Conservatis - Core Ideas And Priciples Flashcards

1
Q

Pragmatism

A
  • way of making decisions and policies, and approaching society and politics with the attitude of “what matters is what works”
  • rejects ideology and instead accepts that the best route to solving a problem is not necessarily what ones beliefs says
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2
Q

Pragmatism - one-nation and New right

A
  • ON is highly pragmatic way of governing
  • NR is much more ideological and requires firm leadership to steer the government and country into neo-liberalism
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3
Q

Example of pragmatism; Major

A
  • some argue that conservatism rejects ideology because of its pragmatic nature
  • evidence in the policy of several conservative PMs
  • john major didn’t see poll tax as a pragmatic decision and replaced it with council tax
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4
Q

Examples of pragmatism: Cameron

A
  • Cameron Conservative Party changed its polices based on coalition compromises between 2010-2015
  • can be argued to be because the party changed its ideas to the most electorally and socially pragmatic policies
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5
Q

tradition

A
  • conservatives respect tradition (history, ideas and systems of the past)
  • conservatives believe that events in the past hold knowledge for those in the present
  • however new right conservatism rejects lots of ideas of tradition
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6
Q

Tradition; Edmund Burke

A
  • Burke supported ideas of tradition
  • says because of human imperfection we cannot just create a new society - we should listen to lesson and teaching o the past + society should organically evolve to meet current needs
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7
Q

Organic change

A
  • idea that social change should not be radical
  • should envelope thorough an organic process + political processes an leaders emergency as a result of this process
  • society as a whole is more important than the individual parts with in it
  • gradual and supported by conservatives who wish to preserve order in society
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8
Q

Revolutionary change

A
  • conservatives believe that revolutionary change disrupted order + heircharcy and so is dangerous to law, order and private property
  • society is constantly evolving and revution doesn’t solve society’s problems
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9
Q

Human imperfection

A
  • conservatives reject ideas from enlightenment about trying to improve HN, saying it ant be perfected
  • because are imperfect they are unable to make good decisions for themselves
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10
Q

Psychological imperfection

A
  • humans are psychologically imperfect - not nessarly rational
  • attracted to safety, comfort and order rather than radical ideas and change
  • so order and hierarchy should be preserved
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11
Q

Moral imperfection

A
  • humans have flawed characters ad therefore cannot always act rationally or perfectly
  • leads to conservative view of crime being a result of flawed moral characteristic, rather than inequalities in the world
  • conservatives believe in behaviour regulation through the law as a result of moral imperfection
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12
Q

Intellectual imperfection

A
  • human rationality is imperfect&unreliable and humans are intellectually imperfect
  • the world around us is more complicated that out intellects are able to comprehend
  • disagree with the liberal view that humans can create a free society through their rationality
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13
Q

Organic society/state

A
  • society develops as an organism , rather than as a man-made device & therefore is constantly changing
  • conservatives support gradual change and believe that society will evolve to fit the needs of the present
  • those is authority are societies natural leaders
  • suggests that unity is more important at than disagreements between the states individual parts
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14
Q

Change to conserve

A
  • links to ideas of organic change
  • conservative believe that it is important to adapt your changing circumstances in society, as long as these adaptations conserves principles of social order, hierarchy and traditions
  • for this reason, many conservatives favour gradual and evolutionary change
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15
Q

Example of change to conserve; one-nation

A
  • ON conservatism emerged as a response the the emergence of capitalism is Britain during the industrial revolution
  • PM Disraeli tried brining society together to form ON, with the upper classes ruling, middle making money and lower producing goods
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16
Q

Example of change to conserve; women’s vote

A
  • the Conservative Party were instrumental in brining women the vote in 1918 and 1928
  • campaigns for suffrage were disruptive to social order
  • the acceptance of women as voters reflected changing attitudes in society to gender
17
Q

Authority

A
  • conservative believe that authority in society is important to preserve order
  • linked to paternalism & hierarchy - should be a social structure with people in charge of others, and those people act in the best interests of those they have authority over
18
Q

Different types of authority

A
  • charismatic authority - where authority comes from the personality of leader
  • rational-legal authority - where authority comes from the legal system & rationalism
  • traditional authority - authority comes from tradition & custom
19
Q

Traditional authority

A
  • the rot it’s such as Max Weber have argued that conservatives favour ‘traditional’ authority as it respects traditional history
  • eg - the monarchy is an example of tradition authority in the UK
20
Q

Hierarchy

A
  • conservatives believe that society is antuarally hierarchical, with inequality’s an dideerendes calsees
  • heir he is an important factor of traditional conservatism
  • say revolutionary change is abandoning heirarchy (conservatives don’t like)
21
Q

Example of hierarchy

A
  • David Cameron government;
  • dominated by Old Etonian, privately educated and oxbridge graduates
  • at one point in 2015, 14 out of 28 cabinet members were privately educated
22
Q

New Right conservatism

A
  • accepts there a natural inequalities in society
  • however, new right conservatives don’t necessarily want to preserve this order & heirarchy
  • instead inequalities lead to people to strive to work harder to improve their place in life
23
Q

Paternalism

A
  • some members of society should lead others and it these people who have obligation to those below them to look after their best interests
  • conservatism believes in human imperfection, which justifies paternalism
  • humans may not always make the best choices and therefore its acceptable to act on behalf of other people
24
Q

Traditional paternalism

A
  • forceful and authtarain approach to paternalism
  • idea that the state knows best and therefore everyone has to do as the state says
25
Q

ON conservatism and paternalism;

A
  • Disraeli is conservatism had strong paternalist ideas and argued there should e social classes & the upper classes should look after their best working class
  • noblesse oblige - upper classes looking after working classes
26
Q

Rejection of paternalism by the New Right

A
  • Thatcher rejected many paternalistic ideas - focused on individualism
  • individual had responsibility to look after them & their family
27
Q

Empiricism

A
  • scientific and philosophical approach which argues that we can only get knowledge from experience
  • opposes the idea that we can get knowledge from theoretical concepts
  • supports the Conservative belief in tradition as it uses the past as a source of wisdom
28
Q

Anti-permissiveness

A
  • when behaviours that some people may disagree with are not allowed to take place
  • not allowing people to make their own moral choices
  • in contrast liberals accept that individuals have the right to determine their own private moral conduct so long as their is no harm to others
29
Q

Examples of anti-permissiveness; Thatcher

A
  • thatcher introduced S28 of the local Government Act in 1987 which prohibited the entire of homosexuality in school sex education
30
Q

Radical conservatism ideas - Libertarianism

A
  • promotion of freedom, free choice and autonomy, mainly focused on applying these concepts to the economy
  • take positions similar to classical liberals
31
Q

Libertarians - state functions

A
  • ‘night-watchman state’ - where the only functions of the state are to protect private property and maintain law & order
  • radical idea that many conservatives reject
32
Q

Libertarians - economy

A
  • free market economy believing that individuals should be responsible for their own economic choices & the government shoulndt intervene
  • the price of goods and services are set by the forces of supply and demand
33
Q

Libertarians - moral values

A
  • support freedom from government intervention in an individuals personal life
  • eg libertarians in the US support the right to own a gun
34
Q

Radical conservative views - Laissez-faire

A
  • political and economical system which supports as little government intervention as possible
35
Q

Laissez-faire - conservive party

A
  • the part adopted the economic state of laissez-faire under the leadership of Robert Peel
  • for much of 19th century conservatives didn’t support free trade, an important part of laissez-faire economics
36
Q

Atomism

A
  • idea that society is made up of individuals who look after themselves (self-sufficient and self-interested)
  • conservatives believe that atomism binds society together through entrepreneurship rather tan socialist principles of equality
  • associated with more radical ideas r
  • Margaret Thatcher once said that “there is no such thing as society”
37
Q

Egoistical individualism

A
  • atomism is also knows as egoistical indivualism
  • links to Ayn Rands idea of selfishness as a postive trait
  • Rand believe that we should actively seek to loom after our own interests instead of relying on the state