CIVIL SOCIETY vs. THE PRIME DIVIDER:
NO PAIN, NO GAIN
I include this essay on civil society partly because Liberal
Cognitive Egocentrism (LCE) fosters a remarkable naiveté
about how difficult and rare it is to establish a civil polity.
This failure to appreciate civil society may be the single most
dangerous factor in our current inability to recognize and cooperate
with its friends on the one hand, and to beware its enemies on
the other. For the purposes of the discussion at this website,
I define civil society somewhat differently from the somewhat
problematic way political
scientists do. The definition most scholars use emphasizes
voluntary associations independent of the state, a component,
but not the defining element of the definition here proposed.
Civil society as I use it here, arises from a cultural project
best described as the systematic substitution of consensual discourse
of fairness for violence in dispute settlement. The definition
entails a series of interlocking elements:
- Same rules for all (equality before the law, what the ancient
Greeks called isonomia
- Independent law courts that determine fair judgments and pre-empt
private (self-help) justice.
- Public transparency and accountability of people in power
(free press, freedom of speech).
- Commoner populations empowered by education to assert and
protect their own legislated rights
- Commitment to voluntarism as a principle form of social interaction
and political organization, emphasizing, mutual trust, contractual
obligations, and moral autonomy.
- Manual labor is not stigmatized, and manual laborers and their
children can participate in
public discourse and if sufficiently successful, enter the
elite.
In the West, as commitment to the values of civil society reached
a significant portion of the population and gained a public voice
(free press), entire polities (US, France, Britain) shifted from
traditional authoritarian, “top-down” styles of governing to ones
based primarily on voluntary participation (social contract and
constitutional states). “Conceived
in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created
equal,” such civil polities explicitly adopt civil society’s
principles as their founding principles: a discourse of fairness
(equality and freedom) replaces violence in dispute settlement.
Civil polities depend on high levels of trust and the commitment
to positive-sum
outcomes in most transactions. Civil societies place high
educational value on
moral autonomy and voluntary acceptance of the rules. The
dominant civil polities of the last two centuries have been cultures
of abundance, using technology and legal egalitarianism to put
an end to famines and to allow large numbers of people to raise
their living standards and education well above subsistence.
Of course, no society so conceived and so dedicated can live
up to such a lofty goal as true equality of justice for all, or
a fair share of abundance for all. At this stage at least, such
experiments can only hope to change the condition of the large
majority of the population, not create an egalitarian utopia.
Failing perfection, however, should not be invoked to argue a
moral equivalence
between civil societies and prime divider societies. Endowed with
enough healthy self-criticism, any civil society can continue
to improve. But human nature what it is, any culture will have
its share of inequalities and injustices. The question is not
do they or do they not exist, but how pervasive is the injustice?
And how does a society respond to revelations of that injustice?
This praise of “civil society” is not an “ethno-centric” argument,
but a cross-cultural one with a great deal of room for variety.
Democracies are neither the only, nor even necessarily the optimum,
shape that a civil society can take. One can also imagine, for
example, affiliated communities governed by judges through whose
decisions the public discourse of justice shapes social relations.
To each political culture, each religious tradition, falls the
ultimate task of finding its passage from violence to fairness.
With the emerging
global community bringing on exceptional levels of culture contact,
our ability to live fairly with ourselves and “others” demands
high levels of tolerance. At least democratic civil societies
demand that tolerance in insisting that people in positions of
authority accept criticism and challenges from highly educated
and motivated commoners who speak their mind (public education,
meritocracy, freedom of speech and assembly).
PRIME DIVIDER:
THE GRAVITATIONAL PULL OF AGRO-LITERATE SOCIETIES
But civil societies, however much we in the West may be familiar
with them, are neither the natural, nor the most common form of
social and political organization. On the contrary, most agriculture-based
societies tend towards a far more authoritarian style that imposes
order from above, favors hierarchies, and keeps the “masses” out
of the public sphere. These “traditional” or “pre-modern” societies
(Gellner
calls them agro-literate), tend to create a strong
dividing line between the elites and the commoners. This barrier,
or the prime divider, characterizes the aristocratic
empires of pre-modern, “high” cultures, from the ancient empires
(Egypt, Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome, China and India) to more
recent ones (Islam, Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Communist
regimes and contemporary dictatorships). In order to have a successful
civil society, the cultural barrier between elites and commoners
must be dismantled and that is no easy task. Only at some key
moments in the recorded history of man has an experiment with
dismantling the prime divider succeeded even momentarily… rarely
surviving more than a couple of centuries.
Prime Divider societies generally consist of the following traits:
- legal and cultural privileges for aristocratic elites, both of the sword and of the pen
- contempt for manual labor and disqualification of laborers from public discourse
- opacity in government (mystery, monarchy)
- willingness of elites to use violence against commoners (as well as each other)
- endemic
hostility between commoners and elites
- hierarchical religions supported by and supportive of the power structure (i.e., as ideologues of the prime divider's "hegemonic discourse")
Behind these various institutional and attitudinal traits lies
a political axiom one might call the “dominating imperative” –
rule or be ruled. Once
a group of elites holds power, they prevent a rival group from
overtaking them by subjugating the other first. The ancient
Romans called it libido
dominandi (the lust to dominate), and proudly claimed it as
their great virtue. Nietzsche spoke of der Wille
zu Macht (will to power), for him, the basic principle of
human and natural behavior.
This dominating imperative, with its political and cultural manifestation,
prime dividers, operates on a zero-sum assumption: I win, you
lose; you win, I lose. As a result of such thinking, most traditional
societies have a notable split between an extremely wealthy elites
(winners) and a majority of losers, commoners (mostly peasants)
living at the margins of existence, with a restricted “middle”
class that enjoys stigmatized wealth. The willingness to use force,
massacre restive populations, and dispossess wealthy and successful
commoners, are hallmarks of these hierarchical cultures, and reflect
the profound contempt that most elites have for their “masses.”
The path to wealth in such cultures is “take, not make.” In contrast
with civil societies, prime divider societies impoverish the many
for the sake of the few, discouraging the initiatives of manual
laborers. Here the elites expropriate the fruits of the commoners’
labors, wasting more on conspicuous consumption than on productive
work. Such societies, despite the wide range of cultural forms
they take, have a tell-tale signature: small elites, limited middle
class, and large population of poor and illiterate commoners.
ON THE GREAT BENEFITS AND GREAT COSTS OF CIVIL SOCIETY
The advantages to dismantling the prime divider are numerous
but so are its disadvantages. In Western intellectual experience,
the legal victory of civil society since the late 18th century
(liberalism) has had a tremendously creative impact – both culturally
and materially (industrial revolution, academia, end of famines,
modern technology), of which intellectuals are among the greatest
beneficiaries. Indeed, the spectacular success of the West’s technological
and cultural creativity has so dazzled the rest of the world that,
at the turn of this millennium, nations
and cultures the world over want “in.” The best lesson we
westerners can provide – equality before the law – is something
that we have achieved through great pain and much suffering. Perhaps
some of those non-Western cultures can do a better job of this
process than we have. Hopefully. Then we can learn some important
lessons that our position of dominance makes it hard to absorb.
But, as Peter Brown once put it, our greatest enemy in understanding
the past is the “patina of the obvious that encrusts human actions.”
Nothing that consolidates, began that way, whether it be a volcanic
eruption, a religious ritual, or a dominant cultural attitude.
And when we do not understand the process, we take things for
granted that we should not. Westerners think that human rights
are obvious, self-evident. We therefore greatly underestimate
the power of the dominating imperative, the persistence of the
aristocracy, the huge resistance that cultures – from people both
above and below – have to the dismantling of the prime divider.
And yet, when one considers the immense vulnerability that civil
society demands – a disarmament of factions, private armies, a
commitment to trust and be trusted – one can well imagine that
many would find it hard to tolerate. In the most common political
conditions of the last 10,000 years of our existence, it would
be mad to argue that we set aside the dominating imperative and
trust others to do the same. To imagine everyone won over to our
enlightened way of negotiating peaceful relations, vastly underestimates
the rational power that “rule or be ruled” has, especially when
so many others play by those rules. One should not treat such
venerable rules lightly.
DISMANTLING THE PRIME DIVIDER AND SOCIAL TURBULENCE
Renouncing and dismantling the prime divider creates important
psychological and political resistance and rouses enormous social
turbulence. It’s self-evident why the elites would resist dismantling
the prime divider: they lose their ability to run the show the
way they want to. But why so much resistance from among the commoners?
To understand that resistance, we must appreciate two things.
One, that hierarchy not only regulates relations between elites
and commoners, but within the ranks of commoners. In hierarchies,
where ordering another provides the source of social stability,
everyone has people who order them, and people whom they can order.
Egalitarian rules between morally autonomous agents challenges
the hierarchy at every level, from political organs to family
relations.
Civil society demands high levels of restraint and discipline.
“Self-help” justice – honor, revenge, vendetta – must give way
to law courts, discussions of rights and fairness, and living
with the court’s judgment. It is not easy to give up the right
to rough and ready “justice”; and without extensive education
in justice and civic commitment, such attempts often fail.
When discourse trumps violence, women, traditionally relegated
to private space in prime divider societies, have much greater
freedom and influence. When market forces and private property
prevail, little people can become big. To many commoners, especially
the “big men” who dominate their local scene, the advent of “civil
society” and the market capitalism that accompanies it, all too
often seem like a coordinated assault on their control over their
inferiors and their women. Demands to give up the dominating imperative
trigger anxiety and defensiveness even among those who, from the
perspective of class conflict, seem part of the dominated subaltern
class.
If such an transition can provoke discord even among commoners,
that anxiety intensifies when the prime divider falls. The “revolutionary
forces” find themselves in uncharted territory, the reaction of
the dispossessed aristocracy violent, and the ability of the new
social polity to sustain relations of trust severely tested. The
tendency towards panic (Great Fear of 1789) and paranoia (Revolutionary
Terror of 1793-4) are regular
features of efforts to eliminate the prime divider.
If, on the other hand, the situation can stabilize into a working
constitutional state (Lincoln’s “so conceived and so dedicated”),
the new rules benefit many, destroy a few, and leave most of the
old elite diminished but not powerless. Societies that dismantle
the prime divider are dynamic, ever-changing. For the the proponents
of civil society (liberals), change is growth and progress, for
the opponents (reactionaries), it is instability and chaos.
ANTI-MODERNISM
For the “losing” older elites, the advent of modernity is a nightmare.
Everywhere they see chaos, the breakdown of public morality, the
degradation of religion. Civic values repel them. It is all a
conspiracy, all
a dastardly plot to steal (my/our) power.
These men (and women) know that democratic license leads to chaos,
and as Greeks such as Plato felt, democracy is a recipe for anarchy.
These elites look for every weakness, encourage every failure.
They thrive on conflict and see it everywhere. They assume that
anyone who supports democratic polities and civic values is a
demopath: for them democracy is a recipe for chaos, and any supporters
of democracy must want that chaos as a cover to establish their
own dominion. This is the core of the message of the genocidal
forgery, Protocols
of the Elders of Zion: the Jews are demopaths.
They are the force behind democracy, which they preach so they
can dupe the commoners into overthrowing their natural protectors
(their own aristocracy). Under cover of the inevitably ensuing
chaos, they plan to enslave mankind. Those who use the Protocols
to promote their cause (e.g., Hitler, Stalin) have characteristically
projected their own desires onto the Jews.
THE GAMBLE OF CIVIL SOCIETY AND THE LIBERAL
ACCOMPLISHMENT
The anti-modernists are, in fact, partly right. They not only
look for conflicts, they find them aplenty. Liberality does give
license, and many people – free riders – abuse it. Civil society
is a
gamble that can fail. The core of the civic challenge is that
citizens must not only trust each other, but they must also prove
themselves trustworthy. Even though it often involves no more
than a spread of elite weaknesses to the whole population – say
white color crime to commoners, or sexual promiscuity to women
– the process of extending autonomy, rights, education to commoners
creates enormous social turbulence that can threaten the “system”
with collapse. The core of the aristocratic argument insists that
commoners are like animals, incapable of self-control and in need
of strong, even ruthless, control.
The price of dismantling the prime divider is an unusual (if
unusually fruitful) social turmoil, a thrash of cultures that
leads to constant and cumulative change. It demands levels of
tolerance and flexibility that eventually challenge any society’s
capacity. At the end of the 20th century it would be superficial
of Westerners to argue that we have the process under control.
One need not be anti-modern to see that modernity, like other
unstable social experiments, is both capable of and maybe even
likely to self-destruct.
When we ponder the forces working against civil society, we begin
to appreciate the social miracle that civil society constitutes.
This leads to two points that some may consider self-evident,
while others find anti-scientific heresy.
First, rationality alone will not do the job. One cannot launch
a civil society by convincing people that it is reasonable to
abandon the rational paranoia of the dominating imperative. Only
ex post facto does civil society “make sense.” In a world dominated
by the dominating imperative, the public and anonymous expressions
of trust that civil society calls for make no sense at all. They
are irrational.
· Second, only very strong emotions can move people to
abandon a defensive posture like the dominating imperative that,
for better or worse, is tried and true. And the
most likely source of that emotional force is religious. The
equality of human beings represents an ideal that only makes ontological
sense – we
hold these truths to be self-evident – in a framework where
our sense of solidarity with “others” can transcend our ego needs.
Such concepts open up a role for certain kinds of religiosity
(demotic
as contributors to civil society, unlike the common view that
secular (i.e. anti-religious) beliefs lie at the heart of modernity.
While this may come as bad news to those who consider religion
an infantile superstition, this is good news, among others, to
those aware of how an aggressive secular modernity can alienate,
even infuriate, religious people. A close study of the American
revolution – when for the first time in Christian history,
tolerance was a winner’s creed – suggests that the path to civil
society lies in modest, passionate religiosity rather than in
indifferent, triumphalist secularism.
The establishment and maintenance of civil society in the West,
however messy and dangerous, represents a major step forward in
the extension of human rights and dignity to others, if only on
a domestic level. However inadequate it may seem when we look
at the rest of the world – in many cases made much worse by our
imperialist and capitalist interventions – it represents an astonishing
achievement in human history. (Those poor commoners around the
world would still be poor if the modern west did not exist.)
In an age when progressives dream of extending these benefits
to the rest of the world, we must be careful not to dismiss this
accomplishment as either so easy anyone can do it (PCP1), or a
mere facade for a new form of dominion (PCP2). The decision by
western insiders, working with the military, to
create the internet in a decentralized fashion so that as many
people could use it independently, represents one of the most
exceptional deeds in the history
of the media. It has permitted the blogosphere to exist. If
we do not appreciate the immensely difficult struggle that produced
such a society, then we run the
risk of destroying it.
Not every culture need dismantle their prime divider, although
who makes that decision and how they make it raise important questions
about cultures and justice. Each culture that does, however, has
to find its own way to dismantle its prime divider and change
the relationship between political elites and commoners in its
society. The lessons western democracies offer teach about what
to avoid as well as what to imitate. What other cultures learn
from us may, like the American model, actively involve religion,
or unlike the western models, not use democracy. The challenge
is not to get rid of elites (all societies have them and need
them), but to change the relationship between them and the vast
majority of the population, to emphasize voluntarism and mutuality,
rather than fear and command.
This is not an “ethnocentric” argument. On the one hand, it leaves
open as many cultural variants (and more) than the ethnic and
cultural variants in “prime divider” societies. On the other,
it does not even insist that other cultures adopt some version
of civic values. It just means that we need to consider another
culture or religion’s attitude towards this fundamental distinction
between civic and authoritarian styles, and we should not imagine
that the representatives of prime divider cultures represent reliable
friends, nor that their narratives deserve the same credibility
as the significantly more self-critical ones of civil societies.
Eyes on the prize. For progressives to despise the very ancestors
who, in founding a civil polity, gave birth to them seems dysfunctional
to say the least.
Can we afford such folly? Now?
SEE ALSO:
PC Paradigm
Jihad Paradigm