theory then man might now work shorter hours and have larger returns than before. In part this has proven true but other and disturbing factors have appeared. Power machinery by centralizing industry compelled a re-location of population and produced the modern city. This forced a specialization in occupation and drew the people away from the land until, as in Belgium the most densely populated country in Europe (659 per square mile), only one-fourth of the people are classed as agricultural and they produce less than one-half of the cereals they consume. By this specialization and the change from a barter basis to cash sale the returns of industry flow into the treasury of the company and the difficulties of a proper and satisfactory distribution among the workers are enormously enhanced. Whereas formerly owner, manager and worker were largely synonymous terms, now three distinct and often unacquainted if not antagonistic groups appear. By specialization, the worker performing only some one or two minute parts of work loses the emotional reaction which comes to the creator of a finished product and comes to think of himself in terms of a machine. Confirmation of this is afforded by an incident which occurred recently in a school for feeble-minded children. Thinking to interest the children and secure some useful products some looms for the making of rag carpets were introduced. The children were given the task of making long strips of carpet. At first all went well, then all interest was lost and no one wanted to work. Inquiry finally brought from a boy the comment, "Oh, you don't never get nothing done." The answer was appreciated - the long strips forgotten. Now only short rugs are made, which one pupil can finish in a few periods, and the looms rattle merrily all day long. Over against the evident and desirable increase in productivity must be set certain great problems which we here list without attempt at solution. Physical effects: diseases peculiar to occupations such as lead poisoning; accidents due to fatigue; indoor life with the increased liability to germ diseases helped along by lack of sunlight and by dust. Social effects: congestion in cities; changed conditions of home and family life; problems of labor and capital; problems of industrial organization; problems of vice and crime due in part to breakdown of old associations and institutions; breakdown of old emotional reactions; changed problems of education. Not one of these great questions of modern life is due primarily to any deliberate selfish attempt to exploit fellow men. They grow out of the changed conditions which no man could foresee, and lacking foresight could not prevent. Yet they must be solved if society is to flourish. "Progress," says Giddings, "is a form of motion and, like other forms of motion, starts reactions against itself." There are two ways of committing suicide. One may take his life by use of knife or revolver, by a dose of prussic acid and the end comes quickly; or he may gradually poison the system by opium or lead until slow death is produced. It is equally possible for a given society to introduce programs which must ultimately lead to decay even though the separate steps produce no perceptible result. The point is that we must realize what progress costs and stand ready to pay the bills whenever they are presented or else witness the downfall of our culture. There is nothing inherent within us which leads always to right choices or wise programs, whether of the individual or the group. This fact is often ignored. At all times we find in the community two types of men, though they may exist in a given man as regards different things, which we may term the conservative and the radical. A comparison of the two is instructive. The conservative usually comes from a group that has been successful under the old régime. He sees that the old program has worked well for his friends and assumes that it must serve others equally well, or that it is their own fault if it does not. These "others" he seldom knows personally. He does not meet them in his parlors, his clubs or his church. Knowing the value of the old and realizing that new conditions may cause trouble he opposes change, sincerely, though perhaps mistakenly. He believes in his people and his country and is often willing to sacrifice time, money, even life itself if need be. If of extreme type, we call him the reactionary for he would go back to still older standards. The radical, by contrast, is likely to come from a new and relatively unknown group. He has nothing to lose by change and so welcomes it. He sees that the higher positions are in other hands and believes that this is true because he and his friends have no chance to show what they can do. Lacking power and the restraining influences thereof he advocates change for the sake of change. He may be equally high-minded and patriotic and may see more clearly than his adversary the advantages of the new order. He is less likely however to appreciate the advantages of the present order, and his desire to get a hearing easily leads him to foolish and unwarranted state ments. Where does the truth lie as between these men? It must be confessed that it lies wholly in neither. There have been merits in the present order else it could not have endured. There are social values which must be preserved. Nevertheless improvement can only come through change, and therefore the change must come even though it brings troubles in its train. Man is likely to boast that he is governed by his intellect and that his decisions are based on a careful consideration of the merits of a question. This is seldom true. The dominant forces are emotional not intellectual in the average man at all times and often in the exceptional man. He is a foolish leader of the public who deals with his followers on an intellectual basis solely. He tells them that he will convince their minds but what he really does is to rub their backs the right way. As illustration, the proposed new constitution for the state of New York, so overwhelmingly defeated in 1915, was a vast improvement over the old, regardless of possible weaknesses. It was defeated by the votes of thousands, most of whom it is safe to say had never read it. It follows then that the solution of social questions lies in the readjustment of institutions that they may more adequately meet present needs. We can neither return to the alleged ideal conditions of the past, nor yet hope for a solution through some panacea which is the forerunner of Utopia. SUGGESTIONS FOR READING COOLEY, C. H. Human Nature and the Social Order. 1902. HOBHOUSE, L. T. Morals in Evolution. (3rd Edit.) 1915. KELLER, A. G. Societal Evolution. 1915. KIDD, B. Social Evolution. 1894. Ross, E. A. Social Psychology. 1901. WARD, L. F. Pure Sociology. 1903. WESTERMARCK, E. Origin and Development of the Moral Ideas. 1906. CHAPTER XI THE NATURE OF PROGRESS A million years ago the physical world was in all essentials the same as it is today. It is now what it will be a million years hence, when the things of which even Wells hardly dreams are the commonplaces of every school child. If we compare ourselves with the men of the early days, there is little reason to believe that there has been any great change in our nature or our needs. We require about as much food and drink, we must be kept as warm and we have about the same strength, physical or mental. We seem to be the same in our emotions and their expressions. We are no happier, no more satisfied with life, no less fearful of death. To be sure we no longer consider these matters in quite the same light, but there is no essential difference. Yet no one could claim that great and important changes had not taken place in the conditions of our life. Most of these changes to say the least have been brought about by man himself through his growing control of the physical world. It follows then that the marked changes have been in the field of our information, in our power of achievement. We can do things because we have learned how. Primitive man must have lived in warm regions until he discovered the art of firemaking and invented clothes. Since that time he has found his greatest opportunities in the temperate zones. Now these are not the richest zones, perhaps, but they are those in which he has found |