Ken Wilber - Integral Politics

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At the recent 5-day Integral Institute seminar on Integral Business Leadership,
Ken Wilber was asked, by a senior Zen teacher, "What do you think of the Republican convention?"

Ken responded by giving an overview of what a truly integral politics might look like, and used that to compare and contrast with the Democratic and Republican conventions, both of which are less-than-integral. We think that this twenty-minute summary is brilliant, insightful, deadly serious, and wickedly funny, all at once. But by all accounts it is an extraordinary account of why all politics today are considerably less-than-integral, along with certain features that almost certainly would have to be included in the future in any truly integral politics.

In this synopsis, Ken focuses on three items that all political theories have attempted to address but none have managed to fully integrate. These are the tension between (1) the individual and the collective; (2) the source of the cause of human suffering: is the individual primarily to blame or is the society primarily to blame?; and (3) the different levels of development that the different political parties tend to represent: any truly integral politics would include and represent all of them, and yet how on earth do you do that?

Due to time considerations, Ken did not discuss two other equally important ingredients in any integral politics. One. In representational democracies, people have a right to be at whatever stage of development they are at, and generally speaking, within free speech, a right to express the values of whatever stage they are at. Traditional-fundamentalist (blue) has a right to be traditional, modernist (orange) has a right to be modernist, postmodernist (green) has a right to be postmodernist, and so on. This is generally modified in practice, to the extent that the center of gravity of a culture will tend to impose its values on others, especially if they are first-tier (or less-than-integral) values. Nonetheless, in democratic societies, there's a general background understanding that people have a right to be, and a right to express, whatever stage they are or whatever belief system they possess.

Two. They do not, however, have a right to act on those beliefs. This is generally handled in representative democracies by a separation of public and private, and by a similar if more specific principle of the separation of church and state. This means that, for example, in the privacy of my blue-meme mind, I am free to believe that Jesus Christ is my personal savior and that nobody achieves salvation without a belief in Jesus. In public behavior, however, I am not allowed to burn at the stake somebody who disagrees with me. In terms of integral psychology, this means in the interior of an individual (i.e., the upper left), the person can believe whatever they like; but in their public behavior (i.e., the upper right), they must behave according to laws drawn from a worldcentric or higher level of development (lower left), or else they are charged with civil or criminal behavior and removed from society if necessary (lower right).

This separation of church and state, or more generally what Max Weber called the differentiation of the values spheres, is one of the great and enduring contributions of the Western enlightenment, a contribution almost entirely misunderstood by extreme postmodernists, who in fact are operating under its protection while bitterly condemning it.

(The most common version of this is the aggressive attempt to reduce "I" and "It" to "We,' or the attempt to reduce art and science to a social construction, which can therefore be deconstructed. As it turns out, this reductionism presumes precisely what it denies, but then, deconstructive postmodernism has been little without its performative contradictions.)

A truly integral politics exists nowhere on the planet at this time, principally because not enough individuals have emerged at the integral levels of consciousness, and hence no governments anywhere have integral representatives as members (except rarely and by accident). Its principal challenge is to create some form of governance that allows each stage to be itself within the constraints of not harming others (i.e., to let red be red, and blue be blue, and orange be orange, and green be green, etc—precisely because, as we saw, this is a right in virtually all free societies), and yet to govern from the highest, widest, deepest, and most encompassing levels of development emerged to date (starting at yellow). Most representative democracies do this anyway, except their center of gravity is not yet fully integral, and they do it implicitly, not explicitly.

Channel: News & Politics
Uploaded: March 28, 2007 at 4:08 pm
Author: IntegralNaked

Length: 00:17:45
Rating: 4.62
Views: 24384

Tags: Integral Naked Ken Wilber Politics Republican Democrat Buddha Bill Clinton George W. Bush Karl Rove

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Video Comments:
chiptricks (August 30, 2008 at 2:04 am)
I'm liberal, and vote democrat. I also have a lot of liberal democrat friends, and I don't know one of them that places "the blame" of someone's mis-fortune on the exterior. I think some see that exterior circumstances can contribute to a problem, but it's not the sole reason.

For me, I realize that the environment, plus the "tools" (mental/material) that someone has contribute to where they are. So having a social network to assist those in need is essentail the health of the whole society.
silverbackman (August 16, 2008 at 5:03 pm)
I find Wilber's political descriptions a bit too overgeneralized. Politics go beyond just democrat and republican......I take it he's of the opinion that the moderate way between democrat and republican is the ideal, and yet in reality the republicans and democrats don't differ too significantly. Another important fact is that both parties are really just out to increase their power. What about the libertarians (both socialist and capitalist).
willhum (August 9, 2008 at 11:24 am)
I cant help but feel Ken Wilber should start by doing a degree in the social sciences first... start reading properly, Lacan, Foucault, Zizek, Zigmunt Bauman etc This idea of having an over-arching 'theory of everything' is highly problematic... especially when you end up basing things on colors rather than referencing others much! Some interesting ideas, but when you look closer it kind of falls apart, he is very weak on American foreign policy also.
MaBu888 (August 18, 2008 at 10:15 am)
A little off topic, but search, from Google, A Declaration of the Value of Global Governance. A website by a businesman Steve McIntosh who uses the integral theory for planning a possible post-UN (UN is not a gvernment lol) world government.
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MaBu888 (July 25, 2008 at 5:12 pm)
The colors in the integral case have no correlation with anything, just random, and for some reason, Wilber changed some of them in his books.
MaBu888 (July 25, 2008 at 5:10 pm)
Did you read his books? Can you be specific? If not, then the issue is still open LOL.