Nordic Ideology

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by Hanzi Freinacht




  HANZI FREINACHT

  Nordic Ideology: A Guide to Metamodern Politics, Book Two

  Copyright © Metamoderna ApS, 2019

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof

  may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever

  without the express written permission of the publisher

  except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  First Edition, 2019

  ISBN 978-87-999739-3-4

  Metamoderna ApS | www.metamoderna.org

  Here’s one for Jonas,

  And one for Jimmy

  And for all the kind, intelligent

  And sensitive people

  Who bow down

  And break down

  Under the existential pressures

  Of modern life

  And one for Tom,

  This mischievous man

  Who was the first reader of this book

  And passed away shortly after

  Contents

  Introduction: BLAZING NEW PATHS

  Breaking the Limits

  The Last Book and This One

  The Map, The Plan and The Proof

  Hanzi: Your Suspicious Friend

  Make an Effort

  Fanfare to Part One: ATTRACTORS

  A Winner’s History

  The Spirit of the Laws Evolving

  An Attractor Is…

  Society and Evolution

  Set the Lodestone Right

  Navigators of History

  Chapter 1: RELATIVE UTOPIA

  The “Both-And” of Development

  Beauties Lost and New Heights Reached

  New Miseries Worth Fighting For

  Chapter 2: GAME CHANGE

  Game Denial

  Conservative Satisfaction

  Game Acceptance

  Don’t Hate the Game

  Multi-Dimensional Game Change

  Chapter 3: HISTORY’S DIRECTION

  A Developmental View of Order

  1. The Early Modern State

  2. The Nation State

  3. The Welfare State

  4. The Listening Society

  The Pattern: (In)dividuation and Differentiation

  Chapter 4: ANOTHER KIND OF FREEDOM

  Freedom as Emotions

  Sociology of Emotions to the Rescue

  Emotional Regimes: Hidden in Plain Sight

  The Spectrum of Judgment

  The Hierarchy of Negative Social Emotions

  Freedom as Societal Development

  Chapter 5: FREEDOM’S BEYOND

  In-formalization and Nordic Envy

  Narcissism Decoded

  Envy and Jealousy

  Escape from Freedom

  Three Voices Whisper

  A Simple Scale of (In-)Dividual Freedom

  The Highest Reaches of Freedom

  Chapter 6: DIMENSIONS OF EQUALITY

  Equality as Paradox

  Six Dimensions of Inequality

  Chapter 7: DEEPER EQUALITY

  Deeper Resonances

  Equality, Equivalence, Equanimity

  Spirituality as a Class Magnifier

  Chapter 8: THE EVOLUTION OF NORMS

  Cultural Penalties and Rewards

  The Norm System as Cultural Struggle

  The Map of Cultural Game Change

  Interlude to Part Two, The Plan: THE SIX NEW FORMS

  Very, Very Quick Recap

  Processes for Deeper Societal Coherence

  Three Caveats

  Chapter 9: DEMOCRATIZATION POLITICS

  Updating Democracy Itself

  The True North: Collective Intelligence

  False Defenders of Democracy

  The Four Democratic Forms

  Interconnecting the Four

  Chapter 10: EVOLVING DEMOCRACY

  Voting Systems and Internet Democracy

  Bottom-Up and Top-Down

  Institutional Experiments

  Final Countdown for Democracy

  Chapter 11: GEMEINSCHAFT POLITICS

  A Call to Fellowship

  Developing the Demos

  From Public to Domestic to Private

  Enter Creepy Politics

  An Orwellian “Ministry of Love”?

  Doing Gemeinschaft Politics

  Four Examples of Gemeinschaft Politics

  Chapter 12: TRANSFORMATIONS OF EVERYDAY LIFE

  Reducing Ethnic Tensions

  Post-Feminism and Gender Antagonism

  Empty Rituals and Unritualized Emotions

  Golden Keys

  Chapter 13: EXISTENTIAL POLITICS

  Existential Issues Determine the Goals of Politics

  Is and Is Not

  Supporting Inner Growth

  Existential Statistics and a Ministry of Existential Affairs

  Via Contemplativa

  Life Crisis and Development

  Chapter 14: THE AWAKENED PUBLIC

  Secular Monasteries

  Meditation and Society

  Transpersonal Integrity

  Death, Truth and Discourse

  Madness and Civilization

  Chapter 15: EMANCIPATION POLITICS

  New Sources of Oppression

  Rights Reloaded

  La Résistance, Direct and Indirect

  Four Dimensions of Oppression

  Chapter 16: EMPIRICAL POLITICS

  Not Obvious, Not Naive

  Higher Levels of Truth?

  An Appalling State of Affairs

  The Ten-Fold Path to Enlightenment (2.0)

  Chapter 17: POLITICS OF THEORY

  Culture into Our Own Hands

  A Serpent Biting Its Own Tail

  Theory in Practice

  Example: Big History in Schools

  Methods for Worldviewing

  Chapter 18: THE MASTER PATTERN

  Resonanz, Bitte!

  Montesquieu 2.0

  Inherent Semiotic Structure

  What Must Be Done

  More Sinister Plots

  Simmering Micro Movements

  Trouble Shooting / FAQ

  Chapter 19: REQUIEMS FOR MODERN IDEOLOGIES

  Subtle Memetic Revolution

  More Egalitarian than Socialism

  More Liberal than Liberalism

  More Sustainable than Ecologism

  More Prudent than Conservatism

  More Radically Rebellious than Anarchism

  Strategic Considerations

  Chapter 20: DANGEROUS DREAMS

  Forbidden Phantoms™

  The Solemn Vengefulness of Communism ☭

  The (Partial) Glory of Fascism

  Excursion: Obedience as Laughter

  Glimmers of New Age Spirituality

  EPILOGUE

  Appendix A: WHY COMMUNISM FAILED

  Don’t Blame Comrade Napoleon

  The Mainstream/Libertarian Account

  A Jammed Information Feedback System

  Marx Had the Wrong Meta-Ideology

  Communism Is “Game Denial”

  Appendix B: THE FOUR FIELDS

  Value Memes in Populations

  The Four Fields of Societal Development

  Marxian Blindness

  The Psychological Prerequisites of Socialism

  Too Dumb for Complex Societies?

  Murder She Wrote

  A Diagnosis of Our Time

  Appendix C: EFFECTING GAME CHANGE

  Evolving Markets, Polities and Civil Spheres

  Notes

  Introduction:

  BLAZING NEW PATHS

  Let it first of all be said that the previous book, The Listening Society , wasn’t all that good or important.

  The previous book basically hammers home one point: that devel
op­ment is real and that it matters. It stays mostly within the realm of psych­ology. There are a few innovations, true, but they aren’t that big.

  The present volume is different. Fewer people will like it, no doubt, as it’s not as light-weight. This is a much heavier, more original and, in my opinion, a more significant piece of work. Essentially, the first book was only the intro­duc­tion to this one, which contains about three times more in terms of theo­retical content and innovation. It presents you with an actual to-do plan to save the world. Without this plan, we’re still just pla­ying around.

  This is where it gets real. Welcome.

  —

  Ah, back in the Alps. It’s a sunny winter’s day. Clear skies. Open hor­i­zons. Majestic mountains. Swathes of pine trees burdened with a thick layer of slowly melting snow, naked cliffs in glistening black and white, rising above misty valleys. It’s quiet here.

  Only the buzzing flies keep me company in this chalet of six­teen beds, five bathrooms, and one jacuzzi. I’ve just spent half an hour chasing a ver­itable army of them out the win­dows. Many more remain. They want to see the sun, but the moment they make their way out, they freeze to death. I watched a few of them land in the soft snow; it takes about ten seconds before their last spasm.

  I don’t know if it’s preferable to a forty-eight-hour life of beating aga­inst a window until you dry up and roll over—and eventually have your body swallowed by the vacuum cleaner. I just sent­enced a good fifty of them to death. I can’t say I regret it.

  Still, I wonder what it would be like to be one of them. They have about 10,000 neurons each. App­ar­ently, this wooden house has parts where magg­ots thrive and eggs can be safely laid. But once the flies have won their wings and confidently lift off to explore the world, they find a barren land­scape of wood and glass, with no scrap to eat, no water to quench their thirst, no cow dung to relish in. During the summer, there are cows grazing about, their bells chiming and echoing until sunset, fields of dung aplenty. But now there is only a hopeless struggle against the win­dow, an invis­ible barrier granting no solace.

  From a human perspec­tive, the relent­less eff­orts of these creatures appear futile. Their way of understand­ing the world—“just go for the light”—seems much too simpleminded. Quite clearly, their intuit­ion be­trays them.

  But are we so different from our distant house fly kin? Evolutionarily, we parted ways about half a billion years ago. For certain, we have taken divergent paths. Verte­brates like our­selves develop a “second mouth” du­r­ing early emb­ryonic stages, where­as the “first mouth” becomes our anus. These little bastards, bang­ing their heads against the window, still eat through their anuses. They live short lives and multiply quickly, dying en masse to let some lucky few pass on their genes—lots of genes. We, on the contrary, live long lives and invest huge energy into our rather few off­spring for many years. Some of us even love them.

  But like the flies, we are born into a world of greater circumstances be­yond our control. Some of us are born on hot, humid summer days, with plenty of space to buzz around and cows to both­er; to live the lives we were, in some sense, meant to live. Others are born to a merci­­less struggle spent beating our heads against invis­i­ble barriers.

  Had I been born elsewhere, I could have been a drug-addicted child sol­dier in Sierra Leone, a sweatshop worker in Bangladesh, or brain­washed in a North Korean labor camp on the Russian taiga. Talk about barren land­scapes for human growth and flour­ishing.

  Breaking the Limits

  Nature is a cruel mistress. On one hand she graciously endows us all—mice and men, and yes, even flies—with unlimited potential to flourish; on the other, she sooner or later throws us against an impenetrable glass barrier. We always hit limits such as lacking resour­ces, harsh climatic con­ditions, hostile life forms, or diseases, to either stump our growth or kill us off.

  No one ever reaches their full potential. But nature isn’t being unfair; on the contrary, it’s life that is utterly unreasonable in its aspirations. To life, to the primordial impulse of the will, the world is simply not enough; the moment it wins the world, it seeks to conquer another.

  Take a pair of flies, for instance; without any natural barr­iers, one mat­ing couple could grow into a swarm exceeding the mass of the Earth in less than a year. [1] A simple house fly may appear a humble creature; but don’t be fooled: If given the chance, it’ll consume the world and every­one in it. Lord of the flies.

  Humans are no less unreasonable; just closer to conquering the world. Human crops now account for more than a third of the Earth’s non-marine biomass, 83% of the terrestrial biosphere is under direct human control, and we and our domesticated animals now make up 97% of all land mamm­als. Insects may be more numerous, but the biomass of all humans has been estimated to be slightly larger than the combined bio­mass of all 12,649 spe­cies of ants. Quite impressive when you think about it. I couldn’t find any estimates for how we compare to flies, but a recent investigation has shown that in certain parts of the world we have killed off around 75% of all winged insects in the last 30 years. [2] At this rate we’ll beat the flies pretty soon.

  Victory at last. If perhaps a lonely one.

  However, the explosive growth from a few million to soon-to-be eight billion humans in the course of a mere 10,000 years is not the most extra­ordinary fact about our species. What’s even more extraordinary is that we’re not about to reach 80 billion.

  We’re often led to believe that the Earth is severely overpopulated, but overconsumed is a more accurate description. Theoretically, we could eas­ily sustain a much larger number of human bodies with the curr­ently avail­able resources and technologies. We have plenty of possibilities to go forth and be fruitful and populate the Earth as God told us in the Bible. But some­how this godly command wasn’t enough for the human race. We wan­ted something more. We wanted to become gods ourselves. Gods of electricity and economic growth. Gods of information. [3]

  Evolution truly is a strange beast. The moment natural selection fin­ally had produced a species capable of overcoming most of the natural bar­riers inhibiting its biological expansion from subsuming the entire bio­sphere, a new evolutionary principle enters the stage and takes the lead role: sym­b­olic evolution.

  Unlike the flies I callously froze to death, our ape bodies appear to be infected by a strange ghost that strives to expand its single self rather than the number of bodies carrying its genome. Our minds have been infected with an intricate and mysterious symbolic world that somehow convinced us that spreading our genes isn’t ultimately what life is about.

  Instead, human life has come to revolve around the expansion of our inner world; a world that is both personal and intimate, and inescapably connected to the wider field of symbols shared with others. In short, all of us have values, ideals and ideas that we seek to imprint upon the world. That’s our way of expanding.

  This has turned humanity into a restless creature, unceasingly on a quest to expand our consciousness: ever higher states of joy and pleasure, even at the price of great torment; new knowledge to satisfy our never-ending curi­osity; deeper spiritual insights to relate to the unanswerable question of why we are here; and increasingly complex ways of thinking in order to make sense of it all.

  Just like flies cannot stop multiplying until the entire world is con­sumed by their offspring, we can’t stop ourselves from expan­ding the scope of our inner world until we reach the impossible ideal of a god—even if it kills us. We just can’t help it; we reach higher and higher, deeper and deeper, in a futile attempt to transcend the many limits that insult our divine pre­ten­sions.

  However, we cannot (foreseeably [4] ) escape the natural barrier that is the frailty of our biological bodies. No matter how far our mind develops be­yond its primal instincts and impulses, no matter how abundantly our spiri­tual depth and intellectual complexity allow us to manipulate the world beyond our bodies, we still remain bio
logical creatures with all the lim­ita­tions that entails.

  Of course, bodies are beautiful. There is, as many have observed, an intelligence in the body—if we only listen to its signals, if we come “out of our heads”. But bodies are also messy, gory and vulnerable. The same prin­ciple that gives us life and mind also leaves us raw and utterly expo­sed.

  Ernest Becker famously argued, in his psycho­analytical account of the denial of death in modern society, that we are “gods with anuses”. [5] This was meant to underscore the strange duality of the human condition: that we are conscious and intelligent beings who can strive for beauty, love and truth—but we can never escape the frailty of our bodies. Even the exalted Dalai Lama will solemnly shit his robes during a sacred ritual if his bowels betray him. Gods with anuses; the pri­mordial mouths we share with the flies.

  Yet nature is not the only barrier to stand between our god-like aspira­tions and all too human predicaments. Societal barriers, such as instit­u­tions, laws, com­m­on under­standings, language structures, tech­no­logy, mark­ets and social norms are both scaffolds for our growth and expres­sion, and prisons for our bodies and souls. The instances I mention­ed above—the child sol­dier, the sweat­­­shop worker and the brainwashed forced laborer—are all clear exa­m­ples of how societal factors can limit our lives, our wellbeing and our psychological develop­ment.

  Yet, even in more favorable envir­on­ments, there will always be societal barriers limiting us: social conventions restraining us from becom­ing who we really want to be, economic circum­stances preventing us from using our greatest talents, lacking support struct­ures and so forth.

  But thanks to our oversized brains and the wonders of sym­bolic lang­uage, we can conceptualize the barriers ahead and take measures to chan­ge the cir­cum­stances within which we live our lives and to which futu­re hum­ans and other sentient beings will be born. Or at least we can die trying.

  As I write this, we are, as a global society, still waking up to the fact that there are significant natural barriers ahead of us: the multidimensional ecological crises, the most well-known of which is human-caused climate change. Science is part by part revealing the grim rules we have to play by. If we play our cards right, we can avert some or even most of these barri­ers, at least for a significant period of time.

  What we haven’t woken up to, however, is the fact that we can chan­ge the soc­ietal barriers and social-psychological landscapes of everyday life. And indeed, because the different kinds of barr­iers inter­act with each other, we must change some of the struts and beams of society if we are also to overcome­ the natural barriers. But to do so, we need to know what it means for humans to grow and flourish, and we need to know the logic of how societies devel­op.

 

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