Chapter 4
part in the crisis which confronted Germany at the
close of the War, and accompanied the German delegation to Versailles in May 1919. He died in Munich in the following year, at the age of fifty-six. Partly as a result of prolonged ill-health, which com- pelled him for several years to lead the life of an invalid, partly because of his premature death, partly, perhaps, because of the very grandeur of the scale on which he worked, he was unable to give the final revision to many of his writings. His collected works have been published posthumously. The last of them, based on notes taken by his students from lectures given at Munich, has appeared in English under the title of General Economic History}
' Max Weber, General Economic History, trans. Frank H. Knight, Ph.D. (George Allen & Unwin). A bibliography of Weber's writings is
1(a)
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
f The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism was published in the form of two articles in the Archiv für Sozialwissenschaft und Sozialpolitik in 1904 and 1905.) Together with a subsequent article, which appeared in 1906, on The Protestant Sects and the Spirit of Capitalism^ they form the first of the studies contained in Weber's Gesammelte Aufsätze zur Religionssoziologie. On their first appearance they aroused an interest which extended beyond the ranks of historical specialists, and which caused the numbers of the Archiv in which they were published to be sold out with a rapidity not very usual in the case of learned publications. The discussion which they provoked has continued since then with undiminished vigour. For the questions raised by Weber possess a universal significance, and the method of his essay was as important as its conclusions. It not only threw a brilliant light on the particular field which it explored, but suggested a new avenue of approach to a range of problems of permanent interest, which concern, not merely the historian and the economist, but all who reflect on the deeper issues of modern society.
The question which Weber attempts to answer is simple and fundamental. It is that of the psychological conditions which made possible the development of capitalist civilization. Capitalism, in the sense of great individual undertakings, involving the control of large financial resources, and yielding riches to their masters
printed at the end of the charming and instructive account of him by his widow, Max Weber, Ein Lebensbild, von Marianna Weber (J. C. B. Mohr, Tübingen, 1926), See also tlconomistes et Historiens: Max Weber, un komme, une ceuvre, pqr Maurice Halbwachs, in Annales d'Histoire ^conomique et Sociale, No. i, January, 1929.
i(b)
Foreword
as a result of speculation, money-lending, commercial enterprise, buccaneering and war, is as old as history. Capitalism, as an economic system, resting on the V^cxUr organisation of legally free wage-earners, for the purpose of pecuniary profit, by the owner of capital or his agents, and setting its stamp on every aspect of society, is a modern phenomenon.
All revolutions are declared to be natural and inevitable, once they are successful, and capitalism, as the type of economic system prevailing in Western Europe and America, is clothed to-day with the unquestioned respectability of the triumphant fact. But in its youth it was a pretender, and it was only after centuries of struggle that its title was established-» For it involved a code of economic conduct and a system of human relations which were sharply at variance with venerable conventions, with the accepted scheme of social ethics, and with the law, both of the church and of most European states. So questionable an innovation demanded of the pioneers who first experimented with it as much originality, self-confidence, and tenacity of purpose as is required to-day of those who would break from the net that it has woven. What influence nerved them to defy tradition? From what source did they derive the -^principles to repKce it ? " '^ i
The conventional answer to these questions is to deny their premises. The rise of new forms of economic enterprise was the result, it is argued, of changes in • the character of the economic environment. It was due to the influx of the precious metals from America in the sixteenth century, to the capital accumulated in
* 1(C)
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
extra-European commerce, to the reaction of expanding markets on industrial organisation, to the growth of population, to technological improvements made pos- sible by the progress of natural science, Weber's reply, which is developed at greater length in his General Economic History than in the present essay, is that such explanations confuse causes and occasions. Granted that the economic conditions of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were, in some respects, though by no means in all, unusually favourable to an advance in economic technique, such conditions had existed from time to time in the past without giving birth to the development of capitalist industry. In many of the regions affected by them no such development took place, nor were those which enjoyed the highest economic civilization necessarily those in which the new order found its most congenial environment. The France of Louis XIV commanded resources which, judged by the standards of the age, were immense, but they were largely dissipated in luxury and war^The "America of theeTghteertth CiJfltUty was economically primitive, but it is in the maxims of Franklin that the spirit of bourgeois capitalism, which, rather than the grandiose schemes of mercantilist statesmen, was to dominate the future, finds, Weber argues, its naivest and most lucid expression.
To appeal, as an explanation, to the acquisitive nstincts, is even less pertinent, for there is little reason to suppose that they have been more powerful during '?!k.the last fe\y centuries than in earlier ages. "The notion that our rationalistic and capitalistic age is characterised by a stronger economic interest than other periods is
i(d)
Foreword
childish. The moving spirits of modern capitaUsm are not possessed of a stronger economic impulse than, for example, an Oriental trader. The unchaining of the economic interest, merely as such, has produced only irrational results: such men as Cortes and Pizarro, who were, perhaps, its strongest embodiment, were far from having an idea of a rationalistic economic life." ' The word "rationalism" is used by Weber as a term of art, to describe an economic system based, not on custom or tradition, but on the deliberate and systematic adjustment of economic means to the attainment of the objective of pecuniary profit. The question is why this temper triiimphed^ver the conventional attitude which had regarded the appetitus divitiarum infijiitus — ^the unlimited lust for gain — as anti-social and immoral.^ His answer is that it was the result of movements which had their source in the religious revolution of the sixteenth century.
Weber wrote as a scholar, not as a propagandist, and there is no trace in his work of the historical ani- mosities which still warp discussions of the effects of the Reformation J Professor Pirenne,^ in an illuminating ^ essay, has argued that social progress springs from below, and that each new phase of economic develop- ment is the creation, not of strata long in possession of wealth and power, but of classes which rise from humble origins to build a new structure on obscure foundations. The thesis of Weber is somewhat similar.
' Weber, General Economic History, trans. Frank H. Knight, PP- 355-6.
* Henri Pirenne, Les P^riodes de VHistoire Sociale du Capitalisme (Hayez, Brussels, 1914).
1(e)
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
The pioneers of the modern economic order were, he
,] argues, parvenus y who elbowed their way to success in
the teeth of the established aristocracy of land and
commerce. The tonic that braced them for the conflict
was a new copcf^pti^^" ^f rpliginn^ wKi^ih taught them
to rpgrard the_purs,ijjt^ pf wealth as, not merely an
.^acLvantage^ but a_ duty. This conception welded into
a disciplined force the still feeble bourgeoisie ^ heightened
its energies, and cast a halo of sanctification round its
LjConvenient vices. What is significant, in short, is not
T^ the strength of the motive of economic self-interest,
^ which is the commonplace of all ages and demands no]
1! explanation. It is the change of moral standards which
converted a natural frailty into an ornament of the
spirit, and canonized as the economic virtues habits
which in earlier ages had been ^
1 The force which produced it was the creed associated V \s^ith the name of Calvin. Capitalism was the social {^ .counterpart of Calvinist theology.
"X The central idea to which Weber appeals in con- firmation of his theory is expressed in the characteristic phrase **a calling." For Luther, as for most mediaeval theologians, it had normally meant the state of life in which the individual had been set bv Heaven, and
(
against which it was impious to rebel. 'l"o the Calvinist, Weber argues, the calling is not a condition in which the individual is born, but a strenuous and exacting enterprise to be chosen bj^himself , and to be pursued with a sense of rehgimis responsihihty. Baptized in the bracing, if icy, waters of Calvinist theology, the life of business, once regarded as perilous to the soul — summe periculosa est emptionis et venditionis negotiatio — 2
Foreword
acquires a new sanctity. Labout-js_-QüL.03erely an economic means : it is a spiritual end. Covetousness^ if '>^ 2l danger to the^oul, is a less formidable menace than sloth. So far from poverty being melito^rious, it is a duty to choose the more profitable occupation. So far "/ Ifoift-there^beingan inevitableconflict between money- making_and43iety Tthey^are^ natural^ alJl^ for the virtues incumbent on the elect — diligence, thriit^ sobriety, prudence — are the_jnost reliable passporL to com- mercial_2ros2erity. Thus the pursuit of riches, which ^ once had been fe3red^;aSLllit:_iUieiy]f;;;5|HP&l4gion , was I now_3:dcmn£d.-_.as_Jts__ally--^The habits "and^insti- tutions in which that philosophy found expression survived long after the creed which was their parent had expired, or had withdrawn from Europe to more congenial cn^es.' If capitalism begins as the practical idealism of the aspiring bourgeoisie , it ends, Weber suggests in his concluding pages, as an orgy of materialism.
Un England the great industry grew by gradual ^ increments over a period of centuries, and, since the English class system had long been based on differences of wealth, not of juristic status, there was no violent contrast between the legal foundations of the old order /) and the new. Hence in England the conception of ^, capitalism as a distinct and peculiar phase of social *^%i, ' development has not readily been accepted. It is still ^^ -^ possible for writers, who in their youth have borne ^ with equanimity instruction on the meaning of feudal- ^ - ism, to dismiss capitalism as an abstraction of theorists or a catchword of politicians.
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
The economic history of the Continent has moved by different stages from that of England, and the categories employed by Continental thinkers have accordingly been different. In France, where the •site on which the modern economic system was to be erected was levelled by a cataclysm, and in Germany, which passed in the fifty years between 1850 and 1900 through a development that in England had occupied two hundred, there has been little temptation to question that capitalist civilization is a phenomenon differing, not merely in degree, but in kind, from the social order preceding it. It is not surprising, therefore, that its causes and characteristics should have been one of the central themes of historical study in both. The discussion began with the epoch- making work of Marx, who was greater as a sociologist than as an economic theorist, and continues unabated. Its most elaborate monument is Sombart's Der Modertie Kapitalismus.
The first edition of Sombart's book appeared in 1902. Weber's articles, of which the first was published two years later, were a study of a single aspect of the same problem. A whole literature ^ has arisen on the subject
* See, in particular, the following: E. Troeltsch, Die Sozialen Lehren der christlichen Kirchen und Gruppen (1912); F. Rachfahl, Kalvinismus und Kapitalismus {Internationale Wochenschrift, 1909, i. III); B. L. Brentano, Die Anfänge des Modernen Kapitalismus (1916) and Der Wirthschaftende Mensch in der Geschichte (191 1); W. Sombart, Die Juden und das Wirthschaftslehen (191 1 . Eng. trans. The Jews and Modern Capitalism, 1913), and Der Bourgeois (1913. Eng. trans. The Quint- essence of Modern Capitalism, 1915); G. v. Schulze-Gaevernitz, " Die Geistesgeschichtlichen Grundlagen der Anglo- Amerikanischen Weltsuprematie. III. Die Wirthschaftsethik des Kapitalismus" {Archiv für Sozialwissenschaft und Sozialpolitik, Bd. 61, Heft 2); H. S^e, *' Dans quelle mesure Puritains et Juifs ont-ils contribuö au Progres du Capitalisme Moderne?" {Revue Historique, t. CLV, 1927)
.11
I Foreword
discussed in them. How does Weber's thesis stand to-day, after a quarter of a century of research and criticism ?
The interpretation of rehgious beHefs and social institutions as different expressions of a common psychological attitude, which Weber elaborated in his Aufsätze zur Religionssociologie^ is no longer so novel as when he advanced it. Once stated, indeed, it has the air of a platitude. The capacity of human beings to departmentalize themselves is surprising, but it is not unlimited. It is obvious that, in so far as doctrines as to man's place in the universe are held with conviction, they will be reflected in the opinions formed of the nature of the social order most conducive to well-being, and that the habits moulded by the pressure of the economic environment' will in turn set their stamp on religion . Nor can Weber's contention be disputed that Calvinism, at least in certain phases of its history, was associated with an attitude to questions of social ethics which contemporaries regarded as peculiarly its own. Its critics attacked it as the sanctimonious ally of commercial sharp practice. Its admirers applauded it
and Les Origines du Capitalisme Moderne (igzb) ; M. Halbwachs, " Les Origines Puritaines du Capitalisme Moderne " (Revue d'histoire et Philosophie religieuses, March-April 1925) and "ficonomistes et His- toriens : Max Weber, une vie, un ceuvre " (Annales d'Histoire Eco- nomique et Sociale, No. i, 1929); H, Häuser, Les Debuts du Capitalisme Moderne (igzj); H. G. Wood, "The Influence of the Reformation on ideas concerning Wealth and Property," in Property, its Rights and Duties (1913); Talcott Parsons, " Capitalism in Recent German Literature" (Journal of Political Economy, December 1928 and February 1929); Frank H. Knight, "Historical and Theoretical Issues in the Problem of Modern Capitalism" (Journal of Economic and Business History, November 1928); Kemper Fulberton, "Cal- vinism and Capitalism" (Harvard Theological Reviezv, July, 1928).
5
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
as the school of the economic virtues. By the middle of the seventeenth century the contrast between the social conservatism of Catholic Europe and the strenuous enterprise of Calvinist communities had become a commonplace. "There is a kind of natural inaptness," wrote a pamphleteer in 1671, "in the Popish religion to business, whereas, on the contrary, among the Reformed, the greater their zeal, the greater their inclination to trade and industry, as holding idleness unlawful." The influence of Calvinism was frequently adduced as one explanation of the economic prosperity of Holland. The fact that in England the stronghold of Nonconformity was the commercial classes was an argument repeatedly advanced for tolerating Non- conformists. .
/ In cmphasTzingrtherefore, the connection betwee^
religious radicalism and economic progress, Webei called attention to an interesting phenomenon, atP which previous writers had hinted, but which none, had yet examined with the same wealth of learning and|- philosophical insight. (The significance"to~be'äscnbedto it, and, in particulaf;ihe relation of Calvinist influences to the other forces making for economic innovation, is a different and more difficult question. His essay was confined to the part played by religious movements in creating conditions favourable to the growth of a new type of economic civilization, and he is careful to guard himself against the criticism that* he under- estimates the importance of the parallel developments in the world of commerce, finance, and industry. It is obvious, however, that, until the latter have been examined, it is not possible to determine the weight to 6
1
Foreword
be assigned to the former. It is arguable, at least, that, instead of Calvinism producing the spirit of Capitalism, ,/ both would with equal plausibility be regarded as different effects of changes in economic organisation and social structure.
It is the temptation of one who expounds a new and fruitful idea to use it as a key to unlock all doors, and to explain by reference to a single principle phenomena which are, in reality, the result of several converging causes ."^~Weber's essay is not altogether free, perhaps, from the defects of its qualities. It appears occasionally to be somewhat over-subtle in' ascribing to intellectual and moral influences develop- ments which were the result of more prosaic and mundane forces, and which appeared, irrespective of the character of religious creeds, wherever external conditions offered them a congenial environment. / "Capitalism" itself is an ambiguous, if indispensable, word, and Weber's interpretation of it seems sometimes to be open to the criticism of Professor See,^ that he simplifies and limits its meaning to suit the exigencies of his argument. There was no lack of the "capitalist spirit" in the Venice and Florence of the fourteenth century, or in the Antwerp of the fifteenth. Its develop- ment in Holland and England, it might not unreason- ably be argued, had less to do with the fact that they, or certain social strata in them, accepted the Calvinist version of the Reformation, than with large economic movements and the social changes produced by them.
t ' H. S^e, " Dans quelle mesure Puritains et Juifs ont-ils contribu^ |au Progrfes Capitalisme Moderne?" {Revue Historique, t. CLV, ii927).
' 7
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
**Ce que MM. Weber et Troeltsch," writes Professor Pirenne,» "prennent pour I'esprit Calviniste, c'est precisement I'esprit des hommes nouveaux que la revolution economique du temps introduit dans la vie des affaires, et qui s'y opposent aux traditionalistes auxquels ils se substituent." Why insist that causation can work in only one direction ? Is it not a little artificial to suggest that capitalist enterprise had to wait, as Weber appears to imply, till religious changes had produced a capitalist spirit? Would it not be equally plausible, and equally one-sided, to argue that the religious changes were themselves merely the result of economic movements ?
If Weber, as was natural in view of his approach to the problem, seems to lay in the present essay some- what too exclusive an emphasis upon intellectual and ethical forces, his analysis of those forces themselves requires, perhaps, to be supplemented. Brentano 's criticism, that the political thought of the Renaissance was as powerful a solvent of conventional restraints as the teaching of Calvin, is not without weight. In England, at any rate, the speculations of business men and economists as to money, prices, and the foreign exchanges, which were occasioned by the recurrent financial crises of the sixteenth century and by the change in the price level, were equally effective in undermining the attitude which Weber called tradi- tionalism. Recent studies of the development of economic thought suggest that the change of opinion on economic ethics ascribed to Calvinism was by no
' H. Pirenne, Les Periodes de VHistoire Sociale du Capitalisme (1914). 2
8
Foreword
means confined to it, but was part of a general intel- lectual movement, which was reflected in the outlook of Catholic, as well as of Protestant, writers. Nor was the influence of Calvinist teaching itself so uniform in character, or so undeviating in tendency, as might be inferred by the reader of Weber's essay. On the contrary, it varied widely from period to period and coimtry to country, with differences of economic conditions, social tradition, and political environment. It looked to the past as well as to the future. If in some of its phases it was on the side of change, in others it was conservative.
Most of Weber's illustrations of his thesis are drawn from the writings of English Puritans of the latter part of the seventeenth century. It is their teaching which supplies him with the materials for his picture of the pious bourgeois conducting his business as a calling to which Providence has summoned the elect. Whether the idea conveyed by the word "calling" is so peculiar to Calvinism as Weber implies is a question for theologians; but the problem, it may be suggested, is considerably more complex than his treatment of it suggests. For three generations of economic develop- ment and political agitation lay between these writers and the author of the Institutes. The Calvinism which fought the English Civil War, still more the Calvinism which won an uneasy toleration at the Revolution, was not that of its founder.
Calvin's own ideal of social organization Is revealed by the system which he erected at Geneva. It had been
/heocracy administered by a dictatorship of ministers.
I "the most perfect school of Christ ever seen on
c 9
4
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
earth since the day of the Apostles", the rule of life had been an iron collectivism. A godly discipline had been the aim of Knox, of the Reformed Churches in France, and of the fathers of the English Presbyterian Movement; while a strict control of economic enter- prise had been the policy first pursued by the saints in New England. The Calvinism, both of England and Holland, in the seventeenth century, had found its way to a different position. It had discovered a com- promise in which a juster balance was struck between prosperity and salvation, and, while retaining the theology of the master, it repudiated his scheme of social ethics. Persuaded that "godliness hath the promise of this life, as well as of the life to come," it resisted, with sober intransigeance, the interference in matters of business both of the state and of divines. It is this second, individualistic phase of Calvinism, rather than the remorseless rigours of Calvin himself, which may plausibly be held to have affinities with the temper called by Weber "the spirit of Capitalism." The question which needs investigation is that of the causes which produced a change of attitude so con- venient to its votaries and so embarrassing to their pastors.
It is a question which raises issues that are not discussed at length in Weber's essay, though, doubtless, he was aware of them. Taking as his theme, not the conduct of Puritan capitalists, but the doctrines of Puritan divines, he pursues a single line of inquiry with masterly ingenuity. His conclusions are illuminat- ing; but they are susceptible, it may perhaps be heid, of more than one interpretation. There was action j^nd
10
)
Foreword
reaction, and, while Puritanism helped to mould the social order, it was, inits turn» jnoulded_by it. It is instructive to "'fFaCeT'with Weber, the influence of religious ideas on economic development. It is not less important to grasp the effect of the economic arrange- ments accepted by an age on the opinion which it holds of the province of religion.
R. H. TAWNEY
74.
^
///
II
AUTHOR'S INTRODUCTION
A PRODUCT of modern European civilization, studying any problem of universal history, is bound to ask him- self to ^hat ^combination of circumstances the fact should be attributed that in Western civilization, and in Western civilization only, cultural phenomena have appeared which(äs we like to think) lie in a line~of development having^ universal significance and value.
Only in the West does science exist at a stage of development which we recognize to-day as valid. Knrpiriral knowledge, reflection on problems of the cosmos and of life, philosophical and theological wisdom of the most profound sort, are not confined to it. thougiTm the case of Ihe last the full development of a_§ystematic theology must be credited to Christianity under the influence of Hellenism, since there were only fragments m Islam and in a few Indian sects. In short, knowledge and observation of great refinement have existed elsewhere, above all in India, China, Babylonia, Egypt. But in Babylonia and elsewhere astronomy lacked — ^which makes its development all the more astounding — ^the mathematical foundation which it first received from the Greeks. The Indian geometry had no rational proof; that was another product of the Greek intellect, also the creator of mechanics and physics. The Indian natural sciences, though well developed in observation, lacked the method of experiment, which was, apart from begin- nings in antiquity, essentially a product of the Renaissance, as was the modern laboratory. Hence medicine, especially in India, though highly developed
13
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
in empirical technique, lacked a biological and par- ticularly a biochemical foundation. A rational chemistry has been absent from all areas of culture except the West.
The highly developed historical scholarship of China did not have the method of Thucydides. Machiavelli, it is true, had predecessors in India; but all Indian political thought was lacking in a systematic method comparable to that of Aristotle, and, indeed, in the possession of rational concepts. Not all the anticipa- tions in India (School of Mimamsa), nor the extensive codification especially in the Near East, nor all the Indian and other books of law, had the strictly syste- matic forms of thought, so essential to a rational juris- prudence, of the Roman law and of the Western law under its influence. A structure like the canon law is known only to the West.
A similar statement is true of art. The musical ear of other peoples has probably been even more sensi- tively developed than our own, certainly not less so. Polyphonic music of various kinds has been widely distributed over the earth. The co-operation of a number of instruments and also the singing of parts have existed elsewhere. All our rational tone intervals have been known and calculated. But rational har- monious music, both counterpoint and harmony, formation of the tone material on the basis of three triads with the harmonic third; our chromatics and enharmonics, not interpreted in terms of space, but, since the Renaissance, of harmony; our orchestra, with its string quartet as a nucleus, and the organization of ensembles of wind instruments; our bass accompani-
14
Author's Introduction
ment; our system of notation, which has made possible the composition and production of modem musical works, and thus their very survival; our sonatas, symphonies, operas; and finally, as means to all these, our fundamental instruments, the organ, piano, violin, etc.; all these things are known only in the Occident, although programme music, tone poetry, alteration of tones and chromatics, have existed in various musical traditions as means of expression.
In architecture, pointed arches have been used else- where as a means of decoration, in antiquity and in Asia ; presumably the combination of pointed arch and cross-arched vault was not unknown in the Orient. But the rational use of the Gothic vault as a means of distributing pressure and of roofing spaces of all forms, and above all as the constructive principle of great monumental buildings and the foundation of a style extending to sculpture and painting, such as that created by our Middle Ages, does not occur elsewhere. The technical basis of our architecture came from the Orient. But the Orient lacked that solution of the problem of the dome and that type of classic rational- ization of all art — in painting by the rational utilization of lines and spatial perspective — which the Renaissance created for us. There was printing in China. But a printed literature, designed only for print and only possible through it, and, above all, the Press and periodicals, have appeared only in the Occident. Institutions of higher education of all possible types,, even some superficially similar to our universities, or at least academies, have existed (China, Islam). But a rational, systematic, and specialized pursuit of science,
^ IS
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
with trained and specialized personnel, has^ only existed in the West in a sense at all approaching its present dominant place in our culture. Above all is this true of the trained official, the pillar of both the modern State and of the economic life- of the West. He forms a type of which there have heretofore only been suggestions, which have never remotely ap- proached its present importance for the social order. Of course the official, even the specialized official, is a very old constituent of the most various societies. But no country and no age has ever experienced, in the same sense as the modern Occident, the absolute and complete dependence of its whole existence, of the political, technical, and economic conditions of its life, on a specially trained organization of officials. The most important functions of the everyday life of society have come to be in the hands of technically, commercially, and above all legally trained govern- ment officials.
Organization of political and social groups in feudal classes has been common. But even the feudal^ state of rex et regnum in the Western sense has only been known to our culture. Even more are parliaments of periodically elected representatives, with government by demagogues and party leaders as ministers respon- sible to the parliaments, peculiar to us, although there have, of course, been parties, in the sense of organiza- tions for exerting influence and gaining control of political power, all over the world. In fact, the State itself, in the sense of a political association with a ra tional, written constitution, rationally ordained law, anvd an administration bound to rational rules or laws, i6'
Introduction
administered by trained officials, is known, in this combination of characteristics, only in the Occident, despite all other approaches to it.
^And the same is true of the most fateful force in our nioaern life, capitalism. The impulse to arqnisitinn, , pursuit_of gain, of money, of the, grpatpst pngsjhlp amount "f money^ has in itself nothing to do with capitalismj^his impulse exists and has existed among waiters, physicians, coachmen, artists, prostitutes, dis- honest officials, soldiers, nobles, crusaders, gamblers, ^ and beggars. One may say that it has been common to ■^' all sorts and conditions of men at all times f^pH \n nÜ '^^ cniintries nf the f^arth, whprf^vpr thf^ nKj^Ptlye possi- bility ^f it jp or has b^^n givfn It^should be taught in the kindergarten of cultural history that this naive id^a oTcäpitalism must be given up once and for all. Un- limited jgreed for gain is not in the least identical with capitalismj ?inH i« still less its spirit- Papitplism mny even be identical with thp r^Qt-ramtj nr at |pQgt ^ rM\^^?\
tempering^ of this irrational impulse. \But capitalism i^ /^ identical with the pursuit of profit, and forever renewed\ profit, by means of continuous, rational, capitalistic eaterprisei-For it must be so: in a wholly capitalistic order of society, an individual capitalistic enterprise which did not take advantage of its opportunities for profit-making would be doomed to extinction. ( Let us now define our terms sornewhat_more care.- fully than is generally done. We will define a capitalistic economic flrtinn~äR~nnp"whirh rests on the expectation of profit by the utilization of opportunities for exchange, that is on (formally) peaceful chances of profit. Acqui- sition by force (formally and actually) follows its own
17
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
particular laws, and it is not expedient, however little one can forbid this, to place it in the same category with action which is, in the last analysis, oriented to profits from exchange. ^ Where capitalistic acquisition is rationally pursued, the corresponding action is adjusted to calculations in terms of capital. This means that the action is adapted to a systematic utilization of goods or personal services as means of acquisition in such a way that, at the close of a business period, the balance of the enterprise in money assets (or, in the case of a continuous enterprise, the periodically estimated money value of assets) exceeds the capital, i.e. the estimated value of the material "^eans of production used for acquisition in exchange. It makes no difference whether it involves a quantity of goods entrusted in natura to a travelling merchant, the proceeds of which may consist in other goods in natura acquired by trade, or whether it involves a manufacturing enterprise, the assets of which consist of buildings, machinery, cash, raw materials, partly and wholly manufactured goods, which are balanced against liabilities. The important fact is always that a calculation of capital in terms of money is made, whether by modern book-keeping methods or in any other way, however primitive and crude. Everything is done in terms of balances : at the beginning of the enterprise an initial balance, before every individual decision a calculation to ascertain its probable profit- ableness, and at the end a final balance to ascertain how much profit has been made. For instance, the initial balances of a commenda ^ transaction would determine an agreed money value of the assets put into i8
Introduction
it (so far as they were not in money form already), and a final balance would form the estimate on which to base the distribution of profit and loss at the end. So far as the transactions are rational, calculation under- lies every smgle action oi the partners. 1 hat a really accurate calculation or estimate may not exist, that the procedure is pure guess-work, or simply traditional and conventional, happens even to-day in every form of capitalistic enterprise where the circumstances do not demand strict accuracy. But these are points affecting only the degree of rationality of capitalistic acquisition.
For the purpose of this conception all that matters is that an actual adaptation of economic action to a com- parison of money income with money expenses takes place, no matter how primitive the form. Now in this sense capitalism^ and capitalistic enterprises, even with a considerable rationalization of capitalistic calcu- lation, have existed in all civilized countries of the earth, so far as economic documents permit us to judge. In China, India, Babylon, Egypt, Mediterranean antiquity, and the Middle Ages, as well as in modem times. These were not merely isolated ventures, but economic enterprises which were entirely dependent on the continual renewal of capitalistic undertakings, and even continuous operations. However, trade espe- cially was for a long time not continuous like our own, but consisted essentially in a series of individual undertakings. Only gradually did the activities of even the large merchants acquire an inner cohesion (with branch organizations, etc.). In any case, the capitalistic enterprise and the capitalistic entrepreneur, not only
19
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
as occasional but as regular entrepreneurs, are very old and were very widespread.
Now, however, the Occident has developed capital- ism both to a quantitative extent, and (carrying this quantitative development) in types, forms, and direc- tions which have never existed elsewhere. All over the world there have been merchants, wholesale and retail, local and engaged in foreign trade. Loans of all kinds have been made, and there have been banks with the most various functions, at least comparable to ours of, say, the sixteenth century. Sea loans,* commenda^ and transactions and associations similar to the Kom- manditgesellschaft y^ have all been widespread, even as continuous businesses. Whenever money finances of public bodies have existed, money- lenders have ap- peared, as in Babylon, Hellas, India, China, Rome. They have financed wars and piracy, contracts and building operations of all sorts. In overseas policy they have functioned as colonial entrepreneurs, as planters with slaves, or directly or indirectly forced labour, and have farmed domains, offices, and, above all, taxes. They have financed party leaders in elections and condottieri in civil wars. And, finally, they have been speculators in chances for pecuniary gain of all kinds. This kind of entrepreneur, the capitalistic adventurer, has existed everywhere. Withjthejexception of trade and credit and banking transactions, their activities' were predominantly of an irrational and speculative character, or directed to acquisition by force, above all the acquisition of booty, whether directly in war or in the form of continuous fiscal booty by exploitation of subjects.
20
Introduction
The capitalism of promoters, large-scale speculators, concession hunters, and much modern financial capital- ism even in peace time, but, above all, the capitalism especially concerned with exploiting wars, bears this stamp even in modern Western countries, and some, / but only some, parts of large-scale international trade ^ ^ are closely related to it, to-day as alwa^» '■c^/ö/w j^
But in modem times the Occident^nas developed, in U> addition to this, a very different form of capitalism /-/e^'^ which has appeared nowhere else : the rational capital- istic organization of (formally) free labour. Only suggestions of it are found elsewhere. Even the organ- ization of unfree labour reached a considerable degree of rationality only on plantations and to a very limited extent in the Ergasteria of antiquity. In the manors, manorial workshops, and domestic industries on estates with serf labour it was probably somewhat less devel- oped. Even real domestic industries with free labour have definitely been proved to have existed in only a few isolated cases outside the Occident. The frequent use of day labourers led in a very few cases — especially State monopolies, which are, however, very different from modern industrial organization — to manufacturing organ- izations, but never to a rational organization of apprentice- ship in the handicrafts like that of our Middle Ages.
^Rational industrial organization, attuned to a regular market7^nd neither to political nor irrationally specu- lative opportunities for profit, is not, however, the only peculiarity of Western capitalism. The modern rational organization of the capitalistic enterprise would not have been possible without two other important factors in its development: tJie separation of business from ^'^
21
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
the household, which completely dominates modem economic life, and closely connected with it, rational book-keeping. A spatial separation of places of work from those of residence exists elsewhere, as in the Oriental bazaar and in the ergasteria of other cultures. The development of capitalistic associations with their own accounts is also found in the Far East, the Near East, and in antiquity. But compared to the modern independence of business enterprises, those are only small beginnings. The reason for this was particularly that the indispensable requisites for this independence, our rational business book-keeping and our legal separation of corporate from personal property, were entirely lacking, or had only begun to develop.^ The tendency everywhere else was for acquisitive enterprises to arise as parts of a royal or manorial household (of the oikos), which is, as Rodbertus has perceived, with all its superficial similarity, a fundamentally different, even opposite, development.
However, all these peculiarities of Western capitalism have derived their significance in the last analysis only from their association with the capitalistic organization of labour. Even what is generally called commercializa- tion, the development of negotiable securities and the rationalization of speculation, the exchanges, etc., is connected with it. For without the rational capitalistic organization of labour,, all this, so far as it was possible at all, would have nothing like the same significance, above all for the social structure and all the specific problems of the modem Occident connected with it. Exact calculation — the basis of everything else — is only possible on a basis of free labour.'
22
Introduction
And just as, or rather because, the world has known no rational organization of labour outside the modern Occident, it has known no rational socialism. Of course, there has been civic economy, a civic food-supply policy, mercantilism and welfare policies of princes, rationing, regulation of economic life, protectionism, and laissez-faire theories (as in China). The world has also known socialistic and communistic experiments of various sorts : family, religious, or military communism, State socialism (in Egypt), monopolistic cartels, and consumers' organizations. But although there have everywhere been civic market privileges, companies, guilds, and all sorts of legal differences between town and country, the concept of the citizen has not existed outside the Occident, and that of the bourgeoisie outside the modern Occident. Similarly, the proletariat as a class could not exist, because there was no rational organization of free labour under regular discipline. Qlass_struggles between creditor and debtor classes; landowners and the landless, serfs, or tenants; trading interests and consumers or landlords, have existed everywhere in various combinations. But even the Western mediaeval struggles between putters-out and their workers exist elsewhere only in beginnings. The modern conflict of the large-scale industrial entre- preneur and free-wage labourers was entirely lacking. And thus there could be no such problems as those of socialism.
Hence in a universal history of culture the central problem for us is not, in the last analysis, even from a purely economic view-point, the development of capital- istic activity as such, differing in different cultures only
23
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
in form: the adventurer type, or capitalism in trade, war, politics, or administration as sources of gain. It is
(rather the origin of this sober bourgeois capitalism with its rational organization of free labour. Or in terms of /cultural history, the problem is that of the origin of
/ the Western bourgeois class and of its peculiarities, a
\ problem which is certainly closely connected with that of the origin of the capitalistic organization of labour, but is not quite the same thing. For the bourgeois as a class existed prior to the development of the peculiar modern form of capitalism, though, it is true, only in the Western hemisphere.
Now the peculiar modern Western form of capitalism has been, at first sight, strongly influenced by the development of technical possibilities. Its rationality is to-day essentially dependent on the calculability of the most important technical factors. But this means fundamentally that it is dependent on the peculiarities of modern science, especially the natural sciences based on mathematics and exact and rational experiment. On the other hand, the development of these sciences and of the technique resting upon them now receives important stimulation from these capitalistic interests in its practical economic application. It is true that the origin of Western science cannot be attributed to such interests. Calculation, even with decimals, and algebra have been carried on in India, where the decimal
/ system was invented. But it was only made use of by developing capitalism in the West, while in India it
, led to no modern arithmetic or book-keeping. Neither was the origin of mathematics and mechanics deter- mined by capitalistic interests. But the technical utilizsL' )f 24 —
Introduction
tion of scientific knowledge, so important for the living conditions of the mass of people, was certainly encour- I aged by economic considerations, which were extremely ' favourable to it in the Occident. Bui this encourage- ment was derived from the peculiarities of the social structure of the Occident. We must hence ask, from what parts of that structure was it derived, since not all of them have been of equal importance ?
Among those of undoubted importance are the rational structures of law and of administration. Fori- modern rational capitalism has need, not only of the technical means of production, but of a calculable legal system and of administration in terms of formal rules. Without it adventurous and speculative trading capital- ism and all sorts of politically determined capitalisms are possible, but no rational enterprise under individual initiative, with fixed capital and certainty of calculations. Such a legal system and such administration have been available for economic activity in a comparative state of legal and formalistic perfection only in the Occident. We must hence inquire where that law came from. Among other circumstances, capitalistic interests häve| in turn undoubtedly also helped, but by no means alone | nor even principally, to prepare the way for the pre- dominance in law and administration of a class of jurists specially trained in rational law. But these interests did not themselves create that law. Quite different forces were at work in this development. And why did not the capitalistic interests do the same in China or India? Why- did not the scientific, the artistic, the political, or the economic development there enter upon that path , of rationalization which is peculiar to the Occident? y
25'
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
For in all the above cases it is a question of the specific and peculiar rationalism of Western culture. Now by this term very different things may be under- stood, as the following discussion will repeatedly show. There is, for example, rationalization' of mystical contemplation, that is of an attitude which, viewed from other departments of life, is specifically irrational, just as much as there are rationalizations of economic life, of technique, of scientific research, of military training, of law and administration. Furthermore, each one of these fields may be rationalized in terms of very different ultimate values and ends, and what is rational from one point of view may well be irrational from another. Hence rationalizations of the most varied character have existed in various departments of life and in all areas of culture. To characterize their differences from the view-point of cultural history it is necessary to know what departments are rationalized, and in what direction. It is hence our first concern to work out and to explain genetically the special peculiarity of Occidental rationalism, and within this field that of the modern Occidental form. Every such attempt at explanation must, recognizing the funda- mental importance of the economic factor, above all take account of the economic conditions. But at the same time the opposite correlation must not be left out of consideration. For though the development of economic rationalism is partly dependent on rational technique and law, it is at the same time determined by the ability and disposition of men to adopt certain types of practical rational condudt. When these types have been obstructed by spiritual obstacles, the 26
Introduction
development of rational economic conduct has also met serious inner resistance. The magical and religious forces, and the ethical ideas of duty based upon them, have in the past always been among the most important formative influences on conduct. In the studies collected here we shall be concerned with these forces.^
Two older essays have been placed at the beginning whicE attempt, at one important point, to approach the side of the problem which is generally most difficult to grasp: the influence of certain religious ideas on the development of aneconomic spirit ,_or the eitte of an economic_system. In this case we are dealing with the connection of the spirit of modern economic life with the rational ethics of ascetic Protestantism. Thus we treat here only one side of the causal chain. The later studies on the Economic Ethics of the World Religions attempt, in the form of a survey of the relations of the most important religions to economic life and to the social stratification of their environment, to follow out both causal relationships, so far as it is necessary in order to find points of comparison with the Occidental development. For only in this way is it possible to attempt a causal evaluation of those elements of the economic ethics of the Western religions which differ- entiate them from others, with a hope of attaining even a tolerable degree of approximation. Hence these ' studies do not claim to be complete analyses of cultures, however brief. On the contrary, in every culture they quite deliberately emphasize the elements in which it differs from Western civilization. They are, hence, definitely oriented to the problems which seem im- portant for the understanding of Western culture from
27
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
this view-point. With our object in view, any other procedure did not seem possible. But to avoid mis- understanding we must here lay special emphasis on the limitation of our purpose.
In another respect the uninitiated at least must be warned against exaggerating the importance of these investigations. The Sinologist, the Indologist, the Semitist, or the Egyptologist, will of course find no. facts unknown to him. We only hope that he will find nothing definitely wrong in points that are essential. How far it has been possible to come as near this ideal as a non-specialist is able to do, the author cannot know. It is quite evident that anyone who is forced to rely on translations, and furthermore on the use and evaluation of monumental, documentary, or literary sources, has to rely himself on a specialist literature which is often highly controversial, and the merits of which he is unable to judge accurately. Such a writer must make modest claims for the value of his work. All the more so since the number of available translations of relal sources (that is, inscriptions and documents) is, especially for China, still very small in comparison with what exists and is important. From all this follows the definitely provisional character of these studies, and especially of the parts dealing with Asia.^ Only the specialist is entitled to a final judgment. And, naturally, it is only because expert studies with this special purpose and from this particular view-point have not hitherto been made, that the present ones have been written at all. They are destined to be superseded in a much more important sense than this can be said, as it can be, of all scientific work. But however objection- 28
Introduction
able it may be, such trespassing on other special fields cannot be avoided in comparative work. But one must take the consequences by resigning oneself to con- siderable doubts regarding the degree of one's success.
Fashion and the zeal of the literati would have us think that the specialist can to-day be spared, or degraded to a position subordinate to that of the seer. Almost all sciences owe something to dilettantes, often very valuable view-points. But dilettantism as a leading principle would be the end of science. He who yearns for seeing should go to the cinema, though it will be offered to him copiously to-day in literary form in the present field of investigation also.^® Nothing is farther from the intent of these thoroughly serious studies than such an attitude. And, I might add, whoever wants a sermon should go to a conventicle. The question of the ,^ elative value of the cultures which are compared herg/
not receive a single word. It is true that the path of human destiny cannot but appall him who surveys a section of it. But he will do well to keep his small personal commentaries to himself, as one does at the sight of the sea or of majestic mountains, unless he knows himself to be called and gifted to give them expression in artistic or prophetic form. In most other cases the voluminous talk about intuition does nothing but conceal a lack of perspective toward the ob'ect, which merits the same judgment as a similar lack of perspective toward men.
Some justification is needed for the fact that ethno- graphical material has not been utilized to anything like the extent which the value of its contributions naturally demands in any really thorough investigation,
29
•xelati ywillj
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
especially of Asiatic religions. This limitation has not only been imposed because human powers of work are restricted. This omission has also seemed to be per- missible because we are here necessarily dealing with the religious ethics of the classes which were the culture- bearers of their respective countries. We are concerned with the influence which their conduct has had. Now it is quite true that this can only be completely known in all its details when the facts from ethnography and folk-lore have been compared with it. Hence we must expressly admit and emphasize that this is a gap to which the ethnographer will legitimately object. I hope to contribute something to the closing of this gap in a systematic study of the Sociology of Religion .^^ But such an undertaking would have transcended the limits of this investigation with its closely circumscribed purpose. It has been necessary to be content with bringing out the points of comparison with our Occi- dental religions as well as possible.
Finally, we may make a reference to the anthropo- logical side of the problem. When we find again and again that, even in departments of life apparently mutually independent, certain types of rationalization have developed in the Occident, and only there, it would be natural to suspect that the most important reason lay in differences of heredity. The author admits that he is inclined to think the importance of biological heredity very great. But in spite of the notable achieve- ments of anthropological research, I see up to the present no way of exactly or even approximately measuring either the extent or, above all, the form of its influence on the development investigated here. 30
Introduction
It must be one of the tasks of sociological and historical investigation first to analyse all the influences and causal relationships which can satisfactorily be ex- plained in terms of reactions to environmental condi- tions. Only then, and when comparative racial neurology and psychology shall have progressed beyond their present and in many ways very promising beginnings, can we hope for even the probability of a satisfactory answer to that problem .^^ In the mean- time that condition seems to me not to exist, and an appeal to heredity would therefore involve a premature renunciation of the possibility of knowledge attainable now, and would shift the problem to factors (at present) still unknown.
31
