Sorry for the necro, but I stumbled across this and it got me to thinking.
...snip...
The common thread I see in ideological thinking is that it's a bundle of question-begging: one must put on the glasses the idealogue wears, in order to see the same world; as opposed to all of us taking off the shades and asking about what's actually out there.
...snip...
The notion of "taking off the shades" presumes that there is a point of view from which ones thinking will be uncolored by preformed notions or ideas... I think an interesting question to ask here is whether or not such a point of view exists.
I.e. is it even possible to have a 100% objective point of view? Or must we always adopt some forms of assumptions which will inevitably have an impact upon our own conclusions.
To put it another way, can we ever truly disentangle our reasoning from subjective bias completely?
I would posit that an absolute, universal, objective point of view does not exist... A person can take off a pair of glasses, but will still be limited by the capabilities of their own eyes.
I think the best we can do is to be able to take the time and observe from many different points of view while maintaining a conscientious awareness of the assumption we are taking on in each instance, but most importantly to be prepared for the times when these assumptions break down and for the times when it is revealed that we have made assumptions without knowing we were making them.
So the problem with ideological thinking is not that it prevents the idealogue from seeing things from a universal objective point of view (with the glasses off), but rather that it prevents them from being able to adapt to situations under which their given ideals are inapplicable or insufficient, or worse, from even recognizing when that is the case.
I like concrete examples so here is an analogy: the framework of an ideaology is like a choice of perspective.
Consider a viewing a ball moving directly toward or away from you under an orthographic viewpoint... The ball would appear stationary!
If you were to view the ball under perspective, the ball would appear to grow larger or smaller... but would you ever know if this was because the ball was moving toward / away or if it was growing / shrinking?... No matter what point of view is taken, there will always exist situations in which important information will be obscured.
The problem with aligning ones thinking to a particular ideology is that we often forget to take time to consider things from other points of view. As a result we will miss important information.
Now in the case of the ball, sufficient information can be gained about the ball's motion by switching among a small set of viewpoints... But this is because we were only concerned with a small set of geometric and spatial qualities. The number of variables to consider is small and well known. Real life is trickier.
Problems often have many more variables to consider.
We may not necessarily know what they are before dealing with a given situation.
Often times it only becomes clear that our assumptions have occluded important information after subsequent observations reveal the problem.
Ideologies, archetypes... isms... Are good in the fact that they can give a starting point to us the observer. We make an observation and have a framework to do reasoning and make judgements with out having to go through the nity gritty of mentally deriving the framework. They are also useful because they provide a common grounds for communicating the details of our point of view in a compact way... However, it is important to remember that these frameworks are not and will never be perfect. Ever.
Any ideal that is defined rigidly enough to convey a point of view precisely will also be limited in its applicability... similarly, any ideal defined loosely enough to give a broadly applicable framework of observation and reasoning will have cases in which additional assumptions are required in order to form well posed problems and statements.
There is and never will be any finite set of assumptions, points of view, ideals, etc. which will equip us to deal with every situation we will ever come across. There is no such thing as viewing "with glasses off" because the act of observing always requires putting on a pair of glasses. The best we can do is be aware of this and be ready in the cases where we need a different set of glasses.