In terms of the genealogy of these ideas, I think theology is very relevant here, as guys like John Milbank and Brad Gregory have shown. That's one of the ironies of liberalism, the source of its anthropology comes, at least in its origins, from one of the "forbidden sources" of justification. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Christianity makes individual salvation the central element of its message. Further, Christian philosophy only develops and strengthens this idea, which could not but influence the social structure and the way of thinking of pre-modern contemporaries: — Astorre
Christianity turned into its own land ownership and statehood game. Kings of tribes became kings of the common folk, as defined by a church system. Church became an administrative arm dealing with the soul of this corporate body.
The Christian church was different from Judaism, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism in that its popes sought to impose new property and marriage laws on old tribal structures. Pope Urban II in 1000s said don’t expect church to ratify old custom as its way was the truth of god.
Christianity cemented English moves towards impersonal law. The kings became the dispensers of court justice. And then the kings themselves were subject to the rule of law under the normative influence of there being a Church and God to say all mortals are law bound. The Church closed the systems in terms of norms of justice and egalitariaism. The same rules constrained, no matter what their personal contingencies.
The Western way emerged from a strong church that claimed the mind and gave the state the body. Then this individualisation evolved its own freedom from church constraint, especially with the scientific revolution and Protestant reformation.
The Catholic Church’s attention to legal codes was important in transforming into modern states. Church came up with Justinian code to reconnect to Greek and Rome rationality, and also Canon law to tidy up its own historic mish mash. So a new institution of legal practice and scholarship emerged.
It also created modern bureaucracy, reinventing Qin China's separation of office from office-holder. Justice dispensed by functionaries of the state. Technical competence and education could start to matter. Chancery staff set a model of civilian rule that kings then adopted
A key difference in Europe was that it was politically fragmented into many states, but had a strong church. Europe had its Justinian code as a result of a scholarly attempt to create unity of textual views. Law became a specialised subject at universities, as well as a practice. And it had its concordat of Worms to establish separation of church and state as institutions.
So it took everything to the next level with a sharper and more explicit abstraction. It was about rules not just for some society, but a rational society in general.
An important Medieval Europe innovation was the 1200s idea of the corporation as effectively a legal person. Graeber p304 says Pope Innocent IV in 1250 established in canon law that monasteries, universities, churches, municipalities and guilds could be corporate bodies. This agreed with Platonic approach of Aquinas where angels were ideas made concrete. Every angel represents a species.
So a turn of mind that in scholastic fashion could treat abstractions as solid organising realities. Intellectual bodies in Ernst Kantorowicz words. Europe was able to accept institutions into the human framework of legal and economic protections.
It started with church bodies, then intellectual bodies, and finally cities and trades. Eventually economic entities could own property and rule their own homes. This recognition of individuality as scalefree interest groups was central in creating a liberal and democratic Europe. If it wasn't hurting others, why not let an interest group pursue its own goals?
Graeber notes that corporations thus started as permissive and cooperative ideals. Allowing localised self-regulating community. But then turned into competitive commercial and mercantile enterprises like the East India Company.
Of course, all this is too reductionist: you can't just look at Christianity as the source of everything. All the changes in public consciousness did not happen in a vacuum, but under the influence of many other things, as you noted in your comments. — Astorre
The question arises: What is the next stage of liberation? Maybe now is the time to free ourselves from the need to be? After all, we are already free from everything else, including any identity, social connections, aren't we? This is exactly where I see one of those very pillars of liberalism that I spoke about earlier. — Astorre
The question arises: What is the next stage of liberation? Maybe now is the time to free ourselves from the need to be? After all, we are already free from everything else, including any identity, social connections, aren't we? This is exactly where I see one of those very pillars of liberalism that I spoke about earlier.
— Astorre
And there we certainly differ. Absolute freedom makes no sense. To have meaning, freedom has to exist within a context of constraint. — apokrisis
All this is the story of someone escaping responsibility to someone else. What I wrote above - no one is responsible for anything. The question arises: What is the next stage of liberation? Maybe now is the time to free ourselves from the need to be? After all, we are already free from everything else, including any identity, social connections, aren't we? This is exactly where I see one of those very pillars of liberalism that I spoke about earlier. — Astorre
Empirically, what appears to emerge is a brutal new puritanism, political correctness taken to extremes.Are we truly entering an era of multipolarity? If so, what are the philosophical consequences of a world without a dominant cultural “center”? — Astorre
Of course not. It already doesn't coexist with alternatives, it wants to rule over the entire world.Is the West prepared to coexist with ideological and civilizational alternatives that do not necessarily aspire to Western liberalism?
And in the "free and liberal and advanced West" a woman is told she is "not expressing herself" if she isn't wearing makeup, high heels etc.I once witnessed a girl who was a guest asking a local girl why she wore a hijab, explaining that it infringed on her rights, her freedom to express herself. To which the second girl replied that this was her way of expressing herself. — Astorre
Perhaps they don't want a "dictatorship" in the sense of actually calling it that way; but they probably want someone strong and capable in the leadership position.What if the dictatorships of the global south are what the inhabitants of the global south want?
There are several types of individualism, but it seems you're only talking about expansive individualism, or entitled individualism, or narcissistic individualism./.../
Further, all this is transformed into individual human rights, freedom of conscience (after all, if you are not righteous, this is your problem), pluralism of opinions - it becomes a consistent development. At the same time, the idea of God as the source of everything is being debunked, as it has been replaced by faith in science.
"I don't care what John thinks, because it's his own business. I don't care how he runs the household or raises his children, because he's responsible for it himself." And the crown of all this is Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Sartre and Camus. Existentialism - as personal responsibility to oneself for one's own actions in the absence of a common meaning or common responsibility.
All this is the story of someone escaping responsibility to someone else. What I wrote above - no one is responsible for anything. The question arises: What is the next stage of liberation? Maybe now is the time to free ourselves from the need to be? After all, we are already free from everything else, including any identity, social connections, aren't we? This is exactly where I see one of those very pillars of liberalism that I spoke about earlier. — Astorre
I'm currently reading a memoir, based on a series of Harvard University lectures, by philosopher/mathematician A. N. Whitehead : Science and Philosophy. He was born & bred British, toward the end of Empire, but spent his later years in the U.S., which he viewed as a beacon of reason for the rest of the world. If only he could see us now!Over the past decade, I've observed a notable shift in global sentiment—especially from my vantage point in the East. Not long ago—perhaps 10 to 15 years back—there was a widespread admiration for the West in my country. The U.S. dollar was seen as unshakable. Western democracy was often cited as the highest political ideal. Western consumer goods were considered objectively superior. And the broader cultural narrative—academic, technological, even moral—was clearly West-centric. — Astorre
Exactly! The world has changed radically in the 21st century. National or state borders are now much more fluid & porous than in the early 20th century. And us-vs-them antipathies are no longer aimed externally at well-defined enemies, but at neighbors, who may differ only in ideologies. In the 1970s, cartoonist Walt Kelly created a new meme, by turning a famous 19th century quote inside-out*1. His lovable possum philosopher made an early environmental statement by pointing the finger-of-blame at us, instead of at them*2.In the United States, however, in my view, the antithesis is more internal. — Astorre
What would you argue is a realistic and beneficial alternative to liberalism? — Tom Storm
In this way the whole notion of liberalism is founded upon a lie and a falsehood, and it is quite difficult to maintain such a bald lie on a societal and cultural level. — Leontiskos
One of the central problems with liberalism is the incoherence of its neutrality principle. Liberalism claims that it is a neutral, universal, tradition-independent framework, when in fact it is one particular, non-neutral tradition among others. The liberal state envisions itself as a kind of referee who oversees the game but does not interfere on behalf of any side and has no value-commitments of its own. It is perhaps the only political philosophy which pretends that it is itself neutral; which pretends that it utilizes no metanarrative in ordering narratives. — Leontiskos
Sure. But what’s the best alternative to liberalism? — Tom Storm
Liberalism has all sorts of definitions. — Leontiskos
A good point and I agree. — apokrisis
And yet what if all societies must construct some such transcendent fiction? - an argument I have made in this thread, and which plays large in Fukuyama’s account of human political history. — apokrisis
What seems apparent is that social animals are organised by the emergence of dominance-submission hierarchies. It is something that is engineered in at a genetic level.
Humans have a capacity to narrate their worlds and so could create social order at this new “civilised” level. To make that happen, the old dominance-submission games had to be submerged under some form of collective transcendent identity. A narrative about ancestral landscapes, judging gods, or democratic justice. Even the mightiest in the group had to bow their heads before a power that outranked even them.
So this is what all societies have in common. The need for an uber-narrative which secures the identity of the individual. A neutralising force that breaks down the local gang boss and allows a society to scale - to grow large and complex despite the still natural tendency to play dominance-submission games. — apokrisis
So yes. Liberalism is a fiction. A meta narrative of a perfection that can never be achieved. But if it scales, then that already says it is a better meta-narrative than the other brands going around.
Whether human societies should freely scale is a new question that has come into view. But liberalism did win that competition. — apokrisis
There's a default assumption that secular civilization can swallow anything up. There's a kind of arrogance there. "The secular civilization of the West is such a broad tent that everyone can be brought into it." But Islam is at least as sophisticated a civilization as the civilization of the Christian West. And a very ancient one. And for most of its existence has been much, much more powerful than the Christian world. Therefore the idea that it should accommodate itself to what liberal secularists think it should do isn't a given. — Tom Holland, ibid, 1:09:30
I don't agree with this first one, namely that all societies must construct some such transcendent fiction, but if it were true then the society would no longer function once the "cat is out of the bag" and the fiction is known to be a fiction, — Leontiskos
So on this theory I gather that we could not return to an outdated uber-narrative which has now been debunked, given that it no longer possesses the necessary plausibility to function. Does the neutrality of the liberal state still possess the necessary plausibility to function? — Leontiskos
liberalism professes the lie of neutrality with a doctrinal earnestness. — Leontiskos
First, I would note that Jordan Peterson is constantly talking about group dynamics through the perspective of primatologists who debunked the idea that "gang boss" dominance (tyrannical social ordering) is common among primates. I don't recall the details… — Leontiskos
If that's right and even primates can manage to avoid "local gang boss" hierarchies, then I don't see why ideational humans would need special help from fictional narratives. — Leontiskos
That is, they attempt to provide rational grounds for avoiding tyrannical social orderings instead of resorting to a fictional narrative. Does that route seem unpromising to you for some reason? — Leontiskos
There are other dynasties that far surpass liberalism, including Islam, China, Rome, and perhaps Christianity if it is separable from liberalism.
Presumably you are claiming that liberalism sits atop the mountain at this point in history, therefore it has won — Leontiskos
The really interesting point with Islam is that it explicitly presented propagation/scaling as an argument for its own legitimacy, and the more territory it conquered, the more often it adverted to this argument. This form of "pragmatism" is common among many ancient dynasties. — Leontiskos
Specifically, I think it would be easy to argue that it is not true that liberalism is theoretically or historically superior to other social orderings; and I don't know that a dominance-submission problem exists such that it needs to be answered with fictional narratives. — Leontiskos
The argument from someone like yourself is apparently that liberalism is superior precisely because of its values, and at that point it could be argued that the fictional neutrality could be dropped given the wide recognition of the legitimacy of liberal values. — Leontiskos
Where is the evidence for this in history? Which religion or even political structure because it was discovered to be a fiction? The Catholic Church lives on. Marxism too. — apokrisis
The reason is that truth can be transcendent even after the facts seem to have abandoned it. So God might not be real. But if society is better organised under His name, then I could live with that. — apokrisis
Anglicanism seems to have gone with that. The Brits also preserved the romance of having a monarchy. The nobility of running an imperial empire as a colonial trade network. In a lot of ways, the UK brand of liberalism thrived as it relied on this quite adaptive mix of transcendent authority. The US by contrast always felt officious and ill at ease with itself. Never actually a land of those feeling much freedom.
So God can be a fiction. The King can be a fiction. A Commonwealth can be a fiction. Everyone can see that and still find it a more useful truth if it binds everyone to a shared sense of social order.
The fiction isn’t the problem. The issue is whether the fiction can evolve in productive fashion. — apokrisis
But how close did we ever get to implementing that neutrality? — apokrisis
I’ve sat with those in high office and their aims are far more pragmatic. Thatcher might have been more of the doctrinal stripe. Or she might just have had a middle class distaste of working class power and a matching love of the aristocratic elite.
But I’ve seen more interest in how to implement properly neutral public policy than doctrinal fervour. At least by choosing to live in a country as near the ideal as it could be in the world as it has become. — apokrisis
Yep. I have studied the details. I know the differences and also the similarities between bonobos and chimps. I wouldn’t leap to citing Peterson as my source. But RIchard Wrangham I recently mention in this light. — apokrisis
The problem for liberalism is when it justifies itself under the old rubric of the good, the true, the beautiful, the almighty. The fiction is being rubbed in your face. One is being asked to worship at the base of a flag and recite an oath of obedience. Literal submission to a flapping bit of cloth.
I would gag at that. I prefer a country where no one really knows the national anthem and can’t even be sure whether the flag is their own or their neighbours, — apokrisis
If have to defend some transcendent principle, it would be pragmatism rather than liberalism - social or economic.
Liberalism has only won in the sense that it scales. It has outpaced the others in terms of growth in being stripped down to take risks and gamble on what burning a planet’s worth of resources can deliver.
So sure, other dynasties have their successes, especially to the degree they tended towards pragmatism and found ways to counter autocracy and corruption.
But liberalism was what lit a rocket under the world. And surely I am as big of critic of that as much as you. I never said might makes right. I’ve always said healthy balance is what we should seek. Unrestrained growth without a matching sense of direction doesn’t sound like a viable plan to me. — apokrisis
Dominance-submission was an evolutionary problem for social organisation as it doesn’t scale. Homo sapiens took off just as the most successful foragers on the planet as they evolved the level of grammatical language to narratise the landscape they lived in. Turn the world into a place of ancestral history and custom. The land became organised over a vastly greater sense of space and time. It became possible to imagine life as an extended network of fighting and trading, raiding and sharing. Competing and cooperating.
The Neanderthals lived in small isolated bands. Sapiens rolled over the landscape in a sudden wave of social narrative. They wave swept across everywhere until it laid claim to the planet as its ancestral heritage. A place to be organised by war and trade. The seed of liberal order. An order that was good to the degree it could negotiate the internal contradictions that so powerfully drove it. — apokrisis
But neutrality is about a balance. One that needs the always larger view that can encompass the necessary contradictions. And so to be “humanity”, we need to socially construct that transcendent point of view. That is what the collective narrative has always been about. — apokrisis
Pragmatism just exposes the mechanics of how this is done in a post-foraging and post-agrarian world. We can appreciate the mechanism in its own rational terms. It the fictions are transparent, then at least they can be critiqued. — apokrisis
An example where the lie was found out and the social order collapsed as a result would be the USSR. — Leontiskos
I would argue that one cannot believe something and not believe something at the same time. Or that it will at least lead to problems. — Leontiskos
When I speak of those who are "doctrinally earnest" I am thinking of Locke, or of the Founders of liberal regimes in 1776 or 1789. — Leontiskos
He is relying on the research of Frans de Waal. — Leontiskos
But I want to ask why you see this as "the seed of a liberal order"? What is the signification of "liberal" in that sentence? Are you saying that social narrative is key to human success, and liberalism promotes social narrative? Or perhaps that liberalism promotes the proper kinds of social narrative? — Leontiskos
Okay, and what does the favored form of "neutrality" balance? What are we to be neutral with respect to? — Leontiskos
So now I am wondering if we agree that the fictions should be made transparent? Or are you just saying that now that the fictions are being laid bare we have an opportunity to recalibrate our direction? — Leontiskos
Major players are willing to calmly provoke, incite, and wage wars to advance their interests. We see how global powers, under the guise of good intentions, shape public opinion, support their preferred forces, and push for protests or suppression. And no side is "absolutely righteous." — Astorre
What do you think philosophy could do in this situation? — Astorre
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