Why Conservatives Can’t Understand Liberals (and Vice Versa)
While we've been on controvercial subjects, why not this one.
Psychologist Jonathan Haidt says many people today live in a ‘moral matrix’.
Note these are the basics it is thought that might be hardwired into humans...some, anyway. Understand that as we grow up we adjust our understanding through experience and the demon temptations lingering in our brains.
Oh boy...this is gona be interesting...
Psychologist Jonathan Haidt says many people today live in a ‘moral matrix’.
Note these are the basics it is thought that might be hardwired into humans...some, anyway. Understand that as we grow up we adjust our understanding through experience and the demon temptations lingering in our brains.
Oh boy...this is gona be interesting...
Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
I would like di dispute the premise of Professor Haidt's proposition. Just because he finds analogies among values (which are, by the way, poorly defined in that piece) in different cultures, it represents no evidence that they are "hard wired".
Briefly, I would like to point out:
1. Each human is, by definition, a unique individual, with no identical predecessor and no identical successor.
2. The Life process itself is characterized by these fundamental drives: survival, procreation and adaptation.
3. Evolution is a big gambling scheme. Mutations are random, but only successful adaptors survive in the big competition for existence.
4. "Conservative" and "liberal" are very loosely defined descriptions of vague and frequently logically inconsistent opposing (for practical political gains) ideologies.
5. There are two fundamental concepts that are missing most of the time in these discussions:
a. Parenting, teaching and managing are the three "incestuously" interrelated activities aiming at making individual humans better. The quality of all three is trending lower in out times.
b. There are huge differences among individual humans in their cognitive capabilities. Nobody dares even mentioning this, and the two "ideologies" I mentioned above completely ignore this.
6. Levels and quality of education and concrete abilities of individuals have enormous economical consequences.
If we can agree on a set of basic definitions, then, if we also "behave", we might have a productive discussion on the plans for the future.
Wish us all good luck and a happier, more rational future.
All the best.
Sincerely,
Maritimus
Makes me think I should have included Shakespeare as one of those top ten philosophers on the other thread.
Funny...that' just what Jaynes was describing.
Now, take that divide and multiply it 100 times and you get islam, especially the radicals.
If it wasn't for this basic information built into us...we never would of survived this long.
Liberal means: seeing the world as they WISH it was.
Conservative means: seeing the world as it ACTUALLY IS.
Liberal means: believing top-down, govt control FIXES all life's ills, which REMOVES INDIVIDUAL FREEDOMS.
Conservative means: smaller, less intrusive govt allows individuals to rise as high as their talents, desires and effort will take them.
Liberal means: guaranteed equal outcomes (irrespective of effort or ability)
Conservative means: guaranteed equal opportunity.
Of particular interest to this group should be Haidt's additional thoughts relating a a sixth base of morality, that of liberty/oppression. He says, "The desire for equality seems to be more closely related to the psychology of liberty and oppression than to the psychology of reciprocity and exchange.... [So] we added a provisional sixh foundation-- liberty/oppression. We also decided to revised our thinking about fairness to place more emphasis on proportionality."
There are two aspects of fairness, "On the left, fairness often implies equality, but on the right it means proportionality - people should be rewarded in proportion to what they contribute, even if that guarantees unequal outcomes."
What I did find fascinating was his disclosure that he had an acknowledged bias, as a liberal, but was shocked to find his research showed conservatives had a much more realistic view of the world. The most balanced moral view belonged to the social conservatives.
His conclusion? Liberals tend more to the fanatic, with unflinching, absolutist positions, and only a personal, devastating event can change their minds (as has been said, a conservative is a liberal who's been mugged). Conservatives waste a lot of time trying to reason with liberals.
"Good people subdue the earth. Evil people subdue other people."
I have lived such a life as to have found this to be true.
Conservatives often confuse freedom of individuation with "liberal anarchy" which is nonsense.
Liberals often view social order as "force" ...which is nonsense.
Morality is reality...and reality is the final arbiter.
Honest Bolshevik Bernie woulda been better. Only for libtards, that is.
Conservatives generally consider the amount of wealth completely controllable by how much effort people put into making it and the barriers in their way to doing so. They don't spend much time worrying about how much someone has figuring that if you bake enough bread, everyone will get some.
I find this even carries into scientists vs engineers where scientists try to determine the rules of a real universe -- and there are only so many rules, and engineers build things without limit.
I think that what positively identifies Liberals from Conservatives stems from the nature of the five categories themselves. Liberals will take the stance which minimizes the three identified by Haidt as lacking in their worldview because they view themselves as the originators of those notions. They view themselves as the ultimate authorities, they ascribe to might makes right philosophies (eschewing loyalty to people or principle), and they view themselves as temporary and therefore willing to discard the body. Conservatives take the approach that they are not the ultimate authority nor are they temporary and that alliance to lasting principles is important.
So the real question in my mind is this: what leads a person to reject the other three ideas?
Load more comments...