Intellectuals and society

Thomas Sowell's picture

There has probably never been an era in history when intellectuals have played a larger role in society. When intellectuals who generate ideas are surrounded by a wide range of others who disseminate those ideas — whether as journalists, teachers, staffers to legislators or clerks to judges — the influence of intellectuals on the way a society evolves can be huge.

Trying for years to understand the nature of that influence eventually led me to write the book “Intellectuals and Society,” which has just been published.

Intellectuals generate ideas and ideas matter, whether those ideas are right or wrong, and they matter far beyond the small segment of society who are intellectuals. Ideas affect the fate of whole nations and civilizations.

Nowhere is that more true than in our own times, when some people make suicidal attacks to kill strangers who have done nothing to them, as on 9/11, because the attackers are consumed with a set of ideas — a vision — and driven by the emotions generated by those ideas and that vision.

Whether in war or peace, and whether in economics or religion, something as intangible as ideas can dominate the most concrete things in our lives. What Karl Marx called “the blaze of ideas” has set whole nations on fire and consumed whole generations.

Those whose careers are built on the creation and dissemination of ideas — the intellectuals — have played a role in many societies out of all proportion to their numbers. Whether that role has, on net balance, made those around them better off or worse off is one of the key questions of our times.

The quick answer is that intellectuals have done both. But certainly, for the 20th century, it is hard to escape the conclusion that intellectuals have on net balance made the world a worse and more dangerous place.

Scarcely a mass-murdering dictator of the 20th century was without his supporters, admirers or apologists among the leading intellectuals — not only within his own country, but in foreign democracies, where intellectuals were free to say whatever they wanted to.

Given the enormous progress made during the 20th century, it may seem hard to believe that intellectuals did so little good as to have that good outweighed by particular wrong-headed notions. But most of those who promoted the scientific, economic and social advances of the 20th century were not really intellectuals in the sense in which that term is most often used.

The Wright brothers, who fulfilled the centuries-old dream of human beings flying, were by no means intellectuals. Nor were those who conquered the scourge of polio and other diseases, or who created the electronic marvels that we now take for granted.

All these people produced a tangible product or service and they were judged by whether those products and services worked. But intellectuals are people whose end products are intangible ideas, and they are usually judged by whether those ideas sound good to other intellectuals or resonate with the public.

Whether their ideas turn out to work — whether they make life better or worse for others — is another question entirely.

The ideas that Karl Marx created in the 19th century dominated the course of events over wide portions of the world in the 20th century. Whole generations suffered, and millions were killed, as a result of those ideas. This was not Marx’s intention, nor the intentions of many supporters of Marxian ideas in countries around the world. But it is what happened.

Some of the most distinguished intellectuals in the Western world in the 1930s gave ringing praise to the Soviet Union, while millions of people there were literally starved to death and vast numbers of others were being shipped off to slave labor camps.

Many of those same distinguished intellectuals of the 1930s were urging their own countries to disarm while Hitler was rapidly arming Germany for wars of conquest that would have, among other things, put many of those intellectuals in concentration camps — slated for extermination — if he had succeeded.

The 1930s were by no means unique. In too many other eras — including our own today — intellectuals of unquestionable brilliance have advocated similarly childish and dangerous notions. How and why such patterns have existed among intellectuals is a challenging question, whose answer can determine the fate of millions of other people.

[Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com.] COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM

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carbonunit52's picture
Submitted by carbonunit52 on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 8:56pm.

There has probably never been an era in history when intellectuals have played a larger role in society.

Where is Bonkers when you need him?

It's not easy being the carbonunit


muddle's picture
Submitted by muddle on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 4:48pm.

It only goes to show that it is possible to be educated right out of one's common sense.

Consider the late philosopher, Richard Rorty, whose definition of truth was something on the order of "Truth is whatever one's colleagues allow one to get away with saying." This seems to have caught on among people who fancy themselves as postmodern intellectuals.

Unfortunately for Rorty, when they threw him on the cart and he said, "I'm not dead yet!" his colleagues insisted, "You most certainly are, Richard."


dawn69's picture
Submitted by dawn69 on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 8:02pm.

Again with the Monte Python reference. I love it!

Let's see....we both love Twain and Monte Python. Yep, you and I, Muddle, we like smart asses!

"The secret to life is honesty and fair dealing. If you can fake that, you've got it made." - Groucho Marx


Main Stream's picture
Submitted by Main Stream on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 5:12pm.

"It only goes to show that it is possible to be educated right out of one's common sense."

You're referring to Thomas Sowell, right?

I wonder what he would think about the impact intellectuals like Steven Jobs and Bill Gates had on the 20th century, or were those ideas "non-events."

Sowell is an idiot.


meanoldconservatives's picture
Submitted by meanoldconservatives on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 7:01pm.

"Sowell is an idiot."

Sowell received his bachelor’s degree in economics (magna cum laude) from Harvard in 1958, his master’s degree in economics from Columbia University in 1959, and his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Chicago in 1968. I'm sure your resume is equally impressive. (FYI, a resume is a list of accomplishments. You don't need one of those.)

Sowell received the Bradley Prize for intellectual achievement in 2003. You received the Employee of the Month at McDonalds, once.

Sowell is a Senior Fellow at a think tank on the Stanford campus. You couldn't join a think tank at an Alzheimer's home.

Sowell taught economics at Cornell and Amherst and taught the history of ideas at Brandeis. He was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. You potty trained a kid or two.

Sowell is a syndicated columnist in over 150 newspapers around the country. You write fringe lunatic blogs here.

Sowell has written and published numerous books and made a ton of money. You have to check books out of a public library (doubtful) and make minimum wage. It shows with your envy.

The point is, you make yourself look even more stupid calling someone with that stature and resume an idiot. That's the liberal way. When someone doesn't think like your pea-sized "progressive" mind does, they are the idiot. There is an idiot here and it isn't Sowell. You proved that....


Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:59pm.

Having a 'degree' or 'credential' does not automatically indicate that one is an 'intellectual'. The more you learn - you realize you have so much more to learn!

Maybe Git, Joe, and MOC would enlighten us on what this paragaph means.

The 1930s were by no means unique. In too many other eras — including our own today — intellectuals of unquestionable brilliance have advocated similarly childish and dangerous notions. How and why such patterns have existed among intellectuals is a challenging question, whose answer can determine the fate of millions of other people.

Thanks!

muddle's picture
Submitted by muddle on Sat, 01/09/2010 - 9:54am.

Chesterton has Sowell's answer here, I believe.

Chapter 2 of Orthodoxy--"The Maniac

Here he argues that the trouble with the madman is not that he has lost his ability to reason. Rather, it is that his reason is taken hostage by a crazy idea, and then a plethora of inferences are drawn from that idea by use of impeccable logic:

The woman claiming to be my wife is an alien and a cannibal who, after fattening me up with meals of lasagna and pot roasts, plans to make a meal of me.

You show him his wedding album with the same lady when she was young. He sees it as proof of alien cunning. You observe that she treats him like a king in his own home. He replies that if she did not, then he might begin to suspect. You point out that she can demonstrate a detailed memory of experiences shared by the two of them. He replies that the alien cannibal uploaded his wife's memories via telepathy just before cooking and eating her.

In short, it is possible to construct and complex and internally consistent system of thought that is founded upon madness.

Chesterton suggests that the same sort of thing occurs with various philosophies. He is right.

Consider, for instance, a view in the philosophy of mind known as "eliminativism." The eliminativist denies that there really is such a thing as consciousness. Why? Because he assumes that the only things that are real are those things that may be described in the third person language of science. And he notes that conscious experiences, if they existed, have an irreducible first person element about them, and would defy such description: "I have a horrific toothache" uttered by Jones, seems not to be captured by anything like "Imaging results reveal brain activity that demonstrates C-fiber firing and is strongly correlated with reports of the experience of pain." And so there are no such things as toothaches.

But Jones knows better and is willing to reverse the argument:

1. If eliminativism is true then there are no toothaches.
2. There are toothaches.
3. Therefore, eliminativism is false.

I'm with Jones.

One contemporary eliminativist recently wrote, "I long ago concluded that there is no substantial or persistent self to be found in experience, let alone in the brain. I have become quite uncertain as to whether there really is anything it is like to be me."

I am quite certain that there is something that it is like to be astonished at such an assertion.

"Intellectuals" may thus be found embracing, articulating and defending ideas and theories that are, to the rest of us, sheer madness.

Chesterton concludes here,

This chapter is purely practical and is concerned with what actually is the chief mark and element of insanity; we may say in summary that it is reason used without root, reason in the void. The man who begins to think without the proper first principles goes mad; he begins to think at the wrong end.


Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Sat, 01/09/2010 - 12:41pm.

The woman claiming to be my wife is an alien and a cannibal who, after fattening me up with meals of lasagna and pot roasts, plans to make a meal of me.

So now I understand the evening, after dinner cups of coffee served with slices of chocolate, key lime, peanut butter or pecan pies. Now I git it.

You gotta love it when the professor puts pen to paper. He'll have you thinkin'.

Just Like Welfare and Socialized Medicine - You Don't Have To Work For It.... THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE


Submitted by Davids mom on Sat, 01/09/2010 - 10:06am.

we may say in summary that it is reason used without root, reason in the void.

Thanks for sharing!!

Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 11:30pm.

Book Smart does not automatically beget one to possess wisdom and common sense. There are hoards of ineffective intellectuals that by the very alma mader they sport on their resumes, are handed positions of great influence and position with no prior productive achievements what-so-ever. Though they may have achieved by grades.... they lack the wisdom and common sense to justify their pious stature and their self inflated notability in life.

Wall Street, Washington, the news media, the law profession and much of academia itself contains such entitled notables such as George W Bush, Timothy Geithner, Ben Bernanke, Al Gore, and even your beloved god and savior.... Barack Hussein Obama. All great community organizers but nothing earned in life beyond their academic achievements. "Big Hat No Cattle" perty much sums them up.

The are people with pedigrees that have produced NOTHING in life and whose very existence depends on those who do have wisdom, common sense and a productive work ethic.

As far as learning goes.... It is a fool who thinks he has learned enough in life. But learning.... isn't everything.

Just Like Welfare and Socialized Medicine - You Don't Have To Work For It.... THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE


Submitted by Davids mom on Sat, 01/09/2010 - 10:25am.

I agree! I wasn't aware of 'W's academic achievements - but I'll look them up. Thanks for sharing.

(By the way - just for clarification, my spiritual beliefs only include one God.)

Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Sat, 01/09/2010 - 12:05pm.

I'm certain his papers are easily ascertained. Eye-wink Eye-wink

Funny though.... in another post you made just a few minutes ago you state: I think, speaking for myself, that it is easier to give a quick negative retort than to engage in meaningful conversation. I know that it is really hard to live up to my resolution not to denigrate a fellow blogger...

Hmmmmm... I think I responded in a meaningful way to this girly slap you threw out in your post above.

Maybe Git, Joe, and MOC would enlighten us on what this paragaph means.

Sooooo... do I get extra credit? Puzzled

Just Like Welfare and Socialized Medicine - You Don't Have To Work For It.... THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE


Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 8:56pm.

Do you see anything without a liberal/conservative filter? (No need to answer - just a rhetorical question.)

The Wedge's picture
Submitted by The Wedge on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 9:39pm.

And what filter did you use for the posting underneath this that agreed that Sowell was an idiot? Since he is a fine black gentleman, it cannot be a racial filter. Therefore it must be the filter that you accuse MOC of using.


meanoldconservatives's picture
Submitted by meanoldconservatives on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:29pm.

"And what filter did you use for the posting underneath this that agreed that Sowell was an idiot?"

Check, and.....


Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:07pm.

I love this new like button Cal came up with. Kinda like Facebook. Smiling

Just Like Welfare and Socialized Medicine - You Don't Have To Work For It.... THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE


Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:04pm.

May be. Night.

Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:09pm.

Without doubt!

Just Like Welfare and Socialized Medicine - You Don't Have To Work For It.... THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE


Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 8:51pm.

It only goes to show that it is possible to be educated right out of one's common sense

Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 5:56pm.

Sowell is an idiot.

YUP!!

Joe Kawfi's picture
Submitted by Joe Kawfi on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 8:39pm.

Look! It's a messenger.....Shoot him!!!

"If ever a time should come, when vain and aspiring men shall possess the highest seats in Government, our country will stand in need of its experienced patriots to prevent its ruin." - Samuel Adams


Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 8:48pm.

Do you enjoy advertising your inability to read and comprehend? I haven't broken my resolution. Just agreed with Main Stream. Does that upset you?

Joe Kawfi's picture
Submitted by Joe Kawfi on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 9:36pm.

No, it doesn't bother me. I just happen to think that Mr. Sowell is a very intelligent man, and do wonder why you feel that he is an "idiot". Or were you just parroting another lib?

"If ever a time should come, when vain and aspiring men shall possess the highest seats in Government, our country will stand in need of its experienced patriots to prevent its ruin." - Samuel Adams


meanoldconservatives's picture
Submitted by meanoldconservatives on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:31pm.

"Or were you just parroting another lib?"

.....Checkmate.

Like Joe, I would be very interested in exactly what makes you think Sowell is an idiot. Hmmmm?????


Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:42pm.

You and Joe can entertain each other with that thought. Night.

meanoldconservatives's picture
Submitted by meanoldconservatives on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:54pm.

Yeah, I didn't think you would want to go into that here. Thanks anyway.


Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:03pm.

Good night. Have a pleasant weekend.

Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:35pm.

Such peaceful venom. Can you hear her whisper? Sssssssssss......

It is so tough when you have so little to stand on. Eh DM?

Just Like Welfare and Socialized Medicine - You Don't Have To Work For It.... THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE


Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:46pm.

Smiling You're benefitting from my resolution. Night! Smiling

Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 10:59pm.

You've proved that.

Just Like Welfare and Socialized Medicine - You Don't Have To Work For It.... THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE


Submitted by Davids mom on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 11:06pm.

.

Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Fri, 01/08/2010 - 11:35pm.

You always get snarky and condescending when you fail to defend the indefensible. It's okay though...we recognize and have come to accept the trend.

Well... Good night David's Mom.... And bless your lil ole heart. Smiling

Just Like Welfare and Socialized Medicine - You Don't Have To Work For It.... THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE


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