Stasis, Competition, and the ‘Noble Lie’: Metic Mettle in Plato’s Republic

2018 ◽  
pp. 98-119
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Patrick J. Deneen
Keyword(s):  

This book concludes with a discussion of the failures of liberalism and how the “Noble Lie” of liberalism continues to be believed and defended by those who benefit from it. It envisions two scenarios: the perpetuation of liberalism that, becoming fully itself, operates in forms opposite to its purported claims about liberty, equality, justice, and opportunity; and the end of liberalism, to be replaced by another regime. It also outlines three steps to avoid the grimmer scenarios of a life after liberalism. First, the achievements of liberalism must be acknowledged, and the desire to “return” to a preliberal age must be abandoned. Second, we must outgrow the age of ideology. Third, out of such experience and practice, a better theory of politics and society might ultimately emerge. The book also emphasizes the theory of consent as one of liberalism's most damaging fictions and explains how we can build a counter-anticulture.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (03) ◽  
pp. 368-373
Author(s):  
Robert Ferrell
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 140 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-30
Author(s):  
Cameron Harwick

If there exist no incentive or selective mechanisms that make cooperation in large groups incentive-compatible under realistic circumstances, functional social institutions will require subjective preferences to diverge from objective payoffs – a “noble lie.” This implies the existence of irreducible and irreconcilable “inside” and “outside” perspectives on social institutions; that is, between foundationalist and functionalist approaches, both of which have a long pedigree in political economy. The conflict between the two, and the inability in practice to dispense with either, has a number of surprising implications for human organizations, including the impossibility of algorithmic governance, the necessity of discretionary rule enforcement in the breach, and the difficulty of an ethical economics of institutions. Leeson and Suarez argue that “some superstitions, and perhaps many, support self-governing arrangements. The relationship between such scientifically false beliefs and private institutions is symbiotic and socially productive” (2015, 48). This paper stakes out a stronger claim: that something like superstition is essential for any governance arrangement, self- or otherwise. Specifically, we argue that human social structure both requires and maintains a systematic divergence between subjective preferences and objective payoffs, in a way that usually (though in principle does not necessarily) entails “scientifically false beliefs” for at least a subset of agents. We will refer to the basis of such preferences from the perspective of those holding them as an “inside perspective,” as opposed to a functionalist-evolutionary explanation of their existence, which we will call an “outside perspective.” Drawing on the theory of cooperation, we then show that the two perspectives are in principle irreconcilable, discussing some implications of that fact for political economy and the prospects of social organization.


2020 ◽  
pp. 009059172097780
Author(s):  
Arash Davari

This article reevaluates the Iranian polymath Ali Shariati’s most controversial lectures. Scholarly consensus reads 1969’s Ummat va Imāmat as derivative, comprising an imitation of Sukarno’s guided democracy and hence an apology for postcolonial authoritarian rule. Shariati’s rhetorical performance suggests otherwise. The lectures address a postcolonial iteration of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s paradox of founding—a call for self-determination alongside the external intervention needed to prepare for it in the wake of moral dispositions accrued during colonization. Shariati proposes to resolve the problem of enduring colonial domination by citing a fabricated French professor, a foreigner, as an authoritative source. He practices a noble lie, believable because it draws from colonized sensibilities but laden with hints encouraging audiences to see past it. If audiences develop the requisite ability to decipher the lie, Shariati wagers, they at once develop the autonomy implied by self-determination. On these grounds, Shariati theorizes the paradox of politics as decolonization.


Zygon® ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 409-416
Author(s):  
Neil J. Elgee
Keyword(s):  

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