Archive | To the Right

The evolving polity: Darwin and the Right

The evolving polity: Darwin and the Right


In one of the more infamous (and, in all likelihood, forgotten) moments of the Republican primary campaign, three of the eight candidates in a May debate in 2007 raised their hands to assert that they did not believe in evolution. Critics derided the question as poorly formulated and defined, but the moment was widely pounced upon as vindication of the know-nothingism of the GOP, a belief further compounded by a Gallup poll finding that 68 percent of Republicans did not believe in evolution. For conservatives who aim for an intellectual high ground, this was not a promising scene.

Darwin_apeYet it was not always this way. After all, the public debate over the landmark “Scopes Monkey Trial” in 1925 pitted the furious rhetoric of creationist William Jennings Bryan (a populist Democrat, a la John Edwards) against evolution’s defender H.L. Mencken (a democracy-mocking member of the Old Right). In the modern day, some conservative defenders of evolution have become more bold — they argue that not only is evolution compatible with conservatism, but the principles of Darwin’s On the Origin of Species underlie many of the basic assumptions governing conservative thought.

This position has been asserted most vocally by Larry Anhart, who wrote a book entitled Darwinian Conservatism in 2005. “Conservatives need Charles Darwin,” he boldly asserts in the introduction. Citing the works of such luminaries as Hayek, Burke, and Russell Kirk, he backs his thesis that conservatives need Darwin “because a Darwinian science of human nature support conservatives in their realist view of human imperfectibility and their commitment to ordered liberty as rooted in nature, custom, and prudence.”

The similarities between Darwin’s biological thought and conservatism’s political thought are uncanny. Changes in the system arise slowly, and through an unregulated process of trial and error. Creatures and humans adapt to fit niches. Tried and true methods — be they genetic adaptations or institutions — are generally to be trusted until they no longer fit the environment — at which point they slow erode, rather than being systematically removed from the top-down. Just as conservatism defies utopianism and any sort of teleological End, so biological evolution denies any sort of End to which man evolves. For biologists, evolution is simply a means of survival– not a bad way to describe a conservative’s defense of the state.

Here, it is important to distinguish between Arnhart’s conception of Darwin’s thought and the widely, if unfairly, loathed “Social Darwinism” of Herbert Spencer. Where Spencer emphasizes the “survival of the fittest” aspect as it applies to individuals, Arnhart and other Darwinian conservatives emphasize “spontaneous order,” a Hayekian terms that could aptly be used to describe the niching process amongst species. Arnhart points out that is not just humans, but human institutions and creations, that are subject to evolutionary processes. In contrast, “intelligent design” sounds less like an insidious euphemism for backwards pseudoscience, and more like a catch phrase for President-elect Obama’s plan for new regulation of the financial markets.

Arnhart cites and responds to five objections in his work, but these readily boil down to two fundamental concerns. The first is the religious critique, holding that Darwin is merely the St. Paul for atheists and that one cannot adhere to his word and His word at the same time. However, none but the strictest readings of Genesis rule out evolution entirely. Accepting that the “days” of Creation are not to be read as 24 hour periods, there is no reason that evolution and religion cannot exist together. God created the fish and birds, indeed — but the Bible fails to specify the means. Is there any reason that God would not have chosen evolution as his method, rather than a Sunday school finger-pointing festival?

The other concern is that of consequences: now that ‘spontaneous order’ and ‘survival of the fittest’ reign supreme, what is to prevent us from implementing eugenics? From eschewing our traditional principles for crass materialism? Yet in such fears, these critics ignore the second part of Darwinian conservatism. Conservatism, after all, is a bit of a misnomer, as conservatives oppose ideologies — “isms” — of all stripes. Rather, conservative thought represents a temperament, a temperament that stands for prudence against radicalism, for bottom-up development against top-down diktats. Such a temperament cannot allow for eugenic policies, as they must be opposed on the sole basis of the destabilizing effect they will have on society.

Granted, the ideas of a conservatism based in evolutionary thought still lurks as an academic issue on the conservative fringe. Yet even those conservatives concerned with the day-to-day affairs of opposing the new Obama order would be wise to reconsider their antimony towards Darwin and his thoughts. Ironically, to save the religious roots of American society that conservatives have bravely defended, they must embrace an approach to governance and society that draws many of its formulations from Darwin’s theories.

Posted in Current Affairs, To the Right2 Comments

Should Clinton be subpoenaed — for his war crimes?

Should Clinton be subpoenaed — for his war crimes?

Black Hawk, Somalia

Jeffery Goldberg raises an interesting question relating to the widespread death of Gazans:

This number, nine hundred, is large, and it brought to mind another conflict between a Western army and a Muslim insurgency, the onehttp://thekosmo.com/wp-admin/post.php?action=edit&post=799 portrayed in the book and movie “Black Hawk Down.” Roughly one thousand Somalis were killed by American forces over the twenty hours or so of the First Battle of Mogadishu (eighteen American soldiers, of course, were also killed).

I couldn’t get an accurate read on how many of those Somalis were civilians, so I called my colleague, Mark Bowden, who wrote the book. He said that eighty percent of the Somali deaths were of civilian. Eighty percent! Roughly eight hundred people.  I asked Bowden if he thought this meant that American forces in Somalia had committed war crimes.

You can read Bowden’s answer here, but the short summary is that no, it wasn’t a war crime, and that there really is very little difference between Hamas and the Mogadishu militants. However, this raises an interesting hypocrisy among many on the Left: while believing that Israel is in the wrong and is committing war crimes, they also believe that Bush committed war crimes during his tenure and should be investigated accordingly. Yet if we put these these two axioms together, it becomes apparent that Clinton, too, and in fact anyone who has authorized military force resulting in widespread civilian deaths. In fact, Clinton not only was responsible for civilian deaths in Somalia, but in Iraq as well.

To steal from a paraphrased comment by Sonny Bunch, “All war is a crime.”  Sometimes, sadly, it is a necessary crime; yet its inherently criminal nature should make nations serious consider the horror of the war option, and to avoid it as much as possible.

Image courtesy of Flickr user ctsnow.

Posted in Current Affairs, To the Right0 Comments

A silver lining on the empty petrol lines?

A silver lining on the empty petrol lines?

Bulgaria Flag

From the New York Times:

Only a year ago, the country’s president, Georgi Parvanov, who is pro-Russian, declared that Bulgaria had “hit a grand slam” after the country signed several energy deals with Moscow aimed at ensuring its gas supply, including one for a pipeline that would connect Russia and Italy and run through Bulgaria. Last week in Varna, a Bulgarian port city on the Black Sea, residents protested the gas stoppage in front of the Russian Consulate, holding banners that read, “Stop Putin’s Gas War.”

Alexander Bozhkov, a former Bulgarian deputy prime minister who is currently chairman of the Center for Economic Development here, said the crisis had laid bare for Bulgaria the enormous human and economic cost of relying on Russia. He predicted that it would result in the electoral defeat of the Socialist government and that it would reorient the country firmly toward the European Union and Washington. [Emphasis added -- EML]

Meanwhile, it doesn’t appear that the Gazprom-EU standoff is coming any closer to a close. Orientation with the West is broadly good, but is good insofar as the EU/NATO isn’t expanded beyond the point of recognition and usefulness, little more than a limited UN with a currency (once Turkey joins, why not Libya? Why not Canada?). It seems as though the former Soviet satellite states that have defied the Mother Bear — Ukraine, Georgia, the Baltic states, among others — would be well-served in forming an association (a mini-Entente, if you will), firmly allied with the EU but separate from it insofar as interests of these states’ independence rise above their necessity in joining the Eurozone, adhering to bureaucratic standards, etc.

Drawing maps, this Recovering Communist Vassals Anonymous association is made awkward by the fact that (a) Georgia is geographically a world away from the other, properly European states, and (b) Belarus, essentially a Soviet vestige, inconveniently separates the Baltic states from the rest. We do have airplanes, but borders help for relationships.


Image courtesy of Flickr reader Klearchos Kapoutsis

Posted in Current Affairs, To the Right0 Comments

Page 10 of 26« First...8910111220...Last »
Advert

The Kosmopolitan Online is:

Published with support from The Center for American Progress/Campus Progress

Archives