1. Global strategies
  2. Liberalism

Liberalism

  • Being liberal
  • Accepting liberal principles

Description

Maximizing the individual's freedom, but not absolutely, to think, to believe, to express and discuss views, to organize or to associate in groups, to find employment, to buy and sell commodities including one's own labour, to choose the government executive and the form of government and to change both periodically or as needed. The more realistic of approaches recognize the drives of greed and ambition in people. This has the political features of the protection of the rights of minorities and the separation of the powers of government. As people are essentially good and therefore perfectable, education is central to this approach.

Context

While liberal ideas are seen through the history of human thought, the term comes from the Spanish "Liberales" of the early 19th Century. The English picked up the term and developed it into a party and doctrine. The Golden Age of Liberalism was from 1750 to 1914 in the nations of the West.

Counter-claim

Liberalism's faith in reason gave way to admiration for middle class "common sense" and popular sovereignty turned into "personal freedom".

Liberalism has been the mask hiding exploitation of people by business and government.

Liberalism has been an excuse for failing to accomplish effective social change.

Liberalism results in over-simplification, atomism, primitivism, utopianism and naive cults of nature, progress and happiness.

Broader

Narrower

Facilitates

Facilitated by

Related

Being
Yet to rate

Problem

Value

Illiberalism
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Being
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Reference

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #17: Partnerships to achieve the Goal

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(A) Abstract fundamental strategies
Subject
  • Metapolitics » Political theories
  • Principles » Principles
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Mar 24, 2022