In Germany, the land of philosophy, when the savants sail into a sea of doubt, some one sets up the cry, "Back to Kant!"
In America, when professed democracy grows ambitious and evolves a lust for power, men say, "Back to Jefferson!"
In business, when employer forgets employee and both forget their better manhood, we say, "Back to Robert Owen!"
We will not go back to Robert Owen: we will go on to Robert Owen, for his philosophy is still in the vanguard.
Robert Owen was a businessman. His first intent was to attain a practical success. He produced the article, and sold it at a profit.
In this operation of taking raw material and manufacturing it into forms of use and beauty—from the time the seed was planted in the ground on up to the consumer who purchased the finished fabric and wove it—Owen believed that all should profit—all should be made happier by every transaction.
That is to say, Robert Owen believed that a business transaction where both sides do not make money is immoral.
There is a legal maxim still cited in the courts—"Caveat emptor"—let the buyer beware.
For this maxim Robert Owen had no respect. He scorned the thought of selling a man something the man did not want, or of selling an article for anything except exactly what it was, or of exacting a price for it, by hook or crook, beyond its value.
Robert Owen believed in himself, and in his product, and he believed in the people. He was a democratic optimist. He had faith in the demos; and the reason was that his estimate of the people was formed by seeing into his own heart. He realized that he was a part of the people, and he knew that he wanted nothing for himself which the world could not have on the same terms. He looked into the calm depths of his own heart and saw that he hated tyranny, pretense, vice, hypocrisy, extravagance and untruth. He knew in the silence of his own soul that he loved harmony, health, industry, reciprocity, truth and helpfulness. His desire was to benefit mankind, and to help himself by helping others.