Conservatism: core ideas and principles Flashcards
Core ideas and principles of conservatism and how they relate to human nature, the state, society and the economy
Pragmatism
an approach that evaluates theories or beliefs in terms of the success of their practical application.
Conservatism: core
ideas and principles: Key terminology
Hierarchy
Authority
Change to conserve
Atomism
Core ideas and principles of conservatism
- Pragmatism
- Tradition
- Human imperfection
- Organic society/state
- Paternalism
- Libertarianism (specifically neoliberalism)
Oakeshott summarisation of conservatism
“to prefer the familiar to the unknown, to prefer the tried to the untried … [and] the actual to the possible.”
Conservative preference for pragmatism link to human rationality
They contend that humans lack the intellectual ability and powers of reasoning to fully comprehend the complex realities of the world. As a result, conservatives tend to dismiss abstract ideas, theories and ideologies that claim to ‘explain’ or ‘improve’ human life and development.
Conservatives Danger of ideas and theories and ideologies
Principles and ideas such as ‘human rights’, ‘a classless society’ and ‘equality’ are dangerous because they can promote a radical reordering of society (oft en through revolution) that leads to worse rather than better conditions.
Conservatives appraoch to issues
act in a pragmatic way that emphasises caution, moderation and a sense of historical continuity
Pragmatism and flexibility
- Pragmatism also implies a flexible approach to politics that considers what is in the best interests of the people, what is acceptable to the public and what will maintain social stability and cohesion.
- pragmatism represents a flexibility of mind and a search for practical solutions rather than the inflexibility imposed by ideologies
- pragmatic politicians face a dilemma that we often take for granted in party politics: they want to look flexible enough to command the ‘centre’ ground, but also appear principled and unwilling to give up completely on their values to secure office.
Criticism of pragmatism
- pragmatism reveals a lack of political principle and encourages politicians to follow rather than lead public opinion
- In practice, political behaviour or action cannot be wholly separated from ideological or theoretical considerations.
Religious criticism of pragmatism
Catholic thinkers and conservative religious thinkers more generally responded to the rise of pragmatism by arguing that its critique of universal truths, its critique of dogmatism was a kind of dogmatism in its own right, and bore the traces of a deep anti-Catholicism and secularism. For such thinkers, pragmatism opened the door to moral nihilism of
Edmund Burke on pragmatism
- Pragmatism was an essential element in facilitating ‘natural’ or inevitable change within a state or society
- This type of change, he argued, should not be opposed because a state ‘without the means of some change is without the means of its conservation’ – for the state to keep going, it would have to adapt to some extent.
- Burke’s conservatism maintained that cautious pragmatism would bring about necessary change peacefully, through evolution, whereas the unbending pursuit of revolution or reaction would lead to conflict and chaos
Change to Conserve
- The idea that society should adapt to changing circumstances by introducing moderate reforms, rather than reject change outright and risk rebellion or revolution.
- This in part reflects their non-ideological approach and their preference for pragmatism. Change is necessary in order that society may function.
How is change to conserve reconciled with Conservatism
the core aim of conservatism is social order and harmony. To achieve this, conservatives favour those institutions and values that encourage a degree of cohesion between the various elements of society.
This line of argument is most closely associated with those figures who sought to formulate the philosophical underpinnings of conservatism.
One Nation Conservatives and pragmatism
- Pragmatic ‘middle way’ approach to the economy that combines market competition with Government regulation
- Both encourages wealth creation through private enterprise and generates funding for state welfare programs
Conservative administrations 1951 - 1964 on pragmatism
In opposition the Conservative Party opposed many aspects of the Labour Government’s domestic reform program
- However once in government they made no concerted effort to reverse them
Tradition
- The transmission of customs or beliefs from generation to generation, or the fact of being passed on in this way.
- The concept of tradition recognises and values “the accumulated wisdom of past societies and a connection across the generations.”
Conservative Religious justification of tradition
- Society’s institutions and practises were ‘God-given’ and so humans who attempt to alter these longstanding social arrarngments are challenging the will of God.
- divine justification severely weakened by impact of Enlightenment thinking (rationality, anti-clericalism) from c18th, and incorporation of man made innovations over time e.g. representative democracy
tghtyjhy
- Edmund Burke (1729-97) and G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936)
- Tradition constitutes the acumulated wisdom of the past
- The institutions, customs, and practises of the past are valable because they have proved fit for purpose and have survived
- They should be preserved for future generations to benefit from
- Tradition establishes continutity and social stability
Burke statment on society
‘A partnership between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born’
Reflections on the Revolution in France 1790
Each generation has a solemn duty ot safeguard and pass on the accumulated wisdom of tradition to the next generation
Conservatives on reform
- Reform or change can only be justified if it evolves naturally in a peaceful, gradual way in order to strengthen existing institutions, customs, and practises
- By seeking to destroy all traditional political and social institutions, the French in 1789 and Bolsheviks in 1917 were cutting themselves off from their past and paving ther way for regimes more tyrannical than the ones they toppled
Conservatists tradition and identity
- tradition provides society and the individual with a strong sense of identity
- historically based sense of belonging
- tradition fosters social cohesion and securityy becuase it offers humans a reassuring collective sense of who they are
- radical, wide ranging changes will cut people off from the traditional basis of society and lead to instability
Human imperfection
According to the conservative mindset, human nature is imperfect and unchangeable.
- Conservatives reject the view that is implicit within radical movements that human nature is somehow perfectible, because the conservative view is that humans are inevitably flawed and unchangeable.
Conservatism human flaws Hobbes + traditionalists
Hobbes argued that it was a basic human instinct to seek power after power wanting to exploit one for the benefit of the self. For many traditionalists, this is rooted in the notion of the ‘original sin’ of Adam and Eve, of whom they believe us to all be descendants, as to the morally incapability of all human beings.
Conservatism humans intellectually flawed
human beings are intellectually flawed unable to comprehend the boundless and bottomless pit of political life (Oakeshott.) Rather than rooting their ideals in grand ideas, such as Socialism or ‘rights of man’, they ground their decisions in pragmatism
What does human imperfection mean for conservatists
- a tough stance on law and order iss needed to deter criminal behaviour
- foreign policy must be based on national security rather than liberal notions of international co-operation and harmony
- self-interest is more powerful and altriusm
organic state or society
- if humans are dependent and security seeking (human imperfection) than they cannot exist seperately from society or social group (family, local community)
- therefore individuals must uphold society by accepting their duties and responsibilities (being a good parent, neighbour, child). Otherwise society would collapse leading to Anomie
Anomie
is a social condition defined by an uprooting or breakdown of any moral values, standards or guidance for individuals to follow
For Conservatives what is true freedom
The willing acceptance of the value of social obligations and ties
Psychological aspect of human imperfection
- People crave safety, familiarity, and the security of knowing their designated place in society
- While social order provides humans with much needed security, predictability, and stability, liberty raises the unsettling prospect of choice, change, and uncertainty.
- Hobbes: social order has to come before liberty
Moral aspect of human imperfection
- Humans are morally imperfect because they are naturally selfish and greedy
- Anti social or criminal behaviour is due to basic human nature and cannot be attributed to economic or social disadvantage
- A robust law and order system that imposes severe sanctions on such conduct is the only effective deterrent
Organicism
- the philosophical position that states that the universe and its various parts (including human societies) ought to be considered alive and naturally ordered, much like a living organism.