Thursday, May 27, 2021
On the Pandemic
Thursday, May 20, 2021
Systemic Racism
Thursday, May 13, 2021
Epistemology and Chronology
Epistemology of the Future: Today’s orthodoxy adheres to an epistemology of the future. The idea is that things are always on an upward course and so newer is necessarily better by virtue of being closer to the future. Reject old ideas and institutions (the American Founding, Great books) and embrace whatever is the latest, since it’s necessarily the greatest (tech companies, wokism). The key to being correct on any given issue is simply identifying trends: see which way the winds are blowing and then conform to those fads. In a Darwinian sense, there is continuous improvement so being closer to the future means being more correct.
Epistemology of the Present: I prefer the epistemology of the present, which evaluates ideas and institutions on the basis of reason and evidence. Truth is independent of age, and we determine belief based on visible evidence in the here and now, as in science.
This shouldn’t be controversial, and if people thought about it, they would agree that a present, scientific, rational approach is better than the epistemology of the past or the epistemology of the future, but it’s remarkable how much those mistaken epistemologies have captured our public consciousness, probably because each one easily attaches to narratives justifying our two political tribes.
Monday, May 10, 2021
Anti-Racism, Anti-Communism
Friday, May 7, 2021
Secession: Why it Might Happen, Why it Might Succeed
Why it might succeed: the new orthodoxy is fundamentally self-contradictory. It is at once radically in favor of expanding state power (to achieve “social justice,” to “end racism,” to “enforce gender equality,” to “achieve socialism”), but at the same time radically opposed to the violent means by which state power is enforced (police and military), and radically opposed to the forces of unification that hold a nation together (e.g., patriotism, national symbols, common education). This means that they will expand state power to enforce their orthodoxy, even as they weaken the power of enforcement and the desire of the public to comply.
This is the first time that I am aware of in human history where this paradox has existed. Nationalism, Socialism, and militarism generally go together (as with Hitler, Stalin, and Mao), but they are fundamentally at odds in the new orthodoxy. Tribe-left is hostile to nationalism and militarism, but supportive of socialism.
The first attempt at secession (1861) didn’t succeed because Lincoln was at once wanting to expand state power to end slavery (a correct use of expanded state power to achieve social justice), but also willing to use the ultimate means of enforcement of state power (the military) and the symbols of nationalism (as in the Gettysburg Address) to achieve his goals. Our current tribe-left has no such consistency meaning they could fail where Lincoln succeeded.