Charles Johnson defends Herbert Spencer against Richard Dawkins.
By Roderick
Charles Johnson defends Herbert Spencer against Richard Dawkins.
Tagged Ethics, Left-Libertarian, Spencer | 3 Responses

The Empirical Me
I’m Roderick T. Long, Professor of Philosophy at Auburn University. I’m an Aristotelean/Wittgensteinian in philosophy and a left-libertarian market anarchist in social theory. (More about me here.) This blog, Austro-Athenian Empire, is a continuation of my earlier blog, archived here.
Paterson Space Elseblogs Cato Encyclopedia Financial Saga Juvenilia Online Texts Arma Virumque Antiquity Science Fact Humor Free the Earth Molinari/C4SS IP Feminism Democracy Resistance Is Not Futile Terror Left-Libertarian Ethics Rand Jove's Witnesses Labortarian Conflation Debate Spencer Left and Right Unethical Philosophy No Borders Personal The Thin Blue Line Antiracism Praxeology PI Complex Guest Blogs LGBT Therapeutic State Industriels Thank You Please May I Have Another Science Fiction Can't Stop the Muzak Boring Administrative Stuff Lapsus Linguae Anarchy
Copyright © 2012 Austro-Athenian Empire.
Clearly, evil and wickedness must have been selected for by evolution, since there is so much of both.
I’ve seen Spencer misunderstood this way many times. It annoys me.
BTW, have you seen Jacoby’s new book The Age of American Unreason? It actually contains MORE Spencer-bashing than Freethinkers! Most of the third chapter is about the evils of “Social Darwinism” promogulated by Spencer and Sumner. And many of the points are repeated right out of the ones in Freethinkers, with many of the same phrases being recycled almost verbatim from the earlier material.
Oh, and I found a piece where Jacoby herself explains why she airbrushed Rand and Mencken from her history of freethought: because she doesn’t consider them to be freethinkers at all (!), again because of the evils of “right-wing social Darwinism”:
“American freethought has run the gamut from deism–belief in a God who set the universe in motion but takes no active role in the affairs of men–to outright atheism. Freethinkers are not necessarily atheists (neither Thomas Paine nor Thomas Jefferson were atheists, but both were freethinkers), and atheists are not necessarily freethinkers. The novelist Ayn Rand and the satirist H.L. Mencken, both well-known for their atheism, were devotees not of the democratic freethought tradition but, ultimately, of right-wing social Darwinism.”
http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/susan_jacoby/2007/04/here_at_last_is_a.html