Pragmatists vs. Ideologues
Achieving A Free Society:  Good News and Bad
By George H. Smith 
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
PART TWO
         We also have 
the pragmatic activist who shares the businessman's 
disdain for ideologues and believes that he, too, has his finger on 
the pulse of people in the real world.  Radical ideas and causes, 
according to this activist, will alienate our potential supporters, 
many of whom are disenchanted by traditional politics.  Therefore, we 
are cautioned not to focus on unpopular issues, such as drug 
legalization.  
         There are 
many variations and permutations of pragmatism, some of 
which are more sophisticated than the types presented here, but all 
share a dislike of abstract arguments and ideologues.  When the 
libertarian pragmatist speak of "facts" and the "real world," he means 
the knowledge gained through experience and observation, knowledge 
acquired from specific events and circumstances.  He begins with 
empirical facts (concrete people, specific actions, etc.) and then 
generalizes about strategy, based on what libertarians can 
realistically hope to achieve in the near future.  
         This inductive 
process is based on the historical method.  All 
facts appealed to by the pragmatist (assuming they are accurate) fall 
within the domain of historical knowledge.  History is the study of 
past human actions; it is concerned with the unique individual event, 
not with a general pattern or theory.  These historical events are 
what the pragmatists call the "real world" of facts.  
         Ironically, 
the pragmatist sometimes places history in the same 
category as theory, relegating both to the ethereal world of the 
ideologue, scholar and academic.  Yet, as Mises and others have 
pointed out, all human knowledge falls into one of these two 
categories.  Knowledge of particular concrete facts is always 
knowledge of something that has already taken place; this is 
historical knowledge.  General knowledge, on the other hand, does not 
refer to a specific time and place; this is theoretical 
knowledge.  All knowledge refers either to specific phenomena that 
occurred at a determinate time and place in the past, or to general 
propositions that are abstracted from any particular time and 
place.  The former is the sphere of history; the latter is the sphere 
of theory.  
         The pragmatist 
commits himself to a strategic method based on 
history instead of theory.  This is a plausible choice, provided the 
pragmatist understands the method he is using, especially its 
limitations.  But this rarely happens.  The pragmatist who disdains 
theory fails thereby to reflect on the theoretical premises and 
implications of his own method, which remain unacknowledged, 
unappreciated, and often ill-treated.  I will discuss three aspects of 
this problem.
         (1)  The 
failure to analyze methodological assumptions is clearly 
illustrated by the mole-like historical sight of some pragmatists who, 
in their search for empirical data, search no farther than their 
immediate range of vision.  History, for the mole, is limited to what 
he has personally witnessed or at least to events that have occurred 
during recent decades.  For the mole, history began a decade ago, 
possibly two or three, but rarely does the mole regard as relevant any 
event that is older than he is.  His life and memory, it seems, just 
happen to overlap perfectly with the only period of history that he 
needs to know.  By a convenient coincidence, all relevant facts 
pertaining to a free society and how to achieve it are confined to the 
same period of time during which the pragmatist has been interested in 
libertarianism.  
         Given his 
commitment to the real world, the pragmatist should 
immerse himself in a study of the real world (i.e., history) and learn 
what factors have contributed to freedom over the past 2500 
years.  Modern libertarians are not the first people to value liberty, 
nor are we the most successful.  Seventeenth and eighteenth century 
libertarians, for example, faced even greater odds than we do, yet 
they had spectacular triumphs in some areas, such as religious 
freedom.  These successes were not accidental.  Early libertarians 
were acutely aware of strategic issues -- witness the popular appeal 
of the Enlightenment philosophes -- yet most would be considered 
"ideologues" by the modern pragmatist.  Indeed, the very word 
"ideologue" was apparently coined by the pragmatic Napoleon, who used 
it to smear Benjamin Constant and other French libertarians who 
refused to sacrifice principles to expediency.  
         I agree 
with the pragmatist that we should be concerned with what 
will work in the real world.  But this requires that we learn 
something about the real world, which is far more complex than the 
mole would have us believe.  If we want to know what will work,we 
should find out what has worked in the past.  Therefore, the sincere 
pragmatist, before he trashes ideologues, should study history for at 
least ten years, reflect on what he has read, and then get back to 
us.  
         (2)  The 
most serious error of pragmatism is its lack of 
appreciation for the role of ideology in social perception.  By 
"social perception," is meant how we "perceive" the world of social 
wholes (or entities), such as "state," "society," "church," and "the 
market."  In truth, we do not perceive social entities with our eyes; 
rather, we understand them with our minds.  Social entities, as 
Hayek says, are "constituted" by the mind.  They are not physical 
things, like rocks and trees and birds, but are mental constructs of 
abstract relationships.  
         This means 
that how we think about social entities will greatly 
influence how we perceive them.  We libertarians know this from 
experience, having encountered many people who appear to "see" 
government differently than we do.  Some people don't see government 
as essentially coercive; they may even see taxes as "voluntary."  These 
differences in social perception result from viewing social reality 
through different ideological lenses.  Ideology is absolutely 
essential to the success of the libertarian movement, because it 
establishes a common frame of reference.  If we fail to convince the 
average person, this is often because we see a different social 
reality than does the average person.  Before we can convince other 
people, we must refer to the same social world.  
         Contrary to 
the pragmatist, the real world of social interaction 
is not a world of objective data and physical entities.  It is a 
subjective world, one that is filtered through ideological 
assumptions, premises, and prejudices.  The social world is 
constituted by the ideas that people have about it.  If libertarians 
can change those ideas, they can, in a very literal sense, change the 
world.  
         (3)  In 
evaluating any form of pragmatism, we should keep in mind 
that the greatest benefits of a free society are often those that 
cannot be foreseen or predicted.  As Hayek points out, this has 
important implications for any pragmatic strategy.  
         "Since the 
value of freedom rests on the opportunities it provides 
for unforeseen and unpredictable actions, we will rarely know what we 
lose through a particular restriction of freedom."  (Law, Legislation, 
and Liberty, Vol.I, p.56)  
         The direct 
effects of market intervention will be apparent in many 
cases, but we cannot know all the opportunities that have been lost 
through such intervention.  This means that liberty will tend to lose 
out in any cost-benefit analysis -- because the benefits of 
intervention can be "seen," while the costs (the unrealized 
opportunities) remain largely "unseen."  Consequently, whenever policy 
decisions are based on expediency instead of principle, "freedom is 
bound to be sacrificed in almost every instance."  Hayek continues:
         "The preservation 
of a free system is so difficult precisely 
because it requires a constant rejection of measures which appear to 
be required to secure particular results, on no stronger grounds than 
that they conflict with a general rule, and frequently without our 
knowing what will be the costs of not observing the rule in the 
particular instance.  A successful defense of freedom must therefore 
be dogmatic and make no concessions to expediency ....  Freedom will 
prevail only if it is accepted as a general principle whose 
application to particular instances requires no justification." 
(Ibid., p.61.)
INTELLECTUALS AND PUBLIC OPINION
         Hayek's essay, 
"The Intellectuals and Socialism", is a superb 
discussion of  the role of intellectuals in modern society, the 
reasons for their attraction to socialism, and why they have generally 
found classical liberal (i.e., libertarian) ideas to be unappealing.  
Although some points in this essay may not be as relevant today as 
when they were first published in 1949 -- for example, a smaller 
percentage of modern intellectuals probably favor outright socialism 
than when Hayek was writing, while a greater percentage  have embraced 
libertarianism -- Hayek's general insights remain highly suggestive 
and useful for the modern movement.  
         "The Intellectuals and Socialism" 
presents nothing less than a 
strategic vision for achieving a free society; it is a compelling case 
for the indispensable role of abstract principles and a systematic 
theory of liberty.  Though Hayek is not usually regarded as a 
strategic thinker, this essay demonstrates in theory what his role in 
establishing the Mont Pelerin Society demonstrated in practice -- 
namely, that F.A. Hayek was perhaps the most brilliant and successful 
strategist in the modern revival of classical liberalism.  
         Because the 
meaning of "intellectual" is rather vague, and because 
the word sometimes carries a negative connotation, it is important to 
understand at the outset what Hayek means by the word.  
         For Hayek, 
an intellectual is a "professional secondhand dealer in 
ideas."  By this Hayek does not intend to disparage the intelligence, 
knowledge, or significance of intellectuals.  Intellectuals can be 
highly intelligent or rather stupid, wise or foolish, knowledgeable or 
ignorant, quick-witted or dull, original or hackneyed.  By 
"second-hand," Hayek means second in the order of the transmission of 
knowledge -- a mediator between the expert and the general public. 
Therefore Hayek defines the intellectual in terms of his public 
function -- or social role, as sociologists would say -- in the 
dissemination of specialized knowledge to a wider audience; he is an 
"intermediary in the spreading of ideas."
         The intellectual 
is distinguished by Hayek from the expert -- the 
specialist, scholar or original thinker in a particular field of 
knowledge.  This does not mean that intellectuals cannot be experts, 
or vice versa, but insofar as the specialist addresses not just fellow 
specialists but the public at large, he is functioning in the dual 
roles of expert and intellectual.  Though the roles of the expert and 
the intellectual are often embodied in different persons, this need 
not be the case.  
         This concept 
of the intellectual encompasses many professionals, 
including journalists, teachers, novelists, ministers, and even 
cartoonists and artists who convey ideas through their work.  Also 
included are various professionals and technicians, such as scientists 
and doctors, who, because of the respect they command in their own 
areas of expertise, are taken seriously in other fields.  Essentially, 
therefore, intellectuals are those who deal with ideas that are taken 
from other sources; they are secondhanders, in contrast to experts, 
who are firsthanders.  
[To Be Continued]
George H. Smith's articles and essays have appeared in many 
publications, including the New York Times, Reason, Liberty, and 
Free Inquiry.  He currently conducts classes and seminars on Ludwig 
von Mises, Ayn Rand and other libertarian thinkers for Resources for 
Independent Thinking, a foundation headed by libertarian psychologist 
Sharon Presley.  RIT, 484 Lake Park Ave., #24, Oakland, CA 94610-2730, 
510-601-9450 (voice), 510-547-7140 (fax), [email protected] (e-mail).  
This article was first delivered as the keynote address at the 
Libertarian Party of California's state convention in Sacramento 
February 15, 1997 and is reprinted from the International Society for 
Individual Liberty's Freedom Network News No.  48 (March 1997).