It's interesting you say this. This view of history is characteristic of modern consciousness - up until the 1800s, the concern over power structures was almost non-existent. Notice that the elements you describe - technocracies, bureaucracies, capitalism, technological enframing, and fixed educational systems - these are elements to be found only in modern societies. Interestingly also, it is only in modern societies that we have seen a gradual and continual breakdown of order towards either of two extremes: totalitarianism or progressivism.Then the reasons we ground an ethical system eventually become subversive. So order becomes a form of power, a way of producing a demand on others to obey some x. But we already know historically this hasn't worked well. We get technocracies, bureaucracies, capitalism, technological enframing, educational systems that begin to take a monopoly of what's right for our children. — Marty
The state will move in to deal with this - it will take over children, how they are raised up, and so forth (out of wedlock birth is at 40% in US - up from 5% 50 years ago) - as a way to solve the problem that has been created. Soon we will slide once again into a totalitarianism - which is the necessary result of all forms of progressivism. — Agustino
The virtues will teach people how to be kind to one another, how to respect one another, how to care for the feelings of one another. — Agustino
Because order still requires to be maintained. If it will not be maintained by the traditional power structures, then it will be maintained by the authoritarianism of the state - which is much worse. — Agustino
That will depend on how we define progressivism I think. I define progressivism as movements which (1) ignore the ineradicable evil in the world (and consider that perfection is achievable on Earth, or in some cases worth striving for), (2) promote rapid social change which is aimed at removing power structures for the sake of removing power structures, and (3) empower (or better said seek to empower, because I don't think, for example blacks, are that empowered today) minority groups in ways which neglect the effect their manner of empowerment has on the rest of society.But... while agreeing that 40% bastardy is deplorable, I'm not willing to agree that "totalitarianism is the necessary result of all forms of progressivism." — Bitter Crank
Indeed that is why it becomes necessary that we have leaders - not only in politics - which exemplify and wear the virtues for all to see. People do what seems to be popular to them, and what seems popular is what they see their leaders do - those who are in the public eye. People learn and arrange their lives based on Hollywood, actors, musicians, comedians, politicians, etc. But the media and Hollywood, and Western politicians are mostly hyper-progressive. They don't wear any virtues, apart from the virtue of benevolence towards everyone and everything, which they mistake for complete virtue. Courage, loyalty, trust, kindness, self-sacrifice, chastity - these virtues, they most certainly don't represent.respect is propagated by doing the virtues, not in teaching or being taught--though teaching virtue is a necessary thing. — Bitter Crank
First of all, bringing together all those who understand the need for Aristotelian virtues. That needs to become a strong and united community. It needs to reconcile and unite people of different religions under the common umbrella of the virtues - in this globalised age, the progressive movements are winning because they have divided religions one against the other, and thus nullified their effect. Second of all, educating other people about the importance of the virtues - combatting Hollywood and the mass-media - because the truth is most people haven't even heard about the importance of the virtues. Who would have told them? Hollywood? Clearly not. People for example don't understand what makes stable marriages - they just have never been educated about it. They have no clue - most people end up marrying someone, without any serious consideration about what characteristics are important for a stable marriage. Then they wonder why their marriage failed - no doubt it failed - if you do something without planning for it, what do you expect? People spend years learning to be doctors or engineers or whatever - and they don't even spend 1 week learning what it means to be moral, which is perhaps much more important than all the other knowledge they have.What, exactly, is the program for returning to the saving virtues of Aristotelianism? — Bitter Crank
Order by the state is order maintained by the threat of law, supervision and punishment - like Stalin. Order from power structures is order maintained by the community itself. For example, if your husband cheats on you, society reacts to this by ostracising him - not respecting him anymore, pushing him towards the periphery of society. That is a form of social order. There is no law determining that to happen. It's just a reaction of the people to say that they do not value this kind of behaviour.is order maintained by the state actually any worse than order maintained by other power structures--church, corporation, family...? — Bitter Crank
The pre-modern ages, on the other hand, were concerned with good and evil. ...if men did not, by a power structure, have to be devoted to their women, most of them would have treated women like nothing more than cattle that they would use and throw away after. — Agustino
This view of history is characteristic of modern consciousness — Agustino
Based on the philosophical movements. Pre-modern = Renaissance and before. Modern = Enlightenment and afterWhat is the time of your dividing line between pre-modern and modern? 300 years ago or 3,000? 10,000--back to the time of the first buildings in Jericho? — Bitter Crank
LOL :DYour interesting OP has kept me from getting to church this morning. I hope you are aware of the negative effect on my morals your writing has. — Bitter Crank
up until the 1800s, the concern over power structures was almost non-existent — Agustino
It's interesting you say this. This view of history is characteristic of modern consciousness - up until the 1800s, the concern over power structures was almost non-existent. — Agustino
Notice that the more power structures are removed in the modern age, the more chaotic the world becomes - the more violent, mean and selfish it will become. — Agustino
Indeed that is why it becomes necessary that we have leaders - not only in politics - which exemplify and wear the virtues for all to see. People do what seems to be popular to them, and what seems popular is what they see their leaders do - those who are in the public eye. People learn and arrange their lives based on Hollywood, actors, musicians, comedians, politicians, etc. But the media and Hollywood, and Western politicians are mostly hyper-progressive. They don't wear any virtues, apart from the virtue of benevolence towards everyone and everything, which they mistake for complete virtue. Courage, loyalty, trust, kindness, self-sacrifice, chastity - these virtues, they most certainly don't represent. — Agustino
In relation to 'technological rationality'.Weapons of math destruction, which O’Neil refers to throughout the book as WMDs, are mathematical models or algorithms that claim to quantify important traits: teacher quality, recidivism risk, creditworthiness but have harmful outcomes and often reinforce inequality, keeping the poor poor and the rich rich. They have three things in common: opacity, scale, and damage. They are often proprietary or otherwise shielded from prying eyes, so they have the effect of being a black box. They affect large numbers of people, increasing the chances that they get it wrong for some of them. And they have a negative effect on people, perhaps by encoding racism or other biases into an algorithm or enabling predatory companies to advertise selectively to vulnerable people, or even by causing a global financial crisis.
As BC noted I probably wasn't referring to political leaders and their enemies, who have always struggled over power. So try a more charitable reading. I was referring to intellectual currents - what people who were talking about how society should be organised were concerned about - people like Kant, Descartes, Aristotle, etc.What? What do you imagine the Catholic Church was doing from 325 until the Reformation? What's the burning of heretics if not a concern to maintain power? What were the Crusades about? Why was there a Pope and a Holy Roman Emperor? What was Ambrose doing publicly shamiong the emperor if not asserting the primacy of Chruch over State?
What the heck was Cromwell doing marching around Britain knocking noble head's together if it wasn't a concern with structures of power? I don't think I imagined that he was asserting the primacy of Parliament over monarchy?
And while we're in Britain, do you have no idea just how deeply structured the feudal system was under the Normans? — Barry Etheridge
Again - you don't get it. Yes it's precisely the point that these people were talking about how society should be organised. However - unlike people like Marx - they weren't concerned with removing power structures. Their questions were never "Who has power in society, and what can we do to eliminate this structure of power?" - their questions were always "What is good for society? How can society be made better?"Isn't Aristotle pre-1800 then? Doesn't Plato have a book entirely concerned with the structure of society and the nature of rule? Isn't Augustine's City of God a treatise on the same subject? What else is Machiavelli talking about in the 15th Century or More in Utopia before him or Hobbes after him? Marcus Aurelius? Cicero? — Barry Etheridge
"Who has power in society, and what can we do to eliminate this structure of power?" — Agustino
No - it's not focused on power structures. Plato's Republic is focused on how to form a good society. The focus is The Good - not Power. I'm talking about people's consciousness, which is reflected in the intellectual movements of the times. This consciousness has drastically changed - changing the way one relates and perceives the world, around the end of the Renaissance and the beginning of the Enlightenment. I'm not the only one to note this either: you can check the works of Owen Barfield, Mircea Eliade, Eric Voegelin to name a few.So Plato's Republic isn't an excoriating critique of 'power to the people' (democracy)? — Barry Etheridge
That's not what I'm referring to. I'm referring to what intellectual circles are concerned with - the ideas which guide their thinking, and which represent the "glasses" they look through at the world - those glasses that they can't remove without much practice. Today power structures govern the thinking of intellectuals - just have a read of Rousseau, Marx, Foucault, and other such modern thinkers. Power forms the glasses through which society is perceived. These ideas which govern intellectual circles seep through into the general culture - it is seen as "intellectual" to hold those ideas, they become something associated with social status. Sooner or later the general population starts to be concerned with and see the world only through this prism.I'm not sure how you can say this, though. That the concern for power structure is a "modern thing." — Marty
In other words there existed order - after this period, which in many cases lasted well into the Renaissance, order started to collapse. And my hypothesis is that order collapsed because the consciousness of man changed.The beginning can be found at the tail end of the middle ages. I would agree before then there was probably more of a commune between the caste systems, but only because social ranking was divinely and financially put into place from birth — Marty
Depends what you mean by prosperity. Spiritually I think the Renaissance and the Middle Ages were more advanced than we are today.But to think this was an era of prosperity for these individuals seems contentious. — Marty
Yes - this is a change which I believe you have correctly spotted. I think when you're talking about the increasing in egocentricity in this period you are noting a change which is a manifestation of the change in consciousness I am trying to refer to.Where society begins to flatten out the antagonisms between good and evil, between higher art and lower art, between high and low culture which you have in mind. — Marty
And paradoxically also less - many people today are truly lawless. People have access to a miserly "freedom" today to do as they please - without realising how limited their choices have actually become.We live in a world where there is more law, more power structures, more surveillance than ever before. — Marty
I agree.We've created a society that refuses to acknowledge any other system than its own. When mankind cannot no longer see alternatives to the society it lives in, where forms of suppression now become invisible forces in the guise of a "neutrality," then one could be completely analogous to a somnambulist — walking through his daily life asleep, and in-taking new forms of "progress" without realizing their mass consumption, (and essential non-radical conformity).
Our society can hardly be called radical or progressive. In fact, we live in probably one of most dangerous times where newer ideas become harder to come by due to the crushing status-quo. — Marty
Which is merely a symptom of the lack of order that exists both in our souls as individuals and in the rest of society. The secularised, bureaucratic and technological world - these, in my opinion, are merely the outward reflection of the change in consciousness which took place - it's the change in consciousness that has produced all these, and not the other way around. People make technology - not technology people. And now, when we behold ourselves through the world we have made - we are as Kierkegaard would say, in despair.The explosion of pathologies today isn't because we've become radical and progressive, it's come because we can't find an identity anymore in the meaningless (secularized) bureaucratic and technological world. — Marty
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