An open access publication of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences
Fall 2007

Ethical politics: reality or illusion?

Author
Robert Neelly Bellah

Robert N. Bellah, a Fellow of the American Academy since 1967, is Elliott Professor of Sociology Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley. His books include “Tokugawa Religion” (1957), “Beyond Belief” (1970), and “Varieties of Civil Religion and Uncivil Religion” (1980). With Richard Madsen, William Sullivan, Ann Swidler, and Steven Tipton, he coauthored “Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life” (1985) and “The Good Society” (1991). Most recently, he coedited “The Robert Bellah Reader” (with Steven M. Tipton, 2007).

It would be well, before reflecting on whether the idea of ethical politics is a reality or an illusion, to consider briefly the meaning of ethical politics, or to put it bluntly, whether many Americans see any relation between ethics and politics.1 As we found out in our research for Habits of the Heart, most Americans think they know what they mean by politics (and by politicians), and it is not nice. Politics is the way some people get what they want by using undue influence, questionable tactics, even thinly veiled forms of bribery. If this widespread understanding of politics is correct, then the answer to the question my title asks is clear from the start: politics is not ethical. Indeed, almost by definition, in the minds of many Americans, politics is unethical.

Yet we claim to be a free, democratic, and self-governing society. For most people all those terms are positive. Indeed, we tend to divide the world between democratic societies, which are good, and undemocratic ones, which are bad. But how do we exercise our freedom, how do we govern ourselves in a democratic society, except through politics? And if democracy is good, how can the political practices that make it work be inherently corrupt?

One might say, it is not that democratic politics are inherently bad; it is just that ours at the moment are bad and we need to reform them. Fair enough. Most institutions, families, marriages, and individuals could use some reform. But will just putting stricter rules on lobbyists make our politics ethical, or are there deeper issues that we need to think about, issues concerning both ethics and politics?

When I was asked to write this essay, I was examining ancient Greece, the birthplace of democracy, and of the very terms ‘politics’ and ‘ethics.’ Our democracy, a representative democracy, is very different from ancient democracy, a direct democracy in which all citizens, or most of them, actively participated in their own governance. Nevertheless, Alexis de Tocqueville, in Democracy in America, found something that he considered similar to ancient direct democracy in the New England town meeting. And we can still see direct democracy at work in many civic associations and in many religious congregations.

.  .  .

Endnotes

  • 1This essay is a revision of a talk first delivered as the Henry Bugbee Lecture in Philosophy in the President’s Lecture Series at the University of Montana, April 3, 2006.
To read this essay or subscribe to Dædalus, visit the Dædalus access page
Access now