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LIBERTY AGAINST PROGRESS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 December 2017
Abstract:
The epistemic approach to liberalism not only clarifies some of the core features of progress-based arguments for liberty. For two reasons it provides grounds for doubting those arguments’ persuasiveness. The first reason emerges from the epistemic liberal explanation of economic recessions and of social regress as necessary consequences of our enjoying the individual liberty to adapt to our circumstances. Precisely because it secures personal choice with respect to the ends of life and the means to pursue them, liberty must be construed as at best necessary for the imperfect and costly realization of the interest individuals may have in personal advancement. Second, and in revealing the underlying logic of the economic and cultural processes that liberty makes possible, epistemic liberalism shows that it is to the notion of complex adaptation that we must look when seeking to evaluate the overall or aggregate results of liberty. Crucially, however, this means rejecting the notion of progress as fit to perform this ethico-historical evaluative role.
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Footnotes
For comments on an earlier version of this essay I am indebted to David Schmidtz, Bas Van der Vossen, the anonymous reviewer at Social Philosophy and Policy and to the other contributors to this volume.
References
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2 “Progress” and “advancement” will be assumed to be coextensive for the purposes of this enquiry.
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4 Plamenatz, Hegel, Marx and Engels, and the Idea of Progress, 310.
5 On Turgot’s two laws of development see Bury, The Idea of Progress, 84. On Hegel see Bury, The Idea of Progress, 137–38; Plamenatz, Hegel, Marx and Engels, and the Idea of Progress, chaps. 1–2. On Marx see Plamenatz, Hegel, Marx and Engels, and the Idea of Progress chaps. 3–4. A related question is whether progress occurs via predefined stages. On this see Plamenatz, Hegel, Marx and Engels, and the Idea of Progress, 310–11.
6 Plamenatz, Hegel, Marx and Engels, and the Idea of Progress, 312–14.
7 Hayek, The Constitution of Liberty, 34.
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27 Whilst Plamenatz’s view is epistemic in that he denies that “all the knowledge acquired by mankind were the possession of one possessor,” he nevertheless assumes that the knowledge in question is only explicit, propositional knowledge. On this see Plamenatz, Hegel, Marx and Engels, and the Idea of Progress, 348.
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33 Ibid., chaps. 6 and 7.
34 Ibid., 52.
35 Hayek, The Constitution of Liberty, 28. See also Tebble, Epistemic Liberalism, 40.
36 Ibid., 29–30.
37 This is not to say that discrimination is morally acceptable, even if it may be legally permissible. For a discussion see Tebble, Epistemic Liberalism: A Defence, 214–30.
38 Plamenatz, Hegel, Marx and Engels, and the Idea of Progress, 312.
39 Galston, William, “Two Concepts of Liberalism,” Ethics 105, no. 3 (1995): 516–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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41 Plamenatz, Hegel, Marx and Engels, and the Idea of Progress, 348.
42 Hayek, The Constitution of Liberty, 45–46.
43 Deliberative democracy would be another, perhaps more promising, candidate regime for the pursuit of progress, but space does not allow us to consider it here.
44 Tebble, Epistemic Liberalism: A Defence, 80–81.
45 Hayek, Law, Legislation and Liberty, vol. 1, 39; vol. 2, 109.
46 Hayek, The Constitution of Liberty, 40. This, of course, militates against the view that Hayek defends elsewhere in The Constitution of Liberty that progress is associated with advances in standards of living. On this see The Constitution of Liberty, 42–44.
47 I am grateful to Darrel Moellendorf for this point.
48 Wright, Erik O., Envisioning Real Utopias (London and New York: Verso, 2010)Google Scholar.
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