authors:
- Hibbing, John R
- Smith, Kevin B
- Alford, John R
content: 'The second, updated edition of this book is a well-written and at times
funny argument for the idea that we humans are a thoroughly political animal. Politics
is inherent in our form of sociality, and political differences are not aberrations
but simply a fact of how we are wired. We have inborn predispositions as to where
on the political scale each one of us is located. This scale, the authors contend,
is one that goes from the radical stance (pro-change, novelty seeking, interested
in others) to the conservative position (pro-tradition, defense of the current state,
wary of others). Interestingly, the authors consider the dimension of distributive
justice (pro-equality vs pro-meritocratic distribution) to be of lesser importance.
Many different studies are brought to bear on the idea that the differences in political
outlook correlate with numerous other traits, ranging from food preferences, attitudes
towards strangers, moral foundations, visual attention reactions, and so on. The
correlations are in general not particularly strong, but neither are they negligible.
The authors discuss the current political environment of polarisation between the
radical and the conservative sides. What they do not adequately account for, in
my opinion, is the shift in Western societies from a focus on issues of wealth and
distribution towards the so-called culture wars. A scientific analysis that cannot
explain the dynamics of the political scene is lacking something. The authors''
wish to drive home the innateness of political differences has led to a certain
blindness to the fact that cultural and institutional dynamics must also play a
strong role. If politics changes, and our genes do no, then something else must
account for that change.
But all in all, this is a good read, with many interesting points and useful leads
to the current literature.'
date: '2024-09-26'
edition:
published: '2024'
publisher: Routledge
goodreads: '199498919'
html: '<p>The second, updated edition of this book is a well-written and at times
funny argument for the idea that we humans are a thoroughly political animal. Politics
is inherent in our form of sociality, and political differences are not aberrations
but simply a fact of how we are wired. We have inborn predispositions as to where
on the political scale each one of us is located. This scale, the authors contend,
is one that goes from the radical stance (pro-change, novelty seeking, interested
in others) to the conservative position (pro-tradition, defense of the current state,
wary of others). Interestingly, the authors consider the dimension of distributive
justice (pro-equality vs pro-meritocratic distribution) to be of lesser importance.</p>
<p>Many different studies are brought to bear on the idea that the differences in
political outlook correlate with numerous other traits, ranging from food preferences,
attitudes towards strangers, moral foundations, visual attention reactions, and
so on. The correlations are in general not particularly strong, but neither are
they negligible.</p>
<p>The authors discuss the current political environment of polarisation between
the radical and the conservative sides. What they do not adequately account for,
in my opinion, is the shift in Western societies from a focus on issues of wealth
and distribution towards the so-called culture wars. A scientific analysis that
cannot explain the dynamics of the political scene is lacking something. The authors''
wish to drive home the innateness of political differences has led to a certain
blindness to the fact that cultural and institutional dynamics must also play a
strong role. If politics changes, and our genes do no, then something else must
account for that change.</p>
<p>But all in all, this is a good read, with many interesting points and useful
leads to the current literature.</p>
'
isbn: '9781032520063'
language: en
lastmod: '2024-09-26'
path: /library/hibbing-2013.html
published: '2013'
rating: 4
reference: Hibbing 2013
subjects:
- human-evolution
- liberalism
- political-philosophy
- politics
title: 'Predisposed: The Left, the Right, and the Biology of Political Differences'
type: book