{"id":3884,"date":"1962-06-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1962-06-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1962-vol-43-no-6-in-search-of-a-canadian-utopia\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:39:47","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:39:47","slug":"june-1962-vol-43-no-6-in-search-of-a-canadian-utopia","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1962-vol-43-no-6-in-search-of-a-canadian-utopia\/","title":{"rendered":"June 1962 &#8211; VOL. 43, NO. 6 &#8211; In Search of a Canadian Utopia"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">A map of the world must include                     Utopia, because that is the one country at which humanity                     is always landing. No sooner does it land than it looks out                     and sees a better country, and sets sail again.<\/p>\n<p> Every enlightened and active-minded person is to some                     degree a Utopian. He pictures to himself the political, social                     and industrial conditions under which he should like to live,                     and, at least in some small degree, he tries to realize those                     conditions.<\/p>\n<p>Few persons in the Western World give in to the thought                     that things have been already settled for them. We know that                     things accepted today as part of our way of life were once                     merely dreams, and we look forward to having our own dreams                     come true.<\/p>\n<p>The word &#8220;Utopia&#8221; was first used by Sir Thomas More in 1516                     as the name of a far distant island on which, according to                     his story, there existed an ideal commonwealth. It has made                     its way into the dictionary as meaning &#8220;a place, state or                     condition ideally perfect in respect of politics, customs                     and conditions.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Some people may think it more or less childish to read utopian                     literature, but one of the great benefits is this: it helps                     us to break through the barriers of conventional thinking                     and see things fresh, from new points of view. There is, in                     the more serious utopian literature, a great treasury of creative                     ideas and useful practical devices.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;What is Utopia?&#8221; is a legitimate and perhaps a useful question                     to raise. Some of the writers portray its citizens as living                     leisurely lives, with an abundance of the necessities of life,                     and enjoying the advantages furnished by gadgets. That thought                     was in keeping with the physically hard times in which the                     books were written. But the utopian idea has something for                     the mind and spirit, too.<\/p>\n<p>The essence of any civilization is found in its sense of                     values, demonstrated in its preferences, its moral commitments,                     its aesthetic judgments, its loyalties, its conception of                     the good life, its standards of excellence, its measures of                     success, and what it teaches its young people about the things                     for which men shall live.<\/p>\n<h3>The Golden Age<\/h3>\n<p>Where do we get the idea of a Golden Age? Writing in the                     eighth century B.C., a Greek shepherd-poet described                     the five ages of the world. First was the golden race of mortal                     men, then silver, then bronze, then a race of heroes, and                     finally our own, the race of iron. We have picked up the phrase                     to designate a period of stability and harmony.<\/p>\n<p>King Alfred pictured the Golden Age of England as a far-off                     time in which &#8220;no one had yet heard of Viking ships of war&#8221;.                     A Chinese philosopher saw in it a time when &#8220;one village might                     look at the smoke rising from the chimneys of another nearby                     without envy or rivalry&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>It is evident that many of the ancient fables of the Golden                     Age had foundations in fact. We find vestiges of them preserved                     in the present time, and echoes of their idealism in our minds.                     The utopian brings together the best ideas of the Golden Age                     and modifies them to fit the new environment.<\/p>\n<p>We have, in fact, enough ideas lying around us and proffered                     to us to build a dozen utopias, but they are a hodgepodge                     of undigested thoughts. They have one thing in common, despite                     their diversity of form: the desire for a fuller, more interesting,                     more satisfying life. In seeking this, they range from Aladdin&#8217;s                     magic lamp, which gives us everything we want at once and                     free of cost and work, to the prophet&#8217;s cry for reformation                     of life and character.<\/p>\n<p>The first utopian we know of who was in a position to put                     his ideas into practice was the Pharaoh Akhenaten. Within                     a crescent of hills, remote from the everyday life of Egypt,                     he built a new city devoted to emancipating the human spirit                     in religion, art and ethics. It was the most striking change                     in any ancient state.<\/p>\n<p>Several centuries later a king of India, Asoka, introduced                     idealism which ranged all the way from planting shade trees                     to founding hospitals, from sending missionaries to the aborigines                     to appointing officers to administer charities at home; from                     providing for the education of women to cultivating medicinal                     herbs. As H. G. Wells says: &#8220;More living men cherish his memory                     today than have ever heard the names of Constantine or Charlemagne.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>For every man who has had the authority to give reality                     to his utopia, there have been thousands who could only plan,                     propose and exhort.<\/p>\n<p>Plato, who had an uncanny knack of being right, is still                     referred to by the advanced thinkers of today although he                     wrote his <em>Republic <\/em>2,300 years ago. Plato set his utopia                     in an inland region with no facilities for maritime trade                     and little economic activity except subsistence farming. He                     points up the prosperity which results when pious, law-abiding,                     industrious pioneers develop a civilization in peace.<\/p>\n<p>The first utopian of what we might call the beginning of                     our present scientific age was Francis Bacon, who wrote <em>New                     Atlantis <\/em>in 1626, professing an aggressive faith in the                     liberating role of science. About the same time, Thomas Campanella,                     an Italian, took bits and pieces of preceding utopias and                     built them into <em>City of the Sun<\/em>. Shakespeare&#8217;s ideas                     of utopia appear in <em>The Tempest<\/em>, where Gonzalo would                     &#8220;&#8230; with such perfection govern, sir, to excel the golden                     age&#8221;, and in <em>King Henry III<\/em>, where Jack Cade promises                     a realm in which there shall be no money, but all shall eat                     and drink at the king&#8217;s expense.<\/p>\n<p>By the nineteenth century people were forecasting plastics,                     synthetic fabrics, combine harvesters, radio, television,                     automobiles and air conditioning, and incorporating these                     in their utopias. Henry Thoreau rejected such pictures of                     a mechanized civilization, and stood out for simple living.<\/p>\n<p>A Massachusetts author, Edward Bellamy, wrote <em>Looking                     Backward <\/em>in 1888, making his utopia of the year 2000 a                     single industrial unit, with compulsory work service for everyone.<\/p>\n<p>There were, too, less pretentious utopias. Robinson Crusoe                     found one where he was allowed to live in an exotic setting                     without any of the puzzling responsibilities of a wife and                     children. Samuel Taylor Coleridge proposed to try the experiment                     of human perfectibility on the banks of the Susquehanna River,                     where his little society was to have combined the innocence                     of the patriarchal age with the knowledge and genuine refinements                     of culture. He remarked in an essay: &#8220;we at length alighted                     on the firm ground of common sense from the gradually exhausted                     balloon of youthful enthusiasm.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Utopias and us<\/h3>\n<p>These Utopias, and others, were based upon the idea of progress,                     or, at the very least, a change from a worse to a better state.                     Mankind has risen from his former lowly condition just because                     of them. Individuals stepped out of the routine rut of their                     existence and attempted to do something that had not been                     accomplished before.<\/p>\n<p>A new state arises out of the needs of mankind, but someone                     has to be first to see the needs. He gets an idealistic vision                     of what seems to be a good society, though such social conditions                     may never have existed, and then compares that apparent perfection                     with the imperfect reality of present society.<\/p>\n<p>To assume that either man or his environment has changed                     so much that lessons of the past no longer apply is unrealistic.                     How can we appreciate freedom, opportunity, and luxury without                     an appreciation of the spent hope and sweat and blood and                     treasure that went into gaining them? How can we be sure that                     our way is the best way unless we have learned about the blind                     alleys into which our forefathers wandered, and the great                     array of things that might as well not be tried again?<\/p>\n<p>There are lessons, too, about how the importance of movements                     which in their own time meant little became the rallying ground                     for advancement in a later age. Consider Magna Charta, the                     Great Charter forced from King John after the revolt of the                     barons in 1215. When Shakespeare wrote a play called <em>King                     John <\/em>he completely omitted what appears to us to have                     been the most dramatic event in that monarch&#8217;s life. Five                     centuries after King John the Charter became the corner-stone                     of liberty for the English-speaking world.<\/p>\n<p>The thing to do with utopian dreams is not to give them                     up but to test them. Some dreams have undeniable grandeur                     and nobility, but upon sober examination they turn out to                     be impractical. Others, like the idealized code written aboard                     the <em>Mayflower <\/em>during the long slow passage from Plymouth                     to Massachusetts in 1620, have vitally affected millions of                     people through many generations.<\/p>\n<p>Consider James H. Harrington&#8217;s <em>The Commonwealth of Oceana<\/em>,                     published in 1656. Arthur E. Morgan points out in <em>Nowhere                     was Somewhere <\/em>that it has almost lost its status as a                     utopia because it has been so widely used in making actual                     constitutions. For example, when congressmen in the United                     States argue for the separation of the legislative, executive                     and judicial branches of the government they are going over                     the arguments of <em>Oceana<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Because of the advances made in the Western World, there                     is not much to be learned from those utopian creations which                     dealt with the elemental needs of men, such as abundance of                     food, shelter and clothing; freedom from oppression; freedom                     from excessive toil, and opportunity for self-expression.<\/p>\n<p>These material utopias, now largely matters of fact, release                     men from immediate preoccupation with material wants, but                     they leave more profound problems of life still unsolved.                     Are we attacking these? Alfred North Whitehead thinks not:                     &#8220;No period of history has ever been great or ever can be that                     does not act on some sort of high, idealistic motives, and                     idealism in our time has been shoved aside, and we are paying                     the penalty for it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>In Canada today<\/h3>\n<p>It will not do for us in Canada to take too petty a view                     of our stature. To people in many other lands Canada seems                     to have nearly reached the utopian ideal. If poverty has not                     been completely abolished, at least a larger proportion of                     our population lives in comfort than in any previous civilization.                     We have, through the forty-hour work week, the leisure                     eulogized by utopian writers. We use food and clothes so lavishly                     that we seem, to other people, wasteful. Our amusements, our                     educational opportunities, our ability to travel, and our                     freedom from hard labour&nbsp;&#8230; all these surpass the most                     golden dreams of the ancient utopians.<\/p>\n<p>But it would be disastrous to our future if we were to settle                     down and say &#8220;Now we are all right&#8221;. We must continue to cultivate                     our garden.<\/p>\n<p>We have an excellent foundation in the values to which we                     give allegiance tabulated for us by Professor George S. Counts:<\/p>\n<p>1. Our ethical standards derived from the Hebraic-Christian                     faith;<\/p>\n<p>2. Our adoption of the humanistic spirit of the Greeks and                     of the Renaissance, which emphasizes the dignity of man;<\/p>\n<p>3. Our confidence in the scientific method of hypotheses                     tested by instruments as the safest path to truth;<\/p>\n<p>4. Our adherence to the Roman and Anglo-Saxon rule                     of law to provide channels for peaceful change in society;<\/p>\n<p>5. Our democratic faith in liberty, equality and fraternity,                     which came to us from the eighteenth century philosophers                     and the French Revolution.<\/p>\n<h3>Confederation<\/h3>\n<p>All of these principles are incorporated or implied in the                     charter of Confederation. The men who framed it were well                     aware of the need for political union in order to preserve                     this country&#8217;s civil and political liberties, but they did                     not place a political yoke around our necks. Instead, they                     reached out to the future, to a fuller, richer, and more various                     life of all the provinces through co-operation centrally                     attained.<\/p>\n<p>The hundred years since they framed their charter, based                     upon everlasting principles and incorporating the practicalities                     of their day, have been years of testing.<\/p>\n<p>It is no easy task to govern in Canada, either in federal                     parliament or provincial legislatures. Many people of sound                     judgment and good ability are needed, and every voter has                     a say in choosing the wisest men.<\/p>\n<p>The purpose of those who govern, as Plato had the merit                     of seeing, is to make the safety and interest of their citizens                     the great aim and design of all their thoughts and endeavours,                     without ever considering their own personal advantage; and                     so to take care of the whole collective body of the nation                     as not to serve the interest of any one party to the prejudice                     or neglect of all the rest.<\/p>\n<p>There are many definitions of what is the interest of the                     people, but for Canadians it may be taken to mean this: the                     right of every man to enjoy, in accordance with his aptitudes                     of character and mentality, the material and spiritual opportunities                     that nature and science have placed at the disposition of                     this nation.<\/p>\n<p>Before we can enjoy the perfection of a government like                     that, we need to educate all our people so that they are qualified                     to select the best leaders. The duty to vote is a duty to                     equip oneself to vote. Wise decisions cannot be extracted                     from blank ignorance.<\/p>\n<p>There is a collateral duty upon those who proffer themselves                     for office. How have they trained themselves to deserve confidence                     in their judgment? Leaders hold their positions only on sufferance,                     and they must justify themselves by other means than appeals                     to inheritance, possession or popularity.<\/p>\n<h3>Some hindrances<\/h3>\n<p>There are three failings which interfere with the development                     of a nation: prejudice, a passion for security, and nationalism.<\/p>\n<p>A utopia may exist though each of its parts has a diversity                     of operations, but it cannot exist without unity of spirit.<\/p>\n<p>Co-operation is the basis of utopian life, as it is                     the basis of democracy. There is no &#8220;ism&#8221; that will add one                     inch to our advance toward a better Canada.<\/p>\n<p>This means that we need a broad tolerance, a seeing of the                     good points on both sides of a question. This does not mean                     keeping always in the middle of the road. The middle way may                     have a part of the vices of both extremes and none of their                     virtues. As someone put it, when you walk in the middle of                     the road you are likely to be run over by both lines of traffic                     instead of by only one.<\/p>\n<p>To be tolerant is not to be indifferent, and it is incompatible                     with ignorance. It is a positive and cordial effort to understand                     another&#8217;s beliefs, practices and habits, without necessarily                     sharing or accepting them.<\/p>\n<p>Mutual understanding is based on the acceptance of our widely                     differing characters and ways of looking at and interpreting                     the world. The Emperor Hadrian excoriated races who had lived                     side by side for centuries without having &#8220;the curiosity to                     get to know each other, or the decency to accept each other&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Many inventors of utopias have made them intolerably dull,                     because their main preoccupation was with security and ease.                     They are like people who build a golf course which is all                     green, without fairway, rough, bunkers or hazards.<\/p>\n<p>The self-respecting person can stand a world without                     a fence around it. He needs opportunities of adventure, of                     trying for himself. He knows that if he stops thinking of                     government as it should be, and thinks only of what it does                     for him, he loses control of it by becoming its beneficiary                     and client.<\/p>\n<p>Pope Leo XIII said in his Encyclical of May 1891: &#8221; If any                     there are&#8230;who hold out to a hard-pressed people freedom                     from pain and trouble, undisturbed repose, and constant enjoyment,                     they cheat the people and impose upon them, and their lying                     promises will only make the evil worse than before.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When preoccupation with security begins to dominate human                     life, the scope of human life begins to be diminished. It                     is right that the state should be a machine fit to serve men,                     but with the least possible risk of crushing them.<\/p>\n<h3>A broad view needed<\/h3>\n<p>The third wrecker of utopian dreams is the spirit of nationalism,                     whether it be of the city, province, state or nation. Many                     people believe that nationalism is the basic ill of our age,                     but it is not a new disease. The great Greek war was a struggle                     between the Union of which Athens was the mistress and the                     states&#8217; rights group of which Sparta was the head. It was                     insistence upon the rights of the province in preference to                     those of the nation that caused the destruction of Greece                     itself.<\/p>\n<p>Many useless words are spoken, many fruitless efforts are                     spent, and many needless enmities are aroused, by sectional                     divisions over public questions. Rabbi Robert Gordis put it                     forcefully: &#8220;No greater peril threatens the survival of the                     race than nationalism, man&#8217;s total absorption in his own ethnic                     or political group.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The opposite to rampant nationalism is the voluntary association                     of men and women for the preservation and cultivation of a                     cherished body of ideals, practices and values.<\/p>\n<p>This seems to lead into consideration of world-wide                     relationships, and no country can ignore them. We often develop                     a sense of bitterness and frustration at the failure of world                     organizations to achieve lasting peace and harmony, but we                     never quite give in to the feeling that the goal should be                     abandoned.<\/p>\n<p>Through example and the force of our representation in international                     affairs we should strive to bring back order, scruple and                     principle into society. Thereby we enhance our own prospect                     of building the ideal commonwealth we see in our mind&#8217;s eye.<\/p>\n<p>No country, big or little, can sail serenely down the stream                     of time looking only at the brave bow wave it is cutting,                     or at the picturesque wake it is leaving. Even a utopia must                     pay attention to the surrounding shores. To paraphrase a great                     Roman: &#8220;So far as we are Tom, Dick or Francois, our country                     is Canada; but so far as we are men, it is the world.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>We recall one great moment in the late war, the moment in                     1940 when England suggested that France unite with her and                     that they become one people under law; but it slipped away.                     Things became less desperate, and the moment was lost.<\/p>\n<p>Unless peace is to depend on a balance of terror, the world                     needs something of the spirit of the Commonwealth. It exists                     for the help and comfort of its members and as an encouragement                     to all who want political freedom and friendship with their                     fellow men.<\/p>\n<h3>What to do<\/h3>\n<p>We should take a look, once in a while, at what has been                     accomplished instead of brooding over what we have not yet                     succeeded in doing. We can transfer thought of the Golden                     Age from the past to the future, exchanging a disillusioned                     view of human destiny for one that is optimistic. It is the                     cult of deprecation that endangers our social stability and                     holds up our efforts to progress. It is better, said Confucius,                     to light one small candle than to curse the darkness.<\/p>\n<p>Utopia is, above all, a place of and for educated people.                     If we are to build a Canada nearer to our hearts&#8217; desire,                     as Archimedes offered to move the world, we need, like him,                     some ground to stand on and a sturdy fulcrum. Education provides                     these.<\/p>\n<p>As long ago as 1944 the Canadian Education Association was                     discussing with school authorities the possibility of some                     organized plan for making education a greater force for national                     unity. The plan envisaged: (1) exchange of correspondence                     among students and teachers in different parts of Canada;                     (2) exchange of teachers of different provinces; (3) encouraging                     teachers to attend summer school in another province.<\/p>\n<p>Education with its wings spread widely wilt help to build                     social sense, which includes the answer to the critical problem                     that all utopians have to face: how shall our larger utopia                     keep from being neglected through every one&#8217;s concern for                     his little private utopia? Only educated men and women can                     think of the broader scene.<\/p>\n<p>Utopia is not made by talking, but by learning, thinking,                     planning and working. Many a proposed Utopia had the fatal                     flaw of excusing and justifying the slackening of men&#8217;s efforts                     to straighten out their immediate world. Just to propose a                     beautiful future is not equivalent to its realization.<\/p>\n<p>We are concerned to better today&#8217;s conditions; we are equally                     charged with planning to improve them tomorrow. Our grandchildren                     will be fortunate indeed if we have envisioned a great pattern                     and laid a few foundation stones.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[42],"class_list":["post-3884","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-42"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>June 1962 - VOL. 43, NO. 6 - In Search of a Canadian Utopia - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/june-1962-vol-43-no-6-in-search-of-a-canadian-utopia\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"June 1962 - VOL. 43, NO. 6 - In Search of a Canadian Utopia - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"A map of the world must include Utopia, because that is the one country at which humanity is always landing. 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No sooner does it land than it looks out and sees a better country, and sets sail again. Every enlightened and active-minded person is to some degree a Utopian. 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