Currently reading Why Liberalism Failed, which is more of a polemic than an argument, but I think the claims are novel enough to warrant that. The author is just trying to 'get the idea out there.' In fact, I picked the book up because it was only one I could find that actually reflects my politics (although I don't think that 'classical education' is what's needed for repairing the damage done by liberalism).
Also, read Foreigner by Cherryh. It's extremely detail-oriented, but somehow also very addicting. Maybe I'm more of a setting guy than I thought.
Yes, extensively.
If you think, after reading the whole book, it is interesting to start a thread on that failure, I am happy to join the discussion
My simplistic thoughts so far are that the original liberalism (from around the Enlightenment period) was a tremendous success !!!
The goal was to get rid of the hereditary privileges (aristocracy, absolute monarchy, divine right, etc)
And the new granular unit of society became the individual human citizen, that got innate privileges, a kind of innate divine/natural right (the cluster of and around human rights).
That original goal to get rid of hereditary privileges has been realised for 99% and those new natural rights for the individual human are plastered around in formal constitutions and declarations (and like the original religious principles ofc in a tensed relation with reality).
So that original Liberalism did not fail !
And from there, under that Liberalism banner, it branched out it many directions, from the very start, into many different flavors, in many countries differing.
International, anglospheric books and articles only covering a subset of those many branches, mostly giving little attention how Liberalism was picked up in the many European countries.
So that was the reason for my question: did the author describe the kind of liberalism that failed.
And BTW in the Yale University press the book was described with: "Of the three dominant ideologies of the twentieth century—fascism, communism, and liberalism—only the last remains".
https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300223446/why-liberalism-failed
If that reflects the book.... not mentioning socialism and social-democracy...... ???
Makes me wondering and interested.
Liberalism didn't "fail". It was defeated politically. It's not a failure of an ideology that people who spent half a century trying to dismantle something eventually succeeded.
I don't know what Casey and Andy is. I knew he had his fans co-write (or edit, if we're generous) the Martian and I just assumed he stopped doing that for commercial reasons for Artemis. Given how much it stunk (I finished it the other night) I thought that was a safe assumption.You weren't familiar with the Weir creative process? Dang, you should go back and read all 666 strips of Casey and Andy.
As a bit of an expert in the matter I can say that it'd be extremely hard to translate so I have to heartily recommend that you just read the original rather than any translations.Getting on with J.L. Borges' El Aleph.
With a title like that? You don't say.Currently reading Why Liberalism Failed, which is more of a polemic than an argument
Oh ok. Yeah the comic didn't have any comments on it so I was confused as to what you meant.Well, it's how his creative process goes. The comic gets markedly better with time.
Hmmm, there used to be a comment on every strip but most of it got lost.
Anyway, as I said, the comic gets better with time and it's clear that it's a WIP. (Once you get to the arcs the writing gets better and he got a lot of feedback back in the day, even if the art style is still awful.)
I haven't read either The Martian nor Artemis so I couldn't say - perhaps he suffered from deadline fever when writing the latter?
If you think, after reading the whole book, it is interesting to start a thread on that failure, I am happy to join the discussion
My simplistic thoughts so far are that the original liberalism (from around the Enlightenment period) was a tremendous success !!!
The goal was to get rid of the hereditary privileges (aristocracy, absolute monarchy, divine right, etc)
And the new granular unit of society became the individual human citizen, that got innate privileges, a kind of innate divine/natural right (the cluster of and around human rights).
That original goal to get rid of hereditary privileges has been realised for 99%
And BTW in the Yale University press the book was described with: "Of the three dominant ideologies of the twentieth century—fascism, communism, and liberalism—only the last remains".
https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300223446/why-liberalism-failed
If that reflects the book.... not mentioning socialism and social-democracy...... ???
Makes me wondering and interested.
Liberalism didn't "fail". It was defeated politically. It's not a failure of an ideology that people who spent half a century trying to dismantle something eventually succeeded.
With a title like that? You don't say.![]()
No, his argument is that it hasn't. Hereditary privilege continues on through informal means, and is harder to see or critique than aristocratic rights ever were.
Liberalism's 'failure' is, for him, its inability to produce a just or healthy society even though absolutely everyone supports it as the solution to their problems.
Yeah, but he just stole that title from the Propagandhi album.Chomsky's Failed States doesn't claim that the US is a third-world country.
This situation has partially been brought about by the right's appropriation of terms traditionally used to criticize the aristocracy, like "elitism", "entitlement", and so on.
Just or healthy as compared to what? Illiberal societies?
Which right? Reagan right or Trump right? He doesn't have much love for the former.
Compared to anything that liberals claim (i.e. society grows rich if we respect property rights, abolishing sexual norms will liberate people). He's not pining for the old days, he's just saying that, for all of liberalism's historic benefits, it is no longer the answer to anyone's problem.
EDIT: Look, this review gives you a pretty good overview of the book. It's preferably to arguing completely in the dark, I think.