Conservatism Flashcards

1
Q

What did Thomas Hobbes believe regarding human nature?

A
  • Humans are selfish, calculating and competitive.
  • “The condition of man… is a condition of war of everyone against everyone’. (Levithan 1651)
  • Rejected the ‘plastic and malleable’ socialist view of human nature that is can be remoulded given the ‘correct’ society or environment - he believed it was fixed.
  • State of nature would be ‘nasty, short and brutish’.
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2
Q

What did Thomas Hobbes believe regarding society?

A
  • Humans sign up to a ‘social contract’ whereby we render to a ‘soverign’ state to ensure the order that was absent in the state of nature.
  • Moral judgement should be made by an authoritarian state - contrary to Bentham’s utilitarian ‘greatest happiness of the greatest number’ philosophy.
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3
Q

What did Thomas Hobbes believe about the state?

A
  • The role of the state was to prevent the state of nature recurring.
  • State must be autocratic and authoritarian as power that is dispersed leads to more chaos and disorder,
  • Humans deciding for themselves what is right and what is wrong, due to the various opinions, would inevitably lead to conflict.
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4
Q

What was Burke’s view of human nature?

A
  • In Reflections on the Revolutions in France (1790), he stressed mankind’s tendency to fail more than succeed.
  • Thus denounced the idealistic society that the French Revolution presented - based on a utopian - thus unrealistic view of human nature.
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5
Q

What was Burke’s view of society?

A
  • Social change is necessary though should be based on fact (empiricism and tradition) rather than theory and idealism.
  • ‘Little platoons’ - individual cultures tailored to their differing needs and tastes - these autonomous communities would ‘acknowledge, nurture and prune… the crooked timber of humanity’.
  • Human nature leads seamlessly into a social hierarchy - ‘the wiser, stronger and more opulent’ - establish a hierarchy - though they have a ‘paternal’ obligation to care for the poorest.
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6
Q

What did Burke believe regarding the state?

A
  • Believed in an organic state - more akin to a plant than machine - both are beyond reason and planning - policy change must be cautious and pragmatic
  • Would see him favour the hereditary peers in the House of Lords - a view highly prominent within the modern Conservative Party.
  • All ‘organic societies’ have a ruling class that was desireable - they had an obligation to govern in the interests of eveyone - French Aristocracy’s failure to do that led to revolution.
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7
Q

What did Burke believe regarding the economy?

A
  • Economic policy should be based on pragmatic and prudential considerations.
  • Burke showed unwavering support for a ruling class - adulates the idea of ‘trickle down’ ecomomics.
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8
Q

What did Disraeli believe regarding society?

A
  • Believed in paternalism - the idea that the wealthy pass on their wealth to those less fortunate.
  • ‘Noblesse oblige’ - links to the idea of a paternal society,
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9
Q

What did Disraeli believe regarding the state?

A
  • The role of the state was to bring together the two nations; the wealthy and the poor.
  • His ‘one nation’ credentials would see him advocate state provision of welfare.
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10
Q

What did Oakeshott believe regarding human nature?

A
  • Contradicts Hobbesian and Burkean views of human nature in ‘On Being Conservative’ (1952) - humans were ‘fallible but not infallible’ and ‘imperfect but not immoral’.
  • Humans, whilst unable to achieve the perfect societies of other ideologies, they were still able to secure ‘both happiness and pleasure and improvement through the humdrum business of everyday life’.
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11
Q

What did Oakeshott believe about society?

A
  • Emphasised the importance of tradition in society - ‘society’s present direction stems from its past developments’
  • Societal change must be slow not drastic; respectful not contemptuous of the past.
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12
Q

What did Oakeshott believe about the state?

A
  • Largely informed by his views of human nature.
  • Nautical metaphor - state’s role was to ‘keep the ship afloat at all costs’ - states role was to preserve the environment that best allows individuals to achieve prosperity.
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13
Q

What did Oakeshott believe regarding the economy?

A
  • Recognised that free-markets may be volatile - advocated pragmatic regulation from the state - links to the idea of the state keeping the ‘ship afloat’.
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14
Q

Give a criticism of Oakeshott.

A

His ideas were criticised by Nozick when he claimed that the ‘Oakeshott mentality’ was ‘lazy’ and allowed socialist ideas to flourish followng 1945.

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15
Q

What did Rand believe about human nature?

A
  • ‘Objectivism’ was defined in ‘Atlas Shrugged’ as being the ‘concept of man as a heroic being, with his happiness as the moral purpose of his life with productive achievement as his noble activity and reason as his only absolute.’
  • ‘Man is a being of self-made soul’ - contradictory of the Judeo-Christian ideas of ‘original sim’ presented by Hobbes and Burke.
  • ‘Rational selfishness is the ultimate expression of human nature’ - agreed with Hobbes that all humans are selfish but claimed that this was not a bad trait - ‘The Virtue of Selfishness’ (1964)
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16
Q

What did Ayn Rand believe about society?

A
  • ‘Man exists for his own sake, neither sacrificing himself for others nor sacrificing others to himself’.
  • Atomistic society
  • Talented individuals, rather than ambitious government, lay at the heart of society.
  • Contradicts T.H. Green’s idea that society is as necessary to form persons as persons are to form society.
17
Q

What did Rand believe about the state?

A
  • State should be constitutionally limited so as to protect rights.
  • Disagreed with a welfare state - ‘the difference between a welfare state and a totalitarian state is a matter of time’.
18
Q

What did Ayn Rand believe about the economy?

A
  • The only way to achieve ‘objectivism’ was to adopt a system that guaranteed rights protection and laissez faire capitalism.
  • Likened the separation of state and economy to the separation of state and church - lead to ‘peaceful corporation and harmony and justice among men’.
  • ‘Every government interference in the economy consists of giving an unearned benefit… to some men at the expense of others’.
19
Q

What did Nozick believe about human nature?

A
  • Generally optimistic view.
  • The preservation of life, liberty and property ‘could not be taken for granted’ without some formal authority enforcing laws - a concession to the legacy of Hobbes.
20
Q

What did Nozick believe regarding society?

A
  • A minarchist state would allow a multitude of self-sufficient communities to emerge alongside the extent of individual freedom.
  • Each community would be free to exercise their own moral codes and values - concession to Burke’s ‘little platoons’ concept.
21
Q

What did Nozick believe about the state?

A
  • Developed on Hayek’s work in ‘A Road to Serfdom’
  • A welfare state created a ‘dependency culture’.
  • Not an anarchist - believed in a ‘minarchist’ state - its only focus was outsourcing public services to private companies.
22
Q

What did Nozick believe regarding the economy?

A
  • ‘Tax, for the most part, is theft’ - sole authors of their talents should be left alone to realise them - without the intervention of the state.