2. Conservatism
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- Created by: RhiannonHarradine
- Created on: 20-03-17 18:11
Description
What is conservatism?
- Reform in order to conserve
- Value traditional institutions
- Tendency towards impiricism & pragmatism
- Social order & security are the most basic of human needs
- Reactionary (against liberealism & socialism)
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Origins of Conservatism
The Enlightenment
- Reaction against liberalism
- Importance of the Church, hierarchy, the monarchy, social order
- Led by the aristocracy & the landed gentry
Class & Conservatism
- Industrial Revolution led to formation of 3 social classes (working, industrial & aristocracy)
- Disraeli: The landed classes were privileged, but had to now justify their position (noblesse oblige)
- Burke: Power of the ruling class justified: can govern in a disinterested way; accumulated wisdom & were superior in their judegment of others' best interests (paternalism)
- Class has remained important, but conservatism diversified in the latter part of the 20th century (free-market capitalism; individualism)
Conservatism & Ideology
- Conservatism has changed its character in order to provide an effective opposition to change
- 19th Century: Liberal emphasis on minimal state & liberty vs. conservative emphasis on social unity & one-nation conservatism
- 20th Century: Socialist collectivism vs. conservative individualism & competition
- 1930s & 40s: Conservatives adopted classical luberal ideas in order to distance themselves from fascism
- Modern liberalism vs. traditional moral values
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Core Values of Conservatism 1
Human Nature:
- Humans are driven by basic appetites (physical property, power & avoidance of deprivation)
- Changes based on the nature of society
- Burke: The relationship between govt. & the people should be like that between a parent & child (paternalism)
- Individuals are more concerned with their own welfare than that of others. Thatcher: "there is no such thing as society"
Order & Authority:
- Humankind's most basic need is for order & security
- Preservation of order & gradual reform
Tradition & Preservation
- Institutions & values
- Burke: "No generation should ever be so rash as to consider itself superior to its predecessors"
- Accumulated wisdom (democracy of the dead)
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Core Values of Conservatism 2
Inequality
- Natural & inevitable
- Fixed hierarchical syste => individualism
- Total social & economic equality is artificial
- Inequality = dynamism & competition
Organic Society & Hierarchy
- Individuals & institutions are interconnected & interdependent
- Reaction against liberal individualism
- Class system is inevitable - noblesse oblige
- Society is superior to individual interests
Pragmatism
- Flexibility - rejaction of dogma
- Understanding what is best for the people, what is acceptable & will preserve a stable society
Individualism
- Everyone should be presented with a wide range of choices & opportunities
- Implied privacy
- Continuity of morality, law & order & traditions
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Core Values of Conservatism 3
Property:
- 1860s & 70s: property-owning m/c
- Opposition to common ownership
- Resistance to high property taxes
- Law & order (esp. property-related crime)
Opposition to Ideology:
- Society should not be directed towards specific goals
- Resistant to rapid / radical reforms & revolutions
- Excessive attachment to ideology can lead to tyranny
Scepticism & Empiricism:
- Express reservations & doubts about all political movements
- Empiricism: Judging current actions against the experience of the past
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Traditional Conservatism
Two Key Doctrines:
- The organic theory of society & the state
- A mistrust of human nature: it is morally, psychologically & intellectually imperfect
Other Central Themes:
- Tradition: The organic society cannot be severed from its roots; Humans should look to tradition & history as guides to action; Tradition can provide a sense of identity; If something has stood the test of time, then it works
- Authority: An essectial feature of the organic society; A form of social glue that binds people together; Prevents chaos & disorder; Link to wisdom
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The New Right 1
Neo-liberalism:
- Mechanistic / individualsit theory
- A view of human nature as rational & self-seeking
- Radical & reactionary
- Free-market economics
- libertarianism
- principled & doctrinaire thinking
Neo-conservatism:
- Organic / collectivist thinking
- Natural hierarchy & authority
- mistrust of human reason
- reactionary
- authoritarian
- prinicpled & doctrinaire thinking
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The New Right 2
Reasons for rolling back the state:
- They believe the free market is self-regulating
- High taxation amounts to legalised theft
- High public spending fuels inflation
- Nationalised industries are inefficient & uncompetitive
- State welfare undermines self-reliance & individual responsibility & promotes a dependency culture
The New Right Paradox:
- Paradox of "limited but strong" government
- "Limitation of govt. does not make for a weak govt. If you've got the role of govt. clearly set out, then it means very strong govt. in that role. Very strong indeed." - Margaret Thatcher
- "What this country wants is less tax & more law & order" - Margaret Thatcher
- "The trouble with a free-market economy is that it takes so many police to make it work" - Neal Ascherson
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Shared views between Tories & the New Right
Shared conservative beliefs:
- Private property
- Hierarchy
- Law & order
- Christian family values
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