torqueless":1v7q50uz said:
Apologies if this has been linked to before. If not, it should have been. An impartial and effective tool which clarifies the whole 'left' and 'right' thing by adding another dimension:
https://www.politicalcompass.org/
is it bollocks impartial and effective, it's very heavily skewed by the test-creator's own opinions and (sometimes mistaken) beliefs about those who he considers to be the extremes in his two chosen axis.
The questions themselves reflect the author's own liberal (
in the literal sense) ideology, so you get weird crap like controlling inflation and controlling unemployment being contradictory goals.
Admittedly the 'test', like all such questionnaires, is a blunt instrument. Anyone who's given such things any thought has a "yeah but..." for any question, which makes a simplistic (strongly)agree/disagree optional answer problematic. What I was describing as 'an impartial and effective tool' was not the questionnaire, but the general analysis at the site, with a list of recommended books that seems to have no ideological bias, and the innovation of adding the vertical axis. It is certainly impartial when compared to the other link in that post.
The result is it gives really weird results. It calls me libertarian-left, less authoritarian than Ghandi. I'm an unapologetic, extremely hardline Communist, so I think that test went wrong somewhere.
Obviously there is often (not always!) a mismatch between an individual's ideals versus what they consider necessary to endorse/sanction/tolerate/suffer from the state. I think Gandhi might qualify as a 'hardline Communist' under dictionary definition? i.e. you might need to more accurately define your position if you seek to differentiate it from his? To me, there is nothing in the phrase 'hardline Communist' that automatically implies a more authoritarian stance than Gandhi's, although I concede that I might be missing the distinction between 'Communist' and 'communist'!
Ideologies really don't go on spectrums. They're philosophical schools, they develop and branch off from one another instead, with very different values and moralities emerging. You can't plot this on a scale of authoritarianism because everyone has a different idea of what it means to be authoritarian in the first place.
Does that mean that you reject any attempt to place ideologies on the left/right continuum too?
One school of thought sees the left/right thing as being basically about how much social/political/economic equality there should be: Equalisers are to the left, stratifiers to the right. I guess the vertical dimension is supposed to differentiate the strategies used to achieve/maintain that? I think authoritarian/libertarian is a useful vertical axis. there may be other better ones.
To me, 'authoritarian' means the unquestioning acceptance of, and psychological need for- more or less permanent hierarchies, in which a person takes orders from 'superiors' and gives orders to 'inferiors', while disassociating themselves from any responsibility for the eventual outcome.