Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
In Thomas Sowell's "Conflict of Visions: Ideological origins of political struggles", he thinks the broad division between "left" and "right" rests on one's broad view of human nature itself - one that tends to either fall into what he called the Constrained and Unconstrained visions.
Let’s try and see how that measures against the empirical facts, the fact being myself a leftist.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
The unconstrained vision
Sowell argues that the unconstrained vision relies heavily on the belief that human nature is essentially good.
I don’t believe such thing, but I don’t believe it is essentially bad either. I’d rather support the view that good and evil are concepts made in society to regulate behaviors. Point against Sowell.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
Those with an unconstrained vision distrust decentralized processes and are impatient with large institutions and systemic processes that constrain human action.
That seems contradictory. In any case, I do believe in the need to plan, organize and control human endeavors, which means centralized processes a the level of implementing broad strategies, but decentralized at the sub-levels, even requiring autonomy and decision-making powers at those levels. The larger the size of institutions, the harder to control their processes at every level, trying to do it simply will erode your own base. Point against Sowell again.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
They believe there is an ideal solution to every problem, and that compromise is never acceptable.
I don’t believe that. You work with what you have, which does not necessarily mean you don’t look for ways to improve the real state of affairs to move to a better state, closest to an ideal state. So, there are compromises along the way. Marxists, for example, argued that a socialist state would carry elements of the bourgeois state, and that this was a necessary compromise before moving to a stateless, communist society. This of course was a dispute with anarchosocialists, who said the state had to disappear right from the start. I stay somewhere in the middle.
Point against Sowell there, too.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
Collateral damage is merely the price of moving forward on the road to perfection. Sowell often refers to them as "the self anointed."
I don’t believe in such abstractions typical of idealists. I’m not a moralist either, and I don’t believe it’s something ingrained in socialist thinking. Point against Sowell there, too.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
Ultimately they believe that man is morally perfectible.
No, I don’t, at least not in absolute, uniform, permanent terms. Such a path would lead to intolerance. We can improve society as a collective humanistic project and that includes setting a standard of living that is concerned with the integral well being of all, having eliminated social and material constraints to allow for the individual’s material, intellectual and moral development by its own choice. I think that is a universal aim of all political projects, but if that’s an attribute of leftists, I’m guilty as charged.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
Because of this, they believe that there exist some people who are further along the path of moral development, have overcome self-interest and are immune to the influence of power and therefore can act as surrogate decision-makers for the rest of society.
I don’t believe that either. To delegate power seems to be a necessary trade-off between private and public life, rather than an ideal in itself. And I don’t get this obsession with morals as the main and perhaps only incentive to take a political and ideological stance. Everyone will have their own sense of good and bad and will evaluate political options accordingly, but that will happen across the whole ideological spectrum. Self-interest is perfectly compatible with service to the common good, given the interplay between personal and social needs.
Point against Sowell again.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
The constrained vision
Sowell argues that the constrained vision relies heavily on the belief that human nature is essentially unchanging…
I assume he means the psychological aspect of human nature. Surely I don’t rely heavily on that view (man does change historically) and that will be a point for Sowell. However, as a leftist I don’t have to embrace the notion that everything human is a social construct, so I’ll give Sowell half a point there.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
…and that man is naturally inherently self-interested, regardless of the best intentions.
I have objections to such thinking, because it presents a false dilemma. Self-interest, intinctive cooperative action and solidarity are not mutually exclusive, they intersect very often. Strategy games show this is true. Since I disagree, a point for Sowell.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
Those with a constrained vision prefer the systematic processes of the rule of law and experience of tradition.
I don’t have any problem with the rule of law and order, systematic processes or tradition. Point against Sowell.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
Compromise is essential because there are no ideal solutions, only trade-offs.
I accept trade-offs. Point against Sowell, again.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
Those with a constrained vision favor empirical evidence and time-tested structures and processes over intervention and personal experience.
So do I. Another point against Sowell.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
Ultimately, the constrained vision demands checks and balances and refuses to accept that all people could put aside their innate self-interest.
All those who work to put checks and balances aren’t putting aside their self-interest in favor of a common interest? Anyway, since I can endorse the first part of the statement, but not the second, I’ll give Sowell half a point.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑June 13th, 2025, 5:31 am
These broad philosophical views are what unites the thinking between the seemingly disparate set of political positions that the authors of the book in the OP believe do not exist.
Stephen Pinker refers to this in "The Blank Slate: The modern denial of human nature" where he states that he thinks this theory is the best to date. He refers to these visions as the Utopian and the Tragic visions of human nature.
It does seem to make sense (to me at least) that one's idea of human nature will at least inform one's political outlook.
There’s here the implicit notion that whatever one thinks of human nature, it immediately translates into how one views society and how it can be organized and transformed, as if there could not be external forces and processes constantly presenting humans with new problems and needs. I think that’s a premise that could be easily challenged