If the USSR won some global economic war it could also claim, as you did, that the US today (in the 'today' where the US is communist) is based on the same damn principles and institutions as the USSR at 'that time' (i.e before the US became communist). 'There was always a firm understanding of what the US would become' the USSR intelligentsia would say, 'there was no other alternative.' — csalisbury
And I think it would be very hard to argue that the plantation/slave system of the south wasn't a system of property or political rights — csalisbury
Un didn't mean people couldn't do any of those things when he said they were "helpless." He was talking about how people are "helpless" in the face of the freedom of others. — TheWillowOfDarkness
On the contrary, I think it would be very easy for him, and anyone, to argue that human beings are not property and that one does not and ought not have the right, political or otherwise, to own them as such.
Still don't get it. If the US were communist, then the USSR, upon defeating it, would make it communist? When does the US become communist in this scenario? In any event, using the USSR as an example doesn't work because it lasted less than a century. It meets very easily the criteria for being intolerable.
the one Marquez doesn't (in fact, remaining within his argument, can't) answer: How do we decide when to bring in independent value systems to override the epistemic argument? — csalisbury
I've come across an article in the journal of social political philosophy. The argument goes like this:
1. The endurance of basic institutions* is in part a function of their 'factual' legitimacy, i.e., their actual actual acceptance by the population they regulate (in other words, endurance and factual legitimacy are correlated). — Kazuma
2. Factual legitimacy is in part a function of how much these institutions avoid producing outcomes that are factually 'intolerable' (and thus not tolerated) for this population. — Kazuma
3. There is some connection between what the people subject to these institutions consider normatively intolerable and what is actually normatively intolerable (i. e., factual and normative legitimacy are correlated, even if normatively intolerable outcomes are not always widely recognized). — Kazuma
4. Therefore, actual endurance is evidence that institutions have avoided producing normatively intolerable outcomes in varied circumstances in the past. — Kazuma
5. The evidence that long-lasting institutions have avoided producing normatively intolerable outcomes in many kinds of unknown past circumstances is also evidence that they may avoid producing such outcomes in unknown future circumstances.
(X. Marquez, 2015, An Epistemic Argument for Conservativism) — Kazuma
*basic institutions are those institutions with the broadest scope of regulation (in my view, those could be, for example, capitalism, family etc.) — Kazuma
Personally, I find it to be more beneficial for the society to keep the status quo and to only improve on the current institutions, previously described as basic. There should not be a direction for a society, meaning there should be no desire for changes, as those changes are unpredictable and would only lead to creating a new ideology and revolutions. — Kazuma
Is this definition in common use? To me it seems quite strained.
As if one were to say, the "factual legitimacy" of oppression and coercion consists in the persistence of oppression and coercion. Or, the "factual legitimacy" of an act of aggression consists in the victory of the aggressor. — Cabbage Farmer
In political science, legitimacy is the right and acceptance of an authority, usually a governing law or a régime. Whereas "authority" denotes a specific position in an established government, the term "legitimacy" denotes a system of government — wherein "government" denotes "sphere of influence". — wiki
I don't think it makes sense to talk about the "legitimacy of oppression" here. — Mongrel
Did you not speak in those terms? — Mongrel
1. The endurance of basic institutions* is in part a function of their 'factual' legitimacy, i.e., their actual actual acceptance by the population they regulate (in other words, endurance and factual legitimacy are correlated). — Kazuma
Is this definition in common use? To me it seems quite strained.
As if one were to say, the "factual legitimacy" of oppression and coercion consists in the persistence of oppression and coercion. Or, the "factual legitimacy" of an act of aggression consists in the victory of the aggressor. — Cabbage Farmer
I thought the absurdity of the statements in the paraphrase might shed some light on the significance of the original passage (pushing especially on the role of "actual acceptance" in that passage). I continued commenting in this manner with analogies to lying and strangling. — Cabbage Farmer
I'm inclined to resist the whole line of thinking, despite the mollifying effect of that vagueness. — Cabbage Farmer
In fact the OP isn't so much presenting an argument as simply laying out how conservatives see the world. — Mongrel
Could an institution be oppressive and endure? Couple of answers:
1. For a while, yes. If that's happening it could be because there is no known alternative or people perceive that the alternative isn't something they can choose — Mongrel
But where that's happening the situation is unstable. It's like an ailing machine that will clunk along until some critical point is reached and the machine falls apart. — Mongrel
2. Looking at the question a different way, any institution might occasionally be afflicted by oppressiveness, corruption, immorality... what have you. Yet acceptance exists and that acceptance is real. — Mongrel
The reason we might not want to claim that this is false legitimacy is that if we dream of some correction, some alteration, some advancement toward the ideal, those dreams will require some accepted institutions. — Mongrel
One would only abandon legitimacy altogether if one is adopting a late-Chomskyesque attitude: that all human civilization is fundamentally evil. I don't know where on the political spectrum that attitude lies, but it's in a zone of complete irrelevance. — Mongrel
That's fine. As I said: it's not saying anything startling, but it's certainly not saying anything ridiculous either. — Mongrel
I spent of lot of years thinking about how everything one says and thinks contributes to bigger successes and failures. — Mongrel
I think all governments are basically democratic (granted I was camping in the woods at the time.) — Mongrel
Right. We can't be too idealistic, and aim to reject, instead of improve, each and every imperfect institution.
How does that pragmatism guide us in defining terms like "acceptance", "tolerance", and "legitimacy" in this conversation? — Cabbage Farmer
It's hard for me to imagine what a speaker as sober as Chomsky might mean by a statement like "all civilization is fundamentally evil." Can you expand on this attitude and its place in Chomsky's late thoughts? Is it somehow connected to "anarchosyndicalism" or to "left libertarianism"? — Cabbage Farmer
What do you mean by "abandon legitimacy"? The phrase could mean: Abandon talk of legitimacy, for instance if we found the term to be fundamentally redundant or ungrounded; perhaps replacing talk of legitimacy with talk in other terms for about the same purposes. For instance, we might use terms like "justice", "liberty", "consent", "popular sovereignty", "prosperity", "pacificity", "humanity"... to evaluate institutions in ways that align with our current use of the term "legitimacy". — Cabbage Farmer
Or that all the speech and other action of each individual contributes to the future successes and failures of that individual, as well as of the communities in which he participates, including the community we call "humanity" and the community we call "all sentient beings"? — Cabbage Farmer
A king with no supporters is no king at all. — Cabbage Farmer
It doesn't guide us. For all practical purposes, you have acceptance of the world as it is unless you are actively seeking to change it or you have recently filled your pockets with stones so as to Virginia Woolf yourself into the river. — Mongrel
The way you understand legitimacy is influenced by your metaphysical outlook. Are you a naturalist? A Christian? Are you a naturalist who smuggles in a medieval Christian view from time to time? My little essay on the history of the term was supposed to convey that. — Mongrel
His extreme pessimism comes out when he's asked to explain what positive steps he thinks the world should take. — Mongrel
Bill says his government has no legitimacy. — Mongrel
He is fundamentally rejecting its normative influence. — Mongrel
Bill could:
1. Move to Alaska and live off the land. Lots of people do it. — Mongrel
2. Stay and just whine all the time. But in this case, the whining is profoundly pointless because Bill has rejected any possibility of making things better. — Mongrel
3. Get a clue and realize that he does accept the imperfect government that stands over him (atrocities and all). Now pick an atrocity and try to do something to help. — Mongrel
That. Think of Gandhi. We stamp his name on a success that involved the actions of millions of people. Hitler.. same thing except it was a failure. — Mongrel
If you get that, then you have everything you need to get the OP. — Mongrel
How do we know whether to support or fight against X? A conservative says that a lot of the work has been done for us by history. The stuff that has survived the last few thousand years has shown itself to be worthy. — Mongrel
There is a fly in the ointment here, but most of the ointment is exceptionally wise. — Mongrel
Give the archetypal Conservative his/her due. We wouldn't be here without them. — Mongrel
Then again, from a broad enough point of view, the last option is only a variation on the middle way. — Cabbage Farmer
No.But I wonder whether the word "legitimacy", or some very close term in translation, has always been used in every time and place, — Cabbage Farmer
Good question. How would you put the meaning of legitimacy into your own words?or if perhaps our concept doesn't necessarily map on to linguistic terms in every culture in the same way. — Cabbage Farmer
Does somebody die on the middle way? — Mongrel
Good question. How would you put the meaning of legitimacy into your own words? — Mongrel
"justice", "liberty", "consent", "popular sovereignty", "prosperity", "pacificity", "humanity" — Cabbage Farmer
I'm not sure that putting it into my own words is a way of answering the question I indicated, which was a question about how other people have used the word, or its closest relations in other languages, across various cultural contexts.
As I've suggested, I haven't heard any generally applicable conception of "legitimacy" that I find philosophically satisfying, and I don't have one myself. I find talk in terms of legitimacy to be quite problematic until we take for granted -- for the sake of conversation, or with respect to something like a national constitution -- some more or less arbitrary characterization of the term. — Cabbage Farmer
Taken at face value, the word "legitimacy" suggests that something legitimate is something legal, something made or done in accordance with law. — Cabbage Farmer
If you mean to ask what values and principles of political organization do I personally consider most relevant to judgments about the legitimacy of laws, governments, and institutions, I’ve given some indication already, in this laundry list:
"justice", "liberty", "consent", "popular sovereignty", "prosperity", "pacificity", "humanity"
— Cabbage Farmer
and I suppose we could add more terms to the list and discuss the meaning or relevance of any item in the present context. — Cabbage Farmer
I'm not really following you at all here. The meaning of "legitimacy," as used in the OP, doesn't seem confusing or arbitrary to me. — Mongrel
OK. But the OP is about political theory, right? Wouldn't it be appropriate to narrow focus down to what the word means in that context? — Mongrel
Again... not following this at all. Sorry. — Mongrel
I think you should feel free to interpret the OP as you see fit. — Mongrel
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