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Traditionalist conservatism, often known as classical conservatism, is a political and social philosophy that emphasizes the importance of transcendent moral principles, manifested through certain posited natural laws to which it is claimed society should adhere. It is one of many different forms of conservatism. Traditionalist conservatism, as known today, is rooted in Edmund Burke's political philosophy, which represented a combination of Whiggism and Jacobitism,[failed verification] as well as the similar views of Joseph de Maistre, who attributed the rationalist rejection of Christianity during previous decades of being directly responsible for the Reign of Terror which followed the French Revolution. Traditionalists value social ties and the preservation of ancestral institutions above what they perceive as excessive rationalism and individualism. One of the first uses of the phrase "conservatism" began around 1818 with a monarchist newspaper named "Le Conservateur", written by Francois Rene de Chateaubriand with the help of Louis de Bonald.
The modern concepts of nation, culture, custom, convention, religious roots, language revival, and tradition are heavily emphasized in traditionalist conservatism.Theoretical reason is regarded as of secondary importance to practical reason. The state is also viewed as a social endeavor with spiritual and organic characteristics. Traditionalists think that any positive change arises based within the community's traditions rather than as a consequence of seeking a complete and deliberate break with the past. Leadership, authority, and hierarchy are seen as natural to humans. Traditionalism, in the forms of Jacobitism, the Counter-Enlightenment and early Romanticism, arose in Europe during the 18th century as a backlash against the Enlightenment, as well as the English and French Revolutions. More recent forms have included early German Romanticism, Carlism, and the Gaelic revival. Traditionalist conservatism began to establish itself as an intellectual and political force in the mid-20th century.
Key principles
This section possibly contains original research.(May 2024) |
Religious faith and natural law
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A number of traditionalist conservatives embrace high church Christianity (e.g., T. S. Eliot, an Anglo-Catholic; Russell Kirk, a Roman Catholic; Rod Dreher, an Eastern Orthodox Christian). Another traditionalist who has stated his faith tradition publicly is Caleb Stegall, an evangelical Protestant. A number of conservative mainline Protestants are also traditionalists, such as Peter Hitchens and Roger Scruton, and some traditionalists are Jewish, such as the late Will Herberg, Irving Louis Horowitz, Mordecai Roshwald, and Paul Gottfried.
Natural law is championed by Thomas Aquinas in the Summa Theologiae. There, he affirms the principle of noncontradiction ("the same thing cannot be affirmed and denied at the same time") as being the first principle of theoretical reason, and ("good is to be done and pursued and evil avoided") as the first principle of practical reason, or that which precedes and determines one's actions. The account of Medieval Christian philosophy is the appreciation of the concept of the summum bonum or "highest good". It is only through the silent contemplation that someone is able to achieve the idea of the good. The rest of natural law was first developed somewhat in Aristotle's work, also was referenced and affirmed in the works by Cicero, and it has been developed by the Christian Albert the Great. This is not meant to imply that traditionalist conservatives must be Thomists and embrace a robustly Thomistic natural law theory. Individuals who embrace non-Thomistic understandings of natural law rooted in, e.g., non-Aristotelian accounts affirmed in segments of Greco-Roman, patristic, medieval, and Reformation thought, can identify with traditionalist conservatism.
Tradition and custom
Traditionalists think that tradition and custom should guide man and his worldview, as their names imply. Each generation inherits its ancestors' experience and culture, which man is able to transmit down to his offspring through custom and precedent. Edmund Burke, noted that "the individual is foolish, but the species is wise." Furthermore, according to John Kekes, "tradition represents for conservatives a continuum enmeshing the individual and social, and is immune to reasoned critique." Traditional conservatism typically prefers practical reason instead of theoretical reason.
Conservatism, it has been argued, is based on living tradition rather than abstract political thinking. Within conservatism, political journalist Edmund Fawcett argues the existence of two strains of conservative thought, a flexible conservatism associated with Edmund Burke (which allows for limited reform), and an inflexible conservatism associated with Joseph de Maistre (which is more reactionary).
Within flexible conservatism, some commentators may break it down further, contrasting the "pragmatic conservatism" which is still quite skeptical of abstract theoretical reason, vs. the "rational conservatism" which does not have skepticism of said reason, and simply favors some sort of hierarchy as sufficient.
Hierarchy, organicism, and authority
Traditionalist conservatives believe that human society is essentially hierarchical (i.e., it always involves various interdependent inequalities, degrees, and classes) and that political structures that recognize this fact prove the most just, thriving, and generally beneficial. Hierarchy allows for the preservation of the whole community simultaneously, instead of protecting one part at the expense of the others.
Organicism also characterizes conservative thought. Edmund Burke notably viewed society from an organicist standpoint, as opposed to a more mechanistic view developed by liberal thinkers. Two concepts play a role in organicism in conservative thought:
- The internal elements of the organic society cannot be randomly reconfigured (similar to a living creature).
- The organic society is based upon natural needs and instincts, rather than that of a new ideological blueprint conceived by political theorists.
Traditional authority is a common tenet of conservatism, albeit expressed in different forms. Alexandre Kojève distinguished between two forms of traditional authority: the father (fathers, priests, monarchs) and the master (aristocrats, military commanders). Obedience to said authority, whether familial or religious, continues to be a central tenet of conservatism to this day.
Integralism and divine law
Integralism, typically a Catholic idea but also a broader religious one, asserts that faith and religious principles ought to be the basis for public law and policy when possible. The goal of such a system is to integrate religious authority with political power. While integralist principles have been sporadically associated with traditionalism, it was largely popularized by the works of Joseph de Maistre.
Agrarianism
The countryside, as well as the values associated with it, are greatly valued (sometimes even being romanticized as in pastoral poetry). Agrarian ideals (such as conserving small family farms, open land, natural resource conservation, and land stewardship) are important to certain traditionalists' conception of rural life.Louis de Bonald wrote a short piece on a comparison of the agriculturalism to industrialism.
Family structure
The importance of proper family structures is a common value expressed in conservatism. The concept of traditional morality is often coalesced with familialism and family values, being viewed as the bedrock of society within traditionalist thought. Louis de Bonald wrote a piece on marital dissolution named "On Divorce" in 1802, outlining his opposition to the practise. Bonald stated that the broader human society was composed of three subunits (religious society - the church, domestic society - the family, public society - the state). He added that since the family made up one of these core categories, divorce would thereby represent an assault on the social order.
Morality
Morality, specifically traditional moral values, is a common area of importance within traditional conservatism, going back to Edmund Burke. Burke believed that a notion of sensibility was at the root of man's moral intuition. Furthermore, he theorized that divine moral law was both transcendent and immanent within humans.Moralism, as a movement largely still exists within mainstream conservative circles with a focus on inherent or deontological suppositions. While moral discussions exist across the political aisle, conservatism is distinct for including notions of purity-based reasoning. The type of morality attributed to Edmund Burke is referred to some as moral traditionalism.
Communitarianism
Communitarianism is an ideology that broadly prioritizes the importance of the community over the individual's freedoms. Joseph de Maistre was notably against individualism, and blamed Rousseau's individualism on the destructive nature of the French revolution. Some may argue that the communitarian ethic has considerable overlap with the conservative movement, although they remain distinct. While communitarians may draw upon similar elements of moral infrastructure to make their arguments, the communitarian opposition to liberalism is still more limited than that of conservatives. Furthermore, the communitarian prescription for society is more limited in scope than that of social conservatives. The term is typically used in two different senses; philosophical communitarianism which rejects liberal precepts and atomistic theory, vs. ideological communitarianism which is a syncretistic belief that holds in priority the positive right to social services for members of said community. Communitarianism may overlap with stewardship, in an environmental sense as well.
Social order
Social order is a common tenet of conservatism, namely the maintenance of social ties, whether the family or the law. The concept may also tie into social cohesion. Joseph de Maistre defended the necessity of the public executioner as encouraging stability. In the St Petersburg Dialogues, he wrote: "all power, all subordination rests on the executioner: he is the horror and the bond of human association. Remove this incomprehensible agent from the world, and the very moment order gives way to chaos, thrones topple, and society disappears."
The concept of social order is not exclusive to conservatism, although it tends to be fairly prevalent within it. Both Jean Jacques Rousseau and Joseph de Maistre believed in social order, the difference was that Maistre preferred the status quo, indivisibility of law and rule, and the mesh of Church with State. Meanwhile, Rousseau preferred social contract and the ability to withdraw from such (and pick the ruler) as well as a separation of Church and state. Furthermore, Rousseau went on the criticize the "cult of the state" as well.
Classicism and high culture
Traditionalists defend classical Western civilization and value an education informed by the sifting of texts starting in the Roman World and refined under Medieval Scholasticism and Renaissance humanism. Similarly, traditionalist conservatives are Classicists who revere high culture in all of its manifestations (e.g. literature, Classical music, architecture, art, and theatre).[citation needed]
Localism
Traditionalists consider localism a core principle, described as a sense of devotion to one's homeland, in contrast to nationalists, who value the role of the state or nation over the local community. Traditionalist conservatives believe that allegiance to family, local community, and region is often more important than political commitments. Traditionalists also prioritize community closeness above nationalist state interest, preferring the civil society of Burke's "little platoons". However, this does not mean that Conservatives are against state authority. Quite the opposite, rather Conservatives prefer simply that the state allow and encourage units like families and churches to thrive and develop.
Alternatively, some theorists state that nationalism can easily be radicalized and lead to jingoism, which sees the state as apart from the local community and family structure rather than as a product of both.
An example of a traditionalist conservative approach to immigration may be seen in Bishop John Joseph Frederick Otto Zardetti's September 21, 1892 "Sermon on the Mother and the Bride", which was a defence of Roman Catholic German-Americans desire to preserve their faith, ancestral culture, and to continue speaking their heritage language of the German language in the United States, against both the English only movement and accusations of being Hyphenated Americans.
History
British influences
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Edmund Burke, an Anglo-Irish Whig statesman and philosopher whose political principles were rooted in moral natural law and the Western heritage, is the one of the first expositors of traditionalist conservatism, although Toryism represented an even earlier, more primitive form of traditionalist conservatism. Burke believed in prescriptive rights, which he considered to be "God-given". He argued for what he called "ordered liberty" (best reflected in the unwritten law of the British constitutional monarchy). He also fought for universal ideals that were supported by institutions such as the church, the family, and the state. He was a fierce critic of the principles behind the French Revolution, and in 1790, his observations on its excesses and radicalism were collected in Reflections on the Revolution in France. In Reflections, Burke called for the constitutional enactment of specific, concrete rights and warned that abstract rights could be easily abused to justify tyranny. American social critic and historian Russell Kirk wrote: "The Reflections burns with all the wrath and anguish of a prophet who saw the traditions of Christendom and the fabric of civil society dissolving before his eyes."
Burke's influence was felt by later intellectuals and authors in both Britain and continental Europe. The English Romantic poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Wordsworth and Robert Southey, as well as Scottish Romantic author Sir Walter Scott, and the counter-revolutionary writers François-René de Chateaubriand, Louis de Bonald and Joseph de Maistre were all affected by his ideas. Burke's legacy was best represented in the United States by the Federalist Party and its leaders, such as President John Adams and Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton.
French influences
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Joseph de Maistre, a French lawyer, was another founder of conservatism. He was an ultramontane Catholic, and thoroughly rejected progressivism and rationalism. In 1796, he published a political pamphlet entitled, Considerations on France, that mirrored Burke's Reflections. Maistre viewed the French revolution as "evil schism", and a movement premised on the "sentiment of hatred". After the demise of Napoleon, Maistre returned to France to meet with pro-royalist circles. In 1819, Maistre published a piece called Du Pape which outlined the Pope as the key sovereign, unto which authority derives from.
Critics of material progress
Three cultural conservatives and skeptics of material development, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Thomas Carlyle, and John Henry Newman, were staunch supporters of Burke's classical conservatism.
According to conservative scholar Peter Viereck, Coleridge and his colleague and fellow poet William Wordsworth began as followers of the French Revolution and the radical utopianism it engendered. Their collection of poems, Lyrical Ballads, published in 1798, however, rejected the Enlightenment notion of reason triumphing over faith and tradition. Later works by Coleridge, such as Lay Sermons (1816), Biographia Literaria (1817) and Aids to Reflection (1825), defended traditional conservative positions on hierarchy and organic society, criticism of materialism and the merchant class, and the need for "inner growth" that is rooted in a traditional and religious culture. Coleridge was a strong supporter of social institutions and an outspoken opponent of Jeremy Bentham and his utilitarian theory.
Thomas Carlyle, a writer, historian, and essayist, was an early traditionalist thinker, defending medieval ideals such as aristocracy, hierarchy, organic society, and class unity against communism and laissez-faire capitalism's "cash nexus." The "cash nexus," according to Carlyle, occurs when social interactions are reduced to economic gain. Carlyle, a lover of the poor, claimed that mobs, plutocrats, anarchists, communists, socialists, liberals, and others were threatening the fabric of British society by exploiting them and perpetuating class animosity. A devotee of Germanic culture and Romanticism, Carlyle is best known for his works, Sartor Resartus (1833–1834) and Past and Present (1843).
The Oxford Movement, a religious movement aimed at restoring Anglicanism's Catholic nature, gave the Church of England a "catholic rebirth" in the mid-19th century. The Tractarians (so named for the publication of their Tracts for the Times) criticized theological liberalism while preserving "dogma, ritual, poetry, [and] tradition," led by John Keble, Edward Pusey, and John Henry Newman. Newman (who converted to Roman Catholicism in 1845 and was later made a Cardinal and a canonized saint) and the Tractarians, like Coleridge and Carlyle, were critical of material progress, or the idea that money, prosperity, and economic gain constituted the totality of human existence.
Cultural and artistic criticism
Culture and the arts were also important to British traditionalist conservatives, and two of the most prominent defenders of tradition in culture and the arts were Matthew Arnold and John Ruskin.
A poet and cultural commentator, Matthew Arnold is most recognized for his poems and literary, social, and religious criticism. His book Culture and Anarchy (1869) criticized Victorian middle-class norms (Arnold referred to middle class tastes in literature as "philistinism") and advocated a return to ancient literature. Arnold was likewise skeptical of the plutocratic grasping at socioeconomic issues that had been denounced by Coleridge, Carlyle, and the Oxford Movement. Arnold was a vehement critic of the Liberal Party and its Nonconformist base. He mocked Liberal efforts to disestablish the Anglican Church in Ireland, establish a Catholic university there, allow dissenters to be buried in Church of England cemeteries, demand temperance, and ignore the need to improve middle class members rather than impose their unreasonable beliefs on society. Education was essential, and by that, Arnold meant a close reading and attachment to the cultural classics, coupled with critical reflection. He feared anarchy—the fragmentation of life into isolated facts that is caused by dangerous educational panaceas that emerge from materialistic and utilitarian philosophies. He was appalled at the shamelessness of the sensationalistic new journalism of the sort he witnessed on his tour of the United States in 1888. He prophesied, "If one were searching for the best means to efface and kill in a whole nation the discipline of self-respect, the feeling for what is elevated, he could do no better than take the American newspapers."
One of the issues that traditionalist conservatives have often emphasized is that capitalism is just as suspect as the classical liberalism that gave birth to it. Cultural and artistic critic John Ruskin, a medievalist who considered himself a "Christian communist" and cared much about standards in culture, the arts, and society, continued this tradition. The Industrial Revolution, according to Ruskin (and all 19th-century cultural conservatives), had caused dislocation, rootlessness, and vast urbanization of the poor. He wrote The Stones of Venice (1851–1853), a work of art criticism that attacked the Classical heritage while upholding Gothic art and architecture. The Seven Lamps of Architecture and Unto This Last (1860) were two of his other masterpieces.
One-nation conservatism
Burke, Coleridge, Carlyle, Newman, and other traditionalist conservatives' beliefs were distilled into former British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli's politics and ideology. When he was younger, Disraeli was an outspoken opponent of middle-class capitalism and the Manchester liberals' industrial policies (the Reform Bill and the Corn Laws). In order to ameliorate the suffering of the urban poor in the aftermath of the Industrial Revolution, Disraeli proposed "one-nation conservatism," in which a coalition of aristocrats and commoners would band together to counter the liberal middle class's influence. This new coalition would be a way to interact with disenfranchised people while also rooting them in old conservative principles. Disraeli's ideas (especially his critique of utilitarianism) were popularized in the "Young England" movement and in books like Vindication of the English Constitution (1835), The Radical Tory (1837), and his "social novels," Coningsby (1844) and Sybil (1845). His one-nation conservatism was revived a few years later in Lord Randolph Churchill's Tory democracy and in the early 21st century in British philosopher Phillip Blond's Red Tory thesis.
Distributism
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In the early 20th century, traditionalist conservatism found its defenders through the efforts of Hilaire Belloc, G. K. Chesterton and other proponents of the socioeconomic system they advocated: distributism. Originating in the papal encyclical Rerum novarum, distributism employed the concept of subsidiarity as a "third way" solution to the twin evils of communism and capitalism. It favors local economies, small business, the agrarian way of life and craftsmen and artists. Otto von Bismarck implemented one of the first modern welfare systems in Germany during the 1880s. Traditional communities akin to those found in the Middle Ages were advocated in books like Belloc's The Servile State (1912), Economics for Helen (1924), and An Essay on the Restoration of Property (1936), and Chesterton's The Outline of Sanity (1926), while big business and big government were condemned. Distributist views were accepted in the United States by the journalist Herbert Agar and Catholic activist Dorothy Day as well as through the influence of the German-born British economist E. F. Schumacher, and were comparable to Wilhelm Roepke's work.
T. S. Eliot was a staunch supporter of Western culture and traditional Christianity. Eliot was a political reactionary who used literary modernism to achieve traditionalist goals. Following in the footsteps of Edmund Burke, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Thomas Carlyle, John Ruskin, G. K. Chesterton, and Hilaire Belloc, he wrote After Strange Gods (1934), and Notes towards the Definition of Culture (1948). At Harvard University, where he was educated by Irving Babbitt and George Santayana, Eliot was acquainted with Allen Tate and Russell Kirk.
T. S. Eliot praised Christopher Dawson as the most potent intellectual influence in Britain, and he was a prominent player in 20th-century traditionalism. The belief that religion was at the center of all civilization, especially Western culture, was central to his work, and his books reflected this view, notably The Age of Gods (1928), Religion and Culture (1948), and Religion and the Rise of Western Culture (1950). Dawson, a contributor to Eliot's Criterion, believed that religion and culture were crucial to rebuilding the West after World War II in the aftermath of fascism and the advent of communism.
In the United Kingdom
Philosophers
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Roger Scruton, a British philosopher, was a self-described traditionalist and conservative. One of his most well-known books, The Meaning of Conservatism (1980), is on foreign policy, animal rights, arts and culture, and philosophy. Scruton was a member of the American Enterprise Institute, the Institute for the Psychological Sciences, the Trinity Forum, and the Center for European Renewal. Modern Age, National Review, The American Spectator, The New Criterion, and City Journal were among the many publications for which he wrote.
Phillip Blond, a British philosopher, has recently gained notoriety as a proponent of traditionalist philosophy, specifically progressive conservatism, or Red Toryism. Blond believes that Red Toryism would rejuvenate British conservatism and society by combining civic communitarianism, localism, and traditional values. He has formed a think tank, ResPublica.
Publications and political organizations
The oldest traditionalist publication in the United Kingdom is The Salisbury Review, which was founded by British philosopher Roger Scruton. The Salisbury Review's current managing editor is Merrie Cave.
A group of traditionalist MPs known as the Cornerstone Group was created in 2005 within the British Conservative Party. The Cornerstone Group represents "faith, flag, and family" and stands for traditional values. Edward Leigh and John Henry Hayes are two notable members.
In Europe
The Edmund Burke Foundation is a traditionalist educational foundation established in the Netherlands and is modeled after the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. It was created by traditionalists such as academic Andreas Kinneging and journalist Bart Jan Spruyt as a think tank. The Center for European Renewal is linked with it.
In 2007, a number of leading traditionalist scholars from Europe, as well as representatives of the Edmund Burke Foundation and the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, created the Center for European Renewal, which is designed to be the European version of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
In the United States
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The Federalists had no ties to European-style nobility, royalty, or organized churches when it came to "classical conservatism." John Adams was one of the first champions of a traditional social order.
The Whig Party had an approach that mirrored Burkean conservatism in the post-Revolutionary era. Rufus Choate argued that lawyers were the guardians and preservers of the Constitution. In the antebellum period, George Ticknor and Edward Everett were the "Guardians of Civilization." Orestes Brownson examined how America satisfies Catholic tradition and Western civilization. The Southern Agrarians, or Fugitives, were another group of traditionalist conservatives. In 1930, some of the Fugitives published I'll Take My Stand, which applied agrarian standards to politics and economics.
Following WWII, the initial stirrings of a "traditionalist movement" emerged. Certain conservative scholars and writers garnered the attention of the popular press. Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind, an expansion of his PhD dissertation written in Scotland, was the book that defined the traditionalist school. Kirk was an independent scholar, writer, critic, and man of letters. He was friends with William F. Buckley Jr., a National Review columnist, editor, and syndicated columnist. When Barry Goldwater combated the Republican Party's Eastern Establishment in 1964, Kirk backed him in the primaries and campaigned for him. After Goldwater's defeat, the New Right reunited in the late 1970s and found a new leader in Ronald Reagan. Ronald Reagan created a coalition of libertarians, foreign-policy rightists, business conservatives, as well as Christian social conservatives and maintained his power by solidifying a newer form of conservative alliance that would continue to dominate the political landscape of the American conservatism to this day.
Political organizations
The Trinity Forum, Ellis Sandoz's Eric Voegelin Institute and the Eric Voegelin Society, the Conservative Institute's New Centurion Program, the T. S. Eliot Society, the Malcolm Muggeridge Society, and the Free Enterprise Institute's Center for the American Idea are all traditionalist groups. The Wilbur Foundation is a prominent supporter of traditionalist activities, particularly the Russell Kirk Center.
Literary
Literary traditionalists are frequently associated with political conservatives and the right wing, whilst experimental works and the avant-garde are frequently associated with progressives and the left wing. John Barth, a postmodern writer and literary theorist, said: "I confess to missing, in apprentice seminars in the later 1970s and the 1980s, that lively Make-It-New spirit of the Buffalo Sixties. A roomful of young traditionalists can be as depressing as a roomful of young Republicans."
James Fenimore Cooper, Nathaniel Hawthorne, James Russell Lowell, W. H. Mallock, Robert Frost and T. S. Eliot are among the literary figures covered in Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind (1953). The writings of Rudyard Kipling and Phyllis McGinley are presented as instances of literary traditionalism in Kirk's The Conservative Reader (1982). Kirk was also a well-known author of spooky and suspense fiction with a Gothic flavor. Ray Bradbury and Madeleine L'Engle both praised novels such as Old House of Fear, A Creature of the Twilight, and Lord of the Hollow Dark as well as short stories such as "Lex Talionis", "Lost Lake", "Beyond the Stumps", "Ex Tenebris," and "Fate's Purse." Kirk was also close friends with a number of 20th-century literary heavyweights, including T. S. Eliot, Roy Campbell, Wyndham Lewis, Ray Bradbury, Madeleine L'Engle, Fernando Sánchez Dragó, and Flannery O'Connor, all of whom wrote conservative poetry or fiction.
Evelyn Waugh, J.R.R. Tolkien, and G. K. Chesterton – British novelists and traditionalist Catholics – are often considered traditionalist conservatives. With regard to both literature and cultural revival among speakers of Celtic languages, the same argument can be made for Saunders Lewis, Máirtín Ó Direáin, John Lorne Campbell, and Margaret Fay Shaw.[citation needed]
See also
- Christian democracy
- Communitarianism
- Counter-Enlightenment
- Corporatism
- Distributism
- High Tories
- Historical school of economics
- Integralism
- Localism (politics)
- Monarchism
- National conservatism
- Natural order (philosophy)
- Neoauthoritarianism (China)
- New Humanism
- New traditionalism
- Organicism
- Paleoconservatism
- Philosophical naturalism
- Red Tory
- Regionalism
- Right-wing authoritarianism
- Royalism
- Social conservatism
- Tory
- Tory (political faction)
- Traditionalism (Spain)
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Many treat it as a standpoint that is sceptical of abstract reasoning in politics, and that appeals instead to living tradition, allowing for the possibility of limited political reform. On this view, conservatism is neither dogmatic reaction, nor the right-wing radicalism of Margaret Thatcher or contemporary American "neo-conservatives". Other commentators, however, contrast this "pragmatic conservatism" with a universalist "rational conservatism" that is not sceptical of reason, and that regards a community with a hierarchy of authority as most conducive to human well-being
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Conservatism's "organic" social vision is inherently sceptical of the state, and puts faith instead in the family, private property and religion
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Link to page
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Bibliography
Further reading
Articles
- "Understanding Traditionalist Conservatism" by Mark C. Henrie. The New Pantagruel, formerly published in Varieties of Conservatism in America, Peter Berkowitz, Ed. (Hoover Press, 2004) ISBN 978-0-8179-4572-5.
General references
- Allitt, Patrick (2009) The Conservatives: Ideas and Personalities Throughout American History. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Critchlow, Donald T. (2007) The Conservative Ascendancy: How the GOP Right Made Political History. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- Dunn, Charles W., and J. David Woodard (2003) The Conservative Tradition in America. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers.
- Edwards, Lee (2004) A Brief History of the Modern American Conservative Movement. Washington, D.C.: Heritage Foundation.
- Frohnen, Bruce, Jeremy Beer, and Jeffrey O. Nelson (2006) American Conservatism: An Encyclopedia. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books.
- Gottfried, Paul, and Thomas Fleming (1988) The Conservative Movement. Boston: Twayne Publishers.
- Nash, George H. (1976, 2006) The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America since 1945. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books.
- Nisbet, Robert (1986) Conservatism: Dream and Reality. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
- Regnery, Alfred S. (2008) Upstream: The Ascendance of American Conservatism. New York: Threshold Editions.
- Viereck, Peter (1956, 2006) Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
By the New Conservatives
- Bestor, Arthur (1953, 1988) Educational Wastelands: The Retreat from Learning in Our Public Schools. Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press.
- Boorstin, Daniel (1953) The Genius of American Politics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Chalmers, Gordon Keith (1952) The Republic and the Person: A Discussion of Necessities in Modern American Education. Chicago: Regnery.
- Hallowell, John (1954, 2007) The Moral Foundation of Democracy. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund Inc.
- Heckscher, August (1947) A Pattern of Politics. New York: Reynal and Hitchcock.
- Kirk, Russell (1953, 2001) The Conservative Mind. Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing.
- Kirk, Russell (1982) The Portable Conservative Reader. New York: Penguin.
- Nisbet, Robert (1953, 1990) The Quest for Community: A Study in the Ethics of Order and Freedom. San Francisco: ICS Press.
- Smith, Mortimer (1949) And Madly Teach. Chicago:Henry Regnery Co.
- Viereck, Peter (1949, 2006) Conservatism Revisited: The Revolt Against Ideology. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
- Vivas, Eliseo (1950, 1983) The Moral Life and the Ethical Life. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.
- Voegelin, Eric (1952, 1987) The New Science of Politics: An Introduction. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Weaver, Richard (1948, 1984) Ideas Have Consequences. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Wilson, Francis G. (1951, 1990) The Case for Conservatism. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
By other traditionalist conservatives
- Dreher, Rod (2006) Crunchy Cons: How Birkenstocked Burkeans, Gun-loving Organic Farmers, Hip Homeschooling Mamas, Right-wing Nature Lovers, and Their Diverse Tribe of Countercultural Conservatives Plan to Save America (or At Least the Republican Party). New York: Crown Forum.
- Frohnen, Bruce (1993) Virtue and the Promise of Conservatism: The Legacy of Burke and Tocqueville. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas.
- Henrie, Mark C. (2008) Arguing Conservatism: Four Decades of the Intercollegiate Review. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books.
- Kushiner, James M., Ed. (2003) Creed and Culture: A Touchstone Reader. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books.
- MacIntyre, Alaisdar (1981, 2007) After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.
- Panichas, George A., Ed. (1988) Modern Age: The First Twenty-Five Years: A Selection. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, Inc.
- Panichas, George A. (2008) Restoring the Meaning of Conservatism: Writings from Modern Age. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books.
- Scruton, Roger (1980, 2002) The Meaning of Conservatism. South Bend, IN: St. Augustine's Press.
- Scruton, Roger (2012) Green Philosophy: How to Think Seriously About the Planet. Atlantic Books
About traditionalist conservatives
- Duffy, Bernard K. and Martin Jacobi (1993) The Politics of Rhetoric: Richard M. Weaver and the Conservative Tradition. Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press.
- Federici, Michael P. (2002) Eric Voegelin: The Restoration of Order. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books.
- Gottfried, Paul (2009) Encounters: My Life with Nixon, Marcuse, and Other Friends and Teachers. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books.
- Kirk, Russell (1995) The Sword of Imagination: Memoirs of a Half-Century of Literary Conflict. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdman's Publishing Co.
- Langdale, John., (2012) Superfluous Southerners: Cultural Conservatism and the South, 1920–1990. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press.
- McDonald, W. Wesley (2004) Russell Kirk and the Age of Ideology. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press.
- Person, James E. Jr. (1999) Russell Kirk: A Critical Biography of a Conservative Mind. Lanham, MD: Madison Books.
- Russello, Gerald J. (2007) The Postmodern Imagination of Russell Kirk. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press.
- Scotchie, Joseph (1997) Barbarians in the Saddle: An Intellectual Biography of Richard M. Weaver. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
- Scotchie, Joseph (1995) The Vision of Richard Weaver. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
- Scruton, Roger (2005) Gentle Regrets: Thoughts From A Life London: Continuum.
- Stone, Brad Lowell (2002) Robert Nisbet: Communitarian Traditionalist. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books.
- Wilson, Clyde (1999) A Defender of Conservatism: M. E. Bradford and His Achievements. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press.
This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these messages The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate May 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Traditionalist conservatism news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message This article or section possibly contains original synthesis Source material should verifiably mention and relate to the main topic Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page May 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Traditionalist conservatism often known as classical conservatism is a political and social philosophy that emphasizes the importance of transcendent moral principles manifested through certain posited natural laws to which it is claimed society should adhere It is one of many different forms of conservatism Traditionalist conservatism as known today is rooted in Edmund Burke s political philosophy which represented a combination of Whiggism and Jacobitism failed verification as well as the similar views of Joseph de Maistre who attributed the rationalist rejection of Christianity during previous decades of being directly responsible for the Reign of Terror which followed the French Revolution Traditionalists value social ties and the preservation of ancestral institutions above what they perceive as excessive rationalism and individualism One of the first uses of the phrase conservatism began around 1818 with a monarchist newspaper named Le Conservateur written by Francois Rene de Chateaubriand with the help of Louis de Bonald The modern concepts of nation culture custom convention religious roots language revival and tradition are heavily emphasized in traditionalist conservatism Theoretical reason is regarded as of secondary importance to practical reason The state is also viewed as a social endeavor with spiritual and organic characteristics Traditionalists think that any positive change arises based within the community s traditions rather than as a consequence of seeking a complete and deliberate break with the past Leadership authority and hierarchy are seen as natural to humans Traditionalism in the forms of Jacobitism the Counter Enlightenment and early Romanticism arose in Europe during the 18th century as a backlash against the Enlightenment as well as the English and French Revolutions More recent forms have included early German Romanticism Carlism and the Gaelic revival Traditionalist conservatism began to establish itself as an intellectual and political force in the mid 20th century Key principlesThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed May 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Religious faith and natural law This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message A number of traditionalist conservatives embrace high church Christianity e g T S Eliot an Anglo Catholic Russell Kirk a Roman Catholic Rod Dreher an Eastern Orthodox Christian Another traditionalist who has stated his faith tradition publicly is Caleb Stegall an evangelical Protestant A number of conservative mainline Protestants are also traditionalists such as Peter Hitchens and Roger Scruton and some traditionalists are Jewish such as the late Will Herberg Irving Louis Horowitz Mordecai Roshwald and Paul Gottfried Natural law is championed by Thomas Aquinas in the Summa Theologiae There he affirms the principle of noncontradiction the same thing cannot be affirmed and denied at the same time as being the first principle of theoretical reason and good is to be done and pursued and evil avoided as the first principle of practical reason or that which precedes and determines one s actions The account of Medieval Christian philosophy is the appreciation of the concept of the summum bonum or highest good It is only through the silent contemplation that someone is able to achieve the idea of the good The rest of natural law was first developed somewhat in Aristotle s work also was referenced and affirmed in the works by Cicero and it has been developed by the Christian Albert the Great This is not meant to imply that traditionalist conservatives must be Thomists and embrace a robustly Thomistic natural law theory Individuals who embrace non Thomistic understandings of natural law rooted in e g non Aristotelian accounts affirmed in segments of Greco Roman patristic medieval and Reformation thought can identify with traditionalist conservatism Tradition and custom Traditionalists think that tradition and custom should guide man and his worldview as their names imply Each generation inherits its ancestors experience and culture which man is able to transmit down to his offspring through custom and precedent Edmund Burke noted that the individual is foolish but the species is wise Furthermore according to John Kekes tradition represents for conservatives a continuum enmeshing the individual and social and is immune to reasoned critique Traditional conservatism typically prefers practical reason instead of theoretical reason Conservatism it has been argued is based on living tradition rather than abstract political thinking Within conservatism political journalist Edmund Fawcett argues the existence of two strains of conservative thought a flexible conservatism associated with Edmund Burke which allows for limited reform and an inflexible conservatism associated with Joseph de Maistre which is more reactionary Within flexible conservatism some commentators may break it down further contrasting the pragmatic conservatism which is still quite skeptical of abstract theoretical reason vs the rational conservatism which does not have skepticism of said reason and simply favors some sort of hierarchy as sufficient Hierarchy organicism and authority Traditionalist conservatives believe that human society is essentially hierarchical i e it always involves various interdependent inequalities degrees and classes and that political structures that recognize this fact prove the most just thriving and generally beneficial Hierarchy allows for the preservation of the whole community simultaneously instead of protecting one part at the expense of the others Organicism also characterizes conservative thought Edmund Burke notably viewed society from an organicist standpoint as opposed to a more mechanistic view developed by liberal thinkers Two concepts play a role in organicism in conservative thought The internal elements of the organic society cannot be randomly reconfigured similar to a living creature The organic society is based upon natural needs and instincts rather than that of a new ideological blueprint conceived by political theorists Traditional authority is a common tenet of conservatism albeit expressed in different forms Alexandre Kojeve distinguished between two forms of traditional authority the father fathers priests monarchs and the master aristocrats military commanders Obedience to said authority whether familial or religious continues to be a central tenet of conservatism to this day Integralism and divine law Integralism typically a Catholic idea but also a broader religious one asserts that faith and religious principles ought to be the basis for public law and policy when possible The goal of such a system is to integrate religious authority with political power While integralist principles have been sporadically associated with traditionalism it was largely popularized by the works of Joseph de Maistre Agrarianism The countryside as well as the values associated with it are greatly valued sometimes even being romanticized as in pastoral poetry Agrarian ideals such as conserving small family farms open land natural resource conservation and land stewardship are important to certain traditionalists conception of rural life Louis de Bonald wrote a short piece on a comparison of the agriculturalism to industrialism Family structure The importance of proper family structures is a common value expressed in conservatism The concept of traditional morality is often coalesced with familialism and family values being viewed as the bedrock of society within traditionalist thought Louis de Bonald wrote a piece on marital dissolution named On Divorce in 1802 outlining his opposition to the practise Bonald stated that the broader human society was composed of three subunits religious society the church domestic society the family public society the state He added that since the family made up one of these core categories divorce would thereby represent an assault on the social order Morality Morality specifically traditional moral values is a common area of importance within traditional conservatism going back to Edmund Burke Burke believed that a notion of sensibility was at the root of man s moral intuition Furthermore he theorized that divine moral law was both transcendent and immanent within humans Moralism as a movement largely still exists within mainstream conservative circles with a focus on inherent or deontological suppositions While moral discussions exist across the political aisle conservatism is distinct for including notions of purity based reasoning The type of morality attributed to Edmund Burke is referred to some as moral traditionalism Communitarianism Communitarianism is an ideology that broadly prioritizes the importance of the community over the individual s freedoms Joseph de Maistre was notably against individualism and blamed Rousseau s individualism on the destructive nature of the French revolution Some may argue that the communitarian ethic has considerable overlap with the conservative movement although they remain distinct While communitarians may draw upon similar elements of moral infrastructure to make their arguments the communitarian opposition to liberalism is still more limited than that of conservatives Furthermore the communitarian prescription for society is more limited in scope than that of social conservatives The term is typically used in two different senses philosophical communitarianism which rejects liberal precepts and atomistic theory vs ideological communitarianism which is a syncretistic belief that holds in priority the positive right to social services for members of said community Communitarianism may overlap with stewardship in an environmental sense as well Social order Social order is a common tenet of conservatism namely the maintenance of social ties whether the family or the law The concept may also tie into social cohesion Joseph de Maistre defended the necessity of the public executioner as encouraging stability In the St Petersburg Dialogues he wrote all power all subordination rests on the executioner he is the horror and the bond of human association Remove this incomprehensible agent from the world and the very moment order gives way to chaos thrones topple and society disappears The concept of social order is not exclusive to conservatism although it tends to be fairly prevalent within it Both Jean Jacques Rousseau and Joseph de Maistre believed in social order the difference was that Maistre preferred the status quo indivisibility of law and rule and the mesh of Church with State Meanwhile Rousseau preferred social contract and the ability to withdraw from such and pick the ruler as well as a separation of Church and state Furthermore Rousseau went on the criticize the cult of the state as well Classicism and high culture Traditionalists defend classical Western civilization and value an education informed by the sifting of texts starting in the Roman World and refined under Medieval Scholasticism and Renaissance humanism Similarly traditionalist conservatives are Classicists who revere high culture in all of its manifestations e g literature Classical music architecture art and theatre citation needed Localism Traditionalists consider localism a core principle described as a sense of devotion to one s homeland in contrast to nationalists who value the role of the state or nation over the local community Traditionalist conservatives believe that allegiance to family local community and region is often more important than political commitments Traditionalists also prioritize community closeness above nationalist state interest preferring the civil society of Burke s little platoons However this does not mean that Conservatives are against state authority Quite the opposite rather Conservatives prefer simply that the state allow and encourage units like families and churches to thrive and develop Alternatively some theorists state that nationalism can easily be radicalized and lead to jingoism which sees the state as apart from the local community and family structure rather than as a product of both An example of a traditionalist conservative approach to immigration may be seen in Bishop John Joseph Frederick Otto Zardetti s September 21 1892 Sermon on the Mother and the Bride which was a defence of Roman Catholic German Americans desire to preserve their faith ancestral culture and to continue speaking their heritage language of the German language in the United States against both the English only movement and accusations of being Hyphenated Americans HistoryBritish influences Edmund Burke Edmund Burke an Anglo Irish Whig statesman and philosopher whose political principles were rooted in moral natural law and the Western heritage is the one of the first expositors of traditionalist conservatism although Toryism represented an even earlier more primitive form of traditionalist conservatism Burke believed in prescriptive rights which he considered to be God given He argued for what he called ordered liberty best reflected in the unwritten law of the British constitutional monarchy He also fought for universal ideals that were supported by institutions such as the church the family and the state He was a fierce critic of the principles behind the French Revolution and in 1790 his observations on its excesses and radicalism were collected in Reflections on the Revolution in France In Reflections Burke called for the constitutional enactment of specific concrete rights and warned that abstract rights could be easily abused to justify tyranny American social critic and historian Russell Kirk wrote The Reflections burns with all the wrath and anguish of a prophet who saw the traditions of Christendom and the fabric of civil society dissolving before his eyes Burke s influence was felt by later intellectuals and authors in both Britain and continental Europe The English Romantic poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge William Wordsworth and Robert Southey as well as Scottish Romantic author Sir Walter Scott and the counter revolutionary writers Francois Rene de Chateaubriand Louis de Bonald and Joseph de Maistre were all affected by his ideas Burke s legacy was best represented in the United States by the Federalist Party and its leaders such as President John Adams and Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton French influences Joseph de Maistre 1753 1821 Joseph de Maistre a French lawyer was another founder of conservatism He was an ultramontane Catholic and thoroughly rejected progressivism and rationalism In 1796 he published a political pamphlet entitled Considerations on France that mirrored Burke s Reflections Maistre viewed the French revolution as evil schism and a movement premised on the sentiment of hatred After the demise of Napoleon Maistre returned to France to meet with pro royalist circles In 1819 Maistre published a piece called Du Pape which outlined the Pope as the key sovereign unto which authority derives from Critics of material progress Three cultural conservatives and skeptics of material development Samuel Taylor Coleridge Thomas Carlyle and John Henry Newman were staunch supporters of Burke s classical conservatism According to conservative scholar Peter Viereck Coleridge and his colleague and fellow poet William Wordsworth began as followers of the French Revolution and the radical utopianism it engendered Their collection of poems Lyrical Ballads published in 1798 however rejected the Enlightenment notion of reason triumphing over faith and tradition Later works by Coleridge such as Lay Sermons 1816 Biographia Literaria 1817 and Aids to Reflection 1825 defended traditional conservative positions on hierarchy and organic society criticism of materialism and the merchant class and the need for inner growth that is rooted in a traditional and religious culture Coleridge was a strong supporter of social institutions and an outspoken opponent of Jeremy Bentham and his utilitarian theory Thomas Carlyle a writer historian and essayist was an early traditionalist thinker defending medieval ideals such as aristocracy hierarchy organic society and class unity against communism and laissez faire capitalism s cash nexus The cash nexus according to Carlyle occurs when social interactions are reduced to economic gain Carlyle a lover of the poor claimed that mobs plutocrats anarchists communists socialists liberals and others were threatening the fabric of British society by exploiting them and perpetuating class animosity A devotee of Germanic culture and Romanticism Carlyle is best known for his works Sartor Resartus 1833 1834 and Past and Present 1843 The Oxford Movement a religious movement aimed at restoring Anglicanism s Catholic nature gave the Church of England a catholic rebirth in the mid 19th century The Tractarians so named for the publication of their Tracts for the Times criticized theological liberalism while preserving dogma ritual poetry and tradition led by John Keble Edward Pusey and John Henry Newman Newman who converted to Roman Catholicism in 1845 and was later made a Cardinal and a canonized saint and the Tractarians like Coleridge and Carlyle were critical of material progress or the idea that money prosperity and economic gain constituted the totality of human existence Cultural and artistic criticism Culture and the arts were also important to British traditionalist conservatives and two of the most prominent defenders of tradition in culture and the arts were Matthew Arnold and John Ruskin A poet and cultural commentator Matthew Arnold is most recognized for his poems and literary social and religious criticism His book Culture and Anarchy 1869 criticized Victorian middle class norms Arnold referred to middle class tastes in literature as philistinism and advocated a return to ancient literature Arnold was likewise skeptical of the plutocratic grasping at socioeconomic issues that had been denounced by Coleridge Carlyle and the Oxford Movement Arnold was a vehement critic of the Liberal Party and its Nonconformist base He mocked Liberal efforts to disestablish the Anglican Church in Ireland establish a Catholic university there allow dissenters to be buried in Church of England cemeteries demand temperance and ignore the need to improve middle class members rather than impose their unreasonable beliefs on society Education was essential and by that Arnold meant a close reading and attachment to the cultural classics coupled with critical reflection He feared anarchy the fragmentation of life into isolated facts that is caused by dangerous educational panaceas that emerge from materialistic and utilitarian philosophies He was appalled at the shamelessness of the sensationalistic new journalism of the sort he witnessed on his tour of the United States in 1888 He prophesied If one were searching for the best means to efface and kill in a whole nation the discipline of self respect the feeling for what is elevated he could do no better than take the American newspapers One of the issues that traditionalist conservatives have often emphasized is that capitalism is just as suspect as the classical liberalism that gave birth to it Cultural and artistic critic John Ruskin a medievalist who considered himself a Christian communist and cared much about standards in culture the arts and society continued this tradition The Industrial Revolution according to Ruskin and all 19th century cultural conservatives had caused dislocation rootlessness and vast urbanization of the poor He wrote The Stones of Venice 1851 1853 a work of art criticism that attacked the Classical heritage while upholding Gothic art and architecture The Seven Lamps of Architecture and Unto This Last 1860 were two of his other masterpieces One nation conservatism Burke Coleridge Carlyle Newman and other traditionalist conservatives beliefs were distilled into former British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli s politics and ideology When he was younger Disraeli was an outspoken opponent of middle class capitalism and the Manchester liberals industrial policies the Reform Bill and the Corn Laws In order to ameliorate the suffering of the urban poor in the aftermath of the Industrial Revolution Disraeli proposed one nation conservatism in which a coalition of aristocrats and commoners would band together to counter the liberal middle class s influence This new coalition would be a way to interact with disenfranchised people while also rooting them in old conservative principles Disraeli s ideas especially his critique of utilitarianism were popularized in the Young England movement and in books like Vindication of the English Constitution 1835 The Radical Tory 1837 and his social novels Coningsby 1844 and Sybil 1845 His one nation conservatism was revived a few years later in Lord Randolph Churchill s Tory democracy and in the early 21st century in British philosopher Phillip Blond s Red Tory thesis Distributism Hilaire Belloc in 1915 In the early 20th century traditionalist conservatism found its defenders through the efforts of Hilaire Belloc G K Chesterton and other proponents of the socioeconomic system they advocated distributism Originating in the papal encyclical Rerum novarum distributism employed the concept of subsidiarity as a third way solution to the twin evils of communism and capitalism It favors local economies small business the agrarian way of life and craftsmen and artists Otto von Bismarck implemented one of the first modern welfare systems in Germany during the 1880s Traditional communities akin to those found in the Middle Ages were advocated in books like Belloc s The Servile State 1912 Economics for Helen 1924 and An Essay on the Restoration of Property 1936 and Chesterton s The Outline of Sanity 1926 while big business and big government were condemned Distributist views were accepted in the United States by the journalist Herbert Agar and Catholic activist Dorothy Day as well as through the influence of the German born British economist E F Schumacher and were comparable to Wilhelm Roepke s work T S Eliot was a staunch supporter of Western culture and traditional Christianity Eliot was a political reactionary who used literary modernism to achieve traditionalist goals Following in the footsteps of Edmund Burke Samuel Taylor Coleridge Thomas Carlyle John Ruskin G K Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc he wrote After Strange Gods 1934 and Notes towards the Definition of Culture 1948 At Harvard University where he was educated by Irving Babbitt and George Santayana Eliot was acquainted with Allen Tate and Russell Kirk T S Eliot praised Christopher Dawson as the most potent intellectual influence in Britain and he was a prominent player in 20th century traditionalism The belief that religion was at the center of all civilization especially Western culture was central to his work and his books reflected this view notably The Age of Gods 1928 Religion and Culture 1948 and Religion and the Rise of Western Culture 1950 Dawson a contributor to Eliot s Criterion believed that religion and culture were crucial to rebuilding the West after World War II in the aftermath of fascism and the advent of communism In the United KingdomPhilosophers Roger Scruton Roger Scruton a British philosopher was a self described traditionalist and conservative One of his most well known books The Meaning of Conservatism 1980 is on foreign policy animal rights arts and culture and philosophy Scruton was a member of the American Enterprise Institute the Institute for the Psychological Sciences the Trinity Forum and the Center for European Renewal Modern Age National Review The American Spectator The New Criterion and City Journal were among the many publications for which he wrote Phillip Blond a British philosopher has recently gained notoriety as a proponent of traditionalist philosophy specifically progressive conservatism or Red Toryism Blond believes that Red Toryism would rejuvenate British conservatism and society by combining civic communitarianism localism and traditional values He has formed a think tank ResPublica Publications and political organizations The oldest traditionalist publication in the United Kingdom is The Salisbury Review which was founded by British philosopher Roger Scruton The Salisbury Review s current managing editor is Merrie Cave A group of traditionalist MPs known as the Cornerstone Group was created in 2005 within the British Conservative Party The Cornerstone Group represents faith flag and family and stands for traditional values Edward Leigh and John Henry Hayes are two notable members In EuropeThe Edmund Burke Foundation is a traditionalist educational foundation established in the Netherlands and is modeled after the Intercollegiate Studies Institute It was created by traditionalists such as academic Andreas Kinneging and journalist Bart Jan Spruyt as a think tank The Center for European Renewal is linked with it In 2007 a number of leading traditionalist scholars from Europe as well as representatives of the Edmund Burke Foundation and the Intercollegiate Studies Institute created the Center for European Renewal which is designed to be the European version of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute In the United StatesRussell Kirk The Federalists had no ties to European style nobility royalty or organized churches when it came to classical conservatism John Adams was one of the first champions of a traditional social order The Whig Party had an approach that mirrored Burkean conservatism in the post Revolutionary era Rufus Choate argued that lawyers were the guardians and preservers of the Constitution In the antebellum period George Ticknor and Edward Everett were the Guardians of Civilization Orestes Brownson examined how America satisfies Catholic tradition and Western civilization The Southern Agrarians or Fugitives were another group of traditionalist conservatives In 1930 some of the Fugitives published I ll Take My Stand which applied agrarian standards to politics and economics Following WWII the initial stirrings of a traditionalist movement emerged Certain conservative scholars and writers garnered the attention of the popular press Russell Kirk s The Conservative Mind an expansion of his PhD dissertation written in Scotland was the book that defined the traditionalist school Kirk was an independent scholar writer critic and man of letters He was friends with William F Buckley Jr a National Review columnist editor and syndicated columnist When Barry Goldwater combated the Republican Party s Eastern Establishment in 1964 Kirk backed him in the primaries and campaigned for him After Goldwater s defeat the New Right reunited in the late 1970s and found a new leader in Ronald Reagan Ronald Reagan created a coalition of libertarians foreign policy rightists business conservatives as well as Christian social conservatives and maintained his power by solidifying a newer form of conservative alliance that would continue to dominate the political landscape of the American conservatism to this day Political organizationsThe Trinity Forum Ellis Sandoz s Eric Voegelin Institute and the Eric Voegelin Society the Conservative Institute s New Centurion Program the T S Eliot Society the Malcolm Muggeridge Society and the Free Enterprise Institute s Center for the American Idea are all traditionalist groups The Wilbur Foundation is a prominent supporter of traditionalist activities particularly the Russell Kirk Center LiteraryLiterary traditionalists are frequently associated with political conservatives and the right wing whilst experimental works and the avant garde are frequently associated with progressives and the left wing John Barth a postmodern writer and literary theorist said I confess to missing in apprentice seminars in the later 1970s and the 1980s that lively Make It New spirit of the Buffalo Sixties A roomful of young traditionalists can be as depressing as a roomful of young Republicans James Fenimore Cooper Nathaniel Hawthorne James Russell Lowell W H Mallock Robert Frost and T S Eliot are among the literary figures covered in Russell Kirk s The Conservative Mind 1953 The writings of Rudyard Kipling and Phyllis McGinley are presented as instances of literary traditionalism in Kirk s The Conservative Reader 1982 Kirk was also a well known author of spooky and suspense fiction with a Gothic flavor Ray Bradbury and Madeleine L Engle both praised novels such as Old House of Fear A Creature of the Twilight and Lord of the Hollow Dark as well as short stories such as Lex Talionis Lost Lake Beyond the Stumps Ex Tenebris and Fate s Purse Kirk was also close friends with a number of 20th century literary heavyweights including T S Eliot Roy Campbell Wyndham Lewis Ray Bradbury Madeleine L Engle Fernando Sanchez Drago and Flannery O Connor all of whom wrote conservative poetry or fiction Evelyn Waugh J R R Tolkien and G K Chesterton British novelists and traditionalist Catholics are often considered traditionalist conservatives With regard to both literature and cultural revival among speakers of Celtic languages the same argument can be made for Saunders Lewis Mairtin o Direain John Lorne Campbell and Margaret Fay Shaw citation needed See alsoConservatism portalChristian democracy Communitarianism Counter Enlightenment Corporatism Distributism High Tories Historical school of economics Integralism Localism politics Monarchism National conservatism Natural order philosophy Neoauthoritarianism China New Humanism New traditionalism Organicism Paleoconservatism Philosophical naturalism Red Tory Regionalism Right wing authoritarianism Royalism Social conservatism Tory Tory political faction Traditionalism Spain ReferencesDeutsch amp Fishman 2010 p 2 DeMarco Carl January 1 2023 A Historical and Philosophical Comparison Joseph de Maistre amp Edmund Burke The Gettysburg Historical Journal 22 1 ISSN 2327 3917 Book Review Conservatism The Fight for a Tradition by Edmund Fawcett The Independent Institute Retrieved January 23 2024 Vincent 2009 p 63 Sedgwick Mark 2009 Against the Modern World Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century Oxford University Press Aquinas Thomas Summa Theologica I II q 94 a 2c A Kojeve Introduction to the Reading of Hegel 1980 p 108 Shellens Max Solomon 1959 Aristotle on Natural Law Natural Law Forum 4 1 72 100 doi 10 1093 ajj 4 1 72 Rommen Heinrich A 1959 1947 The Natural Law A Study in Legal and Social Philosophy Translated by Hanley Thomas R B Herder Book Co p 5 ISBN 978 0865971615 Meany Paul The Ancient Roman Cicero s idea of natural law has much to teach us about the evolution of liberty www libertarianism org Retrieved October 4 2022 Cunningham Stanley Reclaiming Moral Agency The Moral Philosophy of Albert the Great Washington D C The Catholic University Of America Press 2008 p 207 First Principles Prejudice www firstprinciplesjournal com Retrieved March 27 2018 Hamilton Andy 2016 Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2016 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Many treat it as a standpoint that is sceptical of abstract reasoning in politics and that appeals instead to living tradition allowing for the possibility of limited political reform On this view conservatism is neither dogmatic reaction nor the right wing radicalism of Margaret Thatcher or contemporary American neo conservatives Other commentators however contrast this pragmatic conservatism with a universalist rational conservatism that is not sceptical of reason and that regards a community with a hierarchy of authority as most conducive to human well being Book Review Conservatism The Fight for a Tradition by Edmund Fawcett The Independent Institute Retrieved January 24 2024 Hamilton Andy August 1 2015 Conservatism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Hamilton Andy 2016 Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2016 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Conservatism s organic social vision is inherently sceptical of the state and puts faith instead in the family private property and religion The New Conservatism c 1885 1914 academic oup com Retrieved January 24 2024 Edmund Burke 1729 1797 www tutor2u net Retrieved January 24 2024 2c Organic society or state Political Investigations June 19 2018 Retrieved January 24 2024 The Notion of Authority Verso Retrieved January 24 2024 O Cist Edmund Waldstein October 31 2018 What Is Integralism Today Church Life Journal Retrieved February 12 2024 Clary Stephanie October 14 2019 What is Catholic integralism U S Catholic Retrieved February 12 2024 Europe as Viewed by Joseph de Maistre EHNE ehne fr Retrieved February 12 2024 Frohnen Bruce Beer Jeremy Jeffrey Nelson O May 20 2014 American Conservatism An Encyclopedia Open Road Media ISBN 9781497651579 Link to page On the Agricultural Family LOUIS DE BONALD 1826 Hearth amp Field Retrieved January 23 2024 Johnson Stephen D Tamney Joseph B 1996 The Political Impact of Traditional Family Values Sociological Focus 29 2 125 134 doi 10 1080 00380237 1996 10570635 ISSN 0038 0237 JSTOR 20831777 Nicholas Davidson 2017 On Divorce Louis de Bonald philpapers org Retrieved January 24 2024 The Moral Imperative of Edmund Burke The Russell Kirk Center May 19 2013 Retrieved January 24 2024 Kilcup Rodeny W 1979 Reason and the Basis of Morality in Burke Journal of the History of Philosophy 17 3 271 284 doi 10 1353 hph 2008 0506 ISSN 1538 4586 S2CID 147394651 Dolan Eric W June 22 2013 Liberals and conservatives approach moral judgments in fundamentally different ways PsyPost Retrieved January 24 2024 Stewart Brandon D Morris David S M 2021 Moving Morality Beyond the In Group Liberals and Conservatives Show Differences on Group Framed Moral Foundations and These Differences Mediate the Relationships to Perceived Bias and Threat Frontiers in Psychology 12 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2021 579908 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 8096906 PMID 33967876 Haidt Jonathan 2007 When Morality Opposes Justice Conservatives Have Moral Intuitions that Liberals may not Recognize PDF www unl edu Retrieved January 24 2024 Stewart Brandon D Morris David S M 2021 Moving Morality Beyond the In Group Liberals and Conservatives Show Differences on Group Framed Moral Foundations and These Differences Mediate the Relationships to Perceived Bias and Threat Frontiers in Psychology 12 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2021 579908 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 8096906 PMID 33967876 Haller Markus September 2001 Edmund Burke s Moral Traditionalism Swiss Political Science Review 7 3 1 19 doi 10 1002 j 1662 6370 2001 tb00320 x ISSN 1424 7755 Maistre Joseph de 1996 Against Rousseau On the State of Nature and on the Sovereignty of the People Mcgill Queen s University Press Retrieved January 24 2024 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Young M June 1 2020 Conservatism and Communitarianism Two or One Canadian Journal of Practical Philosophy 4 58 71 Communitarianism Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved January 24 2024 Hamilton Andy 2020 Conservatism in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2020 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved January 24 2024 Etzioni Amitai 2003 What is Political Social Science Research Network SSRN 2157170 Retrieved January 23 2024 Communitarianism By Branch Doctrine The Basics of Philosophy www philosophybasics com Retrieved January 24 2024 Joseph de Maistre Counter Enlightenment Catholic Reformer Political Philosopher Britannica www britannica com Retrieved January 25 2024 Runte Roseann 1997 Against Rousseau by Joseph de Maistre review University of Toronto Quarterly 67 1 220 221 ISSN 1712 5278 First Principles Localism www firstprinciplesjournal com Retrieved March 27 2018 Vincent A Yzermans 1988 Frontier Bishop of Saint Cloud Park Press Waite Park Minnesota Pages 117 138 Tory Wikipedia August 27 2023 retrieved September 14 2023 High Tory Wikipedia August 26 2023 retrieved September 14 2023 Frohnen Bruce Jeremy Beer and Jeffrey O Nelson 2006 American Conservatism An Encyclopedia Wilmington DE ISI Books pp 107 09 Kirk Russell 1967 1997 Edmund Burke A Genius Reconsidered Wilmington DE ISI Books p 154 Kirk Russell 1976 1997 Edmund Burke A Genius Reconsidered Wilmington DE ISI Books p 155 Blum Christopher Olaf ed 2004 Critics of the Enlightenment Wilington DE ISI Books pp xv xxxv Viereck Peter 1956 2006 Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers pp 87 95 Joseph de Maistre McGill Queen s University Press www mqup ca Retrieved January 23 2024 Krause Paul August 26 2022 Joseph De Maistre and the Importance of Social Order Discourses on Minerva Retrieved January 23 2024 Considerations on France Wikipedia December 8 2023 retrieved January 27 2024 Maistre Considerations on France Texts in political thought Cambridge University Press Retrieved January 27 2024 Maistre Joseph de 1994 Lebrun Richard A ed Maistre Considerations on France Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 46628 8 Krause Paul August 23 2022 Joseph De Maistre and the Metaphysics of the French Revolution Discourses on Minerva Retrieved January 23 2024 Joseph de Maistre Oxford Reference Retrieved January 24 2024 Viereck Peter 1956 2006 Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers pp 34 37 Viereck Peter 1956 2006 Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers pp 37 39 Viereck Peter 1956 2006 Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers pp 39 40 Viereck Peter 1956 2006 Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers p 40 Brendan A Rapple 2017 Matthew Arnold and English Education The Poet s Pioneering Advocacy in Middle Class Instruction McFarland p 116 ISBN 9781476663593 Quoted in Richard M Weaver 1948 Ideas Have Consequences Expanded Edition 2013 U of Chicago Press p 26 ISBN 9780226090238 DiNunzio Mario Who Stole Conservatism Capitalism And the Disappearance of Traditional Conservatism Viereck Peter 1956 2006 Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers pp 40 41 Viereck pp 42 45 Frohnen Bruce Jeremy Beer and Jeffrey O Nelson 2006 American Conservatism An Encyclopedia Wilmington DE ISI Books pp 235 36 Frohnen Bruce Jeremy Beer and Jeffrey O Nelson 2006 American Conservatism An Encyclopedia Wilmington DE ISI Books pp 263 66 Frohnen Bruce Jeremy Beer and Jeffrey O Nelson 2006 American Conservatism An Encyclopedia Wilmington DE ISI Books pp 219 20 Allitt Patrick The Conservatives Ideas and Personalities Throughout American History Yale University Press 2009 p 12 Muller Jerry Z ed Conservatism An Anthology of Social and Political Thought from David Hume to the Present Princeton University 1997 pp 152 66 Kirk Russell 1995 The Sword of Imagination Memoirs of a Half Century of Literary Conflict Grand Rapids MI William B Eerdmans Publishing Co pp 285 288 John Barth 1984 intro to The Literature of Exhaustion in The Friday Book Traditionalism between the past and the present nytimes comBibliographyDeutsch Kenneth L Fishman Ethan 2010 The Dilemmas of American Conservatism University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 813 13962 3 Vincent Andrew 2009 Modern Political Ideologies John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 444 31105 1 Further readingArticles Understanding Traditionalist Conservatism by Mark C Henrie The New Pantagruel formerly published in Varieties of Conservatism in America Peter Berkowitz Ed Hoover Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 8179 4572 5 General references Allitt Patrick 2009 The Conservatives Ideas and Personalities Throughout American History New Haven CT Yale University Press Critchlow Donald T 2007 The Conservative Ascendancy How the GOP Right Made Political History Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Dunn Charles W and J David Woodard 2003 The Conservative Tradition in America Lanham MD Rowman and Littlefield Publishers Edwards Lee 2004 A Brief History of the Modern American Conservative Movement Washington D C Heritage Foundation Frohnen Bruce Jeremy Beer and Jeffrey O Nelson 2006 American Conservatism An Encyclopedia Wilmington DE ISI Books Gottfried Paul and Thomas Fleming 1988 The Conservative Movement Boston Twayne Publishers Nash George H 1976 2006 The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America since 1945 Wilmington DE ISI Books Nisbet Robert 1986 Conservatism Dream and Reality Minneapolis MN University of Minnesota Press Regnery Alfred S 2008 Upstream The Ascendance of American Conservatism New York Threshold Editions Viereck Peter 1956 2006 Conservative Thinkers from John Adams to Winston Churchill New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers By the New Conservatives Bestor Arthur 1953 1988 Educational Wastelands The Retreat from Learning in Our Public Schools Champaign IL University of Illinois Press Boorstin Daniel 1953 The Genius of American Politics Chicago University of Chicago Press Chalmers Gordon Keith 1952 The Republic and the Person A Discussion of Necessities in Modern American Education Chicago Regnery Hallowell John 1954 2007 The Moral Foundation of Democracy Indianapolis Liberty Fund Inc Heckscher August 1947 A Pattern of Politics New York Reynal and Hitchcock Kirk Russell 1953 2001 The Conservative Mind Washington D C Regnery Publishing Kirk Russell 1982 The Portable Conservative Reader New York Penguin Nisbet Robert 1953 1990 The Quest for Community A Study in the Ethics of Order and Freedom San Francisco ICS Press Smith Mortimer 1949 And Madly Teach Chicago Henry Regnery Co Viereck Peter 1949 2006 Conservatism Revisited The Revolt Against Ideology New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers Vivas Eliseo 1950 1983 The Moral Life and the Ethical Life Lanham MD University Press of America Voegelin Eric 1952 1987 The New Science of Politics An Introduction Chicago University of Chicago Press Weaver Richard 1948 1984 Ideas Have Consequences Chicago University of Chicago Press Wilson Francis G 1951 1990 The Case for Conservatism New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers By other traditionalist conservatives Dreher Rod 2006 Crunchy Cons How Birkenstocked Burkeans Gun loving Organic Farmers Hip Homeschooling Mamas Right wing Nature Lovers and Their Diverse Tribe of Countercultural Conservatives Plan to Save America or At Least the Republican Party New York Crown Forum Frohnen Bruce 1993 Virtue and the Promise of Conservatism The Legacy of Burke and Tocqueville Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas Henrie Mark C 2008 Arguing Conservatism Four Decades of the Intercollegiate Review Wilmington DE ISI Books Kushiner James M Ed 2003 Creed and Culture A Touchstone Reader Wilmington DE ISI Books MacIntyre Alaisdar 1981 2007 After Virtue A Study in Moral Theory Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Press Panichas George A Ed 1988 Modern Age The First Twenty Five Years A Selection Indianapolis Liberty Fund Inc Panichas George A 2008 Restoring the Meaning of Conservatism Writings from Modern Age Wilmington DE ISI Books Scruton Roger 1980 2002 The Meaning of Conservatism South Bend IN St Augustine s Press Scruton Roger 2012 Green Philosophy How to Think Seriously About the Planet Atlantic BooksAbout traditionalist conservatives Duffy Bernard K and Martin Jacobi 1993 The Politics of Rhetoric Richard M Weaver and the Conservative Tradition Santa Barbara CA Greenwood Press Federici Michael P 2002 Eric Voegelin The Restoration of Order Wilmington DE ISI Books Gottfried Paul 2009 Encounters My Life with Nixon Marcuse and Other Friends and Teachers Wilmington DE ISI Books Kirk Russell 1995 The Sword of Imagination Memoirs of a Half Century of Literary Conflict Grand Rapids MI William B Eerdman s Publishing Co Langdale John 2012 Superfluous Southerners Cultural Conservatism and the South 1920 1990 Columbia MO University of Missouri Press McDonald W Wesley 2004 Russell Kirk and the Age of Ideology Columbia MO University of Missouri Press Person James E Jr 1999 Russell Kirk A Critical Biography of a Conservative Mind Lanham MD Madison Books Russello Gerald J 2007 The Postmodern Imagination of Russell Kirk Columbia MO University of Missouri Press Scotchie Joseph 1997 Barbarians in the Saddle An Intellectual Biography of Richard M Weaver New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers Scotchie Joseph 1995 The Vision of Richard Weaver New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers Scruton Roger 2005 Gentle Regrets Thoughts From A Life London Continuum Stone Brad Lowell 2002 Robert Nisbet Communitarian Traditionalist Wilmington DE ISI Books Wilson Clyde 1999 A Defender of Conservatism M E Bradford and His Achievements Columbia MO University of Missouri Press