Difference between revisions of "Political ideologies"

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m (→‎Brainstorming: doctrine vs. reasoning; hierarchy vs. peer)
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==Brainstorming==
 
==Brainstorming==
 
[[Category:Brainstorming]]What other dimensions might be significant in measuring political ideology?
 
[[Category:Brainstorming]]What other dimensions might be significant in measuring political ideology?
* Willingness to reopen discussion of ''existing'' solutions (as opposed to just solving ''new'' problems), in different arenas (e.g. social, as in marriage laws; infrastructure, as in power generation - liberals don't want to reconsider nuclear as an option, for example)
+
* willingness to reopen discussion of ''existing'' solutions (as opposed to just solving ''new'' problems), in different arenas (e.g. social, as in marriage laws; infrastructure, as in power generation - liberals don't want to reconsider nuclear as an option, for example)
 +
* importance of studying doctrine vs. use of reasoning (Pournelle box only charts reason vs. irrationality - is "belief in an incorruptible doctrine" a form of irrationality? If so, is it the ''only'' form?)
 +
* preference for superior-inferior (usually hierarchical) power relationships, as opposed to peer-peer

Revision as of 15:52, 17 January 2006

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The quantifying of all political ideologies as falling somewhere in a "left-right" spectrum is generally misleading and appears to arise largely from a short-lived circumstance of seating in the French National Assembly in the 18th century[1]. Other systems have been proposed, generally using two or more dimensions.

Political Spectra

References

  1. The Pournelle Political Axes (1986)

Brainstorming

What other dimensions might be significant in measuring political ideology?

  • willingness to reopen discussion of existing solutions (as opposed to just solving new problems), in different arenas (e.g. social, as in marriage laws; infrastructure, as in power generation - liberals don't want to reconsider nuclear as an option, for example)
  • importance of studying doctrine vs. use of reasoning (Pournelle box only charts reason vs. irrationality - is "belief in an incorruptible doctrine" a form of irrationality? If so, is it the only form?)
  • preference for superior-inferior (usually hierarchical) power relationships, as opposed to peer-peer