Nordic Ideology
Page 58
With some racist blind spots here and there typical of the period, Marx and Engels at least strived to include all people in an increasingly rational social order—where irrational tendencies such as “fetishism” (wanting money for money’s sake, or stuff for stuff’s sake) and “reification” (thinking that there was something inherently real in arbitrary human constructs such as God, money or our current political ideology) would no longer determine our lives and govern our societies.
Most of all, you could say that Marx in some rudimentary sense was “postmodern” because he wanted to create a society that was not pre -modern, but still built upon something else than capitalism; he sought a system in which everyday life and activities revolve around something other than monetary exchanges and where we are not “steered” by money in our organization of, and participation in, everyday life.
And since capitalism and modernity are inherently intertwined, the striving for a post-capitalist society is inherently postmodern: it is that which, by definition, comes after modernity. [155]
The “real socialism” that followed during the 20th century was a kind of “state capitalism”, hence never achieving the non-capitalist ideal—in practice, everyday life still revolved around money, materialism and consumption. But still, Marx’s values rather accurately reflect—or herald—an early form of what I call the Postmodern value meme; this certainly includes the vision of a society that is free from alienation and excessive inequality.
In Marx’s time, there was really no research on developmental psychology—and certainly nothing that would resemble a four-dimensional political developmental psychology with the theory of effective value memes. Sure, you had some early glimmers of such developmental thinking, all crafted by Romantic thinkers: Rousseau’s stage theory of children; Schiller, Herder and others played with adult stages of psychological and development (recycled later, and more famously, by Kierkegaard). [156] But none of this amounts to a political-psychological research program that can track and describe the overall development of larger demographics and societies.
Today the situation is very different; we finally have good and ample research to support the idea of people being at different developmental stages—even if the scientific program is still, to our day, rudimentary. But we have something that Marx did not: a science of developmental psychology. This changes everything.
Let’s bring this puppy home. What am I getting at? Well, look at what Marx wrote about. He wrote about how he thought the economic system develops, and how that in turn affects other parts of society and people’s psyches. [157] Marx wrote about economic theory, about the economic system above all. He believed that he was working for a society that would come after capitalism, one that would be non-capitalist: what he termed “communist”. Notwithstanding the limitations of his analysis of the economic system (there were some, even if he correctly predicted a number of developments), he failed to understand that a post-capitalist society would require a corresponding post-capitalist psychological development of the population to function, or even to emerge in the first place—as well as a corresponding behavioral and cultural development.
Hence, Marx was blind to three out of four fields of development. And so was the communist movement that followed. They had their eyes gouged out by materialist reductionism.
That’s the Marxian Blindness. Don’t let it infect you.
The Psychological Prerequisites of Socialism
What, then, would a political psychology of a genuinely functional “socialist” population look like? Here’s a rough estimation; they would need to be:
extremely egalitarian, unimpressed by wealth and power;
extremely peaceful, non-violent; prone to resolve issues by dialogue and compromise;
extremely tolerant of differences and accepting of weaknesses in others;
capable of taking in and harboring a multiplicity of perspectives, and viewing the perspectives as enriching to each other, being non-judgmental towards others with differing views;
capable of autonomous critical thinking that goes beyond following the current norms, being able to recognize and bust autocratic, totalitarian tendencies and see through populist “simple solutions”;
prepared to change their own opinions if good arguments are presented;
focused on non-material and secular-spiritual issues in life, rather than material wealth and comfort, working for other rewards than money;
prepared to view themselves and their own interests in relation to a larger system, preferably one in which all humans in the world are included;
skilled at being inclusive in dialogues, with a battery of good techniques for democratically dividing speaking time, listening to one another and generally being sensitive interlocutors;
generally emotionally fulfilled and mature, hence difficult to manipulate, seduce, provoke or bribe, and generally less prone to emotional overreactions;
in an emotional position where one is not driven by either economic fears, nor fear of military threats, ideally not even personal/emotional fears;
capable of understanding, acknowledging and actively counteracting privileges and stigmas of race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, disabilities, class background and even personality types;
identifying with other things than nationalities, religions, ethnicities and one’s own status in society;
emphasize long-term stability and ecological sustainability of the society they live in.
So that’s the kind of people who would need to be around for a socialist system to work at all. Lots and lots of them. Depending on other factors, you might need up to half of the adult population to fit this description.
As much as all this sounds like, I am not describing some “super-perfect impossible goodie-two-shoes”. These people do exist in reasonable numbers around the world today. You can check off all of the above boxes for a lot of people, without them being impossibly perfect. They are the highly functional, well-to-do, highly educated “liberals”—at least as these people often turn out after a more self-indulging period in their 20s. In other words: people at the Postmodern value meme.
In the most advanced countries in the world today, like the Nordic ones, you have about a quarter of the adult population at this value meme. In a country like the US, the share is lower, unless you zoom in on New York or California.
Marx himself was at this Postmodern value meme. Not so strange really: He was privileged, self-made, intelligent, sensitive, successful, a leader; his wife a noble, his father-in-law a mentor and supporter, his professor a world-class philosopher (Hegel!), his best friend the son of a factory owner and also at genius level of intellect. Not that Marx lived a very easy life, but his was a privileged life that could spur his personal development into a higher value meme. He was ahead of his time. How many people at the Postmodern value meme were around in his days? The percentage is almost zero, even in London, at the heart of the modern world.
If you grow up as Oliver Twist, the Postmodern value meme is just not going to happen. It’s just not. You are going to be angry that they beat you as a kid, concerned with getting food, be easily seduced by promises, care little about foreign cultures, have little democratic fiber and skills, be prone to want quick reliefs for your aching body and soul, be very anxious to get much richer by any means possible, not have the opportunity to educate yourself. That’s how I would function under such circumstances, and you probably would too.
So Marx wanted to create socialism in a place and time where there were, frankly speaking, no “socialists”. Heck, most socialists today aren’t even socialists. Think about it; significant demographics at the Postmodern value meme have only showed up in the most privileged and stable countries, and only after a hundred years or more of capitalist industrialism and social reforms. By far the
most people of the 19th and 20th centuries were at the Modern or earlier value memes. [158]
In terms of psychological development, there were almost no true “socialists” around. Should it then surprise us that all the “real” socialist countries—Russia, China, and so on—in which populations were generally well below the Modern value meme, ended up reproducing crude and autocratic systems?
And how many people at the Postmodern value meme would it take to run a “socialist” (genuinely postmodern and post-capitalist) society? Even the almost 25% in Sweden is not nearly enough. It’s not just that you need a majority, or at least a strong minority, to get your policies through in a democratic manner (so that you can shape the institutions in a corresponding way)—you also need an army of highly functional postmodernists to man all the key functions in such a society. You need teachers, politicians, community organizers, bosses, judges, police officers, administrators who all genuinely embody the Postmodern value meme.
They need to be everywhere: much like people at the Modern value meme are needed to man all the positions in today’s modern societies.
Too Dumb for Complex Societies?
To be fully functional at the Postmodern value meme, a significant limitation is that you also need to be a relatively complex thinker—one who uses the postmodern values in an encompassing, nuanced, context-sensitive, systemic way. The cognitive stage of a person’s thinking may have substantial genetic or hereditary causes (much like IQ). Only about 20% of a normal adult population seems to develop to a stage of sufficiently complex thinking, one that truly matches the postmodern ideas (this cognitive stage is called “stage 12 Systematic”, according to the Model of Hierarchical Complexity).
This means that the Postmodern value meme, once it becomes dominant in a society’s culture, is often used in “flattened” and simplified ways that can become oppressive, or at least quite annoying, for most people, rather than genuinely inclusive and democratic.
In the Nordic countries today, you have a lot of people using flattened and simplified versions of the Postmodern values, and the result is often suffocating and alienating to many. For instance, you get excessive “political correctness” and simplified versions of feminism as people apply simple, linear, “flattened” versions of the purportedly sensitive and inclusive norms, or when they apply these “sensitive norms” as ways of promoting their own moral worth at the expense of others. This, quite understandably, leads to resentful populist counter-reactions.
Just to underscore this, let’s take a look at how intelligence (here measured rather crudely as IQ) relates to political ideology and value memes. I prefer to talk about “cognitive stage” instead of IQ, but this is the best we’ve got research-wise. Apparently, childhood IQ scores predict future voting behaviors. Here are figures from the UK, about 6000 people, in 2001. [159]
UK Party
Voter IQ Average
Comment
Green
108.3
Clearly based on postmodern values and environmentalism.
Liberal Democrats
108.2
The social-liberal party, “third player” in UK’s largely bipartisan system.
Conservative
103.7
The large center-right party, mostly modernist values.
Labour
103.0
The large center-left party, mostly modernist values.
UK Independence (UKIP)
101.1
Eurosceptic, right wing populist, modernist/ traditionalist values.
British National
98.4
Nationalist, postfaustian/traditionalist values with some faustian (fascist, etc.) undercurrents.
If you look at the difference between the leaders of the IQ-league and the ones with lowest IQ, you clearly see the scores map perfectly onto the value memes. The parties that embody the later, or “higher”, value memes seem to attract the more cognitively endowed parts of the populace and the lowest value memes the less intellectually gifted. The progressive parties have an IQ score five points above the mainstream, which in turn averages five points above the regressive parties.
Whereas there may be many different mechanisms at play in this stratification [160] process, we can glean the tendency that higher value memes require more cognitively advanced people; except that they do not gather around the attractor point of socialism, but around Green Social Liberalism, which has turned out to be the real attractor of late modern society—hence the concentration of smarts around the Greens and the social-liberal Liberal Democrats.
Obviously, IQ does not in itself “cause” political progressiveness (in which case Hong Kong and Japan would be full of green social liberals, these being higher IQ populations) but it does, without doubt, interact with it in some way. The point here is simply to show that more progressive views may have higher cognitive prerequisites and that a lot of people fall short on this measure.
In Book One, we saw that over 60% of a normal adult population seems to reach the cognitive stages necessary for successfully understanding and operating the norms of a “modern” society (formal logic). When it comes to postmodern society, we are down to about 20% (systematic logic). For metamodern society—which is the main attractor ahead, as we shall see—we’re down to a harrowing 2% (meta-systematic logic), at least in purely cognitive terms (how complex your thinking is).
What we’re looking at is a disparaging challenge to our very biology: We are creating a society which we are biologically unequipped to grasp and thrive in. Up until now, people have been smart enough for society. These days we are, as it were, running out of cognitive fuel. We’re not sufficiently cognitively complex to productively relate to the society that we ourselves have created—or rather, the society that has emerged, self-organized, as the complex result of our ongoing interactions.
Luckily, there is a lot that can be done about this matter. One part of it has to do with “transhumanism” (changing humanity via genetics and technology) but that topic falls outside the scope of this book and is discussed at length by authors like Oxford philosopher David Pearce. And of course, transhumanist development comes with considerable risks, which should best be discussed elsewhere.
Another part, which is more relevant to the metamodern political activist, has to do with creating a society that realistically manages all the different value memes and people at different levels of complexity and personal development—as well as working to support the long-term advancement into higher value memes.
As you can see, a “socialist” society is completely implausible to create in any genuine or sustainable manner unless you also have perhaps over 40% of the population cognitively functional at the Postmodern value meme, which may be achievable only if we manage to surmount some developmental limitations in the population at large.
Murder She Wrote
I’d like to present three more reasons for why socialism never worked and no postmodern, or post-capitalistic, society ever materialized.
Reason One: “Pomos” creep others out. People at the Postmodern value meme are likely to alienate, creep out or otherwise provoke people at the earlier value memes. Their world, their society and their morality often seem abstract, exaggerated and suffocating to moderns and traditionalists; just look at how they shake with rage against “political correctness”, “social justice warriors” and identity politics.
One of the main differences between pomos (postmodernists) and the “memos” (metamodernists) is that the latter include the perspectives of the earlier value memes and empathize with them (since the memos have a developmental, hierarchical perspective which the pomos don’t). The pomos just think there is something wrong with moderns and traditionalists, and that they need to “open up”, stop being so dogmatic and greedy,
or that the spell of “bourgeois ideology” must be broken and so forth.
And indeed, this was what Marx and Engels wrote about when they used terms such as “ideology” and “false consciousness”; workers were not socialists because they were, in effect, brainwashed by their oppressors. Similar schemata show up again and again in postmodern thought: there is a structure or ideology that fools people into being non-socialists, non-vegans (“carnists”), non-environmentalists, non-feminists, mindless consumers, and so on. With Rousseau, the pomos all believe some version of the idea that their own way of thinking is default, logical and benevolent while other people have been fooled and that something is preventing the underlying goodness in them to surface. This idea about demasking and criticizing ideology is married to an implicit assumption of Rousseau’s “noble savage” (that modern humans essentially are corrupted by society and deep down actually subscribe to all these nice-guy postmodern values), and it comes in so many forms: critical cultural studies, feminist epistemology, discourse analysis, narrative analysis, etc.
There may be considerable explanatory value in many of these research fields, but they tend to entirely miss the point regarding developmental psychology. Pomos are unaware of the developmental stages and hence assume all humans are inherently postmodern unless some external force prevents them from being so, and hence they try to shake people and wake them up: “What’s wrong with you!? Why aren’t you acting in your own obvious interest!?” This, of course, only rarely works, and it antagonizes and provokes folks who are modern and traditionalist. It puts psychological demands upon people that cannot be met by their factually existing minds.
That’s what metamodernists don’t do. They respect people’s stage of development and have solidarity with the natural occurrence of their perspectives and developmental journeys. This is to become all the more important in the years to come as the pomos are going to make up a growing proportion of the population.