The theory
is best understood by way of contrast with other theories, including other
theories discussed by Simon. What Simon
calls the “coach-driver theory” holds that government officials are analogous
to the driver of a coach who simply follows the directives of the passengers in
the coach. The “divine right theory”
proposed by some 16th century thinkers holds that governmental
authority is imparted to rulers directly from God.
The transmission
theory can be thought of as a kind of middle ground position between these two
theories. The coach-driver theory
essentially takes political authority to begin and end in the community, with
governmental officials functioning as mere instruments of the community’s will
rather than having any true authority over it.
The divine right theory denies that the community plays any role at all where
political authority is concerned, locating such authority only in the ruler and
in God, who conveys it to the ruler. The
transmission theory attributes a greater role to the community than the divine
right theory does, but a smaller role than the coach-driver theory does. It holds, contra the divine right theory,
that political authority really does reside in the community, and that it is
only through the community that rulers get this authority from God. But it holds, contra the coach-driver theory,
that such authority does not originate in the community and does not remain
there, insofar as it comes from God and is transferred to governmental
officials.
Another
illuminating contrast is with the way popes receive their authority. It comes directly from God, rather than
through the community. Hence, papal
authority is more like the authority the divine right theory attributes to
kings, rather than the authority governmental officials have on the
transmission theory. To be sure, popes
are chosen by human beings, namely the cardinal electors. But the transmission theory distinguishes the
cases by holding that while the cardinals designate
the man to whom papal authority will be transmitted, they do not themselves transmit that authority. Again,
God does that.
This
distinction suggests yet another theory of secular political authority, known
as the “designation theory.” This holds
that while the community designates
the officials to whom political authority will be transmitted, it is God rather
than the community who transmits it. It’s
like the divine right theory but allows some role to at least part of the
community (again, to designate the recipient of authority, but still not to
transmit authority). The transmission
theory takes even the designation theory to attribute too much to governmental authorities
and too little to the community. The
designation theory essentially makes secular political authority analogous to
papal authority.
It seems to
me that another useful way to understand the transmission theory and its
relations to other theories is by analogy with the different metaphysical theories
of causality that were discussed by Scholastic writers. (This analogy is mine rather than Simon’s.)
The view
defended by St. Thomas Aquinas is known as concurrentism. It holds that created things are “secondary
causes.” This means, on the one hand,
that they have genuine causal power (that’s the “causes” part); but on the
other hand, it also holds that they have their power only in a borrowed way
insofar as they cannot act at all apart from the divine first cause (that’s the
“secondary” part). Think of the stock
example of the stick being used to push a stone. The stick really does push the stone, but
only insofar as some person uses the stick to push it. The stick could not act without the person “concurring”
with its operation. In the same way,
natural objects have real causal power – the sun really does melt ice, a bird
really does built a nest, and so on – but only because God concurs with their
operations by constantly imparting causal power to them.
This is a
middle ground position between occasionalism
and what commentators sometimes call mere
conservationism. According to
occasionalism, there are no true secondary causes in the natural world. God is the only true cause. Hence, it isn’t really the sun that melts
ice. It is God who melts it, on the
occasion when the sun is present. It isn’t
really the bird that brings the nest into being. It is God who does so, on the occasion when
the bird is present. And so on. Mere conservationism, by contrast, holds that
while God conserves natural causes in existence, they are entirely capable of
acting on their own without his concurrence.
It is the sun alone that melts the ice, the bird alone that builds the
nest, and so on, with no need for God continually to impart causal power to
them once they are created.
I would
suggest that on the transmission theory of authority, the community is a kind
of “secondary cause.” It plays a genuine
causal role in imparting power to governing authorities, even if it does so
only as the instrument of the divine first cause. The divine right theory and designation
theory, by contrast, are analogous to occasionalism in that they attribute no
causal role at all to the community in transmitting power to governing authorities. Only God transmits it (though the designation
theory allows that the community plays another, non-transmitting role). Meanwhile, the coach-driver theory is
analogous to mere conservationism insofar as it makes the community all by
itself the source of authority, rather than transmitting it from God.
I would
suggest that these distinctions and analogies also illuminate the way the
Scholastic natural law tradition differs from liberalism. Liberal social contract theories are
essentially variations on the coach-driver theory. Political authority originates entirely from
the people rather than from God. This is
true even in Locke’s version of the social contract, despite its theological
component. That there is a law of nature
in the state of nature is, for Locke, due to God. But there is no governmental authority in
that state of nature. Government is not a
natural institution, and its power is thus not the kind that derives from the
author of nature. Rather, it is a
product of human artifice, and its power derives from the human artificers who
make it. Moreover, while the “inconveniencies”
of the state of nature make it prudent for us to leave it and set up
governments, there is no strict obligation under natural law for us to do
so. Whatever authority governments have,
then, is not transmitted to them by God through the people, but from the people
alone. Indeed, strictly speaking the
people retain this power, which is why, for Locke, when the people decide to
overthrow an oppressive government, it is the government rather than the people
who are “rebelling.” The government is
like an insubordinate employee who has to be fired – or, to borrow Simon’s
analogy, like a coach driver who suddenly takes the passengers somewhere other
than where they paid him to go.
As Simon
notes, a problem with the coach-driver theory is that, consistently pursued, it
would entail anarchy. A passenger in a
coach has no obligation to go where the coach driver wants to drive him, even
if the other passengers want to go there.
The dissident passenger has every right to get out of the coach rather
than submit to the will of the driver or the majority of passengers. Similarly, Simon points out, the coach-driver
theory has no plausible way of explaining why members of the community who
disagree with the majority should submit to that majority or to the government
personnel who act on the majority’s behalf.
Social
contract theories have a similar problem.
They have no plausible way of explaining why people who object to the
terms of the hypothetical liberal social contract (Lockean, Rawlsian, or
whatever) should be expected to abide by it – or indeed, why a merely
hypothetical contract should be binding on anyone in the first place.
My analogy
with mere conservationism also suggests that it is no accident that liberal
societies have, Locke’s theism notwithstanding, tended to become increasingly
secularist over time. One of the
objections to mere conservationism is that, given its assumptions, it seems
inevitably to collapse into deism or even atheism. If natural objects can act or operate without
God, then (given the Scholastic dictum that action
follows being), it is hard to see why they could not also exist without him. Similarly, if political authority in no way
derives from God, it is not surprising that people should increasingly see theology
as something that has no proper role in politics.
Finally, I
would suggest that all of this also illuminates what it is, or can be, to be postliberal. Many assume that postliberalism is bound to
be authoritarian or despotic. As I have
argued elsewhere, that is simply not the case. And the distinctions drawn here make clear
why. To be sure, one could reject
liberalism in favor of a divine right theory or a designation theory of
political authority, and it is easy to see why such theories might lend
themselves to authoritarianism. But one
could instead reject liberalism in favor of the transmission theory of
authority. And while that theory is
compatible with monarchy, it is also compatible with aristocracy, democracy, or
some mixed constitution.
Indeed, many liberals claim to see in Bellarmine and Suárez precursors to their own position. They are quite wrong if they suppose there is anything in these Scholastics that is strictly liberal. But they are right to hold that ideals such as the rule of law, constitutional limits on governmental power, and grounds for a polity with a strong democratic component are to be found in the Scholastic tradition. What this shows is not that the Scholastics were proto-liberals, but rather that not all non-liberals fit the despotic caricature liberals like to paint of them.

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