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Lecture Note 01

This document provides an introduction to the ideologies of liberalism, socialism, and nationalism that shaped the modern world from the 18th to 20th centuries. It discusses how liberalism emerged from the Enlightenment era and revolutions in America and France. Socialism developed in reaction to liberalism, and nationalism was a reaction opposing liberalism's universalism. The document then examines the economic and political ascendancy of the West and the challenges to liberalism from socialism, nationalism, and other contesting ideologies over the past 200 years.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views

Lecture Note 01

This document provides an introduction to the ideologies of liberalism, socialism, and nationalism that shaped the modern world from the 18th to 20th centuries. It discusses how liberalism emerged from the Enlightenment era and revolutions in America and France. Socialism developed in reaction to liberalism, and nationalism was a reaction opposing liberalism's universalism. The document then examines the economic and political ascendancy of the West and the challenges to liberalism from socialism, nationalism, and other contesting ideologies over the past 200 years.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CCHU 9068:

SHAPING OUR WORLD: LIBERALISM,


SOCIALISM, AND NATIONALISM

Y C R Wong
1 February 2020
PPT Note 01

IntroducJon to Ideologies
Shaping Our World
Modern Era 18th – 20th Century

• Course on PoliJcal Philosophy of Modern Era


—poliJcal liberalism, economic capitalism
• Three most influenJal ideologies:
• Liberalism the first centerpiece ideology is
universalist
• Socialism a reacJon against liberalism, and is
also universalist
• NaJonalism another reacJon to liberalism,
but is non-universalist and tribalist/naJvist
• All three are modern poliJcal ideologies,
gradually displaced European feudal and
monarchical order under Christendom that
dominated 800 years, the Medieval Dark Ages
• Resulted in economic, poliJcal and military
ascendancy of the West, and spread across
the world
• Culture: individualisJc, urban, industrial,
progress, private property, market oriented
Early Modern Era 15th – 18th Century

• Liberalism has roots in early modern era


• Influenced by Black Death, value free poliJcs,
Renaissance, ReformaJon, scienJfic
discoveries, humanism, religious skepJcism,
faith in human progress, and belief in science
and knowledge to advance human condiJon
• Early modern era rebelled against European
Christendom, feudal and monarchical order, return
to wisdom of ancient Greek philosophy and Roman
law, knowledge is virtue
• Liberalism was child of the Enlightenment Era:
– American & French RevoluJons of 1776 & 1789
– Rise of the world market economy/global
capitalism
– Culture of urban life, individualism, bourgeois
values, liberty & equality
Average global GDP per capita over the last
2000 years in constant dollars
1500-1820

• In the first 300 grew at 0.2% pa, slow growth, not


stagnaJon
• Discovery of the New World and other
civilizaJons
• New resources were discovered and trade grew
• QuesJon: Different cultures, different values, is
this backwardness or just differences?
• From healthy skepJcism to civilizing
backwardness? Ascendancy of Western values
• Is backwardness now moral backwardness?
World average GDP per capita 1500-2000
1820-2020

• In the next 200 years rapid economic growth


2.0% pa occurred with the Industrial
RevoluJon
• Demise of agriculture, rise of manufacturing &
services, urban life and alienaJon
• GlobalizaJon and technological progress
• Liberal values undergo transformaJon from
seeing differences as “sheer backwardness” to
“diversity, dignity, and (re-)imagined idenJty”
Great Divergence and Convergence

• Rise of the West precipitated a total


rebalancing of the economic share of world
GDP from China and India to a few Western
naJons (including Japan) and especially the
USA aler 1820, process reversed aler 1980
• 200 years of economic growth brought social
poliJcal disrupJons
• Socialism/communism and naJonalism
contested liberalism & capitalism’s record of
progress
Share of World GDP 1-2008
• Rise of colonialism, imperialism, many
empires in Europe collapsed, two world wars
(1914-18, 1939-45), Great Depression
(1929-39), reforming liberalism & capitalism,
• Cold War and the Berlin Wall collapses in 1989
• Downfall of the Soviet Union (15 states
independent) & Yugoslavia (7 states) and the
Triumph of Liberal Capitalism??
• Another idea is conservaJsm, to be
disJnguished from reacJonary, also mounted
an important criJcism of liberalism
• Primary interest is the main ideologies and
trace their emergence and conflict
• Knowing the past will help us understand the
present and the future
• Understanding the ideas need a historical
background
• Ideas are not a simple reflecJon of reality, they
influence reality, and old ideas are reinterpreted
in the light of the new reality
• Ideas influence reality in unexpected dynamic
ways too
• Ideas are responses to other ideas in the context
of the Jmes
• They produce intellectual, poliJcal, economic and
socio-cultural legacies
• Background reading: John Hirst, The Shortest
History of Europe
Promise & Surprise of Liberal PoliJcs

• From ancient Greece to the Enlightenment


• Hobbes & Locke on social contract and the
individualisJc origin of power
• Hume’s skepJcism & Montesquieu’s poliJcal
liberalism
• Smith on moral senJments and market economy
• Rousseau’s modernism & schism in the
Enlightenment
• French RevoluJon and Lel-Right PolarizaJon
• French RevoluJon and German Counter
Enlightenment
ContesJng Ideologies in a Capitalist Order

• Liberal versus Civic Republicanism


• Marxism and Communism
• The Other Europe & VarieJes of NaJonalism
• Progressive Reforms and Libertarian &
Communitarian Counter Reforms to Save
Capitalism
• Radical Individualism & Roots of IrraJonal
PoliJcs
• Western Marxism & Postmodernist Cultural Lel
• Conclusion to Ideologies Shaping Our World
What is the poliJcal?
• PoliJcs and parJsanship
• PoliJcs without common good becomes mere
interest
• How and what to choose
• Choosing the common good democraJcally
• The Social Choice Theory dilemma—Arrow’s
Impossibility Theorem
Impossibility Theorem
• Person A, Person B, and Person C
• Choice X, Choice Y, and Choice Z

• Person A: X > Y, Y > Z, and X > Z; i.e., X > Y > Z


• Person B: Y > Z, Z > X, and Y > X; i.e., Y > Z > X
• Person C: Z > X, X > Y, and Z > Y; i.e., Z > X > Y
• between X and Y, two persons agree X > Y
• between Y and Z, two persons agree Y > Z
• between Z and X, two persons agree Z > X

• yields the paradoxical result of X > Y > Z > X


• This result implies that it mauers which pair of issues
are voted on first, e.g.,
• If the pair X and Y are voted on first, then Persons A
and C will vote for X, and Y will be defeated.
• In the second round of voBng, the choice will be
between X and Z, and Persons B and C will vote for Z
defeaBng X.
• If you want Z to win then you must make sure that X
and Y are voted on first—agenda control.
• So what is the people’s choice? It can be
manipulated.
Prometheus
&
Frankenstein
Prometheus Myth & Modernity
• If the people together cannot choose raJonally then how do
we make poliJcal decisions?
• Unreason, senJment, intuiJon, dignity, and thymos (anger)?
• In Greek mythology, Prometheus created men and stole fire
from the Gods to gave it to humanity—he was punished by
Zeus for his zealous ambiJon.
• Human yearning to determine their future and desJny was
according to the Gods Prometheus’ crime .
• Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is modern man’s dream to create
man? Or is it his nightmare?
End

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