Pragmatists vs. Ideologues
Achieving A Free Society:  Good News and Bad
By George H. Smith 
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
PART THREE
         Concerning 
the influence of intellectuals in modern society, F.A. 
Hayek writes:
         "There is 
little that the ordinary man of today learns about 
events or ideas except through the medium of this [intellectual] 
class; and outside our special fields of work we are in this respect 
almost all ordinary men, dependent for our information and instruction 
on those who make it their job to keep abreast of opinion.  It is the 
intellectuals in this sense who decide what views and opinions are to 
reach us, which facts are important enough to be told to us, and in 
what form and from what angle they are to be presented.  Whether we 
shall ever learn of the results of the work of the expert and the 
original thinker depends mainly on their decision."  (Studies in 
Philosophy, Politics, and Economics, p. 180)
         Hayek points 
out that the vast majority of economists are opposed 
to both socialism and protectionism, more so than in any other 
academic discipline.  Typically, however, it is not the  views of this 
majority, but the pro-interventionist views of the minority, who 
receive a public hearing, even though they may be of doubtful standing 
in their own profession.  This is because the intellectuals, who 
transmit ideas to the general public, filter out ideas they disagree 
with and publicize the views of those experts whose opinions coincide 
with their own.  Thus, regardless of the dominance of free-market 
views among professional economists, their ideas will exert little 
influence politically, since the public will be largely unaware of 
them.  Such is the all-pervasive influence of intellectuals in 
contemporary society.  Quoting Hayek:
         "Even though 
[the knowledge of intellectuals] may be often 
superficial, and their intelligence limited, this does not alter the 
fact that it is their judgment which mainly determines the views on 
which society will act in the not too distant future.  It is no 
exaggeration to say that once the more active part of the 
intellectuals have been converted to a set of beliefs, the process by 
which these become generally accepted is almost automatic and 
irresistible.  They are the organs which modern society has developed 
for spreading knowledge and ideas, and it is their convictions and 
opinions which operate as the sieve through which all new conceptions 
must pass before they can reach the masses."  (Ibid., p. 182.)
         Hayek, it 
should be noted, does not attribute sinister motives to 
these intellectuals, whatever their political beliefs may be.  By and 
large they are intellectually honest people who follow their 
convictions.  Like everyone else, their beliefs instill in them a bias 
that naturally tends to slant everything according to their 
theoretical preconceptions.  In this respect Hayek's analysis differs 
from that, say, of conservatives who attack what they see as a 
deliberate and mendacious bias in the mass media.  This kind of bias, 
according to Hayek, is natural and inevitable, because we all view the 
social and political world through ideological spectacles.  Our 
theories and ideas act as mental categories, which mold our 
perceptions of social reality.
         As Hayek 
points out, it is extremely difficult to change the 
theoretical beliefs of intellectuals, because they do not, and cannot, 
possess first-hand information about every new idea that comes their 
way.  The intellectual judges a new idea not on its particular merits, 
but rather on how neatly that idea fits into his other general 
notions.  Or, as philosophers of knowledge might say, the intellectual 
assesses the truth or validity of a new idea, not according to whether 
it corresponds to a fact of reality -- which is something he cannot 
possibly know in every case -- but rather on the _coherence_ of that 
new idea with the rest of his knowledge, which tends to be generalized 
and highly abstract.  If the new idea is consistent with his other 
knowledge, he accepts it; if not, he rejects it.  
         The general 
ideas of the intellectual, therefore, are like the 
pieces of an incomplete jigsaw puzzle, and new pieces are accepted or 
rejected according to how well they fit into the overall pattern.  
Moreover, since the intellectual determines the climate of opinion in 
his society, his jigsaw puzzle will tend to be the same as that of 
society as a whole.  Thus, if the intellectual rejects a piece because 
it doesn't fit into his puzzle, then, even though his rejection may be 
based on ignorance or error, that piece will never even reach the 
general public, who will be deprived of any opportunity to judge it 
for themselves.
         It is 
through this process that intellectuals play a crucial role 
in determining what in German is called Weltanschauung, or worldview 
-- or to what Hayek, following other writers, variously refers to as 
the "climate of opinion" or "spirit of the time."  This idea, which 
today is commonly known as "public opinion," refers to that amorphous 
but formidable collection of fundamental beliefs, whether true or 
false, about social reality that are held by most members of a given 
society.  A basic purpose of Hayek's essay is to explain how a 
worldview is generated, sustained and reinforced.  For Hayek, 
intellectuals, and especially philosophers (though not necessarily 
academic philosophers), exert a tremendous influence in this area, 
because their abstract theories serve as a social filter, trapping 
some ideas while allowing others to pass through to the general 
public.  
         This is 
an interesting analysis, because it explains how the 
average person can be influenced by philosophical theories without 
studying those theories or even being explicitly aware of what they 
are.  Indeed, as Hayek points out, the theories themselves may have 
little or no intrinsic merit; they may be excessively vague or even 
self-contradictory, or they may seem so obvious so as not to require 
any justification.  The expression of a worldview is frequently 
preceded with phrases like, "As everybody knows..."  or, "It's obvious 
that...."  Such worldviews tend to be self-reinforcing, because, for 
the most part, only those ideas that are consistent with the worldview 
are allowed to pass through the filter of the intellectual to the 
public at large.  
         Again, it 
must be stressed that Hayek does not regard this 
selective process as a sinister conspiracy of philosophers and 
intellectuals.  Rather, it arises spontaneously and is necessitated by 
the vast number of ideas and bits of knowledge that circulate in a 
complex society, only a handful of which can be considered by any 
particular person.  Accordingly, therefore, those who wish to 
establish a free society should focus, not on railing against the evil 
motives of their adversaries, but on replacing the erroneous theories 
of those adversaries with better ones.  
         Hayek places 
great stress on this point.  It is not enough merely 
to poke holes in an opposing theory or to point out its practical 
difficulties, because such problems can always be accounted for, or 
explained away, with ad hoc justifications that are consistent with 
the theory in question.  No -- if a free society is to be achieved, 
the prevailing worldview of statism must be replaced by a better set 
of theories, namely, the worldview of libertarianism.  And this 
requires not just the continuous development of libertarian theory -- 
which, of course, is crucial -- but also the cultivation of 
libertarian philosophers and intellectuals who can undertake the long 
and arduous process of reshaping public opinion.
CONCLUSION
         Every person 
in this room is an intellectual, though some of you 
may not think of yourself in these terms.  We are all engaged in 
communicating the ideas of liberty, whether to our friends and 
colleagues or to a broader audience.  I encourage each of you to take 
seriously your role as a public intellectual, by developing your 
knowledge and cognitive skills.  I suggest this, not only because it 
will enrich your life, but also because it will vastly improve your 
effectiveness as a libertarian activist.  It's difficult to put into 
words exactly how this happens, but I can assure you from personal 
experience that it does.  Every so often I sit down and examine my 
ideology from scratch, attempting, as honestly as I can, to examine 
the ultimate foundations for my libertarian beliefs.  Through this 
critical reexamination, combined with many years of reading and 
rereading the libertarian classics and reflecting on what I have read, 
I find a progressive improvement in my ability to communicate ideas 
and persuade others.  
         With this 
in mind, let's return to the paradox of the good news 
and the bad news that exist side by side in our society.  However 
impressive our intellectual advances have been during the past several 
decades, libertarians constitute a minuscule part of the intellectual 
class, as Hayek understands that term.  Our ideas about liberty, 
however logical and rigorous, tend to have little influence on the 
thinking of Americans, because the intellectual class prevents those 
ideas from filtering down to the general public.
         This is 
especially true in the cultural arena, such as popular 
entertainment.  Where are the libertarian screenwriters, directors, 
producers, actors, and artists?  True, there are occasional 
exceptions.  The movie Legends of the Fall, for example, is a 
marvelous depiction of libertarian family values, where an estranged 
son is reunited with his father when they share some quality time by 
bumping off federal agents.  A few actors, such as Kurt Russell, are 
libertarians, but they are rare exceptions who, as Russell explained 
in a recent interview, are shunned by the Hollywood community.  
Fortunately, we are better represented in the realm of imaginative 
literature, especially in science fiction, where libertarian themes 
and values are quite common.  
         In short, 
as a movement we are top-heavy with experts, such as 
professional economists, but we are sorely lacking in cultural 
intellectuals who can popularize and transmit the ideas of our experts 
to the general public.  Before we can hope to achieve anything like a 
free society, we must establish a culture of liberty as its 
indispensable foundation.
         Unfortunately, 
there is no magic bullet by which we can bring this 
about.  We cannot legislate cultural change; we cannot transform the 
American worldview merely by replacing our rulers.  By this I do not 
mean that political change is unimportant; it is something, but it is 
not everything.  
         Meanwhile, 
Hayek's view of the role of intellectuals, coupled with 
my earlier remarks about the relationship between theory and strategy, 
allows us to avoid the profound pessimism that can arise by focusing 
too much on the "bad news" of political degeneration.  The empirical 
data of political degeneration can neither prove nor disprove our 
strategic theory -- which tells us that freedom will never arise and 
prosper without the strength of principles, and that we must display 
moral courage in applying those principles consistently, without 
compromise, however unpopular this may make us in the short run.  
History tells us that radical changes can be effected, that political 
degeneration can be arrested and reversed, though no one can say how 
long the process will take.  
         Those Americans 
who took up arms in 1775 knew that they might not 
live to see the freedom they so desperately desired, but many 
thousands gave their lives for the ideal of individual rights.  The 
empirical data was against them; America, with no professional army or 
navy, faced the most powerful military machine on the face of the 
earth, one that had defeated France just a few years before.  A modern 
political scientist, with his empirical data and computer simulations, 
would have informed the Americans that their rebellion was futile, 
that they could not possibly defeat the British.  But the resilience 
of freedom, and its power to motivate, cannot be quantified, measured, 
or predicted.  
         Likewise, we 
libertarians should disregard the bad empirical news 
of political degeneration and not allow it to deflect us from our 
principled course of action.  Theory cannot tell us whether we will 
succeed, but if it is still possible to reclaim the liberty of our 
country, then theory, combined with an understanding of history, 
teaches us that an inflexible zeal on behalf of the freedom and 
dignity of the individual is the only way that we can achieve our 
goal.  
         Will those 
of us here live to see a free society?  I sincerely 
hope we will.  But even if we do not, even if we continue on the 
slippery slide to tyranny, we can still lay the intellectual and 
cultural foundations of liberty for future generations, for our 
children and for our grandchildren.
         And that, 
my friends, is a cause worth fighting for.  
George H. Smith is the author of  Atheism:  The Case Against God and 
Atheism, Ayn Rand, and Other Heresies.  He is currently working on 
his third book, Sovereign State, Sovereign Self.  Smith recently 
wrote the introduction to a new edition of The State by Franz 
Oppenheimer.
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).