From a thymological standpoint, the “actor” here is the assembly of state-appointed delegates who met in Philadelphia in 1787 and, under conditions of secrecy, chose to abandon mere amendment of the Articles of Confederation and draft a new frame of government.
- Action restated neutrally
- Delegates convened to revise the Articles of Confederation but instead drafted and signed a new Constitution establishing a stronger federal structure, then sent it to the states for ratification.
- Surface motives (as they presented them)
- Preserve the Union and prevent disintegration into rival confederacies.
- Remedy the Articles’ defects: no taxation power, weak executive, inability to regulate interstate and foreign commerce, and ineffectual national defense.
- Restore public credit, stabilize currency/finance, and facilitate commerce.
- Establish a workable republican government with checks and balances to control faction and prevent both anarchy and tyranny.
- Deeper reconstruction of the delegates’ lifeworld and evaluations
- Lived experience and recent shocks: Many had witnessed the financial chaos and political volatility of the 1780s—state-issued paper money, debtor-relief laws perceived as unjust by creditors, and Shays’ Rebellion—feeding a felt urgency (fear of “anarchy”) and a valuation of stability, order, and honor (Washington’s language frequently framed the situation as a crisis of national reputation).
- Geopolitical anxiety: Britain’s forts on the frontier, Spanish closure of the Mississippi, and Barbary threats created a practical sense that only an “energetic” national government could protect interests and negotiate credibly.
- Republican ideology and classical inheritance: In a culture steeped in Roman exemplars and Enlightenment thought (Montesquieu, mixed government), many delegates prized balanced institutions, separation of powers, and the rule of law as means to preserve liberty through structure, not mere exhortation.
- Social position and economic exposure: A large share were lawyers, merchants, planters, or holders of public securities. They valued predictable contract enforcement, uniform commercial rules, and a framework securing property and public credit, which they understood as prerequisites for prosperity and dignity.
- Sectional and institutional commitments: Southern planters prioritized protections for slaveholding and export interests; small-state delegates prioritized political equality in at least one chamber; “nationalists” (e.g., Hamilton, at times Madison) prioritized an integrated fiscal-military and commercial union; many valued state autonomy but wanted to cage its excesses.
- Process design and ratification calculus: Secrecy signaled a valuation of candid bargaining over performative debate; many choices were shaped by a forward-looking appraisal of what states and the public would ratify, pushing compromise (e.g., Connecticut Compromise, 3/5, slave trade until 1808) as volitional “means” to the higher end of a viable Union.
- Primary motives with secondary/contributing factors (ranked by likelihood across the whole convention)
- Primary:
- Preservation of the Union through an effective national government with real powers (taxation, commerce, defense).
- Restoration of public credit and commercial reliability (stable rules, uniformity, and contract protection).
- Institutional control of faction and volatility—designing checks to curb perceived excesses of state-level populism without lapsing into monarchy.
- Secondary:
4) Sectional/institutional protections: equal state suffrage in the Senate for small states; slavery-related guarantees for the Lower South; navigation and commerce advantages for commercial states.
5) Personal and reputational motives: a sense of honor, legacy, and postwar responsibility; for some, future office-holding prospects.
6) Ideational projects of an “energetic” executive and coordinated national capacity befitting a respectable nation among powers.
- Alternative interpretations and uncertainties
- Economic-determinist reading (Beard): Delegates, often creditors and bondholders, designed a Constitution to protect wealth. Thymologically plausible as a contributing layer (they clearly valued contract and credit), but too monocausal; many non-creditor actors shared the Union-and-stability valuation, and significant compromises (e.g., equal state suffrage) were not straightforwardly “pro-wealth.”
- Pure republican-ideology reading: Ideas of mixed government and fear of corruption drove design. Strong, but ideas were constantly filtered through concrete pressures: war debts, foreign threats, and state-level policy turmoil.
- Sectional-capture thesis: Southern slaveholding interests steered the bargain. They achieved crucial concessions (3/5, fugitive clause, slave trade until 1808), yet they did not win decentralized “states’ rights” supremacy; the final charter still increased national power substantially, indicating multi-sided bargaining rather than single-interest dominance.
- Residual uncertainties: Individual delegates blended motives idiosyncratically—e.g., Madison as both nationalist architect and federalist compromiser; Washington’s personal authority and concern for honor may have galvanized consensus beyond any material interest analysis.
- Thymological conclusion: why it made sense to them
- Given their lifeworld—recent civil-military experience, economic fragility, and fear of geopolitical vulnerability—the delegates judged that only a redesigned constitutional architecture could secure order, credit, and liberty together. They valued Union over parochial control, stability over volatility, and institutionalized balance over charismatic leadership. The specific compromises (representation, slavery, commerce) were chosen as necessary volitional means to make ratification achievable while embedding a national framework robust enough to command respect at home and abroad. Even where the design morally troubled some (e.g., slavery), the prevailing judgment of value prioritized securing a workable Union first, with the hope—explicit for some—that future politics could address unresolved evils within the new structure.
Brief note on thymology vs. praxeology here
- Praxeology would abstractly say the delegates acted to choose means to their ends under scarcity and uncertainty. Thymology instead reconstructs their subjective meanings: the honor-laden fear of anarchy after Shays’, the humiliation of diplomatic weakness, the republican imaginary of balanced powers, the creditor’s dread of paper-money laws, the planter’s resolve to guard slave property, and the small state’s insistence on political dignity. It is this textured web of valuations, emotions, and cultural ideals—not a universal logic alone—that explains why this particular Constitution, in that summer of 1787, felt like the right act to these particular men.
Sources for this response
- Primary/thymological method:
- Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History (1957), chs. on thymology and historical understanding.
- Ludwig von Mises, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962), section on “The Thymological Method.”
- Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949/1966), contrasts of praxeology with psychology/history.
- Max Weber, Economy and Society (selections on Verstehen); R.G. Collingwood, The Idea of History.
- Historical materials and scholarship:
- James Madison, Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787.
- The Federalist Papers (esp. Nos. 10, 23, 39, 51).
- Gordon S. Wood, The Creation of the American Republic, 1776–1787.
- Bernard Bailyn, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (for ideological background).
- Forrest McDonald, We the People: The Economic Origins of the Constitution (critique/nuance of Beard).
- Charles A. Beard, An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States (economic-determinist thesis).
- Pauline Maier, Ratification: The People Debate the Constitution, 1787–1788.
- Merrill Jensen, The New Nation.
- Joseph J. Ellis, Founding Brothers (for motive sketches; popular but insightful).
- Contextual events: records on Shays’ Rebellion; diplomatic issues with Britain/Spain/Barbary (standard U.S. diplomatic histories).
From a thymological standpoint, here are additional, more granular layers of motive reconstruction for the 1787 Convention—zooming into specific delegates’ lifeworlds, factional bargains, and the social-psychological “feel” of the room.
- Action restated neutrally
- State-appointed delegates met under a rule of secrecy to revise the Articles; through bargaining and committee work, they produced an entirely new constitutional design and transmitted it to the states for ratification.
- Surface motives (brief recap)
- Secure the Union; empower national taxation, commerce, and defense; restore public credit; design a republican system able to tame faction without monarchy; get something ratifiable.
- Deeper reconstruction: key actors’ lifeworlds and valuations
- George Washington: The actor likely valued honor, national reputation, and postwar stability over personal ease. Given his Lebenswelt as victorious general now fearing dissolution, he framed the choice as duty versus disgrace. He lent legitimacy “from above,” but insisted on institutional checks to prevent demagogy “from below.”
- James Madison: Valued a “science of politics.” His in-order-to motive was to control majority faction via scale and structure. He preferred proportional representation, an energetic center, and even a federal negative on state laws (a control he failed to secure). Emotionally invested in coherence and long-horizon design rather than short-term expedients.
- Alexander Hamilton: Valued public credit, commercial greatness, and executive energy. Admired the stability of the British model; his long-tenure executive pitch expressed a judgment that durability outcompetes volatility. Pragmatic thymology: he floated maximal ideas, then rallied to a more moderate design as the best ratifiable vehicle for fiscal-military capacity.
- Benjamin Franklin: Elder statesman whose valuation of union and civic concord outweighed design purism. He practiced “conciliation as method,” signaling that imperfect compromise is rational when the higher end is Union. His religiously tinged appeals expressed a cultural matrix where Providence, humility, and prudence legitimated compromise.
- Gouverneur Morris: Nationalist with aristocratic sensibilities; valued a strong executive and clear national supremacy. Skeptical of slavery and of excessive democracy; wrote with stylistic purpose to sacralize the final text—an aesthetic-volitional act to confer dignity and durability.
- Roger Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth (Connecticut): Valued state corporate identity and equality. Their lifeworld—small-state dignity within a union—made the Senate’s equal suffrage a nonnegotiable. They prized workable federalism and were wary of abstract system-building.
- James Wilson: Valued popular sovereignty and direct legitimacy (popular election of the presidency, a stronger national judiciary). He saw democratic connection as a stabilizer, not a threat, thus his push for a more national popular base.
- George Mason: Valued republican liberty and local autonomy; feared consolidated power absent explicit rights—hence his refusal to sign without a declaration of rights. His stance reflects a prudential, rights-first valuation over speed of union.
- Luther Martin and other strong federal particularists: Valued state prerogative and feared national consolidation. Their withdrawals and dissent show a prioritization of local autonomy over national credit/commerce gains.
- Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, John Rutledge, Charles Pinckney (Lower South): Valued institutional protection of slave property, export interests, and freedom from navigation-act “tyranny.” They bargained hard for the 3/5 ratio, protection of the Atlantic slave trade until 1808, and anti-export taxes, seeing these as existential guarantees.
- Institutional design as signals of valuation
- Secrecy rule: Expressed a valuation of candid bargaining and reputational safety over immediate public accountability; it lowered performative pressure to grandstand and enabled ideational experimentation.
- Committees (Detail; Postponed Parts): Mechanisms to transform principle-level standoffs into text-level trades. This reflects a cultural craft valuation: solve conflict by drafting language that all sides can live with.
- Logrolls and trades:
- Representation: Proportional in the House (nationalist value) vs equal state suffrage in the Senate (small-state dignity).
- Commerce vs slavery: New England/Mid-Atlantic won robust commerce/tariff powers; Lower South secured time-bound protection for the slave trade, a fugitive slave clause, and safeguards against export taxes.
- Executive design: Electoral College balanced popular legitimacy, state roles, and elite filters—encoding competing valuations into one device.
- Ratification theater as a distinct thymological arena
- The actor (Federalist coalition) valued momentum, inevitability, and reasoned reassurance. Strategy: rename consolidation as “a more perfect Union”; flood the zone with arguments (The Federalist), promise a Bill of Rights post-ratification, and target quick-wins in key states to frame the Constitution as the only viable path away from dishonor and decay.
- Anti-Federalists valued local control, militias, jury rights, religion, press, and face-to-face accountability. Their writings show a lifeworld where distant power is presumptively predatory. Their resistance forced the rights-adding compromise that many Federalists privately deemed prudent anyway.
- Cultural-psychological atmosphere of 1787
- Memory of 1770s-80s turmoil: paper money, debtor relief, requisitions, and Shays’ Rebellion produced a visceral fear of anarchy and a reputational shame about impotence abroad.
- Classical republican imagery: Rome’s rise and fall, Polybius’ mixed constitution, and Montesquieu’s separation-of-powers furnished the emotional-cognitive scaffolding for what “wise” design felt like.
- Time pressure and heat: The grueling summer, scarcity of time before harvests and elections, and fatigue nudged actors toward “good enough to ratify” solutions over ideal blueprints.
- Honor economy: Personal reputation, posterity, and the “judgment of the world” loomed large as evaluative standards—especially for Washington and other notables.
Primary motives by faction (with key secondary layers)
- Nationalists (Madison/Hamilton/Wilson/Morris)
- Primary: Effective center for defense/credit/commerce; institutional checks.
- Secondary: International respectability; textual elegance/clarity; executive energy.
- Small-state federalists (Sherman/Ellsworth/Paterson)
- Primary: Equality of states in at least one chamber; protect state corporate standing.
- Secondary: Aversion to overly “popular” national mechanisms; preference for incrementalism.
- Lower South planters (Rutledge/Pinckneys/Butler)
- Primary: Protect slave property and export interests.
- Secondary: Hedge against northern commercial dominance; maintain labor regime security.
- Mid-Atlantic/New England commercial interests
- Primary: National tariff/commerce power; stable credit and uniform rules.
- Secondary: Navy-building and treaty credibility; westward security for trade expansion.
Alternative interpretations and live uncertainties
- Was “fear of anarchy” overstated rhetorically to legitimize consolidation? Plausible for some, but letters and financial data suggest genuine alarm about credit collapse and diplomatic weakness.
- Did Hamilton truly want quasi-monarchy or use it as an “anchor” in bargaining? Ambiguous; subjectively, he prized energy and durability more than titles.
- Did they anticipate parties? Largely not as we know them; they feared “faction” yet underestimated institutionalized party systems.
- Moral discomfort vs. expediency on slavery: Some (e.g., Morris, Mason) were uneasy or opposed; the prevailing judgment prioritized Union first, addressing slavery later—an explicit temporizing calculation for several actors.
Coherent thymological conclusion
- Given their lifeworld—post-revolution fragility, honor-conscious republican culture, and concrete financial-diplomatic stress—the delegates judged that a stronger, balanced national frame was the least-bad path to preserve liberty, property, and reputation. They traded across sectional and institutional lines, accepting morally fraught clauses where they saw no ratifiable alternative. The design reflected layered valuations: Union over parochialism, predictability over volatility, structure over charisma, and legitimacy (via compromise and ratification strategy) over doctrinal purity.
Brief note on thymology vs. praxeology here
- Praxeology would note only that delegates chose means to ends under uncertainty. Thymology reconstructs their subjective world: the honor-infused dread of disorder, the creditor’s fear of paper money, the planter’s existential defense of slave property, the small state’s demand for dignity, and the ideational allure of mixed constitutions. It is this mosaic of valuations, emotions, and cultural ideals that made the specific 1787 bargains feel “right enough” to those men at that moment.
Sources for this response
- Thymological/method sources:
- Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History (1957), chs. on thymology and historical understanding.
- Ludwig von Mises, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962), “The Thymological Method.”
- Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949/1966), contrasts with psychology/history; method of understanding.
- Max Weber, Economy and Society (Verstehen); R.G. Collingwood, The Idea of History; Alfred Schütz, The Phenomenology of the Social World.
- Primary/historical:
- James Madison, Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 (ed. Farrand).
- Max Farrand, The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787.
- The Federalist Papers (Nos. 10, 23, 39, 51, 70).
- George Washington’s letters (1786–1788); Benjamin Franklin’s speeches.
- Anti-Federalist writings (e.g., Brutus, Federal Farmer, Centinel).
- Secondary analyses:
- Gordon S. Wood, The Creation of the American Republic, 1776–1787.
- Pauline Maier, Ratification: The People Debate the Constitution, 1787–1788.
- Forrest McDonald, We the People: The Economic Origins of the Constitution.
- Jack N. Rakove, Original Meanings: Politics and Ideas in the Making of the Constitution.
- Michael J. Klarman, The Framers’ Coup.
- Bernard Bailyn, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution.
- Charles A. Beard, An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States.
- Woody Holton, Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution.
- Herbert J. Storing (ed.), The Complete Anti-Federalist.