A Postscript Chapter
AT THE time when this book was being brought to
its close, the first attempt at the foundation of some initial hesitating
beginning of the new world-order, which both governments and peoples had begun
to envisage as a permanent necessity if there was to be any order in the world
at all, was under debate and consideration but had not yet been given a
concrete and practical form; but this had to come and eventually a momentous
beginning was made. It took the name and
appearance of what was called a League of Nations.
It was not happy in its conception, well-inspired in its formation or
destined to any considerable longevity or a supremely successful career. But that such an organised endeavour should
be launched at all and proceed on its way for some time without an early
breakdown was in itself an event of capital importance and meant the initiation
of a new era in world history; especially, it was an initiative which, even if
it failed, could not be allowed to remain without a sequel but had to be taken up
again until a successful solution has safeguarded the future of mankind, not
only against continued disorder and lethal peril but against destructive
possibilities which could easily prepare the collapse of civilisation and
perhaps eventually something even that could be described as the suicide of the
human race. Accordingly, the League of Nations disappeared but was replaced by the
United Nations Organisation which now stands in the forefront of the world and
struggles towards some kind of secure permanence and success in the great and
far-reaching endeavour on which depends the world’s future.
This is the capital event, the crucial
and decisive outcome of the world-wide tendencies which Nature has set in
motion for her destined purpose. In
spite of the constant shortcomings of human effort and its stumbling mentality,
in spite of adverse possibilities that may baulk or delay for a time the
success of this great adventure, it is in this event that lies
the determination of what must be. All
the catastrophes that have attended this course of events and seem to arise of
purpose in order to prevent the working out her intention have not prevented,
and even further catastrophes will not prevent, the successful emergence and
development of an enterprise which has become a necessity for the progress and
perhaps the very existence of the race.
Two stupendous and world-devastating wars have swept over the globe and
have been accompanied or followed by revolutions with far-reaching consequences
which have altered the political map of the earth and the international
balance, the once fairly stable equilibrium of five continents, and changed the
whole future. A third still more
disastrous war with a prospect of the use of weapons and other scientific means
of destruction far more fatal and of wider reach than any ever yet invented,
weapons whose far-spread use might bring down civilisation, with a crash and
whose effects might tend towards something like extermination on a large scale,
looms in prospect; the constant apprehension of its weighs upon the mind of the
nations and stimulates them towards further preparations for war and creates an
atmosphere of prolonged antagonism, if not yet of conflict, extending to what is called “cold war” even
in times of peace. But the two wars that
have come and gone have not prevented the formation of the first and second
considerable efforts towards the beginning of an attempt at union and the
practical formation of a concrete body, an organised instrument with that
object: rather they have caused and hastened this new creation. The
League of
Nations came into being as a direct consequence of the first
war, the U.N.O. similarly as a consequence of the second world-wide
conflict. If the third war which is
regarded by many if not by most as inevitable does come, it is likely to
precipitate as inevitably a further step and perhaps the final outcome of this
great world-endeavour. Nature uses such
means, apparently opposed and dangerous to her intended purpose, to bring about
the fruition of that purpose. As in the
practice of the spiritual science and art of Yoga one has to raise up the
psychological possibilities which are there in the nature and stand in the way
of its spiritual perfection and fulfilment so as to eliminate them, even, it
may be, the sleeping possibilities which might arise in the future to break the
work that has been done, so too Nature acts with the world-forces that meet her
on her way, not only calling up those which will assist her but raising too, so
as to finish with them, those that she knows to be the normal or even the
unavoidable obstacles which cannot but start up to impede her secret will. This one has often seen in the history of
mankind; one sees it exampled today with an enormous force commensurable with
the magnitude of the thing that has to be done.
But always these resistances turn out to have assisted by the resistance
much more than they have impeded the intention of the great Creatrix
and her Mover.
We may then look with a legitimate optimism
on what has been hitherto achieved and on the prospects of further achievement
in the future. This optimism need not
and should not blind us to undesirable features, perilous tendencies and the
possibilities of serious interruptions in the work and even disorders in the
human world that might possibly subvert the work done. As regards the actual conditions of the
moment it may even be admitted that most men nowadays look with dissatisfaction
on the defects of the United Nations Organisation and its blunders and the
malignancies that endanger its existence and many feel a growing pessimism and
regard with doubt the possibility of its final success. This pessimism it is unnecessary and unwise
to share; for such a psychology tends to bring about, to make possible the
results which it predicts but which need not at all ensure. At the same time, we must not ignore the
danger. The leaders of the nations, who
have the will to succeed and who will be held responsible by posterity for any
avoidable failure, must be on guard against unwise policies or fatal errors;
the deficiencies that exist in the organisation or its constitution have to be
quickly remedied or slowly and cautiously eliminated; if there are obstinate
oppositions to necessary change, they have somehow to be overcome or
circumvented without breaking the institution; progress towards its perfection,
even if it cannot be easily or swiftly made, must yet be undertaken and the
frustration of the world’s hope prevented at any cost. There is no other way for mankind than this,
unless indeed a greater way is laid open to it by the Power that guides through
some delivering turn or change in human will or human nature or some sudden
evolutionary progress, a not easily foreseeable leap, saltus,
which will make another and greater solution of our human destiny feasible.
In the first idea and form of a
beginning of world-union which took the shape of the League of Nations,
although there were errors in the structure such as the insistence on unanimity
which tended to sterilise, to limit or to obstruct the practical action and
effectuality of the League, the main defect was inherent in its conception and
in its general build, and that again arose naturally and as a direct
consequence from the condition of the world at that time. The League of Nations was in fact an
oligarchy of big Powers each drawing behind it a retinue of small States and
using the general body so far as possible for the furtherance of its own policy
much more than for the general interest and the good of the world at
large. This character came out most in
the political sphere, and the manoeuvres and discords, accommodations and
compromises inevitable in this condition of things did not help to make the
action of the League beneficial or effective as it purposed or set out to
be. The absence of
America and
the position of
Russia had
helped to make the final ill-success of this first venture a natural
consequence, if not indeed unavoidable.
In the constitution of the U.N.O. an attempt was made, in principle at
least, to escape from these errors; but the attempt was not thorough-going and
not altogether successful. A strong surviving element of oligarchy remained in
the preponderant place assigned to the five great Powers in the Security
Council and was clinched by the device of the veto; these were concessions to a
sense of realism and the necessity of recognising the actual condition of
things and the results of the second great war and could not perhaps have been
avoided, but they have done more to create trouble, hamper the action and
diminish the success of the new institution than anything else in its make-up
or the way of action forced upon it by the world situation or the difficulties
of a combined working inherent in its very structure. A too hasty or radical endeavour to get rid
of these defects might lead to a crash of the whole edifice; to leave them
unmodified prolongs a malaise, an absence of harmony and smooth working and a
consequent discredit and a sense of limited and abortive action, cause of the
widespread feeling of futility and the regard of doubt the world at large has
begun to cast on this great and necessary institution which was founded with
such high hopes and without which world conditions would be infinitely worse
and more dangerous, even perhaps irremediable.
A third attempt, the substitution of a differently constituted body,
could only come if this institution collapsed as the result of a new
catastrophe: if certain dubious portents fulfil their menace, it might emerge
into being and might even this time be more successful because of an increased
and a more general determination not to allow such a calamity to occur again;
but it would be after a third cataclysmal struggle which might shake to its
foundations the international structure now holding together after two
upheavals with so much difficulty and unease.
Yet, even in such a contingency, the intention in the working of Nature
is likely to overcome the obstacles she has herself raised up and they may be
got rid of once and for all. But for
that it will be necessary to build, eventually at least, a true World-State
without exclusions and on a principle of equality into which considerations of
size and strength will not enter. These
may be left to exercise whatever influence is natural to them in a well-ordered
harmony of the world’s peoples safeguarded by the law of a new international
order. A sure justice, a fundamental
equality and combination of rights and interests must be the law of this
World-State and the basis of its entire edifice.
The real danger at the present second
stage of the progress towards unity lies not in any faults, however serious, in
the building of the United Nations Assembly but in the division of the peoples
into two camps which tend to be natural opponents and might at any moment
become declared enemies irreconcilable and even their common existence
incompatible. This is because the
so-called Communism of Bolshevist Russia came to birth as the result, not of a
rapid evolution, but of an unprecedentedly fierce and
prolonged revolution sanguinary in the extreme and created an autocratic and
intolerant State system founded upon a war of classes in which all others
except the proletariat were crushed out of existence, “liquidated,” upon a
“dictatorship of the proletariat” or rather of a narrow but all-powerful party
system acting in its name, a Police State, and a mortal struggle with the
outside world: the fierceness of this struggle generated in the minds of the
organisers of the new State a fixed idea of the necessity not only of survival
but of continued struggle and the spread of its domination until the new order
had destroyed the old or evicted it, if not from the whole earth, yet from the
greater part of it and the imposition of a new political and social gospel or
its general acceptance by the world’s peoples.
But this condition of things might change, lose its acrimony and full
consequence, as it has done to some degree, with the arrival of security and
the cessation of the first ferocity, bitterness and exasperation of the
conflict; the most intolerant and oppressive elements of the new order might
have been moderated and the sense of incompatibility or inability to live
together or side by side would then have disappeared and a more secure modus
vivendi been
made possible. If much of the unease,
the sense of inevitable struggle, the difficulty of mutual toleration and
economic accommodation still exists, it is rather because the idea of using the
ideological struggle as a means for world domination is there and keeps the
nations in a position of mutual apprehension and preparation for armed defence
and attack than because the coexistence of the two ideologies is
impossible. If this element is
eliminated, a world in which these two ideologies could live together, arrive
at an economic interchange, draw closer together, need not be at all out of the
question; for the world is moving towards a greater development of the
principle of State control over the life of the community, and a congeries of
socialistic States on the one hand, and on the other, of States co-ordinating
and controlling a modified Capitalism might well come to exist side by side and
develop friendly relations with each other. Even a World-State in which both
could keep their own institutions and sit in a common assembly might
come into being and a single world-union of this foundation would not be
impossible. This development is indeed
the final outcome which the foundation of the U.N.O. presupposes; for the
present organisation cannot be itself final, it is only an imperfect beginning
useful and necessary as a primary nucleus of that larger institution in which
all the peoples of the earth can meet each other in a single international
unity: the creation of a World-State is, in a movement of this kind, the one
logical and inevitable ultimate outcome.
This view of the future may under
present circumstances be stigmatised as a too facile optimism, but this turn of
things is quite as possible as the more disastrous turn expected by the
pessimists, since the cataclysm and crash of civilisation sometimes predicted
by them need not at all be the result of a new war. Mankind has a habit of surviving the worst
catastrophes created by its own errors or by the violent turns of Nature and it
must be so if there is any meaning in its existence, if its long history and
continuous survival is not the accident of a fortuitously self-organising
Chance, which it must be in a purely materialistic view of the nature of the
world. If man is intended to survive and
carry forward the evolution of which he is at present the head and, to some
extent, a half-conscious leader of its march, he must come out of his present
chaotic international life and arrive at a beginning of organised united
action; some kind of World-State, unitary or federal, or a confederacy or a
coalition he must arrive at in the end; no smaller or looser expedient would
adequately serve the purpose. In that
case, the general thesis advanced in this book would stand justified and we can
foreshadow with some confidence the main line of advance which the course of
events is likely to take, at least the main trend of the future history of the
human peoples.
The question now put by evolving
Nature to mankind is whether its existing international system, if system it
can be called, a sort of provisional order maintained with constant
evolutionary or revolutionary changes, cannot be replaced by a willed and
thought-out fixed arrangement, a true system, eventually a real unity serving
all the common interests of the earth’s peoples. An original welter and chaos with its jumble
of forces forming, wherever it could, larger or smaller masses of civilisation
and order which were in danger of crumbling or being shaken to pieces by
attacks from the outer chaos was the first attempt at cosmos successfully
arrived at by the genious of humanity. This was finally replaced by something like
an international system with the elements of what could be called international
law or fixed habits of intercommunication and interchange which allowed the
nations to live together in spite of antagonisms and conflicts, a security
alternating with precariousness and peril and permitting of too many ugly
features, however local, of oppression, bloodshed, revolt and disorder, not to
speak of wars which sometimes devastated large areas of the globe. The indwelling deity who presides over the
destiny of the race has raised in man’s mind and heart
the idea, the hope of a new order which will replace the old unsatisfactory
order, and substitute for it conditions of the world’s life which will in the
end have a reasonable chance of establishing permanent peace and
well-being. This would for the first
time turn into an assured fact the ideal of human unity which, cherished by a
few, seemed for so long a noble chimera; then might be created a firm ground of
peace and harmony and even a free room for the realisation of the highest human
dreams, for the perfectibility of the race, a perfect society, a higher upward
evolution of the human soul and human nature.
It is for the men of our day and, at the most, of tomorrow to give the
answer. For, too long a postponement or too
continued a failure will open the way to a series of increasing catastrophes
which might create a too prolonged and disastrous confusion and chaos and
render a solution too difficult or impossible; it might even end in something
like an irremediable crash not only of the present world-civilisation but of
all civilisation. A new, a difficult and
uncertain beginning might have to be made in the midst of the chaos and ruin
after perhaps an extermination on a large scale, and a
more successful creation could be predicted only if a way was found to develop
a better humanity or perhaps a greater, a superhuman race.
The central question is whether the
nation, the largest natural unit which humanity has been able to create and
maintain for its collective living, is also its last and ultimate unit or
whether a greater aggregate can be formed which will englobe
many and even most nations and finally all in its united totality. The impulse to build more largely, the push
towards the creation of considerable and even very vast supranational
aggregates has not been wanting; it has even been a permanent feature in the
life-instincts of the race. But the form
it took was the desire of a strong nation for mastery over others, permanent
possession of their territories, subjugation of their peoples, exploitation of their resources: there was also an attempt
at quasi-assimilation, an imposition of the culture of a dominant race and, in
general, a system of absorption wholesale or as complete as possible. The Roman Empire was the classic example of
this kind of endeavour and the Greaco-Roman unity of
a single way of life and culture in a vast framework of political and
administrative unity was the nearest approach within the geographical limits
reached by this civilisation to something one might regard as a first figure or
an incomplete suggestion of a figure of human unity. Other similar attempts have
been made though not on so large a scale and with a less consummate ability
throughout the course of history, but nothing has endured for more than
a small number of centuries. The method
used was fundamentally unsound inasmuch as it contradicted other life-instincts
which were necessary to the vitality and healthy evolution of mankind and the
denial of which must end in some kind of stagnation and arrested progress. The imperial aggregate could not acquire the
unconquerable vitality and power of survival of the nation-unit. The only enduring empire-units have been in
reality large nation-units which took that name like
Germany and
China and
those were not forms of the supranational State and need not be reckoned in the
history of the formation of the imperial aggregate. So, although the tendency to the creation of
empire testifies to an urge in Nature towards larger unities of human life, —
and we can see concealed in it a will to unite the disparate masses of humanity
on a larger scale into a single coalescing or combined life-unit, — it must be
regarded as an unsuccessful formation without a sequel and unserviceable for
any further progress in this direction.
In actual fact a new attempt of world-wide domination could succeed only
by a new instrumentation or under novel circumstances in englobing
all the nations of the earth or persuading or forcing them into some kind of
union. An ideology, a successful
combination of peoples with one aim and a powerful head like Communist Russia,
might have a temporary success in bringing about such an objective. But such an outcome, not
very desirable in itself, would not be likely to ensure the creation of an
enduring World-State. There would
be tendencies, resistances, urges towards other
developments which would sooner or later bring about its collapse or some
revolutionary change which would mean its disappearance. Finally, any such stage would have to be overpassed; only the formation of a true World-State,
either of a unitary but still elastic kind, — for a rigidly unitary State might
bring about stagnation and decay of the springs of life, — or a union of free
peoples could open the prospect of a sound and lasting world-order.
It is not necessary to repeat or
review, except in certain directions, the considerations and conclusions set
forward in this book with regard to the means and methods or the lines of
divergence or successive development which the actual realisation of human
unity may take. But still on some sides
possibilities have arisen which call for some modification of what has been
written or the conclusions arrived at in these chapters. It had been concluded, for instance, that
there was no likelihood of the conquest and unification of the world by a
single dominant people or empire. This
is no longer altogether so certain, for we have just had to admit the
possibility of such an attempt under certain circumstances. A dominant Power may be able to group round
itself strong allies subordinated to it but still considerable in strength and
resources and throw them into a world struggle with other Powers and
peoples. This possibility would be
increased if the dominating Power managed to procure, even if only for the time
being, a monopoly of an overwhelming superiority in the use of some of the
tremendous means of aggressive military action which Science has set out to discover and
effectively utilise. The terror of
destruction and even of large-scale extermination created by these ominous
discoveries may bring about a will in the governments and peoples to ban and
prevent the military use of these inventions, but, so long as the nature of
mankind has not changed, this prevention must remain uncertain and precarious
and an unscrupulous ambition may even get by it a chance of secrecy and
surprise and the utilisation of a decisive moment which might conceivably give
it victory and it might risk the tremendous chance. It may be argued that the history of the last
war runs counter to this possibility, for in conditions not quite realising but
approximating to such combination of circumstances the aggressive Powers failed
in their attempt and underwent the disastrous consequences of a terrible
defeat. But after all, they came for a
time within a hair’s breadth of success and there might not be the same good
fortune for the world in some later and more sagaciously conducted and
organised adventure. At least, the
possibility has to be noted and guarded against by those who have the power of
prevention and the welfare of the race in their change.
One of the possibilities suggested at
that time was the growth of continental agglomerates, a united Europe, some
kind of a combine of the peoples of the American continent under the leadership
of the United States, even possibly in the resurgence of Asia and its drive
towards independence from the dominance of the European peoples a drawing
together for self-defensive combination of the nations of this continent; such
an eventuality of large continental combinations might even be a stage in the
final formation of a world-union. This
possibility has tended to take shape to a certain extent with a celerity that
could not then be anticipated. In the
two American continents it has actually assumed a predominating and practical
form, though not in its totality. The
idea of a United States of Europe has also actually taken shape and is assuming
a formal existence, but is not yet able to develop into a completed and fully
realised possibility because of the antagonism based on conflicting ideologies
which cuts off from each other Russia and her satellites behind their iron
curtain and Western Europe. This
separation has gone so far that it is difficult to envisage its cessation at
any foreseeable time in a predictable future.
Under other circumstances a tendency towards such combinations might
have created the apprehension of huge continental clashes such as the
collision, at one time imagined as possible, between a resurgent
Asia and
the Occident. The acceptance by
Europe and
America of
the Asiatic resurgence and the eventual total liberation of the Oriental
peoples, as also the downfall of
Japan
which figured at one time and indeed actually presented itself to the world as
the liberator and leader of a free
Asia
against the domination of the West, have removed this dangerous
possibility. Here again, as elsewhere,
the actual danger presents itself rather as a clash between two opposing
ideologies, one led by Russia and Red China and trying to impose the Communistic
extreme partly by military and partly by forceful political means on a
reluctant or at least an infected but not altogether willing Asia and Europe,
and on the other side a combination of peoples,
partly capitalist, partly moderate socialist who still cling with some
attachment to the idea of liberty, — to freedom of thought and some remnant of
the free life of the individual. In
America there seems to be a push, especially in the Latin peoples, towards a rather
intolerant completeness of the Americanisation of the whole continent and the
adjacent islands, a sort of extended Monroe Doctrine, which might create
friction with the European Powers still holding possessions in the northern
part of the continent. But this could
only generate minor difficulties and disagreements and not the possibility of
any serious collision, a case perhaps for arbitration or arrangement by the
U.N.O., not any more serious consequence.
In Asia a more
perilous situation has arisen, standing sharply across the way to any
possibility of a continental unity of the peoples of this part of the world, in
the emergence of Communist China. This
creates a gigantic bloc which could easily englobe
the whole of Northern Asia in a combination between two enormous Communist
Powers, Russia and China, and would overshadow with a threat of absorption
South-Western Asia and Tibet and might be pushed to overrun all up to the whole
frontier of India, menacing her security and that of Western Asia with the
possibility of an invasion and an overrunning and subjection by penetration or
even by overwhelming military force to an unwanted ideology, political and
social institutions and dominance of this militant mass of Communism whose push
might easily prove irresistible. In any
case, the continent would be divided between two huge blocs which might enter
into active mutual opposition and the possibility of a stupendous
world-conflict would arise dwarfing anything previously experienced: the
possibility of any world-union might even without any actual outbreak of
hostilities be indefinitely postponed by the incompatibility of interests and
ideologies on a scale which would render their inclusion in a single body
hardly realisable. The possibility of a
coming into being of three or four continental unions, which might subsequently
coalesce into a single unity, would then be very remote and, except after a
world-shaking struggle,
hardly feasible.
At one time it was possible to regard
as an eventual possibility the extension of Socialism to all the nations; an
international unity could then have been created by its innate tendencies which turned naturally towards an overcoming
of the dividing force of the national-idea with its separatism and its turn towards
competitions and rivalries often culminating in open strife; this could have
been regarded as the natural road and could have turned in fact into the
eventual way towards world-union. But,
in the first place, Socialism has under certain stresses proved to be by no
means immune against infection by the dividing national spirit and its
international tendency might not survive its coming into power in separate
national States and a resulting inheritance of competing national interests and
necessities: the old spirit might very
well survive in the new socialist bodies.
But also there might not be or not for a long time to come an inevitable
tide of the spread of Socialism to all the peoples of the earth: other forces
might arise which would dispute what seemed at one time and perhaps still seems
the most likely outcome of existing world tendencies; the conflict between
Communism and the less extreme socialistic idea which still respects the
principle of liberty, even though a restricted liberty, and the freedom of
conscience, of thought, of personality of the individual, if this difference
perpetuated itself, might create a serious difficulty in the formation of a
World-State. It would not be easy to
build a constitution, a harmonised State-law and practice in which any modicum
of genuine freedom for the individual or any continued existence of him except
as a cell in the working of a rigidly determined automatism of the body of the collectivist
State or
a part of a machine would be possible or conceivable. It is not that the principle of Communism
necessitates any such results or that its system must lead to a termite
civilisation or the suppression of the individual; it could well be, on the
contrary, a means at once of the fulfilment of the individual and the perfect
harmony of a collective being. The
already developed systems which go by the name are not really Communism but
constructions of an inordinately rigid State Socialism. But Socialism itself might well develop away
from the Marxist groove and evolve less rigid modes; a co-operative Socialism,
for instance, without any bureaucratic rigour of a coercive
administration, of a Police State, might
one day come into existence, but the generalisation of Socialism throughout the
world is not under existing circumstances easily foreseeable, hardly even a
predominant possibility: in spite of certain possibilities or tendencies
created by recent events in the Far East, a division of the earth between the
two systems, capitalistic and socialistic, seems for the present a more likely
issue. In
America the
attachment to individualism and the capitalistic system of society and strong
antagonism not only to Communism but to even a moderate Socialism remains
complete and one can foresee little possibility of any abatement in its
intensity. The extreme success of
Communism creeping over the continents of the Old World, which we have had to
envisage as a possibility, is yet, if we consider existing circumstances and
the balance of opposing Powers, highly improbable and, even if it occurred,
some accommodation would still be necessary, unless one of the two forces
gained an overwhelming eventual victory over its opponent. A successful accommodation would demand the
creation of a body in which all questions of possible dispute could be solved
as they arose without any breaking out of open conflict, and this would be a
successor of the
League of Nations and the U.N.O.
and move in the same direction. As
Russia and America, in spite of the constant opposition of policy and ideology,
have avoided so far any step that would make the preservation of the U.N.O. too
difficult or impossible, this third body would be preserved by the same
necessity or imperative utility of its continued existence. The same forces would work in the same
direction and a creation of an effective world-union would still be possible;
in the end the mass of general needs of the race and its need of
self-preservation could well be relied on to make it inevitable.
There is nothing then in the
development of events since the establishment of the United Nations
Organisation, in the sequel to the great initiation at San Francisco of the
decisive step towards the creation of a world-body which might end in the
establishment of a true world-unity, that need discourage us in the expectation
of an ultimate success of this great enterprise. There are dangers and difficulties, there can
be an apprehension of conflicts, even of colossal conflicts that might
jeopardise the future, but total failure need not be envisaged unless we are
disposed to predict the failure of the race.
The thesis we have undertaken to establish of the drive of Nature
towards larger agglomerations and the final establishment of the largest of all
and the ultimate union of the world’s peoples still remains unaltered: this is evidently
the line which the future of the human race demands and which conflicts and
perturbations, however immense, may delay, even as they may modify greatly the
forms it now promises to take, but are not likely to prevent; for a general
destruction would be the only alternative destiny of mankind. But such a destruction, whatever the
catastrophic possibilities balancing the almost certain beneficial results,
hardly limitable in their extent, of the recent discoveries and inventions of
Science, has every chance of being as chimerical as an early expectation of
final peace and felicity or a perfected society of the human peoples. We may rely, if on nothing else, on the
evolutionary urge and, if so no other greater hidden Power, on the manifest
working and drift or intention in the World-Energy we call Nature to carry
mankind at least as far as the necessary next step to be taken, a
self-preserving next step: for the necessity is there, at least some general
recognition of it has been achieved and of the thing to which it must
eventually lead the idea has been born and the body of it is already calling
for its creation. We have indicated in
this book the conditions, possibilities, forms which this new creation may take
and those which seem to be most desirable without dogmatising or giving
prominence to personal opinion; an impartial consideration of the forces that
work and the results that are likely to ensue was the object of this
study. The rest will depend on the
intellectual and moral capacity of humanity to carry out what is evidently now
the one thing needful.
We conclude then that in the
conditions of the world at present, even taking into consideration its most
disparaging features and dangerous possibilities, there is nothing that need
alter the view we have taken of the necessity and inevitability of some kind of
world-union; the drive of Nature, the compulsion of circumstances and the
present and future need of mankind make it inevitable. The general conclusions we have arrived at
will stand and the consideration of the modalities and possible forms or lines
of alternative or successive development it may take. The ultimate result must be the formation of
a World-State and the most desirable form of it would be a federation of free
nationalities in which all subjection or forced inequality and subordination of
one to another would have disappeared and, though some might preserve a greater
natural influence, all would have an equal status. A confederacy would give the greatest
freedom to the nations constituting the World-State, but this might give too
much room for fissiparous or centrifugal tendencies to operate; a federal order
would then be the most desirable. All
else would be determined by the course of events and by general agreement or
the shape given by the ideas and necessities that may grow up in the
future. A world-union of this kind
would have the greatest chances of long survival or permanent existence. This is a mutable world and uncertainties and
dangers might assail or trouble for a time; the formed structure might be
subjected to revolutionary tendencies as new ideas and forces emerged and
produced their effect on the general mind of humanity, but the essential step
would have been taken and the future of the race assured or at least the
present era overpassed in which it is threatened and
disturbed by unsolved needs and difficulties, precarious conditions, immense
upheavals, huge and sanguinary world-wide conflicts and the threat of others to
come. The ideal of human unity would be
no longer an unfulfilled ideal but an accomplished fact and its preservation
given into the charge of the united human peoples. Its future destiny would lie on the knees of
the gods and, if the gods have a use for the continued existence of the race,
may be left to lie there safe.