Utopian society12/29/2023 Of course, this fact then only adds to the ambiguities of just how much of a “utopia” Utopia really is.It’s easy to look back at the many failed American utopian communities that sprung up during the Transcendentalist movement of the 1840s-from the Oneida Community to Brook Farm to Fruitlands-and point out what went wrong. In Utopia, where universal labor and communal property are seen as crucial aspects of happiness, slavery is simply the practical answer to human error. We might be scandalized that slavery should exist in Utopia, but the institution is part and parcel of the Utopians’ program of eliminating idleness and waste: instead of hanging a thief, as England would, why not force him to contribute to the public good? Or so runs Hythloday’s argument. Slavery in Utopia is a punishment for those Utopians who have committed “heinous offenses.” The nation also pays cities in other lands for their criminals, but only those already condemned to death, who are then brought back to Utopia to labor in bondage. A person is either 1) a freeman, including the average Utopian and members of the magistracy or priesthood or 2) a bondman, or slave, who works more than freemen and at harder work. There are two principal social statuses in Utopia that affect the conditions of one’s work. But not even these magistrates live idly: though exempt from labor by law, they labor anyway so that “their example provoke others to work.” To keep people diligently at their tasks is almost the only office of the Utopian magistrates known as Syphogrants or Philarchs, who are chosen by the people they live among. In addition, every Utopian learns his or her own proper craft: clothworking, masonry, metalworking, or carpentry. Such a policy makes it so that Utopians never lack agricultural knowledge, which is especially important in the event of a food shortage, and many hands also make light work. For one thing, everyone in Utopia is educated in the theory and practice of farming, and all citizens are required to relocate to the country at some point in their lives to work the farms for a period of two years. There are no idle serving men here, no idle women, no idle priests, no idle landowners, and no idle able-bodied beggars. One earnestly looks upon the common affairs by rolling up one’s sleeves and diligently getting to work, and for no less than six hours a day. Second, “where nothing is private,” Hythloday claims, “the common affairs be earnestly looked upon.” By the same token, everyone in Utopia who is fit to work must earn their keep through labor. Only these few divide up the wealth among themselves while the rest of the citizens are afflicted by “the heavy and inevitable burden of poverty and wretchedness.” In contrast, the equality established in Utopia enables every man, woman, and child to live in plenty. For one thing, he says, in nations founded on property and money-like feudal England, where wealthy landlords profited from peasants’ work-it tends to be the case that wealth unjustly falls into the hands of the most useless, wicked, and greedy people. Hythloday gives several reasons as to why there is no private property in Utopia. (The Utopians are so committed to this that, to give a more radical example, the doors to their houses are never locked or bolted, so that any citizen can, when they please, freely enter any other citizen’s house.) Without private property, Hythloday says, people don’t cultivate their pride so much as their nation, which becomes like a great and thriving household. In other words, the citizens of Utopia own nothing individually but share the resources of their nation collectively, from land to housing to bread and wine. In Book II of Utopia, we learn that the principal foundation of Utopian law and policy, as in Plato’s ideal republic and some monastic systems, is the abolition of all private property.
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