User Contributed Dictionary
- Plural of ideology
Extensive Definition
An ideology is an organized collection of
ideas. The word ideology
was coined by Destutt de
Tracy in 1796 (during the French
Revolution) to define a "science of ideas". An ideology can be
thought of as a comprehensive vision, as a way of looking at things
(compare Weltanschauung),
as in common sense (see
Ideology in everyday society below) and several philosophical tendencies
(see
Political ideologies), or a set of ideas proposed by the
dominant class of a society to all members of this society. The
main purpose behind an ideology is to offer change in society
through a normative thought process. Ideologies are systems of
abstract thought (as opposed to mere ideation) applied to public
matters and thus make this concept central to politics. Implicitly
every political tendency entails an ideology whether or not it is
propounded as an explicit system of thought.
(For the Marxist definition
of ideology see
Ideology as an instrument of social reproduction below.)
Ideology in everyday society
In public discussions, certain ideas arise more commonly than others. Often people with diverse backgrounds and interests may find themselves thinking alike in startling ways. Social scientists might explain this phenomenon as evidence of ideologies.Dominant
ideologies appear as "neutral", holding to assumptions that are
largely unchallenged. Meanwhile, all other ideologies that differ
from the dominant ideology are seen as radical, no matter what the
content of their actual vision may be. The philosopher Michel
Foucault wrote about the concept of apparent ideological
neutrality. Ideology
is not the same thing as philosophy. Philosophy is a way of living
life, while ideology is an almost ideal way of life for society.
Some attribute to ideology positive characteristics like vigor and
fervor, or negative features like excessive certitude and
fundamentalist rigor.
Organizations that strive for power
will try to influence the ideology of a society to become closer to
what they want it to be. Political organizations (governments included) and
other groups (e.g. lobbyists) try to influence people by
broadcasting their opinions.
When most people in a society think alike about
certain matters, or even forget that there are alternatives to the
status quo, we arrive at the concept of Hegemony, about
which the philosopher Antonio
Gramsci wrote. Modern linguists study the mechanism of conceptual
metaphor, by which this 'thinking alike' is thought to be
transmitted.
History of the concept of ideology
Perhaps the most accessible source for the
original meaning of "ideology" is Hippolyte
Taine's work on the Ancien
Regime (first volume of "Origins of Contemporary France"). He
describes ideology as rather like teaching philosophy by the
Socratic
method, but without extending the vocabulary beyond what the
general reader already possessed, and without the examples from
observation that practical science would require. Taine identifies
it not just with Destutt de Tracy, but also with his milieu, and
includes Condillac as one
of its precursors.
The word "ideology" was coined long before the
Russians coined "intelligentsia", or before the adjective
"intellectual" referred to a sort of person (see substantive), i.e. an
intellectual. Thus
these words were not around when the hard-headed, driven Napoleon
Bonaparte took the word "ideologues" to ridicule his
intellectual opponents. Gradually, however, the term "ideology" has
dropped some of its pejorative sting, and has become a neutral
term in the analysis of differing political opinions. Ideological
references are important to many people throughout the world.
Karl
Marx used the term in his own context often throughout his
works.
Analysis of ideology
Meta-ideology is the study of the structure,
form, and manifestation of ideologies. Meta-ideology posits that
ideology is a coherent system of ideas, relying upon a few basic
assumptions about reality that may or may not have any factual
basis, but are subjective choices that serve as the seed around
which further thought grows. According to this perspective,
ideologies are neither right nor wrong, but only a relativistic
intellectual strategy for categorizing the world. The pluses and
minuses of ideology range from the vigor and fervor of true
believers to ideological infallibility. Excessive need for
certitude lurks at fundamentalist levels in politics, religions,
and elsewhere.
The works of George
Walford and Harold
Walsby, done under the heading of systematic
ideology, are attempts to explore the relationships between
ideology and social systems.
David W. Minar describes six different ways in
which the word "ideology" has been used:
- As a collection of certain ideas with certain kinds of content, usually normative;
- As the form or internal logical structure that ideas have within a set;
- By the role in which ideas play in human-social interaction;
- By the role that ideas play in the structure of an organization;
- As meaning, whose purpose is persuasion; and
- As the locus of social interaction, possibly.
For Willard A. Mullins, an ideology is composed
of four basic characteristics:
- it must have power over cognitions;
- it must be capable of guiding one's evaluations;
- it must provide guidance towards action;
- and, as stated above, must be logically coherent.
Mullins emphasizes that an ideology should be
contrasted with the related (but different) issues of utopia and
historical myth.
The German philosopher Christian Duncker called
for a "critical reflection of the ideology concept" (2006). In his
work, he strove to bring the concept of ideology into the
foreground, as well as the closely connected concerns of epistemology and history.
In this work, the term ideology is defined in terms of a system of
presentations that explicitly or implicitly claim to absolute
truth.
Though the word "ideology" is most often found in
political discourse, there are many different kinds of ideology:
political, social, epistemological, ethical, and so on.
Ideology as an instrument of social reproduction
Karl Marx proposed an economic base/superstructure model of society. The base refers to the means of production of society. The superstructure is formed on top of the base, and comprises that society's ideology, as well as its legal system, political system, and religions. For Marx, the base determines the superstructure. Because the ruling class controls the society's means of production, the superstructure of society, including its ideology, will be determined according to what is in the ruling class's best interests. Therefore the ideology of a society is of enormous importance since it confuses the alienated groups and can create 'false consciousness' such as the fetishism of commodities. Critics of the Marxist approach feel that it attributes too much importance to economic factors in influencing society.The ideologies of the dominant class of a society
(dominant
ideology) are proposed to all members of that society in order
to make the ruling class' interests appear to be the interests of
all. György
Lukács describes this as a projection of the class
consciousness of the ruling class, while Antonio
Gramsci advances the theory of cultural
hegemony to explain why people in the working-class
can have a false conception of their own interests.
The dominant forms of ideology in capitalism are
(in chronological order):
and they correspond to the stages of development
of capitalism:
- extensive stage
- intensive stage
- contemporary capitalism (or late capitalism, or current crisis)
The Marxist view of ideology as an instrument of
social reproduction has been an important touchstone for the
sociology
of knowledge and theorists such as Karl
Mannheim, Daniel Bell,
and Jürgen
Habermas, amongst many others. However, Mannheim attempted to
move beyond what he saw as the 'total' but 'special' Marxist
conception of ideology to a 'general' and 'total' conception which
acknowledged that all ideologies resulted from social life
(including Marxism). Pierre
Bourdieu extensively developed this idea.
Louis Althusser's Ideological State Apparatuses
Louis
Althusser proposed a materialistic conception of ideology,
which made use of a special type of discourse: the lacunar
discourse. A number of propositions, which are never untrue,
suggest a number of other propositions, which are, in this way, the
essence of the lacunar discourse is what is not told (but is
suggested).
For example, the statement 'All are equal before
the law', which is a theoretical groundwork of current legal
systems, suggests that all people may be of equal worth or have
equal 'opportunities'. This is not true, for the concept of
private
property over the means
of production results in some people being able to own more
(much more) than others, and their property brings power and
influence (the rich can afford better lawyers, among other things,
and this puts in question the principle of equality before the
law).
Althusser also invented the concept of the
Ideological State Apparatus to explain his theory of ideology.
His first thesis was "ideology has no history": while ideologies
have histories, interleaved with the general class struggle of
society, the general form of ideology is external to history. His
second thesis, "Ideas are material", explains his materialistic
attitude, which he illustrated with the "scandalous advice" of
Pascal
toward unbelievers: "kneel and pray, and then you will believe",
thus reversing the primacy of idealism toward materialism. However,
this mustn't be misunderstood as simple behaviorism, as there may
be, as Pierre
Macherey put it, a "subjectivity without subject";
in other words, a form of non-personal liberty, as in Deleuze's
conception of becoming-other.
Feminism as critique of ideology
Naturalizing socially constructed patterns of
behavior has always been an important mechanism in the production
and reproduction of ideologies. Feminist theorists
have paid close attention to these mechanisms. Adrienne
Rich e.g. has shown how to understand motherhood as a social
institution. However, 'feminism' is not a homogenous whole, and
some corners of feminist thought criticise the critique of social
constructionism, by advocating that it disregards too much of human
nature and natural tendencies. The debate, they say, is about the
normative/naturalistic fallacy - the idea that just something
'being' natural does not necessarily mean it 'ought' to be the
case.
Political ideologies
Many political parties base their political action and programme on an ideology. In social studies, a political ideology is a certain ethical set of ideals, principles, doctrines, myths or symbols of a social movement, institution, class, or large group that explains how society should work, and offers some political and cultural blueprint for a certain social order. A political ideology largely concerns itself with how to allocate power and to what ends it should be used. Some parties follow a certain ideology very closely, while others may take broad inspiration from a group of related ideologies without specifically embracing any one of them.Political ideologies have two dimensions:
- Goals: How society should work (or be arranged).
- Methods: The most appropriate ways to achieve the ideal arrangement.
An ideology is a collection of ideas. Typically,
each ideology contains certain ideas on what it considers to be the
best form of
government (e.g. democracy, theocracy, etc), and the best
economic
system (e.g. capitalism, socialism, etc). Sometimes the
same word is used to identify both an ideology and one of its main
ideas. For instance, "socialism" may refer to an economic system,
or it may refer to an ideology which supports that economic
system.
Ideologies also identify themselves by their
position on the political
spectrum (such as the left,
the center
or the right),
though this is very often controversial. Finally, ideologies can be
distinguished from political strategies (e.g. populism) and from single
issues that a party may be built around (e.g. opposition to
European integration or the
legalisation of marijuana).
Studies of the concept of ideology itself (rather
than specific ideologies) have been carried out under the name of
systematic
ideology.
Political ideologies are concerned with many
different aspects of a society, some of which are: the economy,
education, health care,
labor
law, criminal
law, the justice
system, the provision of social
security and social
welfare, trade, the
environment,
minors, immigration,
race, use of the military, patriotism and established
religion.
There are many proposed methods for the
classification of political ideologies. See the political
spectrum article for a more in-depth discussion of these
different methods (each of whom generates a specific political
spectrum).
Epistemological ideologies
Even when the challenging of existing beliefs is
encouraged, as in science, the dominant paradigm or mindset can prevent certain
challenges, theories or experiments from being advanced.
There are critics who view science as an ideology
in itself, or being an effective ideology, called scientism. Some scientists
respond that, while the scientific
method is itself an ideology, as it is a collection of ideas,
there is nothing particularly wrong or bad about it.
Other critics point out that while science itself
is not a misleading ideology, there are some fields of study within
science that are misleading. Two examples discussed here are in the
fields of ecology and economics.
A special case of science adopted as ideology is
that of ecology, which
studies the relationships between living things on Earth. Perceptual
psychologist J. J.
Gibson believed that human perception of ecological
relationships was the basis of self-awareness
and cognition itself.
Linguist
George
Lakoff has proposed a
cognitive science of mathematics wherein even the most
fundamental ideas of arithmetic would be seen as consequences or
products of human perception - which is itself necessarily evolved
within an ecology.
Deep ecology
and the modern ecology
movement (and, to a lesser degree, Green
parties) appear to have adopted ecological sciences as a
positive ideology.
Some accuse ecological
economics of likewise turning scientific theory into political
economy, although theses in that science can often be tested.
The modern practice of green
economics fuses both approaches and seems to be part science,
part ideology.
This is far from the only theory of economics to
be raised to ideology status - some notable economically-based
ideologies include mercantilism, Mixed_economy,social
Darwinism, communism, laissez-faire
economics, and free trade.
There are also current theories of safe trade and
fair
trade which can be seen as ideologies.
References
- Mullins, Willard A. (1972) "On the Concept of Ideology in Political Science." The American Political Science Review. American Political Science Association.
- Minar, David M. (1961) "Ideology and Political Behavior", Midwest Journal of Political Science. Midwest Political Science Association.
- Pinker, Steven. (2002) "The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature." New York: Penguin Group, Inc. ISBN 0-670-03151-8
- Christian Duncker: Kritische Reflexionen des Ideologiebegriffes, 2006, ISBN 1-903343-88-7
Further reading
- Hawkes, David (2003) Ideology (2nd ed.), Routledge, ISBN 0-415-29012-0
- Minogue, Kenneth (1985) Alien Powers: The Pure Theory of Ideology, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 0-312-01860-6
- Eagleton, Terry (1991) Ideology. An introduction, Verso, ISBN 0-86091-319-8
See also
External links
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ideologies in Belarusian: Ідэалогія
ideologies in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
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ideologies in Bosnian: Ideologija
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