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Simon Neale's avatar

Many thanks for an excellent article. I was inspired to read Iain McGilchrist's "The Master and his Emissary" by one of your earlier posts, and the links are quite plain, aren't they. Starmer - and probably his entire government - are extreme examples of "left brain thinking". Relentlessly focused on decontextualised issues, failing to see the whole picture, and largely oblivious to feedback which does not confirm their prejudices. Starmer himself seems to have some kind of schizoid personality disorder, and I find myself surprised that he ever took enough interest in another person's emotional life to give rise to a plausible sex scandal.

The wheels are fast coming off, of course, but I do worry about the appointment of Morgan McSweeney as Starmer's chief advisor. Although he is another technocrat who is doomed to failure, he is likely to exercise a better grasp of the optics, and will nudge the government in the direction of more effective dissembling and subterfuge. The patently useless technocrats like Miliband and Lammy will do less damage in the long run.

As McGilchrist points out, left hemisphere dominance replicates and intensifies itself throughout society. It creates institutions which embody its concerns, nurtures those individuals who display those characteristics, and trains new recruits. Nearly 50 years ago, I did a degree in Government and a Master's in Political Theory at a university which had a superb reputation in that area. Looking back, we studied "comparative cribs". In a way it was fascinating stuff, and perhaps it was significant that so much time was spent on the ongoing spat between Nicos Poulantzas and our Energy Secretary's dad. Oakeshott, though, was just a name in a book, never mentioned in lectures or seminars. So he's now another one on the list, and thank you for bringing him to my attention, and - more importantly - for your superb output here.

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A C Harper's avatar

I remember the past.... our Grammar School was designed as a feeder for Oxford or Cambridge universities and back then (way back) an O Level in a classical language was required as one of the entry requirements. We studied Caesar's Gallic Wars Book 1 ("All Gaul is halved into three quarters") and Vergil's Aeneid. We naturally used cribs to help us with the translations... and we learned as a by- product not to rely upon them. One of the characters in the Aeneid (according to Brodie's crib) "weaved hazy orbs across the battlefield". Repeat this translation and our Latin master (Brutus) would be very scathing.

And the by-product realisation is that cribs were unreliable... they translated a 2000 year old text in one language (with a social context of the time) into an equivalent in a relatively modern language (with a social context of the time) for the students of a more modern time still. No wonder the cribs were unreliable.

So... do Socialists use Marx as crib? Probably. And perhaps it explains why socialists keep applying the same principles and keep failing because the 'crib' is not fit for purpose in a radically different world to the one that Marx inhabited.

As the article suggests the crib-based politics (of most parties) is always going to come unstuck, especially as most crib authors (think tanks and the like) only ever propose one-size-shall-fit-all answers. And one-size-shall-fit-all is bureaucratic rather than pragmatic thinking.

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