From My Notebook, no. 12
“Is money-making
the same as household-management or a part of it or subsidiary to it? And it is subsidiary, is it so in the
same way as shuttle-making is subsidiary to weaving, or as bronze founding is
to the making of statues? For these two are not subsidiary in the same way; the
one provides instruments, the other provides the material, that is, the
substance out of which a product is made, as wool for the weaver, bronze for
the sculptor. It is obvious that
household management is not the same as money-making; it is the task of the one
to provide, the other to use; for what other activity than running the house is
going to make use of what is in the house? But whether money-making is part of
management or a different kind of activity altogether – that is a debateable
question, if, that is to say, it is the money-maker’s task to look around and
to see from what sources money and property may be derived.” (Aristotle: 4th century BCE: 1962. “The
Politics”, Book 1, Chapter 8, pp. 38. Translated by J. A. Sinclair, Penguin
Classics, Harmondsworth).
Comment
This is one of many
other paragraphs I could cite where `Aristotle mentions en passant of his main
thesis various activities that constituted separate established functions from
farming or shepherding, the principal activities of the established communities
with which he and his readers were familiar.
Reading this
extract I was struck by its relevance to my ‘debate’ last yearwith David
Graeber’s severe criticism of Adam Smith for his statements about the social
evolution and roles of “truck, barter, and exchange” in Wealth Of Nations (ch.
1, Book 1).
David Graeber makes
great play in his severe criticism of Smith for stating in 1776 that “trade”
emerged as “truck, barter, and
exchange” behaviours in early human societies. David believes this is manifestly wrong and he uses as his
crowning evidence against Adam Smith is from his search in the anthropological
literature, and his own fieldwork, is the fact that he found no references in
his or his colleagues’ work in the field to the effect that barter played any
role in the societies they studied, which societies are regarded by
anthropologists as precursors in respect of ‘modern’ societies.
Of course, it seems
farfetched to come to that conclusion given that they survived for millennia
without evolving into even simple forms of pre-market societies. This alone should provoke scepticism,
not about Smith’s reported fallacious assertions of a sequence of “truck,
barter, and exchange”, but instead about the significance of surviving
pre-market societies without that reported experience implied in Smith’s
assertion. The fact that such societies survived outside the geographical
domains of those societies that did develop is itself significant but not for
the reasons asserted by Dr Graeber.
They did not survive within that geographical area, either because they
were pushed by choice to move to more remote areas beyond the geographic
fringes or they were violently destroyed by the first appearances of evolving
property conscious, proto-changing societies, in the deep past during tens of
millennia ago.
Those societies
that remained within the hunter-gatherer technologies outwith the geographical
reach of those modern societies that made contact with them including that deep
past and up to relatively recently (in the past three centuries) often suffered
grieviously from those first contacts. [In this respect I would not expect any
people on Earth to benefit necessarily if it is ever visited by an high-tech,
alien society in some future millennia.]
When ‘primitive’
precursor societies are asked about their relationships they tended to consider
“trade” an alien idea set against their traditional relationships of
reciprocity and social solidarity.
Such evidence-based
rebuttals were produced with polemical vigour against Smith and his successors,
and the newer neo-classical economists, whom Graeber sternly mocked in his
“Debt: The First 5,000 Years , 2011. (Melville House Publishing, New York)
I remain sceptical
of his stern rebukes, not because I doubted his evidence from anthropology, but
from what I initially summed by responding that he and his colleagues asked the
wrong questions of the wrong people perhaps from an over emphasis of “exchange”
as meaning “trade”.
Anthropology is a
relatively new science, and, to its credit, is heavily evidence based.
Detailed studies of
societies that survived through to the 19th and 20th
centuries without contact with, for the sake of cutting though longish
qualifying statements, what we regard, as “modern” (NB: “modern” does not mean
“better” in all or any ways). Nor does it make any statements about what
happened once higher technology societies came into contact with them.
One observation we
might make is that those early societies that continued to live out their lives
as hunter-gatherers but remained in close proximity to societies that had
changed their modes of acquiring their subsistence through shepherding, and
eventually farming, either moved further away and out of their easy reach, or
they were violently eliminated of absorbed via forms of slavery.
Some were protected
to by geographical distance, though they too were eventually contacted and,
usually, severely treated by so-called “civilised” invaders (who seldom ceased
to invade and violently disrupt each other through to the 21st
Century).
So when travellers
from the 18th Century reported on surviving early societies (in the
Americas, Africa, Asia) their impressions were often accompanied by fancy and
fantasy than the more scientific reports of early anthropologists from the 19th
Century through to the 20th century. They reported on societies that
had remained outside the experience of several, in some cases many, millennia
of early the economies outside the experience of shepherding, farming and
commerce already well established mainly in Europe, North Africa, and Northern
Asia.
For reasons
discussed by Deidre McCloskey, the related technologies that grew out of elements
of commerce in largely agricultural societies in North Western Europe
increasingly widened the per capita income and product gap with the diminishing
number of the remaining earlier societies.
In Smith’s day
almost all of his knowledge about human societies were limited to the history
of European societies that showed considerable written evidence of the effects
of early commerce within largely agricultural societies over the 5 millennia of
written history. Smith had a good working knowledge of Latin and Greek classic
texts, and French, and some knowledge of Italian (his fluency in Latin
helped).
There is much
relevance to what we take for granted in our European, Middle-Eastern and Egyptian
history, and in varying degrees of awareness of the ancient empires of China
and India.
This takes us back
to my notebook notes of Aristotle above. Putting to one side his, and others, views
on the ethics of commerce, we can see in his reports of the apparently normal
existence of clear differences in the range of products and the divisions of
labour for separate industries technologically different from pure shepherding
and farming in 4th-century Europe that were associated with commerce
and monetary transactions.
The only contrast
Smith makes between what Europeans called “savage” societies in the 18th
century and labourers in commercial societies was in their relative ability to
consume products from developing market societies and the absence of such
products in surviving pre-market societies in the Americas and Africa (Wealth
Of Nations, Book 1, chapter 1).
Smith asserted boldly that the “poorest common labour” in Europe was
much better off in living standards than the richest and most powerful of
“savage princes”.
On this basis he
opens Wealth Of Nations with firm statements on the historic significance of
exchange behaviour, not necessarily confined to direct “trade” only (see his “Lectures
On Rhetoric and Belles Lettres”, 1762-3).
Societies that do
not evolve the means for at least proto-market exchanges, post-reciprocation
behaviours, survived as exhibits for anthropologists to study. Indeed, every human society could have
remained without ever evolving into market type economies (as appears to be the
case for all of then through the c.200,000 years of the homo sapiens from the
proto-human speciation from the common ancestor species of chimpanzees some six
million years ago in central Africa.
But some proto humans did evolve and, as their populations grew, so did
their occupation of geographical space from Africa into Asia. Over the millennia
they continued to evolve and the scope for studying those localised societies
that did not evolve in pace with societies in Europe and Asia from 12,000 years ago in this manner and from 500 years ago their geographical isolation shrunk rapidly (though some societies in Central America did begin to form elements of post-hunter gatherer societies relatively recently. Social evolution has always been more complex than a simple universal 'Stadial' sequence (such as in the "Four Ages of Man" sequence at the root of Smith's and others' speculations).
These
considerations show the limited relevance of Dr Graeber’s argument over Adam
Smith ‘supposed’ errors.
That is why examining the information in such works
as Aristotle’s, let alone the entire genre of classical literature, is vital for
our understanding of Smith’s assertions. It also shows how well-rooted in
history and pre-history were Smith’s speculations.[GK: Edited: 8 June]
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