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Human Nature in Nature Blog

America’s Decline, Part IV: Ideas & Politics

Quote by philosopher, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, saying that stupidity is more dangerous than evil.
Just as scientists are discovering that there are different kinds of intelligence, so there also are different kinds of dumb. Some kinds of dumb blur Bonhoeffer’s line between stupidity and immorality.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a theologian, Christian philosopher, and anti-Nazi dissident. The Nazi regime in Germany killed him in the Spring of 1945 by hanging. He was 39 years old. 

In this well-known acid-tongued quote Dietrich Bonhoeffer says that stupidity can be more dangerous than malice or evil. But scanning back over previous posts in this series, you might see that very smart people sometimes act in just the ways Bonhoeffer describes stupid. They close their minds; “reasons fall on deaf ears”; when challenged they get mean and attack; they engage in outright denial of known facts; they care more about winning than about the truth; and some evidently (in some respects) smart people lie shamelessly and obviously. 

The last three posts in this series on America’s Decline reviewed some of the problems that we have brought on ourselves—problems of growing inequality, worsening social and political division, and looming ecological crises.  They also emphasize that those problems don’t just happen; they are consequences of policy decisions and of the ideas underlying those decisions. Therefore, people who develop those bad ideas, who buy into them, and who act on or tolerate them—and that’s all of us in one way or another, some more and some less—are responsible for the damage done. It’s time to stop making excuses or blaming something or someone else. There is direct moral accountability involved here. 

This post will continue exploring these themes as lead-up to the final post, which looks more specifically at some individuals and institutions who most directly set us on the course leading to extreme inequality and the threat of ecological collapse. We want to see what ideas guided and motivated them. And in the end we want to know just who formulated these bad ideas, spread them, and sold us on them, and why.

Thinking is a Moral Act. 

But, you might ask, What does it matter? They’re only ideas. Anthropologist Clifford Geertz has one answer, summed up in the essay “Thinking as a Moral Act” (Chapter 2, reprinted in his book Available Light). “Thought is conduct,” Geertz says, “and is to be morally judged as such.” 

“Thinking is a social act, and one is therefore responsible for it as for any other social act. Perhaps even more so, for, the long run, it is the most consequential of social acts.”

Anthropologist Clifford Geertz

How could this possibly not be so, especially for ideas that are developed as the basis for policy decisionmaking that affects people’s lives? 

Bonhoeffer counterpoises stupidity and malice. But Geertz’s observation suggests their convergence. It’s easy to get lost in all the complications, and of course we want to be fair and charitable. There is, however, also a time and place for calling a spade a spade. 

Einstein supposedly said that “Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results is insanity.” But maybe it’s worse than crazy. Continuing to act on the basis of ideas that are widely known to be wrong and that produce bad results—especially when the underlying motive for doing so is greedy self-interest—is in our present circumstance both stupid and immoral. 

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Different Kinds of Stupid. 

It isn’t nice to call people stupid or crazy—we all learned that on the grade-school playground, or should have done. Nor is it generally helpful to beat ourselves up by turning such disparaging terms on ourselves. But let’s put nice aside just this once, and look at ourselves in Bonhoeffer’s terms in which “stupid” is a more grown-up, complicated concept. 

If people with high IQs still act and think in ways Bonhoeffer labels “stupid,” there must be different kinds of stupidity just as there are different kinds of intelligence. Nominally smart people may give in to denial or delusion—I’d like to think not as often those with less smarts, but I’m not sure that’s the case.  We can all recall brilliant thinkers who have spent their lives defending ideas that they’ve become fixated on, refusing to see their limits or to be open to counter-arguments. What Bonhoeffer says about stupidity being dangerous perhaps especially applies when smart people are being stupid—when they make their own blinders and put them on themselves.

Such problems, as Geertz’s observations suggest, and as the rise of German Nazism illustrates, can affect not just individuals but a whole community, or even a nation.  When people are stressed, economically insecure, frightened, they are apt to act with less intelligence or care. 

Highly developed and advanced societies can act stupidly if they refuse to let go of inherited mistakes; or if they fall or are pushed under the spell of narrow thinking, ideological obsession, mistaken dogmatisms, or policy prescriptions rooted in fear, greed or prejudice with the one reinforcing the others. What might begin as honest mistakes become moral failures and a kind of stupidity when people continue to push them or cling to them after their errors are known and their harmful consequences have become obvious. 

Let’s Take the United States, For Example.

Picture Credit: John Metcalf, CityLab, May 17, 2016

National character, just like the character of individuals, has many sides. Like any country, the United States has its failings, its ups-and-downs. Now we’ve hit a particularly rough patch in the road. It’s a good time for self-reflection, and maybe for taking on a little more humility. 

In that spirit, I’m being pretty critical in this series of posts because we’re facing hard realities that need a hard look. The shifting cross-currents of the tumultuous global economy, and the fallout from domestic economic policies that create gross inequality and squeeze the middle classes, make many people insecure; and insecurity readily turns to anger. Fear and anger become fertile ground for demagogues to exploit. They also dampen creativity, openness, and the willingness to think outside the box—all qualities we especially need now. 

Knowledge can be a potent antidote to fear and anger. Knowledge is empowering. This much should be obvious: The better people understand the combination of circumstances, consequences, historical currents, understandable errors, and bad ideas that put us on the path we’re on, the better able they are to chart more intelligent course corrections.

Then there is the question of values. In the end, people make decisions and act on the basis of the ideas and ideologies they hold, and the values they care about. Most people are basically good, and want to be good. Being aware of the moral dimensions of policy ideas and actions can only help people choose ideas and policies with better outcomes. 

And while taking hard look at the issues, it’s important to remember also that America has much to be proud of. Among other things, Americans can be extraordinarily generous, positive, and innovative. The United States, my native land, has its softer, gentler, compassionate and more sensitive sides. With a little care and tending, they will flower and prevail over the rapidly-sprouting weeds of conflict and division. 

Ideas and Politics. 

I mentioned above that countries can make mistakes, be led astray, just like individuals. Sometimes their best ideas become their worst errors when they get misused or mis-applied, or out-live their time. Let’s look a little more closely at some of the foundational ideas of U.S. politics, and where they come from. 

The United States is arguably the world’s most advanced scientific nation—or at least remains high on the growing list. A long time ago our nation’s founders inherited some mistaken ideas—the best ideas at the time, perhaps, but mistakes nonetheless, as later scientific advances and social consequences revealed. 

Most nations evolve into being. The United States was different. It was born in revolution and more or less consciously designed as a constitutional democracy. That’s a bit of a simplification, I know; but it remains true that a lot of conscious thought went into the United States Constitution and institutions of government.  What ideas did the authors of U.S. civil, political, and economic life have to draw on? Well, for one, at that time Newtonian physics had much prestige as the cutting edge of science. 

Our nation’s forefathers borrowed ideas from Newtonian physics—even more, they worked within the world-view it embodied—as they set up the mechanics of government and economy for the new Union they conceived. They strove for a balance of powers in government, and for an economy that would work as an autonomous system.  They also drew on vastly simplified notions of evolution driven by a crude “survival-of-the-fittest” model. The (limited) scientific understandings of their day became woven into the fabric of the everyday life of the new democracy. 

In many ways it worked well. In others, not so much. Subsequent science has greatly complicated or even outright refuted some the premises the Framers worked with.  New more sophisticated understandings of complex systems and how they work is now available. In light of those advances, we can see where some of the mistakes lie, and how they’re causing trouble today. The chickens are coming home to roost. 

What mistaken ideas? Well, l et’s look a couple. For one, take a look at the one-time supposedly scientific, crudely Darwinian notion that other (that is, non-White) races are biologically inferior. It’s mostly forgotten now, but a lot of effort went into trying to prove that theory; and, we aren’t entirely over it yet. 

For another, consider human nature as defined in today’s still-dominant mainstream economic theory. This theory portrays human beings in all our complexity as the vastly simplified Economic Man. We have made significant progress on redressing some of the harms of the first; virtually none at all on the second. Let’s take a closer look at these two bad ideas. 

Two Bad Ideas

Scientific Racism. When American ideals of freedom and equality conflicted with the economic benefits of slavery, “the answer was simple,” observes one historian: define those with dark skin as inferior, limiting the definitions of “the people” and “all men” to refer only to Whites.  In this way the Framers contrived a constitution that “guaranteed white men the rights and liberties promised by the Constitution while preserving a thriving economy based on racial oppression.” Many disagreed with this solution on moral grounds, of course; but without a definitive counter-argument it was still possible to justify a slave-based economy with theories of race-based biological inferiority.

Later scientific advances—in particular, the discovery of culture bolstered by parallel progress in genetics and archaeology—provide an alternative explanation for human differences. Thus science moves on, shunting scientific racism into the historical dustbin of failed theories. Progress, to be sure; but the job isn’t done. 

When such ideas become entrenched, as racism did in the institution of slavery, they are devilishly hard to root out. People’s livelihoods, way of life, and even cultural identity can be at stake. In that case, it took a bloody civil war. But war never really settles issues of ideas and ideology. Neither does science, for that matter. At least not right away, and for some never. Some people will always believe what they want to believe, science be damned. 

Despite the Civil War and later scientific advances, people still fight today over those conflicting ideas and principles from our early national history revolving around race. On a drive through portions of the rural South a few years ago, we saw Confederate flags proudly flying on high flagpoles people had put up in their yards. These families are still fighting the Civil War. The fights over race in the U.S. today are vicious still, but largely more covert. Coded messages rather than bullets and bayonets serve as weapons; and the fights, thankfully, now range over the battlegrounds of politics and culture rather than bloodied fields—as I’ll discuss further in a moment. 

Economic Man. Another severely mistaken scientific idea from the same era, and first cousin to scientific racism, is the notion that all people are individuals first and foremost, governed when all’s said and done by the same basic human nature. 

Like racism, this idea of humankind as made up of individuals driven by universal innate traits reductively ties human behaviour directly to a biologically-defined nature. “At the heart of twentieth-century economics.” writes economist Kate Raworth (p. 27), “stands the portrait of rational economic man: he has told us that we are self-interested, isolated, calculating, fixed in taste and dominant over nature—and his portrait has shaped who we have become” 

Unlike racism, this notion lumps everyone together instead of dividing them into unequal categories. Based on analogies inspired by the universal laws of early physics, it became the model for today’s mainstream economic theory. As Raworth puts it, with a touch of humour (p. 111), Newton’s physics revolutionized science, and its prestige later “gave rise to “physics envy, misplaced metaphors, and painfully narrow thinking in economics.” This mistaken way of thinking about human nature and the economy became, and remains, even more entrenched at even deeper levels of our culture than racism. 

Economics defined in those terms—that economic outlook—shaped the emerging weave of our cultural lives. Over time it came to dominate almost every sphere from the family to education to health care, and more. Again unlike racism, it doesn’t have a widely-known name or label. Many scholars call it “classical liberalism,” but that’s confusing to the rest of us on a number of counts. It has been revived as “neoliberalism.” That term also is not widely understood—as I discussed in an earlier post. Let’s just follow Raworth for now, and call it the belief in economic man.

But science is progressive. That’s its nature. Science moves on, even as these early mistaken ideas become entrenched in the fabric of Western culture and economy. Later science definitively refutes the Myth of Economic Man that still lies at the foundation of economic theory. It belongs with racism in the trashcan of socially pernicious failed theories. Here I’ll quote Raworth again:

“Human nature,” she writes (pp. 22-23), “is far richer than this, as early sketches of our new self-portrait reveal: we are social, interdependent, approximating, fluid in values and dependent upon the living world. What’s more, it is indeed possible to nurture human nature in ways that give us a far greater chance of…” living rich, full, sustainable lives. 

Kate Raworth (2017, p.27)

Given the ongoing influence of economic man in our lives and institutions, it’s important to realize just how solidly science has knocked him out of the ring. But he keeps sneaking back in anyway—a zombie idea, a vampire of the mind. 

That’s a puzzle in itself. Why? Why won’t these negative ideas of human nature as naturally individualistic, greedy, calculating, and competitive just die the final death they deserve? 

Self-Fulfilling Ideas: Mythology Becomes Reality

The answer, like so much else in human life, is complicated. The gist of it is thatideas,when people believethem and act on the basis of these beliefs, can become self-fulfilling. We literally turn ourselves into the beings we believe that we are—whether or not these ideas are right to begin with or not. 

If we structure our lives and institutions around an economy based on the principles embodied in the figure of economic man, then we shouldn’t be surprised to find ourselves forced by those institutions to live according to the dictates of that image—that economy. We become economic man: individualistic, competitive, accumulative, self-interested and largely indifferent to others’ suffering caused by the gross inequities that our economy inevitably produces. The stories we tell ourselves become the lives we live. 

But, you might ask, if that is so, then how can we say that the theory is wrong? Didn’t I just say that we become what the theory says we are? It’s a bit of a paradox, a tautology—but that’s the nature of culture. If we believe it and act on it, the theory makes itself right to some degree. Well, you might persist: How then canit be wrong? 

The answer is that it’s wrong because economic man is not who we really are, and squeezing ourselves into that image harms and limits us. The theory posits that economic man is who we naturally are. There is no point, then, in trying to change, because it’s just human nature.  It is a whole other ball game if who we are is not defined by a fixed human nature, but rather by cultures that we ourselves create. This new understanding makes us responsible for who we are in ways that older theories of a given, fixed human nature do not. The advance of knowledge brings moral accountability more front-and-center. 

That’s the first part of the story. The second part is that once the system built around economic man is in place, those who benefit from it are those who most completely buy into its premises and live it. They become deeply invested in it. They wantto preserve it as it is—not just to protect their outsized wealth and incomes, but also their very selves. 

This is a more complicated picture that I’m painting here. But we are complicated beings; and with recent advances in social and cultural theory we now have more complicated understandings of who and what we are. 

Who are we, really, then? The very taproot of our human nature is sociability. Sociability rather than self-interested individualism isn’t just an outcome of civilization having tamed our original brute nature, as some people might still assume. As anthropologist Yuval Noah Harari explains in his bestselling book Sapiens (2016), ever since our earliest ancestors diverged from the Great Apes, walked upright, and developed larger brains, human biology and evolution “favoured those [early humans] capable of forming strong social ties” (p. 10). Sociability not only defines us as genus Homo, but also our genius.  We are the most social of animals. (Sociability, in fact, was integral to the very earliest evolution of life—but that’s another story for a different time.)

“Sorry, beg your pardon,” says Marshall Sahlins, Charles F. Grey Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of the University of Chicago, and another one of my favorite anthropologists, “Western society has been built on a perverse and mistaken idea of human nature.” “Perverse and mistaken” are the operative words here. 

The problem isn’t just that Economic Man is a myth. Myth is the foundation for human society. “Any large-scale human cooperation,” Harari goes on to say (p.27), “whether a modern state, a medieval church, an ancient city or an archaic tribe—is rooted in common myths that exist only in people’s collective imagination.” The real problem with Economic Manis that he’s a dangerous myth, a painfully limiting myth.

Before moving on, I want to say a further word regarding Harari’s observation that human culture and society are rooted in myth. I find that characterization both right and wrong, both illuminating and misleading. It is true that human society is built on stories—that the stories we tell ourselves become the lives we live. But some stories are true, or at least more true than others. Calling allstories “myths” fails to make this distinction; it implies they all are equally ungrounded in reality. 

Let’s go back to Economic Man—who clearly is an entirely mythical being. Until, that is, he becomes incarnated in a society built on the notions he represents. But as far as representing basic human nature is concerned, Economic Man, as we saw above, is an entirely fictional character. 

One historian calls ideas like liberal individualism or Economic Man, “technical fables.” Another anthropologist refers to this idea as “a kind of normative charter” for liberal political, social, and economic life.  These are different ways of saying that we shouldn’t take those representations of human nature literally any more. We once believed them to be literally true; now we know better.  But at the same time, they continue to shore up our way of life. 

So, think about what these and many other social scientists and philosophers are saying: We know that such notions are false, they say; but we hang on to them anyway because they give order to our lives. That might make sense if we didn’t know any better—and, if the order they provide is working for us, is the best we can do. .

But what does recognizing the mythical basis of such ideas mean for us? Do we really want how we live to be propped up by zombie ideas when better fully alive ideas are available? More and more people are asking that very question in one way or another. For an excellent, clearly laid out overview of better ideas and how to act on them, see Kate Raworth’s book, Doughnut Economics, that I mentioned above. 

So, Just Who Is Responsible

It’s not easy to change. That’s true for individuals; and its doubly or triply true for a powerful and in many ways successful nation like the United States. On the other hand, however, the need for some basic changes in how we live and govern ourselves is evident; and more and more people see this, feel it, and desperately or angrily want positive change—for some, any change, it seems. What’s in our way, then? Who is responsible? 

In a way, of course, we’re all responsible. But that isn’t much of an answer. It’s true—almost by definition. Also, if everyone is responsible, then no one is. We need to get more specific. 

The final post in this series tackles that question more directly, asking who, in particular, is in our way. Who most actively and effectively works agains the kinds of changes we so critically need to make?

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Human Nature in Nature Blog Politics

The Twisty Language of Politics: What Does Being “Liberal” or “Conservative” or “Neoliberal” Mean?

Like everyone else who thinks or talks or writes about current politics, words like “liberal,” “conservative,” “liberalism,” “neoliberal,” fly glibly from my tongue or off my keyboard.  It’s just about impossible to talk or write, or even think about current politics without them.

But what do they mean?  Different things for different folks, evidently.  At least, they have very different emotional charge depending on who uses them in what context—so much so that communication across political divides often seems difficult or impossible. Today many “conservatives,” for instance, make “liberal” a dirty word, almost a curse. (In recent decades an ascendant “conservative” movement made the term so negatively loaded or ambiguous that many who might call themselves “liberal” substitute “progressive.”)

But on the other side, “liberals” in turn often view “conservative”or especially “neoconservative” in an equally negative light.  Esteemed political theorist Wendy Brown (University of California at Berkeley) find

"a left political moralizing impulse that wants everything the right stands for to be driven by nefariousness, smallness, or greed, and everything we do to be generously minded and good, an impulse that casts Us and Them in seamless and opposing moral-political universes.”

 

Conflict and Confusion, Doubt and Disorder

Picture by nettlebee, downloaded from Pixaby.com 2018-07-29

In the United States our political language has become so bent and twisty, so much a language of emotion rather than meaning, of reaction rather than reason, that we’ve just about lost our ability to communicate with each other across political divides.  I’ve known families who can’t even talk politics around the table.  Instead of reaching for agreement, or at least for understanding the other guy’s position enough to enjoy the challenge of honest debate, they get mad.  To keep the peace, they make politics a taboo topic at the table.

Manufacturing Doubt, Creating Controversy.  True, politics is conflictual—a contact sport, as it were.  And of course the language of politics reflects discord as well as causes it.  But any game needs rules. On the larger political stage, outright disrespect for truth, and cynically manipulating meanings to create social division and conflict for the sole purpose of exploiting them, are out-of-bounds if we want a functional democracy. There is that larger context to be considered.  I’ll get to some of my own ideas on that later.  But for now, let’s look at some definitions beginning with the word“liberal,” and neoliberal.”

Definitions are boring, I know.  But in today’s politics, it’s a place to start. Words matter, and these words that define our political life are important.  We should come to terms with them (pun intended). Getting more clarity in our language can help to head off those who would manufacture doubt and create controversy for their own ends.  Besides, the key terms we’re looking at here open windows to the modern soul, and to some of the complexity and perplexity of our time.

As we’ll see, what these words refer to is either broadly misunderstood (in the case of“liberal”)or almost invisible (in the case of neoliberal”—although it now defines our culture, our world).  That may seem like a strong claim, but read on and you’ll see what I mean.  We’ll never get full agreement these terms, not in my lifetime; but exploring them is useful anyway.

The Word “Liberal

My old (1981) three-volume Webster’s dictionary has a large page of dense type devoted to the term. In the realm of politics, liberal” refers to a political party devoted to “ideals of individual esp. economic freedom, greater participation in government…and the reforms necessary to achieve these objectives.” And again, a person who is “an adherent or advocate of liberalism, esp. in terms of individual rights and freedom from arbitrary authority.”

That sounds like a good thing.  “Liberal,”“liberalism” are terms that stand generally opposed to centralized, authoritarian or feudalistic societies. Valuing the individual and personal freedom is the core of liberal ideology; but it leaves lots of leeway for different ideas about how to put it into practice, as we will see.

Going beyond thumbnail definitions, the on-line Encyclopaedia Britannica has a good overview.  It begins with a concise definition of liberalism as that “political doctrine that takes protecting and enhancing the freedom of the individual to be the central problem of politics.” Free markets are part of that; but depending on how they are set up and administered, markets also readily concentrate wealth and power.  The resulting inequality and poverty and their accompanying social ills veer the other way, eroding individual freedom.  Some liberalsthose who really do focus on the freedom and well-being of individuals—think that governments have a legitimate role to play in protecting individual freedomagainst market excess.

The Encyclopaedia’s accompanying brief article on neoliberalism spells that out. Liberalism,”it explains, “evolved over time into a number of different (and often competing) traditions.” Liberals of all stripes believe in market freedom, a strong private sphere generally, and limits on governmental power, but they have developed contrasting views on the role of democratic government. Classical liberals who focus on market freedoms would cut government to a bare minimum—just enough to keep order and enforce market rules.  (At least, that’s what they say; not necessarily what they do).  But…

“Since the late 19th century, however, most liberals have insisted that the powers of government can promote as well as protect the freedom of the individual. According to modern liberalism, the chief task of government is to remove obstacles that prevent individuals from living freely or from fully realizing their potential. Such obstacles include poverty, disease, discrimination, and ignorance.”

In short, until recently modern liberalism was evolving toward greater latitude for democratically implemented intervention to protect individuals from the worst effects and excesses of free-market capitalism. This was a positive, evolutionary movement within the liberal tradition that kept the original focus on individual well-being as its guiding principle.  As the Encyclopaedia further explains,

Modern liberalism developed from the social-liberal tradition, which focused on impediments to individual freedom—including poverty and inequality, disease, discrimination, and ignorance—that had been created or exacerbated by unfettered capitalism and could be ameliorated only through direct state intervention.

It became clear that unconstrained markets can run counter to thoriginal basic liberal focus on expanding the sphere of freedom and well-being for individuals and families.  When the market sector relentlessly concentrates wealth and power, the “free market” becomes oppressive in its own right—as much or perhaps even more so than a strong democratic government that some free market enthusiasts oppose.

Corporations, the dominant free market institution—some of which grow larger than many governments—evolve under market opportunities and pressures (which are themselves creatures of government legislation and regulation) into huge top-down organizations that become the antithesis of the democratic ideal.  Athey grow, some large aggressive corporations use their ever-increasing wealth and power to shape government agendas in ways that further their accumulation of yet more wealth and political power.

The Words “Neoliberal,” “Neoliberalism”

Now, what about neoliberalism? I wrote a little about the moral burdens of this now dominant ideology last time, and about some of the flawed “zombie ideas.” behind it in the post before that.  Now we’ll take a brief look at what a couple of very smart people say about neoliberalism’s conflictual relationship with democracy, and a little about its history.

This now dominant offshoot of classical liberalism represents a retreat back to an extreme anti-government stance that takes “market freedom” as its highest value, even over the freedom and well-being of individuals and families, or even of society, or the nation.  And just as before, when it became actual policy and got enacted as law, today’s version of market fundamentalismmarching under the banner of neoliberalism—leadto extreme inequality which ultimately can only be anti-democratic.

Political philosopher Wendy Brown has written an article that compares and contrasts neoliberalism and neoconservatism. You can find a lot written on neoliberalism, but this is one of the most deeply insightful discussion that I have seen, and is readily available on-line with the above link. I’ll summarize a few points, but recommend that you read the article for yourself.  You might have to go over a few passages more than once and look up some words (I did), but it’s worth it if you want to understand what’s happening in our world today.

Neoliberalism, according to Brown, is a form of government based on “market rationality” instead of on democratic principles. “ Equality, universality, political autonomy and liberty, citizenship, the rule of law, a free press” says Brown (p. 696) are the basic elements of political democracy that neoliberalism challenges or replaces “with its alternative principles of governance” based on economic principles and values. Although it’s all about the economy, neoliberalism is not just about the economy: it’s a philosophy of human society and culture at large.

Neoliberalism has been the dominant political philosophy implemented by U.S. administrations, both Republican and Democrat, over the last nearly four decades. It has also been sold to, or rammed down the throats of, other nations around the world. “Every age has an order, and ours is a neoliberal one,” says commentator Umair Haque.  Haque goes on to list five costs of neoliberalism, including economic stagnation, rising inequality, and “authoritarianism and extremism.”  

It’s indisputable that these problems have been on the rise over the past few decades.  In my mind, though, it is an open question whether neoliberalism is cause or consequence, or (as is generally the case in human affairs and other complex systems) both.  Either way it is implicated in them, and as it moves from being a fringe radical economic philosophy to governing principlewhen it actually shapes government policy and legal decision- makingneoliberalism betrays the principles of liberal democracy.

That’s become crystal clear during the last four decades in which it has been the standard model.  Substituting market principles and values for democratic ones, the real social and cultural effects of neoliberalism are undemocratic, if not downright anti-democratic.  That’s ironic, since the founding aims of the movement, as stated, included advancing political freedom and the open society, and not just free market ideals.  A brief historical overview will help make sense of this paradox.  

So, just how did neoliberalism get a foothold among legal and political leaders, and then become the dominant paradigm, the prevailing conceptual frame, for setting policy and making governing decisionsfor re-making Western culture in the image of the capitalist market?  And when did this happen?  David Harvey addresses these and related questions in his A Brief History of Neoliberalism (2006).  

Neoliberalism became ascendant in Britain with the election of Margaret Thatcher in 1979, and in the United States with Ronald Reagan in 1980.  Thatcher and Reagan shared a common right-wing political philosophy, and became fast friends and allies.  Augusto Pinochet, backed by the U.S., brutally implemented neoliberal policy in Chile during the 1980s.

While the neoliberal version of classical liberalism became dominant only in the 1980s with Thatcher, Reagan, and Pinochet leading the pack, the ground-work was being laid for some time.  As described above, neoliberalism’s roots go back to the classical market-oriented liberalism of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.  Those ideas were revived and reworked in the later 1900s by economist Friedrich Hayek and others who opposed not just Marxism and various forms of authoritarian government, but also Keynesian economics.  Keynesianism held that government can and should actively manage the market economy as needed, and became the standard economic model after the Great Depression until the 1970s.

Hayek convened a prestigious group of economists and philosophers to discuss and support his ideas, and begin articulating and spreading the basic tenets of what became neoliberalism.  They first met in 1947 at a Swiss resort called Mont Pelerin, and the group became known as the Mont Pelerin Society.   Prominent members included Milton Friedman, philosopher Karl Popper (for a time), Arthur F. Burns (of the U.S. Federal Reserve), and George Stigler, among others.  Growing numbers of conservative think-tanks often lavishly funded by wealthy donors followed in the wake of Mont Pelerin.  When the Keynesian consensus broke down under the oil shocks and high inflation of the 1970s, neoliberalism was poised to fill the gap.

Hayek strongly influenced Margaret Thatcher.  In 1979 Thatcher’s election brought to the office of the Prime Minister of Britain an inflexible commitment to neoliberal ideas.  Thatcher had, writes David Harvey in A Brief History of Neoliberalism (pp. 22-23),

a fierce determination to have done with the institutions and [p.23] and political ways of the social democratic state that had been consolidated in Britain after 1945…. There was, she famously declared, ‘no such thing as society, only individual men and women’—and, she subsequently added, their families. All forms of social solidarity were to be dissolved in favour of individualism, private property, personal responsibility, and family values. The ideological assault along these lines that flowed from Thatcher’s rhetoric was relentless. ‘Economics are the method’, she said, ‘but the object is to change the soul.”

Again we see that neoliberalism as it developed became much more than an economic ideology or practice.  It puts in place as the governing principle of human social life an entire philosophy and culture based on fundamentalist free-market principles.  

Neoliberalism slid into place as a comprehensive and ubiquitous cultural world-view—so much so that it virtually defines our present reality.  Seeing the world through that particular lens, we don’t recognize it as one option among others. “So pervasive has neoliberalism become,” writes commentator George Monbiot,

“that we seldom even recognise it as an ideology. We appear to accept the proposition that this utopian, millenarian faith describes a neutral force; a kind of biological law, like Darwin’s theory of evolution. But the philosophy arose as a conscious attempt to reshape human life and shift the locus of power.”

Discussion & Conclusion: Liberalism & Neoliberalism

You can begin to appreciate the confusion of terms here: “liberal,” “classical liberal,” “progressive liberal,” “neoliberal.” (And we haven’t even gotten to “conservative” and“neoconservative”yet).  What to do? Here’s one small terminological suggestion regarding the terms classical liberal and neoliberal.  Since these closely related philosophies elevate and value the freely operating market above all other considerations—even, one might say, making it a fetish—let’s call them variants of “market fundamentalism.”  This seems to me to be the most descriptive and apt term to encompass or sum up what they’re really about.  Neoliberalism is the absolutist and now dominant “brand” of liberalism defined by its free market-fundamentalism.

In the bigger picture, then, political debates within modern societies actually occur between different versions of liberalism.  This is the insight of another perceptive thinker, the great Scottish social and political philosopher, Alasdair MacIntyrein his 1988 book, Whose Justice? Which Rationality?  The contemporary debates within modern political systems,” he writes (p. 392), “are almost exclusively between conservative liberals, liberal liberals, and radical liberals. There is little place…for putting liberalism itself in question.” Not surprising, if you consider that liberalism is a defining feature of the culture of modernity (but more on that another time too).

 

 

 

 

 

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