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    Joe Perez is a writer striving to take Integral approaches to issues in ordinary life, culture, politics, sexuality, and spirituality. A graduate of Harvard University and The Divinity School at the University of Chicago, his books are Soulfully Gay (Integral Books, 2007) and Rising Up (Lulu, 2006). Read more...

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  • Posts Tagged ‘progressivism’

    The false idolatrous spirit of progressivism?

    Friday, July 18th, 2008

    Chris Dierkes at Indistinct Union writes:

    The Spirit of the Lord, blowing where it will, renews not only the face of the earth but the faces on the earth, the faces of the earth.  This is worthy of adoration. 

    There is renewal of that which has been forgotten and should never have been.  Renewal of that which is held in oppression when the yoke is lifted and that which was enslaved returns to its pristine natural vigor.  There is renewal as new creation, re-newing everything that was prior to the truly new. 

    Christian Ethics and the spiritual/religious path more broadly conceived should fundamentally be about renewal and re-creation.  It is too often about power, prestige, and place.  Far too often concerned not with renewal–which may mean letting things die a natural death so others can take its place–but rather with conservation (in the negative sense).   Holding on past time. 

    But renewal without adoration becomes too easily the false idolatrous spirit of progressivism and worse revolutionary fervor and worse still violence.  Change for change’s sake, meeting the new boss whose the same as the old boss, is no answer, no virtue, religious or otherwise. 

    Few progressives would recognize themselves as advocating change for change’s sake, nor with wanting a new boss the same as the old. Yet too often social change movements have turned against individual liberty, towards fascism, repression, and an impoverishment of the human spirit. Religious social movements have fared no better, so far as I know.

    What I think Chris is getting at is that the impulse to change what’s wrong with the world must be balanced by an impulse to bless what’s right about the world. Whether that blessing impulse comes from a religious sensibility or not, I think it makes a huge difference in the real world. Progressives who fail to bless frequently find themselves consumed with bitterness, cynicism, and ultimately hypocrisy. Progressive movements which fail to bless may inadvertently destroy the meaning-giving, structure-producing, and discipline-enforcing contexts in which human development naturally occurs. Renewal is half blessing, half inspiration for change.

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    Thoughts on Ross Douthat’s definition of conservatism

    Thursday, June 19th, 2008

    One of the most intriguing — and palatable, if I may speak freely — conservative thinkers writing today is The Atlantic’s Ross Douthat. Recently, he attempted his own definition of conservatism:

    I don’t think of conservatism as a philosophy…. It’s a practical principle, yes, but I think a better way of putting it would be to call it an approach to political and social controversies, under which the fact that a given piece of furniture (i.e. a policy or institution) has suited in the past - and the fact that it is your piece of furniture, which belonged to your father and grandfather as well - gives the case for keeping it greater weight that it might enjoy if you simply tallied the chair or sofa’s good qualities and compared them to the really fabulous, amazing, but still-hypothetical qualities of the fancy new one that might replace it. Now certain political philosophies may be effectively conservative in certain times and places, because they function as defenses of the existing furniture - thus Lockean liberalism is an effectively conservative philosophy in contemporary America in a way that it wasn’t in the 17th century, and thus many contemporary American conservatives consider the Enlightenment, at least in its the Scottish and English manifestations, to be the patrimony that they’re charged with defending. But conservatism itself (again, under my admittedly idiosyncratic definition) is not a philosophy or an ideology; it’s an approach, a bias, or a political style.

    The notion that conservatism is actually a style rather than an ideology hadn’t occurred to me, nor had I seriously imagined that a leading conservative writer would actually hold such conservatism isn’t a political philosophy. But, novelty aside, the idea is growing on me. Conservatism as a style overcomes a number of problems, especially the tricky issue that conservatives can’t agree on what it is that they all believe or have in common.

    Ken Wilber, as many of my readers certainly know, argues that the political right is distinguished from the political left by virtue of its doctrine that the source of human suffering is in the interiors of individuals. Put simply, people suffer because human nature is selfish, lazy, and mean. If people suffer, it’s because they deserve it.

    But if Douthat is correct, then Wilber’s view of the supposedly core conservative doctrine is really just one more way of intellectually justifying a much more fundamental disposition towards life. That is, I would summarize, the disposition that the case for keeping a tradition is given greater weight simply because it’s your tradition.

    I’d like to put Douthat’s definition into a frame of reference that he wouldn’t be comfortable with, but seems reasonable to me. Douthat seems to be arguing that the conservative approach is to privilege the maintenance of smaller circles of concern over greater circles of concern at all levels of consciousness. At the egocentric level, conservatism privileges the maintenance of egoic structures and family structures. At the ethnocentric level, conservatism privileges the maintenance of tribal or national structures. It stands to reason that at the worldcentric level, conservatism privileges the maintenance of global structures (as opposed to Kosmocentric structures), and so on.

    Douthat’s definition of conservatism is worth stewing over. It may also invite another consideration: What if the definition of an integral approach to politics is that it’s “not a philosophy or an ideology; it’s an approach, a bias, or a political style.” What might that style look like? Integralists inclined towards “include and transcend” might be rather conservative in temperament, whereas those inclined towards “include and transcend” might be rather progressive. Indeed, I’m inclined to think that there is not one integral political style but at least two major styles, one emphasizing Eros (progressivism) and the other Agape (conservatism).

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