conservatism: origins, traditions and thinkers lecture 1 may 16, 2006

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Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

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Page 1: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and

Thinkers

Lecture 1

May 16, 2006

Page 2: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Important Concepts:

Right and LeftPolitical Spectrum

Radical and Reactionary

Page 3: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006
Page 4: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006
Page 5: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006
Page 6: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Classical Liberalism

Montesquieu (1748)John Locke (1670s)Adams Smith (1776)Thomas Jefferson (1776)John Stuart Mill (1859)

Page 7: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Modern Liberalism

John Rawls (1971)John M. Keynes (1919)Isaiah Berlin (1969)

Page 8: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

The French Revolution

Page 9: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Joseph de Maistre

Page 10: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Edmund Burke

Page 11: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

A new concern?

NO T. Hobbes in Leviathan (1651)

Life without government is “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short”

Page 12: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

The AmericanRevolution-1776

Page 13: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

"a disposition to preserve, and an ability to improve".

 

Page 14: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Loyalists

vs. Revolutionaries

Page 15: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Declaration of Independence

“Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light

and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more

disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to

which they are accustomed.”

Page 16: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Back to Burke’s definition:

The American Dilemma…

What to preserve?

Page 17: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Louis Hartz The Liberal Tradition in America

Page 18: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Two Orientations:

Communityand

Individuals

Page 19: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Two Orientations:

CommunityTraditionalist-Reformist

Page 20: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

“Organicists”

• Russell Kirk

- more concerned with reversing

- negative view of society

Page 21: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

“Reformists”

• Peter Viereck

-concerned with adaptation

-positivist of society

Page 22: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Paleoconservatives

1) Nativists

2) Isolationists

3) Protectionists

4) State Right’s

5) Anti-Welfare State

Page 23: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

Neoconservatives

1) Opportunity

2) Interventionism

3) Free Trade

4) National Government

5) Conservative Welfare State

Page 24: Conservatism: Origins, Traditions and Thinkers Lecture 1 May 16, 2006

The Problem of Organicists

Goes back to Burke…

What to Preserve?

Is conservatism ahistorical?

Is there a starting point?