Offline
seigneur wrote:
Neither do I. On the political arena, the role of conservatives is (simply, if you like) to bicker with liberals.
Just like there are no permanent inherent core liberal values in politics (as Feser has demonstrated very convincingly in his analysis time and again), there are also no inherent core conservative values. The common element of conservative policies is either to thwart an alleged threat from liberals or to oppose the current liberal slogan for no particular reason. Pro-life versus pro-choice, pro-war versus anti-war, pro-hoarding versus pro-spending, etc. Nevermind the nature of the issue of life/choice, war/peace and hoarding/spending, nevermind the particular outcomes and effects of the agenda.
Conservatives in politics serve no other purpose than to be in virtual opposition to liberals. They are each others' mirror images, both equally fluid, essenceless.
Sustaining the actual core values and observing the continuity of the society would be traditionalism, something that normally doesn't exist in politics. It would take an actual statesman to do it. But there are no statesmen these days. We only have politicians.
That is one view of conservatism - the view that it is situational or opposition to radical or rapid change. It isn't the one I use though. The term conservatism comes from Burke and the French counterrevolutionaries. It is to them, to Johnson, Disraeli, Russell Kirk, and so on to whom I look to define conservatism. I think you are correct about contemporary popular conservatism in Britain or America. Often this is just a few slogans, like small government, and opposition to what the liberals want.
Offline
Alexander wrote:
The lack of strong principles either side of politics strikes me as a key reason for the popularity of Jeremy Corbyn. There are a lot of people just relieved to have a politician who obviously stands for something and believes what he says.
I agree. I'm no fan of Corbyn (though I'm not necessarily opposed to some of his schemes, like nationalising the railways - British Rail was bad but the privatised railways have actually managed to be worse), but he does have an authenticity that has long been missing from British politics in the age of spin doctors and sound bites. One only has to compare him to the Blair creature or Mr, Slippery, our current PM. Also, he might shake up British politics, by losing so badly.
Offline
Jeremy Taylor wrote:
Of course, free market economics is important to conservatives too. Traditional conservatives are no fans of socialism or too much meddling in the economy by the state, especially the centralised state. Though they can sometimes be simplistic or dogmatic (Keynes or whoever is not proved wrong simply because what he writes, if true, is inconvenient for a free marketeer), free market economists have important insights. But the traditional conservative cannot support Manchesterism in its entirety. There are free market economists who straddle the boundaries between conservatism and classical liberalism, like Ropke and even Hayek to a degree.
This seems specious. I do understand that, certainly in the last half a century or so, conservatism and free market thinking have been aligned, but why isn't that just the result of the common fight against communism?
I mean, just consider the interaction between free market thought and moralism or traditionalism. Free market thinking will always or nearly always favor liberalized approaches to vice. You might be able to have an in principle agreement about something like abortion, just on some version of the no harm principle, but what about prostitution, gambling, etc? Never mind aspects of Catholic social teaching on poverty. Never mind that free market thinking in principle simply subordinates anything like tradition or religion or morality to the market. DH Lawrence, no leftist himself, makes this point constantly. When it comes to the choice between something like a traditional communal way of life in some English county, or, even more blatantly, the traditional way of life in an English colony like India, and economic development what wins for the free market thinker? The market. Who wins, merchants or the nobility? Merchants. Who wins? The Church or industrialists who want to develop church lands? The industrialists. What rules? Objective good or money? Money. Always there's some subordinate instrumental thinking about how the free market will lead to the good, but, first this is as much wishful thinking as any utopian, and second isn't this heresy for the Catholic or, indeed, any sincere moral thinker? What's the Church for if money and the World is the real way to the good? Never mind that the rule of the market can hardly be said to be older than the 17-hundreds while the rule of the Church in Europe was successful for over a millennium.
Offline
I'm not sure we really disagree. In that post and before I made it clear I think the conservative, especially the traditional conservative, cannot subscribe to free market liberalism in its entirety. But he does agree with the free marketeer that too much government interference is a bad thing and that there does need to be plenty of room for private property and private entreprise. The conservative can even admire and utilise the genuine insights of free market economists. The conservative case against free market liberalism doesn't mean the conservative is a socialist or even social democrat. It doesn't mean the conservative simply wishes to blend social democracy and free markets.
In some ways the conservative is more suspicious of the state than the free market liberal, in that the conservative is a decentralised and localist by principle. The conservative believes in the central importance to all human society of what Burke called the little platoons, or the intermediate associations like family, community, church, and so on. The free market liberal doesn't afford the same status to these associations, especially if they seem to get in the way of individual autonomy. But the centralised state can also be a menace to such associations if it doesn't respect their autonomy and authority, which is one reason why the conservative, as well as the free market liberal, wishes for limits to the role of the state in society.
I agree that the global-capitalist economy has wreaked havoc on much that conservatives hold dear, but then so has the state. Indeed, the global-capitalist economy is bound up with the modern state. In a different sort of economic system a bit of free trade is not a bad thing. I don't think we should excessively worry about the merchant. That is a peculiar Western paranoia you don't find in other cultures. Even that stern moral Dr. Johnsonn could say men are never so innocently occupied as when they are making money.
What the conservative wants is neither free market liberalism nor social democracy nor a splitting the difference between these. He wants something genuinely different - the general principles (not necessarily the whole schemes) that are behind quite a few different schools of thought (distributism, agrarianism, Schumacher's movement, and so on) but amount to much the same thing.
Offline
Jeremy Taylor wrote:
That is one view of conservatism - the view that it is situational or opposition to radical or rapid change. It isn't the one I use though.
Let's back up a bit. We began with Feser's articles on Islam, so what is at issue is not our definition of conservatism, but his definitions. Feser's definition of liberalism, specifically, because there's a prominent theme in his longest article about liberalism's relationship to Islam.
The problem is that he doesn't identify any of those alleged Islamophile liberals. He identifies Islamophobic liberals, Sam Harris among them, from which it can easily be said that he does not mean liberals at all. Some other identifier or denominator would be better, say the PC folks. Political correctness largely overlaps with liberalism and is often thought to have stemmed from liberalism, but it's not identical with liberalism, because there is a fairly revolutionary-minded wing of anti-establishment liberals which has been historically prominent.
For example, there's nothing politically correct about Noam Chomsky, and nothing Islamophile about him either, but he is a liberal, when liberalism is broadly construed. Feser's definition of liberalism, however, is not about such liberals, broadly construed. Feser's article seems to be more about those overly concerned about political correctness. Calling this stream in political rhetoric "liberalism" is to mislabel it.
This mislabeling has a few unfortunate consequences. First, when you are attacking something called "liberalism", you are implicitly suggesting "conservatism" as a cure. But which of the conservative values should be the cure here? All of them? When the problem specifically is deluded Islamophilia of liberals, would the cure be realistic Islamophobia of conservatives? Are conservatives known for this or would conservatives want to be known for this? Since this is not really a liberals versus conservatives issue and there's nothing to gain in making it such, the rhetoric used in talking about it should avoid implicit hints in that direction.
Second, when liberals fail to recognize themselves in the picture you are painting, then in politics this means they can safely ignore the problem you are talking about. The problem may be real, but when it's wrongly framed, it can at best be only misaddressed, not properly addressed. So the real cure is to label things with precision.
Third, for foreign policy purposes, a realistic historical perspective would also help. Maybe in the era of the crusades the Occident was arguably on the defensive, but the current map of the Middle East is the making of more recent Western colonial powers. And the activity of the United States is seen in the Middle East (quite appropriately) as an extension of the colonial powers and (less appropriately, but still understandably) as an echo of the crusades. The realistic foreign policy perspective is not ideologically denied by something called "liberalism" and any realistic perspective is not the proper birthright of some political camp opposed to liberalism, so again, adequate identification would greatly help.
Offline
Chomsky is an anarchist, specifically an anarcho--communist. You could argue such radical positions do have some foundation in liberalism in the broad sense. You could even argue Marxism is in some sense an off-shoot of liberalism, but I would not call anarchists liberals without some compelling argument to show they should be called liberals.
It is true that there is more and more radicalism within contemporary left-liberalism, though I'd still differentiate out and out anarchists or Marxists from liberals. Much identity politics comes not from old fashioned liberalism but from radicalism and Marxism. And identity politics has come more and more to dominate liberalism. I would agree with you if you are saying liberalism, as in contemporary left-liberalism, is hard to define and to delineate into its various aspects and divisions.
Leaving aside right-wing or classical liberalism and the questions of liberalism within Anglo-American conservatism and focusing only on left-liberalism (which is how Americans tend to use the term in everyday political dicussion and probably how Dr. Feser was using it) there are contemporary liberals who, even though they are what is called new or social liberals rather than classical liberals or what Yanks call libertarians, are strongly committed to older liberal values like free speech and less government interference in peoples' personal lives (though they might be social democrats in economics). These sorts of liberals would be keen on feminism and all the usual sorts of identity politics and social issues, but they balk at measures that are illiberal to support them, like much that occurs on campuses in both Britain and the US, draconian hate speech rules, and so on. I would hazard a guess that some of the reason they balk at these measures is they don't share the more radical, even Marxist derived, conceptual baggage, like class struggle (even when the classes are not economic groups but lmen and women, straights and non-straights, whites and non-whites) and constant preoccupation with power-relations. The old fashioned liberal still tends to see things in traditional individualistic terms, socially if not economically. The solution to the oppression of women is let all have freedom and equality, understood in old fashioned (new or social) liberal terms, and there to be a general live and let live attitude in society. This sort of liberal will criticise freely (unless they fear for their personal safety) aspects of Islam and Islamic civilisations they consider illiberal.
Then there is the sort of liberal who is more indulgent to the radicalism bound up with much identity politics. This sort of liberal is, indeed, often a blend of old fashioned (new or social) liberal and radical, though he doesn't know it. This sort of liberal is less likely to criticise Muslims. He tends to look at things in terms of social power and considers Muslims oppressed non-whites, non-Westerners. He is reticent to criticise even the illiberalism of groups he considers oppressed. This seems to be the sort of liberal Dr. Feser has in mind. He is criticising their hypocrisy. This sort of liberal is influential. He is the usual sort of liberal or left-liberal these days, at least in Britain and Australia. Here he is left-liberal establishment - The BBC-Guardian - and most run of the mill liberals. I don't think America is that different. You could argue that Dr. Feser should have defined his meaning of liberalism a bit deeper, but I do think he is clearly talking about the dominant form of left-liberalism in the modern West.
I also don't see that pointing out the hypocrisy of the dominant form of left-liberalism necessitates advocating for conservatism. I'm a Platonic univeralist. I have the greatest respect for Islam and traditional Islamic civilisation. I consider it as divine and sacred as Christian civilisation or any other. But I still notice left-liberal hypocrisy surrounding it.
Offline
Jeremy Taylor wrote:
Then there is the sort of liberal who is more indulgent to the radicalism bound up with much identity politics.
Unless, of course, that identity politics is Zionism. Then we see a chimp-out incomparable to the liberal reaction to just about anything else.
Offline
Ah, but that is identity politics. Palestinians are considered the underdogs, the oppressed by left-liberals and much of the left. Therefore, they are treated as the generally in the right and Israelis in the wrong regardless of the facts.
Offline
Jeremy Taylor wrote:
Chomsky is an anarchist, specifically an anarcho--communist.
Maybe. I mentioned his name only to illustrate how skewed/broad Feser's brush is when painting liberalism.
Reading closer, Feser provides two direct identifiers to the liberalism he is talking about. One is Hillary Clinton and the other is French Revolution. What would you say, what's the connection between these two? My point is that if these two have a connection, then Chomsky fits into the mix just fine.
Jeremy Taylor wrote:
I also don't see that pointing out the hypocrisy of the dominant form of left-liberalism necessitates advocating for conservatism. I'm a Platonic univeralist. I have the greatest respect for Islam and traditional Islamic civilisation. I consider it as divine and sacred as Christian civilisation or any other. But I still notice left-liberal hypocrisy surrounding it.
It's correct that pointing out problems with a stance does not necessitate a particular different stance. However, when the problematic stance is poorly identified, it raises questions whether it's actually misidentified and whether perhaps the accuser's own stance is problematic.
Jeremy Taylor wrote:
Palestinians are considered the underdogs, the oppressed by left-liberals and much of the left. Therefore, they are treated as the generally in the right and Israelis in the wrong regardless of the facts.
Hmm. What would you say the facts are? Do for example Chomsky and Finkelstein present facts or narrow ideological talking points when they discuss the topic?
Offline
seigneur wrote:
Reading closer, Feser provides two direct identifiers to the liberalism he is talking about. One is Hillary Clinton and the other is French Revolution. What would you say, what's the connection between these two? My point is that if these two have a connection, then Chomsky fits into the mix just fine.
My judgment is that Dr. Feser was talking about the politically correct sort of liberalism I mentioned when he referred to those hypocritical on Islam. Perhaps he could have been more explicit. He does, though, change to critiquing broader liberal principles (on Church and State, etc). If there is confusion here it isn't really Dr. Feser's fault, I'd say. Contemporary left-liberalism is confused. It combines old fashioned (new or social) liberal (which itself blends classical liberalism with aspects of socialism) with increasing radicalism. I suppose if he were writing a book or a journal article, Dr. Feser would have to really try and make sense of the mess of modern liberalism, but his approach works in a blog post. He does describe the dominant strain of left-liberalism reasonably well.
Hmm. What would you say the facts are? Do for example Chomsky and Finkelstein present facts or narrow ideological talking points when they discuss the topic?
Well, Etzelnik was referring to a particular kind of liberal, but I would say the truth is both sides are to blame for the contemporary problems but that the Palestinians are more so. The Palestinians have been offered almost all they claim quite a few times and rejected it. The Palestinians support terrorism and Hamas. The Israelis have their share of the blame, especially in building settlements. I recognise that some of the settlements are necessary to give Israel defensible borders, but Israel has greatly increased its settlement building beyond this, and seems to use them as a punitive measure against the Palestinians. But, still, the Israelis have sought an agreement and the Palestinians have refused.