Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Anatomy of Empire from Rome to Washington
- 1 Defending Empire: The School of Salamanca and the ‘Affair of the Indies’
- 2 ‘Making Barbarians into Gentle Peoples’: Alberico Gentili on the Legitimacy of Empire
- 3 The Peopling of the New World: Ethnos, Race, and Empire in the Early-Modern World
- 4 Conquest, Settlement, Purchase, and Concession: Justifying the English Occupation of the Americas
- 5 Occupying the Ocean: Hugo Grotius and Serafim de Freitas on the Rights of Discovery and Occupation
- 6 Cambiar su ser: Reform to Revolution in the Political Imaginary of the Ibero-American World
- 7 From the “Right of Nations” to the “Cosmopolitan Right”: Immanuel Kant's Law of Continuity and the Limits of Empire
- 8 “Savage Impulse-Civilized Calculation”: Conquest, Commerce, and the Enlightenment Critique of Empire
- 9 Human Rights, Natural Rights, and Europe's Imperial Legacy
- Bibliography
- Index
8 - “Savage Impulse-Civilized Calculation”: Conquest, Commerce, and the Enlightenment Critique of Empire
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Anatomy of Empire from Rome to Washington
- 1 Defending Empire: The School of Salamanca and the ‘Affair of the Indies’
- 2 ‘Making Barbarians into Gentle Peoples’: Alberico Gentili on the Legitimacy of Empire
- 3 The Peopling of the New World: Ethnos, Race, and Empire in the Early-Modern World
- 4 Conquest, Settlement, Purchase, and Concession: Justifying the English Occupation of the Americas
- 5 Occupying the Ocean: Hugo Grotius and Serafim de Freitas on the Rights of Discovery and Occupation
- 6 Cambiar su ser: Reform to Revolution in the Political Imaginary of the Ibero-American World
- 7 From the “Right of Nations” to the “Cosmopolitan Right”: Immanuel Kant's Law of Continuity and the Limits of Empire
- 8 “Savage Impulse-Civilized Calculation”: Conquest, Commerce, and the Enlightenment Critique of Empire
- 9 Human Rights, Natural Rights, and Europe's Imperial Legacy
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
I
Imperial expansion, wrote the great Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter in 1918, as more than one European empire was coming to an ignominious end, was “the purely instinctual inclination towards war and conquest”. This, he declared, confidently, had “no adequate object beyond itself. … Hence the tendency of such expansion to transcend all bonds and tangible limits to the point of utter exhaustion.” The desire for expansion, conquest, and possession which had been the driving force behind every empire, from the Achaemenid to the British, had been, as he phrased it, entirely without “external objects”. They had had no motive other than expansion itself; they had simply gone on and on until they had reached the natural limits of their resources or come up against a stronger power. But why this apparent blind rush into a seemingly shapeless future? “The explanation lies”, Schumpeter replied, “in the vital needs of situations that moulded people and classes into warriors.” If the members of the dominant warrior class wished “to avoid extinction”, they had to continue to be warriors since transformation into something else was unavailable to them. “Imperialism”, in Schumpeter's view, “is thus atavistic in character. It falls into that large group of surviving features from an earlier age …. In other words it is an element that stems from the living conditions not of the present but of the past.” On this account imperialism was not the inescapable consequence of some profound, and eradicable, human aggressiveness, much less was it the expression either of class or economic interests – as the Marxists maintained – both of which could have been perpetuated, albeit in some other form, into the present. It was simply a phase in human history which would “tend to disappear as an element of habitual emotional reaction, because of the progressive rationalization of life and mind”. If this were so then, “cases of Imperialism should decline in intensity the later they occur in the history of a people and a culture”.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Burdens of Empire1539 to the Present, pp. 224 - 242Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2015
- 1
- Cited by