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Falsehoods and Truths


The political divide is largely a natural and inevitable consequence of fundamental human nature. We evolved to form into groups of like-minded people which then compete with other groups for political power and influence. But some of the divide is NOT inevitable. That part, simply put, is ignorance. Both sides believe things about human nature that are not true. And because of those false beliefs we believe things about each other that are also not true.  It is the aim of The Independent Whig to work to replace the falsehoods with truths.  

Many aspects of the political divide are common to everyone regardless of their political persuasion.  That is, many parts of our Righteous Minds and of the Coming Apart are not liberal things or conservative things, they’re human things. The number of things that are truly unique to right or left is limited.  It is the aim of The Independent Whig to work to tease out the unique from the common.  

Due at least partly, if not mostly, to our varying understanding of human nature, people on opposite sides of the political center often have very different, arguably mutually exclusive, concepts in mind when they use words like liberty, equality, justice, and fairness.  A major consequence of those differences is that we talk past each other, and we’re often dumbfounded as to how a person on the other side could possibly support policies that are so clearly counter-productive to what we believe liberty, equality, justice, etc., to be.  It is the aim of The Independent Whig to shine the light of day on those different conceptions, and work to see that they’re openly part of our political discussions rather hidden below the surface or between the lines, so that all parties understand themselves and each other and the goals and objectives they’re trying to achieve.

The American Founding was based largely on only one of the two major conceptualizations human nature, and on only one of the two major conceptualizations of liberty, equality, justice, and fairness.  It is the aim of The Independent Whig to highlight this, too, so that our political discussions can happen with an understanding and appreciation of the context of where we came from, the reasons for our founding, and the reasoning in our founding documents, in the hope that this context can be a better guide for where we want to go.     

Following is a listing of false beliefs and their attendant truths.  The list is not complete, nor is every statement necessarily in its final form.  The list is offered as a first draft only to indicate the thought process and direction of The Independent Whig.  Links are provided only as introductions to the topics they describe.  They’re not considered to exhaustive explorations of the False Beliefs or Truths they’re associated with.   The effort described here is a work in progress, subject to additions and deletions, and refinements and enhancements, as it continues.       


False Belief: reason is objective analysis of empirical facts.
Truth: Reason is almost entirely subjective.


False Belief: Human thought and action is determined mostly by reason, and therefore the reason people don’t act or think “right” is because they don’t think straight.
Truth: Ninety-nine percent of what we think, say, and do is driven by subconscious intuition.


False Belief: Reason evolved in humans to help them make better decisions
Truth: Reason evolved to create post hoc rationalizations in defense of our intuitions intuitions.


False Belief: The mind is a blank slate at birth, which means that everything we believe about right and wrong, and good and bad, is taught to us or learned as we mature.
Truth: We’re born already “knowing” at a subconscious level, many about favorable and unfavorable behavior.  (The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature,  Predisposed: Liberals, Conservatives, and the Biology of Political Differences)


False Belief: There’s no genetic component to ideology, and the only reason we’re liberal, conservative, or something else is because of what we’ve been taught, or because of the environment we grew up in, or because we “reasoned” our way to our ideology.
Truth: Ideology is heritable.  We tend to inherit personality traits from our parents. including in matters of ideology.  We’re born predisposed to lean left or right, and most people stay with that predisposition.


False Belief: There’s no genetic component to behavioral differences among groups of people of different sexes, cultures, or ideologies, and therefore all such differences are nothing more than artificial social constructs
Truth: Evolution continues.  It happens within groups, which creates differences between groups. (Faster Evolution Means More Ethnic Differences by Jonathan Haidt, The Bell Curve Twenty Years Later: A Q&A With Charles Murray.)


False Belief: Abstract reason is the path to moral truth.
Truth:  Reason is terrible at finding truth, and often leads us away from it.


False Belief: Since reason is the path to moral truth, and since human behavior is determined almost entirely by reason and by social constructs, then all we have to do to achieve the good society is teach the right things and put in place the right social constructs.
Truth: Since none of the assumptions upon which this is based are true, this too is not true.


False Belief:  Morality starts and ends with “care”
Truth:  It also includes, fairness, liberty, loyalty, authority, and sanctity.


False Belief: Liberals understand conservatives better than conservatives understand liberals
Truth:  It’s the other way around.


False Belief: Liberals understand human nature better than do conservatives
Truth: Again, it’s the other way around. ( Haidt on The Colbert Report.  Colbert does a fantastic job of summarizing Haidt’s work.  Haidt on Moyers and Company)


False Belief: Religion is somehow fundamentally different from ideology or morality, secular or otherwise.
Truth: Religion, morality, and ideology are nothing more than different words for the same underlying aspect of human nature.  Namely they represent the value sets around which like-minded people form into groups which then compete with other groups for political power and influence.

 

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