Nordic Ideology

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by Hanzi Freinacht


  In order for a maj­ority pomo society to be genuine­ly “social­ist” (here just meaning inclusive and fair), and not creep the hell out of over half of the pop­ulation, it would still need to be led by a min­ority of memos who subtly but effectively snatch many of the key posit­ions in society.

  For pomo-land to exist and function at all, you need to have a signi­ficant number of memos to man the steering wheels.

  None of this was included any­where in Marxist thought or in any of its heirs. Lenin had the notion of an avant-garde , an idea which he had inhe­r­ited from other Rus­sian radi­cals, but he did not describe the developme­ntal psychology of such an elite. And he thought he could simply repro­gram people to be socialists by means of a combination of education, prop­aganda and viol­ence.

  Reason Two: Socialist values require postindustrial abundance. But the problems with socialism don’t end there. Where do the pomo popula­tions of the world start showing up in significant numbers? Again, only in highly developed postindustrial countries. As long as life in gen­eral still revolves around indust­rial production, and most of us still need to endure hours every day in boring factories and offices, partaking in other menial, soul-corr­osive work, there’s just no way people are going to become postmod­ern post-materialists. Why would they? If you get rich, it means you can stop wasting your life doing some­thing extremely boring. So you’ll want to get rich. And if your work is that unrewarding and uncrea­tive, of course you’re going to be in it for the money, to want compensa­tion for your trou­bles. You won’t become post-materialist.

  Hence, the precondition for significant parts of the populations to dis­play the necessary psychologies is that you need to have a genuinely post­indu­s­trial society. But—and this is important—you also need the syst­em to function on a massive scale, preferably on a global scale. Just some islands of relative progressive values cannot create a truly postmodern society. This is because they still function within a larger modern, indu­strial cap­italist world­-system, which means you need to make serious con­cess­ions to that same system.

  Looking at some central parts of the current economic world-system, you have postindustrial islands which trade machine-made goods and abst­r­act services to others, but the world-system as a whole is still largely indus­trial. Hence, we can hardly expect the Postmodern value meme to take over on a global scale anytime soon, which would be necessary for any­thing like “social­ism” to function. I’ll get back to this part of the matter in Out­competing Capitalism .

  Phew. And we’re still not done.

  Reason Three: There simply aren’t enough pomos around to uphold the Postmodern value meme through­out society. For people to func­tion within a post­modern society, you would need to have a culture that cor­responds to this value meme. You also need the “cultural code” of post­modern society. You would need to have what we called “symbol-stage E Post­modern” readily available for people to “down­load” and then use in their everyday lives—i.e. people must gain access to the postmodern ideas and learn about them early on in life. And this generally requires at least some higher edu­ca­tion within the hum­anities and/or critical social scien­ce.

  But other than that, you must have vast cohorts of artists, writers, poets, filmmakers, professors and others who recreate and transmit this cultural code—being critical, inclusive, multiperspectival, and all the rest of it—who make these ideas and symbols active and alive within society.

  And even if you manage to institute a system of production that is non-capitalist, you must have some clever way of self-organizing people’s eff­orts, time and attention in an efficient manner that works on a trans­nat­ional scale—something other than the capitalist markets. You need a very efficient information processing system to uphold such an eco­n­omy—one that is more receptive to instant feedback processes, than is mod­ern capital­ism. How else will you successfully coor­dinate the every­day work and activities of billions of inter­connected people on the world market? This, our Marxist friends never offer­ed us. [161]

  Alright. Now, dear Watson, can you see the murder weapon? Imagine you try to create a postmodern economic system, like “socialism”, except:

  there are almost no genuine socialists (in a political-psychological sense of a corresponding effective value meme);

  society is not sufficiently economically and technologically developed;

  people are all stuck in games and incentives for non-socialist mot­ives (making money, gaining power, etc.); and

  there is no postmodern culture that would support an inclu­sive multiplicity of per­spectives.

  What would happen? The society would simply fail to materialize the way you imagined. You would only be able to create it by force, never by spontaneous self-organization. And once you use force, people resist, and they get opp­ressed or killed. And once you have instituted the system by force, none of it behaves as you would expect, because in its very DNA, it is non-soc­ia­list. Hence, you get shortages, corruption and collapses. And you must respond with a reign of terror just to keep things in place, at least some­what. And lots of peo­ple die.

  Mystery solved. Murder she wrote.

  A Diagnosis of Our Time

  All of this brings us to an understanding of what is fundamentally wrong with the world of today. It’s quite simple really. It is, again, a developmen­tal im­bal­ance. Can you guess what it is?

  It’s the obvious fact that we have an economic and technological world-system that has advanced far ahead of the three other fields of developed . We live in an incr­ea­s­ingly global, transnational, digitized, postindustrial world-syst­em, with an increasing number of “disruptive technologies”, i.e. inve­n­tions that redefine people’s lives dramatically. But we lack a correspond­ing glob­al, transnational, digitized, post­industrial system of gov­er­nance. So the system goes tits up and crea­tes large pock­ets of econ­omic, social and cultural losers around the world: the working and middle lower class­es in affluent societies, the ex­ploited poor in poorly governed and failed states, the animals suffering under industrial farming, clim­ate change refugees and other desperate migrants, the disenfranchis­ed urb­an immigrant populations in ghettos and banlieues , the tri­bal and trad­ition­alist religi­ous popul­ations who suffer from confusion and aliena­tion, the fish and other aquatic animals, the biosphere itself.

  But these issues would be self-regulating if the populations, economic agents and leaders of the world were up to pace with recent develop­ments. The crux is that we are not. That’s the issue. That’s what’s wrong with the world.

  We lack a cultural sphere and understanding of our time, an over­arch­ing narrative that matches this new economic and technological order of the world. We, as global humanity, lack the corresponding value meme. And we display behaviors that are unsustainable and downright destruc­tive, given the current systemic circumstances. In other words, we have fallen behind in cultural, psychological and behavioral develop­ment . As noted in Book One, we live in a “retarded world”; we have developed too slowly—mentally, culturally and emotionally.

  Immense quantities of human and animal suffering are at stake here; if we fail to actively and deliberately generate the conditions that foster pers­onal growth, new behaviors and new cultural understandings, we cannot expect the coming age to be a fruitful transition to a postmodern or meta­modern soc­iety. We can expect confused and limited overreactions that worsen the maladies of people and animals around the world.

  Today, the world-system, for all its wonder and power, is not functi­oning in a socially, economically or ecologically sustainable manner. We, the global community, have in some sense become as the Soviet Union—a global bronze colossus on feet of clay.

  Thus, we must orchestrate an extensive moral, emotional and cultural devel­opment. I am not saying, as some idealistic observers think, that we should “follow our hearts” and “return to our moral intuitions and shared va
lues”. Rather, the point is that our moral intuitions and shared values betray us; they can and must evolve.

  To master this situation, to navigate the ongoing global “multi-dimen­sional crisis-revol­ution”, we must look to the subtlest and most intimate details of what it means to be a developing human being in an evolving soc­iety.

  It is an ironic twist of fate that, in order to solve the hard and large pro­blems of the world-system, we must learn to look in­w­ards —into our emo­tional lives and into the nature of our intimate relation­ships with our­selves, one another and our place in the universe.

  And we must do so, not as an individual matter of personal seeking, but as an inherently pol­itical issue that involves all members of society.

  Appendix C:

  EFFECTING GAME CHANGE

  There are different levels of game change, some more fundamental than oth­ers, but all are necessary. There are many different “levers” to pull. We ex­plore these throughout the book, but here are some general sugg­estions to get us started. The levers are:

  Studying the rules of the game and teaching them to as many as possible (Sun Tzu’s Art of War , Machiavelli’s The Prince , Neil Strauss’ The Game etc.). This actually makes the game fairer because it works against game denial and towards a more even distribution of knowing the rules of the game. But emphasizing this side alone can land us in the cynicism of game acceptance.

  Change the game settings by changing the supply of resources. In richer societies where resources are more equally distributed, the games of everyday life are generally less cruel since people have more of what they need and thus feel less tempted to take advantage of others.

  Change the game framing by changing ethical discourses. What is considered acceptable or not in order to get ahead in the daily games of life can be altered by making new ethical guidelines more prevalent; and if everyone tends to follow the same rules, people will be more inclined towards “playing nice”. Even who is to be considered a “loser” can be changed, for instance by making it okay to be poor or uneducated.

  Evolve the game by increasing cognitive capacity for social perspective taking (higher cognitive stage and value meme, as described in Book One). This makes the whole game fairer, where people at higher cognitive stages accept John Rawls’ “veil of ignorance” (not knowing who in society you will be). Yet higher levels of complexity breed even more refined games, like accepting sol­idarity with all sentient beings and mak­ing room for different kinds of con­sciousness in the public.

  Amassing stronger and wider monopolies of violence (states can uphold the rule of law, but the lack of global polity or transnational govern­ance sets limits for how far solidarity through rule of law can reach). A big and strong monopoly of violence stuck in a crude game can of course cause a lot of relative suffering (Fascist states caused more suff­er­ing than rep­resentative republican, capitalist, meat-eating soc­ieties, even if they ma­naged to amass considerable monopolies of violence). But a strong state simply makes it more likely that interpersonal mis­deeds are penalized, that people’s lives and property are protected, and hence that losing in the games of everyday life doesn’t entail death or absolute poverty.

  And last but not least, changing the lived relationship to life and death through increasing contemplative insight, hence changing the needs and wants the games are played for . This changes which goods are ultimately seen as most real, most substantial. Goods that are deeper, more immaterial, are easier to distribute more fairly (insight and bliss vs. food and oil, etc.). This affects the economy of roles to be attained for enactment of imagined immortality. In a society whe­re power over others is the ultimate fan­tasy, people will have to play for roles like “supervisor” or “great dict­ator” or even “conqueror” and these roles will be the most desired ones, result­­ing in very dire games where only few can win and only through great cruelty. In a richer “economy of happiness” , people may play for roles such as “the wise person”, “the saint” or “the trustworthy friend”. That will still produce losers and win­ners, but the results will be determined through much less bloodshed and losing will come at much lower costs.

  I urge the reader to look at these suggestions and compare them with our current political reality—which levers for changing the game are we currently using? Even critical social science seems to take the game too much for granted, seeing too few levers.

  If we stay on our current track, we will miss valuable opportunities for changing the game, for changing the logics through which our social inter­actions function.

  Evolving Markets, Polities and Civil Spheres

  In Book One, I argued that neither the market, nor the state bureaucracy, nor the civil sphere (including our associations, clubs, media and personal rela­tion­ships) can be seen as inherently “ratio­n­al”, “free” or “humane”. Rather, each sphere can be more or less intelli­gent and display varying degrees of coll­e­­c­t­ive intelligence .

  They develop togeth­er and depend upon each other for their proper functioning. In this view, it makes less sense to be a class­ical libertarian, socialist, conservative or anarchist be­cause each of these pos­itions is inhe­r­ently biased towards and against mar­ket, state and civil sphere solutions respectively. They each have “pol­itical aller­gies” and infatuations limiting their pers­pectives upon all things pol­itical. In this sense, it is necessa­ry to go “beyond Left and Right”, letting go of irrational allergies and infa­t­u­a­tions.

  I also argued there are different analytical “fractal triads” which are be­coming increa­singly intermeshed and re-integrated in the digital, post­industrial eco­n­omy that relies more upon sustainability, creativity and inno­vation.

  These fractal triads are:

  1. The systems :

  the market,

  the state,

  the civil sphere.

  2. The spheres of life :

  the professional,

  the civic (citizen and public engagement),

  the personal.

  3. The political base-suppositions :

  solidarity,

  competition,

  trade.

  4. The basic political values :

  order,

  equality,

  freedom.

  I suppose you could add a fifth triad consisting of an expanded form of Habermas’ duality between “the system” (all impersonal exchanges via money and formal political power) and “the lifeworld” (everyday life ex­perience and the relations in it) by adding a third category of “imagined communities” or “imaginaries” (the shar­ed ideas and preconceptions about society at large including ethnicity and nat­ion­ality, such as has been proposed by Benedict Anderson and somewhat differently by Charles Taylor). It is not difficult to see these three categories are also in a dialec­tical dance with one another and that neither of them is “the most real” or the ultimate source of legitimacy.

  Each of these triads develop as triadic fractal systems ; their constituent parts develop to­gether or regress together—even if there may be times when one aspect can and should be emphasized over the other two. The triads can be intelligently weaved to­gether, or their parts can work against each other and cause mutual harm. And, more fund­amentally, the parts dep­end upon each other in their logical structure. Fractals.

  The game deniers tend to dislike and deny the aspects of competition and trade that are in fact logically necessary parts of life and society. The game accepters tend to deride and underestimate the very real aspects of solid­arity, moral concern and love, trying to explain these by red­ucing them to the “underlying hard facts” of political real­ism and crude econo­mic inter­ests. They think competition is the most real.

  The game change position avoids such biases against markets, states and the civil sphere, or against solidarity, competition and trade. Rather, the idea is to work for game change across all of these: to see how they interact, how they strengthen and
/or impede each other.

  Notes

  * * *

  See: Ruelle, D., Takens, F., 1971. On the nature of turbulence. Communications in Mathematical Physics . 20 (3): 167–192.

  See: Norberg, J., 2013. How Laissez-Faire Made Sweden Rich. Libertar­ianism.org. Oct. 25 th 2003.

  Welzel, C. 2013. Freedom Rising. Human Empowerment and the Quest for Emancipation. Cam­bridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

  See: Graham, C., Zhou, S., Zhang, J. 2017. Happiness and Health in China: The Paradox of Progress. World Development . Vol. 96, pp. 231-44.

  The other such category is “loop­holes” , i.e. when the values of modern society can be set aside and the ethics of earlier stages of society de facto reign. For instance, modern society transposes (and rela­bels) slavery and serf­dom beyond its own shores under colonialism and, in our days, under the com­plex sub-contractor chains of production and distribution of major corporate transnationals. You could say that these categories are special cases of “residual problems” and “new emer­gent properties” pro­blems. I discuss these in another book titled The 6 Hidden Patterns of History .

  By the way—I don’t mean to equate conservatives with pickup artists or vice versa. I am just looking for the general “let’s keep it real” sentiment, which they both share.

  See Scott, M. B., Lyman, S. M., 1968: Accounts. American Sociological Review , Vol. 33, No. 1: 46-62.

  See also: Buttny, R., 1993. Social Accountability in Communication. London: Sage.

  When the conservative philosopher Edmund Burke in the early 19 th century wrote his critical com­mentary on the French Revolution he was noticing a related but distinct aspect: that you cannot just force a system into being without the corresponding psychology and culture within the population, lest you will experience a huge backlash. But Burke, too, over­generalized. He was noticing another developmental imbalance and took it as uni­ver­­sally applicable. But in reality, dramatic shifts of systems have been made successfully throughout history. It’s just that some are sustain­able because they match the development in the three other fields, while some aren’t. The political systems that aren’t based within all four fields simply lead to severe pathologies: planned economy without a socialist (post­modern) population will lead to breadlines and oppression, an industrialized society with a modern bureaucracy governed by faustian principles of dominance and war will lead to nazism.

 

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