Overlearning Lessons
I’m a big fan of Scott’s post the other day on neo-conservatism, which I take to be a terrific defense of the original insights provided by neo-conservatism even as it seeks to distance itself from the “overzealous and dangerous manner” in which those insights have been applied. I was particularly smitten with this sentence:
Ironically, my own estimation is that it is neoconservatism’s emphasis on moral clarity, the hubris that has spelled its intermediate doom, that offer the greatest strength we might cull from its many wolves (and perhaps not ultimately very ironic at all as circumstances have shown us often enough that an ideology’s Mjöllnir seems ever destined to become its Achilles heel).
As Scott suggests, it is very often the strength of an ideology’s wisdom and/or moral clarity that ultimately becomes its undoing. I’d go further and say that the wisdom and/or moral clarity are also what gives an ideology the opportunity to gain popular relevance in the first place. Typically, this moral clarity is also fundamentally correct or at the very least serves to remind us of the importance of a particular moral virtue. Naturally, the ideology’s proponent’s put forth some fairly specific proposals about how that virtue ought to relate to the problems of the day.
This ability to remind us of a particular virtue can make the ideology extremely appealing, and eventually allows it to gain adherents outside of the particular group of intellectuals who first begin to emphasize it. In many instances, it can even gain enough of a following to become an influential player in one or both of the primary political coalitions, resulting in many (though almost never all) of its original policy prescriptions getting implemented.
The trouble is that in the process of gaining adherents, the ideology loses much of the nuance and intellectual rigor that was involved in its creation in the first place. Simply put, you can’t expect every voter to have read their preferred movement’s version of FA Hayek, John Rawls, or Russell Kirk. Take my preferred ideology, for example. As relatively small as libertarianism may be, there are still millions of small “l” libertarians; and yet, how many of them have actually read Hayek’s masterwork Road To Serfdom, which despite its legendary reputation has only managed to sell half a million copies in its 65 years of existence? And yes, that doesn’t account for people who have read the book in libraries or perhaps purchased a used copy. But even accounting for that, I find it highly unlikely that more than 20% of libertarians have actually read Road To Serfdom. And it’s safe to say that the number who have done so who also had the historical knowledge to fully understand what Hayek was writing about are just a fraction of that number (hell, I’m not even sure that I fit in that latter category).
The result is that the moral clarity that gave rise to the ideology gets mixed up with the prescriptions and diagnoses that resulted therefrom. In other words, the specific prescriptions and diagnoses that originated from the ideology’s moral clarity wind up becoming proxies for that moral clarity. To continue with the example of libertarianism, Hayek’s arguments against very specific types of government intervention wind up being interpreted and/or promoted as arguments that just about any government intervention is an irreversible step on the Road To Serfdom; any government intervention at all gets hit with the “socialism!” cry.*
At first, there’s really not much wrong with this response. In order for the intellectual ideology to have any opportunity at seeing its prescriptions and diagnoses have any impact on policy, the ideology needs popular support, after all.
The problem occurs, though, when the ideology achieves some measure of success or when circumstances change. While the intellectuals that gave rise to the movement may have different ideas, their movement’s newfound size means that they no longer have much control over the movement’s direction. Because the initial prescriptions and diagnoses of the movement have become proxies for the moral clarity that was the original basis for those prescriptions and diagnoses, this means that the movement’s answer to just about all problems is some version of those original prescriptions and diagnoses – never mind that they were created for a particular time and situation that no longer exists.
And that is the big problem – in assuming that the original set of prescriptions and diagnoses are always and everywhere the only way to act on the original moral clarity that underlay the movement, the movement actually winds up losing sight of that moral clarity. To be sure, it will still pay lip service to its moral vision; but it will refuse to even consider whether alternatives exist that better serve that moral vision. Worse, it may even wind up so over-emphasizing those particular prescriptions that it will utterly disregard evidence and arguments that the enactment of those prescriptions in a given situation may actually wind up undermining the moral vision for which the movement purports to stand.
In the case to which Scott cites, i.e., neoconservatism, I think this is precisely what has happened. To be sure, there are shockingly few people who have ever self-identified as neo-conservative, especially since the term has become a catch-all perjorative for just about any form of conservatism that one does not like. But that doesn’t mean that neo-conservatism has lacked for influence (it was virtually impossible, for instance, to go to college in the mid-to-late ’90s and avoid contact with Francis Fukuyama’s End of History and the Last Man).
The problem was that the high-brow neo-conservative intellectual thought became perverted when it took the form of actual political influence. What had begun as essentially an intellectual counterweight to nihilism and moral relativism and a defense of the right of nations to promote their vision of morality, when it became translated into political rhetoric, became an argument that liberal democracies had a moral right to promote their sense of morality and defend themselves by whatever means they saw fit. The idea that liberal democracies needed to attempt to do so in the least intrusive manner possible got thrown out the window. In other words, when the neoconservative critique was translated into the public mind, it became an argument that the promotion and defense of liberal democracy was such an important moral virtue that all other moral virtue became irrelevant as long as actions were being taken to promote or defend liberal democracy. In a sad way, the popular incarnation of neo-conservatism became the very nihilism and moral relativism that it claimed to oppose (and that many/most intellectual neo-conservatives actually DID oppose). Out went just war doctrine and proportionality; in came waterboarding and Guantanamo Bay.
Alas, this was far from the position of many intellectuals who self-identified as neo-conservatives, including Francis Fukuyama himself, who had a far more nuanced view of what actions were appropriate at what time. Unfortunately, nuance doesn’t win votes.
*I’m aware that Mises and Rothbard would likely have agreed with this conclusion. However, the fact is that outside of die-hard movement libertarianism, these two are even less known than Hayek.
You can’t spread democracy through force of arms; trying to do so is just a basic contradiction in terms. Spreading stability through force of arms is always self-defeating in the short term (by definition), and in the long term, the record is really, really bad. We’re still stuck on “should wes”, when “can wes” remain the absolutely essential questions.
No other policy in American politics could have such a horrendous record and yet enjoy more chances than an aggressive foreign policy.Report
“No other policy in American politics could have such a horrendous record and yet enjoy more chances than an aggressive foreign policy.”
I think the Left’s aggressive domestic policy in support of welfare (Great Society, etc.) enjoys a similarly horrendous record. And it hasn’t worked, either! Just saying!Report
Freddie: I absolutely agree with you on that. My point is that intellectual neoconservatism is not (or at least was not) necessarily a reflexive belief that military force could or should solve just about every problem, nor is it a belief that any actions can be justified if they are intended to spread and/or protect liberal democracy. That many, relying on a dumbed-down version of neo-conservatism, think that it does provide such justification is not an indictment of the seminal neo-conservative thinkers, but an indictment of the way in which nuance gets lost when a fairly complex intellectual idea gets translated to the masses.Report
Indeed Mark. The moral clarity that I was referring to in my piece wasn’t intended to be a green light to any and all opportunities for intervention. That clarity cuts both ways, as it were, and would likely have provided significant evidence against, say, the invasion of Iraq (in no small part because of the lack of clarity around that decision).
In reverse, such clarity doesn’t necessarily justify all of America’s excursions/interventions abroad, as I think many fear (perhaps rightly so given the fervor of extreme nationalism that seems to have embedded itself in popularized neoconservatism). Rather, such clarity would seek to, as the word denotes, clarify when use of force is appropriate and when it is not.Report
Scott:
Continuing with the Fukuyama example, I think his case proves your point that moral clarity would have provided significant evidence against the invasion of Iraq. Fukuyama supported covert action and military aid to Iraqi dissidents, but when push came to shove, he opposed the decision to invade Iraq (if memory serves correctly).Report
Though “moral clarity” really strikes me as so objective, so intangible…can something so mercurial as that provide us with a foreign policy compass?Report
E.D.: In and of itself, no. But some kind of moral clarity is a pre-requisite to the development of a reliable compass, not just in terms of foreign policy but also in terms of politics and culture in general. It’s important to remember that neo-conservatism largely developed as a response to what was viewed as a lack of moral clarity amongst the 1960s-era political Left, and not just the Left’s preferred foreign policy (which, I would argue, was in turn a result of the American Left overlearning ITS lessons….but that’s not something I’m prepared to discuss right now).Report
E.D., is it not perhaps the case that notions of moral clarity seem “mercurial” precisely because we are increasingly slipping into an orientation of relativity. Part of my suggestion in defending neoconservatism was that we need to work at developing a more tangile sense of moral clarity that would better guide our foreign policy compass.
Part of my condemnation for neoncons came from the fact that they identified this as an important project, but never seemed to really grapple with the difficulty of truly developing such clarity in the context of a complicated and dynamic world and allowed their notion of clarity to be co-opted by a strict adherence to nationalism/national interest. At least so it would seem insofar as they came to power and had to translate critique into policy, as Mark suggests.
So in aligning my condemnation with my defense, I’m suggesting that we pull this element of neoconservative out of its wreckage and do a better job of it than has been done to date.Report
Well, I’m certainly curious as to where you’ll go with this, Scott. The task of importing morality or idealism into foreign policy in place of cold, hard realism is Herculean, to be sure. I think the trick is not overstepping, but that is almost inevitable given the nature of power – sort of the tragic flaw of the neoconservative movement. “Power corrupts” and all that…
In any case, these posts deserve greater thought and a longer response….Report
In a sad way, the popular incarnation of neo-conservatism became the very nihilism and moral relativism that it claimed to oppose
By the way, love that word – nihilism – really jumped out at me! 🙂Report
E.D. – that’s good to know. I assure you, I just chose it randomly; actually, that’s how I choose just about all of my words – randomly….after all, I don’t believe in anything so I really don’t have a point in any of my writing. I just type random words and letters and hope that they result in a coherent thought.Report
Heh. Careful what you say….they may be listening….
I’m not paranoid or anything….Report
But how do we know “they” even exist? How do we know existence exists?Report
E.D., agreed, this is a long haul effort, something to be worked on over years and I’ve really only just started. But I did want to calrify one thing, as per this post, I’m not looking to replace realism with idealism, but rather find a useful blanace between the two in our analysis with regards to foreign policy, and in other areas.Report
By the way, love that word – nihilism – really jumped out at me!
It’s a commonplace traits amongst back-patting, high-fiving nihilists in denial….ist. 🙂
Seriously though, I kind of find the whole moral clarity thing amusing since neoconservatives are, at heart, big government social conservatives and they have the same typically woeful views on allowing democratic majorities to run roughshod simply on the basis of the majority rule. Not like libertarians have any moral clarity on what liberty means or anything like that.
😉Report
I’d say neocons are generally of two varieties – Big Government Social Cons, and Big Government Secular Cons – who share a hawkish vision of foreign policy.Report