This is my attempt to understand Conservatives. I myself am a progressive, though I don't know why. I'm also an INTP 'Rational' knowledge seeker.
My goal is to understand people who have a different worldview. Supposedly we all live in the same world, but different people have in their minds different models of the world and how the world works. We need these models in our minds so we can make decisions about what to do and how to interact with the world. But our models differ even though we all live in the same world. That's fascinating to me.
I used to think a person's worldview was just their opinion, but now I'm slowly realizing it's much more. A person's worldview is their belief of how the world works upon which they make all their decisions on what to do. A person's worldview is based on their entire life's experience; what they've seen, what they've been told, what they've read, everything.
I'm slowly beginning to realize even though we all supposedly live in the same world, we all create our own worldview, and it's quite possible for there to be many strikingly different worldviews which conflict with one another.
It's also psychologically traumatizing for a person to change their worldview. (If it wasn't people wouldn't have a solid worldview and they wouldn't be able to cope with the world, so I opine.) People can change their worldview; for example some Christians leave the faith and become non-Christians, but the change initially leaves them very unsettled. There is a period of adjustment they go through. Another example, I changed my worldview when I realized Santa Claus didn't exist. It was a big change to my worldview, and took some time to get used to (though not really traumatizing). Another example, I changed my worldview when I realized Jesus never existed. The whole story is a myth. I originally took the evemerist view that Jesus was a person whose story became embellished to the point he was made a deity. When I changed my worldview I was unsettled for about two months, even though I'm not a Christian.
So my goal now is to understand other people whose worldview is different from mine. Why is theirs different? Why do I have the worldview I have? Was I born with it? Did I learn it? At what age? Has it changed over the years? Where do other people get their worldview from? I have a "knowledge seeking" personality (INTP 'Rational') so I'm just compelled to ask these questions and seek out answers.
The quest to understand starts with the following two books:
Year: 1996 (2nd edition 2002). “Contemporary American Politics is about worldview. Conservatives
simply see the world differently than do progressives, and both often have a difficult time
understanding accurately what the other’s worldview is.” Lakoff explains
that Conservatives and Progressives have two very different concepts of Morality. This is
an excellent book for anyone wanting to understand the other side's point of view.
See a lecture given by George Lakoff at
http://www.uctv.tv/library-popup.asp?showID=11194
This book takes work to understand, so
here is an outline of the main points in the book:
The next book describes how different people's priorities are focused in fundamentally
different ways.
A classic book on the 16 different personality types identified by Myers-Briggs.
Myers-Briggs divides personality types into four major categories, with each category
having four subcategories, for a total of 16 different personality types. Understanding
that other people actually think in different ways from you is initially a hard concept
to learn, but eventually you'll understand why most other people seem to be different
from you—it's because they are. Again, there is no "right" personality type, there
are just different personalities. Also see www.keirsey.com
Also see
Presidential Temperament: The Unfolding of Character in the Forty Presidents of the United States
by Ray Choiniere, David Keirsey.
Year: 1992.
A good companion which gives real life examples of the various character and temperament
types and further descriptions of the various types.
Two Concepts of Morality
In my recent studies I've discovered quite to my surprise
that according to George Lakoff there are two completely different concepts of Morality. One
is "Morality is Empathy;" we care about what hurts others. This is
the progressive view. The other is "Morality is Obedience;" to a set of
rules, such as a list of sins you're not supposed to do. This is the
conservative view.
Now I've been struggling to understand this dichotomy. It occurs to
me that maybe children need a list of rules because they're too
young to understand Empathy, and as we grow into adults some of us
understand "Morality is Empathy" and switch to that, while others
for whatever reason cling to the set of rules and never grow up.
(This guess will probably prove to be wrong.)
Conservatives and Progressives make different assumptions about the nature of children
in particular and human beings in general.1
(Most of the following attributes are extracted from Lakoff's book) | |
CONSERVATIVE | PROGRESSIVE |
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Conservatives are SJ Guardians?
My first insight is there appears to be a connection between conservative thought as
described by Lakoff and the SJ 'Guardian' personality type described by Keirsey. I do not
believe all Guardians are conservative, but perhaps many conservatives are
Guardians who don't understand there are other personality types. Conservatives classify
all these other people as immoral. (SJ Guardians make up about 40% of
the population.) However, there are SP Artisans who were/are Republican, supposedly conservative.
Ronald Reagan was an SP Artisan. And Arnold Schwarzenegger is SP Artisan and Republican.
There are also SJ Guardians who are progressive. President Jimmy Carter was an SJ Guardian
Monitor (according to the book
Presidential Temperament: The Unfolding of Character in the Forty Presidents of the United States
by Ray Choiniere & David Keirsey),
and he was a democrat, thus I assume progressive, though I was too young at the time to
make the distinction.
So far no conservatives have identified with George Lakoff's description of a conservative. It makes me wonder if Lakoff didn't describe a conservative then what did he describe? He's certainly an intelligent person, a cognitive scientist and linguist, and he went to all this trouble because he realized he didn't understand what conservatives were saying, and as a linguist that was embarrassing to him.
One hypothesis I have is Lakoff is an NT Rational, because they are the kind of people
who are fascinated by what they don't understand and will do research to learn (same with
me). And, he read a lot of books written by SJ Guardians, because they are the kind of
people who are likely to write books about how they think people ought to behave. He
successfully extracted the SJ Guardian philosophy from these books, and not identifying
with it since he's not an SJ Guardian, he decided that must be the philosophy of
conservatives whom he also does not identify with (he's a progressive). I'm guessing Lakoff
is not familiar with temperament theory and the four basic types, and thus did not
recognize the SJ Guardian way of thinking when he encountered it.
The Guardian (SJ) Socializer Parent (from Keirsey, pg. 278)
Guardian parents are mainly concerned with socializing their
children. They would teach them the customs and conventions of their
society, and would pass on the attitudes of good citizenship, most of
which can be neatly summarized in the twelve points of Boy and Girl
Scout Law. Scouts are to be: trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly,
courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, clean, brave, and
reverent. Guardian parents want their children (whether they join
Scouts or not) to do their best to do their duty, and thus to be
increasingly helpful and productive at school, at church, at social
functions, and certainly at gatherings of the extended family—to
become fully a part of their communities. But Guardian parents also
want their children to value their duty and to want to obey.
Dutifulness and obedience for the wrong reasons are not acceptable. SJ
parents are far more concerned with this project than they are with the
concerns of other types, that is, with fostering their children's
venturesomeness, their positive self-image, or their individuality.
Indeed, the way they usually see it is that fully socialized children
are in a much better position to become venturesome, to feel
increasingly good about themselves, or to establish their independence
than those who are not well socialized, a point made abundantly clear
by Alfred Adler and his disciple Rudolph Dreikurs.
Among the Guardians, Administrators
(ESTJs & ISTJs) tend to be strict parents because their main
concern is that their children do what is right and not do what is
wrong. They regard it as their obligation to the family and the
community to keep their children under their watchful eye lest they
stray from the fold. Their children must behave in a seemly manner and
must not do things that reflect badly on the family. These are the
parents who believe that punishment is the best way to keep
their kids in line, and they will at times resort to corporal
punishment to get their point across—to spare the rod, they
believe, is to spoil the child.
Authority (Keirsey pg. 98)
Guardians trust authority. They believe in a hierarchical structure
of authority—rule from the top down. They believe there should be
subordination and superordination, that the actions of members of
communities, schools, churches, and corporations, but also of families,
should be governed by those in the highest positions. SJs tend to take
the word of authorities in matters of education and
medicine—their unquestioned assumption is "the doctor knows
best." Moreover, SJs have an abiding trust in the heads of church and
state, and popes and pontiffs, presidents and prime ministers, and
royalty of all types seem to capture their trust and their loyalty. And
many SJs believe that an even higher authority keeps an
eye on us.
Guardians are preoccupied with Morality (Keirsey pg. 87). They are probably the ones who lament:
"The country is in a state of moral decline and there is no respect for authority anymore!"
"We need "Moral Mission Statements!"
"Postmodern relativism has led us into a nightmare of uncertainty and moral chaos!"
Conservatives are obsessed with obedience to authority. This isn't correct, as there are INTP conservatives. I think I'm confusing different usages of the concept of authority. There's authority related to the natural order. Then there's authority related to one's competence in a given field of expertise.
INTP 'Rationals' like myself are not impressed with
authority related to one's competence in a given field of expertise,
because we posses the ability to examine any statement made
to determine if it is rational and consistent. If the authority is
wrong we'll spot the error. We refuse blind obedience to authority,
because we possess the ability to see for ourselves. "Architects
[INTPs] exhibit the greatest precision in thought and language of all
the types. They tend to see distinctions and inconsistencies in thought
and language instantaneously, and can detect contradictions in
statements no matter when or where the statements were made. Only
sentences that are coherent carry weight with them, and thus authority
derived from office, credential, or celebrity does not impress them.
Like the ENTPs, INTPs are devastating in debate or any form of
adversarial discussion, their skill in differential analysis giving
them an enormous advantage in discrediting their opponents' arguments
and in structuring their own. They regard all discussions as a search
for understanding, and believe their function is to eliminate
inconsistencies, no matter who is guilty of them." (Keirsey, pg. 206)
(INTPs are found in only 1% of the population.) "INTPs detect
contradictions in statements no matter how distant in space or time the
contradictory statements were produced. ... INTPs can concentrate
better than any other type." (Keirsey, Bates pg. 186)
QUOTES
“There are many other examples of DNA-mediated delight in activities tending toward adaptive fitness -- including parental love for children, joy in exploration and discovery, courage, camaraderie, and altruism.”—Carl Sagan, Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors, pg. 224
“In a laboratory setting, macaques were fed if they were willing to pull a chain and electrically shock an unrelated macaque whose agony was in plain view through a one-way mirror. Otherwise, they starved. After learning the ropes, the monkeys frequently refused to pull the chain; in one experiment only 13% would do so -- 87% preferred to go hungry. One macaque went without food for nearly two weeks rather than hurt its fellow. Macaques who had themselves been shocked in previous experiments were even less willing to pull the chain. ... By conventional human standards, these macaques -- who have never gone to Sunday school, never heard of the Ten Commandments, never squirmed through a single junior high school civics lesson -- seem exemplary in their moral grounding and their courageous resistance to evil. Among the macaques, at least in this case, heroism is the norm. If the circumstances were reversed, and captive humans were offered the same deal by macaque scientists, would we do as well?”—Carl Sagan, Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors, pg. 117
“Characteristically, [John Stuart] Mill had hit on an important question: Are people
inherently bad? Those who believe so have tended, like Samuel Smiles, to be morally
conservative—to stress self-denial, abstinence, taming the beast within. Those
who believe not have tended, like Mill, to be morally progressive, fairly relaxed about how
people choose to behave. Evolutionary psychology, young though it is, has already shed
much light on this debate. Its findings are at once comforting and unsettling.
“Altruism, compassion, empathy, love, conscience, the
sense of justice—all of these things, the things that hold society together, the
things that allow our species to think so highly of itself, can now confidently be said
to have a firm genetic basis. That's the good news. The bad news is that, although these
things are in some ways blessings for humanity as a whole, they didn't evolve for the
"good of the species" and aren't reliably employed to that end. Quite the contrary:
it is now clear that ever how (and precisely why) the moral sentiments are used
with brutal flexibility, switched on and off in keeping with self-interest; and how
naturally oblivious we often are to this switching. In the new view, human beings are
a species splendid in their array of moral equipment, tragic in their propensity to
misuse it, and pathetic in their constitutional ignorance of the
misuse.”—Robert Wright The Moral Animal: Why we are the way we are:
The New Science of Evolutionary Psychology.
“Children of authoritarian parents tend to lack social competence
with peers: They tend to withdraw, not to take social initiative,
to lack spontaneity. Although they do not behave differently from
children of other types of parents on contrived measures of
resistance to temptation, on projective tests and parent reports
they do show lesser evidence of "conscience" and are more likely to
have external, rather than internal, moral orientation in
discussing what is the "right" behavior in situations of moral
conflict. In boys, there is evidence that motivation for
intellectual performance is low. Several studies link authoritarian
parenting with low self-esteem and external locus of control.
“Whereas the parents of aggressive children tend to be
authoritarian, children of authoritarian parents may or may not be
aggressive, and so far the aspects of family interaction that are
important in determining whether a child of authoritarian parenting
will be subdued or "out of control" have not been satisfactorily
identified.”—(B2, Maccoby and Martin, p. 44, as quoted by Lakoff, pg. 354)
“The authoritative-reciprocal pattern of parenting is associated with children's being independent, "agentic" in both the cognitive and social spheres, socially responsible, able to control aggression, self-confident, and high in self-esteem.”—(B2, Maccoby and Martin, p. 48, as quoted by Lakoff, pg. 356)
“Single moms are stupid. Not all are stupid. But plenty are. Too many of them are stupid, lazy and selfish.”—Phil Luciano, columnist for the Peoria journal Star (Illinois) (9/20/05)
"I kind of see things in black and white terms. I know there's gray up here (pointing to her brain), but right here (pointing to her heart) I really see things as a struggle between right and wrong."—Nancy Grace, anchor, CNN Headline News, Colbert Report 1/9/06.)
Morality Is Empathy. Moral Action Is Nurturance.
prize faith over facts, to rely on the word of authorities rather than their own judgment, and to disregard arguments that run counter to their beliefs. http://www.ebonmusings.org/atheism/thoughts.html
One's thoughts should be set free to explore wherever they please, to examine one's beliefs from every angle, and even to consider the possibility that they are not true — because if they are true, they will inevitably stand up to reality and so there is no harm in asking the question. On the other hand, if they are not true, we should want to know that so we can replace them with something better.
In Aristotle's Ethics, it's clear that the ease and pleasure with which good acts are done, the absence of moral effort, is for him the symptom of virtue. (Osborne, pg. 25)
During the civil rights movement (1960's), white southerners worldview was that blacks could not be educated beyond a 6th grade education. Blacks were simply intellectually inferior. And blacks were happy with their lot. It was only those northerners who wanted to mess things up by forcing school integration. Putting blacks in white schools would only drag down the quality of education. Northerners worldview was that skin color has nothing to do with intelligence, blacks could be just as smart as whites. The black community carefully chose nine of their brightest students to integrate with the white school. What do we do with two conflicting worldviews? Obviously the southern worldview was wrong, as we now have numerous black college graduates who are very bright. Conflict boils down to a clash between two conflicting worldviews.
Don't pray in my schools and I won't think in your church.
"common sense rules of parenting that worked well in this country for generations" --Arthur Sido (Amazon.com)
"I can't watch most modern day cartoons with my kids without being thoroughly disgusted with the values and content. These classic episodes portray good vs evil kind of values." -- M. Stephens (Amazon.com)
"Doesn't your child deserve the same instruction and discipline that laid the foundations for generations of parents and grand parents to achieve in the face of despair and uncertainty, and ultimately build the greatest country in the world, The United States of America? Let someone else's kid be a guinea pig for "modern enlightened parenting". Relearn what has been forgotten." -- M. Stephens (Amazon.com)
In a day of widespread drug use, immorality, sexually transmitted diseases, vandalism, and violence... (Amazon.com)
"Every child needs boundaries and limits and they even crave it.." -- True only of SJ Guardian children? (Amazon.com)
"This book shows the perfect way to raise a child contrary to progressive & foolish ideas a child's spirit won't be broken instead it will teach them discipline, respect for law, authority & others in case you disagree just watch the news & see how must of criminals are young, *wake up America*" (Amazon.com)
"I think the permissive attitudes are what is wrong in the world
(particularly the U.S.) today." (Amazon.com)
Conservatives believe Progressives "want to give it away." (Whatever "it" is...)
Progressives see themselves as wanting to make it accessible to everyone, which is
not exactly the same as "giving it away."
I see conservatives as the ones who want to keep the status quo. So when slavery was
the status quo the conservatives supported slavery and wanted to keep it. No changes. Then
conservatievs wanted to keep racism. Conservatives were against women's liberation. And
now conservatives are against homosexuals. Conservatives don't want change. Progressives want
change for the better. Progressives fought hard to end slavery, end racism, give women the
right to vote, and are now fighting for gay rights. (It's not a choice. Homosexuals are
born that way.)
Of course I'm sure Conservatives don't define themselves this way, and Conservatives don't see Progressives the way Progressives define themselves.
"we are far more dependent on other members of our species that any other ape or monkey. We are more like ants or termites who live as slaves to their societies. We define virtue almost exclusively as pro-social behavior and vice as anti-social behavior. One of the things that marks humanity out from other species and accounts for our ecological success, is our collection of hyper-social instincts." I might add that this is exactly what the economist Joseph Schumpeter had in mind when he referred to capitalism as a naturally occuring spontaneous ordering, a concept anathema to the collectivist, group oriented, anti-individualist souls on the political left. Hence, they call Ridley a Thatcherite while ignoring the evidence of this book which leads to an understanding of the correctness of Schumpeter's inescapable conclusion. Mutual cooperation and trust on an individual level lead to far greater surpluses for all than any concentration of power laid in the hands of government bureaucrats.
Matt Ridley is all grown up, and what interests him in this book is not so much the
origin of virtue (although he does get heavily into that) but the restoration of the
conservative agenda. Alas. He argues from biology (our nature) to what ought to be
politically. This is doubly "alas" because Ridley preaches mightily against this very
delusion, calling it a "reverse naturalistic fallacy"
--Dennis Littrell (Amazon.com) on Ridley's "The Origins of Virtue"
The questions continue. I haven't figured it out yet...
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