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<h2> Chapter Nine ~~ The Conservation of Archaic Traits </h2>
<p>The institution of a leisure class has an effect not only upon social
structure but also upon the individual character of the members of
society. So soon as a given proclivity or a given point of view has won
acceptance as an authoritative standard or norm of life it will react upon
the character of the members of the society which has accepted it as a
norm. It will to some extent shape their habits of thought and will
exercise a selective surveillance over the development of men's aptitudes
and inclinations. This effect is wrought partly by a coercive, educational
adaptation of the habits of all individuals, partly by a selective
elimination of the unfit individuals and lines of descent. Such human
material as does not lend itself to the methods of life imposed by the
accepted scheme suffers more or less elimination as well as repression.
The principles of pecuniary emulation and of industrial exemption have in
this way been erected into canons of life, and have become coercive
factors of some importance in the situation to which men have to adapt
themselves.</p>
<p>These two broad principles of conspicuous waste and industrial exemption
affect the cultural development both by guiding men's habits of thought,
and so controlling the growth of institutions, and by selectively
conserving certain traits of human nature that conduce to facility of life
under the leisure-class scheme, and so controlling the effective temper of
the community. The proximate tendency of the institution of a leisure
class in shaping human character runs in the direction of spiritual
survival and reversion. Its effect upon the temper of a community is of
the nature of an arrested spiritual development. In the later culture
especially, the institution has, on the whole, a conservative trend. This
proposition is familiar enough in substance, but it may to many have the
appearance of novelty in its present application. Therefore a summary
review of its logical grounds may not be uncalled for, even at the risk of
some tedious repetition and formulation of commonplaces.</p>
<p>Social evolution is a process of selective adaptation of temperament and
habits of thought under the stress of the circumstances of associated
life. The adaptation of habits of thought is the growth of institutions.
But along with the growth of institutions has gone a change of a more
substantial character. Not only have the habits of men changed with the
changing exigencies of the situation, but these changing exigencies have
also brought about a correlative change in human nature. The human
material of society itself varies with the changing conditions of life.
This variation of human nature is held by the later ethnologists to be a
process of selection between several relatively stable and persistent
ethnic types or ethnic elements. Men tend to revert or to breed true, more
or less closely, to one or another of certain types of human nature that
have in their main features been fixed in approximate conformity to a
situation in the past which differed from the situation of today. There
are several of these relatively stable ethnic types of mankind comprised
in the populations of the Western culture. These ethnic types survive in
the race inheritance today, not as rigid and invariable moulds, each of a
single precise and specific pattern, but in the form of a greater or
smaller number of variants. Some variation of the ethnic types has
resulted under the protracted selective process to which the several types
and their hybrids have been subjected during the prehistoric and historic
growth of culture.</p>
<p>This necessary variation of the types themselves, due to a selective
process of considerable duration and of a consistent trend, has not been
sufficiently noticed by the writers who have discussed ethnic survival.
The argument is here concerned with two main divergent variants of human
nature resulting from this, relatively late, selective adaptation of the
ethnic types comprised in the Western culture; the point of interest being
the probable effect of the situation of today in furthering variation
along one or the other of these two divergent lines.</p>
<p>The ethnological position may be briefly summed up; and in order to avoid
any but the most indispensable detail the schedule of types and variants
and the scheme of reversion and survival in which they are concerned are
here presented with a diagrammatic meagerness and simplicity which would
not be admissible for any other purpose. The man of our industrial
communities tends to breed true to one or the other of three main ethic
types; the dolichocephalic-blond, the brachycephalic-brunette, and the
Mediterranean—disregarding minor and outlying elements of our
culture. But within each of these main ethnic types the reversion tends to
one or the other of at least two main directions of variation; the
peaceable or antepredatory variant and the predatory variant. The former
of these two characteristic variants is nearer to the generic type in each
case, being the reversional representative of its type as it stood at the
earliest stage of associated life of which there is available evidence,
either archaeological or psychological. This variant is taken to represent
the ancestors of existing civilized man at the peaceable, savage phase of
life which preceded the predatory culture, the regime of status, and the
growth of pecuniary emulation. The second or predatory variant of the
types is taken to be a survival of a more recent modification of the main
ethnic types and their hybrids—of these types as they were modified,
mainly by a selective adaptation, under the discipline of the predatory
culture and the latter emulative culture of the quasi-peaceable stage, or
the pecuniary culture proper.</p>
<p>Under the recognized laws of heredity there may be a survival from a more
or less remote past phase. In the ordinary, average, or normal case, if
the type has varied, the traits of the type are transmitted approximately
as they have stood in the recent past—which may be called the
hereditary present. For the purpose in hand this hereditary present is
represented by the later predatory and the quasi-peaceable culture.</p>
<p>It is to the variant of human nature which is characteristic of this
recent—hereditarily still existing—predatory or
quasi-predatory culture that the modern civilized man tends to breed true
in the common run of cases. This proposition requires some qualification
so far as concerns the descendants of the servile or repressed classes of
barbarian times, but the qualification necessary is probably not so great
as might at first thought appear. Taking the population as a whole, this
predatory, emulative variant does not seem to have attained a high degree
of consistency or stability. That is to say, the human nature inherited by
modern Occidental man is not nearly uniform in respect of the range or the
relative strength of the various aptitudes and propensities which go to
make it up. The man of the hereditary present is slightly archaic as
judged for the purposes of the latest exigencies of associated life. And
the type to which the modern man chiefly tends to revert under the law of
variation is a somewhat more archaic human nature. On the other hand, to
judge by the reversional traits which show themselves in individuals that
vary from the prevailing predatory style of temperament, the
ante-predatory variant seems to have a greater stability and greater
symmetry in the distribution or relative force of its temperamental
elements.</p>
<p>This divergence of inherited human nature, as between an earlier and a
later variant of the ethnic type to which the individual tends to breed
true, is traversed and obscured by a similar divergence between the two or
three main ethnic types that go to make up the Occidental populations. The
individuals in these communities are conceived to be, in virtually every
instance, hybrids of the prevailing ethnic elements combined in the most
varied proportions; with the result that they tend to take back to one or
the other of the component ethnic types. These ethnic types differ in
temperament in a way somewhat similar to the difference between the
predatory and the antepredatory variants of the types; the dolicho-blond
type showing more of the characteristics of the predatory temperament—or
at least more of the violent disposition—than the
brachycephalic-brunette type, and especially more than the Mediterranean.
When the growth of institutions or of the effective sentiment of a given
community shows a divergence from the predatory human nature, therefore,
it is impossible to say with certainty that such a divergence indicates a
reversion to the ante-predatory variant. It may be due to an increasing
dominance of the one or the other of the "lower" ethnic elements in the
population. Still, although the evidence is not as conclusive as might be
desired, there are indications that the variations in the effective
temperament of modern communities is not altogether due to a selection
between stable ethnic types. It seems to be to some appreciable extent a
selection between the predatory and the peaceable variants of the several
types. This conception of contemporary human evolution is not
indispensable to the discussion. The general conclusions reached by the
use of these concepts of selective adaptation would remain substantially
true if the earlier, Darwinian and Spencerian, terms and concepts were
substituted. Under the circumstances, some latitude may be admissible in
the use of terms. The word "type" is used loosely, to denote variations of
temperament which the ethnologists would perhaps recognize only as trivial
variants of the type rather than as distinct ethnic types. Wherever a
closer discrimination seems essential to the argument, the effort to make
such a closer discrimination will be evident from the context.</p>
<p>The ethnic types of today, then, are variants of the primitive racial
types. They have suffered some alteration, and have attained some degree
of fixity in their altered form, under the discipline of the barbarian
culture. The man of the hereditary present is the barbarian variant,
servile or aristocratic, of the ethnic elements that constitute him. But
this barbarian variant has not attained the highest degree of homogeneity
or of stability. The barbarian culture—the predatory and
quasi-peaceable cultural stages—though of great absolute duration,
has been neither protracted enough nor invariable enough in character to
give an extreme fixity of type. Variations from the barbarian human nature
occur with some frequency, and these cases of variation are becoming more
noticeable today, because the conditions of modern life no longer act
consistently to repress departures from the barbarian normal. The
predatory temperament does not lead itself to all the purposes of modern
life, and more especially not to modern industry.</p>
<p>Departures from the human nature of the hereditary present are most
frequently of the nature of reversions to an earlier variant of the type.
This earlier variant is represented by the temperament which characterizes
the primitive phase of peaceable savagery. The circumstances of life and
the ends of effort that prevailed before the advent of the barbarian
culture, shaped human nature and fixed it as regards certain fundamental
traits. And it is to these ancient, generic features that modern men are
prone to take back in case of variation from the human nature of the
hereditary present. The conditions under which men lived in the most
primitive stages of associated life that can properly be called human,
seem to have been of a peaceful kind; and the character—the
temperament and spiritual attitude of men under these early conditions or
environment and institutions seems to have been of a peaceful and
unaggressive, not to say an indolent, cast. For the immediate purpose this
peaceable cultural stage may be taken to mark the initial phase of social
development. So far as concerns the present argument, the dominant
spiritual feature of this presumptive initial phase of culture seems to
have been an unreflecting, unformulated sense of group solidarity, largely
expressing itself in a complacent, but by no means strenuous, sympathy
with all facility of human life, and an uneasy revulsion against
apprehended inhibition or futility of life. Through its ubiquitous
presence in the habits of thought of the ante-predatory savage man, this
pervading but uneager sense of the generically useful seems to have
exercised an appreciable constraining force upon his life and upon the
manner of his habitual contact with other members of the group.</p>
<p>The traces of this initial, undifferentiated peaceable phase of culture
seem faint and doubtful if we look merely to such categorical evidence of
its existence as is afforded by usages and views in vogue within the
historical present, whether in civilized or in rude communities; but less
dubious evidence of its existence is to be found in psychological
survivals, in the way of persistent and pervading traits of human
character. These traits survive perhaps in an especial degree among those
ethic elements which were crowded into the background during the predatory
culture. Traits that were suited to the earlier habits of life then became
relatively useless in the individual struggle for existence. And those
elements of the population, or those ethnic groups, which were by
temperament less fitted to the predatory life were repressed and pushed
into the background. On the transition to the predatory culture the
character of the struggle for existence changed in some degree from a
struggle of the group against a non-human environment to a struggle
against a human environment. This change was accompanied by an increasing
antagonism and consciousness of antagonism between the individual members
of the group. The conditions of success within the group, as well as the
conditions of the survival of the group, changed in some measure; and the
dominant spiritual attitude for the group gradually changed, and brought a
different range of aptitudes and propensities into the position of
legitimate dominance in the accepted scheme of life. Among these archaic
traits that are to be regarded as survivals from the peaceable cultural
phase, are that instinct of race solidarity which we call conscience,
including the sense of truthfulness and equity, and the instinct of
workmanship, in its naive, non-invidious expression.</p>
<p>Under the guidance of the later biological and psychological science,
human nature will have to be restated in terms of habit; and in the
restatement, this, in outline, appears to be the only assignable place and
ground of these traits. These habits of life are of too pervading a
character to be ascribed to the influence of a late or brief discipline.
The ease with which they are temporarily overborne by the special
exigencies of recent and modern life argues that these habits are the
surviving effects of a discipline of extremely ancient date, from the
teachings of which men have frequently been constrained to depart in
detail under the altered circumstances of a later time; and the almost
ubiquitous fashion in which they assert themselves whenever the pressure
of special exigencies is relieved, argues that the process by which the
traits were fixed and incorporated into the spiritual make-up of the type
must have lasted for a relatively very long time and without serious
intermission. The point is not seriously affected by any question as to
whether it was a process of habituation in the old-fashioned sense of the
word or a process of selective adaptation of the race.</p>
<p>The character and exigencies of life, under that regime of status and of
individual and class antithesis which covers the entire interval from the
beginning of predatory culture to the present, argue that the traits of
temperament here under discussion could scarcely have arisen and acquired
fixity during that interval. It is entirely probable that these traits
have come down from an earlier method of life, and have survived through
the interval of predatory and quasi-peaceable culture in a condition of
incipient, or at least imminent, desuetude, rather than that they have
been brought out and fixed by this later culture. They appear to be
hereditary characteristics of the race, and to have persisted in spite of
the altered requirements of success under the predatory and the later
pecuniary stages of culture. They seem to have persisted by force of the
tenacity of transmission that belongs to an hereditary trait that is
present in some degree in every member of the species, and which therefore
rests on a broad basis of race continuity.</p>
<p>Such a generic feature is not readily eliminated, even under a process of
selection so severe and protracted as that to which the traits here under
discussion were subjected during the predatory and quasi-peaceable stages.
These peaceable traits are in great part alien to the methods and the
animus of barbarian life. The salient characteristic of the barbarian
culture is an unremitting emulation and antagonism between classes and
between individuals. This emulative discipline favors those individuals
and lines of descent which possess the peaceable savage traits in a
relatively slight degree. It therefore tends to eliminate these traits,
and it has apparently weakened them, in an appreciable degree, in the
populations that have been subject to it. Even where the extreme penalty
for non-conformity to the barbarian type of temperament is not paid, there
results at least a more or less consistent repression of the
non-conforming individuals and lines of descent. Where life is largely a
struggle between individuals within the group, the possession of the
ancient peaceable traits in a marked degree would hamper an individual in
the struggle for life.</p>
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