Robert Tulip wrote: ↑Thu Mar 14, 2024 2:20 am
This conversation is very relevant to the current Booktalk non-fiction selection, The Subtle Art of Not Giving A Fuck, which is quite an entertaining and easy short read.
I have long resisted the book, but the main problem now is time. I will be doing well if I manage to read some of the discussion.
Robert Tulip wrote:Modern violence has been concealed in some ways but the numbers killed in war are much higher than in the past. History is tectonic, with pressures gradually building up until an explosive event. Long periods of peace can allow differences to fester that generate polarisation and eventual conflict.
I appreciate the mention of a mechanism, since I have trouble convincing myself on the face of it that violence is a release of pressures. The old anthropological story, that population pressure builds (or resources undergo stress) so that conflict just cuts down on population, well that made some sense but doesn't really match today's reality.
There's a sort of corollary these days when internal conflict builds to the point at which only external conflict can relieve the internal stress. Something like that seems to be happening in India, with the imbalance of young men relative to young women causing unbearable internal stress.
However, the underlying problem with such a mechanism is that violence is lose-lose, that is, the critical resource is now capital, and war destroys it (that does not happen with land). If I can restate that more carefully, it may seem emotionally that attacking one's competitors will loosen one's resource constraint, but the cost of carrying on a war and the destruction that results make it nearly impossible for a win to actually improve the situation of the group initiating conflict.
Rather I think the good image is of tremendous chaos going on in ordinary lives, and the more this chaos is managed by reason the better off everyone is. Ethics are crucial to building a system of management by reason, starting with the motivation they give people to resist the chaotic urge to violence.
Robert Tulip wrote: Getting elites to have a long term understanding of interests requires a coherent analysis of strategy as distinct from tactics. If the whole of politics is consumed by tactical manoeuvre the risks of collapse are crowded out of view. That is certainly the case for climate policy.
Indeed. There used to be a healthy focus on "soft power," but the natural appeal of libertarian ideology to the rich in the West and of imperialism to the petrorulers of Russia and the Middle East have undermined that discussion. And with both sets of elites heavily invested in fossil fuels, the long run is losing its grip on the policy.
Robert Tulip wrote:I’m not sure virtue has ever been in a controlling position. There has always been a concealing duplicity within politics, aiming to present corrupt interests under the guise of principle.
Well, that's the issue I'm trying to raise here: how do we push the corrupt interests to participate in a good-faith way in the discussion about what is right and just?
As a simple example, the typical right-wing talking points about global warming (looking at you, Nikki Haley) argue for sacrifices from poor countries, where the sacrifices literally cost multitudes of lives, as a condition for willingness to sacrifice by rich countries, where the sacrifices are merely irritating. Not what I would call good faith.