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Pawlenty Jumps Aboard the Nut Wagon

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Sharmuta9/04/2009 9:51:18 pm PDT

re: #780 jaunte

On the conservative / liberal divide:
I encourage everyone here to read Thomas Sowell’s book, A Conflict of Visions.
Peter Robinson reviewed it in Forbes, and this excerpt will give you a sense of his thinking, if you haven’t already read it.

Sowell calls one worldview the “constrained vision.” It sees human nature as flawed or fallen, seeking to make the best of the possibilities that exist within that constraint. The competing worldview, which Sowell terms the “unconstrained vision,” instead sees human nature as capable of continual improvement.
You can trace the constrained vision back to Aristotle; the unconstrained vision to Plato. But the neatest illustration of the two visions occurred during the great upheavals of the 18th century, the American and French revolutions.

The American Revolution embodied the constrained vision. “In the United States,” Sowell says, “it was assumed from the outset that what you needed to do above all was minimize [the damage that could be done by] the flaws in human nature.” The founders did so by composing a constitution of checks and balances. More than two centuries later, their work remains in place.

The French Revolution, by contrast, embodied the unconstrained vision. “In France,” Sowell says, “the idea was that if you put the right people in charge–if you had a political Messiah–then problems would just go away.” The result? The Terror, Napoleon and so many decades of instability that France finally sorted itself out only when Charles de Gaulle declared the Fifth Republic.

A Conflict of Visions: Ideological Origins of Political Struggles

There’s also this great interview with Sowell on the book that Syrah shared with me and got me into the book:

Youtube Video