Who Has Discussed Realist Anthropology in Polite Society?

Several respectable bodies of thought reach John J. Mearsheimer’s premises without his realist framing, and they have done so for two centuries.

The oldest line runs through the counter-Enlightenment. Edmund Burke (1729-1797) holds that reason is thin and inheritance is deep, that a man draws more from the partnership of generations than he can work out on his own, and that the abstract rights-bearing individual of the French theorists names no creature who ever lived. Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821) puts it in his line about having seen Frenchmen and Italians and Russians but never, in his life, Man. David Hume (1711-1776) supplies the engine for the claim about reason a generation earlier when he makes reason the slave of the passions. These three carry the whole structure: weak reason, prior attachment, the fiction of the unencumbered self.

The sociological founding gives it a science. Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) treats the social as a thing in its own right, prior to the individual and productive of him, so that even the modern cult of the individual is a collective creation. Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) names the value infusion Mearsheimer describes. His habitus is the set of dispositions laid down early, below awareness, that shapes how a man perceives and judges before he reasons at all.

The communitarian philosophers built the respectable critique of liberal anthropology in the 1980s and they sit at the center of polite society. Alasdair MacIntyre (1929-2025) in After Virtue and Dependent Rational Animals argues that a man is constituted by traditions and narratives he did not choose. Michael Sandel (b. 1953) in Liberalism and the Limits of Justice takes apart the Rawlsian self that arrives prior to its ends. Charles Taylor (b. 1931) in his essay “Atomism” and in Sources of the Self argues that the very capacities liberalism prizes can only form inside a society. Robert Bellah (1927-2013) and his coauthors in Habits of the Heart show American individualism eating the bonds Americans depend on.

A conservative line attacks reason directly. Michael Oakeshott (1901-1990) in Rationalism in Politics sets technical reason against the practical knowledge carried in traditions and never fully stated. Friedrich Hayek (1899-1992) in The Constitution of Liberty and The Fatal Conceit makes tradition the bearer of knowledge no single mind commands, and treats the constructivist faith in reason as a conceit. Roger Scruton (1944-2020) defends prior attachment to home and people as the ground of the self.

The evolutionary and psychological strand reaches the same premise about reason from the lab. Jonathan Haidt (b. 1963) in The Righteous Mind makes intuition the elephant and reason the rider who rationalizes after the fact, and calls man ninety percent chimp, ten percent bee. Daniel Kahneman (1934-2024) gives the slow deliberate system second place behind fast intuition. Hugo Mercier and Dan Sperber in The Enigma of Reason argue that reason evolved for winning arguments inside a group, not for finding truth alone. Robin Hanson and Kevin Simler in The Elephant in the Brain treat conscious reasoning as a press secretary for motives it does not see.

The cultural anthropologists supply the transmission. Joseph Henrich in The Secret of Our Success and The WEIRDest People in the World argues that man is a cultural animal who survives by copying, and that the atomistic individual of liberal theory is a recent and peculiar product of one strange corner of the world rather than the human default.

The tribal core has its respectable carriers too, though they pay a higher price for it. Samuel Huntington (1927-2008) in Who Are We? and The Clash of Civilizations puts group identity ahead of creed. Carl Schmitt (1888-1985) grounds the political in the friend and enemy grouping. E.O. Wilson (1929-2021) defends group selection and the eusocial pull.

The live synthesis is Patrick Deneen in Why Liberalism Failed, published the same year as Mearsheimer, which argues that liberalism rests on a false picture of the autonomous self and undoes itself by acting on it. Christopher Lasch (1932-1994) reaches a near neighbor from the left in The Culture of Narcissism and The True and Only Heaven. John Gray (b. 1948) in Straw Dogs turns the whole apparatus against liberal humanism and its faith in progress.

For epistemic dependence, the sources are John Hardwig, whose 1985 paper named the problem, C.A.J. Coady in Testimony, and Steven Shapin in A Social History of Truth, who shows trust standing under even the hardest knowledge.

These premises move freely in polite society when they wear evolutionary psychology, communitarian philosophy, cultural anthropology, or the conservative inheritance. The same premises, stated plainly and drawn toward their political conclusions, get a man expelled from those rooms. The respectable carriers keep their standing by holding the anthropology and declining the politics Mearsheimer is willing to name. That gap, between who may say these things and who may act on them, is the part almost no one writes about.

A correction. Tribalism as fact does not yield favor your tribe. Haidt holds the same anthropology and draws the reverse lesson: your moral mind lies to you, so distrust it, build institutions that check it, practice humility toward the people you find disgusting. Mearsheimer holds it and draws the nationalist lesson: the bonds are real and durable, so stop pretending the species dissolves into a liberal universal, and let nations be nations. One description, two roads. The fact says nothing about which to take. So polite society does not police the premise. It polices the road. You may carry the dark anthropology into the room on one condition, that you pay it off with the meliorist conclusion, the humility, the warning against your own instincts. Hold the fact and recommend restraint, keep your chair. Hold the fact and recommend partiality, lose it. The toll is the direction you point the same truth.
Then the question of why partiality is the firing offense and restraint the dues. In-group preference does not read the same on every group. Among out-groups and minorities it reads as peoplehood, solidarity, self-determination, and the institutions bless it. Among majority or founding or dominant groups it reads as chauvinism, and the institutions were built after 1945 to suppress it. So the same sentence, my people should look after their own, is civic virtue from one mouth and menace from another. The anthropology is neutral as to coalition. The license is not. That asymmetry is the live wire in the whole subject, and touching it is the thing that gets a man put out.
Society already acts on the premises. It runs ethnic patronage, diaspora lobbies, group remedies, speech rules that protect some groups from others, immigration politics keyed to who counts as us. It acts on the tribal anthropology every day, for some coalitions, against others, and never under the banner of the anthropology. So the gap does not sit between belief and action. The action is everywhere. The gap sits between the action and its avowal. Naming the thing is the crime. Doing it is administration. Mearsheimer’s sin is not that he wants tribes to matter. They already govern. His sin is that he says so in the open and points at the asymmetry that lets the saying be punished selectively.
This explains the silence. The cost of describing the gate is paid at the gate. The men positioned to see it, the respectable carriers, hold their standing on the condition of not saying it, so their incentive runs against the only sentence that would describe it. The men who do say it, the dissident right and the realists, arrive pre-discredited, so their description does not register as scholarship. It registers as recruiting. The topic is self-sealing. The toll falls on whoever names the toll. That is why the literature thins to nothing right at the point where it would get interesting.
Here is the strongest argument for leaving it alone, and a serious man has to answer it. The gap might be load-bearing. A polity of tribal animals may cohere only by forbidding the open avowal of tribalism. The taboo does the work that Plato gave the noble lie and that the fourth chapter of Turner’s book Making Democratic Theory Democratic gives to myth: it suppresses the war of all coalitions by denying that the coalitions are at war. Schmitt sits behind the curtain with the friend and the enemy, and the curtain is the thing keeping the room from becoming a battlefield. On this reading the silence is not failure of nerve. It is distributed prudence. To name the gate is not to liberate anyone. It is to hand every tribe the permission slip at once and detonate the truce. The writer who tears the veil thinks he is telling the truth. He may be firing the starting gun.
The counter is that the guardrail has a shelf life, and the bill comes due in the way Turner’s populists arrive. A rule administered to one coalition and not another stays stable only while the disfavored coalition fails to notice, or lacks the numbers and the voice to object. Cheap speech lowers the cost of noticing. Once the asymmetry is visible to the people on the wrong side of it, the denial stops calming them and starts enraging them, and the populism is the predicted result, not a malfunction. So the gate is a guardrail with an expiration, and the eruptions of the last decade are what expiration looks like.
I will not pretend to resolve it, because the resolution is the contested thing. The descriptive claim holds: the premises move freely in academic dress and get a man expelled in plain clothes, and the line tracks coalition rather than truth. What that gap is, a hypocrisy to expose or a fiction holding the floor up, divides exactly along the politics the anthropology was supposed to be neutral about. And the writer who wants to describe the gate honestly has the standpoint problem from before. He cannot get outside the room to report on the door, because there is no outside. He writes from a coalition too, and the act of naming the asymmetry is a move in the game he claims to be describing.

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Making Democratic Theory Democratic (2023)

Grant John J. Mearsheimer his anthropology, and most of this book survives. Authors Stephen Turner and George Mazur have already done much of the demolition Mearsheimer wants done.
They deflate. Democracy is a majoritarian procedure for making law and choosing leaders, no more. The will of the people is a fiction, and they cite Max Weber (1864-1920) saying so. Values vary from man to man, and no reasoner stands outside the variation to rank them. The Rawlsian veil and the Straussian philosopher are virtual beings, not citizens. John Rawls (1921-2002) and Leo Strauss (1899-1973) each build a reasoner who escapes his socialization to reach a standard above the fray. Turner says no such reasoner exists. The rule of law, stripped of its decorative associations, is a coercive order obeyed and effective, turnable to many ends.
All of this sits well with Mearsheimer. Both men reject the rationalist, universalist picture of the liberal self. Both treat the unencumbered chooser as a story. Turner’s Ideologiekritik of liberal shibboleths and Mearsheimer’s demolition of liberal universalism cut in the same direction. So the book is not a target. It is, for long stretches, an ally.
Now the damage.
Turner clears away the virtual citizen and keeps a thinner one, the conversationalist. He sets the conversation against the abstraction. Citizens, he writes, persuade each other on factual, prudential, pragmatic, and empathic grounds, and might reach a novel compromise. This is his wish, the thing he defends once the absolutist models fall. Grant Mearsheimer and the conversationalist joins Rawls and Strauss as a fiction. Mearsheimer ranks reason the weakest of the three sources of preference, behind socialization and innate sentiment, and he says the value infusion lands early, before a man can think for himself. A conversation that moves men by reasons is the open reasonable feedback Mearsheimer denies. Men do not get talked out of their group attachments by prudential and empathic appeals. They defend the coalition and find reasons after. Turner thinned the liberal reasoner without killing him.
Watch where Turner puts value. It varies, he says, from person to person. Different men value different things and ground their preferences in different experience. The unit of valuation is the individual. This is the fact-value picture he takes from Kelsen (1881-1973): values are personal, hot cognition, relative to the cognizer. Mearsheimer moves the unit. Value is not first personal and idiosyncratic. The family and the society impose the value infusion, and men hold strong attachment to the group and sacrifice for it. So the variation Turner sees among individuals is, on Mearsheimer’s account, variation among the tribes that made those individuals. Turner’s value-relativism stays individualist at its root, the same root liberalism stands on. He keeps the atomistic seat of value while denying the atomistic reasoner. Mearsheimer relocates value to the coalition and reads individual preference as the tribe speaking through the man.
The fourth chapter, on anti-populism, runs closest to Mearsheimer and then stops one step short. Turner calls the people, the state, and expertise an unstable triad, and says it is mythogenic. Stabilizing it requires fictions. Expertise is the neutral third leg, and its neutrality is a legitimacy claim, a myth that lets administrators rule while the people keep a place without power. Anti-populism is the counter-myth that reconciles practices drawn from absolutism with the rhetoric of democracy. This is close to Mearsheimer already. The expert faction claims the narrative engine of the state under cover of neutrality. But Turner reaches for myth where Mearsheimer reaches for tribe, and the difference holds. A myth is a story a society tells to stabilize an arrangement. A tribe is a coalition fighting rivals for control. Turner’s myths float a little free of the warring groups that author them. He treats them as answers to a structural problem, the triad that cannot be balanced. Mearsheimer grounds each myth in a coalition’s bid to win and to coerce the belief of others. Read his way, anti-populism is not a fiction the system needs. It is the weapon one faction, the credentialed, carries against another, the people, and the talk of neutrality is the disguise tribal power wears in a regime that must still call itself democratic.
The deepest tension lies in the standpoint. Turner’s enterprise is meta. He offers a framework that enables understanding, not a side in the fight. He excludes ideology from the basic framework. He half-admits the strain when he writes that meta arguments have the effect of taking sides. Grant Mearsheimer and the strain becomes the whole problem. There is no meta position. The man doing Ideologiekritik is socialized, tribal, reason-weak, the same as the men he studies. His deflationary positivism is not a view from above. It is a position in the contest, and it serves a coalition: the realists and positivists against the Rawlsian left and the Straussian right, the anti-normativists against the normativists. Turner the value-relativist becomes, on his own premises read through Mearsheimer, a participant who mistook his faction’s frame for neutrality. The critic of myths makes a myth, the myth of the standpoint that sees myths plain. Mearsheimer denies any man the buffered position the method needs.
So the book and the frame agree on the corpse and part over what killed it and what lives. Both bury the rational universal liberal self. Turner buries it and keeps three things: the reasoning conversationalist, the individual as the seat of value, and the meta-critic who stands clear of ideology. Mearsheimer’s premises take all three. What remains, granted those premises, is closer to Turner’s own anti-populism chapter than to his conversational ideal. A permanent contest among tribes for the engine that makes belief, with procedures, expertise, and the rule of law as its truce lines and its weapons, and no conversation wide enough, no critic neutral enough, to rise above the fight.

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Stephen P. Turner’s Anthropology & Epistemics

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

If Mearsheimer’s premises are right, the impact on Stephen Park Turner (b. 1951) is nuanced. His framework would receive both a powerful validation and a major structural challenge.
As a Distinguished University Professor of Philosophy and Sociology at the University of South Florida, Turner has spent his career examining the philosophy of the social sciences, the nature of expertise, and the sociology of knowledge. The realist framework intersects with his life work in two ways.
One. The validation of his critique of shared culture. In The Social Theory of Practices, Turner argues against collective, supra-individual concepts like a uniform “culture” that group members simply download and share. Instead, he focuses on the actual, messy mechanics of transmission. He posits that what looks like a cohesive collective culture is a rough uniformity built through individual interactions, varied personal experiences, and feedback loops. If Mearsheimer is right about the total power of childhood value infusions, Turner’s emphasis on the transmission mechanism is completely validated. Culture is not an abstract cloud floating above individuals; it is a concrete, persistent series of behavioral habits and moral codes driven into the young to create group cohesion. However, the realist premise pushes Turner’s model further than his individualist focus on varied interactions implies because it suggests that these feedback mechanisms are not accidental or open-ended, but are heavily wired by an evolutionary necessity for tight in-group solidarity.
Two. Validates Turner’s analysis of epistemic inequality. In The Politics of Expertise and Liberal Democracy 3.0, Turner tracks the rising authority of technical and scientific experts in modern society. He points out that this reliance on experts introduces a profound “epistemic inequality” into liberal democracy, creating a fundamental tension between technocratic guidance and public governance. If the realist premise holds, Turner’s skepticism toward the neutral authority of experts is fully vindicated. Experts are not value-free information processors standing above the tribal fray. They are highly socialized members of a specific elite sub-tribe, trained in academic fortresses. The data and objective policy recommendations they issue are not neutral truths, but the protective ideology of their own institutional caste. Turner’s warning that expertise introduces a new axis of inequality matches the realist conclusion: “expert knowledge” functions as a highly effective weapon used by a managerial tribe to assert dominance over competing social groups.
While Turner is a sharp critic of how expertise distorts democratic processes, his work seeks to understand how civil society and liberal structures might adapt to or survive these epistemic tensions. If Mearsheimer is right, the very concept of a stable liberal democracy operating via open, reasonable feedback loops is an illusion. The tension Turner identifies cannot be managed or resolved through a better structural design of civil society. The rise of competing experts and the suppression of alternative views through “epistemic coercion” are not institutional malfunctions that can be corrected; they are the permanent, zero-sum dynamics of tribal factions fighting to control the narrative engine of the state.
Mearsheimer and Turner agree that epistemic coercion and epistemic dependence sit together because a man knows almost nothing on his own. He takes most of what he holds true on trust, from teachers, books, experts, and the people around him. John Hardwig gave this the name epistemic dependence in 1985, and it follows from the division of cognitive labor. No one checks the chemistry, the law, the history, and the medicine for himself. He relies on others who claim to know.
Once you grant that, coercion stops looking like a fault in the system and starts looking like a feature of the ground. Whoever controls the sources a man leans on holds power over what that man believes. The dependence is the opening. You cannot close the opening without removing the dependence, and you cannot remove the dependence, because no one thinks alone any more than he survives alone. That is the bridge to Mearsheimer. The social necessity he describes at the level of survival shows up again at the level of belief. We are embedded thinkers for the same reason we are embedded actors. By necessity.
Turner does not agree that these tensions are permanent, zero-sum, past repair by any design of civil society. Turner writes that structures can alter and mitigate. Mitigate is the word to watch. A man who held the contest zero-sum would not reach for it. Turner tells you the room for institutional work is real. Courts, universities, a free press, rival centers of expertise, these change how dependence spreads and how coercion travels. They do something.
Turner’s books, The Politics of Expertise and Liberal Democracy 3.0 among them, doubt that anyone can engineer the conditions of legitimate knowledge from above. The people who would design the mitigating structures depend on experts too. They face the same problem they mean to fix. And the effects of any reform run loose. You cannot model them in advance and collect the result you planned. So structures help, and the help comes without a guarantee and without a forecast.
There is slack between the anthropologies of Mearsheimer and Turner. The slack is small, and no one can promise where it leads, and inside that slack runs Turner’s project. He does not defend the liberal dream of open reasonable feedback. He denies that its failure leaves only tribal warfare with nothing left over. The slack is the partial, unreliable purchase that structures keep on a problem they can never solve.
The case for convenient belief by Turner here is strong. Take away the slack, seal the contest, call it zero-sum, and his books and articles lose their subject. A scholar of how liberal structures survive needs the structures to survive a little. The mitigation thesis keeps the enterprise running. He has spent his career on whether expertise and democracy can be reconciled, and a man cannot spend a career on a question he holds already closed. So the belief pays him. It pays his standing, his shelf, his reason to keep writing. The first beneficiary of the belief is Turner.
But convenience names the pull on a man who holds a belief. It says nothing about whether the belief tracks the world. A view can serve the one who holds it and still be true.
Now the part that complicates the easy verdict. Watch how little he kept. He concedes almost the entire hard claim by Mearsheimer. Rooted in necessity, yes. He keeps only “partially and unpredictably,” the smallest remainder a man could keep and still have work to do. A purely convenient belief runs the other way. It inflates. The comfortable version says structures work, reform succeeds, the dream sits within reach. That flatters the liberal and flatters the scholar’s craft. Turner refuses it. He also refuses the tribal answer that would please the realist. His hedge pleases no coalition.
Turner concedes the maximum, retains the minimum, and you have what an honest mind looks like under pressure. You also have what convenience looks like once an honest mind puts it on a short leash. The frame cannot pry those two apart from the outside. What you can say with confidence: if this is convenience, it runs lean. He bought himself the least belief that keeps the lights on, and he paid full price in concessions for it.

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What Might A Democratic Party Platform Look Like If It Aligned With Reality?

If John Mearsheimer’s premises are right, meaning humans are deeply tribal, national identity reigns supreme, and abstract moral crusades mask the raw struggle for security in an anarchic world, the Democratic Party would face a total structural realignment.

To remain viable, the party would have to abandon the modern post-Cold War consensus of liberal internationalism, borderless cosmopolitanism, and technocratic global governance. Instead, a realist Democratic platform would fuse left-wing economic solidarity with an intense focus on preserving domestic group stability, using state power to protect the working-class tribe from the disruptive forces of global capital and international conflict.A platform built on these realist imperatives would lead on four primary pillars.

1. Class Solidarity as Tribal Cohesion

Modern Democratic platforms often treat economic policy through a universalist lens of human rights or individual opportunity. Under a realist framework, economic disparity is recognized as a direct threat to the internal solidarity of the national tribe.

High, progressive taxation on mobile capital, the revitalization of powerful labor unions through federal protection, and massive state-directed redistribution programs like universal healthcare and guaranteed public employment.

If a nation-state is to survive in a competitive global system, it cannot allow its internal population to fracture along wealth lines. Class stratification undermines the shared sense of oneness necessary for a tribe to sacrifice for the collective good. The working class must be economically locked into the state’s survival, ensuring they view the national government as their primary protector.

When capital is highly mobile and concentrated in a small, transnational managerial caste, that elite develops interests separate from the national group. They no longer rely on the local working class for their status, and they no longer view the survival of the state as tied to their personal well-being.

This detachment creates a dangerous internal fault line. If the ordinary citizens who populate the military, manufacture the goods, and maintain the infrastructure see that the state functions primarily to protect the assets of a detached elite, their willingness to sacrifice for the collective good evaporates. In a great power conflict, a state with an alienated working class faces internal rot and potential collapse.

Under this model, high progressive taxation is not a tool for achieving cosmic fairness; it is an act of state preservation. It is designed to pin capital to the territory of the nation.

By imposing severe financial penalties on capital flight and offshoring, the state forces corporate entities to reinvest their surpluses domestically. The wealth generated within the borders is systematically captured and transformed into tangible state capacity.

Standard economics views labor unions either as market distortions that reduce corporate profits or as instruments for individual worker empowerment. A realist platform completely reframes organized labor as a vital mechanism for internal stability.

Federal laws that mandate unionization and protect collective bargaining perform a critical sociological function: they institutionalize class conflict within a controlled, state-sanctioned architecture. By giving the working class an institutionalized lever to secure a premium on their labor, the state prevents the development of radical, anti-systemic domestic movements. Unions become a stabilizing force, binding the material destiny of industrial workers to the regulatory power of the state.

The establishment of massive, state-directed redistribution networks—such as universal healthcare and a federal job guarantee—serves as the ultimate engine of civic socialization.

By removing healthcare from the private market and placing it entirely under state administration, the citizen’s physical survival is rendered explicitly dependent on the survival of the government. Private anxieties are replaced by a baseline reliance on the public apparatus.

A federal job guarantee ensures that during global economic downturns or supply chain reorientations, the human capital of the nation is not left to decay in unemployment. The state absorbs the excess labor pool, directing it toward the construction of roads, ports, energy facilities, and defense infrastructure.

The ultimate objective of this platform is to build an unyielding psychological and material link between the ordinary citizen and the sovereign state.

If human beings are naturally tribal and look to their group for defense against a hostile world, the national government must be the undisputed provider of that defense. When a worker receives his healthcare, his employment, and his community’s economic stability directly from the state, his loyalty to that state becomes absolute.

Class stratification is erased not to achieve a utopian, borderless equality, but to forge a highly disciplined, cohesive social unit. By locking the working class economically into the state’s survival, the nation ensures that when it must compete against rival great powers, its internal population operates as a singular, unbreakable column.

If Mearsheimer’s premises are right, a Democratic Party looking to secure its long-term survival would radically alter its approach to hot-button social issues like Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) and transgender rights.

Currently, the progressive wing of the party approaches these issues through a combination of post-modern intersectionality and liberal universalism. They treat minority identities as global, unencumbered categories of individual rights that must be liberated from local historical power structures.

Under a realist framework, this approach is exposed as an internal security disaster. If human beings are fundamentally tribal and require a unified national identity to maintain the internal cohesion necessary to survive great power competition, then fragmenting the population into competing sub-tribes is a form of state suicide.

To maintain political dominance and protect the state, a realist Democratic platform would strip these social issues of their intersectional rhetoric, re-framing them through the strict logic of national integration, majoritarian solidarity, and civic socialization.

Modern DEI programs are built on the assumption that a institution must mirror and elevate distinct group identities, often cultivating a race-conscious, sub-tribal awareness.

Democrats would dismantle the current iteration of DEI, replacing it with a state-directed program of Civic Integration and Shared Class Identity.

If you teach a multi-ethnic population to view themselves primarily through the lens of separate racial and cultural sub-tribes, you dissolve the shared “oneness” required for a nation-state to endure. The party would stop using DEI as a tool to celebrate permanent fragmentation. Instead, they would use public institutions and corporate frameworks to enforce a singular, working-class national identity. Diversity would no longer be celebrated as an end in itself; it would be treated as a demographic reality that the state must actively manage and assimilate into a cohesive, patriotic whole to prevent domestic balkanization.

The dominant progressive position on transgender issues rests on radical individualism—the belief that the individual mind is a self-authoring entity that can completely redefine its identity, biology, and social role independent of collective norms.

The party would pivot away from defending fluid, open-ended gender definitions, instead anchoring its policies in state-sanctioned stability, age-restricted medical protocols, and the preservation of majoritarian social norms.

Early, non-negotiable childhood socialization is what keeps a human society stable. When an institution introduces concepts that suggest the baseline biological coordinates of a community are infinitely plastic and self-directed, it induces deep cultural anxiety and weakens the group’s foundational socialization engine (the family). To protect its standing with the broader working-class tribe, the Democratic platform would adopt a position of institutional stabilization. They would restrict gender-affirming care for minors, protect traditional privacy spaces based on biological realities, and frame the issue around civic tolerance for adults rather than a state-sponsored rewriting of social biology.

Under this realist realignment, the way Democrats talk about social issues would shift entirely. They would no longer speak the language of individual expression or global human rights.

The party would argue that internal social peace is a national security requirement. Constant, low-intensity cultural warfare over pronouns, corporate quotas, and historical revisionism drains the state’s energy and prevents the formation of a unified front against external adversaries like China.

By dumping the unpopular, hyper-individualistic vanguard elements of the cultural left, a realist Democratic Party would remove the primary cultural weapon the Republican Party uses to win over the working class. They would settle the culture war through an enforcement of majoritarian stability, clearing the terrain to focus entirely on their primary structural goal: locking the working class into a powerful, insulated, and hyper-cohesive domestic economic fortress.

2. Progressive Environmental Realism

The conventional platform frames climate change as a global moral imperative requiring international treaties, shared carbon markets, and multilateral cooperation. A realist Democratic platform would strip away this cosmopolitan rhetoric.

An aggressive, state-directed industrial mobilization to achieve complete clean energy autarky, deploying heavy federal capital into domestic wind, solar, and next-generation nuclear infrastructure, combined with carbon tariffs on foreign competitors.

The party would stop pretending that global climate agreements can override the self-interest of rival great powers like China or Russia. Instead, the green transition would be weaponized as a tool for national security. By freeing the state from reliance on global oil and gas supply chains, the platform ensures the national tribe cannot be strangled by foreign adversaries during geopolitical crises.

3. Foreign Policy Restraint and Domestic Reconstruction

For decades, the foreign policy establishment within the Democratic Party championed “liberal hegemony”—using American military power to spread democracy, enforce international law, and build transnational institutions. Mearsheimer’s core thesis labels this a catastrophic failure that triggers bloody nationalist backlashes abroad.

A grand strategy of restraint and offshore balancing. The party would advocate for the winding down of open-ended foreign entanglements, the rejection of humanitarian interventions, and a sharp reduction in global military footprint, redirecting hundreds of billions of dollars into domestic infrastructure, public education, and state capacity.

Nationalism is the most powerful political ideology on earth; foreign populations will always violently resist American attempts at social engineering. The state must husband its power, preserve its blood and treasure, and focus strictly on maintaining a balance of power in critical regions, letting local actors bear the costs of regional stability.

4. Controlled Borders for Labor and Social Stability

The modern progressive faction often views strict border enforcement with skepticism, advocating for relaxed asylum laws and open paths for global migration. A realist platform recognizes that an influx of unassimilated populations destabilizes the internal culture.

A highly regulated, enforcement-heavy immigration system that ties entry strictly to domestic labor shortages, paired with massive federal funding for public integration programs, English language education, and civic socialization.

If intense childhood and civic socialization is what creates a functional human community, a state cannot maintain order if it introduces millions of individuals from entirely different socialization engines without a strict mechanism for assimilation. Border control is not treated as a racial or moral issue, but as a basic requirement for protecting the domestic labor market and maintaining the cultural cohesion of the existing national group.

5. Sovereign Labor Subsidies and the Anti-Globalist Welfare State

The platform would abandon the classic neoliberal approach to welfare, which relies on globalized growth to lift all boats and retraining programs to fix structural unemployment.

Enact a federal job guarantee in public infrastructure, direct wage subsidies for unionized domestic workers, and the implementation of aggressive wealth taxes to permanently fund a fortress of universal public services (childcare, healthcare, and state pensions).

If internal friction weakens a group’s survival capacity, extreme wealth inequality is a national security crisis. The platform treats the working class not as atomistic consumers looking for the cheapest imported goods, but as the primary human core of the nation. By insulating this group from global labor market shocks, the state builds unyielding domestic loyalty and structural stability.

6. Demolishing Corporate Monopolies as Hostile Internal Factions

The platform would move past standard regulatory anti-trust enforcement and treat multi-national tech, finance, and agricultural conglomerates as powerful, un-socialized internal factions whose interests run counter to the national tribe.

The systematic breaking up or nationalization of mega-corporations that control vital infrastructure, such as digital banking networks, pharmaceutical manufacturing, and communication utilities. Corporate charters would be tied directly to a mandate for national public utility.

In a zero-sum political environment, an elite corporate caste with no national loyalty is an existential threat. These entities use their vast wealth to captured regulatory bodies and shape public narratives for their own benefit. The state must crush these independent power centers to ensure that the material resources of the country remain under the direct control of the democratic collective.

7. The Defense of Public Space and Radical Civic Socialization

The platform would recognize that left-wing political longevity requires capturing the primary socialization engines of the state. It would abandon the idea that civic values emerge organically from a neutral public square.

Massive federal investment into physical public goods—parks, libraries, municipal recreation centers, and state-funded civic clubs—paired with a mandatory curriculum in public schools that explicitly instills a moral code of civic obligation, collective labor history, and national solidarity.

If human minds are captured by early value infusions, leaving the social landscape to be atomized by private real estate developers, commercial algorithms, and insular private schools is political suicide. The party would actively use public infrastructure to forge a unified social identity, injecting the young with a shared moral framework centered on collective mutual aid and loyalty to the democratic state.

8. Ecological Territorialism and Resource Denationalization

The party would reframe the environmental movement away from international carbon markets and transnational climate treaties, which are consistently subverted by great power self-interest.

The aggressive invocation of national security powers to seize, protect, and restore public lands, water networks, and agricultural resources from private or foreign exploitation, combined with severe ecological tariffs on imported goods produced via environmental degradation.

A tribe cannot survive without a secure, fertile, and self-contained material habitat. Environmental degradation is treated as a physical invasion of the national territory. By securing and state-managing the physical landscape, the platform ensures that the primary biological prerequisites for the group’s long-term survival—clean water, arable land, and dense domestic energy—remain entirely sovereign and insulated from global market volatility.

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What Might A Republican Platform Look Like If It Aligned With Reality?

If John J. Mearsheimer’s premises are correct that human behavior is governed by innate tribal sentiments and childhood value infusions, that abstract reason is a weak secondary tool, and that the international arena is an unyielding great power competition, the Republican Party would maximize its interests by abandoning conventional libertarianism and neoconservative globalism.

Instead, the platform would focus entirely on protecting the native tribe’s primary socialization engine and securing the material power of the state within a dangerous, anarchic world.

A platform engineered around these realist imperatives would lead on these pillars:

1. Absolute Sovereign Border Protection and Cultural Assimilation

Under the realist lens, a state cannot survive if its internal cohesion fractures. A borderless nation or a completely fragmented multicultural society is an existential failure.

An immediate, severe restriction on immigration, coupled with an aggressive, state-backed mandate for cultural assimilation.

The platform would treat immigration not as an economic calculation of cheap labor (rejecting the corporate libertarian view), but as a demographic challenge to group solidarity. To ensure state survival, incoming individuals must be thoroughly digested by the native tribe’s socialization engine, adopting its language, legal traditions, and historical memory.

2. Economic Mercantilism and Industrial Sovereignty

Neoliberal globalism and free-trade agreements like NAFTA assume that global efficiency maximizes human welfare. Mearsheimer’s premises reveal this as a catastrophic vulnerability: interdependence creates weakness.

High strategic tariffs, aggressive industrial policies to repatriate manufacturing, and total supply-chain independence in steel, semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, and energy.

If Mearsheimer’s premises are right, a sophisticated Republican economic platform must entirely reject the mid-century consensus that separated “free markets” from “national security.” In an anarchic world where state survival depends on relative power, economic policy is simply a weapon of statecraft.

A fully realized Republican Trade and Industrial Policy platform built on these realist imperatives moves beyond generic protectionism. It structures the state to achieve absolute material self-reliance, strategic insulation, and dominance over great power rivals.

The goal of trade policy is no longer consumer welfare or absolute global efficiency; it is the minimization of strategic vulnerability. Interdependence is weakness.

Implement a permanent, non-negotiable baseline tariff on all foreign manufactured goods, with an aggressive, multi-tiered tariff regime specifically targeting non-market adversaries. This systematically alters the cost-benefit analysis for domestic firms, forcing the repatriation of capital.

Move away from multilateral frameworks like the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the Most-Favored-Nation principle. Trade agreements must be bilateral, strictly conditional, and based on absolute reciprocity. If a foreign nation imposes a tariff or non-tariff barrier on an American product, the US automatically mirrors that exact barrier.

Revoke Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR). Strip strategic adversaries of normal trade status. The state uses targeted enforcement mechanisms under Section 301 and Section 232 to systematically sever economic dependencies in dual-use technologies and advanced manufacturing.

The state cannot rely on the open market to provision the baseline requirements of survival. The party abandons laissez-faire abstraction to mandate domestic production capabilities in four existential pillars:

Force the rebuilding of domestic productive capacity in steel, aluminum, copper, heavy trucks, and shipbuilding through state-guaranteed purchase agreements and long-term capital subsidies.

Mandate that all essential medicines, active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), and medical equipment used in American hospitals or stockpiles be manufactured within the physical borders of the United States.

Critical minerals. Establish a state-directed, border-adjusted price mechanism for critical minerals and rare earth elements. The state insulates domestic mining and processing from foreign predatory pricing, creating a secure, alternative supply network independent of adversary control.

Extend aggressive domestic fabrication mandates down the entire supply chain—not just for high-end logic chips, but for the legacy and foundational chips that power defense infrastructure, telecommunications, and the automotive sector.

Capital mobility must be subordinated to the national interest. Wall Street cannot be permitted to fund the rise of foreign adversaries or hollow out domestic stability for short-term arbitrage.

Ban American venture capital, private equity, and institutional funds from investing in technology, manufacturing, or infrastructure assets located within strategic adversary nations.

Make the 18% corporate tax rate and full capital expensing contingent on domestic manufacturing footprint. Corporations that outsource production face punitive tax penalties and are barred from receiving federal contracts, research grants, or participating in public-private partnerships.

Use state power to acquire “golden shares” or direct equity positions in critical, fragile domestic industries (such as specialized aerospace or advanced machine tools) to shield them from foreign acquisition, hostile takeovers, or bankruptcy during market downturns.

A manufacturing renaissance requires cheap, dense, and dispatchable power. The platform treats energy not as a regulatory portfolio, but as the foundational input for all industrial competitiveness.

Eliminate federal tax credits and mandates for intermittent green energy sources that destabilize the grid and inflate industrial power costs.

Fast-track permitting timelines, opening public lands for resource extraction, and executing state-backed guarantees for the construction of a new generation of small modular civilian nuclear reactors and natural gas infrastructure directly attached to industrial manufacturing hubs.

A factory is useless without a disciplined, highly skilled workforce. The platform treats the working class as the vital human core of the national tribe, protecting it from both wage suppression and ideological alienation. Opportunities for honor and status must be expanded to include more persons who do not go to college.

Abolish foreign guest-worker programs and low-skill visas that multi-national corporations use to bypass American workers and suppress wages in the construction and manufacturing sectors.

Divert federal student loan guarantees and research funding away from abstract humanities programs at elite universities and directing those resources into localized vocational training, technical institutes, and advanced engineering programs explicitly aligned with regional industrial needs.

In a zero-sum, competitive world, the “wealth of nations” is secondary to the “security of nations.” The platform would reject the myth of a borderless global market. It would treat economic policy as an instrument of statecraft designed to maintain the material dominance of the state over rivals like China, while ensuring the domestic working class remains loyal and economically integrated into the national tribe.

3. Retrenchment and Realist Foreign Policy

The neoconservative crusade to export democracy and enforce a “rules-based international order” through military intervention is viewed under this framework as a dangerous liberal delusion. It triggers intense nationalist resistance abroad and wastes the state’s blood and treasure.

A foreign policy of offshore balancing and strategic retrenchment. The military would pull back from open-ended nation-building deployments in the Middle East or eastern Europe. Resources would be concentrated entirely on maintaining a lethal nuclear deterrent and a dominant naval and technological presence in critical geographic zones (like the Indo-Pacific) to check rival great powers.

Alliances are temporary arrangements based on raw self-interest, not permanent moral commitments to shared values. The state must husband its power and let regional rivals balance against each other, intervening only when an existential threat directly challenges the global balance of power.

4. Recapturing the Domestic Socialization Engines

The most critical domestic battle under a realist framework is the fight over value infusion. The party would recognize that whoever controls the schools, the universities, and the legal defaults controls the future of the tribe.

The systematic defunding of DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) bureaucracies in public institutions, universal school choice to bypass captured public school systems, and the protection of traditional family structures and religious freedom through federal and state law.

If a child’s moral imagination is captured during a long childhood before critical thinking develops, the left-wing managerial tribe’s current monopoly over elite education is an existential threat to conservative survival. The platform would stop appealing to a neutral “marketplace of ideas” and use raw state power to dismantle the opposing faction’s fortresses, ensuring that the next generation is injected with a moral code centered on national loyalty, civic duty, and historical continuity.

5. Explicit Pro-Natalism and Demographic Security

The platform would abandon the standard view of family policy as either a purely private religious issue or an abstract tax credit consideration. It would treat demographic decline as an immediate threat to the long-term survival of the national tribe.

Aggressive, state-backed financial and social incentives for married native citizens to have larger families, combined with the restriction of foreign worker programs that suppress domestic wages.

A state cannot project power or maintain internal solidarity without a stable, replacement-level population that shares a unified historical identity. Relying on mass immigration to fill labor shortages is a catastrophic structural failure that introduces incompatible socialization models into the state. Demographic security is the foundation of national power.

6. The Subversion of Left-Wing Institutional Fortresses

The platform would recognize that the long march through the institutions executed by the progressive managerial tribe cannot be countered by pleading for “viewpoint diversity.” It would treat captured universities, foundations, and public broadcasters as hostile territory that must be dismantled.

Using the power of the purse and federal tax codes to target elite university endowments, stripping tax-exempt status from ideological non-profit foundations, and establishing new, state-directed parallel institutions that explicitly train a counter-elite in traditional national values.

If childhood and early-adulthood value infusions dictate lifelong political loyalty, leaving the elite credentialing apparatus in the hands of an opposing faction is a form of political suicide. The party would stop pretending the university is a neutral seminar room and treat it as a captured fortress that must be subverted through raw state power.

7. Technological Autarky and Sovereign Data Control

The platform would reject the Silicon Valley myth of a borderless digital commons managed by multi-national corporations. It would treat technology and information infrastructure as the primary modern terrain of great power conflict.

The mandatory domestic ownership and localization of all critical data infrastructure, severe federal restrictions on foreign tech platforms, and state-directed investments into sovereign artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and satellite networks.

Interdependence in digital infrastructure creates extreme strategic vulnerability. Allowing foreign adversaries or detached globalist corporations to control the algorithms that shape the domestic population’s information intake is a failure of statecraft. The state must control its digital borders as strictly as its physical ones to prevent hostile psychological manipulation and espionage.

8. Legal Realism and Judicial Power Project

The platform would discard the conservative romance with abstract legal neutralism, originalist passivity, and the myth of the referee judge who simply calls balls and strikes.

The deliberate appointment of judges who view the law through the lens of legal realism—recognizing that law is an instrument of authority used to maintain social order, protect core national structures, and defend the primary group against internal subversion.

In a zero-sum struggle for political survival, appealing to neutral procedural rules while the opposing faction uses the legal apparatus to enforce its own moral code is an explicit strategy for defeat. Judicial power would be used actively to secure the administrative and legal conditions necessary for the national tribe to survive and project its authority across generations.

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John Stuart Mill and the Enlightenment

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

The atomistic liberal of The Great Delusion picks his values off a menu by reason. John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) held the reverse. The force behind On Liberty comes from his fear of custom, not from any faith that men reason their way to their beliefs. He calls it the despotism of custom. He points to China as the case of a people who perfected their customs and then stood still for centuries. Mill concedes John Mearsheimer’s (b. 1947) premise before Mearsheimer states it. Most men inherit their beliefs and then defend what they inherited.
Mill does not describe man as a lone reasoner. He laments that man is a herd creature and then asks what a society might do to protect the few who are not. The individualism in On Liberty works as a prescription built on top of the social man, not as a portrait of him. Mearsheimer reads liberal individualism as a claim about what men are. In Mill it operates as a claim about what a small number of men can become, and why the rest have a stake in shielding them.
Grant the whole socialization story and Mill’s politics still stands, because his politics answers that story. He wants room for the dissenter, the eccentric, the man who runs an experiment in living, against the pressure Mearsheimer describes. He does not justify that room by pretending everyone reasons. He justifies it by the gain that comes to a society when it leaves a channel open for the rare man who pushes against the inheritance and turns out to be right.
Mill needs reason to override socialization at least sometimes, in at least a few men, under good conditions. Mearsheimer ranks reason last among the three sources of our preferences and puts socialization and inborn sentiment above it. Push that ranking hard and Mill’s hope narrows to a thin band: the exceptional mind in whom criticism outruns the value infusion. Mill half believed this himself. He worried about mediocrity and the weight of mass opinion, and he wanted a learned class to hold the higher ground. Mearsheimer’s anthropology pushes Mill toward his own colder side, the side that doubts the many and rests its hopes on the few. The democratic Mill recedes. The aristocratic Mill comes forward.
Isaiah Berlin (1909-1997) read Mill’s deepest commitment as self-creation rather than happiness, the man who makes his own life as a work and chooses his own path. Set that Mill against Mearsheimer and the conflict sharpens. If the self arrives all but finished, fabricated by family and society before the boy can weigh anything, then self-creation describes a late and partial edit, not an authorship. Mearsheimer does not deny that a man can revise himself. He denies that the revising self came from nowhere. Berlin’s Mill wants an author. Mearsheimer offers an editor working on a manuscript other hands already wrote.
Mill’s view of where moral feeling comes from takes a separate hit. Mill stood with the associationists against the intuitionist school of William Whewell (1794-1866). He held that our moral sentiments, however fixed they feel, come from education and association rather than from innate structure. His reform program depends on that plasticity. Remake the schooling and the institutions and you can remake the character, and so the society. Mearsheimer lists inborn sentiment as a force that shapes how a man thinks before he thinks. If that is right, character resists the reformer’s hand more than Mill allowed, and tribal feeling sits deeper than association can reach.
The sharpest defeat falls on Mill’s cosmopolitanism. In Utilitarianism he roots the sanction of morality in the social feelings of mankind, the wish to live in unity with one’s fellows, and he thought civilization widens that feeling. There lies the hope: the circle of sympathy grows until it reaches the species. Mearsheimer agrees that man is social and bonded and ready to sacrifice for his group. He denies the expansion. The bond holds at the level of the tribe and the nation and goes no further with any force. The quarrel is not whether man is social. Both men say he is. The quarrel is the ceiling. Mill bets the sympathy climbs to humanity. Mearsheimer bets it stops at the nation, and that when nationalism and liberalism collide, the nation wins. If Mearsheimer is right, the communitarian half of Mill survives and the cosmopolitan half fails.
Mearsheimer says liberal universalism breeds crusades, the urge to carry rights to every people for their own good. Mill is the case in point, not the exception. He worked for the East India Company for most of his career. On Liberty exempts the barbarians and the societies it calls backward from the liberty principle and grants that despotism suits them so long as it improves them. The missionary liberalism Mearsheimer describes runs straight through Mill’s imperial writing. A defender can answer that Mill’s universalism comes hedged. Mill does not think you can hand free institutions to any people at any stage. He ties good government to national character and to a people’s readiness, which reads closer to Mearsheimer’s realism than to the abstract creed Mearsheimer attacks. So Mill ends up more universalist and more particularist than the figure in the book, the imperialist by his paternalism and the realist by his developmentalism.
What comes through intact is the core argument of On Liberty about speech and harm. Those arguments never rested on atomism. Mill defends open debate because collision with error keeps truth alive and because the silenced opinion may hold the part of the truth the reigning view lacks. He defends the harm principle as a line drawn around the social pressure he saw everywhere. Grant Mearsheimer’s man, the social creature shaped by inherited value, and these arguments earn their keep, because they answer the very conformity Mearsheimer treats as our default. Mill becomes less a prophet of the sovereign individual and more a designer of guardrails against the herd.
Mearsheimer ranks reason last and then writes four hundred pages of reasoned argument meant to change how readers think, and he ranks the three sources for us as though we can weigh his ranking. The genre fights the thesis. Mill at least carries a theory for why argument earns its keep among the small class that reads and writes and decides what counts as knowledge. Mearsheimer leaves reason a junior place and then asks it to do the heavy lifting of his book. The tension does not sink his anthropology. It marks the seam where his account and Mill’s might still do business, in the narrow niche where reason does more work than it does in the run of men.

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The Nathan Cofnas Debates

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

Grant Mearsheimer his three claims. Men are tribal before they are anything else. Reason ranks below socialization and inborn sentiment in setting what a man wants. Colorblind meritocracy is a local creed, not a law of nature. Run the Cofnas affair through that frame and the familiar story comes apart. The free-speech reading and the inclusion reading both assume a contest over evidence and rights. The realist reading sees a tribe defending the engine that reproduces its young.
Start with what Cofnas wants, because his own program carries the flaw he finds in his enemies. He argues that wokeness follows from the equality thesis, the premise that every group holds the same spread of cognitive traits. Accept that premise and any gap left over reads as proof of hidden racism. He wants the elite to trade the equality thesis for hereditarianism, genes playing a non-trivial part in average group differences, and he expects a colorblind meritocracy of individuals to settle out the far side. The fight then narrows to which premise the elite carries.
Mearsheimer’s man wrecks the payoff. A meritocracy of sorted individuals asks men to hold still while status flows to whoever scores highest, and to take their rank without forming a faction. No people does this. Tell a group it sits low on a prized trait and it does not scatter into lone strivers. It organizes. It mobilizes along the line Mearsheimer says runs deepest. Under his premises, hereditarian facts, once public and believed, arm tribal competition rather than dissolve it. Cofnas imagines the truth about genes yields peace and merit. The realist predicts it yields sharper coalitions and a harder scramble for power and resources. So Cofnas underrates tribe in his cure as the liberals underrate it in theirs. Two rationalist projects, one blind spot.
Look at the pair side by side and they rhyme. The woke elite holds that reason and reformed schooling erase the difference and widen sympathy toward all mankind. Cofnas holds that reason and accepted data sort men by talent and leave a creed of individual merit. Both trust the right facts to govern the man. Mearsheimer ranks reason last of the three and puts the value infusion above it. Both projects misread the creature in the same direction.
The crusade reading falls on Cofnas next. His hereditarian revolution is a missionary campaign. Convert the elite at the top universities, reform the society from above, carry the unwelcome truth into the fortress for the good of all. That is the universalist structure Mearsheimer attacks in liberalism, the urge to remake men by fixing the doctrine. Cofnas stands inside the pattern, not outside it. He is another missionary with a rival gospel, and the gospel travels by argument because he believes argument moves the men who run things.
That belief is the heart of the misread. He pins his hope on a vanguard of intelligent, rational leaders who change their preferences when shown the chart. Mearsheimer’s account of childhood value infusion says the elite mind is the most socialized mind in the country, formed inside the institution that selected it, trained it, and handed it its moral coordinates. Reason there is a lawyer for inherited preference, not a scientist chasing the taboo fact. Asking that elite to adopt race realism by philosophical argument asks the immune system to welcome the thing it formed to destroy.
The institution behaves the way the frame predicts. The university reproduces a value infusion and passes it to the next ruling class. The marketplace of ideas is a story the engine tells about itself. Its work is transmission, generation to generation, of a moral code, and the equality thesis sits at the center of that code as the sacred premise. Cofnas attacks the premise at the root. Function drives what follows. They did not disprove him. They removed him, the way a body clears what threatens its cohesion, and the removal needed no finding of fact.
Cofnas held no tenure. He was a Leverhulme early-career fellow in the Faculty of Philosophy and a College Research Associate at Emmanuel, a peripheral and unprotected affiliate. The college cut the affiliation. The faculty held the line. Realism expects the tribe to cull the exposed member first, at the lowest cost, and to send its signal through the cheapest available actor. A marginal post-doc is the easy target. The pattern then repeated at Ghent, where his own department moved against the appointment. One campus might be an accident. Two is a fault line.
So the protestors read the institution right and read themselves wrong. They see that the fortress lives by enforcing its code, that an affiliated insider who breaks the code threatens the cohesion of the whole, and that the safe move is expulsion. They are correct about all of it. Then they tell themselves the expulsion serves a borderless human liberation. Under Mearsheimer it serves their tribe and no one beyond it. Realists in the deed, universalists in the self-description: that is his portrait of the liberal, drawn from life.
The affair resolves into a hard diagnosis. No neutral seminar room. No resting point in colorblind merit, because the merit creed is one tribe’s myth and the egalitarian creed is another’s, and neither describes the man as he is. The university is an arena of great power competition, and the prize is the engine that infuses the next elite. Academic freedom and the Equality Act 2010 set the rules of the contest. They do not name the prize. The only live question is which tribe runs the engine, and on what terms it shapes the moral coordinates of the men who will govern.
Cofnas bets the truth about genes will free the West, and he addresses his guide to the most heavily socialized people in the country, on the faith that argument reaches them. The genre fights the thesis, the way the genre fights Mearsheimer’s own four hundred reasoned pages. If reason ranks last, the hereditarian revolution is a sermon preached to men whose tribe has already told them what to believe. The only readers it converts are the few in whom criticism outruns the infusion. That band is real, and it is too thin to turn an elite. It is also the one niche where Cofnas, and Mearsheimer, and the argument itself still do their work.

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The Amy Wax Debates

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

Grant Mearsheimer his premises. Men are tribal first. Reason sits below socialization and inborn sentiment in setting what a man wants. Universalist, individualist talk is a shield, not a description. Run the Amy Wax affair through that frame and the academic-freedom story and the inclusion story both thin. Instead, we see a fight between two coalitions for the engine that forms the next elite.
Wax argues that all cultures are not equal and defends mid-century bourgeois culture, the Anglo-Protestant legal inheritance, and assimilation. Her enemies hear White supremacy. Her friends hear a brave defense of the West. The frame hears Wax defending a value infusion. She tells the society that its order rests on a code drilled into children, and that the code holds the state together. On Mearsheimer’s account she has this right. The childhood infusion does most of the work, more than reason, and a people that loses its infusion loses its cohesion.
Then she breaks her own insight. She treats the Anglo-Protestant matrix as an open system that any individual can enter by learning the script. That is the conservative-liberal hope folded inside her realism, assimilation as a merit on-ramp for the atomized newcomer. She names a real friction, the strain when millions arrive carrying other infusions, and then she prescribes a cure that assumes the tribe is a club a man joins by reading its handbook. Mearsheimer’s man does not join a tribe that way. The script he lives by went into him in childhood, before he could weigh it, and an adult does not swap one infusion for another the way he changes an opinion.
Wax’s case rests on culture, not blood. She says the bourgeois script can be taught and absorbed, which puts socialization above inborn sentiment, the order Mearsheimer sets. The hereditarian leans the other way, on genes.
Now the institution. Penn argued professional norms and equal learning opportunity. The Heterodox Academy and the free-speech camp answered with the Chicago Principles and the marketplace of ideas. The frame treats the marketplace as a story the engine tells. The elite university transmits a moral code to the class that will run things, generation after generation, and a managerial faction now holds the engine and runs a code built around diversity, equity, and inclusion. The sacred premise of that code is the equality of groups and the openness of the multicultural settlement. Wax attacks the sacred premise by name and in public.
The sanction follows from that function. Her offense, in the frame, is the breach of the sacred said out loud. A tribe punishes the spoken heresy harder than the private doubt, because the spoken heresy threatens the cohesion the code exists to hold.
Penn left her tenure standing. One year of suspension at half pay, the loss of her named chair and her summer pay in perpetuity, a public reprimand, and a standing order that she state at every appearance that she speaks for herself and not for the law school. The faction measured the cost. A tenured chair is an expensive target. Dismissal makes a martyr and hands the courts a clean claim. So the tribe drew the boundary, shamed the heretic, and contained her, all short of the rupture that firing brings. The disclaimer is the sharpest stroke and the most telling. It cuts her voice away from the tribe’s name. You may speak, it says, but never again in our name. Against a peripheral affiliate the tribe can expel outright. Against a tenured insider it calibrates. The cost of the target sets the maneuver.
Her legal strategy then walks into the frame. She files under Titles VI and VII and her tenure contract, appealing to colorblind, neutral principle. The court reframed the suit as breach of contract and set the speech claim aside. The district judge dismissed the case in August 2025. She stands now on appeal before the Third Circuit, with a separate contract suit filed in Pennsylvania state court in November 2025 waiting behind it. The realist reading says the neutral-rights vocabulary she reaches for belongs to the order the faction has already displaced, and that law serves the arrangement in power, so she pleads the old rules into a room that keeps new defaults.
If law were only an instrument of the dominant tribe, Wax would hold no case. She holds one. A contract claim has teeth a captured institution cannot wish away. Procedure binds even a faction that runs the engine. Belief and contract suits sometimes lose in the first round and win on appeal, as Forstater did in Britain. Pure realism overshoots here. The old liberal rules are not a fiction all the way down. They run weaker than Wax hopes and stronger than the frame allows, and the appeal is the place to watch which reading the law bears out.
Then the symmetry. Both sides reject the neutral university, and both dress their tribe in a universal creed. The new faction wields inclusion and harm reduction to purge dissent and enforce its code, and it tells itself it serves a borderless human equality. The traditionalist camp wields academic freedom and merit to hold ground for the old alignment, and it tells itself it serves universal reason and the open society. Each pairs a true tribal instinct with a false universal story.
The affair resolves where the Cofnas affair resolves. No neutral seminar room. No value-free university, because the university is always a site of socialization and never anything else. The only live question is which faction holds the engine and which code it pours into the students who pass through. Wax names the engine and defends one code for it. Her enemies hold the engine and defend another. The contest is great power competition over the right to form the next elite, and the rest, the principles and the statutes and the reprimands, is the vocabulary the two sides speak while they fight for the prize.
Wax defends the bourgeois infusion as the ground of a stable order, and then she asks colorblind law and open debate to rescue her, as though reasoned principle stood above the fight. The frame says reasoned principle ranks junior to the value infusion and serves whoever holds the engine. If she has it right that childhood socialization rules the man, then her appeal to neutral reason is the weakest card in her hand, and her strongest holding is the one her enemies hold too, a tribe that will fight for the engine. She asks the room to honor a creed the room no longer teaches its young.

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Benjamin Schreier: Literary Critic of Jewish Identity and Ethnic Studies

Benjamin Schreier (b. 1972) holds the Mitrani Family Professorship of Jewish Studies and a professorship in English and Jewish Studies at Penn State University, where he has directed the Jewish Studies Program and the graduate program in English. Since 2011 he edits Studies in American Jewish Literature, a journal published by Penn State University Press and one of the field’s central venues. His scholarship occupies the meeting point of literary theory, intellectual history, ethnic studies, and the sociology of academic knowledge, and across three monographs he presses a single sustained argument: that the categories scholars use to organize literature, above all the category of Jewish identity, are products of critical and institutional labor rather than reflections of a prior cultural essence.

Schreier earned his B.A. in English at Swarthmore College in 1994, graduating with High Honors, and completed his Ph.D. in English and American literature at Brandeis University in 2003. His training joined close textual reading to the theoretical currents that remade the humanities in the late twentieth century, among them post-structuralism, cultural studies, and the critical theory of identity and representation. That double inheritance marks all his work. He reads particular texts with care, and he reads the disciplines that read those texts with equal care.

His first book, The Power of Negative Thinking: Cynicism and the History of Modern American Literature (University of Virginia Press, 2009), takes cynicism as a category of literary and intellectual history. Schreier traces how skeptical and oppositional habits of thought shaped modern American writing, and the book already shows the concern that organizes his later career: the tension among identity, critique, and the cultural authority that lets some readings count and others fall away.

The book that established his reputation, The Impossible Jew: Identity and the Reconstruction of Jewish American Literary History (NYU Press, 2015), turns that concern on his own field. Schreier rejects the premise that Jewish American literature expresses a coherent Jewish communal self waiting in the texts to be found. He argues instead that “Jewish American literature” is a critical and institutional construction, assembled by scholars, critics, editors, and teachers who decide which writers belong and what their belonging means. Through readings of figures across the canon, among them Abraham Cahan (1860-1951), the New York Intellectuals, and Philip Roth (1933-2018), he asks what identity-based literary study does when it puts identity to work, and he treats the answer as a question about the discipline rather than about the writers. The book reached debates well beyond Jewish studies, touching canon formation, ethnicity, and the politics of identity in the academy, and reviewers noted the paradox at its center, that a sustained critique of the field also enriches it.

The Rise and Fall of Jewish American Literature: Ethnic Studies and the Challenge of Identity (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2020) extends the argument into a cultural and intellectual history of Jewish American literary study as such. Schreier traces how the field formed across the twentieth century and which institutional and political conditions gave it shape. He holds that labels like “Jewish American literature” are not neutral descriptions but artifacts of particular historical circumstances, and he asks whether identity-based frameworks still serve the reading of literature in a more mixed and connected cultural world. Read together, The Impossible Jew and The Rise and Fall of Jewish American Literature form one argument against essentialist accounts of ethnicity and identity in literary scholarship, and they place Schreier among a cohort of critics who want to rebuild the foundations of minority and ethnic literary study rather than add to its accumulated readings.

His other publications widen the frame. He edited Studies in Irreversibility: Texts and Contexts (2007), and with Jonathan Eburne he edited The Year’s Work in Nerds, Wonks, and Neocons (2017), a project that carries his interests into the politics and self-conception of contemporary American intellectual life. As editor of Studies in American Jewish Literature he has pushed the journal toward ethnic studies, secularism studies, political theory, postcolonial scholarship, and the critical study of identity, positioning it as a site for interdisciplinary work that situates Jewish culture inside larger social and theoretical arguments.

At Penn State he teaches across American literature, Jewish American literature, ethnic literature, American comedy, modernism, post-Holocaust literature, Jewish American film, contemporary political fiction, and the intellectual history of the New York Intellectuals, at both undergraduate and graduate levels. His teaching turns on close reading, theoretical self-awareness, and reflection on the categories through which readers assign value to texts.

A constant runs through the scholarship, the editing, and the teaching: the relation between literary criticism and institutional power. Schreier holds that a critic must read the assumptions and structures that govern his own methods alongside the texts those methods address, and this reflexive demand separates his work from more conventional literary history. His current research carries the program into new material. He is at work on a study of Palestinian American literature within the development of Arab American studies, and on a second project concerning Zionism and the institutional and cultural politics of the Jewish Studies field, both of which keep his long-standing question in view: how cultural categories form, gain authority, and govern reading inside the academy and beyond it.

The Great Delusion

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

The liberal error, for Mearsheimer, lies in treating the person as a free-standing chooser of his own moral code, when the code arrives mostly from birth and upbringing. If this anthropology holds, what happens to Benjamin Schreier?
Schreier’s argument moves in the opposite direction. He treats Jewish identity as made rather than given, and he treats the communal self that the field claims to read as the field’s own product. The category gets assembled by critics and editors and teachers, and a man might dismantle it by showing the seams. That is a claim about contingency. The thing the field calls a Jewish communal essence has no fixed reality. It can be built, and what can be built can be taken apart, or built otherwise, or set aside.
Run the two men against each other. Mearsheimer does not say group identity is fixed in its content. He says attachment to the group is near-universal, deep, and prior to reason, planted by socialization before the man can weigh it. Schreier’s construction thesis and Mearsheimer’s social anthropology might seem to meet here, because both deny a timeless essence and both grant that identity gets formed rather than inherited from nature. The agreement breaks on what the formation produces. For Schreier the construction is light, a critical and institutional artifact a scholar might expose and loosen. For Mearsheimer the construction is heavy, a value infusion welded to the man in childhood, carried below the reach of argument, defended sometimes to the death. Schreier shows that the academic category was assembled. Mearsheimer answers that the assembly of a category and the durability of a bond are separate questions, and that the bond survives the demolition of the category.
Mearsheimer’s account turns on the weakness of reason against socialization, and Schreier’s project is a project of reason. It asks a man to see through his inherited sense of who he is, to recognize the communal self as a construction and hold it at the distance critique requires. Mearsheimer ranks that capacity last among the forces that move us. He might read the whole anti-essentialist program as a late and local product of one particular socialization, the training of the theory-formed humanities of the 1990s, a group with its own intense value infusion and its own sacred refusal of essence. The man who learned to distrust group belonging learned it from a group. His cosmopolitan suspicion of the tribe is the marker of his tribe. On Mearsheimer’s terms the academic who announces that identity is constructed performs the membership badge of the cosmopolitan intellectual class, and he mistakes a socialized preference for the verdict of free reason.
Samuel Moyn (b. 1970), whom Mearsheimer quotes on the rise of human rights, sits near this point. The elevation of the rights-bearing individual over the inherited group is, for Mearsheimer, the signature liberal move, and Schreier’s loosening of communal Jewish identity belongs to the same family. It frees the person from the weight of the collective self. Mearsheimer says the weight does not lift, that the liberal who proclaims the autonomous chooser describes a creature who never existed, and that the social animal goes on cooperating with his fellow members and sacrificing for them after the theorist has declared the bond a fiction.
What survives for Schreier, if Mearsheimer is right, is narrower than the full anti-essentialist claim but firmer for the narrowing. Schreier might be correct about the academic category and wrong about the attachment beneath it. Jewish American literature as a field, a canon, a journal, a set of chairs, got built by men making choices, and Schreier maps the building with care. The error, on this reading, comes when the construction thesis migrates from the category to the bond, when the demonstration that scholars assembled a label becomes a suggestion that the communal self is similarly optional. Mearsheimer holds that the self is not optional. The group precedes the man, shapes him before he can refuse, and holds him after he thinks he has reasoned his way out. The category is paper. The tribe is not.
There is a cost to Schreier in this collision, and a cost to Mearsheimer. The cost to Schreier is that his rationalism might overreach, treating critique as a solvent strong enough to dissolve what childhood welded, and underrating the durability of the attachment his own readers carry into the seminar room. The cost to Mearsheimer is that he can prove too much, since an anthropology that makes reason nearly powerless against socialization struggles to explain Schreier at all, the man who did, in fact, turn his critical faculties against the value infusion of his own people and his own field. If socialization wins as completely as Mearsheimer says, the heretic should not exist. He does exist. Either reason can do more than Mearsheimer grants, or Schreier’s heresy is the socialized loyalty of a rival group, and the tribe he serves is the one that taught him to doubt the tribe.

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Roger Pilon: Natural Rights, Judicial Engagement, and Constitutional Liberty

Roger Pilon (b. 1942) is an American political philosopher, constitutional theorist, and legal scholar whose work across more than four decades has shaped modern libertarian constitutionalism, and whose name now stands among the foremost American advocates of natural-rights theory, limited government, economic liberty, and constitutional originalism. Through his long association with the Cato Institute, where he founded the Center for Constitutional Studies in 1989 and served thereafter as vice president for legal affairs, Pilon became an architect of the libertarian legal movement, and his writings on natural rights, judicial review, property, federalism, and constitutional interpretation have reached scholars, judges, litigators, and policymakers who otherwise share little common ground.

His path to intellectual life departed from the conventional academic route in ways that mark the rest of his career. Born in Vermont and raised near the village of Galway in rural upstate New York, Pilon enrolled at Syracuse University as an engineering major, switched to music, and, finding neither discipline satisfying, left formal education for roughly seven years, a stretch he later described as an intellectual odyssey of various jobs, wide reading, and slow movement toward philosophy, political theory, economics, and law. He returned to higher education in 1968 with a clearer sense of purpose and took a bachelor’s degree in philosophy from Columbia University in 1971.

Pilon continued at the University of Chicago, where he earned a master’s degree and a doctorate in philosophy. His dissertation, A Theory of Rights: Toward Limited Government (1979), examined the philosophical foundations of individual rights and the moral limits of political authority, and it carried the marks of three influences who supervised or surrounded the project: the philosophers Alan Gewirth (1912-2004) and Alan Donagan (1925-1991), who directed the work, and the economist Milton Friedman (1912-2006), whose presence at Chicago colored the broader intellectual setting. During these years Pilon also met the law-and-economics scholarship then forming at Chicago, a body of thought that would inform his later constitutional writing.

The defense of natural rights has supplied the central theme of his career. Drawing on John Locke (1632-1704), the American Founders, and the wider classical liberal inheritance, Pilon argues that individuals hold rights because of their nature as rational and purposive agents, that such rights do not originate in government, and that governments instead come into existence to secure rights already in place. On this account the legitimacy of any political institution turns on how well it protects life, liberty, and property while respecting the equal rights of others.

This starting point leads him to a sharp distinction between liberty rights and welfare rights. Liberty rights guard the individual against coercion and interference. Welfare rights, by contrast, require government to compel some men to furnish resources or services to others. Pilon argues that governments may choose to establish social programs, yet such programs ought not be mistaken for fundamental rights, a position that places him within the classical liberal tradition and that has shaped his criticism of expansive government programs and regulatory systems.

Property occupies a place near the center of his thought. He treats property not as an economic institution alone but as a condition of personal independence, holding that secure control over one’s labor and possessions guards the other liberties, which grow vulnerable without it. Much of his scholarship therefore criticizes the judicial doctrines and regulatory practices that weaken constitutional protection of private property, and he has pressed a long argument against eminent-domain abuse, against heavy regulation, and against doctrines that let governments load substantial burdens on owners without compensation.

His constitutional theory joins originalism to a broader commitment to the principles of the American Revolution as stated in the Declaration of Independence. Pilon argues that the Declaration of Independence supplies the moral ground of the American constitutional order and that the Constitution then builds the institutions meant to secure those principles, and for that reason he rejects procedural or majoritarian readings of constitutional government, holding that democratic majorities carry legitimate authority only within the boundaries set by individual rights.

A defining feature of his legal philosophy has been a long quarrel with judicial restraint. Across the late twentieth century many conservative legal thinkers, Robert Bork (1927-2012) foremost among them, argued that judges should defer to legislatures except where a constitutional violation appears explicit and unmistakable. Pilon refused that view. He held that courts carry an affirmative duty to protect liberty against governmental encroachment and should not presume the constitutionality of legislative acts, and decades before the term gained currency he argued for what later acquired the name judicial engagement, an approach under which courts enforce constitutional limits on government power and give substantive protection to individual rights.

His scholarship on the Fourteenth Amendment shows the same commitment. Pilon argues that the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment was meant to protect substantive individual rights against the states, and he regards the Supreme Court’s decision in The Slaughter-House Cases as among the gravest constitutional errors in American history because it drained that clause of force. Restoring the clause to its original meaning, he contends, might strengthen constitutional protection for economic liberty, property, and other freedoms.

Though known mostly as a scholar, Pilon also gathered considerable government experience. Under the administration of Ronald Reagan (1911-2004) he held a series of senior policy posts at the Office of Personnel Management, the Department of State, and the Department of Justice. At the Justice Department he served as the first director of the Asylum Policy and Review Unit, where he worked on refugee and asylum questions during a period of large international migration and Cold War strain, and the experience deepened a skepticism toward bureaucratic expansion and confirmed his sense that administrative agencies often wield powers hard to square with constitutional principle.

One episode from these years carried a personal cost. A lengthy inquiry by the Department of Justice’s Office of Professional Responsibility considered an alleged disclosure of classified information, and Pilon maintained his innocence throughout. After his clearance he brought suit under the Privacy Act, arguing that confidential information about the investigation had leaked. The litigation ended in his favor with a substantial settlement, an outcome that hardened his standing as a critic of governmental abuse and administrative misconduct.

Before his government service Pilon taught philosophy at California State University, Sonoma, and philosophy of law at Emory University School of Law, and he held a fellowship at the Hoover Institution and a senior fellowship at the Institute for Humane Studies. These posts tied him to a widening network of scholars devoted to free markets, constitutional government, and classical liberal ideas.

In 1989 Pilon joined the Cato Institute and founded what became an influential center for constitutional study. Under his direction the Center for Constitutional Studies advanced scholarship on limited government, federalism, economic liberty, and judicial review, and it grew into a venue for debate over constitutional interpretation and legal reform. Pilon organized conferences, sponsored research, testified before Congress, and built relationships among academics, judges, litigators, and policy experts drawn to the project of restoring constitutional limits on government power.

Among his lasting institutional achievements stands the Cato Supreme Court Review, which he created in 2001. Conceived as an annual study of the Court from a classical liberal vantage, the publication became a respected forum for legal analysis and constitutional argument. Pilon served as its founding publisher and later as publisher emeritus, and through the Review and the wider work of Cato’s constitutional program he carried libertarian legal arguments into the mainstream discussion of constitutional law.

He has written across a wide range of subjects, from free speech, federalism, and economic liberty to drug prohibition, judicial review, constitutional history, and international human rights, and he has edited volumes that include Flag-Burning, Discrimination, and the Right to Do Wrong, The Politics and Law of Term Limits, and The Rule of Law in the Wake of Clinton. His writing returns again and again to the danger of concentrated political power and to the place of constitutional constraint in the preservation of individual freedom.

Unlike many conservative constitutional theorists, Pilon grounds rights in reason rather than theology. He acknowledges the historical weight of Christianity on Western political development, yet he argues that natural rights admit of justification through philosophical reasoning open to all men whatever their religious belief, a rationalist orientation that reflects both his philosophical training and his continuing engagement with Enlightenment political thought.

His influence runs past libertarian circles. Scholars who work on judicial engagement, constitutional originalism, economic liberty, and limits on administrative power often take up arguments that Pilon helped form decades earlier, and while critics challenge his reliance on natural-rights reasoning and his skepticism toward the modern regulatory state, even opponents grant his standing as a consistent defender of classical liberal constitutionalism.

Pilon remains a senior fellow at Cato and continues to write and speak on constitutional questions, property, the Declaration of Independence, and the proper scope of government. His later writing circles back to the themes that have held him throughout: the moral foundations of liberty, the hazards of unconstrained political power, and the constitutional architecture built to protect individual rights.

He is married to Juliana Geran Pilon, a Romanian-born philosopher, author, and scholar of democracy and international affairs, and their shared formation in philosophy reflects a long intellectual partnership rooted in a common interest in political thought and the defense of free societies.

The significance of Roger Pilon rests not in his scholarship alone but in his work as a bridge among academic philosophy, constitutional law, and public policy. At a time when many legal scholars settled into either abstract theory or practical litigation, Pilon tied foundational questions about rights and human freedom to concrete constitutional disputes, and through that effort he became an architect of contemporary libertarian legal thought and a leading advocate of limited constitutional government in modern America.

The Sociology of Philosophies

Randall Collins (b. 1941) wrote The Sociology of Philosophies to press a hard claim about how ideas rise. Thinkers do not win on the strength of their arguments alone. They win on position in a network. The eminent cluster with the eminent, master to pupil and rival against rival, and the names that survive tend to sit at the dense crossings of these chains. Collins read two and a half millennia of philosophy this way and found one shape across cultures and centuries: a small set of linked figures holds the attention of each generation, the link comes first and the fame second, and the texts that endure carry the emotional charge of the gatherings that produced them. Set Pilon against this frame and the life hands the frame its data.

Begin with the chain that formed him. Collins holds that creative thinkers descend from creative thinkers, that cultural capital and emotional energy pass down master-pupil lines the way an inheritance passes down a family. Pilon took his doctorate at Chicago under Gewirth and Donagan, two philosophers already at work on the foundations of rights and moral agency, and he did so within reach of Friedman and the law-and-economics scholarship then gathering force at the same place. On Collins’s reading this matters more than any single book Pilon later wrote. He arrived at his own work charged by contact with men who held the attention of their fields, and he carried their problems forward as his own. Gewirth argued rights from the structure of rational agency. Pilon’s dissertation, A Theory of Rights: Toward Limited Government, took up that thread and ran it toward constitutional limits. The continuity reads less as borrowing than as descent.

Collins adds a second law, the one he calls the law of small numbers. The attention space of any field holds room for only a handful of active positions at a time, somewhere between three and six. Below three there is too little conflict to hold an audience. Above six the field splinters and no position commands notice. Rivals therefore define one another, and a thinker secures his slot by standing against the men who hold the neighboring slots. Place Pilon here and his quarrel with judicial restraint comes into focus. Across the late twentieth century the conservative legal field organized itself around restraint, and Bork held that position with authority. Pilon took the opposing slot and argued for what later acquired the name judicial engagement: courts that enforce constitutional limits rather than defer to legislatures. The two positions sharpen against each other. Engagement needs restraint to push against, and the energy of the argument comes from the opposition as much as from the substance. Collins would read the pairing as structural before it is philosophical.

The third element is the base. Collins insists that no intellectual position survives without an organizational base and a patron to fund it. Monasteries carried medieval philosophy. Universities and academies carried what came after. Shift the base and the field shifts with it. Most thinkers inherit a base, a chair in a department built by men who came before. Pilon built his own. He had taught at Sonoma and at Emory and had held fellowships at Hoover and the Institute for Humane Studies, the ordinary stations of an academic career, and then in 1989 he left that path and founded the Center for Constitutional Studies at Cato. The move reads, in Collins’s terms, as the creation of a base outside the university, funded by the patronage that sustains the libertarian network, and stocked deliberately with the carriers a position needs to spread: not other philosophers alone but judges, litigators, and policy experts who could move the argument from the page into the courts. A philosopher who recruits litigators has understood something Collins makes explicit. Ideas travel through their carriers.

The base needs its rituals, and here too the life cooperates. Collins draws his account of emotional energy from the study of interaction rituals, the focused gatherings that generate solidarity and recharge the confidence of the men inside them. Pilon ran conferences, testified before Congress, and built relationships across the field, and in 2001 he founded the Cato Supreme Court Review, an annual study of the Court from the libertarian vantage. An annual review is a ritual in Collins’s sense. It assembles the network on a fixed cycle, focuses its attention on a shared object, and sends its members back to their work charged with the sense that they belong to a project larger than any one of them. The Review did for Pilon’s circle what the seminar and the academy did for the chains Collins traced across history. It manufactured the solidarity that keeps a position alive between generations.

The judicial engagement idea rose, Collins’s account suggests, less because the argument compelled assent than because Pilon occupied a slot, built a base, ran the rituals, and recruited the carriers who could push the position into the institutions that decide cases. The merits of the natural-rights argument sit outside the frame. Collins brackets the question of whether a thinker is correct and asks instead how his position captured and held a share of the attention space. By that measure Pilon succeeded through the same route Collins found everywhere: descent from an eminent chain, a defining rivalry, a self-built base, a patron, and a ritual that renewed the whole arrangement on schedule.

Pilon presents himself as a man who reasons rights from human nature and follows the argument where it leads, and the natural-rights tradition trains its defenders to tell the story that way, as conviction against power. Collins relocates the story in the network. The conviction is real and the frame does not deny it. The frame holds that conviction alone never built an attention space, and that the rise of judicial engagement runs through Chicago, through Cato, through the Review, and through the litigators who carried it, more than through the force of any single proof.

What the frame leaves out is the content of the rights themselves and the question of whether the Privileges or Immunities argument or the reading of The Slaughter-House Cases states something true about the constitutional order. Collins does not arbitrate that. He maps the network that carried the claim into the room where it could be heard. Pilon’s life supplies what the theory asks for, and the theory returns a Pilon who looks less like a philosopher alone with a principle and more like a node that found its slot, built its base, and held its share of the attention space for forty years.

The Great Delusion

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

Pilon grounds rights in man’s nature as a rational and purposive agent. Rights precede government. They reach all men through reason, whatever the creed or culture a man happens to inherit, and Pilon takes care to ground them in reason rather than theology so that the claim might hold for everyone and not for believers alone. The rights-bearing individual stands first, the group and the government after, and property guards the independence that lets the individual stand at all. The architecture rests on three loads: the individual is prior, reason is the faculty that finds his rights, and the rights so found hold for every man.

Mearsheimer pulls each load.

He pulls the faculty first. Pilon rests the whole structure on reason, and Mearsheimer ranks reason the weakest of the three sources and the last to arrive. The faculty Pilon makes foundational shows up after a man’s society has already stocked him with a code, which means the rights Pilon says any man can reason toward are, on Mearsheimer’s account, reached by almost no man through reason, because reason is not the place moral codes come from. Pilon’s foundation turns out to be the part of the human equipment that does the least work.

He pulls the unit next. Pilon’s individual holds rights before any government and, in the logic of the argument, before any group. Mearsheimer’s individual is born into a society that forms him before he can assert a self, and develops attachments to that society strong enough to die for. The atomistic rights-bearer, the self who owns himself prior to the social world, is the figure Mearsheimer says liberalism invents and then mistakes for something it found in nature. Liberty rights that guard the self against coercion and property that secures the self’s independence both presuppose a self standing apart from the group. Mearsheimer denies there is one.

He pulls the reach last, and this pull does the most damage to the thing Pilon cares about. Pilon left theology for reason to win the universal, rights for all men whatever they believe. Mearsheimer answers that moral codes come from socialization and inborn sentiment, both of them local, both varying from group to group, so the universal Pilon reaches for through reason collapses back into the particular code of one society. The flight from creed lands in another creed wearing different clothes.

What then for Pilon, if Mearsheimer is right?

His universalism reads as parochialism in disguise. The natural rights he calls human nature become the moral inheritance of a particular people, Lockean, Enlightenment, American, dressed up as the structure of all human nature and offered to the species. Mearsheimer ties this move to foreign policy, to the liberal state that goes abroad to spread rights it takes for universal. Pilon keeps his work at home, on the Constitution and the courts, yet the intellectual move underneath is the one Mearsheimer names: take the code of your own society, run it through reason, and present the output as a discovery about man as such.

Something of Pilon survives the demolition, though not the part he would defend hardest. Mearsheimer grants that liberalism works inside a nation-state, nested within a bounded group held together by the stronger force of nationalism. Pilon’s constitutional project can survive on those terms, re-described as the defense of one nation’s inherited settlement rather than the application of universal reason. The American order is a particular people’s achievement, and a man who guards it guards his tribe’s arrangement. That is the last name Pilon claims for what he does. Mearsheimer hands it to him anyway.

The stress test owes Pilon a fair limit, and here it is. Mearsheimer’s anthropology describes how men come to believe what they believe. Pilon’s claim is normative, that rights exist however a man arrives at the sight of them. A story about how a belief forms does not settle whether the belief is true. Mathematics also arrives after the value infusion, and its lateness says nothing about whether its theorems hold. Pilon can answer, then, that Mearsheimer has explained why few men reason their way to natural rights without showing that natural rights are not there to be reasoned toward. To explain the rarity of a belief is not to refute it.

The standoff costs Pilon more than it costs Mearsheimer. Mearsheimer dissolves the social plausibility of the universal claim and leaves Pilon a foundation that almost no man reaches through the faculty Pilon says delivers it, defended by a tradition that looks, from the outside, like one tribe’s code raised to the dignity of human nature. Pilon keeps the bare possibility that the rights are real and waiting. Whether a moral foundation that nearly no one reaches by reason can still serve as the foundation it claims to be is the question Mearsheimer forces and Pilon cannot walk around. The rationalist grounding that was supposed to open natural rights to every man becomes, if Mearsheimer is right, the narrowest beam in the house.

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