Spencer, Herbert

Spencer, Herbert
born April 27, 1820, Derby, Derbyshire, Eng.
died Dec. 8, 1903, Brighton, Sussex

English sociologist and philosopher, advocate of the theory of social Darwinism.

His System of Synthetic Philosophy, 9 vol. (1855–96), held that the physical, organic, and social realms are interconnected and develop according to identical evolutionary principles, a scheme suggested by the evolution of biological species. This sociocultural evolution amounted to, in Spencer's phrase, "the survival of the fittest." The free market system, without interference by governments, would weed out the weak and unfit. His controversial laissez-faire philosophy was praised by social Darwinists such as William Graham Sumner and opposed by sociologists such as Lester Frank Ward. Liked or loathed, Spencer was one of the most discussed Victorian thinkers.

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▪ British philosopher
Introduction
born April 27, 1820, Derby, Derbyshire, Eng.
died Dec. 8, 1903, Brighton, Sussex

      English sociologist and philosopher, an early advocate of the theory of evolution, who achieved an influential synthesis of knowledge, advocating the preeminence of the individual over society and of science over religion. His magnum opus was The Synthetic Philosophy, a comprehensive work completed in 1896 and containing volumes on the principles of biology, psychology, morality, and sociology.

Life and works.
      Spencer's father, William George Spencer, was a schoolmaster, and his parents' dissenting religious convictions inspired in him a nonconformity that continued active even after he had abandoned the Christian faith. Spencer declined an offer from his uncle, the Rev. Thomas Spencer, to send him to Cambridge, and in consequence his higher education was largely the result of his own reading, which was chiefly in the natural sciences. He was, for a few months, a schoolteacher and from 1837 to 1841 a railway civil engineer.

      In 1842 he contributed some letters (republished later as a pamphlet, The Proper Sphere of Government, 1843) to The Nonconformist, in which he argued that it is the business of governments to uphold natural rights and that they do more harm than good when they go beyond this. After some association with progressive journalism through such papers as The Zoist (devoted to mesmerism and phrenology) and The Pilot (the organ of the Complete Suffrage Union), Spencer became in 1848 a subeditor of The Economist. In 1851 he published Social Statics (reissued in 1955), which contained in embryo most of his later views, including his argument in favour of an extreme form of economic and social laissez-faire. About 1850 Spencer became acquainted with Marian Evans (the novelist George Eliot (Eliot, George)), and his philosophical conversations with her led some of their friends to expect that they would marry; but in his Autobiography (1904) Spencer denies any such desire, much as he admired Evans' intellectual powers. Other friends were G.H. Lewes, T.H. Huxley, and J.S. Mill. In 1853 Spencer, having received a legacy from his uncle, resigned his position with The Economist.

      Having published the first part of The Principles of Psychology in 1855, Spencer in 1860 issued a prospectus and accepted subscriptions for a comprehensive work, The Synthetic Philosophy, which was to include, besides the already published Principles of Psychology, volumes on first principles and on biology, sociology, and morality. First Principles was published in 1862, and between then and 1896, when the third volume of The Principles of Sociology appeared, the task was completed. In order to prepare the ground for The Principles of Sociology, Spencer started in 1873 a series of works called Descriptive Sociology, in which information was provided about the social institutions of various societies, both primitive and civilized. The series was interrupted in 1881 because of lack of public support. Spencer was a friend and adviser of Beatrice Potter, later Beatrice Webb, the social reformer, who frequently visited Spencer during his last illness and left a sympathetic and sad record of his last years in My Apprenticeship (1926). Spencer died in 1903, at Brighton, leaving a will by which trustees were set up to complete the publication of the Descriptive Sociology. The series comprised 19 parts (1873–1934).

      Spencer was one of the most argumentative and most discussed English thinkers of the Victorian period. His strongly scientific orientation led him to urge the importance of examining social phenomena in a scientific way. He believed that all aspects of his thought formed a coherent and closely ordered system. Science and philosophy, he held, gave support to and enhanced individualism and progress. Though it is natural to cite him as the great exponent of Victorian optimism, it is notable that he was by no means unaffected by the pessimism that from time to time clouded the Victorian confidence. Evolution, he taught, would be followed by dissolution, and individualism would come into its own only after an era of socialism and war.

The synthetic philosophy in outline.
      Spencer saw philosophy as a synthesis of the fundamental principles of the special sciences, a sort of scientific summa to replace the theological systems of the Middle Ages. He thought of unification in terms of development, and his whole scheme was in fact suggested to him by the evolution of biological species. In First Principles he argued that there is a fundamental law of matter, which he called the law of the persistence of force, from which it follows that nothing homogeneous can remain as such if it is acted upon, because any external force must affect some part of it differently from other parts and cause difference and variety to arise. From this, he continued, it would follow that any force that continues to act on what is homogeneous must bring about an increasing variety. This “law of the multiplication of effects,” due to an unknown and unknowable absolute force, is in Spencer's view the clue to the understanding of all development, cosmic as well as biological. It should be noted that Spencer published his idea of the evolution of biological species before the views of Charles Darwin and the British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace were known, but Spencer at that time thought that evolution was caused by the inheritance of acquired characteristics, whereas Darwin and Wallace attributed it to natural selection. Spencer later accepted the theory that natural selection was one of the causes of biological evolution, and he himself coined the phrase “survival of the fittest” (Principles of Biology [1864], vol. 1, p. 444).

      Sociology and social (social Darwinism) philosophy. That Spencer first derived his general evolutionary scheme from reflection on human society is seen in Social Statics, in which social evolution is held to be a process of increasing “individuation.” He saw human societies as evolving by means of increasing division of labour from undifferentiated hordes into complex civilizations. Spencer believed that the fundamental sociological classification was between military societies, in which cooperation was secured by force, and industrial societies, in which cooperation was voluntary and spontaneous.

      Evolution is not the only biological conception that Spencer applied in his sociological theories. He made a detailed comparison between animal organisms and human societies. In both he found a regulative system (the central nervous system in the one, government in the other), a sustaining system (alimentation in the one case, industry in the other), and a distribution system (veins and arteries in the first; roads, telegraphs, etc., in the second). The great difference between an animal and a social organism, he said, is that, whereas in the former there is one consciousness relating to the whole, in the latter consciousness exists in each member only; society exists for the benefit of its members and not they for its benefit.

      This individualism is the key to all of Spencer's work. His contrast between military and industrial societies is drawn between despotism, which is primitive and bad, and individualism, which is civilized and good. He believed that in industrial society the order achieved, though planned by no one, is delicately adjusted to the needs of all parties. In The Man Versus the State (1884) he wrote that England's Tories generally favour a military and Liberals an industrial social order but that the Liberals of the latter half of the 19th century, with their legislation on hours of work, liquor licensing, sanitation, education, etc., were developing a “New Toryism” and preparing the way for a “coming slavery.” “The function of liberalism in the past was that of putting a limit to the powers of kings. The function of true liberalism in the future will be that of putting a limit to the powers of parliaments.”

      In his emphasis on variety and differentiation, Spencer was unwittingly repeating, in a 19th-century idiom, the metaphysics of liberalism that Spinoza (Spinoza, Benedict de) and Leibniz (Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm) had adumbrated in the 17th century. Spinoza had maintained that “God or Nature” has an infinity of attributes in which every possibility is actualized, and Leibniz had argued that the perfection of God is exhibited in the infinite variety of the universe. Though neither of them believed that time is an ultimate feature of reality, Spencer combined a belief in the reality of time with a belief in the eventual actualization of every possible variety of being. He thus gave metaphysical support to the liberal principle of variety, according to which a differentiated and developing society is preferable to a monotonous and static one.

Evaluation.
      Spencer's attempt to synthesize the sciences showed a sublime audacity that has not been repeated because the intellectual specialization he welcomed and predicted increased even beyond his expectations. His sociology, although it gave an impetus to the study of society, was superseded as a result of the development of social anthropology since his day and was much more concerned with providing a rationale for his social ideals than he himself appreciated. Primitive men, for example, are not the childlike emotional creatures that he thought them to be, nor is religion to be explained only in terms of the souls of ancestors. When T.H. Huxley (Huxley, T.H.) said that Spencer's idea of a tragedy was “a deduction killed by a fact,” he called attention to the system-building feature of Spencer's work that led him to look for what confirmed his theories and to ignore or to reinterpret what conflicted with them.

Harry Burrows Acton

Major Works

Philosophy and religion.
The Nature and Reality of Religion, 1885 (withdrawn from publication). Spencer's series on Synthetic Philosophy comprises: First Principles, 1862; The Principles of Biology, 2 vol., 1864–67; The Principles of Psychology, 1855; The Principles of Sociology, 3 vol., 1876–96; The Principles of Ethics, 2 vol., 1892–93.

Political and social.
The Proper Sphere of Government, 1843; Social Statics, 1851; Education: Intellectual, Moral, Physical, 1861; The Study of Sociology, 1872; The Man Versus the State, 1884; Facts and Comments, 1902.

Other works.
Essays: Scientific, Political, and Speculative, 3 vol., 1891; Autobiography, 1904, an intellectual rather than a personal autobiography.

Additional Reading
A so-called official biography is that by David Duncan, Life and Letters of Herbert Spencer, 2 vol. (1908). T.H. Huxley, in “Evolution and Ethics,” in Collected Essays, vol. 9 (1894), accuses Spencer of “fanatical individualism” and “reasoned savagery.” H. Sidgwick, Lectures on the Ethics of T.H. Green, Mr. Herbert Spencer and J. Martineau, pp. 135–312 (1902); and G.E. Moore, Principia Ethica, sect. 31–35 (1903, reprinted 1954), contain detailed criticisms of Spencer's ethical theory. See also J. Rumney, Herbert Spencer's Sociology: A Study in the History of Social Theory (1934); S. Andreski (ed.), Principles of Sociology, abr. ed. (1969), which includes an analysis and assessment of Spencer's sociological theory; D. MacRae (ed.), The Man Versus the State: With Four Essays on Politics and Society (1969), in which the introduction (pp. 7–54) deals with Spencer's views on society and politics; J.Y.D. Peel, Herbert Spencer: The Evolution of a Sociologist (1971); and David Wiltshire, Social and Political Thought of Herbert Spencer (1977).

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Universalium. 2010.

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