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Re: Utopistics and Democratic Global Commonwealth by wwagar 18 March 2003 19:53 UTC |
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I assume that by employing such terms as "lovely," "utopiarama," "nice pastime," and "missionary embrace," Gert is having a little fun at my expense. I hope he enjoyed himself. But social science need not lose its scientific soul by using the knowledge it has acquired of human behavior, including the behavior of world-systems, to speculate intelligently about ways and means and ends, in short to apply its data and insights and hypotheses to imagine a better world that could be achieved in real time under various circumstances following specific courses of action. Boswell and Chase-Dunn have done superb work along these lines, and Wallerstein has written a meditation on utopistics, his word, not mine. But no one could accuse contemporary social science, in the main, of being seriously concerned with the tasks and goals of world reconstruction. If in fact we are living in the era of what proves to be "late capitalism," in the shadow of imminent environmental, economic, political, and military cataclysms, I find it incredible--difficult if not impossible to believe--that the majority of progressive social scientists, including world-systems researchers, do not turn most of their attention in these latter days to such tasks and goals. Of course we are in good historical company. From the whole immense and fertile corpus of the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, I dare say one could not extract more than 25 pages of serious thought about the contours and parameters of the kind of world they hoped would replace the world of the 19th Century. They did not want to repeat the mistakes of the "utopian socialists," and they did not want to tell a future classless and free humanity how to live its life. Only the men and women of the future itself could and should decide. Nevertheless, they could have sketched alternative scenarios, ventured hopeful possibilities, warned of imaginable pitfalls. Perhaps if they had, the Stalins and the commissars in times ahead would have been strangled in their cradles. Probably not, but we'll never know for sure. Meanwhile, I don't think we have even the beginnings of a consensus on how to get from "here" to "there" or on what "there" should or might be. Not even a consensus on the idea that only democratically guided institutions of planetary governance can disarm nations, rescue the biosphere, reallocate wealth and resources, and provide for the well-being of all peoples everywhere. The world-system will have to deteriorate much more rapidly and much more catastrophically before such a consensus can emerge. I think we may rely on the system to do its part. I think it is programmed for self-destruction. But when the opportunity arises, will humankind be ready to seize it? Are progressive sociologists fully engaged even now in the struggle to help our species prepare for that Dies Irae? If not, why not? Why the open hostility, even on this network, to the exploration of desirable futures in the longue duree? I do not understand. Warren On Sun, 16 Mar 2003, g kohler wrote: > Utopistics and Democratic Global Commonwealth > > > > Professor Wagar mentioned the lovely words "utopistics" and "democratic > global commonwealth" in a recent posting. While some of that is already > discussed in the oeuvres of Boswell and Chase-Dunn, more utopiarama would be > a nice pastime, while we are waiting for the bombs to drop. For example, how > would a democratic global commonwealth bring about a massive transition to > sustainable development? For example, how would the decision-making take > place? Canada would be a democratic republic in that global commonwealth, > and so would be USA, Angola, Iraq, and others. Would the democratic > grassroots of the world (i.e., we) all do the right thing, guided by our > reason and without any bosses (the no - archy situation)? Or guided by our > elected representatives? How would the Angolan and Canadian representatives > make sure that they have a fair hearing vis-à-vis the Chinese, Indian, and > U.S.-American brothers and sisters? How could the Canadian representative be > sure that the chief U.S. representative does not sleep with the chief > Chinese representative and rule the democratic global commonwealth in a > missionary or oriental mode of embrace? Any utopists out there? > > > > Gert > > >
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