Part of the Liberalism
Resurgent web site
© Copyright by Steve Kangas,
editor
Myth:
The world is going to hell in a hand basket.
Fact: Society is constantly improving.
Summary
Society is not deteriorating, as conservatives would have you believe. In
the last 400 years, Western society has seen continual progress under the
Scientific Revolution. This has resulted in social, scientific and economic
miracles too numerous to mention. Just a few examples include doubled lifespans,
mass education, rising standards of living, not to mention the abolition of
slavery, the Inquisition, the witch hunts, dueling, pogroms, serfdom, feudalism,
etc. The traditional meaning of "conservativism" is the attempt to
conserve the various aspects of society, but why anyone would wish to preserve
such a sick society is a mystery. The traditional meaning of
"liberalism," on the other hand, is openness to progress and change,
and the last four centuries bear testimony to its success.
Argument
According to many conservatives, society has been degenerating for many
centuries now. Some go so far as to assert the impending fall of Western
Civilization. Quite often this belief also has a religious cast, with
predictions of the world ending in an Apocalypse or a Time of Trouble. Is there
any evidence to support such pessimism? Yes, but it's always anecdotal, such as
particularly horrifying news stories about human behavior at the extremes.
Conservatives go on to blame this deterioration on society's growing liberalism,
collectivism and secularism.
Fortunately, this belief is sheer nonsense. The last 400 years have been ones of
astonishing scientific and moral progress, and no one can seriously argue
otherwise. The key to it all has been the Scientific Revolution, which Galileo
started in the early 1600s. Human knowledge has exploded since then, resulting
in all manner of scientific, economic and social miracles. Consider all the
advances that have occurred in the West during the last four centuries:
- The West abolished slavery, serfdom, feudalism, the Inquisition, witch
hunts, theocracy, dueling, pogroms, polygamy, state-sanctioned torture,
censorship of the press, infanticide, child labor, and capital punishment
for misdemeanors.
- The West also greatly reduced infant mortality, bastardy, religious
persecution, racism, misogyny, discrimination, superstition, and war. What
few wars do occur tend to be tremendously more violent, but it is
also a long-term trend that they are getting rarer. There has also been a
sharp drop in institutionalized anti-Semitism -- apparently, the Holocaust
shocked Europe out of this 1,500-year tradition.
- The West has seen a clear rise in individual rights, civil rights, human
rights, sexual rights, global trade, travel and telecommunications,
computerization, sanitation, hygiene, free markets, private property and
increasingly sophisticated economic institutions and banking practices.
- Democracy has replaced monarchy and aristocracy.
- Illiteracy once afflicted the vast majority of society, but today has been
almost completely wiped out, thanks to the rise of mass education.
- Economic depressions used to visit the West once every generation or two.
But ever since World War II, depressions have been completely eliminated in
all nations practicing Keynesian monetary policies.
- Poverty and income inequality have both been considerably reduced. Prior
to the 18th century, peasants and serfs were cruelly exploited under
feudalism and manorialism. Even by the turn of the 20th century, over 50
percent of all people in the U.S. lived in poverty. Today, the poverty rate
has been reduced to 15 percent. In Europe, it's as low as 3 or 4 percent.
- Our standard of living is continually rising. Efficiency of survival is
greater than ever before.
- Advances in medical science have more than doubled our lifespans -- from
an average of 30 years to 75 years. Plagues that once killed a third of
Europe have been wiped out. Epidemics have dwindled in both number and size.
Each generation is taller, stronger, healthier, and faster than the
previous.
- Average IQs are rising 3 points per decade, in all nations, races and
classes worldwide.
Any one of these by itself would constitute a major improvement. Taken together,
they provide overwhelming evidence of humanity's upward trend.
Of course, the human race is not completely out of the woods yet.
Over-population, pollution, and nuclear war are serious threats to civilization
which may do us in yet. But there are global organizations that are
dedicated to fighting these threats and educating the public about them. If
historical trends are any guide, we may be cheered by the prospect of continual
improvement.
The above account simply describes the advance of Western Civilization. Let's
take a closer look now at the driving forces behind it: science and society's
increasing liberalism.
The forces of change
To put the last 400 years in perspective, we should define
"liberalism" and "conservatism" in the historical sense.
Traditionally, conservatism has meant the conservation of past beliefs, culture,
language, music, tradition, property, family, religion, literature, history,
architecture, symbols, land, etc. Liberalism, on the other hand, promotes
continual progress and change in all these institutions. Indeed, such change has
been occurring at an accelerating rate.
The list of things conservatives would like to preserve may seem quite unrelated
at first, but ultimately they can all be boiled down to one factor: information.
Society's main activity is the transmission of information from one generation
to the next. It does this in countless ways: genetic information is passed on
through our DNA, cultural information is passed on through traditional
practices, scientific information is passed on through education, linguistic
information is passed on through communication, productive information is passed
on through apprenticeship, property information (who owns what) is passed on
through inheritances (both living and mortal) or market transactions.
Clearly, there was a time when information did not change all that much, and it
was possible to conserve it, even for millennia. Property stayed pretty much in
the family; science crawled ahead at a glacial pace; the Catholic Church
preached the same theology for 1,500 years; even genes differed no more than the
local region's, since individuals spent their entire lives in one village. But,
as we've seen above, this all started to change about 400 years ago. Increasing
ease of travel (especially by ocean) resulted in global trade, travel and
communication. People with different ideas, cultures, philosophies, religions
and, yes, genes came into contact with each other. The Scientific Revolution
began, leading to the Industrial Revolution, and then the Communication
Revolution. The Protestant Reformation shattered Catholic hegemony over
religious ideas -- and it is no accident that this occurred shortly after the
invention of the printing press, which disseminated its ideas. Property became
less transmitted by family and more by market transactions in a dynamic economy.
And the driving force behind this accelerating change was the growth of
information of all types, especially as embodied by science and technology.
The conservative approach to science has been to claim that there are timeless
truths, such as Christianity, family values, the work ethic, and patriotism.
Hans Morganthau (a famous conservative political scientist in the 20th century)
found timeless truths in the work of Thucydides (a Greek historian in the 5th
century B.C.) who described the power politics of states and their desire for
military security. Morganthau then made the classically conservative statement
that the extreme age of a theory is not a weakness, but a strength. (There are
many refutations to this sentiment, most notably slavery, which has been almost
universally supported by both state and religious leaders since the dawn of
recorded history.) When confronted with the argument that science is obviously
improving, many conservatives argue that the best knowledge is already known --
for example, in the Bible. Science is just playing "catch-up" to these
revealed truths, they claim. (Again, the fact that these ancient sources of
"truth" advocated slavery refutes the contention that they are
perfect.)
Liberals, on the other hand, believe that information of all types is constantly
evolving. Theories are overturned in the light of new findings. People once
believed the earth is flat; now they believe it is round. Liberals question
those audacious enough to call themselves the "final authority,"
because they know their knowledge will almost certainly change or improve. They
agree with the words of Socrates, who admitted that he was the wisest of
philosophers in that he knew he was not wise. (Conservatives should not take
false comfort in this: ironically, Socrates was wiser than those who claimed
they knew everything.)
Undoubtedly, the truth lies somewhere between these two extremes. Even the most
biased political observer can see that life is a mixture of both constancy and
change. This mix itself, however, has not remained constant throughout history.
In the last 2,000 years, the number of constant factors in life have grown
smaller, as more and more things in our lives have become changeable. At a rate
greater than ever before, humans are changing their culture, religious beliefs,
political beliefs, careers, work practices, education, class, station in life,
geography, environment, mates, possessions, health, friends, entertainment,
hobbies, language, even personal appearance and gender -- you name it, it is
coming under increasing change. In the future, people will be able to change
their very DNA. This is a mind-boggling possibility. Science is opening new
doors to the human experience, allowing humans to do things never before
possible. Once, Leonardo Da Vinci regretted that humans could not fly like
birds. Now, thanks to science, they not only fly, they are exploring space.
When conservatives argue for the preservation of society (or worse, a past form
of society), what they really mean is that they want to arrest or even reverse
all progress. They hearken back to a simpler time, usually with rose-colored
glasses to avoid seeing the slavery, exploitation, tyranny and misery that
existed back then. Here is but one example from the Almanac of American
Politics, written by conservative political scientists Michael Barone and
Grant Ujifusa. After the Republicans took control of Congress in 1994, the
authors ecstatically declared:
"The 1994 election, the first time Americans have selected national
officeholders with terms extending into the 21st Century, has also marked a
return to old traditions -- in government a restoration of constitutional
order, in society a return to a Tocquevillian America…
"Americans are looking to government not so much for economic
redistribution… but for the maintenance of basic order -- not some
authoritarian order, it must be added, but to an orderly framework in which
people can make their livings, raise their families and work together in their
communities." (1)
Of course, De Tocqueville's famous critiques of America were hardly
complimentary; he described a nation which preached freedom but practised
slavery, prohibited women from voting, and committed atrocities against Native
Americans. The young republic was not truly a government of the people, but of
rich white male property-owners. It is not surprising why modern conservatives
-- who are still primarily rich white male property-owners -- would so eagerly
desire to return to a Tocquevillian America. Clearly, what the far right wishes
to conserve most is their privilege.
Endnotes
1. Michael Barone and Grant Ujifusa, "Introduction,"
The Almanac of American Politics, 1995.