Excavations


... nothing is more essential to public interest than the preservation of public liberty.

- David Hume



Wednesday, May 22, 2013

To Duffy on Dues and Duty (with help from Collingwood)



For those not in the know, Senator Mike Duffy’s $90,000 expense claims, considered invalid by audit, were to be secretly paid for by personal cheque from Prime Minister Harper’s former chief of staff, Nigel Wright.  Given that the highest-ranking official behind the “Harper Government” has now stepped down, Duffy is left to once again to ponder his accountability, a matter in which Harper and his subordinates allegedly take pride. Here is what R. G. Collingwood (1889-1943), the English philosopher and historian would say to Duffy on his “dues” and “duty”.

17. 12.  ‘Due’ and ‘duty’ first appear in English in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries to describe various aspects of the state of indebtedness.  They always contain a reference to the past, debitum being a past participle; a past act of incurring the debt; logically past; it need not be also temporally past.

17. 13. They are medieval words, and in the Middle Ages the idea of debt was associated less with the expectation of a money payment than with that of a payment in kind; or, still oftener, that of rendering to a ‘lord’ a ‘service’ not necessarily conceived as having a monetary equivalent.

17. 14.  The idea of a debt incurred by one act and discharged by another had already found a vernacular English expression in a new sense of the Germanic verb ‘owe’.  Originally this meant ‘own’, but from the tenth century onwards it is the current English translation for debere.

17. 15.  When ‘due’ and ’duty’ first appeared in English, therefore, they found Germanic synonyms derived from the verb ‘owe’ already established; in particular the past tense ‘ought’, where the same reference to a logically past act of incurring debt is implied.

17. 16.  Etymologically, then, ‘it is my duty to do this’ and ‘I ought to do this’ mean the same; viz. that I am conscious of an obligation or debt incurred in the past by an act that generated the obligation, and to be discharged in the future by the act referred to as ‘this’.

17. 17.  In modern English, consciousness of obligation is distinguished from other forms of consciousness by the name ‘conscience’.  ‘Conscience’ has a first-order subject, viz. the obligation itself. ...[1]





[1] R. G. Collingwood, The New Leviathan, or Man, Society, Civilization and Barbarism, ed. David Boucher (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992), pp. 119,120.  Emphasis added.

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