Liberal: spoken in a certain tone, heard more and more often lately, it summons up permissiveness, materialism, rootlessness, skepticism, relativism run rampant. How has liberalism, the grand democratic ideal, come to be a dirty word? This hook shows us what antiliberalism means in the modern world--where it comes from, whom it serves, and why it speaks with such a forceful, if everchanging, voice. In the past, in a battle pitting one offspring of eighteenth-century rationalism against another, Marxism has been liberalism's best known and most vociferous opponent. But with the fall of communism, the voices of ethnic particularism, communitarianism, and religious fundamentalism--a tradition Holmes traces to Joseph de Maistre--have become louder in rejection of the Enlightenment, failing to distinguish between the descendants of Karl Marx and Adam Smith. Stephen Holmes uses the tools of the political theorist and the intellectual historian to expose the philosophical underpinnings of antiliberalism in its nonmarxist guise. Examining the works of some of liberalism's severest critics--including Maistre, Carl Schmitt, Leo Strauss, and Alasdair Maclntyre--Holmes provides, in effect, a reader's guide to antiliberal culture, in all its colorful and often seductive, however nefarious, variety. As much a mindset as a theory, as much a sensibility as an argument, antiliberalism appears here in its diverse efforts to pit "spiritual truths" and "communal bonds" against a perceived cultural decay and moral disintegration. This corrosion of the social fabric--rather than the separation of powers, competitive elections, a free press, religious tolerance, public budgets, and judicial controls on the police--is what the antiliberal forces see as the core of liberal politics. Against this picture, Holmes outlines the classical liberal arguments most often misrepresented by the enemies of liberalism and most essential to the future of democracy. Constructive as well as critical, this book helps us see what liberalism is and must be, and why it must and always will engender deep misgivings along with passionate commitment.
When I read the panegyric reviews of this book in the New Republic 13 years ago, I promptly bought it. Few reviews of any book in any venue matched the praise for this book. When it arrived, I was disappointed. Other than its attacks on various nonmarxist illiberal schemes, which are the first-half of the book, and often "straw men," it only offered traditional (classic) liberal principles against the straw-men arguments hoisted against liberalism by conservatives, communitarians, and theocrats. When John Dean's book "Conservatives without Conscience" was reviewed, all of the dragons Dean slays were already in mind. Where had I encountered them? Well, from this book, written 13 years earlier. Dean, it appears, like most traditional conservatives are still classical liberals at heart. The appeal of Barry Goldwater (a Dean mentor) was his devotion to classical liberal ideals. Maybe a tad extreme, but nonetheless appealing. Now, in light of neo-conservatism's assault on classical liberalism (which bears no resemblance to traditional conservatism), suddenly the power of this book becomes all to obvious and deserving of a far wider readership. Classical liberalism has been under assault from its beginnings. It undermined the hegemony of religion. It gave people the right to consent to be governed. It imposed "limits" on what a government could and could not do, infuriating whimsical autocrats. It fostered the autonomy of the individual in making his own choices. It created a system where the exchange of ideas, commodities, and governors was in the common domain, not left to the elite. It insisted on "rights" of certain individuals and functions. It imposed checks-and-balances. It demanded democracy and representative government. From the perspective of history, liberalism not only upset the status quo, but by giving the ruled the right to choose their rulers, and within certain confines, each individual could control his or her life within wide boundaries without encroachment. Liberalism was and remains subversive of all authoritarian schemes, unless the authority comes from the people themselves through democracy and laws. It was and remains positively scandalous. Authority-oriented utopians and master planners will find all these liberal principles entirely too distasteful and inhospitable to stomach. No defense of liberalism can counter every antiliberal notion; such an enterprise, if possible, would require volumes. So, Holmes deliberately omits all Marxist antiliberalism, and in Part I focuses on just seven: Maistre, Schmitt, Strauss, MacIntyre, Lasch, Unger, and Sandel. Strangely, without comment, Holmes ignores Fabianism. The irony is that he has ignored the elephant in the center of the room, while focusing on flies buzzing around on the periphery. The targets he selects he admirably disposes, but the target he ignores is arguably one of the most important. In other words, six of his targets are from the Right, and only one from the Left. N
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