Friday, 9 June 2023
Cosmopolitan
A speculative post this, but there is plenty of evidence that cosmopolitan elites despise the rest of us at least as much as they always have. It is not an excessively cynical assumption. Suppose we concoct another assumption which says that to be cosmopolitan is to be a generalist rather than a specialist.
Over recent centuries, specialists have become more embedded in the increasingly complex maintenance of elite lifestyles. In addition and almost within living memory, certain aspects of the elite lifestyle became less exclusive and more accessible to a much larger number of people.
Familiarity with another language, travel in other countries, other continents was part of being conspicuously cosmopolitan and once only accessible to elites. Educated familiarity with literature, music, art and fashion were also essential. Then a slow change began to seep in, the pretensions became easier, cheaper and more widespread. Economic growth and technical development changed what it is to be cosmopolitan, to be apart from the masses, to be superior in every sense that matters.
The beginnings of the change are impossible to define closely, but after the Great War there were signs which have since become familiar, almost clichés. The boundary between cosmopolitan pretensions and middle class aspirations slowly blurred. Millions of men had been to Europe, met Europeans, heard other languages spoken. Books were mass produced, wireless and cinema waiting in the wings, travel became easier, cars cheaper, as did travel by rail, ship or aircraft.
It was still possible to be cosmopolitan as opposed to not cosmopolitan, but the solid facts of it, the travel, languages, broad cultural familiarities, were eroding. Certainly not disappearing, but certainly eroding. Almost everything can be imitated and even superior versions and exclusive brands became exposed to that neat old cliché - more style than substance.
At some equally indefinable point, elites apparently began to dislike all this erosion of their cosmopolitan pretensions. If one is not an aristocrat and one cannot be conspicuously cosmopolitan, what else can one be? The reaction was an old one – openly despise the lower classes for their pretensions and specialist capabilities, just as the wheelwright was once despised as a common artisan.
Admittedly this is all very nebulous, but we seem to have entered the age of specialists who are worthy of being despised. Scientists and academics have been corrupted by the political games of elite generalists who still see themselves as differently cosmopolitan. Yet the wheelwright must still make circular wheels, not sustainable wheels or carbon neutral wheels and it cannot end well.
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6 comments:
If you stand back and squint you can see that humans have historically formed clans, guilds, unions, elites, priesthoods, professions and classes and then gone on to protect their group against dilution of privileges. I suspect that they do this not because of dislike (although this is used as a justification) but because of fear.
After all if you are not 'special' (anointed, selected, graced, specially educated) then you fear losing some of your individual status. Indeed others might think you are merely ordinary, and that won't do.
And yet the 'divine right of kings' was an early loss. Closed shops have slowly vanished. Teachers are now rarely thought as a profession. Unions have lost their grip (outside the public sector), solicitors now use clerks and conveyances to do some of their 'professional work', there is talk of using part qualified doctors, and anyone with a keyboard can be a journalist or pundit.
One recent strong group still going is the Woke who worship the oppressed - but there are signs that this is collapsing under its own absurdity. Perhaps it will join the other quaint groups that are no more?
Lady Nugee comes to mind. And Gordon Broon's "bigot" snide remark. KCIII, everything.
They want us to take unproven ineffective chemicals, eat bugs and factory created "meat". Make private transport, heating and food unaffordable. The want to kill off farming. They have killed off industry with high energy costs and environmental restrictions, so no working class for our Worker's Party to represent. And maybe the last nail, admit millions of aliens just to ensure that our children will have carp education, guilt about their country and history, poor prospect of rewarding careers and shortage of housing and health care.
Have I missed anything out? Mindless pap and fake news on msm just to keep us distracted and not see what a mess the West is in.
Cynique? Moi?
Techs production produced "carp" so I let it win a small battle.
This is, I think related to (Rob Henderson's ?) idea about luxury beliefs. The cosmopolitan elite adopt luxury beliefs (like open borders, world government, increasing control of populations, climate change, etc.) because they are things that anyone who has to engage with the real world cannot take as feasible.
One current problem we have is that many middle class people - not of the cosmopolitan elite - appear to have adopted those luxury beliefs. This involves them in a good degree of cognitive dissonance and subterfuge, because they obviously know deep down that Net Zero and unfettered immigration are going to hurt them and their offspring very badly. They are like those middle class bluffers who wore the clothes and played the games of the elite, knowing deep down that they couldn't actually afford them. I think they are in for a time of disillusion quite soon.
There is, of course, no such thing as luxury knowledge. Just more or less useful. The bloke making the wheel knows something that others do not, and the trick is to find out what knowledge we have, and to deploy it well.
DJ - "One recent strong group still going is the Woke who worship the oppressed - but there are signs that this is collapsing under its own absurdity."
Collapse is another theme worth following because you are right, there are signs that the absurdity of Woke could cause it to collapse. To my mind this is why incompetence can be interesting, because if significantly damaging it has to be corrected or it dies.
Doonhamer - I don't think you've missed anything out, although they may also expect AI and robots to replace us. It depresses me to see paper versions of msm mindless pap and fake news still being sold at supermarkets. Local news can be okay, but the national stuff is dire.
Sam - that's a good point, luxury beliefs have spread through the middle classes to people who can't afford them. It's really luxury language because as you say, they know that Net Zero and immigration are going to damage them in various ways. Yet they avoid sceptical language almost as they are avoiding crude language and profanity. It's odd.
When I was a teenager who read the Sunday papers I kept meeting the word "generalist" to describe the sort of people who became civil servants, politicians, or the like. Just occasionally the journalist would tell me about a generalist's education. And lo, it would turn out that he was of course a specialist, just not a specialist in anything likely to make him better at his job.
The chap who took A levels in French, Latin, and Greek and then took honours in Classical Languages, had had a more specialist education than the one I planned for myself. It's just hard to see what his education brought to the world of work except, probably, having learnt about writing clearly, or obscurely, as the situation required.
dearieme - there used to be an assumption that scientists are unlikely to make good generalists as opposed to classicists for example, yet it often seems to be the other way round. Maybe we should go back to Aristotle and teach rhetoric so at least we understand how we are persuaded.
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