Dubious wrote:
The quote as given...
"Endarkenment" is Scruton's way of describing the process of socialization through which certain behaviours and choices are closed off and forbidden to the subject, which he considers to be necessary in order to curb socially damaging impulses and behaviours.
...is hardly specific enough to denote it as “brainwashing”.
uwot wrote:Well, brainwashing isn't a very specific term itself, but Scruton would have people indoctrinated with a set of values that he perceives as socially cohesive.
Specific enough since it's universally understood as pejorative which in this case was your specific intention to inflict.
Dubious wrote:One can generalize and simply say there is nothing new in this. Isn't that what societies functionally do anyways, to adjust to it's way of thinking?
uwot wrote: Well yes, but in a democracy, those values are decided by popular approval and can be challenged. Scruton believes people should be denied the right to make their own mind up.
I was still looking for proof of this being a common ground of denunciation on this site. Couldn't find any overt denial of of such rights. What you assert requires context and none is given. As stated it amounts to a single simplistic pronouncement as if nothing more is required to be known or understood. Much too monochrome. Having lately perused more of Scruton proves him considerably more complicated.
Dubious wrote:In any event, it doesn't qualify him as an idiot or a monster.
uwot wrote:It does in my book. If, like Scruton, you think people should be prevented from challenging a given doctrine, have a cigar; I think you are an idiot and a monster too.
Again, as derived from his writings, he actually encourages the challenging of dogma. So, while I'm reasonably certain there are no monsters on this site, I'm not so sure about the idiots.
Dubious wrote:Opinions in the minds of many are nothing more than mental rubbish.
uwot wrote:Pretty much what Scruton thinks. It is the easiest way to immediately dismiss that person as a negative, a nonentity. Wait! News just in:
Dubious wrote:Calling someone a “blithering idiot” is the easiest way to immediately dismiss that person as a negative, a nonentity. It happens on Philosophy forums constantly.
Given even a slight survey between what he actually wrote and what others say he meant by it, the chasm between the two offers no ostensible reason to revoke my view that
Opinions in the minds of many are nothing more than mental rubbish.
uwot wrote:Indeed. It saves time.
Personally, I always preferred torque over speed.
uwot wrote:I would be very surprised if you suspend judgement of public figures until you have read everything they have published.
But that's just the point. I've read a number of articles among a fairly long list available, no books, and what comes across is not by any stretch in how he's described. So the question is, am I going to trust the source or those who merely comment on it. Critiques can be very interesting based on the abilities of the reviewer but the only ones available here contain nothing but those which defile and stigmatize. The only quote offered is the Wiki one which affirms very little without context and none by Scruton himself as an example of what you're so enraged about. I admit one can take a number of exceptions to Scruton's thinking but as with most "philosophers" what's so unusual about that?
Sorry to repeat again! This does not sound like a blithering idiot to me:
Scruton wrote:In my view, the idea that there is a single, one-size-fits-all solution to social and political conflict around the world, and that democracy is the name of it, is based on a disregard of historical and cultural conditions, and a failure to see that democracy is only made possible by other and more deeply hidden institutions. And while we are willing to accept that democracy goes hand in hand with individual freedom and the protection of human rights, we often fail to realise that these three things are three things, not one, and that it is only under certain conditions that they coincide.
...and this:
Scruton wrote:The truth is that government, of one kind or another, is manifest in all our attempts to live in peace with our fellows. We have rights that shield us from those who are appointed to rule us—many of them ancient common-law rights, like that defined by habeas corpus. But those rights are real personal possessions only because government is there to enforce them—and if necessary to enforce them against itself. Government is not what so many conservatives believe it to be, and what people on the left always believe it to be when it is in hands other than their own—namely a system of power and domination. Government is a search for order, and for power only insofar as power is required by order. It is present in the family, in the village, in the free associations of neighbors, and in the “little platoons” extolled by Burke and Tocqueville. It is there in the first movement of affection and good will, from which the bonds of society grow. For it is simply the other side of freedom, and the thing that makes freedom possible.
A few paragraphs further on:
In everyday life, too, there are people who relate to others without making themselves accountable. Such people are locked into the game of domination. If they are building a relationship, it is not a free relationship. A free relationship is one that grants rights and duties to either party, and which raises their conduct to the higher level in which mere power gives way to a true mutuality of interests. That is what is implied by the second formulation of Kant’s categorical imperative, which commands us to treat rational beings as ends and not as means only—in other words, to base all our relations on the web of rights and duties. Such free relations are not just forms of affection: They are forms of obedience, in which the other person has a right to be heard. This, as I read him, is Kant’s message: Sovereign individuals are also obedient subjects, who face each other “I” to “I.”