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Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Equality: The Impossible Quest

by

20161208

Al­though Crev­eld de­scribes his book as a his­to­ry, it is al­so a polemic. But this dual pur­pose does not de­tract from ei­ther the his­to­ry or the ar­gu­ment and, in­deed, helps clar­i­fy both the con­cept and its ef­fects.

Crev­eld lists var­i­ous kinds of equal­i­ty, such as equal­i­ty be­fore God and here on earth, of body, of mind, civic, po­lit­i­cal, op­por­tu­ni­ty, and so on, point­ing out that the list is vir­tu­al­ly in­ex­haustible.

"That is why equal­i­ty is im­pos­si­ble to de­fine�and al­so why, in­stead of en­gag­ing in a hope­less at­tempt to do so, I have cho­sen to write its his­to­ry in­stead," he ex­plains.

In 11 chap­ters, Crev­eld traces the ori­gins of equal­i­ty from ear­li­est times, its de­vel­op­ment, var­i­ous forms, and its costs and ben­e­fits. He be­gins with a sur­vey of the an­i­mal king­dom, fo­cus­ing on pri­mates.

He then ex­am­ines sim­ple hu­man so­ci­eties, from for­agers to tribes. Af­ter this, he gets in­to the meat of the is­sues, trac­ing the ori­gin of the con­cept as a po­lit­i­cal ide­al to the an­cient Greeks in 650 BCE, and then again af­ter 1650 with the pub­li­ca­tion of Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes and then, in its first mod­ern im­ple­men­ta­tion, in 1776 with the found­ing of the Unit­ed States of Amer­i­ca.

His the­sis is that "Where there is no equal­i­ty there can be nei­ther jus­tice nor lib­er­ty. On the oth­er hand, equal­i­ty it­self is not with­out its dan­gers. Should it be pushed too far, it can eas­i­ly reach the point where it lim­its, or even elim­i­nates, both lib­er­ty AND jus­tice."

His his­to­ry in­cludes sub­jects from so­cial­ism to racism to lib­er­al­ism.

His core ques­tions, rig­or­ous­ly tack­led through­out the book, are: Is there any sense in which equal­i­ty is nat­ur­al? If not, when did the idea be­gin and why? What forms has it as­sumed? What role has it played in his­to­ry?

He fo­cus­es on West­ern so­ci­ety, since he ar­gues that equal­i­ty as a co­her­ent idea did not ex­ist in oth­er civil­i­sa­tions and, where sim­i­lar con­cepts ex­ist­ed, they were im­ple­ment­ed po­lit­i­cal­ly or so­cial­ly.

He notes, for ex­am­ple, an ar­gu­ment by Chi­nese re­former Sun Yat Sen, who lob­bied for po­lit­i­cal equal­i­ty but re­as­sured his au­di­ence that this would not re­place "true equal­i­ty," which in Chi­na placed the sage at the top of the so­cial lad­der and the dullard at the bot­tom.

Crev­eld's treat­ment of the pur­suit of po­lit­i­cal equal­i­ty in the West high­lights the iron­ic out­come, in that "All the regimes claim­ing to be built on the doc­trines of Marx and En­gels did was cre­at­ed in­equal­i­ties of an al­to­geth­er un­prece­dent­ed and of­ten par­tic­u­lar­ly vi­cious sort."

His chap­ter on racism is es­pe­cial­ly in­ter­est­ing, trac­ing its ex­is­tence in dif­fer­ent cul­tures, and its es­pe­cial­ly vir­u­lent form in Nazi Ger­many (per­haps be­tray­ing Crev­eld's bias as a Jew and Is­raeli).

His chap­ter on fem­i­nism un­der­mines con­ven­tion­al wis­dom, as­sert­ing that "For every dis­ad­van­tage un­der which women laboured there al­most al­ways was, and still is, some priv­i­leges they alone en­joyed."

You may not agree with all of Crev­eld's ar­gu­ments, but there is much in this book that you will not find in stan­dard his­to­ries.

Equal­i­ty: The Im­pos­si­ble Quest by Mar­tin van Crev­eld. Castalia House, 2015ASIN:B00UVLE20W; 282 pages.

?Book re­view byKevin Baldeosingh


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