Civic Liberalism: self-image and reality

Herewith another brief contribution.  Last time I was looking at economic liberalism, now I shall look at civic liberalism and its self-image, and consider the reality in the pecking order of exploitation.

So Picture One is the self-image for an economic liberal. It defines authority, as regulating the market-place but not the market forces.  Civic liberalism sees itself as confronting authority, asserting the rights of ‘Man’.  Feminism might be regarded as an applied form, operating within a society it seeks to change, substituting ‘men’ for ‘authority’ and ‘women’ for ‘society’.  In fact civic liberalism conflates limited resources, skills and expertise and the supply curve into ‘authority’ since it is not sensitive to the economy:

Well, let us simply roll on the reality.

Now we see that far from confronting each other, they are intricately related, but have different skills, and different cultures, the latter, in yellow, not on the critical path of exploitation.  The second diagram characterises people who I would call secondary exploiters.

Once again we have the grey, and the various freedoms are no longer white, and we see grey: the ignorance and fear of those they jointly exploit.

The culture of those exploited has a place in Marxist interpretation of culture.  In particular the term subaltern was coined by the Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci (subalterno in Italian).  According to Wikipedia:

“In critical theory and post-colonialism, subaltern is the social group who are socially, politically, and geographically outside of the hegemonic power structure [my italics] of the colony and of the colonial homeland. In describing "history told from below", the term subaltern derived from the cultural hegemony work of Antonio Gramsci, which identified the social groups who are excluded from a society’s established structures for political representation, the means by which people have a voice in their society.”

However, in characterising exploitation as an economically-driven relationship between the cultures of exploiters and exploited, I am not focussing on social groups who are “geographically outside of the hegemonic power structure [again my italics] of the colony and of the colonial homeland.”  I am talking about people within the hegemonic power structure.

For me it is the secondary exploiters who are partially if not totally outside the hegemonic power structure, though they depend on it.  And it is this degree of cultural independence which looks like individual choice.

And the capitalism of the primary exploiters is still a cancer, which the hegemonic powers try to protect from its host.  And the cancer still continues to move forward, like a drunken crab, conscious only of its very immediate surroundings.

Martin Prior

Reverence and Happiness

I just had the fortune of gazing up at a full moon, reflecting the light of the sun through lazy, misty night clouds. The celestial body is so far away that I can't even register it with my sense of depth perception. It is ludicrously huge and distant.

I never made the full moon appear. It was just there, unexpectedly. Nor did I play any part in engineering the sky, which appears massive and profound from this open-air space I call home. From here the sky is not a slither of blue between buildings, as it is for most in the urban sprawl. It is a vast canvas, and I can see the sun rising on one side of the world and setting on the other so much that the process has become embodied within me.

Depth, distance, size and scale is integrated into life out here. Wonder carries with it. This wider sense takes me somewhere further than moment to moment happiness - they create reverence for the cosmos by making me part of it.

Without a sense of reverence and wonder and eternal mystery, how flat our lives.

This is not to promote lack of understanding like some romantic rube. We have scientific tools that can tell us how far the moon is from the earth, or even take us there to have a proper gander at it.

The availability of these facts do nothing to remove the sheer poetic joy of the moon in this moment. For perhaps it is gazing back at me, and feels like I am some small part of its perception.

Imagine not having that sense of art or poetry.

How terrifying it is to think that we may live in a future where vast walls surround us and we lose all contact with the Cosmos which created and sustains us. Once we lose this sense we lose reverence.

And where else can that lead but to the moment-to-moment emptiness of mass-hedonism; the second-rate happiness which plagues our age and tramples the natural joys beneath its clumsy feet.

For there is a difference between the flickering light of a fire and the scientific canopy of a lightbulb. The latter is more useful, but the former is more terrible and passionate and beautiful.
 
The moon is high in the sky tonight, and nothing of human contrivance can match its wonder - except perhaps the conversations in the corridors of philosophers

Selim 'Selim' Talat.

Last Week's Questions

Last week's questions:

1) What is an individual? Is it possible to divide human beings from the world / environment in such a distinct way?

Cogito ergo sum (I think therefore I am). It is only possible for an individual to make such a distinction on their own behalf.

2) What does it mean to be rational? Is the acquisition of wealth and power a rational goal?

Goals are axiomatic. Actions can only be categorised as rational or otherwise in the context of their probable efficacy in achieving a goal.

3) Is it idealistic to think that capitalism makes those who deserve it rich in light of the economic crash? Is pure capitalism as utopian as pure socialism?

A1. Yes. A2. Both require a benevolent arbiter. Finding such an arbiter is utopian.

Answered by Michael Bryant

Letters and answers

Letters and Answers

The Philosophy Newsletter is a very variable enjoyment, but it comes as a shock to see the ridiculous self-centred balderdash of Ayn Rand still being put forward as a worthy basis for a way of life.

Her influence on the world of business, economics and government has been entirely bad, in that it justifies greed and selfishness as the basis of a way of life.  Her philosophical image of the world has been the basis of the trend over the recent decades for the rich to get richer and the poor poorer, because the rich believe they deserve their "rewards", and they can use their money to influence government policy in their favour and create or destroy governments.

Her "individualists" are seen as struggling against others to achieve a better quality of life and keeping the world going by filling wage packets and paying taxes, but that is rubbish.

The vast majority of them start off rich anyway, and those that become rich make their fortunes by finding new ways of acquiring wealth without directly competing with their established rivals.

They make sure they don't fill any more paypackets than they absolutely have to and put as little in as they can get away with.

They demand lower taxes and find ways to avoid paying them wherever possible.

I could go on at length, but that would mean looking carefully  - even scientifically - at what is happening in the real world.

Putting that stuff up as the basis of a philosophical argument is making philosophy look ridiculous.

Sid Gould

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