51. These lesser societies and the larger society
differ in many respects, because their immediate purpose and aim are different.
Civil society exists for the common good, and hence is concerned with the
interests of all in general, albeit with individual interests also in their due
place and degree. It is therefore called a public society, because by its
agency, as St. Thomas of Aquinas says, "Men establish relations in common
with one another in the setting up of a commonwealth."(36) But
societies which are formed in the bosom of the commonwealth are styled private,
and rightly so, since their immediate purpose is the private advantage of
the associates. "Now, a private society," says St. Thomas again,
"is one which is formed for the purpose of carrying out private objects;
as when two or three enter into partnership with the view of trading in
common."(37) Private societies, then, although they exist within
the body politic, and are severally part of the commonwealth, cannot
nevertheless be absolutely, and as such, prohibited by public authority. For,
to enter into a "society" of this kind is the natural right of man;
and the State hasfor its office to protect natural rights, not to destroy them;
and, if it forbid its citizens to form associations, it contradicts the very
principle of its own existence, for both they and it exist in virtue of the
like principle, namely, the natural tendency of man to dwell in society.
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