as the best, but also the earliest
form of the state, of the arts, even of the individual.
Columbus' accounts of his voyages were given currency in the works of Peter
Martyr (Pietro Martire d'Anghiera, 1459-1526), whose Decades were frequently
translated and reedited. Peter Martyr gave detailed accounts of the conduct
of both the Spaniards and the Indians; and though those of the Indians were
not always to their credit, nevertheless he kept alive the tradition that the
natives resembled the men of the Golden Age. The islanders of Hispaniola, for
instance, would be well nigh perfect if only they were Christians. They go about
naked, like the Adamites, know nothing of weights and measures, "nor of
the source of all misfortunes, money... living in the golden age, without laws,
without lying judges, without books, satisfied with their life, and in nowise
solicitous for the future." They are like men who were living before the
social compact and yet with no need for government. The description is one which
could well be written by a cultural primitivist but for one particular: the
Hispaniolians are ambitious and fight among themselves. The Cubans are similarly
described. They hold the land in common and know no difference between meum
and tuum. Peter Martyr compares them also to the men of the Golden Age, and
they apparently differ from their neighbors in Hispaniola only in that they
are naturally equitable and never injure one an- other. If one believed this
writer, and many did, one saw that ideas that might have been thought of as
simply literary conventions or legend were in fact true. The Indians were primitive
in the concrete sense of preserving the manners of the first age of man. They
were real people living in a state of nature.
But the idea of the Golden Age was also kept alive in belles lettres. Italian
literature of the fifteenth century is full of allusions to that happy period,
and the following custom, started by Vergil in his Fourth Eclogue, was often
used to celebrate the advent of any new ruler. All the well worn clich¨¦s about
the earth producing without toil, the community of goods, the happiness of mankind,
the beauty of men and women, their goodness, were brought out of storage and
put into liquid verse. Sannazaro's Arcadia (1504) was a case in point with its
fairylike land, peopled by exquisite shepherds and shepherdesses, all of whom
speak in exquisite tropes. This classical theme, derived from Theocritus and
Vergil, was reinforced by the reading of travelers' tales. Gilbert Chinard in
his L'Exotisme am¨¦ricain dans la litt¨¦rature fran?aise au XVIe si¨¨cle has shown
how such reports extended the imagination of poets, even when they were using
the idiom and mythology of the ancients.
It would be impossible to list all the contributors to the progress of modern
primitivism for they survive in too great
quantity. We shall therefore confine our- selves to mentioning a few of the
most influential and let them stand for the rest. Of these Michel de Montaigne
must head the list, for his Essais (1580) not only went through several editions
and were widely translated, but one of them, On the Cannibals (Book I, 31),
was hotly disputed by his seventeenth-century critics and was thus called to
the attention of men who might not otherwise have read it.
There was, however, little in this essay that had not been anticipated by reputable
classical writers, though they would not have been writing about American Indians.
Montaigne's main thesis is simply that civilization does not improve morals.
He points out that all that is barbarous among American natives is their strangeness,
for we always think that the strange is barbarous. These people are wild (sauvages)
in the same way that berries and flowers are wild: they are the product of "our
great and powerful mother, Nature." They are living as men lived in the
Golden Age, without trade, letters, mathematics, courts of justice, political
ranks, servitude, riches or poverty, contracts,
legacies, leisure occupations, individual kinship, clothing, agriculture, metallurgy,
wine, or grain. They have no words for lying, treason, dissimulation, avarice,
envy, belittlement, pardon, or misunderstanding. And, quoting Vergil (Georgics
I, 20), he says, "These ways of life were first taught by Nature."
Their country enjoys a mild climate, so that it is rare to see illness or any
defects of bodily structure. They live on the coast and have plenty to eat.
Their food is cooked without artificial embellishments. Their houses and clothes
are simple, and they rise with the sun and eat their single meal immediately.
They pass their time in dancing, while their youth are at the chase.
After relating their regard for women, the discourses of their old men, and
their wars against a transmontane people, Montaigne comes to their cannibalism.
He
excuses this on the ground that they eat only their enemies, and they eat them
not for sustenance but for vengeance. (This would seem to show that they could
do things for which they had no names.) But this was no worse than what the
Portuguese were doing, which was to bury their captives waist-deep and then
shoot at them with arrows. There is no sense in our being horrified at their
behavior if we can accept our own. "I think," Montaigne says, "it
is more barbarous to eat a man alive than to eat him dead, to tear to pieces
by torture and pain a body still capable of feeling, of roasting it bit by bit,
of letting it be bitten and torn by dogs and swine"-here he cites what
he had seen
during the wars of religion-"than to roast and eat him after his decease."
In any event cannibalism is better than our ordinary defects: treason, disloyalty,
tyranny, and cruelty.
Montaigne here is not embellishing the life of his primitives; on the contrary
he accepts all their blemishes but maintains that in comparison with our own,
they are either no worse than we, or not bad at all. The primitive thus serves
as a basis of contrast, and this service is founded on the premiss that morality
is not to be judged by an absolute standard but by the context in which deeds
are done. The argument may not be solid if acts are considered in isolation.
But Montaigne was one of the first to think of the total regimen of peoples
and he uses his law of nature as a standard for that. To take this attitude
is to challenge one of the traditional premisses of the Church, that the foundation
for morality lies in the Decalogue and the words of Christ. It might also be
argued that these words are at the same time the Law of Nature and the Law of
God. But in that case the goodness of savage life would be an accident of history
and in no sense a paradigm for civilized people. Montaigne, it should also be
noted, contributed to that side of primitivism
which looked to the animals for models of good behavior, and to children.
The feeling spread that if goodness could be found in men who were supposed
to be living in a state of nature, then one had but to revert to the Greek ideal.
The problem was to find exemplifications of that which was natural. As a result
of this search new concepts of primitivism
arose. The savage began to lose his prestige as soon as more reports came in
from, for instance, the North American settlers. No one who had been through
the Deerfield Massacre could feel friendly towards the Indians. They became
simply a blood-thirsty lot. Their behavior showed that they had not received
the word of God and knew nothing of the theological virtues. Someone had to
take their place. And when the islands in the Atlantic became exhausted as a
source for primitivism, men turned to the
Pacific. When there were no more imaginary lands to be inhabited by imaginary
saints, instead of abandoning the notion, writers turned elsewhere.
First to be endowed with the characters of the Noble Savage, probably because
of the influence of Rousseau, was the Peasant, living a simple, pastoral life
as was lived in the pastoral period of history. The Peasant lived close to nature
in the sense of the nonartificial. He was primitive only in degree, for after
all he plowed his fields, sowed them, reaped the harvest, bought and sold; but
he was innocent of most of the arts and
sciences and, until advanced methods of agriculture were introduced, he could
be endowed with simplicity, innate wisdom, guilelessness, and, by the time Wordsworth
came along, with poetic insight. He seemed to be living in intimate communion
with forces over which men had no control, the wind and the rain. It was the
urban dweller who represented Custom as opposed to Nature.
Sometimes a ballad would play on the Peasant's shrewdness, his ingenuity, even
his ability to outwit the city man. Men of education, like Montaigne or Agrippa
von Nettesheim (1486-1535), along with some of the Protestant mystics, insisted
that learning was a cover for a higher kind of knowledge which needed no schooling
to emerge. This was a reversion to that form of anti-intellectualism which had
appeared now and then in the Middle Ages, when writers pointed out that Christ
had not chosen scholars for his disciples but fishermen. Only four of the Apostles,
as far as is known, were actually fishermen, but since the occupation of only
one of the others, that of Matthew (a tax collector, publican) was known, no
one could be contradicted who held to this opinion.
At the same time there was a current of thought that was definitely antipeasant.
It appears, to take but one instance, in the vogue for emblems, whose supporters
insisted that the deepest truths were too important to be revealed to all and
sundry, that Christ had spoken in parables not to teach the unlearned, but to
conceal his real meaning from them. The sixteenth century had as one of its
marked traits the antagonism between learning and folly, and Erasmus was not
alone in praising the latter. Agrippa's Eulogy of the Ass was in line with the
tradition of the Wise Fool; and the party of the Wise Fool could appeal to Saint
Paul, "the Fool in God," or for that matter to Tertullian if they
knew about him. Montaigne was bitterly attacked in the seventeenth century for
his anti-intellectualism.
But in a time when one side of Protestantism was emphasizing any man's ability
to interpret the Bible, the other side could only take refuge in insisting that
the truths of Scripture were too complicated, too recondite, for the understanding
of anyone but a scholar. Yet just as the American Indian could be peaceful,
gentle, kind, able to do without law and judges, so the farmer knew instinctively
the essentials of religion, and the inessentials could be reserved for those
who wanted to study them. It would be absurd to see in this no more than an
epistemological quarrel. The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries were, as we
have said, periods of armed revolt, revolt not only against the State but also
against the Church. And once the Peasant had the audacity to declare that he
had the same rights as the landed proprietors, the magnates, and was willing
to fight for them, the truth would be proved pragmatically. As in the case of
the Noble Savage, closer acquaintance with the Peasant led to doubts. The Peasant,
like the urban ruffian was soon to be just as evil as the noble, the burgess,
or the small employer.
The lower classes had to wait until the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
to become fully rehabilitated. And by that time they were on the wane, slowly
rising in the social hierarchy. But there was another candidate for the position
of primitivistic paradigm waiting in the wings, ready to enter the stage when
the cue came. That was the Child. The Child might have come into his own with
Christianity, for the verses of Matthew 18:3, beginning, "Except ye be
converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom
of heaven," might have been expected to be an incentive to put childhood
on a pedestal. But that did not take place and, though it may seem strange from
the modern perspective, even the cult of the infant Jesus was relatively late
(sixteenth century). It was Montaigne again who first began calling attention
to the rights of the child to be a child and not an immature man. And in Rousseau's
¨¦mile this right was accentuated and developed into a theory of pedagogy. Rousseau
did not urge men to turn into children-that was to come in the middle of the
twentieth century. But he did insist on the evil of treating children as if
they were only potential adults. And since there was a strong streak of anti-intellectualism
in him, it was easy to infer that he meant education to be nothing more than
allowing a child to do as he would.
It is true that Rousseau believed in a source of truth that was nonempirical
and which he called the heart. One could always argue that, if men were simply
rational, then the present person without schooling was defective. But this
would never do, for society needed men of all grades of intelligence, and there
must be at least a minimum of knowledge accessible to us all. We have quoted
Cicero on the Child as a speculum naturae. This meant that one did not have
to go to the Scythians to gather information about universal beliefs in order
to discover what Nature had to say to us. One had but to look at the Child.
This form of cultural primitivism contained
within itself an element of chronological primitivism.
The Child stood for Adam before the Fall. He was innocent and pure and the fact
that his innocence depended on his impotence was irrelevant. He was like an
angel. In the words of John Earle in his Microcosmographie (1628), he
is "the best copy of Adam before he tasted of Eve or the apple.... He is
nature's fresh picture newly drawn in oil which time, and much handling, dims
and defaces." The process of growing up is degeneration. The history of
individual men reproduces the history of the race. And if we wish to understand
what has happened to mankind since the Fall, we have only to watch the Child
as he matures. He gradually loses his primeval innocence and innate wisdom;
in Wordsworth's words, the "shades of the prison-house begin to close"
about him. During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries the Child loomed larger
as an exemplar; and children's rights took on greater importance, not only in
the eyes of educators but also in those of moralists. The twentieth century,
said Ellen Key, was to be the "century of the child." The Child, she
maintained, instinctively knows both what is right and what is true. The totem
of this school of thought might well be Hans Christian Andersen's child who
saw that the Emperor was naked.
From the Savage to the Peasant to the Child would seem a fairly steep descent,
but there was one more step to be taken, the step into animality. Diogenes the
Cynic had already taken the beasts as his model. And it had been said that man
had learned his arts from the spider and the bird; that the beasts never went
to extremes of eating and drinking and sexuality; never made war upon their
own kind; and, according to some writers, were not only as rational as men but
more so. During the Middle Ages when men believed that the animals had been
created for the use of mankind, this sort of infra primitivism
was recessive. But during the Renaissance it was revived. How seriously admiration
for animals was preached is questionable. But the problem of their intelligence,
as of the existence of their souls, was very seriously debated. For if they
had souls, those souls might be immortal; and if they were intelligent, what
became of man's differentia?
To treat the beasts with kindness is modern and it would be senseless if the
creatures had no feelings, as the Cartesians maintained. But since the development
of theories of evolution, men have tended to integrate themselves into the whole
biological order and to feel their kinship with the other animals. This tendency
would by no means allow us to infer that animals had rights which were equal
or superior to our own. But it would lead men to protect them from cruelty,
to study their ethology, to admire their ingenuity. One thing above all was
true of them: they could not be called unnatural. They had developed no culture
which might lead them away from that which was "in accordance with Nature,"
and even more than the Child, the animal was a mirror of Nature's designs. One
other strain of cultural primitivism should
be mentioned, though it was short-lived. That is the strain of epistemological
feminism. At the end of the eighteenth century, especially among the romanticists,
it was believed that women had a kind of insight into the truth which was lacking
in man; it was called "intuition." Intuition usually was directed
towards character reading, the arts, and the concealed motives of human behavior.
The story of the rehabilitation of Eve does not belong here. But it is not out
of place to recall that most of the evils which beset mankind had been attributed
to her weakness when faced with the Serpent. Christ as the Second Adam had redeemed
mankind from the sin of the first Adam; the Blessed Virgin as the Second Eve
had been the immaculate vessel of the Redeemer. But somehow or other woman had
to wait for some centuries to pass before the German romanticists saw in the
sex those dark enigmatic forces which are unperceived by the more active and
rational male. This very attractive point of view was not of long duration.
With the economic and political emancipation of women, they were given something
approaching equality and hence lost what mystery they had previously possessed.
Chronological primitivism today has lost
most of its force. Few take the story of either the Golden Age or prelapsarian
Adam literally. Life in the Islands of the Blessed has become simply a literary
decoration, at most a wistful dream, and there are no Noble Savages left to
admire. But the theory of social evolution as framed by nineteenth-century writers
like Herbert Spencer led some people to believe that preliterate tribes were
really primitive, as children or eggs prior to adults or freely living individuals.
According to this view there ought to be no significant differences among such
tribes. Yet one could hardly lump together the Polynesians and the Bantus, the
Eskimos and the Patagonians without noting important differences in manner of
life, social organization, kinship rules, sanctions, in short, ideals. The use
of the word "primitive" to characterize all such people was scientifically
unfortunate, for there was no evidence that any civilized group had ever literally
evolved from any condition identical with that of the so-called primitives.
But
psychologically the misfortune was not so great, for it satisfied those who
had primitivistic leanings. It induced men to look upon the arts of the Africans
and the American Indians, the South Sea Islanders and the Eskimos, with greater
sympathy and, though the reasoning about such matters was usually weak, the
results of the reasoning were to broaden our sympathies and understanding. The
South Sea Islands were usually described in terms of soft primitivism,
but soon the detection of yaws and elephantiasis balanced the notice taken of
beautiful women and the abundance of fruit and flowers.
The extension of our field of aesthetic appreciation, moreover, was helped
by the opening of caves in France and Spain, by the discovery of the rock paintings
of North Africa and southern Mexico. Where some saw in these works of art the
persistent need for self-expression, others saw in them a degree of "naturalness"
which was lacking in what came out of the academies. Consequently there was
an aesthetic movement back to what was believed to be primitive; and the drawings
of children, as well as the masks and
images of the Africans or Maoris, became the inspiration of artists like Paul
Klee, Mir¨®, and Picasso. Some of these men have denied this influence, but an
artist is seldom aware of all of the forces which have been most powerful in
forming his style.
There has also been a reversion to a form of anti-intellectualism with primitivistic
overtones in the work of both Freud and Jung. Freud was a bitter critic of civilization
and found in it the unconscious vestiges of primitive mentality. Yet he never
urged us to act
either as uncivilized human beings or as children. Jung on the other hand with
his theory of archetypes tended towards a definite aesthetic primitivism.
The archetypes were supposed to be a limited number of universal symbols possessed
by the collective unconscious. The collective unconscious by its very nature
is the common property of all human beings, regardless of their culture. Hence
to uncover these symbols is to see directly into the minds of all one's fellowmen.
But it was also to discover within one's psyche an identity with the primitives.
Thus we had a form of cultural primitivism
which led its proponents to interpret all myths, all forms of scientific theory,
all artistic expressions of aspirations and fears, all ethical commandments,
in a manner independent of linguistic barriers. Since the archetypes tend to
be covered with layers of cultural accretions, they are most clearly found in
the child or the childlike adult, who are not inhibited by convention from seeing
and speaking primitive truth.
There was also a strain of cultural primitivism in
the two outstanding forms of fascism, that of Italy and that of Germany. Mussolini
was heavily influenced by anarchism and the theory of violence. The emphasis
upon leadership, that which was later to be called by the Nazis the F¨¹hrerprinzip,
was a throwback to the model of the horde governed by the will of a strong man.
Mussolini emphasized the need for strength and power. Bitterly opposed to any
form of humanitarianism, a kind of neo-Darwinism was his ideal. Man was a superior
form of ape and must remember this.
In Nazism the animal origin of mankind was even more strongly emphasized. The
motto "Blood and Soil" was supposed to indicate the continuing link
between the blond beast of today and the blond beast of primitive times. Men
like Ludendorff and Rosenberg even urged a return to the religion of the Nordics,
the worship of Odin and Thor, as a fit religion for the German people. The Nazis
would readily have claimed that civilization had detracted men from their original
condition, for it was no longer the civilization of the Germans; it was an international
style of culture. But his primitivistic vocabulary did not prevent the Nazi
from using all the modern methods of destruction when he made war.
Finally, it might be conceded that some forms of extreme "progressive
education" are based on primitivistic postulates. If the child is to be
permitted to satisfy all his desires, however contrary to the general peace,
he will obviously act in a totally undisciplined manner. Discipline is something
imposed from outside; it rarely, if ever, originates from within. Hence it cannot
be called "natural." But progressive education was also based on the
hope, which had been expressed by Rousseau, that the child would soon grow out
of its anarchic state, just as society was believed to have done. In fact, some
theories of pedagogy were derived from transferring the Law of Recapitulation
out of embryology into sociology. It was then maintained that the growth of
the individual recapitulated the history of the race. Hence the child must be
allowed to repeat all the stages through which mankind had grown to maturity.
Since some historians, Spengler for instance, had utilized the basic metaphor
of the life cycle as a picture of a nation's progress, there seemed to be some
evidence that would justify this educational process. But though the American
child might begin his schooling with studying the American Indian, building
tepees, dancing corn dances, making Indian costumes, none seem to have been
made to live in a cave, eat his fellows' flesh, or hunt with stone-tipped arrows.
At the time of writing a similar movement has set in among certain sociologists
to erect the animals again as exemplars of civilized behavior. Thus the "territorial
imperative" is used to interpret what civilized nations are doing on the
international scene. But it is not always clear whether this is an interpretive
description or a program.
There always remain residues of earlier cultural periods in every period and these tendencies may not be of long duration. Primitivism now seems to exist mainly in the arts, perhaps because it is no longer reasonable to deny the benefits of scientific discovery and technological inventions. It appears as if modern man were committed to civilization with all its weaknesses and lack of picturesqueness.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
A. O. Lovejoy and G. Boas, Primitivism...
in Antiquity (Baltimore, 1935), gives in Greek, Latin, and English all the passages
pertinent to the subject. G. Boas, Essays on Primitivism and Related Ideas in
the Middle Ages (Baltimore, 1948), cites English translations of similar texts
for the medieval period. For the eighteenth century, see Lois
Whitney, Primitivism and the Idea of Progress
in English Popular Literature of the Eighteenth Century (Baltimore, 1934). Other
books covering aspects of the subject: Gilbert Chinard, L'Exotisme am¨¦ricain
dans la litt¨¦rature fran?aise au XVIe si¨¨cle (Paris, 1911); and idem, L'Am¨¦rique
et le r¨ºve exotique dans la litt¨¦rature fran?aise au XVIIe et au XVIIIe si¨¨cles
(Paris, 1933); G. Boas, The Happy Beast (Baltimore, 1933); and idem, The Cult
of Childhood (London, 1966). For the rise of the pastoral and its relations
to primitivism, see Walter W. Greg, Pastoral Poetry and Pastoral Drama (London,
1906); for primitivism in art, see Robert
J. Goldwater, Primitivism in Modern Painting
(New York, 1938). GEORGE BOAS [See also Allegory v1-07 ; Astrology v1-20 ; Christianity
v1-49 ; Cosmic Fall v1-63 ; Cycles v1-74 ; Cynicism v1-75 ; Education v2-08
; Epicureanism v2-15 ; Happiness and Pleasure v2-43 ; Impiety v2-62 ; Law, Natural
v3-04 ; Millenarianism v3-26 ; Myth v3-35 v3-36 v3-37 v3-38 v3-39 v3-40 ; Nature
v3-44 ; Progress v3-75 v3-76 ; Rationality v4-07 ; Sin and Salvation v4-31 ;
Skepticism v4-32 v4-33 ; Stoicism v4-41 ; Women. v4-72 ]
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