Shakespeare as a Common Good Conservative

Patrick Gray, professor of literature at the new University of Austin (UATX), was recently interviewed on Peter Adamson’s podcast The History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps. He argues there that Shakespeare was combating a neo-Senecan ethics of autonomy in much the same way that common good conservatives today combat the liberal/Kantian ethics of autonomy:

Rome for Shakespeare is the Rome of Seneca. This connection is important not least because Seneca is the model and inspiration for a contemporary of Shakespeare, the Dutch political philosopher Justus Lipsius, who in turn exercises a considerable influence on Kant. Kant’s emphasis on individual autonomy as in effect the greatest good is a legacy of the influence of Seneca. And it is a touchstone for the present-day liberal consensus as regards morality as well as politics. To put the connection a different way, when I was working on Shakespeare’s Roman plays, I wanted to find a contemporary point of view that most closely resembles his. Is he conservative? Progressive? Marxist? Libertarian? What? And what I realized is that the closest analogue of Shakespeare’s thought about politics in our time is what has come to be known as “post-liberalism” or “common-good conservatism,” such as we find in the works of authors such as Alastair MacIntyre and Patrick Deneen. Moreover, that similarity makes sense. Both authors, Deneen and Shakespeare, argue that a society where each individual is trying to maximize his or her autonomy at the expense of everyone else is a society that is doomed to oscillate between brittle autocracy and merciless civil war. Shakespeare sees this dynamic in a pre-Christian society, Rome; Deneen sees it in a post-Christian society, our world today.

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Some Reflections for Law Students

You’ve decided to go to law school. You have probably acted against the advice of family, friends, acquaintances, strangers, teachers, clergy, and, above all, lawyers. But as my late mother said to me often: some people have to learn things the hard way. I will not dwell on the decision to go to law school. But if you are reading Ius & Iustitium, you either are doing oppo research for your Conservatism Inc. job or you have an interest in the classical legal tradition. As many students are beginning law school this month, I thought I would offer some reflections for your edification.

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MacIntyre with the Jurists

Friday, November 12 was the second day of the annual fall conference of the Center for Ethics and Culture at the University of Notre Dame, dedicated this year to the topic of “Human Dignity in a Secular World.” As is customary, Alasdair MacIntyre, one of the most remarkable living philosophers, graced the event with what in European universities was traditionally called a lección magistral, a magisterial—that is, a Master’s—lecture. MacIntyre’s truly excellent lecture is available online, and highly recommended.

Over at The Postliberal Order, Patrick Deneen offers a crisp, suggestive summary of this “bombshell” lecture, in which MacIntyre, with delicious elegance and learned restraint, appeared to undermine the premise of the conference almost entirely. As Deneen recounts, MacIntyre began by reminding his audience that the modern concept of dignity was purposely developed in the wake of the Second World War as a kind of placeholder-notion, vacuous by design, “that people of various faiths, secularists, different traditions, and varying nationalities could agree upon as a basis for a decent political and social order.” One is reminded of Jacques Maritain shamelessly pointing out in 1947, regarding the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, that given the disagreement among the drafters and proponents of the declaration on the source of the rights, it was enough merely to enumerate them without committing to any view about what made them intelligible. Hence, dignity talk. It served as a stand-in for a minimum standard of treatment of persons, but without contributing very much to an understanding of what that minimum standard actually requires in practice. The only claim is that whatever it is, dignity is “inherent” to the human person as such.

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St. Thomas More and the Summons Ex Officio

Robert Bolt’s screenplays for Lawrence of Arabia, Doctor Zhivago, and A Man for All Seasons are classics of the genre, no doubt aided by David Lean’s brilliant adaptations of Lawrence and Zhivago. One might go so far as to say that the three make up a trilogy: each focuses on a man, more or less extraordinary, not least for his commitment to himself, swimming against the tide of events. One might say that Bolt focuses intensely on the individual who is true to himself at all costs. Of course, the emphasis must be on “at all costs,” since T.E. Lawrence, Yuri Zhivago, and Sir Thomas More all pay a high price for their integrity. The tide of events is, it turns out, much harder to resist than one might first imagine.

Bolt’s portrayals have been hugely successful. I dare say that far more people have seen Lawrence of Arabia than have ever read Seven Pillars of Wisdom, Lawrence’s account of the events depicted. This is, of course, too bad, since Seven Pillars of Wisdom, especially in the original, so-called Oxford Edition, is a wonderful book. But it is Bolt’s Sir Thomas More that has completely eclipsed the historical St. Thomas More, especially in Catholic legal circles. One, not quite random, example will suffice. Judge William Pryor, a perennial shortlist candidate for a Supreme Court seat under Republican administrations, lately a vocal opponent of what he calls (attempting to imitate the late Antonin Scalia’s wit and his positivism, though how successfully is an open question) “Living Common Goodism,” has said that he is inspired by the example of St. Thomas More.

He is far from alone. One hears Bolt’s speech about giving the devil the benefit of law quoted all the time, for example. It is taken, usually, as some devastating objection to governing with an end in mind. Every agent acts for an end, cf. III Cont. gent. c.2, but not the civil authorities. Of course, More never said it. Bolt bowdlerized a quip quoted by William Roper, More’s son-in-law. One of More’s sons-in-law was complaining that Cardinal Wolsey’s doorkeepers made a nice living for themselves ushering petitioners into the prelate’s presence when he was chancellor of England. A claimant needed some help getting justice from Wolsey, and Wolsey’s household was more than willing to oblige—for a price. More, on the other hand, was so scrupulously just that a petitioner could get access to him and plead his case just as easily for himself. More responded that he would do justice between his father and the devil. Not quite the passionate defense of the “rule of law” one sees in the movie.

One can play this game all day. The fact of the matter is that the reputation of St. Thomas More as a good liberal rests on a profound ignorance of More’s writings and a fondness for Robert Bolt’s depiction. More was an enthusiastic Counter-Reformation polemicist, who defended not only the theology of the Church but also her legal system. One example stands out. Late in his life—in fact, shortly before his final, fatal confrontation with Henry VIII—More engaged in an exchange of pamphlets with the protestant lawyer Christopher St. Germain, which touched in large part on the inquisitorial procedure of the Roman Church as it existed under the decretals. This exchange sheds light on Thomas More as a Catholic and a lawyer—but not, notably, a liberal. 

* * *

More’s last years have to be understood not only in the context of Henry VIII’s adultery but also in the context of More’s work as a Counter-Reformation polemicist. For the latter, More had official standing. On March 7, 1528 (N.S.), Bishop Cuthbert Tunstall of London commissioned More to write books in English in defense of the Catholic faith against protestant books, especially books by Martin Luther, which had been appearing in English. From the language of the commission, it is apparent that Tunstall was concerned that the English translations of Luther’s books required English answers specifically. Tunstall urged More to bring to bear the full range of his eloquence and wit in defense of the Catholic faith against the protestants and conceded to More the license to keep and read the protestant tracts that would otherwise be forbidden. 

More had already written a significant Counter-Reformation polemic when Tunstall commissioned him to take up the fight in English. In 1521, Henry VIII wrote a Defense of the Seven Sacraments against Luther’s Babylonian Captivity. Late in 1522, Luther, with his accustomed deference and tact, published an appalling Contra Henricum Regem Angliae. Henry asked More and Bishop John Fisher to respond. More responded to Luther quickly, though for unknown reasons the publication was delayed.

After receiving Tunstall’s commission, More wrote his Dialogue of Sir Thomas More, Knight, better known perhaps as the Dialogue Concerning Heresies, a title introduced in a subsequent edition. More lived up to Tunstall’s call to be a sort of English Demosthenes against the heretics: the Dialogue has been praised for its literary qualities no less than for its polemical value. Then, More published The Supplication of Souls in the fall of 1529, responding to a sixteen-page pamphlet that is remembered primarily because Thomas More responded to it. In the spring of 1532, More began his engagement with William Tyndale, who had responded to his Dialogue in 1531. The Confutation of Tyndale’s Answer would sprawl into eight books, published in 1532 and 1533, and is More’s longest work.

If few have read T.E. Lawrence’s Seven Pillars of Wisdom, I am confident that no one has read any of these works, least of all the Catholic lawyers who invoke St. Thomas More in defense of liberalism. One gets (from them) a vision of More as a lawyer and politician who, as Robert Bolt would have it, defends the rights of conscience against the incursions of tyrannous power. One does not see, or at least I do not remember seeing, much recognition that More was an enthusiastic participant in Counter-Reformation polemics and a defender of the Church’s law as it existed. It is, of course, easier than ever to read More. Yale University Press has recently brought out the very fine Essential Works of Thomas More, edited by Gerard Wegemer and Stephen Smith, collecting many of his Counter-Reformation tracts, letters, and other writings in a handsome volume. 

* * *

As I said, one of More’s final public battles—that is, before his very public battle with Henry VIII, which concluded with More’s glorious martyrdom—was with the lawyer Christopher St. Germain. St. Germain had, during the 1520s, written a couple of dialogues concerning the English common law and ecclesiastical law. Eventually these dialogues were published in English as Doctor and Student. St. Germain’s treatise was one of the important introductory texts in the common law until Blackstone’s Commentaries were published a couple of hundred years later. 

In December 1532, St. Germain published (anonymously) the Treatise Concerning the Division Between the Spiritualty and the Temporalty, allegedly in response to the increasing tensions between the laity and clergy in England. More, invoking Bishop Tunstall’s commission, published the Apology of Sir Thomas More, Knight, which was a lengthy response (via a digression) to St. Germain, in April 1533. In September, St. Germain responded to More’s apology with his dialogue, Salem and Bizance. More answered St. Germain again in November with his Debellation of Salem and Bizance, written in “few days.” Within a few months of November 1533, in the spring of 1534, More’s conflict with Henry VIII over the marriage to Anne Boleyn came to a head.

One ought to acknowledge, however, that More’s engagement with St. Germain was scarcely less dangerous than his refusal to acknowledge Henry’s marriage to Anne Boleyn or Henry’s pretended ecclesiastical supremacy. St. Germain was a protestant and was plainly part of Henry’s propaganda operation. Several editions of the Treatise Concerning the Division were published by the King’s printer. More’s sarcastic, penetrating critique could not help but attract unwelcome attention. Indeed, every indication is that it did. More, in his preface to the Debellation of Salem and Bizance, writing of the Apology, acknowledges that “some were very wroth therewith” and “diverse very great cunning men” were preparing answers to it. More no doubt understood that there were risks associated with pressing the point with the Debellation.

Among his many complaints, St. Germain criticized the practice (insofar as he understood it) of ecclesiastical courts summoning persons ex officio for examination for heresy without disclosing the identity of their accusers. According to St. Germain, this practice was authorized under Lucius III’s decretal Ab abolendam (c.9, X, de haereticis, V,7). St. Germain was, as Henry Ansgar Kelly has noted, simply expanding upon the House of Commons’ Supplication Against the Ordinaries of March 18, 1532. The Commons’ Supplication contained nine charges against the prelates of England, including a complaint about the practice of laity being summoned before their ordinaries and examined on charges of heresy without knowing who their accusers were. The Supplication may well have come out of Henry’s circle, so it is natural that St. Germain would keep up the propaganda support for a priority of the regime.

It is certainly true that Ab abolendam sets forth in very general terms a procedure by which laity could be summoned before their ordinaries for examination. The decretal speaks of those “qui vero inventi fuerint sola ecclesiae suspicione notabiles” (c.9, X, de haereticis, V,7 § Qui vero). And, unless they demonstrate their innocence to the bishop’s satisfaction, they are subject to the same penalties for heresy that are imposed upon heretical clergy and laity that have been found guilty. And it is certainly true that Boniface VIII’s decretal, Statuta quaedam (c.20, In VIto, de schismaticis, V,2), authorized withholding the identity of the accusers from the alleged heretic in cases of grave danger.

Richard Helmholz and Ansgar Kelly have both written on Thomas More’s specific knowledge of the canon law. Both take the position that More was not an expert in the decretals governing practice and procedure in the ecclesiastical courts, though More certainly defended the Church’s law. Ansgar Kelly takes the view that More, when push came to shove, knew enough about canon law, even if he was not an expert. And More was certainly familiar with some canonical texts. For example, Ansgar Kelly shows that More knew Lyndwood’s Provinciale, citing it in the fourteenth chapter of the third book of the Dialogue. Lyndwood’s commentary in the Provinciale was often of a technical, canonical nature.

It is likewise unclear how much canon law St. Germain really knew, except through the mediation of a couple of obscure manuals for confessors as opposed to the decretals or the standard commentaries on the decretals. For example, he holds out Ab abolendam as a one-off excess of Pope Lucius III. Ansgar Kelly observes that More knew that Ab abolendam had been confirmed for the most part by the Fourth Lateran Council in its decree Excommunicamus (c.13, X, de haereticis, V,7). Here one can go into the weeds very quickly. We can omit that for now. But, well founded or not, More’s response to St. Germain’s complaint is worth considering for a moment.

In the Apology, More accepts, at least arguendo, St. Germain’s charge that the prelates of England summon those suspected of heresy ex officio for examination. First, he says that the streets would swarm with heretics if no one could be examined for heresy without being confronted with a complaining witness. More claims that in many instances people will give a judge information secretly that they will not give openly. He also notes that in many cases, people, called to public examination, will perjure themselves before they give open testimony on a matter that has been proved with other evidence. 

Second, More argues that, even if someone summoned to give account before his ordinary for heresy cannot be proved guilty of heresy, he should still be given a penance for behaving in such a manner that his neighbors took him for a heretic. This is an astonishing argument, especially in the context of More’s argument to this point. St. Germain complained of ordinaries summoning laity ex officio for examination for heresy based upon “secret” evidence. More’s response first was that the secrecy was necessary to encourage accusation. Next, in response to St. Germain’s claim that people may be compelled to do penance without proof, More says that if they lived in such a manner as to give rise to accusations of heresy, they ought to do penance notwithstanding whether or not heresy could be proved. 

Finally, More analogizes to similar procedures in the common-law courts of England. He describes both bail procedure and grand jury procedure as analogies for the practice of being summoned ex officio and being put to penance. In both cases, the common-law courts might impose very stern punishments without the accused having a clear idea who had given evidence against him. Beyond this, More describes taking action as chancellor against public officials based upon secret evidence. This is, of course, scarcely less extraordinary than More’s previous argument. More’s defense of the canonical, inquisitorial procedure standing by itself is a challenge to the vision of More as a proto-liberal martyr of conscience. However, the fact that he saw the same procedures available in the English common law presents a much more serious challenge. None of the justifications More offers are notably liberal and none support the proposition that the English common law is a law of liberty, opposed to the Roman, continental tyranny of the civil law and the canon law.

* * *

Robert Bolt’s Thomas More is a compelling character, to be sure. However, it is simply incorrect to take More as a proto-liberal martyr of conscience. More was an enthusiastic participant in Counter-Reformation discourse and a vigorous defender of the laws and procedures of the Roman Church. In his exchange with St. Germain, More defended in sweeping terms the authority of ordinaries to summon laity before their courts and examine them for heresy without disclosing the evidence against them. He defended, over the course of his exchange with St. Germain and in his other polemical writings, other practices which we can leave to one side for now.

More saw no conflict between a summons ex officio for examination for heresy and certain common-law procedures. This ought to give the liberals who claim More’s patronage pause, too. One of the essential arguments against the classical legal tradition (or the common good) is that the Anglo-American common law tradition is somehow opposed to the continental, canonical ius commune. This is false and demonstrably so. However, the example of St. Thomas More’s defense of summons ex officio shows just how false it is.

Pat Smith

St. Benedict’s Rule and the penal law

Dom Cuthbert Butler’s Benedictine Monachism begins by quoting Viollet-le-Duc’s statement that, “[r]egarded merely from the philosophical point of view, the Rule of St. Benedict is perhaps the greatest historical fact of the Middle Ages.” Pius XII, in his Fulgens radiatur, praises Benedict’s monastic law as an “outstanding monument of Roman and Christian prudence.” While St. Benedict’s Rule is first and foremost a document governing common monastic life, it is, as Viollet-le-Duc, Butler, and Pius XII recognize, an example of the classical tradition and applicable more broadly. One particular area where the Rule offers great insight is penal law. St. Benedict offers a vision of the penal law that has significant value even today.

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Notes on the Ius Commune – Part I: The Hydra of Legal Positivism

Marx and Engels famously wrote in The German Ideology that «hundreds of earlier writers» (earlier, that is, than Max Stirner) agreed that «right originated from force» — i.e., from violence.

Anyone surveying the last 350 years of the history of jurisprudence may be excused for agreeing with them. It has been a history of monstrous heavings and shakings, where the law has been taken up and wielded as a tool for all kinds of delirious and utopian schemes. The common thread has been the demolition of the political-juridical principles of the prior order, which have been torn down, gutted, and redefined one by one. The justification for this razing of our juridical bastions has generally been connected to a claim that those old structures were offensive to the «rights of man». A claim about rights — a claim of justice — is thus at the heart of Modernity. But it is a claim of a perverted, defaced justice. «If the essence of “modern” culture is voluntarism (which is the intimate secret of rationalism)», wrote Cornelio Fabro, «one should not be astonished if the truth is then identified with action and right with force … The crisis of the world is a crisis of rights, in that it is first and foremost a crisis of their foundation, that is, of principles».1

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Magín Ferrer and the Fundamental Law of the Spanish Monarchy

Ernest Renan (author of a blasphemous Life of Jesus) once quipped that “hereditary monarchy is a political conception so profound that it is not within the reach of every intelligence to comprehend it.” Indeed, the doctrine of Christian monarchy was the crown jewel of classical public law. In order to introduce our readers to it, Ius & Iustitium presents here a translation of an excerpt from Fr. Magín Ferrer, O. de M.’s Fundamental Laws of the Spanish Monarchy (1843). It is a lucid and brief exposition of this theory from the pen of one of its great exponents.

Introduction

Magín Ferrer (1792-1853), a friar of the Royal and Military Order of Our Lady of Mercy, was one of the early writers—both doctor and pamphleteer—of the Carlist cause, the longest-living Catholic counter-revolutionary and integralist movement of the past two centuries.1 Carlism traces its origins to the break in 1833 of the Spanish royal house, when the death of Ferdinand VII pitted two lines, the agnate and the feminine, against each other.  The former was centered on the late King’s brother, the infante Don Carlos María Isidro (King Charles V), whose rights were founded on the old laws of the realm, and the latter on the infanta Isabel (called Isabel II), the King’s daughter, and on her mother, María Cristina of the Two Sicilies.  The followers of Don Carlos, Carlists, were the collection of anti-liberal, traditional forces of Spain, enemies of both the liberalism of the Cortes of Cádiz of 1812 and of the French-style absolutism of some reactionaries.  They traced their intellectual and moral roots back to the principles of the ancient Catholic Monarchy.  The followers of Isabel, the Isabelinos (or Cristinos, for her cunning mother), were their opponents: the forces of Spanish liberalism and their “conservative” enablers.

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A new edition of Wulfstan’s legal writings

Old English Legal Writings: Wulfstan
Edited and Translated by Andrew Rabin
Harvard University Press (Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library 66)

Archbishop Wulfstan of York is not a household name, even, one imagines, among those with an interest in the Anglo-American legal tradition. However, he was, in the years shortly before the Norman Conquest, a hugely influential figure in England. An accomplished prose stylist, jurist, and preacher, Wulfstan’s influence spanned the reigns of Æthelred the Unready and Cnut. He wrote a number of law codes for both kings—along with political tracts and extensive ecclesiastical legislation. A new edition, edited and translated by University of Louisville professor Andrew Rabin, collects these law codes, political tracts, and ecclesiastical laws. Taking the work as a whole, one finds in Wulfstan a remarkably well developed concept of the commonwealth, sustained by order and justice, animated by Christianity, implemented through his civil and ecclesiastical laws. 

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The Unwritten Law and the Order of the State

I have discussed elsewhere how St. Isidore of Seville’s Etymologies were hugely influential for later writers like Gratian and St. Thomas Aquinas. (The Etymologies were generally influential throughout the Middle Ages.) It is helpful, however, to see St. Isidore’s jurisprudence in action, especially when applied to a current problem. One of the preferred jurisprudential moves of liberalism is to reduce the order of the state to written law—written norms—and exclude from that order any unwritten law. St. Isidore (and, later, St. Thomas) demonstrate that such a move has no warrant in the classical legal tradition and, therefore, should be rejected outright. Indeed, the saints show clearly that the order of the state is far greater than whatever may be reduced to written law at any time.

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Recovering St. Isidore’s Etymologies in the Classical Legal Tradition

One of the most important sources in Christendom throughout the Middle Ages was St. Isidore of Seville’s Etymologies. A universal encyclopedia, the Etymologies was spread throughout Europe shortly after Isidore’s death and it remained an essential reference for scholars of all kinds thereafter. It has a special significance for the classical legal tradition, since writers like Gratian and St. Thomas Aquinas relied upon the Etymologies for their definitions of important legal concepts. Indeed, with an understanding of the Etymologies in mind, one can readily see how, for example, St. Thomas Aquinas developed the prevailing understanding of the natural law or insurrection. The Etymologies, therefore, is an essential component of the recovery of the classical legal tradition. 

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