Are you a liberal or a conservative? Progressive or
traditionalist? Leftist or right-winger? If you think that aligning with some
of those categories is of ultimate political concern, you may have been taken
in by the central pseudoproblem of Western politics.
The main deficiency of those categories lies not in their
overuse, although the hackneyed formulations of much political punditry deadens
our sensibilities, preventing us from understanding much of what’s been happening
before our eyes. Neither is the underlying problem that our political discourse
is fragmented and tribal, as we scramble to identify with a political party or
with our favourite celebrity, news personality, or podcaster to feel like we
belong to something that will outlast our meager self.
The chief embarrassment, rather, is that the categories in
question obscure a deeper, unspeakable division, even while the conventional
distinctions we draw in politics are acceptable because they’re irrelevant. Allow
me, then, to outline the real division, to help you come to know where you
really stand on the political front.
The Origin of Politics
A long time ago, humans separated from the other animals by
acquiring what philosophers and psychologists call “personhood.” A person
enjoys greater autonomy, intelligence, and creativity than the animals do,
which is why our kind has dominated the planet in spite of the comparative
weakness of our body type (although our mental talents in turn have given us
physical prowess in the form of technological control). Animals are defined by
their conformity to their biological life cycle, whereas we have more and more
godlike freedom from our evolutionary role.
Rather than being angels or saints that have wholly
transcended our animal nature, however, we often regress. After all, it’s hard
to know what to do with godlike power, given life’s humble origin from water
and dust. Thus, for a few million years in the Paleolithic Age, nomadic bands
of wise apes wandered the plains as hunter-gatherers. Eventually they formed
civilizations and learned the benefits and drawbacks of a sedentary way of life.
There were artistic revolutions, culminating early on in the cave paintings, as
well as spiritual and philosophical revolutions such as those of the Axial Age,
from the eighth to the third centuries BCE.
These exciting advances in learning to cope with our
personhood, with our existential divide from the rest of nature, on account of
our unparalleled knowledge of our mortality and of the scope of the universe
met with setbacks when we sometimes fell back into ignorance. After dark ages
there were rebirths as we recaptured old insights and social frameworks. But
even the social progress we take for granted, including advances in farming,
medicine, and civil rights has no absolute legitimacy, because all such
advances are experiments in personhood, in the creativity of clever mammals
that have to look to themselves and to their cherished fictions to decide what
to do with a superabundance of knowledge and freedom. What’s good for our
species or for some generations, at least, may be disastrous for life in
general; our progress may have tragic unintended consequences, because that
progress is an accident on top of an accident, a social development resting on
the natural selection of our species’ brain power.