The Time-before-Design
Willingness and Politics
Entering political life requires individuals to possess a
to work for the good of the people. Let us take this requirement step by step:- The first aspect of is about being to access wealth and power; while the second aspect is about being to manage for the good of each and all.
- This second aspect of is rather fragile. It often appears to vanish and be replaced by the all-too-human urge for self-aggrandizement—the lust for power and wealth.
The presence of self-aggrandizing lust immediately puts to work for the good of all» become squeezed out. Ultimately, concern for the people en masse is almost an afterthought to be fitted in if absolutely necessary.
in jeopardy. then supports and enables the abuse of power for personal or group gain instead of the general good. The self-interested urge enters and shapes the machinery of government; and the end result is that genuine motivations «Michael Oakeshott describes Greece where Western ideas of originated.
In tribal times in ancient Greece a tribe was little more than an extended family. It operated via custom and personal relationships. When tribes joined together in early Greece, the need for management of diversity arose and hence
and laws emerged.The language of
then was about «doing justice», making tribes «feel at home», «divine inspiration». The Greek thinkers and leaders were, apparently, lovers of political discourse and debate. The polis, agora, demos, politai, basileus, ecclesia, politike, themis, thesmos, nomos, dike, nemesis: all these things seem remote from political violence. Yet violence was everywhere.Oakeshott suggests that what the Greeks created was more a «legend about politics», than itself. The aim here is not to create any legends, but to focus on the brute reality of so we can know what it is that we have to tame.
The Design Issue
Prior to societies, there were bands and tribes which are essentially kin-driven, egalitarian. without a central authority, and with norms but no laws with independent enforcement. Everything is personal.
Once societies emerge, governing institutions need to be specifically designed to be impersonal and take account of the human lust for:
- power for the sake of power;
- wealth without effort.
In the Time-before-Design, the political-governing role implicitly selected for those with a lust for power and a readiness to do anything, anything at all, to gain power. Until rather recently in human evolution, societies were run by a «strong man», the King or Chief or General or Tyrant or Dictator, who inherited power, or took it by force, or was begged to take charge to deal with chaos or fears.
A few powerful organized groups then surrounded this Supreme Leader: his generals & soldiers, the priesthood, and usually aristocrats (e.g. barons). Together, they ruled and governed society. Once political power was gained, it was used to accumulate:
- wealth by taxes and from plunder;
- power by distributing shares in the spoils (the carrot) and using intimidation (the stick).
That is how enlightened goal for politics.
started, and how it has in general continued. But that does not deny the continuing existence of a realistic yetA: Wrong question. obeys evolution's «survival of the fittest» rule. Those who are most determined to do what it takes rise to the top.
In the past: kill or be killed was the power rule: so murdering competitors often solved the issue. Yes: it does violate every ethical doctrine—but ethical choice is a matter of personal freedom, so there is little that any doctrine (as such) can do about it.
In the present: survival of the fittest still applies in
generally. Anyone squeamish about cheating, lying, defaming, bribing, threatening, tricking, distorting, inciting base emotions, or using charisma for selfish ends is liable to be crushed by a less scrupulous competitor.- an enlightened goal. does have
- Confront the current career trajectory for those entering politics with integrity.
Originally posted: July 2009; Last updated: 24-Feb-2014