70 The EconomistJanuary27th 2018
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1
O
VER the past four centuries liberalism
has been so successful that it has dri-
ven all its opponents off the battlefield.
Now it is disintegrating, destroyed by a mix
of hubris and internal contradictions, ac-
cording to Patrick Deneen, a professor of
politics at the University of Notre Dame.
The gathering wreckage of liberalism’s
twilight years can be seen all around, espe-
cially in America, Mr Deneen’s main focus.
The founding tenets of the faith have been
shattered. Equality of opportunity has pro-
duced a new meritocratic aristocracy that
has all the aloofness of the old aristocracy
with none of its sense ofnoblesse oblige.
Democracy has degenerated into a theatre
of the absurd. And technological advances
are reducing ever more areas of work into
meaningless drudgery. “The gap between
liberalism’s claims about itself and the
lived reality of the citizenry” is now so
wide that “the lie can no longer be accept-
ed,” Mr Deneen writes. What better proof
of this than the vision of 1,000 private
planes whisking their occupants to Davos
to discuss the question of“creating a
shared future in a fragmented world”?
Mr Deneen uses the term “liberalism”
in its philosophical rather than its popular
sense. He is describing the great tradition
of political theory that is commonly traced
to Thomas Hobbes and John Locke rather
than the set of vaguely leftish attitudes that
Americans now associate with the word.
But this is no work of philosophical cud-
than” (detail pictured), with its sketch of
thousands of atomised individuals con-
fronted by an all-powerful sovereign.
Mr Deneen makes his case well, though
he sometimes mistakes repetition for per-
suasion. He reminds the reader that, before
the advent of modern liberalism, philoso-
phers identified liberty with self-mastery
rather than self-expression, with the con-
quest of hedonistic desires rather than
their indulgence. He does an impressive
job of capturing the current mood of disil-
lusionment, echoing left-wing complaints
about rampant commercialism, right-wing
complaints about narcissistic and bullying
students, and general worries about ato-
misation and selfishness. But when he
concludes thatall thisadds up to a failure
of liberalism, is his argument convincing?
His book has two fatal flaws. The first
lies in his definition of liberalism. J.H. Hex-
ter, an American academic, believed his
fellow historians could be divided into
two camps: “splitters” (who were forever
making distinctions) and “lumpers” (who
make sweeping generalisations by lump-
ing things together). Mr Deneen is an ex-
treme lumper. He argues that the essence
of liberalism lies in freeing individuals
from constraints.
In fact, liberalism contains a wide range
ofintellectual traditions which provide dif-
ferent answers to the question of how to
trade off the relative claims of rights and re-
sponsibilities, individual expression and
social ties. Even classical liberals who were
most insistent on removing constraints on
individual freedom agonised about atomi-
sation. The mid-Victorians were great insti-
tution-builders, creating everything from
voluntary organisations to joint-stock
companies (“little republics” in the phrase
of Robert Lowe, a 19th-century British
statesman) that were designed to fill the
space between the state and society. Later
chewing. Most political theorists argue
that liberalism has divided into two inde-
pendent streams: classical liberalism,
which celebrates the free market, and left-
liberalism which celebrates civil rights. For
Mr Deneen they have an underlying unity.
Most political observersthink thatthe de-
bate about the state of liberalism has noth-
ing to do with them. Mr Deneen argues
that liberalism is a ruling philosophy, dic-
tating everything from court decisions to
corporate behaviour. Theory is practice.
The underlying unity lies in individual
self-expression. Both classical and left lib-
erals conceive of humans as rights-bearing
individuals who should be given as much
space as possible to fulfil their dreams. The
aim of government is to secure rights. The
legitimacy of the system is based on a
shared belief in a “social contract” be-
tween consenting adults. But this produces
a paradox. Because the liberal spirit me-
chanically destroysinherited customs and
local traditions, sometimes in the name of
market efficiency and sometimes in the
name of individual rights, itcreates more
room for the expansion of the state, as mar-
ketmaker and law-enforcer. The perfect ex-
pression of modern liberalism is provided
by the frontispiece of Hobbes’s “Levia-
Political thought
The problem with liberalism
How to revive the most successful idea of the past 400 years
Books and arts
Also in this section
71 How democracies die
72 Swearing is good for you
73 A memoir of the second world war
73 John Ashbery, American poet
Why Liberalism Failed. By Patrick
Deneen. Yale University Press; 248 pages;
$30 and £30
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