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Polyconomics

Nov 26 2002


Supply-Side University
SSU Lesson #12: The Origins of Society

To: Students of Supply-Side University
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Ibn Khaldun on the Origins of Society

This is a guest lecture first published here on April 24, 1998, one that I especially
recommend to college men and women interested in the liberal arts, history and
the political economy. I’d first heard of Ibn Khaldun, a 14th century philosopher,
from Ronald Reagan, who loved to quote Khaldun’s observation that at the
beginning of great empires tax rates were low, and at the end they were high. I
began to take a closer look when I learned that Arnold Toynbee, one of the 20th
century’s leading historians, believed that Ibn Khaldun had produced the
greatest work on social science to come from the mind of man. After reading
through a small piece of Khaldun’s work, I have to admit I am awed by the man’s
genius. How could I have spent so much of my life in politics without being led to
him before? His insights into the nature of empires, why they rise and fall, are
especially relevant today, with the United States at the zenith of global power,
yet still vulnerable to attacks from unexpected sources that could bring about its
decline.

We’re going to spend the next three weeks on one segment of the massive
history of philosophy that he produced. Ibn Khaldun is not an Arab neo-platonist,
as his world view subsumes theirs and is an original one not previously
expressed in the world. This singular breakthrough is not only awesome, but
practically evidence of divine inspiration. What we will consider in the next three
weeks are selected fragments from the sixth book of his philosophy of history.
My aim is simply to allow you to be impressed with him and have you appreciate
the foundation he presents, on which you can build your own designs of the way
the world works. The following passages are presented with what at first seems
almost childlike simplicity, until you realize he is building this foundation brick by
brick, with seamless logic. In a way, the ancient philosophers become easier to
follow after seeing how Ibn Khaldun knits together the fabric of society. My
thanks to Cedric Muhammad, founder of www.blackelectorate.com who
recommended Khaldun’s Muqaddimah, a self-contained introduction to his
mammoth world history.

An Arab Philosophy of History: Selections from the Prolegomena
(Muqaddimah)of Ibn Khaldun of Tunis (1332-1406), edited by Charles Issawi.

SOCIETY AND STATE

Origins of Society

Human society is necessary. Philosophers express this truth by saying that man
is social by nature, i.e. he needs a society, or city as they call it. The reason for
this is that...each individual’s capacity for acquiring food falls short of what is
necessary to sustain life. Even taking a minimum, such as one day’s supply of
wheat, it is clear that this requires operations (grinding and kneading and
baking) each of which necessitates utensils and tools, which presuppose the
presence of carpenters, smiths, potmakers, and other craftsmen. Even granting
that he eat the wheat unground, he can only obtain it in that state after many
more operations, such as sowing and reaping and threshing, to separate the
grain from the chaff, all of which processes require even more tools and crafts.

Now it is impossible for an individual to carry out all the above-mentioned work,
or even part of it. Hence it becomes necessary for him to unite his efforts with
those of his fellow men who by co- operating can produce enough for many
times their number. Similarly each individual needs the help of his fellow men for
the purposes of defense. For God...gave to many brute beasts more power than
to man. Thus the horse, the ass and the bull are more powerful than man, while
the lion and elephant are many times as strong. And whereas enmity is natural
between animals, He gave to each kind an organ of self-defense. To man,
however, He gave the mind and the hand which, in the service of the mind, can
apply itself to the crafts and produce tools which take the place of the natural
organs with which other animals are endowed for self-defense. Thus spears
replace horns; swords, claws; shields, thick hides; and so forth, as was
mentioned by Galen in his book on the uses of organs.

But an individual human being cannot resist an animal, especially a beast of
prey, nor is his tool- using capacity of any avail unless he join with his fellow
men, for he cannot, unaided, make the many tools needed. And unless he so
co-operate with others he cannot obtain the food without which he cannot live,
nor defend himself, for want of weapons, but will fall a prey to the beasts and his
species will be extinct. Co-operation however, secures both food and weapons,
thus fulfilling God’s will of preserving the species. Society is therefore necessary
to man...and it is society which forms the subject of this science....

[Here is a parallel passage from Aristotle’s Politics, written 1700 years earlier: "A
social instinct is implanted in all men by nature, and yet he who first founded the
state was the greatest of benefactors. For man, when perfected, is the best of
animals, but, when separated from law and justice, he is the worst of all; since
armed injustice is the more dangerous, and he is equipped at birth with arms,
meant to be used with intelligence and virtue, which he may use for the worst
ends. Wherefore, if he have not virtue, he is the most unholy and the most
savage of animals, and the most full of lust and gluttony. But justice is the bond
of men in states, for the administration of justice, which is the determination of
what is just, is the principle of order in political society." Bk. One, Chapter 2
p.181.]

Origins of the State

....Human society having, as we have shown, been achieved and spread over
the face of the earth, there arises the need of a restraining force to keep men off
each other in view of their animal propensities for aggressiveness and
oppression of others. Now the weapons with which they defend themselves
against wild beasts cannot serve as a restraint, seeing that each man can make
equal use of them. Nor can the restraint come from other than men, seeing the
animals fall far short of men in their mental capacity. The restraint must
therefore be constituted by one man, who wields power and authority with a firm
hand and thus prevents anyone from attacking anyone else, i.e. by a sovereign.
Sovereignty is therefore peculiar to man, suited to his nature and indispensable
to his existence.

According to certain philosophers, Sovereignty may also be found in certain
animal species, such as bees and locusts, which have been observed to follow
the leadership of one of their species, distinguished from the rest by its size and
form. But in animals Sovereignty exists in virtue of instinct and divine
providence, not of reflection aiming at establishing a political organization....

It is maintained by some that rule can be founded on a Divine Law, commanded
by God and revealed by Him to a man whom He has so endowed with
outstanding qualities that other men willingly and unfeigningly obey him and
surrender themselves to him. But this proposition cannot be demonstrated: for
human society can exist without such a Divine Law, merely in virtue of the
authority imposed by one man or of the Social Solidarity which compels the
others to follow and obey him. And it is clear that the People of the Book and
those who have followed the teachings of the prophets are few in comparison
with the pagans, who do not have a book and who constitute a majority of the
inhabitants of the world. And yet these pagans have not only lived but have
founded states and left monuments. And until this day they form societies in the
extreme northern and southern zones. Their condition is therefore not one of
anarchy, i.e. of men left to themselves without restraint, for such a condition
cannot possibly exist....

State and Society

....The state is therefore to society as form is to matter, for the form by its nature
preserves the matter and, as philosophers have shown, the two are inseparable.
For a state is inconceivable without a society; while a society without a state is
well nigh impossible, owing to the aggressive propensities of men, which require
a restraint. A polity therefore arises, either theocratic or kingly, and this is what
we mean by state.

The two being inseparable, any disturbance in either of them will cause a
disturbance in the other; just as the disappearance of one leads to the
disappearance of the other. The greatest source of disturbance is in the
breakdown of such empires as the Roman, Persian, or Arab; or in the
[breakdown of a whole] dynasty, such as the Omayyad or Abbaside. Individual
rulers, such as Heraclius, or Anushirvan, or ’Abdel Malik Ibn Marwan, or Harun
al Rashid, are merely successive rulers and guardians of society. The
succession of such rulers does not affect society greatly for they resemble each
other closely. Moreover the real force which operates on society is solidarity and
power, which persists through [successive] rulers. Should such a solidarity
disappear, and be replaced by another solidarity which acts on society, the
whole Ruling Class would disappear and the disturbance thus caused be very
great... [Vol. II, p. 264]

Political Sanctions

....We have already refuted the view [declaring that no society can be constituted
without a Divine Law revealed by a prophet]. For one of the premises of this
view is that a Sanction can only be provided by a Divine Law which is blindly
obeyed by all because of their faith. Now this is false, for a sanction can be
provided by the power of the king, or of a ruling group, without there being any
Divine Law -- as took place, for instance, among the pagans who did not have a
Revelation or Sacred Book. Nay, conflict may stop if every person is clearly
aware, by the light of his reason, that he has no right to oppress his
neighbour....Oppression and strife might therefore cease...if men undertook to
restrain themselves.... [Vol. I, p. 345]

Social Solidarity Is Based on Kinship

Social solidarity is found only in groups related by blood ties or by other ties
which fulfill the same functions. This is because blood ties have a force binding
on most men, which makes them concerned with any injury inflicted on their next
of kin. Men resent the oppression of their relatives, and the impulse to ward off
any harm that may befall those relatives is natural and deep rooted in men. If the
degree of kinship between two persons helping each other is very close, it is
obviously the blood tie, which, by its very evidence, leads to the required
solidarity. If the degree of kinship is distant, the blood tie is somewhat weakened
but in its place there exists a family feeling based on the widespread knowledge
of kinship. Hence each will help the other for fear of the dishonour which would
arise if he failed in his duties towards one who is known by all to be related to
him. The clients and allies of a great nobleman often stand in the same
relationship towards him as his kinsmen. Patron and client are ready to help
each other because of the feeling of indignation which arises when the rights of
a neighbour, a kinsman, or a friend are violated. In fact, the ties of clientship are
almost as powerful as those of blood.

This explains the saying of the Prophet Mohammad, "Learn your genealogies to
know who are your near of kin," meaning that kinship only serves a function
when blood ties lead to actual co- operation and mutual aid in danger -- other
degrees of kinship being insignificant. The fact is that such relationship is more
of an emotional than an objective fact in that it acts only by bringing together the
hearts and affections of men. If the kinship is evident in acts as a natural urge
leading to solidarity; if it is based on the mere knowledge of descent from a
common ancestor it is weakened and has little influence on the sentiments and
hence little practical effect. [Vol. I, p. 235]

Ties of kinship come out most clearly among savage peoples living in
wildernesses, such as the Bedouins and other like peoples. This is because of
he peculiarly hard life, poor conditions and forbidding environment which
necessity has imposed upon such peoples. For their livelihood is based upon the
produce of camels, and camel breeding draws them out into the wilderness
where the camels graze on the bushes and plants of the desert sands; as we
mentioned earlier. Now the wilderness is a hard and hungry home, to which
such men adapted their nature and character in successive generations. Other
peoples, however, do not try to go out into the desert or to live with the nomads
and share their fate; nay, should a nomad see the possibility of exchanging his
condition for another he would not fail to do so. As a result of all this, the
genealogies of nomads are in no danger of being mixed or confused but remain
clear and known to all... [Vol. I, p. 236]

Proximity and a Common Life as the Basis of Solidarity

....Clientship and the mixing with slaves and allies can replace kinship [as the
basis of solidarity]. For although kinship is natural and objective it is also
emotional. For group ties are formed by such things as living together,
companionship, prolonged acquaintance or friendship, growing up
together, having the same foster parents, and other such matters of life and
death. Such ties once formed lead to mutual help and the warding off of injuries
inflicted on others; as can be commonly seen to occur. An example of this is
provided by the relation of dependence. For there arises a special tie between a
patron and those in his service which draws them close together so that
although kinship is absent the fruits of kinship are present.... [Vol. I, p. 332]

Solidarity in Tribes

....Aggressiveness and the lust for power are common characteristics of men
and whenever a man’s eye dwells on the goods of his neighbour his hand is apt
to follow it, unless he be checked by some restraint.... As regards towns and
villages, their mutual aggressiveness is checked by the governors and the State,
which restrain their subjects from attacking or oppressing each other; in other
words, the power of the rulers preserves the people from oppression, unless it
be the oppression of those same rulers. External aggression, for its part, is
warded off by means of walls and fortifications, which protect a city by night,
prevent surprises, and moreover supplement an otherwise inadequate defense;
while the garrisons of the State carry out a prepared and prolonged resistance.
In nomadic societies, intragroup aggressiveness is checked by the chiefs and
elders, owing to the prestige and respect with which they are regarded by the
tribesmen. Aggression from outside, aimed at their possessions, is warded off
by those of their young men who are noted for their bravery. And such defense
can succeed only when they are united by a strong social solidarity arising out of
kinship, for this greatly increases their strength.... [Vol. I, p. 233]

Transition From Tribal To Village and City Life and Consequent Weakening of
Solidarity

....The above [i.e. purity of race and tribal solidarity] holds true only for nomadic
Arabs. The caliph Omar said: "Learn your genealogies and be not like the
Nabateans of Mesopotamia who, if asked about their origins reply: ‘I come from
such and such a village.’" Those Arabs who took up a more sedentary life,
however, found themselves, in their quest for more fertile lands and rich
pastures, crowding in on other peoples -- all of which led to a mixture [of blood]
and a confusion of genealogies. This is what happened at the beginning of the
Muslim era, when men began to be designated by the localities [in which they
dwelt]. Thus people would refer to the military province of Qinnasrin or the
military province of Damascus or that of al ’Awasim. The usage then spread to
Spain.

This does not mean, however, that the Arabs were no longer designated by their
genealogies; they merely added to their tribal name a place-name which allowed
their rulers to distinguish between them more easily. Later on, however, further
mixture took place, in the cities, between Arabs and non-Arabs. This led to a
complete confusion of genealogies, and a consequent weakening of that
solidarity which is the fruit of tribal kinship; hence tribal names tended to be cast
aside. Finally, the tribes themselves were absorbed and disappeared and with
them all traces of tribal solidarity. The nomads, however, continued as they had
always been. "And God shall inherit the earth and all that are upon it." [Vol. I, p.
237]

Solidarity in Cities

It is evident that men are by nature in contact with and tied to each other, even
where kinship is absent; though, as we have said before, in such cases such
ties are weaker than where they are reinforced by kinship. Such contact may
produce a solidarity nearly as powerful as that produced by kinship. Now many
city dwellers are interrelated by marriage, thus forming groups of kinsmen,
divided into parties and factions, between which there exist the same relations of
friendship and enmity as exist between tribes.... [Vol. II, p. 267]

Solidarity Is the Basis of Sovereignty

The end of social solidarity is sovereignty. This is because, as we have said
before, it is solidarity which makes men unite their efforts for common objects,
defend themselves, and repulse or overcome their enemies. We have also seen
that every human society requires a restraint, and a chief who can keep men
from injuring each other. Such a chief must command a powerful support, else
he will not be able to carry out his restraining function. The domination he
exercises is Sovereignty, which exceeds the power of a tribal leader; for a tribal
leader enjoys leadership and is followed by his men whom he cannot however
compel. Sovereignty, on the other hand, is rule by compulsion, by means of the
power at the disposal of the ruler. Now rulers always strive to increase their
power, hence a chief who secures a following will not miss the chance of
transforming, if he can, his rule into sovereignty; for power is the desire of men’s
souls. And sovereignty can be secured only with the help of the followers on
whom the ruler relies to secure the acquiescence of his people, so that kingly
sovereignty is the final end to which social solidarity leads.... [Vol. I, p. 252]

Solidarity Is the Basis of Kingship

Kingship and dynasties can be founded only on popular support and solidarity.
The reason for this is, as we have seen before, that victory, or even the mere
avoidance of defeat, goes to the side which has most solidarity and whose
members are readiest to fight and to die for each other. Now kingship is an
honoured and coveted post, giving its holder all worldly goods as well as bodily
and mental gratifications. Hence it is the object of much competition and is
rarely given up willingly, but only under compulsion. Competition leads to
struggle and wars and the overthrow of thrones, none of which can occur
without social solidarity. Such matters are usually unknown to, or forgotten by,
the masses, who do not remember the time when the dynasty was first
established, but have grown up, generation after generation, in a fixed spot,
under its rule. They know nothing of the means by which God set up the
dynasty; all they see is their monarchs, whose power has been consolidated and
is no longer the object of dispute and who do not need to base their rule any
more on social solidarity. They do not know how matters stood at first and what
difficulties were encountered by the founders of the dynasty.... [Vol. I, p. 278]

Once the State Is Established Solidarity Becomes Superfluous

Once consolidated the state can dispense with social solidarity. The reason is
that newly founded states can secure the obedience of their subjects only by
much coercion and force. This is because the people have not had the time to
get accustomed to the new and foreign rule. Once kingship has been
established, however, and inherited by successive generations or dynasties, the
people forget their original condition, the rulers are invested with the aura of
leadership, and the subjects obey them almost as they obey the precepts of their
religion, and fight for them as they would fight for their faith. At this stage the
rulers do not need to rely on a great armed force, since their rule is accepted as
the will of God, which does not admit of change or contradiction. It is surely
significant that the discussion of the Imamate is inserted [in theological books] at
the end of the discussion of doctrinal beliefs, as though it formed an integral part
of them. From this time onward the authority of the king is based on the clients
and freedmen of the royal household, men who have grown up under its
protection; or else the king relies on foreign bands of warriors whom he attaches
to himself.

An example of this is provided by the Abbaside dynasty. By the time of the
Caliph Al Mu‘tasim and his son Al Wathiq, the kings relied mainly on clients
recruited from Persians, Turks, Deylamites, Seljuks, and others. These
foreigners soon came to control the provinces, the Abbasides’ rule being
confined to the neighbourhood of Baghdad. Then the Deylamites marched on
Baghdad and occupied it, holding the Caliphs under their rule. They were
succeeded by the Seljuks, who were followed by the Tatars, who killed the
Caliph and wiped out that dynasty.... The same is true of the Omayyad dynasty
in Spain. When the spirit and solidarity of the Arabs weakened, the feudal lords
pounced on the kingdom and divided it up among themselves. Each of them set
himself up as supreme lord in his region and, following the example of the
foreigners in the Abbaside empire, usurped the emblems and titles of
sovereignty....They upheld their authority by means of clients and freedmen and
with the help of tribesmen recruited from the Berbers, Zenata and other North
Africans.... [Vol. I, p. 279]

* *

In 700 years, nothing has really changed in how societies continuously are being
shaped, about the nature of solidarity and sovereignty. Now that the United
States alone is at the top of the global power pyramid, we can almost imagine
the dynamics that will flow from this fact into the next century. The U.S. is the
global sovereign power. All other heads of state are as chieftains of their
national tribes. It is an intricate maze to organize, though, with many hundreds of
languages and myriad religions, sects, ethnicities, national identities. It will take
great skill to organize over the next several years, decades and centuries. The
way the United States is now dealing with the severe tensions in the Middle
East, consulting with the global family through the United Nations, seems a step
in the right direction. At least Ibn Khaldun would probably think so.

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and benefit of one and all.  Then accept it and live up to it."
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