One Sacred Trick for Moral Regeneration
This is a guest post by Harry Pottash.
Post-enlightenment culture has almost completely conquered Western cities, leaving them swimming in a rich and diverse memetic soup. From within this soup a new society is emerging, its members pejoratively called “Social Justice Warriors”. To avoid falling into the trap of pre-existing connotations we can refer to this emerging society as the “Identity-affirming society." Identity-affirming society shows a striking resemblance to more traditional religions and societies, with specific adaptations, particularly around the concept of cultural appropriation, that make it more resilient to the dissolving forces of post enlightenment culture from which it is emerging. How do unique cultures -- the Amish, for instance -- protect themselves from being subsumed by the surrounding culture? A clearer view of how the ideas of cultural appropriation are used can be reached by comparing it with the more rigorously mapped views regarding intellectual property, as both cover similar territory.
Societies are finite games, games that introduce goals, rules, constraints on behavior and provide a scoring system. They are among the games we engage in so completely that we forget participation is optional, and the rules arbitrary. Most fully formed societies attach their rules to six instinctively used pillars of ethical behavior, each a thematic set of constraints that participants in the society must follow (or flaunt). Durable societies use these constraints to reinforce boundaries between societal insiders and outsiders.
Identity-affirming society originates from the far Left, where compassion is embraced as the primary value, and as the justification for most of its derived virtues. For identity-affirming society, compassion is always the key value. When the neglected three pillars of loyalty, purity, and obedience are redeveloped it is by stretching compassion, or less frequently, one of the other base values. For example, not wearing the clothing of another culture (purity) is justified by appealing to how it would make members of that culture feel (compassion). Once the norms attached to the other three pillars have been established, they take on a life of their own and are even able to compete with their parent norms.
Identity-affirming society is inherently non-violent by nature, having never practiced or advocated physical violence against persons, or even proxy versions of it such as imprisonment. Its core value is an attempt to relieve oppression. Identity-affirming society calls attention to very legitimate grievances of groups, particularly those who are being subtly or indirectly attacked. At its best, identity-affirming society solves collective action problems for smaller cultures facing the juggernaut of western society in much the same way as unions. This function is critical in the face of the ruthless application of neoliberalism so frequently embraced by post-enlightenment culture. Most of all, identity-affirming society is active! Its virtues are not theoretical, but engaged with on a day-to-day basis. Identity-affirming society members live their virtues in much the same way as those with religious zeal, even using the term “Woke" (compare "enlightened").
Many members of post-enlightenment culture are, however, quite uncomfortable with the emergence of identity-affirming society. Some of this is likely due to naive pattern matching: identity-affirming society resembles older traditional societies, some of which contained intense repression, violence, and injustice. Identity-affirming society calls for greater restrictions on free speech, a pattern that always raises discomfort in post-enlightenment culture members. Some identity-affirming society members accuse post-enlightenment culture members of racism and other forms of intolerance, and particularly frustratingly, these accusations are frequently made on the basis of race, which seems hypocritical given post-enlightenment culture’s color-blind ideals. In some cases, identity-affirming society strips away familiar privileges, leaving behind equality that, for previously privileged post-enlightenment culture members, can feel like oppression. Identity-affirming society also bears some similarities to utopian movements, which despite good intentions have generated the worst atrocities of the 20th century.
For its part, post-enlightenment culture allows for, and even encourages, the ruthless exploitation of nearly everything and everyone. It produces tremendous imbalances in wealth and power and its more aggressive adherents are willing to spread it, even at gunpoint, across other cultural groups. Though post-enlightenment culture is rarely explicitly racist, it is brutally efficient at maintaining and even exaggerating the starting conditions that were produced by it’s abhorrently racist societal predecessor. Worse yet, to a member of identity-affirming society, it appears to defend emerging atavistic societies which call back to, or even exaggerate, its racist past.
Identity-affirming society uses several tricks to help distinguish boundaries within the cultural soup of post-enlightenment culture, tricks such as the use of respect, essentially a secularized version of the concept of sacredness. Respect provides a justification to prevent the mixing of external societies with random elements of culture. Many complexities in the concept of cultural appropriation, though not all of them, can be seen through this lens. Cultural appropriation can be used as way of re-establishing the “Loyalty” and “Purity” ethical pillars using respect for boundary creation.
Purity, a pillar which in almost every culture manifests through ethical rules regarding food and sex, is visibly reemergent as well. Sexual ethics remain quite culturally open, but the demonstration of ritual purity through abstaining from specific foods has re-emerged in full. Much of this started with compassion-based dietary preferences: veganism, vegetarianism, fair-trade-certified, and free range food. This trend has spread to other patterns such as refraining from GMO foods or gluten. Additionally, there are unspoken but similar patterns, such as avoiding eating at large chains such as McDonalds.
None of these purity patterns is entirely groundless. Each has an underpinning which can, at least nominally, be traced back to a post-enlightenment culture virtue. Post-enlightenment culture itself has been playing with the question “how should we eat?” for decades. What makes this different from, say, the move from butter to margarine, or other fads of the previous decades, is that these modern ones tend to be intended as absolute. Even when butter was “bad for your health” one could have a little, as opposed to avoiding gluten, which has a firm all-or-nothing boundary.
A different manifestation of the emerging drive to purity, one not attached to identity-affirming society, is the desire to avoid vaccination. Again this is portrayed as a measure of compassion (for the children whom vaccination ostensibly endangers) but also clearly touches on emotional fears about purity.
Obedience is the least tapped-into of the returning ethical pillars. In identity affirming society, no ethical imperative is given to obeying authority figures, even ones who are chosen by the group. What does exist there is a drive to obey digitally-achieved group consensus. The social networks acts as a meta-authority figure. This meta-authority is appealed to regularly in the case of what is sometimes described as victimization culture or call-out culture. Nothing makes this sort of anarchic group-conversation-as-judge better, or worse, than a centralized system, and like democracy it is subject to its own problems.
It’s also important to note identity-affirming society’s continued appreciation of the cultural values of liberty, compassion, and justice. Just as with traditional Christian society, these values are held in balance with the other three. It often feels to post-enlightenment culture members that these values are abandoned, or highly inconsistent, because the additional values that have been introduced are capable of competing with these three. When a value that post-enlightenment culture doesn’t recognize is deployed in conflict with one that it does, it seems as if the held value is being ignored arbitrarily. For instance, the Christian Right’s aggressive persecution of, say, premarital sex is to a Christian a conflict between purity and liberty, but to post-enlightenment culture members simply looks cruel or foolish. We can see an objection by identity-affirming society to non-Japanese wearing kimonos, despite there being no apparent request from Japanese community, as a conflict between purity and liberty as well.
Issues in cultural appropriation are a wonderful ground to explore examples of how the post-enlightenment culture principles have been extended and transformed into identity affirming society ones, and how they create additional individuation and more stable social structures in similar ways to a traditional culture. Thought on cultural appropriation can also be contrasted to thought on intellectual property which largely addresses the same problems. Instances where they diverge often result in outrage and eye rolling, indicating that they are likely to be interesting.
Vice and Virtue in the Age of Whole Foods
Post-enlightenment culture is not a durable society. It is a highly virulent pattern which swept the earth like wildfire, embracing just three of the six pillars: fairness, liberty, and compassion. Obedience, loyalty, and purity, the three pillars ignored by post-enlightenment culture, are most readily associated with boundaries and individuation of the society. That these would be re-emerging fits thematically into the zeitgeist of our era, a period dominated by a focus on boundary issues.
Identity-affirming society originates from the far Left, where compassion is embraced as the primary value, and as the justification for most of its derived virtues. For identity-affirming society, compassion is always the key value. When the neglected three pillars of loyalty, purity, and obedience are redeveloped it is by stretching compassion, or less frequently, one of the other base values. For example, not wearing the clothing of another culture (purity) is justified by appealing to how it would make members of that culture feel (compassion). Once the norms attached to the other three pillars have been established, they take on a life of their own and are even able to compete with their parent norms.
Identity-affirming society is inherently non-violent by nature, having never practiced or advocated physical violence against persons, or even proxy versions of it such as imprisonment. Its core value is an attempt to relieve oppression. Identity-affirming society calls attention to very legitimate grievances of groups, particularly those who are being subtly or indirectly attacked. At its best, identity-affirming society solves collective action problems for smaller cultures facing the juggernaut of western society in much the same way as unions. This function is critical in the face of the ruthless application of neoliberalism so frequently embraced by post-enlightenment culture. Most of all, identity-affirming society is active! Its virtues are not theoretical, but engaged with on a day-to-day basis. Identity-affirming society members live their virtues in much the same way as those with religious zeal, even using the term “Woke" (compare "enlightened").
Many members of post-enlightenment culture are, however, quite uncomfortable with the emergence of identity-affirming society. Some of this is likely due to naive pattern matching: identity-affirming society resembles older traditional societies, some of which contained intense repression, violence, and injustice. Identity-affirming society calls for greater restrictions on free speech, a pattern that always raises discomfort in post-enlightenment culture members. Some identity-affirming society members accuse post-enlightenment culture members of racism and other forms of intolerance, and particularly frustratingly, these accusations are frequently made on the basis of race, which seems hypocritical given post-enlightenment culture’s color-blind ideals. In some cases, identity-affirming society strips away familiar privileges, leaving behind equality that, for previously privileged post-enlightenment culture members, can feel like oppression. Identity-affirming society also bears some similarities to utopian movements, which despite good intentions have generated the worst atrocities of the 20th century.
For its part, post-enlightenment culture allows for, and even encourages, the ruthless exploitation of nearly everything and everyone. It produces tremendous imbalances in wealth and power and its more aggressive adherents are willing to spread it, even at gunpoint, across other cultural groups. Though post-enlightenment culture is rarely explicitly racist, it is brutally efficient at maintaining and even exaggerating the starting conditions that were produced by it’s abhorrently racist societal predecessor. Worse yet, to a member of identity-affirming society, it appears to defend emerging atavistic societies which call back to, or even exaggerate, its racist past.
Identity-affirming society uses several tricks to help distinguish boundaries within the cultural soup of post-enlightenment culture, tricks such as the use of respect, essentially a secularized version of the concept of sacredness. Respect provides a justification to prevent the mixing of external societies with random elements of culture. Many complexities in the concept of cultural appropriation, though not all of them, can be seen through this lens. Cultural appropriation can be used as way of re-establishing the “Loyalty” and “Purity” ethical pillars using respect for boundary creation.
Purity, a pillar which in almost every culture manifests through ethical rules regarding food and sex, is visibly reemergent as well. Sexual ethics remain quite culturally open, but the demonstration of ritual purity through abstaining from specific foods has re-emerged in full. Much of this started with compassion-based dietary preferences: veganism, vegetarianism, fair-trade-certified, and free range food. This trend has spread to other patterns such as refraining from GMO foods or gluten. Additionally, there are unspoken but similar patterns, such as avoiding eating at large chains such as McDonalds.
None of these purity patterns is entirely groundless. Each has an underpinning which can, at least nominally, be traced back to a post-enlightenment culture virtue. Post-enlightenment culture itself has been playing with the question “how should we eat?” for decades. What makes this different from, say, the move from butter to margarine, or other fads of the previous decades, is that these modern ones tend to be intended as absolute. Even when butter was “bad for your health” one could have a little, as opposed to avoiding gluten, which has a firm all-or-nothing boundary.
A different manifestation of the emerging drive to purity, one not attached to identity-affirming society, is the desire to avoid vaccination. Again this is portrayed as a measure of compassion (for the children whom vaccination ostensibly endangers) but also clearly touches on emotional fears about purity.
Obedience is the least tapped-into of the returning ethical pillars. In identity affirming society, no ethical imperative is given to obeying authority figures, even ones who are chosen by the group. What does exist there is a drive to obey digitally-achieved group consensus. The social networks acts as a meta-authority figure. This meta-authority is appealed to regularly in the case of what is sometimes described as victimization culture or call-out culture. Nothing makes this sort of anarchic group-conversation-as-judge better, or worse, than a centralized system, and like democracy it is subject to its own problems.
It’s also important to note identity-affirming society’s continued appreciation of the cultural values of liberty, compassion, and justice. Just as with traditional Christian society, these values are held in balance with the other three. It often feels to post-enlightenment culture members that these values are abandoned, or highly inconsistent, because the additional values that have been introduced are capable of competing with these three. When a value that post-enlightenment culture doesn’t recognize is deployed in conflict with one that it does, it seems as if the held value is being ignored arbitrarily. For instance, the Christian Right’s aggressive persecution of, say, premarital sex is to a Christian a conflict between purity and liberty, but to post-enlightenment culture members simply looks cruel or foolish. We can see an objection by identity-affirming society to non-Japanese wearing kimonos, despite there being no apparent request from Japanese community, as a conflict between purity and liberty as well.
Issues in cultural appropriation are a wonderful ground to explore examples of how the post-enlightenment culture principles have been extended and transformed into identity affirming society ones, and how they create additional individuation and more stable social structures in similar ways to a traditional culture. Thought on cultural appropriation can also be contrasted to thought on intellectual property which largely addresses the same problems. Instances where they diverge often result in outrage and eye rolling, indicating that they are likely to be interesting.
9 Comments
A thought-provoking analysis! Thinking about SJW (IAS) culture as an attempt to use post-enlightenment values as a jumping off point to re-establish new kind of traditionalist society offers some new insights, especially if they are compared directly to such groups as urban Orthodox Jews, or rural white Christians.
One thing that might jump out at anyone who is actually familiar with how these traditional groups operate in practice, is that, contrary to their reputation as pure "patriarchies", both male and female forms of power are nurtured (I would rather have a farm patriarch pissed off at me than a farm matriarch!), and family stability and reproduction are affirmed and encouraged.
By contrast, the new IAS seems to be lop-sidedly feminine, and anti-reproductive. Masculinity is actively discouraged (unless it is a trans expression of it) and even the guys with the big beards look like they are cosplaying being men. The expressions of social power used to police are strictly in line with "Mean Girls" methods: shaming and shunning. The protests they launch seem to lack a coherent program or philosophy, and even the violence looks more like a toddler having a tantrum than the organized, disciplined, hierarchy-preserving violence of groups with more masculine energy.
Like historic groups, like the Shakers, that practiced celibacy or discourage reproduction, the demographics in the IAS have some absurdly low reproductive rates, and will probably underbreed themselves out of existence unless they can recruit from surrounding more fertile populations. (Maybe that is why they are so excited about bringing in more immigrants from the fertile Arab world?)
I think this combination of characteristics that align the IAS with traditional societies, and distinguish it from them as well, makes it a very interesting social experiment.
I agree it will be very interesting to see how things evolve from here.
Yes, the gender dimension is key. Large scale society has traditionally been male-dominated in no small measure because men are more naturally inclined to broad, shallow, hierarchical, and impersonal networks. Women, by contrast, more typically form more intimate, egalitarian, and personal networks and these don't scale well.
The development of social media changes the game, solving the scalability problem. It greatly increases the power of shunning and shaming, key mechanisms of female competition and group formation. It also sustains highly personal attachments with more prominent women, who can function as queen bees. I've commented on some of the dynamics over on my blog.
>The development of social media changes the game, solving the scalability problem. It greatly increases the power of shunning and shaming
Absolutely this! I'm pretty sure that social media and the internet in general are going to change the ground game of human organization more deeply than we even suspect.
A stimulating post, thanks.
On the obedience foundation, I think the SJW culture of 'deference' is a key aspect you could have developed. Frederik deBoer writes:
IAS definitely has its own structures of moral authority and deference/obedience corresponding to these.I'll have to look into the concept of "deference" as obedience. I'm not entirely sure at what level it's actually practiced. I personally haven't seen it happen much, but then again, I only really get to frequent a few of the anti-opression circles
Experiments with game theory suggest that forgiving and kind rules such as “Do unto others as you would have them do to you” fail badly in practice. What works is having some kind of enforcement mechanism as with “Tit for tat” or “Tit for tats”.
Very loosely speaking there is a similarity to how Jainism emphasizes nonviolence and pervasive validity and has over time faded into the background while clearly related Sikhism with emphasis on being prepared to defend others and setting boundaries for protection is currently the fifth largest faith.
So also the way modernity has progressed through emphasis on liberty, equality, and fraternity might represent a dangerous and naive incompleteness. Inherent longing for purity, loyalty, and embrace of the sacred is stronger in some than others so there must be outlets or social tensions are likely. Some way of describing such a balance and its benefits to ordinary people would be very helpful. Calling this balance against high modernism “Tribalism” would probably be bad marketing.
Transition to such a system might have multiple components just as democracy typically relies on both elected leaders and independent judges. A basic income might offer critical support and the basis for a social compact, though clearly that would have to go along with protections for the diversity of emergent identity groups. Prohibit something for purity in your domain, but don’t expect to rule over others. Trade, environmental, and engineering regulations may be based on what can be shown to work for the majority of domains. This could open up a path where a central bank and Federal Reserve rule exclusively over a central currency while having limited influence over local currencies which could have profound economic impacts.
>So also the way modernity has progressed through emphasis on liberty, equality, and fraternity might represent a dangerous and naive incompleteness. Inherent longing for purity, loyalty, and embrace of the sacred is stronger in some than others so there must be outlets or social tensions are likely.
I couldn't agree more. PEC found some sort of magic sauce that basically allowed it to dissolve its way through most of the traditional cultures it encountered. The question is... is this trick long term viable, or is the next crop of evolved social structures going to be immune to it and eat PEC's lunch?
You need to drop down a few levels and get to the root issues. As a society, we've been extraordinarily affluent for about 3 generations now and real hardship is all but extinct. As such, genome-based evolution has yielded to a memetic variant in which fitness selection is now driven by relational prowess rather than existential robustness. SJWs understand that they cannot survive in a world returned to hardship and scarcity, so hive mentally is their best long-term survival strategy.
Spot on Tom.