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Una Pagina Classica
Corporate Co-operation
The desire
to detach the individual from society, allegedly to make
him self-sufficient, leads to a result entirely
different from that intended. Some believed that this
would strengthen the individual and afford him more
freedom of action. The latter proved to be partly true
insofar as occasionally more freedom of action and
possibility of development is gained .In the main,
however, and considering humanity as a whole, the
individual detached from society is lost in the big
mass.
The true
fact is that under present conditions it is not the
single individual who is confronted by the centralistic
state authority, but organized individuals who, in their
organizations, are and remain mass, and have
given up their individuality in order to be mass and
thus be effective by the momentum of their number. The
organizations are not members of the national body, the
nation that is united in the state, but are independent
social groups. Their existence does not affect the
principle that the absolute and sovereign individual is
directly confronted by the sovereign and omnipotent
state, except insofar as it renders the situation
somewhat obscure.
At present
we have a class society with class controversies. The
future shall bring us a society arranged according to
functional corporations, and a united co-operation
between these corporations.
The Pope
designates modern society as “organized upon the
antagonism of class interests”. What is this state of
affairs? As long as society was a well-arranged
organism, its structure and form were determined
organically by the forces of life. If, however, society
has become a big tub into which the mass of millions of
socially detached and atomized individuals has been
thrown in confusion, then the organic forces are
replaced by inorganic, mechanical forces. Among these
one dominates gravity. As a result of prolonged shaking
the heavier particles will move to the bottom. We need
only ask which force in this instance takes the place of
gravity. The answer is not difficult. Experience shows
us that lack of means is the leaden weight that attaches
itself to man’s feet, pulling him into the depths of the
economic void, while ownership is the force that keeps
him economically afloat. In the course of time, a
separation into layers has taken place, rating men
according to the amount of their possessions and finally
classifying them only according to possession or lack of
possession. As a result, we have at present two
distinctly separated social groups which are not
organically related to each other; they are not organs
of the social body, but accumulations of unrelated
parts. These two groups nevertheless engage in a
relationship which, however, is essentially
antagonistic.
Class
antagonism, the mechanistic arrangement of social
classes, must be replaced by an organic arrangement
of society. The word rearrangement suggests
that we are again forming member groups. These members
are the vocational groups “well-ordered members of the
social body binding men together, not according to the
position they occupy in the labor market, but according
to the diverse functions which they exercise in
society”.
But why a
corporate organization according to vocations?
This seems to be a fine distinction. Corporate because
these social groups, forming themselves according to
vocational relations must be developed into true and
real organs of the social body.
From Oswald von Nell-Breuning S.J.,
Reorganization of Social Economy: The Social
Encyclical developed and Explained, English edition
prepared by Bernard W.
Dempsey S.J., New York, The Bruce
Publishing Company, 1936. This book is a commentary on
the encyclical Quadragesimo anno.
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