... it is best that the truth be fully stated and clearly
recognized. He who sees the truth, let him proclaim it,
without asking who is for it or who is against it. This
is not radicalism in the bad sense which so many attach
to the word. This is conservatism in the true
sense.
Henry George:
Progress & Poverty:
Introductory: The Problem
... I propose in the following pages to attempt to
solve by the methods of political economy the great
problem I have outlined. I propose to seek the law
which associates poverty with progress, and increases
want with advancing wealth; and I believe that in the
explanation of this paradox we shall find the explanation
of those recurring seasons of industrial and commercial
paralysis which, viewed independent of their relations to
more general phenomena, seem so inexplicable.
Properly commenced and carefully pursued, such an
investigation must yield a conclusion that will stand
every test, and as truth will correlate with all other
truth. For in the sequence of phenomena there is no
accident. Every effect has a cause, and every fact
implies a preceding fact.
That political economy, as at present taught, does not
explain the persistence of poverty amid advancing wealth
in a manner which accords with the deep-seated
perceptions of men;
- that the unquestionable truths which it does teach
are unrelated and disjointed;
- that it has failed to make the progress in popular
thought that truth, even when unpleasant, must
make;
- that, on the contrary, after a century of
cultivation, during which it has engrossed the
attention some of the most subtle and powerful
intellects, it should be spurned by the statesman,
scouted by the masses, relegated in the opinion of many
educated and thinking men to the rank of a
pseudo-science in which nothing fixed or can be fixed
— must, it seems to me, be due not to any
inability of the science when properly pursued, but
some false step in its premises, or overlooked factor
in its estimates. And as such mistakes are generally
concealed the respect paid to authority, I propose in
this inquiry take nothing for granted, but to bring
even accepted theories to the test of first principles,
and should they not stand the test, to freshly
interrogate facts in the endeavor to discover their
law.
I propose to beg no question, to shrink from no
conclusion, but to follow truth wherever it may lead.
Upon us the responsibility of seeking the law, for in the
very heart of our civilization to-day women faint and
little children moan. But what that law may prove to be
is not our affair. If the conclusions that we reach
run counter to our prejudices, let us not flinch; if they
challenge institutions that have long been deemed wise
and natural, let us not turn back. ...
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