INTRODUCTION TO PARADIGMS
Paradigms provide overarching frameworks within which people try
to understand major issues. An example of a major paradigm shift
occurred in astronomy when scholars realized the earth and planets
revolved around the sun instead of the sun revolving around the
earth. People require frameworks in all areas of life in order
to function, because they help us measure the relative importance
of any given detail or its causes and effects. On the other hand,
all paradigms have weak points, are necessarily partial, and must
confront data that does not perfectly “fit”. If we are to honestly
look at the world then we must explore the anomalies in our paradigms.
Refusal to do so contributes to dogmatism or blind adherence to
a chosen “truth”.
Political paradigms are more problematic and uncertain than scientific
paradigms. Because political paradigms deal with subjective value
judgments, they involve one’s beliefs, values, and personal morality.
In this subjective terrain one can find many more anomalies, especially
when political climates change. No political paradigm can justify
a claim as “scientific” or “objectively true”.
Despite these weaknesses, political and social paradigms are
as important as scientific paradigms in orienting our thoughts
and behavior. They attempt to explain the behavior of important
people and current events. When people align themselves with a
political paradigm, they often also express their own faith or
lack of faith in others. People may prefer one paradigm over another
less for its explanatory abilities than because they like its
philosophy.
But choosing a paradigm for the wrong reasons can be dangerous.
When people are committed to a certain set of conclusions, regardless
of the evidence, the paradigm ceases to aid an accurate assessment
of reality and asserts a zero-sum relationship to any other approach
to the issue. You are wrong because I am right. One of the key
indicators that paradigms have become dogmatic is the presence
of verbal “landmines”: when one says certain things (see the “catch
phrases”) from one paradigm, adherents of the other immediately
either turn off or get hostile, accusing the person of racism,
fascism, idiotarianism, islamo-bolshevism, etc.
As a result paradigms becomes dogmatic, a tool to wield, or a
weapon with which an activist can strike, rather than a map to
explore. Ultimately, this shift to blinding activism can have
a huge negative impact on our world, even as it promises to further
our hopes. It can insist on a “truth” that directly contradicts
important evidence, and proposes solutions that will backfire
in real life.
Ultimately, we need to be able to apply both paradigms, exploring
our social and political world by treating them as working hypotheses
that get confirmed or disproved in any individual case, rather
than axiomatic truths that impose “right” on every case. Then
different paradigms can have a positive-sum relationship, and
improve our ability to solve problems by increasing our ability
to understand them.
As promoters of civil societies, unfair judgments are exactly
what we try to avoid. If we want to reduce moral failures at home
and around the world, we might start at home, by judging fairly.
If we don’t, we may find that poor judgments encourage the very
evils we think we oppose. And in today’s current climate of terrorism,
judging poorly and taking sides unfairly can be suicidal.
SEE ALSO:
PC Paradigm
Jihad Paradigm
PC Paradigm vs. Jihad Paradigm
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