Ideas and Society in Don Porfirio`s Mexico
Transcription
Ideas and Society in Don Porfirio`s Mexico
Ideas and Society in Don Porfirio's Mexico Author(s): William D. Raat Reviewed work(s): Source: The Americas, Vol. 30, No. 1 (Jul., 1973), pp. 32-53 Published by: Academy of American Franciscan History Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/980446 . Accessed: 27/10/2012 13:36 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. . Academy of American Franciscan History is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Americas. http://www.jstor.org IDEAS AND SOCIETYIN DON PORFIRIO'SMEXICO N opinion often expressed by historians of Mexico and Latin America is that the age of Don Porfirio'sMexico was one in which the philosophy of positivism, wherther Comtean or Spencerian, was the dominant and official ideology of the day.- In contrast to this viewpoint, an important supposition of this essay is that the intellectual history of the Porfiriato can only become intelligible if and when other ideas, concepts, and philosophies are distinguished from positivism. In addition, an accurate description of the role of ideas necessitates that some attention be focused upon the function of ideas in society. Thus a concern of this essay, apart from differentiating ideas, is that of suggesting the interrelationship of ideas to certain political and socio-economic groups during the Porfiriato.2 To do this properly will first require a statement about the social structure of Mexico between 1876 and 1911. Although various criteria, ranging from dietary habits to sexual practices, have been used by scholars of social structure in Mexico, a classanalysisappearsto be one of the more fruitful approaches. The term "class" can be defined as a group or groups of people considered as a unit according to economic function, occupation, life style, and social status. A conscious identity of interests may or may not characterize the members of such a group. With this admittedly general criteria, Mexico between 1895 and 1900 can be grouped into a rural and urban sector, with upper, middle, and popular classes within each sector. Of a total population of around 1Examples of this position are too numerous to cite. It should suffice to note that they range from the early studies of Leopoldo Zea such as El positivismo en Mixico (M6xico: El Colegio de Mexico, 1943), and Apogeo y decadencia del positivismo en Mexico (M6xico: El Colegio de Mexico, 1944) to the recent collection of essays edited by Ralph Lee Woodward, Jr., entitled Positivism in Latin America, 1850-1900 (Lexington, Mass: D. C. Heath and Company, 1971). For a definition of positivism and an analysis of Zea's works see William D. Raat, "Leopoldo Zea and Mexican Positivism: A Reappraisal,"Hispanic American Historical Review 48 (February 1968): 1-18. See also Charles A. Hale, "Sustancia y m6todo en el pensamiento de Leopoldo Zea," Historia Mexicana 20 (Oct.-Dec. 1970): 285-304. 2The philosophical debate about the nature of ideas and whether or not ideas are or can be functional cannot be entertained in this context. In an earlier essay I have concerned myself with the philosophical and methodological problems of intellectual history and the history of ideas. See William D. Raat, "Ideas e historia en M6xico: Un ensayo sobre metodologia," Latino America 3 (1970): 175-188. 32 WILLIAM D. RAAT 33 13 1/2 million, approximately 91% can be classified as popular, 8% as middle, and 1% as upper. The upper class consised of hacendados, plantation owners, investors (foreign and domestic), industrialists,and high ranking members of the church and the army. The middle sectors included amongst others professional and managerialgroups, politicians, officeworkers, artisans, tradesmen, skilled workers, rancheros, and proprietor farmers. Finally, the popular class included types like soldiers, industrial workers, vendors, peones, sharecroppers, beggars, and other unemployed urban and rural poor. A rough ethnic or cultural correlation can be made between the creole and mestizo elites and middle groups (la gente decente) and the mestizo and indigenous poor (pelados and los tontos).It is understood that these are less than precise categories. Obviously rural and urban groupings overlapped. Many hacendados,while owning vast agricultural and pastoral estates with a casa grande situated upon them, were engaged in urban-oriented industrial, banking, and manufacturing pursuits, owned a town house, and had a social and political base in the city. Often these provincial elites would consist of extended family units with a few families controlling the political and economic affairs of a region or province. Some examples of these elites would include the Arriaga, Hernandez, and Cabrerafamilies of San Luis Potosi; the Terrazas, Trias, Casavantes, and Gonzailez families of Chihuahua; and the Madero family of Coahuila. Other examples would include the Torres-Corral group of Sonora and the hacendado supporters of Bernardo Reyes in Nuevo Le6n.4 The statistics come from Arturo Gonzilez Cosio, "Clases y estratos sociales," in Mexico, cincuenta aiios de revolucidn: La vida social (M6xico: Fondo de Cultura Econ6mica, 1961): 55. See also Moises Gonzilez Navarro, El Porfiriato: La vida social in Historia moderna de Mexico, ed. by Daniel Cosio Villegas (M6xico: Editorial Hermes, 1970): 383-399; Andr6s Molina Enriquez, Los grandes problemas nacionales in Problemas Agricolas e Industriales de Mexico 5 (January-March 1953): 26-34 & 122-24; James W. Wilkie, The Mexican Revolution: Federal Expenditure and Social Change Since 1910 (Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California, 1967), p. 203. 4 The urban-rural characteristics of the traditional hacienda are treated by James Lockhart in his essay "Encomienda and Hacienda: The Evolution of the Great Estate in the Spanish Indies,"Hispanic American Historical Review 49 (August 1969): 411-429. For examples of regional studies see the following: For San Luis Potosi see James D. Cockcroft, Intellectual Precursors of the Mexican Revolution (Austin: University of Texas, 1968), pp. 13-34. For Chihuahua, Michael C. Meyer, Mexican Rebel (Lincoln: University of Nebraska, 1967), pp. 9-15; Harold D. Sims, "Espejo de caciques: Los Terrazas de Chihuahua,"Historia Mexicana 18 (January-March1969): 379-399;William Beezley, "Opportunity in Porfirian Mexico," North Dakota Quarterly 40 (Spring 1972): 30-40. For the Reyistas of Nuevo Le6n and Coahuila see Anthony T. Bryan, "Mexican Politics in Transition, 1900-1913: The Role of General Bernardo Reyes" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Nebraska, 1970), pp. 21-270. 34 DON PoRFnIRIO'S MEXIco On the other end of the social spectrum the members of the communal village distinguished amongst themselves between the peon farmers (los indios) and the village elites (known as los correctos). The latter were considered "citified peoples" because of their contact with outsiders and urban centers, and consisted of village leaders, priests, lawyers, and teachers.5 Throughout Mexico's society there were also emerging or transitional groups which were the result of the increasing mobility which came from modernization and urbanization. A most important development during the Porfiriato was the rise of what Mois6s Gonzilez Navarro calls a new class of Mexican bourgeosie." These were the new elites of an industrialized state included businessmen, financiers, bankers, industrialists, lawyers, engineers, educators, and commercial farmers. Of these new elites the Mexico City groups were favored because of their nearnessto the centers of government, education, and international finance. One of these groups formed a governmental clique around Minister of Finance Jose Ives Limantour and was unkindly known by their enemies as the partido cientifico-the party of Scientists. Of the influential members of the cientifico clique, at least six were directly involved in finance, banking, and government. In addition to Limantour, they included Pablo and Miguel Macedo, Francisco Bulnes, Enrique Creel, and Joaquin Casasis.7 One other instance is worth noting, that of the transitional role of upper and middle class intellectuals. During the last part of the Porfiriato, intellectuals, voicing the interests of both middle and popular class groups, defended and criticized the existing regime. For example, Antonio Caso, although a member of the anti-positivist Ateneo, was a director of the Club Reeleccionista of Mexico City which had as its purpose the reelection of Diaz and Corral in 1910. Another member of the Ateneo, Alfonso Reyes, was active after 1900 in promoting the political interests of his father, the Porfirian General, Bernardo Reyes. Many intellectuals were moderate reformers like the Maderista Jos6 Vasconcelos, who was secretary of the Centro 5As Oscar Lewis notes, this does not mean that there were two distinct social classes within the village, only that there were rich and poor and a general awareness of differences in economic and political status. See Lewis, Life in a Mexican Village (Urbana: University of Illinois, 1970), pp. 54-55 & 430-431. 6 GonzailezNavarro, pp. 387-393. 7Biographical data taken from Diccionario Porrnia (M6xico: Editorial Porrf'a, S. A., 1964). WILLImD. RAAT 35 Antireeleccionista,and the Reyista thinker,Andr6s Molina Enriquez.8 The latter'scritiqueof Diaz society, Los grandesproblemasnacionales, was an attack upon corporatepropertiesand a plea for the creation of a rural middle class at the expense of the large hacendados. As such his ideology, like those of the Ateneo, could not properly be describedas revolutionary.9 There were radicalintellectualswho actedas precursorsof revolution. Many intellectualswere alienatedby a social system controlled by elites which blocked the advances and hindered the aspirationsof membersof the middle class. Foremostamong the alienatedwas the high-statusintellectualfrom San Luis Potosi, CamiloArriaga. While many of his peers at the National PreparatorySchool were pondering the doctrines of positivism,he directed his efforts to the study of Proudhon,Marx,Engels,andBakunin. Arriagalaterjoinedforceswith Antonio Diaz Soto y Gama and Ricardo Flores Mag6n to transform the Mexicanliberalparty movementfrom reformismto the radicalism of socialismand anarchism. Their ideologies of protest affected the directionof both the urbanand agrarianlaborrevolts.10 Social theoristssuch as James Davies and Neil Smelserargue that revolutions,as violent social disturbances,are more likely to occur when a prolonged period of economic and social development is followed by a short period of sharp reversal. An important idea contained within this theory is the concept of awvareness; that is, a consciousfear that materialgains made over a period of time will be quickly lost and a perceptionof discrepancybetween aspirationsand objective conditions. In this situationideologies are either created or borrowed in order to rationalizeand guide revolutionary behavior which is intended to erase the gap between aspirationsand conditions." 8 Fernando Salmer6n, "Los fil6sofos mexicanos del siglo xx," in Estudios de historia de la filosofia en Mexico (M6xico: Universidad Nacional Aut6noma de Mixico, 1963): 281. 9 Mois6s Gonzilez Navarro, "La ideologia de la revoluci6n mexicana," Historia Mexicana 10 (April-June 1961): 631-634. 10Cockcroft, pp. 55-88. 11James C. Davies, "Toward a Theory of Revolution," American Sociological Review 27 (February 1962): 5-19 and Neil Smelser, Theory of Collective Behavior (New York: Free Press of Glencoe, 1963), pp. 18-19. Both Davies and Smelser have been subject to criticism from their peers in the profession. Davis' so-called J-curve of rising expectations has been tested by Raymond Tanter and Manus Midlarsky with results which run counter to his propositions. Some theorists argue that after a country reaches a certain economic base, political instability decreases with continuing economic development. In any case the crucial idea of economic reversal, so basic to Davies' position, 36 DON PORFIRIO'S MEXICO An ideology may have been elborated at an earlier stage, but until the social conditions are conducive and the structure is strained no one will make use of it. This was the case with the doctrine of anarchismwhich was introduced into Mexico as early as 1861 with the publication of the Cartilla socialista by Plotino Rhodakanaty. During the 1870's the disciples of Rhodakanaty began to advocate the more radical cooperrative and communist-anarchistideas of Kropotkin. Yet the movement declined in the 1880's and was not revived until after 1900 when the Flores Mag6n brothers gave new life to the movement and the ideology. It was also after 1900 that the first structural strains of Diaz' Mexico started to become apparent.12 In general terms at least, it would appear that Mexico's revolutionary situation fits the sociological model described by Davies 4nd Smelser. The Porfirian years were years of rapid economic development, at least until 1902. Foreign investment, attracted to Mexico by government concessions and promises of peace, developed Mexico's railroads and export industries. The creation of an internal transport system fostered the growth of manufacturing and commercial agriculture. Mexico even saw the beginnings of a modern indigenous industrial base. This was especially the case with those elite families of Sonora and Nuevo Le6n, who, taking advantage of the arrival of the railroads, formed alliances with foreign investors in order to convert their estates into cotton plantations. Many others, like the cientificos, tended to invest in banking and trade adventures.13 was not consideredin these analyses.Smelserhas been criticizedfor having an antidemocraticbias which considerscollective behavior,especiallyrevolution,irrational. For the critiqueof Davis see D. P. Bwy, "PoliticalInstabilityin LatinAmerica: The Test of a CausalModel,"Latin AmericanResearchReview 3 (Spring Cross-Cultural 1968): 17-66. For a critiqueof Smelsersee Elliott Currieand JeromeH. Skolnick, "A CriticalNote on Conceptionsof CollectiveBehavior,"The Annalsof the American Academyof Politicaland SocialScience 391 (September1970): 34-45. That sameissue featuresa rebuttalby Smelserentitled"Two Criticsin Searchof a Bias": 46-55. For a generalsurvey of the historicalliteratureof the MexicanRevolution,which treats both underlyingand immediatecauses,see Cole Blasier,"Studiesof SocialRevolution: Originsin Mexico,Bolivia,and Cuba,"Latin AmericanResearchReview 2 (Summer 1967):28-64. '12Plotino C. Rhodakanaty,Cartillasocialista(M6xico: Imprentade V. G. Torres, see eitherJos6C. Valades,"Noticia sobre 1861),16 pp. For an analysisof Rhodakanaty el Socialismoen Mexico duranteel siglo XIX," in CartillaSocialista(Mixico: 1968), pp. 5-35 or John Hart, "AnarchistThoughtin NineteenthCenturyMexico" (Ph.D. diss.,Universityof California,1970),pp. 31-49. I For a general descriptionof economic developmentduring the Porfiriato,see Raymond Vernon, The Dilemma of Mexico's Development (Cambridge: Harvard University, 1963), pp. 38-58. WILLIAM D. RAAT 37 Until 1902, manufacturing, commercial farming, mining, and the livestock industry all tended to expand. In 1902 agriculture and manufacturing experienced a decline. There was a similar reduction of productivity in cattle ranching and mining between the years of 1904 and 1905. Staple food crops like corn, wheat, and beans, while increasing in total production throughout the Diaz years, barely exceeded the growth of the population. Finally in 1907 a depression in world henequen prices and a shrinking of foreign markets hurt producers of henequen, cotton, and industrial minerals. With a shortage of funds, banks curtailed credit and thereby hurt landowners and other potential investors.14 Rapid economic development tended to disrupt Mexican society. Supporters of the regime started to question their loyalities to the government when they found themselves in economic trouble. Many hacendados and foreign investors were uncertain of their future under the Diaz regime. When largescale irrigated cotton farms appeared in northern Mexico, wage rates increased. The new sugar plantations did the same thing in order to attract labor. Modernization was hurting the hacendado who was unwilling or unable to change his traditional methods of land utilization. The credit squeeze of 1907 only aggravated conditions. Likewise, foreign investors in Mexico's railways were increasingly unhappy over the government's new policy of nationalization begun by Limantour after 1908. A weakening of ties between some foreign and domestic elites, as well as between foreigners and the government, was a natural result.'5 As labor and industry sought each other, internal migration and the growth of urbanization produced added social dislocations. Migrants moved from states like Guanajuato and Jalisco to other areas such as Veracruz and Yucatin. Municipalities under 3000 in population declined while the larger cities of Toluca, Orizaba, Monterrey, Jalapa, San Luis Potosi, and Mexico City increased. Some indications of urban unrest during the period include labor strikes, a rampant alcoholism among Mexican workers (this was also a direct result of 14This data measures productivity in terms of millions of pesos and is based on 1950 prices. See Enrique Perez L6pez, "El producto nacional," in Mexico, cincuenta aios de revolucidn: La economia (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Econ6mica, 1960), p. 587. For a critique of Perez L6pez, especially "upward bias," and a general discussion of the problems and limitations of statistical data see Donald B. Keesing, "Structural Change Early in Development: Mexico's Changing Industrial and Occupational Structure from 1895-1950,"Journal of Economic History 29 (Dec. 1969): 716-737. 15Vernon, pp. 52-55. 38 DoN PORFIRIO'S MEXICO economic developmentin that the railroadsuddenly linked the rich market of Mexico City with the pulque producers of Apizaco), and increasing suicide and crime rates."' Concerning labor it should be noted that industrial unrest was more the rule than the exception during the Porfiriato,especiallyin the textile and railwayindustries. Mois6sGonzalezNavarroestimates that there were at least 250 strikes during the Porfiriato and that labor strikes and agitation were especially widespread between the years of 1905 and 1907. It was of course those years which witnessed the Cananeastrike in Sonora (1906), and the textile strikesin Puebla (1907) and Veracruz (the Rio Brancostrike of 1907). These strikes were suppressedby federal troops, and in the case of the Cananea strike Arizona Rangers conveniently crossed the border to aid law and order in Mexico.17 The relationship between hacendado and peon was also one of increasedstrain. In the state of Morelos modernizationmeant the conversionof agriculturallands into sugarplantations. Profit minded hacendadossought to increasetheir landholdings,often at the expense of the surroundingIndianvillages. Diaz' land policiesonly accentuated this exploitation. In addition,an increasingawarenesson the part of the peon of the betterwages and living conditionsof both the Mexican urban worker and the agriculturalworker in the United States increased his restlessnessmaking him more receptive to ideologies of protestand politicalaction.' Mention has alreadybeen made of the alienatedintellectualof the upper and middle class. Politicalsuppression,dishonestelections,and governmentcensorshipencouragedmany upperandmiddlesector elites like Madero and Arriaga to question the legitimacy of the regime. Economic developmenthad produced an indigenouscommericaland industrial group. Some of these people, young and active, found themselvesexcludedfrom Diaz's expandingbureaucracyand unableto realizetheir ambitions. By 1910 Diaz and many of his advisorswere literally weak with old age. Thus a quarrelof generationsadded to the generaldiscord."' 16 Moises Gonzilez Navarro, La vida social, pp. 19-35; 72-82; 415-434. 17Ibid., pp. 298-300. 18Robert A. White, "Mexico: The Zapata Movement and the Revolution," in Latin American Peasant Movements, ed. by Henry A. Landsberger (Ithaca and London: Cornell University, 1969), pp. 103-104. See also John Womack's Zapata and the Mexican Revolution (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1969). 19Octavio Paz, The Labyrinth of Solitude (New York: Grove Press, 1961), p. 137. WILLIAM D. RAAT 39 As can be seen then, the dislocationsof rapideconomicdevelopment produceda conflictsituationwhich was both internaland external,a conflictwhicheventuallyled to a breakdown of the old regime. The internalconflictwas the politicalstrugglewithin the regimeitself. The externalstrugglewas betweenthe regimeand thosemiddleand popularsectorswhichhadbeendeniedaccessto politicalandeconomic power. Withinthisconflictstructureseveralgroupsevolvedideasand whichmadethe changingworldof Diaz'sMexicointelliidea-systems gibleto themselves. Someof the dimensions of the internalstruggleincludedgenerational strife, a weakening of ties between some hacendadosand foreign interestswith the regime, the alienationof intellectualsand students, an increasinglycriticalvoice from someclericson the issueof positivism and education,and an in-depth strugglewithin the upper ranksof the governmental hierarchy between cliques of cabinet members and advisors. The encounterbetween Ministerof FinanceJos6Ives Limantour and Ministerof War BernardoReyes is an exampleof the latter. This clash between Limantour and Reyes not only revealed the political ambitionsof the two vice-presidentialcontenders,but symbolizedthe largerstrugglebetween the interestsof the Army and those of the emergingMexico City bourgeoisiewho fearedthe rising power of a provincialcaudillo. The contest began in the early 1900'swhen Limantouropposed the renovationof the army and the creationof a SecondReserve. It continuedinto 1909 when the Reyistasled an anticientifico campaignwhich broughtabout a temporaryforced exile for GeneralReyes. It is tempting to speculatewhat the condition of the Federal Army would have been in 1910 if Reyes would have been allowed his reforms. In any case this was not the situation. The army of 1910, as is well known, was so weak and decrepit that it was incapableof defendingthe interestsof the regime.20 Internalstrugglesinvolvingthe use or threatof violence can lead to coups d' etat in which one ruling group replacesanother. Although a change in the composition of government occurs, this does not necessitatea majorreorientationof policiesor a restructuringof society 20 For a general description of the Limantour-Reyes conflict which analyzes Reyes' motivation see again Anthony Bryan, "Mexican Politics in Transition," pp. 96-100 and 218-270. For a "cientifico" view see Jos6 Yves Limantour, Apuntes sobre mi vida ptiblica (M6xico: Editorial Porrua, S. A., 1965), pp. 105-152. For the poor condition of the military during the Porfiriato see Edwin Lieuwen, Mexican Militarism (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1968), pp. 1-12. 40 DON PORFIRIO'S MEXICO and government.2 Madero's movement seemingly fits this description, since he, like many civilian caudillos before him, took the place of the head of state and continued to govern through the apparatus of the old regime's state and army. Yet an important effect of the Madero seizure of power must be noted. That is, the Maderista coup was a precipitating factor of social revolution. Madero, in order to move successfully against Diaz, had to enlist the support of military leaders, urban intellectuals, angry peasants, and industrial workers. By so doing he conceded to them a kind of political power and legitimacy.22 In this process a middle class program of liberalism, "Indianism, " and anticlericalism was wedded to more radical doctrines of protest, and the external struggle, that is, a broadly based social revolution, took place. Because the revolution in its beginnings was chaotic and spontaneous, with many blocs competing for power, the leadership of the Mexican revolution is usually described by historians as lacking a carefully articulated doctrine or ideology. In Frank Tannenbaum's words, it .was unadorned by any philosophy of politics, meager in its ".... social program, and opportunistic in its immediate objectives. " 2Yet was this necessarily the case? It could be argued that Mexico's revolution, instead of not having an ideology, had instead too many competing ideologies, doctrines, plans, and programsto give the revolution a narrow purposive direction. The chaos of the intial stage from 1911 to 1916 can be described as an era of suspended revolution; that is, the co-existence of several antagonistic centers or blocs (e. g. Reyistas, Maderistas, Magonistas, Zapatistas,Villistas, etc.) which were unable or unwilling to eliminate each other. A prolonged breakdown of the state's monopoly of power occurred with each bloc adopting its own ideology and programs." The force of nationalismwas evidently too weak to provide adequate social and political cohesiveness, as evidenced by the lack of a national ideology. In any case it is appropriateto distinguish and delimit some of these competing ideas and programs. 21See Carl Leiden and Karl M. Schmitt, The Politics of Violence: Revolution in the Modern World (Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1968), pp. 19-35. 22Robert White, "Mexico: The Zapata Movement," p. 104. 23Frank Tannenbaum, Mexico, The Struggle for Peace and Bread (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1964), p. 49. See also Cole Blasier, "Studies of Social Revolution," p. 39. 24 This interpretation follows the definition and model of revolution outlined by Peter Amman in his essay "Revolution: A Redefinition," Political Science Quarterly 77 (March 1962): 36-53. WILLIAM D. RAAT 41 Of the various types of ideas of interest to the historian of ideas, the concept of ideology remainsone of the more ambiguous and perplexing of terms. The end-of-ideology debate, so current amongst United States historians and sociologists of the twentieth century, is partly the result of a lack of a common definition rather than to disagreement over issues. Without entering that debate a limited consensus concerning the meaning of ideology can be distinguished. Daniel Bell, Talcott Parsons, and Edward Shils, all students of ideology, agree that ideology implies a set of beliefs which have been mobilized by a group for purposes of social or political action. An ideology arises out of a situation in which the leadership of a primary group sees reality in terms of a divergence between the ideal and the existent. The function of the ideology is to rationalize and direct group behavior towards the realization of a utopian order more akin to the ideal. Bell and Shils would agree further that, when compared to other beliefs, ideologies are highly systematized around a few pre-eminent values such as, for example, national destiny, eternal salvation, social equality, or even ethnic purity. By relating human activity to a transcendent realm or higher purpose, ideologues are stiving, sometimes passionately, to infuse their movements with discipline and an uncompromising rightness which will aid their political effectiveness.25 Other kinds of ideas can be distinguished from ideologies. Similar to ideologies, but lacking the scope and systematic elaboration of the former, are creeds. While creeds may be coherent and explicit, and even have the intellectual core of an ideology, they generally do not have the concerted intellectual power of ideologies nor the influence upon those who espouse them as do ideologies.26 Distinct from creeds are outlooks, which usually contain within themselves a variety of ideas, beliefs, and creeds. Outlooks are not systematic and have only a loose relationship with conduct. Unlike ideologies, outlooks generally affirm or accept the existing order of society. 25See Chaim I. Waxman, The End of Ideology Debate (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1968), esp. pp. 3-4. See also Edward Shils, "The Concept and Function of Ideology," in the International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, ed. by David Sills, 7 (New York: Macmillan Co. and The Free Press, 1968): 66-76; and Talcott Parsons, The Social System (Glencoe, Illinois: The Free Press, 1951), pp. 326-383. 26 For a discussion of types of ideas see Shils, "The Concept and Function of Ideology," pp. 66-73. 42 DoN PORFIRIo'sMExIco When the focus of interest that is implicit in an outlook is narrowed and made more explicit it is called a program. Programs can be creeds, idea-systems, or other types of ideas that, when mobilized, are converted into a set of beliefs critical or at least in disagreement with dominant attitudes and outlooks. Although ideologies are usually accompained by programs, the opposite is not necessarily the case; that is, programs can exist independent of ideologies and ideologues. A system of thought having an elaborate pattern and which is logically integrated can be called an idea-system. Unlike ideologies, they do not have to be mobilized for political action nor do they require a consensus among adherents. Systematic philosophies like Hegelian idealism or pragmatismare examples of idea-systems. It is obvious that these categories of ideas are not either inclusive or mutually exclusive. Many beliefs and opinions do not fit these definitions. For example, a concept, that is, generalized idea of a class of objects, may lack the comprehensive pattern and level of cognitive awareness that an ideology, idea-system, or outlook suggests. At the same time a concept, although narrow in scope, may not be as explicit or goal-oriented as ideologies and programs. Thus, for the purposes of this essay, specific ideas that do not fit the categories described above will be referred to only as beliefs, opinions, or concepts. Following the scheme introduced, it is now possible to delimit several types of ideas from the intellectual milieu of the Porfiriato. Protesting the status quo were a group of ideologies, both European and indigenous in their origins, which were used in the revolt against the old order. Taken together they formed the intellectual core of the Mexican revolution. Some of the more obvious ideologies were anarchism (in both its mutualist and radical forms), anarcho-syndicalism, socialism, and nationalistic populism. Accompanying these ideologies were programs, such as liberal indigenism and anticlericalism. Ideas reflecting the interests of the regime included creeds, outlooks, and idea-systems. The creeds most manifest of the era were the religious beliefs and confessions of faith of the Catholic Church, including its lay members, supporters, and hierarchy. Another creed less well known consisted of the articles of faith of a group of secular religionists who worshipped and practiced the Religion of Humanity (an orthodox positivist movement). Some examples of outlooks would be the eclectic views of many members of the regime consisting of a complex of ideas and beliefs such as materialism, elitism, racism, scientism, environmen- WILLIAM D. RAAT 43 talism, and political and economic liberalism. Final~y, from the academiesthere developedelaborateand integratedphilosophieswhich reflectedthe impact of Europeantraditionsupon Mexico. The more importantincluded French Positivism (i. e., the doctrinesof Auguste Comte and his disciples), Idealism (especially the variant known as Krausism),Social Darwinism,and Utilitarianism. An exampleof a generalizedconcept which does not fit any category of thought is anti-positivism. This idea could best be describedas an impressionor notion, not always developed and only vaguely understoodby those who were affected by it. Anti-positivismas a political movementcut across class lines and group interestsand was an ingredientof both the internaland externalstruggleof the Porfiriato. Its major assumptionwas that the cientificos were adherents of positivismand as such were directing Mexico's destiniesalong a path which was alien to Mexico's traditionsof liberalism (including the liberalarmy for the Reyistas) and/or Catholicism. Outsideof politics its academic expressionwas the anti-materialistand idealistic philosophiesof the men of the Ateneo, such as Antonio Caso'sChristian Dualismor the Aesthetic Monismof Jose Vasconcelos. For ideas to have socal importance,they must be communicated. Meansmust be availablenot only for the productionof ideas, but for their consumptionas well. Another by-product of economic and social developmentof the Porfiriatowas an increasein the quality and quantity of educationalcenters, academicsocieties, and mass media. All of these were importantas meansof intellectualdiffusionin an age of increasedliteracy. The NationalPreparatorySchool, as a center of culture and learning,educated many of Mexico'selites.27 Some, like Limantour and Arriaga, later became politically active although as advocatesof far differentcauses. Fromthe NationalPreparatorySchool andthe provincialschoolstheredevelopedacademiccirclesand societies which often held public meetings espousing various points of view.2 27For a general discussion of the National Preparatory School see again Moises Gonzilez Navarro, La vida social, pp. 607-632. See also Alfonso Noriega, Vida y obra del doctor Gabino Barreda (Mexico: Libreria de Manual Porrua, S.A., 1969), pp. 93124 and Ezequiel A. Chivez, "La reorganizaci6n de la Escuela Nacional Preparatoria" in Mexico, su evolucidn social, ed. by Justo Sierra, 1, pt. 2 (Mexico: J. Ballescai y Compania, 1902): 572-576. For education in general during the Porfiriato see Josefina V~izquez de Knauth, Nacionalismo y educacidn en Mexico (Mexico: El Colegio de Mexico, 1970), pp. 44-126. 28Two examples of academic groups, both of which published annals and journals, would be Sociedad Metoddfila Gabino Barreda for the early Porfiriato and the Sociedad Positivista for the period after 1900. For a description of the activities of the first group 44 DoN PORFIRIO'S MEXICO As for the mass media, newspaper circulation quadrupled between 1893 and 1907 and included a wide range of political opinions from the conservative voice of La Voz de Mexico to the radical Magonista publications.~ In an increasingly mobile society ideas were exchanged wherever intellectuals came into contact with each other, whether in the classroom, the coffee shop, or the prison workshop. In attempting to correlate ideas to social and political groups, it becomes apparent that some attitudes and outlooks were shared by more than one group, class, or sector. Such was the case for both Mexican nationalism,which can be defined as a set of attitudes held by a national community, and liberalism. The developments of the Porfiriato gave a new impetus to the growth of cohesiveness and nationalism. Don Porfirio's Mexico saw the rise of a transportation system which tended to break down the traditional regions and unite them with Mexico City. With the growth of markets and internal transportation, the Spanish language spread as a medium for economic transactions. Educators like Justo Sierra, Porfirio Parra, Enrique R6bsamen, and Joaquin Baranda were active in promoting a unified, national system of education. Even the history of Mexico was being rewritten along nationalistic lines with the publication of two monumental works, Me'xico a Traves de los Siglos and Mexico, su evoluci6n social. Both of these studies attempted to resolve see Manuel Flores, Gabino Barreda, apuntes biogrificos," La Tribuna "Aplndice: (Mexico), Nov. 19, 1880. For the Sociedad Positivista see Agustin Arag6n, "La conmemoraci6n en Mexico del 49 aniversario de la muerta de Augusto Comte," Revista Positiva 6 (Sept. 1906): 546-547 and Arag6n, "La vida y la obra de Augusto Comte," Revista Positiva 7 (Sept. 1907): 575-603. 29 The enterprising scholar can have a field day in Mexico's national collection of newspapers located in Mexico City and known as the Hemeroteca Nacional. For the Porfiriato one can find newspapers representing several political and ideological views. Note the following examples: For labor views see El Diablito Bromista, El Diablito Rojo, and La Palanca. For radical labor ideas, including both anarchism and socialism, see for the early Porfiriato El Socialista (until 1886) and El Hijo del Trabajo (also until 1886). For the later Porfiriato see El Hijo del Ahuizote edited by Daniel Cabrera, El Ahuizote Jacobino, Camilo Arriaga'sRenacimiento, and Flores Mag6n's Regeneracion. For reform liberalism see El Diario del Hogar, El Partido Democrdtico, El Antirreeleccionista, and La Repzublica.For scientism during the early Porfiriato see La Libertad. For the conservative Catholic voice see either La Voz de Mexico or El Pais. Finally the government press consisted in El Mundo, El Mundo Ilustrado, El Imparcial, and El Universal. Many newspapers supported the regime including El Debate, El Diario, and La Reeleccidn. For a general survey of newspapers in Diaz's Mexico see both Henry Lepidus, The History of Mexican Journalism in the University of Missouri Bulletin 29 (1928): 54-69, and Mario Rojas Avendaijo, "El Periodismo," in Mexico, cincuenta acos de revolucidn: La cultura (M6xico: Fondo de CulturaEcon6mica, 1962): 604-621. WILLIAM D. RAAT 45 the traditional conflict between Hispanist and Indianist authors by speaking of the Mexican as a national man who was the product of both Spanish and indigenous pasts. The increasing presence of the foreign investor angered cientificos and anarchists alike. As has already been noted, Limantour's anti-foreigner policies after 1908 reflected a kind of xenophobia that was not unlike the nationalistic fears of the reformers and revolutionaries of the later Porfiriato. Nationalismwas sharedby both friendsand enemiesof the regime.so It hasbeenarguedthatthe Diaz regimeabandoned the traditionsof Mexicanliberalismby developinga centralistsystemof government whichtendedto supportcorporateinterests(suchas the Church)and to ignoreconstitutional guaranteesof politicalfreedom.,- Although this propositioncontainssometruth,the statementis too partialand limitedto be anadequatedescription of liberalism duringthe Porfiriato. There are at least three problemswith this description. First,the statementfailsto note the severaldimensions of traditional liberalism some inherentinconsistencies containedwithin the liberal including position. Secondly,this propositiondoes not take into consideration the interrelationship of formalphilosophies like utilitarianism, Comtean and to And liberalism. no positivism, Spencerianism, finally, noticeis madeof the possibletransformation of liberalismand the similarities betweenliberalism andconservatism. Duringits formationby Moraduringthe earlynineteenthcentury, as a politicalandeconomicdoctrine,inheritedcertainconliberalism, tradictions fromitsphilosophical utilitarianism. counterpart, Philosophers of utilitarianism between an "artifical" and "natural" distinguished identification of interestsbetweenthe individualand society. In the realmof politicalandjuridicalaffairsthe utilitarians arguedthat state actionwasneededin orderto guarantee individual liberty. By so doing the state createdan artificialidentificationof interestsbetweenthe individualand the politicalorder. On the other hand,in economic affairsthere was alreadya spontaneousor naturalidentificationof interestbetweenunfetteredindividualism and the economic order. Thislatterpositioncomplemented the notionof laissez-faire economics 30 See Frederick C. Turner, The Dynamic of Mexican Nationalism (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968), pp. 53-100. For historical literature of the Porfiriato see both Edmundo O'Gorman, "La historiografla," in Mexico, cincuenta afios de revolucidn: La cultura, pp. 197-203and Josefina Vizquez de Knauth, Nacionalismo y educaci6n en Mexico, pp. 97-125. 31 See, for example, Daniel Cosio Villegas, "El porfiriato, era de consolidacion," Historia Mexicana 13 (July-Sept. 1963): 76-87. 46 DoN Pornuo's MEXIcO in which government was not to interfere with the economy. Mexico's liberals reflected these same contradictions by emphasizing the need for a strong state to curtail corporate privileges, while, at the same time, adhering to a laissez-faire position in economics.2 The doctrine of liberalism was also undergoing a transformation during the Porfiriato, a transformation from an atomistic to an organic philosophy. This new organic definition of liberalism can be seen in the early 1880's in the publications of La Libertad, as well as in the later articles written for the Revista Positiva after 1900.1 Undoubtedly the philosophies of Comtean positivism and Spencerianism influenced many of these Porfirian intellectuals. Organic liberalism, which placed society and social needs above those of the individual, was an extension of laissez-faire liberalism. Economic liberty and individualism was "natural" and in harmony with Mexico's needs for development and growth. Strong state action was only needed to create an artificial identification of interests between individual political action and the public's need for social order and peace. Finally the similaritiesbetween traditional liberalismand conservatism should be noted. It is true that the liberal emphasized laissez-faire economics, federalism, and republican principles, while the conservative argued for a kind of neomercantilism, centralism, and veneration of the Spanish tradition of monarchy. Yet there were also many similarities. Liberalism and conservatism in their early development were ideologies of the same sector of Mexican society, i. e., the emerging creole bourgeoisie. Both agreed with the doctrine of the sanctity of private property. While the conservative emphasized state action to promote mercantile interests (e. g., shipping, industry, banking), the liberal argued for state action to curtail corporate property-action which would aid in the creation of a rural landholding middle class. Both liberals and conservatives shared the habit of social conservativeness and apathy when it came to questions about the welfare of the Indian. Because of this both groups were incapable of revolutionary action in 1910 since genuine agrarian reform, i. e., the destruction of the hacienda and 32 See both of the following by Charles Hale: "Jos6 Maria Luis Mora and the Structure of Mexican Liberalism,"Hispanic American Historical Review 45 (May 1965): 196-220 and Mexican Liberalism in the Age of Mora (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1968), pp. 39-107. 3 Several examples can be found in various issues of La Libertad and the Revista Positiva. See especially Jorge Hammeken y Mexia, "La politica positiva y la politica metafisica," La Libertad, August 12 and 20, 1880; and Horacio Barreda, "La Escuela Nacional Preparatoria,"Revista Positiva 8 (April, May, June & July 1908): 232-286: 305-381; 385-437; 449-506. WILLIAMD. RAAT 47 the restorationof the communalvillage, would violate their ideals of privateproperty,elitism,and economicprogress."34 Thus by the time of the Porfiriatothe traditionaldistinctionsbetween liberalismand conservatismwere meaningless. The idea of liberalism was more a vague outlook than a defined ideology. Porfirio Diaz, a liberalin the traditionof Benito Juirez and the wars of La Reforma, blurredthe distinctionsfurtherby refusingto war againstthe Church. With the declineof anticlericalism,a majorcharacteristicof the liberal movementwas dissolved. Organicliberalismaddedto this processby identifying liberalismwith the idea of the positive state. It is no wonder that hacendados,bankers,Reyistas,Maderistas,and cienti'ficos all claimedthe title of liberals. Before the resurgenceof anticlericalism after 1900, liberalismwas a doctrine with a traditionand a form, but with very little content. Only when Arriagaand others rekindleda new liberalpartymovementbasedon the programof anticlericalismdid liberalismonce again have political content and meaning. The new liberalism,this time finding its philosophicalcounterpartsin anarchism and socialism,would be a far more radicaldoctrinethan the old.35 A survey of the intellectual history of the Porfiriatowould be incompletewithout a brief descriptionof the outlook of the cientificos. Amongst others,some of the "key" membersof this clique included Limantour,Justo Sierra, Francisco Bulnes, Manuel Flores, Joaquin Ram6nCorral,Pablo and Miguel Macedo,and EnriqueCreel. Casaskis, They were all well educated,six of'the nine havingbeen educatedor directly associatedwith the center of positivistdiffusionin Mexico, the NationalPerparatorySchool. As a clique centeringaroundLimantour they representedone of the many politicalfactions within the system of Diaz politics. The factions that they often opposed were those groups led by BernardoReyes and JoaquinBaranda. At the time of their inceptionin 1892,when many of them cametogetherto form the Liberal Union, they could be consideredliberal reformerswho were attemptingto realizemany traditionalliberalgoals such as freedom of the press, an independentjudiciary, a new method of presidential succession,the developmentof public lay education,and freedom of commerce from internalrestrictions. As such, they were originally criticsof the Diaz regime.86 In due time, however,they resolvedtheir 4 Hale, "Jos6 Maria Luis Mora," pp. 208-220. s This is the importance of the union of a liberal like Arriaga with an anarchist like Flores Mag6n, a union which lasted until 1906. 3 Walter N. Breymann, "The Cientificos: Critics of the Diaz Regime, 1892-1903," Proceedings of the Arkansas Academy of Sciences 7 (1954): 91-97. 48 DoN PoRFIRIO's MEXICO differences with Diaz and became very influential in directing the financial and economic affairs of Mexico. Although some of the individualmembersof the clique differed greatly in their thinking from each other (e. g., compare Sierra with Bulnes), a kind of general cientifico outlook can be noted. Those who were signatories to the Liberal Union manifesto of 1892 could be considered members of the liberal tradition. Many, like Limantour and Bulnes, adhered to ideas of environmentalism and social evolution. Their thinking was a kind of reforming Darwinism in which natural elites, employing the techniques of science and sociology, could shape the evolutionary development of Mexico's history. Most of them were anticlerical, especially the vocal Bulnes. They were not necessarily racist, or "racialist, " in their attitudes concerning the Indian; they only shared the prevailing social conservativeness of the liberals and conservatives of the day. And finally, they cannot accurately be called Comtean positivists or orthodox positivists. If one word were to describe their eclectic outlook and mood, it would be scientism, not positivism.3 Apart from the cientificos there was a group of orthodox positivists in Mexico. The leading member of this group was Agustin Arag6n. It was he, along with the logician Porfirio Parra, who organized the leading positivist societies and provided for the publication of a positivist journal called the Revista Positiva. The orthodox positivists were followers of the Laffitte school in France and were active in developing a secular religion of humanity in Mexico. In propagandizing and missionizingthe sacred truths of positivism, the group developed and 8 This is an observation derived from an examinationof many of the writings of the cientfficos. Some of the more important include the following: Limantour, Correspondencia, 1848-1911 (402 letters, var. sizes). Garcia Collection of the University of Texas Library; Limantour, "Discurso . .. pronunciado en la ceremonia de Clausura del Concurso Cientifico Nacional," Revista Positiva 1 (Feb. 1, 1901): 54-63; Limantour, Apuntes sobre mi vida pziblica, pp. 16-22, 73-152, 229-239; Miguel Macedo, "Discurso . .. " Revista Positiva 1 & 2 (Jan. 1, 1901 & Feb. 1, 1902): 1-20 & 36-42; Bulnes, El porvenir de las naciones latino-americanas(M6xico: Pensamiento vivo de America, n. d.); Bulnes, El verdadero Diaz y la revolucidn (M6xico: Eusebio G6mez de la Puente, 1920), pp. 98-169; Bulnes, The Whole Truth About Mexico (New York: M. Bulnes Book Co., 1916), esp. pp. 119-120;Bulnes, Los grandes problemas de Mexico (MWxico:Editorial El Universal, 1926), p. 329; Enrique Creel, "Conferencia del Lago Mohonk sobre arbitrajeinternacional,"Revista Positiva 7 (Sept. 1907): 565-574;Manuel Flores, "Ensayos sobre la educaci6n,"La Libertad, April 25, 1879;Flores, "La Libertad," El Mundo Ilustrado, March 3, 1907; Justo Sierra, "Las garantias individuales," La Libertad, January 3, 1879; Sierra, Evolucidn politica del pueblo mexicano (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Econ6mica, 1940), pp. 269-276. WILLIAM D. RAAT 49 followed a humanistic creed in which the great Being of Humanity was worshipped.38 The movement was important for Mexico's history in two ways. First, as a humanistic religion it contributed to the secularization of Mexican life so noticeable in the days of Don Porfirio. And secondly, orthodox positivism, as has been noted, aided in the transformation of liberalism from an atomistic to an organic definition of society. Like the cientificos, the positivists were not, as a rule, racist in their thinking. In fact, most of the intellectuals of the period could more accurately be described as conservative or European indigenists rather than as racists. Despite the adherence to Spencerianism and scientism by government thinkers, the repression of the indigenous masses cannot be explained through an assertion that these thinkers and educators were racists. Certainly racism can be found in the Mexico of Don Porfirio, but it will take additional research to demonstrate where and how. At this point the evidence only suggests that a kind of creole racism probably permeated several groups, with individual instances found among both provincial as well as urban elites. As for the spokesmen of the regime, Sierra and other educators accepted the idea of the fusion of the two races as the essence of the Mexican. In addition, these thinkers constantly argued for the educability of the Indian.8 The dominant idea of the time concerning the Indian can best be described as conservative or European indigenism. This was a sociopolitical program which promoted rural education as one means for resolving the poverty and problems of the countryside. Unlike the Hispanists, the European indigenist did not sucumb to racism. The Indian was not inferior racially. But unlike the "Indianists " and liberal indigenists, the Indian past was neither glorified nor praised. Latin Civilization was the model or archetype for their reforms. The Indian was to be modernized and incorporated into an occidental society. He would be taught Spanish, not Nahuatl; his religious values 38 For a description of the positivist creed and an analysis of their movement see William D. Raat, "Agustin Arag6n and Mexico's Religion of Humanity," Journal of Inter-AmericanStudies 11 (July 1969): 441-455. 39This is a thesis which I have demonstrated in another context. This conclusion is supported by the research efforts of Martin Stabb and T. G. Powell. See the following: William D. Raat, "Los intelectuales, el positivismo y la cuesti6n indigena," Historia Mexicana 20 (Jan.-March 1971): 412-427; Martin S. Stabb, "Indigenism and Racism in Mexican Thought: 1857-1911,"Journal of Inter-American Studies 1 (Oct. 1959): 405423; Martin Stabb, In Quest of Identity (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1967), pp. 44-57; T. G. Powell, "Mexican Intellectuals and the Indian Question, 1876-1911,"Hispanic American Historical Review 48 (Feb. 1968): 19-36. 50 DON PoRFIRIo'sMEXICo would be Catholic, not pagan. This type of indigenism, so current among the intellectuals of the Diaz government, was an antecedent to the conservative Vasconcelos' program of the 1920's.4o Many of the critics of the cientificos, who formed part of the internal struggle already described, shared some of the ideas of their enemies, including liberalism, scientism, and conservative indigenism. But the one unifying concept which they all held in common was the notion of anti-positivism. In a series of harangues between 1904 and 1905, the Reyista apologist Juan Pedro Didapp, did not hesitate to equate the cientificos with positivism, and positivism with corruption, materialism, and atheism. Didapp's major concern was, of course, the defense of the military and General Reyes from their political enemies in the government.4' In Didapp's charge of cientifico irreligion, his attitudes were complemented by the writings and teachings of many clerics. These Catholic thinkers, like Didapp, equated cientifico thinking with positivism, and positivism with a host of social evils from materialism and atheistic socialism to drunkenness and pornography. The panacea was obvious-replace the cientificos, rid the educational system of positivism, and restore the country to Catholic spirituality.42 The most formal expression of the new spirituality was the intellectual revolt against positivism by the new idealists of the Ateneo, Jose Vasconcelos and Antonio Caso. One other idea, or more correctly, idea-system which characterized the thinking of some critics of the regime was Spanish Idealism, better known in Latin circles as Krausism. Karl Christian Friedrich 40See Raat, ibid. For a discussion of the differences between "Indianism,"European indigenism, and liberal indigenism, see Ram6n Eduardo Rui, Mexico, The Challenge of Poverty and Illiteracy (San Marino, California: The Huntington Library, 1963), pp. 123-141. 41See the following works by Juan Pedro Didapp: Partidos politicos de Mexico (Mexico: Libreria Espafiola, 1903), pp. 183-216, 224-225, 254; Explotadores politicos de Mixico (M6xico, Tip. de los Sucs. de Francisco Diaz de Le6n, 1904), pp. 669-671; Gobiernos militares de Mexico (M6xico: 1904). 42For some examples of clerical anti-positivism, see the following: Rafael Cirlos, "Refutaci6n de los errores dominantes,"La Voz de Mexico, Feb. 5, 1892 and April 27, 1892; Ignacio Gamboa, El positivismo filosdfico y su influencia en el estado actual de la sociedad humana (Yucatan: Imprenta "Lorede Mola," 1899), pp. 17-68; Francisco Zavala, El socialismo y la iglesia (Guadalajara: Imp. de "El Regional," 1907), pp. iii-vii; Zavala, El positivismo (Guadalajara:Tip. de "El Regional," 1909), pp. 3-5 and 36-38; Zavala, "Criticismo," La Voz de Mexico, Dec. 29, 1908; Jose de Jesus Cuevas, El positivismo en Mexico (Zacatecas: Tip. del Comercio, 1885), pp. 24-42. WILLIAM D. RAAT 51 Krause (1781-1832), like Fichte and Schelling, developed an idealist philosophy in which society was considered a spiritual organism evolving towards the image of God. The function of the state was to translate the ethical values of spiritualism and humanism into law so that materialism could be transcended and spiritual freedom realized. Krause'sethics was a kind of synthesis in which a semireligious humanism was interlaced with social consciousness. Krausism was imported into Spain by JuliainSanz del Rio and from the University of Madrid it spread to the law schools of Latin American. Because of the predominance of legal studies in the universities of Latin America, Krausism as a kind of legal philosophy of social action was widely read and discussed by students, lawyers, and jurists." In Mexico the leading Krausist thinker of the early Porfiriato was Jos6 Maria Vigil. It was Vigil who led the struggle against the adoption of Alexander Bain's textbook of "positivist" logic by the faculty of the National Preparatory School. Intead, he argued that the school should adopt the Krausian textbook of the Belgian idealist Tiberghien. Porfirio Parra and other writers for La Libertad came to the defense of Bain. In due time the Vigil-Parra debate had widened into a public quarrel between metaphysicians and positivists, the former leading an anti-positivist revolt not unlike later Reyistas and clerics." The most important Krausist and spiritualist of the later period was Francisco Madero. His conversion to " spiritism" occurred while travelling in France as a young man. Like the earlier idealists and anti-positivist, Madero held to a vague kind of ethical humanism in which materiality as represented by man's ego would have to be overcome so that the spiritual purposes of life could be realized." Madero's attitudes had a more systematic expression in the personalism of Antonio Caso's philosophy of Christian Dualism which was so important in academic circles after 1910. Anti-positivism, like liberalism and indigenism, was an intellectual 43For Spanish Krausism see Juan L6pez Morillas, El Krausismo espafiol (Mcxico: Fondo de Cultura Econ6mica, 1956). Also see Francisco Larroyo and Edmundo Escobar, Historia de las doctrinas filosdficas en Latinoamerica (Mixico: Editorial Porruia, 1968), pp. 125-127; and Miguel Jorrin and John D. Martz, Latin-American Political Thought and Ideology (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North CarolinaPress, 1970), pp. 154-156. 44For the Vigil-Parra debate see the following: Jose M. Vigil and Rafael Angel de la Pefia, Discursos pronunciados en la Escuela Nacional Preparatoria (Mexico: Imprenta del Gobierno, en Palacio, 1885); Porfirio Para, "La 16gica de Bain y los profesores sus enemigos," La Libertad, July 16, 1880. 45Charles C. Cumberland, Mexican Revolution: Genesis Under Madero (Austin: University of Texas Press), pp. 33-35. 52 DoN PORFIRIO'SMEXICO link connecting the critics from within the old regime to those outside of it. Thus spokesmen for radical labor, along with the anarchists, employed the tool of antipositivism in their attempt to discredit the regime-especially the cientificos of the regime.46 It is outside the scope of this essay to describe in detail the various ideologies of protest and critical ideas of the men of the external revolt. It may suffice to note that ideas already mentioned formed the intellectual core of the revolt. Ideologies of protest for both urban and agrarian labor included socialism, populism, and anarchism, with an emphasis upon the latter. The ideas of urban thinkers like Antonio Diaz Soto y Gama, along with the ideas of folk heroes and manhood contained in the popular ballads (corridos), provided an adequate rationalization for the use of violence by the Zapatistasin the countryside. Urban labor, in addition, made use of concepts and programs not readily adopted by the agrarianradicals. Among others these included "Indianism, " liberal indigenism, anticlericalism, and anti-positivism." As can be seen then, the intellectual milieu of the Porfiriato was very pluralistic. When ideas are considered as intellectual devices by means of which a social group deals with the events it experiences, correlations between thought and social action can be distinguished. After 1900 a conflict situation characterized by increasing structural strain can be noted. The forces leading to the dissolution of the old regime were both internal and external. From within the regime more and more elitist voices were questioning the legitimacy of the government while actively moving to improve their own positions. The emerging radicalism of urban and agrarian labor only aggravated the situation further. The Madero revolt was an important phase of these political movements since it linked the moderates within the regime with the radicals outside of the arenas of power. Throughout, ideas were used by all groups to rationalize and direct and make intelligible their behavior. The Porfirian elites held outlooks which were eclectic, composed of a 4 For examples of anti-positivismin labor and radical publications see the following: "Los Cientificos," in El Diablito Bromista, Nov. 27, 1904; "Positivismo y Pesetivismo," in El Diablito Rojo, April 6, 1908; "Amor y positivismo,"in El Diablito Rojo, March 11, 1901; and the following issues of El Hijo del Ahuizote, July 6, 1902; Jan. 28, 1894; March 3, 1889;August 9, 1896; August 16, 1896; August 30, 1896;Jan. 15, 1899; Dec. 14, 1902; Jan. 4, 1903. 47See again Jorrin and Martz, Latin-American Political Thought and Ideology, pp. 191-196; 207-213. Also see again Robert A. White, "Mixico: The Zapata Movement and the Revolution," pp. 122-129. WILLIAM D. RAAT 53 complex of opinions and beliefs. The ideas of secular progress and material development permeated the era. The cientificos, in particular, held to a kind of reforming Darwinism and scientism which undoubtedly aided them in directing the economic and educational forces of the Porfiriato. The liberal tradition had been transformed in part to a doctrine of state capitalism. And while many intellectual elites were not racists, the Indian was still viewed as a kind of second class citizen who, in order to be saved, had to adopt the European norms of conservative indigenism. Orthodox positivist and Catholic creeds, along with the formal philosophies of utilitarianism, Spencerianism, and Comtean positivism, complemented the elitist views of Mexico's upper and middle classes. Throughout the period Krausism, as the philosophical counterpart of anti-positivism, acted as a "spiritualist" corrective to the secular doctrines of material progress so evident in the Porfiriato. Its initial expression came with the anti-positivist debate begun by Jos6 Maria Vigil. The later version can be seen in the personalistic ethics of both Francisco Madero and Antonio Caso. Anti-positivism was a special concept which was used by men within and outside the regime. The Reyista spokesmen developed the myth of cientifico positivism in order to promote General Reyes' political ambitions,or at least the ambitionsof the men who attached themselves to Reyes. The clerics,unableto attackDonPorfiriohimself, could vent theirown frustrationsuponthe cientificosand an educational systemwhich was evidentlypositivistandthereforeevil. And, as noted before, anti-positivismwas a convenienttool for the new liberal and urbancriticsof the regime,from Maderoto DanielCabrera. andliberalindigenism Ideologyandthe programsof anticlericalism were used by the more seriouscritics of Diaz. When it came to the final days of revolution,ideologiesof socialismand anarchism, along with political programs,were used by angry men to transcendwhat were to them the "not so smilingaspects" of Mexicanlife in the days of Don Porfirio. State UniversityCollege Fredonia,New York WILLIAM D. RAAT