Evolution of the "Liberal"
Can anyone tell me when and how the term "Liberal" changed. The word root means freedom, and the original meaning (now called "Classical" Liberal) advocated freedom for citizens. Today it universally seems to advocate freedom for state in contrast with freedom for citizens.
In hindsight, it seems like a rhetorical trick, but I doubt it was. That seems a bit too clever.
Perhaps it was a gradual process where early liberals just let their philosophy slowly become corrupted, until the name lost its original meaning.
I'm interested here in the damaging evolution of language, and what other political words are being hijacked today, and how can we stop that process.
In hindsight, it seems like a rhetorical trick, but I doubt it was. That seems a bit too clever.
Perhaps it was a gradual process where early liberals just let their philosophy slowly become corrupted, until the name lost its original meaning.
I'm interested here in the damaging evolution of language, and what other political words are being hijacked today, and how can we stop that process.
This is an excellent question—one that I wish every voter knew the answer to. The historical answer is that the transition from classical liberalism to welfare state liberalism started in England in the late 1800s, and took off in America at the turn of the 20th century, culminating in FDR's New Deal. The “new Liberals,” as they were called at the time, were socialists at heart but knew that socialism wouldn’t fly in Britain and especially not in America. So they manipulated the concepts of classical liberalism to infuse them with socialist meaning. Freedom from interference came to mean freedom from the want; coercion as the exercise of actual force came to mean any kind of social or economic pressure (like being subject to market wages); rights to life, liberty, and property expanded to include rights welfare benefits. It was conceptual warfare.
The full story is told in Arthur Ekirch’s, The Decline of American Liberalism, 1955, which Ayn Rand recommended at the time ( on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Decline-American-L... ). There's also my book A Life of One's Own: Individual Rights in the Welfare State; Chap 3 is a shorter version of the history, focusing on the manipulative change in the concepts ( on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Life-Ones-Own-Indi... ).
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ADMIN EDIT: Added links to books.
Thanks for the book references, I will check them out.
Thanks for all you do.
As for my name: my understanding is that it's Scotch-Irish, people from northern England, Scotland, and northern Ireland--as opposed to the Irish Kelly's.
Enjoyed meeting you in Vegas. Hope to make the Atlas Summit if not this year next year. Take Care
Ayn Rand emphasized the importance of concepts and definitions. She identified several logical fallacies focused on invalid use of concepts, not just fallacies of 'propositions': the fallacies of the stolen concept, floating abstractions, frozen abstractions, etc.
She wrote a whole book on the proper formation of concepts -- Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology -- as a defense of reason as our means to knowledge.
Conceptual thought is more fundamental than communication. You can't make statements without concepts, and you can't think properly with missing concepts. As Ayn Rand put it in IOE: "Cognition precedes communication".
The abuse of language today, muddying and destroying proper concepts, has the effect of making it literally impossible to properly think and therefore to argue for individualism, science, etc.
Jan
This post is very interesting because I keep running into the same thing.
I can't say for sure when the term "liberal" was hijacked but SaltyDog touched on the culprits. If i'm remembering correctly the progressive movement in the late 1800s began to use the term to lend credibility to their ideas. They are just now returning to the use of "progressive" because the negative connotation is all but gone. (Except for Salty. Lol)
I have mentioned the destruction of language in a few other conversations and, to me, it is a very important topic. I don't know if there is any way to stop it but it is important to understand it, recognize it and call it out whenever we see it happening.
From the Ayn Rand Lexicon; "The “stolen concept” fallacy, first identified by Ayn Rand, is the fallacy of using a concept while denying the validity of its genetic roots, i.e., of an earlier concept(s) on which it logically depends"
The most well known word (to Objectivists anyway) is selfish which is regularly utilized to lump the Bernie Madoffs and the Bill Gates' into one basket.
The most contested seems to be altruism which is equated with charity (to say otherwise gets people fired up) and is used to impose a duty upon people. (It takes a village)
I'm sure most of us on here have had the "two wolves and a sheep deciding what's for dinner" discussion whenever someone blurts out "we live in a democracy, after all".
Don't forget that we don't know what the meaning "of the word is is."
I agree about "selfish" and "altruism" being misunderstood, I think often intentionally just to avoid facing the logic of Rand's ideas. There would be a feeling of safety, I guess, when going along with the consensus that selfishness is bad instead of understanding it can be a virtue.
I prefer to think of it as the opposite of pro is con, so the opposite of progress is congress.
Nice pun with pro/con :)
Jan
The term has been stolen only in the US political propaganda.
Jan
I was amused by a coworker who complained about such labellings of Russians with great irritation.
To him, a liberal was always a communist or at least a pinko.
He just could not wrap his mind around any international term applications.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYAHNv7l...
Progressing ever forward in the great ideas of deception..
It seems to me that there is a lack of focus in at least some of the comments that you received. Let me try to explain why I think that.
There is an axiom which I believe to be self evident: "To be able to write well, you have to be able to think well." Writing is a communication means among humans. So is speaking. We seem to be more readily able to recognize a confused mind from confused speech than from confused writing. I do not know why is that, but I suspect that it might be because the speech is so much older than writing, so that our discerning skills had much longer time to develop. As we know, words are labels for the concepts in our consciousness. That is why a confusion in language is a confusion in concepts. It can be involuntary or deliberate(!).
All communications addressed broadly at the public have the purpose of imparting knowledge, thus attempting to change the minds of the recipients. Increasing knowledge is a change of mind. So is the deliberately misleading distortion of recipients' concepts. You can call it mind control.
From Wikipedia:
"Mind control (also known as brainwashing, reeducation, coercive persuasion, thought control, or thought reform) is a theoretical indoctrination process which results in "an impairment of autonomy, an inability to think independently, and a disruption of beliefs and affiliations. In this context, brainwashing refers to the involuntary reeducation of basic beliefs and values".
Throughout history, the mind control thrived. From oracles, to religion ("God's word"), to witchcraft ("Devil's word"), to political campaigning, to advertising etc. On this last one. Just listen to how frequently TV advertisement teach kids broken logic.
The labels "progressive", "socialist", "liberal" and now back to "progressive" have been used by people who wish, by use of the government's monopoly on use of force, to enforce on all people their version of Utopia. It is a fundamentally dishonest approach. They resort to dishonesty because they cannot defend their approach on straight logic and reality. The roots are in Kantian and subsequent evil philosophies. Evil, because they deny reason, knowledge and even existence. In practice, when people begin to see through the falsity of the label of the period, they change to a knew label, in the hope that people will not notice that the only difference is in the label. You may wish to read the item entitled "Liberals" in Rand's Lexicon.
One last thing. DanShu, above, voices trouble in deciding which label applies to him. To me, the answer is obvious. The only label for him is DanShu. That does not prevent him from being a member of a political party, activist group or anything else. We each have an obligation to acquire and "install" in ourselves our own philosophies. Yes, they will be unique, just as each one of us is a unique, unrepeatable rational animal. I subscribe to an Objectivist philosophy. I don't even know if my philosophy in every detail coincides with the views of Ayn Rand. The knowledge that our principles coincide is enough for me.
Please forgive me the verbosity. I am obsessed by a strong desire to never be misunderstood. Alas, I do not know how write (and think!) as well as Ayn Rand did.
Take time to call a spade a spade. A REGRESSIVE a Regressive. An Illiberal and illiberal. A censor a censor. A fascist a fascist.
Of course, implying that only whites can be part of the power group IS racist.
Another part of history that is conveniently ignored was in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when there was actual racism within the black community itself: the lighter your skin (see the term "high yellow"), the higher your status within the black community. Si I strongly agree with William and other posters that "only whites can be racist" is ridiculous.
Progressives accomplish this by constantly changing the meaning *THEY* assign to common words. Then berating the rest of us for not using their shifted meaning.
Most everything I write follows your interest and it took some years to uncover the root meanings.
The one phrase we hear most today besides the living constitution crap is a quote from Lenin. Anything done or said that promotes the party is the truth. Even if it's different tomorrow.
The Constitution was a living document in that it provided a way of making change. Ignoring it was not one of the procedures. By any definition.
Progressive used to mean forward-thinking, making positive progress. It has come to mean what liberal now means. The meanings evolved, but not naturally. It's sort of a forced evolution as performed by Dr. Frankenstein.
And it certainly was a quite successful (and IMO intentional) "re-branding", as corporate Newspeak would call it. I know it relates to Marx and his followers, when the word "liberty" was transformed from "liberty to do..." to "liberty "from"...exploitation, hunger, the need to work...etc...
(I damned if I can find it now, or even an online reference, but I'm certain I read in a legitimate source that the "New School for Social Research" in New York City was originally named after Karl Marx...but that was shortly "re-branded".)
The Political Compass site does away with the over-simplistic "left versus right" thing and instead maps people's alignments on a two dimensional graph. If you've got a couple of minutes to answer a few questions, it's an interesting study:
http://www.politicalcompass.org/
widespread attention of the students to "arts" or
specialties of all kinds would produce a well-rounded
individual. . according to my mom, whose degree
was in something like social studies from Agnes
Scott in atlanta. . I asked about engineering, and
she said that science was included. . but engineering
is the application of science to the betterment of
humankind, I said. . we went circular from there.
liberals probably adopted the name from something
like this, I would think -- the well-rounded learning
of everything progressive for humankind -- progress
toward the envisioned utopia. . maybe? -- j
I would like to submit for your consideration two ideas.
1. A definition of engineering: "the art of things that work."
2. The art f engineering uses a lot of scientific knowledge, but ultimately it is a process of trial and error involving innovations and improvements, with unavoidable guesses and risk taking. All this is done for the benefit of a profitable manufacturing business and their customers.
Just my opinions.
experimentation. . successful experiments lead to
engineering something which people can count on
to help with life. . and, oh are there trials and errors
involved!!! -- j
p.s. the fun word empirical (reality check results)
jumps up in any good conversation like this.
More like de-evolution in my mind. Those that have absconded and distorted the title are now more likely to call themselves "progressive." They keep pushing marxist nonsense from the past. It is always the same ... "We just didn't do it right..." or have enough government force/backing to make it work.. bla bla bla
Baa Baa Baa blind sheep...
Regards,
O.A.
Perhaps the libertarian party needs to reclaim it, it might help their voting numbers.
They are also good at redefining the other side of the argument. A "Conservative" originally meant a politician or person that wants to conserve the intent and meaning of the Constitution of the United States. How easy it has been for them to see a wealthy person purchase something inexpensive (cheap) and define him as conservative (cheap). If you tell a lie enough times, it begins to have the ring of truth.
Add to that a laziness in the listener and there is magic. For example; I have met many people that claimed to want to become millionaires. A closer look revealed they really wanted to be in position to spend a million dollars, which is the inverse of becoming a millionaire.
As to "liberal", I think libertarian has assumed the position of "Classic liberal" and the shopworn term liberal is whatever definition pop culture media chooses for it.
And that is the way they play on it, with a built-in evaluation emotionally substituting for saying what they mean. That is why you should always use the term term "progressive" in a political context by spelling it out in the form of "never-ending, progressively increasing controls" and refer to their "regression" to tyranny.
"Conservative" did not originally mean conserving the intent and meaning of the Constitution, it means conserving tradition and the status quo in general. Political conservatives have in general advocated preserving tradition because it is tradition, and do not and cannot defend individualism.
And worse, defense of a "tradition" _because_ it is tradition is no defense at all. The basic weakness of conservatism is not their rhetoric. They believe it.
The modern theft of the word "liberal" by progressives was started under President Wilson by George Creel, chairman of the Committee on Public Information, and promoted by Edward Bernays (author of the book "Propaganda" and one of Joseph Goebbels favorite political thinkers), also a CPI member.
These same figures also established many elements of political correctness. Their work was admired and adopted by the Nazis and the Communist Party. It is unsettling to see how unashamedly Democrats have relished using these tools of tyrannical (and yes, I include Woodrow Wilson as the first American tyrant) regimes.
Jan
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