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by tshaddox
1652 days ago
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This sentiment seems completely useless (actually incredibly dangerous) without at least some attempt at explaining how we might distinguish between aspects of society which seem terrible but are actually secretly good even though no one knows why, and aspects of society which seem terrible because they're terrible. |
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The two relevant ideas I know are:
1. Chesterton's Fence: "I don't understand why this exists, so let's tear it down" is an big and tempting error. Wait until you understand.
2. Consequences of societal change are inherently unknowable, which is why revolutions usually end in tragedy. The sane approach is to change society incrementally, see what happens, and adjust and learn as you go.
The educated reader may notice that 1+2 is pretty much the sane version of Conservatism.
I'm not a conservative myself, but as I've grown older and wiser, I've come to understand and respect the philosophy.