登陆注册
38544300000060

第60章

Now, national affairs are exactly such a joint concern, with the difference, that no one needs ever be called upon for a complete sacrifice of his own opinion. It can always be taken into the calculation, and counted at a certain figure, a higher figure being assigned to the suffrages of those whose opinion is entitled to greater weight. There is not, in this arrangement, anything necessarily invidious to those to whom it assigns the lower degrees of influence. Entire exclusion from a voice in the common concerns is one thing: the concession to others of a more potential voice, on the ground of greater capacity for the management of the joint interests, is another. The two things are not merely different, they are incommensurable. Every one has a right to feel insulted by being made a nobody, and stamped as of no account at all. No one but a fool, and only a fool of a peculiar description, feels offended by the acknowledgment that there are others whose opinion, and even whose wish, is entitled to a greater amount of consideration than his. To have no voice in what are partly his own concerns is a thing which nobody willingly submits to; but when what is partly his concern is also partly another's, and he feels the other to understand the subject better than himself, that the other's opinion should be counted for more than his own accords with his expectations, and with the course of things which in all other affairs of life he is accustomed to acquiese in. It is only necessary that this superior influence should be assigned on grounds which he can comprehend, and of which he is able to perceive the justice.

I hasten to say that I consider it entirely inadmissible, unless as a temporary makeshift, that the superiority of influence should be conferred in consideration of property. I do not deny that property is a kind of test; education in most countries, though anything but proportional to riches, is on the average better in the richer half of society than in the poorer. But the criterion is so imperfect; accident has so much more to do than merit with enabling men to rise in the world; and it is so impossible for any one, by acquiring any amount of instruction, to make sure of the corresponding rise in station, that this foundation of electoral privilege is always, and will continue to be, supremely odious. To connect plurality of votes with any pecuniary qualification would be not only objectionable in itself, but a sure mode of discrediting the principle, and ****** its permanent maintenance impracticable. The Democracy, at least of this country, are not at present jealous of personal superiority, but they are naturally and must justly so of that which is grounded on mere pecuniary circumstances. The only thing which can justify reckoning one person's opinion as equivalent to more than one is individual mental superiority; and what is wanted is some approximate means of ascertaining that. If there existed such a thing as a really national education or a trustworthy system of general examination, education might be tested directly. In the absence of these, the nature of a person's occupation is some test. An employer of labour is on the average more intelligent than a labourer; for he must labour with his head, and not solely with his hands. A foreman is generally more intelligent than an ordinary labourer, and a labourer in the skilled trades than in the unskilled. A banker, merchant, or manufacturer is likely to be more intelligent than a tradesman, because he has larger and more complicated interests to manage.

In all these cases it is not the having merely undertaken the superior function, but the successful performance of it, that tests the qualifications; for which reason, as well as to prevent persons from engaging nominally in an occupation for the sake of the vote, it would be proper to require that the occupation should have been persevered in for some length of time (say three years). Subject to some such condition, two or more votes might be allowed to every person who exercises any of these superior functions. The liberal professions, when really and not nominally practised, imply, of course, a still higher degree of instruction; and wherever a sufficient examination, or any serious conditions of education, are required before entering on a profession, its members could be admitted at once to a plurality of votes. The same rule might be applied to graduates of universities; and even to those who bring satisfactory certificates of having passed through the course of study required by any school at which the higher branches of knowledge are taught, under proper securities that the teaching is real, and not a mere pretence. The "local" or "middle class" examination for the degree of Associate, so laudably and public-spiritedly established by the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and any similar ones which may be instituted by other competent bodies (provided they are fairly open to all comers), afford a ground on which plurality of votes might with great advantage be accorded to those who have passed the test. All these suggestions are open to much discussion in the detail, and to objections which it is of no use to anticipate. The time is not come for giving to such plans a practical shape, nor should I wish to be bound by the particular proposals which I have made. But it is to me evident, that in this direction lies the true ideal of representative government; and that to work towards it, by the best practical contrivances which can be found, is the path of real political improvement.

同类推荐
  • 班马异同论

    班马异同论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 修真十书金丹大成集

    修真十书金丹大成集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说法华三昧经

    佛说法华三昧经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 词径

    词径

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 滇游记

    滇游记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 半生离落半生香

    半生离落半生香

    在你这是草,在别人那儿未必不是宝!人生低处总能看见曙光!没事别作,死的快!有事别哭,总会有人爱!
  • 一舞倾城:独宠逍遥王妃

    一舞倾城:独宠逍遥王妃

    终是为那一身南国烟雨覆了天下,荣华谢后,不过一场,山河永寂。她是舞倾城,一舞倾城名动天下的倾城皇后,是人人敬若神明的巫族遗失后代,信手拈花便能杀人无形。可现在她竟被自己最爱的男人搞成了现在人不人,鬼不鬼的样子,连她唯一的孩子也胎死腹中,是悔?是怨?是怒?还是不甘?想要帝位?想要天下?好啊!一步步精心策划,只为抢你帝位,夺你天下。且看她如何手握风云,笑倾天下!
  • 花开花落之青春有殇

    花开花落之青春有殇

    在青春期的时候有些少女总会对这样那样的男人产生异乎寻常的好感,有敬佩而生亲近,由亲近而生爱慕,由爱慕而生痴缠,但更多的结局是无疾而终,有些隐秘的心事,像潜伏在青春少女血液里的病毒,发作的时候觉得天地之大,容身之所不过只是他一个人而已,但总是会过去的。关于青春,成长和爱情,原来不过只是一段惆怅的离歌;那些与青春有关的日子,是决绝,是孤勇,是沉溺,亦是顿悟,是成熟,是彼岸花开,是拈花一笑。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 生存实验(王晋康自选集·中)

    生存实验(王晋康自选集·中)

    《王晋康自选集》是王晋康的首部自选集。既然是自选集,选上的这些作品除了本身是经典、是获奖作品外,还都是作者偏爱的作品。这本集子收集了作者各个时期的代表作品,从中可以看出作者的写作风格,也代表了中国科幻的最高水平!《王晋康自选集》精选了王晋康最经典的短篇小说!早在十几年前,《替天行道》一文就表达了作者对这个转基因问题的思考。《七重外壳》的发表时间比《盗梦空间》上映时间早十年。《夏娲回归》是在《科幻世界》上发的最后一个短篇。
  • 青铜镜

    青铜镜

    高中生严巧是个性格懦弱、内向自卑的孩子。与世界格格不入的她在学校备受欺凌,找不到自己存在的意义。一次偶然的机缘、一面神秘的古镜、一个白衣的翩翩少年,将她带入了一个似曾相识的神秘世界。在此,各种光怪陆离的经历使得她渐渐由任人拿捏的软柿子蜕变成玩世不恭、艳冠群芳的风流才女……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 穿越维度

    穿越维度

    新人练手制作、不能说百分之百的原创。如果你是个老书虫你肯定会看到类似的剧情。人艰不拆、!关于这本书。女主会多。但不种马、剧情很多。不会拖拉。偶尔小捏猪脚。总结。爽文一本。最后大家加油提意见,3233126024.
  • 夜晚最亮的星星

    夜晚最亮的星星

    她如半粒尘埃,活的平凡,他是上天的骄子,满怀激情。以前的青梅竹马,现在的欢喜冤家,她想他一定是哪根筋搭错了,不然的话,他怎么会一直缠着她,上班遭辞职,她忍;看电视被偷亲,她忍;无奈肚里被种下种子,被迫生产,她已经忍无可忍了。帝无君,墙角面壁思过,不叫你不许过来上床睡觉。帝无君:是老婆大人。(小仙有懒癌症(=^.^=),更文慢,原谅我吧~)
  • 重生之妖妃祸国

    重生之妖妃祸国

    她为他媚帝祸国,换来的却是他对她的赶尽杀绝!万般绝望之下她自焚身亡,却意外重生七年前!上天既然给她重活一世的机会,那她就定然不会辜负了上天的这份恩情,虐妒妇,斗恶人,踩渣男,绝不手软!帝王的一颗真心为她倾倒,她一夜白头,帝王为她天涯海角奔走,踏遍万水千山,两颗心相互依偎,她收获了这世间最美好的爱情!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 夜魔天

    夜魔天

    神圣大陆,浩瀚无尽;神魔争霸,持续千年。韩颂自异界穿越而来,在这个世界小心翼翼地生存和奋斗。一心只图安稳富贵的他,机缘巧合之下,踏上修行之路。从此,仗剑天涯,诛神屠魔,逆转天下!