Wednesday, May 5, 2010

untethered from reality

It all started with Julian Sanchez, Research Fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute, hardly an advocate for the left. In the first of several posts, he reflects on David Frum’s recent ouster from the American Enterprise Institute, and the less formal excommunication of Andrew Sullivan from the conservative movement. See "Frum, Cocktail Parties, and the Threat of Doubt." Some of this strict enforcement of orthodoxy, Sanchez concedes, is simply people following the money. But he's also worried about a trend, as he sees it, in the conservative movement toward "epistemic closure." He compares conservatism's intolerance of dissent to China's efforts to censor the internet. Nothing can be allowed to challenge its closed world.

Sanchez then elaborates on his theme with "Epistemic Closure, Technology, and the End of Distance." Here, he suggests that, while group think and confirmation bias are present among every clique to some degree, today these phenomena are not left-and-right symmetrical, although it's easy enough to point out this sort of thing on the left. Sanchez goes on to blame the conservative circling of the wagons on the collapse of geographic closure. To use his example, it's no longer possible to live in a geographically contained world where a ban against gay couples attending a prom -- so self-evidently justified to the local community -- will go unchallenged from the wider world.

Finally, Sanchez posts "A Coda on Closure" wherein he explains what he meant by "epistemic closure," after confessing that it really wasn't the right phrase anyway. It's not so much that the right is incapable of new ideas, that it's advocates are particularly closed-minded, or that they are not aware of other points of view. What he meant is that the conservative analysis is more and more impervious to actual facts -- in his words, the right has "become worryingly untethered from reality."

His quick review of the crazy yet unshakable beliefs from the right: "the obsession with ACORN or the idea that the “Climategate” e-mails were some kind of game changer in the larger AGW [Anthropogenic Global Warming] debate." And again: "Bill Ayers’ potential authorship of Obama’s memoir, the looming threat of death panels, the president’s crypto-Islamic background and allegiances, his attempt to create a “private army” via the health care bill, his desire to see America come to ruin, the imagined racism of Sonia Sotomayor." No need to even mention the birther people. And now, just hot off the press, we have Fox news, former Bush officials and Rush Limbaugh making veiled accusations of sabotage of the BP oil rig -- maybe by the administration.

Since then, the web has come alive with various responses from all sides. One chronicle of the debate is here: " 'Epistemic Closure'? Those Are Fighting Words." Even my people, the philosophers, weigh in claiming that Sanchez misused a technical philosophical term. See "More From the Frontlines of the Epistemic Closure Debate." (John Quiggin, an economist at the University of Queensland in Australia, suggested, instead, the use of the word “agnotology," coined by the historian Robert Proctor “to describe study of the manufacture of ignorance. ”)

Finally, where I came in: Marc Ambinder's post in the Atlantic website "Have Conservatives Gone Mad?" Ambinder argues that, if you want to read genuinely cogent criticism of this administration, look leftward. The Republican base has abandoned all pretense at serious analysis and, instead, "seems to have developed a notion that bromides are equivalent to policy-thinking, and that therapy is a substitute for thinking." And by the way, it seems clear that Ambinder means to answer his title question in the affirmative.

5 comments:

james said...

Great post Myk.

Another solid contribution/summing up of the debate about epistemic closure was written by William Saletan, who gives some tips on how to avoid this mental trap: http://www.slate.com/id/2252685

I've also been reading a few articles extolling the virtues of reading viewpoints contrary to your own and arguing with those who hold them. Apparently, it's a more valuable workout for the brain than just crossword puzzles.

James R said...

The signs of 'epistemic closure' are more unsettling in that, hopefully, we are becoming more educated. Is the world (and the world of ideas) too much for us that we have to close parts of it up?

Karen Armstrong once described 'sin' (a concept that had little meaning for me until I came across Armstrong's description) as characterized by exclusivity. In general, inclusivity is better than exclusivity.

I liked the exposition in the slate article. As a crossword puzzle substitution, an even more valuable workout would be to actually argue the opposing side. There are usually some grains of truth in the opposition's argument.

One activity I think should get more practice is debate-team-style debating, where there are two sides to a subject and your team may be called on to argue either one. If that were practiced more in school I think we would have less epistemic closure and agnotogy.

Big Myk said...

I used to like the Catholic term "invincible ignorance" to describe the lunatic right -- that is, they suffer from ignorance so profound that no amount of effort can defeat it. Now, I have a new word to add: agnotogy -- the science of the manufacture of ignorance.

James R said...

However, especially in the interest of all these articles, I feel it is not especially useful to characterize the lunatic right as the lunatic right.

Big Myk said...

Actually, the Slate article about trying to get out of your bubble was extremely valuable and should be required reading in every civics class.

But, I use the term "lunatic" not as a description of the right, but as a way of separating the Obama-wants-the-terrorists-to-win right vs. the more thoughtful right. You can actively engage with those outside your circle without having to give credence to every hair-brained idea that comes along. Life simply doesn't allow the time.

Jesus said it as good as any: Give not that which is holy unto the dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine. ...