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DalInpr10-01-005 |
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In Praise of
Prejudice The
Necessity of Preconceived Ideas Theodore
Dalrymple Brief
Encounters, 2007, 129 pp. ISBN 978-1-59403-202-8 |
Dalrymple is a retired physician and psychiatrist
who regularly saw patients in an English prison. He is the author of several books and
writes for the London Spectator. Although
claiming no religious belief, he insists that prejudices are necessary for
good character and a functioning society.
It’s a fascinating little book of connected essays. Prejudice is a premature judgment or bias or an
unreasoning predilection. To
discriminate against someone because of race has become the worst of all
vices. “I very much doubt whether anyone,
at least in polite company, would admit to a prejudice about anything. To admit to a prejudice is to proclaim
oneself a bigot….” (3) However, to be an unprejudiced person, one must
subject all his presuppositions to constant re-examination and become an
original thinker on every subject. He
must determine his opinion about everything on the basis of principles that
are beyond doubt. Clearly, this is
impossible. We are not a race of
philosophical giants. We no longer have pupils. We have students. No one feels that anyone has the right to
tell them what to do. Therefore they
are not pupils. “A pupil is under the
tutelage or direction of someone who knows what the pupil, for his own good,
ought to know and learn; a student has matured to the point at which his own
curiosity or ambition permit him to follow his own inclinations….” (17)
This change in attitude toward authority is
manifested in the “failure by parents to inculcate self-control in their
offspring. And this is the result of
investing their children with an authority to make choices and exercise
vetoes as soon as they are able to express, or even to indicate them. … By
abdicating their responsibility in this fashion, in the name of not passing
on their own prejudices or preconceptions to their children, and not imposing
their own view of what is right upon them, they enclose their children within
the circle of their childish tastes. …in the absence of experience, children
will always choose the same thing, the thing that is most immediately
attractive or gratifying to them. … [This] is soon followed by arrested
development. A young child, constantly
consulted over his likes and dislikes, learns that life is, and ought to be,
ruled by his likes and dislikes. He is
not free of prejudices just because he is free of his parents’
prejudices. On the contrary, he is a
slave to his own prejudices.
Unfortunately, they are harmful both to him as an individual, and to
the society of which he is a member.” (18-20) “The horror of unhappy marriage, and the cruelty
of the prejudice against illegitimate children and those who gave birth to
them, became truths universally, and even joyfully, acknowledged. … The
solution, then, was to destroy the prejudice—philosophical, social, and
economic—in favor of the family structure that wrought so much harm.” However, “to overturn a prejudice is not to
destroy prejudice as such. It is
rather to inculcate another prejudice.
The prejudice that it is wrong to bear a child out of wedlock has been
replaced by the prejudice that there is nothing wrong with it at all.” “The prejudice of centuries had been
overturned, made to appear ridiculous, and replaced by another, the
unedifying practical consequences of which I saw daily in my work as a
doctor.” [He means substantial
populations of unemployed and purposeless mothers with children living on
government welfare. Quoted interviews
with some of these mothers are very revealing in their lack of articulation
and their entitlement expectations (prejudices).] (24-25) “A blind prejudice in favor of constituted
authority has been replaced by a blind prejudice that authority, other than
one’s own, is inherently illegitimate.” “We can rid ourselves of any particular
attitude to any given question, no doubt, but we cannot give up having any
attitude whatsoever towards it.” (28, 29)
“[Young teens] need first to be inculcated with
useful prejudices before they can be expected to make for themselves the most
fundamental (and difficult) choices in life.” (32) Dalrymple argues that being unconventional has
become a virtue in itself. “An artist
who breaks a taboo…is likely to be praised for his originality, courage, and
so forth, irrespective of whether the taboo ought to have been broken, or the
social effect of having done so. The
habitual breakers of boundaries are not so much objecting to any particular
boundary, as objecting to the existence of boundaries as such.” (39-40)
It has become a convention to escape convention. The vast majority of our knowledge comes to us on
the basis of authority. “I have known
from a very early age that a battle took place at Hastings in the year 1066,
but I still do not know how to prove that it did.” It is quite difficult to demonstrate for
yourself almost any of the discoveries of previous generations. We believe them on the basis of authority. By contrast, people tend to think that “the most
important quality of an act or opinion is not that it should be right, or
striving to be right…, but that it should be the person’s own. … Many an argument about substantive matters
of fact is now brought to an end by one or several of the disputants
claiming, at a point of irreconcilable difference, ‘Well, my opinion is just
as valid as yours.’ … Thus freedom of opinion becomes equality of
opinion…” Any opinion is equally
valid, irrespective of the evidence. Many people have concluded that a custom is to be
flouted or overthrown, not because of its content, but simply because it is a
custom and therefore is deleterious.
“Here, truly, is a prejudice against prejudice.” (59) When custom is abandoned then everything that is
not illegal is acceptable. This can
result in profound social changes. “It
turns everything that is not forbidden into a right, for obviously one has
the right to do what no one has the right to prohibit. Suddenly, the world becomes filled with
rights, and new ones are discovered every day. … Rights expand to meet the
egos of those for whom freedom is nothing but unconstrained action. … I want, therefore I have a right …desire is
sovereign…. …the thinking goes that if a right is genuinely a right, it must
be unconditional. …I have a right to play my music, it likewise cannot be
abrogated by any other consideration—for example that its volume prevents my
neighbor from sleeping…. Either I have
a right or I don’t….” (69-71) “Radical individualism instills a deep prejudice
in favor of oneself and one’s own ego. …
Life is conceived of as a limitless extension of consumer choice…
lifestyles can be picked up as are brands of processed food, and with no
deeper or more meaningful consequences. … The customer is king all right, but
only of himself.” (72) Radical individualism leads to increasing the
power of government over individuals. Everything
that is legally permissible is considered morally permissible; thus the
government has to establish what is allowed.
And “if anything is addictive, prescriptive power is addictive. Once you have it…you can never have enough
of it.” “The lack of intervening
authorities, such as family, church, professional organizations, etc.,
accustoms us to expect, and accept, the central direction of our lives…”
(74) The worst thing about prejudice is that it leads
to discrimination. “In the early days
of my schooling, it [discrimination] meant to make a proper
judgment—aesthetic, moral, and intellectual—and my teachers were possibly the
last generation of pedagogues who believed that the inculcation of powers of
discrimination was the noblest part of their job….” “Accordingly, a person who did not
discriminate, who was undiscriminating, was a person without taste, morality,
or intellect; undiscriminating, he was likely to be indiscriminate in his
behavior. Discrimination was for these
teachers the most important function of the mind; without it, truth could not
be distinguished from falsehood, beauty from ugliness, or good from evil….”
(75) “New connotations can often contaminate or
overwhelm old denotations. … Hence the very act of distinguishing between
higher and lower, better and worse, deeper and shallower, becomes suspect and
best avoided.” (76) “It is from social prejudice that one learns
social virtue. Metaphysical thought
and reflection come later. Nothing is
easier, of course, than to demonstrate that the kind of social prejudice to
which I refer can sometimes, or often, lead to terrible manifestations of
bigotry and its associated cruelty. … But it is one thing to say that this or
that prejudice is disgusting or extremely harmful, and another to say that we
can do without prejudice altogether. There
are surgical operations often performed in the past that did more harm than
good…but there is no reason why mankind should forego the life-saving
advantages of surgery as a matter of principle.” (83) “Change can be for the worse as well as for
the better, and…the will to originality and to judge everything by the light
of one’s own unaided opinion can be more a manifestation of a malign egotism
than of a desire for truth or the good life.” (84) “The ideal of life without prejudices,
stereotypes, preconceptions, and pre-existing authority is nevertheless
regarded as a proper, indeed a noble one.
Our own moral authority in everything should be our goal.” This is the philosophy of nihilism. “A nihilist is a person who does not take
any principle for granted, however much the principle may be revered.”
(100-01) This is an attitude of
repudiation (what would have once been called ‘spiritual pride’). It usually turns out that a person who is
against all authority is really against only some authority, that which they
dislike. “In my clinical work in England, I met large
numbers of patients who were either the victims or perpetrators of terrible
cruelty.” “What I saw was human
conduct as it becomes when the requirement to conform to inherited social restraints
no longer exists, when it is left to the whim of individuals how to
behave. The result is an urban hell.”
(105-06) The author had been consulted by thousands of
women who had been abused by men, thousands of men who had abused women, and
by not a few women who had abused men (by violence). The most common motive was sexual
jealousy. “With the breakdown of a
socially accepted structure, or script, of relations between the sexes, this
jealousy has itself increased very markedly, even dramatically.” “It proved far easier in the event to
remove sexual restraint than to overcome each individual’s desire for the
exclusive sexual possession of another; and it takes little effort of the
imagination…to understand the result.”
“The combination of sexual predation with an insistence on the fidelity
of the current sexual partner has led to violence all round.” (107-109) Why do women continue to fall into the clutches
of men who have “abuser” written all over them? The answer given by many such women is that
it would be wrong to jump to conclusions, to judge adversely, to stigmatize,
or to stereotype. (112) “The only ethical thing to do…is…not to
pass judgment before the decision to live together. At least then the woman can be assured that
she is not acting on a prejudice or being judgmental, even if it means a
broken nose and permanently terrified children.” (113) It is necessary and unavoidable to make
statements of value. Some espouse
non-judgmentalism as a philosophy because judgment has now become synonymous
with intolerance. “Moral complacency,
oddly enough, is the natural consequence of non-judgmentalism as an
ideal.” “Good and bad, beautiful and
ugly, are built into the very structure of our thoughts, and we cannot
eliminate them any more than we can eliminate language, or a sense of time.”
(120-21) It does not follow that because some prejudices are harmful, we can
do without prejudices altogether.” (125)
“It takes judgment to know when prejudice should
be maintained and when abandoned.
Prejudices are like friendships: they should be kept in good repair. …
they are what give men character and hold them together. We cannot do without them.” (126) |
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